Page:Twenty years before the mast - Charles Erskine, 1896.djvu/177

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Twenty Years Before the Mast.
153

Captain Hudson captured the celebrated chief, Vendovi, who in 1834 massacred eleven of the crew of the American brig Charles Dagget of Salem, Captain Batcheller commander. The Dagget's boat went ashore early one morning, and the crew had proceeded half-way up to the beche de mer house when they were suddenly surprised by a party of these cannibals who had been lying in ambush. They were seized and firmly held, while the chief, Vendovi, knocked them on the head with his handy billy, a small war-club made of iron-wood. This horrible crime was committed in order to get possession of the trading or Jew box, containing cheap trinkets, and some hatchets, plane-irons, etc. The Dagget was a South Sea trader, for sandal-wood, tortoise-shell, and beche de mer, which were taken to China and traded for teas and silks. Nearly all the Pacific and Chinese trade carried on in this country eighty years ago was confined to Salem. The sandal-wood referred to is a deliciously fragrant, scented wood. The Chinese burn it in their temples as incense to their gods. The beche de mer, or sea-slug, is a sort of round jelly-fish, from six to twelve inches long, and two in diameter, and of a reddish- brown color. They are found in great abundance on the coral reefs. The natives fish for them at night by the light of the moon, and with torches. These fish hide themselves during the day in the crevices of the coral reefs. They sally forth at night and creep out upon the reefs like caterpillars. After they are gathered they are thoroughly dried, or cured, and then resemble a well-fried sausage. The Chinese make an excellent soup of them; the natives eat them raw.