. Kate Bonnet; the romance of a pirate's daughter. a boarding party . 330 XXXII. The delivery of the letter .... 341 XXXIII. Blackbeard gives Greenway some difficult WORK 357 XXXIV. Captain Thomas of the Koyal James . 364 XXXV. A CHAPTER OF HAPPENINGS 373 XXXVI. The tide decides 381 XXXVII. Bonnet and Greenway part company . 392 XXXVIII. Again Dickory was there .... 399 XXXIX. The blessings which come from the death OF THE WICKED 405 XL. Captain Ichabod puts the case . . 409 VI LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FACINGPAGE Oh, Kate ! said Diekory, you should have seen thatwonderful pirate fight . . Frontis


. Kate Bonnet; the romance of a pirate's daughter. a boarding party . 330 XXXII. The delivery of the letter .... 341 XXXIII. Blackbeard gives Greenway some difficult WORK 357 XXXIV. Captain Thomas of the Koyal James . 364 XXXV. A CHAPTER OF HAPPENINGS 373 XXXVI. The tide decides 381 XXXVII. Bonnet and Greenway part company . 392 XXXVIII. Again Dickory was there .... 399 XXXIX. The blessings which come from the death OF THE WICKED 405 XL. Captain Ichabod puts the case . . 409 VI LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS FACINGPAGE Oh, Kate ! said Diekory, you should have seen thatwonderful pirate fight . . Frontispiece If you talk to me like that I will cut you down where you stand ! . . . . .46 He is my father ! said Kate 124 Haste ye! haste ye, cried Diekory, they will leave you behind . 155 Take that, he feebly said, and swear that it shall be delivered 241 Kate and her father in the warehouse .... 260 Lucilla rescues Diekory 337 In an instant Diekory was there , , , , 403 vn KATE BONNET CHAPTER I TWO YOUNG PEOPLE, A SHIP, AND A FISH. month was September andthe place was in the neigh-bourhood of Bridgetown, inthe island of Barbadoes. Theeighteenth century was not eighteen years the girl who walked slowly down to the riverbank was three years its senior. She carried afishing-rod and line, and her name was KateBonnet. She was a bright-faced, quick-movingvoung person, and apparently did not expect tocatch many fish, for she had no basket in whichto carry away her finny prizes. Nor, apparently,did she have any bait, except that which wasupon her hook and which had been affixed thereby one of the servants at her home, not far awayIn fact, Mistress Kate was too nicely dressed andher gloves were too clean to have much to do with 1 KATE BONNET fish or bait, but she seated herself on a little rockin a shady spot not far from -ihe water and threwforth her line. Then she gazed about her; alittle up the river and a good deal down the river. It was truly a pleasant scene which lay be-fore


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