The
corsair
was immediately invited to dine with
the
Governor, seating himself between His
Excellency
and the Portuguese Viceroy, then
and
there arranging for the latter’s ransom,
Bemardin
de St. Pierre of his refusing to
take
anything for the release of so agreeable
a
gentleman, actually carrying off the ship in
default
of getting the two thousand dollars
demanded,
for which misconduct Capitaine
Olivier
Levasseur was hanged at Bourbon on
the
17th July, 1730, having failed to get himself
included
in the Act of Grace.
Introduction to “Robert Drury’s Journal,” etc., by
Captain Oliver, R.A. (1890). pp. 24, 25.
The amnesty granted in 1721 to the pirates
who chose to become colonists of Bourbon
did not prevent them from attacking ships,
even in the roadstead of St. Denis. Fragments from The Story of Africa and It's Explorers, Robert Brown, Vol. 1