summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--35431-0.txt11867
-rw-r--r--35431-0.zipbin0 -> 251377 bytes
-rw-r--r--35431-8.txt11869
-rw-r--r--35431-8.zipbin0 -> 251210 bytes
-rw-r--r--35431-h.zipbin0 -> 390113 bytes
-rw-r--r--35431-h/35431-h.htm14471
-rw-r--r--35431-h/images/map-1200.pngbin0 -> 67784 bytes
-rw-r--r--35431-h/images/map-600.pngbin0 -> 56553 bytes
-rw-r--r--35431-h/images/mmco-logo.pngbin0 -> 1700 bytes
-rw-r--r--35431.txt11869
-rw-r--r--35431.zipbin0 -> 251028 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
14 files changed, 50092 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/35431-0.txt b/35431-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..8a97122
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11867 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Modern Buccaneer, by Rolf Boldrewood
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Modern Buccaneer
+
+Author: Rolf Boldrewood
+
+Release Date: February 28, 2011 [EBook #35431]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MODERN BUCCANEER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Erica Pfister-Altschul and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This book was produced from scanned images of public
+domain material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A MODERN BUCCANEER
+
+[Illustration]
+
+I desire to acknowledge my indebtedness to Mr. Louis Becke, author of
+_By Reef and Palm_, as to the South Sea Island portion of _A Modern
+Buccaneer_, with the exception of the chapter headed "Poisoned Arrows,"
+which is founded upon the diary of a Whaling Cruise by my late father.
+
+[Illustration: _Boldrewood's "Modern Buccaneer"_ _Walker & Boutall sc._]
+
+
+
+
+A MODERN BUCCANEER
+
+
+BY
+ROLF BOLDREWOOD
+
+AUTHOR OF 'ROBBERY UNDER ARMS'
+
+
+London
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO.
+AND NEW YORK
+1894
+
+_All rights reserved_
+
+
+COPYRIGHT
+1894
+BY
+MACMILLAN AND CO.
+
+
+_First Edition (3 Vols.) April 1894_
+_Second Edition (1 Vol.) October 1894_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ MY FIRST VOYAGE 1
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+ WILLIAM HENRY HAYSTON 13
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+ IN SAMOA 20
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ SAMOA TO MILLÉ 32
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+ THE BRIG LEONORA 41
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ CAPTAIN BEN PEESE 62
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ CRUISING AMONG THE CAROLINES 74
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ POISONED ARROWS 87
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ HALCYON DAYS 111
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+ MURDER AND SHIPWRECK 121
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ A KING AND QUEEN 159
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ "MY LORDS OF THE ADMIRALTY" 189
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ H.M.S. ROSARIO 206
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ NORFOLK ISLAND--ARCADIA 225
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ EPITHALAMIUM 255
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ A SWIM FOR LIFE 277
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ "OUR JACK'S COME HOME TO-DAY" 303
+
+
+
+
+A MODERN BUCCANEER
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MY FIRST VOYAGE
+
+
+Born near Sydney harbour, nursery of the seamen of the South, I could
+swim almost as soon as I could walk, and sail a boat at an age when most
+children are forbidden to go near the water. We came of a salt-water
+stock. My father had been a sea-captain for the greater part of his
+life, after a youth spent in every kind of craft, from a cutter to a
+man-of-war. No part of the habitable globe was unfamiliar to him: from
+India to the Pole, from Russia to the Brazils, from the China Sea to the
+Bight of Benin--every harbour was a home.
+
+He had nursed one crew frost-bitten in Archangel, when the blankets had
+to be cut up for mittens; had watched by the beds of another, decimated
+by yellow fever in Jamaica; had marked up the "death's-head and
+cross-bones" in the margin of the log-book, to denote the loss by
+tetanus of the wounded by poisoned arrows on Bougainville Island; and
+had fought hand to hand with the stubborn Maories of Taranaki. Wounds
+and death, privation and pestilence, wrecks and tempests were with him
+household words, close comrades. What were they but symbols,
+nature-pictures, the cards dealt by fate? You lost the stake or rose a
+winner. Men who had played the game of life all round knew this. He
+accepted fortune, fair or foul, as he did the weather--a favour or a
+force of nature to be enjoyed or defied. But to be commented upon, much
+less complained of? Hardly. And as fate had willed it, the worn though
+unwearied sea-king had seen fit to heave anchor, so to speak, and moor
+his vessels--for he owned more than one--in this the fairest haven of
+the southern main. Once before in youth had he seen and never forgotten
+the frowning headlands, beyond which lay so peerless a harbour, such
+wealth of anchorage, so mild a clime, so boundless an extent of virgin
+soil; from which he, "a picked man of countries," even then prophesied
+wealth, population, and empire in the future.
+
+Here, then, a generation later, he brought his newly-wedded wife. Here
+was I, Hilary Telfer, destined to see the light.
+
+From the mid-city street of Sydney is but a stone's throw to the wharves
+and quays, magnificent water-ways in which those ocean palaces of the
+present day, the liners of the P. and O. and the Orient, lie moored, and
+but a plank divides the impatient passenger from the busy mart. Not that
+such stately ships were visitors in my school-boy days. Sydney was then
+a grass-grown, quiet seaport, boasting some fifty thousand inhabitants,
+with a fleet of vessels small in size and of humble tonnage.
+
+But, though unpretending of aspect, to the eager-hearted, imaginative
+school-boy they were rich as Spanish galleons. For were they not laden
+with uncounted treasure, weighed down with wealth beyond the fabled
+hoards of the pirates of the Spanish Main, upon whose dark deeds and
+desperate adventures I had so greedily feasted?
+
+Each vessel that swept through the Heads at midnight, or marked the
+white-walled mansions and pine-crowned promontories rise faintly out of
+the pearl-hued dawn, was for me a volume filled with romance and
+mystery. Sat there not on the forecastle of that South Sea whaler,
+silent, scornful, imperturbable, the young Maori chief, nursing in his
+breast the deep revenge for a hasty blow, which on the return voyage to
+New Zealand and the home of his tribe was to take the form of a massacre
+of the whole ship's company?
+
+Yes, captain and officers, passengers and crew, every man on that ship
+paid the death penalty for the mate's hard word and blow. The insult to
+a Rangatira must be wiped out in blood.
+
+The trader of the South Sea Islands was a marine marvel which I was
+never weary of studying.
+
+I generally managed to make friends with one or other of the crew, who
+permitted me to explore the lower deck and feed my fancy upon the
+treasures from that paradise with which the voyager from an enchanted
+ocean had surely freighted his vessel. Strange bows and arrows--the
+latter poison-tipped, as I was always assured, perhaps as a
+precautionary measure--piles of shaddocks, tons of bananas, idols,
+skulls, spears, clubs, woven cloth of curious fabric, an endless store
+of unfamiliar foreign commodities.
+
+Among the crew were always a few half-castes mingled with the grizzled,
+weather-beaten British sea-dogs. Perhaps a boat's crew of the islanders
+themselves, born sailors, and as much at home in water as on land.
+
+Seldom did I leave, however unwillingly, the deck of one of these fairy
+barques, without registering a vow that the year in which I left school
+should see me a gay sailor-boy, bound on my first voyage in search of
+dangerous adventures and that splendidly untrammelled career which was
+so surely to result in fortune and distinction.
+
+Then the whaleships! In that old time, Sydney harbour was rarely without
+a score or more of them. In their way they were portents and wonders of
+the deep. Fortune failed them at times. The second year might find them
+far from full of the high-priced whale-oil. The capricious cetacean was
+not to be depended upon in migration from one "whaling ground" to
+another. Sometimes a "favourite" ship--lucky in spite of
+everything--would come flaunting in after an absence of merely eleven or
+twelve months--such were the _Florentia_ and the _Proteus_--full to the
+hatches, while three long years would have elapsed before her consort,
+sailing on the same day and fitted up much in the same way, would crawl
+sadly into Snail's or Neutral Bay, battered and tempest-tossed, but
+three-quarter full even then, a mark for the rough wit of the port, to
+pay off an impoverished crew and confront unsmiling or incredulous
+owners.
+
+Every kind of disaster would have befallen her. When she got fast to a
+ninety-barrel whale, her boats would be stoven in. When all was well, no
+cheery shout of "There she spouts!" would be heard for days. Savage
+islanders would attack her doggedly, and hardly be beaten off. Every
+kind of evil omen would be justified, until the crew came to believe
+that they were sailing with an Australian Vanderdecken, and would never
+see a port again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The grudging childish years had rolled by, and now I was seventeen years
+of age--fitted, as I fully believed, to begin the battle of life in
+earnest, and ardent for the fray. As to my personal qualifications for a
+life on the ocean wave, and well I knew no other would have contented
+me, let the reader judge. At the age when tall lads are often found to
+have out-grown their strength, I had attained the fullest stature of
+manhood; wide-chested and muscular, constant exercise with oar and sail
+had developed my frame and toughened my sinews, until I held myself,
+with some reason, to be a match in strength and activity for most men I
+was likely to meet.
+
+In the rowing contests to which Australians of the shore have always
+been devoted, more particularly the privileged citizens of Sydney, I had
+always taken a leading part. More than once, in a hard-fought finish,
+had I been lifted out fainting or insensible.
+
+My curling fair hair and blue eyes bore token of our Norse blood and
+Anglo-Norman descent. The family held a tradition that our surname came
+from Taillefer, the warrior minstrel who rode in the forefront of Duke
+William's army at Hastings. Strangely, too, a passionate love of song
+had always clung to the race. "Sir Hilary charged at Agincourt," as
+saith the ballad. Roving and adventure ran in the blood for generations
+uncounted.
+
+For all that trouble arose when I announced my resolve. My schoolmates
+had settled down in the offices of merchants, bankers, and lawyers, why
+could not I do the same? My mother's tears fell fast as she tried in
+vain to dissuade me from my resolution. My father was neutral. He knew
+well the intensity of the feeling. "If born in a boy," he said, "as it
+was in me, it is his fate--nothing on earth can turn him from it; if you
+stop him you will make a bad landsman and spoil a good sailor. Let him
+go! he must take his chance like another man. God is above the wave as
+over the earth. If it be his fate, the perils of the deep will be no
+more than the breezes of the bay."
+
+It was decided at length that I should be allowed to go on my way. To
+the islands of the South Pacific my heart pointed as truly as ever did
+compass needle to the North.
+
+I had read every book that had ever been written about them, from
+Captain Cook's _Voyages_ to _The Mutiny of the Bounty_. In my dreams how
+many times had I seen the purple mountains, the green glow of the fairy
+woodlands, had bathed in the crystal streams, and heard the endless surf
+music on the encircling reef, cheered the canoes loaded with fruit
+racing for their market in the crimson flush of the paradisal morn, or
+lingered amidst the Aidenns of the charmed main, where the
+flower-crowned children of nature--maidens beauteous as angels--roamed
+in careless happiness and joyous freedom! It was an entrancing picture.
+
+Why should I stay in this prosaic land, where men wore the hideous
+costume of their forefathers, and women, false to all canons of art,
+still clung to their outworn garb?
+
+What did I care for the sheep and cattle, the tending of which enriched
+my compatriots?
+
+A world of romance, mystery, and adventure lay open and inviting. The
+die was cast. The spell of the sea was upon me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My father's accumulations had amounted to a reasonable capital, as
+things went in those Arcadian non-speculative days. He was not
+altogether without a commercial faculty, which had enabled him to make
+prudent investments in city and suburban lands. These the steadily
+improving markets were destined to turn into value as yet undreamed of.
+
+It was not thought befitting that I should ship as an apprentice or
+foremost hand, though I was perfectly willing, even eager, for a start
+in any way. A more suitable style of equipment was arranged. An
+agreement was entered into with the owner of a vessel bound for San
+Francisco viâ Honolulu, by which a proportion of the cargo was purchased
+in my name, and I was, after some discussion, duly installed as
+supercargo. It may be thought that I was too young for such a
+responsible post. But I was old for my age. I had a man's courage and
+ambition. I had studied navigation to some purpose; could "hand reef and
+steer," and in the management of a boat, or acquaintance with every
+rope, sail, and spar on board of a vessel, I held myself, if not an A.
+B., fully qualified for that rank and position.
+
+Words would fail to describe my joy and exultation when I found myself
+at length on blue water, in a vessel which I might fairly describe as
+"our little craft," bound for foreign parts and strange cities. I
+speedily made the acquaintance of the crew--a strangely assembled lot,
+mostly shady as to character and reckless as to speech, but without
+exception true "sailor men." At that time of day, employment on the high
+seas was neither so easy to obtain nor so well paid as at present. The
+jolly tars of the period were therefore less independent and inclined to
+cavil at minor discomforts. Once shipped, they worked with a will, and
+but little fault could be found with their courage or seamanship.
+
+Among other joys and delights which I promised myself, had been a closer
+acquaintance with the life and times of a picturesque and romantic
+personage, known and feared, if all tales were true, throughout the
+South Seas. This was the famous, the celebrated Captain Hayston, whose
+name was indeed a spell to conjure with from New Zealand to the Line
+Islands.
+
+Much that could excite a boyish imagination had been related to me
+concerning him. One man professing an intimate knowledge had described
+him as "a real pirate." Could higher praise be awarded? I put together
+all the tales I had heard about him--his great stature and vast
+strength, his reckless courage, his hair-breadth escapes, his wonderful
+brig,--cousin german, no doubt, to the "long low wicked-looking craft"
+in the pages of _Tom Cringle's Log_, and other veracious historiettes,
+"nourishing a youth sublime," in the long bright summer days of old;
+those days when we fished and bathed, ate oysters, and read alternately
+from early morn till the lighthouse on the South Head flashed out! My
+heroes had been difficult to find hitherto; they had mostly eluded my
+grasp. But this one was real and tangible. He would be fully up to
+description. His splendid scorn of law and order, mercy or moderation,
+his unquestioned control over mutinous crews and fierce islanders,
+illumined by occasional homicides and abductions, all these splendours
+and glories so stirred my blood, that I felt, if I could only once
+behold my boyhood's idol, I should not have lived in vain. Among the
+crew, fortunately for me as I then thought, was a sailor who had
+actually known in the flesh the idol of my daydreams.
+
+"And it's the great Captain Hayston you'd like to hear about," said Dan
+Daly, as we sat together in the foc'sle head of the old barque
+_Clarkstone_, before we made Honolulu. Dan had been a South Sea
+beach-comber and whaler; moreover, had been marooned, according to his
+own account, escaping only by a miracle; a trader's head-man--once,
+indeed, more than half-killed by a rush of natives on the station. With
+every kind of dangerous experience short of death and burial he was
+familiar. On which account I regarded him with a fine boyish admiration.
+What a night was it, superbly beautiful, when I hung upon his words, as
+we sat together gazing over the moonlit water! We had changed our course
+owing to some dispute about food between captain and crew, and were now
+heading for the island of Rurutu, where fresh provisions were
+attainable. As I listened spellbound and entranced, the barque's bows
+slowly rose and fell, the wavering moonlight streamed down upon the
+deck, the sails, the black masses of cordage, while ghostly shadows
+moved rhythmically, in answering measure to every motion of the vessel.
+
+"You must know," said Dan, in grave commencement, "it's nigh upon five
+years ago, when I woke up one morning in the 'Calaboose' as they call
+the 'lock-up' in Papiete, with a broken head. It's the port of the
+island of Tahiti. I was one of the hands of the American brig
+_Cherokee_, and we'd put in there on our way to San Francisco from
+Sydney. The skipper had given us liberty, so we went ashore and began
+drinking and having some fun. There was some wahines in it, in
+coorse--that's whats they call the women in thim parts. Somehow or other
+I got a knock on the head, and remimbered nothing more until I woke up
+in the 'Calaboose,' where I was charged with batin' a native till he was
+nigh dead. To make a long story short, I got six months 'hard,' and the
+ship sailed away without me.
+
+"When I'd served my time, I walks into the American Consulate and asks
+for a passage to California.
+
+"'Clear out,' says the Consul, 'you red-headed varmint, I have nothing
+to say to you, after beating an inoffensive native in the manner you
+did.'
+
+"'By the powers,' says I to myself, 'you're a big blackguard, Dan Daly,
+when you've had a taste of liquor, but if I remimber batin' any man
+black, white, or whitey-brown, may I be keel-hauled. Howsomdever, that
+says nothing, the next thing's a new ship.'
+
+"So I steps down to the wharf and aboord a smart-looking schooner that
+belonged to Carl Brander, a big merchant in Tahiti, as rich as the
+Emperor of China, they used to say. The mate was aboord. 'Do you want
+any hands?' says I.
+
+"'We do,' says he. 'You've a taking colour of hair for this trade, my
+lad.'
+
+"'How's that?'
+
+"'Why, the girls down at Rimitara and Rurutu will just make love to you
+in a body. Red hair's the making of a man in thim parts.'
+
+"Upon this I signed articles for six months in the schooner, and next
+day we sailed for a place called Bora-bora in the north-west. We didn't
+stay there long, but got under weigh for Rurutu next day. We weren't
+hardly clear of Bora-bora when we sights a brigantine away to windward
+and bearing down on us before the wind. As soon as she got close enough,
+she signalled that she wanted to send a boat aboard, so we hove to and
+waited.
+
+"Our skipper had a look at the man who was steering the boat, whin he
+turns as pale as a sheet, and says he to the mate, 'It's that devil
+Hayston! and that's the brigantine he and Captain Ben Peese ran away
+with from Panama.'
+
+"However, up alongside came the boat, and as fine a looking man as ever
+I set eyes on steps aboord amongst us.
+
+"'How do ye do, Captain?' says he. 'Where from and whither bound?'
+
+"The skipper was in a blue funk, I could see, for this Bully Hayston had
+a terrible bad name, so he answers him quite polite and civil.
+
+"'Can you spare me half a coil of two-inch Manilla?' asks the stranger,
+'and I'll pay you your own price?'
+
+"The skipper got him the rope, the strange captain pays for it, and they
+goes below for a glass of grog. In half an hour, up on deck they comes
+again, our skipper half-seas over and laughing fit to kill himself.
+
+"'By George!' says he, 'you're the drollest card I ever came across.
+D--n me! if I wouldn't like to take a trip with you myself!' and with
+that he struggles to the skylight and falls in a heap across it.
+
+"'Who's the mate of this schooner?' sings out Hayston, in such a changed
+voice that it made me jump.
+
+"'I am!' said the mate, who was standing in the waist.
+
+"'Then where's that Mangareva girl of yours? Come, look lively! I know
+all about her from that fellow there,' pointing to the skipper.
+
+"The mate had a young slip of a girl on board. She belonged to an island
+called Mangareva, and was as pretty a creature, with her big soft eyes
+and long curling hair, as ever I'd seen in my life. The mate just trated
+her the same as he would the finest lady, and was going to marry her at
+the next island where there was a missionary. When he heard who the
+strange captain was, he'd planted her down in the hold and covered her
+up with mats. He was a fine manly young chap, and as soon as he saw
+Hayston meant to take 'Taloo,' that was her name, he pulls out a pistol
+and says, 'Down in the hold, Captain Hayston! and as long as God gives
+me breath you'll never lay a finger on her. I'll put a bullet through
+her head rather than see her fall into the hands of a man like you.' The
+strange captain just gives a laugh and pulls his long moustache. Then he
+walks up to the mate and slaps him on the shoulder.
+
+"'You've got the right grit in you,' says he. 'I'd like to have a man
+like you on board my ship;' and the next second he gripped the pistol
+out of the mate's hand and sent it spinning along the deck. The mate
+fought like a tiger, but he was a child in the other man's grasp. All
+the time Hayston kept up that devilish laugh of his. Then, as he saw me
+and Tom Lynch coming to help the mate, he says something in a foreign
+lingo, and the boat's crew jumps on board amongst us, every one of them
+with a pistol. But for all that they seems a decent lot of chaps.
+
+"Hayston still held the mate by his wrists, laughing in his face as if
+he was having the finest fun in the world, when up comes Taloo out of
+the hold by way of the foc'sle bulk-head, with her long hair hanging
+over her shoulders, and the tears streaming down her cheeks.
+
+"She flings herself down at the Captain's feet, and clasps her arms
+round his knees.
+
+"'No, no! no kill Ted!' she kept on crying, just about all the English
+she knew.
+
+"'You pretty little thing,' says he, 'I wouldn't hurt your Ted for the
+world.' Then he lets go the mate and takes her hand and shakes it.
+
+"'What's your name, my man?'
+
+"'Ted Bannington!' says the mate.
+
+"'Well, Ted Bannington, look here; if you'd showed any funk I'd have
+taken the girl in spite of you and your whole ship's company. If a man
+don't think a woman good enough to fight for, he deserves to lose her if
+a better man comes along.'
+
+"Taloo put out one little hand, the other hand and arm was round the
+mate's neck, shaking like a leaf too.
+
+"'I'm so sorry if I've hurt your wrists,' says he to the mate, most
+polite. Then he gave some orders to the boat's crew, who pulled away to
+the brigantine. After they had gone he walked aft with the mate, the two
+chatting like the best friends in the world, and I'll be hanged if that
+same mate wasn't laughing fit to split at some of the yarns the other
+chap was spinning, sitting on the skylight, with the Captain lying at
+their feet as drunk as Davy's sow.
+
+"Presently the boat comes alongside agin, and a chap walks aft and gives
+the strange captain a parcel.
+
+"'You'll please accept this as a friendly gift from Bully Hayston,' says
+he to the mate; and then he takes a ten-dollar piece out of his pocket
+and gives it to Taloo. 'Drill a hole in it, and hang it round the neck
+of your first child for luck.'
+
+"He shakes hands with her and the mate, jumps into the boat, and steers
+for the brigantine. In another ten minutes she squared away and stood to
+the south-east.
+
+"'Come here, Dan,' says the mate to me; 'see what he's given me!' 'Twas
+a beautiful chronometer bran new, in a splendid case. The mate said he'd
+never seen one like it before.
+
+"Well, that was the first time I ever seen Bully Hayston, though I did a
+few times afterwards, and the brigantine too.
+
+"They do say he's a thundering scoundrel, but a pleasanter-spoken
+gentleman I never met in my life."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+WILLIAM HENRY HAYSTON
+
+
+These were the first particulars I ever heard of the man who had
+afterwards so great an influence upon my destiny that no incident of my
+sojourn with him will ever be forgotten. A man with whom I went into the
+jaws of death and returned unhurt. A man who, no matter what his faults
+may have been, possessed qualities which, had they been devoted to
+higher aims in life, might have rendered him the hero of a nation.
+
+Our Captain's altercation with the crew nearly blossomed into a mutiny.
+This was compromised, however, one of the conditions of peace being that
+we should touch at Rurutu, one of the five islands forming the Tubuai
+group. This we accordingly did, and, steering for San Francisco,
+experienced no further adventures until we sighted the Golden Gate. When
+our cargo was sold I left the ship.
+
+My occupation being from this time gone, I used to stroll down to the
+wharf from my lodgings in Harvard Street to look at the foreign vessels.
+Wandering aimlessly, I one day made the acquaintance of a "hard-shell
+down-easter," with the truly American name of Slocum, master of a
+venerable-looking rate called the _Constitution_. He himself was a
+dried-up specimen of the old style of Yankee captain, with a face that
+resembled in colour a brown painted oilskin, and hands like an
+albatross's feet. He had been running for a number of years to Tahiti,
+taking out timber and returning with island produce.
+
+Not being a proud man, he permitted me to stand drinks for him in a
+well-known liquor saloon in Third Street, where we had long yarns over
+his trading adventures in the Pacific.
+
+One Sunday morning, I remember it as if yesterday, we were sitting in a
+private room off the bar. Slocum was advising me to come with him on his
+next trip and share the luxuries of the _Constitution's_ table, for
+which he asked the modest sum of a hundred dollars to Tahiti and back,
+when we heard some one enter and address the bar-keeper. "Great Scott!"
+came the reply, "it's Captain Hayston! How air you, Captain, and whar
+d'ye come from?"
+
+"I've come to try and find Ben Peese. We're going to form a new station
+at Arrecifu. He left me at Yap in the Carolines to come here and buy a
+schooner with a light draught; but he never turned up; I'm afraid that
+after he left Yap he met with some accident."
+
+The moment Slocum heard the stranger's voice his face underwent a
+marvellous change. All his assurance seemed to have left him. He
+whispered to me, "That's Bully Hayston! I guess I'll lie low till he
+clears out. I don't want to be seen with him, as it'll sorter damage my
+character. Besides, he's such a vi'lent critter."
+
+The next moment we heard the new-comer say to the barman,--
+
+"Say, Fred, I've been down to that old schooner the _Constitution_, but
+couldn't find Slocum aboard. They told me he often came here to get a
+cheap drink. I want him to take a letter to Tahiti. Do you know where he
+is?"
+
+Slocum saw it was of no use attempting to "lie low," so with a nervous
+hand he opened the door.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I've knocked about the world a good deal since I sat in the little back
+parlour in Third Street, Frisco, but neither before nor since I left
+Strong's Island have I seen such a splendid specimen of humanity as the
+man who then entered.
+
+Much that I am about to relate I learned during my later experience.
+
+William Henry Hayston was born in one of the Western States of America,
+and received his education at Norfolk, Virginia. As his first
+appointment he obtained a cadetship in the United States Revenue
+Service, subsequently retiring to become captain of one of the large
+lake steamers.
+
+In '55 he joined the navy, serving with great gallantry under Admiral
+Farragut. The reported reason of his leaving the service was a
+disagreement with Captain Carroll, afterwards commander of the rebel
+cruiser _Shenandoah_. So bitter was their feud, that years afterwards,
+when that vessel was in the South Pacific, her commander made no secret
+of his ardent wish to meet Hayston and settle accounts with him, even to
+the death.
+
+Hayston was a giant in stature: six feet four in height, with a chest
+that measured, from shoulder to shoulder, forty-nine inches; and there
+was nothing clumsy about him, as his many antagonists could testify. His
+strength was enormous, and he was proud of it. But, apart from his
+magnificent physique, Hayston was one of the most remarkably handsome
+men about this time that I have ever seen. His hair fell in clusters
+across his forehead, above laughing eyes of the brightest blue; his nose
+was a bold aquiline; a well-cut, full-lipped mouth that could set like
+fate was covered by a huge moustache. A Vandyke beard completed the
+_tout ensemble_ of a visage which, once seen, was rarely forgotten by
+friend or foe. Taking him altogether, what with face, figure, and
+manner, he had a personal magnetism only too fatally attractive, as many
+a man--ay, and woman too--knew to their cost. He was my beau ideal of a
+naval officer--bold and masterful, yet soft and pleasant-voiced withal
+when he chose to conciliate. His sole disfigurement--not wholly so,
+perhaps, in the eye of his admirers--was a sabre cut which extended from
+the right temple to his ear.
+
+For his character, the one controlling influence in his life was an
+ungovernable temper. It was utterly beyond his mastery. Let any one
+offend him, and though he might have been smiling the instant before,
+the blue eyes would suddenly turn almost black, his face become a deep
+purple. Then it was time for friend or foe to beware. For I never saw
+the man that could stand up to him. Strangely enough, I have sometimes
+seen him go laughing through a fight until he had finished his man. At
+other times his cyclone of a mood would discharge itself without warning
+or restraint. It was probably this appalling temper that gained him a
+character for being bloodthirsty; for, once roused, nothing could stop
+him. Yet I do him the justice to say that I never once witnessed an act
+of deliberate cruelty at his hands. In the islands he was surrounded by
+a strange collection of the greatest scoundrels unhung. There, of
+necessity, his rule was one of "blood and iron."
+
+And now for his pleasing traits. He was one of the most fascinating
+companions possible. He possessed a splendid baritone voice and affected
+the songs of Schumann and the German composers. He was an accomplished
+musician, playing on the pianoforte, violin, and, in default of a better
+instrument, even on the accordion. He spoke German, French, and Spanish,
+as well as the island languages, fluently. Generous to a fault, in spite
+of repeated lessons, he would insist on trusting again and again those
+in whom he believed. But once convinced that he had been falsely dealt
+with, the culprit would have fared nearly as well in the jaws of a
+tiger. He was utterly without fear, under any and all circumstances,
+even the most desperate, and was naturally a hater of every phase of
+meanness or cowardice. But one more trait, and my sketch is complete.
+He had a fatal weakness where the fairer sex was concerned. To one of
+them he owed his first war with society. To the consequences of that
+false step might have been traced the reckless career which dishonoured
+his manhood and led to the final catastrophe.
+
+"Come, gentlemen!" he said on entering--in so pleasant and kindly a
+tone, that I felt drawn towards him at once, "let us sit down and have a
+drink together."
+
+We went back to the room, Slocum, I could see, feeling intensely
+uncomfortable, fidgeting and twisting. As we sat down I took a good look
+at the man of whom I had heard so much. Heard of his daring deeds in the
+China seas; of a wild career in the Pacific Islands; of his bold
+defiance of law and order; besides strange tales of mysterious cruises
+in the north-west among the Caroline and Pellew Islands.
+
+"And how air yer, Captain?" said Slocum with forced hilarity.
+
+"I'm devilish glad to see _you_," replied Hayston; "what about that
+barque of mine you stripped down at the Marshalls, you porpoise-hided
+skunk?"
+
+"True as gospel, Captain, I didn't know she was yours. There was a
+trader at Arnu, you know the man, an Italian critter, but they call him
+George Brown, and he says to me, 'Captain Slocum,' says he, 'there's a
+big lump of a timber-ship cast away on one of them reefs near Alluk, and
+if you can get up to her you'll make a powerful haul. She's new
+coppered, and hasn't broke up yet.' So I gave him fifty dollars, and
+promised him four hundred and fifty more if his news was reliable; if
+that ain't the solid facts of the case I hope I may be paralysed."
+
+"Oh! so it was George who put you on to take my property, was it? and he
+my trader too; well, Slocum, I can't blame you. But now I'll tell you my
+'_facts_': that barque was wrecked; the skipper and crew were picked up
+by Ben Peese and taken to China. He bought the barque for me for four
+hundred dollars, and I beat up to Arnu, and asked George if he would get
+me fifty Arnu natives to go with me to the wreck and either try and
+float it or strip her. The d--d Marcaroni-eating sweep promised to get
+me the men in a week or two, so I squared away for Madura, where I had
+two traders. Bad weather came on, and when I got back to Arnu, the
+fellow told me that a big canoe had come down from the Radacks and
+reported that the barque had gone to pieces. The infernal scoundrel! Had
+I known that he had put you on to her I'd have taken it out of his hide.
+Who is this young gentleman?"
+
+"A friend of mine, Captain, thinking of takin' a voyage with me for
+recruitin' of his health," and the lantern-jawed Slocum introduced us.
+
+Drawing his seat up to me, Hayston placed his hand on my shoulder, and
+said with a laugh, looking intensely at Slocum, who was nervously
+twisting his fingers, "Oh! a recruitin' of his health, is he? or rather
+recruitin' of your pocket? I'm glad I dropped in on you and made his
+acquaintance. I could tell him a few droll stories about the pious
+Slocum."
+
+Slocum said nothing, but laughed in a sickly way.
+
+Leaning forward with a smiling face, he said, "What did you clear out of
+my barque, you good Slocum?"
+
+"Nigh on a thousand dollars."
+
+"You know you lie, Slocum! you must have done better than that."
+
+"I kin show my receipts if you come aboard," he answered in shaky tones.
+
+"Well, I'll take your word, you sanctimonious old shark, and five
+hundred dollars for my share."
+
+"Why, sartin, Captain! that's fair and square," said the other, as his
+sallow face lighted up, "I'll give you the dollars to-morrow morning."
+
+"Right you are. Come to the Lick house at ten o'clock. Say, my pious
+friend, what would our good Father Damien think if I told him that
+pretty story about the six Solomon Island people you picked up at sea,
+and sold to a sugar planter?"
+
+The trader's visage turned green, as with a deprecating gesture towards
+me he seemed to implore Hayston's silence.
+
+"Ha! ha! don't get scared. Business matters, my lad," he said, turning
+to me his merry blue eyes, and patting me on the back. "Where are you
+staying here?"
+
+I told him. Then as we were rising to go, speaking to me, and looking
+Slocum in the face, he said, "Don't have any truck with Master Slocum,
+he'll skin you of every dollar you've got, and like as not turn you
+adrift at some place you can't get away from. Isn't that so, my saintly
+friend?"
+
+Slocum flinched like a whipped hound, but said nothing. Then, shaking
+hands with me, and saying if ever I came to the Pacific and dropped
+across him or Captain Ben Peese I should meet a hearty welcome, he
+strode out, with the shambling figure of the down-easter under his lee.
+
+That was the last I saw of the two captains for many a long day, for a
+few days later the _Constitution_ cleared out for Tahiti, and I couldn't
+learn anything more about Hayston. Whether he was then in command of a
+vessel, or had merely come up as passenger in some other ship, I could
+not ascertain. All the bar-keeper knew about him was that he was a
+gentleman with plenty of money and a h--l of a temper, if anybody
+bothered him with questions.
+
+Little I thought at the time that we were fated to meet again, or that
+where we once more forgathered would be under the tropic sun of
+Polynesia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+IN SAMOA
+
+
+From what I have said about Hayston, it will readily be understood that
+every tale relating to him was strangely exciting to my boyish mind. For
+me he was the incarnation of all that was utterly reckless, possibly
+wicked, and of course, as such, possessed a fascination that a better
+man would have failed to inspire.
+
+My hero, however, had disappeared, and with him all zest seemed to have
+gone out of life at Frisco. So after mooning about for a few weeks I
+resolved on returning to Sydney.
+
+My friends on the Pacific slope did their best to dissuade me, trying to
+instil the idea into my head that I was cut out for a merchant prince by
+disposition and intellect. But I heeded not the voice of the charmer.
+The only walk in life for which I felt myself thoroughly fitted was that
+of an armed cruiser through the South Sea Islands. All other vocations
+were tame and colourless in comparison. I could fancy myself parading
+the deck of my vessel, pistol at belt, dagger in sheath, a band of
+cut-throats trembling at my glance, and a bevy of dark-skinned
+princesses ready to die for me at a moment's notice, or to keep the
+flies from bothering, whichever I preferred.
+
+I may state "right here," as the Yankees have it, that I did not become
+a "free trader," though at one time I had a close shave of being run up
+to the yardarm of a British man-of-war in that identical capacity. But
+this came later on.
+
+I returned, therefore, to my native Sydney in due course of time, and as
+a wholesome corrective after my somewhat erratic experiences, was placed
+by my father in a merchant's office. But the colourless monotony became
+absolutely killing. It was awful to be stuck there, adding up columns of
+pounds, shillings, and pence, and writing business letters, while there
+was stabbing, shooting, and all sorts of wild excitement going on "away
+down in the islands."
+
+It was about this time that I made the acquaintance of certain South Sea
+Islanders belonging to whalers or trading vessels. With one of them,
+named George, a native of Raratonga, I became intimate. He impressed me
+with his intelligence, and amused me with his descriptions of island
+life. He had just returned from a whaling voyage in the barque
+_Adventurer_ belonging to the well-known firm of Robert Towns & Company.
+
+So when George, having been paid off in Sydney with a handsome cheque,
+confided to me that he intended going back to the Navigators' Islands,
+where he had previously spent some years, in order to open a small
+trading station, my unrest returned. He had a hundred pounds which he
+wished to invest in trade-goods, so I took him round the Sydney firms
+and saw him fairly dealt with. A week afterwards he sailed to Samoa viâ
+Tonga, in the _Taoji Vuna_, a schooner belonging to King George of that
+ilk.
+
+Before he left he told me that two of his countrymen were trading for
+Captain Hayston--one at Marhiki, and one at Fakaofo, in the Union group.
+Both had made money, and he believed that Captain Hayston had fixed upon
+Apia, the chief port of Samoa, as his head-quarters.
+
+Need I say that this information interested me greatly, and I asked
+George no end of questions. But the schooner was just leaving the wharf
+in tow of a tug, and my dark-skinned friend having shipped as an A. B.,
+was no longer of the "leisure classes." So, grasping my hand, and
+telling me where to hear of him if I ever came to Samoa, we parted.
+
+Before going further let me explain the nature of a Polynesian trader's
+mission.
+
+On the greater number of the islands white men are resident, who act as
+agents for a firm of merchants, for masters of vessels, or on their own
+account. In some cases a piece of ground is rented from the king or
+chief whereon to make the trading station. In others the rulers are paid
+a protection fee. Then, if a trader is murdered, his principal can claim
+blood for blood. This, however, is rarely resorted to. A trader once
+settled on his station proceeds to obtain cocoa-nuts from the natives,
+for which he pays in dollars or "trade." He further employs them to
+scrape the fruit into troughs exposed to the sun, by which process the
+cocoa-nut oil is extracted. Of late years "copra" has taken the place of
+the oil. This material--the dried kernel of the nut--has become far more
+valuable; for when crushed by powerful machinery the refuse is pressed
+into oil-cake, and proved to be excellent food for cattle.
+
+To be a good trader requires pluck, tact, and business capacity. Many
+traders meet their death for want of one or other of these attributes.
+All through the South Seas, more especially in the Line Islands, are to
+be found the most reckless desperadoes living. Their uncontrolled
+passions lead them to commit acts which the natives naturally resent;
+the usual result being that if the trader fails to kill or terrorise
+them, they do society a kindness by ridding it of him. Then comes the
+not infrequent shelling of a native village by an avenging man-of-war.
+And thus civilisation keeps ever moving onwards.
+
+The traders were making fortunes in the South Seas at that time,
+according to George. I returned to business with a mind full of
+projects. The glamour of the sea, the magic attraction of blue water,
+was again upon me; I was powerless to resist. My father smiled. My
+mother and sisters wept afresh. I bowed myself, nevertheless, to my
+fate. In a fortnight I bade my relations farewell--all unworthy as I
+felt myself of their affection. Inwardly exultant, though decently
+uncheerful, I took passage a fortnight later in a barque trading to the
+Friendly and Navigators' Islands. She was called the _Rotumah_,
+belonging to Messrs. M'Donald, Smith, & Company, of Hunter Street,
+Sydney. Her captain was a Canadian named Robertson, of great experience
+in the island trade.
+
+There were two other passengers--a lady going to join her brother who
+was in business at Nukulofa, in Tonga, and a fine old French priest whom
+we were taking to Samoa. The latter was very kind to me, and during our
+passage through the Friendly Islands I was frequently the guest of his
+brother missionaries at their various stations in the groups.
+
+How shall I describe my feelings, landed at last among the charmed isles
+of the South, where I had come to stay, I told myself? Generally
+speaking, how often is there a savour of disappointment, of anticipation
+unrealised, when the wish is achieved! But the reality here was beyond
+the most brilliant mental pictures ever painted. All things were fresh
+and novel; the coral reefs skirting the island shore upon which the surf
+broke ceaselessly with sullen roar; cocoa-palms bowed with their
+feathery crests above a vegetation richly verdurous. The browns and
+yellows of the native villages, so rich in tone, so foreign of aspect,
+excited my unaccustomed vision. Graceful figures, warm and dusky of
+colouring, passed to and fro. The groves of broad leafed bananas; the
+group of white mission houses; the balmy, sensuous air; the transparent
+water, in which the very fish were strange in form and hue,--all things
+soever, land and water, sea and sky, seemed to cry aloud to my eager,
+wondering soul, "Hither, oh fortunate youth, hast thou come to a world
+new, perfect, and complete in itself--to a land of Nature's fondness and
+profuse luxuriance, to that Aïdenn, long lost, mysteriously concealed
+for ages from all mankind."
+
+At the Marist Mission at Tongatabu I was received most kindly by the
+venerable Father Chevron, the head of the Church in Tonga. His had been
+a life truly remarkable. For fifty years he had laboured unceasingly
+among the savage races of Polynesia, had had hairbreadth escapes, and
+passed through deadliest perils. Like many of his colleagues he was
+unknown to fame, dying a few years later, beloved and respected by all,
+yet comparatively "unhonoured and unsung." During the whole course of my
+experiences in the Pacific I have never heard the roughest trader speak
+an ill word of the Marist Brothers. Their lives of ceaseless toil and
+honourable poverty tell their own tale. The Roman Catholic Church may
+well feel proud of these her most devoted servants.
+
+One morning Captain Robertson joined me; the Father seemed pleased to
+see him. On my mentioning how kindly they had treated me, a stranger and
+a Protestant, he replied,--
+
+"Ay, ay, my lad; they are different from most of the missionaries in
+Tonga, anyway, as many a shipwrecked sailor has found. If a ship were
+cast away, and the crew hadn't a biscuit apiece to keep them from
+starving, they wouldn't get so much as a piece of yam from some of the
+reverend gentlemen."
+
+I asked Father Chevron if he knew Captain Peese and Captain Hayston.
+
+"Yes! I am acquainted with both; of the latter I can only say that when
+I met him here I forgot all the bad reports I had heard about him. He
+cannot be the man he is reputed to be."
+
+I was sorry to part with the good Father when the time came to leave.
+But a native messenger arrived next day with a note from the captain,
+who intended sailing at daylight.
+
+So I said farewell and went on board.
+
+We called at Hapai and Vavau, the two other ports of the Friendly
+Islands, sighting the peak of Upolu, in the Navigators', three days
+after leaving the latter place.
+
+We rounded the south-east point of Upolu next day, running in so close
+to the shore that we could see the natives walking on the beaches. Saw a
+whaleboat, manned by islanders and steered by a white man, shoot through
+an opening in the reef opposite Flupata. For him we tarried not, in
+spite of a signal, running in as we were with the wind dead aft, and at
+four o'clock in the afternoon anchored in Apia harbour, opposite the
+American consulate.
+
+The scenery around Apia harbour is beauteous beyond description.
+Spacious bays unfold themselves as you approach, each revealing the
+silvery white-sanded beach fringed with cocoa-palms; stretching afar
+towards the hills lies undulating forest land chequered with the white
+houses of the planters. The harbour itself consists of a horseshoe bay,
+extending from Matautu to Mullinu Point. Fronting the passage a mountain
+rears its summit cloud-enwrapped and half-hidden, narrow paths wind
+through deep gorges, amid which you catch here and there the sheen of a
+mountain-torrent. On the south the land heads in a graceful sweep to
+leeward, until lost in the all-enveloping sea-mists of the tropics,
+while the straggling town, white-walled, reed-roofed, peeps through a
+dark-green grove of the bananas and cocoa-palms which fringe the beach.
+
+At this precise period I paid but little attention to the beauties of
+Apia, for in a canoe paddled by a Samoan boy sat my friend George. I
+hailed him; what a look of joy and surprise rippled over his dark
+countenance as he recognised me! With a few strokes of the paddle the
+canoe shot alongside and he sprang on deck.
+
+"I knew you would come," he said; "I boarded every ship that put in here
+since I landed. Going to live here?"
+
+"I think so, George! I have some money and trade with me; if I get a
+chance I'll start somewhere in Samoa."
+
+He was delighted, and said I would make plenty of money by and by. He
+wouldn't hear of my going to an hotel. I must come with him. He had a
+Samoan wife at Lellepa, a village about a mile from Apia on the Matautu
+side.
+
+It was dark when we landed. As we walked towards his home George pointed
+out a house standing back from the beach, which, he said, belonged to
+Captain Hayston.
+
+That personage had just left Samoa, and was now cruising in the Line
+Islands, where he had a number of traders. He was expected back in two
+months. A short time before I arrived, the American gunboat
+_Narraganset_ had suddenly put in an appearance in Apia where Hayston's
+brig was lying. Her anchor had barely sounded bottom, before an armed
+boat's crew left her side, boarded, took Hayston prisoner, and kept
+possession of the _Leonora_.
+
+There was wild excitement that day in Apia. Many of the residents had a
+strong liking for Hayston and expressed sympathy for him. Others,
+particularly the German element, were jubilant, and expressed a hope
+that he would be taken to America in irons.
+
+The captain of the _Narraganset_ then notified his seizure to the
+foreign consuls, and solicited evidence regarding alleged acts of piracy
+and kidnapping. During this time Hayston was, so the Americans stated,
+in close confinement on board the man-of-war, but it was the general
+opinion that he was treated more as a guest than a prisoner. The trial
+came on at the stated time, but resulted in his acquittal. Either the
+witnesses were unreliable or afraid of vengeance, for nothing of a
+criminal nature could be elicited from them. Hayston was then conducted
+back to his brig, and in half-an-hour he had "dressed ship" in honour
+of the event. The next act was to give his crew liberty--when those
+bright particular stars sallied forth on shore, all more or less drunk,
+in company with the blue jackets from the man-of-war, and immediately
+set about "painting the town red," and looking for the witnesses who had
+testified against their commander. On the next night Hayston gave a ball
+to the officers, and, doubtless, from that time felt his position
+secure, as far as danger from warships of his own country was concerned.
+
+All this was told to me by George as we walked along the track to his
+house, where we arrived just in time for a good supper. The place was
+better built than the ordinary native houses. The floor was covered with
+handsome clean mats on which, on the far end of the room, his wife and
+two daughters by a former marriage were sitting. They seemed so
+delighted at the idea of having me to live with them, that in a few
+minutes I felt quite at home. The evening meal was ready on the mats;
+the smell of roast pork and bread-fruit whetted my appetite amazingly;
+nor was it appeased until George and his wife had helped me to food
+enough to satisfy a boarding-school.
+
+After supper the family gathered round the lamp which was placed in the
+middle of the room. There they went through the evening prayers; a hymn
+was sung, after which a chapter was read from a Samoan Testament,
+followed by a prayer from the master of the house.
+
+I found that the custom of morning and evening prayers was never
+neglected in any Samoan household; for, whether the Samoans are really
+religious or no, they keep up a better semblance of it than many who
+have whiter skins.
+
+That night George, who by the way was called Tuluia by his wife and
+daughters, made plans for our future. As we sat talking the others
+retired to a far corner, where they sat watching us, their big dark eyes
+dilated with interest. We agreed to buy a boat between us and make
+trading trips to the windward port as far as Aleipata. Then after
+smoking a number of "salui" or native cigarettes, we turned in.
+
+All next day we were incommoded by crowds of inquisitive visitors, who
+came to have a look at me and learn why I had come to Samoa--George
+having told them merely that I was his "uo," or friend, treated most of
+them with scant courtesy, explaining that the natives about Apia are
+thorough loafers and beggars, and warning me not to sell any of them my
+"trade" unless I received cash in return. In the afternoon I landed my
+effects, but could scarcely get into the house for the crowds.
+
+George's wife, it appeared, had been so indiscreet as to tell some of
+her relations that I had rifles for sale; as a consequence there were
+fully a hundred men eager to see them. Some had money, others wanted
+credit, others desired loose powder, and kept pointing to a shed close
+by, saying, "Panla pana fanua" (powder for the cannon). I discovered
+that under the shed lay a big gun which Patiole and Asi, two chiefs, had
+bought from Captain Hayston for six hundred dollars, but had run out of
+ammunition.
+
+I had no powder to sell, but George found me a cash buyer for one of my
+Winchesters at seventy-five dollars. I could have sold the other three
+for sixty dollars each, but he advised me to keep them in order to get a
+better price up the coast. It was just on the eve of the second native
+war, so the Samoans were buying arms in large quantities. From some
+Californians' trading vessels they had brought about three hundred
+breech-loaders, and Hayston had sold them the cannon aforesaid, which he
+had brought from China in the _Leonora_.
+
+The chief, Malietoa, had an idea of carrying the war into the enemy's
+country. His plan was to charter a vessel, and take five hundred men to
+Tuvali, the largest island in the group. Hayston had met a deputation of
+chiefs, and told them that for a thousand dollars he would land that
+number of Malietoa's warriors in any part of the group. Moreover, if
+they gave him ten dollars for every shot fired, he would land them under
+cover of four guns. But they were not to bring their arms, and were to
+arrange to have taumualuas, or native boats, to meet the brig off the
+coast and put them on board. This, he explained, was necessary to
+prevent the vessel being seized if they met a man-of-war, and so getting
+him into serious trouble.
+
+The chiefs took this proposition in eagerly at first, but, on thinking
+it over, suspicions arose as to their reaching their destination safely;
+and, finally, after the usual amount of fawning and flattering, in which
+every Samoan is an adept, they told Hayston that they could not raise
+sufficient money, and so the matter ended.
+
+The following months of my sojourn in Samoa passed quickly. George and I
+bought a cutter in which we made several trips to the windward villages,
+whence we ran down to the little island of Manono, situated between
+Upolu and Savaii. There we did a good business, selling our trade for
+cash to the people of Manono, and buying a cargo of yams to take to
+Apia, to sell to the natives there, who were short of food owing to the
+outbreak of hostilities.
+
+On our way up we took advantage of a westerly wind, and made the passage
+inside the reef, calling at the villages of Multifanna and
+Saleimoa--visiting even places with only a few houses nestling amongst
+the cocoa-palms.
+
+We left Saleimoa at dusk, and although we were deeply laden, we made
+good way. Whilst at the village I heard that a large Norwegian ship
+laden with guano had put into Apia, having sprung a leak and run short
+of provisions; also that there was not a yam to be had in the place. Our
+informant was a deserter from a man-of-war, living at Saleimoa. He had
+been tattooed, and was a thorough Samoan in appearance, but was anxious
+to get a passage to New Britain, being afraid to remain longer in his
+present quarters. He was known as "Flash Jack," and was held to be a
+desperate character. After a few drinks he became communicative, telling
+me certain things which he had better have kept to himself. He informed
+me that he intended to ship with Hayston, whose brig was expected daily
+with a hundred recruits for Goddeffroy and Sons' plantations. He advised
+me to keep my yams until the _Leonora's_ cargo of "boys" arrived, as the
+Germans would pay me my own price for them, being short of food for
+their plantation labourers. In another few minutes Jack was drunk, and
+wanted to fight us, when two of his wives came on board, and after
+beating him with pieces of wood, carried him on shore and laid him in
+his bunk.
+
+I determined, however, to take his advice about the yams, and was
+cogitating as to the price I should ask for them, when George, who was
+steering, called my attention to two "taumualuas" full of men, paddling
+quickly in from sea through an opening in the reef.
+
+Not apprehending danger we kept on. Our boat was well known along the
+coast by the Tua Massaga or Malietoa faction, and we merely supposed
+that these boats were coming down from Apia to the leeward ports. It was
+a clear night; George called out the usual Samoan greeting, used when
+canoes meet at night. The next moment we saw them stop paddling, when,
+without a word of warning, we received a volley, the bullets striking
+the cutter in at least twenty places. How we escaped is a mystery.
+George got a cut on the shoulder from a piece of our saucepan, which was
+lying against the mast. It flew to pieces when struck, and I thought a
+shell had exploded.
+
+Flinging ourselves flat on the deck, George called out to the canoes,
+which were now paddling quickly after us, and told them who we were, at
+the same time lowering our jib and foresail. The taumualuas dashed up,
+one on each side. Luckily some of the warriors instantly recognised us.
+They expressed great sorrow, and explained that they had mistaken us for
+a boat bringing up a war party from Savaii.
+
+Every man was armed with a rifle, mostly modelled on the German
+needle-gun, and as they were all in full fighting costume they had a
+striking and picturesque effect. After mutual expressions of regard and
+a general consumption of cigarettes, we gave them a bottle of grog to
+keep out the cold night air, sold them some cartridges from my own
+private stock, and with many a vociferous "To Fa," we sailed away, and
+left them in the passage waiting for the expected invaders.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+SAMOA TO MILLÉ
+
+
+Just as we parted from our warlike friends who had so nearly put an end
+to our cruises, one of the chiefs sang out that a large brig, painted
+white, was out at sea beating up to Apia. Turning his information over
+in my mind, the conviction grew upon me that she must be Hayston's
+vessel, the _Leonora_. It proved to be correct, for as we ran past
+Mulinu Point we saw her entering the passage leading to the harbour. She
+was about a mile distant from us, but I could see that she was a
+beautifully-built vessel, and could well believe the tales of her
+extraordinary speed. The Norwegian guano-man, an immense ship, the _Otto
+and Antoine_, was lying in the roadstead, and as the _Leonora_ came to
+her moorings, we ran up between the two vessels and dropped anchor.
+
+During the next few minutes I received no less than three different
+offers for our sixteen tons of yams. These I declined, and after waiting
+till I perceived that most of the shore visitors had left the brig, I
+took our dingey and pulled aboard.
+
+Captain Hayston was below, and the Chinese steward conducted me into his
+presence. He looked at me steadily for a moment, as if trying to recall
+where he had seen me before, and then after my few words of explanation,
+gave me a hearty welcome to the South Seas.
+
+Having told him how I came to visit Samoa, I offered him my yams, which
+he gladly purchased, paying me a good price for them in United States
+gold coin. This transaction being concluded, he asked me to meet him
+next day, when we could have a good long chat, at the same time desiring
+me to keep secret the fact of our previous meeting. What his reasons
+were I never knew; but as he seemed anxious on this matter, I told him
+that I had seldom mentioned the circumstance, and to no one in Samoa,
+with the exception of my mate Tuluia. I had indeed made few other
+acquaintances.
+
+Although I should much have liked to have had a look round the brig, I
+could see the Captain wished to get on shore, so after shaking hands
+with him I returned to our cutter, where, in a few minutes, the brig's
+longboat came alongside, and we set to work getting out the yams.
+Hayston paid me without demanding to have them weighed, and George's
+dark face was wreathed in smiles when I showed him the money. He
+explained that two tons were very bad, and had they been seen by a
+purchaser would have been rejected.
+
+Although only a Kanaka, George possessed true commercial instincts, and
+I felt sure he would grow rich.
+
+The native war was now at its height, and the lines of the hostile party
+were so close to Matautu, the eastern part of Apia, that bullets were
+whistling over our heads all day long. The yam season being over, and
+the copra trade at a standstill, we gave up the cutter and settled for a
+while on shore. It was during this period that I was a constant visitor
+at the house of Mr. Lewis, the American Consul, where I generally found
+Hayston in company with Captain Edward Hamilton, the pilot, and another
+American, a whisky-loving, kava-drinking old salt, brimful of fun and
+good humour. He had been twenty years in Samoa, and was one of the best
+linguists I ever met with; was known to every native in the group, and
+had been several trips with Hayston to the north-west islands. He
+followed no known occupation, but devoted his time to idling and
+attending native dances.
+
+Many a merry evening we spent together while the _Leonora_ was
+recruiting, and I began to think Hayston was the most entertaining man I
+had ever met. He made no secret of some of his exploits, and in
+particular referred to the way in which he had beaten a certain German
+firm in the way of business, even breaking up their stations in the Line
+Islands. At that time these merchants had acquired a bad name for the
+underhand manner in which they had treated English and American traders;
+and for any man to gain an advantage over them was looked upon as a
+meritorious action.
+
+By many people who cherished animosity against Hayston I had been led at
+first to look upon him as a thorough-going pirate and a bloodthirsty
+ruffian. Yet here I found him, if not respected, at least deemed a fit
+associate for respectable men. Moreover, his word was considered as good
+security in business as another man's bond. I well remember the days
+when he used to visit me at Leliepa, and we amused ourselves with pistol
+practice. He was a wonderful shot, and his skill excited the loud
+applause of the native chiefs. One fat old fellow, known as Pulumakau
+(the bullock), begged him to spend a day now and then in the lines with
+the native forces, and exercise his skill upon the enemy.
+
+One day he took me on board with him in order to show me over the brig.
+He intended to leave in a few days, and I remarked, as we were pulled on
+board, that I should dearly like to have a trip with him some day.
+
+He was silent for a minute, and then replied, "No! I shall be glad
+enough of your company as my guest, as I have taken a fancy to you; but
+it will be better for you to keep clear of me."
+
+When we got on board I was struck with the beautiful order in which the
+vessel was kept, aloft and below; there was not a rope yarn out of
+place. Descending to the cabin I found it splendidly furnished for a
+vessel of her size.
+
+The _Leonora_ was 250 tons register, and had been built for the opium
+trade. During her career in Chinese seas she acquired the reputation of
+being the fastest vessel on the coast. She then carried eight guns. She
+had been several times attacked by pirates, who were invariably beaten
+off with loss. At the time of my visit she carried but one gun, which
+stood on the main deck, Hayston having sold two others of the same
+calibre to the natives. But for this, as far as I could see, she had a
+most peaceful appearance.
+
+On the main deck, just abaft the foc'sle, was a deckhouse divided into
+compartments, forming the cook's galley and boats' crews' quarters,
+together with those belonging to the first and second mates. On the top
+of the house a whale-boat was carried, leaving room for two sentries to
+keep guard, a precaution which I afterwards found was, on certain
+occasions, highly necessary for the vessel's safety. The foc'sle was
+large, for she carried between twenty-five and thirty men. The thing
+that struck me most, however, was the bulkhead, which was loop-holed for
+rifles, so that if any disturbance took place in the forehold, which was
+sometimes filled with Kanaka labourers, the rebels could be shot down
+with ease and accuracy.
+
+The most noticeable things about the gear were the topsails she carried,
+Cunningham's patent, in which there were no reef points. The topsail
+yards revolved, so that you could reef as much as you liked, and all the
+work could be done from the main deck by the down haul. Many captains
+dislike this patent, but it behaved splendidly on the _Leonora_ for all
+that.
+
+The crew, or most of them, were ashore, and only the second mate, the
+Chinese carpenter, the steward, and ship's boys were on board. The mate
+was a muscular Fijian half-caste named Bill Hicks, known as a fighting
+man all over Polynesia. A native girl, called Liva, was sitting on the
+main hatch making a bowl of kava.
+
+"Halloa! Liva," said the Captain, as we passed along the deck, "I
+thought you were married to one of the Dutch clerks at Goddeffroy's?"
+
+"Avoe, lava, alii." "Quite true, Captain, but I've come to stay with
+Bill for a week."
+
+The Captain and second mate laughed, and next day I learned that Bill
+had gone to the clerk's house at Matafele, the German quarter of the
+town, and though there were other Germans present, told Liva to pack up
+her clothes and come with him. She, nothing loth, did as he told her,
+and the Germans, seeing mischief in the half-caste's eye, offered no
+opposition.
+
+The departure of the _Leonora_ took place a few days afterwards, and I
+accepted the position of supercargo in a ketch which the junior partner
+of one of the principal firms in Samoa wished to send to the Marshalls
+to be sold. I expressed my doubts of her sea-worthiness for so long a
+voyage. However, he said there was no danger, as it would be a fine
+weather passage all the way through, adding that the king of Arnu, or
+Arrowsmith's Island, had commissioned Captain Hayston to buy a vessel
+for him in Samoa.
+
+I thought his proposition over, and next day stated my willingness to
+undertake the venture, the owners promising to put the vessel in repair
+as soon as possible. She was hauled up to the beach in front of the
+British consulate, where for the next few weeks carpenters were at work,
+patching up and covering her rotten bottom with a thick coating of
+chunam. Notwithstanding these precautions no one except old Tapoleni,
+the Dutch skipper, could be induced to take charge of her.
+
+During the time she was on the beach I made a trip to the beautiful
+village of Tiavea, doing a week's trading and pigeon shooting. On my
+return I found the town in a high state of excitement owing to a
+succession of daring robberies of the various stores. Strong suspicions
+were entertained with respect to a herculean American negro, known as
+Black Tom, who kept an extremely disorderly hotel where seamen were
+known to be enticed and robbed.
+
+The old vessel was launched at last, and, to the manifest surprise of
+everybody, refrained from springing a leak. Things might easily have
+been worse; for what with the great age of her timber and the thickness
+of her hull the carpenters were barely able to make the copper hold.
+
+Next day we took in our stores. I was surprised at the casks of beef,
+tins of biscuits, and quantities of other provisions put on board, and
+thought the owners extremely liberal. This favourable state of feeling
+lasted till we were well at sea, when I discovered all the beef to be
+bad, and the remainder of the stores unfit for any well-brought-up pig.
+When everything was aboard the owners gave me the following document:--
+
+ APIA, _3rd December, 187 _.
+
+ Dear Sir,--You will proceed to Millé, Mulgrave Island, for the
+ purpose of selling the ketch _E. A. Wilson_. You will find
+ Captain Hayston there waiting for you; so you will please
+ consult with him, as he is acquainted with the parties who wish
+ to purchase her. Try to obtain oil and copra to the amount of
+ £500 for the vessel. Ship whatever produce you may get on board
+ the _Leonora_, and get Captain Hayston to sign bills of lading.
+ Do not sell the chronometer unless you get a good price for it.
+ Sell the few things you take to the best advantage; none of the
+ Samoans are to remain, but must come back to Apia. Have the
+ ketch painted on your arrival at Millé. Wishing you a prosperous
+ and speedy voyage.--We are, etc.,
+
+ BASCOM & CO.
+
+I quote this letter _in extenso_, for later on it plays an important
+part in my narrative. Having carefully read it Mr. Bascom shook hands
+with me, wished me a pleasant voyage, and departed. I went aboard, the
+vessel being already hove short, and, as I thought, only waiting my
+arrival to sail.
+
+Things looked much otherwise as I stepped on deck. The skipper was drunk
+and helpless. The decks were thronged with shore natives--men and women
+nearly all crying and half drunk, bidding farewell to one or other of
+the crew.
+
+The mate, Jim Knowles, was a Tongan half-caste, who was afterwards
+hanged in Fiji for shooting Larsen, one of the Messrs. Goddeffroy's
+captains, dead on his own ship. He was the only sober man on board. He
+told me that one of Tapoleni's friends had come on board, and that she
+had been stowed away by that worthy, who swore that he would not leave
+her behind. To this Maa Maa I had a particular aversion, and always
+hated to see her come on board. She was ugly enough in all conscience,
+and had always been said to be the cause of quarrels and fights whenever
+the skipper took her on a trip. Taking Knowles with me, we lugged her on
+deck screaming and biting. As she refused to get into a canoe, Knowles
+threw her overboard, where some sympathising friends picked her up.
+
+Just as this incident terminated I received a note from the owners,
+telling me to delay the vessel's departure for half-an-hour. Wondering
+what was in the wind, I set about restoring order. I found a lot of
+liquor in the foc'sle, which I took aft and locked up. Then with
+Knowles' aid I succeeded in clearing the decks of the women and shore
+loafers, who were lying about in all stages of intoxication.
+
+At eleven o'clock we saw two boats pulling off from the shore, and
+noticed armed Samoans among the crews. As they came alongside I saw
+seated in one of them the figures of Black Tom and his son Johnny, both
+heavily ironed. In the stern sat his Samoan wife, a woman named Musia. A
+number of white residents were in charge of the lot, and I was informed
+that at an impromptu mass meeting, held that morning, it had been
+decided to expatriate Tom and his family for the good of the country;
+they had seized this favourable opportunity of carrying their resolution
+into effect.
+
+This was a pretty state of affairs. I need scarcely explain my
+indignation at having two such characters as Black Tom and his son
+foisted on me as passengers. I was about to get into a boat and let them
+carry their own prisoners away, when I was told that I could land him
+and his family at the first land we made. This would be Quiros Island,
+bearing N.N.W. from Apia.
+
+"All right, gentlemen," I replied, "and as everybody here happens to be
+drunk, I'll feel obliged if you will be good enough to lift the anchor
+and let us get away."
+
+Tom and his family were accordingly put in the hold, and the new-comers
+having got the anchor up bade me farewell, chuckling at having rid
+themselves of Black Tom so cleverly. Whereupon they got into the boats
+and pulled ashore.
+
+It was blowing stiffly as we ran through the passage, and certainly we
+presented a pretty spectacle, with our running gear all in disorder, and
+the crew drunk in the lee scuppers. I had the keys of the prisoners'
+irons, so giving the tiller to Knowles, I went below and liberated them.
+
+"Tom," I said, "my instructions are to keep you in irons till we made
+the first land. Now, I've got nothing against you, but I don't want your
+company, and I consider I was served a shabby trick when they put you on
+board. I mean to be even with them. They said the first land. Now, I'll
+stand on this tack till midnight; then I'll put about and land you on
+the coast."
+
+The negro's bloodshot eyes showed blind fury when I first approached
+him, but his look softened as I spoke. He laughed, evidently enjoying my
+suggestion.
+
+"Thank you, sir, for taking the bracelets off us, but I don't care about
+landing in Samoa again, and I'll face the voyage with you. You're the
+first man that's spoke a kind word to me since I was rushed and tied in
+my own house--treated like a wild beast, and, by ----! I'll do any
+mortal thing in this world for you."
+
+He then begged me not to land him at Quiros, but to let him remain on
+board until we met Captain Hayston who, he was sure, would give him a
+trading station. I promised him this, and in return, being a splendid
+cook, he provided me during the remainder of the voyage with all sorts
+of sea delicacies.
+
+I will not speak of the dangers of that wearisome voyage; the
+drunkenness that I tried in vain to suppress; the erratic course we made
+to our destination. The skipper sobered up every two or three days, took
+the sun, worked out the ship's position, and let me steer any course I
+liked. Then he would fly to his bottle of "square-face," until I thought
+it necessary to rouse him again in order to ascertain our whereabouts.
+At last, after a forty-two days' passage, we sighted the low-lying coral
+islands enclosing the spacious lagoon of Millé.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE BRIG LEONORA
+
+
+The island of Millé is situated in the Radac or eastern portion of the
+Marshall group, discovered by a captain of that name in 1788. On the
+charts it bears the name of the Mulgrave Lagoon, and the reason is not
+far to seek. For the most part the islands of Polynesia are of volcanic
+origin, whilst the lagoons, which sometimes pass for islands, are
+exclusively of coral formation. The minute insects which form them build
+their submarine wall in a circle, which growing for ages, until it rises
+at low water above sea-level, gradually collects sand and debris, when
+it decomposes and becomes a solid. Then comes a day when wandering
+cocoa-nuts float to it and take up their abode on its shores. Gradually
+a ring of land is formed, varying in width, covered with a wreath of
+palms, sheltering within its circumference a peaceful sea, into which
+access is attainable by scattered channels only.
+
+The spot we had reached was of this description.
+
+Day was breaking when we first sighted the tops of the cocoa-palms, and
+putting the ketch dead before the wind we ran down to the passage. On
+going aloft I was glad to see the spars of a vessel showing about three
+miles distant. As none of the crew had ever visited the place before, we
+lay to and fired a gun. In about half-an-hour we saw a boat pulling
+towards us, with a tall man standing up steering. It was Hayston.
+Jumping aboard he shook me warmly by the hand, and said, "So you see
+we've met again! What sort of passage did you have?"
+
+I recounted our misfortunes, adding the information that the ketch
+leaked terribly.
+
+"Oh! that's just like Bascom," he remarked. "He told me that he'd send
+her down as sound as a bell. I never had a chance of looking at her when
+she was on the beach at Apia, and I certainly thought he would act
+squarely with me. But we'll talk business by and by."
+
+He now took command of the ketch, and brought us into the lagoon, where
+we dropped anchor in ten fathoms alongside the brig. I then formally
+handed over my vessel to him, and wished the king of Arnu joy of his
+bargain. After receiving full particulars of the voyage, he called the
+skipper aft.
+
+"Well, Captain Westendorf," he said, "you have most fortunately reached
+here safely, but more through good luck than good management. I know you
+to be an experienced and capable navigator, so that had you attended to
+your duty you would have made Millé ten or fifteen days, earlier. Now,
+you can go ashore and live with my trader till you get a passage back to
+Samoa, for I'll be hanged if I take you back. As for your crew, I don't
+want them either; you can take them with you or turn them adrift. The
+ketch I intend to leave here until I return from Ascension; but mark
+this--_and you know me_--don't attempt to board her during my absence;
+good day!"
+
+I felt sorry at seeing the good-natured "Tapoleni" so humiliated; for
+with the exception of that one failing which has obscured brighter
+intellects, and which was the cause of all his troubles, he was a
+thoroughly honest old fellow.
+
+Black Tom and his wife elected to remain at Millé until they found a
+suitable island on which to open a trading station. They parted from me
+with many professions of gratitude which I think were sincere. He
+afterwards became a wealthy man--such are fortune's vagaries in the
+islands; his son Johnny earnestly begged me to intercede with Captain
+Hayston on his account, and not to leave him on shore at Millé. I made
+the request, and the Captain told him to come aboard the _Leonora_.
+
+During the afternoon Hayston and I went over the ketch in order to
+inspect the stores, gear, etc., when he asked me, now that my
+responsibility had ended, what were my intentions as to future
+movements? I told him I proposed to charter a native canoe for Arnu,
+there to await a passing vessel and a passage to Samoa. From this
+course, however, he dissuaded me, pointing out that I might have to stay
+there six months. He then offered me the position of supercargo on his
+brig at a fair salary, pressing for an immediate answer.
+
+Thinking it better to be earning money than leading a life of idleness
+among the natives, I consented. "I accept your offer, Captain," I said;
+"but there is one thing I wish you to understand, I am coming with you,
+not for the sake of the pay, but because I don't want to loaf about the
+Marshall group like a beach-comber, and, moreover, I should like to
+visit the Carolines. I don't particularly want to return to Samoa, and
+if I see a place I like I'll start trading. Now, I am willing to do duty
+as supercargo, even without pay, but I won't lend a hand in any
+transaction that I don't like the look of. So at our first difference
+you can set me ashore."
+
+Hayston looked me straight in the face and held out his hand--"Well,
+now, that's a fair deal. I give you my word that I won't ask you to join
+in anything doubtful. The traders round here are the greatest scoundrels
+unhung, and I have to treat them as they treat me. My books are in a bad
+state, and you'll find work enough putting them straight; but I'll be
+glad of your company aboard, even if you never do a hand's turn." So
+the bargain was closed. I got my chest from the hold and sent it aboard
+the brig; the steward receiving instructions that I was to occupy the
+port side of the cabin. At dusk Hayston gave some of the crew liberty,
+and sent the rest with the mates to haul the ketch in and beach her as
+the tide was full. While he stood watching her from the brig's deck, he
+suddenly remarked that they were making a mess of it, and calling two
+boys to bring the dingey alongside, he was pulled into the shore.
+
+There was a number of young women on board, natives of the Kingsmill
+group, good-looking, but wild in appearance. I was on deck and they were
+below, where I heard them laughing and talking, and saw they were seated
+on the lounge that ran round the cabin. They all seemed very merry over
+a game, much like "knucklebones," which they were playing with shells. A
+large canoe was bearing down on us from one of the islands in the
+lagoon, and just as she ran up in the wind ahead of us, allowing the
+topsail to drift down alongside, I heard a man's voice mingling with the
+girls'.
+
+I was going forward to have a close look at the canoe, when I saw the
+Captain close alongside in the dingey. He had sailed out to the brig,
+having let the two boys remain on shore to assist at the ketch. Just as
+he stepped over the sail, the owner of the voice I had heard ran out of
+the cabin. Hayston gripped him by the arm, and I heard him sing out,
+"What, would you knife me?" The next minute the man was seized in the
+powerful arms, lifted high above his head, and then dashed upon the
+deck, where he lay perfectly still.
+
+The Captain disappeared in the cabin, and running up I lifted the man's
+head. His back and neck seemed broken, and though I called loudly no one
+came from below. There were a lot of Arunai natives in the hold sleeping
+and smoking, but they took no notice of my calls, which, as I didn't
+know a word of their language, did not surprise me. The canoe had now
+come alongside, and the Captain reappeared upon deck. The chief seemed
+pleased to see him, and then a lot of natives clambered on board and
+carried the wounded man aboard their barque.
+
+Having given them eight or ten pounds of tobacco, Hayston told them,
+partly in English and partly in the Millé dialect, that the man was
+shamming dead, and if he woke up on board they could chuck him overboard
+and let him swim. Then they hoisted sail again and stood away.
+
+I felt horrified, for, although the Captain was certainly justified in
+defending himself from a man armed with a knife, I was shocked at
+witnessing the result. He, however, insisted that the fellow was only
+"foxing," and so the matter ended. When the boats returned from the
+ketch, I heard the women remark to the sailors that Siāké (Jack) had run
+away in a canoe, because "Kaptin" had beat him.
+
+At daylight next morning we got under weigh, and I was astonished at the
+manner in which Hayston handled the brig through the narrow passage.
+After accomplishing this feat, we bore away for Ujillong, and the
+steward called us to breakfast.
+
+Our destination was the almost unknown chain of coral islets forming
+Ujillong or Providence Island. Some fifteen months previously, Hayston
+had discovered a passage through the reef there, and sailed his brig in.
+He was delighted with the security afforded by the magnificent lagoon
+inside. The islets were covered with cocoa-nuts, and he at once decided
+upon forming a principal trading station there, making it a centre from
+whence he could work the islands in the North Pacific. There were only
+thirty natives on the whole lagoon, and with these he succeeded in
+establishing friendly relations, setting them to work in erecting
+dwelling-houses and oil-sheds.
+
+We left in charge two white men named Jerry Jackson and Whistling Bill,
+together with a number of Line Island natives who were to assist in
+making oil. Hayston told me he intended to settle there himself and
+cruise among the Carolines and Marshalls, whilst Captain Peese, his
+colleague, would run a small vessel to China, making Ujillong his
+headquarters. On this occasion he expected to find that a large quantity
+of oil had been made in his absence, and was anxious to get there as
+quickly as possible.
+
+During the day I had leisure to observe the crew, and considering that
+none of them were white men, the way in which the brig was worked was
+simply admirable. They treated the officers with great freedom of
+manner, but before the Captain they seemed absolutely to cower. There
+being some thirty of them they were by no means over-worked. They were
+allowed as much liquor as they chose to buy at a dollar a bottle for
+gin, beer at fifty cents, and rum at a dollar. With such license one
+would naturally think that insubordination would be rife. It was not so.
+But though they never broke out at sea, when once the brig anchored they
+became fiends incarnate. Gambling and drinking then commenced. The
+sounds of oaths, yells, and blows floated up from the foc'sle, mingling
+with the screams of the women, and the night was made horrible with
+their din.
+
+Individual members of the crew of this strange vessel I shall describe
+later on--for the present _place aux dames_! Every officer had a native
+wife, and the Chinese carpenter two. Most of these women were natives of
+Arurai or Hope Island, one of the Kingsmill group. They were darker in
+complexion than the other Polynesians, and prone to violent jealousy of
+their protectors. It was by no means uncommon to see two of these girls
+fighting like demons on the main deck with their national weapons,
+wooden daggers set round with shark's teeth, while blood poured in
+streams from their lacerated limbs and bodies. There were several girls
+from Ocean and Pleasant Island, near the equator. Very good-looking
+were these last, and fair as to complexion. The principal belle, whose
+name was Nellie, was a very handsome half-caste--a native of Hope
+Island. Her father, a deserter from a whaler, had acquired such
+influence with the natives that they made him a war chief. He led them
+when they cut off an American whaler and killed the whole crew.
+Discarding civilised clothing, he became a native in all but colour, and
+finally met his death in a skirmish with a hostile tribe. This girl was
+his daughter, and had been given as a present to Hayston by the king of
+Arurai. Along with her beauty she had a violent and dangerous temper,
+and was never backward in using her knife on any woman that provoked
+her.
+
+We had merely dropped Millé astern of us, when Hayston changed his mind
+about going to Arurai, and bore away to Pleasant Island. He told me that
+he had forgotten a promise made to the traders there to bring them
+supplies, but that he would call at Providence on our way back from the
+Carolines.
+
+Pleasant Island (or Naura) is generally considered one of the Gilbert
+group, although it is far to the leeward, and the natives, together with
+those of Ocean Island (or Paanup), consider themselves a distinct
+people. The former island is in latitude 0.25 S., longitude 167.5 E.,
+and the latter in latitude 0.505, longitude 169.30 E.
+
+"We've got a bully breeze," said the Captain; "and there is a straight
+run of five hundred miles before we sight the cocoa-nuts on Pleasant
+Island. I'll show you what the _Leonora_ can do."
+
+Our course was something about S.W. by W., the wind increasing in
+strength as we put the helm up for Pleasant Island, and during the
+afternoon, so quickly was the brig slipping through the water, that
+Hayston said we should do the distance--four hundred and ninety-five
+miles--in forty-eight hours. I was astonished at the rate we travelled,
+and the Captain himself seemed pleased. Calling the hands aft, he gave
+them a glass of grog all round, and told the women to go on the main
+deck and dance. This created considerable amusement, for as the brig was
+running dead before the wind, and occasionally giving rolls, the dancers
+losing their balance got some heavy falls into the scuppers, while the
+others laughed and enjoyed their misfortunes.
+
+We ran up under the leeside of the island just forty-four hours after
+leaving Millé, a trifle over eleven knots an hour. In a few minutes we
+were boarded by the traders, of whom there were six. They were certainly
+a rough lot. As each man lived under the protection of a particular
+chief, the island being divided into six districts, there was the
+keenest business rivalry among them.
+
+Hayston called them down below, when they were soon pretty well drunk.
+
+They had plenty of dollars, and bought largely of arms and ammunition. I
+was employed, with the second mate, in getting up the guns, principally
+Snider rifles, from the lazarette. I called to them, one by one, to come
+and pick what they wanted; however they seemed quite satisfied to let me
+give them what I liked.
+
+The brig was standing off and on, close into the land, in charge of the
+boatswain, the mate being ill; Hayston was singing "The Zouave," and the
+traders were applauding uproariously, whilst two were dancing with
+Nellie and Sara, shouting and yelling like lunatics. The only one that
+was sober was a fine young fellow who seemed ill, and was supported by a
+native. This young fellow paid me for the arms bought by his comrades,
+saying, "They're all drunk now, and as I don't go in for that kind of
+thing myself, they've got me to do this business for them." The man who
+was dancing with Sara had a bag of dollars in his hand, and as he
+waltzed round the cabin he kept swinging it about and striking the
+woodwork of the cabin.
+
+Carl, the sick man, called out to him, "I say, Ned, let me have that
+money now, I'm settling up for you." Swinging the bag of dollars round,
+Ned sent it full at liberty, and struck Carl in the chest, knocking him
+down. I picked him up, and thought by the pallor of his face that he was
+either killed or seriously injured.
+
+The native who was with him called to some of his comrades, and a young
+woman came down and took his head in her lap, while I got a decanter of
+water. After a while he came round, and told me he was not much hurt,
+but that the bag of money was heavy and had bruised his chest greatly.
+
+"You dog," he said, getting up and walking over to the other man, who
+was now sitting at the table talking to the Captain, "as sure as my
+name's Carl I'll make you suffer for this."
+
+"Come, come," said Hayston, "it was only Ned's rough play. I don't think
+he meant to hurt you. Besides, I don't want to see white men fighting on
+board my ship."
+
+"Look here, Captain," said he, pulling off his shirt, "look at my body,
+and tell me if Ned thought me a fit subject for a joke."
+
+It makes me shudder now. There was an awful gash on his back, extending
+from his right shoulder to below the ribs on the right side. It was
+roughly sewn up here and there, and seemed to be healing, but the blow
+on the chest had made it bleed anew; a dark stream was soaking down his
+leg to the ground.
+
+"By heaven! that is a terrible cut," said the Captain; "how in thunder
+did you get mauled like that?"
+
+Carl, who was still very faint, told us that some time ago he had a
+fight with a native, and licked him. One night, as he was lying face
+downward on his mat, this man crept into his hut and struck him with a
+shark tooth sword. His native wife, who was coming into the house at
+the time, carrying two shells of toddy, dropped them, and flinging her
+arms round the man's legs, tripped him up, and held him, while Carl, all
+smothered in blood, shot him dead with his revolver.
+
+"Ned!" said the Captain gravely, when Carl's tale was told, "did you
+know this young fellow had this gash in his back when you hove the bag
+at him?"
+
+"Of course I did! why, d--n him, can't he take a joke? Naura's a rough
+shop for a man that can't stand a bit of fun."
+
+"Put up your hands, you cowardly dog!" said the Captain, and in an
+instant the drunken traders cleared a space. "I'll teach you to hurt a
+wounded man."
+
+Ned was as big a man as the Captain, and seemed to be the leading spirit
+of the gang. But the other traders, though armed with navy revolvers and
+derringers, did not seem inclined to interfere.
+
+At the first round the big trader went down like a bullock, and lay on
+the cabin floor apparently lifeless. Hayston was like a mad animal when
+he tried to get him up, and the man fell helpless. Picking him up in his
+arms like a child, he carried him on deck, the rest of us following.
+
+"Here! Naura men, where's Ned's boat?" he called out.
+
+It was towing astern, and some one having hauled it up, Hayston dropped
+the man into it like a log of wood.
+
+Then his good temper returned instantly, and he paid Carl every
+attention, insisting on dressing his wound. We remained out by Pleasant
+Island all day, and shipped a lot of oil, for which Hayston paid the
+traders in arms and ammunition; we then stood away for Ocean Island.
+
+I learned that Carl had been a petty officer on board the U.S. cruiser
+_Wish-ton-wish_, but had deserted and made his way to Pleasant Island.
+He seemed superior to his companions in every way, and I was glad to be
+able to give him some books.
+
+He told me that he belonged to the New England States, but that he could
+never return, and would put a bullet through his head rather than be
+taken back a disgraced man. I bade him farewell with regret, and learned
+two years afterwards that, a month after I saw him, he had blown his
+brains out, as the U.S. corvette _Rowena_ touched at the island. Poor
+Carl! How many a tale of wasted life, of reckless deeds, and early
+death, could every island of the South Sea tell.
+
+Although Hayston was an utterly reckless man in most matters, he was by
+no means foolhardy where the lives of others were concerned. During the
+time we spent at Pleasant Island every precaution was taken against a
+surprise.
+
+All the crew carried revolvers, and two men were posted in the fore and
+main-tops armed with Winchesters. The natives of this island had cut off
+many ships in past years, and were now so well armed and determined that
+the utmost caution was needed.
+
+It was here that I met an American named Maule--about as hard a specimen
+of an old style South Sea trader as one could fall across. He was
+extremely anxious that I should purchase two native girls from him. They
+were under his charge. It seems their father had been killed, and his
+own wife objected to their presence in his house.
+
+I told him that I was supercargo, and therefore could not speculate on
+my own account. Besides, that sort of traffic was entirely out of my
+line. If he had curios, weapons, or Naura gods, I would deal, but there
+I drew the line.
+
+"Well, blame my cats! if you ain't too disgustin' partickler! Want to
+stuff yer cabin with kyurosities and graven images, instead of dellikit
+young women. Now, lookee hyar--jest you take them two gals o' mine for
+thirty dollars, and you'll jest double your money from king Abinoka.
+He's jest mad after Naura girls, and buys 'em up by the dozen."
+
+Finding that I wouldn't invest, he tried the Captain, telling him that
+the girls were anxious to get away from Pleasant Island, as their father
+was dead, and having no brothers, they could not get food enough from
+the people. His wife was jealous too, and had beaten them.
+
+"Well, well!" said the Captain, "bring them aboard, and I'll give them a
+passage somewhere. I suppose by and by you'll tell some man-of-war
+captain that I stole them." So the trader sent them on board, and
+received in exchange some boats' gear and a keg of molasses.
+
+The girls went aft, and remained with the others in the cabin for a few
+days. When we sighted Ocean Island, Hayston called me on deck, and said,
+"Come and see a bit of fun."
+
+Old Mary was told to bring up her flock. The two Pleasant Island girls
+came up with the rest. They were about fourteen and fifteen years of
+age, and, from their close similarity, probably the children of the same
+mother--a somewhat unusual thing in the Gilbert group. They seemed
+frightened at being called up, and clung closely to Sara and Nellie.
+Their hair, Pleasant Island fashion, hung down straight upon their
+backs, and was carefully oiled and combed. A girdle of Pandanus leaf was
+their only garment. Speaking kindly to them, the Captain asked them if
+they would like to go ashore there and live. I give the conversation.
+
+_Captain._--"Well, will you go ashore here?"
+
+_Girls._--"Are there plenty of cocoa-nuts and fish?"
+
+_Captain._--"Pretty fair; but there are not always plenty."
+
+_Girls._--"What chiefs will take us and give us food?"
+
+_Captain._--"I don't know--there are more women there than men. All the
+young men have gone away in whaleships."
+
+_Girls._--"That's bad; the Ocean Island women will soon kill us
+strangers."
+
+_Captain._--"Most likely. Would you like to stay on the ship if I get
+you husbands?"
+
+_Girls._--"Yes! where are they?"
+
+_Captain._--"Boatswain, send Sunday and boy George here."
+
+These were two boys who had been sailing with Hayston for some years.
+Both were about sixteen. Of George I will speak later on. Having come
+aft, the Captain, addressing them, said he was pleased at their
+steadiness, and as a reward for their good conduct, he had at great
+expense procured them wives, whom he hoped they would treat well. His
+speech was a humorous one, and the crew standing round grinned
+approvingly--Sunday and boy George being, apparently, looked upon as
+lucky youths, for the girls were undeniably good-looking. In fact, I
+never saw an ill-looking Pleasant islander.
+
+"Now, Terau and N'jilong, you must draw lots for first pick. Carpenter,
+bring me two splinters of wood."
+
+They were instructed by the other native girls how to draw lots, the
+result being that Terau picked boy George, and her sister took Sunday.
+
+"Steward!" commanded Hayston, "bring up a couple of bottles of grog. And
+you, Sunday and boy George! before you begin your married life just
+listen to me! Call all hands aft!"
+
+The crew came aft, and the Captain, who now seemed quite serious, said,
+"Now, boys, I have given these girls to Sunday and boy George. Don't let
+me hear of any one attempting to interfere with them, and if one of you
+puts his head into the boys' house while the girls are there alone, I'll
+make it warm for him. There's a couple of bottles of grog for the watch
+to drink their healths, and the steward has two more for the watch
+below. For'ard now, and you, boys, go and ask the supercargo for some
+cloth to rig your girls out with."
+
+The _Leonora_ was certainly a very sociable and domesticated ship.
+
+We lay off and on at Ocean Island for a day or two, and engaged
+twenty-seven natives to proceed to Ponapé (Ascension Island) to work for
+Cappelle and Milne, a German firm. Then we made an easterly course to
+Taputanea (or Drummond Island), one of the Gilbert group, where Hayston
+had a trader.
+
+The Drummond islanders are notorious throughout the Pacific for
+treachery and ferocity. They frequently cut off vessels, and murder all
+hands, being led on these occasions by renegade white men. When
+Commodore White's ships visited this spot in 1842 they murdered one of
+his seamen. A fight ensued, in which many were killed, and the town of
+Utiroa was laid in ashes. But the lesson had no great effect, and
+Hayston told me that they would not hesitate to attempt the capture of
+any vessel that could not make a good resistance.
+
+We sighted the island at night-time, and lay off Utiroa till daylight.
+Then after putting the brig in a state of defence, and giving the
+command to the Fiji half-caste, Bill, telling him also to shoot a
+certain native if he saw him come alongside, Hayston had the longboat
+and whaleboat lowered.
+
+Into the former he put a great quantity of trade, principally gin, rum,
+and firearms, giving me charge of the latter to cover him. I had six men
+with me, each armed with a Vetterlich rifle, and I carried my own
+Winchester--eighteen shot. Hayston gave me full instructions how to act
+if he was attacked; then we made for the town of Utiroa, the boats
+keeping alongside of each other. As we were pulling Hayston told me that
+he wished to get ashore before the canoes left, in order to interview
+his trader Jim in the presence of the people. This fellow, it appeared,
+was a fighting man who had great influence over the Drummond Island
+natives, with whom bloodshed and murder were acts of everyday
+occurrence. He always aided them in their tribal fights, and evinced a
+partiality for taking life that had won their warmest admiration.
+Hayston had brought him from Ponapé, where he was the terror of the
+white men, swaggering about the ports of the island, and using his
+pistol on any one that resented his conduct. But he was a good trader
+for all that, and had been placed in this trust because no other man
+could be found willing to risk his life among such a treacherous race.
+
+Jim had not been installed a week at Utiroa, when a chief named Tabirau
+gave him one of his daughters for a wife, and was paid for her in trade
+according to custom. Shortly afterwards the girl ran home again, saying
+that the white man had beaten her for spoiling a razor.
+
+Jim took his rifle, went to his father-in-law's house, and demanded the
+girl back. A number of natives followed up, anticipating that he would
+be killed, for Tabirau was a chief of note, not averse to the
+extermination of white men. As they expected, he refused to give up the
+girl unless Jim paid more trade, alleging that one of the muskets paid
+for her was no good. Without a moment's hesitation the trader shot him
+through the body, killing him instantly, and then clubbed the girl to
+death with the butt end of his rifle.
+
+Instead of being murdered by the natives for this atrocious deed, he was
+looked upon as a hero, and all Tabirau's land, canoes, and property were
+made over to him. The people of Utiroa elected him to be their
+commercial ruler, refusing to sell oil or produce to any ship without
+his advice or consent. For a while his conduct had quite satisfied
+Hayston, until he learned that Jim had sold a lot of his oil to a
+Californian trader, boasting, besides, that Hayston dared not bring him
+to task for it.
+
+It was now the Captain's intention to assert his authority, and break
+the trader's power over the natives. For this purpose he determined to
+meet him on shore, and let the natives see which was the better man.
+
+As we approached the beach we saw fully five hundred natives assembled;
+all were armed, and many dressed in their thick armour of fibre, and
+wearing helmets of the skin of the porcupine fish. There was great
+excitement among them, though many of them seemed glad to see Hayston,
+calling out "Tiaka po, Kaptin" (How do you do). The main body, however,
+seemed ready to dispute our landing.
+
+"Keep close up!" the Captain called out to me, "and don't let any of
+them see your arms, but be ready to drop it into them the first shot
+that is fired. But, for God's sake, don't miss. That villain Jim, you
+see, isn't here, though; those fellows mean mischief. However, land I
+must, and will." He then told the crew to run the boat on the beach, and
+standing up in the stern, called out to natives that he knew, pretending
+to see nothing unusual in their manner. At the moment that he stepped on
+the beach the whole body of natives formed in solid line in front of
+him, while hundreds of rifle muzzles were almost thrust in his face. He
+looked steadily at them, and commenced to talk with his hands in his
+trousers' pocket.
+
+I forgot my instructions, and my crew seemed equally excited at the
+Captain's danger, for, without being told, they ran the whaleboat ashore
+and we all jumped out. The men in the other boat were standing up rifle
+in hand, and they followed us.
+
+The Captain was speaking calmly to the natives, when he turned and saw
+me. "For God's sake, go back to the boats," he said, in a quiet tone;
+then raising his hand threateningly and roaring like a lion, he repeated
+the order in the Drummond Island dialect. I understood this hint, so we
+ran back, but kept our arms ready. Hayston's order to me seemed to have
+a good effect, for the fierce looks of the natives relaxed, and soon
+afterwards he called out that it was all right, and told me to give him
+two muskets and a box of tobacco out of the longboat. This was a present
+for two of the principal chiefs, who now shook hands with him, saying
+that Jim was in his house, and had told them that if Captain Hayston put
+his foot inside he would shoot him. Our former opponents seemed pretty
+equally divided in their opinions. Half of them were eager to see the
+fight between Jim and the Captain, and the others were ready to massacre
+the whole of us if but a single act of hostility was committed on either
+side.
+
+Hayston ordered me then to come with him, and asked the natives'
+permission to allow me to bring my Winchester, as I was frightened of
+them. The boats were shoved out, the crew being told to jump ashore if
+they heard any firing, and fight their way to Jim's house. As I joined
+the Captain on the beach he told me that the natives thought he meant to
+kill Jim, and that they had felt him all over to see if he had concealed
+any arms, but that they seemed satisfied when they found none. I was
+astonished at his recklessness in not bringing weapons, and as we were
+escorted along the road by the natives, I told him that I had a
+derringer hidden among some tobacco in a canvas bag slung round my
+waist.
+
+"No, no!" he said. "It will never do to see you give it to me now.
+Besides, I don't want any shooting if I can help it. There are many of
+these natives who will be glad to see Jim's power broken, and I want to
+get my hands on him before he puts a bullet into me. The rest is easy
+enough. If you see him taking a shot at me before I come up to him, you
+can use that rifle; but don't kill him if you can help it, and don't be
+alarmed about yourself. Take hold of this old nigger's hand who is
+walking beside you and you'll be all right. Just keep laughing and
+talking."
+
+After a long walk we got up to the trader's house, and here the natives
+made a halt. I was beginning to feel horribly scared, and wished we were
+on board the brig again. Presently we were told that Jim was inside, and
+would not come out because he was sick. Walking steadily forward the
+Captain advanced to within a few feet of the house, and called out,
+"Well, this is a nice sort of welcome, Jim! Come out and show yourself."
+
+The door opened, and I could see that the place was filled with natives,
+all of whom carried guns and seemed much excited.
+
+Then Jim made his appearance and walked slowly up to the Captain. He was
+a tall man, dressed in pyjamas, with two navy revolvers in his belt.
+With his heavy red moustache and bloodshot eyes, he looked his character
+well--that of an unscrupulous and remorseless ruffian. Hayston had
+seated himself on a fallen cocoa-nut tree with his hands full of papers.
+
+"How d'ye do, Jim?" he said, extending his hand to the trader and rising
+as he spoke. The moment the trader's hand touched his, he seized him by
+the throat and shook him like a dog shaking a rat; then spun him round
+violently and threw him against the stern of a canoe, where he lay half
+stunned. The natives gave a roar, but the Captain held up his hands--the
+tide seemed to turn at once in our favour, and one man went up to the
+trader, took away his pistols, and gave them to Hayston. The Captain
+addressed the principal chiefs, whom he told that Jim had robbed him,
+and that after he had made presents to the people, he intended to take
+the rest of the trade away.
+
+We were moving into the house to take possession, when the trader, who
+had now recovered himself, got up and addressed the natives. I did not
+understand what he said, but Hayston evidently did. The effect of Jim's
+harangue was to render the natives undecided as to what course to
+adopt. One man, who spoke good English and had a rifle with a sword
+bayonet attached, said it did not matter if any one was killed, but they
+thought their white man did not have fair play.
+
+"Jim," said the Captain, in his smoothest tones, "you say you can whip
+any man in the Pacific in four rounds. Well! now you have an opportunity
+to prove your words. If you are a better man than I am, I will let you
+keep what trade you have got, and shake hands afterwards."
+
+Jim stripped to the waist, and called for one of his women to bring him
+a pair of "taka" or "cinnet" sandals, as he was barefooted.
+
+He was shaking with rage and excitement, while Hayston showed no concern
+whatever. From the jump the trader forced the fighting, but in less time
+than I describe it, both of his eyes were nearly closed, and he had a
+terrific cut on his cheekbone. Some women then ran in and begged the
+Captain to desist. I believe he could have killed his man in another
+five minutes. He asked Jim if he was satisfied and would shake hands.
+But the trader would not answer, and then the Captain's face grew dark.
+Seizing him again by the throat he nearly strangled him, his eyes
+protruding horribly as he worked his arms in the air. When he let him go
+he fell like a log. "Carry him down to the boats and make him fast," he
+said to the interpreter.
+
+We entered his house unmolested, and I took an inventory of his goods.
+There was very little trade left, but the natives said he had a lot of
+money given him by the skipper of the Californian vessel. This we found
+in a large soup and bouilli tin in his chest. It amounted to nearly
+seven hundred dollars, mostly in U.S. half-dollar coins.
+
+The natives begged the Captain not to close the station up; if Jim was
+going away, they wished some one in his place. He said he would consider
+their wish after he got on board; but they must first help him to raft
+off twenty casks of oil that were lying in Jim's oil-shed.
+
+We got off to the boats at last. The old man still kept hold of my left
+hand. This, the Captain had told me, he had done to protect me if any
+fighting took place; that if fighting had resulted I would not have been
+killed, but would have been regarded as the old man's prize. The natives
+launched their canoes and followed the boats in swarms when we set sail
+for the brig. As soon as we got alongside, Hayston asked the second mate
+if the native he had spoken of had shown up.
+
+"No," said Bill; "he's gone away to Samoa, so they say here."
+
+Hayston seemed pleased at this news, telling me that this man was a
+special enemy of his, into whom he meant to put a bullet if he could
+drop across him. As he was gone away he was saved an unpleasant task.
+Jim was taken for'ard, and the carpenter was ordered to put him in
+irons; thereupon he sulkily explained that he didn't intend to turn
+rusty.
+
+"All right, then, Jim," replied the Captain. "I'm glad we're going to be
+friends again. But you can go ashore at Makin and stay there."
+
+He then called for a man among his crew to take Jim's place on shore.
+After some hesitation a sturdy Rotumah native said he didn't mind, if
+the Captain gave him a wife. He couldn't speak the language, and if he
+took a Taputana woman she might plot to kill him and he be none the
+wiser.
+
+"Boys!" called out the Captain, "is any one of you willing to give
+Willie his wife? I'll make it up to him. Besides, there'll be plenty
+more going through the Marshall group."
+
+No one appeared struck with the idea. So the Captain called Sunday aft,
+and held brief conversation with him, after which the boy went into the
+deckhouse and brought out his wife and N'jilong. The poor girl shed a
+few tears at first and clung to Sunday's neck, but he finally induced
+her to go with Willie. She had come aboard almost naked, but went away
+with a well-filled chest and any amount of finery.
+
+She parted from her sister in an apathetic manner, but her tears began
+to flow afresh when Sunday turned coolly from her and pursued his duties
+on the deck. Savage though she might be, she felt the parting from the
+hardened young wretch whom she had come to look on as her partner.
+However she lost nothing by the change. Her new husband was a steady,
+good fellow who treated her kindly. Years afterwards I met them both on
+one of the Ellice Islands and received a warm welcome. Willie had
+legally married her in Fiji, and they seemed a most affectionate couple,
+with children in whom their chief pride in life was centred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+CAPTAIN BEN PEESE
+
+
+For the next few weeks we cruised about among the islands of the
+Kingsmill and Gilbert groups, collectively known as the Line Islands.
+The most southerly of them is Arurai or Hope Island, in the latitude
+2.41 S., longitude 177 E.--the most northerly, Makin or Butaritu, in
+latitude 3.20, 45 N.
+
+We did good business generally going through this group, and steady
+going trade it was, varied only by the mad drunken bouts and wild dances
+which took place when we were at anchor--these last beyond description.
+
+Just then I was badly hurt fishing on shore one day. It was peculiarly a
+South Sea accident. I was standing on a jutting ledge of coral, holding
+my rod, when it suddenly broke off, allowing me to fall downwards on
+sharp edges, where I was terribly cut about the legs and body. The green
+or live coral has the property of making a festering wound whenever it
+pierces the true skin, and for weeks, with my unhealed wounds, I was
+nearly mad with pain. The Captain did all he could for me, having a
+netted hammock slung on deck, where I could see all that was going on.
+One day in a fit of pain I fell out and nearly cracked my skull. All the
+native girls on board were most kind and patient in nursing me. So the
+Captain said the least I could do was to marry one, if only out of
+gratitude and to brush away the flies.
+
+Whatever some people might call these poor girls they had at least one
+virtue, which, like charity, covereth a multitude of sins. Pity for any
+one in bodily pain they possessed in the highest degree. Many an hour
+did they sit beside me, bathing my aching head with a sponge and salt
+water--this last the universal and infallible cure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We called at Peru or Francis Island, where we obtained nine
+natives--five men and four young women. The islanders here are rude and
+insulting to all strangers not carrying arms, and almost as threatening
+as those of Taputana. I was, however, too ill to go on shore here.
+
+After a two months' cruise through this group we bore away for Strong's
+Island, distant some five hundred miles. We had favourable winds, and
+the brig's speed was something wonderful. In thirty-eight hours we had
+covered a distance of four hundred and ninety miles, when the lofty
+hills of this gem of the North Pacific, covered with brightest verdure,
+gladdened our eyes after the long, low-lying chains of islets and atolls
+of the Marshall and Kingsmill groups.
+
+The brave "north-east trade" that had borne us so gallantly along died
+away to a zephyr as we drew near the land, and saw once more the huge
+rollers thundering on the weather point of the island.
+
+Calling first at Chabral harbour we did a little trading, and then
+sailed down the coast close to the shore--so deep runs the water--till
+we reached Utwé.
+
+Here we found three American whalers put in for food and water. Hayston
+seemed anxious to get away, so, after exchanging courtesies with the
+skippers, we ran round to Coquille harbour, where we lay several days
+trading and painting ship. We cleared the harbour at daylight, with the
+sea as smooth as glass and wind so light that the _Leonora_ could
+scarcely stem the strong easterly current. Still keeping a north-west
+course, we sailed away over the summer sea while scarce a ripple broke
+its glassy surface, until we sighted Pingelap or M'Askill's, a hundred
+and fifty miles from Strong's Island.
+
+These were discovered by Captain Musgrave, of the American whaler _Sugar
+Cane_, in 1793. They are densely covered with cocoa-palms, and though
+wholly of coral formation, are a good height above sea-level.
+
+The Captain had a trader here named Sam Biggs--a weak-kneed,
+gin-drinking cockney. How ever such a character could have found his way
+to these almost unknown islands passed my comprehension! We ran in close
+to the village--so near that, the wind being light, we nearly drifted
+onto the beach, and lowered the starboard quarter boat to tow out again.
+
+Whilst waiting for the trader I had a good look at the village, which I
+was surprised to hear contained 500 inhabitants. As, however, these
+islands--there are three of them, Takai, Tugula, and Pingelap--are
+wondrous fertile, they support their populations easily.
+
+Presently the trader came off in a canoe, and, shambling along the deck,
+went down below to give in his report. He said that things were very
+bad. A few months back the American missionary brig _Morning Star_ had
+called and prevailed on the king to allow two teachers to be landed.
+After making presents to the chiefs and principal men, they had got
+their promise to accept Christianity and to send the white man Biggs
+about his business. They had also told the natives that Captain Hayston
+was coming with the intention of carrying them off in bondage to work on
+the plantations in Samoa. Also that Mr. Morland, the chief missionary,
+was now in Honolulu, begging for a man-of-war to come to Pingelap and
+fight Captain Hayston's ship with his big guns and sink her.
+
+All South Sea islanders are easily influenced. In a few hours after the
+teachers landed the whole village declared for Christianity, burned
+their idols, and renounced the devil and all his works, _i.e._ Captain
+Hayston and the brig _Leonora_.
+
+The Captain's face darkened as he listened; then he asked the trader
+what he had done in the matter. The man, blinking his watery eyes, said
+he had done nothing; that he was afraid the natives would kill him, and
+asked to be taken away.
+
+Jumping up from the table, Hayston grasped him by the collar, and asked
+me to look at him and say what he should do with such a white-livered
+hound, who would let one of the finest islands in the Pacific be handed
+over to the sanctimonious pack on board the _Morning Star_, and let the
+best trading station he, Hayston, owned be ruined?
+
+I suggested that he should be detained on board till we met the _Morning
+Star_, and then be given to Mr. Morland to keep.
+
+"By ----! just the thing! but just let me tell you, you drunken hound,
+that when I picked you up a starving beach-comber in Ponapé, I thought
+you had at least enough sense to know that I am not a man to be trifled
+with. I was the first man to place a trader on Pingelap. I overcame the
+natives' hostility, and made this one of the safest islands in the group
+for whaleships to call at. Now I have lost a thousand dollars by your
+cowardice. So take this to remember it by."
+
+Then, holding him by one hand, he shook him like a rag, finally slinging
+him up the companion way, and telling the men to tie him up.
+
+"Lower away the longboat," he roared, "I'll teach the Pingelap gentry
+how to dance." I went with him, as I wanted to get some bananas and
+young cocoa-nuts. In five minutes we drew up on the beach.
+
+The head-men of the island now came forward to meet the Captain, and to
+express their pleasure at seeing him. But he was not to be mollified,
+and sternly bade them follow him to the largest house in the town where
+he would talk to them.
+
+The boy Sunday, who was a native of Pingelap, came with us to act as
+interpreter. Behind the crowd of natives were the two Hawaiian teachers,
+dressed in white linen shirts and drill trousers. They had their wives
+with them, dressed in mixed European and native costume.
+
+None of us had arms, nor did we think them necessary. Hitherto these
+people had been slavish admirers of Hayston, and he assured me that he
+would reassert his former influence over them in ten minutes. The crowd
+swarmed into the council-house and sat down on their mats. The Captain
+remained standing.
+
+His grand, imposing form, as he stood in the centre of the house and
+held up his hands for silence, seemed to awe them as would a demi-god,
+and murmurs of applause broke from them involuntarily.
+
+"Tell them, Sunday," he said, fixing his piercing blue eyes on the
+cowering forms of the two missionary teachers, "that I have come to talk
+peace, not to fight. Ask them who it was years ago, when the hurricane
+came and destroyed their houses and plantations--when their little ones
+were crying with hunger--that brought them to his ship and fed them?
+Have they forgotten who it was that carried them to Ponapé, and there
+let them live on his land and fed them on his food till they grew tired
+of the strange land, and then brought them back to their homes again?"
+
+Sunday translated, and the silence was unbroken till the Captain
+resumed, "Did not the men of Pingelap say then that no man should be
+more to them than me--that no one else should place a white man here?
+And now a strange ship comes, and the men of Pingelap have turned their
+faces from me?"
+
+A scene of wild excitement followed, the greater number crowding round
+the Captain, while with outstretched hands and bent heads they signified
+respect.
+
+The two teachers were walking quickly away with their wives, when the
+Captain called them back, and in a pleasant voice invited them to come
+on board and see if there was anything there that they would like their
+wives to have for a present.
+
+Before returning on board Sunday told the Captain that the chiefs and
+people desired to express their sorrow at receiving the missionaries,
+and that they would be glad if he took them away. Since the visit of the
+_Morning Star_ an epidemic had broken out resembling measles, which had
+already carried off fifty or sixty of them. Already their superstitious
+fears led them to regard the sickness as a punishment for having broken
+their treaty with Hayston. So they offered us six young women as a
+present; also ten large turtles, and humbly begged him to allow his
+trader to remain.
+
+The Captain made answer that he did not want six young women--there were
+plenty on board already; but he would take two, with the ten turtles,
+and ten thousand cocoa-nuts. The said presents were then cheerfully
+handed over; the two girls and the turtles going off in the Captain's
+boat, while the cocoa-nuts were formed into a raft and floated alongside
+the ship.
+
+While these weighty matters were being arranged I walked round to the
+weather side of the island with Sunday, who wanted to show me a pool in
+which the natives kept some captive turtle. On our way we came across
+some young boys and girls catching fish with a seine. They brought us
+some and lit a fire. We stayed about an hour with them, having great fun
+bathing in the surf.
+
+Happening to look out to sea, I saw a big ship coming round the point
+under easy sail; from her rig and the number of boats she carried I knew
+her at once to be a whaler. We ran ashore and dressed, and as two of the
+children offered to show us a short cut through the forest to the
+village, we ran all the way and got opposite the brig just in time to
+see the Captain leaving her side to board the whaler. I hailed the brig,
+and they sent me the dingey, in which I followed Hayston. She proved to
+be the _Josephine_, just out from Honolulu--a clean ship, not having
+taken a fish. The captain was a queer-looking old fellow dressed like a
+fisherman. He received us with civility, yet looked at the Captain
+curiously. His crew were all under arms. Each man had a musket, a lance,
+or a whaling spade--these two last very formidable weapons--in his hand.
+
+Captain Long was candid, and admitted that as soon as he sighted our
+brig he had armed his men, for the wind was so light that he would have
+no chance of getting away. Hayston laughingly asked him if he thought
+the brig was a pirate.
+
+The whaler replied, "Why, certainly. Old Morland and Captain Melton told
+me two years ago that you sailed a brig with a crew of darned cut-throat
+niggers, and would take a ship if you wanted her, so I made up my mind
+to have a bit of shootin' if you boarded us."
+
+"Well, Captain Long," said Hayston, in his easy, pleasant way, "come
+over to my little vessel and see the pirate at home."
+
+The invitation was accepted, and as we pulled over amicably, the skipper
+cast an admiring glance at the graceful _Leonora_ as she floated o'er
+the still, untroubled deep. As we stepped over the ship's side we were
+met by Bill Hicks, the second mate, whose savage countenance was
+illumined by a broad smile as he silently pointed to the queer
+entertainment before us.
+
+"Great ancestral ghosts! d'ye carry a troupe of ackeribats aboard this
+hyar brig?" quoth the skipper, pointing to four undraped figures
+capering about in the mad abandonment of a Hawaiian national dance.
+
+The mate explained briefly that he had given the native teachers grog,
+after which nothing would satisfy them but to show the crew how they
+used to dance in Lakaina in the good old days. Their wives were also
+exhilarated, and having thrown off their European clothes, were dancing
+with more vigour than decorum to the music of an accordion and a violin.
+The Hope Island girl, Nellie, was seated in a boat we carried on deck
+playing the accordion, and with her were the rest of the girls laughing
+and clapping their hands at the antics of the dancers. The stalwart
+Portuguese, Antonio, was perched on the water-tank with his fiddle, and
+the rest of the crew who were not at work getting the cocoa-nuts on
+board were standing around encouraging the quartette by shouts and
+admiring remarks.
+
+As the whaling skipper gazed with astonishment at the sight, Hayston
+said, "Ay, there you see the Honolulu native teacher in his true
+colours. His Christianity is like ours--no better, no worse--to be put
+on and off like a garment. Once give a Sandwich Island missionary a
+taste of grog and his true instincts appear in spite of himself. There
+is _nothing_ either of those men would not do now for a dollar; and yet
+in a day or two they will put on their white shirts, and begin to preach
+again to these natives who are better men than themselves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We went below, and after a glass of wine or two the skipper was about to
+leave, after promising to sell us some bolts of canvas, when the Chinese
+steward announced that they were fighting on deck. We ran up and saw
+Antonio and boy George struggling with knives in their hands. The
+Captain caught Antonio a crack on the head, which sent him down very
+decisively, and then pitched George roughly into the boat with the
+girls, telling them to stop their infernal din. The two teachers' wives
+were then placed in old Mary's care below, and told to lie down and
+sleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The two Pingelap girls who came on board were very young, and seemed
+frightened at their surroundings, wailing and moaning with fear, so
+Hayston gave them trinkets and sent them back to the chiefs, getting two
+immense turtles in exchange.
+
+The wind now died away. All night the brig lay drifting on the glassy
+sea. At breakfast-time we were almost alongside of the whaler, and the
+two crews were exchanging sailors' courtesies when five or six whales
+hove in sight.
+
+All was changed in a moment. Four boats were lowered as if by magic from
+the whaler, and the crews were pulling like demons for the huge prizes.
+
+The whales were travelling as quickly as the boats, but towards the
+ships, and in another quarter of an hour three of the boats got fast,
+the fourth boat also, but had to cut away again.
+
+Our crew cheered the boats, and as there was no wind for the vessel to
+work up to the dead whales which were being towed up, I took the brig's
+longboat and six men to help the boats to get the whales alongside.
+
+A breeze sprung up at noon, so after bidding good-bye to the whaler, we
+stood away for Ponapé, making W.N.W. We were ten days out from Pingelap
+before we sighted Ponapé's cloud-capped peaks. The wind was very light
+for the whole way, the brig having barely steerage way on her. Hayston
+was anxious to reach the island, for there he expected to meet his
+partner, the notorious Captain Ben Peese.
+
+Here he told me that if things went well with them they would make a
+fortune in a few years; that he had bought Peese's schooner and sent him
+to Hong Kong with a load of oil to sell, arranging to meet him in
+Jakoits harbour in Ponapé on a day named. They were then to proceed to
+Providence Island, which was a dense grove of cocoa-nut trees. He was
+sanguine of filling two hundred and fifty casks now in the brig's hold
+with oil when we reached there.
+
+Twenty miles from shore we spoke an American whaleship from New London.
+She was "trying out," and signalled to send a boat. The Captain, taking
+me with him, went on board, when we were met by a pleasant, white-haired
+old man, Captain Allan.
+
+His first words were, "Well, Captain Hayston, I have bad news. Peese has
+turned against you. He returned to Ponapé from China a week ago, and
+cleared out your two stations of everything of value. He had a big
+schooner called the _Vittoria_, and after gutting the stations, he told
+the chiefs at Kiti harbour that you had sent him for the cattle running
+there. He took them all away--thirty-six head."
+
+The Captain said nothing. Turning away he looked at the brig, as if in
+thought, then asked Allan if he knew where Peese had gone.
+
+"To Manila; Peese has made friends there, and engaged with the
+Governor-General of the Philippines to supply the garrison with forty
+head of cattle. I knew the cattle were yours, and warned the chiefs not
+to let Peese take them away. But he threatened them with a visit from a
+Spanish man-of-war, and Miller backed him up. He had a strong party with
+him to enforce his demands."
+
+"Thank you, Allan!" Hayston said very deliberately and calmly; "I was
+half afraid something like this would happen, but I thought the man I
+took out of the slums of Shanghai and helped like a brother was the last
+person to have robbed me. It has shown me the folly of trusting any one.
+You are busy, Allan! so will leave you."
+
+Bidding adieu to the good skipper we stepped into our boat. Hayston was
+silent for ten minutes. Then he put his hand on my knee, and looking
+into my face with the expression I had never seen him wear since he
+fought the trader at Drummond Island, said, "Hilary! did you ever know
+me to say I would do a thing and not do it?"
+
+"No! but I have often wished you would _not_ keep your word so strictly.
+Some day you will regret it."
+
+"Perhaps so. But listen to me. This man--this Peese--I found in Shanghai
+years ago, ill and starving. There was something in his face which
+roused my interest; I took him on board my vessel and treated him as a
+brother. I was then high in favour with the Chinese authorities. Not as
+I am now--hunted from port to port--forced to take up this island life
+and associate with ruffians who would shoot and rob me if they did not
+fear me. I went to a mandarin--a man who knew the stuff I was made of,
+and what I had done in the Chinese service--and asked for preferment for
+Peese. It was done. In a week he was put in command of a transport, and
+with his commission in his hand he came aboard my ship and swore he
+would never forget who it was that had saved him. He spoke but the bare
+truth, for I tell you this man was dying--dying of starvation. Well! it
+was he who led me afterwards, by his insidious advice and by collusion
+with Portuguese collie merchants, into risky dealings. At first all went
+well. We so used our positions in the Imperial service that we made over
+fifteen thousand dollars in three months, exclusive of the money used in
+bribing Chinese officials. The end came by and by, when I nearly lost my
+head in rescuing Peese from a gunboat in which he lay a prisoner. Anyhow
+I lost my rank, and the Viceroy issued a proclamation in the usual
+flowing language, depriving me of all honours previously conferred. We
+escaped, it is true, but China was closed to me for ever. Since then I
+have stood to Peese faithfully. Now, you see the result. He is a d--d
+clever fellow, and a good sailor, no doubt of that. But mind me when I
+say that I'll find him, if I beggar myself to do it. And when I find
+him, he dies!"
+
+I said nothing. He could not well let such treachery and ingratitude
+pass, and Peese would deserve his fate. However, they never met. Peese,
+like Hayston, appeared to have his hand against every man, as every man
+had his hand against Peese.
+
+He met his fate after this fashion:--
+
+A daring act of piracy--seizing a Spanish revenue vessel under the very
+guns of a fort--and working her out to sea with sweeps, outlawed him.
+Caught at one of his old haunts in the Pelew Islands, he was heavily
+ironed and put on board the cruiser _Hernandez Pizarro_, for conveyance
+to Manila, to await trial.
+
+One day he begged the officers of the corvette to allow him on deck as
+the heat was stifling. He was brought up and his leg-irons widened so
+that he could walk. Peese was always an exceedingly polite man. He
+thanked the officers for their courtesy, and begged for a cigar.
+
+This was given him, and he slowly walked the decks, dragging his
+clanking chains, but apparently enjoying the flavour of his cigar.
+Standing against a gun, he took a last look at the blue cloudless sky
+above him, and then quietly dropped overboard. The weight of his irons,
+of course, sank him "deeper than plummet lies".... So, and in such
+manner, was the appropriate and befitting ending of Benjamin Peese,
+master mariner--"_Requiescat in pace!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+CRUISING AMONG THE CAROLINES
+
+
+Our first port of call at Ponapé was Jakoits harbour. It was here we
+were to land some Line Islanders we had brought from various places in
+the Gilbert group. Hayston had brought them to the order of the firm of
+Johann Guldenstern and Sons of Hamburg, whose agents and managers at
+Ponapé were Messrs. Capelle and Milne. Their trading stations were at
+Jakoits Islands, where resided the manager of the business. The senior
+partner of the firm--a burly, bullying Scot--had for some time been
+carrying on a rather heated correspondence with Hayston, whom he had
+accused of kidnapping the firm's traders. He had not as yet encountered
+the Captain, but had told various whaling skippers and others that if
+half a dozen good men would back him up, he would seize Hayston, and
+keep him prisoner till H.M. warships _Tuscarora_ or _Jamestown_ turned
+up.
+
+Occasionally Hayston had by letter warned him to beware, as he was not a
+man to be trifled with. Talk and threats are easy when the enemy is
+distant; so Miller, during his cruisings in the schooner _Matauta_,
+would exhibit to various traders the particular pistol he intended to
+use on Hayston. Representing a powerful firm, he had almost unlimited
+influence in Ponapé. Hayston told me that he believed Peese would never
+have dared to have looted his trading stations and taken his cattle if
+Miller had not sided with him.
+
+"Now," said the Captain, as we were slowly sailing into Jakoits, "I'm in
+a bit of a fix. I must let Miller come aboard and treat him civilly for
+a bit, or he will pretend he knows nothing of this consignment of
+natives I have for him. He lies easily, and may declare that he has
+received no instructions from Kleber, the manager at Samoa, to receive
+these niggers from me, much less pay for them. But once I have the cash
+in hand, or his firm's draft, I mean to bring him up with a round turn."
+
+We dropped anchor in the lovely harbour, almost underneath the
+precipitous Jakoits Islands, on which were the trading stations. There
+were five whalers lying at anchor, having run in according to custom to
+get wood, water, and other necessaries. One of these was a brig, the
+_Rameses_ of Honolulu. Dismantled and deserted-looking--in a little
+secluded cove--she had not a soul on board but the captain, and he was
+mad. Of him and his vessel later on.
+
+A Yankee beach-comber of a pilot, named Joe Kelman, met us as we came
+in; not that his services were required, but evidently for his own
+gratification, as he was bursting with news. As he pulled alongside the
+Captain told me that he was a creature of Miller's, and a thundering
+scoundrel on his own account as well. But he would settle it with him
+and his principal also in a few days.
+
+With a countenance expressive of the deepest sorrow the beach-comber, as
+he sent glass after glass of grog down his throat, told his doleful
+tale--how Peese had come with a crew of murdering Spaniards, and played
+h--l with the "Capting's" property; stole every hoof of his cattle, but
+four which were now running at Kiti harbour; how Capting Miller had been
+real cut up at seeing Peese acting so piratical, and said that though he
+and Captain Hayston was sorter enemies, he thought Peese was "blamed
+downright ongrateful," etc.
+
+"That's all right, Joe," answered the Captain with the pleasantest
+laugh, "that's only a stroke of bad luck for me. I bear Captain Miller
+no ill will from the letters he has written me, and for this part--we
+are both hot-tempered men, and may have felt ourselves injured by each
+other's acts--as he tried to save my property, I shall be glad to meet
+him and thank him personally."
+
+"Well, that's suthinlike," said the beach-comber, "I'd be real sorry to
+see two such fine lookin' men shootin' bullets into each other. Besides,
+pore Miller's sick. Guess I'll cut ashore now, Captain. Kin I take any
+message?"
+
+Hayston said he would give him a few lines, and, sitting down, wrote a
+short but polite note to Miller, stating that he had a number of
+labourers for him, which he would be glad to have inspected and landed.
+He regretted his illness, but would come ashore as soon as he (Miller)
+was well enough to receive him.
+
+The beach-comber took the letter and went ashore. Hayston turned to me
+with a laugh: "Do you see that? The gin-drinking scoundrel is playing
+pilot-fish. He has come to learn if I suspect anything of the game his
+master is playing. Here's a canoe; you'll see I'll get the truth out of
+these natives."
+
+The canoe was paddled by a very old man and a boy. There were also a lot
+of young girls. The Captain declined to entertain visitors at present,
+there being too much work to do, and cross-examined the old man as to
+Miller and his men. He said there were no white men now at Jakoits;
+furthermore, that when the _Leonora_ was sighted, Miller had gone off to
+the four whaleships and had a long talk with the captains. He had taken
+two guns from the _Seabreeze_, and loaded them as soon as he got ashore.
+The natives were told there were going to be a big fight; that Captain
+Miller had got sixty natives in his house, and the two guns placed in
+front of the landing-place. Hayston gave the old man a present, and
+suggested that he should dispose of his cargo to one of the whaleships.
+The old fellow shook his head sadly, saying he had come too late.
+
+Turning to me, the Captain said, "There's news for you; Miller must have
+thought I meant to go for him as soon as we met, and has his people
+ready to give me a warm reception. If I had not these Kanakas on board
+I'd give him as much fighting as he cares for, and put a firestick in
+his station to finish up with." A few minutes later we saw a boat put
+off from Jakoits with a big burly man sitting in the stern. At the same
+time one of the whalers' boats came aboard, in which were the four
+captains. He greeted them warmly, and we all trooped below.
+
+One of them, a wizened little man with a wonderful vocabulary of curses,
+said, looking at the others: "Well, gentlemen, before we accept Captain
+Hayston's hospitality we ought to tell him that we lent Captain Miller
+two guns to sink this brig with."
+
+"Gentlemen," said Hayston, standing at the head of his table, with his
+hands resting upon it, "I know all about that, but you are none the less
+welcome. Miller will be here in a few minutes, and I must beg of you not
+to let him know that I have been informed of the warm reception he had
+prepared for me. Besides, they tell me he is ill."
+
+"Oh, h--l! Ill! That's curious; he was in powerful good health an hour
+or two ago," and the skippers looked at each other and winked. Presently
+we returned to the deck, just as the bluff personage of whom we were
+talking clambered up the ship's side and came aft.
+
+The whaling captains and I watched the meeting with intense interest.
+Miller was evidently ill at ease, but seeing Hayston walking towards him
+with outstretched hand and a smile on his face, he made a great effort
+at self-command, and shook hands vigorously.
+
+"Well, we've met at last, Captain Hayston, and ye see I'm no feared to
+come aboard and speak up till ye like a man."
+
+"My dear sir," replied Hayston, grasping his hand with a prolonged
+shake, "I was just telling these gentlemen how I regretted to hear of
+your illness, for, although we have carried on such a paper warfare, I'm
+convinced that we only need to meet to become good friends."
+
+Here one of the American captains came up, and, looking the new-comer
+straight in the face, said, "Well, I _am_ surprised at meeting you here.
+Reckon you can sick and well quicker'n any man I ever come across."
+
+No notice was taken by Miller of this and other sarcastic remarks while
+he hurried on his business with Hayston. Much grog was drunk, and then
+the Captain passed the word for all hands to muster on deck--the crew to
+starboard, the Kanaka passengers on the port side.
+
+The "labour" was then inspected, and passed by their new proprietor,
+who, now very jovial and unsteady on his pins, took them on shore
+without delay. He returned shortly and paid for them in cash. Next
+morning several traders came on board, and any amount of beach-combers,
+for Ponapé is their paradise. Mr. Miller came with an invitation to
+visit him on shore. Having business to attend to I stayed on board,
+promising to follow later on. As Hayston was leaving the brig, Miller
+said, in presence of the traders,--
+
+"Eh, Captain Hayston, but ye're no siccan a terrible crater as they mak'
+ye oot. Man, I hae my doots if ye could pommel me so sevairly as ye've
+inseenuated."
+
+"Mr. Miller," said the Captain, stopping dead, and taking him by the
+shoulder, "you are now on board my ship, and I will say nothing further
+than that if you have any doubt on the subject I am perfectly willing,
+as soon as we reach your station, to convince you that you are
+mistaken."
+
+The traders, who had hitherto backed up their colleague, applauded
+loudly, evidently expecting Miller to take up the challenge. He,
+however, preferred to treat it as a joke. I knew that the Captain was
+labouring under suppressed wrath because he was so cool and polite. I
+knew, by the ring in his voice, that he meant mischief, and at any
+moment looked to see the hot blood surging to his brow, and his fierce
+nature assert itself.
+
+About an hour later the mate of one of the whaleships came on board to
+have dinner with me, and told me that Hayston had given Miller a
+terrible thrashing in his own house, in the presence of his backers and
+the American captains. It seems that Hayston led the conversation up to
+Captain Peese's recent visit, and then suddenly asked Miller if he had
+not told the natives that Captain Peese must take the cattle, and that
+he (Hayston) dared not show up in Ponapé again, or else he would long
+since have appeared on the scene.
+
+Possibly Miller thought his only chance was to brazen it out, for,
+though he had a following of the lowest roughs and beach-combers, who
+were at that moment loafing about his house and grounds, and Hayston was
+unarmed, he could see by the coolness of the American captains that he
+could not count on their support. At last he said, with a forced
+laugh,--
+
+"Come, let us have nae mair fule's talk. We can be good friends
+pairsonally, if we would fain cut each other's throats in business. I'll
+make no secret of it, I did say so, and thocht I was playing a good joke
+on ye."
+
+"So that's your idea of a joke, is it," said Hayston, grimly, "but now I
+must have mine, and as it takes a surgical operation to get one into a
+Scotchman's brain, I'll begin at once."
+
+He gave Miller a fearful knocking about there and then. The captains
+picked him up senseless, with a head considerably altered for the worse.
+After which Hayston washed his hands, and went on board one of the
+whaleships to dinner.
+
+He then sent for the chiefs of the various districts, telling them to
+meet him at Miller and Lapelle's station on a certain day and hour. When
+they were all assembled, he induced Miller to say that he sincerely
+regretted having told them such lies, as he knew the cattle did belong
+to Captain Hayston. Finally they shook hands, and swore to be friends in
+future; Hayston, in a tone of solicitude, informing him that he would
+send him some arnica, as his head appeared very bad still. The parting
+scene must have been truly ludicrous. Shaking him warmly by the hand,
+Hayston said, "Good-bye, old fellow; we've settled our little
+difficulty, and will be better friends in future. If I've lost cattle,
+I've gained a friend." Begging the favour of a kiss from the women
+present he then departed, full of honours and dignities; and in another
+hour we were sailing round the coast to Metalauia harbour.
+
+Here we bought a quantity of hawkbill turtle shell. While it was being
+got on board, the Captain and I spent two days on shore exploring the
+mysterious ruins and ancient fortifications which render the island so
+deeply interesting; wonderful in size, Cyclopean in structure. It is a
+long-buried secret by whom and for what purpose they were erected. None
+remain to tell. "Their memorial is perished with them."
+
+In one of the smaller islands on which those ruins are situated, Hayston
+told me that a Captain Williams, in 1836, had found over £10,000 worth
+of treasure. He himself believed that there were rich deposits in other
+localities not far distant.
+
+To this end we explored a series of deathly cold dungeons, but found
+nothing except a heavy disc of a metal resembling copper several feet
+under ground.
+
+This was lying with its face to the stone wall of the subterranean
+chamber--had lain there probably for centuries.
+
+Its weight was nearly that of fifty pounds. It had three holes in the
+centre. We could form no idea as to its probable use or meaning. I was
+unwilling to part with it, however, and taking it on board, put it in my
+cabin.
+
+While we were at Metalauia, Joe Keogh came on board, bringing with him
+three native girls from the Andema group, a cluster of large coral
+islands near the mainland, belonging to the three chiefs of the Kité
+district. He had gone forward, when the Captain saw him and called him
+aft.
+
+He at once accused Joe of being treacherous, telling him that the
+whaling captains had given him a written statement to the effect that he
+had taken a letter from Miller to the Mortlock group, where an American
+cruiser was surveying, asking the captain if he would take Hayston to
+California, as he (Miller) and Keogh would engage to entice him ashore
+and capture him if the cruiser was close at hand.
+
+Not being able to deny the charge, Keogh was badly beaten, and sent away
+without the girls, who were taken aft. Like the Ponapé natives, they
+were very light-coloured, wearing a quantity of feather head-dress and
+other native finery. They agreed to remain on board during the cruise
+through the Caroline group, and were then to be landed at their own
+islands.
+
+They were then sent to keep the steward company in the cabin, and put to
+making hats and mats, in which they excelled. At Kité harbour we took on
+board the bull and three cows which Peese had not succeeded in catching.
+On returning to Jakoits harbour in a fortnight's time, I was told that I
+might take up my quarters on shore, while the cabin was redecorated. I
+therefore got a canoe and two natives, with which I amused myself with
+visiting the native village and pigeon-shooting.
+
+One day I fell across a deserted whaling brig. Her crew had run away,
+and the ship having contracted debts, was seized by Miller and Lapelle.
+The captain alone was left. He was now ship-keeper, and his troubles had
+so preyed on his mind that he had become insane.
+
+I watched him. It was a strange and weird spectacle; there lay the
+vessel, silent, solitary--"a painted ship upon a painted ocean."
+
+Her brooding inmate would sometimes pace the deck for hours with his
+arms folded; then would throw himself into a cane lounge, and fixing his
+eyes upon the sky, mutter and talk to himself.
+
+At other times he would imagine that the ship was surrounded by whales,
+and rush wildly about the decks, calling on the officers to lower the
+boats. Not succeeding, he would in despair peer down the dark, deserted
+foc'sle, begging the crew to be men, and get out the boats.
+
+We cruised now for some weeks to and fro among the lovely islands of the
+Caroline group, trading in turtle shell, of which we bought great
+quantities. What a halcyon time it was! There was a luxurious sense of
+dreamy repose, which seemed unreal from its very completeness.
+
+The gliding barque, the summer sea, the lulling breeze, the careless,
+joyous children of nature among whom we lived,--all were fairy-like in
+combination.
+
+When one thought of the hard and anxious toilers of civilisation, from
+whom we had come out, I could fancy that we had reached the lotus-land
+of the ancients, and could well imagine a fixed unwillingness to return
+to a less idyllic life. Hayston was apparently in no hurry.
+
+At any particular island that pleased him he would lie at anchor for
+days. Then we would explore the wondrous woods, and have glorious
+shooting trips on shore.
+
+We met some truly strange and original characters in these waters--white
+men as well as natives. The former, often men of birth and culture,
+were completely lost to the world, to their former friends and kinsfolk.
+
+Return? not they! Why should they go back? Here they had all things
+which are wont to satisfy man here below. A paradise of Eden-like
+beauty, amid which they wandered day by day all unheeding of the morrow;
+food, houses, honours, wives, friends, kinsfolk, all provided for them
+in unstinted abundance, and certain continuity, by the guileless
+denizens of these fairy isles amid this charmed main. Why--why, indeed,
+should they leave the land of magical delights for the cold climate and
+still more glacial moral atmosphere of their native land, miscalled
+home?
+
+Then, perhaps, in the former life beyond these crystal seas--where the
+boom of the surf upon the reef is not heard, and the whispering palm
+leaves never talk at midnight--some imprudence, some mistake at cards
+may have occurred, who knows! These things happen so easily.
+
+The temptation of a moment--a lack of resolve at the fateful crisis--and
+they are so deadly difficult of reparation. Difficult--nay impossible.
+
+Where, then, can mortal find such an asylum for weary body and restless
+soul as this land of Lethe? Where life is one long dream of bliss, and
+where death comes as a lingering friend rather than a swift executioner.
+
+It added materially to my enjoyment of the whole adventure, that
+wherever we went we were always honoured personages, favoured guests.
+Everywhere the people had the greatest admiration for Hayston's personal
+qualities--his strength, his fearlessness, his prompt determination in
+the face of danger and difficulty. That his word was invariably law to
+them was fully evident.
+
+One day, however, as a kind of drawback to all these satisfactions, I
+suddenly noticed that the girl Terau, who had been given to boy George,
+appeared to be very ill, if not dying. That young savage had obtained
+permission from the Captain to keep her on board, although she was most
+anxious to get ashore at Ponapé.
+
+She would often get into one of the boats and sit there all day--sad and
+silent--knitting a head-dress from the fibres of the banana plant. Not
+being able to talk to her myself, I got a native of Ocean Island, whose
+dialect resembled her own, to ask her if she was ill.
+
+The girl made no answer. She covered her face with her hands. I then saw
+that every movement of her body gave her pain. At length she murmured
+something to the Ocean islander, slowly took from her shoulders the mat
+which covered them, and looking at me, said, "Teorti fra mati Terau"
+(George has nearly killed Terau). I was horrified to see that the poor
+girl's back was cut and swelled dreadfully. Her side, also, she said,
+was very bad, and it hurt her to breathe.
+
+We lifted her carefully out of the boat, and carried her between us to
+the skylight, where we placed her in a comfortable position.
+
+I found the Captain lying down, and asked him to come on deck, where,
+lifting the mat from the girl's bruised shoulders, I showed him the
+terrible state she was in.
+
+"Do you mean to allow such brutality to be practised on a poor girl?
+Why, I believe she is dying!"
+
+He said nothing, except "Come below." Sitting down at the table, he
+said, "I will not punish that boy. But I would be glad if you will see
+him, and induce him to treat the girl kindly."
+
+I called George, who was in the deck-house playing cards, and asked him
+what he would take for Terau.
+
+The lad thought for a moment, and asked me if the Captain had told me to
+come to him about her?
+
+I said, "Yes! he had." But that I wanted him either to give or sell me
+the girl, adding that he had better be quick about it, as Terau seemed
+sinking fast.
+
+"Oh! if that is so, you give me what you like for her. Don't want no
+dead girls 'bout me."
+
+I called up three of the crew as witnesses, whereupon George sold me the
+victim of his brutality for ten dollars and a German concertina.
+
+"Now, George," I said, "I am going to put Terau ashore, and if you touch
+her again, or even speak to her, I'll knock your infernal soul out of
+your black body."
+
+He grinned, and replied that he was only too glad to get rid of her; and
+returning into the deck-house, began at once to play on the concertina.
+
+A few days after this transaction we touched at Ngatik or Los Valientes
+Island, and I was pleased to find here a trader whose wife was a native
+of Pleasant Island.
+
+I asked them if they would like to have Terau to live with them, and the
+wife at once expressed her willingness as well as joy at seeing one of
+her own countrywomen.
+
+Returning on board, I inquired of Terau if she would not like to go
+ashore and live with these people, who would treat her kindly. During my
+ownership she had regained her strength in great degree, Nellie having
+agreed to attend on her, and the Chinese steward saw that she had
+nourishing food.
+
+She preferred to go ashore, being still afraid of George's
+ill-treatment; I did not tell her of the trader's wife being a
+countrywoman, trusting it would prove a joyful surprise. I was not
+mistaken. The two women rushed into each other's arms, and wept in their
+impulsive fashion. I felt certain that here poor Terau would receive
+kind treatment.
+
+Before returning on board the trader told me that Terau had related her
+story to them, and that the Ngatik women, who were in the house, told
+her to make the white man who had been so kind to her "the present of
+poverty." This ceremonial consisted in her cutting off her hair close to
+the head, and, together with an empty cocoa-nut shell and a small fish,
+offering it to me. The trader said this was to express her
+gratitude--the empty shell and small fish signifying poverty, while the
+gift of hair denoted that she was a bondswoman to me for life.
+
+I felt sorry that the poor child should have cut off her beautiful hair,
+which was tied round the centre with a band of pandanus leaf, and put in
+my hand; but I felt a glow of pleasure at being able to place her with
+people who would be good to her; and thanking her for the gift, to which
+she added a thick plate of turtle shell, I said farewell, and returned
+to the brig.
+
+The Captain called me below, and shook my hand.
+
+"I'm glad," he said, "that poor girl has left the ship; but I must repay
+you the money you gave George for her."
+
+This I refused to take. I felt well repaid by the unmistakable gratitude
+Terau had evinced towards me from the moment the Ocean islander and I
+had carried her pain-racked form below.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+POISONED ARROWS
+
+
+The weather had changed, and been cloudy and dull for several days. We
+were all rather in the doldrums too. We had been bearing eastward on the
+line. Suddenly Hayston said, "Suppose we put in at Santa Cruz. We want
+the water casks filled. I'm not very fond of the island, for all its
+name. Sacred names and bloodshed often go together with Spaniards.
+However, I know the harbour well, and the yams are first-rate." So at
+daylight we bore up, at eight bells we entered the heads with both
+anchors bent to the chains, and at noon were beating up the harbour. By
+two o'clock we cast anchor in thirty fathoms. Out came the canoes, and
+we soon began trading with the natives.
+
+We kept pretty strict watch, however. The men, to my fancy, had a sullen
+expression, and the women, though not bad-looking, seemed as if it cost
+them an effort to look pleasant.
+
+Our girls wouldn't have anything to say to them. Hope Island Nellie, in
+particular, said she'd like to shoot half of them; that they'd killed a
+cousin of hers, who was only scratched with a poisoned arrow, and that
+it was one of the Captain's mad tricks to go there at all.
+
+However, Hayston, as usual, was spurred on by opposition to have his own
+way, and to do even more than he originally intended. He told me
+afterwards that he only wanted to get some yams in the harbour, and that
+the water would have held out longer--until we got to a known safe
+island.
+
+So on Sunday we sent two boats on shore, and got the casks filled with
+water immediately. Our provisions were taken out and examined. Trading
+with the natives went on merrily.
+
+On Monday the weather was fine. We got a couple of rafts out with water,
+and laid in yams enough to last for the rest of our cruise. Hayston
+laughed, and said there was nothing like showing natives that you were
+not afraid of them. "Eh, Nellie? What you think now?"
+
+"Think Captain big fool," said Nellie, who was in a bad temper that
+morning. "Ha! you see boat crew; by God! man wounded--I see them carry
+him along."
+
+Sure enough, we could see the two boats' crews coming down to the beach.
+They were carrying one man, while two supported another, who seemed
+hardly able to walk. "Get out the boats!" roared Hayston. "I'll teach
+the scoundrels to touch a crew of mine."
+
+All was now bustle and commotion. Every man on the ship that could be
+spared, and Hope Island Nellie to boot, who had begged to be allowed to
+go with the attacking party, and whose ruffled temper was restored to
+equanimity by the chance of having a shot at her foes, and avenging her
+cousin's death. We left a boat's crew watch, and made for the shore,
+Nellie sitting in the bow of the Captain's boat with a Winchester rifle
+across her knees, and her eyes sparkling with a light I had never seen
+in a woman's face before. It was the light of battle come down through
+the veins of chiefs and warriors of her people for centuries uncounted.
