PRIVATEERS AND PIRATES 173 Injury proved fatal to Moore and ultimately re- sulted in disaster for Kidd. After leaving Mada- gascar the pirate captain sailed for the West Indies, and it must have been with a sinking heart that he received the news which awaited him there. The piracy of the Adventure-Galley was already known in England, and a committee of Parliament had been appointed to inquire into the whole affair. Free pardon for acts committed before May 1,1699, was offered by royal proclama- tion to all pirates who would surrender. But an ominous exception was made in this proclama- tion of mercy: Avery, a notorious buccaneer, and William Kidd were not included. The cause of this exclusion from grace is not far to seek. It was not that Kidd was a sinner above all others; but that he had involved great person- ages from the King down, and that the Tories were making capital out of the connection between prominent Whig statesmen and the misdeeds of Captain Kidd. The outlaw now determined on a course which in a righteous cause might well have been called bold but which under the circum- stances could only be described as brazen. He bought at the island of Hispaniola a small sloop which he loaded with gold coin, gold dust, gems5