The Lady and the Pirate - Page 45/199

We sped on now steadily, day by delightful day, and ever arose in my

soul new wonders at the joy of life itself, things that had escaped me

in my plodding business life. Now and again, I took from my pocket the

little volume which always went with me on the stream when I angled,

and which I confess sometimes charmed me away from the stream to some

shaded nook where I might read old Omar undisturbed--as now I might,

with L'Olonnois at the masthead and Lafitte at the wheel. And always

these wise, reckless, joyous pages of the old philosopher spelled to

me "Haste! Haste!"

"Whether at Naishápúr or Babylon,

Whether the Cup with sweet or bitter run,

The Wine of Life keeps oozing drop by drop.

The Leaves of Life keep falling one by one."

"Come, fill the Cup, and in the fire of Spring

Your Winter-garment of Repentance fling:

The Bird of Time has but a little way

To flutter--and the Bird is on the Wing!"

What truth, what absolute truth of the red-hot spur lay in those

words, lesson direst to me! What had my life been, plodding in books

to learn to keep by forms of law the booty my father had stolen? Away

with it, then, for now the Bird of Time was on the wing! Let me forget

the wasted years, spent in adding dollar to dollar; for what could the

highest pile of dollars mean to a man who had missed what Lafitte and

L'Olonnois and Omar had in their teaching? The booty of the world, the

pearls of price, the casks of the Wine of Life, are his only who takes

them. They can not be bought, can not be given. "Oh, haste! Jean

Lafitte, for my new knowledge indeed eats at my soul. Hasten, for the

Bird of Life is on the wing, L'Olonnois." So I spoke to them; and

they, feeling it all a part of the play, gravely answered in kind, to

what end that any who sought to stay Black Bart and his crew did so at

peril of their blood.

We came, I knew not after how many days forgotten in detail--after

passing, each avoided as a pestilence, many cities prosperous in

commerce--alongside the river port of the city of St. Louis, crowded

with motley and misfit shipping of one sort or other, where our craft

might moor without fear of exciting any suspicion, in spite of our

ominous name; for I had the precaution to lower our flag of the skull

and cross-bones.

I sought out the man most apt to know of any considerable vessels

docking there, and made inquiry for any power yacht one hundred and

twenty-five feet long, white and black ventilators, white hull with

blue line, flying the burgee Belle Helène, or some such name. None

could advise me for a time, and I looked in vain, as I had in every

dock in six hundred miles, for the trim hull of my yacht. At last one

old mariner, in rubber boots, himself skipper of a house-boat

south-bound for a winter's trapping, admitted that he had seen such a

craft three days before!