+
+We left a couple of men in each boat, telling them to keep on and off
+until we returned; the wounded men were carefully laid on mats in one of
+their own boats; and forth we went--a light-hearted storming party, and
+attacked the town of the treacherous devils. Hayston was in a frightful
+rage, cursing himself one moment for relaxing his usual caution, and
+devoting the Santa Cruz natives in the next to all the fiends of hell
+for their infernal causeless treachery. He raged up again and again to
+the cluster of huts, thickly built together with palisades here and
+there, which made excellent cover for shooting from, backed up by the
+green wall of the primeval forest. I could not but admire him as he
+stood there--grand, colossal, fearless, as though he bore a charmed
+life, while the deadly quivering arrows flew thick, and more than one
+man was hit severely. Only that our fire was quick and deadly with the
+terrible Winchester repeaters, and that the savages--bold at first--were
+mowed down so quickly that they had to retreat to a distance which
+rendered their arrows powerless, we should have had a muster roll with
+gaps in it of some seriousness. Hayston was a splendid rifle shot, and
+for quick loading and firing had few equals. Every native that showed
+himself within range went down ere he could fit an arrow to his
+bowstring. And there was Hope Island Nellie by his side, firing nearly
+as fast, and laughing like a child at play whenever one of her shots
+told.
+
+Then the arrows grew fewer. Just before they ceased I had fired at a
+tall native who had been conspicuous through the fight. He fell on his
+face. Nellie gave a shout, and loaded her own rifle on the chance of
+another shot, straining her bright and eager eyes to see if another
+lurking form was near enough for danger. Well for me was it that she did
+so! Staggering to his feet, a wounded native fitted an arrow to his bow,
+and sent it straight for my breast before I could raise my gun to my
+shoulder. Nellie made a snap shot at him, and, either from exhaustion or
+the effect of her bullet, he fell prone and motionless.
+
+I felt a scratch on my arm--bare to the shoulder--as if a forest twig
+had raised the skin. "Look!" said Nellie, and her face changed. As she
+spoke, she passed her finger over the place, and showed it bloodstained.
+"The crawling brute's arrow hit you there. Let me suck the poison. If
+you don't"--as I made a gesture of dissent--"you die, twel' days."
+
+"Don't be a fool!" said Hayston. "You're a dead man if you don't. As it
+is, you must run your chance. Some of these fellows will lose the number
+of their mess, I'm sorry to say."
+
+So the girl, who had been but the moment before thirsting for blood, and
+firing into the mob of half-frightened, yet ferocious savages, pressed
+her soft lips on my arm, like a young mother soothing a babe, and with
+all womanly tenderness bound up the injured place, which had now begun
+to smart, and, to my excited imagination, commenced to throb from wrist
+to shoulder.
+
+"Strange child, isn't she?" laughed Hayston. "If she'd only been born
+white, and been to boarding-school down east, what a sensation she'd
+have created in a ball-room!"
+
+"Better as she is, perhaps," said I. "She has lived her life with few
+limitations, and enjoyed most of it."
+
+The excited crew rushed in and finished every wounded man in a position
+to show fight. Nellie did not join in this, but stood leaning on her
+rifle--_la belle sauvage_, if ever there was one--brave, beautiful, with
+a new expression like that of a roused lioness on her parted lips and
+blazing eyes.
+
+As for Hayston, he was a fatalist by constitution and theory. "A man
+must die when his time comes," he had often said to me. "Until the hour
+of fate he cannot die. Why, then, should he waste his emotions by giving
+way to the meanest of all attributes--personal fear?"
+
+He had none, at any rate. He would have walked up to the block without
+haste or reluctance, had beheading been the fashionable mode of
+execution in his day, chaffed his executioner, and with a bow and a
+smile for the handsomest woman among the spectators, quitted with easy
+grace a world which had afforded him a fair share of its rarest
+possessions.
+
+By his order the town was fired and quickly reduced to ashes, thus
+destroying a number of articles--mats, utensils, wearing apparel,
+weapons, etc.--which, requiring, as they do, considerable skill and
+expenditure of time, are regarded as valuable effects by all savages.
+
+The attack had been early in the day. We cut down as many cocoa-nut
+trees as we could, and finally departed for the ship, towing out with us
+a small fleet of canoes, to be broken up when we got to the brig. The
+sick men were sent below, and such remedies as we knew of were applied.
+They were--all but one--silent and downhearted. They knew by experience
+the sure and deadly effect of the poison manufactured among the Line
+Islands. Subtle and penetrating! But little hope of recovery remains.
+
+About four o'clock next morning we began to heave at the windlass, and
+got under weigh at eight. The wind was light and variable, and our
+progress slow. As we got abreast of the hostile village we gave them a
+broadside. But the sullen devils of Santa Cruz were not cowed yet. A
+second fleet of canoes swarmed around the ship. They made signals of
+submission and a desire to trade, but when they got near enough sent a
+cloud of arrows at the ship, many of which stuck quivering in the masts,
+though luckily no one was hit. Their yells and screams of wrath were
+like the tumult of a hive of demons. We were luckily well prepared, and
+we let them have the carronades over and over again, sinking a dozen of
+their canoes, and doing good execution among the crews when their black
+heads popped up like corks as they swam for the nearest canoes. While
+this took place we unbent the starboard chain, stowed it and the anchor,
+and clearing the heads, bade adieu to the inhospitable isle.
+
+On the next day all hands were engaged in cleaning our armoury, which it
+certainly appeared necessary to keep in good order. Hope Island Nellie
+polished her Winchester rifle till it shone again, besides showing an
+acquaintance with the machinery of the lock and repeating gear was
+nothing new to her.
+
+"You ought to make a notch in the stock for every man you kill, Nellie,"
+said Hayston, as we were lying on the deck in the afternoon, while the
+_Leonora_ was gliding on her course like the fair ocean bird that she
+was.
+
+Nellie frowned. "No like that talk," she answered. "Might have to put
+'nother notch yet for Nellie--who knows?"
+
+"Who knows, indeed, Nellie?" answered the Captain. "None of us can
+foresee our fate," he added with a tinge of sadness, which so often
+mingled with his apparently most careless moments. "We don't even know
+who's going to die from those arrow scratches yet."
+
+Here the girl looked over at me. "How you feel, Hil'ree?" she said, as
+her voice softened and lost its jesting tone.
+
+"Feel good," I said, "think getting better."
+
+"You no know," she answered gravely. "You wait." And she began to count.
+She went over the fingers of her small, delicately-formed left
+hand,--wonderful in shape are the hands and feet of some of these Island
+girls,--and after counting from little finger to thumb _twice_, touched
+the two first fingers, and looked up. "How many?" she asked.
+
+"Twelve," I said; I had followed the counts with care, you may be sure.
+
+"Twel' day, you see," she said; "perhaps you all right--perhaps"--and
+here she gave a faint but accurate limitation of the dreadful shudder
+which precedes the unspeakable agonies of tetanus.
+
+"Nellie's right," said Hayston; "keep up your spirits, for you won't
+know till then whether you're to go to sleep in your hammock in blue
+water or not."
+
+This was a cheerful prospect, but I had come through many perils, and
+missed the grim veteran by so many close shaves, that I had grown to be
+something of a fatalist like Hayston.
+
+"Well! if I go under it won't be your fault, Nellie! So, Captain,
+remember I make over to her all the stuff in my trade chest. Send any
+letters and papers to the address you know in Sydney, and a bank draft
+for what you will find in the dollar bag. Nellie will have some good
+dresses anyhow."
+
+"Dress be hanged!" quoth Nellie, who was emphatic in her language
+sometimes. "You go home to mother yet;" and she arose and left
+hurriedly. Poor Nellie!
+
+In that day when we and others who have sinned, after fullest knowledge
+of good and evil "know the right and yet the wrong pursue," shall be
+arraigned for deeds done in the flesh, will the same doom be meted out
+to this frank, untaught child of Nature and her sisters? I trow not. I
+must say that for a day or two before the fated twelfth which Nellie so
+stoutly insisted upon, I felt slightly anxious. What an end to all one's
+hopes, longings, and glorious imaginings, to be racked with tortures
+indescribable before dying like a poisoned hound, all because of the
+instinctive, senseless act of a stupid savage!
+
+To die young, too, with the world but opening before me! Life with its
+thousand possibilities just unrolled! One's friends, too,--the weeping
+mother and sisters, whose grief would never wholly abate this side of
+time; the old man's fixed expression of sorrow. These thoughts passed
+through my brain, with others arising from and mingled with them, as I
+left my hammock early on the twelfth day. I dressed quickly, and going
+on deck, that daily miracle occurred--"the glorious sun uprist."
+
+The dawnlight now began to infuse the pearly rim, which, imperceptibly
+separating from the azure grey horizon, deepened as it touched the edge
+of the vast ocean plain. Faintly glimmering, how magically it
+transformed from a dim, neutral-tinted waste to an opaline clarity of
+hue--a fuller crimson. Then the wondrous golden globe heaved itself over
+the edge of our water-world all silently, and the day, the 19th of
+October, began its course.
+
+Should I live to see its close?
+
+How strange if all this time the subtle poison should have lurked in
+one's veins until the exact moment, when, like a modern engine of
+devilry--an infernal machine with a clock and apparatus--set to strike
+and detonate at a given and calculated hour, the death-stroke should
+sound!
+
+We had breakfasted, and were lying on the deck chatting and reading, as
+the _Leonora_ glided over the heaving bosom of the main--the sun
+shining--the seabirds sailing athwart our course with outstretched,
+moveless wings--the sparkling waters reflecting a thousand prismatic
+colours, as the brig swiftly sped along her course--all nature gaily
+bright, joyous, and unheeding. Suddenly one of the wounded men, Henry
+Stephens by name, raised himself from his mat with a cry so wild and
+unearthly that half the crew and people started to their feet.
+
+"My God!" he exclaimed, as he sank down again upon his mat, "I'm a dead
+man--those infernal arrows."
+
+"Poor Harry!" said Nellie, who by this time was bending over him, "don't
+give in--by and by better--you get down to bunk. Carry him down, you
+boys!"
+
+Two of the crew lifted the poor fellow, who even as they raised him had
+another fearful paroxysm, drawing his frame together almost double, so
+that the men could scarcely retain their hold.
+
+"Carry him gently, boys!" said Hayston; "go to the steward for some
+brandy and laudanum, that will ease the pain."
+
+"And is there no cure--no means of stopping this awful agony?"
+
+"Not when tetanus once sets in," said Hayston; "it's not the first case
+I've seen."
+
+The other man was quite a young fellow, and famed among us for his
+entire want of fear upon each and every occasion. He laughed and joked
+the whole time of the fight with the Santa Cruz islanders, said that
+every bullet had its billet, and that his time had not come. "He
+believed," he said, "also that half the talk about death by poisoned
+arrows was fancy. Men got nervous, and frightened themselves to death."
+He was not one of that sort anyhow. He had laughed and joked with both
+of us, and even now, when poor Harry Stephens was carried below, and we
+could hear his cries as the increasing torture of the paroxysms overcame
+his courage and self-control, he joked still.
+
+The day was a sad one. Still the brig glided on through the azure
+waveless deep--still the tropic birds hung motionless above us--still
+the breeze whispered through our swelling sails, until the soft, brief
+twilight of the tropic eve stole upon us, and the stars trembled one by
+one in the dusky azure, so soon to be "thick inlaid with patines of
+bright gold."
+
+"Reckon I've euchred the bloodthirsty niggers this time," said Dick,
+with a careless laugh, lighting his pipe as he spoke. "This is 'Twelfth
+night.' That's the end of the time the cussed poison takes to ripen,
+isn't it, Nellie?" he laughed. "It regular puts me in mind of old
+Christmas days in England, and us schoolboys counting the days after the
+New Year! What a jolly time it was! Won't I be glad to see the snow, and
+the bare hedges, and the holly berries, and the village church again?
+Dashed if I don't stay there next time I get a chance, and cut this
+darned slaving, privateering life. I'll--oh! my God--ah--a--h!"
+
+His voice, in spite of all his efforts, rose from a startled cry to a
+long piercing shriek, such as it curdled our blood to hear.
+
+Hayston came up from the cabin, followed by Nellie and the other girls.
+All crowded round him in silence. They knew well at the first cry he was
+a doomed man.
+
+"Carry him down, lads!" he said, as he laid his hand on his forehead and
+passed it quietly over his clustering hair--"poor Dick! poor fellow!" At
+this moment another frightful spasm shook the seaman's frame, and
+scarcely could the men who had lifted him from the deck on which he had
+been lying control his tortured limbs. As they reached the lower deck
+another terrible cry reached our ears, while the continuous groaning of
+the poor fellow first attacked made a ghastly and awful accompaniment to
+the screams of the latest victim.
+
+As for me, I walked forward and sat as near as I could get to the
+_Leonora's_ bows, where I lit my pipe and awaited the moment in which
+only too probably my own summons would come in a like pang of
+excruciating agony. The gleaming phosphorescent wavelets of that calm
+sea fell in broken fire from the vessel's side, while the hissing,
+splashing sound deadened the recurring shrieks of the doomed sufferers,
+and soothed my excited nerves.
+
+Now that death was so near, in such a truly awful shape, I began
+seriously to reflect upon the imprudence, nay, more, the inexcusable
+folly of continuing a life exposed to such terrible hazards.
+
+If my life was spared I would resolve, like poor Dick, to stay at home
+in future. The resolution might avail me as little as it had done in his
+case.
+
+As I sat hour after hour gazing into the endless shadow and gleam of the
+great deep, a strange feeling of peace and resignation seemed to pass
+suddenly over my troubled spirit. I felt almost tempted to plunge
+beneath the calm bosom of the main, and so end for aye the doubt, the
+fear, the rapture, and despair of this mysterious human life. All
+suddenly the moon rose, sending before her a brilliant pathway, adown
+which, in my excited imagination, angels might glide, bearing messages
+of pardon or reprieve. A distinct sensation of hope arose in my mind. A
+dark form glided to my side, and seated itself on the rail.
+
+"You hear eight bell?" she said. "Listen now, you all right--no more
+poison--he go away." She held my hand--the pulse was steady and regular.
+In spite of my efforts at calmness and self-control, I was sensible of a
+strange exaltation of spirit. The heaven above, the sea below, seemed
+animate with messengers of pardon and peace. Even poor Nellie, the
+untaught child of a lonely isle, "placed far amid the melancholy main,"
+seemed transformed into a celestial visitant, and her large, dark eyes
+glowed in the light of the mystic moon rays.
+
+"You well, man Hil'ree!" she said in the foc'sle vernacular. "No more go
+maté. Nellie so much glad," and here her soft low tones were so instinct
+with deepest human feeling that I took her in my arms and folded her in
+a warm embrace.
+
+"How's poor Dick?" I asked, as we walked aft to where Hayston and the
+rest of the cabin party were seated.
+
+"Poor Dick dead!" she said; "just die before me come up."
+
+The people we had brought for the big firm, mostly Line Island natives,
+were quiet and easily controlled. Hayston now and then executed orders
+of this sort, though he would have scorned the idea of turning the
+_Leonora_ into a labour vessel. He was naturally too humane to permit
+any ill-treatment of the recruits, and having his crew under full
+control, always made matters as pleasant for these dark-skinned
+"passengers" as possible.
+
+But there were voyages of very different kind,--voyages when the
+recruiting agents were thoroughly unscrupulous, caring only for the
+numbers--by fair means or foul--to be made up. Sometimes dark deeds were
+done. Blood was shed like water; partly from the fierce, intractable
+nature of the islanders--sometimes in pure self-defence. But "strange
+things happen at sea." One labour cruise of which Hayston told me--he
+heard it from an English trader who saw the affair--was much of that
+complexion. We had plenty of time for telling stories in the long calm
+days which sometimes ran into weeks. And this was one of them.
+
+One day a white painted schooner, with gaff-headed mainsail, and flying
+the German flag, anchored off Kabakada, a populous village on the north
+coast of New Britain. She was on a labour cruise for the German
+plantations in Samoa.
+
+Not being able to secure her full complement of "boys" in the New
+Hebrides and Solomon groups, she had come northward to fill up with
+recruits from the naked savages of the northern coast of New Britain.
+
+In those days the German flag had not been formally hoisted over New
+Britain and New Ireland, and apart from the German trading station at
+Matupi in Blanche Bay, which faces the scarred and blackened sides of a
+smouldering volcano springing abruptly from the deep waters of the bay,
+the trading stations were few and far between.
+
+At Kabakada, where the vessel had anchored, there were two traders. One
+was a noisy, vociferous German, who had once kept a liquor saloon in
+Honolulu, but, moved by tales of easily accumulated wealth in New
+Britain, he had sold his business, and settled at his present location
+among a horde of the most treacherous natives in the South Seas. His
+rude good nature had been his safety; for although, through ignorance of
+the native character, he was continually placing his life in danger, he
+was quick to make amends, and being of a generous disposition and a man
+of means, enjoyed a prestige among the natives possessed by no other
+white man.
+
+His colleague--or rather his opponent, for they traded for opposition
+firms--was a small, dark Frenchman, an ex-bugler of the Chasseurs
+d'Afrique, who had spent some years of enforced retirement at New
+Caledonia. His advent to New Britain had been made in the most private
+manner, and his reminiscences of the voyage from the convict colony with
+his four companions were not of a cheerful nature.
+
+Ten miles away, at the head of a narrow bay that split the forest-clad
+mountains like a Norwegian fiord, lived another trader, an English
+seaman. He had been on the island about two years, and was well-nigh
+sickened of it. Frequently recurring attacks of the deadly malarial
+fever had weakened and depressed him, and he longed to return to the
+open, breezy islands of eastern Polynesia, where he had no need to start
+from his sleep at night, and, rifle in hand, peer out into the darkness
+at the slightest noise.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The labour schooner anchored about a mile from the German trader's
+house, and about two hours afterwards the boat of the Englishman was
+seen pulling round Cape Luen, and making for Charlie's station. This was
+because all three traders, being on friendly terms, it would have been
+considered "playing it low down" for any one of them to have boarded the
+schooner alone.
+
+The day was swelteringly hot, and the sea between the gloomy outlines of
+Mau Island and the long, curving, palm-shaded beaches of New Britain
+shore was throwing off great clouds of hot, steamy mist. As the
+Englishman's boat was about half-way between the steep-wooded point of
+Cape Luen and Kabakada, she altered her course and ran into the beach,
+where, surrounded by a cluster of native huts, was the station of
+Pierre. This was to save the little Frenchman the trouble of launching
+his clumsy boat. Pierre, dressed in white pyjamas, with a heavy
+Lefaucheux revolver in his belt and a Snider rifle in his hand, came out
+of his house. Addressing his two wives in emphatic language, and warning
+them to fire off guns if anything happened during his absence on board
+the schooner, he swaggered down the beach and into the boat.
+
+"How are you, Pierre?" said the Englishman, languidly. "I knew you and
+Hans Muller would expect me to board the schooner with you, or else I
+wouldn't have come. Curse the place, the people, the climate, and
+everything!"
+
+The little Frenchman grinned, "Yes, it ees ver' hot; but nevare mind.
+Ven ve get to de 'ouse of de German we shall drink some gin and feel
+bettare. Last veek he buy four case of gin from a valeship, and now le
+bon Dieu send this schooner, from vich we shall get more."
+
+"What a drunken little beast you are!" said the Englishman, sourly. "But
+after all, I suppose you enjoy life more than I do. I'd drink gin like
+water if I thought it would kill me quick enough."
+
+"My friend, it is but the fevare that now talks in you. See me! I am
+happy. I drink, I smoke, I laugh. I have two wife to make my café and
+look aftare my house. Some day I walk in the bush, then, whouff, a spear
+go through me, and my two wife will weep ven they see me cut up for
+_rosbif_, and perhaps eat a piece themselves."
+
+The Englishman laughed. The picture Pierre drew was likely to be a true
+one in one respect. Not a mile from the spot where the boat was at that
+moment were the graves of a trading captain, his mate, and two seamen,
+who had been slaughtered by the natives under circumstances of the most
+abominable treachery. And right before them, on the white beach of Mau
+Island, a whaler's boat's crew had been speared while filling their
+water casks, the natives who surrounded them appearing to be animated
+by the greatest friendliness.
+
+Such incidents were common enough in those days among the islands to the
+westward of New Guinea, and the people of New Britain were no worse than
+those of other islands. They were simply treacherous, cowardly savages,
+and though occasionally indulging in cannibalistic feasts upon the
+bodies of people of their own race, they never killed white men for that
+purpose. Many a white man has been speared or shot there, but their
+bodies were spared that atrocity--so in that respect Pierre did his
+young wives an injustice. They would, if occasion needed it, readily
+poison him, or steal his cartridges and leave him to be slaughtered
+without the chance of making resistance, but they wouldn't eat him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It's the _Samoa_," said the German, as he shook hands with us. "And the
+skipper is a d--d Dutchman, but a good sort" (having once sailed in a
+Yankee timber ship, trading between Sydney and the Pacific slope, Hans
+was now an American), "and as soon as it gets a bit cool, we'll go off.
+I know the recruiter, he's a chap with one arm."
+
+"What?" said the Englishman, "you don't mean Captain Kyte, do you?"
+
+"That's the man. He's a terror. Guldensterns pay him $200 a month
+regular to recruit for them, and he gets a bonus of $10 each for every
+nigger as well. We must try and get him a few here to fill up."
+
+"_You_ can," said the Englishman, "but I won't. I'm not going to tout
+for an infernal Dutch black-birder."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As soon as a breeze set in the three traders sailed off. The schooner
+was a fine lump of a vessel of about 190 tons register, and her decks
+were crowded with male and female recruits from the Solomon group.
+There were about fifty in all--thirty-five or forty men and about a
+dozen women.
+
+The captain of the schooner and his "recruiter," Captain Kyte, received
+the traders with great cordiality. In a few minutes the table was
+covered with bottles of beer, kummel, and other liquor, and Hans was
+asserting with great vehemence his ability to procure another thirty
+"boys."
+
+Kyte, a thin man, with deep-set grey eyes, and a skin tanned by twenty
+years' wanderings in the South Seas, listened quietly to the trader's
+vapourings, and then said, "All right, Hans! I think, though, we can
+leave it till to-morrow, and if you can manage to get me twenty 'boys,'
+I'll give you five dollars a head for them, cash."
+
+The traders remained on board for an hour or two, and in the meanwhile
+the captain of the schooner sent a boat ashore to fill water casks from
+the creek near the trader's house. Six natives got in--four of whom were
+seamen from the schooner and two Solomon Island recruits; these two
+recruits led to all the subsequent trouble.
+
+Kyte was a wonderfully entertaining man, and although his one arm was
+against him (he had lost the other one by the bursting of a shell), he
+contrived to shoot very straight, and could hold his own anywhere.
+
+He was full of cynical humour, and the Englishman, though suffering from
+latent fever, could not but be amused at the disrespectful manner in
+which the American spoke of his employers. The German firm which in a
+small way was the H.E.I.C. of the Pacific; indeed, their actions in many
+respects, when conducting trading arrangements with the island chiefs,
+were very similar to those of the Great East India Company--they always
+had an armed force to back them up.
+
+"I should think you have natives enough on board as it is, Captain
+Kyte," the Englishman was saying, "without taking any more."
+
+"Well, so I have in one way. But these d--d greedy Dutchmen (looking the
+captain and mate of the schooner full in the face) like to see me come
+into Apia harbour with about 180 or 200 on board. The schooner is only
+fit to carry about ninety. Of course the more I have the more dollars I
+get. But it's mighty risky work, I can tell you. I've got nearly sixty
+Solomon boys on board now, and I could have filled down there, but came
+up along here instead. You see, when we've got two or three different
+mobs on board from islands widely apart they can't concoct any general
+scheme of treachery, and I can always play one crowd off against the
+other. Now, these Solomon Island niggers know me well, and they wouldn't
+try any cutting off business away up here--it's too far from home. But I
+wouldn't trust them when we are beating back through the Solomons on our
+way to Samoa--that's the time I've got a pull on them, by having New
+Britain niggers on board."
+
+"You don't let your crew carry arms on board, I see," said the
+Englishman.
+
+"No, I don't. There's no necessity for it, I reckon. If we were anywhere
+about the Solomon Islands, and had a lot of recruits on board, I take
+d--d good care that every man is armed then. But here, in New Britain,
+we could safely give every rifle in the ship to the 'recruits'
+themselves, and seeing armed men about them always irritates them. As a
+matter of fact, these 'boys' now on board would fight like h--l for us
+if the New Britain niggers tried to take the ship. Some men, however,"
+and his eyes rested on Pierre, Hans, and the captain, "like to carry a
+small-arms factory slung around 'em. Have another drink, gentlemen?
+Hallo, what the h--l is that?" and he was off up on deck, the other four
+white men after him.
+
+The watering party had come back, but the two Solomon islanders (the
+recruits) lay in the bottom of the boat, both dead, and with broken
+spears sticking all over their bodies. The rest of the crew were
+wounded--one badly.
+
+In two minutes Captain Kyte had the story. They were just filling the
+last cask when they were rushed, and the two Solomon islanders speared
+and clubbed to death. The rage of the attackers seemed specially
+directed against the two recruits, and the crew--who were natives of
+Likaiana (Stewart's Island)--said that after the first volley of spears
+no attempt was made to prevent their escape.
+
+The face of Captain Kyte had undergone a curious change. It had turned
+to a dull leaden white, and his dark grey eyes had a spark of fire in
+them as he turned to the captain of the schooner.
+
+"What business had you, you blundering, dunder-headed, Dutch swab, to
+let two of my recruits go ashore in that boat? Haven't you got enough
+sense to know that it was certain death for them. Two of my best men,
+too. Bougainville boys. By ----! you'd better jump overboard. You're no
+more fit for a labour schooner than I am to teach dancing in a ladies'
+school."
+
+The captain made no answer. He was clearly in fault. As it was, no one
+of the boat's crew were killed, but that was merely because their
+European clothing showed them to be seamen. The matter was more serious
+for Kyte than any one else on board. The countrymen of the murdered boys
+looked upon him as the man chiefly responsible. He knew only one way of
+placating them--by paying some of the dead boys' relations a heavy
+indemnity, and immediately began a consultation with five Solomon
+islanders who came from the same island.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the mean time the three traders returned to the shore, and Hans, with
+his usual thick-headedness, immediately "put his foot in it," by
+demanding a heavy compensation from the chief of the village for the
+killing of the two men.
+
+The chief argued, very reasonably from his point of view, that the
+matter didn't concern him.
+
+"I don't care what you think," wrathfully answered the little trader, "I
+want fifty coils, of fifty fathoms each, of _dewarra_. If I don't get
+it"--here he touched his revolver.
+
+Now, dewarra is the native money of New Britain; it is formed of very
+small white shells of the cowrie species, perforated with two small
+holes at each end, and threaded upon thin strips of cane or the stalk of
+the cocoa-nut leaf. A coil of dewarras would be worth in European money,
+or its trade equivalent, about fifty dollars.
+
+The chief wasn't long in giving his answer. His lips, stained a hideous
+red by the betel nut juice, opened in a derisive smile and revealed his
+blackened teeth.
+
+"He will fight," he answered.
+
+"You've done it now, Hans," said the Englishman, "you might as well pack
+up and clear out in the schooner. You have no more sense than a hog. By
+the time I get back to my station I'll find it burnt and all my trade
+gone. However, I don't care much; but I hope to see you get wiped out
+first. You deserve it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All that night the native village was in a state of turmoil, and when
+daylight came it was deserted by the inhabitants, who had retreated to
+their bush-houses; the French trader, who had walked along the beach to
+his station, returned at daylight and reported that not a native was in
+his town, even his two wives had gone. Nothing, however, of his trade
+had been touched.
+
+"That's a good sign for you," said the Englishman. "If I were you,
+Pierre, I would go quietly back, and start mending your fence or
+painting your boat as if nothing had happened. They won't meddle with
+you."
+
+But this was strongly objected to by his fellow-trader, and just then a
+strange sound reached them,--the wild cries and howls of chorus, in a
+tongue unknown to the three men. It came from the sea, and going to the
+door they saw the schooner's two whaleboats, packed as full of natives
+as they could carry, close in to the shore. Instead of oars they were
+propelled by canoe paddles, and at each stroke the native rowers fairly
+made the boats leap and surge like steam launches in a sea-way. But the
+most noticeable thing to the eyes of the traders was the glitter of
+rifle barrels that appeared between the double row of paddlers. In
+another five minutes the leading boat was close enough for the traders
+to see that the paddlers who lined the gunwales from stem to stern had
+their faces daubed with red and blue, and their fighting ornaments on.
+In the body of the boats, crouching on their hams, with elbows on knees,
+and upright rifles, were the others, packed as tightly as sardines.
+
+"Mein Gott!" gasped Muller, "they have killed all hands on the schooner
+and are coming for us. Look at the rifles." He dashed into his
+trade-room and brought out about half a dozen Sniders, and an Epsom
+salts box full of cartridges. "Come on, boys, load up as quick as you
+can."
+
+"You thundering ass," said the Englishman, "look again; can't you see
+Kyte's in one boat steering?"
+
+In another minute, with a roar from the excited savages, the first boat
+surged up on the beach, and a huge, light-skinned savage seized Kyte in
+his arms as if he were a child and placed him on the land. Then every
+man leaped out and stood, rifle in hand, waiting for the other boat.
+Again the same fierce cry as the second boat touched the shore; then
+silence, as they watched with dilated eyes and gleaming teeth the
+movements of the white man.
+
+For one moment he stood facing them with outstretched hand uplifted in
+warning to check their eager rush. Then he turned to the traders--
+
+"The devils have broken loose. Have you fellows any of your own natives
+that you don't want to get hurt? If so, get them inside the house, and
+look mighty smart about it."
+
+"There's not a native on the beach," said the German, "every mother's
+son of them has cleared into the bush, except this man's boat's crew,"
+pointing to the English trader; "they're in the house all right. But
+look out, Captain Kyte, those fellows in the bush mean fight. There's
+two thousand people in this village, and many of them have
+rifles--Sniders--and plenty cartridges. I know, because it was I who
+sold them."
+
+Kyte smiled grimly. There was a steely glitter of suppressed excitement
+in his keen grey eyes. Then he again held up his hand to his followers--
+
+"Blood for blood, my children. But heed well my words--kill not the
+women and children; now, go!"
+
+Like bloodhounds slipped from the leash, the brown bodies and gleaming
+rifle barrels went by the white men in one wild rush, and passed away
+out of sight into the comparatively open forest that touched the edge of
+the trader's clearing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"There they go," said Kyte quietly, as he sat down on the edge of the
+trader's verandah and lit a cigar, "and they'll give those smart niggers
+of yours a dressing down that will keep them quiet for the next five
+years (he was right, they did). Well, I had to let them have their own
+way. They told me that if I didn't let them have revenge for the two men
+that I would be unlucky before I got to Samoa,--a polite way of saying
+that they would seize the schooner and cut our throats on the way up. So
+to save unpleasantness, I gave each man a Snider and twenty-five
+cartridges, and told them to shoot as many _pigs and fowls_ as they
+liked. You should have heard the beggars laugh. By the way, I hope they
+do shoot some, we want pork badly."
+
+"Hallo, they've got to Tubarigan's, the chief's bush-house, and fired
+it!" said Muller.
+
+A column of black smoke arose from the side of the mountain, and in
+another second or two loud yells and cries of defiance mingled with the
+thundering reports of the Sniders and the crackling of the flames.
+
+The little Frenchman and Muller played nervously with their rifles for a
+moment or two; then meeting the answering look in each other's eyes,
+they dashed into the trees and up the jungle-clad mountain side in the
+direction of the smoke and fighting.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The native houses in New Britain are built of cane, neatly lashed
+together with coir cinnet, and the roofs thatched with broad-leaved
+grass or sugar-cane leaves. They burn well, and as the cane swells to
+the heat each joint bursts with a crack like a pistol shot.
+
+"Look now," said Kyte to his companion, pointing along the tops of the
+hills. Clouds of black smoke and sheets of flame were everywhere
+visible, and amidst the continuous roar of the flames, the crackling of
+the burning cane-work of the native houses, and the incessant reports of
+the Sniders, came savage shouts and yells from the raiders, and
+answering cries of defiance from the New Britain men, who retreated
+slowly to the grassy hills of the interior, whence they watched the
+total destruction of some four or five of their villages. These
+bush-houses are constructed with great care and skill by the natives,
+and are generally only a short distance from the main village on the
+beach; every bush-house stands surrounded by a growth of
+carefully-tended crotons of extraordinary beauty and great variety of
+colour, and in the immediate vicinity is the owner's plantation of yams,
+taro, sugar-cane, bananas, and betel nuts.
+
+In the course of an hour or two the Solomon islanders ceased firing, and
+then the two white men, looking out on the beach, saw a number of the
+beaten villagers fleeing down to the shore, about half a mile away, and
+endeavouring to launch canoes.
+
+"By ----!" exclaimed Kyte, "my fellows have outflanked them, and are
+driving them down to the beach. I might get some after all for the
+schooner. Will you lend me your boat's crew to head them off? They are
+going to try and get to Mau Island."
+
+"No," said the Englishman, "I won't. If Pierre and the German are such
+idiots as to go shooting niggers in another man's quarrel, that's no
+reason why I should take a hand in it."
+
+Kyte nodded good-humouredly, and seemed to abandon the idea; but he went
+into the house after a while, and came out again with a long Snider in
+his hand.
+
+In a few minutes the Solomon islanders began to return in parties of two
+or three, then came the two white men, excited and panting with the lust
+of killing.
+
+Kyte held a whispered consultation with one of his "boys,"--a huge
+fellow, whose body was reeking with perspiration and blood from the
+scratches received in the thorny depths of the jungle,--and then pointed
+to the beach where four or five white-painted canoes had been launched,
+and were making for an opening in the reef. To reach this opening they
+would have to pass in front of the trader's house, for which they now
+headed.
+
+Kyte waited a moment or two till the leading canoe was within four or
+five hundred yards, then he raised his rifle, and placing it across the
+stump of his left arm, fired. The ball plumped directly amidships, and
+two of the paddlers fell. The rest threw away their paddles and spears,
+and swam to the other canoes.
+
+"Now we've got them," said Kyte, and taking about twenty of his boys,
+he manned his two boats and pulled out, intercepting the canoes before
+they could get through the reef into the open.
+
+Then commenced an exciting chase. The refugees swam and dived about in
+the shallow water like frightened fish, but their pursuers were better
+men at that game than they, and of superior physique. In twenty minutes
+they were all captured, except one, who sprang over the edge of the reef
+into deep water and was shot swimming.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were about five-and-twenty prisoners, and when they were brought
+back in the boats and taken on board the schooner it was found that the
+chief was among them. It may have occurred to him in the plantation life
+of the after time that he had better have stayed quiet. The Englishman,
+disgusted with the whole affair, went off with the other white men,
+leaving his boat's crew for safety in the trader's house, for had the
+Solomon islanders seen them they would have made quick work of them, or
+else Kyte, to save their lives, would have offered to take them as
+recruits.
+
+The two other traders decided to leave in the schooner. They had made
+the locality too warm for themselves, and urged the Englishman to follow
+their example.
+
+"No," he said, "I've been a good while here now, and I've never shot a
+nigger yet for the fun of the thing. I'll take my chance with them for a
+bit longer. The chances are you fellows will get your throats cut before
+I do."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+However, the schooner arrived safely at Samoa with her live cargo, but
+Kyte reported to his owners that it would not be advisable to recruit in
+New Britain for a year or two.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HALCYON DAYS
+
+
+We were now bound for Arrecifos Island, Hayston's central station, but
+had first to call at Pingelap and Strong's Island, where we were to land
+our cattle and ship a few tuns of oil.
+
+Nine days after leaving Ponapé, as the sun broke through the tropic
+haze, the lookout reported smoke in sight. The Captain and I at once
+went aloft, and with our glasses made out a steamer a long distance off.
+
+Hayston said he thought it was the _Resacca_, an American cruiser.
+Possibly she might overhaul us and take us into Ponapé. Unless the
+breeze freshened we could not get away from her.
+
+We were heading N.N.E. close hauled, and the steamer appeared to be
+making for Ponapé. She was sure to see us within an hour unless she
+changed her course.
+
+The _Leonora_ was kept away a couple of points, but the wind was light,
+and we were only travelling about four knots.
+
+At breakfast time we could see the man-of-war's spars from the deck, and
+the breeze was dying away. The Captain and I went on the foreyard and
+watched her.
+
+She had not as yet changed her course, but apparently did not seem
+anxious to overtake us.
+
+At length Hayston said with a laugh, as he took a long look at her, "All
+right, keep full, and by (to the man at the wheel) ----, brace up the
+yards again, she doesn't want to stop us. It's that old Spanish gunboat
+from Manila, a 'side wheeler.' I was told she was coming down to Ponapé
+from Guam to look after some escaped Tagalau prisoners. She'd never
+catch us if she wanted to with anything like a breeze."
+
+That night the Captain seemed greatly relieved. He told me that it would
+prove a bad business for him if an American cruiser took him; and
+although he did not anticipate meeting with one in these parts, he gave
+me full instructions how to act in the event of his seizure. He placed
+in my charge two bags of gold coin of two thousand dollars each, and a
+draft for a thousand dollars on Goddefroys' in Samoa.
+
+After which he declared that the ship was getting dull lately, and
+ordered the steward's boy to beat the gong and call out the girls for a
+dance.
+
+For the next hour or two wild merriment prevailed. Antonio, the
+Portuguese, with his violin, and the Captain with his flute, furnished
+the music, while half a dozen of the girls were soon dancing with some
+of the picturesque ruffians of the foc'sle.
+
+For days and days we had scarcely shifted tack or sheet, so gentle and
+steady was the wind that filled our sails; but the easterly equatorial
+counter current that prevails in these calm seas was sweeping us
+steadily on towards Strong's Island at the rate of two or three knots an
+hour.
+
+On some days we would lower a floating target and practise with the long
+gun carried amidships, on others the Captain and I would pass away an
+hour or two shooting at bottles with our rifles or revolvers.
+
+Hayston was a splendid shot, and loud were the exclamations from the
+crew when he made an especially clever shot; at other times he would sit
+on the skylight, and with the girls around him, sewing or card-playing,
+tell me anecdotes of his career when in the service of the Chinese
+Government.
+
+There were on board two children, a boy and girl--Toby and
+Kitty--natives of Arurai or Hope Island. They were the Captain's
+particular pets, in right of which he allowed them full liberty to tease
+any one on the ship.
+
+He was strongly attached to these children, and often told me that he
+intended to provide for them.
+
+Their father, who was one of his boat's crew, had fallen at his side
+when the natives of the island had boarded the vessel. On his next
+cruise he called at Arurai and took them on board, the head chief freely
+giving his permission to adopt them. I mention this boy and girl more
+particularly, because the American missionaries had often stated in the
+Honolulu journals "that Hayston had kidnapped them after having killed
+their father."
+
+His story was that on his first visit to the Pelew Islands with Captain
+Peese, the vessel they owned, a small brigantine, was attacked by the
+natives in the most daring manner, although the boarding nettings were
+up and every preparation made to repel them.
+
+He had with him ten seamen--mostly Japanese. Captain Peese was acting as
+first mate. An intelligent writer has described these Pelew islanders,
+the countrymen of the young Prince Lee Boo, whose death in England
+caused genuine sorrow, as "delicate in their sentiments, friendly in
+their disposition, and, in short, a people that do honour to the human
+race."
+
+The Captain's description of the undaunted manner in which fifty of
+these noble islanders climbed up the side of the brigantine, and slashed
+away at the nettings with their heavy swords, was truly graphic.
+Stripped to the waist they fought gallantly and unflinchingly, though
+twelve of their number had been killed by the fire of musketry from the
+brigantine. One of them had seized Captain Peese by his beard, and,
+dragging him to the side, stabbed him in the neck, and threw him into
+the prahu alongside, where his head would have soon left his body, when
+Hayston and a Japanese sailor dashed over after him, and killed the two
+natives that were holding him down, while another was about to
+decapitate him. At this stage three of the brigantine's crew lay dead
+and nearly all were wounded, Hayston having a fearful slash on the
+thigh.
+
+There were seventeen islanders killed and many badly wounded before they
+gave up the attempt to cut off the vessel.
+
+The father of Kitty and Toby was the steward. He had been fighting all
+through like a demon, having for his weapon a carpenter's squaring axe.
+He had cut one islander down with a fearful blow on the shoulder, which
+severed the arm, the limb falling on the deck, when he was attacked by
+three others. One of these was shot by a Japanese sailor, and another
+knocked down by the Captain, when the poor steward was thrust through
+from behind and died in a few minutes.
+
+The Captain spoke highly of the courage and intelligence of the Pelew
+islanders, and said that the cause of the attack upon the vessel was
+that, being under the Portuguese flag--the brigantine was owned by
+merchants in Macao--the natives had sought to avenge the bombardment of
+one of their principal towns by two Portuguese gunboats a year
+previously.
+
+Hayston afterwards established friendly relations with these very people
+who had attacked him, and six months afterwards slept ashore at their
+village alone and unarmed.
+
+From that day his perfect safety was assured. He succeeded in gaining
+the friendship of the principal chiefs by selling them a hundred
+breech-loading rifles and ten thousand cartridges, giving them two
+years' time to pay for them. He also gave nearly a thousand dollars'
+worth of powder and cartridges to the relatives of the men killed in
+attempting to cut off the brigantine.
+
+Such was one of the many romantic incidents in Hayston's career in the
+wild islands still further to the north-west. That he was a man of
+lion-like courage and marvellous resolution under the most desperate
+circumstances was known to all who ever sailed with him. Had not his
+recklessness and uncontrollable passions hurried him on to the
+commission of deeds that darkened for ever his good name, his splendid
+qualities would have earned him fame and fortune in any of those
+national enterprises which have in all ages transformed the adventurer
+into the hero.
+
+One day, while we sat talking together, gazing upon the unruffled
+deep,--he had been explaining the theory of the ocean currents, as well
+as the electrical phenomena of the Caroline group, where thunder may be
+heard perhaps six times a year, and lightning seen not once,--I
+unthinkingly asked him why he did not commit his observations to paper,
+as I felt sure that the large amount of facts relating to the
+meteorology of the Pacific, of which he was possessed, would be most
+valuable, and as such secure fitting recognition by the scientific
+world.
+
+He smiled bitterly, then answered, "Hilary, my boy, it is too late. I am
+an outlaw in fact, if not in name. The world's doors are closed, and
+society has turned its back on me. Out of ten professed friends nine are
+false, and would betray me to-morrow. When I think of what I once was,
+what I might have been, and to what I have now fallen, I am weary of
+existence. So I take the world as it comes, with neither hope nor fear
+for the morrow, knowing that if I do not make blue shark's meat, I am
+doomed to leave my bones on some coral islet."
+
+And thus the days wore on. We still drifted under cloudless skies, over
+the unfretted surface of the blue Pacific, the brig's sails ever and
+anon swelling out in answer to the faint, mysterious breeze-whispers, to
+fall languidly back against her spars and cordage.
+
+Passing the Nuknor or Monteverde Islands, discovered by Don Juan
+Monteverde in 1806, in the Spanish frigate _La Pala_, we sailed onward
+with the gentle N.E. trades to Overluk, and then to Losap. Like the
+people of Nuknor, the Losap islanders were a splendid race and most
+hospitable. Then we made the Mortlock group, once so dreaded by
+whaleships. These fierce and warlike islanders made most determined
+efforts to cut off the whaleships _Dolly Primrose_ and _Heavenly City_.
+To us, however, they were most amiable in demeanour, and loud cries of
+welcome greeted the Captain from the crowd of canoes which swarmed
+around the brig.
+
+Then commenced one of the reckless orgies with which the brig's crew
+were familiar. Glad to escape the scene, I left the brig and wandered
+about in the silent depths of the island forest.
+
+The Captain here, as elsewhere, was evidently regarded as a visitor of
+immense importance, for as I passed through the thickly populated
+villages the people were cooking vast quantities of pigs, poultry, and
+pigeons.
+
+The women and girls were decorating their persons with wreaths of
+flowers, and the warriors making preparations for a big dance to take
+place at night. I had brought my gun with me, and shot some of the
+magnificent pigeons which throng the island woods, which I presented to
+the native girls, a merry group of whom followed me with offerings of
+cocoa-nuts, and a native dish made of baked bananas, flavoured with the
+juice of the sugar-cane.
+
+I could not have eaten a fiftieth part of what was offered, but as
+declining would have been regarded as a rudeness, I begged them to take
+it to the chief's house for me.
+
+On my return a singular and characteristic scene presented itself. I
+could not help smiling as I thought what a shock it would have given
+many of my steady-going friends and relatives in Sydney, most of whom,
+if untravelled, resemble nothing so much as the inhabitants of English
+country towns, and are equally apt to be displeased at any departure
+from the British standard of manners and morals.
+
+The Captain was seated on a mat in the great council-house of the tribe,
+talking business with a white-headed warrior, whom he introduced as the
+king of the Mortlock group. The women had decorated the Captain's neck
+and broad breast with wreaths--two girls were seated a little farther
+off, binding into his hat the tail-feathers of the tropic bird. He
+seemed in a merry mood, and whispering something to the old man, pointed
+to me.
+
+In a moment a dozen young girls bounded up, and with laughing eyes and
+lips, commenced to circle around me in a measure, the native name of
+which means "a dance for a husband."
+
+They formed a pretty enough picture, with their waving arms and flowing
+flower-crowned hair. I plead guilty to applauding vociferously, and
+rewarding them with a quantity of the small red beads which the Mortlock
+girls sew into their head-dresses.
+
+Thus, with but slight variations, our life flowed, if monotonously,
+pleasantly, even luxuriously on--as we sailed to and fro amid these
+charmed isles, from Namoluk to Truk, thence to the wondrously beautiful
+Royalist Islands, inhabited by a wild vigorous race. They also made much
+of us and gave dances and games in honour of our visit.
+
+And still we sailed and sailed. Days passed, and weeks. Still glided we
+over the summer sea--still gazed we at a cloudless sky--still felt we
+the languorous, sighing breath of the soft South Pacific winds.
+
+Day by day the same flock of predatory frigate birds skimmed and swept
+o'er the glittering ocean plain, while high overhead the wandering
+tropic birds hung motionless, with their scarlet tail-feathers floating
+like lance pennons in relief against the bright blue heavens.
+
+Now, the Captain had all a true seaman's dislike to seeing a sea-bird
+shot. One day, off Ocean Island, Jansen, the mate, came out of the cabin
+with a long, smooth bore, which he proceeded to load with buck shot,
+glancing the while at two graceful tropic birds, which, with snow-white
+wings outspread, were poised in air directly over the deck, apparently
+looking down with wondering eye at the scene below.
+
+"What are you going to shoot, Jansen?" inquired the Captain, in a mild
+voice.
+
+The mate pointed to the birds, and remarked that his girl wanted the
+feathers for a head-dress. He was bringing the gun to his shoulder, when
+a quick "Put down that musket," nearly caused him to drop it.
+
+"Jansen!" said the Captain, "please to remember this,--never let me see
+you or any other man shoot a sea-bird from the deck of this ship. Your
+girl can live without the feathers, I presume, and what is more to the
+point, I _forbid_ you to do it."
+
+The mate growled something in an undertone, and was turning away to his
+cabin, when Hayston sprang upon him like a panther, and seizing him by
+the throat, held him before him.
+
+"By ----! Jansen," he said, "don't tempt me too far. I told you as
+civilly as possible not to shoot the birds--yet you turn away and mutter
+mutinously before my men. Listen to me! though you are no seaman, and a
+thorough 'soldier,' I treat you well for peace' sake. But once give me a
+sidelook, and as sure as God made me, I'll trice you up to the mainmast,
+and let a nigger flog you."
+
+He released his hold of the mate's throat after this warning. The cowed
+bully staggered off towards his cabin. After which the Captain's mood
+changed with customary suddenness; he came aft, and began a game with
+Kitty and her brother--apparently having forgotten the very existence of
+Jansen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The calm, bright weather still prevailed--the light air hardly filling
+our sails--the current doing all the work. When one afternoon, taking a
+look from aloft, I descried the loom of Kusaie or Strong's Island, on
+the farthest horizon.
+
+"Land ho!" The watch below, just turning out, take up the cry as it goes
+from mouth to mouth on deck. Some of them gaze longingly, making
+calculations as to the amount of liberty they are likely to get, as well
+as the work that lies before them.
+
+Early next morning we had drifted twenty miles nearer, whereupon the
+Captain decided to run round to the weather side of the island first,
+and interview the king, before going to Utwé or South harbour, where we
+proposed to do the most of our trading.
+
+Suddenly, after breakfast, a serious disturbance arose between the
+Chinese carpenter and Bill Hicks, the fierce Fijian half-caste, who was
+second mate. The carpenter's provisional spouse was a handsome young
+woman from the Gilbert group, who rejoiced in the name of Ni-a-bon
+(Shades of Night). Of her, the carpenter, a tall, powerfully-built
+Chinaman, who had sailed for years with Hayston in the China Seas, was
+intensely jealous. So cunning, however, was she in evading suspicion,
+that though every one on board was aware of the state of affairs, her
+lawful protector suspected nothing.
+
+However, on this particular morning, Nellie, the Hope Island girl, being
+reproved by the second mate for throwing pine apple and banana peel into
+the ship's dingey, flew into a violent rage, and told the carpenter that
+the second mate was stealing Ni-a-bon--and, moreover, had persuaded her
+to put something into his, the carpenter's, food, to make him "go maté,"
+_i.e._ sicken and die.
+
+Seizing an axe, the Chinaman sallied on deck, and commenced to exact
+satisfaction by aiming a blow at Ni-a-bon, who was playing cards with
+the other girls. The girl Mila averted the blow, and the whole pack fled
+shrieking to the Captain, who at once called upon Bill for explanation.
+
+He did not deny the impeachment, and offered to fight the carpenter for
+Ni-a-bon. The Captain decided this to be eminently right and proper; but
+thought the carpenter was hardly a match for the mate with fists. Bill
+promptly suggested knives. This seemed to choke off the carpenter, as,
+amid howls from the women, he stepped back into his cabin, only to
+reappear in the doorway with a rifle, and to send a bullet at the mate's
+head, which missed him.
+
+"At him, Billy," cried the Captain, "give him a good licking--but _don't
+hurt his arms_; there's a lot of work to be done to the bulwarks when we
+get the anchor down again."
+
+The second mate at once seized the carpenter, and dragging him out of
+his cabin, in a few minutes had so knocked his features about that he
+was hardly recognisable.
+
+Ni-a-bon was then called up before the Captain and questioned as to her
+preference, when, with many smiles and twisting about of her hands, she
+confessed to an ardent attachment to the herculean Bill.
+
+The Captain told Bill that he would have to pay the carpenter for
+damages, which he assessed at ten dollars, the amount being given, not
+for personal injury, but for the loss sustained by his annexation of the
+fascinating Ni-a-bon.
+
+At sunset we once more were off Chabral harbour, where we ran in and
+anchored--_within fifty yards_ of the king's house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MURDER AND SHIPWRECK
+
+
+We found the island in a state of excitement. Two whaleships had
+arrived, bringing half a dozen white men, and who had a retinue of
+nearly a hundred natives from Ocean and Pleasant Islands. The white men
+had to leave Pleasant Island on account of a general engagement which
+had taken place; had fled to the ships for safety, taking with them
+their native wives, families, and adherents.
+
+The other men were from Ocean Island, a famine having set in from
+drought in that lovely isle. They had also taken passage with their
+native following, to seek a more temporarily favoured spot. The
+fertility of Kusaie (Strong's Island) had decided them to remain.
+
+Strange characters, in truth, were these same traders, now all quartered
+at Chabral harbour! They were not without means, and so far had
+conducted themselves decently. But their retinue of savage warriors had
+struck terror into the hearts of the milder natives of Kusaie.
+
+Let me draw from the life one of the patriarchs of the movement, on the
+occasion of his embarkation.
+
+Ocean Island, lat. 0° 50´ south, long. 168° east.
+
+A fantastic, lonely, forbidding-looking spot. Circular in form, with
+rounded summit, and a cruel upheaved coral coast, split up into ravines
+running deep into the land. Here and there, on ledges overlooking the
+sea, are perched tiny villages, inhabited by as fierce and intractable a
+race of Malayo-Polynesians as ever lacerated each other's bodies with
+sharks'-tooth daggers, after the mad drunkenness produced by sour toddy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mister Robert Ridley, aged seventy, sitting on a case in his house, on
+the south-west point of Paanopa, as its people call Ocean Island, with a
+bottle of "square face" before him, from which he refreshes himself,
+without the intervention of a glass, is one of the few successful
+deserters from the convict army of New South Wales. At the present
+moment he is an ill-used man. For seven years he has been the boss white
+man of Paanopa, ever since he left the neighbouring Naura or Pleasant
+Island, after seeing his comrades fall in the ranks one by one, slain by
+bullet or the scarce less deadly drink demon. Now, solitary and
+saturnine, he has to bow to Fate and quit his equatorial cave of
+Adullam, because a mysterious Providence has afflicted his island with a
+drought.
+
+From out the open door he sees the _Josephine_, of New Bedford, Captain
+Jos Long, awaiting the four whaleboats now on the little beach below his
+house, which are engaged in conveying on board his household goods and
+chattels, his wives and his children, with _their_ children, and a dusky
+retinue of blood-relations and retainers; for the drought had made food
+scarce. Blood had been shed over the ownership of certain cocoa-nut
+trees; and old Bob Ridley has decided to bid farewell to his island, and
+to make for Ponapé in the Carolines. So the old man sits alone and
+awaits a call from the last boat. Perhaps he feels unusual emotion
+stirring him, as the faint murmur of voices ascends from the beach. He
+would be alone for awhile to conjure up strange memories of the past, or
+because the gin bottle is but half emptied.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"The _Josephine_, of New Bedford!" he mutters, as a grim smile passes
+over his bronzed, sin-wrinkled countenance; "why, _t'other one_ was from
+New Bedford too. This one's larger--a six-boat ship--and carries a big
+afterguard. Still the job could be done agin. But--what's the good now!
+If Joe, the Portuguese, was here with me I'd say it _could_ be done."
+Another gulp at the "square face." "Damn it! I'm an old fool. There's
+too many of these here cussed blubber-hunting Yankees about now. Say we
+took the ship, we'd never get away with her. Please God, I'll go to
+Ponapé and live like a d--d gentleman. There's some of the old crowd
+there now, and I a'n't so old yet."
+
+And here, maybe, the old renegade falls a thinking afresh of "the other
+one" from New Bedford, that made this very island on the evening of the
+3rd of December 1852.
+
+Out nearly two years, and working up from the Line Islands towards
+Honolulu, the skipper had tried to make Pleasant Island, to get a
+boat-load of pigs for his crew, but light winds and strong currents had
+drifted him away, till, at dawn, he saw the rounded summits of Ocean
+Island pencilled faintly against the horizon, and stood away for it. "We
+can get a few boat-loads of pigs and 'punkins' there, anyhow," he said
+to the mate.
+
+The mate had been there before, and didn't like going again. That was in
+1850. Sixteen white men lived there then, ten of whom were runaway
+convicts from Sydney or Norfolk Island. He told his captain that they
+were part of a gang of twenty-seven who had at various times been landed
+from whalers at Pleasant Island in 1845. They had separated--some going
+away in the _Sallie_ whaler, and others finding their way to Ocean
+Island. Now, the _Sallie was never heard of again_, the mate remarked.
+The captain of the _Inga_ looked grave, but he had set his heart upon
+the pigs and "punkins." So at dusk the brig hove to, close to the
+south-west point, and as no boats came off the skipper went ashore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were nearly a thousand people on Ocean Island then, and he felt a
+trifle queer as the boat was rushed by the wild, long-haired crowd, and
+carried bodily on shore.
+
+Through the gathering darkness he saw the forms of white men trying to
+push their way through the yellow crowd of excited natives. Presently a
+voice called out, "Don't be scared, mister! Let the niggers have their
+way and carry up the boat."
+
+He let them have their way, and after being glared at by the red light
+of cocoa-nut torches borne by the women, he was conducted to one of
+three houses occupied by the six gentlemen who had arranged to leave the
+continent of Australia without beat of drum.
+
+Bob Ridley's house was the scene of rude and reckless revelry that
+night. A jar of the _Inga's_ rum had been sent for, and seated around on
+the boxes that lined the side of the room the six convicts drank the raw
+spirit like milk, and plied the captain for news of the outer world two
+years old. Surrounding the house was a throng of eager, curious natives,
+no longer noisy, but strangely silent as their rolling, gleaming eyes
+gloated over the stone jar on the table. Presently a native, called
+"Jack" by his white fellow residents, comes to the door and makes a
+quick sign to Bob and a man named Brady, who rose and followed him into
+a shed used as a cook-house. Jack's story is soon told. He had been to
+the brig. She had thirty-two hands, but three men were sick. A strict
+watch was kept by the mate, not more than ten natives were allowed on
+board at once. In the port bow boats and the starboard quarter boats
+hanging on the davits there were two sailors armed with muskets.
+
+Another of the white men now slunk into the cook-house where the three
+talked earnestly. Then Brady went back and told the captain that the
+brig was getting into the set of the outer currents, and would be out of
+sight of land by daylight unless he made sail and worked in close again.
+Upon which the captain shook hands all around, and was escorted to his
+boat, promising to be back at daylight and get his load of "punkins."
+
+Brady and two others went with the captain for company, and on the way
+out one of his new friends--a tall, ghastly creature, eternally twisting
+his long fingers and squirting tobacco juice from his evil-seeming
+mouth--told the captain that he "orter let his men take a run ashore to
+get some cocoa-nuts and have a skylark." When they got aboard the
+captain told the mate to take the sentries out of the boats, to make
+sail, and run in close out of the currents, as it was all right. The
+captain and the guests went below to open another jar, while the mate
+and cooper roused up the hands who were lying about yarning and smoking,
+and told them to make sail. In the house ashore Bob Ridley with his two
+companions and Jack were planning _how the job was to be done_.
+
+Two boats came ashore at daylight, and in addition to the crews there
+were ten or a dozen liberty men who had leave till noon to have a run
+about the island. The captain still bent on his "punkins," took a
+boat-steerer and two other hands to put the coveted vegetables into bags
+and carry them down to the boats. The pumpkins, Ridley said, grew on his
+own land quite close; the men could pick them off the vines, and the
+natives carry them down. So they set off up the hill until the pumpkin
+patch was reached. Here old Bob suddenly felt ill, and thought he would
+go back to take a swig at the rum jar and return, but if the captain
+wanted a good view from the top of the island Jack would show him round.
+So leaving the men to bag the pumpkins, the skipper and Jack climbed the
+path winding through the cocoa-nuts to the top of the hill. The sun was
+hot already, and the captain thirsty. Jack, out of his hospitable heart,
+suggested a drink. There were plenty of cocoa-nuts around growing on
+short, stumpy trees, a couple of which he twisted off, and without
+husking one with his teeth, as is often done, cut a hole in the green
+husk and presented it to the skipper to drink from. The nut was a heavy
+one; taking it in both hands the doomed sailor raised it to his lips and
+threw back his head. That was his last sight of the summer sky that has
+smiled down on so many a deed of blood and rapine. For Jack at that
+moment lifted his right arm and drove the knife to the hilt through his
+heart.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As Jack hurried back to be in good time for the "grand coup"--the
+cutting off of the brig--he saw that the boat-steerer and his two hands
+_had finished gathering the pumpkins_. Two bags were filled and tied,
+while beside them were the three bodies of the gatherers, each decently
+covered with a spreading cocoa-nut branch. The ten "liberty men" had
+been induced by a bevy of laughing island nymphs to accompany them along
+the ledge of the steep coast cliff to a place where, as Jack had told
+them, they would find plenty of nuts--a species of almond peculiar to
+Ocean and Pleasant Islands. Half-an-hour's walk took them out of sight
+and hearing of the _Inga_, and then the "liberty men" saw that the girls
+had somehow dropped behind, and were running with trembling feet into
+the maze of the undergrowth. The startled men found themselves in an
+amphitheatre of jagged rough coral boulders, covered over with a dense
+verdure of creepers, when suddenly Brady and fifty other devils swept
+down upon them without a cry. It was soon over. Then the blood-stained
+mob hurried back to the little beach.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The mate of the _Inga_ was a raw-boned Yankee from Martha's Vineyard.
+Fearless, and yet watchful, he had struck the tall renegade as "a chap
+as was agoin' to give them trouble if they didn't stiffen him fust in
+the cabin." It was then noon, and as eight bells struck the crew began
+to get dinner. The mate, before he went below, took a look at the shore
+and fancied he saw the boat shoving off with the captain.
+
+"Yes," chimed in Wilkins, one of the guests, "that's him; he's got a
+boat-load, and all the canoes comin' off 's a lot of our own niggers
+bringin' off cocoa-nuts."
+
+"Then let's get dinner right away," answered the mate, who knew the
+captain would make sail as soon as ever he found his "punkins" safe
+aboard.
+
+Had he known that the captain was lying staring up at the sun on the
+hilltop among the dwarf palms, he might even then have made a fight of
+it, short of half the crew as he was.
+
+It was not to be.
+
+They went below--he and his guests, the third mate and the carpenter;
+the cooper was left in charge of the ship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The boats and canoes came alongside at once, pulling hard. Suddenly the
+cooper heard a cry from a man in the waist of the ship that chilled his
+blood, while over the bulwarks swarmed the copper-skinned crowd, knife
+and club in hand. As he rushed to the companion, the tall renegade
+looked up and saw the time had come.
+
+Then began the butchery. The ship's officers rushed on deck, leaving
+behind only the negro steward and a boy with the three convicts. Two
+shots were fired in the cabin, after which the three demons hurried up
+to join in the melée. In ten minutes there was not a man of the crew
+alive, except the cooper in the maintop, with a bloody whale-spade in
+his fast relaxing grasp. Brady and Bob were agreed "to give the old cove
+a chance to get eat up by the sharks," and ironically advised him to
+take a header and swim ashore. But the cooper, with his feet dangling
+over the futtocks and his head sunk on his chest, made no sign. He fell
+back as a streak of red ran slowly between the planking of the maintop
+and trickled down the mast to the deck.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a disappointment when the white murderers gathered in the cabin
+to find so small a quantity of rum in the _Inga's_ lazarette. But they
+were consoled by two bags of Mexican dollars--"Money for the punkins,"
+grinned Brady, which would buy them twice as much as they wanted when
+next ship came along. And then as the principal business was over, the
+harmony began, and amidst rum and unholy jesting, a division of the
+effects in the cabins was made, while unto Jack and his myrmidons were
+abandoned all and sundry that could be found for'ard.
+
+When the heavy-laden boats had been sent again and again to the shore, a
+fire was lighted in the cabin by the tall renegade, and the white men
+pushed off. But it suddenly occurred to Messrs. Ridley and Brady that
+"such a hell of a blaze might be seen by some other blubber-hunters a
+long way on a dark night," so the boat was put back and the brig
+hurriedly scuttled. And you can drop a lead line close to the edge of
+the reef anywhere about Ocean Island, and get no soundings at forty
+fathoms.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Soon after we anchored an urgent message was sent to the Captain by King
+Tokusar and Queen Sê, imploring him to come ashore and advise them. The
+Captain had of late seemed averse to going anywhere without my company,
+and asked me to come with him. So, getting into the whaleboat, we were
+pulled on shore, landing at a massively-built stone wharf which formed
+part of the royal premises.
+
+I may here mention that the headquarters of the American Mission had
+been at Kusaie for many years. The people were all Christians, and to a
+certain degree educated. Their island took rank, therefore, as the most
+successful result of missionary enterprise in the North Pacific.
+
+A native college had been built, to which were brought from outlying
+islands those natives who were destined for the ministry. However, about
+a year previously the Board of Mission had changed their headquarters to
+Ebon, an island of the Marshall group, leaving but one native missionary
+on Kusaie in charge of the flock. His name was Likiak Sâ. There are
+coloured Chadbands as well as white ones; and for pure, unmitigated
+hypocrisy the European professor would have had but little show in a
+prize contest.
+
+The head of the American Mission, Mr. Morland, had built himself an
+exceedingly comfortable stone house in Lêlé. As he was away at present
+in the brig _Morning Star_, his residence was occupied by his
+fellow-worker, Likiak Sâ, his wife, and an exceedingly pretty girl named
+Kitty of Ebon, who acted as housekeeper to Mr. and Mrs. Morland when at
+home.
+
+The missionaries had tried hard to prevent the people of Kusaie from
+selling produce to the whaleships, alleging that their visits were
+fruitful of harm. The old king, however, whose power had declined
+sensibly since the arrival of the missionaries, withstood their orders;
+and finally insisted upon the privilege of permitting them to visit the
+island, and to purchase the pigs, poultry, and fruit from the islanders
+which would otherwise lie useless on their hands.
+
+This King Tokusar was a curious compound of shrewdness, generosity,
+cant, and immorality, each alternately gaining the upper hand.
+
+On entering the "palace," which was exceedingly well furnished, we found
+him seated in an armchair in his reception room. He was dressed in a
+black frock-coat and white duck trousers: the latter somewhat of a
+military cut, falling over patent leather shoes. On one side of the
+chair, lying on its broad arm, was a ponderous copy of the Scriptures in
+the Kusaie dialect. On the other arm was placed one of the long clay
+pipes known as churchwardens.
+
+Behind him, with her much bejewelled fingers clasping the back of her
+consort's chair, was Queen Sê, a pretty little woman, with a pleasant,
+animated expression of countenance. Further inside the apartment were
+the queen's female attendants, sitting in the ungraceful manner peculiar
+to the Pingelap and Kusaie women.
+
+The king looked worn and ill, as he croaked out, "How you do, Captain? I
+glad to see you again. I thank God he bin good to you--give you good
+voyage. How much oil you bin buy at Ponapé?"
+
+Shaking hands warmly with the king, Hayston introduced me in form, and
+then to Her Majesty, who smiled graciously, tossing back her wavy black
+hair, so as to show her massive gold ear-rings. Chairs were brought,
+when a truly amusing conversation took place.
+
+_King._--"Well, Captain! you d--d clever man. I want you give me advice.
+You see--all these men come to Kusaie. Well--me afraid, take my island
+altogether. What you think?"
+
+_Captain._--"Oh no, king! I'll see they do you no harm. I think some of
+them go away in the _Leonora_."
+
+_King._--(Much doubting) "Oh! thank you. I no want too many white men
+here--no Christians like Kusaie men. No believe God, no Jesus Christ."
+(Then with sudden change of tone) "I say, Capt'n Hayston, one of you men
+no pay my people when you here last--no pay anybody."
+
+_Captain._--"Very bad man, king, how much he cheat people out of?"
+
+_King._--(With inquiring look at queen) "Oh! about three dollars."
+
+_Captain._--"I'll attend to it, king--I'll see it paid."
+
+_King._--"Thank you, Capt'n. What you say this young gentleman's name?"
+
+_Captain._--"His name is Hilary Telfer."
+
+_King._--"You like Strong's Island, young gentleman? Pretty girl, eh?
+Same as Captain?" Here he gave a wheezing laugh, and clapped his hands
+on the Captain's knees.
+
+I told him I thought the Strong Island girls very pretty. The queen
+communicated this to the attendants. After which I was the recipient of
+various nods and winks and wreathed smiles.
+
+An enormous roasted hog was then carried in by two of the king's cooks,
+after which a number of servitors appeared carrying taro, yams, and
+other vegetables--again yet more, bearing quantities of fish. We seated
+ourselves at a small table--the Captain opposite the king, while the
+lively little queen and I were _vis-a-vis_.
+
+"Make up to her," whispered the Captain, "flatter her to the masthead if
+you wish to be in clover for the rest of your stay. Never mind old
+Tokusar."
+
+Acting on this hint I got on famously with her South Sea majesty,
+discovering in due course that she was a really clever little woman, as
+well as an outrageous flirt.
+
+Presently the boats came ashore again, and the steward was ushered in,
+carrying a large box.
+
+"King!" said the Captain, "I know you are sick, and need something to
+make you strong. Pray accept a small present from my table." The
+present consisted of two bottles of brandy, with the same quantity of
+gin, and a dozen of beer.
+
+"Oh! thank you, Capt'n--you really very kind. By George! I like you too
+much."
+
+The queen cast a reproachful glance at Hayston. I could see she did not
+appreciate the gift. Her lord soon had a bottle of brandy opened, out of
+which he poured himself an able seaman's dose. The Captain took a
+little, and I--for once in my life--shared a bottle of Tennant's bitter
+beer with a real queen.
+
+The king rose up, with a broad smile illumining his wrinkled face, and
+said, with his glass to his lips, "Capt'n, and Capt'n's friend, I glad
+to see you." Presently, however, with a scared face, he said something
+to his consort at which she seemed disconcerted, and then told us they
+had forgotten to say grace.
+
+This, in a solemn manner, Hayston requested me to do, and, as I was
+bending my head and muttering the half-forgotten formula, the king
+leaned over and whispered to him, "I say, Capt'n, how many labour boys
+you want take away in brig?"
+
+This made me collapse entirely, and I indulged in a hearty laugh. The
+Captain and the queen followed suit, and, at some distance, the king's
+cackling merriment.
+
+It certainly was a jolly dinner. The king was growing madder ever
+minute, alternately quoting Scripture and swearing atrociously. After
+which he told me that he liked to be good friends with Mr. Morland, and
+that he had given up all his bad habits. But, changing his mood again,
+he confided to me that he wished he was young again, and concluded by
+expressing a decided opinion as to the beauty of Kitty of Ebon, Mrs.
+Morland's housekeeper.
+
+The queen now rose from the table and asked me to smoke a cigar. She
+produced a work-box in which were cigarettes and some Manila cheroots.
+Most graciously she lighted one for me.
+
+The king was now more than half-seas over. He laughed hilariously at the
+Captain's stories, and, with some double-barrelled oaths, announced his
+determination to return to the worship of the heathen gods and to
+increase the number of his wives.
+
+Queen Sê smiled, and blowing out the smoke from between her pouting red
+lips, said, "Hear the old fool talk!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That night there was high revel on board the _Leonora_ after we had
+taken our farewell of the king and queen.
+
+Hayston decided to take advantage of the land breeze, and so get away to
+South harbour at once, as we had business to do there. Chabral harbour
+was a difficult place to get out of, though easy enough to get into.
+
+The trade winds blow steadily here for seven months out of the twelve.
+Now, though the largest ship afloat may run in easily through the deep
+and narrow passage, there is not room enough to beat out against the
+north-east wind. Neither can she tow out, as there is always a heavy
+swell rolling in through the passage, wind or no wind. Kedging out is
+also simply impossible, owing to the extraordinary depth of water.
+
+In 1836, the _Falcon_ of London, a whaleship, lay in Chabral harbour for
+120 days. She had ventured in for wood and water. On making a fifth
+attempt to tow out with her five boats, she touched and went to pieces
+on the reef.
+
+Hayston, however, had run in, knowing that at this season of the
+year--from January to March--the winds were variable, a land breeze
+generally springing up at dusk.
+
+I stated that there was revelry on board the brig that night. The fact
+was that the Captain, in the presence of the king, queen, and myself,
+had made agreement with the refugee traders to take them to whatever
+island they preferred. The king was strongly averse to their retinue of
+excitable natives being domiciled among the peaceful Kusaie people.
+Inspired with courage by the presence of Hayston, he had told the
+traders that he wished them to vacate Lêlé. If they did arrange to leave
+in the _Leonora_, he told them that they could establish themselves at
+Utwé (South harbour), and there remain until they got away in a passing
+whaler or China-bound ship.
+
+After conferring with Hayston, most of the traders decided to take his
+offer of conveying them and their following to Ujilong (Providence
+Island), which was his own property, and there enter into engagement
+with him to make oil for five years. Two others agreed to proceed to the
+sparsely populated but beautiful Eniwetok (or Brown's group), where were
+vast quantities of cocoa-nuts, and only thirty natives. These two men
+had a following of thirty Ocean islanders, and were in high delight at
+the prospect of having an island to themselves and securing a fortune
+after a few years of oil-making.
+
+As the merry clink of the windlass pauls echoed amidst the verdurous
+glens and crags of the mountains that surround Lêlé, the traders, with
+their wives, families, and followers, pulled off in their whaleboats and
+came aboard.
+
+What a picture did the brig make as she spread her snowy canvas to the
+land-breeze! Laden with the perfume of a thousand flowers, cooled by its
+passage through the primeval forest, it swept us along towards the
+passage, upon the right steering through which so much depended. The
+traders had half a dozen whaleboats; these, with two belonging to the
+_Leonora_, were towing astern, with a native in each.
+
+The passage, as I have said before, was deep but narrow. As the traders
+gazed on either side and watched the immense green rollers dashing with
+resistless force past the brig's side, they looked apprehensively at
+the Captain and then at their boats astern.
+
+Right in the centre an enormous billow came careering along at the speed
+of an express train. Though it had no "breaking curl" on its towering
+crest, I instinctively placed my hands in the starboard boat davits,
+expecting to see the vast volume of water sweep our decks. Some of the
+traders sprang into the main rigging just as the brig lifted to the sea,
+to plunge downward with a swift and graceful motion, never losing her
+way for a moment. No man of our crew took the least notice. They knew
+what the brig could do, they knew the Captain, and no more anticipated a
+disaster than a mutiny.
+
+We made open water safely. Then the Captain descended from the
+fore-yard, whence he had been conning the ship. "Well, gentlemen," he
+said, "here we are, all on board the _Leonora_! I hope you think well of
+her."
+
+The traders emphatically asserted that she was a wonder. Then, as we did
+not intend to enter Utwé harbour till the morning, we shortened sail.
+The brig was placed under her topsails only, and we glided slowly and
+smoothly down the coast. Still the reef surge was thundering on the
+starboard hand.
+
+The light of the native villages--for the sudden night of the tropics
+was upon us--glimmered through the groves of cocoa-nuts and bread-fruit
+trees that fringed the snowy beaches. A shadowy, dreamy landscape,
+blurred and indistinct at times, while ever and anon the back-borne
+spume of the breakers fell in rain-mist over all, as they reared and
+raved, only to dash themselves in mad turmoil on the javelins of jagged
+coral.
+
+It was a strange scene. Yet stranger still were the dramatis
+personæ--the wild band of traders that clustered around the giant form
+of the Captain, as he lay smoking his cigar on the skylight, in friendly
+converse with all.
+
+Foremost in position and seniority comes old Harry Terry, a stalwart,
+grizzled veteran, brown-cheeked and bright-eyed still. Full of yarns of
+his cruise with Captain Waldegrave of H.M. _Seringapatan_, and Captain
+Thomas Thompson in the _Talbot_ frigate, on the coast of South America.
+Clear and honest is his eye, yet he has a worn and saddened look, as
+from a sorrow, long past, half-forgotten, yet never to be wholly erased
+from memory's tablet. A deserter--of course. Yet had he a true Briton's
+love for the flag which he had once sailed and fought under. By his side
+stand four stalwart half-caste sons, hearkening with glistening eyes to
+the Captain's tales of lands they had never seen, scarcely heard of,--of
+polar bears, icebergs, dog sledges, Esquimaux, reindeer, far amid the
+solitudes of the frozen North.
+
+Close by old Harry sits a tall, red-bearded man, with a look of latent
+humour in his countenance, which proclaims his nationality even if the
+richness of his brogue were not in evidence. This is Pleasant Island
+Bill, a merry good-for-nothing, with a warm heart and unlimited capacity
+for whisky. In his belt he carries--perhaps from force of habit--a heavy
+navy revolver, before which many a fierce Pleasant islander has gone
+down in the bloody émeutes so common in that wild spot. Behind Bill is
+his wife Tiaro--a fair-skinned native of Taputanea (Drummond's Island).
+She is certainly the "savage woman" of the poet's fancy--handsome
+withal, as, with her hand on her husband's shoulder, she gazes
+admiringly at the herculean figure of the far-famed Rover of the South
+Seas, the dreaded Captain of the _Leonora_. Near to or behind Tiaro are
+the other traders' wives, with their wild-eyed, graceful children.
+
+Beside me, sitting upon a bundle of sleeping mats, is a bronzed and
+handsome young fellow, Charlie Wilder by name, a veritable Adonis of the
+South Seas. With clear-cut features and bright brown curling locks,
+contrasting well with a dark, drooping moustache, he lolls languidly on
+the mats, gazing dreamily at times at the animated forms and faces
+around him. He was the ideal sea rover--much untrammelled by the canons
+of more civilised life. To each of his four young wives he appeared
+equally devoted. Though a _blasé_, exquisite in manner, he was a man who
+simply laughed at wounds and death. A dangerous antagonist, too, as some
+of his fellow-traders had good reason to know.
+
+There was yet another trader--a tall young American, who had run away at
+Pleasant Island from the whaleship _Seagull_--a difference of opinion
+with the captain having resulted in Seth's being put in irons.
+
+Besides Dick Mills the boat-steerer, who had deserted also from a
+whaler, there was another well-known trader, a true type of the old-time
+escaped convict. Burnt browner than a coffee berry is old Bob Ridley,
+scarred, weather-beaten, and, in accordance with the fashion of runaway
+sailors in the early days, tattooed like a Marquesas islander. Very
+"dour" and dangerous was this veteran--thinking no more of settling a
+difference with his ever-ready revolver than of filling his ancient clay
+pipe. He had with him two sons and three daughters, all married save the
+youngest girl. Sons and daughters alike had intermarried with natives,
+and the old man himself--his first wife being dead--had possessed
+himself of a girl of tender years but unyielding character. A native of
+Rapa-nui or Easter Island, she possessed in a high degree the personal
+beauty for which her race is famed throughout Polynesia. The old trader,
+it seems, had lately visited Tahiti, and there had dropped across the
+beautiful Lālia, and rescued her from the streets of Papeite. When he
+returned to Pleasant Island she accompanied him. She was a clever
+damsel, and having once been an inmate of the military camp at Tahiti,
+gave herself great airs over her step-children, though she was the
+junior of the youngest girl. Amongst other accomplishments Lālia could
+swear fluently both in French and English, having besides a thorough
+command of whaleship oaths which, I may observe, are unique in their
+way, and never seen in print.
+
+Singing and dancing were kept up until the galley fire was lit and
+coffee served out. Then as the tropic sea-mist was dispelled by the
+first sun rays, we saw, at no great distance, the verdurous hills that
+enclose with emerald walls the harbour of Utwé. Far back, yet seeming
+but a cable's length from the brig, rose the rugged coast, two thousand
+feet in air, of Mount Crozier.
+
+The inner shore of the harbour, sheltered by the reef from the fury of
+the terrific rollers, is surrounded by a broad belt of darkest green
+mangroves and hibiscus, forming a dense barrier, monotonous in
+colouring, but blending harmoniously with sea and sky. A well-nigh
+impassable forest coloured the landscape from sea to mountain top. Only
+near the shore were groves of cocoa-palms waving their plumy banners to
+the soft trade breezes. Interspersed at intervals one descried
+plantations of bananas and sugar-cane, yams and taro. The humidity of
+the climate shows itself in the surpassing richness of the vegetation.
+Mountain torrents foam and "rivulets dance their wayward round" in many
+a sequestered glen. Cane thickets springing densely from the deep
+alluvial mould form a safe retreat for the wild boar, while the stately
+purple plumaged pigeons preen themselves in the green gloom of this
+paradisal wild.
+
+The Captain walked the quarter-deck, giving orders to make sail on the
+brig, glancing in a half amused, yet contemptuous manner at the
+recumbent figures of the traders who, overcome by their potations, lay
+slumbering on the deck.
+
+Utwé is but a small harbour, so that the Captain felt vexed when
+daylight broke and revealed four whalers lying at anchor in the little
+port, allowing us no room. But one of them had his canvas loosed, and
+we caught the strains of "Shenandoah" as the crew lifted the anchor. We
+backed our main-yard and lay to, while she sailed out. A fine sight it
+was, as the whaler stood out through the narrow passage! The huge
+rollers dashing swiftly past her weather-beaten sides, made her roll so
+heavily that the boats on the davits nearly touched the water with their
+keels. She came close under our stern. Her captain stood up in one of
+the boats and took off his hat.
+
+"How air you, Capt'n?" he drawled; "that's a beautiful brig of yours.
+I've heard a deal of the _Leonora_ and Captain Hayston. I'm real sorry I
+hav'n't time to board you and have a chat. There's another
+blubber-hunter coming out after me, so you'd better wait awhile."
+
+Hayston answered him politely, and the _Marathon_ soon ran round the lee
+side of the island. In a quarter of an hour she was followed by another
+ship, after which we filled again and ran in, anchoring between the
+mangroves and the _Europa_ and _St. George_, New Bedford whaleships.
+
+Our first care was to land the cattle, and here the traders and whalers
+were treated to a lively scene. The mate Jansen, of whom I have before
+spoken, had been knocked off duty by the Captain, who told him that he
+was no seaman, and a cowardly dog besides, as he was always ready to ill
+treat the native crew, but would not stand up to him.
+
+An incident, in which I was an actor, goes to show the savage nature of
+the brute. One day, during our stay at Ponapé, I happened to require a
+pair of steelyards that lay in his cabin; on going for them he used
+insulting language, and dared me to enter. He was lying in his bunk, and
+his bloodshot eyes glared with rage as he took a pistol from under his
+pillow. Keeping one eye on the pistol I went in and took the steelyards.
+He leaped out, and a struggle began. We fell on the deck--his whole
+weight upon me--but I managed to get hold of the pistol, which I threw
+overboard. As he freed himself and rose, he gave me a savage kick on
+the knee which lamed me for a week. But I drew back and landed him a
+left-hander, which catching him fair in the face, sent him down
+senseless, while a stream of blood poured from his mouth and ears.
+
+"Malie! malie!" shouted Black Johnny in Samoan (the equivalent to
+"_habet_"), and the crew took up the cry in tones of deep approval.
+
+We never spoke again after this encounter.
+
+However, just before we made ready to land the cattle, he came aft and
+begged the Captain to reinstate him.
+
+"Mr. Jansen!" said Hayston, "I cannot permit you to resume duty as mate
+of this brig. I have given the position to Fiji Bill, as you are not fit
+for it. However, I will see how you behave for the future, and may give
+you another chance. Go on deck and assist to get these cattle into the
+water."
+
+The traders and whalers were watching the operation with great interest.
+The longboat, in charge of Fiji Billy, was ready to tow the cattle on
+shore as soon as they were lowered into the water. The first beast was
+swung safely out of the main hold and over the side, when the tackle
+parted aloft and the animal plunged into the sea, just missing the boat.
+For a moment there was silence. We all ran to the side, where we saw the
+bullock reappear and strike bravely out for the mangroves, which he
+reached in safety.
+
+The Captain walked slowly over to Jansen, who was engaged in bullying
+the boatswain.
+
+"Who rigged that tackle?" he asked in his most unruffled tones; but I
+could see the colour mounting to his forehead, as the laughter of the
+whaling crews fell upon his ear.
+
+"I did," growled Jansen (edging towards his cabin, in which he always
+kept loaded firearms), his sullen face showing fear and hatred
+combined.
+
+"Keep to the deck, sir," broke forth the Captain, who had foreseen this
+movement; the harsh, severe tones I knew foretold disaster. "D--n you,
+sir, you are neither good enough for an officer nor man before the mast.
+There is not a kanaka on board this brig but could have rigged that
+tackle in a seaman-like manner. Boy George, or even one of the girls,
+could have made a better fist of it. You have disgraced the brig in the
+presence of other ships. Go to your bunk till after breakfast."
+
+And now Jansen brought immediate punishment on himself. With one hand on
+the door of the deckhouse, he turned round and muttered, "Why didn't you
+let the women do it, then?"
+
+The next moment both men were struggling fiercely on the deck,--Jansen
+making frantic efforts to fire a pistol he had concealed in the bosom of
+his shirt; but the hand which held it was gripped by the Captain, and
+the muzzle pointed upwards.
+
+Jansen was an extremely powerful man, and, amid the babel of tongues
+that were let loose, I heard one trader say, "By ----! he's got the best
+of the Captain."
+
+But I noticed that while Jansen was almost spent, and was breathing
+stertorously, the Captain had not yet put forth the tremendous strength
+which, on sea or shore, I never saw equalled. He was still holding
+Jansen's hand with a vice-like grasp, when the pistol fell to the deck.
+Suddenly freeing himself, he stepped back and dealt two blows with
+wonderful quickness on the mate's face, cutting his forehead and cheek
+to the bone. The man staggered wildly--his features streaming with
+blood--then fell senseless against one of the crew, who darted aside and
+let him drop on the deck. A murmur of applause, mingled with cries of
+pity from the women, arose from the spectators, while the whaler crews
+rent the air with cheers for "Bully Hayston."
+
+The Captain drew forth his handkerchief, with which he removed a slight
+stain upon his face, then said in a mild and pleasant voice, as if
+nothing had occurred, "Steward! bring me a glass of water. Bill (to the
+Fijian) get these other beasts up and put them ashore. Antonio! get
+Jansen's traps together, and put them and him into the boat. The man
+that points a pistol at me on board of this brig only does it once. As I
+don't wish to hurt him again, I must get rid of him."
+
+The cattle were soon landed and eating their fill on the rich tract of
+littoral between Utwé and Coquille.
+
+That day I bought various articles of trade--including ten tons of yams
+for Arrecifos. The Captain never interfered with my dealings with the
+natives; so when Likiak Sâ the missionary went to him, and in a whining
+tone complained of my paying them in trade, he got the following answer:
+"Don't want your people to be paid in trade, don't you? Precisely so!
+you white chokered schemer--you whited sepulchre! you want to see these
+hard-working slaves of natives paid in cash, so that you and your
+brethren may rob the poor devils of every dollar for church tithes. The
+supercargo has my fullest confidence, and will not rob any native of a
+cent. Go and talk to him."
+
+The missionary came to the trade-room, where I was selling pigeon shot
+and powder to a man named Sree, and said that he wished the natives paid
+in cash. Every Strong's islander can speak English. So I turned to those
+present and asked if I had suggested their taking trade instead of
+dollars. On receiving this answer in the negative I told him to clear
+out. He disregarded me, upon which I assisted him to leave the cabin,
+while Lālia and Kitty covered him with flour from the pantry.
+
+This provided me with a persistent and bitter enemy.
+
+About six o'clock the Captain went below, but rather hastily returned,
+casting an anxious look to seaward. "The glass is falling fast," he
+said, "I can't make it out. I have never known it to blow hard here at
+this time of year. Still it is banking up to the westward."
+
+He hailed the whaleships, and saw that they had also noticed the glass
+falling. In a few minutes the two captains boarded us to have a
+consultation. The heavy, lowering cloud to seaward had deepened in
+gloom, and the three captains gazed anxiously at it.
+
+"Gentlemen!" said Hayston, "we are in a bad place if it comes on to
+blow. The land-breeze has died away, and that it is going to blow from
+the sou'-west I am convinced. We cannot tow out in the face of such a
+swell, even if we had daylight to try it. To beat out by night would be
+madness."
+
+The faces of the Yankee skippers lengthened visibly as they begged
+Hayston to make a suggestion.
+
+"Well," he said at length, "your ships may ride out a blow, for you've
+room to swing in, and if you send down your light spars and be quick
+about it, and your cables don't part, you'll see daylight. But with me
+it is different. I cannot give the brig a fathom more cable; there are
+coral boulders all around us, and the first one she touches will knock a
+hole in her bottom. But now every man must look to himself. I have two
+hundred people on board, and my decks are lumbered up with them. Adios!
+gentlemen, go on board and get your spars down for God's sake."
+
+Then the Captain turned all his attention to getting the brig ready for
+the storm that was even then close upon us. In the shortest time our
+royal and topgallant yards were down, the decks cleared of lumber, the
+native passengers sent below, and five fathoms of cable hove in. Hayston
+knew the brig would swing round with her head to the passage as soon as
+the gale struck her, and unless he hove in cable, must strike on one of
+the boulders he had spoken of.
+
+As yet there was not a breath of air, for after the last whisper of the
+land-breeze had died away, the atmosphere became surcharged with
+electricity, and the rollers commenced to sound a ceaseless thunder, as
+they dashed themselves upon the reef, such as I had never heard before.
+A pall of darkness settled over us, and though the whaleships were so
+near that the voices of their crews sounded strange and ghostlike in our
+ears, we could see nothing except the dull glow of the lamps alight in
+the cabins--showing through the ports.
+
+Then we heard the voice of Captain Grant of the _St. George_, "Stand by,
+Captain Hayston, it's coming along as solid as a wall."
+
+A fierce gust whistled through the cordage, and then a great white cloud
+of rain, salt spume, and spray enveloped the brig, as with a shrill,
+humming drone, like a thousand bagpipes in full blast, the full force of
+the gale struck us. The brig heeled over, then swung quickly round to
+her anchor, while the crew, every man at his station, sought through the
+inky blackness that followed the rain squall to see how the whaleships
+fared.
+
+But now the darkness deepened, if such were possible. No star shone
+through the funereal gloom; while the enormous rollers, impelled by the
+increasing force of the wind, swept in quickest succession through the
+narrow passage. The three ships rolled heavily.
+
+"Harry!" called out the Captain to the oldest trader, "take your boats
+and land as many of the people as you can. The sea is getting up
+fast--in half-an-hour it will be breaking aboard the brig."
+
+The traders' boats were made fast to the ship's stern, except two on
+deck.
+
+These were now hauled alongside, and old Harry, with his four stalwart
+sons--splendid fellows they were physically--manned one, and taking
+about fifty of their followers, who sprang over the side and were
+hauled into the boat, the sons gave a wild shout and disappeared into
+the darkness.
+
+The other boat was equally lucky in not being stove in. Pleasant Island
+Bill was in charge, and in a lull of the wind I heard him call out to
+those on deck to throw the women overboard and he would pick them up.
+
+Five or six of them leaped overboard and, swimming like otters, gained
+the boat; many others naturally held back. Standing on the deck clinging
+to the Captain's knees were the two children, Toby and Kitty. Seizing
+Kitty in his arms the Captain tossed her into the black waters close to
+the boat, where one of the crew caught her by the hair and pulled her
+in. Toby gave a yell of alarm and tried to dart below, but I caught him
+and slung him over after Kitty. Bill nearly missed catching him as he
+rose to the surface, but he was taken in. Then the boat headed for the
+shore, now only discernible by the white line of foam breaking; into the
+mangroves.
+
+And now our troubles recommenced. The waters of the harbour, generally
+placid as a mill-pond, were now running mountains high, so quickly had
+the sea got up. The Captain, who was standing at the stern sounding, and
+apparently as cool as if he were trout fishing, beckoned me to him, and
+placing his mouth to my ear, shouted--
+
+"Four fathoms under our stern--little enough if the sea gets worse. But
+if the wind hauls another point we'll touch that big coral mushroom on
+the port quarter, and then it's good-bye to the _Leonora_!"
+
+The words had hardly left his lips when a strange and awful lull of the
+wind occurred, rendering more intense the enshrouding darkness, more
+dread and distinct the seething wash and roar of the seas that broke on
+the weather reef.
+
+The Captain sprang into the main rigging and held up his hand to feel
+if the wind was coming from a new quarter. For some minutes the brig
+rolled so madly that it was all he could do to hold on.
+
+Then his strong, fearless voice sounded out: "Men! who will man a boat
+to take a line to the _Europa_? If I can get a hawser to the whaler to
+keep the brig's stern from this boulder under our port quarter, it may
+save the ship. If not, we must strike. There's a lull now, and a boat
+could get away."
+
+After a momentary hesitation, Antonio the Portuguese, Johnny Tilton, and
+two natives volunteered.
+
+"Good lads!" cried the Captain; "stand by, men, to lower away the
+whaleboat." In a few minutes she was in the water, and a whale-line made
+fast to a stout hawser was coiled away in the bow, as with an
+encouraging cheer from those on deck, the men gave way, and passing
+under our stern made for the _Europa_.
+
+After twenty minutes of anxiety, for we could see nothing, nor tell
+whether the boat had reached the _Europa_ safely or been stove in
+alongside, we saw her dart past the stern again, and Antonio called out,
+"All right, Captain, heave away on the hawser, the end's fast to the
+_Europa_."
+
+"Well done, lads!" cried the Captain; "but stay where you are, and I'll
+get some more women on shore."
+
+The strange lull still continued, but a lurid glare showed me the glass
+still falling steadily; when I told the Captain this he sighed, for he
+knew that our best chance of safety was gone. But he was a man of
+action.
+
+"Go below, Hilary!" he said quietly, "and get all the papers, letters,
+and articles of value together--I'll send them on shore with the women."
+
+In the cabin were eight or ten women; they gazed at me with
+terror-stricken faces. "On deck, Mary!" I said. "On deck all of you!
+there's a boat alongside, and some of you can get ashore."
+
+Five of them, with old Mary, at once left the cabin, and I heard their
+wild cries and screams of alarm as they were seized by the Captain and
+crew, and thrown overboard to be picked up by the boat.
+
+Lālia and the others remained in the cabin, clinging to each other and
+sobbing with fear.
+
+I picked up a heavy trade chest, and laying mats and rugs along the
+bottom and sides, stowed into it the chronometers, a couple of sextants,
+charts, and what gold and silver coin was in the Captain's secretary;
+also as many Winchester carbines and cartridges as it would hold.
+
+"Here, girls! help me carry this on deck," I said in Samoan to Lālia,
+who understood the language. We dragged the heavy box on deck, and, by
+wonderful good luck, it was lowered into the boat, which was now under
+the ship's quarter, and in imminent danger of being stove in.
+
+The Captain desired me to go ashore in the longboat and take charge of
+the boat. I was just about to jump when the brig gave a fearful plunge,
+and before she could recover, a heavy roller crashed over the waist and
+nearly smothered me. By clinging to the iron boat davits near me, I
+managed to save myself from being carried overboard with the debris of
+spars and timber that swept aft. When I regained my breath I could see
+nothing of the boat. She had, however, been swept ashore, and all in her
+landed safely except Bill, who was knocked overboard, but washed up into
+the mangroves.
+
+I felt the Captain's hand on my shoulder, as he asked me if I thought
+the boat had gone under.
+
+"I think not, or we should have heard some of them calling out; they can
+all swim."
+
+"Well, perhaps so," he replied, "but I fear not. I don't care a cent
+about the loss of the dollars, but Bill is a good fellow."
+
+Lālia had clung to the davits with me when the sea struck us, and was
+now almost exhausted. So with the Captain's help I carried her below
+into the now deserted cabin, for the other women were gone; had, I
+supposed, been washed overboard, for they were standing with us when we
+lowered the chest.
+
+The Captain then hastened on deck, telling me that the wind was coming
+away from the south. He had scarcely left me when I heard the dismal
+drone of the gale again, and his voice shouting to the carpenter to
+stand by and cut away the masts, for the seas were now breaking clean
+over the bows, and sweeping along the decks with resistless force.
+
+Being almost hove short, the ship could not rise quickly enough to the
+seas, and was besides rolling so much that she threatened to turn turtle
+every minute. It was impossible for any one to cross the deck, so madly
+was the brig rolling, and so fiercely were the seas sweeping her decks
+in quick succession; and so for a while all hands waited till a better
+chance offered to cut away.
+
+In the mean time I had dragged out another trade chest, and first
+securing my own papers and placing them in the bottom, I filled it with
+such articles as I thought would prove valuable if we did not save the
+ship.
+
+Lālia rendered me great assistance now. I filled a wineglass of brandy
+from the decanter, and made her drink it, for her teeth were chattering,
+and her lips blue with cold and terror combined.
+
+Together we managed to get the chest half-way up the companion, when
+another plunge made me slip, and the heavy box jammed the girl's feet
+against the side of the companion lining. I called loudly for help, as I
+could not extricate her from under the box. Fortunately, four native
+seamen heard me, and lifted the chest off her legs.
+
+Then I heard the Captain's voice calling out, "Well done, boys! Rotumah
+men, brave fellows, in a boat!"
+
+Carrying the girl below again, I dropped her in the steward's cabin,
+told her to stay there till I came back, and ran on deck.
+
+The Captain met me, and, pointing to a dark, indistinct mass, rising and
+falling near the ship's stern, said, "There's real grit for you!"
+
+It was one of the trader's whaleboats, manned by four Rotumah men and a
+native of Danger Island. Two of these brave fellows had been washed
+ashore in the second sea that had struck us, and with three others, who
+had reached the mangroves in another boat, had put out again to return
+to the brig and save their shipmates.
+
+The Captain now called out to those who were left on board, and told
+them that there was a chance of some of them getting ashore, by jumping
+over as the boat approached and getting into her. As for himself, if
+three or four good men would stand by him, he would attempt to cut away
+the masts, and perhaps save the ship as the hawser was made fast to the
+_Europa_.
+
+It was a new one, and might not part; but if it did, nothing could help
+the brig from sticking on the detached coral boulders that lay so close
+under the stern.
+
+Seizing her child in her arms, a powerfully-built Ocean Island woman
+sprang into the seething foam-caldron, and disregarding our cries to
+make for the boat, struck out for the nearest point of the mangroves.
+Next morning the child was found unharmed on a small beach, more than a
+mile away, and the body of the mother lying dead beside her, with a
+fearful gash on her temple and one foot missing,--the poor babe gazing
+at the cold face, and wondering why she did not wake when she called to
+her. Then others followed the women, some getting into the boat, and
+others letting the sea take them in the direction of the shore.
+
+"Where is the second mate?" shouted the Captain to the coxswain of the
+rescuing boat.
+
+"On shore with the traders, sir; all the boats but one are stove in on
+the beach, and he can't get out again."
+
+"All right, lads, don't attempt to come out again; but wait a minute."
+Then turning to me, "You must go ashore now in this boat. She has not
+many in her; and if her head is kept right into the break between the
+mountains she'll run up into the mangroves."
+
+But I said I would take my chance with the ship. I was a good swimmer,
+and in that time of danger, even despair, I could not leave the Captain.
+
+He pressed my hand silently, then called out, "All right, men, give way,
+the supercargo stays with me and the ship"; one dash of the oars, a
+wailing cry, a shout which out-toned it, and the boat disappeared, as if
+swallowed up by the darkness or the deep.
+
+We were not clustered together aft. Those of the crew that had stood by
+the ship were hanging on to the main rigging. The Captain, who had
+hitherto intended cutting away both masts at once, told me he fancied
+the ship was straining and plunging less, and that he would only cut
+away as a last resource.
+
+Suddenly he bent his glance at the hawser that was made fast to the
+_Europa_, and then pointed over to the seething water under our stern. I
+saw we were almost over a huge coral boulder, which every now and then
+showed itself bare.
+
+"By ----! those fellows on board the _Europa_ are paying out the hawser.
+We were fifty feet from that rock when the hawser was made fast and had
+a strain on it, and now it's right under her stern. Can any of you see
+the whaler's cabin lights?"
+
+The men looked through the blinding mists of spray that flew in our
+faces, and stung like whip-lashes when the brig was lifted high on a
+towering sea. The hawser tightened like an iron bar, but suddenly fell
+as if it had parted or been cast off.
+
+"The cursed dogs!" said the Captain, opening and shutting his hands
+spasmodically, "they are paying out, and letting us go to the devil!"
+
+And now a tremendous sea swept along and broke just as it reached
+abreast the mainmast. We felt the brig strike. Sea after sea tumbled in
+over the bulwarks, and a solid sheet of water broke over us in the main
+rigging, sweeping three or four men overboard.
+
+When I cleared my throat of the water I had swallowed, I saw the Captain
+with a rifle in his hand, and then followed the flash as he fired in the
+direction of the _Europa_.
+
+"Captain," I cried, "what good will that do? She may be ashore herself
+in as bad a fix as we are."
+
+He pushed me aside as I placed my hand on his arm. "Stand clear, Hilary!
+I tell you these cowardly hounds are deliberately wrecking me. That ship
+is in a safe place, and could ride out a heavier gale than this."
+
+"Captain," I began, when another sea lifted the brig's bow high in the
+air; then, with a dull crash, we struck stern on, and I saw the hawser
+had either parted or been cut away. The rudder had been torn from the
+stern-post, and ripped its way through the timbers with a fearful
+tearing sound. Again the Captain's face showed itself to me almost as
+white as the hell of boiling foam around us.
+
+"My ship is dearer to me than my life!" he said, as he cast the rifle
+from him and stood gazing out into the howling storm, amid which all the
+voices of earth and air seemed to be contending.
+
+Suddenly, with a pang of pity, I remembered that Lālia was in the
+steward's cabin. I dashed down below. Already the water was running into
+the hold, and as I gained the cabin the ship once more struck violently
+under my feet.
+
+"Lālia! Lālia!" I called, "come with me. Can you walk?"
+
+The girl was sitting up in the bunk, her hair unloosed, her eyes dilated
+with terror, as she gazed into the dimly-lighted cabin, and saw the
+water washing around it.
+
+She could hardly stand with the pain in her bruised feet, but I lifted
+her out. Then she tore off her dress, stripped to the waist, and, hand
+in hand, we succeeded in gaining the companion-way just as a torrent of
+water filled the cabin and put out the lamps.
+
+I felt the Captain's hand grasp me round the waist as we stumbled out on
+deck, and heard him say, "Hold on to me, Hilary! hold on like grim
+death, my girl!" as we were swept along by a sea against the bulwarks on
+the starboard side.
+
+Some of the men had clung to a boat that we carried on top of the
+deck-house, which had been washed over the side. They had no oars, but
+the backwater from the reef dashed her up against the ship, and I have
+an indistinct remembrance of the Captain dragging us along with him, and
+attempting to lift the girl up, when a towering wave struck us right
+amidships and drove us all over together on top of the boat, which was
+already stove in.
+
+I should have gone under then but for Lālia, for I had got a blow on the
+side from a piece of wreckage. Anyhow, what followed I cannot remember,
+for when I came to my senses it was daylight, and I was lying under some
+cocoa-nut trees with Lālia, and one of Harry Skilling's native retainers
+named Karta, bathing my back with fresh water.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My first inquiry was for the Captain, and I was relieved to hear from
+Lālia that he was visible at that moment, directing the crew to save
+wreckage from the brig. The two whaleships had ridden out the gale in
+safety, and the _Europa_ was already under weigh. I thought it just as
+well it was so, for Hayston would, I am sure, have attempted to seize
+her.
+
+Lālia told me that we clung to the boat till she struck a coral rock and
+went to pieces. Then every one was separated. She had been seized by
+Karta, and, still keeping hold of me, the three of us had come ashore
+together. She said also that my back was badly cut with the coral. The
+poor girl had a terrible gash on her arm, and this she had neglected to
+attend to me. I had a deep wound on my face, which caused me great pain,
+as a piece of tough coral had broken off in it.
+
+Lālia was almost nude, and I had only the remnants of a pair of duck
+trousers. We did not feel cold, however, as the storm had ceased, and
+the sun was now shining brightly. The wind had gone down, and the
+harbour was nearly as smooth as a mountain lake. The only visible sign
+of the disaster of the night was the maintopmast of the _Leonora_,
+showing where she had gone down.
+
+From the bank of mangroves on which we were located there was no access
+to the village of Utwé, where the rest of the ship's company were. Deep
+channels separated the two portions of the harbour. Karta was about to
+swim over to tell the Captain where I was, when Lālia caught him by the
+arm and pointed to the water. I have read a good many tall yarns about
+sharks, but never till now could I believe in their being as numerous as
+a shoal of minnows.
+
+The channels were simply alive with the brutes dashing to and fro,
+lashing the water into foam, and contesting with each other for dark
+objects floating near the surface. I shuddered instinctively, but Lālia
+laughed, and explained that the dead bodies were those of pigs washed
+overboard from the brig.
+
+Presently the tall figure of Karta attracted the notice of some of the
+people on the other side, and Lālia said the "ariki vaka" was coming
+over to us in one of the traders' whaleboats.
+
+The Captain sprang out of the boat, and seeing me lying down with my
+head in the girl's lap thought I was dead.
+
+"My dear boy," he said, taking both my hands and pressing them, "are you
+badly hurt?"
+
+I showed him my back, and said I felt most pain in my side, and
+whereupon I suffered ten excruciating pains in one as he extracted the
+piece of flat coral from my face. He then called one of the boat's crew,
+and told him to take off his shirt, one sleeve of which he tore off and
+bound up Lālia's arm. He then gave her the mutilated garment to cover
+her bare body, saying in his old cheerful manner that her husband was
+all right, and was out searching the beaches for her. She made a gesture
+of indifference, and then fainted away. As soon as she revived she was
+lifted into the boat, and we pushed off for the village.
+
+The Captain kept pressing my hand all the way over, and told me that
+since daylight he had been looking among the wreckage coming ashore and
+searching the beach for me, when some one saw our three figures in the
+cocoa-nut grove, and said two were white. Hayston knew this must be
+Lālia and myself, as she had a very fair skin. He was sincerely pleased
+at my escape, and no words need express my relief at his safety.
+
+He took us forthwith to one of the villagers' houses, and told the
+people to attend to us, and see that we wanted for nothing. He further
+insisted that I should not attempt to render him any assistance until I
+was perfectly recovered. I could only nod acquiescence, as my side was
+paining me terribly.
+
+A warm grasp of my hand and a kind look to Lālia and he was gone.
+
+One of the Kusaie women in the house told us that a message had gone up
+to the king, and that a native doctor named Srulik would soon come down
+and cure my back with leaves in the island fashion. She also informed
+Lālia that her husband had gone away in a canoe to look for her body,
+with two natives, but that he had come across a case of gin, and was now
+dead drunk on the opposite side of Utwé. It is hardly to be expected
+that a young girl could feel love for a man of her husband's years; but
+tears of humiliation coursed down her cheeks when the woman added that
+he had already asked an Ocean Island girl to be wife to him.
+
+About four o'clock in the afternoon messengers arrived from Lêlé with a
+message of regret from the king to Captain Hayston, and an invitation
+for me to Chabral harbour, so that I could get better quickly; and he
+could send his own boat for me. But I did not want to be separated from
+the Captain, and said I would come and visit him when I got permission.
+
+Queen Sê sent me a large basket of cooked pigeons and fruit. Taking out
+a few for myself and Lālia, I sent the rest to the Captain, who was glad
+of them for his weary and hungry men.
+
+For the next few days I suffered fearfully with the pain in my side, and
+though the Captain visited me twice a day, and tried all he could to
+cheer me up, I fell into a hopeless state of despondency. All the time
+Lālia had remained in the house, her husband, not having finished the
+case of gin, never coming near her. Her stepsons and daughters disliked
+her, and therefore avoided the house where we were staying.
+
+The Captain told me that her arm was cut to the bone, and that the trade
+chest that had fallen against her had injured one foot badly. Never as
+long as I live shall I forget the unwearied attention and kindness which
+the poor girl showed me during our stay in the village. Though lame, and
+with only the use of one arm, she never left my side, and strove by
+every means in her power to allay the agony I endured--answering to my
+petulance and irritability only with smiles and kind words.
+
+The Captain told me that he had saved a good many articles from the
+wreck; that the big trade chest had come ashore, and that the money and
+firearms were in a safe place. A quantity of liquor had also been saved,
+and already some fierce fights had taken place, but the traders had in
+most instances behaved well, and assisted him to maintain order. He told
+me also that Lālia's husband had taken away a lot of liquor into the
+impassable forest that lines the north side of Utwé, and, with two of
+his sons and several women, was having a big carouse.
+
+"The virtuous and Christian Strong's islanders had," he said, "stolen
+about a thousand dollars' worth of trade that had been washed ashore.
+But," he added quietly, "I'll talk to them like a father as soon as I
+get a house built, and knock the devil out of those Pleasant islanders
+besides. They seem disposed to cut all our throats."
+
+A couple of days after this, Hayston came to me with a letter from
+Lālia's husband, which he handed to me. I don't know whether amusement
+or indignation predominated as I read it, written as it was on a piece
+of account paper.
+
+ STRONG'S ISLAND, _March 11th_.
+
+ Supercargo _Leonora_ Brig.
+
+ DEAR FRIEND.--I heer my wife have took up with you, and say she
+ do'ent want anny mo-ar truck with her lawful husban. Captin
+ Hayston say No, but she must be cotton strong to you, not to
+ come to me when I look for her neerly one week amung two thousan
+ sharks, as I can prove, but I bare you no ill-wil, for I got
+ anuther wife, but you must give me the three rings she ware, and
+ I warn you I'm not responsble.--I remane, your true and sincere
+ friend.
+
+ _P.S._--Lal can read as well as me, and you can let her read
+ this. She is a good girl, and I bear no ill-wil.
+
+The Captain laughed when I read out this precious document, and told me
+not to take matters so seriously. He then sat down and chatted for
+half-an-hour, saying that as soon as he had finished saving the
+wreckage, he had called the traders together, and laid certain proposals
+before them to which they had agreed.
+
+These were that the traders and their followers would consider
+themselves under his direction, in which case he would engage to provide
+food for them during their stay on the island. They were not to have any
+commercial dealings with the people of Strong's Island, and their
+natives were to assist the crew of the _Leonora_ in erecting houses for
+their joint accommodation. After which he would endeavour to charter a
+vessel, probably a passing whaleship, to take the whole lot of us to
+Providence Island. Should no vessel call in six months' time, he would
+take a boat's crew and make for Millé Lagoon, six hundred miles distant.
+If the ketch I had brought down from Samoa was still afloat, he would
+bring her back, and take the people in detachments to Providence Island.
+He feared, however, that no more whalers would be calling in for ten
+months, as the _St. George_ and _Europa_ were the last of the fleet
+which was making, viâ Japan, for the Siberian coast, "right whaling."
+
+He left us then, saying he had established a little republic on the
+narrow strip of land that lay on the sea-side of Utwé village.
+
+Then I gave Lālia the letter I had received from her reprobate husband.
+She read it in silence and returned it to me, but I could see that the
+heartless old scoundrel's words had wounded her deeply. She took off
+some rings from her fingers, and sent them to the Captain to hand to the
+old man. "Do you think," she said, "that I can ever get back to
+Rapa-nui?" (Easter Island.)
+
+Her father, she went on to say, was dead, and her mother had been among
+those unfortunate people who in 1866 were seized by three Peruvian
+slavers and taken to work the guano deposits on the Chincha Islands.
+She, when about fourteen, had married one of the captains of one of the
+ships owned by the great firm of Brander of Tahiti. The tales she told
+me of his brutality and ill-usage during his drunken fits of passion
+moved me to sincere pity. The unmitigated rascal deliberately sold his
+child wife to an American (or a man who called himself one), and by him
+she was taken to San Francisco and delivered into yet more hopeless
+slavery. Here she made the acquaintance of a Tahitian half-caste. She
+and this girl succeeded in escaping and paying their passages to Tahiti,
+where they landed penniless and starving.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From Tahiti she was taken by her present husband.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A KING AND QUEEN
+
+
+On the next day I walked to the new village in course of formation, when
+I received from whites and natives alike a most flattering reception.
+Outside of the sandy spit a solid sea-wall of coral had been built, the
+ground had been levelled, and an enormous dwelling-house erected. This
+was the work of the Ocean and Pleasant islanders. It was the Captain's
+house, and from a hole in the gable floated the starry banner of the
+great Republic. This flag had been the joint work of Nellie and Mila. It
+was composed of strips of white calico, navy blue and Turkey red. At the
+further end of the sea-wall stood the traders' houses; opposite the
+captains' were those of their people. Every one seemed busy, and the
+greatest animation pervaded the scene, while a number of Strong's
+islanders, squatted down in front of the big house, surveyed the
+operations with dismay. They dreaded, and with good reason, the fierce
+and intractable natives of Pleasant Island, who would have been only too
+pleased to have cut their throats and taken possession of their
+beautiful home altogether.
+
+I was received by the Captain at the door of his house, and although the
+girls had frequently been to visit me, and bring fruit and fish from the
+Captain when I was sick, I was made as much of as if I had been dead and
+buried and come to life again. The Captain's merry blue eyes looked
+searchingly into mine, as I seated myself in an easy chair, "You see
+what it is to be _l'ami du maison_."
+
+I acknowledged the compliment, and then turned to shake hands with
+little Toby, who with a number of other children were being entertained
+by a sort of pig and yam tea-party by the Captain, each youngster having
+in his hand a junk of yam and piece of pork.
+
+Those of the crew who were in the vicinity now came in, and I had quite
+a levee. Black Johnny nearly wrung my hand off. I was glad to see the
+Captain looking so bright, and evidently on such good terms with those
+around him. I could not but be struck with the way in which the traders,
+resolute and determined men themselves, deferred to his slightest wish.
+
+For a few minutes he walked up and down the long matted floor,
+apparently lost in thought, while I sat and talked with the
+light-hearted, merry creatures around me. Suddenly stopping, he came up,
+and placed his hand on my shoulder.
+
+"Hilary! I like this island so well, that as Henry the Fifth said in
+France, when the French queen asked him how he liked her country: I mean
+to keep it."
+
+"Captain," I said, startled and alarmed, "are you serious?"
+
+"Yes and no! If I cannot get a ship to take us to Providence Island
+within six months I will upset the missionaries' apple-cart and take
+possession of the island. If a ship does call here, and I can charter
+her, I am bound in honour to fulfil my promise to these traders."
+
+"Captain," I said, "there are two hundred and fifty men on Strong's
+Island; surely you would not dispossess them? Besides, they will fight."
+
+"So much the better," he said, with a smile of contempt, "once let a
+quarrel break out between them and these Ocean and Pleasant islanders,
+and every native of Kusaie will have his throat cut in twenty-four
+hours."
+
+I turned the subject, for I saw by his stern expression that he meant
+what he said, and that any trifling incident would perhaps bring matters
+to an issue.
+
+Presently he began again. "Yes, these Pleasant islanders, who two weeks
+ago were all attached to these traders, are now heart and soul devoted
+to me. They know I am a better man, according to their ideas, than all
+the traders put together, and if I stepped out of the house now and told
+them I would lead them, they would follow me and burn old Tokusar's town
+over his head, cut off a passing ship, or do any other devilry such as
+their bloody instincts revel in."
+
+I tried to turn his thoughts into another channel, and succeeded so far
+that when I rose to return he was laughing and joking in his usual
+manner. He pointed out to me a separate part of the house, and told me
+that as soon as I liked to take possession he would be glad to see me in
+it.
+
+I explained to him that for the present I had better remain in the
+native house, as the king daily sent me food, and considered me his
+guest. In this he concurred, as he said if the king took a liking to a
+white man he would live in clover. He advised me to go and see him as
+soon as I was strong, or else his dignity would be touched. Also that I
+would find it well to keep good friends with Queen Sê.
+
+When I returned to the native house, however, I felt "sick unto death,"
+and cast myself down on the mats in despair. The hurt I had received in
+the side seemed to have also affected my chest, as I could hardly
+breathe without suffering agonies. Happily I became unconscious; when I
+opened my eyes I found the Captain beside my mat, and during the whole
+night he remained with me and encouraged my sinking spirits. When
+daylight came he examined me carefully, after which he told me, that
+from the darkening colour of my skin, and the agony I felt from the
+slightest pressure, he thought I had received internal injury. He
+therefore insisted upon my coming over to his village, so that I might
+be under his immediate control. To this I consented at last, although
+young Harry (as we called Harry Waters) was eager that I should come and
+live with him on the north side of Utwé, where Hayston had formed a
+sub-station to make oil and given him charge.
+
+I liked Harry very much; he was the only one of the traders whose age
+approached my own. His bearing and behaviour, too, contrasted favourably
+with those of his drunken and dissolute colleagues. However, I had to
+decline his kind offer, although, to my amusement, he emphatically
+asserted that I would be no trouble to him, as he had four wives, and
+Rosa, the youngest of them, was a clever nurse. I paid the Strong
+islanders who had attended on me, and then inquired of Lālia what she
+intended to do? She had, of course, no money to pay the people for
+keeping her, and the old custom of extending hospitality to strangers
+had naturally died out since the coming of the missionaries.
+
+I had no other way of showing my gratitude than by offering her money.
+This she refused, but said she would be glad to get some clothes or
+material to make them. I gave a native money, and sent him up to Lêlé,
+where he bought several dresses from Kitty of Ebon, and as she was the
+same height and figure as Lālia, they fitted her capitally.
+
+A couple of days after I had taken up my quarters with the Captain she
+came to see me, and say good-bye. She told me she was going to live at a
+village near Lêlé, and teach the Strong's Island women hat-making, at
+which she was clever. She would stay there till she got tired of it. I
+was sincerely sorry, and was not ashamed to show it, "being weak from my
+wound," and hardly able to refrain from tears. I felt quite pleased when
+the Captain came up and shook her little hand warmly, telling her that
+she really ought not to leave us. "Mind, Lālia, come to me if you are in
+any trouble, and I will see you righted," he said in parting.
+
+"I know that, Captain! very well," she answered, looking up with a
+strange, sorrowful look in her large bright eyes, "but I must go now."
+Whereupon she walked slowly down the beach, and getting into a canoe
+with two Kusaie women, waved her hand and was soon out of sight.
+
+I recovered slowly, but after a while was able to get about and to take
+an inventory of the property saved, while the Captain amused himself by
+overlooking the building of a large oil-store. He had demanded an
+immediate payment of two hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts from the
+king, as part indemnity for the property stolen by the natives from the
+wreck. The king dared not refuse, and now a huge pile of cocoa-nuts was
+accumulating near the oil-shed, where the Pleasant islanders were daily
+scraping the nuts and making oil. A number of butts had come ashore,
+which were utilised for the oil, so that the village had already gained
+a settled look. About this time the Captain gave way to occasional
+bursts of passion, inflicting severe beatings upon two of the traders,
+who had got drunk and were careering about with rifles in their hands,
+threatening to shoot any one that interfered with them.
+
+He also accused old Harry Terry of plotting with the king, and a violent
+scene ensued. Some of the natives still sided with their old master, and
+with knives and shark-tooth daggers surrounded him, uttering cries of
+defiance at the Captain.
+
+I was in the big house when the row commenced, and saw the excited
+savages running up to where the Captain and old Harry stood. An
+encounter seemed imminent.
+
+Boy George, with Nellie and the other women, now rushed in and demanded
+of me to give them the Winchester and Snider rifles, which stood ready
+loaded in a corner of the house. But, knowing that the Captain was ready
+to assert his authority without arms, I refused, and locking them up in
+a trade chest sat down upon it. I knew that the first shot would be
+followed by a scene of bloodshed and murder. George was persistent,
+saying the Captain would be killed, but changed his tone when he walked
+in unharmed, but with his fingers bleeding. Harry had given in when he
+saw the Captain dart in amongst the natives surrounding him, and knock
+two of the ringleaders down, but denied that he had been plotting to
+usurp Hayston's authority. A hollow reconciliation then took place, but
+there was bad blood between them from that time. He told me that I had
+done wisely in locking up the arms, and gave me the key to keep, as I
+had, he confessed, shown more prudence than himself. Then he sat down
+and began to sing like a schoolboy on a holiday.
+
+One day we took the boat and went up a creek flowing into the harbour.
+We were the only men, as the crew consisted of Ocean Island women and
+some of the girls from the brig.
+
+We were going to land them across the creek, where they intended to
+construct a fish weir, as the harbour was a bad place to fish in on
+account of the swarms of fierce and daring sharks.
+
+Among the girls in the boat were two from Ocean Island, being of the
+party landed from the whaleships at Chabral harbour. One of these was
+the new wife of the old convict trader. She had come down on a visit,
+and kept us amused with her descriptions of the orgies and drunken
+freaks of the fierce old man, whose conduct had frightened--no easy
+matter--all who came into contact with him.
+
+As we crossed over the in-shore reef and got into the channel of the
+creek, I saw a canoe with three figures in it ahead of us, and told the
+Captain that I thought I recognised Lālia. He said it was hardly
+possible, as she lived six miles away on the coast, and was not likely
+to come down here. At this mention of Lālia her successor looked
+frightened, and said she would like to go back, but was overruled by
+the others, who laughed at her fears. After rowing up the creek as far
+as the boat would go, the girls got out, and the Captain and I took our
+rifles and started up a spur in the mountain on the chance of getting a
+shot at the wild pigs.
+
+We struck into the dense woodland, and in a few minutes the voices of
+the laughing girls sounded subdued and far away. The gloom of the
+primeval forest seemed to be deepened by the vast structure and domelike
+tops of the mighty trees, whose thick branches formed an almost perfect
+canopy, while underneath our footsteps fell soundless on the thick
+carpet of rotting leaves.
+
+Here the Captain and I took different routes, agreeing to meet on the
+summit of the spur. As I walked along the silence that enshrouded all
+things seemed to weigh heavily; the darkening gloom of the forest began
+to fill me with childish fancies and misgivings. My nerves became strung
+to such a pitch that the harsh croak of some brooding frigate bird, or
+the sudden booming note of a wood pigeon, set my heart bumping against
+my ribs with that strange, undefined feeling which, if it be not
+premonition, is nearly akin to it.
+
+I had ascended half-way to the spur when I heard a shot.
+
+Its prolonged and tumultuous echoes startled the denizens of the forest,
+winged and quadrupedal, and as they died away a wild chorus of shrieks
+and growls seemed to electrify me into life. Waiting till silence
+resumed sway I called aloud to the Captain. Far down below I heard his
+answering call. Then he queried, "Have you shot anything?"
+
+"No, I have not fired."
+
+"Quick," he shouted, "come down--there's mischief among the women."
+
+Rushing down the leaf-strewn spur I soon joined him. We ran together
+till we reached the boat. There a tragedy had been enacted. The girls
+were huddled up in the boat, which was drifting about from bank to bank.
+As we dashed through the scrub they pointed to a patch of green-sward
+amongst the cocoa-nut trees, saying, "She is killed."
+
+There, lying on her face quite dead, was the Ocean Island girl with a
+bullet through her breast. The ball had passed completely through her
+body, and though her limbs were still quivering with muscular action,
+she must have died in a few seconds after she was struck.
+
+The girls told us that while they were making the weir she had gone up
+to a pool of fresh water among the rocks to look for fresh-water
+shrimps. A few minutes after they heard a shot; she staggered forward
+and fell on her face dead.
+
+The Captain and I looked at one another. Each read the thoughts that
+passed through the other's mind--Lālia had fired the shot! But, calling
+the women out of the boat, the Captain sternly forbade them to mention
+Lālia's name in connection with the matter, and said that they must all
+keep silence. A grave was hastily dug in the soft alluvial of the
+shadowy forest glade, where the body of the poor girl, wrapped in
+garments of her companions, was hastily buried.
+
+I did not understand the meaning of the secrecy which was evidently
+considered necessary, until the Captain told me that as the girl was in
+his charge at the time of her death, he would be held responsible, and
+that the uncertain temper of her countrymen might at any time cause an
+outbreak.
+
+We returned to the boat, and the women, as we neared the village, were
+instructed by the Captain to answer all inquiries for the dead girl by
+saying she had disappeared. Her countrymen took her departure very
+quietly, and came to the conclusion that the evil spirits of the
+mountain had carried her away, and their superstition forbade search.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I cannot, even after the time that has elapsed, recall without a pang of
+regret the total change in the Captain's demeanour and conduct at this
+time. Some demon appeared to have taken possession of him. His terrific
+bursts of violence drove every soul away at times, none daring to
+venture near him until he had cooled down except myself, to whom he
+never addressed a harsh or angry word. One day he declared that the men
+of the _Leonora_ and some of the Pleasant islanders were concocting a
+meeting, and I was sickened and horrified at seeing three of each lashed
+to cocoa-nut trees, while the huge figure of Antonio, the black
+Portuguese, towered above the crowd as he flogged them. The Captain
+stood by with a pistol in each hand as, with a countenance blanched and
+disturbed with passion, he ordered Antonio to lay it on well.
+
+I went into the house and, sitting down, tried to think out a course for
+myself. The Captain came in after a while and, drawing a seat to the
+window, gazed moodily out upon the sparkling, breeze-rippled sea. Then I
+knew that the dark hour had passed, and that he would listen to reason.
+
+"Captain," I said, "I can stay here no longer with you. I am sick of
+seeing men flogged till their backs are like raw meat, even though they
+are mutinous. If I thought any words of mine would do good, I would
+earnestly beg of you to adopt milder measures. Every day that passes you
+run the gauntlet, so to speak, of these men's deadly hatred, I know; for
+how can I avoid hearing the mutterings and seeing the fierce glances of
+the people--that you are surrounded with foes, and that any moment may
+be your last."
+
+He placed his hand on my shoulder in his old way. "True, my lad, true;
+but if they are dangerous to meddle with, so am I. The white men, young
+Harry excepted, would gladly see me lying out there on the sand with a
+bullet hole in my skull; but, by ----, I'll shoot every mother's son of
+them if I detect any treachery.... And so you wish to leave me?"
+
+I considered a moment and then answered, "Sorry am I to say it, but I
+do."
+
+"Come out to the beach, my lad, and talk to me there. This house is
+stifling; another month of this life would send me mad."
+
+We walked along the weather side for about a mile, then seating
+ourselves on a huge flat rock, watched the rollers tumbling in over the
+reef and hissing along the sand at our feet. Hayston then spoke freely
+to me of his troubles, his hopes, and disappointments, begging me to
+remain with him--going, indeed, the length of a half promise to use
+gentler methods of correction in future.
+
+I yielded for a time, but after another week the fights and floggings,
+followed by threats of vengeance, commenced anew. Two incidents also,
+following close upon one another, led me to sever my connection with the
+Captain finally, though in a friendly spirit.
+
+The first was an attack single-handed upon the Kusaie village of Utwé,
+driving the men before him like a flock of sheep. Some who ventured to
+resist were felled by blows of his fist. Then he picked out half a dozen
+of the youngest women, and drove them to the men's quarters, telling
+them to keep them till the husbands and families ransomed them.
+
+This was all because he had been told that Likiak Sâ had been to the
+village, and urged the natives to remove to Lêlé, where a man-of-war was
+expected to arrive from Honolulu, and that Hayston dared not follow them
+there.
+
+The next matter that went wrong was that he desired me to bring the
+trade books, and go over the various traders' accounts with him.
+
+One of these books was missing, although I remembered placing the whole
+bundle in the big chest with the charts and chronometers. He declared
+that the loss of this book, with some important accounts of his trading
+stations in the Line and Marshall Islands, rendered the others
+valueless.
+
+I felt aggrieved at the imputation of carelessness, and having never
+since first I knew him felt any fear of expressing myself clearly, told
+him that he must have lost it, or it would have been with the others.
+
+Starting from his seat with his face livid with rage, he passionately
+denied having lost it. Then he strode into his room, and with savage
+oaths drove out the women, cursing them as the cause of the brig's loss
+and all his misfortunes.
+
+The next moment he appeared with his arms full of chronometers, and,
+standing in the doorway, tore the costly instruments from their cases
+and dashed them to pieces on the coral flagstones at his feet. Then,
+swearing he would fire the station and roast every one in it, with his
+hands beating and clutching at the air, his face working with passion,
+he walked, staggering like a drunken man, to the beach, and threw
+himself down on a boulder.
+
+Three hours after, taking little Kitty and Toby with me, I found him
+still there, resting his head on his hand and gazing out upon the sea.
+
+"Captain," I said, "I have come to say farewell."
+
+He slowly raised his head, and with sorrow depicted on his countenance,
+gave me his hand.
+
+I pressed it and turned away. I packed up my belongings, and then
+calling to Nellie, told her to give the Captain a note which I left on
+his table, and with a handshake to each of the wondering girls, made my
+way through the village, and thence to the bank of a lagoon that runs
+parallel to the southern coast of Strong's Island. I knew that I could
+walk to Coquille harbour in about a day, and thither I decided to go,
+as at the village of Moūt dwelt a man named Kusis, who had several times
+pressed me to visit him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a bright moonlight night, so that I had no difficulty in making
+my way along the lonely coast. The lagoon, solemnly still and
+silver-gleaming, lay between me and the mainland. The narrow strip on
+the ocean side was not more than half a mile wide; on the lagoon border
+was a thicket well-nigh impassable.
+
+The mood of melancholy that impressed me at parting with a man to whom,
+in spite of his faults, I was sincerely attached, weighed heavily. The
+deep silence of the night, unbroken save by the murmuring plumes of the
+cocoa-nut palms as they swayed to the breath of the trade-wind, and the
+ceaseless plaints of the unresting surge, completed the feeling of
+loneliness and desolation.
+
+At length I reached the end of the narrow spit that ran parallel to the
+lofty mainland, and found that I had to cross over the reef that
+connected it to the main, this reef forming the southern end of the
+lagoon.
+
+The country was entirely new to me, but once I gained the white beach
+that fringed the leeside of the island, I knew that I need only follow
+it along till I reached the village of Moūt, about four miles distant
+from the end of the lagoon. I hung my bundle across my Winchester and
+commenced the crossing. The tide was out and the reef bare, but here and
+there were deep pools through which I had to pick my steps carefully,
+being confused besides by the lines of dazzling moon-rays.
+
+When nearly across, and walking up to my waist through a channel that
+led between the coral patches, I saw a strange, dark shape moving
+quickly towards me. "A shark!" I thought, but the next minute the black
+mass darted past me at an angle, when I saw it was an innocent turtle
+that was doubtless more frightened than I. After this adventure I gained
+the white beach, which lay shining like a silver girdle under the
+moon-rays, and flung myself down on the safe yielding sand. The spot was
+silent as the grave. The murmurous rhythm of the surf sounded miles
+distant, and but rose to the faintest lulling sound, as I made a pillow
+of my worldly goods and sank into dreamless sleep.
+
+It was the earliest dawn when the chill breath of the land-breeze
+touched my cheek, and sent a shiver through my somewhat exhausted frame.
+I arose, and looking round found that I was not wholly alone: several
+huge turtles had been keeping me company during the night, having come
+ashore to lay their eggs. As soon as I stood up they scrambled and
+floundered away in dire fright. I felt badly in need of a smoke, but
+having no matches, decided to eat something instead. I had not far to
+seek for a breakfast. Picking up a couple of sprouting cocoa-nuts from
+the ground, I husked them by beating them against a tree-trunk, and made
+a much needed meal from the sweet kernels.
+
+Although I was still far from well, and the pain in my side had returned
+with tenfold vigour, I felt a new-born elasticity of spirit. The glow of
+the tropic sun lighted up the slumberous main spread out in azure
+vastness before me.
+
+Shouldering my bundle and rifle, my sole worldly possessions, except
+utterly valueless money and papers in the Captain's care, I descended to
+the beach and walked along in the hard sand. At about six o'clock I came
+abreast of two lovely verdure-clad islets, rising from the shallow
+waters which lay between the outer reefs and the mainland, and I knew I
+must be near Moūt.
+
+Then I saw a canoe shoot out from the land about a quarter of a mile
+distant, with the native in it standing up poling it along. The next
+bend of the beach brought me in full view of the picturesque village. A
+loud cry of wonder greeted me. The next moment I was surrounded by
+smiling villagers. I felt a thrill of pride at the thought that of all
+those who had been cast away in the _Leonora_, none would have been
+welcomed so warmly as I was now by those simple, kind-hearted people.
+
+"Kusis' friend, Kusis' friend has come!" the men called aloud. Crowding
+around, and taking my rifle and bundle from me, I was escorted to the
+farther end of the village, where out of a pretty little house embowered
+in a grove of palms, a man sprang out and fairly hugged me.
+
+This was Kusis, in whose frank and open countenance nothing but joyous
+welcome and boundless hospitality could be read. Taking me by the hand,
+he led me inside. My cares were over for the present, evidently.
+
+Words of mine can but faintly describe the generosity and kindness of
+these people to me during my lengthened sojourn among them. The memory
+of the peaceful days which I passed in that unknown, lovely village can
+never be effaced.
+
+Kusis, it seems, had often been to see me when I lay sick at Utwé, and
+was unconscious of his presence. The Captain and Lālia had told me of
+how he would come softly into the house, bringing a present of fruit or
+fish for "the sick white boy," as he called me. He would sit by my side
+and gaze anxiously at me for hours at a time, always questioning the
+Captain concerning me. When I got better I had long chats with him, and
+to his inexpressible delight, gave him a shot gun which I had bought
+from the carpenter for a pound of tobacco. He had no shot, but he told
+me he could make some from strips of lead, and as there was plenty of
+that from the wreckage that came ashore, the Captain gave him as much as
+he could carry in the canoe, besides a large tin of powder and plenty
+of caps.
+
+He was a tall, large-framed man for a Strong's islander--magnificently
+built, and with a heart in proportion. His wife Tulpé, and his only
+daughter, a little girl named Kinie, made up the family. He evidently
+wished to complete it by making me his son, for his sole aim in life
+seemed to be to keep me with him.
+
+Unlike the people of Utwé, the villagers of Moūt were utterly
+unsophisticated, besides being free from the cant and hypocrisy that
+nearly always attaches to the native character when they profess
+Christianity. No doubt this was the result of their village being so
+distant from Lêlé, where the natives were for ever chanting psalms and
+hymns, and keeping the letter of the law, while at the same time they
+departed as widely from the spirit as their heathen forefathers had ever
+done.
+
+After a while I received a letter from Captain Hayston, and with it a
+large parcel. The letter ran as follows:--
+
+ MY DEAR BOY.--Have you entirely deserted me? I hope not. Come
+ and see me again, even if you only stop a day: I miss you
+ greatly, and the evenings are very dull without you to talk to.
+ I gave that fellow Miles, the boatswain, a bad beating, and he
+ has cleared out to the mountains with the Pleasant islanders.
+ Had you been here you would have got him off. As it is, I have
+ lost three men. Accept the things I send. (The hat was made for
+ you by a friend.) They will do for presents for your Kusaie
+ friends. Let me know when you can come up, and I will send the
+ whaleboat.--Yours sincerely,
+
+ W. H. HAYSTON.
+
+I sent back my thanks, saying that I would come and see him, but should
+come overland, as the messenger was returning in a canoe. Kusis put in
+two turtle as "present for Captin."
+
+I opened the parcel, which I found contained all sorts of articles
+likely to be useful to me, with ten pounds of tobacco, and a bag of
+small scarlet and white beads, the delight of a Strong's Island girl's
+heart. Rolled up in a native sash was a beautifully-made Panama hat.
+This latter was a gift from Lālia, and at once excited the admiration of
+Kusis and Tulpé, when they examined its texture. The childish delight of
+Kinie, when I gave her the beads, gave me the greatest pleasure, and
+although her father and mother looked with glistening eyes at the other
+articles which I wished them to take, they firmly refused the offered
+gifts, Kusis only taking a few sticks of tobacco, and his wife a silk
+handkerchief with some needles and thread.
+
+I was rapidly regaining my strength, now felt in much higher spirits as
+I accompanied Kusis on his shooting and fishing trips, returning home to
+the bright faces and welcoming smiles of his wife and daughter. After
+another week Kusis and I set out to visit the Captain, who, though I was
+thoroughly happy and contented with my new friends, was never absent
+from my thoughts. He received us with unaffected pleasure, and, calling
+his steward and making us sit down to lunch, he gave me an account of
+what had been doing since I had left.
+
+The village had now a settled appearance, and the people were all busy
+making oil, another two hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts having
+been paid by the king. The Captain asked me if there were not a vast
+quantity of cocoa-nuts at Coquille harbour, and on my assenting, said he
+would send a gang of Pleasant islanders under Fiji Bill and Antonio to
+live there, and collect the third part of the indemnity--another two
+hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts.
+
+This I begged him not to do, pointing out the injustice of such an
+action, inasmuch as the people of Coquille had no hand in stealing the
+property from the brig, and it would be cruel to make them pay for the
+misdoings of others. I told him also that at Coquille were situated the
+largest taro and yam plantations, with the best turtle fisheries, that I
+was sure the natives would destroy the plantations and abandon the
+villages if they had the savage Pleasant islanders quartered upon them.
+Besides, we might have to remain another eight or nine months on the
+island before the whaling fleet called here again, and that it was
+absolutely indispensable that he should be able to command a supply of
+food to subsist nearly a hundred and fifty people.
+
+Kusis, who was seated on the mats near us, eagerly watched the Captain.
+At length a look of content overspread his face as the Captain said he
+would not touch the cocoa-nuts in Coquille harbour. To Kusis he said,
+"Tell your people to have no fear as long as the king continues to pay
+up, but once let me see any 'soldiering,' or desire to avoid paying the
+fine, I'll strip the island from Mount Crozier to the reef."
+
+Then we strolled to and fro on the Plaza, as we called the local
+esplanade in front of the big house, and the Captain told me to come and
+look at his turtle pond, in which were a number of green turtle, and
+also the two hawkbills sent by Kusis.
+
+I found that several of the traders had now openly broken with him, and
+leaving their native following, had retired to Lêlé, where they were
+under the protection of the king. The number of girls in the big house
+had now increased to nine or ten. At the time of my visit some were
+engaged in weaving an immense mat to cover the whole floor, others were
+drying and picking tobacco leaves for making cigars. Two of the new
+arrivals, I could see, were native girls. I asked the Captain what they
+were doing there. He answered somewhat testily, "Did I think they came
+to teach Sunday-school?"
+
+I remained that night, and we spent a merry evening. In the morning,
+after a breakfast of turtle eggs and roast pig, Kusis and I prepared to
+return.
+
+The Captain urged me to go by way of Chabral harbour, and pay my
+promised visit to the king.
+
+"In that case I might let him know how his Majesty was taking matters."
+Kusis also urged me to see the king, who was anxious that I should spend
+a week with him.
+
+We got a canoe to carry us across to the north arm of the harbour, where
+I remained an hour or two with young Harry, who had established quite a
+small village.
+
+When we entered the fence surrounding his place, we found him lying in a
+hammock, slung between two pandanus-trees, smoking his morning pipe, and
+having his hair combed by two pretty little witches named Rosa and
+Taloe.
+
+This was Harry's idea of island luxury. He always alleged that sleeping
+gave him a headache, and that having his hair brushed drove it away,
+particularly if the combing was performed by the soft hands of one of
+his four houris.
+
+He sprang up and welcomed me heartily, urging me to stay all night. But
+I was anxious to get on. However, I said I should be glad to see him at
+Moūt, when he could bring his family with him, and give them a week's
+feast on pork and turtle.
+
+Harry presently took me into a small room, saying, "Look here!" The
+place was closely packed with liquor in small kegs. These had been
+washed ashore, and he had found them, only a few days since, high up in
+the mangroves. The Captain told him to store it, as it was dangerous
+stuff to bring to Utwé. The Pleasant islanders are very fond of liquor,
+after imbibing which they always want to fight and kill some one, and
+generally do.
+
+We had a glass of grog together, after which I said good-bye to the
+good-natured, handsome young trader and his wives, whom he used to call
+the "Three Graces, with another thrown in."
+
+Kusis and I reached the south side of Chabral harbour about sunset. I
+was freshly enchanted with the loveliness of the scene, accustomed as I
+had become to this paradisal quarter of the globe. The trade-wind had
+died away, the transparent waters of the harbour reflected in their blue
+depths the tall shadows of the towering mountains that overhung the
+harbour on three sides.
