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ave learned it by prying about my place." I spoke gravely and with approval. "No, we didn't know who you was." "Let it be so. Let me be a man of no name. A name is of no consequence, and neither am I." "Sho, now, that ain't so. I never seen a better--now, I never seen--" Jean Lafitte's reticence in friendship, again, was getting the better of him. "So we said we'd call you Black Bart," added L'Olonnois. "That is a most excellent name," said I after some thought. "At present, I can find no objection to it, except that I wear no beard at all and would have a red or brown one if I did; and that Black Bart was rather a pirate of the land than of the sea." "Was he?" queried L'Olonnois. "Wasn't he a pirate, too, never?" "There was a famous pirate chief known as Bluebeard or Blackbeard, and it may be, sometimes, they called him Black Bart." "Wasn't he a awful desper't sort of pirate?" "He is said to have been." "It sounds like a awful desper't name," said Jimmy: "like as though he'd fill up his ship with captured maidens, an' put all rivals to the sword." "Such, indeed, shipmate," said I, "was his reputation." "Well," concluded L'Olonnois, "we couldn't think o' any better name'n that, because we know that is just what you would do." (So, then, my reputation was advancing!) "Wasn't you never a pirate before, honest?" queried Lafitte at this juncture. "Because, you seem like a real pirate to us. We been, lots of times, over on the lake." "It may be because my father was always called a pirate," I replied. "You see, in these days, there are not so many pirates who really scuttle ships and cut throats." "But you would?" "Certainly. 'Tis in my blood, my bold shipmate." "We knew it," concluded L'Olonnois calmly. "So, after now, we'll call you Black Bart. You can let your whiskers grow, you know." "True," said I. "Well, we will at least take the whiskers under advisement, as the court would say." "We must be an awful long ways from home," ventured L'Olonnois, after a time. "Hundreds of miles our good ship has ploughed the deep, and as yet has raised no sail above the horizon," I admitted. "Do you--now--do you--well, anyhow, do you have any idea of where we are going?" demanded Lafitte, shamefacedly. "Not in the slightest." "But now--well--now then----" In answer I drew from my pocket a map and a compass; the latter mostly for effect, since I knew very well the bed of our rive
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