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The Trabucayras

by Percy B. St. John


The very morning that gave to the world the narrative in connection with Vigo prison, I called upon my worthy friend Don Gulielmo, who was reading the paper to his very excellent and agreeable wife. He received me with his usual cordiality, and after the ordinary interchange of salutations, observed that, of course, I came in search of ideas. I protested against any so egotistical a project, but as the ex-agent of Don Carlos appeared in reality to have made up his mind to tell a story, I, nothing loth, whatever to hear his reminisce, sealed myself, and prepared to give every attention to his narrative. “I am not,” he said, “about to give you exactly one of my own escapes, but to tell you what I heard from the lips of one who acted in the scene I described. You have heard, doubtless, of the ravages committed by certain banditti of late, who, in Catalonia, have under the name of Trabucayras, earned a very unenviable notoriety. The name is derived from the trabucos, a kind of blunderbuss with which they are armed, and some years back they were organized in a very powerful and strong hand which was the terror of all Catalonia. How I became acquainted with the following adventure you shall hear.

During one of my expeditions, I had occasion to journey from the frontier, and instead of following the high road from Barcelona to Girona, turned off into a path with which I was well-acquainted, and which led me by a shorter route to the same place. It was afternoon when I entered the lane, and I felt that it would be a matter of no small difficulty to reach the termination of my journey, but this was a matter of little moment to me, and I therefore by no means hurried myself. I had a good stock of creature comforts, that same stone bottle which served you and I so often on the prairies, and I was not expected until the morrow. Conscious of this state… Read More