+
+A canoe put across from the king's wharf when I fired a shot to attract
+attention. So wonderfully clear was the atmosphere, so unbroken the
+silence of the lonely bay, that the quick "tweep, tweep" of the paddle,
+as it struck the water, reached our ears as distinctly as if the canoe
+was but a few yards distant, instead of nearly half a mile.
+
+The old king received me graciously, but soon commenced a string of
+complaints, interlarded with Scripture quotations rounded off by quaint
+oaths. He feared the Captain greatly, and yet was anxious to keep up his
+authority. Then, with every grievance that was laid before me, he drank
+a stiff glass of grog to wash it down with, and insisted on my keeping
+him company.
+
+Queen Sê now came in, saying in her prettiest English, "Oh! you naughty
+boy! Why you no come see king, see _me_? Long time promise, but never
+come out. How you bad pain side? How many Strong's Island girl Captain
+got now? I never see man like that. Debil, I believe. You got any wife
+yet?"
+
+I told the queen I was still unmarried, and thought I should remain so.
+
+"Oh! no, you say so now. By and by get like Captain. But don't you steal
+girl like him. You come to me! I pick you out nice girl. Cook, sew, make
+pyjamas; very pretty face too."
+
+By this time old Tokusar was asleep, with his head on the table, his
+inevitable Bible open at the Psalms of David (printed in the Kusaie
+dialect) in the leaf of his armchair, and the half-emptied gin bottle
+encircled by his left arm.
+
+Queen Sê was a tiny little creature--very good-looking, even at this
+time of her life--being about five-and-twenty, which is considered the
+_passée_ period in Polynesia. She was extremely vain, but had a quick
+perception of humour. She and the Captain always got on famously
+together.
+
+Drawing our chairs up to a side table, she brought me a number of bound
+volumes of _Leslie's Illustrated Paper_, sent to her by the queen of
+Hawaii.
+
+While I looked at the pictures she plied me with questions, principally
+at random, about Captain Hayston, who, I was not long in discovering,
+had been a former admirer. Going into a side room, she unlocked a small
+box, and brought me out a photo of a gentleman wearing a post-captain's
+uniform in her Britannic Majesty's navy. "What do you think of him?" she
+asked. "Very, oh! very handsome man--that Captain Damer. Oh! that long
+time ago. I love him; he love me too"--and then, pointing to poor old
+Tokusar, "King know all about it. He don't like me to talk about Captain
+Damer. But, oh! such handsome man! He tell me I loveliest girl in all
+the world. What you think yourself? What Captain tell you; he think me
+pretty too?"
+
+Her Majesty was an expert angler for flattery. I was not indisposed to
+humour a pretty woman, and a queen, and was evidently rising in her
+estimation. I resolved to turn my good fortune to account, by inducing
+her to effect a reconciliation between the king and the Captain, who
+wanted the king to visit him at Utwé, to see the wonderful change he had
+effected there. He felt certain that, when the king saw the magnitude of
+the station, knowing that it must, sooner or later, come into his
+possession when he, Hayston, left the island, he would forgive all that
+had passed.
+
+Once the subject was broached I became an ardent advocate for the
+Captain, and told the queen how anxious he was to be on good terms with
+the king again. In fact, so eloquent did I become, partly through the
+potency of the schnapps of which I had partaken, that I represented the
+Captain as devoured with grief at losing the king's and her friendship.
+
+The queen listened gravely, and then extending her shapely hand, caught
+me by the ear, and laughed, "Oh! you bad boy! Captain Hayston think
+Tokusar old fool; told _me_ so plenty time. Well, never mind, I try make
+everything all right."
+
+The queen, as beseemed her, had a number of young women with her,
+sitting round the sides of the great room. Some were making the girdles
+that the Kusaie natives of both sexes wear round the waist under their
+other garments. They are woven on an ingeniously constructed loom, the
+banana fibres which form the material being stained in various bright
+colours. These girls were sitting in the manner peculiar to the Strong's
+Island women, with their eyes cast down--it being considered a boldness
+to look at either the king or queen. When speaking to either their eyes
+were always bent on the ground.
+
+The king, being carefully placed on a cane lounge, a meal was brought
+in. Both Kusis and I were presented with food enough to last for a
+month. As the queen bade me good-night she passed her arm round me, and
+tenderly inquired, "How my poor side feel?" adding that I was a very
+good boy, because I was kind to Strong's Island man. She also informed
+me that I could kiss her, which I did. Then putting the post-captain's
+photo in her bosom she went to bed, finally telling me that she "will
+make king friend once more with Captain."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the next six months I lived with the kind-hearted Kusis, his wife,
+and little daughter. Except for an occasional visit to the Captain or
+the king, nothing disturbed the pleasing monotony of my existence.
+
+Why Kusis should have taken such a violent and wholly unreasonable
+attachment to me is a mystery I never could unravel. Yet such is island
+life. And how strange it is, and hard of comprehension! Women take their
+fancies here, as in other worlds (surely this is a world in itself,
+distinct, mystic, unreal), but the extraordinary point in the social
+system is, that men will, as a matter of mere caprice, conceive the most
+ardent friendship for an utter stranger. In pursuance of which passion
+they will entertain him for any time which he likes to stay; will guide,
+help, and defend him, risking, and indeed sacrificing their lives for
+him in the most reckless and devoted manner. Such was the deep and
+sudden affection of Kusis for me. How he acquired it I don't in the
+least know. All my personal property seemed to be mixed up with his. As
+the weather was not favourable for attention to detail, I preferred to
+leave things as they were. My life at this time was chiefly uneventful.
+Yet it was not always so. I was fishing one day near the end of the
+lagoon which extends from Utwé to the lee side of the island. After I
+had anchored my canoe a very strange incident indeed occurred.
+
+The sun had just set, and I had cast out my hooks, and was able to fill
+my pipe, when I saw two boatsful of Pleasant islanders land on the
+narrow fringe of the north side of the lagoon. There were about twenty
+men and seven or eight women. I saw that they had with them a small keg,
+doubtless one of the kegs of rum which had been washed ashore, and which
+they had discovered in the mangroves. A fire was lit. The women began to
+sing and the men to dance; and as the fiery spirit was passed round in
+cocoa-nut shells to the men--for the women touched none--a wild orgie
+began.
+
+Suddenly bright flashes appeared from out the darkness in the
+surrounding grove, and the reverberating echoes of gun-shots pealed over
+the water, and ran far back, from mountain, crag, and cave.
+
+Three of the dancers fell, either killed or wounded. Then the dark forms
+of their previously unseen enemies appeared through the firelight. The
+white shells worn in strings round their necks told me that they were
+Ocean islanders, between whom and the Pleasant islanders feuds were of
+common occurrence. Then began a bloody hand-to-hand fight, the twilight
+silence being broken by yells of rage and screams of mortal agony. When
+the Ocean islanders were beaten off seven or eight bodies lay motionless
+on the ground.
+
+I quietly pulled up the anchor, and let the canoe drift towards the
+mainland. I did not care about visiting the scene of the fight as I had
+no arms with me, and learnt by experience the folly of meddling with the
+Pleasant islanders when they were sober. When they were drunk I knew
+that they would as soon cut my throat as not.
+
+I mentioned this matter to the Captain on my next visit. He told me with
+a grim smile that he knew there had been a fight up the lagoon; so much
+the better, as he found the Pleasant islanders harder to manage every
+day, and the sooner their number was reduced the better.
+
+One day, when Kusis and I were coming across the lagoon with some
+pigeons I had shot, we met the Pingelap girl, Peloa, paddling a canoe
+furiously, her plump face showing great excitement. "She had been sent
+for us," she said, "by the Captain. There was a sail in sight. I was to
+hasten back to Moūt, where I would find a boat outside the reef which he
+had sent down for me. I was to try and board the ship, in case he could
+not do so from Utwé, and tell the master that a shipwrecked crew were
+on the island."
+
+Peloa hauled her canoe up on a little beach, and got in with us. We
+three then paddled along till we got abreast of the two islets near
+Moūt. We then saw a whaleboat coming round the point with a lug sail.
+She soon ran in for me, and I found she was manned by Pleasant
+islanders, who told me that the ship was coming round the point, about
+three miles off the land.
+
+There was a strong breeze, and we slipped through the water at a great
+rate so as to meet the ship. As soon as we cleared the point I saw her
+coming down before the wind about two miles distant.
+
+She was a large ship, and was running straight for us with her yards
+squared. At first I thought she had seen us, but she kept steadily on
+her course. Then I saw her take in her light sails and heave to.
+Standing up in the boat, I could distinguish a whaleboat under a fore
+and aft sail close to her. Behind this boat were two others, which, from
+their black paint and peculiarly-cut sails, I knew to be those the
+Captain had at Utwé.
+
+The ship lay to till the first whaleboat boarded her, and then, to my
+great surprise, the yards were swung round, the light sails again set,
+and she stood on her course, but kept the wind more on her quarter so as
+to make the most of the breeze.
+
+By this time I had got almost within hailing distance of the ship. She
+was deep in the water, and was, I supposed, some coal-laden ship bound
+from New South Wales to China, which had taken the outside or easier
+route to her destination. When the whaleboat lowered her sail and ran
+alongside, I saw that she was the king's new boat, and contained but two
+men. These, my crew said, looked like the two deserters from the _St.
+George_. As soon as they got on board the boat was hoisted in without
+delay, and, as I have said, the ship kept on her course.
+
+It was of no use attempting to overtake her, as she was travelling now
+about twelve knots, so I signalled for the other two boats, and they ran
+down after us till we got under the lee of the land again in smooth
+water.
+
+The men in these boats told me the following tale:--About daylight that
+morning the king's whaleboat, which was anchored in Utwé harbour, was
+found to be missing. The two deserters from the _St. George_ were also
+gone. Captain Hayston instantly offered to send his boat in pursuit of
+the runaways, and curiously, just as they were being launched, there
+came a cry of "Sail ho." The Captain then saw the ship a long way off,
+and told the crews to try and board her, and get her to run in close to
+the land, and that he would then come off himself. In the mean time he
+manned one of the trader's whaleboats with a native crew, and sent her
+round to Coquille to pick me up, as he fancied the ship would be easier
+boarded from there than from Utwé. The three boats left together, two
+standing right out to sea, and the other running down the coast to pick
+me up.
+
+When the two boats were within three miles of the ship, they noticed the
+fore and aft sail of the king's whaleboat showing up now and then as she
+rose and sunk again in the heavy swell, and noticed that she was also
+heading to meet the ship. The rest I had observed myself.
+
+I suspected something from the manner of the coxswain in charge of the
+king's two boats, but did not question him, and telling him to give the
+Captain full particulars of our endeavour to board the ship, I got
+ashore in a smooth part of the reef, and walked back to Moūt, where I
+found the villagers in a great state of excitement, under the impression
+that I had gone away in the ship.
+
+Hayston afterwards admitted that he had supplied the deserters with
+sextant, compass, and chart, had also given them provisions, and fifty
+dollars in money. They promised him to make straight for Ponapé, and
+wait there till some Californian ship called, which they would endeavour
+to charter, on the part of Hayston, to beat up to Strong's Island, and
+take us all away to Providence Island. Barney was a good navigator, and
+could he only have kept fairly sober would have long since had a ship of
+his own. He eagerly accepted the Captain's offer, and the next morning
+the crew of the king's whaleboat found she had disappeared; then
+followed the strange series of events by which Barney and his mate got
+on board the ship and evaded pursuit.
+
+Barney was a highly intelligent individual, as the sequel will show, and
+was capable of making a rapid calculation of probabilities. He
+afterwards visited Samoa, and gave this account of his escape.
+
+He said that when the Captain provided him with "a jewel of a
+whaleboat," he honestly intended to fulfil his promises. He lost some
+time in trying to persuade a native girl named Luta to share his
+fortunes, but she was afraid of a long voyage in a small boat. His
+pleadings, moreover, were cut short by the Captain, who told him to
+hurry up, and get out of the harbour before daylight.
+
+As soon, then, as Barney sighted the ship a plan suggested itself to
+him. Once on deck he introduced himself to the Captain as "Captain
+Casey," and said, "For heaven's sake, sir, don't delay another moment.
+There are two boat-loads of bloody, cut-throat pirates coming after me,
+and they mane to take the ship! Have you never heard of 'Bully
+Hayston'?"
+
+The skipper _had_ heard of him,--things true, and untrue likewise. Then
+Barney told him a tale of how the _Leonora_ had been wrecked on the
+island, and that ever since the fierce Captain and crew had planned to
+cut off the first ship that touched at the island--that he (Barney) and
+his mate had owned a small trading cutter, which Hayston had seized two
+days ago--but that he had managed to escape with one of his men, and
+thanked God that he was able to reach the ship in time, and save every
+one's throat from being cut.
+
+The ship's captain took all this in; Barney's boat was hoisted in, and
+the ship kept away. The two boats, with their crews of excited natives
+yelling and shouting, gave colour to Barney's narrative, and when he
+pointed to my boat, and said, "Holy saints! there's another of the
+villains coming out under the lee side with a boat-load of pirates too,"
+the captain's funk was complete. He landed Barney and his companion at
+Ponapé, and, purely out of compassion, bought the king's whaleboat and
+her contents for a hundred dollars, so that Mr. Barney landed there with
+a hundred and fifty dollars in his pocket, and got a free passage later
+on to Manila as a distressed American seaman.
+
+The Captain took matters philosophically when the boats returned, saying
+that he never had expected to see Barney again. After which he resumed
+his oil-making and the government of his "kingdom by the sea" as usual.
+
+As for me, my life was a quiet, deeply enjoyable one. I began at times
+to doubt whether I should ever wish to change it. But against this phase
+of lotus-eating contentment arose from time to time a haunting dread,
+lest by evil chance I should ever sink down into the position of those
+renegades from civilisation, whom I had known, in the strange world of
+"The Islands," and as often pitied or despised. In this Robinson Crusoe
+existence I even felt a mild interest in the three cattle that we had
+landed at Utwé.
+
+They had found their way over to the lee side of the island, and made
+their way along the beach to Moūt.
+
+One day little Kinie met them, and, with hair flying loose and eyes
+dilated in an agony of terror, fled wildly home. She explained to me
+incoherently "that she had met three huge pigs, with, long teeth
+growing out of their heads and eyes as big as cocoa-nuts."
+
+Kusis and I, with some natives, went out and found them walking slowly
+along the beach. At the sound of my voice they stopped and let me come
+up to them, smelling me all over. I had only a mat round my waist, for
+my European clothes were only worn on great occasions; but they
+evidently knew me for a different being to those around them. We drove
+them to a rich piece of meadow land, where they remained during the rest
+of my stay on the island--fat, quiet, and contented.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Early one morning I made ready for a start back to Coquille harbour, and
+found Kusis awaiting me in the king's courtyard.
+
+Shortly after the queen came out and told me that I must wait for
+breakfast, or the king would be offended. Old Tokusar then appeared,
+none the worse for the night's potations, and we sat down to a very good
+breakfast.
+
+He told me that he had intended to go and see the Captain's village at
+Utwé, but that Likiak Sâ, had dissuaded him by telling him that Hayston
+would seize and imprison him.
+
+I assured the king that this was a pure invention, upon which both he
+and the queen said they would take my word before that of Likiak Sâ, and
+from the kindness of the king and his subjects at Chabral harbour, I
+felt certain that my intercession with Hayston on behalf of the villages
+at Coquille had placed me high in their regard.
+
+The queen pointed to a pile of beautiful mats, quantities of cooked
+fowls, pigeons, pork, fish, and fruit, which were being carried in and
+deposited in the courtyard, telling me that they were presents from the
+king and herself, and would be taken down to Moūt for me by native
+carriers.
+
+As I was bidding my royal friends good-bye, promising to come and see
+them whenever I got tired of Moūt, Kitty of Ebon came in, and quite bore
+out the description Hayston had given me of her remarkable beauty. She
+seemed a very intelligent girl, and was much admired by the king, who
+kept nudging me, and saying in his wheezy, croaking voice, "Um, ah! What
+you tink girl like that?"
+
+He then fell into moody silence, upon which Queen Sê gave him a scornful
+glance, exclaiming, "For shame! old man like you, sick all the time,
+look so much at young girl like Kitty Ebon! Captain Hayston teach you
+all that."
+
+I learnt from Kitty that Lālia was then at her house on a visit, and,
+telling the king and queen of her kindness to me when I was ill at Utwé,
+said I should like to go and see her, as Kitty's house lay in the
+direction Kusis and I were taking. The queen generously gave me a small
+work-box, with the necessary fittings, which she said I could give to
+Lālia. It was quite a handsome affair, and had been given to the queen
+by a ship captain; but she had never used it. Shaking hands with Tokusar
+and Queen Sê, we set out on our journey, Kusis leading the way, Kitty of
+Ebon and I following, and the carriers in the rear.
+
+Kitty was very lively, and startlingly simple in manner. She made me
+laugh at her description of the flirtations of Captain Hayston and the
+queen when he had visited Strong's Island three years before in company
+with Captain Ben Peese. For a missionary's housekeeper Kitty of Ebon was
+something unique, and her lively sallies kept me amused in her excellent
+English all the way. I was pleased to see Lālia, who was looking as
+beautiful as ever. Indeed, it was hard to say which was the handsomer,
+she or the hostess.
+
+I gave her the work-box, which seemed to please her very much. Then
+Kitty proposed a game of cards, saying it was all right, as we need not
+play for money, and no one would tell Mr. Morland. But I had to decline,
+and, saying good-bye to them with some regrets, I rejoined Kusis, much
+wondering inwardly whether Lālia, with her sad, bright eyes, soft voice,
+and gentle manner, could really have been the perpetrator of the cruel
+deed in the mountain forest of Utwé.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+"MY LORDS OF THE ADMIRALTY"
+
+
+In October I received another letter from the Captain, asking me to meet
+him in Chabral harbour. He had become so tired of waiting for a ship
+that he had decided to start in a boat for Millé. He had effected a
+reconciliation with the king, and was paying him a friendly visit. He
+meant to arrange with him regarding the people and the management of the
+station at Utwé during his absence.
+
+I left Moūt at daylight, and, as I said good-bye to Tulpé and the little
+daughter, how little I thought that I should never cross their
+hospitable threshold again!
+
+Kusis came with me, and we took the route by the weather side of the
+island, reaching Lêlé in the afternoon. On my way to the king's house we
+came across a number of women catching shrimps in the rivulet that runs
+into Chabral harbour, and among them were Kitty of Ebon and Lālia.
+
+These two called to us to stop, as they had news for me. Coming out of
+the water, they threw off their wet clothes and put on dry ones. Then
+the four of us sat down on a low coral wall under the shade of some
+trees.
+
+Kitty of Ebon began the conversation by saying that the Captain had
+arrived the night before, and had a long talk with the king, whom he
+told that he was going to try and reach Millé in the largest of the
+ship's boats, though he would have to contend against the north-east
+trades the whole way. He wished the king to become responsible for the
+management and safety of the station of Utwé.
+
+This the king didn't see his way to do, as he could never control the
+Pleasant islanders. The remaining white men at Chabral harbour would
+regain their control over them as soon as Hayston had left; that it was
+not wise of the Captain to attempt to reach Millé.
+
+He also showed great fear of being punished if the Captain came back and
+found his station pillaged.
+
+Kitty of Ebon, who was present at the interview, further narrated that
+the king, finding that Hayston was bent on setting out for Millé, made
+another proposal to the Captain, who had accepted it on the condition
+that I would concur. This was that all the oil, boats, and stores, with
+the women, should be conveyed to Chabral harbour and put under the
+king's protection, who professed then to be anxious that I should come
+and live with him in case the traders made an attack on him, and tried
+to seize the property or carry off the women.
+
+Both Kitty and Lālia urged me not to do this, for, they said, "as soon
+as the Captain goes away there will be fighting here; the king is weak,
+and the traders do not fear him. Besides, they are plotting with Likiak
+Sâ, the missionary, who has promised them to win the king over. They say
+that you and Black Johnny are the only two men that will stand by the
+Captain's property when guns and knives are out, as young Harry is to
+stay at Utwé till the Captain returns."
+
+I inquired of the girls what the traders proposed doing with me?
+
+"Shoot you, Black Johnny, and young Harry. Then, when the Captain is
+once away, they will be strong enough, and the king will not interfere
+with them."
+
+Lālia then told me that one of the trader's wives had told her that they
+had arranged to have us three shot by some of their natives as soon as
+the Captain had left for Millé. The girls again urged me not to comply
+with the king's request, and to dissuade Hayston from his intended
+voyage. Indeed, they tried to prevent me from going to the king at all,
+Kitty urging me to come to her house, and write a letter to the Captain
+asking him to meet me there.
+
+The thought of the Captain being a victim, as well as myself and young
+Harry, to such treachery decided me in an instant, and breaking away
+from the women, Kusis and I soon reached the king's house.
+
+The traders who were living at Chabral kept carefully within doors. When
+I reached the courtyard of the king's house I found no one there but His
+Majesty and Likiak Sâ engaged in earnest conversation. The native
+missionary glanced uneasily at me, and I at once opened out on him by
+calling him a treacherous dog, striking him at the same time, and
+threatening him with the Captain's vengeance. He picked himself up and
+left.
+
+"Where is the Captain?" I said to the king.
+
+"In my oil-shed," he answered in a troubled voice.
+
+But I said nothing to him, and, finding Hayston, shortly made him
+acquainted with what I had learnt from Kitty of Ebon. His face darkened
+as he strode off to the king.
+
+At that moment the natives called out that there was a vessel in sight,
+upon which he turned back, and together we walked to the beach in time
+to see a fine fore and aft schooner sailing in, which Hayston declared
+was the _Matautu_, belonging to Captain Warner.
+
+"He would never have ventured in if he knew I was here," quoth the
+Captain grimly; "and if I had a few of my boys he'd never go out again,
+unless the schooner had a new master."
+
+I reasoned with him against the folly of such an action, when he said
+that he would use fair means at first, and would try and charter the
+_Matautu_. He then went to the king, and I could see meant mischief. I
+was glad to notice the traders getting into canoes and making for the
+schooner, where they no doubt thought they would be safe, as Hayston had
+only two native boys with him, and would hardly attempt to tackle the
+schooner single-handed.
+
+Likiak Sâ was again with the king when we returned. However, he ran away
+at once, narrowly missing a chair which the Captain threw at him. Old
+Tokusar seemed scared, as he watched the Captain's darkening face. He
+inquired in a shaking voice, "Why you so much angry?"
+
+"Because," answered the Captain, "the men who have been living on my
+food have been plotting against me, and that scheming missionary is at
+the bottom of it; but look you, King Tokusar, and mark my words well! If
+I suspect you, too, I will burn your house and town, and drown you like
+a rat in your own turtle pond!"
+
+"Captain," I said, "what folly! You are here almost alone, and all but
+in the power of your enemies. Return to the boats and get back to Utwé."
+
+He calmed down almost immediately, and said he would see Captain Warner.
+He asked me to come with him. I mentioned the fact of the traders being
+on board the ship, and urged him to be cautious.
+
+We got in the boats, and pulled towards the schooner. Before we were
+half-way across the Captain laughed contemptuously, and pointed to the
+traders, who were already leaving the schooner's side in canoes, and
+making rapidly for the western side of the harbour.
+
+Captain Warner seemed under great excitement when we stepped on deck,
+but the cordial manner of Hayston's greeting at once reassured him, so
+that we were received most politely and asked below.
+
+Captain Warner seemed so intensely amiable that I could hardly help
+laughing, and as he kept his glass constantly filled, or rather emptied,
+his amiability increased proportionately.
+
+In the course of conversation a discussion arose as to some business
+transactions with Hayston while we were at Ponapé, and the skipper
+laughingly remarked that he had over-reached him in the matter. The
+Captain, who was now perfectly calm, gave a pleasantly-worded denial,
+and said, "No, Captain Warner, I think my supercargo must have got to
+windward of _you_ there."
+
+A quarrel ensued forthwith. The burly skipper became offensive, and it
+ended in our agreeing to meet with pistols on the beach at daylight next
+morning.
+
+However, at dawn the _Matautu_ had towed out with the first breath of
+the land-breeze, and was already outside the passage standing to the
+westward. So the duel did not come off. I honestly think the skipper was
+not afraid, but I suspect he decided not to risk another encounter with
+Hayston, and so thought discretion was the better part of valour.
+
+Next day we again heard the stirring cry of "Sail ho!" The new arrival
+was the _Morning Star_ from Honolulu, from which about ten o'clock
+landed the Rev. Mr. Morland--a portly, white bearded old gentleman, who
+at once made his way to his residence, while the Captain and I returned
+to South harbour. Kusis went home, with a promise from me to follow him
+next day, the honest fellow begging me to delay as little as possible.
+
+It was dark when we started, and a fierce black squall struck us just
+after we got out of the passage, nearly capsizing the boat. The Captain
+thought we had better return, but I was anxious to get back to Moūt, and
+said I was sure the squall would not last. So we reefed the sail and
+dashed out to sea close-hauled, for the squall came from the westward,
+and was dead against us. However, the wind continued to increase, and
+the little boat shipped two or three heavy seas. So we agreed to turn
+back.
+
+We went about in a lull, and had made the entrance to the passage, as we
+thought, when the Captain called out, "Look out! here comes a sea!"
+
+Looking back, I saw a huge black roller almost on top of us. The next
+minute I felt we had touched. I shouted, "By Jove! we're not in the
+passage at all--it's only a creek in the reef. Jump out, quick!"
+
+We all sprang out of the boat on to the jagged coral, then the waves,
+poised high in air, dashed down upon us, and we were all washed clear
+over into a pool of smooth water. The boat was capsized, and with broken
+masts and oars gone, was swept in far ahead of us, till she disappeared
+in the darkness. We clung to the reef as best we could, and succeeded in
+reaching a coral "mushroom" that was just a wash. "We'll be all right
+here," said the Captain, in his cool, cheerful way; "are you boys all
+right?"--the two native boys were, like ourselves, cut about the arms
+and legs by the coral. But they thought nothing of that. What they
+dreaded were the _sharks_!
+
+Fortunately the tide was falling, and the coral knoll was gradually
+showing more of its surface above the water. Otherwise none of us would
+have reached the shore; for in these deep water passages the sharks
+literally swarm.
+
+A sea occasionally broke close to us, but not with sufficient force to
+wash any of us away. Suddenly the Captain said, "Boys, I see some people
+fishing ashore with torches," and he gave a resounding hail. An answer
+came back, and, what was more to the purpose, a canoe, in which we were
+rescued from our precarious position and taken ashore. The boat was
+searched for, and found drifting out to sea. But as long as I live I
+shall never forget the horrible feeling of standing on that coral knoll,
+in the wave-washed darkness, knowing that if we were once dislodged
+there was no chance of escaping the sharks. We were all good swimmers,
+but the Kusaie natives told us that the passage of Chabral harbour was
+swarming with the dreaded reef-shark, that seeks its prey, chiefly
+turtle, in the foam and swirl of the breakers on the reef. We slept that
+night in a native house, some distance from the village of Lêlé, and at
+daylight proceeded along the beach to the king's house. The old king did
+not appear; the queen was very hospitable to us, but seemed nervous and
+constrained in her manner to the Captain. Once when I was standing apart
+from him, she said in a low tone that I had better return to Moūt, where
+I would be safe, adding, "Don't stay along with Captain. Man-of-war come
+from Honolulu to take him away. By and by I tell him."
+
+I afterwards regretted that I did not attach more importance to her
+warning, and tell the Captain; subsequent events showed that both the
+king and queen had been informed by Mr. Morland of the impending arrival
+of a man-of-war, which had been searching for Hayston for months
+previously. Later in the day, while the Captain was superintending
+repairs to the boat, Mr. Morland and the native colleague were
+announced. The white missionary requested to see the Captain. I may
+mention, that during our cruise to the north-west in the _Leonora_ we
+had occasionally met with the missionary brig, _Morning Star_, and had
+been visited by Mr. Morland once or twice.
+
+On this occasion he met us with the usual smile and outstretched hand.
+
+"How do you do, Captain Hayston? I am glad--very glad to see you, and
+yet sorry; for you have my sincere sympathy for the loss of your
+beautiful vessel."
+
+"Morland!" came the quick reply, "you know you are lying most
+infernally. You are no more pleased to see me than I am to see you. Our
+interests are too antagonistic for us to take kindly to each other. So
+let us at least be candid!"
+
+"Oh! Captain Hayston!" rejoined Mr. Morland, "you terribly unkind man!
+Why must you hate the poor parson so? Oh! my friend, my countryman, let
+us shake hands as fellow-Christians should do when they meet in these
+lonely, beautiful spots of God's bright universe!"
+
+Hayston smiled, but if he had but known that Mr. Morland was, even then,
+anxiously looking for the tall spars of one of Her Majesty's warships,
+and had actually been in communication with her captain a few days
+previously, he would possibly have half-strangled his pleasant-mannered
+visitor then and there.
+
+After a short chat the missionary returned to the king's house with the
+Captain, while I busied myself with the repairs of the boat, when the
+startling cry of "Sail ho!" rang through the quiet village. I ran up to
+the king's house, and found the Captain in the courtyard playing a game
+of dominoes with Queen Sê.
+
+The missionary and Likiak Sâ were just coming out from an interview with
+the king. The air of exultation on their faces as they saw the natives
+hurrying to and fro at the cry of "Sail ho!" struck me at once.
+
+The Captain sprang up at once, and said, "Let us take the boat and go
+out to her, she may want a pilot"; and we walked through the house to
+the stone wharf that abutted on one side of the king's establishment. We
+jumped into the boat, and with a crew of four natives pulled quickly out
+of the passage. On gaining the open we could see no sail, and concluded
+that the ship must be coming round the north-eastern side of the island,
+where she had been sighted by the natives. We then set sail, and
+commenced beating to windward, and about half-an-hour afterwards, as the
+little boat rode on the swell, we got a sight of the lofty masts and
+square yards of a man-of-war under steam, as she rounded the high land
+on the north-east side of the island.
+
+With a sudden exclamation the Captain stood up and gazed at the steamer.
+He then seated himself and seemed lost in thought. The great vessel came
+steadily on, then altered her course by a couple of points, and steered
+in the direction of the passage. I could see that she was under a full
+head of steam, and was travelling at a great rate. A volume of thick
+smoke was issuing from the yellow funnel, and as there is always a heavy
+sea off the windward side of Strong's Island she rolled tremendously,
+the water pouring from her black painted sides in sheets.
+
+The Captain watched her intently. "That's a man-of-war, Hilary! and a
+Britisher too," he said. "Though she may be an American--the
+_Portsmouth_ or the _Jamestown_; I can't tell with that smoke blowing
+ahead of her. If she's an American cruiser, she'll take me prisoner
+right enough. It's no use attempting to escape now. It's too late; I
+must take my chance. In that case you must get away to Utwé as quick as
+possible, and do the best you can with the station and the people. You
+know where the money is stowed away, and what to do with it if we are
+fated not to meet again."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As he said these words the smoke cleared away from the cruiser, and we
+had a splendid view of her as she rose majestically to a heavy sea, and
+fell gracefully into the trough again. "A Britisher, by ----!" exclaimed
+the Captain, "and a beauty too; give way, my lads, she's stopped her
+engines. Let us get aboard, and I'll soon learn what's in store for me."
+
+In order that it may be understood what reason the Captain had for these
+strong suspicions of arrest and imprisonment, I will here make quotation
+from the _Queensland Government Gazette_, an official journal of
+severely correct character, which, like "the _Apparatus_, cannot lie."
+
+
+ COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE,
+ BRISBANE, _20th August 1875_.
+
+ His Excellency directs the subjoined circular despatch received
+ from the Secretary of State for the Colonies, together with the
+ enclosed correspondence with the Board of Admiralty, respecting
+ the proceedings in the South Seas of W. H. Hayston, a United
+ States' subject, and master of the American brig _Leonora_, to
+ be published in the _Gazette_ for general information.
+
+ A. MACALISTER.
+
+
+ The Admiralty to the Colonial Office.
+
+ ADMIRALTY, _12th January 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I am commanded by the my Lords Commissioners of the
+ Admiralty to transmit herewith, for the information of the Earl
+ of Carnarvon, a letter and its enclosures from Commodore
+ Goodenough, Senior Naval Officer of the Australasian Station,
+ reporting the proceedings of W. H. Hayston, a citizen of the
+ United States, and master of the late American brig _Leonora_.
+ It is requested that these papers be returned in order that they
+ may be sent to the Foreign Office.--I am, etc.
+
+ (Signed) ROBERT HALL.
+
+ The Under Secretary of State,
+ Colonial Office.
+
+
+ Admiral Cochrane to the Admiralty.
+
+ _Repulse_ AT CALLAO, _28th February 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to forward for the information of their
+ Lordships a copy of correspondence which I have received from
+ Commodore Goodenough, commanding the Australian Station.
+
+ 2. The correspondence has reference to the very irregular
+ conduct of a master of a trading brig lately wrecked. The master
+ is believed to be an American.
+
+ 3. Commodore Goodenough requested that the documents containing
+ evidence tending to substantiate the charges against the said
+ master should be forwarded to the American admiral commanding
+ the North Pacific Station. The islands where the occurrences
+ referred to took place are not included in the Pacific
+ Station.--I am, etc.
+
+ (Signed) A. A. COCHRANE.
+
+ Rear Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.
+
+
+ H.M.S. _Repulse_,
+ CALLAO, _28th February 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to forward for your perusal copies of
+ correspondence I have received from Commodore Goodenough in
+ command of H.M. ships on the Australian Station, relative to the
+ highly irregular proceedings of a master of a vessel trading
+ among the South Sea Islands. He is believed to be an American
+ citizen.
+
+ I should be much gratified if circumstances enable you to cause
+ inquiry into the subject of the charges enumerated.--I have,
+ etc.
+
+ (Signed) A. A. COCHRANE.
+
+ Rear Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.
+
+
+ Circular.
+
+ DOWNING STREET, _13th May 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to transmit to you copies of a
+ correspondence with the Board of Admiralty respecting the
+ proceedings in the South Seas of W. H. Hayston, a United States'
+ subject, and master of the late American brig _Leonora_. In
+ connection with the lawless conduct of Hayston, as reported in
+ the papers now transmitted, I beg to refer you to my
+ predecessor's Circular Despatch of 22nd December 1875, relating
+ to the proceedings in the case of the _Atlantic_, and I desire
+ to express my entire concurrence in the hope expressed by Lord
+ Kimberley, that no opportunity may be lost of bringing the man
+ to trial.--I have, etc.
+
+ CARNARVON.
+
+ To the Officer administering the
+ Government of Queensland.
+
+
+ Proceedings of H.M.S. _Rosario_ in the South Sea Islands.
+ Criminal acts of Mr. W. H. Hayston, master of the brig _Leonora_.
+
+ H.M.S. _Pearl_, _16th November 1874_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to enclose for the information of the
+ Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, a Report and various
+ papers furnished to me by Commander Dupont of H.M.S. _Rosario_,
+ concerning a Mr. William H. Hayston, master of the late American
+ brig _Leonora_.
+
+ 2. This Mr. Hayston has long been known among the Pacific
+ Islands as a collector of produce, and has the reputation of
+ defrauding natives and lifting produce collected by other
+ traders. He has been spoken of in correspondence between this
+ and the Chinese Station as "the notorious Captain Hayston," but
+ hitherto no evidence on which he could be convicted of any
+ piratical act has been brought before me.
+
+ 3. It seemed possible that Commander Dupont, while cruising in
+ H.M.S. _Rosario_ among the Gilbert and Ellice Islands, and
+ watching the labour traffic, might be able to gather some
+ evidence which would enable him to detain this person, who is
+ doing much harm among the islands. A copy of my orders to
+ Commander Dupont is enclosed.
+
+ 4. Commander Dupont seems only to have obtained the evidence
+ which he desired against Hayston after he had learned of his
+ escape, and he is satisfied from inspection of Hayston's papers
+ that he is an American citizen.
+
+ 5. Commander Dupont brought away with him from Strong's Island
+ the crew of Hayston's vessel, the _Leonora_, which was wrecked
+ there in March last, and also one Hilary Telfer, who had
+ proceeded from Samoa to Millé as supercargo of a vessel called
+ the _E. A. Wilson_, and belonging to the sons and daughters of
+ Mr. Wilson, H.M. Consul from Samoa.
+
+ 6. This Mr. Telfer carried with him from Samoa orders from Mr.
+ Wilson to put the _E. A. Wilson_ and the cargo into Hayston's
+ hands to be sold, and in course of business appears to have
+ become so mixed up in Hayston's affairs, that the latter made
+ him his agent and entrusted him with letters to all his
+ subordinate agents, informing them that he had been seized by
+ the _Rosario_ for conveyance to Sydney.
+
+ 7. I was in Samoa in H.M.S. _Pearl_ in November 1873. The ketch
+ _E. A. Wilson_ was then there under repairs. Mr. S. D. Wilson
+ told me nothing of his intentions regarding the vessel, but gave
+ me to understand that Mr. Hayston was a great rascal, who had
+ cleverly outwitted all inquiries. He offered to obtain evidence
+ from a half-caste, and at my desire took the statements (which
+ proved valueless) on oath. Yet on December 3, 1873, he enters
+ into communication with this man, against whom he had pretended
+ to give me information.
+
+ 8. I consider the whole affair as most unsatisfactory, even
+ regarding Mr. Wilson as a trader. In the position of Her
+ Majesty's Acting Consul, I consider that he has been guilty of
+ improper behaviour, rendering him unworthy to occupy such a
+ position. The desirability of appointing a non-trading Consul in
+ Samoa has already been pointed out by both myself and my
+ predecessor on this Station.
+
+ 9. The papers I enclose concerning Hayston will illustrate the
+ life of a modern South-Sea filibuster.--I have the honour to be,
+ your obedient servant,
+
+ JAMES G. GOODENOUGH,
+ Captain and Commodore, 2nd Class,
+ Commanding Australian Station.
+
+ To the Secretary.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 2.
+
+ H.M.S. _Rosario_,
+ AT SEA, Lat. 2° 26′ N., Long. 167° 19′ E.,
+ _10th October 1874_.
+
+ SIR,--With reference to Mr. Hayston, master of the American brig
+ _Leonora_, I beg to forward the following statement of facts
+ relative to him that I have been able to collect among the
+ different islands visited during my present cruise:--
+
+ 1. There can be no doubt but that Mr. Hayston is a shrewd,
+ unprincipled man, who has committed acts of violence towards the
+ natives, and been guilty of unjustifiable acts towards other
+ persons. Yet, so greatly has his name got to be feared, by both
+ natives and white men on the islands, that, though it was
+ evident that at nearly all the islands I visited he was well
+ known, it was impossible to find out much about him.
+
+ 2. With respect to Mr. Dunn's business, what evidence I could
+ get was mainly in Hayston's favour, and tended to show that
+ Dunn's agents had sold the trade to Hayston instead of his
+ taking it. This is certainly the case as regards an Englishman
+ named George Winchcombe, whom I found living on Nukufutau, one
+ of the Ellice group. He himself stated to me that he left Sydney
+ with Dunn, in the understanding that he was to be found at a
+ station on one of the islands. He complained that Dunn treated
+ him badly on board, and eventually sent him on shore on the
+ island of Apaiari (Gilbert group) to collect trade. He was
+ dissatisfied with his life, much in dread of the natives, and on
+ Hayston's coming there in the beginning of 1873, he begged him
+ to take him off the island, and offered to sell him all the
+ trade he had collected. Hayston accordingly took him. At another
+ island, Tarawa, the only white resident had heard that some
+ trade had been removed by Hayston, but was not on the island at
+ the time. At other islands I heard things relative to Dunn's
+ property, but could get nothing but hearsay evidence. I could
+ not find a single individual, either white or native, who could
+ furnish me with any positive evidence or proof against Hayston.
+
+ On entering Chabral harbour (Strong's Island) Mr. Hayston, as I
+ have reported in my letter of proceedings, came out to meet the
+ ship in a boat. He told that his vessel had been wrecked in
+ South harbour of the island on the 15th of March this year,
+ since which date he had been living on shore collecting oil.
+
+ Mr. Morland, an American missionary, who had just arrived from
+ Ebon Island, and numerous white men--the late crew of the
+ _Leonora_--were also there. A schooner under the German flag,
+ Mr. Miller an Englishman master, lay in the harbour. I commenced
+ making inquiries as quietly as possible about Hayston, but here,
+ as at other places, I met with disinclination from all traders
+ to tell me anything they might know; Mr. Miller, though hinting
+ that Hayston had robbed him not long since, would at first say
+ nothing, nor was it till after considerable persuasion and the
+ delay of some days that I got the enclosed statement, with the
+ various witnesses in the matter, from him.
+
+ But as he was sailing under German colours, I could not believe
+ my duty was to do more than receive the statements and forward
+ it through you to the German Consul in Sydney.
+
+ Hayston, apprised by some of the crew of the inquiries that had
+ been made, left the island in a boat on the night of the 27th.
+ His design was, I believe, either to make the island of
+ Ascension or that of Pingelap. At their own request, and also
+ considering it a good thing for the island to be rid of them, I
+ took five of the crew of the _Leonora_ on board for passage to
+ Sydney, and also one other person who had been a passenger on
+ board, and also, from what I could hear, a great friend of
+ Hayston. This Hilary Telfer was the person who had been sent by
+ Mr. Wilson, British Consul at Samoa, as supercargo of the ketch
+ that I met at Millé, but leaving his charge there, had gone to
+ sea with Hayston and been with him since January. I deemed it
+ advisable that he should be removed, there being no chance of
+ his getting back to Millé from Strong's Island, and also because
+ the chief particularly desired his removal, as being likely to
+ stir up trouble in the island. These six persons are now on
+ board.
+
+ I visited Mr. Hayston's residence at South harbour; he had made
+ a regular settlement of it, and had collected a large quantity
+ of oil. No less than five young women were living in his house,
+ who had all with one exception been living on board the
+ _Leonora_. That vessel was sunk in fourteen fathoms, her topmast
+ head a few feet above water.
+
+ The first mate I left on the island, recommending him to take
+ charge of Hayston's property. The second mate, William Hicks,
+ ran away into the bush and couldn't be found, otherwise I should
+ have taken him to Sydney with the others. Thinking the case over
+ quietly afterwards, I cannot see how I could have arrested
+ Hayston. It is, therefore, with great regret that I am obliged
+ to report my failure to collect sufficient evidence against him
+ to warrant my doing so. The case of Mr. Dunn must have failed
+ from want of such evidence.--I have, etc., etc.
+
+ A. E. DUPONT,
+ Commander.
+
+ To Commodore J. G. Goodenough,
+ H.M.S. _Pearl_.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 13.
+
+ MESSRS. MILLER AND WARNE TO MR. HILARY TELFER, SUPERCARGO.
+
+ DEAR SIR,--You will proceed from hence to Millé, Mulgrave
+ Island, for the purpose of selling the ketch _A.E.W._ You will
+ find Captain Hayston there waiting for you, so you will please
+ consult with him, as he is acquainted with the people who wish
+ to purchase the ketch. Try to obtain oil or copra to the amount
+ of £500 for her. Ship whatever produce you may get on board the
+ _Leonora_, and get Captain Hayston to sign bills of lading. Do
+ not sell the chronometer unless you get a good price for it.
+ Sell the few things you take to the best advantage. None of the
+ Samoans are to remain, but to come back to Apia. Have the ketch
+ painted at Millé.--Wishing you a prosperous and speedy voyage,
+ we are, etc.,
+
+ (Signed) MILLER AND WARNE.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 15.
+
+ Know all men by these presents that I, William Henry Hayston,
+ Master mariner, now residing on Strong's Island, in the North
+ Pacific Ocean, have made, constituted, and appointed Hilary
+ Telfer, of Sydney, New South Wales, at present residing on this
+ island of Kusaie (or Strong's Island), to be my true and lawful
+ agent for me, and, in my place and stead, to enter into and take
+ possession of my station situated at Maloe, near the village of
+ Utwé, South harbour, on the above-named island. Also all my oil,
+ casks, tobacco, and other trade which may be on said station.
+ Also boats, canoe, pigs, fowls, possessions--all and everything,
+ whether of value or not, together with my furniture and private
+ effects, and to take full charge of all my business on the
+ above-named island during my trip to the eastward.
+
+ (Signed) W. H. HAYSTON,
+ In the presence of the undersigned witness,
+ this 19th August 1874.
+
+ (Signed) CHARLES ROBERTS.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 16.
+
+ MEMORANDUM OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR MR. HILARY TELFER.
+
+ SIR,--As I am about to leave Strong's Island, and have given you
+ power to act on my behalf, I wish you to close up all my affairs
+ in the best manner you can. You will look after the property I
+ leave behind, and dispose of it to the best advantage. Out of
+ the remainder of the oil you can pay yourself for the
+ chronometer, and Mr. Harry Skillings for the trade I had from
+ him. Sell the balance, including the large cargo-boat, as soon
+ as an opportunity offers. Anything left over you can give to the
+ people that have been kind to you, and the natives. Out of the
+ proceeds of the sale you can pay for the passage of my natives
+ to Samoa, if they want to go there. If not, see them back on
+ their own island, or on some of the Kingsmill group, that they
+ may get with their own country people.
+
+ My native boy Toby I wish you to take to Samoa, and look after
+ him as well as you can; also Kitty, as they have no father or
+ mother. Both were given to me by the king of Hope Island. The
+ stores I left behind are for you and the natives to live on till
+ you can get away. Be careful of the little trade I leave you, as
+ the Strong's islanders want payment for everything you get of
+ them to eat. You will also bear in mind that the king owes me
+ 12,100 cocoa-nuts, the balance of the 48,000 that he agreed to
+ pay me for the property stolen by the Strong's islanders at the
+ time of the loss of the brig.
+
+ I write an accompanying letter to each of my agents. You will
+ have to settle with them by their own accounts, as my trade-book
+ was lost, as you know. The balance, after paying for your own
+ passage and expense, you can hand over to my agent at
+ Samoa.--Wishing you a safe arrival there and every success, I
+ remain, yours in good faith,
+
+ (Signed) W. H. HAYSTON.
+
+
+ Circular.
+
+ DOWNING STREET, _31st May 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--With reference to my circular despatch of 13th instant, I
+ have the honour to transmit to you the accompanying copy of a
+ note addressed by the Duc de Decazes to Her Majesty's Minister
+ at Paris, in consequence of the communication on the subject of
+ the lawless proceedings of W. H. Hayston in the South Seas,
+ which the Earl of Derby caused to be made to the French
+ Government, also those of Germany and the United States.--I am,
+ etc.,
+
+ CARNARVON.
+
+ The Officer Administering
+ the Government of Queensland.
+
+
+ THE DUC DE DECAZES TO MR. ADAMS.
+
+ (Copy.)
+
+ PARIS, _le 10 mai 1875_.
+
+ M. LE MINISTRE,--J'ai porté à la connaissance de mon collègue
+ les informations que vous m'avez fait l'honneur de me
+ transmettre, relativement à un personnage dangereux, du nom de
+ Hayston, qui se serait signalé par de nombreux actes de
+ déprédation dans les Iles de l'Océanie. M. l'Amiral de Montaigne
+ répondant à ma communication m'annonce qu'il signalera par le
+ premier courrier cet individu au Commandant en Chef de notre
+ division navale dans l'Océan Pacifique. Il adressera en outre à
+ M. l'Amiral Rebout les instructions nécessaires pour que ce
+ flibustier soit surveillé de près et mis, le cas échéant, hors
+ d'état de poursuivre son industrie criminelle.--Agréez, etc.,
+
+ (Signed) DUC DE DECAZES.
+
+ M. Adams.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+H.M.S. ROSARIO
+
+
+As we pulled up alongside we saw her bulwarks forward crowded with the
+blue-jackets. The Captain's quick eye, which nothing escaped, detected
+among them the bronzed faces of Dan Gardiner and another trader whom he
+had left at Providence Island.
+
+"She's come to take me, sure enough," he said to me. "The moment I
+looked at those two fellows they dropped back out of sight. Never mind,
+come aboard and I'll see it through."
+
+As soon as we gained the deck he advanced towards a group of officers
+standing on the quarter-deck, and, raising his hat, said, "Good morning,
+gentlemen. I am Captain Hayston of the brig _Leonora_, cast away on this
+island in the earlier part of the year."
+
+There was a moment's silence; then a tall man, the captain of the
+cruiser, stepped out from the others, surveyed Hayston from head to
+foot, and said, "Oh, ah, indeed! then you are the very man I am looking
+for. This is Her Majesty's ship _Rosario_, and you are a prisoner, Mr.
+Hayston!"
+
+Hayston simply bowed and said nothing, retiring to the port side, where
+he was placed under the charge of the sergeant-major of marines, who, as
+also all others on board, looked with intense curiosity at the man of
+whose doings they had heard so much in their cruises in the Pacific
+Ocean.
+
+The man-of-war captain then demanded my name, after which I was
+considerably staggered by the announcement that he had instructions to
+apprehend me on the charge of stealing the ketch _E. A. Wilson_, the
+property of Messrs. Miller and Warne of Samoa.
+
+Hayston at once came forward, and, addressing the captain, said that I
+had simply brought that vessel to him at Millé, and could produce
+written instructions from the owners to hand the vessel over to him. To
+this no answer was returned, and silence was maintained, for the
+_Rosario_ was now entering the passage, and so interested was I at the
+novel surroundings of a man-of-war under steam, and so lost in
+admiration of the perfect discipline on board, that for the time being I
+forgot that the Captain of the _Leonora_ was a prisoner, and that I was
+also apprehended on a serious charge.
+
+Slowly and gracefully the great ship steamed through the passage, and
+brought up within a cable's length of the king's wharf, where the anchor
+plunged below to its resting-place on the coral bottom. No sooner had
+the man-of-war come to anchor than Mr. Morland and the native
+missionary, who followed him like a shadow, came on board, and were
+received by Her Majesty's representative. A consultation took place,
+after which I was separated from my companion, and, without being able
+to exchange a word of farewell, was hurried down to the gun-room. As I
+placed my foot on the ladder leading to the "'tween decks" I turned. He
+waved his hand to me in farewell. _We never met again!_
+
+While I was detained in the gun-room a midshipman told me that Captain
+Hayston had been permitted to go on shore, under the charge of an
+officer, to collect his personal effects and write letters, as he had
+been informed that I would not be permitted to have any further
+communication with him.
+
+The midshipman said that Mr. Morland had seemed surprised at Captain
+Hayston's not being put in irons, and was at that moment collecting
+evidence in order to formulate a series of charges against him before
+the captain of the _Rosario_. My informant added, "If Captain Hayston is
+such a blood-thirsty ruffian as he is described to be he certainly shows
+no indication of it."
+
+Several of the warrant officers now gathered around and pressed me with
+questions concerning Hayston. One of them jocularly inquired where the
+Captain's harem was located, adding that it was a pity to separate him
+from them, and that there was plenty of room on board the _Rosario_ for
+ladies.
+
+I was burning with anxiety to know on what particular charge Hayston had
+been arrested, and how the captain of the _Rosario_ had heard of the
+loss of the _Leonora_. They told me then that the _Rosario_ had been
+searching for Hayston for some time, under instructions from the
+Commodore of the Australian Station, to whom representations had been
+made concerning alleged depredations committed by him (Hayston) in the
+Line Islands. The _Rosario_ had visited a number of islands, and
+endeavoured to obtain evidence against Hayston, but that it had resulted
+in a failure, nearly every one, when it came to the point, declining to
+make any statement against him. The captain of the man-of-war then
+decided to proceed to Arrecifos, or Providence Island, which he knew to
+be one of Hayston's depôts. On arrival he learned from the two white men
+there that so long an interval had passed since his last visit that they
+fancied that the _Leonora_ had been lost.
+
+These two men were taken on board, and the _Rosario_ made for Strong's
+Island. When within 400 miles she met the little _Matautu_, who
+signalled a wish to speak. As soon as Captain Warner boarded the
+man-of-war he informed the commander of the loss of the _Leonora_, and
+of Hayston's presence on the island. He also handed in several written
+charges made by himself against Hayston, and, as well as I can remember
+from what I was told, was about to return to his schooner when the
+_Morning Star_ hove in sight.
+
+On board of the missionary brig was Mr. Morland, and a consultation then
+took place between the two captains and this gentleman, who was, of
+course, delighted to hear of the loss of the _Leonora_, and that Captain
+Hayston was to be taken prisoner.
+
+The _Matautu_ then bore away on her course, and the _Morning Star_,
+after landing Mr. Morland at the weather side of the island, went on her
+way, leaving him ashore, perfectly assured of his own safety and the
+immediate presence of the _Rosario_ in Chabral harbour.
+
+I could now understand the hints given me by the queen, as well as the
+expression of triumph on the faces of the missionaries as they returned
+from their interview with the king.
+
+Presently an officer came down and asked me if I wished to obtain my
+effects from the shore. I at once sent a message to Kusis to bring me a
+small chest, in which were my worldly goods, as well as my power of
+attorney and letters of instructions from former employers in Samoa. I
+was going to make inquiries about Hayston, when the officer requested me
+kindly enough not to ask him questions, as he could give me no
+information. He told me, however, that the captain of the _Rosario_ was
+at that moment engaged in hearing charges against Hayston made by the
+king, Mr. Morland, and two or three of the traders from Pleasant Island.
+Also that some of the crew of the _Leonora_ had been induced to come
+forward and make statements. I also learned that Hayston had been taken
+to South harbour in charge of an officer, for what purpose I could never
+learn, unless it was to give him an opportunity of escaping, as he could
+easily have written his letters in the king's house.
+
+Two of the boats' crews were piped away, and I was told by an old
+quarter-master, with a humorous grin, that some of the officers had gone
+away in the boats to South harbour to have a look at the "pirate's
+village, and bring away the unfortunate female captives." All this time
+I was kept in close confinement, and the time passed wearily away. I was
+growing tired of the ceaseless questions from every one that came near
+me about Hayston, the _Leonora_, and our voyage from the Carolines till
+the brig was cast away.
+
+At night, however, the boats returned, and after the crews had been
+piped down to supper the good old sergeant-major of marines, suspecting
+the anxiety I was in as to Hayston's movements, startled me by telling
+me that he had escaped from custody when at South Island harbour.
+
+He told me that as soon as the boat reached the village they found the
+place in a state of wildest confusion. A messenger had come down along
+the coast and told the Captain's people that a man-of-war was at Lêlé,
+and that Captain Hayston had been taken prisoner, put in irons, and was
+to be shot or hanged at once. A number of Strong's Island natives
+followed the man-of-war boats down from Chabral harbour, and these at
+once attempted to rush and ransack the station, which they were only
+prevented from doing by the presence of the blue-jackets.
+
+Hayston was escorted to his station, where he was at once surrounded by
+the girls belonging to the house and many others, among them being the
+carpenter's, steward's, boatswain's, and Antonio's wives--all clinging
+to him and impeding his movements.
+
+Calling them all together, with such others of the natives as had not
+fled from the village at the sight of the blue-jackets, he told them
+that they need not be under any alarm, that he was going away in the
+man-of-war, and might not return for a long time--perhaps many moons,
+but that the supercargo, Hilary Telfer, would be with them shortly, and
+they must be guided by him. Of course the Captain never for a minute
+imagined that I was then under the closest surveillance, and therefore
+would be utterly powerless to carry out his promises made to them.
+
+He then quietly seated himself, and wrote a quantity of letters to his
+agents in the different islands in the Line and Marshall groups. These
+letters he directed and enclosed to me, together with a power of
+attorney which he had previously drawn up, and a letter of
+instructions--all of which he laid on the table.
+
+He then told his captors that he was ready to return with them, when
+(according to the statement made by the marines on their return to Lêlé)
+he suddenly exerted his vast strength, and knocking several of them
+down, sprang into the sea and gained the mangroves on the opposite side
+of the harbour.
+
+On my inquiring from the marine officer why he had not been pursued,
+that gentleman winked at me, and replied, "No orders, my boy, no orders;
+besides he swam like a beaver, and to search the mangroves for one man
+would take a month of Sundays." Thinking the matter over, I came to the
+conclusion that for some reason I could not fathom, the captain of the
+man-of-war was not particularly anxious to keep Hayston a prisoner,
+though I had heard him declare to Mr. Morland that the naval authorities
+would at last rid the Pacific of this man, who was a source of terror
+and dread from New Zealand to the China Seas.
+
+When the boats returned from Utwé they brought up the man Jansen, whom
+Hayston had beaten and disgraced. He called himself, and was recognised
+by the captain of the _Rosario_ as the chief officer of the _Leonora_,
+although he had long since lost his position on account of his rascally
+conduct. He seemed brimful of evidence as to Hayston's misdeeds, and I
+was afterwards informed that when brought into the ward-room of the
+man-of-war the officers expected to have some thrilling stories of
+rapine and bloodshed. However, they were disappointed, as his evidence
+was little more than confirmatory of that of Captain Warner of the
+_Matautu_, in reference to the taking of some gear from the brig
+_Kamehameha the Fourth_.
+
+Mr. Morland and Likiak Sâ appeared to be the leading spirits in
+obtaining charges against the absent Hayston, for the commander of the
+man-of-war was strictly neutral, and certainly not furiously indignant
+at his escape. They succeeded in obtaining his approval of the
+appointment of Jansen to take charge of the people and the station,
+under the supervision of King Tokusar, at Utwé. It was at this juncture
+that the letters written by Hayston to his agents, as well as the power
+of attorney and letters of instruction to me, were produced by Mr.
+Morland. How they came to be in that gentleman's hands I do not know. A
+rough draft was made by him for the king's perusal, he said, and the
+originals were then brought to me by one of the lieutenants, who also
+handed me a bundle of papers which he said had been brought on board by
+a native.
+
+These papers were my power of attorney, to hand over the ketch _E. A.
+Wilson_ to Captain Hayston, and also a letter of instructions in
+reference to the crew--copies of which the reader has already seen.
+Feeling confident that I had but to show these documents to Commander
+Dupont to insure an interview and my instant release, I requested to be
+ushered into the autocrat's presence. The Reverend Mr. Morland was
+present, and greeted me with such a smile of active benevolence that I
+longed to kick him.
+
+When I presented the letter to Captain Dupont I was considerably
+surprised when he denounced them as forgeries, calling me at the same
+time a d--d piratical scoundrel and accomplished young villain, adding
+that my cruel behaviour in aiding and abetting Hayston in his villainies
+made him regret that he could not run me up to the yardarm as a
+warning. He finished this tirade by tearing up my papers and throwing
+them at me. Calling the sergeant of marines, he ordered me put in irons,
+from which, however, I was released before the _Rosario_ put to sea.
+
+Early next morning, much to my relief, there appeared on board the black
+shining face of Johnny Tilton, the young negro, who among others of the
+crew had been brought away from Utwé, in one of the man-of-war boats.
+Johnny, with his shipmates, was taken below and examined by the captain
+and Mr. Morland. But as there was nothing against him personally or the
+Fijian half-caste Bill, they were permitted to return ashore. Before
+leaving, Johnny requested to be allowed to see me, which was granted.
+
+The moment I saw his face I knew he had something of importance to tell
+me, for looking at the marine standing sentry over me, he said in
+Samoan, "Le--alu uā sola i te po" (the Captain escaped in the night).
+
+"Yes!" I replied, "I know that already."
+
+"Ah! but I mean that he has taken the small boat and gone away
+altogether. Listen, I'll tell you all about it. After the man-of-war
+boats had gone away from Utwé, and the Captain had escaped into the
+mangroves, a number of the Strong's islanders came down and said they
+were going to loot the place. Then the king sent down word that the
+captain of the man-of-war had declared that the station now belonged to
+him (the king), and that he could do what he liked with the place. The
+king forbade any of the people to go into the Captain's house till
+Jansen came down with Likiak Sâ, as these two had been appointed by the
+king and Mr. Morland to take charge. Well, there was a lot of us ran
+away into the mountains at the very first when we heard the Captain was
+taken prisoner. Bill Hicks and I were among them, also boy George and
+Sunday. Before we left I went to the Captain's house and told the girls
+that we were running away, and our wives were coming with us, and asked
+them what they intended to do. Old Mary said she would wait and see
+first if it were true about the Captain being taken prisoner.
+
+"All the young women, too, though they were very frightened, said they
+would stay. I got Hope Island Nellie to give me three Winchester rifles
+and a bag of cartridges from the back of the big house. I cut a hole
+through the side of the Captain's sleeping-place, and Nellie passed the
+rifles out to me quietly. I told Nellie that we were going to hide in
+the mountains till we saw whether the man-of-war wanted to catch us as
+well as the Captain. If not we would return to Utwé.
+
+"I took the rifles and wrapped them up in a long mat, and went down to
+the lagoon, where I found a canoe and took it. Bill and the others were
+waiting for me; they told me that the man-of-war boats were coming into
+the harbour, and that the Captain was in one of them; we watched them
+carefully and saw them go out of the harbour. Then Bill began to talk
+against the Captain, and said he would be glad if he were shot. He asked
+me if I was willing to make a dash into the village and help him to
+bring away Nellie and Sara, as if the Captain was taken away in the
+man-of-war he was going to have them for himself.
+
+"I told him that until Captain Hayston was taken away or dead that I
+intended to stick to him. So we nearly had a fight over it. Then Bill
+said all of a sudden that he intended to have Sara and Nellie, right or
+wrong. And as he had nothing to fear from the man-of-war, he would try
+if he couldn't fool the captain, and pretend he could tell him all about
+Captain Hayston robbing Captain Daly's station on the Line Islands.
+
+"I told him I was not going to turn dog on the Captain, and he might do
+his dirty work himself.
+
+"So off he went, and we saw him cross over in a canoe to young Harry's
+place, and knew he was going along the beach to Chabral harbour. Then I
+talked to the others, and asked them what we ought to do, for I was
+afraid we would not see the Captain any more. Boy George laughed, and
+said he didn't care, but he meant to be beforehand with Bill and run off
+with Sara; that if I had any sense I would run off with Nellie, and let
+the other girls go adrift. He said we could easily live in the mountains
+till the man-of-war was gone, and then go back to Utwé. But I said I
+wouldn't do that, and that they would find that Sara would fight like a
+wild cat if boy George or any one else tried to take her away.
+
+"Boy George then said if she wouldn't come he would put a bullet through
+her, and take Mila or Nellie instead. So then we had a row; he called me
+a black thief and said I could go to h--l. He and the others cleared out
+and left me alone.
+
+"It was then very dark, and as everything seemed quiet, I walked across
+the coral and got into the house on the point where some Strong's Island
+people live, the one you were brought to when you were washed ashore.
+The man and his wife Nadup were frightened at first; but they were good
+to me, and gave me food, and then they told me Jansen was in charge of
+the station; that the Pleasant islanders were fled into the bush, and
+that the girls in the big house had run away when they saw him coming to
+them, drunk, with a loaded rifle in his hand.
+
+"Only Nellie and little Kitty and Toby stayed behind. Nellie had a
+Winchester rifle and pointed it at Jansen, who was afraid to come into
+the house. Then she, Kitty, and the little boy collected as many of the
+Captain's things as they could carry, and taking a canoe, put out to
+sea, intending to paddle round to Moūt, where they thought they would
+find you, who would tell them all about the Captain, and whether he was
+killed or not.
+
+"But, after they had gone four or five miles, the outrigger came off
+and the canoe capsized. They swam ashore and then walked back to Utwé,
+where they were told by some natives that you were also a prisoner on
+board the man-of-war. And the last that had been seen of Nellie, Kitty,
+and the boy, was that they started to walk to Chabral harbour to try and
+see the captain of the man-of-war, as they were afraid that Jansen would
+kill them.
+
+"Well," continued Black Johnny, "when I heard that you were also a
+prisoner I thought I would run away into the bush again, as I knew
+Jansen would put a bullet into me whenever he saw me if I did not get
+first shot. Just as I was thinking very hard what I should do, I heard
+some one walking on the broken coral outside the house. I knew the
+footstep; it was the Captain! I crept outside, and saw him standing up
+leaning against a stone wall. He had two pistols in his sash and a
+Winchester rifle in his hand. He seemed to be considering. I whistled
+softly, and then spoke. He shook hands with me, and then raised his
+rifle and pointed it at the head of the Strong's islander, who, with his
+wife Nadup, had followed me. They ran outside and threw themselves on
+the ground, and grovelled in the way they do to old Tokusar, and swore
+they would not tell that the Captain had come back.
+
+"We then had a hasty talk, and I told him about you being a prisoner.
+But he said you would soon be set free again and would return to Utwé,
+and I must stick to you and help to keep order; that after the
+man-of-war had gone he would come back again. When I told him that the
+station was broken up, and that Jansen was in charge of thirty Strong's
+islanders, and that the girls had run away, he said it was a bad case,
+and, picking up his rifle, he asked me where Jansen was sleeping. I saw
+what he meant to do, and begged him to let things be as they were, and
+not kill Jansen while the man-of-war was here.
+
+"So he thought awhile, and then said if he could find a boat he would
+get away, as he didn't think the man-of-war would follow him. By and by
+he would come back again, when he hoped to find you and me here all
+safe.
+
+"The Strong's Island women then told us that the dingey had been brought
+down from Chabral harbour by Jansen, and was then lying outside the
+coral at anchor. 'She'll do,' said the Captain; 'lend me a hand, and
+we'll bring her ashore.' But I made him lie quiet while I went for her;
+and I can tell you I was in a terrible funk all the time about sharks as
+soon as I began to swim out. Anyway I brought her in all right; and then
+the man and his wife brought a lot of cocoa-nuts and cooked food, and
+put it into the boat. I gave the Captain all the cartridges I had. He
+told me that he got the pistols from the place in the bush that you know
+of, and the rifle from young Harry, and that everything else there was
+all right."
+
+By this I knew that Hayston had visited a place in the bush where he had
+secreted his bags of money, besides firearms and ammunition.
+
+Going on with his talk the young negro said, "When everything was ready
+the Captain told me he meant to sail round the lee side of the island,
+and hide the boat in the mangroves till the man-of-war had gone, and
+then he would return and wipe out Jansen and the traders.
+
+"He told me, though (for he felt sure of your being set free again),
+that if it so happened that he did not return in ten days you would know
+that he had cleared out towards the north-west, and would try to reach
+the Pelew Islands. He said if he reached there he would soon get a
+vessel, as there were always plenty of small Spanish schooners about
+those islands, and he could easily put his hand on one or two people in
+the Pelews who would help him to take one. I asked him what we should do
+if, when we came back to Utwé, you found that Jansen was too strong for
+us? He said we should make no attempt to take forcible possession, but
+go and live with your people at Moūt. That as soon as the girls knew
+where we were they would be certain to come to us with little Kitty and
+Toby. That we must wait till he returned, as he would never desert us.
+
+"Then," said Johnny, whose glistening eyes showed how deeply attached he
+was to his Captain, "the poor fellow! he shook hands with me, and said I
+was made of the right stuff, and that the Almighty made a mistake when
+he gave me a black skin. Then, telling me to keep a stout heart, he got
+in and hoisted the sail. It was very dark, but there was a good
+land-breeze, and he sailed the dingey right along the edge of the reef
+till he came to the passage, and disappeared in the darkness. I ran
+across the strip of land on the sea-side of the lagoon and waited till I
+saw him pass.
+
+"In about half-an-hour I saw the little boat sailing along close into
+the shore, just outside of the breakers, rising and falling like a
+sea-gull on the top of the heavy seas. I could see the Captain's figure
+in the stern, and every moment expected to see her lifted high up on a
+roller and dashed on the reef. But though I shouted to him to keep
+farther out, the white figure in the stern never moved, and my voice was
+lost in the roaring of the surf.
+
+"Then, as I saw him still keeping steady to the southward, just clear of
+the last sweep of the seas before they curled and broke on the reef, I
+remembered that only a few cables' lengths from the breakers there was
+always a strong current setting to the north, and that with a light
+breeze the boat would never stem it. That was why he hugged the shore so
+closely. At last, as I kept running through the undergrowth following
+the boat, I came to that place where there is a thick cane scrub. When I
+got through it he was nearly out of sight, and I sat on a boulder and
+watched the sail gradually covered up by the night."
+
+Such, in effect, was the young negro's story. I could not help being
+affected by his evident sorrow, and told him that I feared there was no
+chance of me at least ever seeing the Captain again. Then, when the time
+came to part, I shook his hand warmly, and advised him to sever his
+connection with the _Leonora's_ crew; also to go and see the king, who
+would not, at any rate, object to his remaining on the island to follow
+out the Captain's wishes as far as lay in his power.
+
+Soon after Black Johnny had bid me good-bye young Harry came to say
+farewell, and with him Kusis and his family, and Lālia.
+
+Harry told me that he saw the Captain after his escape, and urged him
+not to think of returning to Utwé just then, as Jansen had a strong
+force of natives with him, and would certainly try to take or shoot him.
+But he was determined to find out how matters stood, and bidding Harry
+good-bye, set out across the mangrove swamp that lined the shore from
+Harry's station to the village at Utwé. He gave him the Winchester and
+cartridges, and the Captain assured him that he would not fire a shot
+except in self-defence.
+
+I told Harry what I had learned from the young negro about the Captain's
+final movements, and that I was being taken away as a prisoner. He
+seemed very bitter against the other traders, whom he spoke of as
+trembling like whipped hounds before the Captain's frown when he was
+free, and who now, when he was a ruined and broken man, were loud in
+their threats and vapourings.
+
+He also told me that he had received a letter from the king and Mr.
+Morland, commanding him to deliver up to Jansen all oil, casks, boats,
+and other property in his possession belonging to Captain Hayston, and
+threatening him with deportation from the island if he refused. To this
+he sent a written reply to the effect, that unless the king and Mr.
+Morland could back up their demand by a boat's crew from the
+man-of-war, he would shoot the first man who stepped inside his fence.
+
+They then appealed to Commander Dupont, who told them that as young
+Harry was an American citizen, he could not force him to give up the
+property, but advised the king and Mr. Morland to take the law into
+their own hands.
+
+Young Harry then armed his wives and native servants with rifles, and
+telling them to make short work of any one attempting to seize Captain
+Hayston's property, set out for Chabral harbour to interview the king.
+He told me that when he reached the king's house he found there the
+other traders, Mr. Morland, and the commander of the man-of-war. On the
+latter gentleman inquiring who he was, and what he wanted, Harry
+answered him very concisely by furnishing his name and nationality. He
+then stated that he had not come to see him (Commander Dupont), but the
+king, of whom he wished to ask by what right he dared to send him a
+letter threatening him with deportation from the island unless he
+consented to give up Captain Hayston's property. He warned him to be
+careful how he interfered with an American citizen, as there was an
+American cruiser now in the Caroline Islands. He (the king) would find
+he had made a serious mistake if he committed any outrage upon a citizen
+of the United States.
+
+"You should have seen the look in the British officer's face," said
+Harry, "when I stepped up to the old king, and nearly touching his face
+with my hand, said, 'and I warn you, king, that the captain of an
+American cruiser will listen to the tale and redress the wrongs of the
+honest American citizen. He would think little of knocking your town
+about your ears.'"
+
+The old king never spoke, but glanced first towards the British officer
+and then to the missionary, but as neither of them offered suggestions,
+the poor old fellow could only mutter something to the effect that he
+was like a little fish in a pool, afraid of the sea because of the
+bigger fish, and afraid to stay lest the frigate birds should seize him.
+Young Harry quite enjoyed relating the scene to me, and said that as he
+was going away the king held out his hand and inquired in a shaky voice,
+"I say, Harry, what you tink, what you do? Suppose Captain Hayston come
+back, what become of King Tokusar? Oh! by God! now I be 'fraid every
+day; think I hear Captain Hayston speak me; make noise like bullock; I
+think better be poor native, no more king."
+
+Harry refused to advise the king, and then taking a good look at the
+white men present, said, "Well, good-bye, King Tokusar! I am going back
+to my station--the station I am minding for Captain Hayston. I have six
+men and four women all armed, and the American flag on a pole in front
+of my door; and the first man that attempts to do me any mischief,
+white, black, or yellow, _I'll shoot him_. You can ask the white men
+from Pleasant Island if I am not a man of my word. They know me."
+
+Harry then got into his boat and pulled on board the man-of-war, where
+the first lieutenant very kindly allowed him to see me. I felt sincere
+regret at parting with Harry, telling him to beware of the other
+traders. I repeated what had been told me by Kitty of Ebon and Lālia. He
+laughed, and said he was always prepared, and meant to do justice to the
+trust reposed in him by Captain Hayston. "I'm the wrong man," he said on
+leaving, "to abandon any station and property left in my charge." Then,
+with oft-repeated wishes that we might meet again, after hearing of the
+Captain's safety we parted.
+
+Then came again good simple Kusis and his people with Lālia. She had in
+charge little Kitty and Toby. Poor Toby clung to my legs and sobbed as
+if his heart was breaking, when I told him that I did not know when the
+Captain would come back again. If no one else loved his master Toby did,
+and I tried in vain to assuage his grief. I was glad to hear from Lālia
+that she was going to young Harry's place with the two children. There I
+knew they would be well treated and cared for.
+
+"Look!" said she, pointing to the little fellow, "the Captain had two
+good friends besides yourself, young Harry, and the nigger Johnny, but
+this little fellow has never ceased crying for 'Captin' since he left
+the village in South harbour. Never mind, little Toby, we will wait and
+the 'Captin' will be sure to come;" and then she stooped down, and tried
+by kissing and coaxing to prevent him from giving utterance to his
+doleful wails and sobs of grief.
+
+Lālia told me, as with glistening eyes and trembling hands we said
+farewell, that her one hope now was to be able to get back to her
+distant home on Easter Island, that Captain Hayston would return with a
+ship; and, if he went towards Samoa or Tahiti, take her with him for
+that portion of the many thousand miles that lay between Strong's Island
+and her native land. That he would do this she felt confident. "For,"
+she said, "he once told me that he would stand by me if I was in
+trouble--it was when we were all washed ashore together--you remember?
+_and he never breaks his word_."
+
+Whatever Lālia's past life had been, I could never help admiring her
+many noble traits of character. I owed her life-long gratitude for her
+heroic self-sacrifice on the fateful night of the wreck of the
+_Leonora_; by me, at least, she will never be forgotten. Poor Lālia!
+Brave, loving, lovely child of the charmed isles of the southern main!
+reckless alike in love and hate, who shall judge? who condemn thee? Not
+I!
+
+Kusis, Tulpé, and Kinie clung to me as if they could not bear to say
+farewell. I see before me often the honest, kindly countenance of Kusis
+as, with his hand clasped in mine, he looked trustfully into my face and
+made me promise that some day I would return and live with him once
+more. And so freshly at that time came the remembrance of the happy days
+I had passed in his quiet home, dreaming the hours away within sight of
+the heaving bosom of the blue, boundless Pacific Ocean, so deliciously
+restful after the stormy life of the _Leonora_ and her wild commander,
+that I believe I really intended to return to Strong's Island some day;
+but, as we used to say at Sydney college, "_Dîs aliter visum_."
+
+Queen Sê sent me a letter as follows:--
+
+ DEAR FRIEND,--Kitty Ebon send Lālia to see you. We all very
+ sorry, but must not say so, because Mr. Morland very strong man
+ now. Where you think Captain Hayston go in little boat? I 'fraid
+ he die in boat. I very sorry for Captain--very kind man--but bad
+ man to natives sometimes.
+
+ QUEEN SÊ.
+
+Enclosed were these pencilled lines from Kitty of Ebon:--
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND,--All the people from Moūt been to Mr. Morland to
+ ask why you are in prison, and he says you will be hung for
+ stealing a ship. We all very sorry, all Moūt people love you
+ very much--and me too. Good-bye, dear friend, come back to Kusis
+ and Moūt people, for I don't think you be hanged in Fiji.--Your
+ sincere friend,
+
+ CATHERINE EBON.
+
+But when the light-hearted blue-jackets manned the capstan and merrily
+footed it round to lively music, and the great steamer's head was
+pointed to the passage, my thoughts were far away, where in fancy I
+discerned a tiny boat breasting the vast ocean swell, while sitting aft
+with his face turned to the westward, his strong brown hand on the
+tiller, was the once dreaded Captain of the _Leonora_; the lawless rover
+of the South Seas; the man whose name was known and feared from the
+South Pole to Japan, and yet through all, my true friend and most
+indulgent commander. With all his faults, our constant association had
+enabled me to appreciate his many noble qualities and fine natural
+impulses. And as the black hull of the _Rosario_ rose and fell to the
+sea, her funnel the while pouring forth volumes of sable smoke, the
+island gradually sunk astern, but the memories connected with it and
+Captain Hayston will abide with me for ever.
+
+Harry Skillings I never saw again, but heard that he went to Truk in the
+North-west Carolines. Black Johnny was murdered in New Britain. The
+other Harry with his native wife fell victims to the treacherous savages
+of the Solomon Islands. Jansen died a few years since on Providence
+Island. Some of the other traders and members of the crew I have heard
+of from time to time, scattered far and wide over the Isles of the
+Pacific. Lālia died in Honolulu about five years since, constant in her
+attempts to reach her distant home on Easter Island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+NORFOLK ISLAND--ARCADIA
+
+
+And now, my innocence and lack of complicity in Hayston's irregularities
+having been established, a revulsion of feeling took place in the minds
+of the captain and officers of the _Rosario_ with regard to me.
+
+After the fullest explanations furnished by the traders and others,
+backed up by the manifest sympathy and good-will of the inhabitants of
+Strong Island, it became apparent that some sort of reparation was due
+to me. This took the form of a courteous invitation to accept a passage
+to Sydney in H.M.S. _Rosario_, and to join the officers' mess on the
+voyage. "I'm afraid that we acted hastily in your case, Mr. Telfer!"
+said Captain Dupont. "You have been thoroughly cleared of all
+accusations made against you. I am bound to say they were very few. And
+you seem chiefly to have acted as a peacemaker and a power for good. I
+have gathered that you are anxious to rejoin your friends in Sydney. I
+shall be glad to have your company on the return voyage. What do you
+say? I trust you will not refuse; I shall otherwise think you have not
+forgiven my apparent harshness."
+
+Thus pressed to return to family and friends--from whom, at times, in
+spite of my inborn roving propensities, the separation had cost me
+dear--what could I do but thank the manly and courteous potentate, and
+comply with an invitation so rarely granted to a South Sea adventurer. I
+was the more loth to lose the opportunity as there had come upon me of
+late a violent fit of homesickness which I in vain strove to combat.
+
+I had in truth now no particular reason for remaining at Kusaie, or
+indeed anywhere in the South Seas. Hayston was gone; his magnetic
+influence no longer controlled my will, as in our first acquaintance.
+The _Leonora_--our pride and boast, our peerless floating home--no
+longer "walked the waters like a thing of life," but lay dead,
+dismantled, dishonoured on the ruthless coral rocks which had crushed
+the life out of her on that fatal night.
+
+I realised now with thankfulness that I had narrowly escaped being
+liable as an accessory for some of Hayston's ultra-legal proceedings--to
+call them by no harsher name.
+
+How often, indeed, in the reckless daring of boyhood is the fatal line
+crossed which severs imprudence from crime! The inexorable fiat of human
+justice knows no shade of criminality. "Guilty or not guilty," goes
+forth the verdict. There is no appeal on earth. And the faulty, but not
+all evil-natured victim, is doomed to live out all the years of a life
+branded as a felon, or maddened by the fears which must ever torture the
+fugitive from justice!
+
+If I stayed in the South Seas on my present footing, nothing remained
+but the trader's life, pure and simple. I had little doubt but that I
+could make a living, perhaps a competence in years to come. But that
+meant exile in every sense of the word. Complete severance from my
+kindred, whom my soul yearned to see again; from the friends of my
+boyhood; from the loved and lovely land of my birth; from the thousand
+and one luxuries, material and intellectual, which are comprehended in
+the word civilisation. I had slaked my thirst for adventure, danger, and
+mystery. I had carried my life in my hand, so to speak, and times
+without number had doubted whether I should retain that more or less
+valuable possession for the next ten minutes. I had felt the poisoned
+arrows at Santa Cruz hurtling around me, even hiss through my waving
+locks, when the death-scratch summoned a man on either hand. I had
+nearly been "blue sharks' meat" as Hayston phrased it, on coral strand
+amid "the cruel crawling foam." All chances and risks I had taken
+heedlessly in the past. But now I began to feel that I must pronounce
+the momentous decision which would make or mar my future career. The
+island life was very fair. For one moment I saw myself the owner of a
+trading station on Pingelap or Arurai. I am sitting in a large, cool
+house, on soft, parti-coloured mats, surrounded by laughing girls
+garlanded and flower-crowned. Around and above, save in the plantation
+which surrounds the house, is the soft green light of the paradisal
+woodland illumining its incredible wealth of leafage, fruit, and
+flowers. Before me lies the endless, azure sea-plain. And oh, my sea! my
+own, my beloved sea!--loved in childhood, youth, and age, if such be
+granted to me! In my ears are the magical murmurous surge-voices, to the
+lulling of which I have so often slept like a tired child. Fruit and
+flowers--love and war--manly effort--danger--high health--boundless
+liberty,--all things necessary to the happiness of primeval man, before
+he became sophisticated by the false wisdom of these later ages, should
+I not possess in profusion? Why, then, should I not remain in this land
+of changeless summer--this magic treasure-house of all delights of land
+and sea?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Long and anxiously did I ponder over my decision. Those only who have
+known the witchery of the "summer Isles of Eden," have felt the charm of
+the dream-life of the Southern Main--the sorcery of that lotus-eating
+existence, alternating with the fierce hazards and stormy delights which
+give a richness to life unknown to a guarded, narrowed civilisation--can
+gauge my irresolution.
+
+I had well-nigh resolved to adhere to the trader's life--until I had
+made a fortune with which I could return in triumph--when I thought of
+my mother! The old house, with its broad, stone-paved verandah came back
+to me--the large, "careless-ordered" garden with its trailing, tropical
+shrubs and fruit-trees--the lordly araucarias, the boat-house, the
+stone-walled bath wherein I had learned to swim--all came back in that
+moment when memory recalled the scenes and surroundings of my early
+life. I could hear a voice ever low and sweet, as in the days of my
+childhood, which said, "Oh! my boy! my boy! come back--let me see my
+darling's face before I die."
+
+I was conquered--the temptations of the strange life, with its sorceries
+and phantasms, which had so long enveloped me, were swept away like a
+ghost-procession at dawn. And in their place came the steadfast resolve
+to return to the home of my youth, thenceforward to pursue such modes of
+life as might be marked out for me. In a new land like my birth-place,
+with a continent for an arena, I had no fear but that a career would
+open itself for me. In no country under heaven are there so many chances
+of success, so many roads to fortune, as in the lone wastes upon which
+the Southern Cross looks down. On land or sea--the tracks are
+limitless--the avenues to fortune innumerable. Gold was to be had for
+the seeking; silver and gems lay as yet in their desert solitudes, only
+awaiting the adventurer who, strong in the daring of manhood, should
+compel the waste to disclose its secrets--only awaited the hour and the
+man.
+
+For such enterprises was I peculiarly fitted. So much could then be said
+without boast or falsehood on my part. My frame, inured to withstand
+every change of temperature which sea or land could furnish, was of
+unusual strength. By hard experience I had learned to bear myself
+masterfully among men of widely various dispositions and characters. I
+took my stand henceforth as a citizen of the world--as a rover on sea
+and land--as more than a suppliant to fortune, a "Conquistador."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The homeward voyage being now fairly commenced, I began to speculate on
+the probabilities of my future career. During the years which I had
+passed among the islands I had acquired experience--more or less
+valuable--but very little cash. This was chiefly in consequence of our
+crowning disaster, the wreck of the _Leonora_. But for that untoward
+gale, my share of the proceeds of the venture would have exceeded the
+profits of all my other trading enterprises. As it was, I was left, if
+not altogether penniless, still in a position which would debar me from
+making more than a brief stay with my friends in Sydney, unless I
+consented to be beholden to them for support. That I held to be
+impossible. For a few weeks I felt that my finances would hold out. And
+after that, was there not a whole world of adventures--risks, hardships,
+dangers, if you will--all that makes life worth living--open before me;
+the curtain had fallen upon one act of the life drama of Hilary Telfer.
+What of that? Were there not four more, at least, to come?
+
+Even the princess had not arrived. There had been a "first robber" on
+the boards, perhaps--even more of that persuasion. But the principal
+stage business was only commencing--the dénouement was obviously far
+off. Thereupon my hopes rose as if freshly illumined. My sanguine
+nature--boundless in faith, fertile in expedient--reasserted itself.
+Temporarily depressed, more in sympathy with Hayston than with my own
+ill-luck, it seemed more vigorous and elastic in rebound than ever. The
+memory of my island life became faint and dreamily indistinct. The forms
+of Hayston, the king and queen, of Lālia, with sad, reproachful gaze--of
+Hope Island Nellie, lifting a rifle with the mien of an angered
+goddess--of Kitty of Ebon, incarnate daughter of the dusky Venus--of the
+bronzed and wrinkled trader, with blood and to spare on his sinewy
+hand--of young Harry and the negro Johnny. All these forms and faces,
+once so familiar, seemed to recede into the misty distance until they
+faded away from my mental vision.
+
+With them passed into shadow-land the joyous life of my youth--of the
+untrammelled, care-free existence--such as no man may find again in this
+world of slow, tracking care and hasty disenchantment. "Was I wise?" I
+asked myself again and again, in quitting it for the hard and anxious
+pursuits of the Continent? Were there not a dozen places besides
+Strong's Island where I should be welcomed, fêted, caressed, almost
+worshipped as a restored divinity? Was it well to abandon the rank which
+I had acquired among these simple people? Was it-- But no. For ever had I
+made the decision. Once resolved, I disliked changing my plans. Burdened
+with a regret which for days I could neither subdue nor remove, I
+adhered unflinchingly to my resolution, and addressed myself to the
+steady contemplation of the future.
+
+Now had commenced for me a new life--a new world socially speaking. The
+quiet reserve and unemotional bearing of the British officer was
+substituted for the frank accost and reckless speech of the island
+trader or wandering mariner. I was prompt, however, to assimilate the
+modish bearing of my companions, and assisted by some natural alertness,
+or perhaps inherited tendencies, soon became undistinguishable from the
+honourables and lordlings of the gun-room. Upon my repose of manner,
+indeed, I was often complimented. "By Jove, old fellow," one of the
+offshoots of the British aristocracy would say, "one would think you had
+been at Rugby or Eton. And I suppose you have never seen England.
+Certainly you have the pull of us in make and shape. I can't think how
+they grow such fellows,--more English than the English,--with your blue
+eyes and fair hair, too, in these God-forsaken regions."
+
+"Because," I said, "I am of as pure English blood as yourself; have been
+reared, and moulded, and surrounded by English people, and have all the
+traditions of the old country at my fingers' end. For the rest, I hold
+that this end of the world is more favourable to the growth of
+Anglo-Saxons, as you call yourselves, than the other."
+
+"Well! it looks like it, I must say," said my new friend. "I only hope
+that when the time comes for fighting, by sea and land--and, mark my
+words, come it will--that you will be found as stanch as I think you
+are."
+
+"Be sure we shall be," said I. "We have inherited the true English
+'grit,' as Americans say. You all said _they_ couldn't fight when their
+war began; when it finished, the world gave a different verdict. We are
+our fathers' sons, neither more nor less. The bull-dog and the game-cock
+still fight to the death in our country. Many a time have I seen it. And
+so will we when our time comes, and when we think it worth our while."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We carried an order from the New South Wales Government to call in at
+Norfolk Island--once the ocean prison of the more desperate felons of
+the old convict régime, who had been replaced by the descendants of the
+Pitcairn islanders. They, in their turn the descendants of mutinous
+sailors and Tahitian women--now the most moral, God-fearing, and ideally
+perfect race on the face of the earth.
+
+What a miracle had been wrought! Who could have imagined that the last
+days of a rough old sailor, spent among the survivors of a group of
+savage women who had butchered their mates, could have so firmly fixed
+the morale of a whole community that virtue should have indelibly
+impressed itself upon a hundred families. Sydney lies about S.S.W. from
+Kusaie, but to avoid passing through the dangers of the New Hebrides,
+and the reef-studded vicinity of New Caledonia, a direct south course
+with a little easting was decided upon.
+
+We made Norfolk Island, the distance being about two thousand miles, in
+ten days' easy steaming from Strong's Island. This lovely island was
+discovered by Cook in 1774.
+
+A military man writing of it in 1798, draws a comparison between it and
+Sydney much to the disadvantage of the latter. "The air is soft (he
+says) and the soil inexpressibly productive. It is a perfect section of
+paradise. Our officers and their wives were sensibly affected at their
+departure, and what they regarded as banishment to Sydney."
+
+Another officer writing of it in 1847, says: "It is by nature a paradise
+adorned with all the choicest gifts of nature--climate, scenery, and
+vegetable productions; by art and man's policy turned into an earthly
+hell, disfigured by crime, misery, and despair."
+
+The island had been brought into a high state of cultivation by convict
+labour. Its roads, buildings, and gardens were in admirable order. But
+with the establishment of the new régime--a different race with
+different tasks--much was neglected, a part became decayed and ruinous.
+The island is now partitioned into blocks of fifty acres, of which each
+adult male is allowed one, drawn for and decided by lot.
+
+Whale fishing is the favourite and most profitable occupation. From this
+and the sale of farm produce, which finds a market in Sydney, the
+inhabitants are furnished with all their needs require. Their wants are
+few, simple, and easily supplied.
+
+The old convict town with its huge, dilapidated barracks,
+gaol-officers' quarters, and servants' houses, is situated on the
+south-east edge of the island, where the little Nepean islet gives
+sufficient shelter to form a precarious roadstead available in certain
+winds. The old town is occupied by the Pitcairn islanders--in number
+about three hundred.
+
+Five miles across the island, on its north-eastern shore, and
+communicating with it by a fair road, lies the Melanesian Mission estate
+of a thousand acres. Sloping gently down to a low cliff and a rocky
+shore, the land is an undulating meadow, broken by ravines, and covered
+with a thick sward of conch grass or "doubh," said to have been imported
+from India, whence we drew our chief food supplies so many a year ago.
+Nothing more beautiful in a state of nature had ever been seen, I
+thought, when I first cast my admiring eyes on it. Here and there
+gigantic, graceful pines (_Araucaria excelsa_) stood in stately groves.
+Higher up on the flanks of Mount Pitt (a thousand feet above) grow the
+lemon and guava, cotton and wild tobacco. The island is nine hundred
+miles from Sydney and thirteen hundred and fifty from Cape Pillar,
+Tasmania. The Nepean and Phillip Islands lie to the south of the main
+island.
+
+We were in such a hurry to see the famous island and still more famous
+islanders, that we omitted a precaution which had been earnestly
+impressed upon us the day before. This was not to attempt to land unless
+we had a Pitcairner to steer. When the long swell of the Pacific rolls
+in upon the shallow beaches of Sydney Bay there is no more dangerous
+place in the world--the roadstead of Madras hardly excepted--than the
+boat harbour at Norfolk Island.
+
+Like most sailors, and man-of-war's men in particular, the crew was
+reckless and confident. For myself, I was a fair hand in a boat, and had
+mixed in so many cases of touch-and-go, where all hands would have fed
+the sharks in a few more minutes, that I had lost any sense of caution
+that I might have originally possessed. As we neared the shore, rising
+and falling upon the tremendous billows, which told of a scarce passed
+gale, I felt a sense of exhilaration to which I had been long a
+stranger. A party of the islanders, seeing a boat leave the ship, had
+come down to watch our landing, apparently with interest. As we came
+closer I noticed them talking rapidly to one another, and occasionally
+waving their arms to one side or the other as if to direct our steering.
+There were several women in the group, but as we neared the landing my
+attention was rivetted upon a girl who stood out some distance from the
+others at the end of a rocky point, which jutted beyond the narrow
+beach.
+
+I had seen strikingly beautiful faces and faultless forms among the
+island girls, as all unconscious, they threw themselves into attitudes
+so graceful and unstudied that a sculptor would have coveted them for
+models. Among these children of nature, roaming at will through their
+paradisal isles, the perfection of the human form had doubtless been
+developed. But there was a subtle charm about this girl, as she stood
+with bare feet beside the plashing wave,--a statuesque presentment of
+nobility, courage, and refinement which I had never before recognised in
+living woman. Tall and slender of frame, she yet possessed the rounded
+outlines which, in all island women, promise a fuller development in the
+matured stage of womanhood. Her features were delicately regular; in her
+large dark eyes there was an expression of strong interest, deepening
+almost into fear, as she gazed at our incoming boat. She had bent
+slightly forward, and stood poised on her rock as if waiting for a
+signal to plunge into the boiling surf. Her complexion was so fair that,
+but for her attitude, which spoke her a daughter of the sea, one which
+no mortal born away from the music of the surges could have assumed, I
+might have taken her for an Englishwoman.
+
+"In the name of all the divine maidens since Nausicaa" (I had not quite
+forgotten my _Odyssey_, rusty though was my Greek) "who can she be?"
+thought I.
+
+At this point my reflections and conjectures came to an abrupt end, as,
+indeed, nearly did also "the fever called living" in my particular case.
+I felt the boat rise heavenwards on the back of a tremendous roller. The
+islanders shouted as though to warn us of danger, the steersman gave the
+tiller a wrong turn, or omitted to give it the right one, and the next
+moment the boat was buried beneath an avalanche of foam, with crew and
+passengers struggling for their lives. I could swim well, that is, of
+course, comparatively, for the difference between the best performance
+of a white man--well practised from youth though he be--and of an
+islander is as that of a dog and a fish. Still, having risen to the
+surface, I made no doubt but that I could easily gain a landing. In this
+I was deceived. As in other spots, the constant surf concealed a
+treacherous undertow against which the ordinary swimmer is powerless.
+Again and again did I gain foothold, to be swept back by the resistless
+power of the backward current. Each time I became weaker, and at length,
+after a long fruitless struggle, I closed my eyes and resigned myself to
+my fate. Borne backward and half fainting, I saw the whole party of
+natives in the water mingling with the crew, who, like myself, had been
+making desperate efforts to reach the landing.
+
+My senses were leaving me; darkness was before my eyes, when dimly, as
+in a dream, I seemed to mark the girl upon the rock plunge with the
+gliding motion of a seal into the boiling foam. Her bosom shone as with
+outstretched arms she parted the foaming tide, her short under-dress,
+reaching only to the knees, offered no impediment to the freedom of her
+limbs. I felt soft arms around me. A cloud of dusky hair enveloped me.
+Strains of unearthly music floated in my ears. It was the dirge of the
+mermaidens, as they wail over the drowned sailor and bear him with song
+and lament to his burial cavern. All suddenly it ceased.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The mid-day sun had pierced the roof and side of the cottage wherein I
+was lying upon a couch, softly matted. When I awoke I looked around.
+Surely I had been drowned, and must be dead and gone! How, then, was I
+once more in a place where the sun shone, where there were mats and
+signs of ordinary life? I closed my eyes in half-denial of the evidences
+of my so-called senses. Then, as I raised myself with difficulty, the
+door opened and a man entered.
+
+He was a tall, grandly developed Pitcairner, one of the men who had been
+on board the night before. His face was dark, with the tint of those
+races which, though far removed from the blackness of the Ethiop, are
+yet distinct from the pure white family of mankind. But his eyes,
+curiously, were of bright and distinct blue, in hereditary transmission,
+doubtless, from that ancestor who had formed one of the historic
+mutineers of the _Bounty_.
+
+"You've had a close shave, Hilary. That's your name, I believe. A trifle
+more salt water and you'd have been with the poor chap that's drowned.
+We got all the crew out but him."
+
+"I thought I _was_ drowned," I replied, "but I begin to perceive that
+I'm alive. I see you're of the same opinion, so I suppose it's all
+right."
+
+"It's not a thing to laugh at," the Pitcairner said gravely. "God saw
+fit to save you this time. To Him and Miranda you owe your thanks for
+being where you are now."
+
+"There are people in Sydney," I said, "who will be foolish enough to be
+glad of it, and after I have a little time to think, I daresay I shall
+be pleased myself. But who is Miranda, and how did she save me?"
+
+"Miranda Christian, my cousin, is the girl you saw standing on the rock.
+She had a strong fight of it to get you in, and but for one of us going
+on each side neither of you would have come out. We had been hard at it
+trying to save the crew, and nearly left it too late. She was just about
+done."
+
+"I shall be uneasy till I thank her. What a brave girl! And what am I to
+call you?"
+
+"Fletcher Quintal, and her cousin," the islander replied, drawing
+himself up and looking at me with a steady gaze. "You won't see her till
+the afternoon. She has gone home to rest after staying with you till you
+came to. My sister, Dorcas, will bring you food directly, and perhaps
+you'd better rest yourself too till sundown. Then some of us will pay
+you a visit. Good morning."
+
+A pleasant-faced damsel, with the sparkling eyes and perfect teeth of
+the race, came in shortly afterwards, who smilingly informed me that her
+name was Dorcas Quintal, and that her cousin Miranda had told her she
+was not to talk much to me.
+
+However, during the time occupied in making a creditable lunch--all
+things considered,--I succeeded in convincing her that I was strong
+enough for a decent dose of gossip, in the course of which I learned
+several interesting pieces of information about Miranda, who certainly
+had posed as my Guardian Angel in the late accident. She was, according
+to Dorcas, the leader in all sports and pastimes, and also the most
+learned and accomplished damsel on the island. "She sang and played in
+their church choir. She had read all the poets in the world," Dorcas
+believed. "She could recite pages and pages of poetry and history.
+Altogether she was a wonderful girl to be born and brought up in such a
+place as Norfolk Island, where we never see any one"--here Dorcas
+wreathed her lips into an expressive pout--"that is, except captains of
+ships and strangers like yourself."
+
+"So she is quite perfect," I said, "alike on land and sea. I can vouch
+for the last. I suppose she can pull an oar and is quite at home in a
+boat?"
+
+"Indeed she is," answered Dorcas, warming up. "She can sail a cutter
+with any man on the island, and steer a whaleboat besides. You should
+see her standing up with the big steer oar in those tiny hands of hers."
+
+"So, then, she has no faults?" I queried, a little mischievously.
+
+The girl smiled. "I suppose we have all some here as in other places.
+She is rather proud and quiet, the other girls say. I never saw it, and
+if there is anything else you must find it out for yourself. And now, as
+you have finished eating and drinking, I must go. Miranda will be here
+by and by."
+
+"Only one word, Dorcas," said I, as she turned towards the doorway. "How
+many admirers has she--all the young men in the island, I suppose?"
+
+"Only one," she replied, impressively, "my brother, Fletcher Quintal. He
+would die for her."
+
+"And she?"
+
+The girl paused before replying, and gazed earnestly at me.
+
+"She says she will never marry." And with that she passed out and left
+me to my meditations.
+
+I must have been fatigued, even bruised and battered by my conflict with
+sea and shore, as I felt a kind of lassitude creep over me, and
+presently fell into a dreamless sleep, which lasted till the sun was low
+and the dimness of the light told me that the day had passed.
+
+I raised myself and saw Miranda sitting on a low stool near the window,
+or the aperture which served for one. As I turned, she smiled and came
+towards me, putting out her hand for me to take, and gazing into my face
+with a frank pleasure of the unspoiled woman of the woods and fields. "I
+have to thank you for my life," I said, as I pressed her hand warmly.
+"It is of no great value to any one, as things have been going lately,
+but being such as it is, you have my warmest gratitude. I should hardly
+have changed for the worse if I had been lying beside poor Bill Dacre."
+
+"You must not talk in that mocking way," she said, with a pained
+expression like that of a hurt child. "God has given us all a life to
+use for some good purpose. Surely you have friends? perhaps a mother and
+sisters, who would weep when they heard you were lying under the waves?"
+
+"You are right, Miranda, and I will not talk foolishly again; but I
+thank you with my whole heart for your noble courage in risking your
+life to save mine. I wonder now how we both got to land, in spite of
+that beastly undertow?"
+
+"I never could have done it without help," she said. "I was nearly
+exhausted, yet I did not like to let you go, when Fletcher Quintal and
+Peter Mills, who had each brought out a man, swam in again, and we came
+in between them."
+
+"You seem to be quite at home in the water," I said. "I thought I could
+swim, and at Strong's Island and other places could hold my own with the
+natives pretty well. But I found my mistake here."
+
+"Of course we all swim well," she replied, smiling, "and know how to
+manage a boat. It would be curious if we did not; there is little else
+to do, in Norfolk Island, except when we are working in the fields. Our
+life is sometimes dull, I must allow."
+
+"I hear that you can do all sorts of other things," I said. "That you
+are the chief musician and teacher, besides being commander of the
+fleet."
+
+"Dorcas has been chattering, I am afraid," she answered, while a blush
+rose to her brow, tingeing the pallor of her ivory cheek with faint
+carmine. "I certainly have a variety of occupations, and very fortunate
+it is! Otherwise, I don't know what would happen to me, for I am
+scarcely as contented as my cousins and the other girls on the island."
+
+"It is the old story," I said. "Now, why should you not be contented on
+this lovely island where you have all you could wish for in the
+world--perfect freedom, a matchless climate, exercise, adventure, the
+love of your kinsfolk, everything that satisfies the heart of woman?"
+
+"Everything necessary to satisfy a woman's heart!" she said, rising and
+walking to where the casement admitted a view of the heaving deep with
+the _Rosario_ lying on and off. "Can you look at the boundless ocean
+with its thousand paths to the cities of the earth and not wish to roam?
+To see the glories of the old world, all the varied richly-coloured life
+of ancient nations that I have read of and see in my dreams? Do you
+think men only are impatient of a hemmed-in life? It is not so. Women
+have their longings for a wider range, a larger sphere; and yet I am
+perhaps the only girl on the island that feels what I have described."
+
+"You must have read much," I said, rather startled at this burst of
+feeling from the lips of a Norfolk Island damsel--a child of the most
+contented community in the world. "These strange yearnings must have
+been awakened in you through the word-painting of these wicked authors."
+
+"And why not?" she answered, with heightened colour and flashing eye.
+"That my world is one of books I do not deny. I have daily tasks and
+occupations, but my evenings are my own, and in them I read and muse.
+Then this little island, with its patient, primitive people, seems to
+fade away. I spend hours in Italy, where I revel in Florence, the Pitti
+Palace, the Arno, and roam the streets of the Eternal City amid the
+monuments of the world's grandest era, their very decay 'an Empire's
+dust.' I fall asleep often when reclining on the banks of 'Tiber, Father
+Tiber, to whom the Romans pray.' But, oh! if I begin to wander away in
+the track of my visions I shall never stop. And you," she continued with
+an eager glance, "you, who have seen men and cities, are you contented
+to linger away your life under cocoa-palms and bread-fruit trees, taking
+in glorious ease among simple savages until you become one yourself in
+all but the colour? Is this what you were born and reared and educated
+for?"
+
+As the girl thus spoke, with head upraised and exalted mien, her
+wondrous eyes flashing with almost unearthly light, her mobile
+lineaments changing with each varying mood, she looked in her strange
+and unfamiliar beauty like some virgin prophetess of the days of old,
+rousing her countrymen to deeds of patriotic valour or self-sacrificing
+heroism.
+
+All enthusiasm is contagious, more especially when the enthusiast is
+fair to look upon, and belongs to that sex for, or on account of which,
+so much of the world's strife has resulted.
+
+For the first time I began seriously to ask myself what motives had led
+me to waste so large a portion of my youth in heedless wandering among
+these fairy isles. What were my aims in life? What did I propose to
+myself? As I looked at the girl's face, aglow with the fire of a noble
+ambition, I felt humbled and ashamed.
+
+"You have spoken truly, Miranda," I replied, after a long pause, during
+which my fair questioner looked with a far-away gaze across the ocean
+plain, now quenching its thousand shifting gleams in the quick-falling
+tropic night. "I have been idly careless and unheeding of the future,
+satisfied with the day's toil and the day's pleasure. But I am going
+back to my people in Australia; there I shall begin a new life. It is a
+land of duty, of labour, and its enduring reward. There I shall renew
+the tension of my moral fibre which has been too long relaxed. But you
+must not be too hard on me. I have had to face losses, dangers, and
+misfortunes. I have been wrecked; I lost everything I had in the world.
+I have been ill; have been wounded; and, but for some of those simple
+islanders you seem to despise, I should not have been a living man
+to-day."
+
+"I do not despise them," she said; "of course every one knows that we
+are descended from those of Tahiti. I only say that they are not fit
+companions for white men--I mean of educated white men who in the end
+become as bad as they are--even worse--much worse. But tell me about
+your being ill. And who tended you? Was it a woman?"
+
+"I will tell you all about it to-morrow if you will walk with me and
+show me some of the scenery of this beautiful island of yours. But it is
+a long story, and it is too late to begin to-night."
+
+"I should like it above all things," she said frankly, "though you must
+have seen so many grand places in your roamings that our poor landscapes
+will hardly interest you."
+
+"Much depends on the guide," I said, as I gazed admiringly at her
+eloquent countenance.
+
+"I know that," she answered, meeting my too ardent gaze with perfect
+unconsciousness of any hidden meaning. "They tell me I am the best guide
+on the island, and indeed I should be, for my father and I were never
+tired of exploring and finding out traces of the old occupation by the
+Sydney Government, and many curious discoveries we made. So I will come
+here after breakfast to-morrow."
+
+She was true to her appointment, and then commenced a series of
+delightful rambles which, perhaps, I more truly enjoyed than many later
+and more pretentious travels.
+
+In despite of Miranda's depreciation of her lovely isle we found endless
+excuses for interest and admiration. It was truly a wonderful little
+"kingdom by the sea." Scraped along the side of a hill would be one of
+the beautiful roads constructed by the forced labour of the convicts
+which at one time almost filled the island. Rising from the valley slope
+were gigantic ferns, broad-leaved palms, lemons, oranges, guavas, all
+originally imported, but now flourishing in the wildest luxuriance in
+the rich soil and semi-tropical climate; while above all, stately and
+columnar, rose the great Araucaria peculiar to the island--the Norfolk
+Island pine of the colonists.
+
+Hand in hand we roamed together through this Eden amid the main, as
+though our great progenitors had again been transplanted to this
+wondrous wild--a latter day Adam, by whose side smiled a sinless
+Eve--pure as her prototype, and yet informed of much of the lore which
+men had wrested from the rolling ages. Together we explored the gloomy
+corridors and echoing halls of the ruinous prison houses--once the dark
+abodes of sorrow, torment, and despair unutterable.
+
+Miranda shuddered at the thought that these dismal cells and courtyards
+had echoed to the cries of criminals under the lash--to the clanking of
+chains--had even witnessed the death penalty inflicted on the murderer
+and the mutineer.
+
+Mute and terrible witnesses were they to the guilt to which human nature
+may descend--to the abysmal depths of despair into which the felon and
+the outcast may be hurled, when, hopeless of help from God or man, he
+abandons himself to all the baser instincts.
+
+We seldom lingered amid these sullen retreats, around which Miranda
+always declared she heard sighs and groanings, sobs, and even shrieks,
+as though the spirits of those who had suffered, and mourned, and died
+amidst the horrors unspeakable of prison life still lingered amid the
+ruins of their place of torment.
+
+How strange, well-nigh impossible, it even seemed to me that the very
+earth, the dumb witness of crime immeasurable, was not polluted
+irredeemably by the deeds that she had perforce endured and condoned.
+And now--stranger than aught that dreaming poet or seer imagined--that
+this Inferno should have been transmuted into an Arcadia, purer and more
+stainless than the fabled land of old, and peopled by the most
+obediently moral and conscientious family of mankind that had ever
+gathered the fruits of the earth since the days of our first parents.
+
+Day after day followed of this charmed life--magical, unreal, only in
+that it transcended all my other experiences in the degree that the
+glamour of fairyland and the companionship of the queen of Elfland may
+have exceeded the memorials of Ercildoune. If he was enchanted, I was
+spellbound even as true Thomas. Never had I met with a companion who
+combined all the charm of womanhood--the grace and joyousness of
+girlhood's most resistless period--with the range of thought and
+intellectual progress which this singular girl, amid her lonely isle and
+restricted companionship, had explored. And withal, she had remained in
+her almost infantine unconsciousness of evil--her virginal, instinctive
+repulsion of all things forbidden and debarred--like a being of
+another planet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Naturally an end arrived to this blissful state of things. The
+man-of-war after a few days was compelled to continue her voyage and
+perform her allotted duties, which comprehended surveys of uncharted
+coast-lines and suspected rocks. I had to choose between going on to
+Sydney and remaining in this charmed isle. And here inclination and
+duty appeared to draw different ways with equal strength. I was
+naturally anxious to return to my birth-place, my family, and friends.
+My feelings of home-sickness had returned with redoubled strength after
+being long in abeyance. But all such doubts and distrusts were swept
+away like storm wrack before the swelling surges of Miranda's own isle.
+I was fain to yield to the resistless force of the passion which now
+dominated, nay, consumed me. True, I had not as yet definitely assured
+myself that this purest pearl of womanhood was within my grasp. I had
+made no proffer of my affections. I had not, in so many words, solicited
+the priceless gift of hers. But I was not so unskilled in affairs of the
+heart as to mistake many a sign and symbol from Love's own alphabet,
+denoting that the outworks of the citadel were yielding, and that the
+fortress would ere long open gate and drawbridge to the invader.
+
+True to nature's own teaching, Miranda had not scrupled to confess and
+dilate upon the pleasure my companionship afforded her, to declare that
+never before in her life had she been half so happy, to wonder if my
+sisters would not die of joy when I returned, to chide me for my long
+absence from them and from such a home as I had often described to her.
+And all this with the steady eye and frank expression of girlish
+pleasure, which a less unsophisticated damsel would scarcely have
+acknowledged without conscious blushes and downcast eyes.
+
+Miranda, on the other hand, stated her sensations calmly and fearlessly,
+her wondrous eyes meeting mine with all the trustful eagerness of a
+happy child, as if it was the most natural thing in the world. "You see,
+Hilary," she would say, laying her hand lightly on my arm, and looking
+up in an appealing manner, "I have never met any one before who seems to
+understand my feelings as you do apparently by instinct. You have
+travelled and been in other places besides the islands, and you have
+read books--nearly all those which I have. You know that story in the
+_Arabian Nights_ about the prince that was changed into a bird? He knew
+that he was a prince, yet he was condemned to be dumb, and was unable to
+convey his feelings, because to all the world he was only a bird.
+
+"I sometimes think we Pitcairn girls live the life of birds--like that
+one," and she pointed to a soaring white-winged sea-bird, which
+presently darted downwards, falling like a stone upon the blue ocean
+wave. "We swim and fish, we are almost more on the sea than the land, we
+sleep on the land like that white bird, walk a little, talk a
+little,--that is our whole life. I think the bird has the best of it, as
+she can fly and we cannot."
+
+"But you all seem happy and contented," I said, "you and your cousins."
+
+"_They_ are, but I seem to have been born under a different star. I must
+have inherited some of the restless, adventurous spirit of my ancestor,
+Fletcher Christian.
+
+"The feeling of unrest and the desire to see the world--the wonderful,
+ancient, beautiful world of which we, in this island prison, for lovely
+as it is, it is but a prison for free souls--becomes so intense at times
+that I almost dread lest I should end my life like his."
+
+"And in what way was that?" I asked. "God forbid you should ever do a
+deed so terrible," I said.
+
+"Do you not know? He used to go every day to the top of a high cliff on
+the south side of Pitcairn to gaze over the ocean--as I have done
+hundreds of times--thinking, perhaps, of the wonderlands beyond, where
+he had forfeited the right to live by his own act; and--and one day he
+threw himself over the cliff, and they found his body on the rocks
+below. Poor Fletcher! I can partly understand his feelings."
+
+This was but one of our many conversations, always fascinating to me,
+as affording the rare privilege of exploring a mind naturally of high
+intelligence, developed by patient thought and a wide range of
+reading,--the island library, enriched by many generous gifts, being by
+no means a poor one,--guarded from deterioration by an exquisite natural
+refinement, yet withal clear and limpid as the transparent seas which
+encircled her home, where the more deeply the eye penetrated the more
+precious were the treasures disclosed.
+
+So it came to pass that the _Rosario_ sailed without me. The Captain and
+my jolly comrades of the gun-room chaffed me about what they called my
+imprudent attachment. "You'll have to turn Pitcairner," they said, "and
+settle down after old Nobbs has spliced you upon a fifty-acre patch,
+where you can grow sweet potatoes, yams, and maize to the end of your
+days. Surely a fellow like you, with a family to go back to, has
+something better in view than that!"
+
+"I shall not stay on the island," I said, "I intend to live in
+Australia, perhaps near Sydney."
+
+"Then your island princess will run away and leave you disconsolate.
+They can't live away from their people and where they were brought up.
+Some of them insisted on going back to Pitcairn, and are there now. They
+could not be persuaded from it. They had to let them go. They would have
+died else."
+
+"I have resolved," I said. "I will take all risks. You shall all come
+and see us in Sydney. We will live at North Shore, and have a yacht
+built on the lines of the _Leonora_. Adios!"
+
+So we parted. The _Rosario_ got up steam, and once more I watched the
+black cloud of smoke pouring from her funnels and the waves breaking as
+she moved majestically across the bright-hued ocean.
+
+Up to the last moment my simple and warm-hearted friends on the island
+had serious doubts as to whether I was not going off in the _Rosario_.
+They could hardly understand how I could prefer remaining as their guest
+and friend when the glory and dignity of a man-of-war--their highest
+expression of maritime splendour--were open to me.
+
+They had, it is true, implored me to stay with them for a few months
+longer--the young men were equally pressing with the older members of
+the community. With artless candour the girls promised that if I would
+stay Miranda should be my constant companion, and, except on Sundays,
+when, as their chief musician and organist, she could not naturally be
+spared, I should have a monopoly of her society.
+
+"You seem to like her so much," Dorcas Quintal repeatedly exclaimed.
+"And I am certain she likes you more than any one she has ever seen. The
+worst of it is that she will be so sorry when you have to go away. Clara
+Young nearly died when her friend went away. That was two years ago. But
+she got over it in time, and now she is happily married. But she _did_
+try to drown herself one day, only we were too quick for her."
+
+"It is a bad thing to have strangers for friends," I said, "if it may
+end so tragically when they leave. I wonder you entertain such dangerous
+visitors."
+
+"I suppose we can't help it," the girl replied, laughingly. "It is so
+pleasant to talk with men who know the great world we can only read
+about. We just take our chance. We have plenty to do, and that prevents
+us from fretting too much. I daresay you will hear a little crying
+to-night. We are all very sorry the big ship is gone."
+
+"It's the old, old story, Dorcas! Girls are a good deal alike all the
+world over, I suppose, in many of their ways. But you Pitcairners are
+certainly different in some respects to any women I know anywhere."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked the girl, eagerly. "I know we are simple, and
+have never been taught very much."
+
+"It isn't that. I will tell you before I go, or rather, I will tell
+Miranda, and she shall tell you what I say."
+
+So, with the full approbation of friends and relations of every degree
+of relationship, and, what was of more consequence, with the good-will
+of the spiritual pastor and master of the island, whose authority was
+absolute and unquestioned, Miranda and I pursued our untroubled way. In
+this wondrous Arcadia there were no jealousies, no scandals, no asking
+of intentions, no fiery, disappointed aspirants, no infuriated
+brothers,--these obstacles to pure and true love were evidently the
+outcome of a higher or a lower stage of civilisation. No evil
+consequences had ever occurred from unrestricted freedom of intercourse
+between the young people since the formation of the community. No such
+result was regarded as possible. Immutably fixed in my own course, I
+knew that nothing--humanly speaking--could affect my unalterable
+resolve. I had discovered a pearl of womanhood, matchless in beauty of
+mind and body, combining the higher mental qualities, indeed, with such
+physical perfection as no girl reared under less fortunate conditions
+was likely to possess. With regard to the future, if she consented to
+link her fate with mine I was ready to take all the risks of fortune.
+The fickle goddess has always favoured the brave, and with Miranda at my
+side I felt that I could lead the forlorn hopes of desperate endeavour,
+or endure uncomplainingly the toil and self-denial of the humblest
+station. I had, it is true, led a careless, somewhat epicurean life in
+the past, surrendering myself perhaps too readily to the charm of island
+life. But this was of the past, and the half-instinctive folly period of
+youth. Henceforth I would essay the culture of the mental qualities with
+which I had been reasonably gifted, turning to account also that very
+sound and thorough early tuition through which I had fortunately passed.
+Thus equipped, and with a helpmate at once loving and practical--devoted
+to duty and the highest forms of unselfish charity--ambitious only for
+intellectual experience and development--I felt that hope became
+certainty and success a mere matter of detail. After the departure of
+the _Rosario_ I became almost a son by adoption among the elders of the
+community. I learned to accommodate myself to their ways, after a
+fashion which was rendered more easy by my years of familiarity with
+island life. At the same time I was careful not to infringe in the
+slightest degree upon their peculiar customs, or to shock those
+religious prejudices which were so earnestly accepted in the community.
+It was taken for granted that I would settle among them in right of my
+bride. If I decided to marry Miranda, or any other island maiden, I
+should be put in possession of a landed estate of fifty acres, where I
+might dream away life in a round of labour that was half recreation,
+wandering amid the island groves, reclining under giant ferns or lofty
+pines, bathing in crystal founts or clear-hued seas at dawn or under the
+yellow moon. Passing contentedly from youth to middle age, from that
+half-way stage to a later span of life, which in this enchanted land
+implied little or no diminution of natural powers. Should it be so?
+
+This question I had asked Miranda more than once. But she would not
+consent to take it seriously. One day, however, I compelled her to
+listen, though she had again declared that we were so happy as we were
+that no change could be for the better, possibly for the worse--even.
+
+"Then, Miranda," I answered, "I must leave the island. Did we not hear
+from the last whaler that called in for fresh provisions that my old
+friend--the friend of the family, Captain Carryall, was to touch here in
+the _Florentia_?" He was the best known, the most popular of all the
+skippers next to Captain Hayston. Unlike him, however, his reputation
+was spotless, while for fair dealing and adherence to his promises his
+fame was proverbial. "Shall I go with him?" I said, "and must I go
+alone?"
+
+"And would you leave me?" she asked, imploringly--her dark eyes turned
+towards my face in a passion of reproachful tenderness, of which she
+herself scarce understood the meaning, "Oh! I thought once that I could
+let you go, though it has been life and happiness untold having you to
+talk to and read with. I fancied I should only mourn for you for a
+while--like the other island girls who weep and lament, and then dry
+their tears and dance and sing as if nothing had happened. But, oh! It
+is not so with me. They always say the Fletcher-Christians are
+different. I shall die! I shall die! I know I shall."
+
+And with that she cast herself on my neck, sobbing as though her heart
+would break. In the same breath declaring that she would never consent
+to spoil my life by marriage with a poor savage island girl, but a few
+degrees superior to the women of Pingelap and Ocean Island whom she had
+so often despised.
+
+By degrees I persuaded her to listen to my pleadings, and then calmly
+set before her my plans for the future. We must be married here, and
+after remaining on the island, living the idyllic life we were revelling
+in now, we would sail for Sydney in the _Florentia_, or some other
+vessel, and there begin life in earnest. Some employment would be found,
+doubtless, which would pave the way, by which I might make a serious
+effort towards a career, perhaps a competency in the future, or even a
+fortune.
+
+I had but little difficulty in carrying out my plan. The elders of the
+community, the relations and friends of Miranda, were overjoyed at the
+prospect of her marriage with a person of my position, who might also be
+enabled to do them many a good turn if I settled in Sydney, a port with
+which they had close business relations. I found, too, that I was not
+altogether an unknown personage. Some of the young men who had made
+voyages in whaleships had heard of my companionship with Captain
+Hayston. However, it would seem that all the natives whom they had met
+had given a good account of me as a fair dealer, and, moreover, generous
+in my treatment of them,--an apparently unimportant matter at the time,
+but serious enough now. Miranda told me afterwards, that had it been
+otherwise nothing would have induced her guardians to give their
+consent, or her to defy their decision.
+
+As it was, however, all seemed _couleur de rose_. No great preparations
+were needed. The simple island fashion was not encumbered with any great
+multiplication of garments. On the happy day Miranda was escorted to the
+modest building which did duty for a church by a band of white-robed
+maidens, in whose dark hair was wreathed the crimson blossoms of the
+coral plant and the hibiscus, with little other adornment but nature's
+furnishing in the flower-time of life. My comrades were selected from
+the younger men of the island, among whom I had always taken care to
+stand well, joining in their sports, and entering as an equal competitor
+their athletic contests. I was therefore looked upon as a most desirable
+acquaintance, able to hold my own, moreover, in all manly
+accomplishments (except swimming), and much esteemed for a gift of
+relating adventures in strange lands, and describing the foreign manners
+and customs with which a roving life had made me familiar.
+
+It might have been imagined that a girl so singularly gifted and
+attractive as Miranda would have had lovers in abundance, by whom a
+successful aspirant like myself would be regarded with jealousy.
+Unlikely as it may appear I observed no feeling of this kind. In that
+strange society, the passions which rage so fiercely in more civilised
+communities appeared to have lost their force, or to flow with the
+peaceful motion of the incoming tide rather than the resistless rush of
+a mountain torrent, which love, hate, jealousy, and envy in other lands
+so often resemble. The young men admired Miranda, indeed, worshipped her
+from afar. But they seemed rather elated by her good fortune, as it so
+appeared to them, than enviously disposed, and had no thought of other
+than the warmest friendship for their more fortunate companion. Even
+Fletcher Quintal, who might have been expected to view with dislike, if
+not a stronger sensation, my marriage with his favourite cousin, had
+apparently no feeling of this sort. He certainly expressed none, but
+congratulated me with all the warmth which a brother might be supposed
+to exhibit at the marriage of his best loved sister with his dearest
+friend. Truly it _was_ the long lost rediscovered Arcadia. There were
+moments when I doubted whether it was wise to leave a land where care
+was unknown; where want, with its attendant evils, had never been heard
+of; where there were no rich men to envy; no bad ones to fear; no poor
+to despise; where no one died but of old age or mishap; whence all the
+ills that flesh is heir to had, like the snakes of Ireland, been
+banished by some good genius, and only the gifts of virtue, contentment,
+and regulated industry remained. But there was wild blood in my veins,
+long dormant as it had lain. The murmur of the ocean seemed to call me
+with a tone of magical power. I longed for the wave-music once more--for
+the voyage which was to speed me to my birthland. I hurried on the
+preparations for our wedding, and, lingering though were all the slow
+sweet hours, endless the days, almost tedious the soft starlight glow of
+the summer nights, the day of days at last dawned that was to herald the
+happiness of a life-time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Our small domain had been carefully measured and marked out for us. A
+cottage had been built, thatched with palm leaves, floored with the soft
+mats of the island, simply furnished, and, as it happened, near to a
+bubbling spring, and shaded by the wondrous wild orange, which here
+grows almost to the height and girth of a forest tree. It happened to be
+the flower-time of these charming fruit bearers, so that wreaths and
+garlands of the blossom sacred to Hymen were plentiful and profuse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+EPITHALAMIUM
+
+
+Our marriage day! Oh, day of days! Dawn of a new existence! All nature
+seemed to sympathise with us in our supernal joy. For us, for us alone
+in all the world the streamlets murmured, the breezes whispered
+together, the wavelets plashed musically, the blue sky glowed, the sun
+shone goldingly. The venerable pastor of the community--he who had
+watched over every man and woman present from infancy, who had
+christened, and married, and buried the whole population of the island
+as they require these offices--read the time-honoured service of the
+Church of England, which was followed with deepest reverential attention
+by all present. When he blessed our union in the solemn language of the
+ritual familiar to me in the days of my childhood, every head was bowed,
+each woman's eye was wet with heart-felt sympathy and warmest affection
+for their erst-while playmate.
+
+The day was cloudless, a breeze at times sighed through the fragrant
+foliage of the grove wherein the little church had been built. The
+wavelets murmured on the beach, and the unresting surges seemed but to
+exchange loving memories of coral islands and crystal seas, of waving
+palms and the green gladness of tropic forests, of maidens,
+feather-crowned and flower-bejewelled, dancing on silver strands beneath
+the full-orbed midnight moon, or gliding, a laughing bevy of syrens,
+beneath the translucent wave. No sullen, dirge-like refrain on that
+paradisal day brought from the ocean voices the memory of drifting
+wrecks, of stormy seas, of drowned seamen--no hint of danger, of
+despair, of pestilence, and death; and yet all these phases of
+experience I had known and reckoned with even in my short life.
+
+No; these and kindred ills were forgotten, banished from earth and sea.
+On this blissful morn the golden age of the earth seemed to have
+returned. Recalling the half-forgotten classics of my boyhood, I could
+fancy that I saw fauns peeping through the leaves of the orange grove,
+that the ages had reverted to the freshness of the elder world, when the
+flush of the fair Arcadian life informed all things with divinity.
+
+And Miranda, my bride of brides! what words can describe her as she
+stood, with an expression half-timid, half-rapt, and inspired, before
+the humble altar that day? Her simple dress of virgin white which but
+slightly concealed while it outlined the curves of her statuesque form;
+her large dark eyes, which had often appeared to me to hold a shade of
+melancholy, were now irradiated by the love-light which she, in the
+purity and innocence of her heart, made no attempt to conceal. Her soft,
+abundant tresses had been gathered up into becoming form and classic
+simplicity, and, save a wreath of scarlet berries and the traditional
+orange blossom, she wore no ornament. As all unconscious of her maiden
+loveliness she stood beside me, with her head raised and an expectant
+smile which disclosed her pearly teeth, she seemed to my enraptured gaze
+a daughter of the wave,--no mortal maiden, but a being compact of air
+and sea and sky, visible but beneath the moonbeams, and unrevealed to
+the dwellers of the garish day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We had been but a month wedded; our simple home, our tiny domain, our
+forest rambles, our sea-baths at dawn and eve, as yet contented
+us--filled us with all fullest delight in which mortal beings can revel
+beneath this ethereal dome. And yet the spirit of unrest, the veritable
+serpent of the world's fairest Aidenns, gradually found means to
+discover himself.
+
+Miranda and I had, indeed, begun to discuss our projected voyage to
+Sydney, and I had many times described to her an ideal home on one of
+the thousand and one bays which render the northern shore of the
+unrivalled Sydney harbour matchless in beauty and convenience for those
+who, like myself, have salt water in their blood. She agreed with me,
+that with a boat, a garden, a bath-house, and a cottage built of the
+beautiful white, pink-veined sandstone, which is so abundant beneath and
+around Sydney, existence might be endured away from her island home,
+with the aid of books and the inspiring idea of the coming fortune.
+
+"And even if we do not make money," she said, "as people call it--what a
+strange idea it seems to me, who have hardly ever seen any--we shall be
+happy. I can't imagine people who are married and love each other ever
+being unhappy. Then your mother and sisters--I am so much afraid of
+them. They will regard me as a kind of savage, I am sure; and, indeed,
+compared with them, or real civilised people, I am afraid that I shall
+feel like one. And, oh! shall we ever be happier than we are now? Why
+should we change? Do you think we can come back now and then and visit
+my people? I should break my heart if I thought I should see them no
+more!"
+
+I promised this and other things, doubtless, at the time. But before we
+had completed the conversation about our future life--which indeed
+supplied us with endless subjects of interest--the great island
+wonder-sign appeared. A shout--a rush of excited people past our hut
+told of a ship in sight. We were down at the beach nearly as soon as
+the others, and as a long, low barque came up before the wind, something
+told me that she was the _Florentia_.
+
+A boat--a whaleboat, with a kanaka crew--put off soon after she was at
+anchor, and in the tall man at the steer-oar, whose commanding figure,
+even at that distance, I seemed to know, there was no difficulty in
+identifying our old friend Captain Carryall.
+
+Directly he jumped ashore, a dozen of the islanders dashed into the surf
+and ran the boat up on the beach. Our recognition was mutual.
+
+"Well, young fellow!" he said, "I've been hunting you up half over the
+South Seas. Wherever have you stowed yourself all this time? Why, what a
+man you've grown--a couple of inches taller than me, and I'm no pony.
+Brown as a berry, too! You'll have to come home with me this trip. Your
+old man's beginning to get anxious about you--and you know he's not much
+in that line--and your mother and sisters."
+
+"Captain Carryall," I said, "there's no necessity for more reasons. I'm
+going to Sydney with you if you'll give me a passage."
+
+"Half a dozen if you want it," quoth the jolly sailor. "And now I must
+have a word with my friends. Anybody been married since I was here last;
+no Quintals--no Millses! Mary, how's this? Dorcas--Grace--Mercy Young,
+I'm ashamed of you. And Miranda! Nobody run away with you yet? I see I
+must take you to Sydney and show you at a Government House ball. Then
+they'd see what a Pitcairn girl was like."
+
+"You may do that yet," I said, "for, seriously, Miranda is now Mrs.
+Hilary Telfer. We have been married more than a month."
+
+The captain could not refrain from giving a prolonged whistle at this
+announcement, which certainly appeared to take him by surprise. However,
+he rallied with ease and celerity, and addressing Miranda, whose hand
+he took as he spoke, said, "My dear! let me congratulate the son of my
+old friend, Captain Telfer, upon his marriage with the best, cleverest,
+and prettiest girl I have fallen across in all my wanderings. I don't
+suppose you have any great amount of capital to begin life with; but if
+two young people like you don't manage to find some path to fortune in a
+country like Australia, I'm a Dutchman. He needs to be a good fellow,
+and a man all round, to be worthy of Miranda Christian; but he can't
+help, as the son of his father and his mother, being all that, and more.
+So now, my dear! you must let me kiss you, as your husband's old friend,
+and wish you all happiness."
+
+Miranda blushed as the warm-hearted fellow folded her in his arms, but
+submitted with becoming grace; and leaving her among her young friends,
+he and I strolled away towards our hut to talk over affairs more at
+leisure.
+
+"Well, youngster!" said he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "I suppose
+you've had enough island life for a while, and won't be sorry to see
+Sydney Heads again. Nor I either. I've been out fifteen months this
+time, and that's rather long to be away from one's home and picaninnies.
+They'll be glad to see your face again at Rose Bay, I'll be bound. But
+they certainly will be taken aback when you turn up as a married man.
+Nineteen times out of twenty it's a mistake to tie one's self up for
+life at your age. But all depends upon getting the right woman, and
+Miranda is the one woman in a thousand that a man might be proud to
+marry, whether he was rich or poor, and to work and wear out his life
+for all his days. I've known her since she was a baby, and, taking her
+all round, I don't know her equal anywhere. It seems queer to say so,
+considering her birth and bringing up. But these Pitcairners are well
+known to be the best and finest women, in all womanly ways, that the
+world can show. And your wife is, and has always been, the flower of the
+flock."
+
+I grasped the captain's hand. I knew that I had secured a powerful ally;
+and though I felt so secure in the wisdom of my choice that no
+disapprobation of family and friends would have had power to affect me,
+yet, in such matters, it is well to have a friend at court, and the
+captain's reputation for sense and sagacity stood so high, that I felt
+not only my relatives, but my acquaintances and friends, would be
+strongly swayed by his judgment.
+
+"Now that we've got so far," he said, "you had better make your
+arrangements to sail with me on Sunday morning; this is Thursday, but my
+passengers want to see the island and the people of whom they have heard
+so much."
+
+"Passengers!" I said. "How many? and where from?"
+
+"Well, I picked them up at Honolulu. Half a dozen, and very nice people,
+too. They came in an English yacht that went to San Francisco for them,
+and they wanted to see Australia, and so came with me. They're rather
+big people at home, I believe, though they're very quiet, and give
+themselves no airs."
+
+"Any ladies?"
+
+"There are two married couples, and a young lady, with her brother."
+
+"That's very serious, captain," said I. "I don't quite know how Miranda
+will get on with travelling Englishwomen--they're rather difficult
+sometimes."
+
+"Miranda will get on with any one," answered the captain, with a decided
+air. "She will sit on my right hand, as a bride, and no one in my ship
+will show her less than proper respect. Anyhow, these people are not
+that sort. You'll see she's all ready to start on Sunday morning. 'The
+better the day, the better the deed.'"
+
+So the captain went to pay a visit to the people of the settlement,
+among whom his free, pleasant manner and generous bearing had made him
+most popular. The girls crowded around him, laughing and plying him with
+questions about the commissions he had promised to execute for them,
+and the presents he had brought. These attentions he never omitted. Full
+of curiosity they were, too, about the English ladies on board. "How
+they were dressed?" "How long they would stay in Sydney?" "What they
+would think of the poor Pitcairn girls?" and so on.
+
+With the elders he told of the whaleships he had spoken, and of their
+cargoes of oil--of the Quintals, or Youngs, Mills, or M'Coys who were
+harpooners and boat-steerers on board some of the Sydney whalers, and of
+the chances of their "lay" or share of profit being a good one. Besides
+all this, the captain consented to act as their ambassador to the
+Governor-General in Sydney, and lay before that potentate certain
+defects of their island administration--small, perhaps, in themselves,
+but highly important to the members of an isolated community. In
+addition to all this, he (as I heard afterwards) specially attended to
+my marriage with Miranda, of which he highly approved; telling the old
+pastor and the elders of the community that he had known my father for
+ever so many years; that he was highly respected now, when retired, but
+had been well known in the South Seas and New Zealand many years ago as
+the captain of the _Orpheus_, one of the most successful whalers that
+ever sailed through Sydney Heads.
+
+"Captain Telfer of the _Orpheus_!" said one of the oldest men of the
+group, "I remember him well. I was cast away on Easter Island the time
+the _Harriet_ was wrecked in a hurricane. He gave me a free passage to
+Tahiti, a suit of clothes, and ten dollars when I left the ship. He
+wanted me to finish the voyage with him and go to Sydney. I was sorry
+afterwards I didn't. He was a fine man, and a better seaman never trod
+plank. No wonder Hilary is such a fine chap. I can see the likeness now.
+I don't hold with our young women going off this island in a general
+way, but Miranda is a lucky girl to have Captain Telfer's son for a
+husband." All this the captain told me afterwards with slight
+embellishments and variations of his own.
+
+My reputation had fairly gone before, but this light thrown on my
+parentage placed me in a most exalted position--next to their spiritual
+pastor and master, before whom they bowed in genuine respect and
+reverence. Perhaps there is no man in the whole world more honoured and
+admired in the South Seas than the captain of a ship. And now that the
+name of my father's barque, once pretty well known south of the line,
+had been recalled from the past, every doubt as to the future of Miranda
+and myself was set at rest.
+
+We were invested, so to speak, with the blessing of the whole community,
+and began our modest preparations with added cheerfulness and resolve.
+
+In the afternoon we saw a boat put off from the _Florentia_ and the
+visitors land. They were five in number. We could see them walk over to
+the village, where they were met by some of the principal people and a
+few of the women and girls. We had been making ready for our voyage, and
+having finished our simple meal, sat in the shade of our orange tree,
+near the door, and awaited the strangers whom I judged rightly that
+curiosity and the captain would bring to our dwelling.
+
+In less than an hour's time we saw them strolling along the path which
+led to our nest. As they approached we arose and went to meet them, when
+the captain with all due form introduced us, "The Honourable Mr. and
+Mrs. Craven, Colonel Percival, Mr. Vavasour, and his sister, Miss
+Vavasour." Mrs. Percival had remained on board, as her little boy of
+four or five years old was not well. Miranda, rather to my surprise, was
+perfectly unembarrassed, and talked away to the stranger ladies as if
+she had been accustomed to the society business all her life.
+
+I could see that they were pleased and surprised at her appearance, as
+also gratified with the manner in which she invited them to inspect our
+simple dwelling.
+
+"Oh! what a charming nest of a place--quite a bower of bliss!" cried
+Miss Vavasour. "I declare I will come here when I am married and spend
+my honeymoon. What shade and fragrance combined! What a lovely crystal
+lakelet to bathe in! and I suppose, Mrs. Telfer, you go out fishing in
+that dear canoe? What an ideal life!"
+
+"I quite agree with you and feel quite envious," said Mrs. Craven.
+"Charlie and I have been married too long to have our honeymoon over
+again; but it would have been idyllic, wouldn't it, Charlie?"
+
+"Splendid place to smoke in," assented her husband. "No hounds meet
+nearer than Sydney, though, I presume. Drawback rather, isn't it?"
+
+"You men are always thinking of horses, and hounds or guns," pouted Miss
+Vavasour. "What can one want with them here? What can life offer more
+than this endless summer, this fairy bower, this crystal wave, this air
+which is a living perfume? It is an earthly paradise."
+
+"And the beloved object," added Mrs. Craven, with quiet humour. "You
+have left him out. It would be an incomplete paradise without Adam."
+
+"Oh! here he comes!" exclaimed Miranda (as she told me afterwards), who
+had not been attending to the enthusiastic speech, but was watching
+bird-like for my approach.
+
+"Who? Adam?" said Miss Vavasour, laughingly.
+
+"Oh, no!" answered she, smiling at the apparent absurdity. "You must
+excuse me a little, but I was looking out for Hilary."
+
+"Now, then, ladies!" said the cheerful voice of Captain Carryall, "we
+must get back to our boat. It's dangerous to stop ashore all night,
+isn't it, Miranda? We must leave you to finish your packing. It's a long
+voyage to Sydney, eh? It may be years before you see the island again."
+
+We all went down together to the boat, where the visitors were seen off
+by all the young people of the island, the girls wondering with
+respectful admiration at the English ladies' dresses, hats, boots, and
+shoes--in fact, at everything they did and said as well. It was a
+revelation to them, not that they had any envious feeling about those
+cherished possessions. They had been too well trained for that, and were
+secure in the guidance of their deeply-rooted religious faith and lofty
+moral code. On the other hand, their visitors admired sincerely the
+noble forms and free, graceful bearing of the island maidens, as well as
+the splendid athletic development of the men.
+
+"Here, you Thursday Quintal, come and show these ladies how you can
+handle a steer-oar," called out the captain. "He was the boat-steerer on
+board the _Florentia_ one voyage, and steered in the pulling race for
+whaleboats at the regatta on anniversary day, which we won the year
+before last in Sydney harbour. We'll bring you ashore in the morning."
+
+"Ay, ay, captain," said the young fellow, showing his splendid teeth in
+a pleasant smile. "It will feel quite natural to take an oar in a boat
+of yours again."
+
+The wind had freshened during the afternoon, and the rollers on the
+beach lifted the whaleboat as she came up to the landing rather higher
+than the ladies fancied. However, they were carefully seated, and at the
+captain's word, "Give way, my lads," the crew picked her up in great
+style, while Quintal, standing with easy grace at the stern, the sixteen
+foot oar in his strong grasp, directed her course with instinctive skill
+so as to avoid the growing force of the wave. As he stood there--tall,
+muscular, glorious in the grace and dignity of early manhood--he seemed
+the embodiment of a sculptor's dream.
