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    Chapter 30

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    --"Front to front,
    Bring thou this fiend----
    Within my sword's length set him; if he 'scape,
    Heaven forgive him too!"--_Macbeth._

    "You have brought the grateful submission of the pirate to my offers!"
    exclaimed the sanguine Commander of the "Dart" to his messenger, as the
    foot of the latter once more touched his deck.

    "I bring nothing but defiance!" was the unexpected reply.

    "Did you exhibit my statement? Surely, Mr Ark so material a document was
    not forgotten!"

    "Nothing was forgotten that the warmest interest in his safety could
    suggest, Captain Bignall. Still the chief of yonder lawless ship refuses
    to hearken to your conditions."

    "Perhaps, sir, he imagines that the 'Dart' is defective in some of her
    spars," returned the hasty old seaman, compressing his lips, with a look
    of wounded pride; "he may hope to escape by pressing the canvas on his own
    light-heeled ship."

    "Does that look like flight?" demanded Wilder, extending an arm towards
    the nearly naked spars and motionless hull of their neighbour. "The utmost
    I can obtain is an assurance that he will not be the assailant."

    "'Fore George, he is a merciful youth! and one that should be commended
    for his moderation! He will not run his disorderly, picarooning company
    under the guns of a British man-of-war, because he owes a little reverence
    to the flag of his master! Hark ye, Mr Ark, we will remember the
    circumstance when questioned at the Old Bailey. Send the people to their
    guns, sir, and ware the ship round, to put an end at once to this
    foolery, or we shall have him sending a boat aboard to examine our
    commissions."

    "Captain Bignall," said Wilder, leading his Commander still further from
    the ears of their inferiors, "I may lay some little claim to merit for
    services done under your own eyes, and in obedience to your orders. If my
    former conduct may give me a title to presume to counsel one of your great
    experience, suffer me to urge a short delay."

    "Delay! Does Henry Ark hesitate, when the enemies of his King, nay more,
    the enemies of man, are daring him to his duty!"


    "Sir, you mistake me. I hesitate, in order that the flag under which we
    sail may be free from stain, and not with any intent of avoiding the
    combat. Our enemy, _my_ enemy knows that he has nothing now to expect, for
    his past generosity, but kindness, should he become our captive. Still,
    Captain Bignall, I ask for time, to prepare the 'Dart' for a conflict that
    will try all her boasted powers, and to insure a victory that will not be
    bought without a price."

    "But should he
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