of his falling in with a
stranger, who had persuaded him to
go off on a mad undertaking of revenge on a piratical Yankee captain,
in consequence of which he got into prison. After a while he broke out
with others, since which she had heard nothing from him, and presumed
he must be dead.
"At length he had sufficiently drawn forth these
reminiscences of the good woman, the traveler assumed his natural
speech and manner, and announced himself as her missing son. At first
she was incredulous, and unable to recognize him, till opening the
bosom of his shirt, he showed her a mole on his breast. This well
remembered mark convinced her of his identity. She fell on his neck,
and like the father of the prodigal, wept tears of joy over her long
lost boy.
Chapter 6
COMMODORE
ISAAC HULL
Isaac Hull was
born March 9, 1773 in the
Town of Derby, the son of Joseph and Sarah Bennett Hull.
When he reached the age of ten, his father sent the boy to stay with
his uncle, General William Hull. Under that
arrangement, young Isaac could have more than the two months of
education given in the wintertime in Derby.
Hull remained with his uncle for a year in Newton,
Massachusetts. Then he went to sea, becoming a ship's boy on a packet
going from New Haven harbor to the West Indies.
Once during one of his voyages, he saved the life of
his captain and survived a shipwreck.
At the age of 18, he returned to Boston to study
navigation. By 1796 Hull was captain of a privately owned merchant
ship. On one of his voyages, his ship was captured by a French
privateer. His ship was sent to France, and Hull was held prisoner. A
British ship rescued him when it captured the privateers' ship. Hull
was landed, without a ship or any money at the Port of Martinique.
He was captured a second time by the French and
imprisoned