+
+"What a magnificent figure!" said Mrs. Craven to her young friend. "How
+rare it is to see such a form in Mayfair!"
+
+"I surmise, as our American girl said at Honolulu," replied Miss
+Vavasour, "that you might look a long time before you saw such a man
+among our 'Johnnies'; and what eyes and teeth he has! Really I feel
+inclined to rebel. Here's this Mr. Telfer, too, and what a grand-looking
+fellow he is, and an English gentleman besides in all his ways. He can
+make his way to this out of the way speck in the ocean, and secure a
+Miranda for a life companion--glorious girl she is too--while we poor
+English spins have to wait till a passable _pretendu_ comes along,--old,
+bald, stupid, or diminutive, as the case may be,--and are bound to take
+him under penalty of dying old maids. I call it rank injustice, and I'd
+head a revolution tomorrow; and oh!--"
+
+The interjection which closed the speech of this ardent woman's righter
+was caused by the onward course of a breaking wave, which was not
+avoided so deftly as usual, and splashed the speaker and Mrs. Craven.
+
+"Hulloa! Quintal, what are you about?" said the captain, "is this your
+steering that I've been blowing about to these ladies and gentlemen?
+Miss Vavasour! I'm afraid it's your fault, you know the rule aboard
+ship? Passengers are requested not to speak to the man at the wheel."
+
+"But there's no regulation, captain, that the man at the steer-oar is
+not to look at the passengers," said Mrs. Craven. "However, here we are
+nearly on board, so there's no harm done, and we're only a trifle
+damped."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Clear-hued--calm--waveless--dawned our farewell day. I was glad of it.
+Rain and storm-clouds lower the spirits more distinctly when one is
+about to make a departure than at any other time, besides the
+inconvenience of wet or bedraggled garments. It was the Sabbath day, and
+the pastor arranged a special service in commemoration of Miranda's
+marriage and departure from the island. All the ship's company that
+could be spared came, of course; the visitors made a point of attending.
+The little church was crowded. Except the youngest children and their
+guardians, every soul on the island was there.
+
+After the Church of England service, which the islanders had at their
+fingers' ends, and in which they all most reverently joined, hymns were
+sung, in which the rich voices of the young girls were heard to great
+advantage. There was a strange and subtle harmony pervading the
+part-singing, which seemed natural to the race, more particularly in
+those parts in which the whole of the congregation joined. As Miranda
+played on the harmonium, it may have occurred to her friends and
+playmates for the last time, many of them could not restrain their
+tears. The aged pastor after the Liturgy preached a feeling and
+sympathetic address, which certainly went to the hearts of all present.
+He made particular allusion to our union and departure.
+
+"One of the children of the island," he said, "who had endeared herself
+to all by her unselfish kindness of heart, who had been marked out by
+uncommon gifts, both mental and physical, was to leave them that day.
+She might be absent for years, perhaps they might not see her face
+again,--that face upon which no one had seen a frown, nor hear that
+voice which had never uttered an unkind word," here the greater part of
+the congregation, male and female, fell a-weeping and lamenting loudly.
+"But they must take comfort; our beloved one was not departing alone,
+she had been joined in holy matrimony with a youth of whom any damsel
+might feel proud; he was the husband of her choice, the son of a master
+mariner well known and highly respected in former years throughout the
+wide Pacific. He himself had often heard of him in old days, and the son
+of such a father was worthy to be loved and trusted. The child of our
+hearts would go forth, even as Rebecca left her home and her people with
+Isaac, and God's blessing would surely rest upon all her descendants as
+upon the children of the promise.
+
+"He would ask all now assembled to join in prayers for the welfare of
+Hilary Telfer and Miranda, his wife."
+
+As the venerable man pronounced the words of the benediction, echoed
+audibly by the whole of the congregation, the sobs of the women were
+audible, while tears and stifled sighs were the rule, and not the
+exception. As the congregation rose from their knees, he walked down to
+the _Florentia's_ boats, it having been so arranged by the captain, who
+had invited all who could by any means attend, to lunch on board his
+vessel. Farewells were said on the beach to all who were perforce
+detained by age, infirmity, or other causes, and at length we were
+safely seated in the captain's boat, and putting off, were followed by a
+perfect fleet of every size and carrying capacity.
+
+Miranda hid her face and wept silently. I did not attempt to persuade
+her to moderate her grief, as the outlet of over-strung feelings, of
+genuine and passionate regret, it was a natural and healthful
+safety-valve for an overburdened heart.
+
+"I don't think I was ever more impressed with our Church service," said
+Mrs. Craven. "That dear, venerable old man, and his truly wonderful
+congregation! How earnestly they listened, and how reverently they
+behaved!"
+
+"Think of our rustics in a village church!" said Miss Vavasour, "the
+conceited choir, the sleeping labourers, the giggling school children,
+where do you ever see anything like what we have witnessed to-day?
+However did they manage to grow up so blameless, and to keep so good and
+pure minded? Can you tell me, Mr. Telfer?"
+
+"My knowledge of my wife's people is chiefly from hearsay," I said; "I
+can remember the old tale of the Mutiny of the _Bounty_ when I was a
+school-boy in Sydney. Captain Bligh, of the ill-fated ship, was
+afterwards the Governor of New South Wales. Whether his conduct provoked
+the mutiny, of which Miranda's great grandfather was the leader, or
+whether the crew were overcome by the temptations of a life in that
+second garden of Eden, Tahiti, has been disputed, and perhaps can never
+be definitely known. This much is certain, that the sole surviving
+mutineer, John Adams, deeply repentant, changed his rule of life.
+Morning and evening prayer was established, and a system of instruction
+for the children and young people regularly carried out. Such was the
+apparently accidental commencement of the religious teaching of the
+little community at the beginning of the century. Some of the results
+you have witnessed to-day."
+
+"It certainly is the most wonderful historiette in the whole world,"
+said Miss Vavasour, who had listened with deep interest. "I never saw so
+many nice people in one place before--all good--all kind--all contented,
+and all happy. It makes one believe in the millennium; I must try what I
+can do with our village when I get back to Dorsetshire."
+
+"You'll have your work cut out for you, Miss Vavasour," said Colonel
+Percival. "Fancy the old poachers and the hardened tramps, the
+beer-drinking yokels and the rough field-hands. Work of years, and
+doubtful then."
+
+"Oh! dear, why do we call ourselves civilised, I wonder?" sighed the
+enthusiastic damsel, just awakened to a sense of the duties of property
+in correlation with the "rights." "I really believe Englishmen--the
+lower classes, of course--are the most ill-mannered, uncivilised people
+in the world. Look at those dear islanders, how polite and unselfish
+they are in their behaviour to each other, and to us! It makes me feel
+ashamed of my country. Why, even at a presentation to Her Majesty people
+push, and crush, and look as black as thunder if you tread on their
+absurd trains."
+
+"You ought to come out and join the Melanesian Mission, my dear," said
+Mrs. Craven. "There is no knowing, with your energy and convictions,
+what good you might do."
+
+"I wish I could," said the girl eagerly. "But I'm not good enough, I
+wish I was. If I felt I could keep up my present feelings I'd go
+to-morrow. But I'm selfish and worldly-minded, like my neighbours in
+Christendom. It would be no use. I should only spoil my own life, and
+not mend theirs."
+
+"Such has been the confession of many an earnest reformer, who had
+started in life with high hopes and a scorn of consequences," said Mr.
+Vavasour quietly; "it is by far the most common result of heroic
+self-sacrifice. If we did not occasionally see the accomplished fact, as
+in this case, we might well despair."
+
+"And this was an accident of accidents," said Miss Vavasour sorrowfully.
+"No missionary society sent away the pioneer preachers to the heathen
+with prayers, and flags, and collections. No, here is the grandest feat
+ever accomplished in the world's history. The most religious, contented,
+consistent community in the whole world evolved from a crew of runaway
+sailors and a few poor savage women! Really there must be some good in
+human nature after all, reviled and insulted as it is by all the extra
+good people."
+
+The _Florentia_ had not had so large a party on board since the last
+successful affair in Sydney harbour. That one included dancing, which
+did not enter into this entertainment. Nothing, however, could have gone
+off better. The curiosity of the young women about the ladies'
+belongings was amply gratified, and the luncheon voted the very best one
+at which they had ever been entertained.
+
+A mirthful and joyous gathering it was. The visitors were charmed with,
+the naturally refined and courteous manners of the guests. And, finally,
+as the day wore on, and the breeze from the land promised a good offing,
+Miranda came up from her cabin, to which she had elected to retire, and
+bade farewell to friends and kinsfolk, who departed in their boats, much
+less saddened of mien than they had been in the morning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Once more at sea. The _Florentia_, though a whaler, and not ornamented
+up to yachting form, was yet extremely neat and spotlessly clean, as far
+as could be managed by a smart and energetic captain. She was a fast
+sailer, and as the wind off the land freshened at sundown, she spread
+most of her canvas and sped before the breeze after a fashion which
+would have made her a not unworthy comrade of the _Leonora_.
+
+Miranda had retired to her cabin. Her heart was too full for jesting
+converse, and after she had watched the last speck of her loved island
+disappear below the horizon, she was fain to go below to hide her tears,
+and relieve her feelings by unrestrained indulgence in grief.
+
+For my part, after a cheerful dinner in the cuddy, I remained long on
+deck, pacing up and down, and revolving in my mind plans for our future.
+As I felt the accustomed sway of the vessel, listened to the creaking of
+the rigging, which was music in my ears, and watched the waves fall back
+from her sides in hissing foam-flakes, as the aroused vessel, feeling
+the force of the rising gale, drove through the darkening wave-masses,
+and seemed to defy the menace of the deep, the memories of my early
+island life came back to me. The luxurious, halcyon days, the starlit,
+silent nights, when ofttimes I had wandered to the shore, and seating
+myself on a coral rock, gazed over the boundless watery waste, wondering
+ever about my career, my destined fate.
+
+Then returned the strange and wayward memories of Hayston and his
+lawless associates--the reckless traders, the fierce half-castes, the
+savage islanders! Again I heard the soft voices of Lālia, Nellie, Kitty
+of Ebon, and smiled as I recalled their pleading, infantine ways, their
+flashing eyes, so eloquent in love or hate. All were gone; all had
+become phantoms of the past. With that stage and season of my life they
+had passed away--irrevocably, eternally--and now I possessed an
+incentive to labour, ambition, and self-denial such as I had never
+before known. With such a companion as Miranda, where was the man who
+would not have displayed the higher qualities of his nature, who would
+not have risen to the supremest effort of labour, valour, or
+self-abnegation? Before Heaven I vowed that night, that neither toil nor
+trouble, difficulty nor danger, should deter me from the pursuit of
+fortune and distinction. So passed our first day at sea.
+
+With the one that followed the gale abated, and as the _Florentia_ swept
+southward under easy sail, comfort was restored. The passengers settled
+themselves down to the enjoyment of that absolute rest and passive
+luxuriousness which characterise board-ship life in fine weather. Miss
+Vavasour and Miranda were soon deep in earnest conversation, both for
+the time disregarding the books with which they had furnished
+themselves. Mrs. Craven had devoted herself to an endless task of
+knitting, which apparently supplied a substitute for thought, reading,
+recreation, and conversation.
+
+I was talking to the captain when a lady came up the companion, followed
+by the colonel, who half lifted, half led a fine little boy of four or
+five years of age.
+
+"Oh," said the captain, with a sudden movement towards the new arrivals,
+"I see Mrs. Percival has come on deck. Come over and be introduced." We
+walked over, and I received a formal bow from a handsome, pale woman,
+who had evidently been sojourning in the East. There is a certain
+similarity in all "Indian women," as they are generally called, which
+extends even to manner and expression. Long residence in a hot climate
+robs them of their roses, while the habit of command, resulting from
+association with an inferior race, gives them a tinge of hauteur--not to
+say unconscious insolence of manner--which is scarcely agreeable to
+those who, from circumstances, they may deem to be socially inferior.
+
+So it was that Miranda, in spite of Miss Vavasour's nods and signals,
+received but the faintest recognition, and retreated to her chair
+somewhat chilled by her reception. She, however, took no apparent notice
+of the slight, and was soon absorbed in conversation with Miss Vavasour,
+her brother, and Mrs. Craven, who had moved up her chair to join the
+party. The colonel deserted his former friends to devote himself to his
+family duties, while the captain and I walked forward and commenced a
+discussion which had, at any rate, a strong personal interest for me.
+
+"Now look here, Hilary," said he, as he lighted a fresh cigar. He had
+been smoking on the quarter-deck under protest, as it were, and thus
+commenced: "Listen to me, my boy! I've been thinking seriously about you
+and Miranda. Your start in life when you get to Sydney is important. I
+think I can give you a bit of advice worth following. You understand all
+the dialects between here and the Line Islands, don't you?"
+
+"More than eight," I answered; "I can talk with nearly every islander
+from here to the Gilberts. I have learned so much, at any rate, in my
+wanderings."
+
+"And a very good thing, too, for it's not a thing that can be picked up
+in a year, no matter how a man may work, and he's useless or nearly so
+without it; you can keep accounts, write well, and all that?"
+
+I replied that I had a number of peculiar accounts to keep as
+supercargo to the _Leonora_, as well as all Hayston's business letters
+to write; that my office books were always considered neat, complete,
+and well kept. Then he suddenly said, "You are the very man we want!"
+
+"Who are we, and what is the man wanted for?" I asked.
+
+"For the South Sea Island trade, and no other," said Captain Carryall,
+putting his hand on my shoulder. "Old Paul Frankston (you've heard of
+him) and I have laid it out to establish a regular mercantile house in
+Sydney for the development of the island trade. The old man will back
+us, and the name of Paul Frankston is good from New Zealand to the North
+Pole and back again. I will do the whaling, cruising, and cargo
+business--cocoa-nut oil, copra, and curios--while you will live in one
+of those nice white houses at North Shore, somewhere about Neutral Bay,
+where you can see the ships come through the Heads; Miranda can have a
+skiff, and you a ten-tonner, so as not to forget your boating and your
+sea-legs. What do you think of that, eh?"
+
+"It is a splendid idea!" I cried, "and poor Miranda will be within sound
+of the sea. If she were not, she would pine away like her own araucarias
+which will not live outside of the wave music. But how about the cash
+part of it? I haven't much. Most of my savings went down in the
+_Leonora_."
+
+"Oh, we'll manage that somehow! Old Paul will work that part of the
+arrangement. I daresay your father will advance what will make your
+share equal, or nearly so, to ours."
+
+"It sounds well," I said. "With partners like Mr. Frankston and yourself
+a man ought to be able to do something. I know almost every island where
+trade can be got, and the price to a cowrie that should be paid. There
+ought to be a fortune in it in five years. What a pity Hayston couldn't
+have had such a chance."
+
+"He'd have had the cash, and the other partners the experience, in less
+than that time," said the captain, smiling sardonically. "He was a
+first-rate organiser if he had not been such a d--d scoundrel. He had
+some fine qualities, I allow; as a seaman he had no equal. In the good
+old fighting days he would have been a splendid robber baron. But in
+these modern times, where there is a trifle of law and order in most
+countries, even in the South Seas he was out of place."
+
+"He was far from a model mariner," I said, "but it hurts me to hear him
+condemned. He had splendid points in his character, and no one but
+myself will ever know how much good there was mixed up with his
+recklessness and despair. I left him, but I couldn't help being fond of
+him to the last."
+
+"It was a good thing for you that you did--a very good thing. You will
+live to be thankful for it. He was a dangerous beggar, and neither man
+nor woman could escape his fascination. However, that's all past and
+gone now. You're married and settled, remember, and you're to be Hilary
+Telfer, Esq., J.P., and all the rest of it directly, and the only
+sea-going business you can have for the future is to be Commodore of the
+Neutral Bay Yacht Club, or some such title and distinction. And now I've
+done for the present. You go and see what Miranda thinks of it. I won't
+agree to anything unless she consents."
+
+Miranda was charmed with the idea of a mercantile marine enterprise, so
+much in accordance with her previous habits and experiences. The added
+inducement of living on the sea-shore, with a boat, a jetty, and a
+bathing-house, decided her. She implicitly believed in Captain
+Carryall's power and ability to make our fortune; was also certain that,
+with Mr. Frankston's commercial aid, we should soon be as rich as the
+Guldensterns, the Rothschilds of the Pacific. She surrendered herself
+thereupon to a dream of bliss, alloyed only at intervals by a tinge of
+apprehension that the great undiscovered country of Sydney society might
+prove hostile or indifferent.
+
+So much she communicated to Miss Vavasour as she and Mrs. Craven were
+reclining side by side on their deck chairs, while the _Florentia_ was
+gliding along on another day all sunshine, azure, and favouring breeze.
+
+"Don't you be afraid, my dear," said the kind-hearted Mrs. Craven, "you
+and your husband are quite able to hold your own in Sydney society or
+any other; indeed, I shall be inclined to bet that you'd be the rage
+rather than otherwise. I wish I had you in Northamptonshire, I'd
+undertake to 'knock out' (as Charlie says) the local belles in a
+fortnight."
+
+Miranda laughed the childishly happy laugh of unspoiled girlhood. "Dear
+Mrs. Craven, how good of you to say so; but, of course, I know I'm a
+sort of savage, who will improve in a year or two if every one is as
+kind as you and Miss Vavasour here; but suppose they should be like
+her," and she motioned towards Mrs. Percival.
+
+This lady had never relaxed the coldness and hauteur towards Miranda and
+myself. She had been unable to modify her "Indian manner," as Captain
+Carryall and Mr. Vavasour called it, and about which they made daily
+jokes.
+
+As she passed the little group, she bowed slightly and without
+relaxation of feature, going forward to the waist of the ship, where she
+sat down and was soon absorbed in a book. The three friends smiled at
+each other, and continued their conversation.
+
+"I should like to dress you for a garden-party, Miranda," said Miss
+Vavasour; "let me see now, a real summer day, such as we sometimes get
+in dear old England--not like this one perhaps, but very nice. A lovely
+old manor house like Gravenhurst or Hunsdon--such a lawn, such old
+trees, such a river, a marquee under an elm a hundred years old, and the
+county magnates marching in from their carriages."
+
+"Oh, how delicious!" cried Miranda. "I have read such descriptions in
+books, but you--oh, how happy you must be to have lived it all!"
+
+"It's very nice, but as to the happiness, that doesn't always follow,"
+confessed the English girl with a half sigh. "I almost think you have
+the greater share of that. Anyhow, just as the company are assembled, I
+am seen walking down from the house. We are of the house party, you
+know, Miranda and I. She is dressed in a soft, white, embroidered
+muslin, very simply made, with a little, a very little Valenciennes
+lace. Its long straight folds hang gracefully around her matchless
+figure, and are confined at the waist by a broad, white moiré sash;
+white gloves, a white moiré parasol, a large Gainsborough hat with
+fleecy white feathers, and Miranda's costume is complete--the very
+embodiment of fresh, fair girlhood, unspotted from the world of fashion
+and folly."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A SWIM FOR LIFE
+
+
+The words died on her lips as a shriek, wild, agonising, despairing,
+rang through the air, and startled not only the little group of pleased
+listeners, but all who happened to be on deck at the time. We started up
+and gazed towards the spot whence the cry had come. The colonel, who had
+been reading on the opposite side of the deck, calmly smoking the while,
+dropped his book and only saved his meerschaum by a cricketer's smart
+catch. The captain came bounding up from below, followed by the steward
+and his boy; the foc'sle hands, with the black cook, hurled themselves
+aft. All guessed the cause as they saw Mrs. Percival wringing her hands
+frantically and gazing at an object in the sea.
+
+Her boy had fallen overboard! Yes! the little fellow, active and
+courageous beyond his years, had tried to crawl up to the shrouds while
+his mother's eyes were engaged in the perusal of the leading novel of
+the day. Weary of inaction, the poor little chap had done a little
+climbing on his own account, and an unexpected roll of the ship had sent
+him overboard. Light as the wind was, he was already a long way astern.
+
+Long before all these observations were made, however, and while the
+astonished spectators were questioning their senses as to the meaning of
+the confusion, Miranda had sprung upon the rail, and in the next moment,
+with hands clasped above her head, was parting the smooth waters.
+Rising to the surface, she swam with rapid and powerful strokes towards
+the receding form of the still floating child. With less rapidity of
+motion, I cast myself into the heaving waste of water, not that I
+doubted Miranda's ability to overtake and bear up the child, but from
+simple inability to remain behind while all that was worth living for on
+earth was adrift upon the wave.
+
+I followed in her wake, and though I failed to keep near her, for the
+Pitcairn islanders are among the fastest swimmers in the world, I yet
+felt that I might be of some use or aid. Long before I could overtake
+her she had caught up the little fellow, and lifting him high above the
+water, was swimming easily towards me.
+
+"Oh! you foolish boy!" she cried, "why did you come after me? do you
+want to be drowned again?" Here she smiled and showed her lovely teeth
+as if it was rather a good joke. It may have been, but at that time and
+place I was not in the humour to perceive it.
+
+"I came for the same reason that you did, I suppose--because I could not
+stay behind. If anything had happened to you what should I have done?
+Here comes the boat, though, and we can talk it over on board."
+
+Some little time had been expended in lowering the boat. The ship had
+been brought to, but even then--and with so light a wind--it was
+astonishing what a distance we had fallen behind. It was a curious
+sensation, such specks as we were upon the immense water-plain which
+stretched around to the horizon. However, the _Florentia_ was strongly
+in evidence, and nearer and nearer came the whaleboat, with the captain
+at the steer-oar, and the men pulling as if they were laying on a crack
+harpooner to an eighty barrel whale.
+
+We were now swimming side by side, Miranda talking to the little fellow,
+who had never lost consciousness, and did not seem particularly afraid
+of his position.
+
+"How tremendously hard they are pulling!" I said; "they are making the
+boat spin again. One would think they were pulling for a wager."
+
+"So they are," answered she, "for three lives, and perhaps another. See
+there! God in His mercy protect us."
+
+I followed the direction of her turned head, and my heart stood still as
+my eye caught the fatal sign of the monster's presence at no great
+distance from us. It was _the back fin of a shark_!
+
+"Do your best, my beloved," she continued; "we must keep together, and
+if he overtakes us before the boat reaches, splash hard and shout as
+loud as you can. I have seen a shark frightened before now; but please
+God it may not come to that."
+
+The boat came nearer--still nearer--but, as it seemed to us, all too
+slowly. The men were pulling for their lives, I could notice, and the
+captain frantically urging them on. They had seen the dreaded signal
+before us, and had commenced to race from that moment. But for some
+delay in the tackle for lowering, they would have been up to us before
+now.
+
+As it was we did our best. I would have taken the child, but Miranda
+would not allow me. "His weight is nothing in the water," she said, "and
+I could swim faster than you, even with him." This she showed me she
+could do by shooting ahead with the greatest ease, and then allowing me
+to overtake her. I had to let her have her own way. We were lessening
+the distance between us and the boat, but the sea demon had a mind to
+overtake us, and our hearts almost failed as we noticed the sharp black
+fin gaining rapidly upon us. Still there was one chance, that he would
+not pursue us to the very side of the boat. It was a terrible moment.
+With every muscle strained to the uttermost, with lung, and sinew, and
+every organ taxed to utmost tension, I most certainly beat any previous
+record in swimming that I had ever attained. Miranda, with apparently
+but little effort, kept slightly ahead. The last few yards--shorter than
+the actual distance--appeared to divide us from the huge form of the
+monster now distinctly visible beneath the water, when with one frantic
+yell and a dash at the oars, which took every remaining pound of
+strength out of the willing crew, the boat shot up within equal
+distance. At a signal from the captain every oar was raised and brought
+down again with a terrific splash into the water, and a simultaneous
+yell. The effort was successful. The huge creature, strangely timid in
+some respects, stopped, and with one powerful side motion of fins and
+tail glided out of the line of pursuit. At the same moment the boat
+swept up, and eager arms lifted Miranda and her burden into it. My hand
+was on the gunwale until I saw her safe, whence with a slight amount of
+assistance I gained the mid-thwart.
+
+"Saved, thank God!" cried the captain, with fervent expression, "but a
+mighty close thing; the next time you take a bath of this kind, my dear
+Miranda, with sharks around, you must let me know beforehand, eh?"
+
+"Some one would have had to go, captain," she answered; "we couldn't see
+the dear little fellow drowned before our eyes. It was only a trifle
+after all--a swim in smooth water on a fine day: I didn't reckon on a
+shark being so close, I must say."
+
+"I saw the naughty shark," said the little fellow, now quite recovered
+and in his usual spirits. "How close he came! do you think he would have
+eaten us all, captain?"
+
+"Yes, my boy--without salt; you would never have seen your papa and
+mamma again if it had not been for this lady here."
+
+"But you took us in the boat, captain," argued the little fellow; "he
+can't catch us in here, can he?"
+
+"But the lady caught you in her arms long before the boat came up, my
+dear, or else you would have been drowned over and over again; that
+confounded tackle caught, or else we should have been up long before.
+It's a good thing they were not lowering for a whale, or my first mate's
+language would have been something to remember till the voyage after
+next. However, here we are all safe, Charlie, and there's your mother
+looking out for you."
+
+A painfully eager face was that which gazed from the vessel as we rowed
+alongside. Every trace of the languor partly born of the tropic sun and
+partly of aristocratic _morgue_ was gone from the countenance of Mrs.
+Percival, as her boy, laughing and prattling, was carried up the rope
+ladder and lifted on deck. His mother clasped him now passionately in
+her arms, sobbing, blessing, kissing him, and crying aloud that God had
+restored her child from the dead. "Oh, my boy! my boy!" she repeated
+again and again; "your mother would have died too, if you had been
+drowned, she would never have lived without you."
+
+By this time Miranda had reached the deck, where she was received with a
+hearty British cheer from the ship's company, while the passengers
+crowded around her as if she had acquired a new character in their eyes.
+But Mrs. Percival surpassed them all; kneeling before Miranda she bowed
+herself to the deck, as if in adoration, and kissed her wet feet again
+and again.
+
+"You have saved my child from a terrible death at the risk of your own
+and your husband's lives," she said. "May God forget me if I forget your
+noble act this day! I have been proud and unkind in my manner to you, my
+dear. I humble myself at your feet, and implore your pardon. But
+henceforth, Miranda Telfer, you and I are sisters. If I do not do
+something in requital it will go hard with me and Charlie."
+
+"Now, my dear Sybil," interposed the husband, "do you observe that Mrs.
+Telfer has not had time to change her dress--very wet it seems to
+be--and I suppose Master Charlie will be none the worse for being put
+to bed and well scolded, the young rascal. Come, my dear."
+
+Colonel Percival, doubtless, felt a world of joy and relief when the
+light of his eyes and the joy of his heart stood safe and sound on the
+deck of the _Florentia_ again, but it is not the wont of the British
+aristocrat to give vent to his emotions, even the holiest, in public.
+The veil of indifference is thrown over them, and men may but guess at
+the volcanic forces at work below that studiously calm exterior.
+
+So, laying his hand gently but firmly on his wife's arm, he led her to
+her cabin, with her boy still clasped in her arms as if she yet feared
+to lose him, and they disappeared from our eyes. As for Miranda and
+myself, such immersions had been daily matters of course, and were
+regarded as altogether too trifling occurrences to require more than the
+necessary changes of clothing.
+
+We both appeared in our places at the next meal, when Miranda was
+besieged with questions as to her sensations, mingled with praises of
+her courage and endurance in that hour of deadly peril.
+
+"And _her_ child, too," said Mrs. Craven; "what a lesson of humility it
+ought to teach her! Had you, my dear girl, been swayed by any of the
+meaner motives which actuate men and women her foolish pride might have
+cost her child's life."
+
+"Oh, surely no one _could_ have had such thoughts when that dear little
+boy fell overboard! I couldn't help Mrs. Percival not liking me. I
+really did not think much about it; but when I saw the poor little face
+in the sea, more startled, indeed, than frightened, I felt as if I must
+go in after him. It was quite a matter of course."
+
+After this incident it may be believed that we were indeed a happy
+family on board the _Florentia_. Every one vied with every one else in
+exhibiting respect and admiration towards Miranda. Mrs. Percival would
+not hear of a refusal that we should come and stay with her, when we
+had done all that was proper and dutiful in the family home. Miss
+Vavasour and Mrs. Craven depended on me to show them all the beauties of
+Sydney harbour; while Captain Carryall pledged himself to place Mr.
+Frankston's yacht at the service of his passengers generally, and to
+render them competent to champion the much-vaunted glories of the
+unrivalled harbour to all friends, foes, and doubters on the other side
+of the world.
+
+Colonel Percival privately interrogated the captain as to the nature of
+the commercial undertaking in which he was about to arrange a
+partnership for me, and begged as a favour, being a man of ample means,
+that he might be permitted to advance the amount of my share. The
+captain solemnly promised him that if there was any difficulty in the
+proposed arrangement on account of my deficiency of cash he should be
+requested to supply it. "He seemed to feel easy in his mind after I told
+him this, my boy," said the commander, with that mixture of simplicity
+and astuteness which distinguished him, "but fancy old Paul and your
+father admitting outside capital in one of their trade ventures!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"This time to-morrow we shall be going through Sydney Heads," said the
+first mate to me as we walked the deck about an hour after sunrise one
+morning, "that is, if the wind holds."
+
+"Pray Heaven it may," said I, "then we shall have a view of the harbour
+and city worth seeing. It makes all the difference. We might have a
+cloudy day, or be tacking about till nightfall, and the whole effect
+would be lost." I was most anxious not only that Miranda's first sight
+of my native land and her future home should impress her favourably, but
+I was naturally concerned that our friends should not suppose that the
+descriptions of the Queen City of the South, with which the captain and
+I had regaled them, were overdrawn. We sat late at supper that night
+talking over the wonderful events and experiences that were to occur on
+the morrow. Plans were discussed, probable residence and inland travel
+calculated, the Fish River caves and the Blue Mountains were, of course,
+to be visited--all kinds of expeditions and slightly incongruous
+journeys to be carried out.
+
+Colonel and Mrs. Percival had been asked to stay at Government House
+during their visit, which was comparatively short; while Mr. and Mrs.
+Craven and Miss Vavasour were to go primarily to Petty's Hotel, which
+had been highly recommended; and the gentlemen had intimation that they
+would receive notices of their being admitted as honorary members of the
+Australian and Union Clubs. With such cheerful expectations and
+forecasts we parted for the night.
+
+The winds were kind. "The breeze stuck to us," as the mate expressed it,
+and about an hour after the time he had mentioned we were within a mile
+of the towering sandstone portals of that erstwhile strange, silent
+harbour into which the gallant seaman Cook, old England's typical
+mariner, had sailed a hundred years ago.
+
+I had been on deck since dawn. Now that we were so near the home of my
+childhood, the thoughts of old days, and the parents, brothers, sisters,
+from whom I had been so long separated, rushed into my mind, until I
+felt almost suffocated with contending emotions. How would they receive
+us? Would they be prepared to see me a married man? Would their welcome
+to Miranda be warm or formal? I began to foresee difficulties--even
+dangers of family disruption--consequences which before had never
+entered into the calculation.
+
+However, for the present these serious reflections were put to flight
+by expressions of delight from the whole body of passengers, headed by
+Miranda, who then came on deck. By this time the good ship _Florentia_
+had closely approached the comparatively narrow entrance, the frowning
+buttresses of sandstone, against which the waves, now dashed with hoarse
+and angry murmur, rose almost above us, while a long line of surges, lit
+up by the red dawn fires, menaced us on either hand.
+
+"Oh, what a lovely entrance!" said Miss Vavasour, after gazing long and
+earnestly at the scene. "It seems like the gate of an enchanted lake.
+What magnificent rock-masses, and what light and colour the sun brings
+out! It is something like a sun--warm, glowing, irradiating everything
+even at this early hour--and what a sky! The dream tone of a painter! I
+congratulate you, you dear darling Miranda, and you, Mr. Telfer, on
+having such a day for home-coming. It is a good omen--I am sure it must
+be. Nothing but good could happen on such a glorious day."
+
+"The day is perfection, but more than one good ship coming through this
+entrance at night has mistaken the indentation on the other side of the
+South Head for the true passage, and gone to pieces on the rocks below
+that promontory. But, at any rate, _we_ are now safely inside; and where
+is there a harbour in the world to match it?"
+
+As we passed Middle harbour and drew slowly up the great waterway, which
+affords perhaps more deep anchorage than any other in the world, the
+ladies were loud in their expressions of admiration. "Look at those
+sweet white houses on the shores of the pretty little bays!" said Mrs.
+Craven; "and what lovely gardens and terraces stretching down to the
+beaches!"
+
+"And there is a Norfolk Island pine, one--two--ever so many," cried
+Miranda. "I did not think _they_ grew here, I am sure now that I shall
+be happy."
+
+"Yes, of course!" said Miss Vavasour, "what is to hinder you? And you
+are to live in one of those pretty cream-coloured cottages--what lovely
+stone it must be!--with a garden just like that one on the point, and a
+boat-house and a jetty. One of those little steamers that I see fussing
+about will land Mr. Telfer, when he returns from the city, or you can
+get into that little boat that lies moored below, and row across the bay
+for him."
+
+Miranda's eyes filled as she glanced at the pretty villas and more
+pretentious mansions, past which we glided, some half-covered with
+climbers, or buried amid tropical shrubs of wild luxuriance. Her heart
+was too deeply stirred for jesting at that moment. She could only press
+her friend's hand and smile, as if pleading for a less humorous view of
+so important a subject.
+
+The harbour itself was full of interest to the strangers. Vessels of all
+sizes and shapes--coasters, colliers, passenger-boats, yachts, and steam
+launches, passed and re-passed in endless succession. Two men-of-war lay
+peacefully at anchor in Farm Cove, a Messagerie steamer in the stream,
+while a huge P. & O. mail-boat outward bound moved majestically towards
+the Heads through which we had so recently entered.
+
+We had just cleared Point Piper, where I remember spending the joyous
+holidays of long ago with my schoolmates, the sons of the fine old
+English gentleman who then dwelt there, when a sailing boat sped swiftly
+towards us, in which stood a stout, middle-aged man waving his hat
+frantically.
+
+"I believe that is Paul Frankston himself come to overhaul us," said the
+captain, raising his glass. "He's sailor enough to recognise the rig of
+the _Florentia_, and if we had been a little nearer his bay, he'd have
+wanted us to stop the ship and lunch with him in a body. As it is I feel
+sure he'll capture some of the party."
+
+"What splendid hospitality!" said Mrs. Percival. "Is that sort of thing
+usual here? you must be something like us Indians in your ways."
+
+"There is a good deal of likeness, I think," said the captain. "I
+suppose the heat accounts for it. It's too hot to refuse, most of the
+year. But here comes Paul!"
+
+The sailing boat by this time had run alongside and doused her sail,
+while one of the crew held on to a rope thrown to him, as the owner
+presented himself on deck with more agility than might have been
+expected from a man of his age.
+
+"Well, Charley, my boy, so you're in at last--thought you were lost, or
+had run away and sold the ship, ha, ha! What sort of a voyage have you
+had? Passengers, too--pray introduce me. Is there anything I can do for
+them in Sydney? Must be something. Perhaps I shall hear by and by. Who's
+this youngster?
+
+"No! surely not the son of my old friend, Captain Telfer? Now I remember
+the boy that ran away to the islands, or would have done so, if they
+hadn't let him go. Quite right, I ran away myself and a fine time I had
+there. I must tell you what happened to me there once, eh! Charley?"
+
+Here the old gentleman began to laugh so heartily that he was forced to
+suspend his narration, while the captain regarded him with an expression
+which conveyed a slight look of warning. "But I am forgetting. By the
+way, Charley, have you any curios in your cabin?" The captain nodded,
+and the two old friends disappeared down the companion. Only, however,
+to reappear in a very few minutes, which we employed in favourable
+criticism.
+
+"What a fine hearty old gentleman!" said Mrs. Craven, "any one can see
+that he is an Englishman by his figure and the way he talks; though I
+suppose colonists are not so very different."
+
+"Mr. Frankston has been a good deal about the world," I said. "But he
+was born in Sydney, and has spent the greater part of his life near
+this very spot. He was at sea in his earlier years, but has been on
+shore since he married. He is now a wealthy man, and one of the leading
+Sydney merchants."
+
+"One would think he was a sea captain now," said Miss Vavasour. "He
+looks quite as much like one as a merchant; but I suppose every one can
+sail a boat here."
+
+"You are quite right, Miss Vavasour. Every one who is born in Sydney
+learns to swim and sail a boat as soon as possible after he can walk.
+There is no place in the world where there are so many yachtsmen. On
+holidays you may see doctors, lawyers, clergymen, even judges, sailing
+their boats--doing a good deal of their own work in the 'able seaman'
+line; and, to tell truth, looking occasionally much more like pirates
+than sober professional men."
+
+About this time Mr. Frankston reappeared, carrying in his hand a couple
+of grass-er-garments, which he appeared to look upon as very precious.
+"These are for my little girl," he said, "she has just come down from
+the bush with her husband to spend the hot months with her old father.
+It will give her the greatest pleasure to see these ladies and their
+husbands at Marahmee, next Saturday, when we can have a little picnic in
+the harbour and a sail in my yacht, the _Sea-gull_. The captain will
+tell you that I am to be trusted with a lively boat still."
+
+"I never wish to go to sea with a better sailor," said the captain, "and
+if our friends have no other engagements, I can promise them a
+delightful day and a view of some of the finest scenery south of the
+line."
+
+Barring unforeseen or indispensable engagements every one promised to
+go. Mr. Frankston averred that they had done him a great--an important
+service. He was getting quite hipped--he was indeed--when his daughter
+luckily recognised the _Florentia_ coming up the harbour. She is a
+sailor's daughter, you know--has an eye for a ship--and started him off
+to meet his old friend Captain Carryall, and secure him for dinner. Now
+he felt quite another man, and would say good-bye. Before leaving he
+must have a word with his young friend.
+
+"My dear boy," said he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "I have known
+your father ever so many years. We were younger men then, and saw
+something of each other in more than one bit of fun; and at least one or
+two very queer bits of fighting in the Bay of Islands; so that we know
+each other pretty well. I've heard what Carryall has to say about you
+and your charming wife. I think we shall be able to 'fix up,' as our
+American friends say, our little mercantile arrangement very neatly. But
+that's not what I wanted to talk to you about. You've been away a good
+while, so many years, we'll say."
+
+"I have indeed," I replied.
+
+"Well--you've grown from a boy into a man, and a devilish fine one too."
+Here the dear old chap patted me on the back and looked up at my face, a
+great deal higher up than his. "Well! naturally, you've changed. So have
+your people, your young brothers and sisters have turned into men and
+women while you've been away. And then again, another change--a great
+one too--you're married."
+
+"Yes! thank God I am."
+
+"I am sure you have good reason, my boy. But my idea is this,
+people--the best of people--don't like surprises,--even one's own
+friends. Now, what I want you to do is to bring your wife and come and
+stay at Marahmee for a week, while they're getting your rooms ready for
+you at North Shore. There's nobody there now but Antonia and her
+husband. It wants another pair of young people to enliven the place a
+bit. And Charley Carryall will go over and tell them all about you and
+your pretty Miranda, while you and I settle our partnership affairs."
+
+I could see how it was; our good old friend, with a kindness and
+delicacy of feeling which I have rarely seen equalled, had all along
+made up his mind that Miranda and I should begin our Sydney experiences
+with a visit to his hospitable mansion. After a talk with the captain,
+for which purpose he had feigned an interest in South Sea "curios," they
+had come to the conclusion that it would be more prudent that the family
+should have a few days to accustom themselves to the idea of my
+marriage. In the mean time his daughter, Mrs. Neuchamp, would be able to
+give Miranda the benefit of her experience as a Sydney matron of some
+years' standing, and to ensure that she made her introduction under
+favourable circumstances.
+
+Miranda, naturally nervous at the idea of then and there making her
+appearance among a group of relatives wholly unknown to her, was much
+relieved at the delay thus granted, and cheerfully acceded to the
+proposed arrangement.
+
+"That being all settled, I'll get home and have everything ready for you
+when you arrive. The captain will take care of you. He knows the road
+out, eh, Charley? night or day; so good-bye till dinner time. Seven
+o'clock sharp."
+
+Still talking, Mr. Frankston descended to his boat, and making a long
+board, proceeded to beat down the harbour on his homeward voyage, waving
+his handkerchief at intervals until he rounded a point and was lost to
+our gaze.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was not very long after this interview that we found ourselves in our
+berth at the Circular Quay, where, unlike Melbourne and some other
+ports, nothing more was needed for disembarkation but to step on shore
+into the city. Our good comrades of so many days were carried off in
+cabs to their destinations, with the exception of the Percivals, who,
+having been invited to Government House, found an aide-de-camp and the
+viceregal carriage awaiting them on the wharf. At such a time there is
+always a certain amount of fuss and anxiety with reference to luggage,
+rendering farewells occasionally less sentimental than might have been
+expected from the character of marine friendships. But it was not so in
+our experience. Miss Vavasour and Mrs. Craven exchanged touching
+farewells with Miranda, mingled with solemn promises to meet at given
+dates--to write--to do all sorts of things necessary for their keeping
+up the flame of friendship. Then at the last moment Colonel and Mrs.
+Percival came up. "My dearest Miranda," said this lady, "don't forget
+that you are my sister, not in word only. Put me to the proof whenever
+you need a sister's aid, and it shall be always at your service. Kiss
+Auntie Miranda, Charlie darling, and tell her you will always love her."
+
+"She picked me up out of the sea, when the naughty shark was going to
+eat us all. She's a good auntie, isn't she, mother?" said the little
+chap responding readily. "Good-bye, Auntie Miranda."
+
+"I am not a man of many words, Mr. Telfer!" said the colonel; "but if I
+can be of service to you, now or at any future time I shall be offended
+if you do not let me know;" and then the stern soldier shook my hand in
+a way which gave double meaning to the pledge.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was yet early in the day, and the captain had duties to attend to
+which would keep him employed until the evening. "I've ordered a
+carriage at six," he said, "when we'll start for Marahmee, which is
+about half-an-hour's drive. Until that time you can go ashore if you
+like; the Botanical Gardens are just round that point, or walk down
+George Street, or in any other way amuse yourselves. Meanwhile, consider
+yourselves at home also."
+
+"I think we'll stay at home then, captain, for the present," said
+Miranda, "and watch the people on shore. You have no idea how they
+interest me. Everything is so new. Remember that I have never seen a
+carriage in my life before, or a cab, or a soldier; there goes one
+now--isn't he beautiful to behold? I shall sit here and make Hilary tell
+me the names of all the specimens as they come into view."
+
+"That will do capitally," said the captain. "I might have known that you
+could amuse yourself without help from any one."
+
+The time passed quickly enough, with the aid of lunch. The decks were
+cleared by six o'clock, by which time we were ready for the hired
+barouche when it drove up.
+
+Miranda and I had employed our time so well that she had learnt the
+names of various types of character, and many products of civilisation,
+of which she had been before necessarily ignorant, except from books.
+"It is a perfect object lesson," she said. "How delightful it is to be
+able to see the things and people that I have only read about! I feel
+like those people in the _Arabian Nights_ who had been all their lives
+in a glass tower on a desert island. Not that our dear Norfolk Island
+was a desert--very far from it. And now I am going to the first grand
+house I ever saw, and to live in it--more wonderful still. I feel like a
+princess in a fairy tale," she went on, as she smilingly skipped into
+the carriage. "Everything seems so unreal. Do you think this will turn
+into a pumpkin, drawn by mice, like poor Cinderella's? Hers was a
+chariot, though. What is a chariot?"
+
+"I remember riding in one when I was a small boy," I answered; "and, by
+the same token, I had caught a number of locusts, and put them into my
+hat. I was invited to uncover, as the day was warm. When I did so, the
+locusts flew all about the closed-up carriage and into everybody's face.
+But chariots are old-fashioned now."
+
+Onward we passed along the South Head road, while below us lay the
+harbour with its multitudinous bays, inlets, promontories, and green
+knolls, in so many instances crowned with white-walled gardens,
+surrounding villas and mansions, all built of pale-hued,
+delicately-toned sandstone.
+
+"Oh! what a lovely, delicious bay!" cried Miranda; "and these are the
+Heads, where we came in. Good-bye, old ocean, playfellow of my
+childhood; farewell, wind of the sea, for a while. But I shall live near
+you still, and hear you in my dreams. I should die--I should feel
+suffocated--if nothing but woods and forests were to be seen."
+
+"If you don't die until you can't see the ocean, or feel the winds about
+here, you will live a long time, my dear," said the captain. "I don't
+know a more sea-going population anywhere than this Sydney one. Half the
+people you meet here have been a voyage, and the boys take to a boat as
+the bush lads do to a horse. But here we are at the Marahmee gates, and
+there's my pet Antonia on the verandah ready to receive us."
+
+As we drove up the avenue, which was not very long, a very pretty,
+graceful young woman came swiftly to meet us. I knew this must be Mrs.
+Neuchamp, formerly Antonia Frankston, the old man's only child. She was
+not grown up when I left Sydney, and I heard that she had lately married
+a young Englishman, who had come out with letters of introduction to Mr.
+Frankston. We had seen each other last, as boy and girl, long years ago.
+
+"Well, Captain Charley," she said, making as though she would have
+embraced the skipper, "what do you mean by being so long away? We began
+to think that you were lost--that the _Florentia_ had run on a reef--all
+sorts of things--been cut off by the islanders, perhaps. But now you
+_are_ back with all sorts of island stories to tell dad, and a few
+curios for me. And you are Mrs. Telfer! Papa has told me all about
+you--his latest admiration, evidently. But you mustn't get melancholy
+when he deserts you; he is a passionate adorer while it lasts, but is
+always carried away by the next fresh face, generally a complete
+contrast to the last. I am sure we shall be great friends. I used to
+dance with your husband when we were children. Do you remember that
+party at Mrs. Morton's? You have grown considerably since then, and so
+handsome, too, I suppose I may say--now we are all married--no wonder
+Miranda fell in love with you. You're to call me Antonia, my dear; and
+now come upstairs, and I'll show you your rooms which I have been
+getting ready all the morning. Papa and Ernest will be here in a few
+minutes."
+
+"Mrs. Neuchamp evidently takes after her father," I said, "who can say
+more kind things in fewer minutes than any one I ever knew--and do them,
+too, which is more to the purpose. I am so glad that Miranda has had the
+chance of making her acquaintance before she sees many other people."
+
+"She is a dear, good, unselfish girl," said the captain, "and was always
+the same from a child, when she used to sit on my knee in this very
+verandah, and get me to tell her the names of the ships. I never saw a
+child so thoughtful for other people, always wondering what she could do
+for them; she is just the same to this day. She will be an invaluable
+friend for our Miranda, I foresee. She can give her all sorts of hints
+about housekeeping, and I've no doubt one or two about dress and the
+minor society matters. Not that Miranda wants much teaching in that or
+any other way. Nature made her a lady, and gave her the look of a sea
+princess, and nothing could alter her."
+
+"Did you ever hear of a handsome young woman being spoiled by flattery,
+captain?" I said. "I don't want to anticipate such a disaster, but it
+strikes me that if you are all going to be so very complimentary, I
+shall have to go on the other tack to keep the compass level."
+
+"There are dispositions that flattery falls harmless from," said the
+captain solemnly; "there are women that cannot be spoiled,--not so many,
+perhaps, but you have got one of them, Antonia is another. They will
+make a good pair, and I'll back them to do their duty and keep a
+straight course, fair weather or foul, against any two, married or
+single, that I ever saw, and I've seen a good many women in my time. But
+now we had better be ready for dinner, for old Paul and Mr. Neuchamp
+will be here directly."
+
+They were not long in making their appearance, and a very merry dinner
+it was. Mr. Frankston wanted to hear all about the islands, and Mrs.
+Neuchamp was much interested in Captain Hayston, and thought he
+resembled one of the buccaneers of the Spanish Main, for whom she had a
+sentimental admiration in her girlhood.
+
+"What a pity that all the romantic and picturesque people should be so
+wicked!" she asked. "How is it, and what law of nature can it be that
+arranges that so many good and worthy people are so deadly
+uninteresting?"
+
+"Antonia is not quite in earnest, my dear Mrs. Telfer!" said Mr.
+Neuchamp, remarking Miranda's wondering look; "she knows well that it is
+more difficult to live up to a high ideal than to fall below it. There
+is a false glamour about men like Hayston, I admit, by which people who
+are swayed by feeling rather than reason are often attracted."
+
+"I am afraid that Captain Hayston was a wicked man," said Miranda,
+"though I can't get Hilary to tell me much about him. However, there
+were very different accounts, some describing him as being generous and
+heroic, and others as cruel and unprincipled."
+
+"Whatever he was, there was no doubt about his being a sailor every inch
+of him," said Captain Charley. "I saw him handle his ship in a gale of
+wind through a dangerous channel, and I never forgot it."
+
+"I suppose he had his faults like the rest of us," said Mr. Frankston,
+who did not seem inclined to pursue the subject. "Never mind, when
+Frankston, Telfer, and Co. get the control of the South Sea Island
+trade, there won't be any room for dashing filibusters, will there,
+Charley?"
+
+"I hope not; his day is over," said the captain. "I am sorry for him,
+too, for he was one of the grandest men and finest seamen God Almighty
+ever permitted to sail upon His ocean. Under a different star he might
+have been an ornament to the service and an honour to his country."
+
+After dinner we all sat out on the broad verandah, where we lighted our
+cigars, and enjoyed the view over the sleeping waters of the bay. It was
+a glorious night, undimmed by mist or cloud. The harbour lights flamed
+brightly, anear and afar, while steamers passing to the different points
+of the endless harbourage lighted up the glittering plain with their
+variegated lamps, as if an operatic effect were intended.
+
+"What a wondrous sight!" said Miranda. "It certainly is a scene of
+enchantment, though it loses some of its beauty in my eyes from being so
+restless and exciting. There is no solitude; all is motion and effort,
+as is the city by day. Our sea-view is as still and silent as if our
+island had just been discovered. It lends an air of solemnity to the
+night which this brilliant, many-coloured vision seems to want."
+
+"Antonia and I enjoy this sort of thing thoroughly," said Mr. Neuchamp;
+"our country is hot and dry as the summer comes on, and the glare is
+something to remember. But I must say I prefer the winter of the
+interior. The nights are heavenly, the mid-day warm without being
+oppressive, and the mornings are delightfully cool and bracing."
+
+"As weather it is as nearly perfect as it can be," assented Mrs.
+Neuchamp, backing up her husband. "Then the rides and drives on the firm
+sandy turf and the delightful natural roads! It's nice to think you can
+drive thirty or forty miles in any direction without going off your own
+run. Miranda must come and stay with me for a month or two when you get
+settled, Mr. Telfer. We must see if she can't be persuaded to leave the
+seaside for a while."
+
+"We'll make up a party," said Mr. Frankston; "it's a long time since I
+have seen any station life. I had half a mind to try squatting once
+myself. But I'm like Miranda--I don't sleep well unless I can hear the
+surge in the night; but for a month or two, in May or June, it would be
+great fun, and do us all good, I expect."
+
+"Yes, my dear dad," said his daughter, patting his shoulder, "think of
+the riding and driving. You're not too old to ride, you know. I'll lend
+you Osmond--he's my horse now, and he's a pearl of hackneys. I'll ride
+out with you, and Ernest can take Miranda and Courtenay in the
+four-in-hand drag."
+
+"Well, that's a bargain, my dear!" said her father. "When the summer is
+over and the autumn has nearly come to an end, and the nights and
+mornings are growing fresh and crisp, that's the time to see the
+interior at its best. I haven't forgotten the feel of a bush-morning at
+sunrise; there's something very exhilarating about it."
+
+"Is there not?" replied Mrs. Neuchamp, "'as you see the vision splendid,
+of the sunlit plains extended,' an ocean of verdure. You trace the river
+by the heavy timber on its banks, and the slowly-rising mists along its
+course. Then the sun, a crimson and gold shield against the cloudless
+azure, the cattle low in the great river meadows, you hear the crack of
+a stockwhip as the horses come galloping in like a regiment of cavalry,
+and the day has begun. It seems like a new world awakening to life."
+
+"I know a young woman," said her husband, "whose 'inward eye' by no
+means made 'the bliss of solitude' when she first went into the bush."
+
+"That was because I was newly married--torn away from my childhood's
+home, and all that," laughed his wife. "Besides, you used to stay away
+unconscionably long sometimes; now everything looks different. You will
+have to pass through that stage, my dear Miranda. So prepare yourself."
+
+"I am sure Hilary will never stay away from our home unless he is
+obliged; and then I must sew and sing till he comes back, like my
+countrywomen at Norfolk Island and Pitcairn when their men are at sea."
+
+"A very good custom, too," said Paul. "That reminds me that we must have
+some music to-night. Antonia will lead the way, and our cigars will
+taste all the better in the verandah."
+
+Mrs. Neuchamp had a fine voice and a fine ear. She had been well taught,
+and played her own accompaniments, while she sang several favourite
+songs of her father's, and a duet with her husband.
+
+"Now, it's your turn, Miranda," said Mr. Frankston. "I've heard all
+about you from the captain."
+
+"I shall be very glad to sing," she answered, seating herself at the
+piano, "if you care for my simple songs. I have always been fond of
+music, but our poor little harmonium was, for a long time, my only
+instrument. What shall I sing?"
+
+"Sing the 'Lament of Susannah M'Coy for her drowned lover,'" said the
+captain, "that was a song brought from Pitcairn, wasn't it? I always
+liked it the best of all the island sing songs."
+
+"It is simple," replied Miranda, "but it is true; I believe the poor
+girl used to sit by the sea-shore singing it at night, and died of grief
+a year afterwards."
+
+She struck a few chords on the grand Erard piano, and commenced a
+wailing, dirge-like melody, "a long, low island song," inexpressibly
+mournful. The movement was chiefly low-toned, and in the minor key, but
+at times it rose to a higher pitch, into which was thrown the agonised
+sorrow of irrevocable love, the endless regret, the void immeasurable
+and eternal, the hopeless despair of a desolated existence.
+
+The words were simple, and more in recitative than rhythm. There was a
+certain monotony and repetition, but as an expression of passionate and
+hopeless sorrow it was strangely complete.
+
+The tale was old as life and death, as love and joy, hope and despair.
+The maiden watching and waiting, during the voyage of the whaleship, the
+year long through. The sudden delight of the vessel being sighted; the
+boats going off; the intensity of the anxiety; the returning crew; the
+eager scanning of the passengers; the refusal to believe in mischance;
+the guarded half-told tale, then the unmistakable word of doom! _He had
+been drowned at sea_; the fearless, fortunate harpooner had, in the
+sudden flurry of the death-stricken whale, been thrown overboard and
+stunned. When the half-capsized boat was righted, Johnnie Mills was
+missing! They rowed round and round, all vainly, then sadly returned to
+the vessel. This was the tale they had to tell, the tale Susannah M'Coy
+had to hear. Her over-wrought feelings found relief in the "Maiden's
+Lament," and after her death her girl companions in singing it preserved
+the memory of the maiden and her lover, of his doom and her unhappy
+fate.
+
+There was nothing unusually melodious in the song itself, but as the
+low, rich notes of Miranda's voice struck on the ear of the listeners,
+those who had not heard before seemed spell-bound. Not a motion was
+made, not a sound escaped them, as they listened with an intentness
+which said far more than the ready and general praise at its close.
+Knowing, as I did, the extraordinary quality of her voice, I had
+expected that some such effect would be produced, but I hardly reckoned
+on such complete and universal admiration.
+
+When the cry of the heartbroken girl rose and echoed through the large
+room, the effect was electrical; the higher notes were sweet and clear,
+without a suspicion of hardness, and yet had wondrous under-tones of
+tears, such as I never heard in another woman's voice. Long before the
+wailing notes had faded into nothingness Mrs. Neuchamp's eyes were wet.
+While old Paul, Mr. Neuchamp, and the captain, seemed in no great hurry
+to express their approval.
+
+"That's the most wonderful song I ever heard," said the old man. "I've
+heard the girls in Nukuheva sing one something like it, and there are
+notes in Miranda's voice that take me back to my youth, the island days,
+and the good old times when Paul Frankston was young and foolish. God's
+blessing on them! Miranda! my dear, take an old man's thanks. I foresee
+that I shall have two daughters: one at Marahmee in the summer, and the
+other in the winter, when Antonia is in the bush."
+
+After this no one would hear of her leaving off. She sang other songs
+which were not all sorrowful. Some had a livelier tone, and the
+transient gleam which lit up the dark eyes told that mirth had its due
+place in her rich and many-sided nature.
+
+"Would you like to hear one of our hymns now?" she asked, with the
+simplicity of a child. "We used to sing them in parts, and many a night
+when the moon was at the full did we sit on the beach and sing for
+hours. I can hear the surge now, and it puts me in mind of our dear old
+home."
+
+"Oh, by all means," said Antonia, and without further prelude, she began
+a well-known hymn, the deep tones of her voice rising and falling as if
+in a cathedral, while the organ-like chords which she evoked from the
+Erard favoured the faultless rendering. We involuntarily joined in, and
+I saw Antonia looking admiringly at the singer, as with head upraised,
+and all the fervour of a mediæval penitent, she poured forth a volume of
+melodious adoration.
+
+All were silent for some seconds after the last cadence had died away.
+At length the pause was broken by Antonia.
+
+"After that lovely hymn, my dear Miranda, let me first thank you warmly
+for the pleasure you have given us all, and then suggest that we retire.
+The gentlemen may stay and smoke a while longer, but this has been an
+exciting day for us, and you require rest. Besides, you have to make
+acquaintance with your new relations."
+
+"A sensible suggestion, my darling," said Mr. Frankston. "So we'll say
+good night to Mrs. Telfer and yourself. We must have one more cigar in
+the verandah while we think over that great song of hers."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was arranged between Mr. Frankston and the captain that I should take
+my bride to my old home on the morning after next, and present her to my
+family. It might have been thought that, after so long an absence from
+my parents, it would have been more in keeping with filial duty to have
+rushed off at once and, in a manner, cast myself at their feet like the
+prodigal. But that unlucky, yet eventually fortunate younger son, did
+not bring a wife with him, in which case the paternal welcome might have
+been less distinct. I had put myself in the hands of my more experienced
+friends, who, as men of the world, knew the value of first impressions.
+
+"You and Miranda will be all the better for a day's rest, and a little
+cheering up at Marahmee," had said the captain. "Antonia, too, will see
+that your sea princess is properly turned out, and fit to bear
+inspection by the ladies of the family. _They_ won't have much to
+criticise, I'll be bound. I'm an early man, so I'll go and breakfast
+with your father, and give him a general idea of your doings and
+prospects. You had better turn up about mid-day. It will be high tide
+then, and Miranda will see Isola Bella at its best. Come on board the
+_Florentia_ first, and I'll send you over in proper style."
+
+Acting upon this prudent advice, Miranda and I alighted from the
+Marahmee carriage at the Circular Quay, and once more set foot on board
+the _Florentia_, where we found the captain ready to receive us. He made
+us come down into the cuddy and partake of fruit and wine (that is,
+Miranda took the first and I the latter), while he gave us a sketch of
+his interview with my father.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+"OUR JACK'S COME HOME TO-DAY"
+
+
+"The old skipper was walking in the garden, glass in hand. I knew I
+should find him up, though it was soon after sunrise. No fear of _his_
+being in bed and the sun up. 'Hallo! Carryall,' he said, 'I was just
+thinking about you; thought I could make out the _Florentia_ yesterday.
+What sort of a voyage have you had, and what luck among the right
+whales?'
+
+"'Pretty fair. Rather longer out than I expected, but didn't do badly
+after all; had some trading among the islands; cocoa-nut oil has gone
+up, and the copra I got will pay handsomely.'
+
+"'That's good news,' he said; 'and look here, Carryall, my boy, I've
+been thinking lately that a very paying business might be put together
+by going in regularly for island trading. They're ready and willing to
+take our goods, and their raw material--oil, copra, fruit, ever so many
+things that they are only too glad to sell--would pay a handsome
+percentage on the outlay. What is wanted is a partner here with capital,
+a few ships to go regularly round the islands, and a manager who knows
+the language and understands the natives. If I were a little younger, by
+Jove! I'd go into it myself. You'll stay and breakfast with us of
+course. We're not late people. By the by you haven't heard of my boy in
+your travels, have you?'
+
+"'Well I _have_ heard of him, and--'
+
+"'Heard of him!' he said, not giving me time to get further; 'where?
+what was he doing?'
+
+"'Well, he was supercargo on board the _Leonora_--Hayston's brig. They
+had been at Ocean Island just before me.'
+
+"'Hayston, Bully Hayston?' the old man said, looking stern. 'I'm sorry
+he was mixed up with that fellow. A fine seaman, but a d--d scoundrel,
+from all I've heard of him; what were they doing there? However, I know
+young fellows must buy their experience. Perhaps he's left him by this
+time.'
+
+"'The _Leonora_ was wrecked in Chabral harbour,' I said, 'and her bones
+lie on the coral reef there. She'll never float again.'
+
+"'Ha! and did Hilary get off safe? I suppose it was a heavy gale. Heard
+anything of him since?'
+
+"'He stayed at Moūt for some time,' I said, 'and then was lucky enough
+to get a passage to Sydney in the _Rosario_, but he left her at Norfolk
+Island.'
+
+"'Left her--left her--why the devil didn't he come on in her, and see
+his old father, and mother, and sisters? Hang the fellow, has he no
+natural feeling? Here have we been wearing our hearts out with anxiety
+all these years, and his poor mother having a presentiment (as she calls
+it) that he's drowned or sold into slavery, or something, and d--mn me,
+sir! the young rascal goes and stays to have a picnic at Norfolk Island!
+The next thing we'll hear, I suppose, is that he's married one of these
+Pitcairn Island girls. Not but what he might do worse, for I never saw
+such a lot of fine-looking lasses in my life, as I did the last time I
+was there; and as good as they are handsome, by George! But to stay
+there, so near home too! If I didn't know that he was a good boy, and as
+honest as the day, from his cradle upwards, I'd say he was an unnatural
+young-- But I won't miscall the lad. To stay there--'
+
+"'But he didn't stay there, captain.'
+
+"'What!' he roared, 'didn't stay there--went back to the islands, I
+suppose, to have a little more beach-combing and loafing? Why couldn't
+he have come home when he was so near? He _might_ have thought of his
+poor mother, if he didn't give _me_ credit for caring to see his face
+again.'
+
+"And here the old skipper frowned, and put on a terribly stern
+expression. 'Why, he might have come home and married a wife, and
+settled down and been the comfort of our old age.'
+
+"'So he has!' I said; 'that is, he is married, and he has come to
+Sydney.'
+
+"'Married? Come to Sydney? How can that be? Why isn't he here? Carryall,
+my boy, you wouldn't play a joke on an old man? No, sir! you wouldn't
+_dare_ to do it. How _could_ he come to Sydney and be married?'
+
+"'He came with me in the _Florentia_,' I said, 'and brought his wife with
+him.' And here, Miranda, my dear, I told him what a very unpleasant
+young woman you were, and took about a quarter of an hour to do it; at
+the end of which narration the breakfast bell rang.
+
+"'Come into the house, Carryall,' he said, 'and tell it all to his
+mother. I'll break it to her by saying that you bring news of Hilary,
+and that he's quite well, and so on, and likely to come home soon.'
+
+"So we went in. I shall never forget the look that came into your
+mother's eyes when the skipper said, 'Here's Captain Carryall straight
+from the islands; he's brought you girls some shells and curios as
+usual, and better than that, news of Hilary.'
+
+"'News of my boy, my darling Hilary! Good news, I hope. Oh, Captain
+Carryall! say it's good. Oh! _where_ is he, and what was he doing?'
+
+"'It is good news, my dear lady,' said I, 'or I should not have come
+over to tell you. I saw him quite lately as near Sydney as Norfolk
+Island.'
+
+"'Of course he was coming here--coming here; he would not have the heart
+to stay away from his poor father and mother any longer, when he was so
+near as that. And was he quite well? Oh! my boy--my precious Hilary!
+What would I not give if he were to come here and settle down for good?'
+
+"'He is thinking of doing so,' I said. 'His fixed intention was to marry
+and live in Sydney for the rest of his days.'
+
+"'Thank God! thank God in His mercy!' she said, clasping her hands. 'And
+do you think he will be here soon--how many weeks?'
+
+"'It will not be a matter of weeks, but days; I know that he took his
+passage in a certain ship, and that you may expect him every hour.'
+
+"Then she looked keenly at me. Your mother is a clever woman. She began
+to think I had been leading her on.
+
+"'You are not treating me as a child, Charles Carryall, are you? My son
+is here, and you have been afraid to tell me so. Is it not so?'
+
+"'Only a harmless deception, my dear Mrs. Telfer. Your son and his wife
+came here in my vessel. They stayed at Paul Frankston's last night, and
+will be here at mid-day.'
+
+"The dear lady looked as if she could not realise it for a moment, then
+sat back in her chair, and raised her eyes as if in prayer.
+
+"One of the girls moved as if to support her, but she waved her off.
+'No, my dear, you need not be afraid. I shall not faint; I have borne
+many things, and can bear this. I am returning thanks to our Almighty
+Father, who has restored my son to me. "My son, who was lost, and is
+found." My son, who was dead to me, and is now restored to life. Oh,
+God! most heartily and humbly do I thank Thee--most merciful--most
+loving!'
+
+"After this we were a very happy party. The girls, of course, wanted to
+know all about Miranda here"--here my darling smiled, and took his hand;
+"I dashed off a sketch, and some day you can ask Mariana and
+Elinor--both great friends of mine they are--if it is a good likeness."
+
+"I am afraid it was too good," sighed Miranda, "and they will be
+dreadfully disappointed."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The end of it was that we left the _Florentia_ at eight bells, in great
+state and majesty, in a whaleboat--upon which Miranda insisted,
+despising the captain's gig as a trumpery skiff--and a picked crew, with
+the skipper himself as the steer-oar.
+
+"That's really something like," she said, as she stepped lightly on to
+the thwart. "If there was a little swell on, I should feel quite myself
+again, and think of the dear days when I was a happy little island girl,
+bare-footed and bare-headed, and thought going off to a strange vessel
+through the great, solemn, sweeping rollers the wildest enjoyment. But I
+am a happy girl now," she added, with a look in her deep eyes which
+expressed a world of love and rich content; "only the thought of
+learning to be a lady sometimes troubles me."
+
+"You will never need to do _that_," I said.
+
+"There is the house?" I cried; "there's Isola Bella!" as we rounded a
+point, and a picturesque stone house came full into view. It had been
+built in the early days of the colony by an Imperial officer, long
+resident in Italy, and showed the period in its massive stone walls,
+Florentine façade, and wide, paved verandah. The site was elevated
+above the lake-like waters of the bay, towards which a winding walk led,
+terminating in a massive stone pier, into which iron rings and
+stanchions had been let. The beach was white and smooth, though the tide
+ran high, and the wavelets rippled close to the pale sandstone rocks,
+which lent a tone of delicacy and purity to the foreshore.
+
+The weather-stained walls of the house were half covered with climbers,
+a wilderness of tropical shrubs, and richly-blooming flower-thickets.
+There were glades interspersed, carpeted with the thick-swarded couch or
+"dhoub" grass, originally imported from India, and which, nourished by
+the coast showers, and delighting in a humid atmosphere, preserves its
+general freshness of colour the long Australian summer through.
+
+I had been so preoccupied with speculations as to Miranda's reception by
+my family, that my own emotions, on returning to my childhood's home,
+lay in abeyance. Now, however, at the near view of the house--the pier,
+the walled-in sea-bath--the scenes and adventures of my earliest youth
+came back with overwhelming force and clearness. There was the
+boat-house, into which I had paddled so many a time after nightfall,
+returning from fishing or sailing excursions. There was the flagstaff on
+which was displayed the Union Jack and other flags on great occasions.
+The old flag floated in the breeze to-day. I knew for what reason and
+celebration. I could see my mother, as of old, walking down to the pier
+to welcome and embrace, or to remonstrate and fondly chide when I had
+remained absent in stormy weather. How many fears and anxieties had I
+not caused to agitate that loving heart! And my stern and mostly silent
+parent--did I not once surprise him in scarce dignified sorrow at my
+night-long absence and probable untimely decease. Yet all his words
+were, "God forgive you, my boy, for the misery you have caused us this
+night."
+
+And now the years had passed--had flown rather, crowded as they were
+with incident--that had changed the heedless boy into the man,--matured,
+perhaps, by too early worldly knowledge, and the grim comradeship of
+danger and death. I had returned safely, bringing my sheaves with me in
+the guise of one dearer to me than life. I had, during the intervals of
+reflection I had lately enjoyed, repented fully of the unconsciously
+selfish sins of my youth, and was fixed in firm resolve to atone, so far
+as in me lay, by care and consideration in the future.
+
+As we dashed alongside of the pier, the years rolled back, and as of old
+I saw my mother pacing the well-known path to the boat. She was followed
+by my father at a short distance. I fancied that the dear form told of
+the lapse of time, in less firm step and the bent figure which age
+compels. My father was erect as ever, and his eye swept the far horizon
+of outer seas as of old; but surely his hair and beard were whiter.
+
+Miranda's step was first upon the pier--she needed no help in leaving or
+entering a boat. Side by side we walked to meet my mother, who, with a
+sob of joy, folded me in her arms. "My boy! my boy!" was all she could
+articulate for some moments; then, gently disengaging herself, "and this
+is my new daughter?" she said. "May God bless and keep you both, my
+children, and preserve for us the great happiness which His providence
+has ordained this day."
+
+"Well, neighbour!" in the well-remembered greeting which he affected,
+rang out here my father's clear tones, "and so you have finished your
+cruise for a while! What a man you have grown!" he exclaimed, as he
+looked upwards half-admiringly at my head and shoulders, markedly above
+his own. "Filled out, bronzed, you look a sailor, man, all over."
+
+"And so you wouldn't give the Sydney girls a chance, and have brought a
+wife back with you for fear there mightn't be a 'currency lass' to
+spare. I must say I admire your taste, my boy. No one can fault that.
+Welcome, my dear Miranda, to your own and your husband's home. Give your
+old father a kiss and the ceremony is complete." Here the governor
+gravely embraced his new daughter, and then, holding her at arm's
+length, regarded her admiringly, till she playfully ran back to the
+girls. "Charley here guarantees she is as good as she is handsome. He
+said better, indeed; but that's impossible. No woman with her looks
+could be better inside than out. So, Hilary, my boy, I congratulate you
+on your choice. You've fallen on your feet in love and friendship both,
+according to what Carryall tells me of Paul Frankston's partnership
+arrangement. And now we'll come up to the house and drink the bride's
+health. I feel as if I needed a refresher after all this excitement. I
+little thought when I saw Charley come over so early what was in store
+for us, eh, mother?"
+
+Before we reached the house the two girls, Mariana and Elinor, had taken
+possession of Miranda and carried her upstairs to the rooms which were
+to be allotted to us while we dwelt at Isola Bella. "Now that the other
+boys are up the country," said Mariana, who was the elder, "we have more
+houseroom than we need. So, directly we heard that you were in Sydney,
+Elinor and I set to work and arranged these two rooms, so that you and
+Miranda should be quite independent. There's such a pretty view of the
+harbour. You can use this one as a sitting-room, and there's a smaller
+dressing-room which he can make a den of. Men always like a place to be
+untidy in."
+
+"Oh, how nice it will be," said Elinor, the younger one, whom I remember
+a curly-headed romp of ten when I left home, "to have a mate for rowing
+and boat-sailing. Mariana here doesn't care for boats, and dislikes
+rough weather. I suppose no weather would frighten you. Oh, what lovely
+trips we shall have, and mother can't be nervous when you are with me."
+
+"I suppose you think Miranda is a sort of mermaid," said I, now arrived
+and joining in the conversation, "and impossible to be drowned. But what
+would become of me if anything happened to her? Do you think I can trust
+her with you? What a grand room! I remember it well in old days when it
+used to be the guest chamber. I was only allowed into it now and then,
+and always under inspection. I feel the promotion."
+
+"Now, we'll run away and leave you," said Mariana. "Lunch is nearly
+ready; you will hear the bell."
+
+We sat down on a couch and gazed into each other's eyes with clasped
+hands. The harbour, with its variously composed fleet, lay wide and
+diversified before us. Every conceivable vessel--barge, steamer,
+collier, skiff, yacht, and row-boat--made progress adown and across its
+waters. How fair a scene it was on this, one of the loveliest days which
+sun and sky and wavelets deep ever combined to fashion! After all my
+adventures by seas and lands--after all the sharp contrasts of my
+chequered life--now lotus-eating amid the groves or by the founts of an
+earthly paradise--now ignorant, from one day to another, of the hour
+when the death-knell would sound--now free and joyous, handsomely
+dressed, in foreign seaports with ruffling swagger and chinking
+dollars--anon ragged, shoeless, shipwrecked, and forlorn--nay, starving,
+but for the charity of the soft-hearted heathens whom we in our pride
+are prone to despise.
+
+And now I was at home again. Home! sweet home! in fullest sense of the
+word--welcomed, beloved, fêted! What had I done to deserve this love and
+trust now so profusely showered upon me? My better angel, too, my
+darling Miranda, by my side, sharing in all this wealth of affection.
+How could I have foretold that such good fortune would be mine, all
+unworthy that I felt myself, when, bruised and bleeding, I was hurled
+ashore in the midnight storm from the wrecked _Leonora_?--when I felt
+in thought the deadly shudder which ever follows the scratch of the
+poisoned arrow--when I sank to eternal rest (as I then supposed) beneath
+the surf-tormented shore of the island? How had I jostled death,
+disease, danger in every form and shape,--and now, almost without
+thought or volition of my own, I was placed in possession of all those
+things for which through a long life so many men toil and struggle
+vainly and unsuccessfully.
+
+"Thank God! thank God!" I exclaimed aloud involuntarily, for truly our
+hearts were filled in that hour of realised peace and happiness with
+grateful wonder.
+
+"Let us give Him thanks," whispered Miranda, "who only has done this
+wondrous thing for us."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Captain Carryall, my father, and Mr. Frankston were men of action--all
+through their lives the deed had followed quick on the resolve. Thus,
+within a week after our arrival, premises were purchased on the shore of
+the bay; stores and warehouses were planned, while upon an office in the
+chief business centre of Sydney, at no great distance from Macquarie
+Square, a legend of the period presented the firm of "Carryall, Telfer,
+and Company, South Sea merchants and purchasers of island produce." This
+was the commencement, as it turned out, of a prosperous mercantile
+enterprise, ramifying in divers directions. It was arranged not only to
+purchase or to ship on commission the raw material so easily procurable,
+but to advance on whaling and trading ventures; the projectors, better
+equipped with experience than capital, being always willing to pay high
+interest, for which indeed the margin of profit amply provided. Here I
+was in my element, whether directing labourers, interviewing seamen,
+shouting in the vernacular to the native crews, or calculating the value
+of cargoes. My father came over every other day to watch me at my work,
+and of my style of management he was pleased to express approval. "You
+have not altogether wasted your time, my boy," he said one day. "The
+great thing in all these matters is energy. With that and reasonable
+experience a man is sure to be successful in a new country--indeed in
+any country. Pluck and perseverance mean everything in life. Never
+despair. You know our family motto--_Fortuna favet fortibus_. And you
+would smile if I told you how often in the history of my life a bold bid
+for fame or fortune has been my only resource."
+
+Whether I had exhibited the proverbial fortitude, or whether, indeed,
+the capricious goddess was mollified in my case, cannot with certainty
+be decided. The fact, however, was there, that our luck, from whatever
+cause, was in the ascendant, inasmuch as business of a profitable nature
+began to pour in upon us. The average gains beyond expenses were so
+apparent that it was evident that before long we should be in a position
+to set up housekeeping on our own account.
+
+In the mean time nothing could be more harmonious and satisfactory than
+our composite home life at Isola Bella, difficult as it is sometimes to
+arrange the housing of two families, however closely related, under one
+roof. The natural amiability of Miranda's nature fortunately prevented
+the slightest friction. Constitutionally anxious to please, it was the
+chief article of her simple faith to seek the happiness of others rather
+than her own. Prompt in compliance, eager to learn all minor matters
+with which she had been necessarily unacquainted, ready to join in the
+harmless mirth of the hour, or to tell of the wonders of her island
+home, she was, as all agreed, a constant source of interest and
+entertainment.
+
+More than all, her pervading, fervent, religious faith endeared her to
+the pious heart of my dearest mother, in whose visits to the poor and
+in charitable ministrations she was by choice her constant companion;
+while her unfeigned pity for the half-fed, half-clothed children of the
+neglected classes with which every city abounds excited my mother's
+wonder and admiration.
+
+"Your wife is a pearl of womanhood, my dear Hilary," she would say to
+me. "You are a good boy; I hope you are worthy of her. I can hardly
+think that any man could be. When you see the women so many men are
+fated to pass their lives with, you have indeed reason to be thankful."
+
+"So I am, my dear old mother," I would say. "Every day I feel minded to
+sing a song of joy and gratitude. I feel as life was a new discovery and
+creation. I am in a Paradise where no serpent that ever crawled has
+power to harm my Eve. I feel sometimes as if there was an unreal
+perfection about it all, too bright to last."
+
+So indeed it appeared to me at that time. Fully employed as I was by day
+and in the exercise of all the faculties that my island life had served
+to train, it was impossible to overtask the health of mind and body in
+which I revelled. I was sensible, too, that the joint enterprise upon
+which I had embarked was growing and improving daily, while much of its
+success was attributed by Mr. Frankston and Captain Carryall to my
+management. At night, when I returned there was one who never failed to
+catch sight of my skiff when half across the bay. Then our family
+evenings, cheered with song and harmless mirth, were truly restful after
+the labours of the day.
+
+Our neighbours, too, with all the old friends of the family, seemed
+desirous to welcome the son of the house who had been so long absent,
+and had wandered so far. Whether from curiosity, or a higher feeling,
+they were equally anxious to call upon "the son's wife." The positions,
+and dispositions, manners, and habitudes of the different types were
+well explained to Miranda by my socially-experienced sisters, so that
+she was saved from any misapprehension which might so easily have
+arisen.
+
+Our friends the Neuchamps, too, were often with us, and made the greater
+part of our quiet recreations. On alternate Sundays nothing would
+content Mr. Frankston short of our all dining with him, to be sent back
+in his sailing boat if the weather was favourable, or to remain for the
+night in the ample guest-chambers of Marahmee if otherwise.
+
+Our Saturday afternoons, indeed, were almost entirely devoted to picnics
+and cruises in his yacht, at which time he insisted upon Miranda
+steering, or, as he said, taking command, at which times he was always
+loud in admiration of her nautical skill--declaring, indeed, that she
+was fit to take charge of any vessel in Her Majesty's navy.
+
+We had also seen a good deal of our fellow passengers, Mr. and Miss
+Vavasour, who, after a first introduction, were always included in Mr.
+Frankston's Saturday picnic invitations. That lively damsel professed a
+great admiration for Mr. Frankston, who responded so promptly that
+Antonia reproached him for turning faithless to Miranda.
+
+"It's his nature, he can't help it," she said.
+
+"But Miss Vavasour will have some day to suffer whatever pangs are
+supposed to fall to the lot of the deserted fair; then she will repent
+of her fascinations."
+
+"Not at all--sufficient for the day, you know. I begin to think that
+one's admirers ought to be past their first youth. They're more
+thoroughly appreciative. 'On his frank features middle age Had scarcely
+set its signet sage,' and so on. I'm sure that quite describes Mr.
+Frankston. How should you like me for a mamma-in-law, Mrs. Neuchamp?
+Marahmee is such a dear house, and these yachting parties are all that
+are wanted to make life perfect."
+
+"I give my consent," said Antonia, "but beware of delay. 'Men were
+deceivers ever,' and if you wait more than a fortnight your charms will
+be on the wane, so I warn you."
+
+"I like decision," responded Miss Vavasour, "but perhaps 'two weeks,' as
+our American friend used to say, is _rather hurried_ legislation. The
+trousseau business and the milliner's objections would be fatal. Even
+Miranda must have stood out for a longer respite. How long did you take,
+Miranda, dear? You're the pattern woman, you know, the first girl I ever
+saw that men and women equally delighted to honour."
+
+Miranda blushed charmingly, then looking up with her clear, frank eyes,
+that always appeared to me to be fountains of truth, as she replied--
+
+"Hilary and I were married just a month after he asked me to be his
+wife, you know very well."
+
+So, jesting lightly, and with a breeze that sufficed just to fill the
+great sails of the yacht, we glided along until we had explored the
+recesses of Middle harbour,--a spacious inlet winding amid the thick
+growing semi-tropical forest which clothed the slopes of the bays and
+promontories to the water's edge.
+
+Here and there were small clearings in which might be discovered a tent
+or cabin, just sufficient for the needs of a couple of bachelors or a
+hermit, who here desired to live during his holiday amid this "boundless
+contiguity of shade"--"The world forgetting, and the world forgot."
+
+"Oh, how lovely!" said Mrs. Percival, as we swept round a point and came
+suddenly upon a fairy-like nook, a tiny bay with milk-white strand and
+fantastic sandstone rocks. There was a fenced enclosure around a cabin.
+There was a boat, with rude stone pier and boat-house. The owner, in
+cool garb and broad-leafed sombrero, was seated on a rock reading, and
+occasionally dabbling his bare feet in the rippling tide. As the yacht
+glided past in the deep water which came so close to his possessions,
+he raised his hat to the ladies, and resumed his studies.
+
+"What a picture of peace and restful enjoyment!" said Mrs. Craven. "How
+I envy men who can seclude themselves like this within an hour's sail
+from a city! Now, people are so fond of generalising about colonists,
+and how wrong they are! They always describe them as wildly energetic
+and restless people, perpetually rushing about in search of gain or
+gold."
+
+"That's Thorndale," said one of the younger guests. "He works hard
+enough at his business when he is about it, but his notion of enjoyment
+is to come here on a Saturday with only a boat-keeper, to fish, and
+read, and smoke till Monday morning, when he goes back to his law and
+his office."
+
+"Sensible fellow!" said the colonel. "There's nothing like tent life to
+recruit a man's health after a spell of official work. We used to manage
+that in India, when we couldn't go all the way to the hills, by forming
+small encampments of a dozen or twenty fellows, having a mess-house in
+common, and living in tents or huts separately when we were not hunting
+or shooting. Splendid life while it lasted! Sent us back twice the men
+we were, when we left the lines!"
+
+We anchored for lunch in one of the fairy nooks of which that enchanted
+region is so lavish. There was tea for the ladies and something
+presumably stronger for the seniors. We had mirth and pleasantries,
+spoken and acted--all went merrily in that charmed sunshine and beneath
+the shadowy sea-woods. We had songs--"A mellow voice Fitz Eustace
+had"--that is, one of the young fellows, native and to the manner born,
+lifted up his tuneful pipe and made us all laugh, the air he sang being
+certainly not "wild and sad,"--the reverse, indeed.
+
+"Now, is not this an ideal picnic,--a day rescued from that terrible
+fiend Ennui, that haunts us all?" cried Miss Vavasour. "I might
+truthfully, perhaps, except myself, who am frivolous, and therefore
+easily amused--but of course it sounds well to complain and be
+mysterious. But, really, this is life indeed! The climate makes up for
+any little deficiency. I shall positively go home and arrange my
+affairs, make sure of my allowance being paid quarterly, then take a
+cottage near Miranda, on that sweet North Shore,--isn't that what you
+call it?--and live happy ever afterwards like a 'maid of Llangollen.'"
+
+"Nothing can be nicer," said Mrs. Neuchamp. "We'll all three live here
+in the summer, within reach of the sea-breeze. In June you must come up
+and stay with me at Rainbar; then you will know what the glory of winter
+in our Riverina is like."
+
+The breeze freshened as we glided swiftly on our homeward course. We had
+expended most of the daylight before we left our fairy bower. Sunset
+banners flared o'er the western horizon. "White and golden-crimson,
+blue," fading imperceptibly into the paler tones, and swift-appearing
+shades which veil the couch of the day god. The stars tremulously
+gleamed at first timidly, then brightly scintillating in pure and
+clustered radiance. Our merry converse had gradually lessened, then
+ceased and died away. All seemed impressed by the solemnity of the
+hour--the hush of sea and land--the shimmering phosphorescent sparkle of
+the silver-seeming plain over which we swept all swift and silently.
+Then the lights of the city, brilliant, profuse, widely scattered as in
+a lower firmament!
+
+Miss Vavasour sat with Miranda's hand in hers. "How lovely to live in an
+hour like this, and yet it is like this with such surroundings that I
+should like to die."
+
+"Hush!" said Miranda, "we must all die when God wills it. It is not good
+to talk so, my dear."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+During the next week our good friends and fellow-passengers of the
+_Florentia_ were to leave us on their return voyage. We arranged to meet
+as often as we could manage the leisure, and, as it happened, there was
+to be a ball at Government House--one of the great functions of the
+season, which, it was decided, would be an appropriate conclusion to our
+comradeship. Mr. and Mrs. Neuchamp were going back to their station,
+Captain Carryall was under sailing orders, and our friends the Colonel
+and Mrs. Percival were leaving for India and "going foreign" generally.
+
+Miranda was not eager to attend the extremely grand, and, as far as she
+was concerned, strange entertainment. But the whole party were most
+anxious for her to make her appearance in public--at least on that
+occasion. Partly from natural curiosity, partly on account of my wishes,
+and my sisters' and Mrs. Neuchamp's strong persuasion, she
+consented--pleading, however, to be relieved from all anxiety on the
+score of her dress.
+
+"Oh! we'll take that responsibility," said Elinor. "Antonia Neuchamp is
+generally admitted to dress in perfect taste. We'll compose a becoming
+ball-dress amongst us or die--something simple and yet not wholly out of
+the fashion, and becoming to Miranda's style of beauty."
+
+"I'm afraid you'll make me vain," she answered, smiling. "What will you
+do if I spend all Hilary's money on dress? However, it must be a lovely
+sight. I have read of balls and grand entertainments, of course, and
+when I was a girl longed to be able to take part in them. Now that I am
+married," and here she gazed at me with those tender, truthful eyes, "I
+seem not to care for mere pleasure. It leads to nothing, you know."
+
+"You are going to be a pattern wife, Miranda, I see," said Mariana, my
+elder sister. "You must not spoil Hilary, you know. He will think he is
+the only man in the world."
+
+"And is he not for me?" she asked, eagerly. Then blushing at the quick
+betrayal of her inmost heart, she added, "Should it not be so? Are
+civilised people in a great city anxious to attract admiration even
+after they are married?"
+
+"There are people who do this and more in all societies, my dear," said
+my mother, with a seriousness which rebuked our inclination to smile at
+Miranda's ignorance of the world. "But do you, my dear child, cling fast
+to the faith in which you have been reared. You will neither be of them
+nor among them that follow the multitude to do evil."
+
+"I don't think there is as much evil in Miranda as would fill a
+teaspoon," said Elinor. "This isle of hers must have been a veritable
+Eden, or she must have come down from the moon, dear creature. You must
+be very good to deserve her, I can tell you, Master Hilary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The day arrived, the night of which was to realise all manner of
+rose-coloured visions, in which the youth and maidens of Sydney had for
+weeks indulged. It was to be the ball of the season. The grand
+entertainment at which a royal personage, who had arrived in a
+man-of-war but recently, had consented to be present! The officers of
+the squadron were, of course, invited. They were gratified that the ball
+was fixed for a week previous to their sailing on an extended cruise
+among the islands. As it happened, too, the great pastoral section--the
+proprietors of the vast estates of the interior--were still at their
+clubs and hotels, not yet departed for their annual sojourn amid the
+limitless wastes of "The Bush." The _jeunesse dorée_ of the city, the
+_flaneurs_, and civil servants who, like the poor, are "always with us,"
+were specially available. Lastly, the Governor's wife had openly stated
+that she wished to show her friends, the Percivals, what we could do in
+Sydney. And she was not a woman to fail in any of her undertakings.
+
+It was arranged that we should comply with Paul Frankston's imperious
+mandate, and meet at Marahmee early in the day for the greater
+convenience of driving thence to Government House, instead of taking
+steamboat from the North Shore. All our plans prospered exceedingly. The
+day was calm and fair; the night illumined by the soft radiance of the
+moon. We dined in great peace and contentment, the ladies having
+devoted--as it appeared to me--the greater portion of the afternoon to
+the befitting adornments of their persons. We were all in good spirits.
+I had reason indeed to be so, for that day I had concluded a highly
+profitable trade arrangement, which augured well for my future
+mercantile career.
+
+"What a glorious night!" said Paul Frankston. "Don't be afraid of that
+Moselle, Ernest, it's some of my own importing--a rare wine, as most
+judges think. Do you remember the ball we went to, Antonia, given by
+that fellow Schäfer? Such a swell he looked, and how well he did the
+thing! He has different quarters now, if all's true that we hear."
+
+"The poor Count!" answered Mrs. Neuchamp, "I can't help feeling sorry
+for him though he was an imposter. Is it really true that they put him
+in prison in Batavia? What a fate after such a brilliant career!"
+
+"Carryall was there last year and saw him. Got an order, you know, from
+the Dutch authorities. Said he was fairly cheerful; expected to be out
+in three years."
+
+"He was very near not being imprisoned in Batavia or anywhere else,"
+interposed Mr. Neuchamp, with some show of asperity. "If Jack Windsor
+had come up a little earlier in the fray we'd have broken the
+scoundrel's neck, or otherwise saved the hangman a task."
+
+"Now, Ernest, you mustn't bear malice," said his wife, reprovingly;
+"after all it was Harriet Folleton and not me whom he wished to carry
+off. It was an afterthought trying to make me accompany her. But 'all's
+well that ends well.' He has paid for his misdeeds in full."
+
+"Not half as much as he deserves," growled Neuchamp, who evidently
+declined to perceive the humorous side of the affair--the attempted
+abduction of an imprudent beauty and heiress, besides the
+ultra-felonious taking away of Miss Frankston, as she was then--as a
+pendant to a career of general swindling and imposture practised upon
+the good people of Sydney. Mr. Frankston's eyes began to glitter, too,
+at the reminiscence. So the conversation was changed.
+
+"I really believe that women never wholly repudiate admiration,"
+continued Mr. Neuchamp, reflectively, "however unprincipled and
+abandoned the 'first robber' may be. It's a curious psychical problem."
+
+"You know that is untrue, Ernest," quoth Mrs. Neuchamp, with calm
+decision. "Don't let me hear you say such things." An hour later our
+carriages had taken up position in the apparently endless line of
+vehicles which stretched along Macquarie Street and the lamplit avenues
+which led to it. After nearly an hour's waiting, as it seemed to me, we
+drove through the lofty freestone gateway which led to the viceregal
+mansion, and descended within the portico, amid a guard of honour and
+attendant aides-de-camp. Passing through a vestibule, and being duly
+divested of wraps in the cloak-rooms, we were finally ushered into the
+Viceroy's presence, and duly announced.
+
+Paul Frankston took the lead, with Miranda on his arm. I followed with
+Mrs. Neuchamp, whose husband escorted my sisters. As we were announced
+by name, I noticed that Colonel and Mrs. Percival, with a few other
+people of distinction, were standing on the dais, close to the Governor
+and Lady Rochester, the latter talking to a young man in naval uniform,
+whom I conjectured to be the Prince. As we approached I saw Mrs.
+Percival speak to Lady Rochester, who at once came forward and greeted
+us warmly. "Mr. Frankston," she said, "I know the Governor wishes to
+talk to you about the fortifications; will you and your party come up
+here and stay with us. And so this is Mrs. Telfer, the heroine of my
+friend, Mrs. Percival's romance! I am delighted to see her and
+congratulate you, Mr. Telfer, on bringing us such a sea princess for
+your bride. She has all the air of it, I declare."
+
+Miranda secured a seat near Mrs. Percival, who watched with pleasure her
+evident admiration, mingled with a certain awe, of the brilliant,
+unaccustomed scene before her. Much to her relief Miss Vavasour came up
+with the Cravens, and commenced a critical review of Miranda's and other
+dresses, which soon obliterated all trace of timidity and strangeness.
+
+"Well, my princess," began Miss Vavasour, "and how does this gay and
+festive scene strike you? Isn't it a fairy tale--a dream of the _Arabian
+Nights_? Don't you expect to see the fairy godmother come when the clock
+strikes twelve, and your carriage turn into a pumpkin and white mice?"
+
+"It is a scene of enchantment," said Miranda. "I hardly expected
+anything so dazzlingly beautiful. How the naval uniforms seem to light
+up the throng, and the soldiers too. I don't wonder at all the pretty
+things we read about them in books."
+
+"Yes, they do strike the unaccustomed eye," said Miss Vavasour. "I wish
+I saw them for the first time. I'm afraid I'm growing old. Oh! my
+coming-out ball! I didn't sleep for a week before in anticipation of
+delicious joy, or a week after in retrospection. Ah! me, my youth is
+slipping away unsatisfied, I much fear. And now, unless my eyes deceive
+me, we are going to have the first quadrille. Miranda, we must show
+these good people that we dance in our island. How about partners and a
+_vis-a-vis_?"
+
+We were not left long in doubt. One of the aides-de-camp, a gorgeous
+apparition in gold and scarlet, came up bowing, and intimated his Royal
+Highness' wish to dance with Mrs. Telfer. This, of course, was
+equivalent to a command. I looked for some indecision or hesitation on
+the part of Miranda. But it appeared to her evidently just as much a
+part of the proceedings as if (as had happened before) she had been
+asked to dance with the captain of a man-of-war at one of their island
+fêtes, where waltz, quadrille, and polka had long been familiar. I had
+provided myself with an enviable partner in the shape of Mrs. Neuchamp;
+and her husband having promptly arranged matters with Miss Vavasour, we
+betook ourselves to the next set, where we had a full view of the
+viceregal party. My sisters had apparently no difficulty in deciding
+between several aspirants for their respective hands, as they and their
+partners helped to make up the set.
+
+When the melodious crash broke forth, in commencement from Herr
+Königsmark's musicians, recruited from an Austrian military band which
+had visited Australia, a murmur of admiration made itself audible, as
+the Prince and his partner stepped forth in the opening measure of the
+dance. I turned my head and was lost in astonishment as I noticed the
+unconscious grace with which Miranda moved--calm as when rivalling the
+fairies in rhythmic measure on a milk white beach beside the moonlit
+wave. How many a time had I watched her!
+
+"Who in the world is that lovely creature dancing with the Prince?" I
+heard a middle-aged dame behind me ask. "She has a foreign appearance,
+and I think she is the most exquisitely beautiful woman I ever saw in my
+life. What a figure, too! How she smiles, what teeth, what eyes! Is
+there any news of a migration of angels? Such strange things happen
+nowadays on account of electricity and all that. Who and what is she,
+Mary Kingston, again I ask you?"
+
+"My dear Arabella!" answered the other dame, evidently one of the
+aristocracy of the land, "you are so enthusiastic! She came with the
+Frankston party. That's her husband quite close to us, dancing with Mrs.
+Neuchamp. He's the son of Captain Telfer of North Shore, and has been
+away among the islands and nobody knows where for ever so long. He
+married her at Norfolk Island. I believe she is one of those wonderful
+Pitcairn people that we hear such good accounts of."
+
+"H'm; he's a young man of distinctly good taste, I must say. I wish my
+Cavendish had gone to the islands too, if that is the sort of girl they
+grow there. Mrs. Percival seems to be a great chum of hers. How did that
+come about?"
+
+"I believe they came back in the _Florentia_ together. Captain Carryall
+touched at Norfolk Island on the way from Honolulu, and it seems that
+Mrs. Percival's little boy fell overboard on the voyage, and the girl
+was into the sea after him like a shot, and swam with him in her arms
+till the boats came. There was something about a shark too. Mrs.
+Percival tells everybody she saved his life. No wonder she raves about
+her."
+
+"What a pearl of a girl! No wonder, indeed! And to think of her having a
+world of courage and fire in her with all that delicacy and beauty. I
+can't take my eyes off her. The Prince admires her, apparently, too; and
+she smiles like a pleased child, with as little thought of vanity or
+harm, I dare swear, as a baby. She ought to be a princess, no doubt of
+it. So I see it's the last figure. I must go and look up my old friend,
+Paul Frankston, and make him tell me all about her."
+
+After the dance and the usual promenade, Mrs. Neuchamp and I recovered
+our respective spouses, and took the opportunity to make a detour of the
+ball-room, and even to go through the next apartment, where refreshments
+were procurable, into the ample gardens. The night was superbly
+beautiful. The full moon lit up the grove of tropical foliage and
+richly-flowering plants, the glades carpeted with velvet lawn, the wide
+sea-plain traversed by shimmering pathways of silver. Below, in the
+sleeping bay, lay several men-of-war, half in shadow, half illuminated
+with coloured lamps hanging from their rigging. Gay and mirthful, grave
+or earnest, the frequent partners passed to and fro like shadows of
+revellers beneath the moon, or turned to the lower paths to gaze at the
+motionless vessels, the silver sea, the whispering wave. It was an
+ecstatic experience, a fairy pageant, a supernal revelation of an
+enchanted landscape.
+
+Miranda pressed my arm. "Oh, Hilary! how lovely all this is! But you
+must not laugh at me. Now that I have seen it, I do not think I shall be
+anxious to follow it up. There is something almost intoxicating about it
+all. I can imagine it unfitting people for their everyday life."
+
+We had hardly returned to the ball-room when the glorious strains of the
+"Tausend und einer nacht" waltz pealed forth from the band, and hurrying
+and anxious swains in search of their partners, not always easy to
+discover in such a crush, were seen in every direction. Instant request
+was preferred to Miranda by a naval officer high in command, but to my
+surprise, as we had not spoken on the subject, she graciously, but
+firmly, declined the honour. He protested, but she quietly repeated her
+negative: "I only dance round dances with my husband, Captain Harley!
+and, indeed, these not very often."
+
+He was inclined to be persistent, though most courteous. "I am sure you
+used to dance them once. Indeed, I heard such an account of your
+waltzing, Mrs. Telfer."
+
+"That was before I was married, Captain Harley!" she replied, with such
+evident belief that this explanation fully answered every objection that
+neither the captain nor I could help smiling.
+
+"Look at your friend, Mrs. Neuchamp!" he said, as that dainty matron
+came gliding past with a military partner, looking like the very
+impersonation of the waltz, "and Mrs. Craven, and Mrs. Percival."
+
+"I am so sorry that I can't comply," she answered. "They are quite right
+to dance waltzes if they please. I do not care for them now, and am only
+going to have one with Hilary to-night. He is fond of it, I know. I will
+dance the Lancers with you, if you like."
+
+"Anything with _you_," murmured the captain gallantly, as he carefully
+wrote her name on his card, and departed to secure a partner for the yet
+unfinished portion of the dance.
+
+"I see by this lovely programme," she said, "that there is another
+waltz, a polka, and then the Lancers, which I used to know very well;
+and after that I will dance the next waltz with you, Hilary, just to
+feel what this wonderful floor is like. You are not angry with me for
+refusing Captain Harley? I really feel as if I _could_ not do it."
+
+"You can follow your own way, my dear!" I said, "in this and all minor
+matters. It concerns you chiefly; and, considering how many husbands
+think their wives are rather too fond of dancing, I shall certainly not
+quarrel with mine for not caring for it enough."
+
+I was not altogether without interest as to this set of Lancers which
+she had promised to the gallant captain of the _Arethusa_, knowing as I
+did that the fashion had changed considerably since the Lancers was a
+decorous, somewhat dull dance, differing from the quadrille only in a
+more complicated series of evolutions, and, like that very proper
+performance, affording much opportunity for conversation. Not intending
+to take part in it myself, and being, indeed, more than sufficiently
+entertained as a spectator of the novel spectacle, I stationed myself
+near the "tops," one couple of which Miranda's partner elected to be. I
+saw by the composition of the set, and the looks of some of the youths
+and maidens who eagerly took their places with their pre-arranged
+_vis-a-vis_, that the pace would be rapid and the newest variations
+introduced.
+
+I provided, therefore, for a _contretemps_. My younger sister having
+professed herself tired with the previous waltz, had declined the
+invitation of a partner not wholly acceptable as it appeared to me. I
+therefore persuaded her to walk up with me to a seat near Miranda, so
+that we, as I explained, might see how she got on.
+
+What I anticipated exactly came to pass. The first few non-committal
+quadrille steps were got through without unusual display, but when
+Miranda saw the damsel next to her leaning back as far as she could
+manage, while her partner swung her round several times, as if he either
+wished to lift her entirely off her feet, or drag her arms out of the
+sockets, a look of amazement overspread her features. She stopped with a
+startled air, commingled with distaste, and saying to her surprised
+partner, "I cannot dance like this--I did not know--why did no one tell
+me?"--walked like a queen to the nearest seat. Now my foresight came in.
+Knowing that a girl of nineteen would be willing to dance with a naval
+officer of the rank and fashion of Captain Harley, if she was ready to
+drop with fatigue, I said promptly, "Allow me to introduce you to my
+sister Captain Harley, who will, I am sure, be happy to take my wife's
+place;" a look of joyful acquiescence lit up her countenance, and before
+any serious hitch took place in the figure the vacancy was filled.
+
+I fancied that my sister Elinor, who was at the age when girls are not
+disinclined for a little daring frolic out of pure gladsomeness,
+performed her part in the figures with somewhat less unreserve after
+noticing the look of quiet surprise with which Miranda observed some of
+the more vivacious couples.
+
+We contented ourselves, when the next series of waltzes commenced, with
+a single dance, which we enjoyed as thoroughly as the perfection of
+floor, music, and surroundings warranted.
+
+"Oh, what a floor!" said Miranda; "if I were as fond of dancing as I
+used to be, I could dance all night; and such music! Quite heavenly, if
+it is not wicked to say so. And there is the sea, too, with the
+moonlight on it as in old days! We have been taken to an enchanted
+castle!
+
+"But there is something different. I can hardly describe my feelings.
+Why, I cannot explain, but going back to dancing now for the mere
+pleasure of it, when I have entered upon the serious duties of life,
+appears like returning to one's childish passion for dolls and
+playthings."
+
+"And yet, how many married people of both sexes are dancing now, not
+with each other either."
+
+"I see them, and I wonder. I am not surprised at married men dancing--if
+they like it. If they come at all, they may as well do so as sit down
+and get weary. But I think the married women should leave the round
+dances to the girls."
+
+"Would not balls be rather slow if the married women only danced
+squares?"
+
+"I don't see why. Yet many of the girls have no partners--wall-flowers,
+I think you call them. And that is hardly fair, surely."
+
+As this dance only came before supper, which was now near at hand, we
+danced it out. I hardly noticed until the music closed how many of the
+other couples had stopped, or that quite a crowd had collected around
+us. This was a tribute, I found, to Miranda's performance, which had an
+ease and grace of movement such as I never saw any living woman possess.
+She hardly seemed to use the ordinary means of progression. Hers was a
+half-aerial motion, in time to every note and movement of the music,
+while the rhythmic sway and yielding grace of her figure presented the
+idea of a mermaiden floating through the translucent waves rather than
+that of a mortal woman.
+
+As she swayed dreamily to the wondrous music of "Tausend und einer
+nacht," her head thrown slightly back, her parted lips, her wondrous
+eyes, her faultless form so impressed the by-standers with the ideal of
+supreme beauty, that they scarce repressed an audible murmur as the
+music ceased and the dance came to an end.
+
+When supper was announced there was the usual crush, but before the
+doors were opened a few of the more favoured guests, including the
+Frankstons and ourselves, were conducted by one of the aides-de-camp to
+a place near the viceregal party. Miranda was taken possession of by
+another of our naval friends, who seemed to think that they had special
+claims upon her, as having knowledge of her island home. I was requested
+to take in our good friend and fellow-voyager Mrs. Percival, who was
+more warm and effusive in praise of Miranda than I ever thought possible
+before her child's danger broke through the crust of her ordinary
+manner. Now nothing could have been more sisterly and unreserved than
+her tone and expression.
+
+"It has been quite a luxury to all of us to look on at that wonderful
+darling of a wife of yours dancing! The whole room, including Lady
+Rochester, was in ecstasies, I assure you. You came in for your share of
+compliments also, which I mustn't make you vain by repeating. How
+exquisitely, how charmingly she does dance! I have seen some of the best
+_danseuses_ in Europe and India--on and off the stage--and not one
+worthy to be named with her. She is a dream of grace--the very poetry of
+motion. I said so before to-night, and now every one agrees with me. It
+is rather a disappointment in some quarters that she declines to dance
+except with you. It would seem odd for some people, but being the woman
+she is I understand it."
+
+"She is free to follow her own course socially," I said. "She will soon
+decide upon her line of action, and will not be turned from it by
+outside influence. Fortunately she and my mother are much in harmony as
+to leading principles, which relieves my mind considerably."
+
+"You are fortunate in that, then, as in several other respects; may I
+add that I think you worthy of your good fortune. I trust that my boy's
+simple prayers for your welfare--and he prays for you both every
+night--may be answered."
+
+Just before the conclusion of the supper I saw that Miranda had been
+presented to his Excellency the Governor, who was standing near the
+Prince. Both of these personages were most complimentary and flattering
+in their attention to her, and when we left, as we had arranged,
+immediately after that most important function supper, leaving the girls
+to go home with Mr. and Mrs. Neuchamp, we were gratified to think that
+we could not have been more graciously received--treated even with
+distinction--and that nothing had occurred to detract in the slightest
+degree from the unwonted pleasure and modest triumph of the night.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After this, our first experience of "society," in the higher sense of
+the word, unexpectedly agreeable, as it had been, Miranda's fixed
+resolve, in which I fully concurred, was to detach ourselves from it and
+its code of obligations, except at rare intervals--to live our own
+lives, and to trouble ourselves as little as might be with the tastes
+and fancies of others.
+
+I was likely to have my time fully occupied in the development of my
+business. Miranda had, partly from observation, partly from information
+supplied by my mother and sisters, discovered that there was even in
+prosperous, easy going, naturally favoured Sydney a section of ill-fed,
+ill-clothed, ill-taught poor. "While I meet them daily, such as I never
+saw on our island, I cannot occupy myself with the vanities of life." My
+mother was delighted to find a daughter willing to co-operate with her
+in the benevolent plans of relief which she was always organising for
+the poor and the afflicted. Between them a notable increase of
+efficiency took place in the management of children's hospitals,
+soup-kitchens, and other institutions, commonly regarded with
+indifference, if not dislike, by the well-to-do members of society.
+Outside of these duties, our chief pleasure at the end of the week, when
+only we could afford the time, was a cruise in our sailing boat the
+_Harpooner_, which soon came to be known as one of the fastest in the
+harbour, as well as one that was rarely absent from the Saturday's
+regatta, when a stiff breeze was sending the spray aloft.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Our life henceforth was that of the happy nations "that have no
+history." My business prospered, and as it largely increased and
+developed from its original proportions, Captain Carryall began to tire
+of his voyages and settled down on shore.
+
+Within a year of the founding of our commercial enterprise one of the
+ideal houses we had so often pictured came into our possession. In an
+afternoon stroll, Miranda and I had ventured into a deserted garden,
+lured by the masses of crimson blooms on a great double hibiscus. The
+heavy entrance-gate was awry--the stone pillars decaying--the avenue
+weed-grown and neglected--the shrubberies trodden down and disfigured by
+browsing cattle. Exploring further behind a screen of thick-growing
+pines, we found the house,--a noble, wide-balconied freestone building,
+which I well remembered in my boyhood. Then it was inhabited, carefully
+tended, and ringing with the voices of happy boys and girls in
+holiday-time. What blight had fallen on the place, or on the pleasant
+family that once dwelt there? On the north-eastern side the land sloped
+down to a little bay, sheltered from the prevailing wind, and provided
+with pier and boat-house--all marine conveniences, in short. "Oh! if we
+had a house like this," said Miranda, clapping her hands, "how happy we
+should be! Not that I am otherwise now; but I should enjoy having this
+for our own. We could soon renovate the poor garden." I assented, but
+said nothing at the time--resolved to take counsel of our good friend
+and trusted adviser then and now--who else but Paul Frankston?
+
+From him I learned the history of the house and its old-time inmates.
+Some were dead and some were gone. The story was long. The gist of it
+was, however, that it was now in the hands of certain trustees for the
+benefit of the heirs-at-law. "I think I can find out about it," he
+concluded. "And now come down and look at my little boat. I've had some
+painting and gilding done lately; I want you all--father, mother,
+sisters, wife, and everybody--to come for a sail next Saturday. I'm
+going to have a race with Richard Jones to the Heads and back, and I
+want your wife to steer. Then we'll win, I'm sure, and we'll call in at
+Edenhall--that's the name of the old place you saw--been its name for
+fifty years or more--and we'll have another look at it."
+
+I said "Yes, by all means."
+
+The next Saturday proved to be a day specially provided by the gods for
+boat-sailing. The wind was in the right quarter, the weather fine. The
+_Sea-gull_ swept across the harbour like a veritable sea-bird, spreading
+her broad wings. The whole party had punctually assembled at our jetty
+after an early lunch. The breeze freshened as the day wore on; we had
+our friendly race against an old comrade of Mr. Frankston's--like him,
+not all ignorant of the ways of those who go down to the deep in
+ships--which we won handsomely, thanks to Miranda's steering, as Paul
+loudly averred. And that young woman herself, as the _Sea-gull_ went
+flying past her sister yacht in the concluding tack, lying down "gunnel
+under," with every inch of canvas on that she dared carry, was as eager
+and excited as if she had been paddling for her life in one of the canoe
+races of her childhood.
+
+We got back to Neutral Bay in time for afternoon tea, a little later
+than the established hour. But instead of having it on board, Paul
+proposed to have it at Edenhall, where he said he had permission to go
+whenever he pleased. He had arranged with the caretaker too.
+
+We landed at the long unused pier. "How many times have I been here
+before, in poor old Dartmoor's time," said Mr. Frankston, "and how many
+a jolly night have I spent within those old walls! Well, well! time goes
+on, and our friends, where are they? Life's a sad business at best.
+However, we can't make it better by crying over our losses. Ladies and
+gentlemen, follow me!"
+
+With a sudden change of tone and manner, Paul stepped briskly along the
+upward winding path, long unused, which led to the house. The hall door
+stood open, and passing along a noble hall and turning to the right, we
+entered a dining-room of fine proportions. In this was an improvised
+table on trestles whereon was spread a tempting collation. Two men
+servants, whom I recognised as the Marahmee butler and footman, stood
+ready to serve the company. A needful amount of sweeping and repair had
+been effected. The windows had been cleaned, and a fine view of the bay
+thereby afforded. Altogether the effect was as striking as it was
+unexpected; a general exclamation broke from the company.
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen," said Paul, "I have prepared a surprise for you,
+I know; but oblige me by making yourselves at home for the present, and
+dining with me in this informal fashion--I will explain by and by."
+
+The day was nearly spent. It would probably be near the time of
+twilight, which in summer in Australia is nearer nine o'clock than
+eight, before we reached our homes. So the majority of the guests hailed
+the idea as one of Paul's eccentric notions with which he was wont to
+amuse his intimates. The Marahmee champagne was proverbial, and after a
+reasonable number of corks had been drawn a progressive degree of
+cheerfulness was reached. Paul rose to his feet, and requested the usual
+solemnities to be observed, as he was about to propose a toast. "Those
+of my friends who have been here before, in its happier times, will
+remember the former owner of this once pleasant home. Little is left now
+save the evidences of decay and desertion--the memories of a long past
+happy day. But there is no reason why it should not be again inhabited,
+again be filled with pleasant and pleasure-giving inhabitants. It is
+solid and substantial; if somewhat old-fashioned, all the better I say.
+There was no jerry building in the old days. The garden is here--to be
+easily renewed in beauty--the jetty, and the boat-house. The sea is
+here, much as I remember when as a boy I used to get 'congewoi' for bait
+off those very rocks."
+
+"Hear, hear!" from the guests, and Mr. Richard Jones.
+
+"And now I come to a piece of news which I am sure you will hear with
+pleasure. The house and grounds have been purchased by a young friend of
+mine, whose health, with that of his charming wife, I now ask you to
+drink with all the honours. The health of Mr. and Mrs. Telfer, their
+long life and prosperity! and may we all have many as pleasant a sail
+round the harbour as we have had to-day, and come here to enjoy
+ourselves at the end of it."
+
+The applause which followed was tumultuous. Paul has sprung a surprise
+upon his guests with a vengeance. I was as much astonished as anybody;
+for though I knew that he had promised to make inquiries about the price
+put upon the property, I had no idea that he would go further in the
+matter, still less that he would purchase it on my account, as it was
+evident that he had done.
+
+I said a few words, chiefly to the effect that it seemed to me quite
+unnecessary to go through the form of exerting myself for my advancement
+in life, as my friends, Mr. Frankston and Captain Carryall, were bent on
+making my fortune for me. I trusted to prove not wholly unworthy of such
+unselfish friendship, and thanking them all in the name of my wife and
+myself, trusted that a meeting like this would often conclude a happy
+day such as we had just completed. As for Miranda, she went up to the
+old man, and placing her hand in his, looked up into his face with an
+expression of heartfelt gratitude, which hardly needed the addition of
+her words: "You have made us both perfectly happy--what can I say? My
+heart will not let me speak. We have nothing to wish for now in this
+world."
+
+The old man looked at her with an expression of mingled admiration and
+paternal affection. "I have two daughters now," he said, "and two sons;
+I was always wishing to have another pair, to gossip with when Antonia
+and Ernest were away. Now I have found them I am sure. The only thing we
+want now is another boat."
+
+Miranda's eyes glistened at the allusion, and she looked as if she was
+only prevented, by a half-instinctive doubt as to the fitness of the
+occasion, from embracing Paul before the assembled company.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Years have passed since that day. Children's voices have long since
+echoed in the wide verandahs and amid the shrubberies of Edenhall. The
+house, thoroughly renovated, is one of the most comfortable, if not the
+most aristocratic, of the many embowered mansions which look over the
+Haven Beauteous.
+
+My boys have been "water babies" from earliest childhood, and we can
+turn out a crew not easy to beat, particularly when their mother can be
+persuaded to steer. My girls have inherited a large proportion of their
+mother's fearless spirit, though people say not one has equalled her in
+beauty. Their partners in the dance, however, appear to consider them
+sufficiently good-looking, if one may judge by the competition which
+their appearance at balls usually produces.
+
+Our business, always aided by the cool heads and steady courage of the
+senior partners, has increased, with the growth of the city of Sydney
+and the development of the island trade, beyond all hope and
+expectation. I am a rich man now, and, indeed, somewhat in danger of the
+occasional mood of discontent with the uneventful, unvarying tide of
+success upon which life's barque appears ever to float. But one look at
+Miranda's face, serenely happy in her children, in her daily life of
+charity and almsgiving, in the devoted love and trust of my parents, is
+all-sufficient to banish all vagrant ideas.
+
+Sometimes, in the train of unbidden fancies which throng the portals of
+the mind, the scenes and sounds of a far clime claim right of audience.
+Again I see the paradisal woodland, the mysterious mountain forest, the
+ceaseless moan of the billow upon the reef sounds in my ear; while
+forms, now fair, now fierce, flit, shadow-like, across the scene. I hear
+again the soft voices of the island girls as in frolic race they troop
+to beach or stream. I see the sad, bright eyes of Lālia, or mark the
+fierce regard of Hope Island Nellie as she stands with bared bosom full
+in the track of the deadly arrow flight. I hear the lion roar of Hayston
+as he quells a mutiny, or towers, alone and unarmed, above a crowd of
+hostile islanders. I shudder in thought at the dangers which I have
+escaped. Once more sounds from afar the weird voice of the tempest in
+the midnight wreck of the _Leonora_. Lastly, the harbour lights
+disappear as I sit in my cane lounge in the verandah of Edenhall, and in
+place of the wooded heights and distant city I see the breakers upon the
+reef of Ocean Island, and discern a solitary figure in the stern of a
+small boat sailing out into the illimitable gloom; I fall a musing upon
+the mysterious problems of Fate--of man's life and the strange
+procession of circumstance--until the hour strikes and I retire. Yet my
+thoughts are still dominated by the majestic figure of the Captain,
+grand in his natural good qualities, grand in his fearless courage, his
+generosity, his friendship--grand even in his vices. He was not without
+resemblance to a yet more famous corsair, immortalised by the poet--
+
+ Who died and left a name to other times,
+ Link'd with one virtue and a thousand crimes.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+The following corrections to spelling or punctuation have been made:
+
+ Page 59 Added missing period "."
+ Page 119 "Utwè" corrected to "Utwé"
+ Page 128 "for'rard" corrected to "for'ard"
+ Page 129 "Likiak Sa" corrected to "Likiak Sâ"
+ Page 135 "beeches" corrected to "beaches"
+ Page 142 "Likiak Sa" corrected to "Likiak Sâ"
+ Page 171 "turtle" corrected to "turtles"
+ Page 174 "Tulpe" corrected to "Tulpé"
+ Page 196 Added missing period "."
+ Page 205 "courier" corrected to "courrier"
+ "filibustier" corrected to "flibustier"
+ Page 232 "itelf" corrected to "itself"
+ Page 309 "brough" corrected to "brought"
+
+Instances of inconsistent hyphenation have been left intact.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Modern Buccaneer, by Rolf Boldrewood
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MODERN BUCCANEER ***
+
+***** This file should be named 35431-0.txt or 35431-0.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/4/3/35431/
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Erica Pfister-Altschul and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This book was produced from scanned images of public
+domain material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/35431-0.zip b/35431-0.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2984843
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431-0.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/35431-8.txt b/35431-8.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5f0c193
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431-8.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11869 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Modern Buccaneer, by Rolf Boldrewood
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Modern Buccaneer
+
+Author: Rolf Boldrewood
+
+Release Date: February 28, 2011 [EBook #35431]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MODERN BUCCANEER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Erica Pfister-Altschul and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This book was produced from scanned images of public
+domain material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A MODERN BUCCANEER
+
+[Illustration]
+
+I desire to acknowledge my indebtedness to Mr. Louis Becke, author of
+_By Reef and Palm_, as to the South Sea Island portion of _A Modern
+Buccaneer_, with the exception of the chapter headed "Poisoned Arrows,"
+which is founded upon the diary of a Whaling Cruise by my late father.
+
+[Illustration: _Boldrewood's "Modern Buccaneer"_ _Walker & Boutall sc._]
+
+
+
+
+A MODERN BUCCANEER
+
+
+BY
+ROLF BOLDREWOOD
+
+AUTHOR OF 'ROBBERY UNDER ARMS'
+
+
+London
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO.
+AND NEW YORK
+1894
+
+_All rights reserved_
+
+
+COPYRIGHT
+1894
+BY
+MACMILLAN AND CO.
+
+
+_First Edition (3 Vols.) April 1894_
+_Second Edition (1 Vol.) October 1894_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ MY FIRST VOYAGE 1
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+ WILLIAM HENRY HAYSTON 13
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+ IN SAMOA 20
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ SAMOA TO MILL 32
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+ THE BRIG LEONORA 41
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ CAPTAIN BEN PEESE 62
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ CRUISING AMONG THE CAROLINES 74
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ POISONED ARROWS 87
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ HALCYON DAYS 111
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+ MURDER AND SHIPWRECK 121
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ A KING AND QUEEN 159
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ "MY LORDS OF THE ADMIRALTY" 189
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ H.M.S. ROSARIO 206
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ NORFOLK ISLAND--ARCADIA 225
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ EPITHALAMIUM 255
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ A SWIM FOR LIFE 277
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ "OUR JACK'S COME HOME TO-DAY" 303
+
+
+
+
+A MODERN BUCCANEER
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MY FIRST VOYAGE
+
+
+Born near Sydney harbour, nursery of the seamen of the South, I could
+swim almost as soon as I could walk, and sail a boat at an age when most
+children are forbidden to go near the water. We came of a salt-water
+stock. My father had been a sea-captain for the greater part of his
+life, after a youth spent in every kind of craft, from a cutter to a
+man-of-war. No part of the habitable globe was unfamiliar to him: from
+India to the Pole, from Russia to the Brazils, from the China Sea to the
+Bight of Benin--every harbour was a home.
+
+He had nursed one crew frost-bitten in Archangel, when the blankets had
+to be cut up for mittens; had watched by the beds of another, decimated
+by yellow fever in Jamaica; had marked up the "death's-head and
+cross-bones" in the margin of the log-book, to denote the loss by
+tetanus of the wounded by poisoned arrows on Bougainville Island; and
+had fought hand to hand with the stubborn Maories of Taranaki. Wounds
+and death, privation and pestilence, wrecks and tempests were with him
+household words, close comrades. What were they but symbols,
+nature-pictures, the cards dealt by fate? You lost the stake or rose a
+winner. Men who had played the game of life all round knew this. He
+accepted fortune, fair or foul, as he did the weather--a favour or a
+force of nature to be enjoyed or defied. But to be commented upon, much
+less complained of? Hardly. And as fate had willed it, the worn though
+unwearied sea-king had seen fit to heave anchor, so to speak, and moor
+his vessels--for he owned more than one--in this the fairest haven of
+the southern main. Once before in youth had he seen and never forgotten
+the frowning headlands, beyond which lay so peerless a harbour, such
+wealth of anchorage, so mild a clime, so boundless an extent of virgin
+soil; from which he, "a picked man of countries," even then prophesied
+wealth, population, and empire in the future.
+
+Here, then, a generation later, he brought his newly-wedded wife. Here
+was I, Hilary Telfer, destined to see the light.
+
+From the mid-city street of Sydney is but a stone's throw to the wharves
+and quays, magnificent water-ways in which those ocean palaces of the
+present day, the liners of the P. and O. and the Orient, lie moored, and
+but a plank divides the impatient passenger from the busy mart. Not that
+such stately ships were visitors in my school-boy days. Sydney was then
+a grass-grown, quiet seaport, boasting some fifty thousand inhabitants,
+with a fleet of vessels small in size and of humble tonnage.
+
+But, though unpretending of aspect, to the eager-hearted, imaginative
+school-boy they were rich as Spanish galleons. For were they not laden
+with uncounted treasure, weighed down with wealth beyond the fabled
+hoards of the pirates of the Spanish Main, upon whose dark deeds and
+desperate adventures I had so greedily feasted?
+
+Each vessel that swept through the Heads at midnight, or marked the
+white-walled mansions and pine-crowned promontories rise faintly out of
+the pearl-hued dawn, was for me a volume filled with romance and
+mystery. Sat there not on the forecastle of that South Sea whaler,
+silent, scornful, imperturbable, the young Maori chief, nursing in his
+breast the deep revenge for a hasty blow, which on the return voyage to
+New Zealand and the home of his tribe was to take the form of a massacre
+of the whole ship's company?
+
+Yes, captain and officers, passengers and crew, every man on that ship
+paid the death penalty for the mate's hard word and blow. The insult to
+a Rangatira must be wiped out in blood.
+
+The trader of the South Sea Islands was a marine marvel which I was
+never weary of studying.
+
+I generally managed to make friends with one or other of the crew, who
+permitted me to explore the lower deck and feed my fancy upon the
+treasures from that paradise with which the voyager from an enchanted
+ocean had surely freighted his vessel. Strange bows and arrows--the
+latter poison-tipped, as I was always assured, perhaps as a
+precautionary measure--piles of shaddocks, tons of bananas, idols,
+skulls, spears, clubs, woven cloth of curious fabric, an endless store
+of unfamiliar foreign commodities.
+
+Among the crew were always a few half-castes mingled with the grizzled,
+weather-beaten British sea-dogs. Perhaps a boat's crew of the islanders
+themselves, born sailors, and as much at home in water as on land.
+
+Seldom did I leave, however unwillingly, the deck of one of these fairy
+barques, without registering a vow that the year in which I left school
+should see me a gay sailor-boy, bound on my first voyage in search of
+dangerous adventures and that splendidly untrammelled career which was
+so surely to result in fortune and distinction.
+
+Then the whaleships! In that old time, Sydney harbour was rarely without
+a score or more of them. In their way they were portents and wonders of
+the deep. Fortune failed them at times. The second year might find them
+far from full of the high-priced whale-oil. The capricious cetacean was
+not to be depended upon in migration from one "whaling ground" to
+another. Sometimes a "favourite" ship--lucky in spite of
+everything--would come flaunting in after an absence of merely eleven or
+twelve months--such were the _Florentia_ and the _Proteus_--full to the
+hatches, while three long years would have elapsed before her consort,
+sailing on the same day and fitted up much in the same way, would crawl
+sadly into Snail's or Neutral Bay, battered and tempest-tossed, but
+three-quarter full even then, a mark for the rough wit of the port, to
+pay off an impoverished crew and confront unsmiling or incredulous
+owners.
+
+Every kind of disaster would have befallen her. When she got fast to a
+ninety-barrel whale, her boats would be stoven in. When all was well, no
+cheery shout of "There she spouts!" would be heard for days. Savage
+islanders would attack her doggedly, and hardly be beaten off. Every
+kind of evil omen would be justified, until the crew came to believe
+that they were sailing with an Australian Vanderdecken, and would never
+see a port again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The grudging childish years had rolled by, and now I was seventeen years
+of age--fitted, as I fully believed, to begin the battle of life in
+earnest, and ardent for the fray. As to my personal qualifications for a
+life on the ocean wave, and well I knew no other would have contented
+me, let the reader judge. At the age when tall lads are often found to
+have out-grown their strength, I had attained the fullest stature of
+manhood; wide-chested and muscular, constant exercise with oar and sail
+had developed my frame and toughened my sinews, until I held myself,
+with some reason, to be a match in strength and activity for most men I
+was likely to meet.
+
+In the rowing contests to which Australians of the shore have always
+been devoted, more particularly the privileged citizens of Sydney, I had
+always taken a leading part. More than once, in a hard-fought finish,
+had I been lifted out fainting or insensible.
+
+My curling fair hair and blue eyes bore token of our Norse blood and
+Anglo-Norman descent. The family held a tradition that our surname came
+from Taillefer, the warrior minstrel who rode in the forefront of Duke
+William's army at Hastings. Strangely, too, a passionate love of song
+had always clung to the race. "Sir Hilary charged at Agincourt," as
+saith the ballad. Roving and adventure ran in the blood for generations
+uncounted.
+
+For all that trouble arose when I announced my resolve. My schoolmates
+had settled down in the offices of merchants, bankers, and lawyers, why
+could not I do the same? My mother's tears fell fast as she tried in
+vain to dissuade me from my resolution. My father was neutral. He knew
+well the intensity of the feeling. "If born in a boy," he said, "as it
+was in me, it is his fate--nothing on earth can turn him from it; if you
+stop him you will make a bad landsman and spoil a good sailor. Let him
+go! he must take his chance like another man. God is above the wave as
+over the earth. If it be his fate, the perils of the deep will be no
+more than the breezes of the bay."
+
+It was decided at length that I should be allowed to go on my way. To
+the islands of the South Pacific my heart pointed as truly as ever did
+compass needle to the North.
+
+I had read every book that had ever been written about them, from
+Captain Cook's _Voyages_ to _The Mutiny of the Bounty_. In my dreams how
+many times had I seen the purple mountains, the green glow of the fairy
+woodlands, had bathed in the crystal streams, and heard the endless surf
+music on the encircling reef, cheered the canoes loaded with fruit
+racing for their market in the crimson flush of the paradisal morn, or
+lingered amidst the Aidenns of the charmed main, where the
+flower-crowned children of nature--maidens beauteous as angels--roamed
+in careless happiness and joyous freedom! It was an entrancing picture.
+
+Why should I stay in this prosaic land, where men wore the hideous
+costume of their forefathers, and women, false to all canons of art,
+still clung to their outworn garb?
+
+What did I care for the sheep and cattle, the tending of which enriched
+my compatriots?
+
+A world of romance, mystery, and adventure lay open and inviting. The
+die was cast. The spell of the sea was upon me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My father's accumulations had amounted to a reasonable capital, as
+things went in those Arcadian non-speculative days. He was not
+altogether without a commercial faculty, which had enabled him to make
+prudent investments in city and suburban lands. These the steadily
+improving markets were destined to turn into value as yet undreamed of.
+
+It was not thought befitting that I should ship as an apprentice or
+foremost hand, though I was perfectly willing, even eager, for a start
+in any way. A more suitable style of equipment was arranged. An
+agreement was entered into with the owner of a vessel bound for San
+Francisco vi Honolulu, by which a proportion of the cargo was purchased
+in my name, and I was, after some discussion, duly installed as
+supercargo. It may be thought that I was too young for such a
+responsible post. But I was old for my age. I had a man's courage and
+ambition. I had studied navigation to some purpose; could "hand reef and
+steer," and in the management of a boat, or acquaintance with every
+rope, sail, and spar on board of a vessel, I held myself, if not an A.
+B., fully qualified for that rank and position.
+
+Words would fail to describe my joy and exultation when I found myself
+at length on blue water, in a vessel which I might fairly describe as
+"our little craft," bound for foreign parts and strange cities. I
+speedily made the acquaintance of the crew--a strangely assembled lot,
+mostly shady as to character and reckless as to speech, but without
+exception true "sailor men." At that time of day, employment on the high
+seas was neither so easy to obtain nor so well paid as at present. The
+jolly tars of the period were therefore less independent and inclined to
+cavil at minor discomforts. Once shipped, they worked with a will, and
+but little fault could be found with their courage or seamanship.
+
+Among other joys and delights which I promised myself, had been a closer
+acquaintance with the life and times of a picturesque and romantic
+personage, known and feared, if all tales were true, throughout the
+South Seas. This was the famous, the celebrated Captain Hayston, whose
+name was indeed a spell to conjure with from New Zealand to the Line
+Islands.
+
+Much that could excite a boyish imagination had been related to me
+concerning him. One man professing an intimate knowledge had described
+him as "a real pirate." Could higher praise be awarded? I put together
+all the tales I had heard about him--his great stature and vast
+strength, his reckless courage, his hair-breadth escapes, his wonderful
+brig,--cousin german, no doubt, to the "long low wicked-looking craft"
+in the pages of _Tom Cringle's Log_, and other veracious historiettes,
+"nourishing a youth sublime," in the long bright summer days of old;
+those days when we fished and bathed, ate oysters, and read alternately
+from early morn till the lighthouse on the South Head flashed out! My
+heroes had been difficult to find hitherto; they had mostly eluded my
+grasp. But this one was real and tangible. He would be fully up to
+description. His splendid scorn of law and order, mercy or moderation,
+his unquestioned control over mutinous crews and fierce islanders,
+illumined by occasional homicides and abductions, all these splendours
+and glories so stirred my blood, that I felt, if I could only once
+behold my boyhood's idol, I should not have lived in vain. Among the
+crew, fortunately for me as I then thought, was a sailor who had
+actually known in the flesh the idol of my daydreams.
+
+"And it's the great Captain Hayston you'd like to hear about," said Dan
+Daly, as we sat together in the foc'sle head of the old barque
+_Clarkstone_, before we made Honolulu. Dan had been a South Sea
+beach-comber and whaler; moreover, had been marooned, according to his
+own account, escaping only by a miracle; a trader's head-man--once,
+indeed, more than half-killed by a rush of natives on the station. With
+every kind of dangerous experience short of death and burial he was
+familiar. On which account I regarded him with a fine boyish admiration.
+What a night was it, superbly beautiful, when I hung upon his words, as
+we sat together gazing over the moonlit water! We had changed our course
+owing to some dispute about food between captain and crew, and were now
+heading for the island of Rurutu, where fresh provisions were
+attainable. As I listened spellbound and entranced, the barque's bows
+slowly rose and fell, the wavering moonlight streamed down upon the
+deck, the sails, the black masses of cordage, while ghostly shadows
+moved rhythmically, in answering measure to every motion of the vessel.
+
+"You must know," said Dan, in grave commencement, "it's nigh upon five
+years ago, when I woke up one morning in the 'Calaboose' as they call
+the 'lock-up' in Papiete, with a broken head. It's the port of the
+island of Tahiti. I was one of the hands of the American brig
+_Cherokee_, and we'd put in there on our way to San Francisco from
+Sydney. The skipper had given us liberty, so we went ashore and began
+drinking and having some fun. There was some wahines in it, in
+coorse--that's whats they call the women in thim parts. Somehow or other
+I got a knock on the head, and remimbered nothing more until I woke up
+in the 'Calaboose,' where I was charged with batin' a native till he was
+nigh dead. To make a long story short, I got six months 'hard,' and the
+ship sailed away without me.
+
+"When I'd served my time, I walks into the American Consulate and asks
+for a passage to California.
+
+"'Clear out,' says the Consul, 'you red-headed varmint, I have nothing
+to say to you, after beating an inoffensive native in the manner you
+did.'
+
+"'By the powers,' says I to myself, 'you're a big blackguard, Dan Daly,
+when you've had a taste of liquor, but if I remimber batin' any man
+black, white, or whitey-brown, may I be keel-hauled. Howsomdever, that
+says nothing, the next thing's a new ship.'
+
+"So I steps down to the wharf and aboord a smart-looking schooner that
+belonged to Carl Brander, a big merchant in Tahiti, as rich as the
+Emperor of China, they used to say. The mate was aboord. 'Do you want
+any hands?' says I.
+
+"'We do,' says he. 'You've a taking colour of hair for this trade, my
+lad.'
+
+"'How's that?'
+
+"'Why, the girls down at Rimitara and Rurutu will just make love to you
+in a body. Red hair's the making of a man in thim parts.'
+
+"Upon this I signed articles for six months in the schooner, and next
+day we sailed for a place called Bora-bora in the north-west. We didn't
+stay there long, but got under weigh for Rurutu next day. We weren't
+hardly clear of Bora-bora when we sights a brigantine away to windward
+and bearing down on us before the wind. As soon as she got close enough,
+she signalled that she wanted to send a boat aboard, so we hove to and
+waited.
+
+"Our skipper had a look at the man who was steering the boat, whin he
+turns as pale as a sheet, and says he to the mate, 'It's that devil
+Hayston! and that's the brigantine he and Captain Ben Peese ran away
+with from Panama.'
+
+"However, up alongside came the boat, and as fine a looking man as ever
+I set eyes on steps aboord amongst us.
+
+"'How do ye do, Captain?' says he. 'Where from and whither bound?'
+
+"The skipper was in a blue funk, I could see, for this Bully Hayston had
+a terrible bad name, so he answers him quite polite and civil.
+
+"'Can you spare me half a coil of two-inch Manilla?' asks the stranger,
+'and I'll pay you your own price?'
+
+"The skipper got him the rope, the strange captain pays for it, and they
+goes below for a glass of grog. In half an hour, up on deck they comes
+again, our skipper half-seas over and laughing fit to kill himself.
+
+"'By George!' says he, 'you're the drollest card I ever came across.
+D--n me! if I wouldn't like to take a trip with you myself!' and with
+that he struggles to the skylight and falls in a heap across it.
+
+"'Who's the mate of this schooner?' sings out Hayston, in such a changed
+voice that it made me jump.
+
+"'I am!' said the mate, who was standing in the waist.
+
+"'Then where's that Mangareva girl of yours? Come, look lively! I know
+all about her from that fellow there,' pointing to the skipper.
+
+"The mate had a young slip of a girl on board. She belonged to an island
+called Mangareva, and was as pretty a creature, with her big soft eyes
+and long curling hair, as ever I'd seen in my life. The mate just trated
+her the same as he would the finest lady, and was going to marry her at
+the next island where there was a missionary. When he heard who the
+strange captain was, he'd planted her down in the hold and covered her
+up with mats. He was a fine manly young chap, and as soon as he saw
+Hayston meant to take 'Taloo,' that was her name, he pulls out a pistol
+and says, 'Down in the hold, Captain Hayston! and as long as God gives
+me breath you'll never lay a finger on her. I'll put a bullet through
+her head rather than see her fall into the hands of a man like you.' The
+strange captain just gives a laugh and pulls his long moustache. Then he
+walks up to the mate and slaps him on the shoulder.
+
+"'You've got the right grit in you,' says he. 'I'd like to have a man
+like you on board my ship;' and the next second he gripped the pistol
+out of the mate's hand and sent it spinning along the deck. The mate
+fought like a tiger, but he was a child in the other man's grasp. All
+the time Hayston kept up that devilish laugh of his. Then, as he saw me
+and Tom Lynch coming to help the mate, he says something in a foreign
+lingo, and the boat's crew jumps on board amongst us, every one of them
+with a pistol. But for all that they seems a decent lot of chaps.
+
+"Hayston still held the mate by his wrists, laughing in his face as if
+he was having the finest fun in the world, when up comes Taloo out of
+the hold by way of the foc'sle bulk-head, with her long hair hanging
+over her shoulders, and the tears streaming down her cheeks.
+
+"She flings herself down at the Captain's feet, and clasps her arms
+round his knees.
+
+"'No, no! no kill Ted!' she kept on crying, just about all the English
+she knew.
+
+"'You pretty little thing,' says he, 'I wouldn't hurt your Ted for the
+world.' Then he lets go the mate and takes her hand and shakes it.
+
+"'What's your name, my man?'
+
+"'Ted Bannington!' says the mate.
+
+"'Well, Ted Bannington, look here; if you'd showed any funk I'd have
+taken the girl in spite of you and your whole ship's company. If a man
+don't think a woman good enough to fight for, he deserves to lose her if
+a better man comes along.'
+
+"Taloo put out one little hand, the other hand and arm was round the
+mate's neck, shaking like a leaf too.
+
+"'I'm so sorry if I've hurt your wrists,' says he to the mate, most
+polite. Then he gave some orders to the boat's crew, who pulled away to
+the brigantine. After they had gone he walked aft with the mate, the two
+chatting like the best friends in the world, and I'll be hanged if that
+same mate wasn't laughing fit to split at some of the yarns the other
+chap was spinning, sitting on the skylight, with the Captain lying at
+their feet as drunk as Davy's sow.
+
+"Presently the boat comes alongside agin, and a chap walks aft and gives
+the strange captain a parcel.
+
+"'You'll please accept this as a friendly gift from Bully Hayston,' says
+he to the mate; and then he takes a ten-dollar piece out of his pocket
+and gives it to Taloo. 'Drill a hole in it, and hang it round the neck
+of your first child for luck.'
+
+"He shakes hands with her and the mate, jumps into the boat, and steers
+for the brigantine. In another ten minutes she squared away and stood to
+the south-east.
+
+"'Come here, Dan,' says the mate to me; 'see what he's given me!' 'Twas
+a beautiful chronometer bran new, in a splendid case. The mate said he'd
+never seen one like it before.
+
+"Well, that was the first time I ever seen Bully Hayston, though I did a
+few times afterwards, and the brigantine too.
