The Lion of Saint Mark eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 443 pages of information about The Lion of Saint Mark.

The Lion of Saint Mark eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 443 pages of information about The Lion of Saint Mark.

“We have surely seen this young gentleman before, Messer Polani,” one of the council said.

“You have, signor,” Polani replied.  “You may remember that he greatly distinguished himself at the fight of Antium, was sent home by the admiral with his despatches, and had the honour of receiving, from you, the thanks of the republic and the gift of citizenship.”

“I remember now,” the councillor said; and a murmur of assent from the others showed that they also recalled the circumstance.  “Is he again the bearer of despatches, from the officer in command of the little squadron which, as it seems, has just, by some miracle, entered the port?  And how is it that the officer did not present himself in person before us?”

“The officer has presented himself,” Polani said.  “Messer Hammond is in command of the four ships which have just arrived.  Not only is he in command by virtue of senior rank, but it is to him that their recapture from the Genoese is entirely due.”

There was a murmur of incredulity from the circle of councillors, but Polani went on quietly.

“It may seem well nigh impossible to you, signors, but what I say is strictly true.  If Messer Hammond will first relate to you the broad facts of the recapture of the ships, I will furnish you with such details as he may omit.”

Francis then briefly related the events which had led to the capture of the four galleys.  He explained that by the death of the captain he, as second officer, succeeded to the command of the Pluto, and that afterwards being captured by the Genoese, Signor Parucchi, the sole other surviving officer, and ten gentlemen belonging to noble families and serving as volunteers on board the Pluto, were confined in one hold of that ship on her voyage as a prize to Genoa, the crew being shut up in the other; that by working at night they had effected a junction with the crew, and choosing a stormy night, when any noise that might be made would not be heard on board the ship, they made their way up to the deck above, through a hole they had cut in the planks, and overpowered the Genoese almost without resistance; that they had then, in the darkness, ran alongside another of the ships and captured her with equal ease; and Parucchi, with a portion of the crew of the Pluto, and the Venetian prisoners on board that ship, had retaken a third; while the Pluto had captured a fourth.

“It may seem to you, signors,” Francis concluded, “that we might, in the same way, have recaptured the rest of our ships, and it was a bitter disappointment to me that we failed to do so; but the storm was so high, and the sea so rough, that it was only with the greatest danger and difficulty that ships could lie alongside each other.  The bulwarks of all four vessels were greatly damaged, and the Pluto lost her foremast while alongside the last ship we captured, and as the storm was increasing, rather than abating, we were, to our great chagrin, obliged to let the rest escape, since in striving for more we might have lost, not only our lives, but the vessels we had taken.”

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The Lion of Saint Mark from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.