Pirate Gold, by Frederic Jesup 
Stimson 
 
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Title: Pirate Gold 
Author: Frederic Jesup Stimson 
 
Release Date: December 5, 2006 [eBook #20025] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PIRATE 
GOLD*** 
E-text prepared by Sam W. and the Project Gutenberg Online 
Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/) from page 
images generously made available by Internet Archive/American 
Libraries (http://www.archive.org/details/americana)
Note: Images of the original pages are available through Internet 
Archive/American Libraries. See 
http://www.archive.org/details/priategold00stimrich 
The author consistently used a convention in which a long dash, used to 
indicate trailed off speech, follows the closing speech mark, rather than 
being enclosed within the speech mark. This convention has been 
retained throughout. 
 
PIRATE GOLD 
by 
F. J. STIMSON (J. S. of Dale) 
 
Boston and New York Houghton, Mifflin and Company The Riverside 
Press, Cambridge 1896 
Copyright, 1895 and 1896, by Houghton, Mifflin & Co. 
Copyright, 1896, by F. J. Stimson. All rights reserved. 
The Riverside Press, Cambridge, Mass., U. S. A. Electrotyped and 
Printed by H. O. Houghton & Co. 
 
CONTENTS. 
PAGE 
PART ONE: DISCOVERY 1 
PART TWO: ROBBERY 75 
PART THREE: RECOVERY 137
PIRATE GOLD 
 
PART ONE: DISCOVERY. 
 
I. 
It consisted of a few hundred new American eagles and a few times as 
many Spanish doubloons; for pirates like good broad pieces, fit to skim 
flat-spun across the waves, or play pitch-and-toss with for men's lives 
or women's loves; they give five-dollar pieces or thin British guineas to 
the boy who brings them drink, and silver to their bootblacks, priests, 
or beggars. 
It was contained--the gold--in an old canvas bag, a little rotten and very 
brown and mouldy, but tied at the neck by a piece of stout and 
tarnished braid of gold. It had no name or card upon it nor letters on its 
side, and it lay for nearly thirty years high on a shelf, in an old chest, 
behind three tiers of tins of papers, in the deepest corner of the vault of 
the old building of the Old Colony Bank. 
Yet this money was passed to no one's credit on the bank's books, nor 
was it carried as part of the bank's reserve. When the old concern took 
out its national charter, in 1863, it did not venture or did not remember 
to claim this specie as part of the reality behind its greenback 
circulation. It was never merged in other funds, nor converted, nor put 
at interest. The bag lay there intact, with one brown stain of blood upon 
it, where Romolo de Soto had grasped it while a cutlass gash was fresh 
across his hand. And so it was carried, in specie, in its original package: 
"Four hundred and twenty-three American eagles, and fifteen hundred 
and fifty-six Spanish doubloons; deposited by ---- De Soto, June 
twenty-fourth, eighteen hundred and twenty-nine; for the benefit of 
whom it may concern." 
And it concerned very much two people with whom our narration has
to do,--one, James McMurtagh, our hero; the other, Mr. James 
Bowdoin, then called Mr. James, member of the firm of James 
Bowdoin's Sons. For De Soto, having escaped with his neck, took good 
pains never to call for his money. 
 
II. 
A very real pirate was De Soto. None of your Captain Kidds, who make 
one voyage or so before they are hanged, and even then find time to 
bury kegs of gold in every marshy and uncomfortable spot from Maine 
to Florida. No, no. De Soto had better uses for his gold than that. 
Commonly he traveled with it; and thus he even brought it to Boston 
with him on that unlucky voyage in 1829, when Mr. James Bowdoin 
was kind enough to take charge of it for him. One wonders what he 
meant to do with a bag of gold in Boston in 1829. 
This happened on Thursday, the 24th of June. It was the day after Mr. 
James Bowdoin's (or Mr. James's, as Jamie McMurtagh and others in 
the bank always called him; it was his father who was properly Mr. 
James Bowdoin, and his grandfather who was Mr. Bowdoin)--after Mr. 
James's Commencement Day; and it was the day after Mr. James's 
engagement as junior clerk in the counting-room; and it was the day 
after Mr. James's engagement to be married; and it was the day but one 
after Mr. James's class's supper at Mr. Porter's tavern in North 
Cambridge. Ah, they did things quickly in those days; ils savoient 
vivre. 
They had    
    
		
	
	
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