+
+"They do say he's a thundering scoundrel, but a pleasanter-spoken
+gentleman I never met in my life."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+WILLIAM HENRY HAYSTON
+
+
+These were the first particulars I ever heard of the man who had
+afterwards so great an influence upon my destiny that no incident of my
+sojourn with him will ever be forgotten. A man with whom I went into the
+jaws of death and returned unhurt. A man who, no matter what his faults
+may have been, possessed qualities which, had they been devoted to
+higher aims in life, might have rendered him the hero of a nation.
+
+Our Captain's altercation with the crew nearly blossomed into a mutiny.
+This was compromised, however, one of the conditions of peace being that
+we should touch at Rurutu, one of the five islands forming the Tubuai
+group. This we accordingly did, and, steering for San Francisco,
+experienced no further adventures until we sighted the Golden Gate. When
+our cargo was sold I left the ship.
+
+My occupation being from this time gone, I used to stroll down to the
+wharf from my lodgings in Harvard Street to look at the foreign vessels.
+Wandering aimlessly, I one day made the acquaintance of a "hard-shell
+down-easter," with the truly American name of Slocum, master of a
+venerable-looking rate called the _Constitution_. He himself was a
+dried-up specimen of the old style of Yankee captain, with a face that
+resembled in colour a brown painted oilskin, and hands like an
+albatross's feet. He had been running for a number of years to Tahiti,
+taking out timber and returning with island produce.
+
+Not being a proud man, he permitted me to stand drinks for him in a
+well-known liquor saloon in Third Street, where we had long yarns over
+his trading adventures in the Pacific.
+
+One Sunday morning, I remember it as if yesterday, we were sitting in a
+private room off the bar. Slocum was advising me to come with him on his
+next trip and share the luxuries of the _Constitution's_ table, for
+which he asked the modest sum of a hundred dollars to Tahiti and back,
+when we heard some one enter and address the bar-keeper. "Great Scott!"
+came the reply, "it's Captain Hayston! How air you, Captain, and whar
+d'ye come from?"
+
+"I've come to try and find Ben Peese. We're going to form a new station
+at Arrecifu. He left me at Yap in the Carolines to come here and buy a
+schooner with a light draught; but he never turned up; I'm afraid that
+after he left Yap he met with some accident."
+
+The moment Slocum heard the stranger's voice his face underwent a
+marvellous change. All his assurance seemed to have left him. He
+whispered to me, "That's Bully Hayston! I guess I'll lie low till he
+clears out. I don't want to be seen with him, as it'll sorter damage my
+character. Besides, he's such a vi'lent critter."
+
+The next moment we heard the new-comer say to the barman,--
+
+"Say, Fred, I've been down to that old schooner the _Constitution_, but
+couldn't find Slocum aboard. They told me he often came here to get a
+cheap drink. I want him to take a letter to Tahiti. Do you know where he
+is?"
+
+Slocum saw it was of no use attempting to "lie low," so with a nervous
+hand he opened the door.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I've knocked about the world a good deal since I sat in the little back
+parlour in Third Street, Frisco, but neither before nor since I left
+Strong's Island have I seen such a splendid specimen of humanity as the
+man who then entered.
+
+Much that I am about to relate I learned during my later experience.
+
+William Henry Hayston was born in one of the Western States of America,
+and received his education at Norfolk, Virginia. As his first
+appointment he obtained a cadetship in the United States Revenue
+Service, subsequently retiring to become captain of one of the large
+lake steamers.
+
+In '55 he joined the navy, serving with great gallantry under Admiral
+Farragut. The reported reason of his leaving the service was a
+disagreement with Captain Carroll, afterwards commander of the rebel
+cruiser _Shenandoah_. So bitter was their feud, that years afterwards,
+when that vessel was in the South Pacific, her commander made no secret
+of his ardent wish to meet Hayston and settle accounts with him, even to
+the death.
+
+Hayston was a giant in stature: six feet four in height, with a chest
+that measured, from shoulder to shoulder, forty-nine inches; and there
+was nothing clumsy about him, as his many antagonists could testify. His
+strength was enormous, and he was proud of it. But, apart from his
+magnificent physique, Hayston was one of the most remarkably handsome
+men about this time that I have ever seen. His hair fell in clusters
+across his forehead, above laughing eyes of the brightest blue; his nose
+was a bold aquiline; a well-cut, full-lipped mouth that could set like
+fate was covered by a huge moustache. A Vandyke beard completed the
+_tout ensemble_ of a visage which, once seen, was rarely forgotten by
+friend or foe. Taking him altogether, what with face, figure, and
+manner, he had a personal magnetism only too fatally attractive, as many
+a man--ay, and woman too--knew to their cost. He was my beau ideal of a
+naval officer--bold and masterful, yet soft and pleasant-voiced withal
+when he chose to conciliate. His sole disfigurement--not wholly so,
+perhaps, in the eye of his admirers--was a sabre cut which extended from
+the right temple to his ear.
+
+For his character, the one controlling influence in his life was an
+ungovernable temper. It was utterly beyond his mastery. Let any one
+offend him, and though he might have been smiling the instant before,
+the blue eyes would suddenly turn almost black, his face become a deep
+purple. Then it was time for friend or foe to beware. For I never saw
+the man that could stand up to him. Strangely enough, I have sometimes
+seen him go laughing through a fight until he had finished his man. At
+other times his cyclone of a mood would discharge itself without warning
+or restraint. It was probably this appalling temper that gained him a
+character for being bloodthirsty; for, once roused, nothing could stop
+him. Yet I do him the justice to say that I never once witnessed an act
+of deliberate cruelty at his hands. In the islands he was surrounded by
+a strange collection of the greatest scoundrels unhung. There, of
+necessity, his rule was one of "blood and iron."
+
+And now for his pleasing traits. He was one of the most fascinating
+companions possible. He possessed a splendid baritone voice and affected
+the songs of Schumann and the German composers. He was an accomplished
+musician, playing on the pianoforte, violin, and, in default of a better
+instrument, even on the accordion. He spoke German, French, and Spanish,
+as well as the island languages, fluently. Generous to a fault, in spite
+of repeated lessons, he would insist on trusting again and again those
+in whom he believed. But once convinced that he had been falsely dealt
+with, the culprit would have fared nearly as well in the jaws of a
+tiger. He was utterly without fear, under any and all circumstances,
+even the most desperate, and was naturally a hater of every phase of
+meanness or cowardice. But one more trait, and my sketch is complete.
+He had a fatal weakness where the fairer sex was concerned. To one of
+them he owed his first war with society. To the consequences of that
+false step might have been traced the reckless career which dishonoured
+his manhood and led to the final catastrophe.
+
+"Come, gentlemen!" he said on entering--in so pleasant and kindly a
+tone, that I felt drawn towards him at once, "let us sit down and have a
+drink together."
+
+We went back to the room, Slocum, I could see, feeling intensely
+uncomfortable, fidgeting and twisting. As we sat down I took a good look
+at the man of whom I had heard so much. Heard of his daring deeds in the
+China seas; of a wild career in the Pacific Islands; of his bold
+defiance of law and order; besides strange tales of mysterious cruises
+in the north-west among the Caroline and Pellew Islands.
+
+"And how air yer, Captain?" said Slocum with forced hilarity.
+
+"I'm devilish glad to see _you_," replied Hayston; "what about that
+barque of mine you stripped down at the Marshalls, you porpoise-hided
+skunk?"
+
+"True as gospel, Captain, I didn't know she was yours. There was a
+trader at Arnu, you know the man, an Italian critter, but they call him
+George Brown, and he says to me, 'Captain Slocum,' says he, 'there's a
+big lump of a timber-ship cast away on one of them reefs near Alluk, and
+if you can get up to her you'll make a powerful haul. She's new
+coppered, and hasn't broke up yet.' So I gave him fifty dollars, and
+promised him four hundred and fifty more if his news was reliable; if
+that ain't the solid facts of the case I hope I may be paralysed."
+
+"Oh! so it was George who put you on to take my property, was it? and he
+my trader too; well, Slocum, I can't blame you. But now I'll tell you my
+'_facts_': that barque was wrecked; the skipper and crew were picked up
+by Ben Peese and taken to China. He bought the barque for me for four
+hundred dollars, and I beat up to Arnu, and asked George if he would get
+me fifty Arnu natives to go with me to the wreck and either try and
+float it or strip her. The d--d Marcaroni-eating sweep promised to get
+me the men in a week or two, so I squared away for Madura, where I had
+two traders. Bad weather came on, and when I got back to Arnu, the
+fellow told me that a big canoe had come down from the Radacks and
+reported that the barque had gone to pieces. The infernal scoundrel! Had
+I known that he had put you on to her I'd have taken it out of his hide.
+Who is this young gentleman?"
+
+"A friend of mine, Captain, thinking of takin' a voyage with me for
+recruitin' of his health," and the lantern-jawed Slocum introduced us.
+
+Drawing his seat up to me, Hayston placed his hand on my shoulder, and
+said with a laugh, looking intensely at Slocum, who was nervously
+twisting his fingers, "Oh! a recruitin' of his health, is he? or rather
+recruitin' of your pocket? I'm glad I dropped in on you and made his
+acquaintance. I could tell him a few droll stories about the pious
+Slocum."
+
+Slocum said nothing, but laughed in a sickly way.
+
+Leaning forward with a smiling face, he said, "What did you clear out of
+my barque, you good Slocum?"
+
+"Nigh on a thousand dollars."
+
+"You know you lie, Slocum! you must have done better than that."
+
+"I kin show my receipts if you come aboard," he answered in shaky tones.
+
+"Well, I'll take your word, you sanctimonious old shark, and five
+hundred dollars for my share."
+
+"Why, sartin, Captain! that's fair and square," said the other, as his
+sallow face lighted up, "I'll give you the dollars to-morrow morning."
+
+"Right you are. Come to the Lick house at ten o'clock. Say, my pious
+friend, what would our good Father Damien think if I told him that
+pretty story about the six Solomon Island people you picked up at sea,
+and sold to a sugar planter?"
+
+The trader's visage turned green, as with a deprecating gesture towards
+me he seemed to implore Hayston's silence.
+
+"Ha! ha! don't get scared. Business matters, my lad," he said, turning
+to me his merry blue eyes, and patting me on the back. "Where are you
+staying here?"
+
+I told him. Then as we were rising to go, speaking to me, and looking
+Slocum in the face, he said, "Don't have any truck with Master Slocum,
+he'll skin you of every dollar you've got, and like as not turn you
+adrift at some place you can't get away from. Isn't that so, my saintly
+friend?"
+
+Slocum flinched like a whipped hound, but said nothing. Then, shaking
+hands with me, and saying if ever I came to the Pacific and dropped
+across him or Captain Ben Peese I should meet a hearty welcome, he
+strode out, with the shambling figure of the down-easter under his lee.
+
+That was the last I saw of the two captains for many a long day, for a
+few days later the _Constitution_ cleared out for Tahiti, and I couldn't
+learn anything more about Hayston. Whether he was then in command of a
+vessel, or had merely come up as passenger in some other ship, I could
+not ascertain. All the bar-keeper knew about him was that he was a
+gentleman with plenty of money and a h--l of a temper, if anybody
+bothered him with questions.
+
+Little I thought at the time that we were fated to meet again, or that
+where we once more forgathered would be under the tropic sun of
+Polynesia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+IN SAMOA
+
+
+From what I have said about Hayston, it will readily be understood that
+every tale relating to him was strangely exciting to my boyish mind. For
+me he was the incarnation of all that was utterly reckless, possibly
+wicked, and of course, as such, possessed a fascination that a better
+man would have failed to inspire.
+
+My hero, however, had disappeared, and with him all zest seemed to have
+gone out of life at Frisco. So after mooning about for a few weeks I
+resolved on returning to Sydney.
+
+My friends on the Pacific slope did their best to dissuade me, trying to
+instil the idea into my head that I was cut out for a merchant prince by
+disposition and intellect. But I heeded not the voice of the charmer.
+The only walk in life for which I felt myself thoroughly fitted was that
+of an armed cruiser through the South Sea Islands. All other vocations
+were tame and colourless in comparison. I could fancy myself parading
+the deck of my vessel, pistol at belt, dagger in sheath, a band of
+cut-throats trembling at my glance, and a bevy of dark-skinned
+princesses ready to die for me at a moment's notice, or to keep the
+flies from bothering, whichever I preferred.
+
+I may state "right here," as the Yankees have it, that I did not become
+a "free trader," though at one time I had a close shave of being run up
+to the yardarm of a British man-of-war in that identical capacity. But
+this came later on.
+
+I returned, therefore, to my native Sydney in due course of time, and as
+a wholesome corrective after my somewhat erratic experiences, was placed
+by my father in a merchant's office. But the colourless monotony became
+absolutely killing. It was awful to be stuck there, adding up columns of
+pounds, shillings, and pence, and writing business letters, while there
+was stabbing, shooting, and all sorts of wild excitement going on "away
+down in the islands."
+
+It was about this time that I made the acquaintance of certain South Sea
+Islanders belonging to whalers or trading vessels. With one of them,
+named George, a native of Raratonga, I became intimate. He impressed me
+with his intelligence, and amused me with his descriptions of island
+life. He had just returned from a whaling voyage in the barque
+_Adventurer_ belonging to the well-known firm of Robert Towns & Company.
+
+So when George, having been paid off in Sydney with a handsome cheque,
+confided to me that he intended going back to the Navigators' Islands,
+where he had previously spent some years, in order to open a small
+trading station, my unrest returned. He had a hundred pounds which he
+wished to invest in trade-goods, so I took him round the Sydney firms
+and saw him fairly dealt with. A week afterwards he sailed to Samoa vi
+Tonga, in the _Taoji Vuna_, a schooner belonging to King George of that
+ilk.
+
+Before he left he told me that two of his countrymen were trading for
+Captain Hayston--one at Marhiki, and one at Fakaofo, in the Union group.
+Both had made money, and he believed that Captain Hayston had fixed upon
+Apia, the chief port of Samoa, as his head-quarters.
+
+Need I say that this information interested me greatly, and I asked
+George no end of questions. But the schooner was just leaving the wharf
+in tow of a tug, and my dark-skinned friend having shipped as an A. B.,
+was no longer of the "leisure classes." So, grasping my hand, and
+telling me where to hear of him if I ever came to Samoa, we parted.
+
+Before going further let me explain the nature of a Polynesian trader's
+mission.
+
+On the greater number of the islands white men are resident, who act as
+agents for a firm of merchants, for masters of vessels, or on their own
+account. In some cases a piece of ground is rented from the king or
+chief whereon to make the trading station. In others the rulers are paid
+a protection fee. Then, if a trader is murdered, his principal can claim
+blood for blood. This, however, is rarely resorted to. A trader once
+settled on his station proceeds to obtain cocoa-nuts from the natives,
+for which he pays in dollars or "trade." He further employs them to
+scrape the fruit into troughs exposed to the sun, by which process the
+cocoa-nut oil is extracted. Of late years "copra" has taken the place of
+the oil. This material--the dried kernel of the nut--has become far more
+valuable; for when crushed by powerful machinery the refuse is pressed
+into oil-cake, and proved to be excellent food for cattle.
+
+To be a good trader requires pluck, tact, and business capacity. Many
+traders meet their death for want of one or other of these attributes.
+All through the South Seas, more especially in the Line Islands, are to
+be found the most reckless desperadoes living. Their uncontrolled
+passions lead them to commit acts which the natives naturally resent;
+the usual result being that if the trader fails to kill or terrorise
+them, they do society a kindness by ridding it of him. Then comes the
+not infrequent shelling of a native village by an avenging man-of-war.
+And thus civilisation keeps ever moving onwards.
+
+The traders were making fortunes in the South Seas at that time,
+according to George. I returned to business with a mind full of
+projects. The glamour of the sea, the magic attraction of blue water,
+was again upon me; I was powerless to resist. My father smiled. My
+mother and sisters wept afresh. I bowed myself, nevertheless, to my
+fate. In a fortnight I bade my relations farewell--all unworthy as I
+felt myself of their affection. Inwardly exultant, though decently
+uncheerful, I took passage a fortnight later in a barque trading to the
+Friendly and Navigators' Islands. She was called the _Rotumah_,
+belonging to Messrs. M'Donald, Smith, & Company, of Hunter Street,
+Sydney. Her captain was a Canadian named Robertson, of great experience
+in the island trade.
+
+There were two other passengers--a lady going to join her brother who
+was in business at Nukulofa, in Tonga, and a fine old French priest whom
+we were taking to Samoa. The latter was very kind to me, and during our
+passage through the Friendly Islands I was frequently the guest of his
+brother missionaries at their various stations in the groups.
+
+How shall I describe my feelings, landed at last among the charmed isles
+of the South, where I had come to stay, I told myself? Generally
+speaking, how often is there a savour of disappointment, of anticipation
+unrealised, when the wish is achieved! But the reality here was beyond
+the most brilliant mental pictures ever painted. All things were fresh
+and novel; the coral reefs skirting the island shore upon which the surf
+broke ceaselessly with sullen roar; cocoa-palms bowed with their
+feathery crests above a vegetation richly verdurous. The browns and
+yellows of the native villages, so rich in tone, so foreign of aspect,
+excited my unaccustomed vision. Graceful figures, warm and dusky of
+colouring, passed to and fro. The groves of broad leafed bananas; the
+group of white mission houses; the balmy, sensuous air; the transparent
+water, in which the very fish were strange in form and hue,--all things
+soever, land and water, sea and sky, seemed to cry aloud to my eager,
+wondering soul, "Hither, oh fortunate youth, hast thou come to a world
+new, perfect, and complete in itself--to a land of Nature's fondness and
+profuse luxuriance, to that Adenn, long lost, mysteriously concealed
+for ages from all mankind."
+
+At the Marist Mission at Tongatabu I was received most kindly by the
+venerable Father Chevron, the head of the Church in Tonga. His had been
+a life truly remarkable. For fifty years he had laboured unceasingly
+among the savage races of Polynesia, had had hairbreadth escapes, and
+passed through deadliest perils. Like many of his colleagues he was
+unknown to fame, dying a few years later, beloved and respected by all,
+yet comparatively "unhonoured and unsung." During the whole course of my
+experiences in the Pacific I have never heard the roughest trader speak
+an ill word of the Marist Brothers. Their lives of ceaseless toil and
+honourable poverty tell their own tale. The Roman Catholic Church may
+well feel proud of these her most devoted servants.
+
+One morning Captain Robertson joined me; the Father seemed pleased to
+see him. On my mentioning how kindly they had treated me, a stranger and
+a Protestant, he replied,--
+
+"Ay, ay, my lad; they are different from most of the missionaries in
+Tonga, anyway, as many a shipwrecked sailor has found. If a ship were
+cast away, and the crew hadn't a biscuit apiece to keep them from
+starving, they wouldn't get so much as a piece of yam from some of the
+reverend gentlemen."
+
+I asked Father Chevron if he knew Captain Peese and Captain Hayston.
+
+"Yes! I am acquainted with both; of the latter I can only say that when
+I met him here I forgot all the bad reports I had heard about him. He
+cannot be the man he is reputed to be."
+
+I was sorry to part with the good Father when the time came to leave.
+But a native messenger arrived next day with a note from the captain,
+who intended sailing at daylight.
+
+So I said farewell and went on board.
+
+We called at Hapai and Vavau, the two other ports of the Friendly
+Islands, sighting the peak of Upolu, in the Navigators', three days
+after leaving the latter place.
+
+We rounded the south-east point of Upolu next day, running in so close
+to the shore that we could see the natives walking on the beaches. Saw a
+whaleboat, manned by islanders and steered by a white man, shoot through
+an opening in the reef opposite Flupata. For him we tarried not, in
+spite of a signal, running in as we were with the wind dead aft, and at
+four o'clock in the afternoon anchored in Apia harbour, opposite the
+American consulate.
+
+The scenery around Apia harbour is beauteous beyond description.
+Spacious bays unfold themselves as you approach, each revealing the
+silvery white-sanded beach fringed with cocoa-palms; stretching afar
+towards the hills lies undulating forest land chequered with the white
+houses of the planters. The harbour itself consists of a horseshoe bay,
+extending from Matautu to Mullinu Point. Fronting the passage a mountain
+rears its summit cloud-enwrapped and half-hidden, narrow paths wind
+through deep gorges, amid which you catch here and there the sheen of a
+mountain-torrent. On the south the land heads in a graceful sweep to
+leeward, until lost in the all-enveloping sea-mists of the tropics,
+while the straggling town, white-walled, reed-roofed, peeps through a
+dark-green grove of the bananas and cocoa-palms which fringe the beach.
+
+At this precise period I paid but little attention to the beauties of
+Apia, for in a canoe paddled by a Samoan boy sat my friend George. I
+hailed him; what a look of joy and surprise rippled over his dark
+countenance as he recognised me! With a few strokes of the paddle the
+canoe shot alongside and he sprang on deck.
+
+"I knew you would come," he said; "I boarded every ship that put in here
+since I landed. Going to live here?"
+
+"I think so, George! I have some money and trade with me; if I get a
+chance I'll start somewhere in Samoa."
+
+He was delighted, and said I would make plenty of money by and by. He
+wouldn't hear of my going to an hotel. I must come with him. He had a
+Samoan wife at Lellepa, a village about a mile from Apia on the Matautu
+side.
+
+It was dark when we landed. As we walked towards his home George pointed
+out a house standing back from the beach, which, he said, belonged to
+Captain Hayston.
+
+That personage had just left Samoa, and was now cruising in the Line
+Islands, where he had a number of traders. He was expected back in two
+months. A short time before I arrived, the American gunboat
+_Narraganset_ had suddenly put in an appearance in Apia where Hayston's
+brig was lying. Her anchor had barely sounded bottom, before an armed
+boat's crew left her side, boarded, took Hayston prisoner, and kept
+possession of the _Leonora_.
+
+There was wild excitement that day in Apia. Many of the residents had a
+strong liking for Hayston and expressed sympathy for him. Others,
+particularly the German element, were jubilant, and expressed a hope
+that he would be taken to America in irons.
+
+The captain of the _Narraganset_ then notified his seizure to the
+foreign consuls, and solicited evidence regarding alleged acts of piracy
+and kidnapping. During this time Hayston was, so the Americans stated,
+in close confinement on board the man-of-war, but it was the general
+opinion that he was treated more as a guest than a prisoner. The trial
+came on at the stated time, but resulted in his acquittal. Either the
+witnesses were unreliable or afraid of vengeance, for nothing of a
+criminal nature could be elicited from them. Hayston was then conducted
+back to his brig, and in half-an-hour he had "dressed ship" in honour
+of the event. The next act was to give his crew liberty--when those
+bright particular stars sallied forth on shore, all more or less drunk,
+in company with the blue jackets from the man-of-war, and immediately
+set about "painting the town red," and looking for the witnesses who had
+testified against their commander. On the next night Hayston gave a ball
+to the officers, and, doubtless, from that time felt his position
+secure, as far as danger from warships of his own country was concerned.
+
+All this was told to me by George as we walked along the track to his
+house, where we arrived just in time for a good supper. The place was
+better built than the ordinary native houses. The floor was covered with
+handsome clean mats on which, on the far end of the room, his wife and
+two daughters by a former marriage were sitting. They seemed so
+delighted at the idea of having me to live with them, that in a few
+minutes I felt quite at home. The evening meal was ready on the mats;
+the smell of roast pork and bread-fruit whetted my appetite amazingly;
+nor was it appeased until George and his wife had helped me to food
+enough to satisfy a boarding-school.
+
+After supper the family gathered round the lamp which was placed in the
+middle of the room. There they went through the evening prayers; a hymn
+was sung, after which a chapter was read from a Samoan Testament,
+followed by a prayer from the master of the house.
+
+I found that the custom of morning and evening prayers was never
+neglected in any Samoan household; for, whether the Samoans are really
+religious or no, they keep up a better semblance of it than many who
+have whiter skins.
+
+That night George, who by the way was called Tuluia by his wife and
+daughters, made plans for our future. As we sat talking the others
+retired to a far corner, where they sat watching us, their big dark eyes
+dilated with interest. We agreed to buy a boat between us and make
+trading trips to the windward port as far as Aleipata. Then after
+smoking a number of "salui" or native cigarettes, we turned in.
+
+All next day we were incommoded by crowds of inquisitive visitors, who
+came to have a look at me and learn why I had come to Samoa--George
+having told them merely that I was his "uo," or friend, treated most of
+them with scant courtesy, explaining that the natives about Apia are
+thorough loafers and beggars, and warning me not to sell any of them my
+"trade" unless I received cash in return. In the afternoon I landed my
+effects, but could scarcely get into the house for the crowds.
+
+George's wife, it appeared, had been so indiscreet as to tell some of
+her relations that I had rifles for sale; as a consequence there were
+fully a hundred men eager to see them. Some had money, others wanted
+credit, others desired loose powder, and kept pointing to a shed close
+by, saying, "Panla pana fanua" (powder for the cannon). I discovered
+that under the shed lay a big gun which Patiole and Asi, two chiefs, had
+bought from Captain Hayston for six hundred dollars, but had run out of
+ammunition.
+
+I had no powder to sell, but George found me a cash buyer for one of my
+Winchesters at seventy-five dollars. I could have sold the other three
+for sixty dollars each, but he advised me to keep them in order to get a
+better price up the coast. It was just on the eve of the second native
+war, so the Samoans were buying arms in large quantities. From some
+Californians' trading vessels they had brought about three hundred
+breech-loaders, and Hayston had sold them the cannon aforesaid, which he
+had brought from China in the _Leonora_.
+
+The chief, Malietoa, had an idea of carrying the war into the enemy's
+country. His plan was to charter a vessel, and take five hundred men to
+Tuvali, the largest island in the group. Hayston had met a deputation of
+chiefs, and told them that for a thousand dollars he would land that
+number of Malietoa's warriors in any part of the group. Moreover, if
+they gave him ten dollars for every shot fired, he would land them under
+cover of four guns. But they were not to bring their arms, and were to
+arrange to have taumualuas, or native boats, to meet the brig off the
+coast and put them on board. This, he explained, was necessary to
+prevent the vessel being seized if they met a man-of-war, and so getting
+him into serious trouble.
+
+The chiefs took this proposition in eagerly at first, but, on thinking
+it over, suspicions arose as to their reaching their destination safely;
+and, finally, after the usual amount of fawning and flattering, in which
+every Samoan is an adept, they told Hayston that they could not raise
+sufficient money, and so the matter ended.
+
+The following months of my sojourn in Samoa passed quickly. George and I
+bought a cutter in which we made several trips to the windward villages,
+whence we ran down to the little island of Manono, situated between
+Upolu and Savaii. There we did a good business, selling our trade for
+cash to the people of Manono, and buying a cargo of yams to take to
+Apia, to sell to the natives there, who were short of food owing to the
+outbreak of hostilities.
+
+On our way up we took advantage of a westerly wind, and made the passage
+inside the reef, calling at the villages of Multifanna and
+Saleimoa--visiting even places with only a few houses nestling amongst
+the cocoa-palms.
+
+We left Saleimoa at dusk, and although we were deeply laden, we made
+good way. Whilst at the village I heard that a large Norwegian ship
+laden with guano had put into Apia, having sprung a leak and run short
+of provisions; also that there was not a yam to be had in the place. Our
+informant was a deserter from a man-of-war, living at Saleimoa. He had
+been tattooed, and was a thorough Samoan in appearance, but was anxious
+to get a passage to New Britain, being afraid to remain longer in his
+present quarters. He was known as "Flash Jack," and was held to be a
+desperate character. After a few drinks he became communicative, telling
+me certain things which he had better have kept to himself. He informed
+me that he intended to ship with Hayston, whose brig was expected daily
+with a hundred recruits for Goddeffroy and Sons' plantations. He advised
+me to keep my yams until the _Leonora's_ cargo of "boys" arrived, as the
+Germans would pay me my own price for them, being short of food for
+their plantation labourers. In another few minutes Jack was drunk, and
+wanted to fight us, when two of his wives came on board, and after
+beating him with pieces of wood, carried him on shore and laid him in
+his bunk.
+
+I determined, however, to take his advice about the yams, and was
+cogitating as to the price I should ask for them, when George, who was
+steering, called my attention to two "taumualuas" full of men, paddling
+quickly in from sea through an opening in the reef.
+
+Not apprehending danger we kept on. Our boat was well known along the
+coast by the Tua Massaga or Malietoa faction, and we merely supposed
+that these boats were coming down from Apia to the leeward ports. It was
+a clear night; George called out the usual Samoan greeting, used when
+canoes meet at night. The next moment we saw them stop paddling, when,
+without a word of warning, we received a volley, the bullets striking
+the cutter in at least twenty places. How we escaped is a mystery.
+George got a cut on the shoulder from a piece of our saucepan, which was
+lying against the mast. It flew to pieces when struck, and I thought a
+shell had exploded.
+
+Flinging ourselves flat on the deck, George called out to the canoes,
+which were now paddling quickly after us, and told them who we were, at
+the same time lowering our jib and foresail. The taumualuas dashed up,
+one on each side. Luckily some of the warriors instantly recognised us.
+They expressed great sorrow, and explained that they had mistaken us for
+a boat bringing up a war party from Savaii.
+
+Every man was armed with a rifle, mostly modelled on the German
+needle-gun, and as they were all in full fighting costume they had a
+striking and picturesque effect. After mutual expressions of regard and
+a general consumption of cigarettes, we gave them a bottle of grog to
+keep out the cold night air, sold them some cartridges from my own
+private stock, and with many a vociferous "To Fa," we sailed away, and
+left them in the passage waiting for the expected invaders.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+SAMOA TO MILL
+
+
+Just as we parted from our warlike friends who had so nearly put an end
+to our cruises, one of the chiefs sang out that a large brig, painted
+white, was out at sea beating up to Apia. Turning his information over
+in my mind, the conviction grew upon me that she must be Hayston's
+vessel, the _Leonora_. It proved to be correct, for as we ran past
+Mulinu Point we saw her entering the passage leading to the harbour. She
+was about a mile distant from us, but I could see that she was a
+beautifully-built vessel, and could well believe the tales of her
+extraordinary speed. The Norwegian guano-man, an immense ship, the _Otto
+and Antoine_, was lying in the roadstead, and as the _Leonora_ came to
+her moorings, we ran up between the two vessels and dropped anchor.
+
+During the next few minutes I received no less than three different
+offers for our sixteen tons of yams. These I declined, and after waiting
+till I perceived that most of the shore visitors had left the brig, I
+took our dingey and pulled aboard.
+
+Captain Hayston was below, and the Chinese steward conducted me into his
+presence. He looked at me steadily for a moment, as if trying to recall
+where he had seen me before, and then after my few words of explanation,
+gave me a hearty welcome to the South Seas.
+
+Having told him how I came to visit Samoa, I offered him my yams, which
+he gladly purchased, paying me a good price for them in United States
+gold coin. This transaction being concluded, he asked me to meet him
+next day, when we could have a good long chat, at the same time desiring
+me to keep secret the fact of our previous meeting. What his reasons
+were I never knew; but as he seemed anxious on this matter, I told him
+that I had seldom mentioned the circumstance, and to no one in Samoa,
+with the exception of my mate Tuluia. I had indeed made few other
+acquaintances.
+
+Although I should much have liked to have had a look round the brig, I
+could see the Captain wished to get on shore, so after shaking hands
+with him I returned to our cutter, where, in a few minutes, the brig's
+longboat came alongside, and we set to work getting out the yams.
+Hayston paid me without demanding to have them weighed, and George's
+dark face was wreathed in smiles when I showed him the money. He
+explained that two tons were very bad, and had they been seen by a
+purchaser would have been rejected.
+
+Although only a Kanaka, George possessed true commercial instincts, and
+I felt sure he would grow rich.
+
+The native war was now at its height, and the lines of the hostile party
+were so close to Matautu, the eastern part of Apia, that bullets were
+whistling over our heads all day long. The yam season being over, and
+the copra trade at a standstill, we gave up the cutter and settled for a
+while on shore. It was during this period that I was a constant visitor
+at the house of Mr. Lewis, the American Consul, where I generally found
+Hayston in company with Captain Edward Hamilton, the pilot, and another
+American, a whisky-loving, kava-drinking old salt, brimful of fun and
+good humour. He had been twenty years in Samoa, and was one of the best
+linguists I ever met with; was known to every native in the group, and
+had been several trips with Hayston to the north-west islands. He
+followed no known occupation, but devoted his time to idling and
+attending native dances.
+
+Many a merry evening we spent together while the _Leonora_ was
+recruiting, and I began to think Hayston was the most entertaining man I
+had ever met. He made no secret of some of his exploits, and in
+particular referred to the way in which he had beaten a certain German
+firm in the way of business, even breaking up their stations in the Line
+Islands. At that time these merchants had acquired a bad name for the
+underhand manner in which they had treated English and American traders;
+and for any man to gain an advantage over them was looked upon as a
+meritorious action.
+
+By many people who cherished animosity against Hayston I had been led at
+first to look upon him as a thorough-going pirate and a bloodthirsty
+ruffian. Yet here I found him, if not respected, at least deemed a fit
+associate for respectable men. Moreover, his word was considered as good
+security in business as another man's bond. I well remember the days
+when he used to visit me at Leliepa, and we amused ourselves with pistol
+practice. He was a wonderful shot, and his skill excited the loud
+applause of the native chiefs. One fat old fellow, known as Pulumakau
+(the bullock), begged him to spend a day now and then in the lines with
+the native forces, and exercise his skill upon the enemy.
+
+One day he took me on board with him in order to show me over the brig.
+He intended to leave in a few days, and I remarked, as we were pulled on
+board, that I should dearly like to have a trip with him some day.
+
+He was silent for a minute, and then replied, "No! I shall be glad
+enough of your company as my guest, as I have taken a fancy to you; but
+it will be better for you to keep clear of me."
+
+When we got on board I was struck with the beautiful order in which the
+vessel was kept, aloft and below; there was not a rope yarn out of
+place. Descending to the cabin I found it splendidly furnished for a
+vessel of her size.
+
+The _Leonora_ was 250 tons register, and had been built for the opium
+trade. During her career in Chinese seas she acquired the reputation of
+being the fastest vessel on the coast. She then carried eight guns. She
+had been several times attacked by pirates, who were invariably beaten
+off with loss. At the time of my visit she carried but one gun, which
+stood on the main deck, Hayston having sold two others of the same
+calibre to the natives. But for this, as far as I could see, she had a
+most peaceful appearance.
+
+On the main deck, just abaft the foc'sle, was a deckhouse divided into
+compartments, forming the cook's galley and boats' crews' quarters,
+together with those belonging to the first and second mates. On the top
+of the house a whale-boat was carried, leaving room for two sentries to
+keep guard, a precaution which I afterwards found was, on certain
+occasions, highly necessary for the vessel's safety. The foc'sle was
+large, for she carried between twenty-five and thirty men. The thing
+that struck me most, however, was the bulkhead, which was loop-holed for
+rifles, so that if any disturbance took place in the forehold, which was
+sometimes filled with Kanaka labourers, the rebels could be shot down
+with ease and accuracy.
+
+The most noticeable things about the gear were the topsails she carried,
+Cunningham's patent, in which there were no reef points. The topsail
+yards revolved, so that you could reef as much as you liked, and all the
+work could be done from the main deck by the down haul. Many captains
+dislike this patent, but it behaved splendidly on the _Leonora_ for all
+that.
+
+The crew, or most of them, were ashore, and only the second mate, the
+Chinese carpenter, the steward, and ship's boys were on board. The mate
+was a muscular Fijian half-caste named Bill Hicks, known as a fighting
+man all over Polynesia. A native girl, called Liva, was sitting on the
+main hatch making a bowl of kava.
+
+"Halloa! Liva," said the Captain, as we passed along the deck, "I
+thought you were married to one of the Dutch clerks at Goddeffroy's?"
+
+"Avoe, lava, alii." "Quite true, Captain, but I've come to stay with
+Bill for a week."
+
+The Captain and second mate laughed, and next day I learned that Bill
+had gone to the clerk's house at Matafele, the German quarter of the
+town, and though there were other Germans present, told Liva to pack up
+her clothes and come with him. She, nothing loth, did as he told her,
+and the Germans, seeing mischief in the half-caste's eye, offered no
+opposition.
+
+The departure of the _Leonora_ took place a few days afterwards, and I
+accepted the position of supercargo in a ketch which the junior partner
+of one of the principal firms in Samoa wished to send to the Marshalls
+to be sold. I expressed my doubts of her sea-worthiness for so long a
+voyage. However, he said there was no danger, as it would be a fine
+weather passage all the way through, adding that the king of Arnu, or
+Arrowsmith's Island, had commissioned Captain Hayston to buy a vessel
+for him in Samoa.
+
+I thought his proposition over, and next day stated my willingness to
+undertake the venture, the owners promising to put the vessel in repair
+as soon as possible. She was hauled up to the beach in front of the
+British consulate, where for the next few weeks carpenters were at work,
+patching up and covering her rotten bottom with a thick coating of
+chunam. Notwithstanding these precautions no one except old Tapoleni,
+the Dutch skipper, could be induced to take charge of her.
+
+During the time she was on the beach I made a trip to the beautiful
+village of Tiavea, doing a week's trading and pigeon shooting. On my
+return I found the town in a high state of excitement owing to a
+succession of daring robberies of the various stores. Strong suspicions
+were entertained with respect to a herculean American negro, known as
+Black Tom, who kept an extremely disorderly hotel where seamen were
+known to be enticed and robbed.
+
+The old vessel was launched at last, and, to the manifest surprise of
+everybody, refrained from springing a leak. Things might easily have
+been worse; for what with the great age of her timber and the thickness
+of her hull the carpenters were barely able to make the copper hold.
+
+Next day we took in our stores. I was surprised at the casks of beef,
+tins of biscuits, and quantities of other provisions put on board, and
+thought the owners extremely liberal. This favourable state of feeling
+lasted till we were well at sea, when I discovered all the beef to be
+bad, and the remainder of the stores unfit for any well-brought-up pig.
+When everything was aboard the owners gave me the following document:--
+
+ APIA, _3rd December, 187 _.
+
+ Dear Sir,--You will proceed to Mill, Mulgrave Island, for the
+ purpose of selling the ketch _E. A. Wilson_. You will find
+ Captain Hayston there waiting for you; so you will please
+ consult with him, as he is acquainted with the parties who wish
+ to purchase her. Try to obtain oil and copra to the amount of
+ 500 for the vessel. Ship whatever produce you may get on board
+ the _Leonora_, and get Captain Hayston to sign bills of lading.
+ Do not sell the chronometer unless you get a good price for it.
+ Sell the few things you take to the best advantage; none of the
+ Samoans are to remain, but must come back to Apia. Have the
+ ketch painted on your arrival at Mill. Wishing you a prosperous
+ and speedy voyage.--We are, etc.,
+
+ BASCOM & CO.
+
+I quote this letter _in extenso_, for later on it plays an important
+part in my narrative. Having carefully read it Mr. Bascom shook hands
+with me, wished me a pleasant voyage, and departed. I went aboard, the
+vessel being already hove short, and, as I thought, only waiting my
+arrival to sail.
+
+Things looked much otherwise as I stepped on deck. The skipper was drunk
+and helpless. The decks were thronged with shore natives--men and women
+nearly all crying and half drunk, bidding farewell to one or other of
+the crew.
+
+The mate, Jim Knowles, was a Tongan half-caste, who was afterwards
+hanged in Fiji for shooting Larsen, one of the Messrs. Goddeffroy's
+captains, dead on his own ship. He was the only sober man on board. He
+told me that one of Tapoleni's friends had come on board, and that she
+had been stowed away by that worthy, who swore that he would not leave
+her behind. To this Maa Maa I had a particular aversion, and always
+hated to see her come on board. She was ugly enough in all conscience,
+and had always been said to be the cause of quarrels and fights whenever
+the skipper took her on a trip. Taking Knowles with me, we lugged her on
+deck screaming and biting. As she refused to get into a canoe, Knowles
+threw her overboard, where some sympathising friends picked her up.
+
+Just as this incident terminated I received a note from the owners,
+telling me to delay the vessel's departure for half-an-hour. Wondering
+what was in the wind, I set about restoring order. I found a lot of
+liquor in the foc'sle, which I took aft and locked up. Then with
+Knowles' aid I succeeded in clearing the decks of the women and shore
+loafers, who were lying about in all stages of intoxication.
+
+At eleven o'clock we saw two boats pulling off from the shore, and
+noticed armed Samoans among the crews. As they came alongside I saw
+seated in one of them the figures of Black Tom and his son Johnny, both
+heavily ironed. In the stern sat his Samoan wife, a woman named Musia. A
+number of white residents were in charge of the lot, and I was informed
+that at an impromptu mass meeting, held that morning, it had been
+decided to expatriate Tom and his family for the good of the country;
+they had seized this favourable opportunity of carrying their resolution
+into effect.
+
+This was a pretty state of affairs. I need scarcely explain my
+indignation at having two such characters as Black Tom and his son
+foisted on me as passengers. I was about to get into a boat and let them
+carry their own prisoners away, when I was told that I could land him
+and his family at the first land we made. This would be Quiros Island,
+bearing N.N.W. from Apia.
+
+"All right, gentlemen," I replied, "and as everybody here happens to be
+drunk, I'll feel obliged if you will be good enough to lift the anchor
+and let us get away."
+
+Tom and his family were accordingly put in the hold, and the new-comers
+having got the anchor up bade me farewell, chuckling at having rid
+themselves of Black Tom so cleverly. Whereupon they got into the boats
+and pulled ashore.
+
+It was blowing stiffly as we ran through the passage, and certainly we
+presented a pretty spectacle, with our running gear all in disorder, and
+the crew drunk in the lee scuppers. I had the keys of the prisoners'
+irons, so giving the tiller to Knowles, I went below and liberated them.
+
+"Tom," I said, "my instructions are to keep you in irons till we made
+the first land. Now, I've got nothing against you, but I don't want your
+company, and I consider I was served a shabby trick when they put you on
+board. I mean to be even with them. They said the first land. Now, I'll
+stand on this tack till midnight; then I'll put about and land you on
+the coast."
+
+The negro's bloodshot eyes showed blind fury when I first approached
+him, but his look softened as I spoke. He laughed, evidently enjoying my
+suggestion.
+
+"Thank you, sir, for taking the bracelets off us, but I don't care about
+landing in Samoa again, and I'll face the voyage with you. You're the
+first man that's spoke a kind word to me since I was rushed and tied in
+my own house--treated like a wild beast, and, by ----! I'll do any
+mortal thing in this world for you."
+
+He then begged me not to land him at Quiros, but to let him remain on
+board until we met Captain Hayston who, he was sure, would give him a
+trading station. I promised him this, and in return, being a splendid
+cook, he provided me during the remainder of the voyage with all sorts
+of sea delicacies.
+
+I will not speak of the dangers of that wearisome voyage; the
+drunkenness that I tried in vain to suppress; the erratic course we made
+to our destination. The skipper sobered up every two or three days, took
+the sun, worked out the ship's position, and let me steer any course I
+liked. Then he would fly to his bottle of "square-face," until I thought
+it necessary to rouse him again in order to ascertain our whereabouts.
+At last, after a forty-two days' passage, we sighted the low-lying coral
+islands enclosing the spacious lagoon of Mill.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE BRIG LEONORA
+
+
+The island of Mill is situated in the Radac or eastern portion of the
+Marshall group, discovered by a captain of that name in 1788. On the
+charts it bears the name of the Mulgrave Lagoon, and the reason is not
+far to seek. For the most part the islands of Polynesia are of volcanic
+origin, whilst the lagoons, which sometimes pass for islands, are
+exclusively of coral formation. The minute insects which form them build
+their submarine wall in a circle, which growing for ages, until it rises
+at low water above sea-level, gradually collects sand and debris, when
+it decomposes and becomes a solid. Then comes a day when wandering
+cocoa-nuts float to it and take up their abode on its shores. Gradually
+a ring of land is formed, varying in width, covered with a wreath of
+palms, sheltering within its circumference a peaceful sea, into which
+access is attainable by scattered channels only.
+
+The spot we had reached was of this description.
+
+Day was breaking when we first sighted the tops of the cocoa-palms, and
+putting the ketch dead before the wind we ran down to the passage. On
+going aloft I was glad to see the spars of a vessel showing about three
+miles distant. As none of the crew had ever visited the place before, we
+lay to and fired a gun. In about half-an-hour we saw a boat pulling
+towards us, with a tall man standing up steering. It was Hayston.
+Jumping aboard he shook me warmly by the hand, and said, "So you see
+we've met again! What sort of passage did you have?"
+
+I recounted our misfortunes, adding the information that the ketch
+leaked terribly.
+
+"Oh! that's just like Bascom," he remarked. "He told me that he'd send
+her down as sound as a bell. I never had a chance of looking at her when
+she was on the beach at Apia, and I certainly thought he would act
+squarely with me. But we'll talk business by and by."
+
+He now took command of the ketch, and brought us into the lagoon, where
+we dropped anchor in ten fathoms alongside the brig. I then formally
+handed over my vessel to him, and wished the king of Arnu joy of his
+bargain. After receiving full particulars of the voyage, he called the
+skipper aft.
+
+"Well, Captain Westendorf," he said, "you have most fortunately reached
+here safely, but more through good luck than good management. I know you
+to be an experienced and capable navigator, so that had you attended to
+your duty you would have made Mill ten or fifteen days, earlier. Now,
+you can go ashore and live with my trader till you get a passage back to
+Samoa, for I'll be hanged if I take you back. As for your crew, I don't
+want them either; you can take them with you or turn them adrift. The
+ketch I intend to leave here until I return from Ascension; but mark
+this--_and you know me_--don't attempt to board her during my absence;
+good day!"
+
+I felt sorry at seeing the good-natured "Tapoleni" so humiliated; for
+with the exception of that one failing which has obscured brighter
+intellects, and which was the cause of all his troubles, he was a
+thoroughly honest old fellow.
+
+Black Tom and his wife elected to remain at Mill until they found a
+suitable island on which to open a trading station. They parted from me
+with many professions of gratitude which I think were sincere. He
+afterwards became a wealthy man--such are fortune's vagaries in the
+islands; his son Johnny earnestly begged me to intercede with Captain
+Hayston on his account, and not to leave him on shore at Mill. I made
+the request, and the Captain told him to come aboard the _Leonora_.
+
+During the afternoon Hayston and I went over the ketch in order to
+inspect the stores, gear, etc., when he asked me, now that my
+responsibility had ended, what were my intentions as to future
+movements? I told him I proposed to charter a native canoe for Arnu,
+there to await a passing vessel and a passage to Samoa. From this
+course, however, he dissuaded me, pointing out that I might have to stay
+there six months. He then offered me the position of supercargo on his
+brig at a fair salary, pressing for an immediate answer.
+
+Thinking it better to be earning money than leading a life of idleness
+among the natives, I consented. "I accept your offer, Captain," I said;
+"but there is one thing I wish you to understand, I am coming with you,
+not for the sake of the pay, but because I don't want to loaf about the
+Marshall group like a beach-comber, and, moreover, I should like to
+visit the Carolines. I don't particularly want to return to Samoa, and
+if I see a place I like I'll start trading. Now, I am willing to do duty
+as supercargo, even without pay, but I won't lend a hand in any
+transaction that I don't like the look of. So at our first difference
+you can set me ashore."
+
+Hayston looked me straight in the face and held out his hand--"Well,
+now, that's a fair deal. I give you my word that I won't ask you to join
+in anything doubtful. The traders round here are the greatest scoundrels
+unhung, and I have to treat them as they treat me. My books are in a bad
+state, and you'll find work enough putting them straight; but I'll be
+glad of your company aboard, even if you never do a hand's turn." So
+the bargain was closed. I got my chest from the hold and sent it aboard
+the brig; the steward receiving instructions that I was to occupy the
+port side of the cabin. At dusk Hayston gave some of the crew liberty,
+and sent the rest with the mates to haul the ketch in and beach her as
+the tide was full. While he stood watching her from the brig's deck, he
+suddenly remarked that they were making a mess of it, and calling two
+boys to bring the dingey alongside, he was pulled into the shore.
+
+There was a number of young women on board, natives of the Kingsmill
+group, good-looking, but wild in appearance. I was on deck and they were
+below, where I heard them laughing and talking, and saw they were seated
+on the lounge that ran round the cabin. They all seemed very merry over
+a game, much like "knucklebones," which they were playing with shells. A
+large canoe was bearing down on us from one of the islands in the
+lagoon, and just as she ran up in the wind ahead of us, allowing the
+topsail to drift down alongside, I heard a man's voice mingling with the
+girls'.
+
+I was going forward to have a close look at the canoe, when I saw the
+Captain close alongside in the dingey. He had sailed out to the brig,
+having let the two boys remain on shore to assist at the ketch. Just as
+he stepped over the sail, the owner of the voice I had heard ran out of
+the cabin. Hayston gripped him by the arm, and I heard him sing out,
+"What, would you knife me?" The next minute the man was seized in the
+powerful arms, lifted high above his head, and then dashed upon the
+deck, where he lay perfectly still.
+
+The Captain disappeared in the cabin, and running up I lifted the man's
+head. His back and neck seemed broken, and though I called loudly no one
+came from below. There were a lot of Arunai natives in the hold sleeping
+and smoking, but they took no notice of my calls, which, as I didn't
+know a word of their language, did not surprise me. The canoe had now
+come alongside, and the Captain reappeared upon deck. The chief seemed
+pleased to see him, and then a lot of natives clambered on board and
+carried the wounded man aboard their barque.
+
+Having given them eight or ten pounds of tobacco, Hayston told them,
+partly in English and partly in the Mill dialect, that the man was
+shamming dead, and if he woke up on board they could chuck him overboard
+and let him swim. Then they hoisted sail again and stood away.
+
+I felt horrified, for, although the Captain was certainly justified in
+defending himself from a man armed with a knife, I was shocked at
+witnessing the result. He, however, insisted that the fellow was only
+"foxing," and so the matter ended. When the boats returned from the
+ketch, I heard the women remark to the sailors that Siak (Jack) had
+run away in a canoe, because "Kaptin" had beat him.
+
+At daylight next morning we got under weigh, and I was astonished at the
+manner in which Hayston handled the brig through the narrow passage.
+After accomplishing this feat, we bore away for Ujillong, and the
+steward called us to breakfast.
+
+Our destination was the almost unknown chain of coral islets forming
+Ujillong or Providence Island. Some fifteen months previously, Hayston
+had discovered a passage through the reef there, and sailed his brig in.
+He was delighted with the security afforded by the magnificent lagoon
+inside. The islets were covered with cocoa-nuts, and he at once decided
+upon forming a principal trading station there, making it a centre from
+whence he could work the islands in the North Pacific. There were only
+thirty natives on the whole lagoon, and with these he succeeded in
+establishing friendly relations, setting them to work in erecting
+dwelling-houses and oil-sheds.
+
+We left in charge two white men named Jerry Jackson and Whistling Bill,
+together with a number of Line Island natives who were to assist in
+making oil. Hayston told me he intended to settle there himself and
+cruise among the Carolines and Marshalls, whilst Captain Peese, his
+colleague, would run a small vessel to China, making Ujillong his
+headquarters. On this occasion he expected to find that a large quantity
+of oil had been made in his absence, and was anxious to get there as
+quickly as possible.
+
+During the day I had leisure to observe the crew, and considering that
+none of them were white men, the way in which the brig was worked was
+simply admirable. They treated the officers with great freedom of
+manner, but before the Captain they seemed absolutely to cower. There
+being some thirty of them they were by no means over-worked. They were
+allowed as much liquor as they chose to buy at a dollar a bottle for
+gin, beer at fifty cents, and rum at a dollar. With such license one
+would naturally think that insubordination would be rife. It was not so.
+But though they never broke out at sea, when once the brig anchored they
+became fiends incarnate. Gambling and drinking then commenced. The
+sounds of oaths, yells, and blows floated up from the foc'sle, mingling
+with the screams of the women, and the night was made horrible with
+their din.
+
+Individual members of the crew of this strange vessel I shall describe
+later on--for the present _place aux dames_! Every officer had a native
+wife, and the Chinese carpenter two. Most of these women were natives of
+Arurai or Hope Island, one of the Kingsmill group. They were darker in
+complexion than the other Polynesians, and prone to violent jealousy of
+their protectors. It was by no means uncommon to see two of these girls
+fighting like demons on the main deck with their national weapons,
+wooden daggers set round with shark's teeth, while blood poured in
+streams from their lacerated limbs and bodies. There were several girls
+from Ocean and Pleasant Island, near the equator. Very good-looking
+were these last, and fair as to complexion. The principal belle, whose
+name was Nellie, was a very handsome half-caste--a native of Hope
+Island. Her father, a deserter from a whaler, had acquired such
+influence with the natives that they made him a war chief. He led them
+when they cut off an American whaler and killed the whole crew.
+Discarding civilised clothing, he became a native in all but colour, and
+finally met his death in a skirmish with a hostile tribe. This girl was
+his daughter, and had been given as a present to Hayston by the king of
+Arurai. Along with her beauty she had a violent and dangerous temper,
+and was never backward in using her knife on any woman that provoked
+her.
+
+We had merely dropped Mill astern of us, when Hayston changed his mind
+about going to Arurai, and bore away to Pleasant Island. He told me that
+he had forgotten a promise made to the traders there to bring them
+supplies, but that he would call at Providence on our way back from the
+Carolines.
+
+Pleasant Island (or Naura) is generally considered one of the Gilbert
+group, although it is far to the leeward, and the natives, together with
+those of Ocean Island (or Paanup), consider themselves a distinct
+people. The former island is in latitude 0.25 S., longitude 167.5 E.,
+and the latter in latitude 0.505, longitude 169.30 E.
+
+"We've got a bully breeze," said the Captain; "and there is a straight
+run of five hundred miles before we sight the cocoa-nuts on Pleasant
+Island. I'll show you what the _Leonora_ can do."
+
+Our course was something about S.W. by W., the wind increasing in
+strength as we put the helm up for Pleasant Island, and during the
+afternoon, so quickly was the brig slipping through the water, that
+Hayston said we should do the distance--four hundred and ninety-five
+miles--in forty-eight hours. I was astonished at the rate we travelled,
+and the Captain himself seemed pleased. Calling the hands aft, he gave
+them a glass of grog all round, and told the women to go on the main
+deck and dance. This created considerable amusement, for as the brig was
+running dead before the wind, and occasionally giving rolls, the dancers
+losing their balance got some heavy falls into the scuppers, while the
+others laughed and enjoyed their misfortunes.
+
+We ran up under the leeside of the island just forty-four hours after
+leaving Mill, a trifle over eleven knots an hour. In a few minutes we
+were boarded by the traders, of whom there were six. They were certainly
+a rough lot. As each man lived under the protection of a particular
+chief, the island being divided into six districts, there was the
+keenest business rivalry among them.
+
+Hayston called them down below, when they were soon pretty well drunk.
+
+They had plenty of dollars, and bought largely of arms and ammunition. I
+was employed, with the second mate, in getting up the guns, principally
+Snider rifles, from the lazarette. I called to them, one by one, to come
+and pick what they wanted; however they seemed quite satisfied to let me
+give them what I liked.
+
+The brig was standing off and on, close into the land, in charge of the
+boatswain, the mate being ill; Hayston was singing "The Zouave," and the
+traders were applauding uproariously, whilst two were dancing with
+Nellie and Sara, shouting and yelling like lunatics. The only one that
+was sober was a fine young fellow who seemed ill, and was supported by a
+native. This young fellow paid me for the arms bought by his comrades,
+saying, "They're all drunk now, and as I don't go in for that kind of
+thing myself, they've got me to do this business for them." The man who
+was dancing with Sara had a bag of dollars in his hand, and as he
+waltzed round the cabin he kept swinging it about and striking the
+woodwork of the cabin.
+
+Carl, the sick man, called out to him, "I say, Ned, let me have that
+money now, I'm settling up for you." Swinging the bag of dollars round,
+Ned sent it full at liberty, and struck Carl in the chest, knocking him
+down. I picked him up, and thought by the pallor of his face that he was
+either killed or seriously injured.
+
+The native who was with him called to some of his comrades, and a young
+woman came down and took his head in her lap, while I got a decanter of
+water. After a while he came round, and told me he was not much hurt,
+but that the bag of money was heavy and had bruised his chest greatly.
+
+"You dog," he said, getting up and walking over to the other man, who
+was now sitting at the table talking to the Captain, "as sure as my
+name's Carl I'll make you suffer for this."
+
+"Come, come," said Hayston, "it was only Ned's rough play. I don't think
+he meant to hurt you. Besides, I don't want to see white men fighting on
+board my ship."
+
+"Look here, Captain," said he, pulling off his shirt, "look at my body,
+and tell me if Ned thought me a fit subject for a joke."
+
+It makes me shudder now. There was an awful gash on his back, extending
+from his right shoulder to below the ribs on the right side. It was
+roughly sewn up here and there, and seemed to be healing, but the blow
+on the chest had made it bleed anew; a dark stream was soaking down his
+leg to the ground.
+
+"By heaven! that is a terrible cut," said the Captain; "how in thunder
+did you get mauled like that?"
+
+Carl, who was still very faint, told us that some time ago he had a
+fight with a native, and licked him. One night, as he was lying face
+downward on his mat, this man crept into his hut and struck him with a
+shark tooth sword. His native wife, who was coming into the house at
+the time, carrying two shells of toddy, dropped them, and flinging her
+arms round the man's legs, tripped him up, and held him, while Carl, all
+smothered in blood, shot him dead with his revolver.
+
+"Ned!" said the Captain gravely, when Carl's tale was told, "did you
+know this young fellow had this gash in his back when you hove the bag
+at him?"
+
+"Of course I did! why, d--n him, can't he take a joke? Naura's a rough
+shop for a man that can't stand a bit of fun."
+
+"Put up your hands, you cowardly dog!" said the Captain, and in an
+instant the drunken traders cleared a space. "I'll teach you to hurt a
+wounded man."
+
+Ned was as big a man as the Captain, and seemed to be the leading spirit
+of the gang. But the other traders, though armed with navy revolvers and
+derringers, did not seem inclined to interfere.
+
+At the first round the big trader went down like a bullock, and lay on
+the cabin floor apparently lifeless. Hayston was like a mad animal when
+he tried to get him up, and the man fell helpless. Picking him up in his
+arms like a child, he carried him on deck, the rest of us following.
+
+"Here! Naura men, where's Ned's boat?" he called out.
+
+It was towing astern, and some one having hauled it up, Hayston dropped
+the man into it like a log of wood.
+
+Then his good temper returned instantly, and he paid Carl every
+attention, insisting on dressing his wound. We remained out by Pleasant
+Island all day, and shipped a lot of oil, for which Hayston paid the
+traders in arms and ammunition; we then stood away for Ocean Island.
+
+I learned that Carl had been a petty officer on board the U.S. cruiser
+_Wish-ton-wish_, but had deserted and made his way to Pleasant Island.
+He seemed superior to his companions in every way, and I was glad to be
+able to give him some books.
+
+He told me that he belonged to the New England States, but that he could
+never return, and would put a bullet through his head rather than be
+taken back a disgraced man. I bade him farewell with regret, and learned
+two years afterwards that, a month after I saw him, he had blown his
+brains out, as the U.S. corvette _Rowena_ touched at the island. Poor
+Carl! How many a tale of wasted life, of reckless deeds, and early
+death, could every island of the South Sea tell.
+
+Although Hayston was an utterly reckless man in most matters, he was by
+no means foolhardy where the lives of others were concerned. During the
+time we spent at Pleasant Island every precaution was taken against a
+surprise.
+
+All the crew carried revolvers, and two men were posted in the fore and
+main-tops armed with Winchesters. The natives of this island had cut off
+many ships in past years, and were now so well armed and determined that
+the utmost caution was needed.
+
+It was here that I met an American named Maule--about as hard a specimen
+of an old style South Sea trader as one could fall across. He was
+extremely anxious that I should purchase two native girls from him. They
+were under his charge. It seems their father had been killed, and his
+own wife objected to their presence in his house.
+
+I told him that I was supercargo, and therefore could not speculate on
+my own account. Besides, that sort of traffic was entirely out of my
+line. If he had curios, weapons, or Naura gods, I would deal, but there
+I drew the line.
+
+"Well, blame my cats! if you ain't too disgustin' partickler! Want to
+stuff yer cabin with kyurosities and graven images, instead of dellikit
+young women. Now, lookee hyar--jest you take them two gals o' mine for
+thirty dollars, and you'll jest double your money from king Abinoka.
+He's jest mad after Naura girls, and buys 'em up by the dozen."
+
+Finding that I wouldn't invest, he tried the Captain, telling him that
+the girls were anxious to get away from Pleasant Island, as their father
+was dead, and having no brothers, they could not get food enough from
+the people. His wife was jealous too, and had beaten them.
+
+"Well, well!" said the Captain, "bring them aboard, and I'll give them a
+passage somewhere. I suppose by and by you'll tell some man-of-war
+captain that I stole them." So the trader sent them on board, and
+received in exchange some boats' gear and a keg of molasses.
+
+The girls went aft, and remained with the others in the cabin for a few
+days. When we sighted Ocean Island, Hayston called me on deck, and said,
+"Come and see a bit of fun."
+
+Old Mary was told to bring up her flock. The two Pleasant Island girls
+came up with the rest. They were about fourteen and fifteen years of
+age, and, from their close similarity, probably the children of the same
+mother--a somewhat unusual thing in the Gilbert group. They seemed
+frightened at being called up, and clung closely to Sara and Nellie.
+Their hair, Pleasant Island fashion, hung down straight upon their
+backs, and was carefully oiled and combed. A girdle of Pandanus leaf was
+their only garment. Speaking kindly to them, the Captain asked them if
+they would like to go ashore there and live. I give the conversation.
+
+_Captain._--"Well, will you go ashore here?"
+
+_Girls._--"Are there plenty of cocoa-nuts and fish?"
+
+_Captain._--"Pretty fair; but there are not always plenty."
+
+_Girls._--"What chiefs will take us and give us food?"
+
+_Captain._--"I don't know--there are more women there than men. All the
+young men have gone away in whaleships."
+
+_Girls._--"That's bad; the Ocean Island women will soon kill us
+strangers."
+
+_Captain._--"Most likely. Would you like to stay on the ship if I get
+you husbands?"
+
+_Girls._--"Yes! where are they?"
+
+_Captain._--"Boatswain, send Sunday and boy George here."
+
+These were two boys who had been sailing with Hayston for some years.
+Both were about sixteen. Of George I will speak later on. Having come
+aft, the Captain, addressing them, said he was pleased at their
+steadiness, and as a reward for their good conduct, he had at great
+expense procured them wives, whom he hoped they would treat well. His
+speech was a humorous one, and the crew standing round grinned
+approvingly--Sunday and boy George being, apparently, looked upon as
+lucky youths, for the girls were undeniably good-looking. In fact, I
+never saw an ill-looking Pleasant islander.
+
+"Now, Terau and N'jilong, you must draw lots for first pick. Carpenter,
+bring me two splinters of wood."
+
+They were instructed by the other native girls how to draw lots, the
+result being that Terau picked boy George, and her sister took Sunday.
+
+"Steward!" commanded Hayston, "bring up a couple of bottles of grog. And
+you, Sunday and boy George! before you begin your married life just
+listen to me! Call all hands aft!"
+
+The crew came aft, and the Captain, who now seemed quite serious, said,
+"Now, boys, I have given these girls to Sunday and boy George. Don't let
+me hear of any one attempting to interfere with them, and if one of you
+puts his head into the boys' house while the girls are there alone, I'll
+make it warm for him. There's a couple of bottles of grog for the watch
+to drink their healths, and the steward has two more for the watch
+below. For'ard now, and you, boys, go and ask the supercargo for some
+cloth to rig your girls out with."
+
+The _Leonora_ was certainly a very sociable and domesticated ship.
+
+We lay off and on at Ocean Island for a day or two, and engaged
+twenty-seven natives to proceed to Ponap (Ascension Island) to work for
+Cappelle and Milne, a German firm. Then we made an easterly course to
+Taputanea (or Drummond Island), one of the Gilbert group, where Hayston
+had a trader.
+
+The Drummond islanders are notorious throughout the Pacific for
+treachery and ferocity. They frequently cut off vessels, and murder all
+hands, being led on these occasions by renegade white men. When
+Commodore White's ships visited this spot in 1842 they murdered one of
+his seamen. A fight ensued, in which many were killed, and the town of
+Utiroa was laid in ashes. But the lesson had no great effect, and
+Hayston told me that they would not hesitate to attempt the capture of
+any vessel that could not make a good resistance.
+
+We sighted the island at night-time, and lay off Utiroa till daylight.
+Then after putting the brig in a state of defence, and giving the
+command to the Fiji half-caste, Bill, telling him also to shoot a
+certain native if he saw him come alongside, Hayston had the longboat
+and whaleboat lowered.
+
+Into the former he put a great quantity of trade, principally gin, rum,
+and firearms, giving me charge of the latter to cover him. I had six men
+with me, each armed with a Vetterlich rifle, and I carried my own
+Winchester--eighteen shot. Hayston gave me full instructions how to act
+if he was attacked; then we made for the town of Utiroa, the boats
+keeping alongside of each other. As we were pulling Hayston told me that
+he wished to get ashore before the canoes left, in order to interview
+his trader Jim in the presence of the people. This fellow, it appeared,
+was a fighting man who had great influence over the Drummond Island
+natives, with whom bloodshed and murder were acts of everyday
+occurrence. He always aided them in their tribal fights, and evinced a
+partiality for taking life that had won their warmest admiration.
+Hayston had brought him from Ponap, where he was the terror of the
+white men, swaggering about the ports of the island, and using his
+pistol on any one that resented his conduct. But he was a good trader
+for all that, and had been placed in this trust because no other man
+could be found willing to risk his life among such a treacherous race.
+
+Jim had not been installed a week at Utiroa, when a chief named Tabirau
+gave him one of his daughters for a wife, and was paid for her in trade
+according to custom. Shortly afterwards the girl ran home again, saying
+that the white man had beaten her for spoiling a razor.
+
+Jim took his rifle, went to his father-in-law's house, and demanded the
+girl back. A number of natives followed up, anticipating that he would
+be killed, for Tabirau was a chief of note, not averse to the
+extermination of white men. As they expected, he refused to give up the
+girl unless Jim paid more trade, alleging that one of the muskets paid
+for her was no good. Without a moment's hesitation the trader shot him
+through the body, killing him instantly, and then clubbed the girl to
+death with the butt end of his rifle.
+
+Instead of being murdered by the natives for this atrocious deed, he was
+looked upon as a hero, and all Tabirau's land, canoes, and property were
+made over to him. The people of Utiroa elected him to be their
+commercial ruler, refusing to sell oil or produce to any ship without
+his advice or consent. For a while his conduct had quite satisfied
+Hayston, until he learned that Jim had sold a lot of his oil to a
+Californian trader, boasting, besides, that Hayston dared not bring him
+to task for it.
+
+It was now the Captain's intention to assert his authority, and break
+the trader's power over the natives. For this purpose he determined to
+meet him on shore, and let the natives see which was the better man.
+
+As we approached the beach we saw fully five hundred natives assembled;
+all were armed, and many dressed in their thick armour of fibre, and
+wearing helmets of the skin of the porcupine fish. There was great
+excitement among them, though many of them seemed glad to see Hayston,
+calling out "Tiaka po, Kaptin" (How do you do). The main body, however,
+seemed ready to dispute our landing.
+
+"Keep close up!" the Captain called out to me, "and don't let any of
+them see your arms, but be ready to drop it into them the first shot
+that is fired. But, for God's sake, don't miss. That villain Jim, you
+see, isn't here, though; those fellows mean mischief. However, land I
+must, and will." He then told the crew to run the boat on the beach, and
+standing up in the stern, called out to natives that he knew, pretending
+to see nothing unusual in their manner. At the moment that he stepped on
+the beach the whole body of natives formed in solid line in front of
+him, while hundreds of rifle muzzles were almost thrust in his face. He
+looked steadily at them, and commenced to talk with his hands in his
+trousers' pocket.
+
+I forgot my instructions, and my crew seemed equally excited at the
+Captain's danger, for, without being told, they ran the whaleboat ashore
+and we all jumped out. The men in the other boat were standing up rifle
+in hand, and they followed us.
+
+The Captain was speaking calmly to the natives, when he turned and saw
+me. "For God's sake, go back to the boats," he said, in a quiet tone;
+then raising his hand threateningly and roaring like a lion, he repeated
+the order in the Drummond Island dialect. I understood this hint, so we
+ran back, but kept our arms ready. Hayston's order to me seemed to have
+a good effect, for the fierce looks of the natives relaxed, and soon
+afterwards he called out that it was all right, and told me to give him
+two muskets and a box of tobacco out of the longboat. This was a present
+for two of the principal chiefs, who now shook hands with him, saying
+that Jim was in his house, and had told them that if Captain Hayston put
+his foot inside he would shoot him. Our former opponents seemed pretty
+equally divided in their opinions. Half of them were eager to see the
+fight between Jim and the Captain, and the others were ready to massacre
+the whole of us if but a single act of hostility was committed on either
+side.
+
+Hayston ordered me then to come with him, and asked the natives'
+permission to allow me to bring my Winchester, as I was frightened of
+them. The boats were shoved out, the crew being told to jump ashore if
+they heard any firing, and fight their way to Jim's house. As I joined
+the Captain on the beach he told me that the natives thought he meant to
+kill Jim, and that they had felt him all over to see if he had concealed
+any arms, but that they seemed satisfied when they found none. I was
+astonished at his recklessness in not bringing weapons, and as we were
+escorted along the road by the natives, I told him that I had a
+derringer hidden among some tobacco in a canvas bag slung round my
+waist.
+
+"No, no!" he said. "It will never do to see you give it to me now.
+Besides, I don't want any shooting if I can help it. There are many of
+these natives who will be glad to see Jim's power broken, and I want to
+get my hands on him before he puts a bullet into me. The rest is easy
+enough. If you see him taking a shot at me before I come up to him, you
+can use that rifle; but don't kill him if you can help it, and don't be
+alarmed about yourself. Take hold of this old nigger's hand who is
+walking beside you and you'll be all right. Just keep laughing and
+talking."
+
+After a long walk we got up to the trader's house, and here the natives
+made a halt. I was beginning to feel horribly scared, and wished we were
+on board the brig again. Presently we were told that Jim was inside, and
+would not come out because he was sick. Walking steadily forward the
+Captain advanced to within a few feet of the house, and called out,
+"Well, this is a nice sort of welcome, Jim! Come out and show yourself."
+
+The door opened, and I could see that the place was filled with natives,
+all of whom carried guns and seemed much excited.
+
+Then Jim made his appearance and walked slowly up to the Captain. He was
+a tall man, dressed in pyjamas, with two navy revolvers in his belt.
+With his heavy red moustache and bloodshot eyes, he looked his character
+well--that of an unscrupulous and remorseless ruffian. Hayston had
+seated himself on a fallen cocoa-nut tree with his hands full of papers.
+
+"How d'ye do, Jim?" he said, extending his hand to the trader and rising
+as he spoke. The moment the trader's hand touched his, he seized him by
+the throat and shook him like a dog shaking a rat; then spun him round
+violently and threw him against the stern of a canoe, where he lay half
+stunned. The natives gave a roar, but the Captain held up his hands--the
+tide seemed to turn at once in our favour, and one man went up to the
+trader, took away his pistols, and gave them to Hayston. The Captain
+addressed the principal chiefs, whom he told that Jim had robbed him,
+and that after he had made presents to the people, he intended to take
+the rest of the trade away.
+
+We were moving into the house to take possession, when the trader, who
+had now recovered himself, got up and addressed the natives. I did not
+understand what he said, but Hayston evidently did. The effect of Jim's
+harangue was to render the natives undecided as to what course to
+adopt. One man, who spoke good English and had a rifle with a sword
+bayonet attached, said it did not matter if any one was killed, but they
+thought their white man did not have fair play.
+
+"Jim," said the Captain, in his smoothest tones, "you say you can whip
+any man in the Pacific in four rounds. Well! now you have an opportunity
+to prove your words. If you are a better man than I am, I will let you
+keep what trade you have got, and shake hands afterwards."
+
+Jim stripped to the waist, and called for one of his women to bring him
+a pair of "taka" or "cinnet" sandals, as he was barefooted.
+
+He was shaking with rage and excitement, while Hayston showed no concern
+whatever. From the jump the trader forced the fighting, but in less time
+than I describe it, both of his eyes were nearly closed, and he had a
+terrific cut on his cheekbone. Some women then ran in and begged the
+Captain to desist. I believe he could have killed his man in another
+five minutes. He asked Jim if he was satisfied and would shake hands.
+But the trader would not answer, and then the Captain's face grew dark.
+Seizing him again by the throat he nearly strangled him, his eyes
+protruding horribly as he worked his arms in the air. When he let him go
+he fell like a log. "Carry him down to the boats and make him fast," he
+said to the interpreter.
+
+We entered his house unmolested, and I took an inventory of his goods.
+There was very little trade left, but the natives said he had a lot of
+money given him by the skipper of the Californian vessel. This we found
+in a large soup and bouilli tin in his chest. It amounted to nearly
+seven hundred dollars, mostly in U.S. half-dollar coins.
+
+The natives begged the Captain not to close the station up; if Jim was
+going away, they wished some one in his place. He said he would consider
+their wish after he got on board; but they must first help him to raft
+off twenty casks of oil that were lying in Jim's oil-shed.
+
+We got off to the boats at last. The old man still kept hold of my left
+hand. This, the Captain had told me, he had done to protect me if any
+fighting took place; that if fighting had resulted I would not have been
+killed, but would have been regarded as the old man's prize. The natives
+launched their canoes and followed the boats in swarms when we set sail
+for the brig. As soon as we got alongside, Hayston asked the second mate
+if the native he had spoken of had shown up.
+
+"No," said Bill; "he's gone away to Samoa, so they say here."
+
+Hayston seemed pleased at this news, telling me that this man was a
+special enemy of his, into whom he meant to put a bullet if he could
+drop across him. As he was gone away he was saved an unpleasant task.
+Jim was taken for'ard, and the carpenter was ordered to put him in
+irons; thereupon he sulkily explained that he didn't intend to turn
+rusty.
+
+"All right, then, Jim," replied the Captain. "I'm glad we're going to be
+friends again. But you can go ashore at Makin and stay there."
+
+He then called for a man among his crew to take Jim's place on shore.
+After some hesitation a sturdy Rotumah native said he didn't mind, if
+the Captain gave him a wife. He couldn't speak the language, and if he
+took a Taputana woman she might plot to kill him and he be none the
+wiser.
+
+"Boys!" called out the Captain, "is any one of you willing to give
+Willie his wife? I'll make it up to him. Besides, there'll be plenty
+more going through the Marshall group."
+
+No one appeared struck with the idea. So the Captain called Sunday aft,
+and held brief conversation with him, after which the boy went into the
+deckhouse and brought out his wife and N'jilong. The poor girl shed a
+few tears at first and clung to Sunday's neck, but he finally induced
+her to go with Willie. She had come aboard almost naked, but went away
+with a well-filled chest and any amount of finery.
+
+She parted from her sister in an apathetic manner, but her tears began
+to flow afresh when Sunday turned coolly from her and pursued his duties
+on the deck. Savage though she might be, she felt the parting from the
+hardened young wretch whom she had come to look on as her partner.
+However she lost nothing by the change. Her new husband was a steady,
+good fellow who treated her kindly. Years afterwards I met them both on
+one of the Ellice Islands and received a warm welcome. Willie had
+legally married her in Fiji, and they seemed a most affectionate couple,
+with children in whom their chief pride in life was centred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+CAPTAIN BEN PEESE
+
+
+For the next few weeks we cruised about among the islands of the
+Kingsmill and Gilbert groups, collectively known as the Line Islands.
+The most southerly of them is Arurai or Hope Island, in the latitude
+2.41 S., longitude 177 E.--the most northerly, Makin or Butaritu, in
+latitude 3.20, 45 N.
+
+We did good business generally going through this group, and steady
+going trade it was, varied only by the mad drunken bouts and wild dances
+which took place when we were at anchor--these last beyond description.
+
+Just then I was badly hurt fishing on shore one day. It was peculiarly a
+South Sea accident. I was standing on a jutting ledge of coral, holding
+my rod, when it suddenly broke off, allowing me to fall downwards on
+sharp edges, where I was terribly cut about the legs and body. The green
+or live coral has the property of making a festering wound whenever it
+pierces the true skin, and for weeks, with my unhealed wounds, I was
+nearly mad with pain. The Captain did all he could for me, having a
+netted hammock slung on deck, where I could see all that was going on.
+One day in a fit of pain I fell out and nearly cracked my skull. All the
+native girls on board were most kind and patient in nursing me. So the
+Captain said the least I could do was to marry one, if only out of
+gratitude and to brush away the flies.
+
+Whatever some people might call these poor girls they had at least one
+virtue, which, like charity, covereth a multitude of sins. Pity for any
+one in bodily pain they possessed in the highest degree. Many an hour
+did they sit beside me, bathing my aching head with a sponge and salt
+water--this last the universal and infallible cure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We called at Peru or Francis Island, where we obtained nine
+natives--five men and four young women. The islanders here are rude and
+insulting to all strangers not carrying arms, and almost as threatening
+as those of Taputana. I was, however, too ill to go on shore here.
+
+After a two months' cruise through this group we bore away for Strong's
+Island, distant some five hundred miles. We had favourable winds, and
+the brig's speed was something wonderful. In thirty-eight hours we had
+covered a distance of four hundred and ninety miles, when the lofty
+hills of this gem of the North Pacific, covered with brightest verdure,
+gladdened our eyes after the long, low-lying chains of islets and atolls
+of the Marshall and Kingsmill groups.
+
+The brave "north-east trade" that had borne us so gallantly along died
+away to a zephyr as we drew near the land, and saw once more the huge
+rollers thundering on the weather point of the island.
+
+Calling first at Chabral harbour we did a little trading, and then
+sailed down the coast close to the shore--so deep runs the water--till
+we reached Utw.
+
+Here we found three American whalers put in for food and water. Hayston
+seemed anxious to get away, so, after exchanging courtesies with the
+skippers, we ran round to Coquille harbour, where we lay several days
+trading and painting ship. We cleared the harbour at daylight, with the
+sea as smooth as glass and wind so light that the _Leonora_ could
+scarcely stem the strong easterly current. Still keeping a north-west
+course, we sailed away over the summer sea while scarce a ripple broke
+its glassy surface, until we sighted Pingelap or M'Askill's, a hundred
+and fifty miles from Strong's Island.
+
+These were discovered by Captain Musgrave, of the American whaler _Sugar
+Cane_, in 1793. They are densely covered with cocoa-palms, and though
+wholly of coral formation, are a good height above sea-level.
+
+The Captain had a trader here named Sam Biggs--a weak-kneed,
+gin-drinking cockney. How ever such a character could have found his way
+to these almost unknown islands passed my comprehension! We ran in close
+to the village--so near that, the wind being light, we nearly drifted
+onto the beach, and lowered the starboard quarter boat to tow out again.
+
+Whilst waiting for the trader I had a good look at the village, which I
+was surprised to hear contained 500 inhabitants. As, however, these
+islands--there are three of them, Takai, Tugula, and Pingelap--are
+wondrous fertile, they support their populations easily.
+
+Presently the trader came off in a canoe, and, shambling along the deck,
+went down below to give in his report. He said that things were very
+bad. A few months back the American missionary brig _Morning Star_ had
+called and prevailed on the king to allow two teachers to be landed.
+After making presents to the chiefs and principal men, they had got
+their promise to accept Christianity and to send the white man Biggs
+about his business. They had also told the natives that Captain Hayston
+was coming with the intention of carrying them off in bondage to work on
+the plantations in Samoa. Also that Mr. Morland, the chief missionary,
+was now in Honolulu, begging for a man-of-war to come to Pingelap and
+fight Captain Hayston's ship with his big guns and sink her.
+
+All South Sea islanders are easily influenced. In a few hours after the
+teachers landed the whole village declared for Christianity, burned
+their idols, and renounced the devil and all his works, _i.e._ Captain
+Hayston and the brig _Leonora_.
+
+The Captain's face darkened as he listened; then he asked the trader
+what he had done in the matter. The man, blinking his watery eyes, said
+he had done nothing; that he was afraid the natives would kill him, and
+asked to be taken away.
+
+Jumping up from the table, Hayston grasped him by the collar, and asked
+me to look at him and say what he should do with such a white-livered
+hound, who would let one of the finest islands in the Pacific be handed
+over to the sanctimonious pack on board the _Morning Star_, and let the
+best trading station he, Hayston, owned be ruined?
+
+I suggested that he should be detained on board till we met the _Morning
+Star_, and then be given to Mr. Morland to keep.
+
+"By ----! just the thing! but just let me tell you, you drunken hound,
+that when I picked you up a starving beach-comber in Ponap, I thought
+you had at least enough sense to know that I am not a man to be trifled
+with. I was the first man to place a trader on Pingelap. I overcame the
+natives' hostility, and made this one of the safest islands in the group
+for whaleships to call at. Now I have lost a thousand dollars by your
+cowardice. So take this to remember it by."
+
+Then, holding him by one hand, he shook him like a rag, finally slinging
+him up the companion way, and telling the men to tie him up.
+
+"Lower away the longboat," he roared, "I'll teach the Pingelap gentry
+how to dance." I went with him, as I wanted to get some bananas and
+young cocoa-nuts. In five minutes we drew up on the beach.
+
+The head-men of the island now came forward to meet the Captain, and to
+express their pleasure at seeing him. But he was not to be mollified,
+and sternly bade them follow him to the largest house in the town where
+he would talk to them.
+
+The boy Sunday, who was a native of Pingelap, came with us to act as
+interpreter. Behind the crowd of natives were the two Hawaiian teachers,
+dressed in white linen shirts and drill trousers. They had their wives
+with them, dressed in mixed European and native costume.
+
+None of us had arms, nor did we think them necessary. Hitherto these
+people had been slavish admirers of Hayston, and he assured me that he
+would reassert his former influence over them in ten minutes. The crowd
+swarmed into the council-house and sat down on their mats. The Captain
+remained standing.
+
+His grand, imposing form, as he stood in the centre of the house and
+held up his hands for silence, seemed to awe them as would a demi-god,
+and murmurs of applause broke from them involuntarily.
+
+"Tell them, Sunday," he said, fixing his piercing blue eyes on the
+cowering forms of the two missionary teachers, "that I have come to talk
+peace, not to fight. Ask them who it was years ago, when the hurricane
+came and destroyed their houses and plantations--when their little ones
+were crying with hunger--that brought them to his ship and fed them?
+Have they forgotten who it was that carried them to Ponap, and there
+let them live on his land and fed them on his food till they grew tired
+of the strange land, and then brought them back to their homes again?"
+
+Sunday translated, and the silence was unbroken till the Captain
+resumed, "Did not the men of Pingelap say then that no man should be
+more to them than me--that no one else should place a white man here?
+And now a strange ship comes, and the men of Pingelap have turned their
+faces from me?"
+
+A scene of wild excitement followed, the greater number crowding round
+the Captain, while with outstretched hands and bent heads they signified
+respect.
+
+The two teachers were walking quickly away with their wives, when the
+Captain called them back, and in a pleasant voice invited them to come
+on board and see if there was anything there that they would like their
+wives to have for a present.
+
+Before returning on board Sunday told the Captain that the chiefs and
+people desired to express their sorrow at receiving the missionaries,
+and that they would be glad if he took them away. Since the visit of the
+_Morning Star_ an epidemic had broken out resembling measles, which had
+already carried off fifty or sixty of them. Already their superstitious
+fears led them to regard the sickness as a punishment for having broken
+their treaty with Hayston. So they offered us six young women as a
+present; also ten large turtles, and humbly begged him to allow his
+trader to remain.
+
+The Captain made answer that he did not want six young women--there were
+plenty on board already; but he would take two, with the ten turtles,
+and ten thousand cocoa-nuts. The said presents were then cheerfully
+handed over; the two girls and the turtles going off in the Captain's
+boat, while the cocoa-nuts were formed into a raft and floated alongside
+the ship.
+
+While these weighty matters were being arranged I walked round to the
+weather side of the island with Sunday, who wanted to show me a pool in
+which the natives kept some captive turtle. On our way we came across
+some young boys and girls catching fish with a seine. They brought us
+some and lit a fire. We stayed about an hour with them, having great fun
+bathing in the surf.
+
+Happening to look out to sea, I saw a big ship coming round the point
+under easy sail; from her rig and the number of boats she carried I knew
+her at once to be a whaler. We ran ashore and dressed, and as two of the
+children offered to show us a short cut through the forest to the
+village, we ran all the way and got opposite the brig just in time to
+see the Captain leaving her side to board the whaler. I hailed the brig,
+and they sent me the dingey, in which I followed Hayston. She proved to
+be the _Josephine_, just out from Honolulu--a clean ship, not having
+taken a fish. The captain was a queer-looking old fellow dressed like a
+fisherman. He received us with civility, yet looked at the Captain
+curiously. His crew were all under arms. Each man had a musket, a lance,
+or a whaling spade--these two last very formidable weapons--in his hand.
+
+Captain Long was candid, and admitted that as soon as he sighted our
+brig he had armed his men, for the wind was so light that he would have
+no chance of getting away. Hayston laughingly asked him if he thought
+the brig was a pirate.
+
+The whaler replied, "Why, certainly. Old Morland and Captain Melton told
+me two years ago that you sailed a brig with a crew of darned cut-throat
+niggers, and would take a ship if you wanted her, so I made up my mind
+to have a bit of shootin' if you boarded us."
+
+"Well, Captain Long," said Hayston, in his easy, pleasant way, "come
+over to my little vessel and see the pirate at home."
+
+The invitation was accepted, and as we pulled over amicably, the skipper
+cast an admiring glance at the graceful _Leonora_ as she floated o'er
+the still, untroubled deep. As we stepped over the ship's side we were
+met by Bill Hicks, the second mate, whose savage countenance was
+illumined by a broad smile as he silently pointed to the queer
+entertainment before us.
+
+"Great ancestral ghosts! d'ye carry a troupe of ackeribats aboard this
+hyar brig?" quoth the skipper, pointing to four undraped figures
+capering about in the mad abandonment of a Hawaiian national dance.
+
+The mate explained briefly that he had given the native teachers grog,
+after which nothing would satisfy them but to show the crew how they
+used to dance in Lakaina in the good old days. Their wives were also
+exhilarated, and having thrown off their European clothes, were dancing
+with more vigour than decorum to the music of an accordion and a violin.
+The Hope Island girl, Nellie, was seated in a boat we carried on deck
+playing the accordion, and with her were the rest of the girls laughing
+and clapping their hands at the antics of the dancers. The stalwart
+Portuguese, Antonio, was perched on the water-tank with his fiddle, and
+the rest of the crew who were not at work getting the cocoa-nuts on
+board were standing around encouraging the quartette by shouts and
+admiring remarks.
+
+As the whaling skipper gazed with astonishment at the sight, Hayston
+said, "Ay, there you see the Honolulu native teacher in his true
+colours. His Christianity is like ours--no better, no worse--to be put
+on and off like a garment. Once give a Sandwich Island missionary a
+taste of grog and his true instincts appear in spite of himself. There
+is _nothing_ either of those men would not do now for a dollar; and yet
+in a day or two they will put on their white shirts, and begin to preach
+again to these natives who are better men than themselves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We went below, and after a glass of wine or two the skipper was about to
+leave, after promising to sell us some bolts of canvas, when the Chinese
+steward announced that they were fighting on deck. We ran up and saw
+Antonio and boy George struggling with knives in their hands. The
+Captain caught Antonio a crack on the head, which sent him down very
+decisively, and then pitched George roughly into the boat with the
+girls, telling them to stop their infernal din. The two teachers' wives
+were then placed in old Mary's care below, and told to lie down and
+sleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The two Pingelap girls who came on board were very young, and seemed
+frightened at their surroundings, wailing and moaning with fear, so
+Hayston gave them trinkets and sent them back to the chiefs, getting two
+immense turtles in exchange.
+
+The wind now died away. All night the brig lay drifting on the glassy
+sea. At breakfast-time we were almost alongside of the whaler, and the
+two crews were exchanging sailors' courtesies when five or six whales
+hove in sight.
+
+All was changed in a moment. Four boats were lowered as if by magic from
+the whaler, and the crews were pulling like demons for the huge prizes.
+
+The whales were travelling as quickly as the boats, but towards the
+ships, and in another quarter of an hour three of the boats got fast,
+the fourth boat also, but had to cut away again.
+
+Our crew cheered the boats, and as there was no wind for the vessel to
+work up to the dead whales which were being towed up, I took the brig's
+longboat and six men to help the boats to get the whales alongside.
+
+A breeze sprung up at noon, so after bidding good-bye to the whaler, we
+stood away for Ponap, making W.N.W. We were ten days out from Pingelap
+before we sighted Ponap's cloud-capped peaks. The wind was very light
+for the whole way, the brig having barely steerage way on her. Hayston
+was anxious to reach the island, for there he expected to meet his
+partner, the notorious Captain Ben Peese.
+
+Here he told me that if things went well with them they would make a
+fortune in a few years; that he had bought Peese's schooner and sent him
+to Hong Kong with a load of oil to sell, arranging to meet him in
+Jakoits harbour in Ponap on a day named. They were then to proceed to
+Providence Island, which was a dense grove of cocoa-nut trees. He was
+sanguine of filling two hundred and fifty casks now in the brig's hold
+with oil when we reached there.
+
+Twenty miles from shore we spoke an American whaleship from New London.
+She was "trying out," and signalled to send a boat. The Captain, taking
+me with him, went on board, when we were met by a pleasant, white-haired
+old man, Captain Allan.
+
+His first words were, "Well, Captain Hayston, I have bad news. Peese has
+turned against you. He returned to Ponap from China a week ago, and
+cleared out your two stations of everything of value. He had a big
+schooner called the _Vittoria_, and after gutting the stations, he told
+the chiefs at Kiti harbour that you had sent him for the cattle running
+there. He took them all away--thirty-six head."
+
+The Captain said nothing. Turning away he looked at the brig, as if in
+thought, then asked Allan if he knew where Peese had gone.
+
+"To Manila; Peese has made friends there, and engaged with the
+Governor-General of the Philippines to supply the garrison with forty
+head of cattle. I knew the cattle were yours, and warned the chiefs not
+to let Peese take them away. But he threatened them with a visit from a
+Spanish man-of-war, and Miller backed him up. He had a strong party with
+him to enforce his demands."
+
+"Thank you, Allan!" Hayston said very deliberately and calmly; "I was
+half afraid something like this would happen, but I thought the man I
+took out of the slums of Shanghai and helped like a brother was the last
+person to have robbed me. It has shown me the folly of trusting any one.
+You are busy, Allan! so will leave you."
+
+Bidding adieu to the good skipper we stepped into our boat. Hayston was
+silent for ten minutes. Then he put his hand on my knee, and looking
+into my face with the expression I had never seen him wear since he
+fought the trader at Drummond Island, said, "Hilary! did you ever know
+me to say I would do a thing and not do it?"
+
+"No! but I have often wished you would _not_ keep your word so strictly.
+Some day you will regret it."
+
+"Perhaps so. But listen to me. This man--this Peese--I found in Shanghai
+years ago, ill and starving. There was something in his face which
+roused my interest; I took him on board my vessel and treated him as a
+brother. I was then high in favour with the Chinese authorities. Not as
+I am now--hunted from port to port--forced to take up this island life
+and associate with ruffians who would shoot and rob me if they did not
+fear me. I went to a mandarin--a man who knew the stuff I was made of,
+and what I had done in the Chinese service--and asked for preferment for
+Peese. It was done. In a week he was put in command of a transport, and
+with his commission in his hand he came aboard my ship and swore he
+would never forget who it was that had saved him. He spoke but the bare
+truth, for I tell you this man was dying--dying of starvation. Well! it
+was he who led me afterwards, by his insidious advice and by collusion
+with Portuguese collie merchants, into risky dealings. At first all went
+well. We so used our positions in the Imperial service that we made over
+fifteen thousand dollars in three months, exclusive of the money used in
+bribing Chinese officials. The end came by and by, when I nearly lost my
+head in rescuing Peese from a gunboat in which he lay a prisoner. Anyhow
+I lost my rank, and the Viceroy issued a proclamation in the usual
+flowing language, depriving me of all honours previously conferred. We
+escaped, it is true, but China was closed to me for ever. Since then I
+have stood to Peese faithfully. Now, you see the result. He is a d--d
+clever fellow, and a good sailor, no doubt of that. But mind me when I
+say that I'll find him, if I beggar myself to do it. And when I find
+him, he dies!"
+
+I said nothing. He could not well let such treachery and ingratitude
+pass, and Peese would deserve his fate. However, they never met. Peese,
+like Hayston, appeared to have his hand against every man, as every man
+had his hand against Peese.
+
+He met his fate after this fashion:--
+
+A daring act of piracy--seizing a Spanish revenue vessel under the very
+guns of a fort--and working her out to sea with sweeps, outlawed him.
+Caught at one of his old haunts in the Pelew Islands, he was heavily
+ironed and put on board the cruiser _Hernandez Pizarro_, for conveyance
+to Manila, to await trial.
+
+One day he begged the officers of the corvette to allow him on deck as
+the heat was stifling. He was brought up and his leg-irons widened so
+that he could walk. Peese was always an exceedingly polite man. He
+thanked the officers for their courtesy, and begged for a cigar.
+
+This was given him, and he slowly walked the decks, dragging his
+clanking chains, but apparently enjoying the flavour of his cigar.
+Standing against a gun, he took a last look at the blue cloudless sky
+above him, and then quietly dropped overboard. The weight of his irons,
+of course, sank him "deeper than plummet lies".... So, and in such
+manner, was the appropriate and befitting ending of Benjamin Peese,
+master mariner--"_Requiescat in pace!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+CRUISING AMONG THE CAROLINES
+
+
+Our first port of call at Ponap was Jakoits harbour. It was here we
+were to land some Line Islanders we had brought from various places in
+the Gilbert group. Hayston had brought them to the order of the firm of
+Johann Guldenstern and Sons of Hamburg, whose agents and managers at
+Ponap were Messrs. Capelle and Milne. Their trading stations were at
+Jakoits Islands, where resided the manager of the business. The senior
+partner of the firm--a burly, bullying Scot--had for some time been
+carrying on a rather heated correspondence with Hayston, whom he had
+accused of kidnapping the firm's traders. He had not as yet encountered
+the Captain, but had told various whaling skippers and others that if
+half a dozen good men would back him up, he would seize Hayston, and
+keep him prisoner till H.M. warships _Tuscarora_ or _Jamestown_ turned
+up.
+
+Occasionally Hayston had by letter warned him to beware, as he was not a
+man to be trifled with. Talk and threats are easy when the enemy is
+distant; so Miller, during his cruisings in the schooner _Matauta_,
+would exhibit to various traders the particular pistol he intended to
+use on Hayston. Representing a powerful firm, he had almost unlimited
+influence in Ponap. Hayston told me that he believed Peese would never
+have dared to have looted his trading stations and taken his cattle if
+Miller had not sided with him.
+
+"Now," said the Captain, as we were slowly sailing into Jakoits, "I'm in
+a bit of a fix. I must let Miller come aboard and treat him civilly for
+a bit, or he will pretend he knows nothing of this consignment of
+natives I have for him. He lies easily, and may declare that he has
+received no instructions from Kleber, the manager at Samoa, to receive
+these niggers from me, much less pay for them. But once I have the cash
+in hand, or his firm's draft, I mean to bring him up with a round turn."
+
+We dropped anchor in the lovely harbour, almost underneath the
+precipitous Jakoits Islands, on which were the trading stations. There
+were five whalers lying at anchor, having run in according to custom to
+get wood, water, and other necessaries. One of these was a brig, the
+_Rameses_ of Honolulu. Dismantled and deserted-looking--in a little
+secluded cove--she had not a soul on board but the captain, and he was
+mad. Of him and his vessel later on.
+
+A Yankee beach-comber of a pilot, named Joe Kelman, met us as we came
+in; not that his services were required, but evidently for his own
+gratification, as he was bursting with news. As he pulled alongside the
+Captain told me that he was a creature of Miller's, and a thundering
+scoundrel on his own account as well. But he would settle it with him
+and his principal also in a few days.
+
+With a countenance expressive of the deepest sorrow the beach-comber, as
+he sent glass after glass of grog down his throat, told his doleful
+tale--how Peese had come with a crew of murdering Spaniards, and played
+h--l with the "Capting's" property; stole every hoof of his cattle, but
+four which were now running at Kiti harbour; how Capting Miller had been
+real cut up at seeing Peese acting so piratical, and said that though he
+and Captain Hayston was sorter enemies, he thought Peese was "blamed
+downright ongrateful," etc.
+
+"That's all right, Joe," answered the Captain with the pleasantest
+laugh, "that's only a stroke of bad luck for me. I bear Captain Miller
+no ill will from the letters he has written me, and for this part--we
+are both hot-tempered men, and may have felt ourselves injured by each
+other's acts--as he tried to save my property, I shall be glad to meet
+him and thank him personally."
+
+"Well, that's suthinlike," said the beach-comber, "I'd be real sorry to
+see two such fine lookin' men shootin' bullets into each other. Besides,
+pore Miller's sick. Guess I'll cut ashore now, Captain. Kin I take any
+message?"
+
+Hayston said he would give him a few lines, and, sitting down, wrote a
+short but polite note to Miller, stating that he had a number of
+labourers for him, which he would be glad to have inspected and landed.
+He regretted his illness, but would come ashore as soon as he (Miller)
+was well enough to receive him.
+
+The beach-comber took the letter and went ashore. Hayston turned to me
+with a laugh: "Do you see that? The gin-drinking scoundrel is playing
+pilot-fish. He has come to learn if I suspect anything of the game his
+master is playing. Here's a canoe; you'll see I'll get the truth out of
+these natives."
+
+The canoe was paddled by a very old man and a boy. There were also a lot
+of young girls. The Captain declined to entertain visitors at present,
+there being too much work to do, and cross-examined the old man as to
+Miller and his men. He said there were no white men now at Jakoits;
+furthermore, that when the _Leonora_ was sighted, Miller had gone off to
+the four whaleships and had a long talk with the captains. He had taken
+two guns from the _Seabreeze_, and loaded them as soon as he got ashore.
+The natives were told there were going to be a big fight; that Captain
+Miller had got sixty natives in his house, and the two guns placed in
+front of the landing-place. Hayston gave the old man a present, and
+suggested that he should dispose of his cargo to one of the whaleships.
+The old fellow shook his head sadly, saying he had come too late.
+
+Turning to me, the Captain said, "There's news for you; Miller must have
+thought I meant to go for him as soon as we met, and has his people
+ready to give me a warm reception. If I had not these Kanakas on board
+I'd give him as much fighting as he cares for, and put a firestick in
+his station to finish up with." A few minutes later we saw a boat put
+off from Jakoits with a big burly man sitting in the stern. At the same
+time one of the whalers' boats came aboard, in which were the four
+captains. He greeted them warmly, and we all trooped below.
+
+One of them, a wizened little man with a wonderful vocabulary of curses,
+said, looking at the others: "Well, gentlemen, before we accept Captain
+Hayston's hospitality we ought to tell him that we lent Captain Miller
+two guns to sink this brig with."
+
+"Gentlemen," said Hayston, standing at the head of his table, with his
+hands resting upon it, "I know all about that, but you are none the less
+welcome. Miller will be here in a few minutes, and I must beg of you not
+to let him know that I have been informed of the warm reception he had
+prepared for me. Besides, they tell me he is ill."
+
+"Oh, h--l! Ill! That's curious; he was in powerful good health an hour
+or two ago," and the skippers looked at each other and winked. Presently
+we returned to the deck, just as the bluff personage of whom we were
+talking clambered up the ship's side and came aft.
+
+The whaling captains and I watched the meeting with intense interest.
+Miller was evidently ill at ease, but seeing Hayston walking towards him
+with outstretched hand and a smile on his face, he made a great effort
+at self-command, and shook hands vigorously.
+
+"Well, we've met at last, Captain Hayston, and ye see I'm no feared to
+come aboard and speak up till ye like a man."
+
+"My dear sir," replied Hayston, grasping his hand with a prolonged
+shake, "I was just telling these gentlemen how I regretted to hear of
+your illness, for, although we have carried on such a paper warfare, I'm
+convinced that we only need to meet to become good friends."
+
+Here one of the American captains came up, and, looking the new-comer
+straight in the face, said, "Well, I _am_ surprised at meeting you here.
+Reckon you can sick and well quicker'n any man I ever come across."
+
+No notice was taken by Miller of this and other sarcastic remarks while
+he hurried on his business with Hayston. Much grog was drunk, and then
+the Captain passed the word for all hands to muster on deck--the crew to
+starboard, the Kanaka passengers on the port side.
+
+The "labour" was then inspected, and passed by their new proprietor,
+who, now very jovial and unsteady on his pins, took them on shore
+without delay. He returned shortly and paid for them in cash. Next
+morning several traders came on board, and any amount of beach-combers,
+for Ponap is their paradise. Mr. Miller came with an invitation to
+visit him on shore. Having business to attend to I stayed on board,
+promising to follow later on. As Hayston was leaving the brig, Miller
+said, in presence of the traders,--
+
+"Eh, Captain Hayston, but ye're no siccan a terrible crater as they mak'
+ye oot. Man, I hae my doots if ye could pommel me so sevairly as ye've
+inseenuated."
+
+"Mr. Miller," said the Captain, stopping dead, and taking him by the
+shoulder, "you are now on board my ship, and I will say nothing further
+than that if you have any doubt on the subject I am perfectly willing,
+as soon as we reach your station, to convince you that you are
+mistaken."
+
+The traders, who had hitherto backed up their colleague, applauded
+loudly, evidently expecting Miller to take up the challenge. He,
+however, preferred to treat it as a joke. I knew that the Captain was
+labouring under suppressed wrath because he was so cool and polite. I
+knew, by the ring in his voice, that he meant mischief, and at any
+moment looked to see the hot blood surging to his brow, and his fierce
+nature assert itself.
+
+About an hour later the mate of one of the whaleships came on board to
+have dinner with me, and told me that Hayston had given Miller a
+terrible thrashing in his own house, in the presence of his backers and
+the American captains. It seems that Hayston led the conversation up to
+Captain Peese's recent visit, and then suddenly asked Miller if he had
+not told the natives that Captain Peese must take the cattle, and that
+he (Hayston) dared not show up in Ponap again, or else he would long
+since have appeared on the scene.
+
+Possibly Miller thought his only chance was to brazen it out, for,
+though he had a following of the lowest roughs and beach-combers, who
+were at that moment loafing about his house and grounds, and Hayston was
+unarmed, he could see by the coolness of the American captains that he
+could not count on their support. At last he said, with a forced
+laugh,--
+
+"Come, let us have nae mair fule's talk. We can be good friends
+pairsonally, if we would fain cut each other's throats in business. I'll
+make no secret of it, I did say so, and thocht I was playing a good joke
+on ye."
+
+"So that's your idea of a joke, is it," said Hayston, grimly, "but now I
+must have mine, and as it takes a surgical operation to get one into a
+Scotchman's brain, I'll begin at once."
+
+He gave Miller a fearful knocking about there and then. The captains
+picked him up senseless, with a head considerably altered for the worse.
+After which Hayston washed his hands, and went on board one of the
+whaleships to dinner.
+
+He then sent for the chiefs of the various districts, telling them to
+meet him at Miller and Lapelle's station on a certain day and hour. When
+they were all assembled, he induced Miller to say that he sincerely
+regretted having told them such lies, as he knew the cattle did belong
+to Captain Hayston. Finally they shook hands, and swore to be friends in
+future; Hayston, in a tone of solicitude, informing him that he would
+send him some arnica, as his head appeared very bad still. The parting
+scene must have been truly ludicrous. Shaking him warmly by the hand,
+Hayston said, "Good-bye, old fellow; we've settled our little
+difficulty, and will be better friends in future. If I've lost cattle,
+I've gained a friend." Begging the favour of a kiss from the women
+present he then departed, full of honours and dignities; and in another
+hour we were sailing round the coast to Metalauia harbour.
+
+Here we bought a quantity of hawkbill turtle shell. While it was being
+got on board, the Captain and I spent two days on shore exploring the
+mysterious ruins and ancient fortifications which render the island so
+deeply interesting; wonderful in size, Cyclopean in structure. It is a
+long-buried secret by whom and for what purpose they were erected. None
+remain to tell. "Their memorial is perished with them."
+
+In one of the smaller islands on which those ruins are situated, Hayston
+told me that a Captain Williams, in 1836, had found over 10,000 worth
+of treasure. He himself believed that there were rich deposits in other
+localities not far distant.
+
+To this end we explored a series of deathly cold dungeons, but found
+nothing except a heavy disc of a metal resembling copper several feet
+under ground.
+
+This was lying with its face to the stone wall of the subterranean
+chamber--had lain there probably for centuries.
+
+Its weight was nearly that of fifty pounds. It had three holes in the
+centre. We could form no idea as to its probable use or meaning. I was
+unwilling to part with it, however, and taking it on board, put it in my
+cabin.
+
+While we were at Metalauia, Joe Keogh came on board, bringing with him
+three native girls from the Andema group, a cluster of large coral
+islands near the mainland, belonging to the three chiefs of the Kit
+district. He had gone forward, when the Captain saw him and called him
+aft.
+
+He at once accused Joe of being treacherous, telling him that the
+whaling captains had given him a written statement to the effect that he
+had taken a letter from Miller to the Mortlock group, where an American
+cruiser was surveying, asking the captain if he would take Hayston to
+California, as he (Miller) and Keogh would engage to entice him ashore
+and capture him if the cruiser was close at hand.
+
+Not being able to deny the charge, Keogh was badly beaten, and sent away
+without the girls, who were taken aft. Like the Ponap natives, they
+were very light-coloured, wearing a quantity of feather head-dress and
+other native finery. They agreed to remain on board during the cruise
+through the Caroline group, and were then to be landed at their own
+islands.
+
+They were then sent to keep the steward company in the cabin, and put to
+making hats and mats, in which they excelled. At Kit harbour we took on
+board the bull and three cows which Peese had not succeeded in catching.
+On returning to Jakoits harbour in a fortnight's time, I was told that I
+might take up my quarters on shore, while the cabin was redecorated. I
+therefore got a canoe and two natives, with which I amused myself with
+visiting the native village and pigeon-shooting.
+
+One day I fell across a deserted whaling brig. Her crew had run away,
+and the ship having contracted debts, was seized by Miller and Lapelle.
+The captain alone was left. He was now ship-keeper, and his troubles had
+so preyed on his mind that he had become insane.
+
+I watched him. It was a strange and weird spectacle; there lay the
+vessel, silent, solitary--"a painted ship upon a painted ocean."
+
+Her brooding inmate would sometimes pace the deck for hours with his
+arms folded; then would throw himself into a cane lounge, and fixing his
+eyes upon the sky, mutter and talk to himself.
+
+At other times he would imagine that the ship was surrounded by whales,
+and rush wildly about the decks, calling on the officers to lower the
+boats. Not succeeding, he would in despair peer down the dark, deserted
+foc'sle, begging the crew to be men, and get out the boats.
+
+We cruised now for some weeks to and fro among the lovely islands of the
+Caroline group, trading in turtle shell, of which we bought great
+quantities. What a halcyon time it was! There was a luxurious sense of
+dreamy repose, which seemed unreal from its very completeness.
+
+The gliding barque, the summer sea, the lulling breeze, the careless,
+joyous children of nature among whom we lived,--all were fairy-like in
+combination.
+
+When one thought of the hard and anxious toilers of civilisation, from
+whom we had come out, I could fancy that we had reached the lotus-land
+of the ancients, and could well imagine a fixed unwillingness to return
+to a less idyllic life. Hayston was apparently in no hurry.
+
+At any particular island that pleased him he would lie at anchor for
+days. Then we would explore the wondrous woods, and have glorious
+shooting trips on shore.
+
+We met some truly strange and original characters in these waters--white
+men as well as natives. The former, often men of birth and culture,
+were completely lost to the world, to their former friends and kinsfolk.
+
+Return? not they! Why should they go back? Here they had all things
+which are wont to satisfy man here below. A paradise of Eden-like
+beauty, amid which they wandered day by day all unheeding of the morrow;
+food, houses, honours, wives, friends, kinsfolk, all provided for them
+in unstinted abundance, and certain continuity, by the guileless
+denizens of these fairy isles amid this charmed main. Why--why, indeed,
+should they leave the land of magical delights for the cold climate and
+still more glacial moral atmosphere of their native land, miscalled
+home?
+
+Then, perhaps, in the former life beyond these crystal seas--where the
+boom of the surf upon the reef is not heard, and the whispering palm
+leaves never talk at midnight--some imprudence, some mistake at cards
+may have occurred, who knows! These things happen so easily.
+
+The temptation of a moment--a lack of resolve at the fateful crisis--and
+they are so deadly difficult of reparation. Difficult--nay impossible.
+
+Where, then, can mortal find such an asylum for weary body and restless
+soul as this land of Lethe? Where life is one long dream of bliss, and
+where death comes as a lingering friend rather than a swift executioner.
+
+It added materially to my enjoyment of the whole adventure, that
+wherever we went we were always honoured personages, favoured guests.
+Everywhere the people had the greatest admiration for Hayston's personal
+qualities--his strength, his fearlessness, his prompt determination in
+the face of danger and difficulty. That his word was invariably law to
+them was fully evident.
+
+One day, however, as a kind of drawback to all these satisfactions, I
+suddenly noticed that the girl Terau, who had been given to boy George,
+appeared to be very ill, if not dying. That young savage had obtained
+permission from the Captain to keep her on board, although she was most
+anxious to get ashore at Ponap.
+
+She would often get into one of the boats and sit there all day--sad and
+silent--knitting a head-dress from the fibres of the banana plant. Not
+being able to talk to her myself, I got a native of Ocean Island, whose
+dialect resembled her own, to ask her if she was ill.
+
+The girl made no answer. She covered her face with her hands. I then saw
+that every movement of her body gave her pain. At length she murmured
+something to the Ocean islander, slowly took from her shoulders the mat
+which covered them, and looking at me, said, "Teorti fra mati Terau"
+(George has nearly killed Terau). I was horrified to see that the poor
+girl's back was cut and swelled dreadfully. Her side, also, she said,
+was very bad, and it hurt her to breathe.
+
+We lifted her carefully out of the boat, and carried her between us to
+the skylight, where we placed her in a comfortable position.
+
+I found the Captain lying down, and asked him to come on deck, where,
+lifting the mat from the girl's bruised shoulders, I showed him the
+terrible state she was in.
+
+"Do you mean to allow such brutality to be practised on a poor girl?
+Why, I believe she is dying!"
+
+He said nothing, except "Come below." Sitting down at the table, he
+said, "I will not punish that boy. But I would be glad if you will see
+him, and induce him to treat the girl kindly."
+
+I called George, who was in the deck-house playing cards, and asked him
+what he would take for Terau.
+
+The lad thought for a moment, and asked me if the Captain had told me to
+come to him about her?
+
+I said, "Yes! he had." But that I wanted him either to give or sell me
+the girl, adding that he had better be quick about it, as Terau seemed
+sinking fast.
+
+"Oh! if that is so, you give me what you like for her. Don't want no
+dead girls 'bout me."
+
+I called up three of the crew as witnesses, whereupon George sold me the
+victim of his brutality for ten dollars and a German concertina.
+
+"Now, George," I said, "I am going to put Terau ashore, and if you touch
+her again, or even speak to her, I'll knock your infernal soul out of
+your black body."
+
+He grinned, and replied that he was only too glad to get rid of her; and
+returning into the deck-house, began at once to play on the concertina.
+
+A few days after this transaction we touched at Ngatik or Los Valientes
+Island, and I was pleased to find here a trader whose wife was a native
+of Pleasant Island.
+
+I asked them if they would like to have Terau to live with them, and the
+wife at once expressed her willingness as well as joy at seeing one of
+her own countrywomen.
+
+Returning on board, I inquired of Terau if she would not like to go
+ashore and live with these people, who would treat her kindly. During my
+ownership she had regained her strength in great degree, Nellie having
+agreed to attend on her, and the Chinese steward saw that she had
+nourishing food.
+
+She preferred to go ashore, being still afraid of George's
+ill-treatment; I did not tell her of the trader's wife being a
+countrywoman, trusting it would prove a joyful surprise. I was not
+mistaken. The two women rushed into each other's arms, and wept in their
+impulsive fashion. I felt certain that here poor Terau would receive
+kind treatment.
+
+Before returning on board the trader told me that Terau had related her
+story to them, and that the Ngatik women, who were in the house, told
+her to make the white man who had been so kind to her "the present of
+poverty." This ceremonial consisted in her cutting off her hair close to
+the head, and, together with an empty cocoa-nut shell and a small fish,
+offering it to me. The trader said this was to express her
+gratitude--the empty shell and small fish signifying poverty, while the
+gift of hair denoted that she was a bondswoman to me for life.
+
+I felt sorry that the poor child should have cut off her beautiful hair,
+which was tied round the centre with a band of pandanus leaf, and put in
+my hand; but I felt a glow of pleasure at being able to place her with
+people who would be good to her; and thanking her for the gift, to which
+she added a thick plate of turtle shell, I said farewell, and returned
+to the brig.
+
+The Captain called me below, and shook my hand.
+
+"I'm glad," he said, "that poor girl has left the ship; but I must repay
+you the money you gave George for her."
+
+This I refused to take. I felt well repaid by the unmistakable gratitude
+Terau had evinced towards me from the moment the Ocean islander and I
+had carried her pain-racked form below.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+POISONED ARROWS
+
+
+The weather had changed, and been cloudy and dull for several days. We
+were all rather in the doldrums too. We had been bearing eastward on the
+line. Suddenly Hayston said, "Suppose we put in at Santa Cruz. We want
+the water casks filled. I'm not very fond of the island, for all its
+name. Sacred names and bloodshed often go together with Spaniards.
+However, I know the harbour well, and the yams are first-rate." So at
+daylight we bore up, at eight bells we entered the heads with both
+anchors bent to the chains, and at noon were beating up the harbour. By
+two o'clock we cast anchor in thirty fathoms. Out came the canoes, and
+we soon began trading with the natives.
+
+We kept pretty strict watch, however. The men, to my fancy, had a sullen
+expression, and the women, though not bad-looking, seemed as if it cost
+them an effort to look pleasant.
+
+Our girls wouldn't have anything to say to them. Hope Island Nellie, in
+particular, said she'd like to shoot half of them; that they'd killed a
+cousin of hers, who was only scratched with a poisoned arrow, and that
+it was one of the Captain's mad tricks to go there at all.
+
+However, Hayston, as usual, was spurred on by opposition to have his own
+way, and to do even more than he originally intended. He told me
+afterwards that he only wanted to get some yams in the harbour, and that
+the water would have held out longer--until we got to a known safe
+island.
+
+So on Sunday we sent two boats on shore, and got the casks filled with
+water immediately. Our provisions were taken out and examined. Trading
+with the natives went on merrily.
+
+On Monday the weather was fine. We got a couple of rafts out with water,
+and laid in yams enough to last for the rest of our cruise. Hayston
+laughed, and said there was nothing like showing natives that you were
+not afraid of them. "Eh, Nellie? What you think now?"
+
+"Think Captain big fool," said Nellie, who was in a bad temper that
+morning. "Ha! you see boat crew; by God! man wounded--I see them carry
+him along."
+
+Sure enough, we could see the two boats' crews coming down to the beach.
+They were carrying one man, while two supported another, who seemed
+hardly able to walk. "Get out the boats!" roared Hayston. "I'll teach
+the scoundrels to touch a crew of mine."
+
+All was now bustle and commotion. Every man on the ship that could be
+spared, and Hope Island Nellie to boot, who had begged to be allowed to
+go with the attacking party, and whose ruffled temper was restored to
+equanimity by the chance of having a shot at her foes, and avenging her
+cousin's death. We left a boat's crew watch, and made for the shore,
+Nellie sitting in the bow of the Captain's boat with a Winchester rifle
+across her knees, and her eyes sparkling with a light I had never seen
+in a woman's face before. It was the light of battle come down through
+the veins of chiefs and warriors of her people for centuries uncounted.
+
+We left a couple of men in each boat, telling them to keep on and off
+until we returned; the wounded men were carefully laid on mats in one of
+their own boats; and forth we went--a light-hearted storming party, and
+attacked the town of the treacherous devils. Hayston was in a frightful
+rage, cursing himself one moment for relaxing his usual caution, and
+devoting the Santa Cruz natives in the next to all the fiends of hell
+for their infernal causeless treachery. He raged up again and again to
+the cluster of huts, thickly built together with palisades here and
+there, which made excellent cover for shooting from, backed up by the
+green wall of the primeval forest. I could not but admire him as he
+stood there--grand, colossal, fearless, as though he bore a charmed
+life, while the deadly quivering arrows flew thick, and more than one
+man was hit severely. Only that our fire was quick and deadly with the
+terrible Winchester repeaters, and that the savages--bold at first--were
+mowed down so quickly that they had to retreat to a distance which
+rendered their arrows powerless, we should have had a muster roll with
+gaps in it of some seriousness. Hayston was a splendid rifle shot, and
+for quick loading and firing had few equals. Every native that showed
+himself within range went down ere he could fit an arrow to his
+bowstring. And there was Hope Island Nellie by his side, firing nearly
+as fast, and laughing like a child at play whenever one of her shots
+told.
+
+Then the arrows grew fewer. Just before they ceased I had fired at a
+tall native who had been conspicuous through the fight. He fell on his
+face. Nellie gave a shout, and loaded her own rifle on the chance of
+another shot, straining her bright and eager eyes to see if another
+lurking form was near enough for danger. Well for me was it that she did
+so! Staggering to his feet, a wounded native fitted an arrow to his bow,
+and sent it straight for my breast before I could raise my gun to my
+shoulder. Nellie made a snap shot at him, and, either from exhaustion or
+the effect of her bullet, he fell prone and motionless.
+
+I felt a scratch on my arm--bare to the shoulder--as if a forest twig
+had raised the skin. "Look!" said Nellie, and her face changed. As she
+spoke, she passed her finger over the place, and showed it bloodstained.
+"The crawling brute's arrow hit you there. Let me suck the poison. If
+you don't"--as I made a gesture of dissent--"you die, twel' days."
+
+"Don't be a fool!" said Hayston. "You're a dead man if you don't. As it
+is, you must run your chance. Some of these fellows will lose the number
+of their mess, I'm sorry to say."
+
+So the girl, who had been but the moment before thirsting for blood, and
+firing into the mob of half-frightened, yet ferocious savages, pressed
+her soft lips on my arm, like a young mother soothing a babe, and with
+all womanly tenderness bound up the injured place, which had now begun
+to smart, and, to my excited imagination, commenced to throb from wrist
+to shoulder.
+
+"Strange child, isn't she?" laughed Hayston. "If she'd only been born
+white, and been to boarding-school down east, what a sensation she'd
+have created in a ball-room!"
+
+"Better as she is, perhaps," said I. "She has lived her life with few
+limitations, and enjoyed most of it."
+
+The excited crew rushed in and finished every wounded man in a position
+to show fight. Nellie did not join in this, but stood leaning on her
+rifle--_la belle sauvage_, if ever there was one--brave, beautiful, with
+a new expression like that of a roused lioness on her parted lips and
+blazing eyes.
+
+As for Hayston, he was a fatalist by constitution and theory. "A man
+must die when his time comes," he had often said to me. "Until the hour
+of fate he cannot die. Why, then, should he waste his emotions by giving
+way to the meanest of all attributes--personal fear?"
+
+He had none, at any rate. He would have walked up to the block without
+haste or reluctance, had beheading been the fashionable mode of
+execution in his day, chaffed his executioner, and with a bow and a
+smile for the handsomest woman among the spectators, quitted with easy
+grace a world which had afforded him a fair share of its rarest
+possessions.
+
+By his order the town was fired and quickly reduced to ashes, thus
+destroying a number of articles--mats, utensils, wearing apparel,
+weapons, etc.--which, requiring, as they do, considerable skill and
+expenditure of time, are regarded as valuable effects by all savages.
+
+The attack had been early in the day. We cut down as many cocoa-nut
+trees as we could, and finally departed for the ship, towing out with us
+a small fleet of canoes, to be broken up when we got to the brig. The
+sick men were sent below, and such remedies as we knew of were applied.
+They were--all but one--silent and downhearted. They knew by experience
+the sure and deadly effect of the poison manufactured among the Line
+Islands. Subtle and penetrating! But little hope of recovery remains.
+
+About four o'clock next morning we began to heave at the windlass, and
+got under weigh at eight. The wind was light and variable, and our
+progress slow. As we got abreast of the hostile village we gave them a
+broadside. But the sullen devils of Santa Cruz were not cowed yet. A
+second fleet of canoes swarmed around the ship. They made signals of
+submission and a desire to trade, but when they got near enough sent a
+cloud of arrows at the ship, many of which stuck quivering in the masts,
+though luckily no one was hit. Their yells and screams of wrath were
+like the tumult of a hive of demons. We were luckily well prepared, and
+we let them have the carronades over and over again, sinking a dozen of
+their canoes, and doing good execution among the crews when their black
+heads popped up like corks as they swam for the nearest canoes. While
+this took place we unbent the starboard chain, stowed it and the anchor,
+and clearing the heads, bade adieu to the inhospitable isle.
+
+On the next day all hands were engaged in cleaning our armoury, which it
+certainly appeared necessary to keep in good order. Hope Island Nellie
+polished her Winchester rifle till it shone again, besides showing an
+acquaintance with the machinery of the lock and repeating gear was
+nothing new to her.
+
+"You ought to make a notch in the stock for every man you kill, Nellie,"
+said Hayston, as we were lying on the deck in the afternoon, while the
+_Leonora_ was gliding on her course like the fair ocean bird that she
+was.
+
+Nellie frowned. "No like that talk," she answered. "Might have to put
+'nother notch yet for Nellie--who knows?"
+
+"Who knows, indeed, Nellie?" answered the Captain. "None of us can
+foresee our fate," he added with a tinge of sadness, which so often
+mingled with his apparently most careless moments. "We don't even know
+who's going to die from those arrow scratches yet."
+
+Here the girl looked over at me. "How you feel, Hil'ree?" she said, as
+her voice softened and lost its jesting tone.
+
+"Feel good," I said, "think getting better."
+
+"You no know," she answered gravely. "You wait." And she began to count.
+She went over the fingers of her small, delicately-formed left
+hand,--wonderful in shape are the hands and feet of some of these Island
+girls,--and after counting from little finger to thumb _twice_, touched
+the two first fingers, and looked up. "How many?" she asked.
+
+"Twelve," I said; I had followed the counts with care, you may be sure.
+
+"Twel' day, you see," she said; "perhaps you all right--perhaps"--and
+here she gave a faint but accurate limitation of the dreadful shudder
+which precedes the unspeakable agonies of tetanus.
+
+"Nellie's right," said Hayston; "keep up your spirits, for you won't
+know till then whether you're to go to sleep in your hammock in blue
+water or not."
+
+This was a cheerful prospect, but I had come through many perils, and
+missed the grim veteran by so many close shaves, that I had grown to be
+something of a fatalist like Hayston.
+
+"Well! if I go under it won't be your fault, Nellie! So, Captain,
+remember I make over to her all the stuff in my trade chest. Send any
+letters and papers to the address you know in Sydney, and a bank draft
+for what you will find in the dollar bag. Nellie will have some good
+dresses anyhow."
+
+"Dress be hanged!" quoth Nellie, who was emphatic in her language
+sometimes. "You go home to mother yet;" and she arose and left
+hurriedly. Poor Nellie!
+
+In that day when we and others who have sinned, after fullest knowledge
+of good and evil "know the right and yet the wrong pursue," shall be
+arraigned for deeds done in the flesh, will the same doom be meted out
+to this frank, untaught child of Nature and her sisters? I trow not. I
+must say that for a day or two before the fated twelfth which Nellie so
+stoutly insisted upon, I felt slightly anxious. What an end to all one's
+hopes, longings, and glorious imaginings, to be racked with tortures
+indescribable before dying like a poisoned hound, all because of the
+instinctive, senseless act of a stupid savage!
+
+To die young, too, with the world but opening before me! Life with its
+thousand possibilities just unrolled! One's friends, too,--the weeping
+mother and sisters, whose grief would never wholly abate this side of
+time; the old man's fixed expression of sorrow. These thoughts passed
+through my brain, with others arising from and mingled with them, as I
+left my hammock early on the twelfth day. I dressed quickly, and going
+on deck, that daily miracle occurred--"the glorious sun uprist."
+
+The dawnlight now began to infuse the pearly rim, which, imperceptibly
+separating from the azure grey horizon, deepened as it touched the edge
+of the vast ocean plain. Faintly glimmering, how magically it
+transformed from a dim, neutral-tinted waste to an opaline clarity of
+hue--a fuller crimson. Then the wondrous golden globe heaved itself over
+the edge of our water-world all silently, and the day, the 19th of
+October, began its course.
+
+Should I live to see its close?
+
+How strange if all this time the subtle poison should have lurked in
+one's veins until the exact moment, when, like a modern engine of
+devilry--an infernal machine with a clock and apparatus--set to strike
+and detonate at a given and calculated hour, the death-stroke should
+sound!
+
+We had breakfasted, and were lying on the deck chatting and reading, as
+the _Leonora_ glided over the heaving bosom of the main--the sun
+shining--the seabirds sailing athwart our course with outstretched,
+moveless wings--the sparkling waters reflecting a thousand prismatic
+colours, as the brig swiftly sped along her course--all nature gaily
+bright, joyous, and unheeding. Suddenly one of the wounded men, Henry
+Stephens by name, raised himself from his mat with a cry so wild and
+unearthly that half the crew and people started to their feet.
+
+"My God!" he exclaimed, as he sank down again upon his mat, "I'm a dead
+man--those infernal arrows."
+
+"Poor Harry!" said Nellie, who by this time was bending over him, "don't
+give in--by and by better--you get down to bunk. Carry him down, you
+boys!"
+
+Two of the crew lifted the poor fellow, who even as they raised him had
+another fearful paroxysm, drawing his frame together almost double, so
+that the men could scarcely retain their hold.
+
+"Carry him gently, boys!" said Hayston; "go to the steward for some
+brandy and laudanum, that will ease the pain."
+
+"And is there no cure--no means of stopping this awful agony?"
+
+"Not when tetanus once sets in," said Hayston; "it's not the first case
+I've seen."
+
+The other man was quite a young fellow, and famed among us for his
+entire want of fear upon each and every occasion. He laughed and joked
+the whole time of the fight with the Santa Cruz islanders, said that
+every bullet had its billet, and that his time had not come. "He
+believed," he said, "also that half the talk about death by poisoned
+arrows was fancy. Men got nervous, and frightened themselves to death."
+He was not one of that sort anyhow. He had laughed and joked with both
+of us, and even now, when poor Harry Stephens was carried below, and we
+could hear his cries as the increasing torture of the paroxysms overcame
+his courage and self-control, he joked still.
+
+The day was a sad one. Still the brig glided on through the azure
+waveless deep--still the tropic birds hung motionless above us--still
+the breeze whispered through our swelling sails, until the soft, brief
+twilight of the tropic eve stole upon us, and the stars trembled one by
+one in the dusky azure, so soon to be "thick inlaid with patines of
+bright gold."
+
+"Reckon I've euchred the bloodthirsty niggers this time," said Dick,
+with a careless laugh, lighting his pipe as he spoke. "This is 'Twelfth
+night.' That's the end of the time the cussed poison takes to ripen,
+isn't it, Nellie?" he laughed. "It regular puts me in mind of old
+Christmas days in England, and us schoolboys counting the days after the
+New Year! What a jolly time it was! Won't I be glad to see the snow, and
+the bare hedges, and the holly berries, and the village church again?
+Dashed if I don't stay there next time I get a chance, and cut this
+darned slaving, privateering life. I'll--oh! my God--ah--a--h!"
+
+His voice, in spite of all his efforts, rose from a startled cry to a
+long piercing shriek, such as it curdled our blood to hear.
+
+Hayston came up from the cabin, followed by Nellie and the other girls.
+All crowded round him in silence. They knew well at the first cry he was
+a doomed man.
+
+"Carry him down, lads!" he said, as he laid his hand on his forehead and
+passed it quietly over his clustering hair--"poor Dick! poor fellow!" At
+this moment another frightful spasm shook the seaman's frame, and
+scarcely could the men who had lifted him from the deck on which he had
+been lying control his tortured limbs. As they reached the lower deck
+another terrible cry reached our ears, while the continuous groaning of
+the poor fellow first attacked made a ghastly and awful accompaniment to
+the screams of the latest victim.
+
+As for me, I walked forward and sat as near as I could get to the
+_Leonora's_ bows, where I lit my pipe and awaited the moment in which
+only too probably my own summons would come in a like pang of
+excruciating agony. The gleaming phosphorescent wavelets of that calm
+sea fell in broken fire from the vessel's side, while the hissing,
+splashing sound deadened the recurring shrieks of the doomed sufferers,
+and soothed my excited nerves.
+
+Now that death was so near, in such a truly awful shape, I began
+seriously to reflect upon the imprudence, nay, more, the inexcusable
+folly of continuing a life exposed to such terrible hazards.
+
+If my life was spared I would resolve, like poor Dick, to stay at home
+in future. The resolution might avail me as little as it had done in his
+case.
+
+As I sat hour after hour gazing into the endless shadow and gleam of the
+great deep, a strange feeling of peace and resignation seemed to pass
+suddenly over my troubled spirit. I felt almost tempted to plunge
+beneath the calm bosom of the main, and so end for aye the doubt, the
+fear, the rapture, and despair of this mysterious human life. All
+suddenly the moon rose, sending before her a brilliant pathway, adown
+which, in my excited imagination, angels might glide, bearing messages
+of pardon or reprieve. A distinct sensation of hope arose in my mind. A
+dark form glided to my side, and seated itself on the rail.
+
+"You hear eight bell?" she said. "Listen now, you all right--no more
+poison--he go away." She held my hand--the pulse was steady and regular.
+In spite of my efforts at calmness and self-control, I was sensible of a
+strange exaltation of spirit. The heaven above, the sea below, seemed
+animate with messengers of pardon and peace. Even poor Nellie, the
+untaught child of a lonely isle, "placed far amid the melancholy main,"
+seemed transformed into a celestial visitant, and her large, dark eyes
+glowed in the light of the mystic moon rays.
+
+"You well, man Hil'ree!" she said in the foc'sle vernacular. "No more go
+mat. Nellie so much glad," and here her soft low tones were so instinct
+with deepest human feeling that I took her in my arms and folded her in
+a warm embrace.
+
+"How's poor Dick?" I asked, as we walked aft to where Hayston and the
+rest of the cabin party were seated.
+
+"Poor Dick dead!" she said; "just die before me come up."
+
+The people we had brought for the big firm, mostly Line Island natives,
+were quiet and easily controlled. Hayston now and then executed orders
+of this sort, though he would have scorned the idea of turning the
+_Leonora_ into a labour vessel. He was naturally too humane to permit
+any ill-treatment of the recruits, and having his crew under full
+control, always made matters as pleasant for these dark-skinned
+"passengers" as possible.
+
+But there were voyages of very different kind,--voyages when the
+recruiting agents were thoroughly unscrupulous, caring only for the
+numbers--by fair means or foul--to be made up. Sometimes dark deeds were
+done. Blood was shed like water; partly from the fierce, intractable
+nature of the islanders--sometimes in pure self-defence. But "strange
+things happen at sea." One labour cruise of which Hayston told me--he
+heard it from an English trader who saw the affair--was much of that
+complexion. We had plenty of time for telling stories in the long calm
+days which sometimes ran into weeks. And this was one of them.
+
+One day a white painted schooner, with gaff-headed mainsail, and flying
+the German flag, anchored off Kabakada, a populous village on the north
+coast of New Britain. She was on a labour cruise for the German
+plantations in Samoa.
+
+Not being able to secure her full complement of "boys" in the New
+Hebrides and Solomon groups, she had come northward to fill up with
+recruits from the naked savages of the northern coast of New Britain.
+
+In those days the German flag had not been formally hoisted over New
+Britain and New Ireland, and apart from the German trading station at
+Matupi in Blanche Bay, which faces the scarred and blackened sides of a
+smouldering volcano springing abruptly from the deep waters of the bay,
+the trading stations were few and far between.
+
+At Kabakada, where the vessel had anchored, there were two traders. One
+was a noisy, vociferous German, who had once kept a liquor saloon in
+Honolulu, but, moved by tales of easily accumulated wealth in New
+Britain, he had sold his business, and settled at his present location
+among a horde of the most treacherous natives in the South Seas. His
+rude good nature had been his safety; for although, through ignorance of
+the native character, he was continually placing his life in danger, he
+was quick to make amends, and being of a generous disposition and a man
+of means, enjoyed a prestige among the natives possessed by no other
+white man.
+
+His colleague--or rather his opponent, for they traded for opposition
+firms--was a small, dark Frenchman, an ex-bugler of the Chasseurs
+d'Afrique, who had spent some years of enforced retirement at New
+Caledonia. His advent to New Britain had been made in the most private
+manner, and his reminiscences of the voyage from the convict colony with
+his four companions were not of a cheerful nature.
+
+Ten miles away, at the head of a narrow bay that split the forest-clad
+mountains like a Norwegian fiord, lived another trader, an English
+seaman. He had been on the island about two years, and was well-nigh
+sickened of it. Frequently recurring attacks of the deadly malarial
+fever had weakened and depressed him, and he longed to return to the
+open, breezy islands of eastern Polynesia, where he had no need to start
+from his sleep at night, and, rifle in hand, peer out into the darkness
+at the slightest noise.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The labour schooner anchored about a mile from the German trader's
+house, and about two hours afterwards the boat of the Englishman was
+seen pulling round Cape Luen, and making for Charlie's station. This was
+because all three traders, being on friendly terms, it would have been
+considered "playing it low down" for any one of them to have boarded the
+schooner alone.
+
+The day was swelteringly hot, and the sea between the gloomy outlines of
+Mau Island and the long, curving, palm-shaded beaches of New Britain
+shore was throwing off great clouds of hot, steamy mist. As the
+Englishman's boat was about half-way between the steep-wooded point of
+Cape Luen and Kabakada, she altered her course and ran into the beach,
+where, surrounded by a cluster of native huts, was the station of
+Pierre. This was to save the little Frenchman the trouble of launching
+his clumsy boat. Pierre, dressed in white pyjamas, with a heavy
+Lefaucheux revolver in his belt and a Snider rifle in his hand, came out
+of his house. Addressing his two wives in emphatic language, and warning
+them to fire off guns if anything happened during his absence on board
+the schooner, he swaggered down the beach and into the boat.
+
+"How are you, Pierre?" said the Englishman, languidly. "I knew you and
+Hans Muller would expect me to board the schooner with you, or else I
+wouldn't have come. Curse the place, the people, the climate, and
+everything!"
+
+The little Frenchman grinned, "Yes, it ees ver' hot; but nevare mind.
+Ven ve get to de 'ouse of de German we shall drink some gin and feel
+bettare. Last veek he buy four case of gin from a valeship, and now le
+bon Dieu send this schooner, from vich we shall get more."
+
+"What a drunken little beast you are!" said the Englishman, sourly. "But
+after all, I suppose you enjoy life more than I do. I'd drink gin like
+water if I thought it would kill me quick enough."
+
+"My friend, it is but the fevare that now talks in you. See me! I am
+happy. I drink, I smoke, I laugh. I have two wife to make my caf and
+look aftare my house. Some day I walk in the bush, then, whouff, a spear
+go through me, and my two wife will weep ven they see me cut up for
+_rosbif_, and perhaps eat a piece themselves."
+
+The Englishman laughed. The picture Pierre drew was likely to be a true
+one in one respect. Not a mile from the spot where the boat was at that
+moment were the graves of a trading captain, his mate, and two seamen,
+who had been slaughtered by the natives under circumstances of the most
+abominable treachery. And right before them, on the white beach of Mau
+Island, a whaler's boat's crew had been speared while filling their
+water casks, the natives who surrounded them appearing to be animated
+by the greatest friendliness.
+
+Such incidents were common enough in those days among the islands to the
+westward of New Guinea, and the people of New Britain were no worse than
+those of other islands. They were simply treacherous, cowardly savages,
+and though occasionally indulging in cannibalistic feasts upon the
+bodies of people of their own race, they never killed white men for that
+purpose. Many a white man has been speared or shot there, but their
+bodies were spared that atrocity--so in that respect Pierre did his
+young wives an injustice. They would, if occasion needed it, readily
+poison him, or steal his cartridges and leave him to be slaughtered
+without the chance of making resistance, but they wouldn't eat him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It's the _Samoa_," said the German, as he shook hands with us. "And the
+skipper is a d--d Dutchman, but a good sort" (having once sailed in a
+Yankee timber ship, trading between Sydney and the Pacific slope, Hans
+was now an American), "and as soon as it gets a bit cool, we'll go off.
+I know the recruiter, he's a chap with one arm."
+
+"What?" said the Englishman, "you don't mean Captain Kyte, do you?"
+
+"That's the man. He's a terror. Guldensterns pay him $200 a month
+regular to recruit for them, and he gets a bonus of $10 each for every
+nigger as well. We must try and get him a few here to fill up."
+
+"_You_ can," said the Englishman, "but I won't. I'm not going to tout
+for an infernal Dutch black-birder."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As soon as a breeze set in the three traders sailed off. The schooner
+was a fine lump of a vessel of about 190 tons register, and her decks
+were crowded with male and female recruits from the Solomon group.
+There were about fifty in all--thirty-five or forty men and about a
+dozen women.
+
+The captain of the schooner and his "recruiter," Captain Kyte, received
+the traders with great cordiality. In a few minutes the table was
+covered with bottles of beer, kummel, and other liquor, and Hans was
+asserting with great vehemence his ability to procure another thirty
+"boys."
+
+Kyte, a thin man, with deep-set grey eyes, and a skin tanned by twenty
+years' wanderings in the South Seas, listened quietly to the trader's
+vapourings, and then said, "All right, Hans! I think, though, we can
+leave it till to-morrow, and if you can manage to get me twenty 'boys,'
+I'll give you five dollars a head for them, cash."
+
+The traders remained on board for an hour or two, and in the meanwhile
+the captain of the schooner sent a boat ashore to fill water casks from
+the creek near the trader's house. Six natives got in--four of whom were
+seamen from the schooner and two Solomon Island recruits; these two
+recruits led to all the subsequent trouble.
+
+Kyte was a wonderfully entertaining man, and although his one arm was
+against him (he had lost the other one by the bursting of a shell), he
+contrived to shoot very straight, and could hold his own anywhere.
+
+He was full of cynical humour, and the Englishman, though suffering from
+latent fever, could not but be amused at the disrespectful manner in
+which the American spoke of his employers. The German firm which in a
+small way was the H.E.I.C. of the Pacific; indeed, their actions in many
+respects, when conducting trading arrangements with the island chiefs,
+were very similar to those of the Great East India Company--they always
+had an armed force to back them up.
+
+"I should think you have natives enough on board as it is, Captain
+Kyte," the Englishman was saying, "without taking any more."
+
+"Well, so I have in one way. But these d--d greedy Dutchmen (looking the
+captain and mate of the schooner full in the face) like to see me come
+into Apia harbour with about 180 or 200 on board. The schooner is only
+fit to carry about ninety. Of course the more I have the more dollars I
+get. But it's mighty risky work, I can tell you. I've got nearly sixty
+Solomon boys on board now, and I could have filled down there, but came
+up along here instead. You see, when we've got two or three different
+mobs on board from islands widely apart they can't concoct any general
+scheme of treachery, and I can always play one crowd off against the
+other. Now, these Solomon Island niggers know me well, and they wouldn't
+try any cutting off business away up here--it's too far from home. But I
+wouldn't trust them when we are beating back through the Solomons on our
+way to Samoa--that's the time I've got a pull on them, by having New
+Britain niggers on board."
+
+"You don't let your crew carry arms on board, I see," said the
+Englishman.
+
+"No, I don't. There's no necessity for it, I reckon. If we were anywhere
+about the Solomon Islands, and had a lot of recruits on board, I take
+d--d good care that every man is armed then. But here, in New Britain,
+we could safely give every rifle in the ship to the 'recruits'
+themselves, and seeing armed men about them always irritates them. As a
+matter of fact, these 'boys' now on board would fight like h--l for us
+if the New Britain niggers tried to take the ship. Some men, however,"
+and his eyes rested on Pierre, Hans, and the captain, "like to carry a
+small-arms factory slung around 'em. Have another drink, gentlemen?
+Hallo, what the h--l is that?" and he was off up on deck, the other four
+white men after him.
+
+The watering party had come back, but the two Solomon islanders (the
+recruits) lay in the bottom of the boat, both dead, and with broken
+spears sticking all over their bodies. The rest of the crew were
+wounded--one badly.
+
+In two minutes Captain Kyte had the story. They were just filling the
+last cask when they were rushed, and the two Solomon islanders speared
+and clubbed to death. The rage of the attackers seemed specially
+directed against the two recruits, and the crew--who were natives of
+Likaiana (Stewart's Island)--said that after the first volley of spears
+no attempt was made to prevent their escape.
+
+The face of Captain Kyte had undergone a curious change. It had turned
+to a dull leaden white, and his dark grey eyes had a spark of fire in
+them as he turned to the captain of the schooner.
+
+"What business had you, you blundering, dunder-headed, Dutch swab, to
+let two of my recruits go ashore in that boat? Haven't you got enough
+sense to know that it was certain death for them. Two of my best men,
+too. Bougainville boys. By ----! you'd better jump overboard. You're no
+more fit for a labour schooner than I am to teach dancing in a ladies'
+school."
+
+The captain made no answer. He was clearly in fault. As it was, no one
+of the boat's crew were killed, but that was merely because their
+European clothing showed them to be seamen. The matter was more serious
+for Kyte than any one else on board. The countrymen of the murdered boys
+looked upon him as the man chiefly responsible. He knew only one way of
+placating them--by paying some of the dead boys' relations a heavy
+indemnity, and immediately began a consultation with five Solomon
+islanders who came from the same island.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the mean time the three traders returned to the shore, and Hans, with
+his usual thick-headedness, immediately "put his foot in it," by
+demanding a heavy compensation from the chief of the village for the
+killing of the two men.
+
+The chief argued, very reasonably from his point of view, that the
+matter didn't concern him.
+
+"I don't care what you think," wrathfully answered the little trader, "I
+want fifty coils, of fifty fathoms each, of _dewarra_. If I don't get
+it"--here he touched his revolver.
+
+Now, dewarra is the native money of New Britain; it is formed of very
+small white shells of the cowrie species, perforated with two small
+holes at each end, and threaded upon thin strips of cane or the stalk of
+the cocoa-nut leaf. A coil of dewarras would be worth in European money,
+or its trade equivalent, about fifty dollars.
+
+The chief wasn't long in giving his answer. His lips, stained a hideous
+red by the betel nut juice, opened in a derisive smile and revealed his
+blackened teeth.
+
+"He will fight," he answered.
+
+"You've done it now, Hans," said the Englishman, "you might as well pack
+up and clear out in the schooner. You have no more sense than a hog. By
+the time I get back to my station I'll find it burnt and all my trade
+gone. However, I don't care much; but I hope to see you get wiped out
+first. You deserve it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All that night the native village was in a state of turmoil, and when
+daylight came it was deserted by the inhabitants, who had retreated to
+their bush-houses; the French trader, who had walked along the beach to
+his station, returned at daylight and reported that not a native was in
+his town, even his two wives had gone. Nothing, however, of his trade
+had been touched.
+
+"That's a good sign for you," said the Englishman. "If I were you,
+Pierre, I would go quietly back, and start mending your fence or
+painting your boat as if nothing had happened. They won't meddle with
+you."
+
+But this was strongly objected to by his fellow-trader, and just then a
+strange sound reached them,--the wild cries and howls of chorus, in a
+tongue unknown to the three men. It came from the sea, and going to the
+door they saw the schooner's two whaleboats, packed as full of natives
+as they could carry, close in to the shore. Instead of oars they were
+propelled by canoe paddles, and at each stroke the native rowers fairly
+made the boats leap and surge like steam launches in a sea-way. But the
+most noticeable thing to the eyes of the traders was the glitter of
+rifle barrels that appeared between the double row of paddlers. In
+another five minutes the leading boat was close enough for the traders
+to see that the paddlers who lined the gunwales from stem to stern had
+their faces daubed with red and blue, and their fighting ornaments on.
+In the body of the boats, crouching on their hams, with elbows on knees,
+and upright rifles, were the others, packed as tightly as sardines.
+
+"Mein Gott!" gasped Muller, "they have killed all hands on the schooner
+and are coming for us. Look at the rifles." He dashed into his
+trade-room and brought out about half a dozen Sniders, and an Epsom
+salts box full of cartridges. "Come on, boys, load up as quick as you
+can."
+
+"You thundering ass," said the Englishman, "look again; can't you see
+Kyte's in one boat steering?"
+
+In another minute, with a roar from the excited savages, the first boat
+surged up on the beach, and a huge, light-skinned savage seized Kyte in
+his arms as if he were a child and placed him on the land. Then every
+man leaped out and stood, rifle in hand, waiting for the other boat.
+Again the same fierce cry as the second boat touched the shore; then
+silence, as they watched with dilated eyes and gleaming teeth the
+movements of the white man.
+
+For one moment he stood facing them with outstretched hand uplifted in
+warning to check their eager rush. Then he turned to the traders--
+
+"The devils have broken loose. Have you fellows any of your own natives
+that you don't want to get hurt? If so, get them inside the house, and
+look mighty smart about it."
+
+"There's not a native on the beach," said the German, "every mother's
+son of them has cleared into the bush, except this man's boat's crew,"
+pointing to the English trader; "they're in the house all right. But
+look out, Captain Kyte, those fellows in the bush mean fight. There's
+two thousand people in this village, and many of them have
+rifles--Sniders--and plenty cartridges. I know, because it was I who
+sold them."
+
+Kyte smiled grimly. There was a steely glitter of suppressed excitement
+in his keen grey eyes. Then he again held up his hand to his followers--
+
+"Blood for blood, my children. But heed well my words--kill not the
+women and children; now, go!"
+
+Like bloodhounds slipped from the leash, the brown bodies and gleaming
+rifle barrels went by the white men in one wild rush, and passed away
+out of sight into the comparatively open forest that touched the edge of
+the trader's clearing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"There they go," said Kyte quietly, as he sat down on the edge of the
+trader's verandah and lit a cigar, "and they'll give those smart niggers
+of yours a dressing down that will keep them quiet for the next five
+years (he was right, they did). Well, I had to let them have their own
+way. They told me that if I didn't let them have revenge for the two men
+that I would be unlucky before I got to Samoa,--a polite way of saying
+that they would seize the schooner and cut our throats on the way up. So
+to save unpleasantness, I gave each man a Snider and twenty-five
+cartridges, and told them to shoot as many _pigs and fowls_ as they
+liked. You should have heard the beggars laugh. By the way, I hope they
+do shoot some, we want pork badly."
+
+"Hallo, they've got to Tubarigan's, the chief's bush-house, and fired
+it!" said Muller.
+
+A column of black smoke arose from the side of the mountain, and in
+another second or two loud yells and cries of defiance mingled with the
+thundering reports of the Sniders and the crackling of the flames.
+
+The little Frenchman and Muller played nervously with their rifles for a
+moment or two; then meeting the answering look in each other's eyes,
+they dashed into the trees and up the jungle-clad mountain side in the
+direction of the smoke and fighting.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The native houses in New Britain are built of cane, neatly lashed
+together with coir cinnet, and the roofs thatched with broad-leaved
+grass or sugar-cane leaves. They burn well, and as the cane swells to
+the heat each joint bursts with a crack like a pistol shot.
+
+"Look now," said Kyte to his companion, pointing along the tops of the
+hills. Clouds of black smoke and sheets of flame were everywhere
+visible, and amidst the continuous roar of the flames, the crackling of
+the burning cane-work of the native houses, and the incessant reports of
+the Sniders, came savage shouts and yells from the raiders, and
+answering cries of defiance from the New Britain men, who retreated
+slowly to the grassy hills of the interior, whence they watched the
+total destruction of some four or five of their villages. These
+bush-houses are constructed with great care and skill by the natives,
+and are generally only a short distance from the main village on the
+beach; every bush-house stands surrounded by a growth of
+carefully-tended crotons of extraordinary beauty and great variety of
+colour, and in the immediate vicinity is the owner's plantation of yams,
+taro, sugar-cane, bananas, and betel nuts.
+
+In the course of an hour or two the Solomon islanders ceased firing, and
+then the two white men, looking out on the beach, saw a number of the
+beaten villagers fleeing down to the shore, about half a mile away, and
+endeavouring to launch canoes.
+
+"By ----!" exclaimed Kyte, "my fellows have outflanked them, and are
+driving them down to the beach. I might get some after all for the
+schooner. Will you lend me your boat's crew to head them off? They are
+going to try and get to Mau Island."
+
+"No," said the Englishman, "I won't. If Pierre and the German are such
+idiots as to go shooting niggers in another man's quarrel, that's no
+reason why I should take a hand in it."
+
+Kyte nodded good-humouredly, and seemed to abandon the idea; but he went
+into the house after a while, and came out again with a long Snider in
+his hand.
+
+In a few minutes the Solomon islanders began to return in parties of two
+or three, then came the two white men, excited and panting with the lust
+of killing.
+
+Kyte held a whispered consultation with one of his "boys,"--a huge
+fellow, whose body was reeking with perspiration and blood from the
+scratches received in the thorny depths of the jungle,--and then pointed
+to the beach where four or five white-painted canoes had been launched,
+and were making for an opening in the reef. To reach this opening they
+would have to pass in front of the trader's house, for which they now
+headed.
+
+Kyte waited a moment or two till the leading canoe was within four or
+five hundred yards, then he raised his rifle, and placing it across the
+stump of his left arm, fired. The ball plumped directly amidships, and
+two of the paddlers fell. The rest threw away their paddles and spears,
+and swam to the other canoes.
+
+"Now we've got them," said Kyte, and taking about twenty of his boys,
+he manned his two boats and pulled out, intercepting the canoes before
+they could get through the reef into the open.
+
+Then commenced an exciting chase. The refugees swam and dived about in
+the shallow water like frightened fish, but their pursuers were better
+men at that game than they, and of superior physique. In twenty minutes
+they were all captured, except one, who sprang over the edge of the reef
+into deep water and was shot swimming.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were about five-and-twenty prisoners, and when they were brought
+back in the boats and taken on board the schooner it was found that the
+chief was among them. It may have occurred to him in the plantation life
+of the after time that he had better have stayed quiet. The Englishman,
+disgusted with the whole affair, went off with the other white men,
+leaving his boat's crew for safety in the trader's house, for had the
+Solomon islanders seen them they would have made quick work of them, or
+else Kyte, to save their lives, would have offered to take them as
+recruits.
+
+The two other traders decided to leave in the schooner. They had made
+the locality too warm for themselves, and urged the Englishman to follow
+their example.
+
+"No," he said, "I've been a good while here now, and I've never shot a
+nigger yet for the fun of the thing. I'll take my chance with them for a
+bit longer. The chances are you fellows will get your throats cut before
+I do."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+However, the schooner arrived safely at Samoa with her live cargo, but
+Kyte reported to his owners that it would not be advisable to recruit in
+New Britain for a year or two.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HALCYON DAYS
+
+
+We were now bound for Arrecifos Island, Hayston's central station, but
+had first to call at Pingelap and Strong's Island, where we were to land
+our cattle and ship a few tuns of oil.
+
+Nine days after leaving Ponap, as the sun broke through the tropic
+haze, the lookout reported smoke in sight. The Captain and I at once
+went aloft, and with our glasses made out a steamer a long distance off.
+
+Hayston said he thought it was the _Resacca_, an American cruiser.
+Possibly she might overhaul us and take us into Ponap. Unless the
+breeze freshened we could not get away from her.
+
+We were heading N.N.E. close hauled, and the steamer appeared to be
+making for Ponap. She was sure to see us within an hour unless she
+changed her course.
+
+The _Leonora_ was kept away a couple of points, but the wind was light,
+and we were only travelling about four knots.
+
+At breakfast time we could see the man-of-war's spars from the deck, and
+the breeze was dying away. The Captain and I went on the foreyard and
+watched her.
+
+She had not as yet changed her course, but apparently did not seem
+anxious to overtake us.
+
+At length Hayston said with a laugh, as he took a long look at her, "All
+right, keep full, and by (to the man at the wheel) ----, brace up the
+yards again, she doesn't want to stop us. It's that old Spanish gunboat
+from Manila, a 'side wheeler.' I was told she was coming down to Ponap
+from Guam to look after some escaped Tagalau prisoners. She'd never
+catch us if she wanted to with anything like a breeze."
+
+That night the Captain seemed greatly relieved. He told me that it would
+prove a bad business for him if an American cruiser took him; and
+although he did not anticipate meeting with one in these parts, he gave
+me full instructions how to act in the event of his seizure. He placed
+in my charge two bags of gold coin of two thousand dollars each, and a
+draft for a thousand dollars on Goddefroys' in Samoa.
+
+After which he declared that the ship was getting dull lately, and
+ordered the steward's boy to beat the gong and call out the girls for a
+dance.
+
+For the next hour or two wild merriment prevailed. Antonio, the
+Portuguese, with his violin, and the Captain with his flute, furnished
+the music, while half a dozen of the girls were soon dancing with some
+of the picturesque ruffians of the foc'sle.
+
+For days and days we had scarcely shifted tack or sheet, so gentle and
+steady was the wind that filled our sails; but the easterly equatorial
+counter current that prevails in these calm seas was sweeping us
+steadily on towards Strong's Island at the rate of two or three knots an
+hour.
+
+On some days we would lower a floating target and practise with the long
+gun carried amidships, on others the Captain and I would pass away an
+hour or two shooting at bottles with our rifles or revolvers.
+
+Hayston was a splendid shot, and loud were the exclamations from the
+crew when he made an especially clever shot; at other times he would sit
+on the skylight, and with the girls around him, sewing or card-playing,
+tell me anecdotes of his career when in the service of the Chinese
+Government.
+
+There were on board two children, a boy and girl--Toby and
+Kitty--natives of Arurai or Hope Island. They were the Captain's
+particular pets, in right of which he allowed them full liberty to tease
+any one on the ship.
+
+He was strongly attached to these children, and often told me that he
+intended to provide for them.
+
+Their father, who was one of his boat's crew, had fallen at his side
+when the natives of the island had boarded the vessel. On his next
+cruise he called at Arurai and took them on board, the head chief freely
+giving his permission to adopt them. I mention this boy and girl more
+particularly, because the American missionaries had often stated in the
+Honolulu journals "that Hayston had kidnapped them after having killed
+their father."
+
+His story was that on his first visit to the Pelew Islands with Captain
+Peese, the vessel they owned, a small brigantine, was attacked by the
+natives in the most daring manner, although the boarding nettings were
+up and every preparation made to repel them.
+
+He had with him ten seamen--mostly Japanese. Captain Peese was acting as
+first mate. An intelligent writer has described these Pelew islanders,
+the countrymen of the young Prince Lee Boo, whose death in England
+caused genuine sorrow, as "delicate in their sentiments, friendly in
+their disposition, and, in short, a people that do honour to the human
+race."
+
+The Captain's description of the undaunted manner in which fifty of
+these noble islanders climbed up the side of the brigantine, and slashed
+away at the nettings with their heavy swords, was truly graphic.
+Stripped to the waist they fought gallantly and unflinchingly, though
+twelve of their number had been killed by the fire of musketry from the
+brigantine. One of them had seized Captain Peese by his beard, and,
+dragging him to the side, stabbed him in the neck, and threw him into
+the prahu alongside, where his head would have soon left his body, when
+Hayston and a Japanese sailor dashed over after him, and killed the two
+natives that were holding him down, while another was about to
+decapitate him. At this stage three of the brigantine's crew lay dead
+and nearly all were wounded, Hayston having a fearful slash on the
+thigh.
+
+There were seventeen islanders killed and many badly wounded before they
+gave up the attempt to cut off the vessel.
+
+The father of Kitty and Toby was the steward. He had been fighting all
+through like a demon, having for his weapon a carpenter's squaring axe.
+He had cut one islander down with a fearful blow on the shoulder, which
+severed the arm, the limb falling on the deck, when he was attacked by
+three others. One of these was shot by a Japanese sailor, and another
+knocked down by the Captain, when the poor steward was thrust through
+from behind and died in a few minutes.
+
+The Captain spoke highly of the courage and intelligence of the Pelew
+islanders, and said that the cause of the attack upon the vessel was
+that, being under the Portuguese flag--the brigantine was owned by
+merchants in Macao--the natives had sought to avenge the bombardment of
+one of their principal towns by two Portuguese gunboats a year
+previously.
+
+Hayston afterwards established friendly relations with these very people
+who had attacked him, and six months afterwards slept ashore at their
+village alone and unarmed.
+
+From that day his perfect safety was assured. He succeeded in gaining
+the friendship of the principal chiefs by selling them a hundred
+breech-loading rifles and ten thousand cartridges, giving them two
+years' time to pay for them. He also gave nearly a thousand dollars'
+worth of powder and cartridges to the relatives of the men killed in
+attempting to cut off the brigantine.
+
+Such was one of the many romantic incidents in Hayston's career in the
+wild islands still further to the north-west. That he was a man of
+lion-like courage and marvellous resolution under the most desperate
+circumstances was known to all who ever sailed with him. Had not his
+recklessness and uncontrollable passions hurried him on to the
+commission of deeds that darkened for ever his good name, his splendid
+qualities would have earned him fame and fortune in any of those
+national enterprises which have in all ages transformed the adventurer
+into the hero.
+
+One day, while we sat talking together, gazing upon the unruffled
+deep,--he had been explaining the theory of the ocean currents, as well
+as the electrical phenomena of the Caroline group, where thunder may be
+heard perhaps six times a year, and lightning seen not once,--I
+unthinkingly asked him why he did not commit his observations to paper,
+as I felt sure that the large amount of facts relating to the
+meteorology of the Pacific, of which he was possessed, would be most
+valuable, and as such secure fitting recognition by the scientific
+world.
+
+He smiled bitterly, then answered, "Hilary, my boy, it is too late. I am
+an outlaw in fact, if not in name. The world's doors are closed, and
+society has turned its back on me. Out of ten professed friends nine are
+false, and would betray me to-morrow. When I think of what I once was,
+what I might have been, and to what I have now fallen, I am weary of
+existence. So I take the world as it comes, with neither hope nor fear
+for the morrow, knowing that if I do not make blue shark's meat, I am
+doomed to leave my bones on some coral islet."
+
+And thus the days wore on. We still drifted under cloudless skies, over
+the unfretted surface of the blue Pacific, the brig's sails ever and
+anon swelling out in answer to the faint, mysterious breeze-whispers, to
+fall languidly back against her spars and cordage.
+
+Passing the Nuknor or Monteverde Islands, discovered by Don Juan
+Monteverde in 1806, in the Spanish frigate _La Pala_, we sailed onward
+with the gentle N.E. trades to Overluk, and then to Losap. Like the
+people of Nuknor, the Losap islanders were a splendid race and most
+hospitable. Then we made the Mortlock group, once so dreaded by
+whaleships. These fierce and warlike islanders made most determined
+efforts to cut off the whaleships _Dolly Primrose_ and _Heavenly City_.
+To us, however, they were most amiable in demeanour, and loud cries of
+welcome greeted the Captain from the crowd of canoes which swarmed
+around the brig.
+
+Then commenced one of the reckless orgies with which the brig's crew
+were familiar. Glad to escape the scene, I left the brig and wandered
+about in the silent depths of the island forest.
+
+The Captain here, as elsewhere, was evidently regarded as a visitor of
+immense importance, for as I passed through the thickly populated
+villages the people were cooking vast quantities of pigs, poultry, and
+pigeons.
+
+The women and girls were decorating their persons with wreaths of
+flowers, and the warriors making preparations for a big dance to take
+place at night. I had brought my gun with me, and shot some of the
+magnificent pigeons which throng the island woods, which I presented to
+the native girls, a merry group of whom followed me with offerings of
+cocoa-nuts, and a native dish made of baked bananas, flavoured with the
+juice of the sugar-cane.
+
+I could not have eaten a fiftieth part of what was offered, but as
+declining would have been regarded as a rudeness, I begged them to take
+it to the chief's house for me.
+
+On my return a singular and characteristic scene presented itself. I
+could not help smiling as I thought what a shock it would have given
+many of my steady-going friends and relatives in Sydney, most of whom,
+if untravelled, resemble nothing so much as the inhabitants of English
+country towns, and are equally apt to be displeased at any departure
+from the British standard of manners and morals.
+
+The Captain was seated on a mat in the great council-house of the tribe,
+talking business with a white-headed warrior, whom he introduced as the
+king of the Mortlock group. The women had decorated the Captain's neck
+and broad breast with wreaths--two girls were seated a little farther
+off, binding into his hat the tail-feathers of the tropic bird. He
+seemed in a merry mood, and whispering something to the old man, pointed
+to me.
+
+In a moment a dozen young girls bounded up, and with laughing eyes and
+lips, commenced to circle around me in a measure, the native name of
+which means "a dance for a husband."
+
+They formed a pretty enough picture, with their waving arms and flowing
+flower-crowned hair. I plead guilty to applauding vociferously, and
+rewarding them with a quantity of the small red beads which the Mortlock
+girls sew into their head-dresses.
+
+Thus, with but slight variations, our life flowed, if monotonously,
+pleasantly, even luxuriously on--as we sailed to and fro amid these
+charmed isles, from Namoluk to Truk, thence to the wondrously beautiful
+Royalist Islands, inhabited by a wild vigorous race. They also made much
+of us and gave dances and games in honour of our visit.
+
+And still we sailed and sailed. Days passed, and weeks. Still glided we
+over the summer sea--still gazed we at a cloudless sky--still felt we
+the languorous, sighing breath of the soft South Pacific winds.
+
+Day by day the same flock of predatory frigate birds skimmed and swept
+o'er the glittering ocean plain, while high overhead the wandering
+tropic birds hung motionless, with their scarlet tail-feathers floating
+like lance pennons in relief against the bright blue heavens.
+
+Now, the Captain had all a true seaman's dislike to seeing a sea-bird
+shot. One day, off Ocean Island, Jansen, the mate, came out of the cabin
+with a long, smooth bore, which he proceeded to load with buck shot,
+glancing the while at two graceful tropic birds, which, with snow-white
+wings outspread, were poised in air directly over the deck, apparently
+looking down with wondering eye at the scene below.
+
+"What are you going to shoot, Jansen?" inquired the Captain, in a mild
+voice.
+
+The mate pointed to the birds, and remarked that his girl wanted the
+feathers for a head-dress. He was bringing the gun to his shoulder, when
+a quick "Put down that musket," nearly caused him to drop it.
+
+"Jansen!" said the Captain, "please to remember this,--never let me see
+you or any other man shoot a sea-bird from the deck of this ship. Your
+girl can live without the feathers, I presume, and what is more to the
+point, I _forbid_ you to do it."
+
+The mate growled something in an undertone, and was turning away to his
+cabin, when Hayston sprang upon him like a panther, and seizing him by
+the throat, held him before him.
+
+"By ----! Jansen," he said, "don't tempt me too far. I told you as
+civilly as possible not to shoot the birds--yet you turn away and mutter
+mutinously before my men. Listen to me! though you are no seaman, and a
+thorough 'soldier,' I treat you well for peace' sake. But once give me a
+sidelook, and as sure as God made me, I'll trice you up to the mainmast,
+and let a nigger flog you."
+
+He released his hold of the mate's throat after this warning. The cowed
+bully staggered off towards his cabin. After which the Captain's mood
+changed with customary suddenness; he came aft, and began a game with
+Kitty and her brother--apparently having forgotten the very existence of
+Jansen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The calm, bright weather still prevailed--the light air hardly filling
+our sails--the current doing all the work. When one afternoon, taking a
+look from aloft, I descried the loom of Kusaie or Strong's Island, on
+the farthest horizon.
+
+"Land ho!" The watch below, just turning out, take up the cry as it goes
+from mouth to mouth on deck. Some of them gaze longingly, making
+calculations as to the amount of liberty they are likely to get, as well
+as the work that lies before them.
+
+Early next morning we had drifted twenty miles nearer, whereupon the
+Captain decided to run round to the weather side of the island first,
+and interview the king, before going to Utw or South harbour, where we
+proposed to do the most of our trading.
+
+Suddenly, after breakfast, a serious disturbance arose between the
+Chinese carpenter and Bill Hicks, the fierce Fijian half-caste, who was
+second mate. The carpenter's provisional spouse was a handsome young
+woman from the Gilbert group, who rejoiced in the name of Ni-a-bon
+(Shades of Night). Of her, the carpenter, a tall, powerfully-built
+Chinaman, who had sailed for years with Hayston in the China Seas, was
+intensely jealous. So cunning, however, was she in evading suspicion,
+that though every one on board was aware of the state of affairs, her
+lawful protector suspected nothing.
+
+However, on this particular morning, Nellie, the Hope Island girl, being
+reproved by the second mate for throwing pine apple and banana peel into
+the ship's dingey, flew into a violent rage, and told the carpenter that
+the second mate was stealing Ni-a-bon--and, moreover, had persuaded her
+to put something into his, the carpenter's, food, to make him "go mat,"
+_i.e._ sicken and die.
+
+Seizing an axe, the Chinaman sallied on deck, and commenced to exact
+satisfaction by aiming a blow at Ni-a-bon, who was playing cards with
+the other girls. The girl Mila averted the blow, and the whole pack fled
+shrieking to the Captain, who at once called upon Bill for explanation.
+
+He did not deny the impeachment, and offered to fight the carpenter for
+Ni-a-bon. The Captain decided this to be eminently right and proper; but
+thought the carpenter was hardly a match for the mate with fists. Bill
+promptly suggested knives. This seemed to choke off the carpenter, as,
+amid howls from the women, he stepped back into his cabin, only to
+reappear in the doorway with a rifle, and to send a bullet at the mate's
+head, which missed him.
+
+"At him, Billy," cried the Captain, "give him a good licking--but _don't
+hurt his arms_; there's a lot of work to be done to the bulwarks when we
+get the anchor down again."
+
+The second mate at once seized the carpenter, and dragging him out of
+his cabin, in a few minutes had so knocked his features about that he
+was hardly recognisable.
+
+Ni-a-bon was then called up before the Captain and questioned as to her
+preference, when, with many smiles and twisting about of her hands, she
+confessed to an ardent attachment to the herculean Bill.
+
+The Captain told Bill that he would have to pay the carpenter for
+damages, which he assessed at ten dollars, the amount being given, not
+for personal injury, but for the loss sustained by his annexation of the
+fascinating Ni-a-bon.
+
+At sunset we once more were off Chabral harbour, where we ran in and
+anchored--_within fifty yards_ of the king's house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MURDER AND SHIPWRECK
+
+
+We found the island in a state of excitement. Two whaleships had
+arrived, bringing half a dozen white men, and who had a retinue of
+nearly a hundred natives from Ocean and Pleasant Islands. The white men
+had to leave Pleasant Island on account of a general engagement which
+had taken place; had fled to the ships for safety, taking with them
+their native wives, families, and adherents.
+
+The other men were from Ocean Island, a famine having set in from
+drought in that lovely isle. They had also taken passage with their
+native following, to seek a more temporarily favoured spot. The
+fertility of Kusaie (Strong's Island) had decided them to remain.
+
+Strange characters, in truth, were these same traders, now all quartered
+at Chabral harbour! They were not without means, and so far had
+conducted themselves decently. But their retinue of savage warriors had
+struck terror into the hearts of the milder natives of Kusaie.
+
+Let me draw from the life one of the patriarchs of the movement, on the
+occasion of his embarkation.
+
+Ocean Island, lat. 0 50 south, long. 168 east.
+
+A fantastic, lonely, forbidding-looking spot. Circular in form, with
+rounded summit, and a cruel upheaved coral coast, split up into ravines
+running deep into the land. Here and there, on ledges overlooking the
+sea, are perched tiny villages, inhabited by as fierce and intractable a
+race of Malayo-Polynesians as ever lacerated each other's bodies with
+sharks'-tooth daggers, after the mad drunkenness produced by sour toddy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mister Robert Ridley, aged seventy, sitting on a case in his house, on
+the south-west point of Paanopa, as its people call Ocean Island, with a
+bottle of "square face" before him, from which he refreshes himself,
+without the intervention of a glass, is one of the few successful
+deserters from the convict army of New South Wales. At the present
+moment he is an ill-used man. For seven years he has been the boss white
+man of Paanopa, ever since he left the neighbouring Naura or Pleasant
+Island, after seeing his comrades fall in the ranks one by one, slain by
+bullet or the scarce less deadly drink demon. Now, solitary and
+saturnine, he has to bow to Fate and quit his equatorial cave of
+Adullam, because a mysterious Providence has afflicted his island with a
+drought.
+
+From out the open door he sees the _Josephine_, of New Bedford, Captain
+Jos Long, awaiting the four whaleboats now on the little beach below his
+house, which are engaged in conveying on board his household goods and
+chattels, his wives and his children, with _their_ children, and a dusky
+retinue of blood-relations and retainers; for the drought had made food
+scarce. Blood had been shed over the ownership of certain cocoa-nut
+trees; and old Bob Ridley has decided to bid farewell to his island, and
+to make for Ponap in the Carolines. So the old man sits alone and
+awaits a call from the last boat. Perhaps he feels unusual emotion
+stirring him, as the faint murmur of voices ascends from the beach. He
+would be alone for awhile to conjure up strange memories of the past, or
+because the gin bottle is but half emptied.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"The _Josephine_, of New Bedford!" he mutters, as a grim smile passes
+over his bronzed, sin-wrinkled countenance; "why, _t'other one_ was from
+New Bedford too. This one's larger--a six-boat ship--and carries a big
+afterguard. Still the job could be done agin. But--what's the good now!
+If Joe, the Portuguese, was here with me I'd say it _could_ be done."
+Another gulp at the "square face." "Damn it! I'm an old fool. There's
+too many of these here cussed blubber-hunting Yankees about now. Say we
+took the ship, we'd never get away with her. Please God, I'll go to
+Ponap and live like a d--d gentleman. There's some of the old crowd
+there now, and I a'n't so old yet."
+
+And here, maybe, the old renegade falls a thinking afresh of "the other
+one" from New Bedford, that made this very island on the evening of the
+3rd of December 1852.
+
+Out nearly two years, and working up from the Line Islands towards
+Honolulu, the skipper had tried to make Pleasant Island, to get a
+boat-load of pigs for his crew, but light winds and strong currents had
+drifted him away, till, at dawn, he saw the rounded summits of Ocean
+Island pencilled faintly against the horizon, and stood away for it. "We
+can get a few boat-loads of pigs and 'punkins' there, anyhow," he said
+to the mate.
+
+The mate had been there before, and didn't like going again. That was in
+1850. Sixteen white men lived there then, ten of whom were runaway
+convicts from Sydney or Norfolk Island. He told his captain that they
+were part of a gang of twenty-seven who had at various times been landed
+from whalers at Pleasant Island in 1845. They had separated--some going
+away in the _Sallie_ whaler, and others finding their way to Ocean
+Island. Now, the _Sallie was never heard of again_, the mate remarked.
+The captain of the _Inga_ looked grave, but he had set his heart upon
+the pigs and "punkins." So at dusk the brig hove to, close to the
+south-west point, and as no boats came off the skipper went ashore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were nearly a thousand people on Ocean Island then, and he felt a
+trifle queer as the boat was rushed by the wild, long-haired crowd, and
+carried bodily on shore.
+
+Through the gathering darkness he saw the forms of white men trying to
+push their way through the yellow crowd of excited natives. Presently a
+voice called out, "Don't be scared, mister! Let the niggers have their
+way and carry up the boat."
+
+He let them have their way, and after being glared at by the red light
+of cocoa-nut torches borne by the women, he was conducted to one of
+three houses occupied by the six gentlemen who had arranged to leave the
+continent of Australia without beat of drum.
+
+Bob Ridley's house was the scene of rude and reckless revelry that
+night. A jar of the _Inga's_ rum had been sent for, and seated around on
+the boxes that lined the side of the room the six convicts drank the raw
+spirit like milk, and plied the captain for news of the outer world two
+years old. Surrounding the house was a throng of eager, curious natives,
+no longer noisy, but strangely silent as their rolling, gleaming eyes
+gloated over the stone jar on the table. Presently a native, called
+"Jack" by his white fellow residents, comes to the door and makes a
+quick sign to Bob and a man named Brady, who rose and followed him into
+a shed used as a cook-house. Jack's story is soon told. He had been to
+the brig. She had thirty-two hands, but three men were sick. A strict
+watch was kept by the mate, not more than ten natives were allowed on
+board at once. In the port bow boats and the starboard quarter boats
+hanging on the davits there were two sailors armed with muskets.
+
+Another of the white men now slunk into the cook-house where the three
+talked earnestly. Then Brady went back and told the captain that the
+brig was getting into the set of the outer currents, and would be out of
+sight of land by daylight unless he made sail and worked in close again.
+Upon which the captain shook hands all around, and was escorted to his
+boat, promising to be back at daylight and get his load of "punkins."
+
+Brady and two others went with the captain for company, and on the way
+out one of his new friends--a tall, ghastly creature, eternally twisting
+his long fingers and squirting tobacco juice from his evil-seeming
+mouth--told the captain that he "orter let his men take a run ashore to
+get some cocoa-nuts and have a skylark." When they got aboard the
+captain told the mate to take the sentries out of the boats, to make
+sail, and run in close out of the currents, as it was all right. The
+captain and the guests went below to open another jar, while the mate
+and cooper roused up the hands who were lying about yarning and smoking,
+and told them to make sail. In the house ashore Bob Ridley with his two
+companions and Jack were planning _how the job was to be done_.
+
+Two boats came ashore at daylight, and in addition to the crews there
+were ten or a dozen liberty men who had leave till noon to have a run
+about the island. The captain still bent on his "punkins," took a
+boat-steerer and two other hands to put the coveted vegetables into bags
+and carry them down to the boats. The pumpkins, Ridley said, grew on his
+own land quite close; the men could pick them off the vines, and the
+natives carry them down. So they set off up the hill until the pumpkin
+patch was reached. Here old Bob suddenly felt ill, and thought he would
+go back to take a swig at the rum jar and return, but if the captain
+wanted a good view from the top of the island Jack would show him round.
+So leaving the men to bag the pumpkins, the skipper and Jack climbed the
+path winding through the cocoa-nuts to the top of the hill. The sun was
+hot already, and the captain thirsty. Jack, out of his hospitable heart,
+suggested a drink. There were plenty of cocoa-nuts around growing on
+short, stumpy trees, a couple of which he twisted off, and without
+husking one with his teeth, as is often done, cut a hole in the green
+husk and presented it to the skipper to drink from. The nut was a heavy
+one; taking it in both hands the doomed sailor raised it to his lips and
+threw back his head. That was his last sight of the summer sky that has
+smiled down on so many a deed of blood and rapine. For Jack at that
+moment lifted his right arm and drove the knife to the hilt through his
+heart.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As Jack hurried back to be in good time for the "grand coup"--the
+cutting off of the brig--he saw that the boat-steerer and his two hands
+_had finished gathering the pumpkins_. Two bags were filled and tied,
+while beside them were the three bodies of the gatherers, each decently
+covered with a spreading cocoa-nut branch. The ten "liberty men" had
+been induced by a bevy of laughing island nymphs to accompany them along
+the ledge of the steep coast cliff to a place where, as Jack had told
+them, they would find plenty of nuts--a species of almond peculiar to
+Ocean and Pleasant Islands. Half-an-hour's walk took them out of sight
+and hearing of the _Inga_, and then the "liberty men" saw that the girls
+had somehow dropped behind, and were running with trembling feet into
+the maze of the undergrowth. The startled men found themselves in an
+amphitheatre of jagged rough coral boulders, covered over with a dense
+verdure of creepers, when suddenly Brady and fifty other devils swept
+down upon them without a cry. It was soon over. Then the blood-stained
+mob hurried back to the little beach.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The mate of the _Inga_ was a raw-boned Yankee from Martha's Vineyard.
+Fearless, and yet watchful, he had struck the tall renegade as "a chap
+as was agoin' to give them trouble if they didn't stiffen him fust in
+the cabin." It was then noon, and as eight bells struck the crew began
+to get dinner. The mate, before he went below, took a look at the shore
+and fancied he saw the boat shoving off with the captain.
+
+"Yes," chimed in Wilkins, one of the guests, "that's him; he's got a
+boat-load, and all the canoes comin' off 's a lot of our own niggers
+bringin' off cocoa-nuts."
+
+"Then let's get dinner right away," answered the mate, who knew the
+captain would make sail as soon as ever he found his "punkins" safe
+aboard.
+
+Had he known that the captain was lying staring up at the sun on the
+hilltop among the dwarf palms, he might even then have made a fight of
+it, short of half the crew as he was.
+
+It was not to be.
+
+They went below--he and his guests, the third mate and the carpenter;
+the cooper was left in charge of the ship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The boats and canoes came alongside at once, pulling hard. Suddenly the
+cooper heard a cry from a man in the waist of the ship that chilled his
+blood, while over the bulwarks swarmed the copper-skinned crowd, knife
+and club in hand. As he rushed to the companion, the tall renegade
+looked up and saw the time had come.
+
+Then began the butchery. The ship's officers rushed on deck, leaving
+behind only the negro steward and a boy with the three convicts. Two
+shots were fired in the cabin, after which the three demons hurried up
+to join in the mele. In ten minutes there was not a man of the crew
+alive, except the cooper in the maintop, with a bloody whale-spade in
+his fast relaxing grasp. Brady and Bob were agreed "to give the old cove
+a chance to get eat up by the sharks," and ironically advised him to
+take a header and swim ashore. But the cooper, with his feet dangling
+over the futtocks and his head sunk on his chest, made no sign. He fell
+back as a streak of red ran slowly between the planking of the maintop
+and trickled down the mast to the deck.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a disappointment when the white murderers gathered in the cabin
+to find so small a quantity of rum in the _Inga's_ lazarette. But they
+were consoled by two bags of Mexican dollars--"Money for the punkins,"
+grinned Brady, which would buy them twice as much as they wanted when
+next ship came along. And then as the principal business was over, the
+harmony began, and amidst rum and unholy jesting, a division of the
+effects in the cabins was made, while unto Jack and his myrmidons were
+abandoned all and sundry that could be found for'ard.
+
+When the heavy-laden boats had been sent again and again to the shore, a
+fire was lighted in the cabin by the tall renegade, and the white men
+pushed off. But it suddenly occurred to Messrs. Ridley and Brady that
+"such a hell of a blaze might be seen by some other blubber-hunters a
+long way on a dark night," so the boat was put back and the brig
+hurriedly scuttled. And you can drop a lead line close to the edge of
+the reef anywhere about Ocean Island, and get no soundings at forty
+fathoms.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Soon after we anchored an urgent message was sent to the Captain by King
+Tokusar and Queen S, imploring him to come ashore and advise them. The
+Captain had of late seemed averse to going anywhere without my company,
+and asked me to come with him. So, getting into the whaleboat, we were
+pulled on shore, landing at a massively-built stone wharf which formed
+part of the royal premises.
+
+I may here mention that the headquarters of the American Mission had
+been at Kusaie for many years. The people were all Christians, and to a
+certain degree educated. Their island took rank, therefore, as the most
+successful result of missionary enterprise in the North Pacific.
+
+A native college had been built, to which were brought from outlying
+islands those natives who were destined for the ministry. However, about
+a year previously the Board of Mission had changed their headquarters to
+Ebon, an island of the Marshall group, leaving but one native missionary
+on Kusaie in charge of the flock. His name was Likiak S. There are
+coloured Chadbands as well as white ones; and for pure, unmitigated
+hypocrisy the European professor would have had but little show in a
+prize contest.
+
+The head of the American Mission, Mr. Morland, had built himself an
+exceedingly comfortable stone house in Ll. As he was away at present
+in the brig _Morning Star_, his residence was occupied by his
+fellow-worker, Likiak S, his wife, and an exceedingly pretty girl named
+Kitty of Ebon, who acted as housekeeper to Mr. and Mrs. Morland when at
+home.
+
+The missionaries had tried hard to prevent the people of Kusaie from
+selling produce to the whaleships, alleging that their visits were
+fruitful of harm. The old king, however, whose power had declined
+sensibly since the arrival of the missionaries, withstood their orders;
+and finally insisted upon the privilege of permitting them to visit the
+island, and to purchase the pigs, poultry, and fruit from the islanders
+which would otherwise lie useless on their hands.
+
+This King Tokusar was a curious compound of shrewdness, generosity,
+cant, and immorality, each alternately gaining the upper hand.
+
+On entering the "palace," which was exceedingly well furnished, we found
+him seated in an armchair in his reception room. He was dressed in a
+black frock-coat and white duck trousers: the latter somewhat of a
+military cut, falling over patent leather shoes. On one side of the
+chair, lying on its broad arm, was a ponderous copy of the Scriptures in
+the Kusaie dialect. On the other arm was placed one of the long clay
+pipes known as churchwardens.
+
+Behind him, with her much bejewelled fingers clasping the back of her
+consort's chair, was Queen S, a pretty little woman, with a pleasant,
+animated expression of countenance. Further inside the apartment were
+the queen's female attendants, sitting in the ungraceful manner peculiar
+to the Pingelap and Kusaie women.
+
+The king looked worn and ill, as he croaked out, "How you do, Captain? I
+glad to see you again. I thank God he bin good to you--give you good
+voyage. How much oil you bin buy at Ponap?"
+
+Shaking hands warmly with the king, Hayston introduced me in form, and
+then to Her Majesty, who smiled graciously, tossing back her wavy black
+hair, so as to show her massive gold ear-rings. Chairs were brought,
+when a truly amusing conversation took place.
+
+_King._--"Well, Captain! you d--d clever man. I want you give me advice.
+You see--all these men come to Kusaie. Well--me afraid, take my island
+altogether. What you think?"
+
+_Captain._--"Oh no, king! I'll see they do you no harm. I think some of
+them go away in the _Leonora_."
+
+_King._--(Much doubting) "Oh! thank you. I no want too many white men
+here--no Christians like Kusaie men. No believe God, no Jesus Christ."
+(Then with sudden change of tone) "I say, Capt'n Hayston, one of you men
+no pay my people when you here last--no pay anybody."
+
+_Captain._--"Very bad man, king, how much he cheat people out of?"
+
+_King._--(With inquiring look at queen) "Oh! about three dollars."
+
+_Captain._--"I'll attend to it, king--I'll see it paid."
+
+_King._--"Thank you, Capt'n. What you say this young gentleman's name?"
+
+_Captain._--"His name is Hilary Telfer."
+
+_King._--"You like Strong's Island, young gentleman? Pretty girl, eh?
+Same as Captain?" Here he gave a wheezing laugh, and clapped his hands
+on the Captain's knees.
+
+I told him I thought the Strong Island girls very pretty. The queen
+communicated this to the attendants. After which I was the recipient of
+various nods and winks and wreathed smiles.
+
+An enormous roasted hog was then carried in by two of the king's cooks,
+after which a number of servitors appeared carrying taro, yams, and
+other vegetables--again yet more, bearing quantities of fish. We seated
+ourselves at a small table--the Captain opposite the king, while the
+lively little queen and I were _vis-a-vis_.
+
+"Make up to her," whispered the Captain, "flatter her to the masthead if
+you wish to be in clover for the rest of your stay. Never mind old
+Tokusar."
+
+Acting on this hint I got on famously with her South Sea majesty,
+discovering in due course that she was a really clever little woman, as
+well as an outrageous flirt.
+
+Presently the boats came ashore again, and the steward was ushered in,
+carrying a large box.
+
+"King!" said the Captain, "I know you are sick, and need something to
+make you strong. Pray accept a small present from my table." The
+present consisted of two bottles of brandy, with the same quantity of
+gin, and a dozen of beer.
+
+"Oh! thank you, Capt'n--you really very kind. By George! I like you too
+much."
+
+The queen cast a reproachful glance at Hayston. I could see she did not
+appreciate the gift. Her lord soon had a bottle of brandy opened, out of
+which he poured himself an able seaman's dose. The Captain took a
+little, and I--for once in my life--shared a bottle of Tennant's bitter
+beer with a real queen.
+
+The king rose up, with a broad smile illumining his wrinkled face, and
+said, with his glass to his lips, "Capt'n, and Capt'n's friend, I glad
+to see you." Presently, however, with a scared face, he said something
+to his consort at which she seemed disconcerted, and then told us they
+had forgotten to say grace.
+
+This, in a solemn manner, Hayston requested me to do, and, as I was
+bending my head and muttering the half-forgotten formula, the king
+leaned over and whispered to him, "I say, Capt'n, how many labour boys
+you want take away in brig?"
+
+This made me collapse entirely, and I indulged in a hearty laugh. The
+Captain and the queen followed suit, and, at some distance, the king's
+cackling merriment.
+
+It certainly was a jolly dinner. The king was growing madder ever
+minute, alternately quoting Scripture and swearing atrociously. After
+which he told me that he liked to be good friends with Mr. Morland, and
+that he had given up all his bad habits. But, changing his mood again,
+he confided to me that he wished he was young again, and concluded by
+expressing a decided opinion as to the beauty of Kitty of Ebon, Mrs.
+Morland's housekeeper.
+
+The queen now rose from the table and asked me to smoke a cigar. She
+produced a work-box in which were cigarettes and some Manila cheroots.
+Most graciously she lighted one for me.
+
+The king was now more than half-seas over. He laughed hilariously at the
+Captain's stories, and, with some double-barrelled oaths, announced his
+determination to return to the worship of the heathen gods and to
+increase the number of his wives.
+
+Queen S smiled, and blowing out the smoke from between her pouting red
+lips, said, "Hear the old fool talk!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That night there was high revel on board the _Leonora_ after we had
+taken our farewell of the king and queen.
+
+Hayston decided to take advantage of the land breeze, and so get away to
+South harbour at once, as we had business to do there. Chabral harbour
+was a difficult place to get out of, though easy enough to get into.
+
+The trade winds blow steadily here for seven months out of the twelve.
+Now, though the largest ship afloat may run in easily through the deep
+and narrow passage, there is not room enough to beat out against the
+north-east wind. Neither can she tow out, as there is always a heavy
+swell rolling in through the passage, wind or no wind. Kedging out is
+also simply impossible, owing to the extraordinary depth of water.
+
+In 1836, the _Falcon_ of London, a whaleship, lay in Chabral harbour for
+120 days. She had ventured in for wood and water. On making a fifth
+attempt to tow out with her five boats, she touched and went to pieces
+on the reef.
+
+Hayston, however, had run in, knowing that at this season of the
+year--from January to March--the winds were variable, a land breeze
+generally springing up at dusk.
+
+I stated that there was revelry on board the brig that night. The fact
+was that the Captain, in the presence of the king, queen, and myself,
+had made agreement with the refugee traders to take them to whatever
+island they preferred. The king was strongly averse to their retinue of
+excitable natives being domiciled among the peaceful Kusaie people.
+Inspired with courage by the presence of Hayston, he had told the
+traders that he wished them to vacate Ll. If they did arrange to leave
+in the _Leonora_, he told them that they could establish themselves at
+Utw (South harbour), and there remain until they got away in a passing
+whaler or China-bound ship.
+
+After conferring with Hayston, most of the traders decided to take his
+offer of conveying them and their following to Ujilong (Providence
+Island), which was his own property, and there enter into engagement
+with him to make oil for five years. Two others agreed to proceed to the
+sparsely populated but beautiful Eniwetok (or Brown's group), where were
+vast quantities of cocoa-nuts, and only thirty natives. These two men
+had a following of thirty Ocean islanders, and were in high delight at
+the prospect of having an island to themselves and securing a fortune
+after a few years of oil-making.
+
+As the merry clink of the windlass pauls echoed amidst the verdurous
+glens and crags of the mountains that surround Ll, the traders, with
+their wives, families, and followers, pulled off in their whaleboats and
+came aboard.
+
+What a picture did the brig make as she spread her snowy canvas to the
+land-breeze! Laden with the perfume of a thousand flowers, cooled by its
+passage through the primeval forest, it swept us along towards the
+passage, upon the right steering through which so much depended. The
+traders had half a dozen whaleboats; these, with two belonging to the
+_Leonora_, were towing astern, with a native in each.
+
+The passage, as I have said before, was deep but narrow. As the traders
+gazed on either side and watched the immense green rollers dashing with
+resistless force past the brig's side, they looked apprehensively at
+the Captain and then at their boats astern.
+
+Right in the centre an enormous billow came careering along at the speed
+of an express train. Though it had no "breaking curl" on its towering
+crest, I instinctively placed my hands in the starboard boat davits,
+expecting to see the vast volume of water sweep our decks. Some of the
+traders sprang into the main rigging just as the brig lifted to the sea,
+to plunge downward with a swift and graceful motion, never losing her
+way for a moment. No man of our crew took the least notice. They knew
+what the brig could do, they knew the Captain, and no more anticipated a
+disaster than a mutiny.
+
+We made open water safely. Then the Captain descended from the
+fore-yard, whence he had been conning the ship. "Well, gentlemen," he
+said, "here we are, all on board the _Leonora_! I hope you think well of
+her."
+
+The traders emphatically asserted that she was a wonder. Then, as we did
+not intend to enter Utw harbour till the morning, we shortened sail.
+The brig was placed under her topsails only, and we glided slowly and
+smoothly down the coast. Still the reef surge was thundering on the
+starboard hand.
+
+The light of the native villages--for the sudden night of the tropics
+was upon us--glimmered through the groves of cocoa-nuts and bread-fruit
+trees that fringed the snowy beaches. A shadowy, dreamy landscape,
+blurred and indistinct at times, while ever and anon the back-borne
+spume of the breakers fell in rain-mist over all, as they reared and
+raved, only to dash themselves in mad turmoil on the javelins of jagged
+coral.
+
+It was a strange scene. Yet stranger still were the dramatis
+person--the wild band of traders that clustered around the giant form
+of the Captain, as he lay smoking his cigar on the skylight, in friendly
+converse with all.
+
+Foremost in position and seniority comes old Harry Terry, a stalwart,
+grizzled veteran, brown-cheeked and bright-eyed still. Full of yarns of
+his cruise with Captain Waldegrave of H.M. _Seringapatan_, and Captain
+Thomas Thompson in the _Talbot_ frigate, on the coast of South America.
+Clear and honest is his eye, yet he has a worn and saddened look, as
+from a sorrow, long past, half-forgotten, yet never to be wholly erased
+from memory's tablet. A deserter--of course. Yet had he a true Briton's
+love for the flag which he had once sailed and fought under. By his side
+stand four stalwart half-caste sons, hearkening with glistening eyes to
+the Captain's tales of lands they had never seen, scarcely heard of,--of
+polar bears, icebergs, dog sledges, Esquimaux, reindeer, far amid the
+solitudes of the frozen North.
+
+Close by old Harry sits a tall, red-bearded man, with a look of latent
+humour in his countenance, which proclaims his nationality even if the
+richness of his brogue were not in evidence. This is Pleasant Island
+Bill, a merry good-for-nothing, with a warm heart and unlimited capacity
+for whisky. In his belt he carries--perhaps from force of habit--a heavy
+navy revolver, before which many a fierce Pleasant islander has gone
+down in the bloody meutes so common in that wild spot. Behind Bill is
+his wife Tiaro--a fair-skinned native of Taputanea (Drummond's Island).
+She is certainly the "savage woman" of the poet's fancy--handsome
+withal, as, with her hand on her husband's shoulder, she gazes
+admiringly at the herculean figure of the far-famed Rover of the South
+Seas, the dreaded Captain of the _Leonora_. Near to or behind Tiaro are
+the other traders' wives, with their wild-eyed, graceful children.
+
+Beside me, sitting upon a bundle of sleeping mats, is a bronzed and
+handsome young fellow, Charlie Wilder by name, a veritable Adonis of the
+South Seas. With clear-cut features and bright brown curling locks,
+contrasting well with a dark, drooping moustache, he lolls languidly on
+the mats, gazing dreamily at times at the animated forms and faces
+around him. He was the ideal sea rover--much untrammelled by the canons
+of more civilised life. To each of his four young wives he appeared
+equally devoted. Though a _blas_, exquisite in manner, he was a man who
+simply laughed at wounds and death. A dangerous antagonist, too, as some
+of his fellow-traders had good reason to know.
+
+There was yet another trader--a tall young American, who had run away at
+Pleasant Island from the whaleship _Seagull_--a difference of opinion
+with the captain having resulted in Seth's being put in irons.
+
+Besides Dick Mills the boat-steerer, who had deserted also from a
+whaler, there was another well-known trader, a true type of the old-time
+escaped convict. Burnt browner than a coffee berry is old Bob Ridley,
+scarred, weather-beaten, and, in accordance with the fashion of runaway
+sailors in the early days, tattooed like a Marquesas islander. Very
+"dour" and dangerous was this veteran--thinking no more of settling a
+difference with his ever-ready revolver than of filling his ancient clay
+pipe. He had with him two sons and three daughters, all married save the
+youngest girl. Sons and daughters alike had intermarried with natives,
+and the old man himself--his first wife being dead--had possessed
+himself of a girl of tender years but unyielding character. A native of
+Rapa-nui or Easter Island, she possessed in a high degree the personal
+beauty for which her race is famed throughout Polynesia. The old trader,
+it seems, had lately visited Tahiti, and there had dropped across the
+beautiful Lalia, and rescued her from the streets of Papeite. When he
+returned to Pleasant Island she accompanied him. She was a clever
+damsel, and having once been an inmate of the military camp at Tahiti,
+gave herself great airs over her step-children, though she was the
+junior of the youngest girl. Amongst other accomplishments Lalia
+could swear fluently both in French and English, having besides a
+thorough command of whaleship oaths which, I may observe, are unique in
+their way, and never seen in print.
+
+Singing and dancing were kept up until the galley fire was lit and
+coffee served out. Then as the tropic sea-mist was dispelled by the
+first sun rays, we saw, at no great distance, the verdurous hills that
+enclose with emerald walls the harbour of Utw. Far back, yet seeming
+but a cable's length from the brig, rose the rugged coast, two thousand
+feet in air, of Mount Crozier.
+
+The inner shore of the harbour, sheltered by the reef from the fury of
+the terrific rollers, is surrounded by a broad belt of darkest green
+mangroves and hibiscus, forming a dense barrier, monotonous in
+colouring, but blending harmoniously with sea and sky. A well-nigh
+impassable forest coloured the landscape from sea to mountain top. Only
+near the shore were groves of cocoa-palms waving their plumy banners to
+the soft trade breezes. Interspersed at intervals one descried
+plantations of bananas and sugar-cane, yams and taro. The humidity of
+the climate shows itself in the surpassing richness of the vegetation.
+Mountain torrents foam and "rivulets dance their wayward round" in many
+a sequestered glen. Cane thickets springing densely from the deep
+alluvial mould form a safe retreat for the wild boar, while the stately
+purple plumaged pigeons preen themselves in the green gloom of this
+paradisal wild.
+
+The Captain walked the quarter-deck, giving orders to make sail on the
+brig, glancing in a half amused, yet contemptuous manner at the
+recumbent figures of the traders who, overcome by their potations, lay
+slumbering on the deck.
+
+Utw is but a small harbour, so that the Captain felt vexed when
+daylight broke and revealed four whalers lying at anchor in the little
+port, allowing us no room. But one of them had his canvas loosed, and
+we caught the strains of "Shenandoah" as the crew lifted the anchor. We
+backed our main-yard and lay to, while she sailed out. A fine sight it
+was, as the whaler stood out through the narrow passage! The huge
+rollers dashing swiftly past her weather-beaten sides, made her roll so
+heavily that the boats on the davits nearly touched the water with their
+keels. She came close under our stern. Her captain stood up in one of
+the boats and took off his hat.
+
+"How air you, Capt'n?" he drawled; "that's a beautiful brig of yours.
+I've heard a deal of the _Leonora_ and Captain Hayston. I'm real sorry I
+hav'n't time to board you and have a chat. There's another
+blubber-hunter coming out after me, so you'd better wait awhile."
+
+Hayston answered him politely, and the _Marathon_ soon ran round the lee
+side of the island. In a quarter of an hour she was followed by another
+ship, after which we filled again and ran in, anchoring between the
+mangroves and the _Europa_ and _St. George_, New Bedford whaleships.
+
+Our first care was to land the cattle, and here the traders and whalers
+were treated to a lively scene. The mate Jansen, of whom I have before
+spoken, had been knocked off duty by the Captain, who told him that he
+was no seaman, and a cowardly dog besides, as he was always ready to ill
+treat the native crew, but would not stand up to him.
+
+An incident, in which I was an actor, goes to show the savage nature of
+the brute. One day, during our stay at Ponap, I happened to require a
+pair of steelyards that lay in his cabin; on going for them he used
+insulting language, and dared me to enter. He was lying in his bunk, and
+his bloodshot eyes glared with rage as he took a pistol from under his
+pillow. Keeping one eye on the pistol I went in and took the steelyards.
+He leaped out, and a struggle began. We fell on the deck--his whole
+weight upon me--but I managed to get hold of the pistol, which I threw
+overboard. As he freed himself and rose, he gave me a savage kick on
+the knee which lamed me for a week. But I drew back and landed him a
+left-hander, which catching him fair in the face, sent him down
+senseless, while a stream of blood poured from his mouth and ears.
+
+"Malie! malie!" shouted Black Johnny in Samoan (the equivalent to
+"_habet_"), and the crew took up the cry in tones of deep approval.
+
+We never spoke again after this encounter.
+
+However, just before we made ready to land the cattle, he came aft and
+begged the Captain to reinstate him.
+
+"Mr. Jansen!" said Hayston, "I cannot permit you to resume duty as mate
+of this brig. I have given the position to Fiji Bill, as you are not fit
+for it. However, I will see how you behave for the future, and may give
+you another chance. Go on deck and assist to get these cattle into the
+water."
+
+The traders and whalers were watching the operation with great interest.
+The longboat, in charge of Fiji Billy, was ready to tow the cattle on
+shore as soon as they were lowered into the water. The first beast was
+swung safely out of the main hold and over the side, when the tackle
+parted aloft and the animal plunged into the sea, just missing the boat.
+For a moment there was silence. We all ran to the side, where we saw the
+bullock reappear and strike bravely out for the mangroves, which he
+reached in safety.
+
+The Captain walked slowly over to Jansen, who was engaged in bullying
+the boatswain.
+
+"Who rigged that tackle?" he asked in his most unruffled tones; but I
+could see the colour mounting to his forehead, as the laughter of the
+whaling crews fell upon his ear.
+
+"I did," growled Jansen (edging towards his cabin, in which he always
+kept loaded firearms), his sullen face showing fear and hatred
+combined.
+
+"Keep to the deck, sir," broke forth the Captain, who had foreseen this
+movement; the harsh, severe tones I knew foretold disaster. "D--n you,
+sir, you are neither good enough for an officer nor man before the mast.
+There is not a kanaka on board this brig but could have rigged that
+tackle in a seaman-like manner. Boy George, or even one of the girls,
+could have made a better fist of it. You have disgraced the brig in the
+presence of other ships. Go to your bunk till after breakfast."
+
+And now Jansen brought immediate punishment on himself. With one hand on
+the door of the deckhouse, he turned round and muttered, "Why didn't you
+let the women do it, then?"
+
+The next moment both men were struggling fiercely on the deck,--Jansen
+making frantic efforts to fire a pistol he had concealed in the bosom of
+his shirt; but the hand which held it was gripped by the Captain, and
+the muzzle pointed upwards.
+
+Jansen was an extremely powerful man, and, amid the babel of tongues
+that were let loose, I heard one trader say, "By ----! he's got the best
+of the Captain."
+
+But I noticed that while Jansen was almost spent, and was breathing
+stertorously, the Captain had not yet put forth the tremendous strength
+which, on sea or shore, I never saw equalled. He was still holding
+Jansen's hand with a vice-like grasp, when the pistol fell to the deck.
+Suddenly freeing himself, he stepped back and dealt two blows with
+wonderful quickness on the mate's face, cutting his forehead and cheek
+to the bone. The man staggered wildly--his features streaming with
+blood--then fell senseless against one of the crew, who darted aside and
+let him drop on the deck. A murmur of applause, mingled with cries of
+pity from the women, arose from the spectators, while the whaler crews
+rent the air with cheers for "Bully Hayston."
+
+The Captain drew forth his handkerchief, with which he removed a slight
+stain upon his face, then said in a mild and pleasant voice, as if
+nothing had occurred, "Steward! bring me a glass of water. Bill (to the
+Fijian) get these other beasts up and put them ashore. Antonio! get
+Jansen's traps together, and put them and him into the boat. The man
+that points a pistol at me on board of this brig only does it once. As I
+don't wish to hurt him again, I must get rid of him."
+
+The cattle were soon landed and eating their fill on the rich tract of
+littoral between Utw and Coquille.
+
+That day I bought various articles of trade--including ten tons of yams
+for Arrecifos. The Captain never interfered with my dealings with the
+natives; so when Likiak S the missionary went to him, and in a whining
+tone complained of my paying them in trade, he got the following answer:
+"Don't want your people to be paid in trade, don't you? Precisely so!
+you white chokered schemer--you whited sepulchre! you want to see these
+hard-working slaves of natives paid in cash, so that you and your
+brethren may rob the poor devils of every dollar for church tithes. The
+supercargo has my fullest confidence, and will not rob any native of a
+cent. Go and talk to him."
+
+The missionary came to the trade-room, where I was selling pigeon shot
+and powder to a man named Sree, and said that he wished the natives paid
+in cash. Every Strong's islander can speak English. So I turned to those
+present and asked if I had suggested their taking trade instead of
+dollars. On receiving this answer in the negative I told him to clear
+out. He disregarded me, upon which I assisted him to leave the cabin,
+while Lalia and Kitty covered him with flour from the pantry.
+
+This provided me with a persistent and bitter enemy.
+
+About six o'clock the Captain went below, but rather hastily returned,
+casting an anxious look to seaward. "The glass is falling fast," he
+said, "I can't make it out. I have never known it to blow hard here at
+this time of year. Still it is banking up to the westward."
+
+He hailed the whaleships, and saw that they had also noticed the glass
+falling. In a few minutes the two captains boarded us to have a
+consultation. The heavy, lowering cloud to seaward had deepened in
+gloom, and the three captains gazed anxiously at it.
+
+"Gentlemen!" said Hayston, "we are in a bad place if it comes on to
+blow. The land-breeze has died away, and that it is going to blow from
+the sou'-west I am convinced. We cannot tow out in the face of such a
+swell, even if we had daylight to try it. To beat out by night would be
+madness."
+
+The faces of the Yankee skippers lengthened visibly as they begged
+Hayston to make a suggestion.
+
+"Well," he said at length, "your ships may ride out a blow, for you've
+room to swing in, and if you send down your light spars and be quick
+about it, and your cables don't part, you'll see daylight. But with me
+it is different. I cannot give the brig a fathom more cable; there are
+coral boulders all around us, and the first one she touches will knock a
+hole in her bottom. But now every man must look to himself. I have two
+hundred people on board, and my decks are lumbered up with them. Adios!
+gentlemen, go on board and get your spars down for God's sake."
+
+Then the Captain turned all his attention to getting the brig ready for
+the storm that was even then close upon us. In the shortest time our
+royal and topgallant yards were down, the decks cleared of lumber, the
+native passengers sent below, and five fathoms of cable hove in. Hayston
+knew the brig would swing round with her head to the passage as soon as
+the gale struck her, and unless he hove in cable, must strike on one of
+the boulders he had spoken of.
+
+As yet there was not a breath of air, for after the last whisper of the
+land-breeze had died away, the atmosphere became surcharged with
+electricity, and the rollers commenced to sound a ceaseless thunder, as
+they dashed themselves upon the reef, such as I had never heard before.
+A pall of darkness settled over us, and though the whaleships were so
+near that the voices of their crews sounded strange and ghostlike in our
+ears, we could see nothing except the dull glow of the lamps alight in
+the cabins--showing through the ports.
+
+Then we heard the voice of Captain Grant of the _St. George_, "Stand by,
+Captain Hayston, it's coming along as solid as a wall."
+
+A fierce gust whistled through the cordage, and then a great white cloud
+of rain, salt spume, and spray enveloped the brig, as with a shrill,
+humming drone, like a thousand bagpipes in full blast, the full force of
+the gale struck us. The brig heeled over, then swung quickly round to
+her anchor, while the crew, every man at his station, sought through the
+inky blackness that followed the rain squall to see how the whaleships
+fared.
+
+But now the darkness deepened, if such were possible. No star shone
+through the funereal gloom; while the enormous rollers, impelled by the
+increasing force of the wind, swept in quickest succession through the
+narrow passage. The three ships rolled heavily.
+
+"Harry!" called out the Captain to the oldest trader, "take your boats
+and land as many of the people as you can. The sea is getting up
+fast--in half-an-hour it will be breaking aboard the brig."
+
+The traders' boats were made fast to the ship's stern, except two on
+deck.
+
+These were now hauled alongside, and old Harry, with his four stalwart
+sons--splendid fellows they were physically--manned one, and taking
+about fifty of their followers, who sprang over the side and were
+hauled into the boat, the sons gave a wild shout and disappeared into
+the darkness.
+
+The other boat was equally lucky in not being stove in. Pleasant Island
+Bill was in charge, and in a lull of the wind I heard him call out to
+those on deck to throw the women overboard and he would pick them up.
+
+Five or six of them leaped overboard and, swimming like otters, gained
+the boat; many others naturally held back. Standing on the deck clinging
+to the Captain's knees were the two children, Toby and Kitty. Seizing
+Kitty in his arms the Captain tossed her into the black waters close to
+the boat, where one of the crew caught her by the hair and pulled her
+in. Toby gave a yell of alarm and tried to dart below, but I caught him
+and slung him over after Kitty. Bill nearly missed catching him as he
+rose to the surface, but he was taken in. Then the boat headed for the
+shore, now only discernible by the white line of foam breaking; into the
+mangroves.
+
+And now our troubles recommenced. The waters of the harbour, generally
+placid as a mill-pond, were now running mountains high, so quickly had
+the sea got up. The Captain, who was standing at the stern sounding, and
+apparently as cool as if he were trout fishing, beckoned me to him, and
+placing his mouth to my ear, shouted--
+
+"Four fathoms under our stern--little enough if the sea gets worse. But
+if the wind hauls another point we'll touch that big coral mushroom on
+the port quarter, and then it's good-bye to the _Leonora_!"
+
+The words had hardly left his lips when a strange and awful lull of the
+wind occurred, rendering more intense the enshrouding darkness, more
+dread and distinct the seething wash and roar of the seas that broke on
+the weather reef.
+
+The Captain sprang into the main rigging and held up his hand to feel
+if the wind was coming from a new quarter. For some minutes the brig
+rolled so madly that it was all he could do to hold on.
+
+Then his strong, fearless voice sounded out: "Men! who will man a boat
+to take a line to the _Europa_? If I can get a hawser to the whaler to
+keep the brig's stern from this boulder under our port quarter, it may
+save the ship. If not, we must strike. There's a lull now, and a boat
+could get away."
+
+After a momentary hesitation, Antonio the Portuguese, Johnny Tilton, and
+two natives volunteered.
+
+"Good lads!" cried the Captain; "stand by, men, to lower away the
+whaleboat." In a few minutes she was in the water, and a whale-line made
+fast to a stout hawser was coiled away in the bow, as with an
+encouraging cheer from those on deck, the men gave way, and passing
+under our stern made for the _Europa_.
+
+After twenty minutes of anxiety, for we could see nothing, nor tell
+whether the boat had reached the _Europa_ safely or been stove in
+alongside, we saw her dart past the stern again, and Antonio called out,
+"All right, Captain, heave away on the hawser, the end's fast to the
+_Europa_."
+
+"Well done, lads!" cried the Captain; "but stay where you are, and I'll
+get some more women on shore."
+
+The strange lull still continued, but a lurid glare showed me the glass
+still falling steadily; when I told the Captain this he sighed, for he
+knew that our best chance of safety was gone. But he was a man of
+action.
+
+"Go below, Hilary!" he said quietly, "and get all the papers, letters,
+and articles of value together--I'll send them on shore with the women."
+
+In the cabin were eight or ten women; they gazed at me with
+terror-stricken faces. "On deck, Mary!" I said. "On deck all of you!
+there's a boat alongside, and some of you can get ashore."
+
+Five of them, with old Mary, at once left the cabin, and I heard their
+wild cries and screams of alarm as they were seized by the Captain and
+crew, and thrown overboard to be picked up by the boat.
+
+Lalia and the others remained in the cabin, clinging to each other
+and sobbing with fear.
+
+I picked up a heavy trade chest, and laying mats and rugs along the
+bottom and sides, stowed into it the chronometers, a couple of sextants,
+charts, and what gold and silver coin was in the Captain's secretary;
+also as many Winchester carbines and cartridges as it would hold.
+
+"Here, girls! help me carry this on deck," I said in Samoan to Lalia,
+who understood the language. We dragged the heavy box on deck, and, by
+wonderful good luck, it was lowered into the boat, which was now under
+the ship's quarter, and in imminent danger of being stove in.
+
+The Captain desired me to go ashore in the longboat and take charge of
+the boat. I was just about to jump when the brig gave a fearful plunge,
+and before she could recover, a heavy roller crashed over the waist and
+nearly smothered me. By clinging to the iron boat davits near me, I
+managed to save myself from being carried overboard with the debris of
+spars and timber that swept aft. When I regained my breath I could see
+nothing of the boat. She had, however, been swept ashore, and all in her
+landed safely except Bill, who was knocked overboard, but washed up into
+the mangroves.
+
+I felt the Captain's hand on my shoulder, as he asked me if I thought
+the boat had gone under.
+
+"I think not, or we should have heard some of them calling out; they can
+all swim."
+
+"Well, perhaps so," he replied, "but I fear not. I don't care a cent
+about the loss of the dollars, but Bill is a good fellow."
+
+Lalia had clung to the davits with me when the sea struck us, and was
+now almost exhausted. So with the Captain's help I carried her below
+into the now deserted cabin, for the other women were gone; had, I
+supposed, been washed overboard, for they were standing with us when we
+lowered the chest.
+
+The Captain then hastened on deck, telling me that the wind was coming
+away from the south. He had scarcely left me when I heard the dismal
+drone of the gale again, and his voice shouting to the carpenter to
+stand by and cut away the masts, for the seas were now breaking clean
+over the bows, and sweeping along the decks with resistless force.
+
+Being almost hove short, the ship could not rise quickly enough to the
+seas, and was besides rolling so much that she threatened to turn turtle
+every minute. It was impossible for any one to cross the deck, so madly
+was the brig rolling, and so fiercely were the seas sweeping her decks
+in quick succession; and so for a while all hands waited till a better
+chance offered to cut away.
+
+In the mean time I had dragged out another trade chest, and first
+securing my own papers and placing them in the bottom, I filled it with
+such articles as I thought would prove valuable if we did not save the
+ship.
+
+Lalia rendered me great assistance now. I filled a wineglass of
+brandy from the decanter, and made her drink it, for her teeth were
+chattering, and her lips blue with cold and terror combined.
+
+Together we managed to get the chest half-way up the companion, when
+another plunge made me slip, and the heavy box jammed the girl's feet
+against the side of the companion lining. I called loudly for help, as I
+could not extricate her from under the box. Fortunately, four native
+seamen heard me, and lifted the chest off her legs.
+
+Then I heard the Captain's voice calling out, "Well done, boys! Rotumah
+men, brave fellows, in a boat!"
+
+Carrying the girl below again, I dropped her in the steward's cabin,
+told her to stay there till I came back, and ran on deck.
+
+The Captain met me, and, pointing to a dark, indistinct mass, rising and
+falling near the ship's stern, said, "There's real grit for you!"
+
+It was one of the trader's whaleboats, manned by four Rotumah men and a
+native of Danger Island. Two of these brave fellows had been washed
+ashore in the second sea that had struck us, and with three others, who
+had reached the mangroves in another boat, had put out again to return
+to the brig and save their shipmates.
+
+The Captain now called out to those who were left on board, and told
+them that there was a chance of some of them getting ashore, by jumping
+over as the boat approached and getting into her. As for himself, if
+three or four good men would stand by him, he would attempt to cut away
+the masts, and perhaps save the ship as the hawser was made fast to the
+_Europa_.
+
+It was a new one, and might not part; but if it did, nothing could help
+the brig from sticking on the detached coral boulders that lay so close
+under the stern.
+
+Seizing her child in her arms, a powerfully-built Ocean Island woman
+sprang into the seething foam-caldron, and disregarding our cries to
+make for the boat, struck out for the nearest point of the mangroves.
+Next morning the child was found unharmed on a small beach, more than a
+mile away, and the body of the mother lying dead beside her, with a
+fearful gash on her temple and one foot missing,--the poor babe gazing
+at the cold face, and wondering why she did not wake when she called to
+her. Then others followed the women, some getting into the boat, and
+others letting the sea take them in the direction of the shore.
+
+"Where is the second mate?" shouted the Captain to the coxswain of the
+rescuing boat.
+
+"On shore with the traders, sir; all the boats but one are stove in on
+the beach, and he can't get out again."
+
+"All right, lads, don't attempt to come out again; but wait a minute."
+Then turning to me, "You must go ashore now in this boat. She has not
+many in her; and if her head is kept right into the break between the
+mountains she'll run up into the mangroves."
+
+But I said I would take my chance with the ship. I was a good swimmer,
+and in that time of danger, even despair, I could not leave the Captain.
+
+He pressed my hand silently, then called out, "All right, men, give way,
+the supercargo stays with me and the ship"; one dash of the oars, a
+wailing cry, a shout which out-toned it, and the boat disappeared, as if
+swallowed up by the darkness or the deep.
+
+We were not clustered together aft. Those of the crew that had stood by
+the ship were hanging on to the main rigging. The Captain, who had
+hitherto intended cutting away both masts at once, told me he fancied
+the ship was straining and plunging less, and that he would only cut
+away as a last resource.
+
+Suddenly he bent his glance at the hawser that was made fast to the
+_Europa_, and then pointed over to the seething water under our stern. I
+saw we were almost over a huge coral boulder, which every now and then
+showed itself bare.
+
+"By ----! those fellows on board the _Europa_ are paying out the hawser.
+We were fifty feet from that rock when the hawser was made fast and had
+a strain on it, and now it's right under her stern. Can any of you see
+the whaler's cabin lights?"
+
+The men looked through the blinding mists of spray that flew in our
+faces, and stung like whip-lashes when the brig was lifted high on a
+towering sea. The hawser tightened like an iron bar, but suddenly fell
+as if it had parted or been cast off.
+
+"The cursed dogs!" said the Captain, opening and shutting his hands
+spasmodically, "they are paying out, and letting us go to the devil!"
+
+And now a tremendous sea swept along and broke just as it reached
+abreast the mainmast. We felt the brig strike. Sea after sea tumbled in
+over the bulwarks, and a solid sheet of water broke over us in the main
+rigging, sweeping three or four men overboard.
+
+When I cleared my throat of the water I had swallowed, I saw the Captain
+with a rifle in his hand, and then followed the flash as he fired in the
+direction of the _Europa_.
+
+"Captain," I cried, "what good will that do? She may be ashore herself
+in as bad a fix as we are."
+
+He pushed me aside as I placed my hand on his arm. "Stand clear, Hilary!
+I tell you these cowardly hounds are deliberately wrecking me. That ship
+is in a safe place, and could ride out a heavier gale than this."
+
+"Captain," I began, when another sea lifted the brig's bow high in the
+air; then, with a dull crash, we struck stern on, and I saw the hawser
+had either parted or been cut away. The rudder had been torn from the
+stern-post, and ripped its way through the timbers with a fearful
+tearing sound. Again the Captain's face showed itself to me almost as
+white as the hell of boiling foam around us.
+
+"My ship is dearer to me than my life!" he said, as he cast the rifle
+from him and stood gazing out into the howling storm, amid which all the
+voices of earth and air seemed to be contending.
+
+Suddenly, with a pang of pity, I remembered that Lalia was in the
+steward's cabin. I dashed down below. Already the water was running into
+the hold, and as I gained the cabin the ship once more struck violently
+under my feet.
+
+"Lalia! Lalia!" I called, "come with me. Can you walk?"
+
+The girl was sitting up in the bunk, her hair unloosed, her eyes dilated
+with terror, as she gazed into the dimly-lighted cabin, and saw the
+water washing around it.
+
+She could hardly stand with the pain in her bruised feet, but I lifted
+her out. Then she tore off her dress, stripped to the waist, and, hand
+in hand, we succeeded in gaining the companion-way just as a torrent of
+water filled the cabin and put out the lamps.
+
+I felt the Captain's hand grasp me round the waist as we stumbled out on
+deck, and heard him say, "Hold on to me, Hilary! hold on like grim
+death, my girl!" as we were swept along by a sea against the bulwarks on
+the starboard side.
+
+Some of the men had clung to a boat that we carried on top of the
+deck-house, which had been washed over the side. They had no oars, but
+the backwater from the reef dashed her up against the ship, and I have
+an indistinct remembrance of the Captain dragging us along with him, and
+attempting to lift the girl up, when a towering wave struck us right
+amidships and drove us all over together on top of the boat, which was
+already stove in.
+
+I should have gone under then but for Lalia, for I had got a blow on
+the side from a piece of wreckage. Anyhow, what followed I cannot
+remember, for when I came to my senses it was daylight, and I was lying
+under some cocoa-nut trees with Lalia, and one of Harry Skilling's
+native retainers named Karta, bathing my back with fresh water.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My first inquiry was for the Captain, and I was relieved to hear from
+Lalia that he was visible at that moment, directing the crew to save
+wreckage from the brig. The two whaleships had ridden out the gale in
+safety, and the _Europa_ was already under weigh. I thought it just as
+well it was so, for Hayston would, I am sure, have attempted to seize
+her.
+
+Lalia told me that we clung to the boat till she struck a coral rock
+and went to pieces. Then every one was separated. She had been seized by
+Karta, and, still keeping hold of me, the three of us had come ashore
+together. She said also that my back was badly cut with the coral. The
+poor girl had a terrible gash on her arm, and this she had neglected to
+attend to me. I had a deep wound on my face, which caused me great pain,
+as a piece of tough coral had broken off in it.
+
+Lalia was almost nude, and I had only the remnants of a pair of duck
+trousers. We did not feel cold, however, as the storm had ceased, and
+the sun was now shining brightly. The wind had gone down, and the
+harbour was nearly as smooth as a mountain lake. The only visible sign
+of the disaster of the night was the maintopmast of the _Leonora_,
+showing where she had gone down.
+
+From the bank of mangroves on which we were located there was no access
+to the village of Utw, where the rest of the ship's company were. Deep
+channels separated the two portions of the harbour. Karta was about to
+swim over to tell the Captain where I was, when Lalia caught him by
+the arm and pointed to the water. I have read a good many tall yarns
+about sharks, but never till now could I believe in their being as
+numerous as a shoal of minnows.
+
+The channels were simply alive with the brutes dashing to and fro,
+lashing the water into foam, and contesting with each other for dark
+objects floating near the surface. I shuddered instinctively, but
+Lalia laughed, and explained that the dead bodies were those of pigs
+washed overboard from the brig.
+
+Presently the tall figure of Karta attracted the notice of some of the
+people on the other side, and Lalia said the "ariki vaka" was coming
+over to us in one of the traders' whaleboats.
+
+The Captain sprang out of the boat, and seeing me lying down with my
+head in the girl's lap thought I was dead.
+
+"My dear boy," he said, taking both my hands and pressing them, "are you
+badly hurt?"
+
+I showed him my back, and said I felt most pain in my side, and
+whereupon I suffered ten excruciating pains in one as he extracted the
+piece of flat coral from my face. He then called one of the boat's crew,
+and told him to take off his shirt, one sleeve of which he tore off and
+bound up Lalia's arm. He then gave her the mutilated garment to cover
+her bare body, saying in his old cheerful manner that her husband was
+all right, and was out searching the beaches for her. She made a gesture
+of indifference, and then fainted away. As soon as she revived she was
+lifted into the boat, and we pushed off for the village.
+
+The Captain kept pressing my hand all the way over, and told me that
+since daylight he had been looking among the wreckage coming ashore and
+searching the beach for me, when some one saw our three figures in the
+cocoa-nut grove, and said two were white. Hayston knew this must be
+Lalia and myself, as she had a very fair skin. He was sincerely
+pleased at my escape, and no words need express my relief at his safety.
+
+He took us forthwith to one of the villagers' houses, and told the
+people to attend to us, and see that we wanted for nothing. He further
+insisted that I should not attempt to render him any assistance until I
+was perfectly recovered. I could only nod acquiescence, as my side was
+paining me terribly.
+
+A warm grasp of my hand and a kind look to Lalia and he was gone.
+
+One of the Kusaie women in the house told us that a message had gone up
+to the king, and that a native doctor named Srulik would soon come down
+and cure my back with leaves in the island fashion. She also informed
+Lalia that her husband had gone away in a canoe to look for her
+body, with two natives, but that he had come across a case of gin, and
+was now dead drunk on the opposite side of Utw. It is hardly to be
+expected that a young girl could feel love for a man of her husband's
+years; but tears of humiliation coursed down her cheeks when the woman
+added that he had already asked an Ocean Island girl to be wife to him.
+
+About four o'clock in the afternoon messengers arrived from Ll with a
+message of regret from the king to Captain Hayston, and an invitation
+for me to Chabral harbour, so that I could get better quickly; and he
+could send his own boat for me. But I did not want to be separated from
+the Captain, and said I would come and visit him when I got permission.
+
+Queen S sent me a large basket of cooked pigeons and fruit. Taking out
+a few for myself and Lalia, I sent the rest to the Captain, who was
+glad of them for his weary and hungry men.
+
+For the next few days I suffered fearfully with the pain in my side, and
+though the Captain visited me twice a day, and tried all he could to
+cheer me up, I fell into a hopeless state of despondency. All the time
+Lalia had remained in the house, her husband, not having finished the
+case of gin, never coming near her. Her stepsons and daughters disliked
+her, and therefore avoided the house where we were staying.
+
+The Captain told me that her arm was cut to the bone, and that the trade
+chest that had fallen against her had injured one foot badly. Never as
+long as I live shall I forget the unwearied attention and kindness which
+the poor girl showed me during our stay in the village. Though lame, and
+with only the use of one arm, she never left my side, and strove by
+every means in her power to allay the agony I endured--answering to my
+petulance and irritability only with smiles and kind words.
+
+The Captain told me that he had saved a good many articles from the
+wreck; that the big trade chest had come ashore, and that the money and
+firearms were in a safe place. A quantity of liquor had also been saved,
+and already some fierce fights had taken place, but the traders had in
+most instances behaved well, and assisted him to maintain order. He told
+me also that Lalia's husband had taken away a lot of liquor into the
+impassable forest that lines the north side of Utw, and, with two of
+his sons and several women, was having a big carouse.
+
+"The virtuous and Christian Strong's islanders had," he said, "stolen
+about a thousand dollars' worth of trade that had been washed ashore.
+But," he added quietly, "I'll talk to them like a father as soon as I
+get a house built, and knock the devil out of those Pleasant islanders
+besides. They seem disposed to cut all our throats."
+
+A couple of days after this, Hayston came to me with a letter from
+Lalia's husband, which he handed to me. I don't know whether
+amusement or indignation predominated as I read it, written as it was on
+a piece of account paper.
+
+ STRONG'S ISLAND, _March 11th_.
+
+ Supercargo _Leonora_ Brig.
+
+ DEAR FRIEND.--I heer my wife have took up with you, and say she
+ do'ent want anny mo-ar truck with her lawful husban. Captin
+ Hayston say No, but she must be cotton strong to you, not to
+ come to me when I look for her neerly one week amung two thousan
+ sharks, as I can prove, but I bare you no ill-wil, for I got
+ anuther wife, but you must give me the three rings she ware, and
+ I warn you I'm not responsble.--I remane, your true and sincere
+ friend.
+
+ _P.S._--Lal can read as well as me, and you can let her read
+ this. She is a good girl, and I bear no ill-wil.
+
+The Captain laughed when I read out this precious document, and told me
+not to take matters so seriously. He then sat down and chatted for
+half-an-hour, saying that as soon as he had finished saving the
+wreckage, he had called the traders together, and laid certain proposals
+before them to which they had agreed.
+
+These were that the traders and their followers would consider
+themselves under his direction, in which case he would engage to provide
+food for them during their stay on the island. They were not to have any
+commercial dealings with the people of Strong's Island, and their
+natives were to assist the crew of the _Leonora_ in erecting houses for
+their joint accommodation. After which he would endeavour to charter a
+vessel, probably a passing whaleship, to take the whole lot of us to
+Providence Island. Should no vessel call in six months' time, he would
+take a boat's crew and make for Mill Lagoon, six hundred miles distant.
+If the ketch I had brought down from Samoa was still afloat, he would
+bring her back, and take the people in detachments to Providence Island.
+He feared, however, that no more whalers would be calling in for ten
+months, as the _St. George_ and _Europa_ were the last of the fleet
+which was making, vi Japan, for the Siberian coast, "right whaling."
+
+He left us then, saying he had established a little republic on the
+narrow strip of land that lay on the sea-side of Utw village.
+
+Then I gave Lalia the letter I had received from her reprobate
+husband. She read it in silence and returned it to me, but I could see
+that the heartless old scoundrel's words had wounded her deeply. She
+took off some rings from her fingers, and sent them to the Captain to
+hand to the old man. "Do you think," she said, "that I can ever get back
+to Rapa-nui?" (Easter Island.)
+
+Her father, she went on to say, was dead, and her mother had been among
+those unfortunate people who in 1866 were seized by three Peruvian
+slavers and taken to work the guano deposits on the Chincha Islands.
+She, when about fourteen, had married one of the captains of one of the
+ships owned by the great firm of Brander of Tahiti. The tales she told
+me of his brutality and ill-usage during his drunken fits of passion
+moved me to sincere pity. The unmitigated rascal deliberately sold his
+child wife to an American (or a man who called himself one), and by him
+she was taken to San Francisco and delivered into yet more hopeless
+slavery. Here she made the acquaintance of a Tahitian half-caste. She
+and this girl succeeded in escaping and paying their passages to Tahiti,
+where they landed penniless and starving.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From Tahiti she was taken by her present husband.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A KING AND QUEEN
+
+
+On the next day I walked to the new village in course of formation, when
+I received from whites and natives alike a most flattering reception.
+Outside of the sandy spit a solid sea-wall of coral had been built, the
+ground had been levelled, and an enormous dwelling-house erected. This
+was the work of the Ocean and Pleasant islanders. It was the Captain's
+house, and from a hole in the gable floated the starry banner of the
+great Republic. This flag had been the joint work of Nellie and Mila. It
+was composed of strips of white calico, navy blue and Turkey red. At the
+further end of the sea-wall stood the traders' houses; opposite the
+captains' were those of their people. Every one seemed busy, and the
+greatest animation pervaded the scene, while a number of Strong's
+islanders, squatted down in front of the big house, surveyed the
+operations with dismay. They dreaded, and with good reason, the fierce
+and intractable natives of Pleasant Island, who would have been only too
+pleased to have cut their throats and taken possession of their
+beautiful home altogether.
+
+I was received by the Captain at the door of his house, and although the
+girls had frequently been to visit me, and bring fruit and fish from the
+Captain when I was sick, I was made as much of as if I had been dead and
+buried and come to life again. The Captain's merry blue eyes looked
+searchingly into mine, as I seated myself in an easy chair, "You see
+what it is to be _l'ami du maison_."
+
+I acknowledged the compliment, and then turned to shake hands with
+little Toby, who with a number of other children were being entertained
+by a sort of pig and yam tea-party by the Captain, each youngster having
+in his hand a junk of yam and piece of pork.
+
+Those of the crew who were in the vicinity now came in, and I had quite
+a levee. Black Johnny nearly wrung my hand off. I was glad to see the
+Captain looking so bright, and evidently on such good terms with those
+around him. I could not but be struck with the way in which the traders,
+resolute and determined men themselves, deferred to his slightest wish.
+
+For a few minutes he walked up and down the long matted floor,
+apparently lost in thought, while I sat and talked with the
+light-hearted, merry creatures around me. Suddenly stopping, he came up,
+and placed his hand on my shoulder.
+
+"Hilary! I like this island so well, that as Henry the Fifth said in
+France, when the French queen asked him how he liked her country: I mean
+to keep it."
+
+"Captain," I said, startled and alarmed, "are you serious?"
+
+"Yes and no! If I cannot get a ship to take us to Providence Island
+within six months I will upset the missionaries' apple-cart and take
+possession of the island. If a ship does call here, and I can charter
+her, I am bound in honour to fulfil my promise to these traders."
+
+"Captain," I said, "there are two hundred and fifty men on Strong's
+Island; surely you would not dispossess them? Besides, they will fight."
+
+"So much the better," he said, with a smile of contempt, "once let a
+quarrel break out between them and these Ocean and Pleasant islanders,
+and every native of Kusaie will have his throat cut in twenty-four
+hours."
+
+I turned the subject, for I saw by his stern expression that he meant
+what he said, and that any trifling incident would perhaps bring matters
+to an issue.
+
+Presently he began again. "Yes, these Pleasant islanders, who two weeks
+ago were all attached to these traders, are now heart and soul devoted
+to me. They know I am a better man, according to their ideas, than all
+the traders put together, and if I stepped out of the house now and told
+them I would lead them, they would follow me and burn old Tokusar's town
+over his head, cut off a passing ship, or do any other devilry such as
+their bloody instincts revel in."
+
+I tried to turn his thoughts into another channel, and succeeded so far
+that when I rose to return he was laughing and joking in his usual
+manner. He pointed out to me a separate part of the house, and told me
+that as soon as I liked to take possession he would be glad to see me in
+it.
+
+I explained to him that for the present I had better remain in the
+native house, as the king daily sent me food, and considered me his
+guest. In this he concurred, as he said if the king took a liking to a
+white man he would live in clover. He advised me to go and see him as
+soon as I was strong, or else his dignity would be touched. Also that I
+would find it well to keep good friends with Queen S.
+
+When I returned to the native house, however, I felt "sick unto death,"
+and cast myself down on the mats in despair. The hurt I had received in
+the side seemed to have also affected my chest, as I could hardly
+breathe without suffering agonies. Happily I became unconscious; when I
+opened my eyes I found the Captain beside my mat, and during the whole
+night he remained with me and encouraged my sinking spirits. When
+daylight came he examined me carefully, after which he told me, that
+from the darkening colour of my skin, and the agony I felt from the
+slightest pressure, he thought I had received internal injury. He
+therefore insisted upon my coming over to his village, so that I might
+be under his immediate control. To this I consented at last, although
+young Harry (as we called Harry Waters) was eager that I should come and
+live with him on the north side of Utw, where Hayston had formed a
+sub-station to make oil and given him charge.
+
+I liked Harry very much; he was the only one of the traders whose age
+approached my own. His bearing and behaviour, too, contrasted favourably
+with those of his drunken and dissolute colleagues. However, I had to
+decline his kind offer, although, to my amusement, he emphatically
+asserted that I would be no trouble to him, as he had four wives, and
+Rosa, the youngest of them, was a clever nurse. I paid the Strong
+islanders who had attended on me, and then inquired of Lalia what she
+intended to do? She had, of course, no money to pay the people for
+keeping her, and the old custom of extending hospitality to strangers
+had naturally died out since the coming of the missionaries.
+
+I had no other way of showing my gratitude than by offering her money.
+This she refused, but said she would be glad to get some clothes or
+material to make them. I gave a native money, and sent him up to Ll,
+where he bought several dresses from Kitty of Ebon, and as she was the
+same height and figure as Lalia, they fitted her capitally.
+
+A couple of days after I had taken up my quarters with the Captain she
+came to see me, and say good-bye. She told me she was going to live at a
+village near Ll, and teach the Strong's Island women hat-making, at
+which she was clever. She would stay there till she got tired of it. I
+was sincerely sorry, and was not ashamed to show it, "being weak from my
+wound," and hardly able to refrain from tears. I felt quite pleased when
+the Captain came up and shook her little hand warmly, telling her that
+she really ought not to leave us. "Mind, Lalia, come to me if you are
+in any trouble, and I will see you righted," he said in parting.
+
+"I know that, Captain! very well," she answered, looking up with a
+strange, sorrowful look in her large bright eyes, "but I must go now."
+Whereupon she walked slowly down the beach, and getting into a canoe
+with two Kusaie women, waved her hand and was soon out of sight.
+
+I recovered slowly, but after a while was able to get about and to take
+an inventory of the property saved, while the Captain amused himself by
+overlooking the building of a large oil-store. He had demanded an
+immediate payment of two hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts from the
+king, as part indemnity for the property stolen by the natives from the
+wreck. The king dared not refuse, and now a huge pile of cocoa-nuts was
+accumulating near the oil-shed, where the Pleasant islanders were daily
+scraping the nuts and making oil. A number of butts had come ashore,
+which were utilised for the oil, so that the village had already gained
+a settled look. About this time the Captain gave way to occasional
+bursts of passion, inflicting severe beatings upon two of the traders,
+who had got drunk and were careering about with rifles in their hands,
+threatening to shoot any one that interfered with them.
+
+He also accused old Harry Terry of plotting with the king, and a violent
+scene ensued. Some of the natives still sided with their old master, and
+with knives and shark-tooth daggers surrounded him, uttering cries of
+defiance at the Captain.
+
+I was in the big house when the row commenced, and saw the excited
+savages running up to where the Captain and old Harry stood. An
+encounter seemed imminent.
+
+Boy George, with Nellie and the other women, now rushed in and demanded
+of me to give them the Winchester and Snider rifles, which stood ready
+loaded in a corner of the house. But, knowing that the Captain was ready
+to assert his authority without arms, I refused, and locking them up in
+a trade chest sat down upon it. I knew that the first shot would be
+followed by a scene of bloodshed and murder. George was persistent,
+saying the Captain would be killed, but changed his tone when he walked
+in unharmed, but with his fingers bleeding. Harry had given in when he
+saw the Captain dart in amongst the natives surrounding him, and knock
+two of the ringleaders down, but denied that he had been plotting to
+usurp Hayston's authority. A hollow reconciliation then took place, but
+there was bad blood between them from that time. He told me that I had
+done wisely in locking up the arms, and gave me the key to keep, as I
+had, he confessed, shown more prudence than himself. Then he sat down
+and began to sing like a schoolboy on a holiday.
+
+One day we took the boat and went up a creek flowing into the harbour.
+We were the only men, as the crew consisted of Ocean Island women and
+some of the girls from the brig.
+
+We were going to land them across the creek, where they intended to
+construct a fish weir, as the harbour was a bad place to fish in on
+account of the swarms of fierce and daring sharks.
+
+Among the girls in the boat were two from Ocean Island, being of the
+party landed from the whaleships at Chabral harbour. One of these was
+the new wife of the old convict trader. She had come down on a visit,
+and kept us amused with her descriptions of the orgies and drunken
+freaks of the fierce old man, whose conduct had frightened--no easy
+matter--all who came into contact with him.
+
+As we crossed over the in-shore reef and got into the channel of the
+creek, I saw a canoe with three figures in it ahead of us, and told the
+Captain that I thought I recognised Lalia. He said it was hardly
+possible, as she lived six miles away on the coast, and was not likely
+to come down here. At this mention of Lalia her successor looked
+frightened, and said she would like to go back, but was overruled by
+the others, who laughed at her fears. After rowing up the creek as far
+as the boat would go, the girls got out, and the Captain and I took our
+rifles and started up a spur in the mountain on the chance of getting a
+shot at the wild pigs.
+
+We struck into the dense woodland, and in a few minutes the voices of
+the laughing girls sounded subdued and far away. The gloom of the
+primeval forest seemed to be deepened by the vast structure and domelike
+tops of the mighty trees, whose thick branches formed an almost perfect
+canopy, while underneath our footsteps fell soundless on the thick
+carpet of rotting leaves.
+
+Here the Captain and I took different routes, agreeing to meet on the
+summit of the spur. As I walked along the silence that enshrouded all
+things seemed to weigh heavily; the darkening gloom of the forest began
+to fill me with childish fancies and misgivings. My nerves became strung
+to such a pitch that the harsh croak of some brooding frigate bird, or
+the sudden booming note of a wood pigeon, set my heart bumping against
+my ribs with that strange, undefined feeling which, if it be not
+premonition, is nearly akin to it.
+
+I had ascended half-way to the spur when I heard a shot.
+
+Its prolonged and tumultuous echoes startled the denizens of the forest,
+winged and quadrupedal, and as they died away a wild chorus of shrieks
+and growls seemed to electrify me into life. Waiting till silence
+resumed sway I called aloud to the Captain. Far down below I heard his
+answering call. Then he queried, "Have you shot anything?"
+
+"No, I have not fired."
+
+"Quick," he shouted, "come down--there's mischief among the women."
+
+Rushing down the leaf-strewn spur I soon joined him. We ran together
+till we reached the boat. There a tragedy had been enacted. The girls
+were huddled up in the boat, which was drifting about from bank to bank.
+As we dashed through the scrub they pointed to a patch of green-sward
+amongst the cocoa-nut trees, saying, "She is killed."
+
+There, lying on her face quite dead, was the Ocean Island girl with a
+bullet through her breast. The ball had passed completely through her
+body, and though her limbs were still quivering with muscular action,
+she must have died in a few seconds after she was struck.
+
+The girls told us that while they were making the weir she had gone up
+to a pool of fresh water among the rocks to look for fresh-water
+shrimps. A few minutes after they heard a shot; she staggered forward
+and fell on her face dead.
+
+The Captain and I looked at one another. Each read the thoughts that
+passed through the other's mind--Lalia had fired the shot! But,
+calling the women out of the boat, the Captain sternly forbade them to
+mention Lalia's name in connection with the matter, and said that
+they must all keep silence. A grave was hastily dug in the soft alluvial
+of the shadowy forest glade, where the body of the poor girl, wrapped in
+garments of her companions, was hastily buried.
+
+I did not understand the meaning of the secrecy which was evidently
+considered necessary, until the Captain told me that as the girl was in
+his charge at the time of her death, he would be held responsible, and
+that the uncertain temper of her countrymen might at any time cause an
+outbreak.
+
+We returned to the boat, and the women, as we neared the village, were
+instructed by the Captain to answer all inquiries for the dead girl by
+saying she had disappeared. Her countrymen took her departure very
+quietly, and came to the conclusion that the evil spirits of the
+mountain had carried her away, and their superstition forbade search.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I cannot, even after the time that has elapsed, recall without a pang of
+regret the total change in the Captain's demeanour and conduct at this
+time. Some demon appeared to have taken possession of him. His terrific
+bursts of violence drove every soul away at times, none daring to
+venture near him until he had cooled down except myself, to whom he
+never addressed a harsh or angry word. One day he declared that the men
+of the _Leonora_ and some of the Pleasant islanders were concocting a
+meeting, and I was sickened and horrified at seeing three of each lashed
+to cocoa-nut trees, while the huge figure of Antonio, the black
+Portuguese, towered above the crowd as he flogged them. The Captain
+stood by with a pistol in each hand as, with a countenance blanched and
+disturbed with passion, he ordered Antonio to lay it on well.
+
+I went into the house and, sitting down, tried to think out a course for
+myself. The Captain came in after a while and, drawing a seat to the
+window, gazed moodily out upon the sparkling, breeze-rippled sea. Then I
+knew that the dark hour had passed, and that he would listen to reason.
+
+"Captain," I said, "I can stay here no longer with you. I am sick of
+seeing men flogged till their backs are like raw meat, even though they
+are mutinous. If I thought any words of mine would do good, I would
+earnestly beg of you to adopt milder measures. Every day that passes you
+run the gauntlet, so to speak, of these men's deadly hatred, I know; for
+how can I avoid hearing the mutterings and seeing the fierce glances of
+the people--that you are surrounded with foes, and that any moment may
+be your last."
+
+He placed his hand on my shoulder in his old way. "True, my lad, true;
+but if they are dangerous to meddle with, so am I. The white men, young
+Harry excepted, would gladly see me lying out there on the sand with a
+bullet hole in my skull; but, by ----, I'll shoot every mother's son of
+them if I detect any treachery.... And so you wish to leave me?"
+
+I considered a moment and then answered, "Sorry am I to say it, but I
+do."
+
+"Come out to the beach, my lad, and talk to me there. This house is
+stifling; another month of this life would send me mad."
+
+We walked along the weather side for about a mile, then seating
+ourselves on a huge flat rock, watched the rollers tumbling in over the
+reef and hissing along the sand at our feet. Hayston then spoke freely
+to me of his troubles, his hopes, and disappointments, begging me to
+remain with him--going, indeed, the length of a half promise to use
+gentler methods of correction in future.
+
+I yielded for a time, but after another week the fights and floggings,
+followed by threats of vengeance, commenced anew. Two incidents also,
+following close upon one another, led me to sever my connection with the
+Captain finally, though in a friendly spirit.
+
+The first was an attack single-handed upon the Kusaie village of Utw,
+driving the men before him like a flock of sheep. Some who ventured to
+resist were felled by blows of his fist. Then he picked out half a dozen
+of the youngest women, and drove them to the men's quarters, telling
+them to keep them till the husbands and families ransomed them.
+
+This was all because he had been told that Likiak S had been to the
+village, and urged the natives to remove to Ll, where a man-of-war was
+expected to arrive from Honolulu, and that Hayston dared not follow them
+there.
+
+The next matter that went wrong was that he desired me to bring the
+trade books, and go over the various traders' accounts with him.
+
+One of these books was missing, although I remembered placing the whole
+bundle in the big chest with the charts and chronometers. He declared
+that the loss of this book, with some important accounts of his trading
+stations in the Line and Marshall Islands, rendered the others
+valueless.
+
+I felt aggrieved at the imputation of carelessness, and having never
+since first I knew him felt any fear of expressing myself clearly, told
+him that he must have lost it, or it would have been with the others.
+
+Starting from his seat with his face livid with rage, he passionately
+denied having lost it. Then he strode into his room, and with savage
+oaths drove out the women, cursing them as the cause of the brig's loss
+and all his misfortunes.
+
+The next moment he appeared with his arms full of chronometers, and,
+standing in the doorway, tore the costly instruments from their cases
+and dashed them to pieces on the coral flagstones at his feet. Then,
+swearing he would fire the station and roast every one in it, with his
+hands beating and clutching at the air, his face working with passion,
+he walked, staggering like a drunken man, to the beach, and threw
+himself down on a boulder.
+
+Three hours after, taking little Kitty and Toby with me, I found him
+still there, resting his head on his hand and gazing out upon the sea.
+
+"Captain," I said, "I have come to say farewell."
+
+He slowly raised his head, and with sorrow depicted on his countenance,
+gave me his hand.
+
+I pressed it and turned away. I packed up my belongings, and then
+calling to Nellie, told her to give the Captain a note which I left on
+his table, and with a handshake to each of the wondering girls, made my
+way through the village, and thence to the bank of a lagoon that runs
+parallel to the southern coast of Strong's Island. I knew that I could
+walk to Coquille harbour in about a day, and thither I decided to go,
+as at the village of Mout dwelt a man named Kusis, who had several
+times pressed me to visit him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a bright moonlight night, so that I had no difficulty in making
+my way along the lonely coast. The lagoon, solemnly still and
+silver-gleaming, lay between me and the mainland. The narrow strip on
+the ocean side was not more than half a mile wide; on the lagoon border
+was a thicket well-nigh impassable.
+
+The mood of melancholy that impressed me at parting with a man to whom,
+in spite of his faults, I was sincerely attached, weighed heavily. The
+deep silence of the night, unbroken save by the murmuring plumes of the
+cocoa-nut palms as they swayed to the breath of the trade-wind, and the
+ceaseless plaints of the unresting surge, completed the feeling of
+loneliness and desolation.
+
+At length I reached the end of the narrow spit that ran parallel to the
+lofty mainland, and found that I had to cross over the reef that
+connected it to the main, this reef forming the southern end of the
+lagoon.
+
+The country was entirely new to me, but once I gained the white beach
+that fringed the leeside of the island, I knew that I need only follow
+it along till I reached the village of Mout, about four miles distant
+from the end of the lagoon. I hung my bundle across my Winchester and
+commenced the crossing. The tide was out and the reef bare, but here and
+there were deep pools through which I had to pick my steps carefully,
+being confused besides by the lines of dazzling moon-rays.
+
+When nearly across, and walking up to my waist through a channel that
+led between the coral patches, I saw a strange, dark shape moving
+quickly towards me. "A shark!" I thought, but the next minute the black
+mass darted past me at an angle, when I saw it was an innocent turtle
+that was doubtless more frightened than I. After this adventure I gained
+the white beach, which lay shining like a silver girdle under the
+moon-rays, and flung myself down on the safe yielding sand. The spot was
+silent as the grave. The murmurous rhythm of the surf sounded miles
+distant, and but rose to the faintest lulling sound, as I made a pillow
+of my worldly goods and sank into dreamless sleep.
+
+It was the earliest dawn when the chill breath of the land-breeze
+touched my cheek, and sent a shiver through my somewhat exhausted frame.
+I arose, and looking round found that I was not wholly alone: several
+huge turtles had been keeping me company during the night, having come
+ashore to lay their eggs. As soon as I stood up they scrambled and
+floundered away in dire fright. I felt badly in need of a smoke, but
+having no matches, decided to eat something instead. I had not far to
+seek for a breakfast. Picking up a couple of sprouting cocoa-nuts from
+the ground, I husked them by beating them against a tree-trunk, and made
+a much needed meal from the sweet kernels.
+
+Although I was still far from well, and the pain in my side had returned
+with tenfold vigour, I felt a new-born elasticity of spirit. The glow of
+the tropic sun lighted up the slumberous main spread out in azure
+vastness before me.
+
+Shouldering my bundle and rifle, my sole worldly possessions, except
+utterly valueless money and papers in the Captain's care, I descended to
+the beach and walked along in the hard sand. At about six o'clock I came
+abreast of two lovely verdure-clad islets, rising from the shallow
+waters which lay between the outer reefs and the mainland, and I knew I
+must be near Mout.
+
+Then I saw a canoe shoot out from the land about a quarter of a mile
+distant, with the native in it standing up poling it along. The next
+bend of the beach brought me in full view of the picturesque village. A
+loud cry of wonder greeted me. The next moment I was surrounded by
+smiling villagers. I felt a thrill of pride at the thought that of all
+those who had been cast away in the _Leonora_, none would have been
+welcomed so warmly as I was now by those simple, kind-hearted people.
+
+"Kusis' friend, Kusis' friend has come!" the men called aloud. Crowding
+around, and taking my rifle and bundle from me, I was escorted to the
+farther end of the village, where out of a pretty little house embowered
+in a grove of palms, a man sprang out and fairly hugged me.
+
+This was Kusis, in whose frank and open countenance nothing but joyous
+welcome and boundless hospitality could be read. Taking me by the hand,
+he led me inside. My cares were over for the present, evidently.
+
+Words of mine can but faintly describe the generosity and kindness of
+these people to me during my lengthened sojourn among them. The memory
+of the peaceful days which I passed in that unknown, lovely village can
+never be effaced.
+
+Kusis, it seems, had often been to see me when I lay sick at Utw, and
+was unconscious of his presence. The Captain and Lalia had told me of
+how he would come softly into the house, bringing a present of fruit or
+fish for "the sick white boy," as he called me. He would sit by my side
+and gaze anxiously at me for hours at a time, always questioning the
+Captain concerning me. When I got better I had long chats with him, and
+to his inexpressible delight, gave him a shot gun which I had bought
+from the carpenter for a pound of tobacco. He had no shot, but he told
+me he could make some from strips of lead, and as there was plenty of
+that from the wreckage that came ashore, the Captain gave him as much as
+he could carry in the canoe, besides a large tin of powder and plenty
+of caps.
+
+He was a tall, large-framed man for a Strong's islander--magnificently
+built, and with a heart in proportion. His wife Tulp, and his only
+daughter, a little girl named Kinie, made up the family. He evidently
+wished to complete it by making me his son, for his sole aim in life
+seemed to be to keep me with him.
+
+Unlike the people of Utw, the villagers of Mout were utterly
+unsophisticated, besides being free from the cant and hypocrisy that
+nearly always attaches to the native character when they profess
+Christianity. No doubt this was the result of their village being so
+distant from Ll, where the natives were for ever chanting psalms and
+hymns, and keeping the letter of the law, while at the same time they
+departed as widely from the spirit as their heathen forefathers had ever
+done.
+
+After a while I received a letter from Captain Hayston, and with it a
+large parcel. The letter ran as follows:--
+
+ MY DEAR BOY.--Have you entirely deserted me? I hope not. Come
+ and see me again, even if you only stop a day: I miss you
+ greatly, and the evenings are very dull without you to talk to.
+ I gave that fellow Miles, the boatswain, a bad beating, and he
+ has cleared out to the mountains with the Pleasant islanders.
+ Had you been here you would have got him off. As it is, I have
+ lost three men. Accept the things I send. (The hat was made for
+ you by a friend.) They will do for presents for your Kusaie
+ friends. Let me know when you can come up, and I will send the
+ whaleboat.--Yours sincerely,
+
+ W. H. HAYSTON.
+
+I sent back my thanks, saying that I would come and see him, but should
+come overland, as the messenger was returning in a canoe. Kusis put in
+two turtle as "present for Captin."
+
+I opened the parcel, which I found contained all sorts of articles
+likely to be useful to me, with ten pounds of tobacco, and a bag of
+small scarlet and white beads, the delight of a Strong's Island girl's
+heart. Rolled up in a native sash was a beautifully-made Panama hat.
+This latter was a gift from Lalia, and at once excited the admiration
+of Kusis and Tulp, when they examined its texture. The childish delight
+of Kinie, when I gave her the beads, gave me the greatest pleasure, and
+although her father and mother looked with glistening eyes at the other
+articles which I wished them to take, they firmly refused the offered
+gifts, Kusis only taking a few sticks of tobacco, and his wife a silk
+handkerchief with some needles and thread.
+
+I was rapidly regaining my strength, now felt in much higher spirits as
+I accompanied Kusis on his shooting and fishing trips, returning home to
+the bright faces and welcoming smiles of his wife and daughter. After
+another week Kusis and I set out to visit the Captain, who, though I was
+thoroughly happy and contented with my new friends, was never absent
+from my thoughts. He received us with unaffected pleasure, and, calling
+his steward and making us sit down to lunch, he gave me an account of
+what had been doing since I had left.
+
+The village had now a settled appearance, and the people were all busy
+making oil, another two hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts having
+been paid by the king. The Captain asked me if there were not a vast
+quantity of cocoa-nuts at Coquille harbour, and on my assenting, said he
+would send a gang of Pleasant islanders under Fiji Bill and Antonio to
+live there, and collect the third part of the indemnity--another two
+hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts.
+
+This I begged him not to do, pointing out the injustice of such an
+action, inasmuch as the people of Coquille had no hand in stealing the
+property from the brig, and it would be cruel to make them pay for the
+misdoings of others. I told him also that at Coquille were situated the
+largest taro and yam plantations, with the best turtle fisheries, that I
+was sure the natives would destroy the plantations and abandon the
+villages if they had the savage Pleasant islanders quartered upon them.
+Besides, we might have to remain another eight or nine months on the
+island before the whaling fleet called here again, and that it was
+absolutely indispensable that he should be able to command a supply of
+food to subsist nearly a hundred and fifty people.
+
+Kusis, who was seated on the mats near us, eagerly watched the Captain.
+At length a look of content overspread his face as the Captain said he
+would not touch the cocoa-nuts in Coquille harbour. To Kusis he said,
+"Tell your people to have no fear as long as the king continues to pay
+up, but once let me see any 'soldiering,' or desire to avoid paying the
+fine, I'll strip the island from Mount Crozier to the reef."
+
+Then we strolled to and fro on the Plaza, as we called the local
+esplanade in front of the big house, and the Captain told me to come and
+look at his turtle pond, in which were a number of green turtle, and
+also the two hawkbills sent by Kusis.
+
+I found that several of the traders had now openly broken with him, and
+leaving their native following, had retired to Ll, where they were
+under the protection of the king. The number of girls in the big house
+had now increased to nine or ten. At the time of my visit some were
+engaged in weaving an immense mat to cover the whole floor, others were
+drying and picking tobacco leaves for making cigars. Two of the new
+arrivals, I could see, were native girls. I asked the Captain what they
+were doing there. He answered somewhat testily, "Did I think they came
+to teach Sunday-school?"
+
+I remained that night, and we spent a merry evening. In the morning,
+after a breakfast of turtle eggs and roast pig, Kusis and I prepared to
+return.
+
+The Captain urged me to go by way of Chabral harbour, and pay my
+promised visit to the king.
+
+"In that case I might let him know how his Majesty was taking matters."
+Kusis also urged me to see the king, who was anxious that I should spend
+a week with him.
+
+We got a canoe to carry us across to the north arm of the harbour, where
+I remained an hour or two with young Harry, who had established quite a
+small village.
+
+When we entered the fence surrounding his place, we found him lying in a
+hammock, slung between two pandanus-trees, smoking his morning pipe, and
+having his hair combed by two pretty little witches named Rosa and
+Taloe.
+
+This was Harry's idea of island luxury. He always alleged that sleeping
+gave him a headache, and that having his hair brushed drove it away,
+particularly if the combing was performed by the soft hands of one of
+his four houris.
+
+He sprang up and welcomed me heartily, urging me to stay all night. But
+I was anxious to get on. However, I said I should be glad to see him at
+Mout, when he could bring his family with him, and give them a week's
+feast on pork and turtle.
+
+Harry presently took me into a small room, saying, "Look here!" The
+place was closely packed with liquor in small kegs. These had been
+washed ashore, and he had found them, only a few days since, high up in
+the mangroves. The Captain told him to store it, as it was dangerous
+stuff to bring to Utw. The Pleasant islanders are very fond of liquor,
+after imbibing which they always want to fight and kill some one, and
+generally do.
+
+We had a glass of grog together, after which I said good-bye to the
+good-natured, handsome young trader and his wives, whom he used to call
+the "Three Graces, with another thrown in."
+
+Kusis and I reached the south side of Chabral harbour about sunset. I
+was freshly enchanted with the loveliness of the scene, accustomed as I
+had become to this paradisal quarter of the globe. The trade-wind had
+died away, the transparent waters of the harbour reflected in their blue
+depths the tall shadows of the towering mountains that overhung the
+harbour on three sides.
+
+A canoe put across from the king's wharf when I fired a shot to attract
+attention. So wonderfully clear was the atmosphere, so unbroken the
+silence of the lonely bay, that the quick "tweep, tweep" of the paddle,
+as it struck the water, reached our ears as distinctly as if the canoe
+was but a few yards distant, instead of nearly half a mile.
+
+The old king received me graciously, but soon commenced a string of
+complaints, interlarded with Scripture quotations rounded off by quaint
+oaths. He feared the Captain greatly, and yet was anxious to keep up his
+authority. Then, with every grievance that was laid before me, he drank
+a stiff glass of grog to wash it down with, and insisted on my keeping
+him company.
+
+Queen S now came in, saying in her prettiest English, "Oh! you naughty
+boy! Why you no come see king, see _me_? Long time promise, but never
+come out. How you bad pain side? How many Strong's Island girl Captain
+got now? I never see man like that. Debil, I believe. You got any wife
+yet?"
+
+I told the queen I was still unmarried, and thought I should remain so.
+
+"Oh! no, you say so now. By and by get like Captain. But don't you steal
+girl like him. You come to me! I pick you out nice girl. Cook, sew, make
+pyjamas; very pretty face too."
+
+By this time old Tokusar was asleep, with his head on the table, his
+inevitable Bible open at the Psalms of David (printed in the Kusaie
+dialect) in the leaf of his armchair, and the half-emptied gin bottle
+encircled by his left arm.
+
+Queen S was a tiny little creature--very good-looking, even at this
+time of her life--being about five-and-twenty, which is considered the
+_passe_ period in Polynesia. She was extremely vain, but had a quick
+perception of humour. She and the Captain always got on famously
+together.
+
+Drawing our chairs up to a side table, she brought me a number of bound
+volumes of _Leslie's Illustrated Paper_, sent to her by the queen of
+Hawaii.
+
+While I looked at the pictures she plied me with questions, principally
+at random, about Captain Hayston, who, I was not long in discovering,
+had been a former admirer. Going into a side room, she unlocked a small
+box, and brought me out a photo of a gentleman wearing a post-captain's
+uniform in her Britannic Majesty's navy. "What do you think of him?" she
+asked. "Very, oh! very handsome man--that Captain Damer. Oh! that long
+time ago. I love him; he love me too"--and then, pointing to poor old
+Tokusar, "King know all about it. He don't like me to talk about Captain
+Damer. But, oh! such handsome man! He tell me I loveliest girl in all
+the world. What you think yourself? What Captain tell you; he think me
+pretty too?"
+
+Her Majesty was an expert angler for flattery. I was not indisposed to
+humour a pretty woman, and a queen, and was evidently rising in her
+estimation. I resolved to turn my good fortune to account, by inducing
+her to effect a reconciliation between the king and the Captain, who
+wanted the king to visit him at Utw, to see the wonderful change he had
+effected there. He felt certain that, when the king saw the magnitude of
+the station, knowing that it must, sooner or later, come into his
+possession when he, Hayston, left the island, he would forgive all that
+had passed.
+
+Once the subject was broached I became an ardent advocate for the
+Captain, and told the queen how anxious he was to be on good terms with
+the king again. In fact, so eloquent did I become, partly through the
+potency of the schnapps of which I had partaken, that I represented the
+Captain as devoured with grief at losing the king's and her friendship.
+
+The queen listened gravely, and then extending her shapely hand, caught
+me by the ear, and laughed, "Oh! you bad boy! Captain Hayston think
+Tokusar old fool; told _me_ so plenty time. Well, never mind, I try make
+everything all right."
+
+The queen, as beseemed her, had a number of young women with her,
+sitting round the sides of the great room. Some were making the girdles
+that the Kusaie natives of both sexes wear round the waist under their
+other garments. They are woven on an ingeniously constructed loom, the
+banana fibres which form the material being stained in various bright
+colours. These girls were sitting in the manner peculiar to the Strong's
+Island women, with their eyes cast down--it being considered a boldness
+to look at either the king or queen. When speaking to either their eyes
+were always bent on the ground.
+
+The king, being carefully placed on a cane lounge, a meal was brought
+in. Both Kusis and I were presented with food enough to last for a
+month. As the queen bade me good-night she passed her arm round me, and
+tenderly inquired, "How my poor side feel?" adding that I was a very
+good boy, because I was kind to Strong's Island man. She also informed
+me that I could kiss her, which I did. Then putting the post-captain's
+photo in her bosom she went to bed, finally telling me that she "will
+make king friend once more with Captain."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the next six months I lived with the kind-hearted Kusis, his wife,
+and little daughter. Except for an occasional visit to the Captain or
+the king, nothing disturbed the pleasing monotony of my existence.
+
+Why Kusis should have taken such a violent and wholly unreasonable
+attachment to me is a mystery I never could unravel. Yet such is island
+life. And how strange it is, and hard of comprehension! Women take their
+fancies here, as in other worlds (surely this is a world in itself,
+distinct, mystic, unreal), but the extraordinary point in the social
+system is, that men will, as a matter of mere caprice, conceive the most
+ardent friendship for an utter stranger. In pursuance of which passion
+they will entertain him for any time which he likes to stay; will guide,
+help, and defend him, risking, and indeed sacrificing their lives for
+him in the most reckless and devoted manner. Such was the deep and
+sudden affection of Kusis for me. How he acquired it I don't in the
+least know. All my personal property seemed to be mixed up with his. As
+the weather was not favourable for attention to detail, I preferred to
+leave things as they were. My life at this time was chiefly uneventful.
+Yet it was not always so. I was fishing one day near the end of the
+lagoon which extends from Utw to the lee side of the island. After I
+had anchored my canoe a very strange incident indeed occurred.
+
+The sun had just set, and I had cast out my hooks, and was able to fill
+my pipe, when I saw two boatsful of Pleasant islanders land on the
+narrow fringe of the north side of the lagoon. There were about twenty
+men and seven or eight women. I saw that they had with them a small keg,
+doubtless one of the kegs of rum which had been washed ashore, and which
+they had discovered in the mangroves. A fire was lit. The women began to
+sing and the men to dance; and as the fiery spirit was passed round in
+cocoa-nut shells to the men--for the women touched none--a wild orgie
+began.
+
+Suddenly bright flashes appeared from out the darkness in the
+surrounding grove, and the reverberating echoes of gun-shots pealed over
+the water, and ran far back, from mountain, crag, and cave.
+
+Three of the dancers fell, either killed or wounded. Then the dark forms
+of their previously unseen enemies appeared through the firelight. The
+white shells worn in strings round their necks told me that they were
+Ocean islanders, between whom and the Pleasant islanders feuds were of
+common occurrence. Then began a bloody hand-to-hand fight, the twilight
+silence being broken by yells of rage and screams of mortal agony. When
+the Ocean islanders were beaten off seven or eight bodies lay motionless
+on the ground.
+
+I quietly pulled up the anchor, and let the canoe drift towards the
+mainland. I did not care about visiting the scene of the fight as I had
+no arms with me, and learnt by experience the folly of meddling with the
+Pleasant islanders when they were sober. When they were drunk I knew
+that they would as soon cut my throat as not.
+
+I mentioned this matter to the Captain on my next visit. He told me with
+a grim smile that he knew there had been a fight up the lagoon; so much
+the better, as he found the Pleasant islanders harder to manage every
+day, and the sooner their number was reduced the better.
+
+One day, when Kusis and I were coming across the lagoon with some
+pigeons I had shot, we met the Pingelap girl, Peloa, paddling a canoe
+furiously, her plump face showing great excitement. "She had been sent
+for us," she said, "by the Captain. There was a sail in sight. I was to
+hasten back to Mout, where I would find a boat outside the reef which
+he had sent down for me. I was to try and board the ship, in case he
+could not do so from Utw, and tell the master that a shipwrecked crew
+were on the island."
+
+Peloa hauled her canoe up on a little beach, and got in with us. We
+three then paddled along till we got abreast of the two islets near
+Mout. We then saw a whaleboat coming round the point with a lug sail.
+She soon ran in for me, and I found she was manned by Pleasant
+islanders, who told me that the ship was coming round the point, about
+three miles off the land.
+
+There was a strong breeze, and we slipped through the water at a great
+rate so as to meet the ship. As soon as we cleared the point I saw her
+coming down before the wind about two miles distant.
+
+She was a large ship, and was running straight for us with her yards
+squared. At first I thought she had seen us, but she kept steadily on
+her course. Then I saw her take in her light sails and heave to.
+Standing up in the boat, I could distinguish a whaleboat under a fore
+and aft sail close to her. Behind this boat were two others, which, from
+their black paint and peculiarly-cut sails, I knew to be those the
+Captain had at Utw.
+
+The ship lay to till the first whaleboat boarded her, and then, to my
+great surprise, the yards were swung round, the light sails again set,
+and she stood on her course, but kept the wind more on her quarter so as
+to make the most of the breeze.
+
+By this time I had got almost within hailing distance of the ship. She
+was deep in the water, and was, I supposed, some coal-laden ship bound
+from New South Wales to China, which had taken the outside or easier
+route to her destination. When the whaleboat lowered her sail and ran
+alongside, I saw that she was the king's new boat, and contained but two
+men. These, my crew said, looked like the two deserters from the _St.
+George_. As soon as they got on board the boat was hoisted in without
+delay, and, as I have said, the ship kept on her course.
+
+It was of no use attempting to overtake her, as she was travelling now
+about twelve knots, so I signalled for the other two boats, and they ran
+down after us till we got under the lee of the land again in smooth
+water.
+
+The men in these boats told me the following tale:--About daylight that
+morning the king's whaleboat, which was anchored in Utw harbour, was
+found to be missing. The two deserters from the _St. George_ were also
+gone. Captain Hayston instantly offered to send his boat in pursuit of
+the runaways, and curiously, just as they were being launched, there
+came a cry of "Sail ho." The Captain then saw the ship a long way off,
+and told the crews to try and board her, and get her to run in close to
+the land, and that he would then come off himself. In the mean time he
+manned one of the trader's whaleboats with a native crew, and sent her
+round to Coquille to pick me up, as he fancied the ship would be easier
+boarded from there than from Utw. The three boats left together, two
+standing right out to sea, and the other running down the coast to pick
+me up.
+
+When the two boats were within three miles of the ship, they noticed the
+fore and aft sail of the king's whaleboat showing up now and then as she
+rose and sunk again in the heavy swell, and noticed that she was also
+heading to meet the ship. The rest I had observed myself.
+
+I suspected something from the manner of the coxswain in charge of the
+king's two boats, but did not question him, and telling him to give the
+Captain full particulars of our endeavour to board the ship, I got
+ashore in a smooth part of the reef, and walked back to Mout, where I
+found the villagers in a great state of excitement, under the impression
+that I had gone away in the ship.
+
+Hayston afterwards admitted that he had supplied the deserters with
+sextant, compass, and chart, had also given them provisions, and fifty
+dollars in money. They promised him to make straight for Ponap, and
+wait there till some Californian ship called, which they would endeavour
+to charter, on the part of Hayston, to beat up to Strong's Island, and
+take us all away to Providence Island. Barney was a good navigator, and
+could he only have kept fairly sober would have long since had a ship of
+his own. He eagerly accepted the Captain's offer, and the next morning
+the crew of the king's whaleboat found she had disappeared; then
+followed the strange series of events by which Barney and his mate got
+on board the ship and evaded pursuit.
+
+Barney was a highly intelligent individual, as the sequel will show, and
+was capable of making a rapid calculation of probabilities. He
+afterwards visited Samoa, and gave this account of his escape.
+
+He said that when the Captain provided him with "a jewel of a
+whaleboat," he honestly intended to fulfil his promises. He lost some
+time in trying to persuade a native girl named Luta to share his
+fortunes, but she was afraid of a long voyage in a small boat. His
+pleadings, moreover, were cut short by the Captain, who told him to
+hurry up, and get out of the harbour before daylight.
+
+As soon, then, as Barney sighted the ship a plan suggested itself to
+him. Once on deck he introduced himself to the Captain as "Captain
+Casey," and said, "For heaven's sake, sir, don't delay another moment.
+There are two boat-loads of bloody, cut-throat pirates coming after me,
+and they mane to take the ship! Have you never heard of 'Bully
+Hayston'?"
+
+The skipper _had_ heard of him,--things true, and untrue likewise. Then
+Barney told him a tale of how the _Leonora_ had been wrecked on the
+island, and that ever since the fierce Captain and crew had planned to
+cut off the first ship that touched at the island--that he (Barney) and
+his mate had owned a small trading cutter, which Hayston had seized two
+days ago--but that he had managed to escape with one of his men, and
+thanked God that he was able to reach the ship in time, and save every
+one's throat from being cut.
+
+The ship's captain took all this in; Barney's boat was hoisted in, and
+the ship kept away. The two boats, with their crews of excited natives
+yelling and shouting, gave colour to Barney's narrative, and when he
+pointed to my boat, and said, "Holy saints! there's another of the
+villains coming out under the lee side with a boat-load of pirates too,"
+the captain's funk was complete. He landed Barney and his companion at
+Ponap, and, purely out of compassion, bought the king's whaleboat and
+her contents for a hundred dollars, so that Mr. Barney landed there with
+a hundred and fifty dollars in his pocket, and got a free passage later
+on to Manila as a distressed American seaman.
+
+The Captain took matters philosophically when the boats returned, saying
+that he never had expected to see Barney again. After which he resumed
+his oil-making and the government of his "kingdom by the sea" as usual.
+
+As for me, my life was a quiet, deeply enjoyable one. I began at times
+to doubt whether I should ever wish to change it. But against this phase
+of lotus-eating contentment arose from time to time a haunting dread,
+lest by evil chance I should ever sink down into the position of those
+renegades from civilisation, whom I had known, in the strange world of
+"The Islands," and as often pitied or despised. In this Robinson Crusoe
+existence I even felt a mild interest in the three cattle that we had
+landed at Utw.
+
+They had found their way over to the lee side of the island, and made
+their way along the beach to Mout.
+
+One day little Kinie met them, and, with hair flying loose and eyes
+dilated in an agony of terror, fled wildly home. She explained to me
+incoherently "that she had met three huge pigs, with, long teeth
+growing out of their heads and eyes as big as cocoa-nuts."
+
+Kusis and I, with some natives, went out and found them walking slowly
+along the beach. At the sound of my voice they stopped and let me come
+up to them, smelling me all over. I had only a mat round my waist, for
+my European clothes were only worn on great occasions; but they
+evidently knew me for a different being to those around them. We drove
+them to a rich piece of meadow land, where they remained during the rest
+of my stay on the island--fat, quiet, and contented.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Early one morning I made ready for a start back to Coquille harbour, and
+found Kusis awaiting me in the king's courtyard.
+
+Shortly after the queen came out and told me that I must wait for
+breakfast, or the king would be offended. Old Tokusar then appeared,
+none the worse for the night's potations, and we sat down to a very good
+breakfast.
+
+He told me that he had intended to go and see the Captain's village at
+Utw, but that Likiak S, had dissuaded him by telling him that Hayston
+would seize and imprison him.
+
+I assured the king that this was a pure invention, upon which both he
+and the queen said they would take my word before that of Likiak S, and
+from the kindness of the king and his subjects at Chabral harbour, I
+felt certain that my intercession with Hayston on behalf of the villages
+at Coquille had placed me high in their regard.
+
+The queen pointed to a pile of beautiful mats, quantities of cooked
+fowls, pigeons, pork, fish, and fruit, which were being carried in and
+deposited in the courtyard, telling me that they were presents from the
+king and herself, and would be taken down to Mout for me by native
+carriers.
+
+As I was bidding my royal friends good-bye, promising to come and see
+them whenever I got tired of Mout, Kitty of Ebon came in, and quite
+bore out the description Hayston had given me of her remarkable beauty.
+She seemed a very intelligent girl, and was much admired by the king,
+who kept nudging me, and saying in his wheezy, croaking voice, "Um, ah!
+What you tink girl like that?"
+
+He then fell into moody silence, upon which Queen S gave him a scornful
+glance, exclaiming, "For shame! old man like you, sick all the time,
+look so much at young girl like Kitty Ebon! Captain Hayston teach you
+all that."
+
+I learnt from Kitty that Lalia was then at her house on a visit, and,
+telling the king and queen of her kindness to me when I was ill at Utw,
+said I should like to go and see her, as Kitty's house lay in the
+direction Kusis and I were taking. The queen generously gave me a small
+work-box, with the necessary fittings, which she said I could give to
+Lalia. It was quite a handsome affair, and had been given to the
+queen by a ship captain; but she had never used it. Shaking hands with
+Tokusar and Queen S, we set out on our journey, Kusis leading the way,
+Kitty of Ebon and I following, and the carriers in the rear.
+
+Kitty was very lively, and startlingly simple in manner. She made me
+laugh at her description of the flirtations of Captain Hayston and the
+queen when he had visited Strong's Island three years before in company
+with Captain Ben Peese. For a missionary's housekeeper Kitty of Ebon was
+something unique, and her lively sallies kept me amused in her excellent
+English all the way. I was pleased to see Lalia, who was looking as
+beautiful as ever. Indeed, it was hard to say which was the handsomer,
+she or the hostess.
+
+I gave her the work-box, which seemed to please her very much. Then
+Kitty proposed a game of cards, saying it was all right, as we need not
+play for money, and no one would tell Mr. Morland. But I had to decline,
+and, saying good-bye to them with some regrets, I rejoined Kusis, much
+wondering inwardly whether Lalia, with her sad, bright eyes, soft
+voice, and gentle manner, could really have been the perpetrator of the
+cruel deed in the mountain forest of Utw.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+"MY LORDS OF THE ADMIRALTY"
+
+
+In October I received another letter from the Captain, asking me to meet
+him in Chabral harbour. He had become so tired of waiting for a ship
+that he had decided to start in a boat for Mill. He had effected a
+reconciliation with the king, and was paying him a friendly visit. He
+meant to arrange with him regarding the people and the management of the
+station at Utw during his absence.
+
+I left Mout at daylight, and, as I said good-bye to Tulp and the
+little daughter, how little I thought that I should never cross their
+hospitable threshold again!
+
+Kusis came with me, and we took the route by the weather side of the
+island, reaching Ll in the afternoon. On my way to the king's house we
+came across a number of women catching shrimps in the rivulet that runs
+into Chabral harbour, and among them were Kitty of Ebon and Lalia.
+
+These two called to us to stop, as they had news for me. Coming out of
+the water, they threw off their wet clothes and put on dry ones. Then
+the four of us sat down on a low coral wall under the shade of some
+trees.
+
+Kitty of Ebon began the conversation by saying that the Captain had
+arrived the night before, and had a long talk with the king, whom he
+told that he was going to try and reach Mill in the largest of the
+ship's boats, though he would have to contend against the north-east
+trades the whole way. He wished the king to become responsible for the
+management and safety of the station of Utw.
+
+This the king didn't see his way to do, as he could never control the
+Pleasant islanders. The remaining white men at Chabral harbour would
+regain their control over them as soon as Hayston had left; that it was
+not wise of the Captain to attempt to reach Mill.
+
+He also showed great fear of being punished if the Captain came back and
+found his station pillaged.
+
+Kitty of Ebon, who was present at the interview, further narrated that
+the king, finding that Hayston was bent on setting out for Mill, made
+another proposal to the Captain, who had accepted it on the condition
+that I would concur. This was that all the oil, boats, and stores, with
+the women, should be conveyed to Chabral harbour and put under the
+king's protection, who professed then to be anxious that I should come
+and live with him in case the traders made an attack on him, and tried
+to seize the property or carry off the women.
+
+Both Kitty and Lalia urged me not to do this, for, they said, "as
+soon as the Captain goes away there will be fighting here; the king is
+weak, and the traders do not fear him. Besides, they are plotting with
+Likiak S, the missionary, who has promised them to win the king over.
+They say that you and Black Johnny are the only two men that will stand
+by the Captain's property when guns and knives are out, as young Harry
+is to stay at Utw till the Captain returns."
+
+I inquired of the girls what the traders proposed doing with me?
+
+"Shoot you, Black Johnny, and young Harry. Then, when the Captain is
+once away, they will be strong enough, and the king will not interfere
+with them."
+
+Lalia then told me that one of the trader's wives had told her that
+they had arranged to have us three shot by some of their natives as
+soon as the Captain had left for Mill. The girls again urged me not to
+comply with the king's request, and to dissuade Hayston from his
+intended voyage. Indeed, they tried to prevent me from going to the king
+at all, Kitty urging me to come to her house, and write a letter to the
+Captain asking him to meet me there.
+
+The thought of the Captain being a victim, as well as myself and young
+Harry, to such treachery decided me in an instant, and breaking away
+from the women, Kusis and I soon reached the king's house.
+
+The traders who were living at Chabral kept carefully within doors. When
+I reached the courtyard of the king's house I found no one there but His
+Majesty and Likiak S engaged in earnest conversation. The native
+missionary glanced uneasily at me, and I at once opened out on him by
+calling him a treacherous dog, striking him at the same time, and
+threatening him with the Captain's vengeance. He picked himself up and
+left.
+
+"Where is the Captain?" I said to the king.
+
+"In my oil-shed," he answered in a troubled voice.
+
+But I said nothing to him, and, finding Hayston, shortly made him
+acquainted with what I had learnt from Kitty of Ebon. His face darkened
+as he strode off to the king.
+
+At that moment the natives called out that there was a vessel in sight,
+upon which he turned back, and together we walked to the beach in time
+to see a fine fore and aft schooner sailing in, which Hayston declared
+was the _Matautu_, belonging to Captain Warner.
+
+"He would never have ventured in if he knew I was here," quoth the
+Captain grimly; "and if I had a few of my boys he'd never go out again,
+unless the schooner had a new master."
+
+I reasoned with him against the folly of such an action, when he said
+that he would use fair means at first, and would try and charter the
+_Matautu_. He then went to the king, and I could see meant mischief. I
+was glad to notice the traders getting into canoes and making for the
+schooner, where they no doubt thought they would be safe, as Hayston had
+only two native boys with him, and would hardly attempt to tackle the
+schooner single-handed.
+
+Likiak S was again with the king when we returned. However, he ran away
+at once, narrowly missing a chair which the Captain threw at him. Old
+Tokusar seemed scared, as he watched the Captain's darkening face. He
+inquired in a shaking voice, "Why you so much angry?"
+
+"Because," answered the Captain, "the men who have been living on my
+food have been plotting against me, and that scheming missionary is at
+the bottom of it; but look you, King Tokusar, and mark my words well! If
+I suspect you, too, I will burn your house and town, and drown you like
+a rat in your own turtle pond!"
+
+"Captain," I said, "what folly! You are here almost alone, and all but
+in the power of your enemies. Return to the boats and get back to Utw."
+
+He calmed down almost immediately, and said he would see Captain Warner.
+He asked me to come with him. I mentioned the fact of the traders being
+on board the ship, and urged him to be cautious.
+
+We got in the boats, and pulled towards the schooner. Before we were
+half-way across the Captain laughed contemptuously, and pointed to the
+traders, who were already leaving the schooner's side in canoes, and
+making rapidly for the western side of the harbour.
+
+Captain Warner seemed under great excitement when we stepped on deck,
+but the cordial manner of Hayston's greeting at once reassured him, so
+that we were received most politely and asked below.
+
+Captain Warner seemed so intensely amiable that I could hardly help
+laughing, and as he kept his glass constantly filled, or rather emptied,
+his amiability increased proportionately.
+
+In the course of conversation a discussion arose as to some business
+transactions with Hayston while we were at Ponap, and the skipper
+laughingly remarked that he had over-reached him in the matter. The
+Captain, who was now perfectly calm, gave a pleasantly-worded denial,
+and said, "No, Captain Warner, I think my supercargo must have got to
+windward of _you_ there."
+
+A quarrel ensued forthwith. The burly skipper became offensive, and it
+ended in our agreeing to meet with pistols on the beach at daylight next
+morning.
+
+However, at dawn the _Matautu_ had towed out with the first breath of
+the land-breeze, and was already outside the passage standing to the
+westward. So the duel did not come off. I honestly think the skipper was
+not afraid, but I suspect he decided not to risk another encounter with
+Hayston, and so thought discretion was the better part of valour.
+
+Next day we again heard the stirring cry of "Sail ho!" The new arrival
+was the _Morning Star_ from Honolulu, from which about ten o'clock
+landed the Rev. Mr. Morland--a portly, white bearded old gentleman, who
+at once made his way to his residence, while the Captain and I returned
+to South harbour. Kusis went home, with a promise from me to follow him
+next day, the honest fellow begging me to delay as little as possible.
+
+It was dark when we started, and a fierce black squall struck us just
+after we got out of the passage, nearly capsizing the boat. The Captain
+thought we had better return, but I was anxious to get back to Mout,
+and said I was sure the squall would not last. So we reefed the sail and
+dashed out to sea close-hauled, for the squall came from the westward,
+and was dead against us. However, the wind continued to increase, and
+the little boat shipped two or three heavy seas. So we agreed to turn
+back.
+
+We went about in a lull, and had made the entrance to the passage, as we
+thought, when the Captain called out, "Look out! here comes a sea!"
+
+Looking back, I saw a huge black roller almost on top of us. The next
+minute I felt we had touched. I shouted, "By Jove! we're not in the
+passage at all--it's only a creek in the reef. Jump out, quick!"
+
+We all sprang out of the boat on to the jagged coral, then the waves,
+poised high in air, dashed down upon us, and we were all washed clear
+over into a pool of smooth water. The boat was capsized, and with broken
+masts and oars gone, was swept in far ahead of us, till she disappeared
+in the darkness. We clung to the reef as best we could, and succeeded in
+reaching a coral "mushroom" that was just a wash. "We'll be all right
+here," said the Captain, in his cool, cheerful way; "are you boys all
+right?"--the two native boys were, like ourselves, cut about the arms
+and legs by the coral. But they thought nothing of that. What they
+dreaded were the _sharks_!
+
+Fortunately the tide was falling, and the coral knoll was gradually
+showing more of its surface above the water. Otherwise none of us would
+have reached the shore; for in these deep water passages the sharks
+literally swarm.
+
+A sea occasionally broke close to us, but not with sufficient force to
+wash any of us away. Suddenly the Captain said, "Boys, I see some people
+fishing ashore with torches," and he gave a resounding hail. An answer
+came back, and, what was more to the purpose, a canoe, in which we were
+rescued from our precarious position and taken ashore. The boat was
+searched for, and found drifting out to sea. But as long as I live I
+shall never forget the horrible feeling of standing on that coral knoll,
+in the wave-washed darkness, knowing that if we were once dislodged
+there was no chance of escaping the sharks. We were all good swimmers,
+but the Kusaie natives told us that the passage of Chabral harbour was
+swarming with the dreaded reef-shark, that seeks its prey, chiefly
+turtle, in the foam and swirl of the breakers on the reef. We slept that
+night in a native house, some distance from the village of Ll, and at
+daylight proceeded along the beach to the king's house. The old king did
+not appear; the queen was very hospitable to us, but seemed nervous and
+constrained in her manner to the Captain. Once when I was standing apart
+from him, she said in a low tone that I had better return to Mout,
+where I would be safe, adding, "Don't stay along with Captain.
+Man-of-war come from Honolulu to take him away. By and by I tell him."
+
+I afterwards regretted that I did not attach more importance to her
+warning, and tell the Captain; subsequent events showed that both the
+king and queen had been informed by Mr. Morland of the impending arrival
+of a man-of-war, which had been searching for Hayston for months
+previously. Later in the day, while the Captain was superintending
+repairs to the boat, Mr. Morland and the native colleague were
+announced. The white missionary requested to see the Captain. I may
+mention, that during our cruise to the north-west in the _Leonora_ we
+had occasionally met with the missionary brig, _Morning Star_, and had
+been visited by Mr. Morland once or twice.
+
+On this occasion he met us with the usual smile and outstretched hand.
+
+"How do you do, Captain Hayston? I am glad--very glad to see you, and
+yet sorry; for you have my sincere sympathy for the loss of your
+beautiful vessel."
+
+"Morland!" came the quick reply, "you know you are lying most
+infernally. You are no more pleased to see me than I am to see you. Our
+interests are too antagonistic for us to take kindly to each other. So
+let us at least be candid!"
+
+"Oh! Captain Hayston!" rejoined Mr. Morland, "you terribly unkind man!
+Why must you hate the poor parson so? Oh! my friend, my countryman, let
+us shake hands as fellow-Christians should do when they meet in these
+lonely, beautiful spots of God's bright universe!"
+
+Hayston smiled, but if he had but known that Mr. Morland was, even then,
+anxiously looking for the tall spars of one of Her Majesty's warships,
+and had actually been in communication with her captain a few days
+previously, he would possibly have half-strangled his pleasant-mannered
+visitor then and there.
+
+After a short chat the missionary returned to the king's house with the
+Captain, while I busied myself with the repairs of the boat, when the
+startling cry of "Sail ho!" rang through the quiet village. I ran up to
+the king's house, and found the Captain in the courtyard playing a game
+of dominoes with Queen S.
+
+The missionary and Likiak S were just coming out from an interview with
+the king. The air of exultation on their faces as they saw the natives
+hurrying to and fro at the cry of "Sail ho!" struck me at once.
+
+The Captain sprang up at once, and said, "Let us take the boat and go
+out to her, she may want a pilot"; and we walked through the house to
+the stone wharf that abutted on one side of the king's establishment. We
+jumped into the boat, and with a crew of four natives pulled quickly out
+of the passage. On gaining the open we could see no sail, and concluded
+that the ship must be coming round the north-eastern side of the island,
+where she had been sighted by the natives. We then set sail, and
+commenced beating to windward, and about half-an-hour afterwards, as the
+little boat rode on the swell, we got a sight of the lofty masts and
+square yards of a man-of-war under steam, as she rounded the high land
+on the north-east side of the island.
+
+With a sudden exclamation the Captain stood up and gazed at the steamer.
+He then seated himself and seemed lost in thought. The great vessel came
+steadily on, then altered her course by a couple of points, and steered
+in the direction of the passage. I could see that she was under a full
+head of steam, and was travelling at a great rate. A volume of thick
+smoke was issuing from the yellow funnel, and as there is always a heavy
+sea off the windward side of Strong's Island she rolled tremendously,
+the water pouring from her black painted sides in sheets.
+
+The Captain watched her intently. "That's a man-of-war, Hilary! and a
+Britisher too," he said. "Though she may be an American--the
+_Portsmouth_ or the _Jamestown_; I can't tell with that smoke blowing
+ahead of her. If she's an American cruiser, she'll take me prisoner
+right enough. It's no use attempting to escape now. It's too late; I
+must take my chance. In that case you must get away to Utw as quick as
+possible, and do the best you can with the station and the people. You
+know where the money is stowed away, and what to do with it if we are
+fated not to meet again."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As he said these words the smoke cleared away from the cruiser, and we
+had a splendid view of her as she rose majestically to a heavy sea, and
+fell gracefully into the trough again. "A Britisher, by ----!" exclaimed
+the Captain, "and a beauty too; give way, my lads, she's stopped her
+engines. Let us get aboard, and I'll soon learn what's in store for me."
+
+In order that it may be understood what reason the Captain had for these
+strong suspicions of arrest and imprisonment, I will here make quotation
+from the _Queensland Government Gazette_, an official journal of
+severely correct character, which, like "the _Apparatus_, cannot lie."
+
+
+ COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE,
+ BRISBANE, _20th August 1875_.
+
+ His Excellency directs the subjoined circular despatch received
+ from the Secretary of State for the Colonies, together with the
+ enclosed correspondence with the Board of Admiralty, respecting
+ the proceedings in the South Seas of W. H. Hayston, a United
+ States' subject, and master of the American brig _Leonora_, to
+ be published in the _Gazette_ for general information.
+
+ A. MACALISTER.
+
+
+ The Admiralty to the Colonial Office.
+
+ ADMIRALTY, _12th January 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I am commanded by the my Lords Commissioners of the
+ Admiralty to transmit herewith, for the information of the Earl
+ of Carnarvon, a letter and its enclosures from Commodore
+ Goodenough, Senior Naval Officer of the Australasian Station,
+ reporting the proceedings of W. H. Hayston, a citizen of the
+ United States, and master of the late American brig _Leonora_.
+ It is requested that these papers be returned in order that they
+ may be sent to the Foreign Office.--I am, etc.
+
+ (Signed) ROBERT HALL.
+
+ The Under Secretary of State,
+ Colonial Office.
+
+
+ Admiral Cochrane to the Admiralty.
+
+ _Repulse_ AT CALLAO, _28th February 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to forward for the information of their
+ Lordships a copy of correspondence which I have received from
+ Commodore Goodenough, commanding the Australian Station.
+
+ 2. The correspondence has reference to the very irregular
+ conduct of a master of a trading brig lately wrecked. The master
+ is believed to be an American.
+
+ 3. Commodore Goodenough requested that the documents containing
+ evidence tending to substantiate the charges against the said
+ master should be forwarded to the American admiral commanding
+ the North Pacific Station. The islands where the occurrences
+ referred to took place are not included in the Pacific
+ Station.--I am, etc.
+
+ (Signed) A. A. COCHRANE.
+
+ Rear Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.
+
+
+ H.M.S. _Repulse_,
+ CALLAO, _28th February 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to forward for your perusal copies of
+ correspondence I have received from Commodore Goodenough in
+ command of H.M. ships on the Australian Station, relative to the
+ highly irregular proceedings of a master of a vessel trading
+ among the South Sea Islands. He is believed to be an American
+ citizen.
+
+ I should be much gratified if circumstances enable you to cause
+ inquiry into the subject of the charges enumerated.--I have,
+ etc.
+
+ (Signed) A. A. COCHRANE.
+
+ Rear Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.
+
+
+ Circular.
+
+ DOWNING STREET, _13th May 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to transmit to you copies of a
+ correspondence with the Board of Admiralty respecting the
+ proceedings in the South Seas of W. H. Hayston, a United States'
+ subject, and master of the late American brig _Leonora_. In
+ connection with the lawless conduct of Hayston, as reported in
+ the papers now transmitted, I beg to refer you to my
+ predecessor's Circular Despatch of 22nd December 1875, relating
+ to the proceedings in the case of the _Atlantic_, and I desire
+ to express my entire concurrence in the hope expressed by Lord
+ Kimberley, that no opportunity may be lost of bringing the man
+ to trial.--I have, etc.
+
+ CARNARVON.
+
+ To the Officer administering the
+ Government of Queensland.
+
+
+ Proceedings of H.M.S. _Rosario_ in the South Sea Islands.
+ Criminal acts of Mr. W. H. Hayston, master of the brig _Leonora_.
+
+ H.M.S. _Pearl_, _16th November 1874_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to enclose for the information of the
+ Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, a Report and various
+ papers furnished to me by Commander Dupont of H.M.S. _Rosario_,
+ concerning a Mr. William H. Hayston, master of the late American
+ brig _Leonora_.
+
+ 2. This Mr. Hayston has long been known among the Pacific
+ Islands as a collector of produce, and has the reputation of
+ defrauding natives and lifting produce collected by other
+ traders. He has been spoken of in correspondence between this
+ and the Chinese Station as "the notorious Captain Hayston," but
+ hitherto no evidence on which he could be convicted of any
+ piratical act has been brought before me.
+
+ 3. It seemed possible that Commander Dupont, while cruising in
+ H.M.S. _Rosario_ among the Gilbert and Ellice Islands, and
+ watching the labour traffic, might be able to gather some
+ evidence which would enable him to detain this person, who is
+ doing much harm among the islands. A copy of my orders to
+ Commander Dupont is enclosed.
+
+ 4. Commander Dupont seems only to have obtained the evidence
+ which he desired against Hayston after he had learned of his
+ escape, and he is satisfied from inspection of Hayston's papers
+ that he is an American citizen.
+
+ 5. Commander Dupont brought away with him from Strong's Island
+ the crew of Hayston's vessel, the _Leonora_, which was wrecked
+ there in March last, and also one Hilary Telfer, who had
+ proceeded from Samoa to Mill as supercargo of a vessel called
+ the _E. A. Wilson_, and belonging to the sons and daughters of
+ Mr. Wilson, H.M. Consul from Samoa.
+
+ 6. This Mr. Telfer carried with him from Samoa orders from Mr.
+ Wilson to put the _E. A. Wilson_ and the cargo into Hayston's
+ hands to be sold, and in course of business appears to have
+ become so mixed up in Hayston's affairs, that the latter made
+ him his agent and entrusted him with letters to all his
+ subordinate agents, informing them that he had been seized by
+ the _Rosario_ for conveyance to Sydney.
+
+ 7. I was in Samoa in H.M.S. _Pearl_ in November 1873. The ketch
+ _E. A. Wilson_ was then there under repairs. Mr. S. D. Wilson
+ told me nothing of his intentions regarding the vessel, but gave
+ me to understand that Mr. Hayston was a great rascal, who had
+ cleverly outwitted all inquiries. He offered to obtain evidence
+ from a half-caste, and at my desire took the statements (which
+ proved valueless) on oath. Yet on December 3, 1873, he enters
+ into communication with this man, against whom he had pretended
+ to give me information.
+
+ 8. I consider the whole affair as most unsatisfactory, even
+ regarding Mr. Wilson as a trader. In the position of Her
+ Majesty's Acting Consul, I consider that he has been guilty of
+ improper behaviour, rendering him unworthy to occupy such a
+ position. The desirability of appointing a non-trading Consul in
+ Samoa has already been pointed out by both myself and my
+ predecessor on this Station.
+
+ 9. The papers I enclose concerning Hayston will illustrate the
+ life of a modern South-Sea filibuster.--I have the honour to be,
+ your obedient servant,
+
+ JAMES G. GOODENOUGH,
+ Captain and Commodore, 2nd Class,
+ Commanding Australian Station.
+
+ To the Secretary.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 2.
+
+ H.M.S. _Rosario_,
+ AT SEA, Lat. 2 26 N., Long. 167 19 E.,
+ _10th October 1874_.
+
+ SIR,--With reference to Mr. Hayston, master of the American brig
+ _Leonora_, I beg to forward the following statement of facts
+ relative to him that I have been able to collect among the
+ different islands visited during my present cruise:--
+
+ 1. There can be no doubt but that Mr. Hayston is a shrewd,
+ unprincipled man, who has committed acts of violence towards the
+ natives, and been guilty of unjustifiable acts towards other
+ persons. Yet, so greatly has his name got to be feared, by both
+ natives and white men on the islands, that, though it was
+ evident that at nearly all the islands I visited he was well
+ known, it was impossible to find out much about him.
+
+ 2. With respect to Mr. Dunn's business, what evidence I could
+ get was mainly in Hayston's favour, and tended to show that
+ Dunn's agents had sold the trade to Hayston instead of his
+ taking it. This is certainly the case as regards an Englishman
+ named George Winchcombe, whom I found living on Nukufutau, one
+ of the Ellice group. He himself stated to me that he left Sydney
+ with Dunn, in the understanding that he was to be found at a
+ station on one of the islands. He complained that Dunn treated
+ him badly on board, and eventually sent him on shore on the
+ island of Apaiari (Gilbert group) to collect trade. He was
+ dissatisfied with his life, much in dread of the natives, and on
+ Hayston's coming there in the beginning of 1873, he begged him
+ to take him off the island, and offered to sell him all the
+ trade he had collected. Hayston accordingly took him. At another
+ island, Tarawa, the only white resident had heard that some
+ trade had been removed by Hayston, but was not on the island at
+ the time. At other islands I heard things relative to Dunn's
+ property, but could get nothing but hearsay evidence. I could
+ not find a single individual, either white or native, who could
+ furnish me with any positive evidence or proof against Hayston.
+
+ On entering Chabral harbour (Strong's Island) Mr. Hayston, as I
+ have reported in my letter of proceedings, came out to meet the
+ ship in a boat. He told that his vessel had been wrecked in
+ South harbour of the island on the 15th of March this year,
+ since which date he had been living on shore collecting oil.
+
+ Mr. Morland, an American missionary, who had just arrived from
+ Ebon Island, and numerous white men--the late crew of the
+ _Leonora_--were also there. A schooner under the German flag,
+ Mr. Miller an Englishman master, lay in the harbour. I commenced
+ making inquiries as quietly as possible about Hayston, but here,
+ as at other places, I met with disinclination from all traders
+ to tell me anything they might know; Mr. Miller, though hinting
+ that Hayston had robbed him not long since, would at first say
+ nothing, nor was it till after considerable persuasion and the
+ delay of some days that I got the enclosed statement, with the
+ various witnesses in the matter, from him.
+
+ But as he was sailing under German colours, I could not believe
+ my duty was to do more than receive the statements and forward
+ it through you to the German Consul in Sydney.
+
+ Hayston, apprised by some of the crew of the inquiries that had
+ been made, left the island in a boat on the night of the 27th.
+ His design was, I believe, either to make the island of
+ Ascension or that of Pingelap. At their own request, and also
+ considering it a good thing for the island to be rid of them, I
+ took five of the crew of the _Leonora_ on board for passage to
+ Sydney, and also one other person who had been a passenger on
+ board, and also, from what I could hear, a great friend of
+ Hayston. This Hilary Telfer was the person who had been sent by
+ Mr. Wilson, British Consul at Samoa, as supercargo of the ketch
+ that I met at Mill, but leaving his charge there, had gone to
+ sea with Hayston and been with him since January. I deemed it
+ advisable that he should be removed, there being no chance of
+ his getting back to Mill from Strong's Island, and also because
+ the chief particularly desired his removal, as being likely to
+ stir up trouble in the island. These six persons are now on
+ board.
+
+ I visited Mr. Hayston's residence at South harbour; he had made
+ a regular settlement of it, and had collected a large quantity
+ of oil. No less than five young women were living in his house,
+ who had all with one exception been living on board the
+ _Leonora_. That vessel was sunk in fourteen fathoms, her topmast
+ head a few feet above water.
+
+ The first mate I left on the island, recommending him to take
+ charge of Hayston's property. The second mate, William Hicks,
+ ran away into the bush and couldn't be found, otherwise I should
+ have taken him to Sydney with the others. Thinking the case over
+ quietly afterwards, I cannot see how I could have arrested
+ Hayston. It is, therefore, with great regret that I am obliged
+ to report my failure to collect sufficient evidence against him
+ to warrant my doing so. The case of Mr. Dunn must have failed
+ from want of such evidence.--I have, etc., etc.
+
+ A. E. DUPONT,
+ Commander.
+
+ To Commodore J. G. Goodenough,
+ H.M.S. _Pearl_.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 13.
+
+ MESSRS. MILLER AND WARNE TO MR. HILARY TELFER, SUPERCARGO.
+
+ DEAR SIR,--You will proceed from hence to Mill, Mulgrave
+ Island, for the purpose of selling the ketch _A.E.W._ You will
+ find Captain Hayston there waiting for you, so you will please
+ consult with him, as he is acquainted with the people who wish
+ to purchase the ketch. Try to obtain oil or copra to the amount
+ of 500 for her. Ship whatever produce you may get on board the
+ _Leonora_, and get Captain Hayston to sign bills of lading. Do
+ not sell the chronometer unless you get a good price for it.
+ Sell the few things you take to the best advantage. None of the
+ Samoans are to remain, but to come back to Apia. Have the ketch
+ painted at Mill.--Wishing you a prosperous and speedy voyage,
+ we are, etc.,
+
+ (Signed) MILLER AND WARNE.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 15.
+
+ Know all men by these presents that I, William Henry Hayston,
+ Master mariner, now residing on Strong's Island, in the North
+ Pacific Ocean, have made, constituted, and appointed Hilary
+ Telfer, of Sydney, New South Wales, at present residing on this
+ island of Kusaie (or Strong's Island), to be my true and lawful
+ agent for me, and, in my place and stead, to enter into and take
+ possession of my station situated at Maloe, near the village of
+ Utw, South harbour, on the above-named island. Also all my oil,
+ casks, tobacco, and other trade which may be on said station.
+ Also boats, canoe, pigs, fowls, possessions--all and everything,
+ whether of value or not, together with my furniture and private
+ effects, and to take full charge of all my business on the
+ above-named island during my trip to the eastward.
+
+ (Signed) W. H. HAYSTON,
+ In the presence of the undersigned witness,
+ this 19th August 1874.
+
+ (Signed) CHARLES ROBERTS.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 16.
+
+ MEMORANDUM OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR MR. HILARY TELFER.
+
+ SIR,--As I am about to leave Strong's Island, and have given you
+ power to act on my behalf, I wish you to close up all my affairs
+ in the best manner you can. You will look after the property I
+ leave behind, and dispose of it to the best advantage. Out of
+ the remainder of the oil you can pay yourself for the
+ chronometer, and Mr. Harry Skillings for the trade I had from
+ him. Sell the balance, including the large cargo-boat, as soon
+ as an opportunity offers. Anything left over you can give to the
+ people that have been kind to you, and the natives. Out of the
+ proceeds of the sale you can pay for the passage of my natives
+ to Samoa, if they want to go there. If not, see them back on
+ their own island, or on some of the Kingsmill group, that they
+ may get with their own country people.
+
+ My native boy Toby I wish you to take to Samoa, and look after
+ him as well as you can; also Kitty, as they have no father or
+ mother. Both were given to me by the king of Hope Island. The
+ stores I left behind are for you and the natives to live on till
+ you can get away. Be careful of the little trade I leave you, as
+ the Strong's islanders want payment for everything you get of
+ them to eat. You will also bear in mind that the king owes me
+ 12,100 cocoa-nuts, the balance of the 48,000 that he agreed to
+ pay me for the property stolen by the Strong's islanders at the
+ time of the loss of the brig.
+
+ I write an accompanying letter to each of my agents. You will
+ have to settle with them by their own accounts, as my trade-book
+ was lost, as you know. The balance, after paying for your own
+ passage and expense, you can hand over to my agent at
+ Samoa.--Wishing you a safe arrival there and every success, I
+ remain, yours in good faith,
+
+ (Signed) W. H. HAYSTON.
+
+
+ Circular.
+
+ DOWNING STREET, _31st May 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--With reference to my circular despatch of 13th instant, I
+ have the honour to transmit to you the accompanying copy of a
+ note addressed by the Duc de Decazes to Her Majesty's Minister
+ at Paris, in consequence of the communication on the subject of
+ the lawless proceedings of W. H. Hayston in the South Seas,
+ which the Earl of Derby caused to be made to the French
+ Government, also those of Germany and the United States.--I am,
+ etc.,
+
+ CARNARVON.
+
+ The Officer Administering
+ the Government of Queensland.
+
+
+ THE DUC DE DECAZES TO MR. ADAMS.
+
+ (Copy.)
+
+ PARIS, _le 10 mai 1875_.
+
+ M. LE MINISTRE,--J'ai port la connaissance de mon collgue
+ les informations que vous m'avez fait l'honneur de me
+ transmettre, relativement un personnage dangereux, du nom de
+ Hayston, qui se serait signal par de nombreux actes de
+ dprdation dans les Iles de l'Ocanie. M. l'Amiral de Montaigne
+ rpondant ma communication m'annonce qu'il signalera par le
+ premier courrier cet individu au Commandant en Chef de notre
+ division navale dans l'Ocan Pacifique. Il adressera en outre
+ M. l'Amiral Rebout les instructions ncessaires pour que ce
+ flibustier soit surveill de prs et mis, le cas chant, hors
+ d'tat de poursuivre son industrie criminelle.--Agrez, etc.,
+
+ (Signed) DUC DE DECAZES.
+
+ M. Adams.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+H.M.S. ROSARIO
+
+
+As we pulled up alongside we saw her bulwarks forward crowded with the
+blue-jackets. The Captain's quick eye, which nothing escaped, detected
+among them the bronzed faces of Dan Gardiner and another trader whom he
+had left at Providence Island.
+
+"She's come to take me, sure enough," he said to me. "The moment I
+looked at those two fellows they dropped back out of sight. Never mind,
+come aboard and I'll see it through."
+
+As soon as we gained the deck he advanced towards a group of officers
+standing on the quarter-deck, and, raising his hat, said, "Good morning,
+gentlemen. I am Captain Hayston of the brig _Leonora_, cast away on this
+island in the earlier part of the year."
+
+There was a moment's silence; then a tall man, the captain of the
+cruiser, stepped out from the others, surveyed Hayston from head to
+foot, and said, "Oh, ah, indeed! then you are the very man I am looking
+for. This is Her Majesty's ship _Rosario_, and you are a prisoner, Mr.
+Hayston!"
+
+Hayston simply bowed and said nothing, retiring to the port side, where
+he was placed under the charge of the sergeant-major of marines, who, as
+also all others on board, looked with intense curiosity at the man of
+whose doings they had heard so much in their cruises in the Pacific
+Ocean.
+
+The man-of-war captain then demanded my name, after which I was
+considerably staggered by the announcement that he had instructions to
+apprehend me on the charge of stealing the ketch _E. A. Wilson_, the
+property of Messrs. Miller and Warne of Samoa.
+
+Hayston at once came forward, and, addressing the captain, said that I
+had simply brought that vessel to him at Mill, and could produce
+written instructions from the owners to hand the vessel over to him. To
+this no answer was returned, and silence was maintained, for the
+_Rosario_ was now entering the passage, and so interested was I at the
+novel surroundings of a man-of-war under steam, and so lost in
+admiration of the perfect discipline on board, that for the time being I
+forgot that the Captain of the _Leonora_ was a prisoner, and that I was
+also apprehended on a serious charge.
+
+Slowly and gracefully the great ship steamed through the passage, and
+brought up within a cable's length of the king's wharf, where the anchor
+plunged below to its resting-place on the coral bottom. No sooner had
+the man-of-war come to anchor than Mr. Morland and the native
+missionary, who followed him like a shadow, came on board, and were
+received by Her Majesty's representative. A consultation took place,
+after which I was separated from my companion, and, without being able
+to exchange a word of farewell, was hurried down to the gun-room. As I
+placed my foot on the ladder leading to the "'tween decks" I turned. He
+waved his hand to me in farewell. _We never met again!_
+
+While I was detained in the gun-room a midshipman told me that Captain
+Hayston had been permitted to go on shore, under the charge of an
+officer, to collect his personal effects and write letters, as he had
+been informed that I would not be permitted to have any further
+communication with him.
+
+The midshipman said that Mr. Morland had seemed surprised at Captain
+Hayston's not being put in irons, and was at that moment collecting
+evidence in order to formulate a series of charges against him before
+the captain of the _Rosario_. My informant added, "If Captain Hayston is
+such a blood-thirsty ruffian as he is described to be he certainly shows
+no indication of it."
+
+Several of the warrant officers now gathered around and pressed me with
+questions concerning Hayston. One of them jocularly inquired where the
+Captain's harem was located, adding that it was a pity to separate him
+from them, and that there was plenty of room on board the _Rosario_ for
+ladies.
+
+I was burning with anxiety to know on what particular charge Hayston had
+been arrested, and how the captain of the _Rosario_ had heard of the
+loss of the _Leonora_. They told me then that the _Rosario_ had been
+searching for Hayston for some time, under instructions from the
+Commodore of the Australian Station, to whom representations had been
+made concerning alleged depredations committed by him (Hayston) in the
+Line Islands. The _Rosario_ had visited a number of islands, and
+endeavoured to obtain evidence against Hayston, but that it had resulted
+in a failure, nearly every one, when it came to the point, declining to
+make any statement against him. The captain of the man-of-war then
+decided to proceed to Arrecifos, or Providence Island, which he knew to
+be one of Hayston's depts. On arrival he learned from the two white men
+there that so long an interval had passed since his last visit that they
+fancied that the _Leonora_ had been lost.
+
+These two men were taken on board, and the _Rosario_ made for Strong's
+Island. When within 400 miles she met the little _Matautu_, who
+signalled a wish to speak. As soon as Captain Warner boarded the
+man-of-war he informed the commander of the loss of the _Leonora_, and
+of Hayston's presence on the island. He also handed in several written
+charges made by himself against Hayston, and, as well as I can remember
+from what I was told, was about to return to his schooner when the
+_Morning Star_ hove in sight.
+
+On board of the missionary brig was Mr. Morland, and a consultation then
+took place between the two captains and this gentleman, who was, of
+course, delighted to hear of the loss of the _Leonora_, and that Captain
+Hayston was to be taken prisoner.
+
+The _Matautu_ then bore away on her course, and the _Morning Star_,
+after landing Mr. Morland at the weather side of the island, went on her
+way, leaving him ashore, perfectly assured of his own safety and the
+immediate presence of the _Rosario_ in Chabral harbour.
+
+I could now understand the hints given me by the queen, as well as the
+expression of triumph on the faces of the missionaries as they returned
+from their interview with the king.
+
+Presently an officer came down and asked me if I wished to obtain my
+effects from the shore. I at once sent a message to Kusis to bring me a
+small chest, in which were my worldly goods, as well as my power of
+attorney and letters of instructions from former employers in Samoa. I
+was going to make inquiries about Hayston, when the officer requested me
+kindly enough not to ask him questions, as he could give me no
+information. He told me, however, that the captain of the _Rosario_ was
+at that moment engaged in hearing charges against Hayston made by the
+king, Mr. Morland, and two or three of the traders from Pleasant Island.
+Also that some of the crew of the _Leonora_ had been induced to come
+forward and make statements. I also learned that Hayston had been taken
+to South harbour in charge of an officer, for what purpose I could never
+learn, unless it was to give him an opportunity of escaping, as he could
+easily have written his letters in the king's house.
+
+Two of the boats' crews were piped away, and I was told by an old
+quarter-master, with a humorous grin, that some of the officers had gone
+away in the boats to South harbour to have a look at the "pirate's
+village, and bring away the unfortunate female captives." All this time
+I was kept in close confinement, and the time passed wearily away. I was
+growing tired of the ceaseless questions from every one that came near
+me about Hayston, the _Leonora_, and our voyage from the Carolines till
+the brig was cast away.
+
+At night, however, the boats returned, and after the crews had been
+piped down to supper the good old sergeant-major of marines, suspecting
+the anxiety I was in as to Hayston's movements, startled me by telling
+me that he had escaped from custody when at South Island harbour.
+
+He told me that as soon as the boat reached the village they found the
+place in a state of wildest confusion. A messenger had come down along
+the coast and told the Captain's people that a man-of-war was at Ll,
+and that Captain Hayston had been taken prisoner, put in irons, and was
+to be shot or hanged at once. A number of Strong's Island natives
+followed the man-of-war boats down from Chabral harbour, and these at
+once attempted to rush and ransack the station, which they were only
+prevented from doing by the presence of the blue-jackets.
+
+Hayston was escorted to his station, where he was at once surrounded by
+the girls belonging to the house and many others, among them being the
+carpenter's, steward's, boatswain's, and Antonio's wives--all clinging
+to him and impeding his movements.
+
+Calling them all together, with such others of the natives as had not
+fled from the village at the sight of the blue-jackets, he told them
+that they need not be under any alarm, that he was going away in the
+man-of-war, and might not return for a long time--perhaps many moons,
+but that the supercargo, Hilary Telfer, would be with them shortly, and
+they must be guided by him. Of course the Captain never for a minute
+imagined that I was then under the closest surveillance, and therefore
+would be utterly powerless to carry out his promises made to them.
+
+He then quietly seated himself, and wrote a quantity of letters to his
+agents in the different islands in the Line and Marshall groups. These
+letters he directed and enclosed to me, together with a power of
+attorney which he had previously drawn up, and a letter of
+instructions--all of which he laid on the table.
+
+He then told his captors that he was ready to return with them, when
+(according to the statement made by the marines on their return to Ll)
+he suddenly exerted his vast strength, and knocking several of them
+down, sprang into the sea and gained the mangroves on the opposite side
+of the harbour.
+
+On my inquiring from the marine officer why he had not been pursued,
+that gentleman winked at me, and replied, "No orders, my boy, no orders;
+besides he swam like a beaver, and to search the mangroves for one man
+would take a month of Sundays." Thinking the matter over, I came to the
+conclusion that for some reason I could not fathom, the captain of the
+man-of-war was not particularly anxious to keep Hayston a prisoner,
+though I had heard him declare to Mr. Morland that the naval authorities
+would at last rid the Pacific of this man, who was a source of terror
+and dread from New Zealand to the China Seas.
+
+When the boats returned from Utw they brought up the man Jansen, whom
+Hayston had beaten and disgraced. He called himself, and was recognised
+by the captain of the _Rosario_ as the chief officer of the _Leonora_,
+although he had long since lost his position on account of his rascally
+conduct. He seemed brimful of evidence as to Hayston's misdeeds, and I
+was afterwards informed that when brought into the ward-room of the
+man-of-war the officers expected to have some thrilling stories of
+rapine and bloodshed. However, they were disappointed, as his evidence
+was little more than confirmatory of that of Captain Warner of the
+_Matautu_, in reference to the taking of some gear from the brig
+_Kamehameha the Fourth_.
+
+Mr. Morland and Likiak S appeared to be the leading spirits in
+obtaining charges against the absent Hayston, for the commander of the
+man-of-war was strictly neutral, and certainly not furiously indignant
+at his escape. They succeeded in obtaining his approval of the
+appointment of Jansen to take charge of the people and the station,
+under the supervision of King Tokusar, at Utw. It was at this juncture
+that the letters written by Hayston to his agents, as well as the power
+of attorney and letters of instruction to me, were produced by Mr.
+Morland. How they came to be in that gentleman's hands I do not know. A
+rough draft was made by him for the king's perusal, he said, and the
+originals were then brought to me by one of the lieutenants, who also
+handed me a bundle of papers which he said had been brought on board by
+a native.
+
+These papers were my power of attorney, to hand over the ketch _E. A.
+Wilson_ to Captain Hayston, and also a letter of instructions in
+reference to the crew--copies of which the reader has already seen.
+Feeling confident that I had but to show these documents to Commander
+Dupont to insure an interview and my instant release, I requested to be
+ushered into the autocrat's presence. The Reverend Mr. Morland was
+present, and greeted me with such a smile of active benevolence that I
+longed to kick him.
+
+When I presented the letter to Captain Dupont I was considerably
+surprised when he denounced them as forgeries, calling me at the same
+time a d--d piratical scoundrel and accomplished young villain, adding
+that my cruel behaviour in aiding and abetting Hayston in his villainies
+made him regret that he could not run me up to the yardarm as a
+warning. He finished this tirade by tearing up my papers and throwing
+them at me. Calling the sergeant of marines, he ordered me put in irons,
+from which, however, I was released before the _Rosario_ put to sea.
+
+Early next morning, much to my relief, there appeared on board the black
+shining face of Johnny Tilton, the young negro, who among others of the
+crew had been brought away from Utw, in one of the man-of-war boats.
+Johnny, with his shipmates, was taken below and examined by the captain
+and Mr. Morland. But as there was nothing against him personally or the
+Fijian half-caste Bill, they were permitted to return ashore. Before
+leaving, Johnny requested to be allowed to see me, which was granted.
+
+The moment I saw his face I knew he had something of importance to tell
+me, for looking at the marine standing sentry over me, he said in
+Samoan, "Le--alu ua sola i te po" (the Captain escaped in the night).
+
+"Yes!" I replied, "I know that already."
+
+"Ah! but I mean that he has taken the small boat and gone away
+altogether. Listen, I'll tell you all about it. After the man-of-war
+boats had gone away from Utw, and the Captain had escaped into the
+mangroves, a number of the Strong's islanders came down and said they
+were going to loot the place. Then the king sent down word that the
+captain of the man-of-war had declared that the station now belonged to
+him (the king), and that he could do what he liked with the place. The
+king forbade any of the people to go into the Captain's house till
+Jansen came down with Likiak S, as these two had been appointed by the
+king and Mr. Morland to take charge. Well, there was a lot of us ran
+away into the mountains at the very first when we heard the Captain was
+taken prisoner. Bill Hicks and I were among them, also boy George and
+Sunday. Before we left I went to the Captain's house and told the girls
+that we were running away, and our wives were coming with us, and asked
+them what they intended to do. Old Mary said she would wait and see
+first if it were true about the Captain being taken prisoner.
+
+"All the young women, too, though they were very frightened, said they
+would stay. I got Hope Island Nellie to give me three Winchester rifles
+and a bag of cartridges from the back of the big house. I cut a hole
+through the side of the Captain's sleeping-place, and Nellie passed the
+rifles out to me quietly. I told Nellie that we were going to hide in
+the mountains till we saw whether the man-of-war wanted to catch us as
+well as the Captain. If not we would return to Utw.
+
+"I took the rifles and wrapped them up in a long mat, and went down to
+the lagoon, where I found a canoe and took it. Bill and the others were
+waiting for me; they told me that the man-of-war boats were coming into
+the harbour, and that the Captain was in one of them; we watched them
+carefully and saw them go out of the harbour. Then Bill began to talk
+against the Captain, and said he would be glad if he were shot. He asked
+me if I was willing to make a dash into the village and help him to
+bring away Nellie and Sara, as if the Captain was taken away in the
+man-of-war he was going to have them for himself.
+
+"I told him that until Captain Hayston was taken away or dead that I
+intended to stick to him. So we nearly had a fight over it. Then Bill
+said all of a sudden that he intended to have Sara and Nellie, right or
+wrong. And as he had nothing to fear from the man-of-war, he would try
+if he couldn't fool the captain, and pretend he could tell him all about
+Captain Hayston robbing Captain Daly's station on the Line Islands.
+
+"I told him I was not going to turn dog on the Captain, and he might do
+his dirty work himself.
+
+"So off he went, and we saw him cross over in a canoe to young Harry's
+place, and knew he was going along the beach to Chabral harbour. Then I
+talked to the others, and asked them what we ought to do, for I was
+afraid we would not see the Captain any more. Boy George laughed, and
+said he didn't care, but he meant to be beforehand with Bill and run off
+with Sara; that if I had any sense I would run off with Nellie, and let
+the other girls go adrift. He said we could easily live in the mountains
+till the man-of-war was gone, and then go back to Utw. But I said I
+wouldn't do that, and that they would find that Sara would fight like a
+wild cat if boy George or any one else tried to take her away.
+
+"Boy George then said if she wouldn't come he would put a bullet through
+her, and take Mila or Nellie instead. So then we had a row; he called me
+a black thief and said I could go to h--l. He and the others cleared out
+and left me alone.
+
+"It was then very dark, and as everything seemed quiet, I walked across
+the coral and got into the house on the point where some Strong's Island
+people live, the one you were brought to when you were washed ashore.
+The man and his wife Nadup were frightened at first; but they were good
+to me, and gave me food, and then they told me Jansen was in charge of
+the station; that the Pleasant islanders were fled into the bush, and
+that the girls in the big house had run away when they saw him coming to
+them, drunk, with a loaded rifle in his hand.
+
+"Only Nellie and little Kitty and Toby stayed behind. Nellie had a
+Winchester rifle and pointed it at Jansen, who was afraid to come into
+the house. Then she, Kitty, and the little boy collected as many of the
+Captain's things as they could carry, and taking a canoe, put out to
+sea, intending to paddle round to Mout, where they thought they would
+find you, who would tell them all about the Captain, and whether he was
+killed or not.
+
+"But, after they had gone four or five miles, the outrigger came off
+and the canoe capsized. They swam ashore and then walked back to Utw,
+where they were told by some natives that you were also a prisoner on
+board the man-of-war. And the last that had been seen of Nellie, Kitty,
+and the boy, was that they started to walk to Chabral harbour to try and
+see the captain of the man-of-war, as they were afraid that Jansen would
+kill them.
+
+"Well," continued Black Johnny, "when I heard that you were also a
+prisoner I thought I would run away into the bush again, as I knew
+Jansen would put a bullet into me whenever he saw me if I did not get
+first shot. Just as I was thinking very hard what I should do, I heard
+some one walking on the broken coral outside the house. I knew the
+footstep; it was the Captain! I crept outside, and saw him standing up
+leaning against a stone wall. He had two pistols in his sash and a
+Winchester rifle in his hand. He seemed to be considering. I whistled
+softly, and then spoke. He shook hands with me, and then raised his
+rifle and pointed it at the head of the Strong's islander, who, with his
+wife Nadup, had followed me. They ran outside and threw themselves on
+the ground, and grovelled in the way they do to old Tokusar, and swore
+they would not tell that the Captain had come back.
+
+"We then had a hasty talk, and I told him about you being a prisoner.
+But he said you would soon be set free again and would return to Utw,
+and I must stick to you and help to keep order; that after the
+man-of-war had gone he would come back again. When I told him that the
+station was broken up, and that Jansen was in charge of thirty Strong's
+islanders, and that the girls had run away, he said it was a bad case,
+and, picking up his rifle, he asked me where Jansen was sleeping. I saw
+what he meant to do, and begged him to let things be as they were, and
+not kill Jansen while the man-of-war was here.
+
+"So he thought awhile, and then said if he could find a boat he would
+get away, as he didn't think the man-of-war would follow him. By and by
+he would come back again, when he hoped to find you and me here all
+safe.
+
+"The Strong's Island women then told us that the dingey had been brought
+down from Chabral harbour by Jansen, and was then lying outside the
+coral at anchor. 'She'll do,' said the Captain; 'lend me a hand, and
+we'll bring her ashore.' But I made him lie quiet while I went for her;
+and I can tell you I was in a terrible funk all the time about sharks as
+soon as I began to swim out. Anyway I brought her in all right; and then
+the man and his wife brought a lot of cocoa-nuts and cooked food, and
+put it into the boat. I gave the Captain all the cartridges I had. He
+told me that he got the pistols from the place in the bush that you know
+of, and the rifle from young Harry, and that everything else there was
+all right."
+
+By this I knew that Hayston had visited a place in the bush where he had
+secreted his bags of money, besides firearms and ammunition.
+
+Going on with his talk the young negro said, "When everything was ready
+the Captain told me he meant to sail round the lee side of the island,
+and hide the boat in the mangroves till the man-of-war had gone, and
+then he would return and wipe out Jansen and the traders.
+
+"He told me, though (for he felt sure of your being set free again),
+that if it so happened that he did not return in ten days you would know
+that he had cleared out towards the north-west, and would try to reach
+the Pelew Islands. He said if he reached there he would soon get a
+vessel, as there were always plenty of small Spanish schooners about
+those islands, and he could easily put his hand on one or two people in
+the Pelews who would help him to take one. I asked him what we should do
+if, when we came back to Utw, you found that Jansen was too strong for
+us? He said we should make no attempt to take forcible possession, but
+go and live with your people at Mout. That as soon as the girls knew
+where we were they would be certain to come to us with little Kitty and
+Toby. That we must wait till he returned, as he would never desert us.
+
+"Then," said Johnny, whose glistening eyes showed how deeply attached he
+was to his Captain, "the poor fellow! he shook hands with me, and said I
+was made of the right stuff, and that the Almighty made a mistake when
+he gave me a black skin. Then, telling me to keep a stout heart, he got
+in and hoisted the sail. It was very dark, but there was a good
+land-breeze, and he sailed the dingey right along the edge of the reef
+till he came to the passage, and disappeared in the darkness. I ran
+across the strip of land on the sea-side of the lagoon and waited till I
+saw him pass.
+
+"In about half-an-hour I saw the little boat sailing along close into
+the shore, just outside of the breakers, rising and falling like a
+sea-gull on the top of the heavy seas. I could see the Captain's figure
+in the stern, and every moment expected to see her lifted high up on a
+roller and dashed on the reef. But though I shouted to him to keep
+farther out, the white figure in the stern never moved, and my voice was
+lost in the roaring of the surf.
+
+"Then, as I saw him still keeping steady to the southward, just clear of
+the last sweep of the seas before they curled and broke on the reef, I
+remembered that only a few cables' lengths from the breakers there was
+always a strong current setting to the north, and that with a light
+breeze the boat would never stem it. That was why he hugged the shore so
+closely. At last, as I kept running through the undergrowth following
+the boat, I came to that place where there is a thick cane scrub. When I
+got through it he was nearly out of sight, and I sat on a boulder and
+watched the sail gradually covered up by the night."
+
+Such, in effect, was the young negro's story. I could not help being
+affected by his evident sorrow, and told him that I feared there was no
+chance of me at least ever seeing the Captain again. Then, when the time
+came to part, I shook his hand warmly, and advised him to sever his
+connection with the _Leonora's_ crew; also to go and see the king, who
+would not, at any rate, object to his remaining on the island to follow
+out the Captain's wishes as far as lay in his power.
+
+Soon after Black Johnny had bid me good-bye young Harry came to say
+farewell, and with him Kusis and his family, and Lalia.
+
+Harry told me that he saw the Captain after his escape, and urged him
+not to think of returning to Utw just then, as Jansen had a strong
+force of natives with him, and would certainly try to take or shoot him.
+But he was determined to find out how matters stood, and bidding Harry
+good-bye, set out across the mangrove swamp that lined the shore from
+Harry's station to the village at Utw. He gave him the Winchester and
+cartridges, and the Captain assured him that he would not fire a shot
+except in self-defence.
+
+I told Harry what I had learned from the young negro about the Captain's
+final movements, and that I was being taken away as a prisoner. He
+seemed very bitter against the other traders, whom he spoke of as
+trembling like whipped hounds before the Captain's frown when he was
+free, and who now, when he was a ruined and broken man, were loud in
+their threats and vapourings.
+
+He also told me that he had received a letter from the king and Mr.
+Morland, commanding him to deliver up to Jansen all oil, casks, boats,
+and other property in his possession belonging to Captain Hayston, and
+threatening him with deportation from the island if he refused. To this
+he sent a written reply to the effect, that unless the king and Mr.
+Morland could back up their demand by a boat's crew from the
+man-of-war, he would shoot the first man who stepped inside his fence.
+
+They then appealed to Commander Dupont, who told them that as young
+Harry was an American citizen, he could not force him to give up the
+property, but advised the king and Mr. Morland to take the law into
+their own hands.
+
+Young Harry then armed his wives and native servants with rifles, and
+telling them to make short work of any one attempting to seize Captain
+Hayston's property, set out for Chabral harbour to interview the king.
+He told me that when he reached the king's house he found there the
+other traders, Mr. Morland, and the commander of the man-of-war. On the
+latter gentleman inquiring who he was, and what he wanted, Harry
+answered him very concisely by furnishing his name and nationality. He
+then stated that he had not come to see him (Commander Dupont), but the
+king, of whom he wished to ask by what right he dared to send him a
+letter threatening him with deportation from the island unless he
+consented to give up Captain Hayston's property. He warned him to be
+careful how he interfered with an American citizen, as there was an
+American cruiser now in the Caroline Islands. He (the king) would find
+he had made a serious mistake if he committed any outrage upon a citizen
+of the United States.
+
+"You should have seen the look in the British officer's face," said
+Harry, "when I stepped up to the old king, and nearly touching his face
+with my hand, said, 'and I warn you, king, that the captain of an
+American cruiser will listen to the tale and redress the wrongs of the
+honest American citizen. He would think little of knocking your town
+about your ears.'"
+
+The old king never spoke, but glanced first towards the British officer
+and then to the missionary, but as neither of them offered suggestions,
+the poor old fellow could only mutter something to the effect that he
+was like a little fish in a pool, afraid of the sea because of the
+bigger fish, and afraid to stay lest the frigate birds should seize him.
+Young Harry quite enjoyed relating the scene to me, and said that as he
+was going away the king held out his hand and inquired in a shaky voice,
+"I say, Harry, what you tink, what you do? Suppose Captain Hayston come
+back, what become of King Tokusar? Oh! by God! now I be 'fraid every
+day; think I hear Captain Hayston speak me; make noise like bullock; I
+think better be poor native, no more king."
+
+Harry refused to advise the king, and then taking a good look at the
+white men present, said, "Well, good-bye, King Tokusar! I am going back
+to my station--the station I am minding for Captain Hayston. I have six
+men and four women all armed, and the American flag on a pole in front
+of my door; and the first man that attempts to do me any mischief,
+white, black, or yellow, _I'll shoot him_. You can ask the white men
+from Pleasant Island if I am not a man of my word. They know me."
+
+Harry then got into his boat and pulled on board the man-of-war, where
+the first lieutenant very kindly allowed him to see me. I felt sincere
+regret at parting with Harry, telling him to beware of the other
+traders. I repeated what had been told me by Kitty of Ebon and Lalia.
+He laughed, and said he was always prepared, and meant to do justice to
+the trust reposed in him by Captain Hayston. "I'm the wrong man," he
+said on leaving, "to abandon any station and property left in my
+charge." Then, with oft-repeated wishes that we might meet again, after
+hearing of the Captain's safety we parted.
+
+Then came again good simple Kusis and his people with Lalia. She had
+in charge little Kitty and Toby. Poor Toby clung to my legs and sobbed
+as if his heart was breaking, when I told him that I did not know when
+the Captain would come back again. If no one else loved his master Toby
+did, and I tried in vain to assuage his grief. I was glad to hear from
+Lalia that she was going to young Harry's place with the two
+children. There I knew they would be well treated and cared for.
+
+"Look!" said she, pointing to the little fellow, "the Captain had two
+good friends besides yourself, young Harry, and the nigger Johnny, but
+this little fellow has never ceased crying for 'Captin' since he left
+the village in South harbour. Never mind, little Toby, we will wait and
+the 'Captin' will be sure to come;" and then she stooped down, and tried
+by kissing and coaxing to prevent him from giving utterance to his
+doleful wails and sobs of grief.
+
+Lalia told me, as with glistening eyes and trembling hands we said
+farewell, that her one hope now was to be able to get back to her
+distant home on Easter Island, that Captain Hayston would return with a
+ship; and, if he went towards Samoa or Tahiti, take her with him for
+that portion of the many thousand miles that lay between Strong's Island
+and her native land. That he would do this she felt confident. "For,"
+she said, "he once told me that he would stand by me if I was in
+trouble--it was when we were all washed ashore together--you remember?
+_and he never breaks his word_."
+
+Whatever Lalia's past life had been, I could never help admiring her
+many noble traits of character. I owed her life-long gratitude for her
+heroic self-sacrifice on the fateful night of the wreck of the
+_Leonora_; by me, at least, she will never be forgotten. Poor Lalia!
+Brave, loving, lovely child of the charmed isles of the southern main!
+reckless alike in love and hate, who shall judge? who condemn thee? Not
+I!
+
+Kusis, Tulp, and Kinie clung to me as if they could not bear to say
+farewell. I see before me often the honest, kindly countenance of Kusis
+as, with his hand clasped in mine, he looked trustfully into my face and
+made me promise that some day I would return and live with him once
+more. And so freshly at that time came the remembrance of the happy days
+I had passed in his quiet home, dreaming the hours away within sight of
+the heaving bosom of the blue, boundless Pacific Ocean, so deliciously
+restful after the stormy life of the _Leonora_ and her wild commander,
+that I believe I really intended to return to Strong's Island some day;
+but, as we used to say at Sydney college, "_Ds aliter visum_."
+
+Queen S sent me a letter as follows:--
+
+ DEAR FRIEND,--Kitty Ebon send Lalia to see you. We all very
+ sorry, but must not say so, because Mr. Morland very strong man
+ now. Where you think Captain Hayston go in little boat? I 'fraid
+ he die in boat. I very sorry for Captain--very kind man--but bad
+ man to natives sometimes.
+
+ QUEEN S.
+
+Enclosed were these pencilled lines from Kitty of Ebon:--
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND,--All the people from Mout been to Mr. Morland
+ to ask why you are in prison, and he says you will be hung for
+ stealing a ship. We all very sorry, all Mout people love you
+ very much--and me too. Good-bye, dear friend, come back to Kusis
+ and Mout people, for I don't think you be hanged in
+ Fiji.--Your sincere friend,
+
+ CATHERINE EBON.
+
+But when the light-hearted blue-jackets manned the capstan and merrily
+footed it round to lively music, and the great steamer's head was
+pointed to the passage, my thoughts were far away, where in fancy I
+discerned a tiny boat breasting the vast ocean swell, while sitting aft
+with his face turned to the westward, his strong brown hand on the
+tiller, was the once dreaded Captain of the _Leonora_; the lawless rover
+of the South Seas; the man whose name was known and feared from the
+South Pole to Japan, and yet through all, my true friend and most
+indulgent commander. With all his faults, our constant association had
+enabled me to appreciate his many noble qualities and fine natural
+impulses. And as the black hull of the _Rosario_ rose and fell to the
+sea, her funnel the while pouring forth volumes of sable smoke, the
+island gradually sunk astern, but the memories connected with it and
+Captain Hayston will abide with me for ever.
+
+Harry Skillings I never saw again, but heard that he went to Truk in the
+North-west Carolines. Black Johnny was murdered in New Britain. The
+other Harry with his native wife fell victims to the treacherous savages
+of the Solomon Islands. Jansen died a few years since on Providence
+Island. Some of the other traders and members of the crew I have heard
+of from time to time, scattered far and wide over the Isles of the
+Pacific. Lalia died in Honolulu about five years since, constant in
+her attempts to reach her distant home on Easter Island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+NORFOLK ISLAND--ARCADIA
+
+
+And now, my innocence and lack of complicity in Hayston's irregularities
+having been established, a revulsion of feeling took place in the minds
+of the captain and officers of the _Rosario_ with regard to me.
+
+After the fullest explanations furnished by the traders and others,
+backed up by the manifest sympathy and good-will of the inhabitants of
+Strong Island, it became apparent that some sort of reparation was due
+to me. This took the form of a courteous invitation to accept a passage
+to Sydney in H.M.S. _Rosario_, and to join the officers' mess on the
+voyage. "I'm afraid that we acted hastily in your case, Mr. Telfer!"
+said Captain Dupont. "You have been thoroughly cleared of all
+accusations made against you. I am bound to say they were very few. And
+you seem chiefly to have acted as a peacemaker and a power for good. I
+have gathered that you are anxious to rejoin your friends in Sydney. I
+shall be glad to have your company on the return voyage. What do you
+say? I trust you will not refuse; I shall otherwise think you have not
+forgiven my apparent harshness."
+
+Thus pressed to return to family and friends--from whom, at times, in
+spite of my inborn roving propensities, the separation had cost me
+dear--what could I do but thank the manly and courteous potentate, and
+comply with an invitation so rarely granted to a South Sea adventurer. I
+was the more loth to lose the opportunity as there had come upon me of
+late a violent fit of homesickness which I in vain strove to combat.
+
+I had in truth now no particular reason for remaining at Kusaie, or
+indeed anywhere in the South Seas. Hayston was gone; his magnetic
+influence no longer controlled my will, as in our first acquaintance.
+The _Leonora_--our pride and boast, our peerless floating home--no
+longer "walked the waters like a thing of life," but lay dead,
+dismantled, dishonoured on the ruthless coral rocks which had crushed
+the life out of her on that fatal night.
+
+I realised now with thankfulness that I had narrowly escaped being
+liable as an accessory for some of Hayston's ultra-legal proceedings--to
+call them by no harsher name.
+
+How often, indeed, in the reckless daring of boyhood is the fatal line
+crossed which severs imprudence from crime! The inexorable fiat of human
+justice knows no shade of criminality. "Guilty or not guilty," goes
+forth the verdict. There is no appeal on earth. And the faulty, but not
+all evil-natured victim, is doomed to live out all the years of a life
+branded as a felon, or maddened by the fears which must ever torture the
+fugitive from justice!
+
+If I stayed in the South Seas on my present footing, nothing remained
+but the trader's life, pure and simple. I had little doubt but that I
+could make a living, perhaps a competence in years to come. But that
+meant exile in every sense of the word. Complete severance from my
+kindred, whom my soul yearned to see again; from the friends of my
+boyhood; from the loved and lovely land of my birth; from the thousand
+and one luxuries, material and intellectual, which are comprehended in
+the word civilisation. I had slaked my thirst for adventure, danger, and
+mystery. I had carried my life in my hand, so to speak, and times
+without number had doubted whether I should retain that more or less
+valuable possession for the next ten minutes. I had felt the poisoned
+arrows at Santa Cruz hurtling around me, even hiss through my waving
+locks, when the death-scratch summoned a man on either hand. I had
+nearly been "blue sharks' meat" as Hayston phrased it, on coral strand
+amid "the cruel crawling foam." All chances and risks I had taken
+heedlessly in the past. But now I began to feel that I must pronounce
+the momentous decision which would make or mar my future career. The
+island life was very fair. For one moment I saw myself the owner of a
+trading station on Pingelap or Arurai. I am sitting in a large, cool
+house, on soft, parti-coloured mats, surrounded by laughing girls
+garlanded and flower-crowned. Around and above, save in the plantation
+which surrounds the house, is the soft green light of the paradisal
+woodland illumining its incredible wealth of leafage, fruit, and
+flowers. Before me lies the endless, azure sea-plain. And oh, my sea! my
+own, my beloved sea!--loved in childhood, youth, and age, if such be
+granted to me! In my ears are the magical murmurous surge-voices, to the
+lulling of which I have so often slept like a tired child. Fruit and
+flowers--love and war--manly effort--danger--high health--boundless
+liberty,--all things necessary to the happiness of primeval man, before
+he became sophisticated by the false wisdom of these later ages, should
+I not possess in profusion? Why, then, should I not remain in this land
+of changeless summer--this magic treasure-house of all delights of land
+and sea?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Long and anxiously did I ponder over my decision. Those only who have
+known the witchery of the "summer Isles of Eden," have felt the charm of
+the dream-life of the Southern Main--the sorcery of that lotus-eating
+existence, alternating with the fierce hazards and stormy delights which
+give a richness to life unknown to a guarded, narrowed civilisation--can
+gauge my irresolution.
+
+I had well-nigh resolved to adhere to the trader's life--until I had
+made a fortune with which I could return in triumph--when I thought of
+my mother! The old house, with its broad, stone-paved verandah came back
+to me--the large, "careless-ordered" garden with its trailing, tropical
+shrubs and fruit-trees--the lordly araucarias, the boat-house, the
+stone-walled bath wherein I had learned to swim--all came back in that
+moment when memory recalled the scenes and surroundings of my early
+life. I could hear a voice ever low and sweet, as in the days of my
+childhood, which said, "Oh! my boy! my boy! come back--let me see my
+darling's face before I die."
+
+I was conquered--the temptations of the strange life, with its sorceries
+and phantasms, which had so long enveloped me, were swept away like a
+ghost-procession at dawn. And in their place came the steadfast resolve
+to return to the home of my youth, thenceforward to pursue such modes of
+life as might be marked out for me. In a new land like my birth-place,
+with a continent for an arena, I had no fear but that a career would
+open itself for me. In no country under heaven are there so many chances
+of success, so many roads to fortune, as in the lone wastes upon which
+the Southern Cross looks down. On land or sea--the tracks are
+limitless--the avenues to fortune innumerable. Gold was to be had for
+the seeking; silver and gems lay as yet in their desert solitudes, only
+awaiting the adventurer who, strong in the daring of manhood, should
+compel the waste to disclose its secrets--only awaited the hour and the
+man.
+
+For such enterprises was I peculiarly fitted. So much could then be said
+without boast or falsehood on my part. My frame, inured to withstand
+every change of temperature which sea or land could furnish, was of
+unusual strength. By hard experience I had learned to bear myself
+masterfully among men of widely various dispositions and characters. I
+took my stand henceforth as a citizen of the world--as a rover on sea
+and land--as more than a suppliant to fortune, a "Conquistador."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The homeward voyage being now fairly commenced, I began to speculate on
+the probabilities of my future career. During the years which I had
+passed among the islands I had acquired experience--more or less
+valuable--but very little cash. This was chiefly in consequence of our
+crowning disaster, the wreck of the _Leonora_. But for that untoward
+gale, my share of the proceeds of the venture would have exceeded the
+profits of all my other trading enterprises. As it was, I was left, if
+not altogether penniless, still in a position which would debar me from
+making more than a brief stay with my friends in Sydney, unless I
+consented to be beholden to them for support. That I held to be
+impossible. For a few weeks I felt that my finances would hold out. And
+after that, was there not a whole world of adventures--risks, hardships,
+dangers, if you will--all that makes life worth living--open before me;
+the curtain had fallen upon one act of the life drama of Hilary Telfer.
+What of that? Were there not four more, at least, to come?
+
+Even the princess had not arrived. There had been a "first robber" on
+the boards, perhaps--even more of that persuasion. But the principal
+stage business was only commencing--the dnouement was obviously far
+off. Thereupon my hopes rose as if freshly illumined. My sanguine
+nature--boundless in faith, fertile in expedient--reasserted itself.
+Temporarily depressed, more in sympathy with Hayston than with my own
+ill-luck, it seemed more vigorous and elastic in rebound than ever. The
+memory of my island life became faint and dreamily indistinct. The forms
+of Hayston, the king and queen, of Lalia, with sad, reproachful
+gaze--of Hope Island Nellie, lifting a rifle with the mien of an
+angered goddess--of Kitty of Ebon, incarnate daughter of the dusky
+Venus--of the bronzed and wrinkled trader, with blood and to spare on
+his sinewy hand--of young Harry and the negro Johnny. All these forms
+and faces, once so familiar, seemed to recede into the misty distance
+until they faded away from my mental vision.
+
+With them passed into shadow-land the joyous life of my youth--of the
+untrammelled, care-free existence--such as no man may find again in this
+world of slow, tracking care and hasty disenchantment. "Was I wise?" I
+asked myself again and again, in quitting it for the hard and anxious
+pursuits of the Continent? Were there not a dozen places besides
+Strong's Island where I should be welcomed, fted, caressed, almost
+worshipped as a restored divinity? Was it well to abandon the rank which
+I had acquired among these simple people? Was it-- But no. For ever had I
+made the decision. Once resolved, I disliked changing my plans. Burdened
+with a regret which for days I could neither subdue nor remove, I
+adhered unflinchingly to my resolution, and addressed myself to the
+steady contemplation of the future.
+
+Now had commenced for me a new life--a new world socially speaking. The
+quiet reserve and unemotional bearing of the British officer was
+substituted for the frank accost and reckless speech of the island
+trader or wandering mariner. I was prompt, however, to assimilate the
+modish bearing of my companions, and assisted by some natural alertness,
+or perhaps inherited tendencies, soon became undistinguishable from the
+honourables and lordlings of the gun-room. Upon my repose of manner,
+indeed, I was often complimented. "By Jove, old fellow," one of the
+offshoots of the British aristocracy would say, "one would think you had
+been at Rugby or Eton. And I suppose you have never seen England.
+Certainly you have the pull of us in make and shape. I can't think how
+they grow such fellows,--more English than the English,--with your blue
+eyes and fair hair, too, in these God-forsaken regions."
+
+"Because," I said, "I am of as pure English blood as yourself; have been
+reared, and moulded, and surrounded by English people, and have all the
+traditions of the old country at my fingers' end. For the rest, I hold
+that this end of the world is more favourable to the growth of
+Anglo-Saxons, as you call yourselves, than the other."
+
+"Well! it looks like it, I must say," said my new friend. "I only hope
+that when the time comes for fighting, by sea and land--and, mark my
+words, come it will--that you will be found as stanch as I think you
+are."
+
+"Be sure we shall be," said I. "We have inherited the true English
+'grit,' as Americans say. You all said _they_ couldn't fight when their
+war began; when it finished, the world gave a different verdict. We are
+our fathers' sons, neither more nor less. The bull-dog and the game-cock
+still fight to the death in our country. Many a time have I seen it. And
+so will we when our time comes, and when we think it worth our while."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We carried an order from the New South Wales Government to call in at
+Norfolk Island--once the ocean prison of the more desperate felons of
+the old convict rgime, who had been replaced by the descendants of the
+Pitcairn islanders. They, in their turn the descendants of mutinous
+sailors and Tahitian women--now the most moral, God-fearing, and ideally
+perfect race on the face of the earth.
+
+What a miracle had been wrought! Who could have imagined that the last
+days of a rough old sailor, spent among the survivors of a group of
+savage women who had butchered their mates, could have so firmly fixed
+the morale of a whole community that virtue should have indelibly
+impressed itself upon a hundred families. Sydney lies about S.S.W. from
+Kusaie, but to avoid passing through the dangers of the New Hebrides,
+and the reef-studded vicinity of New Caledonia, a direct south course
+with a little easting was decided upon.
+
+We made Norfolk Island, the distance being about two thousand miles, in
+ten days' easy steaming from Strong's Island. This lovely island was
+discovered by Cook in 1774.
+
+A military man writing of it in 1798, draws a comparison between it and
+Sydney much to the disadvantage of the latter. "The air is soft (he
+says) and the soil inexpressibly productive. It is a perfect section of
+paradise. Our officers and their wives were sensibly affected at their
+departure, and what they regarded as banishment to Sydney."
+
+Another officer writing of it in 1847, says: "It is by nature a paradise
+adorned with all the choicest gifts of nature--climate, scenery, and
+vegetable productions; by art and man's policy turned into an earthly
+hell, disfigured by crime, misery, and despair."
+
+The island had been brought into a high state of cultivation by convict
+labour. Its roads, buildings, and gardens were in admirable order. But
+with the establishment of the new rgime--a different race with
+different tasks--much was neglected, a part became decayed and ruinous.
+The island is now partitioned into blocks of fifty acres, of which each
+adult male is allowed one, drawn for and decided by lot.
+
+Whale fishing is the favourite and most profitable occupation. From this
+and the sale of farm produce, which finds a market in Sydney, the
+inhabitants are furnished with all their needs require. Their wants are
+few, simple, and easily supplied.
+
+The old convict town with its huge, dilapidated barracks,
+gaol-officers' quarters, and servants' houses, is situated on the
+south-east edge of the island, where the little Nepean islet gives
+sufficient shelter to form a precarious roadstead available in certain
+winds. The old town is occupied by the Pitcairn islanders--in number
+about three hundred.
+
+Five miles across the island, on its north-eastern shore, and
+communicating with it by a fair road, lies the Melanesian Mission estate
+of a thousand acres. Sloping gently down to a low cliff and a rocky
+shore, the land is an undulating meadow, broken by ravines, and covered
+with a thick sward of conch grass or "doubh," said to have been imported
+from India, whence we drew our chief food supplies so many a year ago.
+Nothing more beautiful in a state of nature had ever been seen, I
+thought, when I first cast my admiring eyes on it. Here and there
+gigantic, graceful pines (_Araucaria excelsa_) stood in stately groves.
+Higher up on the flanks of Mount Pitt (a thousand feet above) grow the
+lemon and guava, cotton and wild tobacco. The island is nine hundred
+miles from Sydney and thirteen hundred and fifty from Cape Pillar,
+Tasmania. The Nepean and Phillip Islands lie to the south of the main
+island.
+
+We were in such a hurry to see the famous island and still more famous
+islanders, that we omitted a precaution which had been earnestly
+impressed upon us the day before. This was not to attempt to land unless
+we had a Pitcairner to steer. When the long swell of the Pacific rolls
+in upon the shallow beaches of Sydney Bay there is no more dangerous
+place in the world--the roadstead of Madras hardly excepted--than the
+boat harbour at Norfolk Island.
+
+Like most sailors, and man-of-war's men in particular, the crew was
+reckless and confident. For myself, I was a fair hand in a boat, and had
+mixed in so many cases of touch-and-go, where all hands would have fed
+the sharks in a few more minutes, that I had lost any sense of caution
+that I might have originally possessed. As we neared the shore, rising
+and falling upon the tremendous billows, which told of a scarce passed
+gale, I felt a sense of exhilaration to which I had been long a
+stranger. A party of the islanders, seeing a boat leave the ship, had
+come down to watch our landing, apparently with interest. As we came
+closer I noticed them talking rapidly to one another, and occasionally
+waving their arms to one side or the other as if to direct our steering.
+There were several women in the group, but as we neared the landing my
+attention was rivetted upon a girl who stood out some distance from the
+others at the end of a rocky point, which jutted beyond the narrow
+beach.
+
+I had seen strikingly beautiful faces and faultless forms among the
+island girls, as all unconscious, they threw themselves into attitudes
+so graceful and unstudied that a sculptor would have coveted them for
+models. Among these children of nature, roaming at will through their
+paradisal isles, the perfection of the human form had doubtless been
+developed. But there was a subtle charm about this girl, as she stood
+with bare feet beside the plashing wave,--a statuesque presentment of
+nobility, courage, and refinement which I had never before recognised in
+living woman. Tall and slender of frame, she yet possessed the rounded
+outlines which, in all island women, promise a fuller development in the
+matured stage of womanhood. Her features were delicately regular; in her
+large dark eyes there was an expression of strong interest, deepening
+almost into fear, as she gazed at our incoming boat. She had bent
+slightly forward, and stood poised on her rock as if waiting for a
+signal to plunge into the boiling surf. Her complexion was so fair that,
+but for her attitude, which spoke her a daughter of the sea, one which
+no mortal born away from the music of the surges could have assumed, I
+might have taken her for an Englishwoman.
+
+"In the name of all the divine maidens since Nausicaa" (I had not quite
+forgotten my _Odyssey_, rusty though was my Greek) "who can she be?"
+thought I.
+
+At this point my reflections and conjectures came to an abrupt end, as,
+indeed, nearly did also "the fever called living" in my particular case.
+I felt the boat rise heavenwards on the back of a tremendous roller. The
+islanders shouted as though to warn us of danger, the steersman gave the
+tiller a wrong turn, or omitted to give it the right one, and the next
+moment the boat was buried beneath an avalanche of foam, with crew and
+passengers struggling for their lives. I could swim well, that is, of
+course, comparatively, for the difference between the best performance
+of a white man--well practised from youth though he be--and of an
+islander is as that of a dog and a fish. Still, having risen to the
+surface, I made no doubt but that I could easily gain a landing. In this
+I was deceived. As in other spots, the constant surf concealed a
+treacherous undertow against which the ordinary swimmer is powerless.
+Again and again did I gain foothold, to be swept back by the resistless
+power of the backward current. Each time I became weaker, and at length,
+after a long fruitless struggle, I closed my eyes and resigned myself to
+my fate. Borne backward and half fainting, I saw the whole party of
+natives in the water mingling with the crew, who, like myself, had been
+making desperate efforts to reach the landing.
+
+My senses were leaving me; darkness was before my eyes, when dimly, as
+in a dream, I seemed to mark the girl upon the rock plunge with the
+gliding motion of a seal into the boiling foam. Her bosom shone as with
+outstretched arms she parted the foaming tide, her short under-dress,
+reaching only to the knees, offered no impediment to the freedom of her
+limbs. I felt soft arms around me. A cloud of dusky hair enveloped me.
+Strains of unearthly music floated in my ears. It was the dirge of the
+mermaidens, as they wail over the drowned sailor and bear him with song
+and lament to his burial cavern. All suddenly it ceased.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The mid-day sun had pierced the roof and side of the cottage wherein I
+was lying upon a couch, softly matted. When I awoke I looked around.
+Surely I had been drowned, and must be dead and gone! How, then, was I
+once more in a place where the sun shone, where there were mats and
+signs of ordinary life? I closed my eyes in half-denial of the evidences
+of my so-called senses. Then, as I raised myself with difficulty, the
+door opened and a man entered.
+
+He was a tall, grandly developed Pitcairner, one of the men who had been
+on board the night before. His face was dark, with the tint of those
+races which, though far removed from the blackness of the Ethiop, are
+yet distinct from the pure white family of mankind. But his eyes,
+curiously, were of bright and distinct blue, in hereditary transmission,
+doubtless, from that ancestor who had formed one of the historic
+mutineers of the _Bounty_.
+
+"You've had a close shave, Hilary. That's your name, I believe. A trifle
+more salt water and you'd have been with the poor chap that's drowned.
+We got all the crew out but him."
+
+"I thought I _was_ drowned," I replied, "but I begin to perceive that
+I'm alive. I see you're of the same opinion, so I suppose it's all
+right."
+
+"It's not a thing to laugh at," the Pitcairner said gravely. "God saw
+fit to save you this time. To Him and Miranda you owe your thanks for
+being where you are now."
+
+"There are people in Sydney," I said, "who will be foolish enough to be
+glad of it, and after I have a little time to think, I daresay I shall
+be pleased myself. But who is Miranda, and how did she save me?"
+
+"Miranda Christian, my cousin, is the girl you saw standing on the rock.
+She had a strong fight of it to get you in, and but for one of us going
+on each side neither of you would have come out. We had been hard at it
+trying to save the crew, and nearly left it too late. She was just about
+done."
+
+"I shall be uneasy till I thank her. What a brave girl! And what am I to
+call you?"
+
+"Fletcher Quintal, and her cousin," the islander replied, drawing
+himself up and looking at me with a steady gaze. "You won't see her till
+the afternoon. She has gone home to rest after staying with you till you
+came to. My sister, Dorcas, will bring you food directly, and perhaps
+you'd better rest yourself too till sundown. Then some of us will pay
+you a visit. Good morning."
+
+A pleasant-faced damsel, with the sparkling eyes and perfect teeth of
+the race, came in shortly afterwards, who smilingly informed me that her
+name was Dorcas Quintal, and that her cousin Miranda had told her she
+was not to talk much to me.
+
+However, during the time occupied in making a creditable lunch--all
+things considered,--I succeeded in convincing her that I was strong
+enough for a decent dose of gossip, in the course of which I learned
+several interesting pieces of information about Miranda, who certainly
+had posed as my Guardian Angel in the late accident. She was, according
+to Dorcas, the leader in all sports and pastimes, and also the most
+learned and accomplished damsel on the island. "She sang and played in
+their church choir. She had read all the poets in the world," Dorcas
+believed. "She could recite pages and pages of poetry and history.
+Altogether she was a wonderful girl to be born and brought up in such a
+place as Norfolk Island, where we never see any one"--here Dorcas
+wreathed her lips into an expressive pout--"that is, except captains of
+ships and strangers like yourself."
+
+"So she is quite perfect," I said, "alike on land and sea. I can vouch
+for the last. I suppose she can pull an oar and is quite at home in a
+boat?"
+
+"Indeed she is," answered Dorcas, warming up. "She can sail a cutter
+with any man on the island, and steer a whaleboat besides. You should
+see her standing up with the big steer oar in those tiny hands of hers."
+
+"So, then, she has no faults?" I queried, a little mischievously.
+
+The girl smiled. "I suppose we have all some here as in other places.
+She is rather proud and quiet, the other girls say. I never saw it, and
+if there is anything else you must find it out for yourself. And now, as
+you have finished eating and drinking, I must go. Miranda will be here
+by and by."
+
+"Only one word, Dorcas," said I, as she turned towards the doorway. "How
+many admirers has she--all the young men in the island, I suppose?"
+
+"Only one," she replied, impressively, "my brother, Fletcher Quintal. He
+would die for her."
+
+"And she?"
+
+The girl paused before replying, and gazed earnestly at me.
+
+"She says she will never marry." And with that she passed out and left
+me to my meditations.
+
+I must have been fatigued, even bruised and battered by my conflict with
+sea and shore, as I felt a kind of lassitude creep over me, and
+presently fell into a dreamless sleep, which lasted till the sun was low
+and the dimness of the light told me that the day had passed.
+
+I raised myself and saw Miranda sitting on a low stool near the window,
+or the aperture which served for one. As I turned, she smiled and came
+towards me, putting out her hand for me to take, and gazing into my face
+with a frank pleasure of the unspoiled woman of the woods and fields. "I
+have to thank you for my life," I said, as I pressed her hand warmly.
+"It is of no great value to any one, as things have been going lately,
+but being such as it is, you have my warmest gratitude. I should hardly
+have changed for the worse if I had been lying beside poor Bill Dacre."
+
+"You must not talk in that mocking way," she said, with a pained
+expression like that of a hurt child. "God has given us all a life to
+use for some good purpose. Surely you have friends? perhaps a mother and
+sisters, who would weep when they heard you were lying under the waves?"
+
+"You are right, Miranda, and I will not talk foolishly again; but I
+thank you with my whole heart for your noble courage in risking your
+life to save mine. I wonder now how we both got to land, in spite of
+that beastly undertow?"
+
+"I never could have done it without help," she said. "I was nearly
+exhausted, yet I did not like to let you go, when Fletcher Quintal and
+Peter Mills, who had each brought out a man, swam in again, and we came
+in between them."
+
+"You seem to be quite at home in the water," I said. "I thought I could
+swim, and at Strong's Island and other places could hold my own with the
+natives pretty well. But I found my mistake here."
+
+"Of course we all swim well," she replied, smiling, "and know how to
+manage a boat. It would be curious if we did not; there is little else
+to do, in Norfolk Island, except when we are working in the fields. Our
+life is sometimes dull, I must allow."
+
+"I hear that you can do all sorts of other things," I said. "That you
+are the chief musician and teacher, besides being commander of the
+fleet."
+
+"Dorcas has been chattering, I am afraid," she answered, while a blush
+rose to her brow, tingeing the pallor of her ivory cheek with faint
+carmine. "I certainly have a variety of occupations, and very fortunate
+it is! Otherwise, I don't know what would happen to me, for I am
+scarcely as contented as my cousins and the other girls on the island."
+
+"It is the old story," I said. "Now, why should you not be contented on
+this lovely island where you have all you could wish for in the
+world--perfect freedom, a matchless climate, exercise, adventure, the
+love of your kinsfolk, everything that satisfies the heart of woman?"
+
+"Everything necessary to satisfy a woman's heart!" she said, rising and
+walking to where the casement admitted a view of the heaving deep with
+the _Rosario_ lying on and off. "Can you look at the boundless ocean
+with its thousand paths to the cities of the earth and not wish to roam?
+To see the glories of the old world, all the varied richly-coloured life
+of ancient nations that I have read of and see in my dreams? Do you
+think men only are impatient of a hemmed-in life? It is not so. Women
+have their longings for a wider range, a larger sphere; and yet I am
+perhaps the only girl on the island that feels what I have described."
+
+"You must have read much," I said, rather startled at this burst of
+feeling from the lips of a Norfolk Island damsel--a child of the most
+contented community in the world. "These strange yearnings must have
+been awakened in you through the word-painting of these wicked authors."
+
+"And why not?" she answered, with heightened colour and flashing eye.
+"That my world is one of books I do not deny. I have daily tasks and
+occupations, but my evenings are my own, and in them I read and muse.
+Then this little island, with its patient, primitive people, seems to
+fade away. I spend hours in Italy, where I revel in Florence, the Pitti
+Palace, the Arno, and roam the streets of the Eternal City amid the
+monuments of the world's grandest era, their very decay 'an Empire's
+dust.' I fall asleep often when reclining on the banks of 'Tiber, Father
+Tiber, to whom the Romans pray.' But, oh! if I begin to wander away in
+the track of my visions I shall never stop. And you," she continued with
+an eager glance, "you, who have seen men and cities, are you contented
+to linger away your life under cocoa-palms and bread-fruit trees, taking
+in glorious ease among simple savages until you become one yourself in
+all but the colour? Is this what you were born and reared and educated
+for?"
+
+As the girl thus spoke, with head upraised and exalted mien, her
+wondrous eyes flashing with almost unearthly light, her mobile
+lineaments changing with each varying mood, she looked in her strange
+and unfamiliar beauty like some virgin prophetess of the days of old,
+rousing her countrymen to deeds of patriotic valour or self-sacrificing
+heroism.
+
+All enthusiasm is contagious, more especially when the enthusiast is
+fair to look upon, and belongs to that sex for, or on account of which,
+so much of the world's strife has resulted.
+
+For the first time I began seriously to ask myself what motives had led
+me to waste so large a portion of my youth in heedless wandering among
+these fairy isles. What were my aims in life? What did I propose to
+myself? As I looked at the girl's face, aglow with the fire of a noble
+ambition, I felt humbled and ashamed.
+
+"You have spoken truly, Miranda," I replied, after a long pause, during
+which my fair questioner looked with a far-away gaze across the ocean
+plain, now quenching its thousand shifting gleams in the quick-falling
+tropic night. "I have been idly careless and unheeding of the future,
+satisfied with the day's toil and the day's pleasure. But I am going
+back to my people in Australia; there I shall begin a new life. It is a
+land of duty, of labour, and its enduring reward. There I shall renew
+the tension of my moral fibre which has been too long relaxed. But you
+must not be too hard on me. I have had to face losses, dangers, and
+misfortunes. I have been wrecked; I lost everything I had in the world.
+I have been ill; have been wounded; and, but for some of those simple
+islanders you seem to despise, I should not have been a living man
+to-day."
+
+"I do not despise them," she said; "of course every one knows that we
+are descended from those of Tahiti. I only say that they are not fit
+companions for white men--I mean of educated white men who in the end
+become as bad as they are--even worse--much worse. But tell me about
+your being ill. And who tended you? Was it a woman?"
+
+"I will tell you all about it to-morrow if you will walk with me and
+show me some of the scenery of this beautiful island of yours. But it is
+a long story, and it is too late to begin to-night."
+
+"I should like it above all things," she said frankly, "though you must
+have seen so many grand places in your roamings that our poor landscapes
+will hardly interest you."
+
+"Much depends on the guide," I said, as I gazed admiringly at her
+eloquent countenance.
+
+"I know that," she answered, meeting my too ardent gaze with perfect
+unconsciousness of any hidden meaning. "They tell me I am the best guide
+on the island, and indeed I should be, for my father and I were never
+tired of exploring and finding out traces of the old occupation by the
+Sydney Government, and many curious discoveries we made. So I will come
+here after breakfast to-morrow."
+
+She was true to her appointment, and then commenced a series of
+delightful rambles which, perhaps, I more truly enjoyed than many later
+and more pretentious travels.
+
+In despite of Miranda's depreciation of her lovely isle we found endless
+excuses for interest and admiration. It was truly a wonderful little
+"kingdom by the sea." Scraped along the side of a hill would be one of
+the beautiful roads constructed by the forced labour of the convicts
+which at one time almost filled the island. Rising from the valley slope
+were gigantic ferns, broad-leaved palms, lemons, oranges, guavas, all
+originally imported, but now flourishing in the wildest luxuriance in
+the rich soil and semi-tropical climate; while above all, stately and
+columnar, rose the great Araucaria peculiar to the island--the Norfolk
+Island pine of the colonists.
+
+Hand in hand we roamed together through this Eden amid the main, as
+though our great progenitors had again been transplanted to this
+wondrous wild--a latter day Adam, by whose side smiled a sinless
+Eve--pure as her prototype, and yet informed of much of the lore which
+men had wrested from the rolling ages. Together we explored the gloomy
+corridors and echoing halls of the ruinous prison houses--once the dark
+abodes of sorrow, torment, and despair unutterable.
+
+Miranda shuddered at the thought that these dismal cells and courtyards
+had echoed to the cries of criminals under the lash--to the clanking of
+chains--had even witnessed the death penalty inflicted on the murderer
+and the mutineer.
+
+Mute and terrible witnesses were they to the guilt to which human nature
+may descend--to the abysmal depths of despair into which the felon and
+the outcast may be hurled, when, hopeless of help from God or man, he
+abandons himself to all the baser instincts.
+
+We seldom lingered amid these sullen retreats, around which Miranda
+always declared she heard sighs and groanings, sobs, and even shrieks,
+as though the spirits of those who had suffered, and mourned, and died
+amidst the horrors unspeakable of prison life still lingered amid the
+ruins of their place of torment.
+
+How strange, well-nigh impossible, it even seemed to me that the very
+earth, the dumb witness of crime immeasurable, was not polluted
+irredeemably by the deeds that she had perforce endured and condoned.
+And now--stranger than aught that dreaming poet or seer imagined--that
+this Inferno should have been transmuted into an Arcadia, purer and more
+stainless than the fabled land of old, and peopled by the most
+obediently moral and conscientious family of mankind that had ever
+gathered the fruits of the earth since the days of our first parents.
+
+Day after day followed of this charmed life--magical, unreal, only in
+that it transcended all my other experiences in the degree that the
+glamour of fairyland and the companionship of the queen of Elfland may
+have exceeded the memorials of Ercildoune. If he was enchanted, I was
+spellbound even as true Thomas. Never had I met with a companion who
+combined all the charm of womanhood--the grace and joyousness of
+girlhood's most resistless period--with the range of thought and
+intellectual progress which this singular girl, amid her lonely isle and
+restricted companionship, had explored. And withal, she had remained in
+her almost infantine unconsciousness of evil--her virginal, instinctive
+repulsion of all things forbidden and debarred--like a being of
+another planet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Naturally an end arrived to this blissful state of things. The
+man-of-war after a few days was compelled to continue her voyage and
+perform her allotted duties, which comprehended surveys of uncharted
+coast-lines and suspected rocks. I had to choose between going on to
+Sydney and remaining in this charmed isle. And here inclination and
+duty appeared to draw different ways with equal strength. I was
+naturally anxious to return to my birth-place, my family, and friends.
+My feelings of home-sickness had returned with redoubled strength after
+being long in abeyance. But all such doubts and distrusts were swept
+away like storm wrack before the swelling surges of Miranda's own isle.
+I was fain to yield to the resistless force of the passion which now
+dominated, nay, consumed me. True, I had not as yet definitely assured
+myself that this purest pearl of womanhood was within my grasp. I had
+made no proffer of my affections. I had not, in so many words, solicited
+the priceless gift of hers. But I was not so unskilled in affairs of the
+heart as to mistake many a sign and symbol from Love's own alphabet,
+denoting that the outworks of the citadel were yielding, and that the
+fortress would ere long open gate and drawbridge to the invader.
+
+True to nature's own teaching, Miranda had not scrupled to confess and
+dilate upon the pleasure my companionship afforded her, to declare that
+never before in her life had she been half so happy, to wonder if my
+sisters would not die of joy when I returned, to chide me for my long
+absence from them and from such a home as I had often described to her.
+And all this with the steady eye and frank expression of girlish
+pleasure, which a less unsophisticated damsel would scarcely have
+acknowledged without conscious blushes and downcast eyes.
+
+Miranda, on the other hand, stated her sensations calmly and fearlessly,
+her wondrous eyes meeting mine with all the trustful eagerness of a
+happy child, as if it was the most natural thing in the world. "You see,
+Hilary," she would say, laying her hand lightly on my arm, and looking
+up in an appealing manner, "I have never met any one before who seems to
+understand my feelings as you do apparently by instinct. You have
+travelled and been in other places besides the islands, and you have
+read books--nearly all those which I have. You know that story in the
+_Arabian Nights_ about the prince that was changed into a bird? He knew
+that he was a prince, yet he was condemned to be dumb, and was unable to
+convey his feelings, because to all the world he was only a bird.
+
+"I sometimes think we Pitcairn girls live the life of birds--like that
+one," and she pointed to a soaring white-winged sea-bird, which
+presently darted downwards, falling like a stone upon the blue ocean
+wave. "We swim and fish, we are almost more on the sea than the land, we
+sleep on the land like that white bird, walk a little, talk a
+little,--that is our whole life. I think the bird has the best of it, as
+she can fly and we cannot."
+
+"But you all seem happy and contented," I said, "you and your cousins."
+
+"_They_ are, but I seem to have been born under a different star. I must
+have inherited some of the restless, adventurous spirit of my ancestor,
+Fletcher Christian.
+
+"The feeling of unrest and the desire to see the world--the wonderful,
+ancient, beautiful world of which we, in this island prison, for lovely
+as it is, it is but a prison for free souls--becomes so intense at times
+that I almost dread lest I should end my life like his."
+
+"And in what way was that?" I asked. "God forbid you should ever do a
+deed so terrible," I said.
+
+"Do you not know? He used to go every day to the top of a high cliff on
+the south side of Pitcairn to gaze over the ocean--as I have done
+hundreds of times--thinking, perhaps, of the wonderlands beyond, where
+he had forfeited the right to live by his own act; and--and one day he
+threw himself over the cliff, and they found his body on the rocks
+below. Poor Fletcher! I can partly understand his feelings."
+
+This was but one of our many conversations, always fascinating to me,
+as affording the rare privilege of exploring a mind naturally of high
+intelligence, developed by patient thought and a wide range of
+reading,--the island library, enriched by many generous gifts, being by
+no means a poor one,--guarded from deterioration by an exquisite natural
+refinement, yet withal clear and limpid as the transparent seas which
+encircled her home, where the more deeply the eye penetrated the more
+precious were the treasures disclosed.
+
+So it came to pass that the _Rosario_ sailed without me. The Captain and
+my jolly comrades of the gun-room chaffed me about what they called my
+imprudent attachment. "You'll have to turn Pitcairner," they said, "and
+settle down after old Nobbs has spliced you upon a fifty-acre patch,
+where you can grow sweet potatoes, yams, and maize to the end of your
+days. Surely a fellow like you, with a family to go back to, has
+something better in view than that!"
+
+"I shall not stay on the island," I said, "I intend to live in
+Australia, perhaps near Sydney."
+
+"Then your island princess will run away and leave you disconsolate.
+They can't live away from their people and where they were brought up.
+Some of them insisted on going back to Pitcairn, and are there now. They
+could not be persuaded from it. They had to let them go. They would have
+died else."
+
+"I have resolved," I said. "I will take all risks. You shall all come
+and see us in Sydney. We will live at North Shore, and have a yacht
+built on the lines of the _Leonora_. Adios!"
+
+So we parted. The _Rosario_ got up steam, and once more I watched the
+black cloud of smoke pouring from her funnels and the waves breaking as
+she moved majestically across the bright-hued ocean.
+
+Up to the last moment my simple and warm-hearted friends on the island
+had serious doubts as to whether I was not going off in the _Rosario_.
+They could hardly understand how I could prefer remaining as their guest
+and friend when the glory and dignity of a man-of-war--their highest
+expression of maritime splendour--were open to me.
+
+They had, it is true, implored me to stay with them for a few months
+longer--the young men were equally pressing with the older members of
+the community. With artless candour the girls promised that if I would
+stay Miranda should be my constant companion, and, except on Sundays,
+when, as their chief musician and organist, she could not naturally be
+spared, I should have a monopoly of her society.
+
+"You seem to like her so much," Dorcas Quintal repeatedly exclaimed.
+"And I am certain she likes you more than any one she has ever seen. The
+worst of it is that she will be so sorry when you have to go away. Clara
+Young nearly died when her friend went away. That was two years ago. But
+she got over it in time, and now she is happily married. But she _did_
+try to drown herself one day, only we were too quick for her."
+
+"It is a bad thing to have strangers for friends," I said, "if it may
+end so tragically when they leave. I wonder you entertain such dangerous
+visitors."
+
+"I suppose we can't help it," the girl replied, laughingly. "It is so
+pleasant to talk with men who know the great world we can only read
+about. We just take our chance. We have plenty to do, and that prevents
+us from fretting too much. I daresay you will hear a little crying
+to-night. We are all very sorry the big ship is gone."
+
+"It's the old, old story, Dorcas! Girls are a good deal alike all the
+world over, I suppose, in many of their ways. But you Pitcairners are
+certainly different in some respects to any women I know anywhere."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked the girl, eagerly. "I know we are simple, and
+have never been taught very much."
+
+"It isn't that. I will tell you before I go, or rather, I will tell
+Miranda, and she shall tell you what I say."
+
+So, with the full approbation of friends and relations of every degree
+of relationship, and, what was of more consequence, with the good-will
+of the spiritual pastor and master of the island, whose authority was
+absolute and unquestioned, Miranda and I pursued our untroubled way. In
+this wondrous Arcadia there were no jealousies, no scandals, no asking
+of intentions, no fiery, disappointed aspirants, no infuriated
+brothers,--these obstacles to pure and true love were evidently the
+outcome of a higher or a lower stage of civilisation. No evil
+consequences had ever occurred from unrestricted freedom of intercourse
+between the young people since the formation of the community. No such
+result was regarded as possible. Immutably fixed in my own course, I
+knew that nothing--humanly speaking--could affect my unalterable
+resolve. I had discovered a pearl of womanhood, matchless in beauty of
+mind and body, combining the higher mental qualities, indeed, with such
+physical perfection as no girl reared under less fortunate conditions
+was likely to possess. With regard to the future, if she consented to
+link her fate with mine I was ready to take all the risks of fortune.
+The fickle goddess has always favoured the brave, and with Miranda at my
+side I felt that I could lead the forlorn hopes of desperate endeavour,
+or endure uncomplainingly the toil and self-denial of the humblest
+station. I had, it is true, led a careless, somewhat epicurean life in
+the past, surrendering myself perhaps too readily to the charm of island
+life. But this was of the past, and the half-instinctive folly period of
+youth. Henceforth I would essay the culture of the mental qualities with
+which I had been reasonably gifted, turning to account also that very
+sound and thorough early tuition through which I had fortunately passed.
+Thus equipped, and with a helpmate at once loving and practical--devoted
+to duty and the highest forms of unselfish charity--ambitious only for
+intellectual experience and development--I felt that hope became
+certainty and success a mere matter of detail. After the departure of
+the _Rosario_ I became almost a son by adoption among the elders of the
+community. I learned to accommodate myself to their ways, after a
+fashion which was rendered more easy by my years of familiarity with
+island life. At the same time I was careful not to infringe in the
+slightest degree upon their peculiar customs, or to shock those
+religious prejudices which were so earnestly accepted in the community.
+It was taken for granted that I would settle among them in right of my
+bride. If I decided to marry Miranda, or any other island maiden, I
+should be put in possession of a landed estate of fifty acres, where I
+might dream away life in a round of labour that was half recreation,
+wandering amid the island groves, reclining under giant ferns or lofty
+pines, bathing in crystal founts or clear-hued seas at dawn or under the
+yellow moon. Passing contentedly from youth to middle age, from that
+half-way stage to a later span of life, which in this enchanted land
+implied little or no diminution of natural powers. Should it be so?
+
+This question I had asked Miranda more than once. But she would not
+consent to take it seriously. One day, however, I compelled her to
+listen, though she had again declared that we were so happy as we were
+that no change could be for the better, possibly for the worse--even.
+
+"Then, Miranda," I answered, "I must leave the island. Did we not hear
+from the last whaler that called in for fresh provisions that my old
+friend--the friend of the family, Captain Carryall, was to touch here in
+the _Florentia_?" He was the best known, the most popular of all the
+skippers next to Captain Hayston. Unlike him, however, his reputation
+was spotless, while for fair dealing and adherence to his promises his
+fame was proverbial. "Shall I go with him?" I said, "and must I go
+alone?"
+
+"And would you leave me?" she asked, imploringly--her dark eyes turned
+towards my face in a passion of reproachful tenderness, of which she
+herself scarce understood the meaning, "Oh! I thought once that I could
+let you go, though it has been life and happiness untold having you to
+talk to and read with. I fancied I should only mourn for you for a
+while--like the other island girls who weep and lament, and then dry
+their tears and dance and sing as if nothing had happened. But, oh! It
+is not so with me. They always say the Fletcher-Christians are
+different. I shall die! I shall die! I know I shall."
+
+And with that she cast herself on my neck, sobbing as though her heart
+would break. In the same breath declaring that she would never consent
+to spoil my life by marriage with a poor savage island girl, but a few
+degrees superior to the women of Pingelap and Ocean Island whom she had
+so often despised.
+
+By degrees I persuaded her to listen to my pleadings, and then calmly
+set before her my plans for the future. We must be married here, and
+after remaining on the island, living the idyllic life we were revelling
+in now, we would sail for Sydney in the _Florentia_, or some other
+vessel, and there begin life in earnest. Some employment would be found,
+doubtless, which would pave the way, by which I might make a serious
+effort towards a career, perhaps a competency in the future, or even a
+fortune.
+
+I had but little difficulty in carrying out my plan. The elders of the
+community, the relations and friends of Miranda, were overjoyed at the
+prospect of her marriage with a person of my position, who might also be
+enabled to do them many a good turn if I settled in Sydney, a port with
+which they had close business relations. I found, too, that I was not
+altogether an unknown personage. Some of the young men who had made
+voyages in whaleships had heard of my companionship with Captain
+Hayston. However, it would seem that all the natives whom they had met
+had given a good account of me as a fair dealer, and, moreover, generous
+in my treatment of them,--an apparently unimportant matter at the time,
+but serious enough now. Miranda told me afterwards, that had it been
+otherwise nothing would have induced her guardians to give their
+consent, or her to defy their decision.
+
+As it was, however, all seemed _couleur de rose_. No great preparations
+were needed. The simple island fashion was not encumbered with any great
+multiplication of garments. On the happy day Miranda was escorted to the
+modest building which did duty for a church by a band of white-robed
+maidens, in whose dark hair was wreathed the crimson blossoms of the
+coral plant and the hibiscus, with little other adornment but nature's
+furnishing in the flower-time of life. My comrades were selected from
+the younger men of the island, among whom I had always taken care to
+stand well, joining in their sports, and entering as an equal competitor
+their athletic contests. I was therefore looked upon as a most desirable
+acquaintance, able to hold my own, moreover, in all manly
+accomplishments (except swimming), and much esteemed for a gift of
+relating adventures in strange lands, and describing the foreign manners
+and customs with which a roving life had made me familiar.
+
+It might have been imagined that a girl so singularly gifted and
+attractive as Miranda would have had lovers in abundance, by whom a
+successful aspirant like myself would be regarded with jealousy.
+Unlikely as it may appear I observed no feeling of this kind. In that
+strange society, the passions which rage so fiercely in more civilised
+communities appeared to have lost their force, or to flow with the
+peaceful motion of the incoming tide rather than the resistless rush of
+a mountain torrent, which love, hate, jealousy, and envy in other lands
+so often resemble. The young men admired Miranda, indeed, worshipped her
+from afar. But they seemed rather elated by her good fortune, as it so
+appeared to them, than enviously disposed, and had no thought of other
+than the warmest friendship for their more fortunate companion. Even
+Fletcher Quintal, who might have been expected to view with dislike, if
+not a stronger sensation, my marriage with his favourite cousin, had
+apparently no feeling of this sort. He certainly expressed none, but
+congratulated me with all the warmth which a brother might be supposed
+to exhibit at the marriage of his best loved sister with his dearest
+friend. Truly it _was_ the long lost rediscovered Arcadia. There were
+moments when I doubted whether it was wise to leave a land where care
+was unknown; where want, with its attendant evils, had never been heard
+of; where there were no rich men to envy; no bad ones to fear; no poor
+to despise; where no one died but of old age or mishap; whence all the
+ills that flesh is heir to had, like the snakes of Ireland, been
+banished by some good genius, and only the gifts of virtue, contentment,
+and regulated industry remained. But there was wild blood in my veins,
+long dormant as it had lain. The murmur of the ocean seemed to call me
+with a tone of magical power. I longed for the wave-music once more--for
+the voyage which was to speed me to my birthland. I hurried on the
+preparations for our wedding, and, lingering though were all the slow
+sweet hours, endless the days, almost tedious the soft starlight glow of
+the summer nights, the day of days at last dawned that was to herald the
+happiness of a life-time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Our small domain had been carefully measured and marked out for us. A
+cottage had been built, thatched with palm leaves, floored with the soft
+mats of the island, simply furnished, and, as it happened, near to a
+bubbling spring, and shaded by the wondrous wild orange, which here
+grows almost to the height and girth of a forest tree. It happened to be
+the flower-time of these charming fruit bearers, so that wreaths and
+garlands of the blossom sacred to Hymen were plentiful and profuse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+EPITHALAMIUM
+
+
+Our marriage day! Oh, day of days! Dawn of a new existence! All nature
+seemed to sympathise with us in our supernal joy. For us, for us alone
+in all the world the streamlets murmured, the breezes whispered
+together, the wavelets plashed musically, the blue sky glowed, the sun
+shone goldingly. The venerable pastor of the community--he who had
+watched over every man and woman present from infancy, who had
+christened, and married, and buried the whole population of the island
+as they require these offices--read the time-honoured service of the
+Church of England, which was followed with deepest reverential attention
+by all present. When he blessed our union in the solemn language of the
+ritual familiar to me in the days of my childhood, every head was bowed,
+each woman's eye was wet with heart-felt sympathy and warmest affection
+for their erst-while playmate.
+
+The day was cloudless, a breeze at times sighed through the fragrant
+foliage of the grove wherein the little church had been built. The
+wavelets murmured on the beach, and the unresting surges seemed but to
+exchange loving memories of coral islands and crystal seas, of waving
+palms and the green gladness of tropic forests, of maidens,
+feather-crowned and flower-bejewelled, dancing on silver strands beneath
+the full-orbed midnight moon, or gliding, a laughing bevy of syrens,
+beneath the translucent wave. No sullen, dirge-like refrain on that
+paradisal day brought from the ocean voices the memory of drifting
+wrecks, of stormy seas, of drowned seamen--no hint of danger, of
+despair, of pestilence, and death; and yet all these phases of
+experience I had known and reckoned with even in my short life.
+
+No; these and kindred ills were forgotten, banished from earth and sea.
+On this blissful morn the golden age of the earth seemed to have
+returned. Recalling the half-forgotten classics of my boyhood, I could
+fancy that I saw fauns peeping through the leaves of the orange grove,
+that the ages had reverted to the freshness of the elder world, when the
+flush of the fair Arcadian life informed all things with divinity.
+
+And Miranda, my bride of brides! what words can describe her as she
+stood, with an expression half-timid, half-rapt, and inspired, before
+the humble altar that day? Her simple dress of virgin white which but
+slightly concealed while it outlined the curves of her statuesque form;
+her large dark eyes, which had often appeared to me to hold a shade of
+melancholy, were now irradiated by the love-light which she, in the
+purity and innocence of her heart, made no attempt to conceal. Her soft,
+abundant tresses had been gathered up into becoming form and classic
+simplicity, and, save a wreath of scarlet berries and the traditional
+orange blossom, she wore no ornament. As all unconscious of her maiden
+loveliness she stood beside me, with her head raised and an expectant
+smile which disclosed her pearly teeth, she seemed to my enraptured gaze
+a daughter of the wave,--no mortal maiden, but a being compact of air
+and sea and sky, visible but beneath the moonbeams, and unrevealed to
+the dwellers of the garish day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We had been but a month wedded; our simple home, our tiny domain, our
+forest rambles, our sea-baths at dawn and eve, as yet contented
+us--filled us with all fullest delight in which mortal beings can revel
+beneath this ethereal dome. And yet the spirit of unrest, the veritable
+serpent of the world's fairest Aidenns, gradually found means to
+discover himself.
+
+Miranda and I had, indeed, begun to discuss our projected voyage to
+Sydney, and I had many times described to her an ideal home on one of
+the thousand and one bays which render the northern shore of the
+unrivalled Sydney harbour matchless in beauty and convenience for those
+who, like myself, have salt water in their blood. She agreed with me,
+that with a boat, a garden, a bath-house, and a cottage built of the
+beautiful white, pink-veined sandstone, which is so abundant beneath and
+around Sydney, existence might be endured away from her island home,
+with the aid of books and the inspiring idea of the coming fortune.
+
+"And even if we do not make money," she said, "as people call it--what a
+strange idea it seems to me, who have hardly ever seen any--we shall be
+happy. I can't imagine people who are married and love each other ever
+being unhappy. Then your mother and sisters--I am so much afraid of
+them. They will regard me as a kind of savage, I am sure; and, indeed,
+compared with them, or real civilised people, I am afraid that I shall
+feel like one. And, oh! shall we ever be happier than we are now? Why
+should we change? Do you think we can come back now and then and visit
+my people? I should break my heart if I thought I should see them no
+more!"
+
+I promised this and other things, doubtless, at the time. But before we
+had completed the conversation about our future life--which indeed
+supplied us with endless subjects of interest--the great island
+wonder-sign appeared. A shout--a rush of excited people past our hut
+told of a ship in sight. We were down at the beach nearly as soon as
+the others, and as a long, low barque came up before the wind, something
+told me that she was the _Florentia_.
+
+A boat--a whaleboat, with a kanaka crew--put off soon after she was at
+anchor, and in the tall man at the steer-oar, whose commanding figure,
+even at that distance, I seemed to know, there was no difficulty in
+identifying our old friend Captain Carryall.
+
+Directly he jumped ashore, a dozen of the islanders dashed into the surf
+and ran the boat up on the beach. Our recognition was mutual.
+
+"Well, young fellow!" he said, "I've been hunting you up half over the
+South Seas. Wherever have you stowed yourself all this time? Why, what a
+man you've grown--a couple of inches taller than me, and I'm no pony.
+Brown as a berry, too! You'll have to come home with me this trip. Your
+old man's beginning to get anxious about you--and you know he's not much
+in that line--and your mother and sisters."
+
+"Captain Carryall," I said, "there's no necessity for more reasons. I'm
+going to Sydney with you if you'll give me a passage."
+
+"Half a dozen if you want it," quoth the jolly sailor. "And now I must
+have a word with my friends. Anybody been married since I was here last;
+no Quintals--no Millses! Mary, how's this? Dorcas--Grace--Mercy Young,
+I'm ashamed of you. And Miranda! Nobody run away with you yet? I see I
+must take you to Sydney and show you at a Government House ball. Then
+they'd see what a Pitcairn girl was like."
+
+"You may do that yet," I said, "for, seriously, Miranda is now Mrs.
+Hilary Telfer. We have been married more than a month."
+
+The captain could not refrain from giving a prolonged whistle at this
+announcement, which certainly appeared to take him by surprise. However,
+he rallied with ease and celerity, and addressing Miranda, whose hand
+he took as he spoke, said, "My dear! let me congratulate the son of my
+old friend, Captain Telfer, upon his marriage with the best, cleverest,
+and prettiest girl I have fallen across in all my wanderings. I don't
+suppose you have any great amount of capital to begin life with; but if
+two young people like you don't manage to find some path to fortune in a
+country like Australia, I'm a Dutchman. He needs to be a good fellow,
+and a man all round, to be worthy of Miranda Christian; but he can't
+help, as the son of his father and his mother, being all that, and more.
+So now, my dear! you must let me kiss you, as your husband's old friend,
+and wish you all happiness."
+
+Miranda blushed as the warm-hearted fellow folded her in his arms, but
+submitted with becoming grace; and leaving her among her young friends,
+he and I strolled away towards our hut to talk over affairs more at
+leisure.
+
+"Well, youngster!" said he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "I suppose
+you've had enough island life for a while, and won't be sorry to see
+Sydney Heads again. Nor I either. I've been out fifteen months this
+time, and that's rather long to be away from one's home and picaninnies.
+They'll be glad to see your face again at Rose Bay, I'll be bound. But
+they certainly will be taken aback when you turn up as a married man.
+Nineteen times out of twenty it's a mistake to tie one's self up for
+life at your age. But all depends upon getting the right woman, and
+Miranda is the one woman in a thousand that a man might be proud to
+marry, whether he was rich or poor, and to work and wear out his life
+for all his days. I've known her since she was a baby, and, taking her
+all round, I don't know her equal anywhere. It seems queer to say so,
+considering her birth and bringing up. But these Pitcairners are well
+known to be the best and finest women, in all womanly ways, that the
+world can show. And your wife is, and has always been, the flower of the
+flock."
+
+I grasped the captain's hand. I knew that I had secured a powerful ally;
+and though I felt so secure in the wisdom of my choice that no
+disapprobation of family and friends would have had power to affect me,
+yet, in such matters, it is well to have a friend at court, and the
+captain's reputation for sense and sagacity stood so high, that I felt
+not only my relatives, but my acquaintances and friends, would be
+strongly swayed by his judgment.
+
+"Now that we've got so far," he said, "you had better make your
+arrangements to sail with me on Sunday morning; this is Thursday, but my
+passengers want to see the island and the people of whom they have heard
+so much."
+
+"Passengers!" I said. "How many? and where from?"
+
+"Well, I picked them up at Honolulu. Half a dozen, and very nice people,
+too. They came in an English yacht that went to San Francisco for them,
+and they wanted to see Australia, and so came with me. They're rather
+big people at home, I believe, though they're very quiet, and give
+themselves no airs."
+
+"Any ladies?"
+
+"There are two married couples, and a young lady, with her brother."
+
+"That's very serious, captain," said I. "I don't quite know how Miranda
+will get on with travelling Englishwomen--they're rather difficult
+sometimes."
+
+"Miranda will get on with any one," answered the captain, with a decided
+air. "She will sit on my right hand, as a bride, and no one in my ship
+will show her less than proper respect. Anyhow, these people are not
+that sort. You'll see she's all ready to start on Sunday morning. 'The
+better the day, the better the deed.'"
+
+So the captain went to pay a visit to the people of the settlement,
+among whom his free, pleasant manner and generous bearing had made him
+most popular. The girls crowded around him, laughing and plying him with
+questions about the commissions he had promised to execute for them,
+and the presents he had brought. These attentions he never omitted. Full
+of curiosity they were, too, about the English ladies on board. "How
+they were dressed?" "How long they would stay in Sydney?" "What they
+would think of the poor Pitcairn girls?" and so on.
+
+With the elders he told of the whaleships he had spoken, and of their
+cargoes of oil--of the Quintals, or Youngs, Mills, or M'Coys who were
+harpooners and boat-steerers on board some of the Sydney whalers, and of
+the chances of their "lay" or share of profit being a good one. Besides
+all this, the captain consented to act as their ambassador to the
+Governor-General in Sydney, and lay before that potentate certain
+defects of their island administration--small, perhaps, in themselves,
+but highly important to the members of an isolated community. In
+addition to all this, he (as I heard afterwards) specially attended to
+my marriage with Miranda, of which he highly approved; telling the old
+pastor and the elders of the community that he had known my father for
+ever so many years; that he was highly respected now, when retired, but
+had been well known in the South Seas and New Zealand many years ago as
+the captain of the _Orpheus_, one of the most successful whalers that
+ever sailed through Sydney Heads.
+
+"Captain Telfer of the _Orpheus_!" said one of the oldest men of the
+group, "I remember him well. I was cast away on Easter Island the time
+the _Harriet_ was wrecked in a hurricane. He gave me a free passage to
+Tahiti, a suit of clothes, and ten dollars when I left the ship. He
+wanted me to finish the voyage with him and go to Sydney. I was sorry
+afterwards I didn't. He was a fine man, and a better seaman never trod
+plank. No wonder Hilary is such a fine chap. I can see the likeness now.
+I don't hold with our young women going off this island in a general
+way, but Miranda is a lucky girl to have Captain Telfer's son for a
+husband." All this the captain told me afterwards with slight
+embellishments and variations of his own.
+
+My reputation had fairly gone before, but this light thrown on my
+parentage placed me in a most exalted position--next to their spiritual
+pastor and master, before whom they bowed in genuine respect and
+reverence. Perhaps there is no man in the whole world more honoured and
+admired in the South Seas than the captain of a ship. And now that the
+name of my father's barque, once pretty well known south of the line,
+had been recalled from the past, every doubt as to the future of Miranda
+and myself was set at rest.
+
+We were invested, so to speak, with the blessing of the whole community,
+and began our modest preparations with added cheerfulness and resolve.
+
+In the afternoon we saw a boat put off from the _Florentia_ and the
+visitors land. They were five in number. We could see them walk over to
+the village, where they were met by some of the principal people and a
+few of the women and girls. We had been making ready for our voyage, and
+having finished our simple meal, sat in the shade of our orange tree,
+near the door, and awaited the strangers whom I judged rightly that
+curiosity and the captain would bring to our dwelling.
+
+In less than an hour's time we saw them strolling along the path which
+led to our nest. As they approached we arose and went to meet them, when
+the captain with all due form introduced us, "The Honourable Mr. and
+Mrs. Craven, Colonel Percival, Mr. Vavasour, and his sister, Miss
+Vavasour." Mrs. Percival had remained on board, as her little boy of
+four or five years old was not well. Miranda, rather to my surprise, was
+perfectly unembarrassed, and talked away to the stranger ladies as if
+she had been accustomed to the society business all her life.
+
+I could see that they were pleased and surprised at her appearance, as
+also gratified with the manner in which she invited them to inspect our
+simple dwelling.
+
+"Oh! what a charming nest of a place--quite a bower of bliss!" cried
+Miss Vavasour. "I declare I will come here when I am married and spend
+my honeymoon. What shade and fragrance combined! What a lovely crystal
+lakelet to bathe in! and I suppose, Mrs. Telfer, you go out fishing in
+that dear canoe? What an ideal life!"
+
+"I quite agree with you and feel quite envious," said Mrs. Craven.
+"Charlie and I have been married too long to have our honeymoon over
+again; but it would have been idyllic, wouldn't it, Charlie?"
+
+"Splendid place to smoke in," assented her husband. "No hounds meet
+nearer than Sydney, though, I presume. Drawback rather, isn't it?"
+
+"You men are always thinking of horses, and hounds or guns," pouted Miss
+Vavasour. "What can one want with them here? What can life offer more
+than this endless summer, this fairy bower, this crystal wave, this air
+which is a living perfume? It is an earthly paradise."
+
+"And the beloved object," added Mrs. Craven, with quiet humour. "You
+have left him out. It would be an incomplete paradise without Adam."
+
+"Oh! here he comes!" exclaimed Miranda (as she told me afterwards), who
+had not been attending to the enthusiastic speech, but was watching
+bird-like for my approach.
+
+"Who? Adam?" said Miss Vavasour, laughingly.
+
+"Oh, no!" answered she, smiling at the apparent absurdity. "You must
+excuse me a little, but I was looking out for Hilary."
+
+"Now, then, ladies!" said the cheerful voice of Captain Carryall, "we
+must get back to our boat. It's dangerous to stop ashore all night,
+isn't it, Miranda? We must leave you to finish your packing. It's a long
+voyage to Sydney, eh? It may be years before you see the island again."
+
+We all went down together to the boat, where the visitors were seen off
+by all the young people of the island, the girls wondering with
+respectful admiration at the English ladies' dresses, hats, boots, and
+shoes--in fact, at everything they did and said as well. It was a
+revelation to them, not that they had any envious feeling about those
+cherished possessions. They had been too well trained for that, and were
+secure in the guidance of their deeply-rooted religious faith and lofty
+moral code. On the other hand, their visitors admired sincerely the
+noble forms and free, graceful bearing of the island maidens, as well as
+the splendid athletic development of the men.
+
+"Here, you Thursday Quintal, come and show these ladies how you can
+handle a steer-oar," called out the captain. "He was the boat-steerer on
+board the _Florentia_ one voyage, and steered in the pulling race for
+whaleboats at the regatta on anniversary day, which we won the year
+before last in Sydney harbour. We'll bring you ashore in the morning."
+
+"Ay, ay, captain," said the young fellow, showing his splendid teeth in
+a pleasant smile. "It will feel quite natural to take an oar in a boat
+of yours again."
+
+The wind had freshened during the afternoon, and the rollers on the
+beach lifted the whaleboat as she came up to the landing rather higher
+than the ladies fancied. However, they were carefully seated, and at the
+captain's word, "Give way, my lads," the crew picked her up in great
+style, while Quintal, standing with easy grace at the stern, the sixteen
+foot oar in his strong grasp, directed her course with instinctive skill
+so as to avoid the growing force of the wave. As he stood there--tall,
+muscular, glorious in the grace and dignity of early manhood--he seemed
+the embodiment of a sculptor's dream.
+
+"What a magnificent figure!" said Mrs. Craven to her young friend. "How
+rare it is to see such a form in Mayfair!"
+
+"I surmise, as our American girl said at Honolulu," replied Miss
+Vavasour, "that you might look a long time before you saw such a man
+among our 'Johnnies'; and what eyes and teeth he has! Really I feel
+inclined to rebel. Here's this Mr. Telfer, too, and what a grand-looking
+fellow he is, and an English gentleman besides in all his ways. He can
+make his way to this out of the way speck in the ocean, and secure a
+Miranda for a life companion--glorious girl she is too--while we poor
+English spins have to wait till a passable _pretendu_ comes along,--old,
+bald, stupid, or diminutive, as the case may be,--and are bound to take
+him under penalty of dying old maids. I call it rank injustice, and I'd
+head a revolution tomorrow; and oh!--"
+
+The interjection which closed the speech of this ardent woman's righter
+was caused by the onward course of a breaking wave, which was not
+avoided so deftly as usual, and splashed the speaker and Mrs. Craven.
+
+"Hulloa! Quintal, what are you about?" said the captain, "is this your
+steering that I've been blowing about to these ladies and gentlemen?
+Miss Vavasour! I'm afraid it's your fault, you know the rule aboard
+ship? Passengers are requested not to speak to the man at the wheel."
+
+"But there's no regulation, captain, that the man at the steer-oar is
+not to look at the passengers," said Mrs. Craven. "However, here we are
+nearly on board, so there's no harm done, and we're only a trifle
+damped."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Clear-hued--calm--waveless--dawned our farewell day. I was glad of it.
+Rain and storm-clouds lower the spirits more distinctly when one is
+about to make a departure than at any other time, besides the
+inconvenience of wet or bedraggled garments. It was the Sabbath day, and
+the pastor arranged a special service in commemoration of Miranda's
+marriage and departure from the island. All the ship's company that
+could be spared came, of course; the visitors made a point of attending.
+The little church was crowded. Except the youngest children and their
+guardians, every soul on the island was there.
+
+After the Church of England service, which the islanders had at their
+fingers' ends, and in which they all most reverently joined, hymns were
+sung, in which the rich voices of the young girls were heard to great
+advantage. There was a strange and subtle harmony pervading the
+part-singing, which seemed natural to the race, more particularly in
+those parts in which the whole of the congregation joined. As Miranda
+played on the harmonium, it may have occurred to her friends and
+playmates for the last time, many of them could not restrain their
+tears. The aged pastor after the Liturgy preached a feeling and
+sympathetic address, which certainly went to the hearts of all present.
+He made particular allusion to our union and departure.
+
+"One of the children of the island," he said, "who had endeared herself
+to all by her unselfish kindness of heart, who had been marked out by
+uncommon gifts, both mental and physical, was to leave them that day.
+She might be absent for years, perhaps they might not see her face
+again,--that face upon which no one had seen a frown, nor hear that
+voice which had never uttered an unkind word," here the greater part of
+the congregation, male and female, fell a-weeping and lamenting loudly.
+"But they must take comfort; our beloved one was not departing alone,
+she had been joined in holy matrimony with a youth of whom any damsel
+might feel proud; he was the husband of her choice, the son of a master
+mariner well known and highly respected in former years throughout the
+wide Pacific. He himself had often heard of him in old days, and the son
+of such a father was worthy to be loved and trusted. The child of our
+hearts would go forth, even as Rebecca left her home and her people with
+Isaac, and God's blessing would surely rest upon all her descendants as
+upon the children of the promise.
+
+"He would ask all now assembled to join in prayers for the welfare of
+Hilary Telfer and Miranda, his wife."
+
+As the venerable man pronounced the words of the benediction, echoed
+audibly by the whole of the congregation, the sobs of the women were
+audible, while tears and stifled sighs were the rule, and not the
+exception. As the congregation rose from their knees, he walked down to
+the _Florentia's_ boats, it having been so arranged by the captain, who
+had invited all who could by any means attend, to lunch on board his
+vessel. Farewells were said on the beach to all who were perforce
+detained by age, infirmity, or other causes, and at length we were
+safely seated in the captain's boat, and putting off, were followed by a
+perfect fleet of every size and carrying capacity.
+
+Miranda hid her face and wept silently. I did not attempt to persuade
+her to moderate her grief, as the outlet of over-strung feelings, of
+genuine and passionate regret, it was a natural and healthful
+safety-valve for an overburdened heart.
+
+"I don't think I was ever more impressed with our Church service," said
+Mrs. Craven. "That dear, venerable old man, and his truly wonderful
+congregation! How earnestly they listened, and how reverently they
+behaved!"
+
+"Think of our rustics in a village church!" said Miss Vavasour, "the
+conceited choir, the sleeping labourers, the giggling school children,
+where do you ever see anything like what we have witnessed to-day?
+However did they manage to grow up so blameless, and to keep so good and
+pure minded? Can you tell me, Mr. Telfer?"
+
+"My knowledge of my wife's people is chiefly from hearsay," I said; "I
+can remember the old tale of the Mutiny of the _Bounty_ when I was a
+school-boy in Sydney. Captain Bligh, of the ill-fated ship, was
+afterwards the Governor of New South Wales. Whether his conduct provoked
+the mutiny, of which Miranda's great grandfather was the leader, or
+whether the crew were overcome by the temptations of a life in that
+second garden of Eden, Tahiti, has been disputed, and perhaps can never
+be definitely known. This much is certain, that the sole surviving
+mutineer, John Adams, deeply repentant, changed his rule of life.
+Morning and evening prayer was established, and a system of instruction
+for the children and young people regularly carried out. Such was the
+apparently accidental commencement of the religious teaching of the
+little community at the beginning of the century. Some of the results
+you have witnessed to-day."
+
+"It certainly is the most wonderful historiette in the whole world,"
+said Miss Vavasour, who had listened with deep interest. "I never saw so
+many nice people in one place before--all good--all kind--all contented,
+and all happy. It makes one believe in the millennium; I must try what I
+can do with our village when I get back to Dorsetshire."
+
+"You'll have your work cut out for you, Miss Vavasour," said Colonel
+Percival. "Fancy the old poachers and the hardened tramps, the
+beer-drinking yokels and the rough field-hands. Work of years, and
+doubtful then."
+
+"Oh! dear, why do we call ourselves civilised, I wonder?" sighed the
+enthusiastic damsel, just awakened to a sense of the duties of property
+in correlation with the "rights." "I really believe Englishmen--the
+lower classes, of course--are the most ill-mannered, uncivilised people
+in the world. Look at those dear islanders, how polite and unselfish
+they are in their behaviour to each other, and to us! It makes me feel
+ashamed of my country. Why, even at a presentation to Her Majesty people
+push, and crush, and look as black as thunder if you tread on their
+absurd trains."
+
+"You ought to come out and join the Melanesian Mission, my dear," said
+Mrs. Craven. "There is no knowing, with your energy and convictions,
+what good you might do."
+
+"I wish I could," said the girl eagerly. "But I'm not good enough, I
+wish I was. If I felt I could keep up my present feelings I'd go
+to-morrow. But I'm selfish and worldly-minded, like my neighbours in
+Christendom. It would be no use. I should only spoil my own life, and
+not mend theirs."
+
+"Such has been the confession of many an earnest reformer, who had
+started in life with high hopes and a scorn of consequences," said Mr.
+Vavasour quietly; "it is by far the most common result of heroic
+self-sacrifice. If we did not occasionally see the accomplished fact, as
+in this case, we might well despair."
+
+"And this was an accident of accidents," said Miss Vavasour sorrowfully.
+"No missionary society sent away the pioneer preachers to the heathen
+with prayers, and flags, and collections. No, here is the grandest feat
+ever accomplished in the world's history. The most religious, contented,
+consistent community in the whole world evolved from a crew of runaway
+sailors and a few poor savage women! Really there must be some good in
+human nature after all, reviled and insulted as it is by all the extra
+good people."
+
+The _Florentia_ had not had so large a party on board since the last
+successful affair in Sydney harbour. That one included dancing, which
+did not enter into this entertainment. Nothing, however, could have gone
+off better. The curiosity of the young women about the ladies'
+belongings was amply gratified, and the luncheon voted the very best one
+at which they had ever been entertained.
+
+A mirthful and joyous gathering it was. The visitors were charmed with,
+the naturally refined and courteous manners of the guests. And, finally,
+as the day wore on, and the breeze from the land promised a good offing,
+Miranda came up from her cabin, to which she had elected to retire, and
+bade farewell to friends and kinsfolk, who departed in their boats, much
+less saddened of mien than they had been in the morning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Once more at sea. The _Florentia_, though a whaler, and not ornamented
+up to yachting form, was yet extremely neat and spotlessly clean, as far
+as could be managed by a smart and energetic captain. She was a fast
+sailer, and as the wind off the land freshened at sundown, she spread
+most of her canvas and sped before the breeze after a fashion which
+would have made her a not unworthy comrade of the _Leonora_.
+
+Miranda had retired to her cabin. Her heart was too full for jesting
+converse, and after she had watched the last speck of her loved island
+disappear below the horizon, she was fain to go below to hide her tears,
+and relieve her feelings by unrestrained indulgence in grief.
+
+For my part, after a cheerful dinner in the cuddy, I remained long on
+deck, pacing up and down, and revolving in my mind plans for our future.
+As I felt the accustomed sway of the vessel, listened to the creaking of
+the rigging, which was music in my ears, and watched the waves fall back
+from her sides in hissing foam-flakes, as the aroused vessel, feeling
+the force of the rising gale, drove through the darkening wave-masses,
+and seemed to defy the menace of the deep, the memories of my early
+island life came back to me. The luxurious, halcyon days, the starlit,
+silent nights, when ofttimes I had wandered to the shore, and seating
+myself on a coral rock, gazed over the boundless watery waste, wondering
+ever about my career, my destined fate.
+
+Then returned the strange and wayward memories of Hayston and his
+lawless associates--the reckless traders, the fierce half-castes, the
+savage islanders! Again I heard the soft voices of Lalia, Nellie,
+Kitty of Ebon, and smiled as I recalled their pleading, infantine ways,
+their flashing eyes, so eloquent in love or hate. All were gone; all had
+become phantoms of the past. With that stage and season of my life they
+had passed away--irrevocably, eternally--and now I possessed an
+incentive to labour, ambition, and self-denial such as I had never
+before known. With such a companion as Miranda, where was the man who
+would not have displayed the higher qualities of his nature, who would
+not have risen to the supremest effort of labour, valour, or
+self-abnegation? Before Heaven I vowed that night, that neither toil nor
+trouble, difficulty nor danger, should deter me from the pursuit of
+fortune and distinction. So passed our first day at sea.
+
+With the one that followed the gale abated, and as the _Florentia_ swept
+southward under easy sail, comfort was restored. The passengers settled
+themselves down to the enjoyment of that absolute rest and passive
+luxuriousness which characterise board-ship life in fine weather. Miss
+Vavasour and Miranda were soon deep in earnest conversation, both for
+the time disregarding the books with which they had furnished
+themselves. Mrs. Craven had devoted herself to an endless task of
+knitting, which apparently supplied a substitute for thought, reading,
+recreation, and conversation.
+
+I was talking to the captain when a lady came up the companion, followed
+by the colonel, who half lifted, half led a fine little boy of four or
+five years of age.
+
+"Oh," said the captain, with a sudden movement towards the new arrivals,
+"I see Mrs. Percival has come on deck. Come over and be introduced." We
+walked over, and I received a formal bow from a handsome, pale woman,
+who had evidently been sojourning in the East. There is a certain
+similarity in all "Indian women," as they are generally called, which
+extends even to manner and expression. Long residence in a hot climate
+robs them of their roses, while the habit of command, resulting from
+association with an inferior race, gives them a tinge of hauteur--not to
+say unconscious insolence of manner--which is scarcely agreeable to
+those who, from circumstances, they may deem to be socially inferior.
+
+So it was that Miranda, in spite of Miss Vavasour's nods and signals,
+received but the faintest recognition, and retreated to her chair
+somewhat chilled by her reception. She, however, took no apparent notice
+of the slight, and was soon absorbed in conversation with Miss Vavasour,
+her brother, and Mrs. Craven, who had moved up her chair to join the
+party. The colonel deserted his former friends to devote himself to his
+family duties, while the captain and I walked forward and commenced a
+discussion which had, at any rate, a strong personal interest for me.
+
+"Now look here, Hilary," said he, as he lighted a fresh cigar. He had
+been smoking on the quarter-deck under protest, as it were, and thus
+commenced: "Listen to me, my boy! I've been thinking seriously about you
+and Miranda. Your start in life when you get to Sydney is important. I
+think I can give you a bit of advice worth following. You understand all
+the dialects between here and the Line Islands, don't you?"
+
+"More than eight," I answered; "I can talk with nearly every islander
+from here to the Gilberts. I have learned so much, at any rate, in my
+wanderings."
+
+"And a very good thing, too, for it's not a thing that can be picked up
+in a year, no matter how a man may work, and he's useless or nearly so
+without it; you can keep accounts, write well, and all that?"
+
+I replied that I had a number of peculiar accounts to keep as
+supercargo to the _Leonora_, as well as all Hayston's business letters
+to write; that my office books were always considered neat, complete,
+and well kept. Then he suddenly said, "You are the very man we want!"
+
+"Who are we, and what is the man wanted for?" I asked.
+
+"For the South Sea Island trade, and no other," said Captain Carryall,
+putting his hand on my shoulder. "Old Paul Frankston (you've heard of
+him) and I have laid it out to establish a regular mercantile house in
+Sydney for the development of the island trade. The old man will back
+us, and the name of Paul Frankston is good from New Zealand to the North
+Pole and back again. I will do the whaling, cruising, and cargo
+business--cocoa-nut oil, copra, and curios--while you will live in one
+of those nice white houses at North Shore, somewhere about Neutral Bay,
+where you can see the ships come through the Heads; Miranda can have a
+skiff, and you a ten-tonner, so as not to forget your boating and your
+sea-legs. What do you think of that, eh?"
+
+"It is a splendid idea!" I cried, "and poor Miranda will be within sound
+of the sea. If she were not, she would pine away like her own araucarias
+which will not live outside of the wave music. But how about the cash
+part of it? I haven't much. Most of my savings went down in the
+_Leonora_."
+
+"Oh, we'll manage that somehow! Old Paul will work that part of the
+arrangement. I daresay your father will advance what will make your
+share equal, or nearly so, to ours."
+
+"It sounds well," I said. "With partners like Mr. Frankston and yourself
+a man ought to be able to do something. I know almost every island where
+trade can be got, and the price to a cowrie that should be paid. There
+ought to be a fortune in it in five years. What a pity Hayston couldn't
+have had such a chance."
+
+"He'd have had the cash, and the other partners the experience, in less
+than that time," said the captain, smiling sardonically. "He was a
+first-rate organiser if he had not been such a d--d scoundrel. He had
+some fine qualities, I allow; as a seaman he had no equal. In the good
+old fighting days he would have been a splendid robber baron. But in
+these modern times, where there is a trifle of law and order in most
+countries, even in the South Seas he was out of place."
+
+"He was far from a model mariner," I said, "but it hurts me to hear him
+condemned. He had splendid points in his character, and no one but
+myself will ever know how much good there was mixed up with his
+recklessness and despair. I left him, but I couldn't help being fond of
+him to the last."
+
+"It was a good thing for you that you did--a very good thing. You will
+live to be thankful for it. He was a dangerous beggar, and neither man
+nor woman could escape his fascination. However, that's all past and
+gone now. You're married and settled, remember, and you're to be Hilary
+Telfer, Esq., J.P., and all the rest of it directly, and the only
+sea-going business you can have for the future is to be Commodore of the
+Neutral Bay Yacht Club, or some such title and distinction. And now I've
+done for the present. You go and see what Miranda thinks of it. I won't
+agree to anything unless she consents."
+
+Miranda was charmed with the idea of a mercantile marine enterprise, so
+much in accordance with her previous habits and experiences. The added
+inducement of living on the sea-shore, with a boat, a jetty, and a
+bathing-house, decided her. She implicitly believed in Captain
+Carryall's power and ability to make our fortune; was also certain that,
+with Mr. Frankston's commercial aid, we should soon be as rich as the
+Guldensterns, the Rothschilds of the Pacific. She surrendered herself
+thereupon to a dream of bliss, alloyed only at intervals by a tinge of
+apprehension that the great undiscovered country of Sydney society might
+prove hostile or indifferent.
+
+So much she communicated to Miss Vavasour as she and Mrs. Craven were
+reclining side by side on their deck chairs, while the _Florentia_ was
+gliding along on another day all sunshine, azure, and favouring breeze.
+
+"Don't you be afraid, my dear," said the kind-hearted Mrs. Craven, "you
+and your husband are quite able to hold your own in Sydney society or
+any other; indeed, I shall be inclined to bet that you'd be the rage
+rather than otherwise. I wish I had you in Northamptonshire, I'd
+undertake to 'knock out' (as Charlie says) the local belles in a
+fortnight."
+
+Miranda laughed the childishly happy laugh of unspoiled girlhood. "Dear
+Mrs. Craven, how good of you to say so; but, of course, I know I'm a
+sort of savage, who will improve in a year or two if every one is as
+kind as you and Miss Vavasour here; but suppose they should be like
+her," and she motioned towards Mrs. Percival.
+
+This lady had never relaxed the coldness and hauteur towards Miranda and
+myself. She had been unable to modify her "Indian manner," as Captain
+Carryall and Mr. Vavasour called it, and about which they made daily
+jokes.
+
+As she passed the little group, she bowed slightly and without
+relaxation of feature, going forward to the waist of the ship, where she
+sat down and was soon absorbed in a book. The three friends smiled at
+each other, and continued their conversation.
+
+"I should like to dress you for a garden-party, Miranda," said Miss
+Vavasour; "let me see now, a real summer day, such as we sometimes get
+in dear old England--not like this one perhaps, but very nice. A lovely
+old manor house like Gravenhurst or Hunsdon--such a lawn, such old
+trees, such a river, a marquee under an elm a hundred years old, and the
+county magnates marching in from their carriages."
+
+"Oh, how delicious!" cried Miranda. "I have read such descriptions in
+books, but you--oh, how happy you must be to have lived it all!"
+
+"It's very nice, but as to the happiness, that doesn't always follow,"
+confessed the English girl with a half sigh. "I almost think you have
+the greater share of that. Anyhow, just as the company are assembled, I
+am seen walking down from the house. We are of the house party, you
+know, Miranda and I. She is dressed in a soft, white, embroidered
+muslin, very simply made, with a little, a very little Valenciennes
+lace. Its long straight folds hang gracefully around her matchless
+figure, and are confined at the waist by a broad, white moir sash;
+white gloves, a white moir parasol, a large Gainsborough hat with
+fleecy white feathers, and Miranda's costume is complete--the very
+embodiment of fresh, fair girlhood, unspotted from the world of fashion
+and folly."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A SWIM FOR LIFE
+
+
+The words died on her lips as a shriek, wild, agonising, despairing,
+rang through the air, and startled not only the little group of pleased
+listeners, but all who happened to be on deck at the time. We started up
+and gazed towards the spot whence the cry had come. The colonel, who had
+been reading on the opposite side of the deck, calmly smoking the while,
+dropped his book and only saved his meerschaum by a cricketer's smart
+catch. The captain came bounding up from below, followed by the steward
+and his boy; the foc'sle hands, with the black cook, hurled themselves
+aft. All guessed the cause as they saw Mrs. Percival wringing her hands
+frantically and gazing at an object in the sea.
+
+Her boy had fallen overboard! Yes! the little fellow, active and
+courageous beyond his years, had tried to crawl up to the shrouds while
+his mother's eyes were engaged in the perusal of the leading novel of
+the day. Weary of inaction, the poor little chap had done a little
+climbing on his own account, and an unexpected roll of the ship had sent
+him overboard. Light as the wind was, he was already a long way astern.
+
+Long before all these observations were made, however, and while the
+astonished spectators were questioning their senses as to the meaning of
+the confusion, Miranda had sprung upon the rail, and in the next moment,
+with hands clasped above her head, was parting the smooth waters.
+Rising to the surface, she swam with rapid and powerful strokes towards
+the receding form of the still floating child. With less rapidity of
+motion, I cast myself into the heaving waste of water, not that I
+doubted Miranda's ability to overtake and bear up the child, but from
+simple inability to remain behind while all that was worth living for on
+earth was adrift upon the wave.
+
+I followed in her wake, and though I failed to keep near her, for the
+Pitcairn islanders are among the fastest swimmers in the world, I yet
+felt that I might be of some use or aid. Long before I could overtake
+her she had caught up the little fellow, and lifting him high above the
+water, was swimming easily towards me.
+
+"Oh! you foolish boy!" she cried, "why did you come after me? do you
+want to be drowned again?" Here she smiled and showed her lovely teeth
+as if it was rather a good joke. It may have been, but at that time and
+place I was not in the humour to perceive it.
+
+"I came for the same reason that you did, I suppose--because I could not
+stay behind. If anything had happened to you what should I have done?
+Here comes the boat, though, and we can talk it over on board."
+
+Some little time had been expended in lowering the boat. The ship had
+been brought to, but even then--and with so light a wind--it was
+astonishing what a distance we had fallen behind. It was a curious
+sensation, such specks as we were upon the immense water-plain which
+stretched around to the horizon. However, the _Florentia_ was strongly
+in evidence, and nearer and nearer came the whaleboat, with the captain
+at the steer-oar, and the men pulling as if they were laying on a crack
+harpooner to an eighty barrel whale.
+
+We were now swimming side by side, Miranda talking to the little fellow,
+who had never lost consciousness, and did not seem particularly afraid
+of his position.
+
+"How tremendously hard they are pulling!" I said; "they are making the
+boat spin again. One would think they were pulling for a wager."
+
+"So they are," answered she, "for three lives, and perhaps another. See
+there! God in His mercy protect us."
+
+I followed the direction of her turned head, and my heart stood still as
+my eye caught the fatal sign of the monster's presence at no great
+distance from us. It was _the back fin of a shark_!
+
+"Do your best, my beloved," she continued; "we must keep together, and
+if he overtakes us before the boat reaches, splash hard and shout as
+loud as you can. I have seen a shark frightened before now; but please
+God it may not come to that."
+
+The boat came nearer--still nearer--but, as it seemed to us, all too
+slowly. The men were pulling for their lives, I could notice, and the
+captain frantically urging them on. They had seen the dreaded signal
+before us, and had commenced to race from that moment. But for some
+delay in the tackle for lowering, they would have been up to us before
+now.
+
+As it was we did our best. I would have taken the child, but Miranda
+would not allow me. "His weight is nothing in the water," she said, "and
+I could swim faster than you, even with him." This she showed me she
+could do by shooting ahead with the greatest ease, and then allowing me
+to overtake her. I had to let her have her own way. We were lessening
+the distance between us and the boat, but the sea demon had a mind to
+overtake us, and our hearts almost failed as we noticed the sharp black
+fin gaining rapidly upon us. Still there was one chance, that he would
+not pursue us to the very side of the boat. It was a terrible moment.
+With every muscle strained to the uttermost, with lung, and sinew, and
+every organ taxed to utmost tension, I most certainly beat any previous
+record in swimming that I had ever attained. Miranda, with apparently
+but little effort, kept slightly ahead. The last few yards--shorter than
+the actual distance--appeared to divide us from the huge form of the
+monster now distinctly visible beneath the water, when with one frantic
+yell and a dash at the oars, which took every remaining pound of
+strength out of the willing crew, the boat shot up within equal
+distance. At a signal from the captain every oar was raised and brought
+down again with a terrific splash into the water, and a simultaneous
+yell. The effort was successful. The huge creature, strangely timid in
+some respects, stopped, and with one powerful side motion of fins and
+tail glided out of the line of pursuit. At the same moment the boat
+swept up, and eager arms lifted Miranda and her burden into it. My hand
+was on the gunwale until I saw her safe, whence with a slight amount of
+assistance I gained the mid-thwart.
+
+"Saved, thank God!" cried the captain, with fervent expression, "but a
+mighty close thing; the next time you take a bath of this kind, my dear
+Miranda, with sharks around, you must let me know beforehand, eh?"
+
+"Some one would have had to go, captain," she answered; "we couldn't see
+the dear little fellow drowned before our eyes. It was only a trifle
+after all--a swim in smooth water on a fine day: I didn't reckon on a
+shark being so close, I must say."
+
+"I saw the naughty shark," said the little fellow, now quite recovered
+and in his usual spirits. "How close he came! do you think he would have
+eaten us all, captain?"
+
+"Yes, my boy--without salt; you would never have seen your papa and
+mamma again if it had not been for this lady here."
+
+"But you took us in the boat, captain," argued the little fellow; "he
+can't catch us in here, can he?"
+
+"But the lady caught you in her arms long before the boat came up, my
+dear, or else you would have been drowned over and over again; that
+confounded tackle caught, or else we should have been up long before.
+It's a good thing they were not lowering for a whale, or my first mate's
+language would have been something to remember till the voyage after
+next. However, here we are all safe, Charlie, and there's your mother
+looking out for you."
+
+A painfully eager face was that which gazed from the vessel as we rowed
+alongside. Every trace of the languor partly born of the tropic sun and
+partly of aristocratic _morgue_ was gone from the countenance of Mrs.
+Percival, as her boy, laughing and prattling, was carried up the rope
+ladder and lifted on deck. His mother clasped him now passionately in
+her arms, sobbing, blessing, kissing him, and crying aloud that God had
+restored her child from the dead. "Oh, my boy! my boy!" she repeated
+again and again; "your mother would have died too, if you had been
+drowned, she would never have lived without you."
+
+By this time Miranda had reached the deck, where she was received with a
+hearty British cheer from the ship's company, while the passengers
+crowded around her as if she had acquired a new character in their eyes.
+But Mrs. Percival surpassed them all; kneeling before Miranda she bowed
+herself to the deck, as if in adoration, and kissed her wet feet again
+and again.
+
+"You have saved my child from a terrible death at the risk of your own
+and your husband's lives," she said. "May God forget me if I forget your
+noble act this day! I have been proud and unkind in my manner to you, my
+dear. I humble myself at your feet, and implore your pardon. But
+henceforth, Miranda Telfer, you and I are sisters. If I do not do
+something in requital it will go hard with me and Charlie."
+
+"Now, my dear Sybil," interposed the husband, "do you observe that Mrs.
+Telfer has not had time to change her dress--very wet it seems to
+be--and I suppose Master Charlie will be none the worse for being put
+to bed and well scolded, the young rascal. Come, my dear."
+
+Colonel Percival, doubtless, felt a world of joy and relief when the
+light of his eyes and the joy of his heart stood safe and sound on the
+deck of the _Florentia_ again, but it is not the wont of the British
+aristocrat to give vent to his emotions, even the holiest, in public.
+The veil of indifference is thrown over them, and men may but guess at
+the volcanic forces at work below that studiously calm exterior.
+
+So, laying his hand gently but firmly on his wife's arm, he led her to
+her cabin, with her boy still clasped in her arms as if she yet feared
+to lose him, and they disappeared from our eyes. As for Miranda and
+myself, such immersions had been daily matters of course, and were
+regarded as altogether too trifling occurrences to require more than the
+necessary changes of clothing.
+
+We both appeared in our places at the next meal, when Miranda was
+besieged with questions as to her sensations, mingled with praises of
+her courage and endurance in that hour of deadly peril.
+
+"And _her_ child, too," said Mrs. Craven; "what a lesson of humility it
+ought to teach her! Had you, my dear girl, been swayed by any of the
+meaner motives which actuate men and women her foolish pride might have
+cost her child's life."
+
+"Oh, surely no one _could_ have had such thoughts when that dear little
+boy fell overboard! I couldn't help Mrs. Percival not liking me. I
+really did not think much about it; but when I saw the poor little face
+in the sea, more startled, indeed, than frightened, I felt as if I must
+go in after him. It was quite a matter of course."
+
+After this incident it may be believed that we were indeed a happy
+family on board the _Florentia_. Every one vied with every one else in
+exhibiting respect and admiration towards Miranda. Mrs. Percival would
+not hear of a refusal that we should come and stay with her, when we
+had done all that was proper and dutiful in the family home. Miss
+Vavasour and Mrs. Craven depended on me to show them all the beauties of
+Sydney harbour; while Captain Carryall pledged himself to place Mr.
+Frankston's yacht at the service of his passengers generally, and to
+render them competent to champion the much-vaunted glories of the
+unrivalled harbour to all friends, foes, and doubters on the other side
+of the world.
+
+Colonel Percival privately interrogated the captain as to the nature of
+the commercial undertaking in which he was about to arrange a
+partnership for me, and begged as a favour, being a man of ample means,
+that he might be permitted to advance the amount of my share. The
+captain solemnly promised him that if there was any difficulty in the
+proposed arrangement on account of my deficiency of cash he should be
+requested to supply it. "He seemed to feel easy in his mind after I told
+him this, my boy," said the commander, with that mixture of simplicity
+and astuteness which distinguished him, "but fancy old Paul and your
+father admitting outside capital in one of their trade ventures!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"This time to-morrow we shall be going through Sydney Heads," said the
+first mate to me as we walked the deck about an hour after sunrise one
+morning, "that is, if the wind holds."
+
+"Pray Heaven it may," said I, "then we shall have a view of the harbour
+and city worth seeing. It makes all the difference. We might have a
+cloudy day, or be tacking about till nightfall, and the whole effect
+would be lost." I was most anxious not only that Miranda's first sight
+of my native land and her future home should impress her favourably, but
+I was naturally concerned that our friends should not suppose that the
+descriptions of the Queen City of the South, with which the captain and
+I had regaled them, were overdrawn. We sat late at supper that night
+talking over the wonderful events and experiences that were to occur on
+the morrow. Plans were discussed, probable residence and inland travel
+calculated, the Fish River caves and the Blue Mountains were, of course,
+to be visited--all kinds of expeditions and slightly incongruous
+journeys to be carried out.
+
+Colonel and Mrs. Percival had been asked to stay at Government House
+during their visit, which was comparatively short; while Mr. and Mrs.
+Craven and Miss Vavasour were to go primarily to Petty's Hotel, which
+had been highly recommended; and the gentlemen had intimation that they
+would receive notices of their being admitted as honorary members of the
+Australian and Union Clubs. With such cheerful expectations and
+forecasts we parted for the night.
+
+The winds were kind. "The breeze stuck to us," as the mate expressed it,
+and about an hour after the time he had mentioned we were within a mile
+of the towering sandstone portals of that erstwhile strange, silent
+harbour into which the gallant seaman Cook, old England's typical
+mariner, had sailed a hundred years ago.
+
+I had been on deck since dawn. Now that we were so near the home of my
+childhood, the thoughts of old days, and the parents, brothers, sisters,
+from whom I had been so long separated, rushed into my mind, until I
+felt almost suffocated with contending emotions. How would they receive
+us? Would they be prepared to see me a married man? Would their welcome
+to Miranda be warm or formal? I began to foresee difficulties--even
+dangers of family disruption--consequences which before had never
+entered into the calculation.
+
+However, for the present these serious reflections were put to flight
+by expressions of delight from the whole body of passengers, headed by
+Miranda, who then came on deck. By this time the good ship _Florentia_
+had closely approached the comparatively narrow entrance, the frowning
+buttresses of sandstone, against which the waves, now dashed with hoarse
+and angry murmur, rose almost above us, while a long line of surges, lit
+up by the red dawn fires, menaced us on either hand.
+
+"Oh, what a lovely entrance!" said Miss Vavasour, after gazing long and
+earnestly at the scene. "It seems like the gate of an enchanted lake.
+What magnificent rock-masses, and what light and colour the sun brings
+out! It is something like a sun--warm, glowing, irradiating everything
+even at this early hour--and what a sky! The dream tone of a painter! I
+congratulate you, you dear darling Miranda, and you, Mr. Telfer, on
+having such a day for home-coming. It is a good omen--I am sure it must
+be. Nothing but good could happen on such a glorious day."
+
+"The day is perfection, but more than one good ship coming through this
+entrance at night has mistaken the indentation on the other side of the
+South Head for the true passage, and gone to pieces on the rocks below
+that promontory. But, at any rate, _we_ are now safely inside; and where
+is there a harbour in the world to match it?"
+
+As we passed Middle harbour and drew slowly up the great waterway, which
+affords perhaps more deep anchorage than any other in the world, the
+ladies were loud in their expressions of admiration. "Look at those
+sweet white houses on the shores of the pretty little bays!" said Mrs.
+Craven; "and what lovely gardens and terraces stretching down to the
+beaches!"
+
+"And there is a Norfolk Island pine, one--two--ever so many," cried
+Miranda. "I did not think _they_ grew here, I am sure now that I shall
+be happy."
+
+"Yes, of course!" said Miss Vavasour, "what is to hinder you? And you
+are to live in one of those pretty cream-coloured cottages--what lovely
+stone it must be!--with a garden just like that one on the point, and a
+boat-house and a jetty. One of those little steamers that I see fussing
+about will land Mr. Telfer, when he returns from the city, or you can
+get into that little boat that lies moored below, and row across the bay
+for him."
+
+Miranda's eyes filled as she glanced at the pretty villas and more
+pretentious mansions, past which we glided, some half-covered with
+climbers, or buried amid tropical shrubs of wild luxuriance. Her heart
+was too deeply stirred for jesting at that moment. She could only press
+her friend's hand and smile, as if pleading for a less humorous view of
+so important a subject.
+
+The harbour itself was full of interest to the strangers. Vessels of all
+sizes and shapes--coasters, colliers, passenger-boats, yachts, and steam
+launches, passed and re-passed in endless succession. Two men-of-war lay
+peacefully at anchor in Farm Cove, a Messagerie steamer in the stream,
+while a huge P. & O. mail-boat outward bound moved majestically towards
+the Heads through which we had so recently entered.
+
+We had just cleared Point Piper, where I remember spending the joyous
+holidays of long ago with my schoolmates, the sons of the fine old
+English gentleman who then dwelt there, when a sailing boat sped swiftly
+towards us, in which stood a stout, middle-aged man waving his hat
+frantically.
+
+"I believe that is Paul Frankston himself come to overhaul us," said the
+captain, raising his glass. "He's sailor enough to recognise the rig of
+the _Florentia_, and if we had been a little nearer his bay, he'd have
+wanted us to stop the ship and lunch with him in a body. As it is I feel
+sure he'll capture some of the party."
+
+"What splendid hospitality!" said Mrs. Percival. "Is that sort of thing
+usual here? you must be something like us Indians in your ways."
+
+"There is a good deal of likeness, I think," said the captain. "I
+suppose the heat accounts for it. It's too hot to refuse, most of the
+year. But here comes Paul!"
+
+The sailing boat by this time had run alongside and doused her sail,
+while one of the crew held on to a rope thrown to him, as the owner
+presented himself on deck with more agility than might have been
+expected from a man of his age.
+
+"Well, Charley, my boy, so you're in at last--thought you were lost, or
+had run away and sold the ship, ha, ha! What sort of a voyage have you
+had? Passengers, too--pray introduce me. Is there anything I can do for
+them in Sydney? Must be something. Perhaps I shall hear by and by. Who's
+this youngster?
+
+"No! surely not the son of my old friend, Captain Telfer? Now I remember
+the boy that ran away to the islands, or would have done so, if they
+hadn't let him go. Quite right, I ran away myself and a fine time I had
+there. I must tell you what happened to me there once, eh! Charley?"
+
+Here the old gentleman began to laugh so heartily that he was forced to
+suspend his narration, while the captain regarded him with an expression
+which conveyed a slight look of warning. "But I am forgetting. By the
+way, Charley, have you any curios in your cabin?" The captain nodded,
+and the two old friends disappeared down the companion. Only, however,
+to reappear in a very few minutes, which we employed in favourable
+criticism.
+
+"What a fine hearty old gentleman!" said Mrs. Craven, "any one can see
+that he is an Englishman by his figure and the way he talks; though I
+suppose colonists are not so very different."
+
+"Mr. Frankston has been a good deal about the world," I said. "But he
+was born in Sydney, and has spent the greater part of his life near
+this very spot. He was at sea in his earlier years, but has been on
+shore since he married. He is now a wealthy man, and one of the leading
+Sydney merchants."
+
+"One would think he was a sea captain now," said Miss Vavasour. "He
+looks quite as much like one as a merchant; but I suppose every one can
+sail a boat here."
+
+"You are quite right, Miss Vavasour. Every one who is born in Sydney
+learns to swim and sail a boat as soon as possible after he can walk.
+There is no place in the world where there are so many yachtsmen. On
+holidays you may see doctors, lawyers, clergymen, even judges, sailing
+their boats--doing a good deal of their own work in the 'able seaman'
+line; and, to tell truth, looking occasionally much more like pirates
+than sober professional men."
+
+About this time Mr. Frankston reappeared, carrying in his hand a couple
+of grass-er-garments, which he appeared to look upon as very precious.
+"These are for my little girl," he said, "she has just come down from
+the bush with her husband to spend the hot months with her old father.
+It will give her the greatest pleasure to see these ladies and their
+husbands at Marahmee, next Saturday, when we can have a little picnic in
+the harbour and a sail in my yacht, the _Sea-gull_. The captain will
+tell you that I am to be trusted with a lively boat still."
+
+"I never wish to go to sea with a better sailor," said the captain, "and
+if our friends have no other engagements, I can promise them a
+delightful day and a view of some of the finest scenery south of the
+line."
+
+Barring unforeseen or indispensable engagements every one promised to
+go. Mr. Frankston averred that they had done him a great--an important
+service. He was getting quite hipped--he was indeed--when his daughter
+luckily recognised the _Florentia_ coming up the harbour. She is a
+sailor's daughter, you know--has an eye for a ship--and started him off
+to meet his old friend Captain Carryall, and secure him for dinner. Now
+he felt quite another man, and would say good-bye. Before leaving he
+must have a word with his young friend.
+
+"My dear boy," said he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "I have known
+your father ever so many years. We were younger men then, and saw
+something of each other in more than one bit of fun; and at least one or
+two very queer bits of fighting in the Bay of Islands; so that we know
+each other pretty well. I've heard what Carryall has to say about you
+and your charming wife. I think we shall be able to 'fix up,' as our
+American friends say, our little mercantile arrangement very neatly. But
+that's not what I wanted to talk to you about. You've been away a good
+while, so many years, we'll say."
+
+"I have indeed," I replied.
+
+"Well--you've grown from a boy into a man, and a devilish fine one too."
+Here the dear old chap patted me on the back and looked up at my face, a
+great deal higher up than his. "Well! naturally, you've changed. So have
+your people, your young brothers and sisters have turned into men and
+women while you've been away. And then again, another change--a great
+one too--you're married."
+
+"Yes! thank God I am."
+
+"I am sure you have good reason, my boy. But my idea is this,
+people--the best of people--don't like surprises,--even one's own
+friends. Now, what I want you to do is to bring your wife and come and
+stay at Marahmee for a week, while they're getting your rooms ready for
+you at North Shore. There's nobody there now but Antonia and her
+husband. It wants another pair of young people to enliven the place a
+bit. And Charley Carryall will go over and tell them all about you and
+your pretty Miranda, while you and I settle our partnership affairs."
+
+I could see how it was; our good old friend, with a kindness and
+delicacy of feeling which I have rarely seen equalled, had all along
+made up his mind that Miranda and I should begin our Sydney experiences
+with a visit to his hospitable mansion. After a talk with the captain,
+for which purpose he had feigned an interest in South Sea "curios," they
+had come to the conclusion that it would be more prudent that the family
+should have a few days to accustom themselves to the idea of my
+marriage. In the mean time his daughter, Mrs. Neuchamp, would be able to
+give Miranda the benefit of her experience as a Sydney matron of some
+years' standing, and to ensure that she made her introduction under
+favourable circumstances.
+
+Miranda, naturally nervous at the idea of then and there making her
+appearance among a group of relatives wholly unknown to her, was much
+relieved at the delay thus granted, and cheerfully acceded to the
+proposed arrangement.
+
+"That being all settled, I'll get home and have everything ready for you
+when you arrive. The captain will take care of you. He knows the road
+out, eh, Charley? night or day; so good-bye till dinner time. Seven
+o'clock sharp."
+
+Still talking, Mr. Frankston descended to his boat, and making a long
+board, proceeded to beat down the harbour on his homeward voyage, waving
+his handkerchief at intervals until he rounded a point and was lost to
+our gaze.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was not very long after this interview that we found ourselves in our
+berth at the Circular Quay, where, unlike Melbourne and some other
+ports, nothing more was needed for disembarkation but to step on shore
+into the city. Our good comrades of so many days were carried off in
+cabs to their destinations, with the exception of the Percivals, who,
+having been invited to Government House, found an aide-de-camp and the
+viceregal carriage awaiting them on the wharf. At such a time there is
+always a certain amount of fuss and anxiety with reference to luggage,
+rendering farewells occasionally less sentimental than might have been
+expected from the character of marine friendships. But it was not so in
+our experience. Miss Vavasour and Mrs. Craven exchanged touching
+farewells with Miranda, mingled with solemn promises to meet at given
+dates--to write--to do all sorts of things necessary for their keeping
+up the flame of friendship. Then at the last moment Colonel and Mrs.
+Percival came up. "My dearest Miranda," said this lady, "don't forget
+that you are my sister, not in word only. Put me to the proof whenever
+you need a sister's aid, and it shall be always at your service. Kiss
+Auntie Miranda, Charlie darling, and tell her you will always love her."
+
+"She picked me up out of the sea, when the naughty shark was going to
+eat us all. She's a good auntie, isn't she, mother?" said the little
+chap responding readily. "Good-bye, Auntie Miranda."
+
+"I am not a man of many words, Mr. Telfer!" said the colonel; "but if I
+can be of service to you, now or at any future time I shall be offended
+if you do not let me know;" and then the stern soldier shook my hand in
+a way which gave double meaning to the pledge.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was yet early in the day, and the captain had duties to attend to
+which would keep him employed until the evening. "I've ordered a
+carriage at six," he said, "when we'll start for Marahmee, which is
+about half-an-hour's drive. Until that time you can go ashore if you
+like; the Botanical Gardens are just round that point, or walk down
+George Street, or in any other way amuse yourselves. Meanwhile, consider
+yourselves at home also."
+
+"I think we'll stay at home then, captain, for the present," said
+Miranda, "and watch the people on shore. You have no idea how they
+interest me. Everything is so new. Remember that I have never seen a
+carriage in my life before, or a cab, or a soldier; there goes one
+now--isn't he beautiful to behold? I shall sit here and make Hilary tell
+me the names of all the specimens as they come into view."
+
+"That will do capitally," said the captain. "I might have known that you
+could amuse yourself without help from any one."
+
+The time passed quickly enough, with the aid of lunch. The decks were
+cleared by six o'clock, by which time we were ready for the hired
+barouche when it drove up.
+
+Miranda and I had employed our time so well that she had learnt the
+names of various types of character, and many products of civilisation,
+of which she had been before necessarily ignorant, except from books.
+"It is a perfect object lesson," she said. "How delightful it is to be
+able to see the things and people that I have only read about! I feel
+like those people in the _Arabian Nights_ who had been all their lives
+in a glass tower on a desert island. Not that our dear Norfolk Island
+was a desert--very far from it. And now I am going to the first grand
+house I ever saw, and to live in it--more wonderful still. I feel like a
+princess in a fairy tale," she went on, as she smilingly skipped into
+the carriage. "Everything seems so unreal. Do you think this will turn
+into a pumpkin, drawn by mice, like poor Cinderella's? Hers was a
+chariot, though. What is a chariot?"
+
+"I remember riding in one when I was a small boy," I answered; "and, by
+the same token, I had caught a number of locusts, and put them into my
+hat. I was invited to uncover, as the day was warm. When I did so, the
+locusts flew all about the closed-up carriage and into everybody's face.
+But chariots are old-fashioned now."
+
+Onward we passed along the South Head road, while below us lay the
+harbour with its multitudinous bays, inlets, promontories, and green
+knolls, in so many instances crowned with white-walled gardens,
+surrounding villas and mansions, all built of pale-hued,
+delicately-toned sandstone.
+
+"Oh! what a lovely, delicious bay!" cried Miranda; "and these are the
+Heads, where we came in. Good-bye, old ocean, playfellow of my
+childhood; farewell, wind of the sea, for a while. But I shall live near
+you still, and hear you in my dreams. I should die--I should feel
+suffocated--if nothing but woods and forests were to be seen."
+
+"If you don't die until you can't see the ocean, or feel the winds about
+here, you will live a long time, my dear," said the captain. "I don't
+know a more sea-going population anywhere than this Sydney one. Half the
+people you meet here have been a voyage, and the boys take to a boat as
+the bush lads do to a horse. But here we are at the Marahmee gates, and
+there's my pet Antonia on the verandah ready to receive us."
+
+As we drove up the avenue, which was not very long, a very pretty,
+graceful young woman came swiftly to meet us. I knew this must be Mrs.
+Neuchamp, formerly Antonia Frankston, the old man's only child. She was
+not grown up when I left Sydney, and I heard that she had lately married
+a young Englishman, who had come out with letters of introduction to Mr.
+Frankston. We had seen each other last, as boy and girl, long years ago.
+
+"Well, Captain Charley," she said, making as though she would have
+embraced the skipper, "what do you mean by being so long away? We began
+to think that you were lost--that the _Florentia_ had run on a reef--all
+sorts of things--been cut off by the islanders, perhaps. But now you
+_are_ back with all sorts of island stories to tell dad, and a few
+curios for me. And you are Mrs. Telfer! Papa has told me all about
+you--his latest admiration, evidently. But you mustn't get melancholy
+when he deserts you; he is a passionate adorer while it lasts, but is
+always carried away by the next fresh face, generally a complete
+contrast to the last. I am sure we shall be great friends. I used to
+dance with your husband when we were children. Do you remember that
+party at Mrs. Morton's? You have grown considerably since then, and so
+handsome, too, I suppose I may say--now we are all married--no wonder
+Miranda fell in love with you. You're to call me Antonia, my dear; and
+now come upstairs, and I'll show you your rooms which I have been
+getting ready all the morning. Papa and Ernest will be here in a few
+minutes."
+
+"Mrs. Neuchamp evidently takes after her father," I said, "who can say
+more kind things in fewer minutes than any one I ever knew--and do them,
+too, which is more to the purpose. I am so glad that Miranda has had the
+chance of making her acquaintance before she sees many other people."
+
+"She is a dear, good, unselfish girl," said the captain, "and was always
+the same from a child, when she used to sit on my knee in this very
+verandah, and get me to tell her the names of the ships. I never saw a
+child so thoughtful for other people, always wondering what she could do
+for them; she is just the same to this day. She will be an invaluable
+friend for our Miranda, I foresee. She can give her all sorts of hints
+about housekeeping, and I've no doubt one or two about dress and the
+minor society matters. Not that Miranda wants much teaching in that or
+any other way. Nature made her a lady, and gave her the look of a sea
+princess, and nothing could alter her."
+
+"Did you ever hear of a handsome young woman being spoiled by flattery,
+captain?" I said. "I don't want to anticipate such a disaster, but it
+strikes me that if you are all going to be so very complimentary, I
+shall have to go on the other tack to keep the compass level."
+
+"There are dispositions that flattery falls harmless from," said the
+captain solemnly; "there are women that cannot be spoiled,--not so many,
+perhaps, but you have got one of them, Antonia is another. They will
+make a good pair, and I'll back them to do their duty and keep a
+straight course, fair weather or foul, against any two, married or
+single, that I ever saw, and I've seen a good many women in my time. But
+now we had better be ready for dinner, for old Paul and Mr. Neuchamp
+will be here directly."
+
+They were not long in making their appearance, and a very merry dinner
+it was. Mr. Frankston wanted to hear all about the islands, and Mrs.
+Neuchamp was much interested in Captain Hayston, and thought he
+resembled one of the buccaneers of the Spanish Main, for whom she had a
+sentimental admiration in her girlhood.
+
+"What a pity that all the romantic and picturesque people should be so
+wicked!" she asked. "How is it, and what law of nature can it be that
+arranges that so many good and worthy people are so deadly
+uninteresting?"
+
+"Antonia is not quite in earnest, my dear Mrs. Telfer!" said Mr.
+Neuchamp, remarking Miranda's wondering look; "she knows well that it is
+more difficult to live up to a high ideal than to fall below it. There
+is a false glamour about men like Hayston, I admit, by which people who
+are swayed by feeling rather than reason are often attracted."
+
+"I am afraid that Captain Hayston was a wicked man," said Miranda,
+"though I can't get Hilary to tell me much about him. However, there
+were very different accounts, some describing him as being generous and
+heroic, and others as cruel and unprincipled."
+
+"Whatever he was, there was no doubt about his being a sailor every inch
+of him," said Captain Charley. "I saw him handle his ship in a gale of
+wind through a dangerous channel, and I never forgot it."
+
+"I suppose he had his faults like the rest of us," said Mr. Frankston,
+who did not seem inclined to pursue the subject. "Never mind, when
+Frankston, Telfer, and Co. get the control of the South Sea Island
+trade, there won't be any room for dashing filibusters, will there,
+Charley?"
+
+"I hope not; his day is over," said the captain. "I am sorry for him,
+too, for he was one of the grandest men and finest seamen God Almighty
+ever permitted to sail upon His ocean. Under a different star he might
+have been an ornament to the service and an honour to his country."
+
+After dinner we all sat out on the broad verandah, where we lighted our
+cigars, and enjoyed the view over the sleeping waters of the bay. It was
+a glorious night, undimmed by mist or cloud. The harbour lights flamed
+brightly, anear and afar, while steamers passing to the different points
+of the endless harbourage lighted up the glittering plain with their
+variegated lamps, as if an operatic effect were intended.
+
+"What a wondrous sight!" said Miranda. "It certainly is a scene of
+enchantment, though it loses some of its beauty in my eyes from being so
+restless and exciting. There is no solitude; all is motion and effort,
+as is the city by day. Our sea-view is as still and silent as if our
+island had just been discovered. It lends an air of solemnity to the
+night which this brilliant, many-coloured vision seems to want."
+
+"Antonia and I enjoy this sort of thing thoroughly," said Mr. Neuchamp;
+"our country is hot and dry as the summer comes on, and the glare is
+something to remember. But I must say I prefer the winter of the
+interior. The nights are heavenly, the mid-day warm without being
+oppressive, and the mornings are delightfully cool and bracing."
+
+"As weather it is as nearly perfect as it can be," assented Mrs.
+Neuchamp, backing up her husband. "Then the rides and drives on the firm
+sandy turf and the delightful natural roads! It's nice to think you can
+drive thirty or forty miles in any direction without going off your own
+run. Miranda must come and stay with me for a month or two when you get
+settled, Mr. Telfer. We must see if she can't be persuaded to leave the
+seaside for a while."
+
+"We'll make up a party," said Mr. Frankston; "it's a long time since I
+have seen any station life. I had half a mind to try squatting once
+myself. But I'm like Miranda--I don't sleep well unless I can hear the
+surge in the night; but for a month or two, in May or June, it would be
+great fun, and do us all good, I expect."
+
+"Yes, my dear dad," said his daughter, patting his shoulder, "think of
+the riding and driving. You're not too old to ride, you know. I'll lend
+you Osmond--he's my horse now, and he's a pearl of hackneys. I'll ride
+out with you, and Ernest can take Miranda and Courtenay in the
+four-in-hand drag."
+
+"Well, that's a bargain, my dear!" said her father. "When the summer is
+over and the autumn has nearly come to an end, and the nights and
+mornings are growing fresh and crisp, that's the time to see the
+interior at its best. I haven't forgotten the feel of a bush-morning at
+sunrise; there's something very exhilarating about it."
+
+"Is there not?" replied Mrs. Neuchamp, "'as you see the vision splendid,
+of the sunlit plains extended,' an ocean of verdure. You trace the river
+by the heavy timber on its banks, and the slowly-rising mists along its
+course. Then the sun, a crimson and gold shield against the cloudless
+azure, the cattle low in the great river meadows, you hear the crack of
+a stockwhip as the horses come galloping in like a regiment of cavalry,
+and the day has begun. It seems like a new world awakening to life."
+
+"I know a young woman," said her husband, "whose 'inward eye' by no
+means made 'the bliss of solitude' when she first went into the bush."
+
+"That was because I was newly married--torn away from my childhood's
+home, and all that," laughed his wife. "Besides, you used to stay away
+unconscionably long sometimes; now everything looks different. You will
+have to pass through that stage, my dear Miranda. So prepare yourself."
+
+"I am sure Hilary will never stay away from our home unless he is
+obliged; and then I must sew and sing till he comes back, like my
+countrywomen at Norfolk Island and Pitcairn when their men are at sea."
+
+"A very good custom, too," said Paul. "That reminds me that we must have
+some music to-night. Antonia will lead the way, and our cigars will
+taste all the better in the verandah."
+
+Mrs. Neuchamp had a fine voice and a fine ear. She had been well taught,
+and played her own accompaniments, while she sang several favourite
+songs of her father's, and a duet with her husband.
+
+"Now, it's your turn, Miranda," said Mr. Frankston. "I've heard all
+about you from the captain."
+
+"I shall be very glad to sing," she answered, seating herself at the
+piano, "if you care for my simple songs. I have always been fond of
+music, but our poor little harmonium was, for a long time, my only
+instrument. What shall I sing?"
+
+"Sing the 'Lament of Susannah M'Coy for her drowned lover,'" said the
+captain, "that was a song brought from Pitcairn, wasn't it? I always
+liked it the best of all the island sing songs."
+
+"It is simple," replied Miranda, "but it is true; I believe the poor
+girl used to sit by the sea-shore singing it at night, and died of grief
+a year afterwards."
+
+She struck a few chords on the grand Erard piano, and commenced a
+wailing, dirge-like melody, "a long, low island song," inexpressibly
+mournful. The movement was chiefly low-toned, and in the minor key, but
+at times it rose to a higher pitch, into which was thrown the agonised
+sorrow of irrevocable love, the endless regret, the void immeasurable
+and eternal, the hopeless despair of a desolated existence.
+
+The words were simple, and more in recitative than rhythm. There was a
+certain monotony and repetition, but as an expression of passionate and
+hopeless sorrow it was strangely complete.
+
+The tale was old as life and death, as love and joy, hope and despair.
+The maiden watching and waiting, during the voyage of the whaleship, the
+year long through. The sudden delight of the vessel being sighted; the
+boats going off; the intensity of the anxiety; the returning crew; the
+eager scanning of the passengers; the refusal to believe in mischance;
+the guarded half-told tale, then the unmistakable word of doom! _He had
+been drowned at sea_; the fearless, fortunate harpooner had, in the
+sudden flurry of the death-stricken whale, been thrown overboard and
+stunned. When the half-capsized boat was righted, Johnnie Mills was
+missing! They rowed round and round, all vainly, then sadly returned to
+the vessel. This was the tale they had to tell, the tale Susannah M'Coy
+had to hear. Her over-wrought feelings found relief in the "Maiden's
+Lament," and after her death her girl companions in singing it preserved
+the memory of the maiden and her lover, of his doom and her unhappy
+fate.
+
+There was nothing unusually melodious in the song itself, but as the
+low, rich notes of Miranda's voice struck on the ear of the listeners,
+those who had not heard before seemed spell-bound. Not a motion was
+made, not a sound escaped them, as they listened with an intentness
+which said far more than the ready and general praise at its close.
+Knowing, as I did, the extraordinary quality of her voice, I had
+expected that some such effect would be produced, but I hardly reckoned
+on such complete and universal admiration.
+
+When the cry of the heartbroken girl rose and echoed through the large
+room, the effect was electrical; the higher notes were sweet and clear,
+without a suspicion of hardness, and yet had wondrous under-tones of
+tears, such as I never heard in another woman's voice. Long before the
+wailing notes had faded into nothingness Mrs. Neuchamp's eyes were wet.
+While old Paul, Mr. Neuchamp, and the captain, seemed in no great hurry
+to express their approval.
+
+"That's the most wonderful song I ever heard," said the old man. "I've
+heard the girls in Nukuheva sing one something like it, and there are
+notes in Miranda's voice that take me back to my youth, the island days,
+and the good old times when Paul Frankston was young and foolish. God's
+blessing on them! Miranda! my dear, take an old man's thanks. I foresee
+that I shall have two daughters: one at Marahmee in the summer, and the
+other in the winter, when Antonia is in the bush."
+
+After this no one would hear of her leaving off. She sang other songs
+which were not all sorrowful. Some had a livelier tone, and the
+transient gleam which lit up the dark eyes told that mirth had its due
+place in her rich and many-sided nature.
+
+"Would you like to hear one of our hymns now?" she asked, with the
+simplicity of a child. "We used to sing them in parts, and many a night
+when the moon was at the full did we sit on the beach and sing for
+hours. I can hear the surge now, and it puts me in mind of our dear old
+home."
+
+"Oh, by all means," said Antonia, and without further prelude, she began
+a well-known hymn, the deep tones of her voice rising and falling as if
+in a cathedral, while the organ-like chords which she evoked from the
+Erard favoured the faultless rendering. We involuntarily joined in, and
+I saw Antonia looking admiringly at the singer, as with head upraised,
+and all the fervour of a medival penitent, she poured forth a volume of
+melodious adoration.
+
+All were silent for some seconds after the last cadence had died away.
+At length the pause was broken by Antonia.
+
+"After that lovely hymn, my dear Miranda, let me first thank you warmly
+for the pleasure you have given us all, and then suggest that we retire.
+The gentlemen may stay and smoke a while longer, but this has been an
+exciting day for us, and you require rest. Besides, you have to make
+acquaintance with your new relations."
+
+"A sensible suggestion, my darling," said Mr. Frankston. "So we'll say
+good night to Mrs. Telfer and yourself. We must have one more cigar in
+the verandah while we think over that great song of hers."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was arranged between Mr. Frankston and the captain that I should take
+my bride to my old home on the morning after next, and present her to my
+family. It might have been thought that, after so long an absence from
+my parents, it would have been more in keeping with filial duty to have
+rushed off at once and, in a manner, cast myself at their feet like the
+prodigal. But that unlucky, yet eventually fortunate younger son, did
+not bring a wife with him, in which case the paternal welcome might have
+been less distinct. I had put myself in the hands of my more experienced
+friends, who, as men of the world, knew the value of first impressions.
+
+"You and Miranda will be all the better for a day's rest, and a little
+cheering up at Marahmee," had said the captain. "Antonia, too, will see
+that your sea princess is properly turned out, and fit to bear
+inspection by the ladies of the family. _They_ won't have much to
+criticise, I'll be bound. I'm an early man, so I'll go and breakfast
+with your father, and give him a general idea of your doings and
+prospects. You had better turn up about mid-day. It will be high tide
+then, and Miranda will see Isola Bella at its best. Come on board the
+_Florentia_ first, and I'll send you over in proper style."
+
+Acting upon this prudent advice, Miranda and I alighted from the
+Marahmee carriage at the Circular Quay, and once more set foot on board
+the _Florentia_, where we found the captain ready to receive us. He made
+us come down into the cuddy and partake of fruit and wine (that is,
+Miranda took the first and I the latter), while he gave us a sketch of
+his interview with my father.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+"OUR JACK'S COME HOME TO-DAY"
+
+
+"The old skipper was walking in the garden, glass in hand. I knew I
+should find him up, though it was soon after sunrise. No fear of _his_
+being in bed and the sun up. 'Hallo! Carryall,' he said, 'I was just
+thinking about you; thought I could make out the _Florentia_ yesterday.
+What sort of a voyage have you had, and what luck among the right
+whales?'
+
+"'Pretty fair. Rather longer out than I expected, but didn't do badly
+after all; had some trading among the islands; cocoa-nut oil has gone
+up, and the copra I got will pay handsomely.'
+
+"'That's good news,' he said; 'and look here, Carryall, my boy, I've
+been thinking lately that a very paying business might be put together
+by going in regularly for island trading. They're ready and willing to
+take our goods, and their raw material--oil, copra, fruit, ever so many
+things that they are only too glad to sell--would pay a handsome
+percentage on the outlay. What is wanted is a partner here with capital,
+a few ships to go regularly round the islands, and a manager who knows
+the language and understands the natives. If I were a little younger, by
+Jove! I'd go into it myself. You'll stay and breakfast with us of
+course. We're not late people. By the by you haven't heard of my boy in
+your travels, have you?'
+
+"'Well I _have_ heard of him, and--'
+
+"'Heard of him!' he said, not giving me time to get further; 'where?
+what was he doing?'
+
+"'Well, he was supercargo on board the _Leonora_--Hayston's brig. They
+had been at Ocean Island just before me.'
+
+"'Hayston, Bully Hayston?' the old man said, looking stern. 'I'm sorry
+he was mixed up with that fellow. A fine seaman, but a d--d scoundrel,
+from all I've heard of him; what were they doing there? However, I know
+young fellows must buy their experience. Perhaps he's left him by this
+time.'
+
+"'The _Leonora_ was wrecked in Chabral harbour,' I said, 'and her bones
+lie on the coral reef there. She'll never float again.'
+
+"'Ha! and did Hilary get off safe? I suppose it was a heavy gale. Heard
+anything of him since?'
+
+"'He stayed at Mout for some time,' I said, 'and then was lucky
+enough to get a passage to Sydney in the _Rosario_, but he left her at
+Norfolk Island.'
+
+"'Left her--left her--why the devil didn't he come on in her, and see
+his old father, and mother, and sisters? Hang the fellow, has he no
+natural feeling? Here have we been wearing our hearts out with anxiety
+all these years, and his poor mother having a presentiment (as she calls
+it) that he's drowned or sold into slavery, or something, and d--mn me,
+sir! the young rascal goes and stays to have a picnic at Norfolk Island!
+The next thing we'll hear, I suppose, is that he's married one of these
+Pitcairn Island girls. Not but what he might do worse, for I never saw
+such a lot of fine-looking lasses in my life, as I did the last time I
+was there; and as good as they are handsome, by George! But to stay
+there, so near home too! If I didn't know that he was a good boy, and as
+honest as the day, from his cradle upwards, I'd say he was an unnatural
+young-- But I won't miscall the lad. To stay there--'
+
+"'But he didn't stay there, captain.'
+
+"'What!' he roared, 'didn't stay there--went back to the islands, I
+suppose, to have a little more beach-combing and loafing? Why couldn't
+he have come home when he was so near? He _might_ have thought of his
+poor mother, if he didn't give _me_ credit for caring to see his face
+again.'
+
+"And here the old skipper frowned, and put on a terribly stern
+expression. 'Why, he might have come home and married a wife, and
+settled down and been the comfort of our old age.'
+
+"'So he has!' I said; 'that is, he is married, and he has come to
+Sydney.'
+
+"'Married? Come to Sydney? How can that be? Why isn't he here? Carryall,
+my boy, you wouldn't play a joke on an old man? No, sir! you wouldn't
+_dare_ to do it. How _could_ he come to Sydney and be married?'
+
+"'He came with me in the _Florentia_,' I said, 'and brought his wife with
+him.' And here, Miranda, my dear, I told him what a very unpleasant
+young woman you were, and took about a quarter of an hour to do it; at
+the end of which narration the breakfast bell rang.
+
+"'Come into the house, Carryall,' he said, 'and tell it all to his
+mother. I'll break it to her by saying that you bring news of Hilary,
+and that he's quite well, and so on, and likely to come home soon.'
+
+"So we went in. I shall never forget the look that came into your
+mother's eyes when the skipper said, 'Here's Captain Carryall straight
+from the islands; he's brought you girls some shells and curios as
+usual, and better than that, news of Hilary.'
+
+"'News of my boy, my darling Hilary! Good news, I hope. Oh, Captain
+Carryall! say it's good. Oh! _where_ is he, and what was he doing?'
+
+"'It is good news, my dear lady,' said I, 'or I should not have come
+over to tell you. I saw him quite lately as near Sydney as Norfolk
+Island.'
+
+"'Of course he was coming here--coming here; he would not have the heart
+to stay away from his poor father and mother any longer, when he was so
+near as that. And was he quite well? Oh! my boy--my precious Hilary!
+What would I not give if he were to come here and settle down for good?'
+
+"'He is thinking of doing so,' I said. 'His fixed intention was to marry
+and live in Sydney for the rest of his days.'
+
+"'Thank God! thank God in His mercy!' she said, clasping her hands. 'And
+do you think he will be here soon--how many weeks?'
+
+"'It will not be a matter of weeks, but days; I know that he took his
+passage in a certain ship, and that you may expect him every hour.'
+
+"Then she looked keenly at me. Your mother is a clever woman. She began
+to think I had been leading her on.
+
+"'You are not treating me as a child, Charles Carryall, are you? My son
+is here, and you have been afraid to tell me so. Is it not so?'
+
+"'Only a harmless deception, my dear Mrs. Telfer. Your son and his wife
+came here in my vessel. They stayed at Paul Frankston's last night, and
+will be here at mid-day.'
+
+"The dear lady looked as if she could not realise it for a moment, then
+sat back in her chair, and raised her eyes as if in prayer.
+
+"One of the girls moved as if to support her, but she waved her off.
+'No, my dear, you need not be afraid. I shall not faint; I have borne
+many things, and can bear this. I am returning thanks to our Almighty
+Father, who has restored my son to me. "My son, who was lost, and is
+found." My son, who was dead to me, and is now restored to life. Oh,
+God! most heartily and humbly do I thank Thee--most merciful--most
+loving!'
+
+"After this we were a very happy party. The girls, of course, wanted to
+know all about Miranda here"--here my darling smiled, and took his hand;
+"I dashed off a sketch, and some day you can ask Mariana and
+Elinor--both great friends of mine they are--if it is a good likeness."
+
+"I am afraid it was too good," sighed Miranda, "and they will be
+dreadfully disappointed."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The end of it was that we left the _Florentia_ at eight bells, in great
+state and majesty, in a whaleboat--upon which Miranda insisted,
+despising the captain's gig as a trumpery skiff--and a picked crew, with
+the skipper himself as the steer-oar.
+
+"That's really something like," she said, as she stepped lightly on to
+the thwart. "If there was a little swell on, I should feel quite myself
+again, and think of the dear days when I was a happy little island girl,
+bare-footed and bare-headed, and thought going off to a strange vessel
+through the great, solemn, sweeping rollers the wildest enjoyment. But I
+am a happy girl now," she added, with a look in her deep eyes which
+expressed a world of love and rich content; "only the thought of
+learning to be a lady sometimes troubles me."
+
+"You will never need to do _that_," I said.
+
+"There is the house?" I cried; "there's Isola Bella!" as we rounded a
+point, and a picturesque stone house came full into view. It had been
+built in the early days of the colony by an Imperial officer, long
+resident in Italy, and showed the period in its massive stone walls,
+Florentine faade, and wide, paved verandah. The site was elevated
+above the lake-like waters of the bay, towards which a winding walk led,
+terminating in a massive stone pier, into which iron rings and
+stanchions had been let. The beach was white and smooth, though the tide
+ran high, and the wavelets rippled close to the pale sandstone rocks,
+which lent a tone of delicacy and purity to the foreshore.
+
+The weather-stained walls of the house were half covered with climbers,
+a wilderness of tropical shrubs, and richly-blooming flower-thickets.
+There were glades interspersed, carpeted with the thick-swarded couch or
+"dhoub" grass, originally imported from India, and which, nourished by
+the coast showers, and delighting in a humid atmosphere, preserves its
+general freshness of colour the long Australian summer through.
+
+I had been so preoccupied with speculations as to Miranda's reception by
+my family, that my own emotions, on returning to my childhood's home,
+lay in abeyance. Now, however, at the near view of the house--the pier,
+the walled-in sea-bath--the scenes and adventures of my earliest youth
+came back with overwhelming force and clearness. There was the
+boat-house, into which I had paddled so many a time after nightfall,
+returning from fishing or sailing excursions. There was the flagstaff on
+which was displayed the Union Jack and other flags on great occasions.
+The old flag floated in the breeze to-day. I knew for what reason and
+celebration. I could see my mother, as of old, walking down to the pier
+to welcome and embrace, or to remonstrate and fondly chide when I had
+remained absent in stormy weather. How many fears and anxieties had I
+not caused to agitate that loving heart! And my stern and mostly silent
+parent--did I not once surprise him in scarce dignified sorrow at my
+night-long absence and probable untimely decease. Yet all his words
+were, "God forgive you, my boy, for the misery you have caused us this
+night."
+
+And now the years had passed--had flown rather, crowded as they were
+with incident--that had changed the heedless boy into the man,--matured,
+perhaps, by too early worldly knowledge, and the grim comradeship of
+danger and death. I had returned safely, bringing my sheaves with me in
+the guise of one dearer to me than life. I had, during the intervals of
+reflection I had lately enjoyed, repented fully of the unconsciously
+selfish sins of my youth, and was fixed in firm resolve to atone, so far
+as in me lay, by care and consideration in the future.
+
+As we dashed alongside of the pier, the years rolled back, and as of old
+I saw my mother pacing the well-known path to the boat. She was followed
+by my father at a short distance. I fancied that the dear form told of
+the lapse of time, in less firm step and the bent figure which age
+compels. My father was erect as ever, and his eye swept the far horizon
+of outer seas as of old; but surely his hair and beard were whiter.
+
+Miranda's step was first upon the pier--she needed no help in leaving or
+entering a boat. Side by side we walked to meet my mother, who, with a
+sob of joy, folded me in her arms. "My boy! my boy!" was all she could
+articulate for some moments; then, gently disengaging herself, "and this
+is my new daughter?" she said. "May God bless and keep you both, my
+children, and preserve for us the great happiness which His providence
+has ordained this day."
+
+"Well, neighbour!" in the well-remembered greeting which he affected,
+rang out here my father's clear tones, "and so you have finished your
+cruise for a while! What a man you have grown!" he exclaimed, as he
+looked upwards half-admiringly at my head and shoulders, markedly above
+his own. "Filled out, bronzed, you look a sailor, man, all over."
+
+"And so you wouldn't give the Sydney girls a chance, and have brought a
+wife back with you for fear there mightn't be a 'currency lass' to
+spare. I must say I admire your taste, my boy. No one can fault that.
+Welcome, my dear Miranda, to your own and your husband's home. Give your
+old father a kiss and the ceremony is complete." Here the governor
+gravely embraced his new daughter, and then, holding her at arm's
+length, regarded her admiringly, till she playfully ran back to the
+girls. "Charley here guarantees she is as good as she is handsome. He
+said better, indeed; but that's impossible. No woman with her looks
+could be better inside than out. So, Hilary, my boy, I congratulate you
+on your choice. You've fallen on your feet in love and friendship both,
+according to what Carryall tells me of Paul Frankston's partnership
+arrangement. And now we'll come up to the house and drink the bride's
+health. I feel as if I needed a refresher after all this excitement. I
+little thought when I saw Charley come over so early what was in store
+for us, eh, mother?"
+
+Before we reached the house the two girls, Mariana and Elinor, had taken
+possession of Miranda and carried her upstairs to the rooms which were
+to be allotted to us while we dwelt at Isola Bella. "Now that the other
+boys are up the country," said Mariana, who was the elder, "we have more
+houseroom than we need. So, directly we heard that you were in Sydney,
+Elinor and I set to work and arranged these two rooms, so that you and
+Miranda should be quite independent. There's such a pretty view of the
+harbour. You can use this one as a sitting-room, and there's a smaller
+dressing-room which he can make a den of. Men always like a place to be
+untidy in."
+
+"Oh, how nice it will be," said Elinor, the younger one, whom I remember
+a curly-headed romp of ten when I left home, "to have a mate for rowing
+and boat-sailing. Mariana here doesn't care for boats, and dislikes
+rough weather. I suppose no weather would frighten you. Oh, what lovely
+trips we shall have, and mother can't be nervous when you are with me."
+
+"I suppose you think Miranda is a sort of mermaid," said I, now arrived
+and joining in the conversation, "and impossible to be drowned. But what
+would become of me if anything happened to her? Do you think I can trust
+her with you? What a grand room! I remember it well in old days when it
+used to be the guest chamber. I was only allowed into it now and then,
+and always under inspection. I feel the promotion."
+
+"Now, we'll run away and leave you," said Mariana. "Lunch is nearly
+ready; you will hear the bell."
+
+We sat down on a couch and gazed into each other's eyes with clasped
+hands. The harbour, with its variously composed fleet, lay wide and
+diversified before us. Every conceivable vessel--barge, steamer,
+collier, skiff, yacht, and row-boat--made progress adown and across its
+waters. How fair a scene it was on this, one of the loveliest days which
+sun and sky and wavelets deep ever combined to fashion! After all my
+adventures by seas and lands--after all the sharp contrasts of my
+chequered life--now lotus-eating amid the groves or by the founts of an
+earthly paradise--now ignorant, from one day to another, of the hour
+when the death-knell would sound--now free and joyous, handsomely
+dressed, in foreign seaports with ruffling swagger and chinking
+dollars--anon ragged, shoeless, shipwrecked, and forlorn--nay, starving,
+but for the charity of the soft-hearted heathens whom we in our pride
+are prone to despise.
+
+And now I was at home again. Home! sweet home! in fullest sense of the
+word--welcomed, beloved, fted! What had I done to deserve this love and
+trust now so profusely showered upon me? My better angel, too, my
+darling Miranda, by my side, sharing in all this wealth of affection.
+How could I have foretold that such good fortune would be mine, all
+unworthy that I felt myself, when, bruised and bleeding, I was hurled
+ashore in the midnight storm from the wrecked _Leonora_?--when I felt
+in thought the deadly shudder which ever follows the scratch of the
+poisoned arrow--when I sank to eternal rest (as I then supposed) beneath
+the surf-tormented shore of the island? How had I jostled death,
+disease, danger in every form and shape,--and now, almost without
+thought or volition of my own, I was placed in possession of all those
+things for which through a long life so many men toil and struggle
+vainly and unsuccessfully.
+
+"Thank God! thank God!" I exclaimed aloud involuntarily, for truly our
+hearts were filled in that hour of realised peace and happiness with
+grateful wonder.
+
+"Let us give Him thanks," whispered Miranda, "who only has done this
+wondrous thing for us."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Captain Carryall, my father, and Mr. Frankston were men of action--all
+through their lives the deed had followed quick on the resolve. Thus,
+within a week after our arrival, premises were purchased on the shore of
+the bay; stores and warehouses were planned, while upon an office in the
+chief business centre of Sydney, at no great distance from Macquarie
+Square, a legend of the period presented the firm of "Carryall, Telfer,
+and Company, South Sea merchants and purchasers of island produce." This
+was the commencement, as it turned out, of a prosperous mercantile
+enterprise, ramifying in divers directions. It was arranged not only to
+purchase or to ship on commission the raw material so easily procurable,
+but to advance on whaling and trading ventures; the projectors, better
+equipped with experience than capital, being always willing to pay high
+interest, for which indeed the margin of profit amply provided. Here I
+was in my element, whether directing labourers, interviewing seamen,
+shouting in the vernacular to the native crews, or calculating the value
+of cargoes. My father came over every other day to watch me at my work,
+and of my style of management he was pleased to express approval. "You
+have not altogether wasted your time, my boy," he said one day. "The
+great thing in all these matters is energy. With that and reasonable
+experience a man is sure to be successful in a new country--indeed in
+any country. Pluck and perseverance mean everything in life. Never
+despair. You know our family motto--_Fortuna favet fortibus_. And you
+would smile if I told you how often in the history of my life a bold bid
+for fame or fortune has been my only resource."
+
+Whether I had exhibited the proverbial fortitude, or whether, indeed,
+the capricious goddess was mollified in my case, cannot with certainty
+be decided. The fact, however, was there, that our luck, from whatever
+cause, was in the ascendant, inasmuch as business of a profitable nature
+began to pour in upon us. The average gains beyond expenses were so
+apparent that it was evident that before long we should be in a position
+to set up housekeeping on our own account.
+
+In the mean time nothing could be more harmonious and satisfactory than
+our composite home life at Isola Bella, difficult as it is sometimes to
+arrange the housing of two families, however closely related, under one
+roof. The natural amiability of Miranda's nature fortunately prevented
+the slightest friction. Constitutionally anxious to please, it was the
+chief article of her simple faith to seek the happiness of others rather
+than her own. Prompt in compliance, eager to learn all minor matters
+with which she had been necessarily unacquainted, ready to join in the
+harmless mirth of the hour, or to tell of the wonders of her island
+home, she was, as all agreed, a constant source of interest and
+entertainment.
+
+More than all, her pervading, fervent, religious faith endeared her to
+the pious heart of my dearest mother, in whose visits to the poor and
+in charitable ministrations she was by choice her constant companion;
+while her unfeigned pity for the half-fed, half-clothed children of the
+neglected classes with which every city abounds excited my mother's
+wonder and admiration.
+
+"Your wife is a pearl of womanhood, my dear Hilary," she would say to
+me. "You are a good boy; I hope you are worthy of her. I can hardly
+think that any man could be. When you see the women so many men are
+fated to pass their lives with, you have indeed reason to be thankful."
+
+"So I am, my dear old mother," I would say. "Every day I feel minded to
+sing a song of joy and gratitude. I feel as life was a new discovery and
+creation. I am in a Paradise where no serpent that ever crawled has
+power to harm my Eve. I feel sometimes as if there was an unreal
+perfection about it all, too bright to last."
+
+So indeed it appeared to me at that time. Fully employed as I was by day
+and in the exercise of all the faculties that my island life had served
+to train, it was impossible to overtask the health of mind and body in
+which I revelled. I was sensible, too, that the joint enterprise upon
+which I had embarked was growing and improving daily, while much of its
+success was attributed by Mr. Frankston and Captain Carryall to my
+management. At night, when I returned there was one who never failed to
+catch sight of my skiff when half across the bay. Then our family
+evenings, cheered with song and harmless mirth, were truly restful after
+the labours of the day.
+
+Our neighbours, too, with all the old friends of the family, seemed
+desirous to welcome the son of the house who had been so long absent,
+and had wandered so far. Whether from curiosity, or a higher feeling,
+they were equally anxious to call upon "the son's wife." The positions,
+and dispositions, manners, and habitudes of the different types were
+well explained to Miranda by my socially-experienced sisters, so that
+she was saved from any misapprehension which might so easily have
+arisen.
+
+Our friends the Neuchamps, too, were often with us, and made the greater
+part of our quiet recreations. On alternate Sundays nothing would
+content Mr. Frankston short of our all dining with him, to be sent back
+in his sailing boat if the weather was favourable, or to remain for the
+night in the ample guest-chambers of Marahmee if otherwise.
+
+Our Saturday afternoons, indeed, were almost entirely devoted to picnics
+and cruises in his yacht, at which time he insisted upon Miranda
+steering, or, as he said, taking command, at which times he was always
+loud in admiration of her nautical skill--declaring, indeed, that she
+was fit to take charge of any vessel in Her Majesty's navy.
+
+We had also seen a good deal of our fellow passengers, Mr. and Miss
+Vavasour, who, after a first introduction, were always included in Mr.
+Frankston's Saturday picnic invitations. That lively damsel professed a
+great admiration for Mr. Frankston, who responded so promptly that
+Antonia reproached him for turning faithless to Miranda.
+
+"It's his nature, he can't help it," she said.
+
+"But Miss Vavasour will have some day to suffer whatever pangs are
+supposed to fall to the lot of the deserted fair; then she will repent
+of her fascinations."
+
+"Not at all--sufficient for the day, you know. I begin to think that
+one's admirers ought to be past their first youth. They're more
+thoroughly appreciative. 'On his frank features middle age Had scarcely
+set its signet sage,' and so on. I'm sure that quite describes Mr.
+Frankston. How should you like me for a mamma-in-law, Mrs. Neuchamp?
+Marahmee is such a dear house, and these yachting parties are all that
+are wanted to make life perfect."
+
+"I give my consent," said Antonia, "but beware of delay. 'Men were
+deceivers ever,' and if you wait more than a fortnight your charms will
+be on the wane, so I warn you."
+
+"I like decision," responded Miss Vavasour, "but perhaps 'two weeks,' as
+our American friend used to say, is _rather hurried_ legislation. The
+trousseau business and the milliner's objections would be fatal. Even
+Miranda must have stood out for a longer respite. How long did you take,
+Miranda, dear? You're the pattern woman, you know, the first girl I ever
+saw that men and women equally delighted to honour."
+
+Miranda blushed charmingly, then looking up with her clear, frank eyes,
+that always appeared to me to be fountains of truth, as she replied--
+
+"Hilary and I were married just a month after he asked me to be his
+wife, you know very well."
+
+So, jesting lightly, and with a breeze that sufficed just to fill the
+great sails of the yacht, we glided along until we had explored the
+recesses of Middle harbour,--a spacious inlet winding amid the thick
+growing semi-tropical forest which clothed the slopes of the bays and
+promontories to the water's edge.
+
+Here and there were small clearings in which might be discovered a tent
+or cabin, just sufficient for the needs of a couple of bachelors or a
+hermit, who here desired to live during his holiday amid this "boundless
+contiguity of shade"--"The world forgetting, and the world forgot."
+
+"Oh, how lovely!" said Mrs. Percival, as we swept round a point and came
+suddenly upon a fairy-like nook, a tiny bay with milk-white strand and
+fantastic sandstone rocks. There was a fenced enclosure around a cabin.
+There was a boat, with rude stone pier and boat-house. The owner, in
+cool garb and broad-leafed sombrero, was seated on a rock reading, and
+occasionally dabbling his bare feet in the rippling tide. As the yacht
+glided past in the deep water which came so close to his possessions,
+he raised his hat to the ladies, and resumed his studies.
+
+"What a picture of peace and restful enjoyment!" said Mrs. Craven. "How
+I envy men who can seclude themselves like this within an hour's sail
+from a city! Now, people are so fond of generalising about colonists,
+and how wrong they are! They always describe them as wildly energetic
+and restless people, perpetually rushing about in search of gain or
+gold."
+
+"That's Thorndale," said one of the younger guests. "He works hard
+enough at his business when he is about it, but his notion of enjoyment
+is to come here on a Saturday with only a boat-keeper, to fish, and
+read, and smoke till Monday morning, when he goes back to his law and
+his office."
+
+"Sensible fellow!" said the colonel. "There's nothing like tent life to
+recruit a man's health after a spell of official work. We used to manage
+that in India, when we couldn't go all the way to the hills, by forming
+small encampments of a dozen or twenty fellows, having a mess-house in
+common, and living in tents or huts separately when we were not hunting
+or shooting. Splendid life while it lasted! Sent us back twice the men
+we were, when we left the lines!"
+
+We anchored for lunch in one of the fairy nooks of which that enchanted
+region is so lavish. There was tea for the ladies and something
+presumably stronger for the seniors. We had mirth and pleasantries,
+spoken and acted--all went merrily in that charmed sunshine and beneath
+the shadowy sea-woods. We had songs--"A mellow voice Fitz Eustace
+had"--that is, one of the young fellows, native and to the manner born,
+lifted up his tuneful pipe and made us all laugh, the air he sang being
+certainly not "wild and sad,"--the reverse, indeed.
+
+"Now, is not this an ideal picnic,--a day rescued from that terrible
+fiend Ennui, that haunts us all?" cried Miss Vavasour. "I might
+truthfully, perhaps, except myself, who am frivolous, and therefore
+easily amused--but of course it sounds well to complain and be
+mysterious. But, really, this is life indeed! The climate makes up for
+any little deficiency. I shall positively go home and arrange my
+affairs, make sure of my allowance being paid quarterly, then take a
+cottage near Miranda, on that sweet North Shore,--isn't that what you
+call it?--and live happy ever afterwards like a 'maid of Llangollen.'"
+
+"Nothing can be nicer," said Mrs. Neuchamp. "We'll all three live here
+in the summer, within reach of the sea-breeze. In June you must come up
+and stay with me at Rainbar; then you will know what the glory of winter
+in our Riverina is like."
+
+The breeze freshened as we glided swiftly on our homeward course. We had
+expended most of the daylight before we left our fairy bower. Sunset
+banners flared o'er the western horizon. "White and golden-crimson,
+blue," fading imperceptibly into the paler tones, and swift-appearing
+shades which veil the couch of the day god. The stars tremulously
+gleamed at first timidly, then brightly scintillating in pure and
+clustered radiance. Our merry converse had gradually lessened, then
+ceased and died away. All seemed impressed by the solemnity of the
+hour--the hush of sea and land--the shimmering phosphorescent sparkle of
+the silver-seeming plain over which we swept all swift and silently.
+Then the lights of the city, brilliant, profuse, widely scattered as in
+a lower firmament!
+
+Miss Vavasour sat with Miranda's hand in hers. "How lovely to live in an
+hour like this, and yet it is like this with such surroundings that I
+should like to die."
+
+"Hush!" said Miranda, "we must all die when God wills it. It is not good
+to talk so, my dear."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+During the next week our good friends and fellow-passengers of the
+_Florentia_ were to leave us on their return voyage. We arranged to meet
+as often as we could manage the leisure, and, as it happened, there was
+to be a ball at Government House--one of the great functions of the
+season, which, it was decided, would be an appropriate conclusion to our
+comradeship. Mr. and Mrs. Neuchamp were going back to their station,
+Captain Carryall was under sailing orders, and our friends the Colonel
+and Mrs. Percival were leaving for India and "going foreign" generally.
+
+Miranda was not eager to attend the extremely grand, and, as far as she
+was concerned, strange entertainment. But the whole party were most
+anxious for her to make her appearance in public--at least on that
+occasion. Partly from natural curiosity, partly on account of my wishes,
+and my sisters' and Mrs. Neuchamp's strong persuasion, she
+consented--pleading, however, to be relieved from all anxiety on the
+score of her dress.
+
+"Oh! we'll take that responsibility," said Elinor. "Antonia Neuchamp is
+generally admitted to dress in perfect taste. We'll compose a becoming
+ball-dress amongst us or die--something simple and yet not wholly out of
+the fashion, and becoming to Miranda's style of beauty."
+
+"I'm afraid you'll make me vain," she answered, smiling. "What will you
+do if I spend all Hilary's money on dress? However, it must be a lovely
+sight. I have read of balls and grand entertainments, of course, and
+when I was a girl longed to be able to take part in them. Now that I am
+married," and here she gazed at me with those tender, truthful eyes, "I
+seem not to care for mere pleasure. It leads to nothing, you know."
+
+"You are going to be a pattern wife, Miranda, I see," said Mariana, my
+elder sister. "You must not spoil Hilary, you know. He will think he is
+the only man in the world."
+
+"And is he not for me?" she asked, eagerly. Then blushing at the quick
+betrayal of her inmost heart, she added, "Should it not be so? Are
+civilised people in a great city anxious to attract admiration even
+after they are married?"
+
+"There are people who do this and more in all societies, my dear," said
+my mother, with a seriousness which rebuked our inclination to smile at
+Miranda's ignorance of the world. "But do you, my dear child, cling fast
+to the faith in which you have been reared. You will neither be of them
+nor among them that follow the multitude to do evil."
+
+"I don't think there is as much evil in Miranda as would fill a
+teaspoon," said Elinor. "This isle of hers must have been a veritable
+Eden, or she must have come down from the moon, dear creature. You must
+be very good to deserve her, I can tell you, Master Hilary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The day arrived, the night of which was to realise all manner of
+rose-coloured visions, in which the youth and maidens of Sydney had for
+weeks indulged. It was to be the ball of the season. The grand
+entertainment at which a royal personage, who had arrived in a
+man-of-war but recently, had consented to be present! The officers of
+the squadron were, of course, invited. They were gratified that the ball
+was fixed for a week previous to their sailing on an extended cruise
+among the islands. As it happened, too, the great pastoral section--the
+proprietors of the vast estates of the interior--were still at their
+clubs and hotels, not yet departed for their annual sojourn amid the
+limitless wastes of "The Bush." The _jeunesse dore_ of the city, the
+_flaneurs_, and civil servants who, like the poor, are "always with us,"
+were specially available. Lastly, the Governor's wife had openly stated
+that she wished to show her friends, the Percivals, what we could do in
+Sydney. And she was not a woman to fail in any of her undertakings.
+
+It was arranged that we should comply with Paul Frankston's imperious
+mandate, and meet at Marahmee early in the day for the greater
+convenience of driving thence to Government House, instead of taking
+steamboat from the North Shore. All our plans prospered exceedingly. The
+day was calm and fair; the night illumined by the soft radiance of the
+moon. We dined in great peace and contentment, the ladies having
+devoted--as it appeared to me--the greater portion of the afternoon to
+the befitting adornments of their persons. We were all in good spirits.
+I had reason indeed to be so, for that day I had concluded a highly
+profitable trade arrangement, which augured well for my future
+mercantile career.
+
+"What a glorious night!" said Paul Frankston. "Don't be afraid of that
+Moselle, Ernest, it's some of my own importing--a rare wine, as most
+judges think. Do you remember the ball we went to, Antonia, given by
+that fellow Schfer? Such a swell he looked, and how well he did the
+thing! He has different quarters now, if all's true that we hear."
+
+"The poor Count!" answered Mrs. Neuchamp, "I can't help feeling sorry
+for him though he was an imposter. Is it really true that they put him
+in prison in Batavia? What a fate after such a brilliant career!"
+
+"Carryall was there last year and saw him. Got an order, you know, from
+the Dutch authorities. Said he was fairly cheerful; expected to be out
+in three years."
+
+"He was very near not being imprisoned in Batavia or anywhere else,"
+interposed Mr. Neuchamp, with some show of asperity. "If Jack Windsor
+had come up a little earlier in the fray we'd have broken the
+scoundrel's neck, or otherwise saved the hangman a task."
+
+"Now, Ernest, you mustn't bear malice," said his wife, reprovingly;
+"after all it was Harriet Folleton and not me whom he wished to carry
+off. It was an afterthought trying to make me accompany her. But 'all's
+well that ends well.' He has paid for his misdeeds in full."
+
+"Not half as much as he deserves," growled Neuchamp, who evidently
+declined to perceive the humorous side of the affair--the attempted
+abduction of an imprudent beauty and heiress, besides the
+ultra-felonious taking away of Miss Frankston, as she was then--as a
+pendant to a career of general swindling and imposture practised upon
+the good people of Sydney. Mr. Frankston's eyes began to glitter, too,
+at the reminiscence. So the conversation was changed.
+
+"I really believe that women never wholly repudiate admiration,"
+continued Mr. Neuchamp, reflectively, "however unprincipled and
+abandoned the 'first robber' may be. It's a curious psychical problem."
+
+"You know that is untrue, Ernest," quoth Mrs. Neuchamp, with calm
+decision. "Don't let me hear you say such things." An hour later our
+carriages had taken up position in the apparently endless line of
+vehicles which stretched along Macquarie Street and the lamplit avenues
+which led to it. After nearly an hour's waiting, as it seemed to me, we
+drove through the lofty freestone gateway which led to the viceregal
+mansion, and descended within the portico, amid a guard of honour and
+attendant aides-de-camp. Passing through a vestibule, and being duly
+divested of wraps in the cloak-rooms, we were finally ushered into the
+Viceroy's presence, and duly announced.
+
+Paul Frankston took the lead, with Miranda on his arm. I followed with
+Mrs. Neuchamp, whose husband escorted my sisters. As we were announced
+by name, I noticed that Colonel and Mrs. Percival, with a few other
+people of distinction, were standing on the dais, close to the Governor
+and Lady Rochester, the latter talking to a young man in naval uniform,
+whom I conjectured to be the Prince. As we approached I saw Mrs.
+Percival speak to Lady Rochester, who at once came forward and greeted
+us warmly. "Mr. Frankston," she said, "I know the Governor wishes to
+talk to you about the fortifications; will you and your party come up
+here and stay with us. And so this is Mrs. Telfer, the heroine of my
+friend, Mrs. Percival's romance! I am delighted to see her and
+congratulate you, Mr. Telfer, on bringing us such a sea princess for
+your bride. She has all the air of it, I declare."
+
+Miranda secured a seat near Mrs. Percival, who watched with pleasure her
+evident admiration, mingled with a certain awe, of the brilliant,
+unaccustomed scene before her. Much to her relief Miss Vavasour came up
+with the Cravens, and commenced a critical review of Miranda's and other
+dresses, which soon obliterated all trace of timidity and strangeness.
+
+"Well, my princess," began Miss Vavasour, "and how does this gay and
+festive scene strike you? Isn't it a fairy tale--a dream of the _Arabian
+Nights_? Don't you expect to see the fairy godmother come when the clock
+strikes twelve, and your carriage turn into a pumpkin and white mice?"
+
+"It is a scene of enchantment," said Miranda. "I hardly expected
+anything so dazzlingly beautiful. How the naval uniforms seem to light
+up the throng, and the soldiers too. I don't wonder at all the pretty
+things we read about them in books."
+
+"Yes, they do strike the unaccustomed eye," said Miss Vavasour. "I wish
+I saw them for the first time. I'm afraid I'm growing old. Oh! my
+coming-out ball! I didn't sleep for a week before in anticipation of
+delicious joy, or a week after in retrospection. Ah! me, my youth is
+slipping away unsatisfied, I much fear. And now, unless my eyes deceive
+me, we are going to have the first quadrille. Miranda, we must show
+these good people that we dance in our island. How about partners and a
+_vis-a-vis_?"
+
+We were not left long in doubt. One of the aides-de-camp, a gorgeous
+apparition in gold and scarlet, came up bowing, and intimated his Royal
+Highness' wish to dance with Mrs. Telfer. This, of course, was
+equivalent to a command. I looked for some indecision or hesitation on
+the part of Miranda. But it appeared to her evidently just as much a
+part of the proceedings as if (as had happened before) she had been
+asked to dance with the captain of a man-of-war at one of their island
+ftes, where waltz, quadrille, and polka had long been familiar. I had
+provided myself with an enviable partner in the shape of Mrs. Neuchamp;
+and her husband having promptly arranged matters with Miss Vavasour, we
+betook ourselves to the next set, where we had a full view of the
+viceregal party. My sisters had apparently no difficulty in deciding
+between several aspirants for their respective hands, as they and their
+partners helped to make up the set.
+
+When the melodious crash broke forth, in commencement from Herr
+Knigsmark's musicians, recruited from an Austrian military band which
+had visited Australia, a murmur of admiration made itself audible, as
+the Prince and his partner stepped forth in the opening measure of the
+dance. I turned my head and was lost in astonishment as I noticed the
+unconscious grace with which Miranda moved--calm as when rivalling the
+fairies in rhythmic measure on a milk white beach beside the moonlit
+wave. How many a time had I watched her!
+
+"Who in the world is that lovely creature dancing with the Prince?" I
+heard a middle-aged dame behind me ask. "She has a foreign appearance,
+and I think she is the most exquisitely beautiful woman I ever saw in my
+life. What a figure, too! How she smiles, what teeth, what eyes! Is
+there any news of a migration of angels? Such strange things happen
+nowadays on account of electricity and all that. Who and what is she,
+Mary Kingston, again I ask you?"
+
+"My dear Arabella!" answered the other dame, evidently one of the
+aristocracy of the land, "you are so enthusiastic! She came with the
+Frankston party. That's her husband quite close to us, dancing with Mrs.
+Neuchamp. He's the son of Captain Telfer of North Shore, and has been
+away among the islands and nobody knows where for ever so long. He
+married her at Norfolk Island. I believe she is one of those wonderful
+Pitcairn people that we hear such good accounts of."
+
+"H'm; he's a young man of distinctly good taste, I must say. I wish my
+Cavendish had gone to the islands too, if that is the sort of girl they
+grow there. Mrs. Percival seems to be a great chum of hers. How did that
+come about?"
+
+"I believe they came back in the _Florentia_ together. Captain Carryall
+touched at Norfolk Island on the way from Honolulu, and it seems that
+Mrs. Percival's little boy fell overboard on the voyage, and the girl
+was into the sea after him like a shot, and swam with him in her arms
+till the boats came. There was something about a shark too. Mrs.
+Percival tells everybody she saved his life. No wonder she raves about
+her."
+
+"What a pearl of a girl! No wonder, indeed! And to think of her having a
+world of courage and fire in her with all that delicacy and beauty. I
+can't take my eyes off her. The Prince admires her, apparently, too; and
+she smiles like a pleased child, with as little thought of vanity or
+harm, I dare swear, as a baby. She ought to be a princess, no doubt of
+it. So I see it's the last figure. I must go and look up my old friend,
+Paul Frankston, and make him tell me all about her."
+
+After the dance and the usual promenade, Mrs. Neuchamp and I recovered
+our respective spouses, and took the opportunity to make a detour of the
+ball-room, and even to go through the next apartment, where refreshments
+were procurable, into the ample gardens. The night was superbly
+beautiful. The full moon lit up the grove of tropical foliage and
+richly-flowering plants, the glades carpeted with velvet lawn, the wide
+sea-plain traversed by shimmering pathways of silver. Below, in the
+sleeping bay, lay several men-of-war, half in shadow, half illuminated
+with coloured lamps hanging from their rigging. Gay and mirthful, grave
+or earnest, the frequent partners passed to and fro like shadows of
+revellers beneath the moon, or turned to the lower paths to gaze at the
+motionless vessels, the silver sea, the whispering wave. It was an
+ecstatic experience, a fairy pageant, a supernal revelation of an
+enchanted landscape.
+
+Miranda pressed my arm. "Oh, Hilary! how lovely all this is! But you
+must not laugh at me. Now that I have seen it, I do not think I shall be
+anxious to follow it up. There is something almost intoxicating about it
+all. I can imagine it unfitting people for their everyday life."
+
+We had hardly returned to the ball-room when the glorious strains of the
+"Tausend und einer nacht" waltz pealed forth from the band, and hurrying
+and anxious swains in search of their partners, not always easy to
+discover in such a crush, were seen in every direction. Instant request
+was preferred to Miranda by a naval officer high in command, but to my
+surprise, as we had not spoken on the subject, she graciously, but
+firmly, declined the honour. He protested, but she quietly repeated her
+negative: "I only dance round dances with my husband, Captain Harley!
+and, indeed, these not very often."
+
+He was inclined to be persistent, though most courteous. "I am sure you
+used to dance them once. Indeed, I heard such an account of your
+waltzing, Mrs. Telfer."
+
+"That was before I was married, Captain Harley!" she replied, with such
+evident belief that this explanation fully answered every objection that
+neither the captain nor I could help smiling.
+
+"Look at your friend, Mrs. Neuchamp!" he said, as that dainty matron
+came gliding past with a military partner, looking like the very
+impersonation of the waltz, "and Mrs. Craven, and Mrs. Percival."
+
+"I am so sorry that I can't comply," she answered. "They are quite right
+to dance waltzes if they please. I do not care for them now, and am only
+going to have one with Hilary to-night. He is fond of it, I know. I will
+dance the Lancers with you, if you like."
+
+"Anything with _you_," murmured the captain gallantly, as he carefully
+wrote her name on his card, and departed to secure a partner for the yet
+unfinished portion of the dance.
+
+"I see by this lovely programme," she said, "that there is another
+waltz, a polka, and then the Lancers, which I used to know very well;
+and after that I will dance the next waltz with you, Hilary, just to
+feel what this wonderful floor is like. You are not angry with me for
+refusing Captain Harley? I really feel as if I _could_ not do it."
+
+"You can follow your own way, my dear!" I said, "in this and all minor
+matters. It concerns you chiefly; and, considering how many husbands
+think their wives are rather too fond of dancing, I shall certainly not
+quarrel with mine for not caring for it enough."
+
+I was not altogether without interest as to this set of Lancers which
+she had promised to the gallant captain of the _Arethusa_, knowing as I
+did that the fashion had changed considerably since the Lancers was a
+decorous, somewhat dull dance, differing from the quadrille only in a
+more complicated series of evolutions, and, like that very proper
+performance, affording much opportunity for conversation. Not intending
+to take part in it myself, and being, indeed, more than sufficiently
+entertained as a spectator of the novel spectacle, I stationed myself
+near the "tops," one couple of which Miranda's partner elected to be. I
+saw by the composition of the set, and the looks of some of the youths
+and maidens who eagerly took their places with their pre-arranged
+_vis-a-vis_, that the pace would be rapid and the newest variations
+introduced.
+
+I provided, therefore, for a _contretemps_. My younger sister having
+professed herself tired with the previous waltz, had declined the
+invitation of a partner not wholly acceptable as it appeared to me. I
+therefore persuaded her to walk up with me to a seat near Miranda, so
+that we, as I explained, might see how she got on.
+
+What I anticipated exactly came to pass. The first few non-committal
+quadrille steps were got through without unusual display, but when
+Miranda saw the damsel next to her leaning back as far as she could
+manage, while her partner swung her round several times, as if he either
+wished to lift her entirely off her feet, or drag her arms out of the
+sockets, a look of amazement overspread her features. She stopped with a
+startled air, commingled with distaste, and saying to her surprised
+partner, "I cannot dance like this--I did not know--why did no one tell
+me?"--walked like a queen to the nearest seat. Now my foresight came in.
+Knowing that a girl of nineteen would be willing to dance with a naval
+officer of the rank and fashion of Captain Harley, if she was ready to
+drop with fatigue, I said promptly, "Allow me to introduce you to my
+sister Captain Harley, who will, I am sure, be happy to take my wife's
+place;" a look of joyful acquiescence lit up her countenance, and before
+any serious hitch took place in the figure the vacancy was filled.
+
+I fancied that my sister Elinor, who was at the age when girls are not
+disinclined for a little daring frolic out of pure gladsomeness,
+performed her part in the figures with somewhat less unreserve after
+noticing the look of quiet surprise with which Miranda observed some of
+the more vivacious couples.
+
+We contented ourselves, when the next series of waltzes commenced, with
+a single dance, which we enjoyed as thoroughly as the perfection of
+floor, music, and surroundings warranted.
+
+"Oh, what a floor!" said Miranda; "if I were as fond of dancing as I
+used to be, I could dance all night; and such music! Quite heavenly, if
+it is not wicked to say so. And there is the sea, too, with the
+moonlight on it as in old days! We have been taken to an enchanted
+castle!
+
+"But there is something different. I can hardly describe my feelings.
+Why, I cannot explain, but going back to dancing now for the mere
+pleasure of it, when I have entered upon the serious duties of life,
+appears like returning to one's childish passion for dolls and
+playthings."
+
+"And yet, how many married people of both sexes are dancing now, not
+with each other either."
+
+"I see them, and I wonder. I am not surprised at married men dancing--if
+they like it. If they come at all, they may as well do so as sit down
+and get weary. But I think the married women should leave the round
+dances to the girls."
+
+"Would not balls be rather slow if the married women only danced
+squares?"
+
+"I don't see why. Yet many of the girls have no partners--wall-flowers,
+I think you call them. And that is hardly fair, surely."
+
+As this dance only came before supper, which was now near at hand, we
+danced it out. I hardly noticed until the music closed how many of the
+other couples had stopped, or that quite a crowd had collected around
+us. This was a tribute, I found, to Miranda's performance, which had an
+ease and grace of movement such as I never saw any living woman possess.
+She hardly seemed to use the ordinary means of progression. Hers was a
+half-aerial motion, in time to every note and movement of the music,
+while the rhythmic sway and yielding grace of her figure presented the
+idea of a mermaiden floating through the translucent waves rather than
+that of a mortal woman.
+
+As she swayed dreamily to the wondrous music of "Tausend und einer
+nacht," her head thrown slightly back, her parted lips, her wondrous
+eyes, her faultless form so impressed the by-standers with the ideal of
+supreme beauty, that they scarce repressed an audible murmur as the
+music ceased and the dance came to an end.
+
+When supper was announced there was the usual crush, but before the
+doors were opened a few of the more favoured guests, including the
+Frankstons and ourselves, were conducted by one of the aides-de-camp to
+a place near the viceregal party. Miranda was taken possession of by
+another of our naval friends, who seemed to think that they had special
+claims upon her, as having knowledge of her island home. I was requested
+to take in our good friend and fellow-voyager Mrs. Percival, who was
+more warm and effusive in praise of Miranda than I ever thought possible
+before her child's danger broke through the crust of her ordinary
+manner. Now nothing could have been more sisterly and unreserved than
+her tone and expression.
+
+"It has been quite a luxury to all of us to look on at that wonderful
+darling of a wife of yours dancing! The whole room, including Lady
+Rochester, was in ecstasies, I assure you. You came in for your share of
+compliments also, which I mustn't make you vain by repeating. How
+exquisitely, how charmingly she does dance! I have seen some of the best
+_danseuses_ in Europe and India--on and off the stage--and not one
+worthy to be named with her. She is a dream of grace--the very poetry of
+motion. I said so before to-night, and now every one agrees with me. It
+is rather a disappointment in some quarters that she declines to dance
+except with you. It would seem odd for some people, but being the woman
+she is I understand it."
+
+"She is free to follow her own course socially," I said. "She will soon
+decide upon her line of action, and will not be turned from it by
+outside influence. Fortunately she and my mother are much in harmony as
+to leading principles, which relieves my mind considerably."
+
+"You are fortunate in that, then, as in several other respects; may I
+add that I think you worthy of your good fortune. I trust that my boy's
+simple prayers for your welfare--and he prays for you both every
+night--may be answered."
+
+Just before the conclusion of the supper I saw that Miranda had been
+presented to his Excellency the Governor, who was standing near the
+Prince. Both of these personages were most complimentary and flattering
+in their attention to her, and when we left, as we had arranged,
+immediately after that most important function supper, leaving the girls
+to go home with Mr. and Mrs. Neuchamp, we were gratified to think that
+we could not have been more graciously received--treated even with
+distinction--and that nothing had occurred to detract in the slightest
+degree from the unwonted pleasure and modest triumph of the night.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After this, our first experience of "society," in the higher sense of
+the word, unexpectedly agreeable, as it had been, Miranda's fixed
+resolve, in which I fully concurred, was to detach ourselves from it and
+its code of obligations, except at rare intervals--to live our own
+lives, and to trouble ourselves as little as might be with the tastes
+and fancies of others.
+
+I was likely to have my time fully occupied in the development of my
+business. Miranda had, partly from observation, partly from information
+supplied by my mother and sisters, discovered that there was even in
+prosperous, easy going, naturally favoured Sydney a section of ill-fed,
+ill-clothed, ill-taught poor. "While I meet them daily, such as I never
+saw on our island, I cannot occupy myself with the vanities of life." My
+mother was delighted to find a daughter willing to co-operate with her
+in the benevolent plans of relief which she was always organising for
+the poor and the afflicted. Between them a notable increase of
+efficiency took place in the management of children's hospitals,
+soup-kitchens, and other institutions, commonly regarded with
+indifference, if not dislike, by the well-to-do members of society.
+Outside of these duties, our chief pleasure at the end of the week, when
+only we could afford the time, was a cruise in our sailing boat the
+_Harpooner_, which soon came to be known as one of the fastest in the
+harbour, as well as one that was rarely absent from the Saturday's
+regatta, when a stiff breeze was sending the spray aloft.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Our life henceforth was that of the happy nations "that have no
+history." My business prospered, and as it largely increased and
+developed from its original proportions, Captain Carryall began to tire
+of his voyages and settled down on shore.
+
+Within a year of the founding of our commercial enterprise one of the
+ideal houses we had so often pictured came into our possession. In an
+afternoon stroll, Miranda and I had ventured into a deserted garden,
+lured by the masses of crimson blooms on a great double hibiscus. The
+heavy entrance-gate was awry--the stone pillars decaying--the avenue
+weed-grown and neglected--the shrubberies trodden down and disfigured by
+browsing cattle. Exploring further behind a screen of thick-growing
+pines, we found the house,--a noble, wide-balconied freestone building,
+which I well remembered in my boyhood. Then it was inhabited, carefully
+tended, and ringing with the voices of happy boys and girls in
+holiday-time. What blight had fallen on the place, or on the pleasant
+family that once dwelt there? On the north-eastern side the land sloped
+down to a little bay, sheltered from the prevailing wind, and provided
+with pier and boat-house--all marine conveniences, in short. "Oh! if we
+had a house like this," said Miranda, clapping her hands, "how happy we
+should be! Not that I am otherwise now; but I should enjoy having this
+for our own. We could soon renovate the poor garden." I assented, but
+said nothing at the time--resolved to take counsel of our good friend
+and trusted adviser then and now--who else but Paul Frankston?
+
+From him I learned the history of the house and its old-time inmates.
+Some were dead and some were gone. The story was long. The gist of it
+was, however, that it was now in the hands of certain trustees for the
+benefit of the heirs-at-law. "I think I can find out about it," he
+concluded. "And now come down and look at my little boat. I've had some
+painting and gilding done lately; I want you all--father, mother,
+sisters, wife, and everybody--to come for a sail next Saturday. I'm
+going to have a race with Richard Jones to the Heads and back, and I
+want your wife to steer. Then we'll win, I'm sure, and we'll call in at
+Edenhall--that's the name of the old place you saw--been its name for
+fifty years or more--and we'll have another look at it."
+
+I said "Yes, by all means."
+
+The next Saturday proved to be a day specially provided by the gods for
+boat-sailing. The wind was in the right quarter, the weather fine. The
+_Sea-gull_ swept across the harbour like a veritable sea-bird, spreading
+her broad wings. The whole party had punctually assembled at our jetty
+after an early lunch. The breeze freshened as the day wore on; we had
+our friendly race against an old comrade of Mr. Frankston's--like him,
+not all ignorant of the ways of those who go down to the deep in
+ships--which we won handsomely, thanks to Miranda's steering, as Paul
+loudly averred. And that young woman herself, as the _Sea-gull_ went
+flying past her sister yacht in the concluding tack, lying down "gunnel
+under," with every inch of canvas on that she dared carry, was as eager
+and excited as if she had been paddling for her life in one of the canoe
+races of her childhood.
+
+We got back to Neutral Bay in time for afternoon tea, a little later
+than the established hour. But instead of having it on board, Paul
+proposed to have it at Edenhall, where he said he had permission to go
+whenever he pleased. He had arranged with the caretaker too.
+
+We landed at the long unused pier. "How many times have I been here
+before, in poor old Dartmoor's time," said Mr. Frankston, "and how many
+a jolly night have I spent within those old walls! Well, well! time goes
+on, and our friends, where are they? Life's a sad business at best.
+However, we can't make it better by crying over our losses. Ladies and
+gentlemen, follow me!"
+
+With a sudden change of tone and manner, Paul stepped briskly along the
+upward winding path, long unused, which led to the house. The hall door
+stood open, and passing along a noble hall and turning to the right, we
+entered a dining-room of fine proportions. In this was an improvised
+table on trestles whereon was spread a tempting collation. Two men
+servants, whom I recognised as the Marahmee butler and footman, stood
+ready to serve the company. A needful amount of sweeping and repair had
+been effected. The windows had been cleaned, and a fine view of the bay
+thereby afforded. Altogether the effect was as striking as it was
+unexpected; a general exclamation broke from the company.
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen," said Paul, "I have prepared a surprise for you,
+I know; but oblige me by making yourselves at home for the present, and
+dining with me in this informal fashion--I will explain by and by."
+
+The day was nearly spent. It would probably be near the time of
+twilight, which in summer in Australia is nearer nine o'clock than
+eight, before we reached our homes. So the majority of the guests hailed
+the idea as one of Paul's eccentric notions with which he was wont to
+amuse his intimates. The Marahmee champagne was proverbial, and after a
+reasonable number of corks had been drawn a progressive degree of
+cheerfulness was reached. Paul rose to his feet, and requested the usual
+solemnities to be observed, as he was about to propose a toast. "Those
+of my friends who have been here before, in its happier times, will
+remember the former owner of this once pleasant home. Little is left now
+save the evidences of decay and desertion--the memories of a long past
+happy day. But there is no reason why it should not be again inhabited,
+again be filled with pleasant and pleasure-giving inhabitants. It is
+solid and substantial; if somewhat old-fashioned, all the better I say.
+There was no jerry building in the old days. The garden is here--to be
+easily renewed in beauty--the jetty, and the boat-house. The sea is
+here, much as I remember when as a boy I used to get 'congewoi' for bait
+off those very rocks."
+
+"Hear, hear!" from the guests, and Mr. Richard Jones.
+
+"And now I come to a piece of news which I am sure you will hear with
+pleasure. The house and grounds have been purchased by a young friend of
+mine, whose health, with that of his charming wife, I now ask you to
+drink with all the honours. The health of Mr. and Mrs. Telfer, their
+long life and prosperity! and may we all have many as pleasant a sail
+round the harbour as we have had to-day, and come here to enjoy
+ourselves at the end of it."
+
+The applause which followed was tumultuous. Paul has sprung a surprise
+upon his guests with a vengeance. I was as much astonished as anybody;
+for though I knew that he had promised to make inquiries about the price
+put upon the property, I had no idea that he would go further in the
+matter, still less that he would purchase it on my account, as it was
+evident that he had done.
+
+I said a few words, chiefly to the effect that it seemed to me quite
+unnecessary to go through the form of exerting myself for my advancement
+in life, as my friends, Mr. Frankston and Captain Carryall, were bent on
+making my fortune for me. I trusted to prove not wholly unworthy of such
+unselfish friendship, and thanking them all in the name of my wife and
+myself, trusted that a meeting like this would often conclude a happy
+day such as we had just completed. As for Miranda, she went up to the
+old man, and placing her hand in his, looked up into his face with an
+expression of heartfelt gratitude, which hardly needed the addition of
+her words: "You have made us both perfectly happy--what can I say? My
+heart will not let me speak. We have nothing to wish for now in this
+world."
+
+The old man looked at her with an expression of mingled admiration and
+paternal affection. "I have two daughters now," he said, "and two sons;
+I was always wishing to have another pair, to gossip with when Antonia
+and Ernest were away. Now I have found them I am sure. The only thing we
+want now is another boat."
+
+Miranda's eyes glistened at the allusion, and she looked as if she was
+only prevented, by a half-instinctive doubt as to the fitness of the
+occasion, from embracing Paul before the assembled company.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Years have passed since that day. Children's voices have long since
+echoed in the wide verandahs and amid the shrubberies of Edenhall. The
+house, thoroughly renovated, is one of the most comfortable, if not the
+most aristocratic, of the many embowered mansions which look over the
+Haven Beauteous.
+
+My boys have been "water babies" from earliest childhood, and we can
+turn out a crew not easy to beat, particularly when their mother can be
+persuaded to steer. My girls have inherited a large proportion of their
+mother's fearless spirit, though people say not one has equalled her in
+beauty. Their partners in the dance, however, appear to consider them
+sufficiently good-looking, if one may judge by the competition which
+their appearance at balls usually produces.
+
+Our business, always aided by the cool heads and steady courage of the
+senior partners, has increased, with the growth of the city of Sydney
+and the development of the island trade, beyond all hope and
+expectation. I am a rich man now, and, indeed, somewhat in danger of the
+occasional mood of discontent with the uneventful, unvarying tide of
+success upon which life's barque appears ever to float. But one look at
+Miranda's face, serenely happy in her children, in her daily life of
+charity and almsgiving, in the devoted love and trust of my parents, is
+all-sufficient to banish all vagrant ideas.
+
+Sometimes, in the train of unbidden fancies which throng the portals of
+the mind, the scenes and sounds of a far clime claim right of audience.
+Again I see the paradisal woodland, the mysterious mountain forest, the
+ceaseless moan of the billow upon the reef sounds in my ear; while
+forms, now fair, now fierce, flit, shadow-like, across the scene. I hear
+again the soft voices of the island girls as in frolic race they troop
+to beach or stream. I see the sad, bright eyes of Lalia, or mark the
+fierce regard of Hope Island Nellie as she stands with bared bosom full
+in the track of the deadly arrow flight. I hear the lion roar of Hayston
+as he quells a mutiny, or towers, alone and unarmed, above a crowd of
+hostile islanders. I shudder in thought at the dangers which I have
+escaped. Once more sounds from afar the weird voice of the tempest in
+the midnight wreck of the _Leonora_. Lastly, the harbour lights
+disappear as I sit in my cane lounge in the verandah of Edenhall, and in
+place of the wooded heights and distant city I see the breakers upon the
+reef of Ocean Island, and discern a solitary figure in the stern of a
+small boat sailing out into the illimitable gloom; I fall a musing upon
+the mysterious problems of Fate--of man's life and the strange
+procession of circumstance--until the hour strikes and I retire. Yet my
+thoughts are still dominated by the majestic figure of the Captain,
+grand in his natural good qualities, grand in his fearless courage, his
+generosity, his friendship--grand even in his vices. He was not without
+resemblance to a yet more famous corsair, immortalised by the poet--
+
+ Who died and left a name to other times,
+ Link'd with one virtue and a thousand crimes.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+The macrons in words like "L[a]lia" and "Mo[u]t" have been removed.
+
+The following corrections to spelling or punctuation have been made:
+
+ Page 59 Added missing period "."
+ Page 119 "Utw" corrected to "Utw"
+ Page 128 "for'rard" corrected to "for'ard"
+ Page 129 "Likiak Sa" corrected to "Likiak S"
+ Page 135 "beeches" corrected to "beaches"
+ Page 142 "Likiak Sa" corrected to "Likiak S"
+ Page 171 "turtle" corrected to "turtles"
+ Page 174 "Tulpe" corrected to "Tulp"
+ Page 196 Added missing period "."
+ Page 205 "courier" corrected to "courrier"
+ "filibustier" corrected to "flibustier"
+ Page 232 "itelf" corrected to "itself"
+ Page 309 "brough" corrected to "brought"
+
+Instances of inconsistent hyphenation have been left intact.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Modern Buccaneer, by Rolf Boldrewood
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MODERN BUCCANEER ***
+
+***** This file should be named 35431-8.txt or 35431-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/4/3/35431/
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Erica Pfister-Altschul and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This book was produced from scanned images of public
+domain material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/35431-8.zip b/35431-8.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5062871
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431-8.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/35431-h.zip b/35431-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..7e30ef0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/35431-h/35431-h.htm b/35431-h/35431-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..5cdc0ee
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431-h/35431-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,14471 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" />
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Style-Type" content="text/css" />
+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of A Modern Buccaneer, by Rolf Boldrewood.
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+
+body {
+ margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+h1,h2,h3,h4,h5 {
+ text-align: center; /* all headings centered */
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+p {
+ margin-top: .75em;
+ text-align: justify;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+}
+
+ul { list-style-type: none; }
+
+ul.TOC {
+ position: relative;
+ left: -3%;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ width: 50%;
+}
+
+li.chapter {
+ margin-top: 1.5em;
+ text-align: center;
+}
+
+span.ralign { /* use absolute positioning to move page# right */
+ position: absolute;
+ right: 0; /* right edge against container's right edge */
+ top: auto; /* vertical align to original text baseline */
+}
+
+hr {
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto;
+ clear: both;
+}
+
+hr.cb { width: 75%; }
+hr.tb { width: 40%; }
+
+.pagenum {
+ position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: smaller;
+ text-align: right;
+} /* page numbers */
+
+.dedication { margin: 2em 25% 2em 25%; }
+
+.blockquot {
+ margin-left: 5%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+}
+
+.center {text-align: center;}
+
+.smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+em.antiqua { font-style: italic; }
+
+.u {text-decoration: underline;}
+
+.caption {font-style: italic;}
+
+/* Images */
+.figcenter {
+ margin: auto;
+ text-align: center;
+}
+
+/* Correspondence */
+
+.letter-heading {
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+}
+.letter-address {
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-left: 60%;
+}
+.letter-signature {
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-left: 70%;
+}
+.letter-rank {
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-right: 70%;
+}
+
+.smaller { font-size: smaller; }
+
+/* Poetry */
+.poem {
+ margin-left:10%;
+ margin-right:10%;
+ text-align: left;
+}
+
+.poem br {display: none;}
+
+.poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;}
+
+.poem span.i0 {
+ display: block;
+ margin-left: 0em;
+ padding-left: 3em;
+ text-indent: -3em;
+}
+
+a,img { border: none; text-decoration: none; }
+
+ins {text-decoration:none; border-bottom: thin dotted gray;}
+
+.tnote { width: 40em;
+ border: 1px dashed #808080;
+ background-color: #f6f6f6;
+ text-align: justify;
+ padding: 0.5em;
+ margin: 80px auto 80px auto;
+}
+ </style>
+ </head>
+<body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Modern Buccaneer, by Rolf Boldrewood
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Modern Buccaneer
+
+Author: Rolf Boldrewood
+
+Release Date: February 28, 2011 [EBook #35431]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MODERN BUCCANEER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Erica Pfister-Altschul and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This book was produced from scanned images of public
+domain material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+<div class="dedication">
+<h1>A MODERN BUCCANEER</h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter dedication" style="width: 100px;">
+<img src="images/mmco-logo.png" width="100" height="27" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="dedication">
+<p>I desire to acknowledge my indebtedness to Mr. Louis
+Becke, author of <i>By Reef and Palm</i>, as to the South Sea
+Island portion of <i>A Modern Buccaneer</i>, with the exception
+of the chapter headed "Poisoned Arrows," which is
+founded upon the diary of a Whaling Cruise by my late father.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<a href="images/map-1200.png"><img src="images/map-600.png" width="600" height="473" alt="" title="" /></a>
+<span class="caption"><i>Boldrewood's "Modern Buccaneer"</i><br />
+<i>Walker &amp; Boutall sc.</i></span>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+
+<h1>A MODERN BUCCANEER</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+<h2>ROLF BOLDREWOOD</h2>
+
+<h4>AUTHOR OF 'ROBBERY UNDER ARMS'</h4>
+
+<h4><em class="antiqua">London</em></h4>
+
+<h4>MACMILLAN AND CO.<br />
+<span class="smaller">AND NEW YORK</span><br />
+1894</h4>
+
+<h5><i>All rights reserved</i></h5>
+
+<h4>COPYRIGHT<br />
+1894<br />
+<span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
+MACMILLAN AND CO.</h4>
+
+<h5><i>First Edition (3 Vols.) April 1894<br />
+Second Edition (1 Vol.) October 1894</i></h5>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+<ul class="TOC">
+<li><span class="ralign">PAGE</span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">My First Voyage</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">William Henry Hayston</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">In Samoa</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_20">20</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">Samoa to Mill&eacute;</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">The Brig Leonora</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_41">41</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">Captain Ben Peese</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">Cruising among the Carolines</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">Poisoned Arrows</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">Halcyon Days</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_111">111</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">Murder and Shipwreck</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">A King and Queen</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_159">159</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">"My Lords of the Admiralty"</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_189">189</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">H.M.S. Rosario</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_206">206</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">Norfolk Island&mdash;Arcadia</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">Epithalamium</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_255">255</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">A Swim for Life</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_277">277</a></span></li>
+<li class="chapter"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</a></li>
+<li>
+ <span class="smcap">"Our Jack's come Home to-day"</span>
+ <span class="ralign"><a href="#Page_303">303</a></span></li>
+</ul>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="A_MODERN_BUCCANEER" id="A_MODERN_BUCCANEER"></a>A MODERN BUCCANEER</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<h2>MY FIRST VOYAGE</h2>
+
+
+<p>Born near Sydney harbour, nursery of the seamen of the
+South, I could swim almost as soon as I could walk, and
+sail a boat at an age when most children are forbidden to
+go near the water. We came of a salt-water stock. My
+father had been a sea-captain for the greater part of his
+life, after a youth spent in every kind of craft, from a
+cutter to a man-of-war. No part of the habitable globe
+was unfamiliar to him: from India to the Pole, from Russia
+to the Brazils, from the China Sea to the Bight of
+Benin&mdash;every harbour was a home.</p>
+
+<p>He had nursed one crew frost-bitten in Archangel, when
+the blankets had to be cut up for mittens; had watched by
+the beds of another, decimated by yellow fever in Jamaica;
+had marked up the "death's-head and cross-bones" in the
+margin of the log-book, to denote the loss by tetanus of the
+wounded by poisoned arrows on Bougainville Island; and
+had fought hand to hand with the stubborn Maories of
+Taranaki. Wounds and death, privation and pestilence,
+wrecks and tempests were with him household words, close
+comrades. What were they but symbols, nature-pictures,
+the cards dealt by fate? You lost the stake or rose a
+winner. Men who had played the game of life all round
+knew this. He accepted fortune, fair or foul, as he did the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>
+weather&mdash;a favour or a force of nature to be enjoyed or
+defied. But to be commented upon, much less complained
+of? Hardly. And as fate had willed it, the worn though
+unwearied sea-king had seen fit to heave anchor, so to
+speak, and moor his vessels&mdash;for he owned more than one&mdash;in
+this the fairest haven of the southern main. Once before
+in youth had he seen and never forgotten the frowning
+headlands, beyond which lay so peerless a harbour, such
+wealth of anchorage, so mild a clime, so boundless an extent
+of virgin soil; from which he, "a picked man of countries,"
+even then prophesied wealth, population, and empire
+in the future.</p>
+
+<p>Here, then, a generation later, he brought his newly-wedded
+wife. Here was I, Hilary Telfer, destined to see
+the light.</p>
+
+<p>From the mid-city street of Sydney is but a stone's throw
+to the wharves and quays, magnificent water-ways in which
+those ocean palaces of the present day, the liners of the
+P. and O. and the Orient, lie moored, and but a plank divides
+the impatient passenger from the busy mart. Not that
+such stately ships were visitors in my school-boy days.
+Sydney was then a grass-grown, quiet seaport, boasting
+some fifty thousand inhabitants, with a fleet of vessels
+small in size and of humble tonnage.</p>
+
+<p>But, though unpretending of aspect, to the eager-hearted,
+imaginative school-boy they were rich as Spanish galleons.
+For were they not laden with uncounted treasure,
+weighed down with wealth beyond the fabled hoards of
+the pirates of the Spanish Main, upon whose dark deeds
+and desperate adventures I had so greedily feasted?</p>
+
+<p>Each vessel that swept through the Heads at midnight,
+or marked the white-walled mansions and pine-crowned
+promontories rise faintly out of the pearl-hued dawn, was
+for me a volume filled with romance and mystery. Sat
+there not on the forecastle of that South Sea whaler, silent,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>
+scornful, imperturbable, the young Maori chief, nursing in
+his breast the deep revenge for a hasty blow, which on the
+return voyage to New Zealand and the home of his tribe
+was to take the form of a massacre of the whole ship's
+company?</p>
+
+<p>Yes, captain and officers, passengers and crew, every
+man on that ship paid the death penalty for the mate's
+hard word and blow. The insult to a Rangatira must be
+wiped out in blood.</p>
+
+<p>The trader of the South Sea Islands was a marine marvel
+which I was never weary of studying.</p>
+
+<p>I generally managed to make friends with one or other
+of the crew, who permitted me to explore the lower deck
+and feed my fancy upon the treasures from that paradise
+with which the voyager from an enchanted ocean had surely
+freighted his vessel. Strange bows and arrows&mdash;the latter
+poison-tipped, as I was always assured, perhaps as a precautionary
+measure&mdash;piles of shaddocks, tons of bananas,
+idols, skulls, spears, clubs, woven cloth of curious fabric,
+an endless store of unfamiliar foreign commodities.</p>
+
+<p>Among the crew were always a few half-castes mingled
+with the grizzled, weather-beaten British sea-dogs. Perhaps
+a boat's crew of the islanders themselves, born sailors,
+and as much at home in water as on land.</p>
+
+<p>Seldom did I leave, however unwillingly, the deck of
+one of these fairy barques, without registering a vow that
+the year in which I left school should see me a gay sailor-boy,
+bound on my first voyage in search of dangerous adventures
+and that splendidly untrammelled career which
+was so surely to result in fortune and distinction.</p>
+
+<p>Then the whaleships! In that old time, Sydney harbour
+was rarely without a score or more of them. In their way
+they were portents and wonders of the deep. Fortune
+failed them at times. The second year might find them
+far from full of the high-priced whale-oil. The capricious
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>
+cetacean was not to be depended upon in migration from
+one "whaling ground" to another. Sometimes a "favourite"
+ship&mdash;lucky in spite of everything&mdash;would come
+flaunting in after an absence of merely eleven or twelve
+months&mdash;such were the <i>Florentia</i> and the <i>Proteus</i>&mdash;full to
+the hatches, while three long years would have elapsed
+before her consort, sailing on the same day and fitted up
+much in the same way, would crawl sadly into Snail's or
+Neutral Bay, battered and tempest-tossed, but three-quarter
+full even then, a mark for the rough wit of the port, to pay
+off an impoverished crew and confront unsmiling or incredulous
+owners.</p>
+
+<p>Every kind of disaster would have befallen her. When
+she got fast to a ninety-barrel whale, her boats would be
+stoven in. When all was well, no cheery shout of "There
+she spouts!" would be heard for days. Savage islanders
+would attack her doggedly, and hardly be beaten off.
+Every kind of evil omen would be justified, until the crew
+came to believe that they were sailing with an Australian
+Vanderdecken, and would never see a port again.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The grudging childish years had rolled by, and now I was
+seventeen years of age&mdash;fitted, as I fully believed, to begin
+the battle of life in earnest, and ardent for the fray. As
+to my personal qualifications for a life on the ocean wave,
+and well I knew no other would have contented me, let the
+reader judge. At the age when tall lads are often found
+to have out-grown their strength, I had attained the fullest
+stature of manhood; wide-chested and muscular, constant
+exercise with oar and sail had developed my frame and
+toughened my sinews, until I held myself, with some reason,
+to be a match in strength and activity for most men I
+was likely to meet.</p>
+
+<p>In the rowing contests to which Australians of the shore
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>
+have always been devoted, more particularly the privileged
+citizens of Sydney, I had always taken a leading part.
+More than once, in a hard-fought finish, had I been lifted
+out fainting or insensible.</p>
+
+<p>My curling fair hair and blue eyes bore token of our
+Norse blood and Anglo-Norman descent. The family held
+a tradition that our surname came from Taillefer, the
+warrior minstrel who rode in the forefront of Duke William's
+army at Hastings. Strangely, too, a passionate
+love of song had always clung to the race. "Sir Hilary
+charged at Agincourt," as saith the ballad. Roving and
+adventure ran in the blood for generations uncounted.</p>
+
+<p>For all that trouble arose when I announced my resolve.
+My schoolmates had settled down in the offices of merchants,
+bankers, and lawyers, why could not I do the same?
+My mother's tears fell fast as she tried in vain to dissuade
+me from my resolution. My father was neutral. He knew
+well the intensity of the feeling. "If born in a boy," he
+said, "as it was in me, it is his fate&mdash;nothing on earth can
+turn him from it; if you stop him you will make a bad landsman
+and spoil a good sailor. Let him go! he must take
+his chance like another man. God is above the wave as
+over the earth. If it be his fate, the perils of the deep
+will be no more than the breezes of the bay."</p>
+
+<p>It was decided at length that I should be allowed to go
+on my way. To the islands of the South Pacific my heart
+pointed as truly as ever did compass needle to the North.</p>
+
+<p>I had read every book that had ever been written about
+them, from Captain Cook's <i>Voyages</i> to <i>The Mutiny of the
+Bounty</i>. In my dreams how many times had I seen the
+purple mountains, the green glow of the fairy woodlands,
+had bathed in the crystal streams, and heard the endless
+surf music on the encircling reef, cheered the canoes loaded
+with fruit racing for their market in the crimson flush of
+the paradisal morn, or lingered amidst the Aidenns of the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+charmed main, where the flower-crowned children of nature&mdash;maidens
+beauteous as angels&mdash;roamed in careless happiness
+and joyous freedom! It was an entrancing picture.</p>
+
+<p>Why should I stay in this prosaic land, where men wore
+the hideous costume of their forefathers, and women, false
+to all canons of art, still clung to their outworn garb?</p>
+
+<p>What did I care for the sheep and cattle, the tending of
+which enriched my compatriots?</p>
+
+<p>A world of romance, mystery, and adventure lay open and
+inviting. The die was cast. The spell of the sea was upon
+me.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>My father's accumulations had amounted to a reasonable
+capital, as things went in those Arcadian non-speculative
+days. He was not altogether without a commercial faculty,
+which had enabled him to make prudent investments
+in city and suburban lands. These the steadily improving
+markets were destined to turn into value as yet undreamed
+of.</p>
+
+<p>It was not thought befitting that I should ship as an
+apprentice or foremost hand, though I was perfectly willing,
+even eager, for a start in any way. A more suitable
+style of equipment was arranged. An agreement was entered
+into with the owner of a vessel bound for San Francisco
+vi&acirc; Honolulu, by which a proportion of the cargo was
+purchased in my name, and I was, after some discussion,
+duly installed as supercargo. It may be thought that I was
+too young for such a responsible post. But I was old for
+my age. I had a man's courage and ambition. I had
+studied navigation to some purpose; could "hand reef and
+steer," and in the management of a boat, or acquaintance
+with every rope, sail, and spar on board of a vessel, I held
+myself, if not an A. B., fully qualified for that rank and
+position.</p>
+
+<p>Words would fail to describe my joy and exultation when
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+I found myself at length on blue water, in a vessel which
+I might fairly describe as "our little craft," bound for foreign
+parts and strange cities. I speedily made the acquaintance
+of the crew&mdash;a strangely assembled lot, mostly
+shady as to character and reckless as to speech, but without
+exception true "sailor men." At that time of day,
+employment on the high seas was neither so easy to obtain
+nor so well paid as at present. The jolly tars of the period
+were therefore less independent and inclined to cavil at
+minor discomforts. Once shipped, they worked with a
+will, and but little fault could be found with their courage
+or seamanship.</p>
+
+<p>Among other joys and delights which I promised myself,
+had been a closer acquaintance with the life and times of
+a picturesque and romantic personage, known and feared,
+if all tales were true, throughout the South Seas. This
+was the famous, the celebrated Captain Hayston, whose
+name was indeed a spell to conjure with from New Zealand
+to the Line Islands.</p>
+
+<p>Much that could excite a boyish imagination had been
+related to me concerning him. One man professing an intimate
+knowledge had described him as "a real pirate."
+Could higher praise be awarded? I put together all the
+tales I had heard about him&mdash;his great stature and vast
+strength, his reckless courage, his hair-breadth escapes,
+his wonderful brig,&mdash;cousin german, no doubt, to the
+"long low wicked-looking craft" in the pages of <i>Tom
+Cringle's Log</i>, and other veracious historiettes, "nourishing
+a youth sublime," in the long bright summer days of old;
+those days when we fished and bathed, ate oysters, and read
+alternately from early morn till the lighthouse on the
+South Head flashed out! My heroes had been difficult to
+find hitherto; they had mostly eluded my grasp. But this
+one was real and tangible. He would be fully up to description.
+His splendid scorn of law and order, mercy or
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
+moderation, his unquestioned control over mutinous crews
+and fierce islanders, illumined by occasional homicides and
+abductions, all these splendours and glories so stirred my
+blood, that I felt, if I could only once behold my boyhood's
+idol, I should not have lived in vain. Among the crew,
+fortunately for me as I then thought, was a sailor who had
+actually known in the flesh the idol of my daydreams.</p>
+
+<p>"And it's the great Captain Hayston you'd like to hear
+about," said Dan Daly, as we sat together in the foc'sle
+head of the old barque <i>Clarkstone</i>, before we made Honolulu.
+Dan had been a South Sea beach-comber and whaler;
+moreover, had been marooned, according to his own account,
+escaping only by a miracle; a trader's head-man&mdash;once,
+indeed, more than half-killed by a rush of natives on the
+station. With every kind of dangerous experience short
+of death and burial he was familiar. On which account I
+regarded him with a fine boyish admiration. What a night
+was it, superbly beautiful, when I hung upon his words,
+as we sat together gazing over the moonlit water! We had
+changed our course owing to some dispute about food between
+captain and crew, and were now heading for the
+island of Rurutu, where fresh provisions were attainable.
+As I listened spellbound and entranced, the barque's bows
+slowly rose and fell, the wavering moonlight streamed down
+upon the deck, the sails, the black masses of cordage, while
+ghostly shadows moved rhythmically, in answering measure
+to every motion of the vessel.</p>
+
+<p>"You must know," said Dan, in grave commencement,
+"it's nigh upon five years ago, when I woke up one morning
+in the 'Calaboose' as they call the 'lock-up' in Papiete,
+with a broken head. It's the port of the island of
+Tahiti. I was one of the hands of the American brig
+<i>Cherokee</i>, and we'd put in there on our way to San Francisco
+from Sydney. The skipper had given us liberty, so we
+went ashore and began drinking and having some fun.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+There was some wahines in it, in coorse&mdash;that's whats
+they call the women in thim parts. Somehow or other
+I got a knock on the head, and remimbered nothing more
+until I woke up in the 'Calaboose,' where I was charged
+with batin' a native till he was nigh dead. To make a
+long story short, I got six months 'hard,' and the ship
+sailed away without me.</p>
+
+<p>"When I'd served my time, I walks into the American
+Consulate and asks for a passage to California.</p>
+
+<p>"'Clear out,' says the Consul, 'you red-headed varmint,
+I have nothing to say to you, after beating an inoffensive
+native in the manner you did.'</p>
+
+<p>"'By the powers,' says I to myself, 'you're a big blackguard,
+Dan Daly, when you've had a taste of liquor, but if
+I remimber batin' any man black, white, or whitey-brown,
+may I be keel-hauled. Howsomdever, that says nothing,
+the next thing's a new ship.'</p>
+
+<p>"So I steps down to the wharf and aboord a smart-looking
+schooner that belonged to Carl Brander, a big merchant in
+Tahiti, as rich as the Emperor of China, they used to say.
+The mate was aboord. 'Do you want any hands?' says I.</p>
+
+<p>"'We do,' says he. 'You've a taking colour of hair for
+this trade, my lad.'</p>
+
+<p>"'How's that?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Why, the girls down at Rimitara and Rurutu will just
+make love to you in a body. Red hair's the making of a
+man in thim parts.'</p>
+
+<p>"Upon this I signed articles for six months in the
+schooner, and next day we sailed for a place called Bora-bora
+in the north-west. We didn't stay there long, but
+got under weigh for Rurutu next day. We weren't hardly
+clear of Bora-bora when we sights a brigantine away to
+windward and bearing down on us before the wind. As
+soon as she got close enough, she signalled that she wanted
+to send a boat aboard, so we hove to and waited.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+"Our skipper had a look at the man who was steering
+the boat, whin he turns as pale as a sheet, and says he
+to the mate, 'It's that devil Hayston! and that's the brigantine
+he and Captain Ben Peese ran away with from
+Panama.'</p>
+
+<p>"However, up alongside came the boat, and as fine a
+looking man as ever I set eyes on steps aboord amongst us.</p>
+
+<p>"'How do ye do, Captain?' says he. 'Where from and
+whither bound?'</p>
+
+<p>"The skipper was in a blue funk, I could see, for this
+Bully Hayston had a terrible bad name, so he answers him
+quite polite and civil.</p>
+
+<p>"'Can you spare me half a coil of two-inch Manilla?'
+asks the stranger, 'and I'll pay you your own price?'</p>
+
+<p>"The skipper got him the rope, the strange captain pays
+for it, and they goes below for a glass of grog. In half an
+hour, up on deck they comes again, our skipper half-seas
+over and laughing fit to kill himself.</p>
+
+<p>"'By George!' says he, 'you're the drollest card I ever
+came across. D&mdash;n me! if I wouldn't like to take a trip
+with you myself!' and with that he struggles to the skylight
+and falls in a heap across it.</p>
+
+<p>"'Who's the mate of this schooner?' sings out Hayston,
+in such a changed voice that it made me jump.</p>
+
+<p>"'I am!' said the mate, who was standing in the waist.</p>
+
+<p>"'Then where's that Mangareva girl of yours? Come,
+look lively! I know all about her from that fellow there,'
+pointing to the skipper.</p>
+
+<p>"The mate had a young slip of a girl on board. She
+belonged to an island called Mangareva, and was as pretty
+a creature, with her big soft eyes and long curling hair, as
+ever I'd seen in my life. The mate just trated her the
+same as he would the finest lady, and was going to marry
+her at the next island where there was a missionary. When
+he heard who the strange captain was, he'd planted her
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>
+down in the hold and covered her up with mats. He was
+a fine manly young chap, and as soon as he saw Hayston
+meant to take 'Taloo,' that was her name, he pulls out a
+pistol and says, 'Down in the hold, Captain Hayston! and
+as long as God gives me breath you'll never lay a finger on
+her. I'll put a bullet through her head rather than see her
+fall into the hands of a man like you.' The strange captain
+just gives a laugh and pulls his long moustache. Then
+he walks up to the mate and slaps him on the shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"'You've got the right grit in you,' says he. 'I'd like
+to have a man like you on board my ship;' and the next
+second he gripped the pistol out of the mate's hand and
+sent it spinning along the deck. The mate fought like a
+tiger, but he was a child in the other man's grasp. All
+the time Hayston kept up that devilish laugh of his. Then,
+as he saw me and Tom Lynch coming to help the mate, he
+says something in a foreign lingo, and the boat's crew
+jumps on board amongst us, every one of them with a
+pistol. But for all that they seems a decent lot of chaps.</p>
+
+<p>"Hayston still held the mate by his wrists, laughing in
+his face as if he was having the finest fun in the world,
+when up comes Taloo out of the hold by way of the foc'sle
+bulk-head, with her long hair hanging over her shoulders,
+and the tears streaming down her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"She flings herself down at the Captain's feet, and clasps
+her arms round his knees.</p>
+
+<p>"'No, no! no kill Ted!' she kept on crying, just about
+all the English she knew.</p>
+
+<p>"'You pretty little thing,' says he, 'I wouldn't hurt your
+Ted for the world.' Then he lets go the mate and takes
+her hand and shakes it.</p>
+
+<p>"'What's your name, my man?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Ted Bannington!' says the mate.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, Ted Bannington, look here; if you'd showed
+any funk I'd have taken the girl in spite of you and your
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+whole ship's company. If a man don't think a woman
+good enough to fight for, he deserves to lose her if a better
+man comes along.'</p>
+
+<p>"Taloo put out one little hand, the other hand and arm
+was round the mate's neck, shaking like a leaf too.</p>
+
+<p>"'I'm so sorry if I've hurt your wrists,' says he to the
+mate, most polite. Then he gave some orders to the boat's
+crew, who pulled away to the brigantine. After they had
+gone he walked aft with the mate, the two chatting like the
+best friends in the world, and I'll be hanged if that same
+mate wasn't laughing fit to split at some of the yarns the
+other chap was spinning, sitting on the skylight, with the
+Captain lying at their feet as drunk as Davy's sow.</p>
+
+<p>"Presently the boat comes alongside agin, and a chap
+walks aft and gives the strange captain a parcel.</p>
+
+<p>"'You'll please accept this as a friendly gift from Bully
+Hayston,' says he to the mate; and then he takes a ten-dollar
+piece out of his pocket and gives it to Taloo. 'Drill
+a hole in it, and hang it round the neck of your first child
+for luck.'</p>
+
+<p>"He shakes hands with her and the mate, jumps into
+the boat, and steers for the brigantine. In another ten
+minutes she squared away and stood to the south-east.</p>
+
+<p>"'Come here, Dan,' says the mate to me; 'see what he's
+given me!' 'Twas a beautiful chronometer bran new, in a
+splendid case. The mate said he'd never seen one like it
+before.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that was the first time I ever seen Bully Hayston,
+though I did a few times afterwards, and the brigantine
+too.</p>
+
+<p>"They do say he's a thundering scoundrel, but a
+pleasanter-spoken gentleman I never met in my life."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h2>WILLIAM HENRY HAYSTON</h2>
+
+
+<p>These were the first particulars I ever heard of the man
+who had afterwards so great an influence upon my destiny
+that no incident of my sojourn with him will ever be forgotten.
+A man with whom I went into the jaws of death
+and returned unhurt. A man who, no matter what his
+faults may have been, possessed qualities which, had they
+been devoted to higher aims in life, might have rendered
+him the hero of a nation.</p>
+
+<p>Our Captain's altercation with the crew nearly blossomed
+into a mutiny. This was compromised, however, one of
+the conditions of peace being that we should touch at
+Rurutu, one of the five islands forming the Tubuai group.
+This we accordingly did, and, steering for San Francisco,
+experienced no further adventures until we sighted the
+Golden Gate. When our cargo was sold I left the ship.</p>
+
+<p>My occupation being from this time gone, I used to stroll
+down to the wharf from my lodgings in Harvard Street to
+look at the foreign vessels. Wandering aimlessly, I one
+day made the acquaintance of a "hard-shell down-easter,"
+with the truly American name of Slocum, master of a
+venerable-looking rate called the <i>Constitution</i>. He himself
+was a dried-up specimen of the old style of Yankee
+captain, with a face that resembled in colour a brown
+painted oilskin, and hands like an albatross's feet. He
+had been running for a number of years to Tahiti, taking
+out timber and returning with island produce.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+Not being a proud man, he permitted me to stand drinks
+for him in a well-known liquor saloon in Third Street, where
+we had long yarns over his trading adventures in the
+Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>One Sunday morning, I remember it as if yesterday, we
+were sitting in a private room off the bar. Slocum was
+advising me to come with him on his next trip and share
+the luxuries of the <i>Constitution's</i> table, for which he asked
+the modest sum of a hundred dollars to Tahiti and back,
+when we heard some one enter and address the bar-keeper.
+"Great Scott!" came the reply, "it's Captain Hayston!
+How air you, Captain, and whar d'ye come from?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've come to try and find Ben Peese. We're going to
+form a new station at Arrecifu. He left me at Yap in the
+Carolines to come here and buy a schooner with a light
+draught; but he never turned up; I'm afraid that after he
+left Yap he met with some accident."</p>
+
+<p>The moment Slocum heard the stranger's voice his face
+underwent a marvellous change. All his assurance seemed
+to have left him. He whispered to me, "That's Bully
+Hayston! I guess I'll lie low till he clears out. I don't
+want to be seen with him, as it'll sorter damage my character.
+Besides, he's such a vi'lent critter."</p>
+
+<p>The next moment we heard the new-comer say to the
+barman,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Say, Fred, I've been down to that old schooner the
+<i>Constitution</i>, but couldn't find Slocum aboard. They told
+me he often came here to get a cheap drink. I want him
+to take a letter to Tahiti. Do you know where he is?"</p>
+
+<p>Slocum saw it was of no use attempting to "lie low," so
+with a nervous hand he opened the door.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>I've knocked about the world a good deal since I sat in
+the little back parlour in Third Street, Frisco, but neither
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
+before nor since I left Strong's Island have I seen such
+a splendid specimen of humanity as the man who then
+entered.</p>
+
+<p>Much that I am about to relate I learned during my later
+experience.</p>
+
+<p>William Henry Hayston was born in one of the Western
+States of America, and received his education at Norfolk,
+Virginia. As his first appointment he obtained a cadetship
+in the United States Revenue Service, subsequently
+retiring to become captain of one of the large lake steamers.</p>
+
+<p>In '55 he joined the navy, serving with great gallantry
+under Admiral Farragut. The reported reason of his leaving
+the service was a disagreement with Captain Carroll,
+afterwards commander of the rebel cruiser <i>Shenandoah</i>.
+So bitter was their feud, that years afterwards, when that
+vessel was in the South Pacific, her commander made no
+secret of his ardent wish to meet Hayston and settle accounts
+with him, even to the death.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston was a giant in stature: six feet four in height,
+with a chest that measured, from shoulder to shoulder,
+forty-nine inches; and there was nothing clumsy about
+him, as his many antagonists could testify. His strength
+was enormous, and he was proud of it. But, apart from
+his magnificent physique, Hayston was one of the most
+remarkably handsome men about this time that I have ever
+seen. His hair fell in clusters across his forehead, above
+laughing eyes of the brightest blue; his nose was a bold
+aquiline; a well-cut, full-lipped mouth that could set like
+fate was covered by a huge moustache. A Vandyke beard
+completed the <i>tout ensemble</i> of a visage which, once seen,
+was rarely forgotten by friend or foe. Taking him altogether,
+what with face, figure, and manner, he had a personal
+magnetism only too fatally attractive, as many a
+man&mdash;ay, and woman too&mdash;knew to their cost. He was
+my beau ideal of a naval officer&mdash;bold and masterful, yet
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
+soft and pleasant-voiced withal when he chose to conciliate.
+His sole disfigurement&mdash;not wholly so, perhaps, in the eye
+of his admirers&mdash;was a sabre cut which extended from the
+right temple to his ear.</p>
+
+<p>For his character, the one controlling influence in his
+life was an ungovernable temper. It was utterly beyond
+his mastery. Let any one offend him, and though he might
+have been smiling the instant before, the blue eyes would
+suddenly turn almost black, his face become a deep purple.
+Then it was time for friend or foe to beware. For I never
+saw the man that could stand up to him. Strangely
+enough, I have sometimes seen him go laughing through a
+fight until he had finished his man. At other times his
+cyclone of a mood would discharge itself without warning
+or restraint. It was probably this appalling temper that
+gained him a character for being bloodthirsty; for, once
+roused, nothing could stop him. Yet I do him the justice
+to say that I never once witnessed an act of deliberate
+cruelty at his hands. In the islands he was surrounded by
+a strange collection of the greatest scoundrels unhung.
+There, of necessity, his rule was one of "blood and iron."</p>
+
+<p>And now for his pleasing traits. He was one of the
+most fascinating companions possible. He possessed a
+splendid baritone voice and affected the songs of Schumann
+and the German composers. He was an accomplished
+musician, playing on the pianoforte, violin, and, in default
+of a better instrument, even on the accordion. He spoke
+German, French, and Spanish, as well as the island languages,
+fluently. Generous to a fault, in spite of repeated
+lessons, he would insist on trusting again and again those
+in whom he believed. But once convinced that he had
+been falsely dealt with, the culprit would have fared nearly
+as well in the jaws of a tiger. He was utterly without fear,
+under any and all circumstances, even the most desperate,
+and was naturally a hater of every phase of meanness or
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+cowardice. But one more trait, and my sketch is complete.
+He had a fatal weakness where the fairer sex was concerned.
+To one of them he owed his first war with society. To the
+consequences of that false step might have been traced the
+reckless career which dishonoured his manhood and led to
+the final catastrophe.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, gentlemen!" he said on entering&mdash;in so pleasant
+and kindly a tone, that I felt drawn towards him at once,
+"let us sit down and have a drink together."</p>
+
+<p>We went back to the room, Slocum, I could see, feeling
+intensely uncomfortable, fidgeting and twisting. As we
+sat down I took a good look at the man of whom I had
+heard so much. Heard of his daring deeds in the China
+seas; of a wild career in the Pacific Islands; of his bold
+defiance of law and order; besides strange tales of mysterious
+cruises in the north-west among the Caroline and
+Pellew Islands.</p>
+
+<p>"And how air yer, Captain?" said Slocum with forced
+hilarity.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm devilish glad to see <i>you</i>," replied Hayston; "what
+about that barque of mine you stripped down at the Marshalls,
+you porpoise-hided skunk?"</p>
+
+<p>"True as gospel, Captain, I didn't know she was yours.
+There was a trader at Arnu, you know the man, an Italian
+critter, but they call him George Brown, and he says to
+me, 'Captain Slocum,' says he, 'there's a big lump of a
+timber-ship cast away on one of them reefs near Alluk, and
+if you can get up to her you'll make a powerful haul. She's
+new coppered, and hasn't broke up yet.' So I gave him
+fifty dollars, and promised him four hundred and fifty more
+if his news was reliable; if that ain't the solid facts of the
+case I hope I may be paralysed."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! so it was George who put you on to take my property,
+was it? and he my trader too; well, Slocum, I can't
+blame you. But now I'll tell you my '<i>facts</i>': that barque
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>
+was wrecked; the skipper and crew were picked up by Ben
+Peese and taken to China. He bought the barque for me
+for four hundred dollars, and I beat up to Arnu, and asked
+George if he would get me fifty Arnu natives to go with
+me to the wreck and either try and float it or strip her.
+The d&mdash;d Marcaroni-eating sweep promised to get me the
+men in a week or two, so I squared away for Madura,
+where I had two traders. Bad weather came on, and when
+I got back to Arnu, the fellow told me that a big canoe had
+come down from the Radacks and reported that the barque
+had gone to pieces. The infernal scoundrel! Had I
+known that he had put you on to her I'd have taken it out
+of his hide. Who is this young gentleman?"</p>
+
+<p>"A friend of mine, Captain, thinking of takin' a voyage
+with me for recruitin' of his health," and the lantern-jawed
+Slocum introduced us.</p>
+
+<p>Drawing his seat up to me, Hayston placed his hand on
+my shoulder, and said with a laugh, looking intensely at
+Slocum, who was nervously twisting his fingers, "Oh! a
+recruitin' of his health, is he? or rather recruitin' of your
+pocket? I'm glad I dropped in on you and made his
+acquaintance. I could tell him a few droll stories about
+the pious Slocum."</p>
+
+<p>Slocum said nothing, but laughed in a sickly way.</p>
+
+<p>Leaning forward with a smiling face, he said, "What did
+you clear out of my barque, you good Slocum?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nigh on a thousand dollars."</p>
+
+<p>"You know you lie, Slocum! you must have done better
+than that."</p>
+
+<p>"I kin show my receipts if you come aboard," he answered
+in shaky tones.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll take your word, you sanctimonious old shark,
+and five hundred dollars for my share."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sartin, Captain! that's fair and square," said the
+other, as his sallow face lighted up, "I'll give you the
+dollars to-morrow morning."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+"Right you are. Come to the Lick house at ten o'clock.
+Say, my pious friend, what would our good Father Damien
+think if I told him that pretty story about the six Solomon
+Island people you picked up at sea, and sold to a sugar
+planter?"</p>
+
+<p>The trader's visage turned green, as with a deprecating
+gesture towards me he seemed to implore Hayston's
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! ha! don't get scared. Business matters, my lad,"
+he said, turning to me his merry blue eyes, and patting me
+on the back. "Where are you staying here?"</p>
+
+<p>I told him. Then as we were rising to go, speaking to
+me, and looking Slocum in the face, he said, "Don't have
+any truck with Master Slocum, he'll skin you of every dollar
+you've got, and like as not turn you adrift at some place
+you can't get away from. Isn't that so, my saintly
+friend?"</p>
+
+<p>Slocum flinched like a whipped hound, but said nothing.
+Then, shaking hands with me, and saying if ever I came to
+the Pacific and dropped across him or Captain Ben Peese I
+should meet a hearty welcome, he strode out, with the
+shambling figure of the down-easter under his lee.</p>
+
+<p>That was the last I saw of the two captains for many a
+long day, for a few days later the <i>Constitution</i> cleared out
+for Tahiti, and I couldn't learn anything more about Hayston.
+Whether he was then in command of a vessel, or
+had merely come up as passenger in some other ship, I
+could not ascertain. All the bar-keeper knew about him
+was that he was a gentleman with plenty of money and a
+h&mdash;l of a temper, if anybody bothered him with questions.</p>
+
+<p>Little I thought at the time that we were fated to meet
+again, or that where we once more forgathered would be
+under the tropic sun of Polynesia.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h2>IN SAMOA</h2>
+
+
+<p>From what I have said about Hayston, it will readily be
+understood that every tale relating to him was strangely
+exciting to my boyish mind. For me he was the incarnation
+of all that was utterly reckless, possibly wicked, and
+of course, as such, possessed a fascination that a better
+man would have failed to inspire.</p>
+
+<p>My hero, however, had disappeared, and with him all
+zest seemed to have gone out of life at Frisco. So after
+mooning about for a few weeks I resolved on returning to
+Sydney.</p>
+
+<p>My friends on the Pacific slope did their best to dissuade
+me, trying to instil the idea into my head that I was cut
+out for a merchant prince by disposition and intellect. But
+I heeded not the voice of the charmer. The only walk in
+life for which I felt myself thoroughly fitted was that of
+an armed cruiser through the South Sea Islands. All
+other vocations were tame and colourless in comparison. I
+could fancy myself parading the deck of my vessel, pistol
+at belt, dagger in sheath, a band of cut-throats trembling
+at my glance, and a bevy of dark-skinned princesses ready
+to die for me at a moment's notice, or to keep the flies
+from bothering, whichever I preferred.</p>
+
+<p>I may state "right here," as the Yankees have it, that I
+did not become a "free trader," though at one time I had a
+close shave of being run up to the yardarm of a British man-of-war
+in that identical capacity. But this came later on.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+I returned, therefore, to my native Sydney in due course
+of time, and as a wholesome corrective after my somewhat
+erratic experiences, was placed by my father in a merchant's
+office. But the colourless monotony became absolutely
+killing. It was awful to be stuck there, adding up columns
+of pounds, shillings, and pence, and writing business letters,
+while there was stabbing, shooting, and all sorts of
+wild excitement going on "away down in the islands."</p>
+
+<p>It was about this time that I made the acquaintance of
+certain South Sea Islanders belonging to whalers or trading
+vessels. With one of them, named George, a native
+of Raratonga, I became intimate. He impressed me with
+his intelligence, and amused me with his descriptions of
+island life. He had just returned from a whaling voyage
+in the barque <i>Adventurer</i> belonging to the well-known firm
+of Robert Towns &amp; Company.</p>
+
+<p>So when George, having been paid off in Sydney with a
+handsome cheque, confided to me that he intended going
+back to the Navigators' Islands, where he had previously
+spent some years, in order to open a small trading station,
+my unrest returned. He had a hundred pounds which he
+wished to invest in trade-goods, so I took him round the
+Sydney firms and saw him fairly dealt with. A week afterwards
+he sailed to Samoa vi&acirc; Tonga, in the <i>Taoji Vuna</i>, a
+schooner belonging to King George of that ilk.</p>
+
+<p>Before he left he told me that two of his countrymen
+were trading for Captain Hayston&mdash;one at Marhiki, and
+one at Fakaofo, in the Union group. Both had made
+money, and he believed that Captain Hayston had fixed
+upon Apia, the chief port of Samoa, as his head-quarters.</p>
+
+<p>Need I say that this information interested me greatly,
+and I asked George no end of questions. But the schooner
+was just leaving the wharf in tow of a tug, and my dark-skinned
+friend having shipped as an A. B., was no longer
+of the "leisure classes." So, grasping my hand, and tell
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>ing
+me where to hear of him if I ever came to Samoa, we
+parted.</p>
+
+<p>Before going further let me explain the nature of a Polynesian
+trader's mission.</p>
+
+<p>On the greater number of the islands white men are resident,
+who act as agents for a firm of merchants, for masters
+of vessels, or on their own account. In some cases a piece
+of ground is rented from the king or chief whereon to make
+the trading station. In others the rulers are paid a protection
+fee. Then, if a trader is murdered, his principal can
+claim blood for blood. This, however, is rarely resorted
+to. A trader once settled on his station proceeds to obtain
+cocoa-nuts from the natives, for which he pays in dollars
+or "trade." He further employs them to scrape the fruit
+into troughs exposed to the sun, by which process the cocoa-nut
+oil is extracted. Of late years "copra" has taken the
+place of the oil. This material&mdash;the dried kernel of the
+nut&mdash;has become far more valuable; for when crushed by
+powerful machinery the refuse is pressed into oil-cake, and
+proved to be excellent food for cattle.</p>
+
+<p>To be a good trader requires pluck, tact, and business
+capacity. Many traders meet their death for want of one
+or other of these attributes. All through the South Seas,
+more especially in the Line Islands, are to be found the
+most reckless desperadoes living. Their uncontrolled passions
+lead them to commit acts which the natives naturally
+resent; the usual result being that if the trader fails to kill
+or terrorise them, they do society a kindness by ridding it
+of him. Then comes the not infrequent shelling of a native
+village by an avenging man-of-war. And thus civilisation
+keeps ever moving onwards.</p>
+
+<p>The traders were making fortunes in the South Seas at
+that time, according to George. I returned to business
+with a mind full of projects. The glamour of the sea,
+the magic attraction of blue water, was again upon me; I
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+was powerless to resist. My father smiled. My mother
+and sisters wept afresh. I bowed myself, nevertheless, to
+my fate. In a fortnight I bade my relations farewell&mdash;all
+unworthy as I felt myself of their affection. Inwardly
+exultant, though decently uncheerful, I took passage a
+fortnight later in a barque trading to the Friendly and
+Navigators' Islands. She was called the <i>Rotumah</i>, belonging
+to Messrs. M'Donald, Smith, &amp; Company, of Hunter
+Street, Sydney. Her captain was a Canadian named Robertson,
+of great experience in the island trade.</p>
+
+<p>There were two other passengers&mdash;a lady going to join
+her brother who was in business at Nukulofa, in Tonga,
+and a fine old French priest whom we were taking to
+Samoa. The latter was very kind to me, and during our
+passage through the Friendly Islands I was frequently the
+guest of his brother missionaries at their various stations
+in the groups.</p>
+
+<p>How shall I describe my feelings, landed at last among
+the charmed isles of the South, where I had come to stay,
+I told myself? Generally speaking, how often is there a
+savour of disappointment, of anticipation unrealised, when
+the wish is achieved! But the reality here was beyond the
+most brilliant mental pictures ever painted. All things
+were fresh and novel; the coral reefs skirting the island
+shore upon which the surf broke ceaselessly with sullen
+roar; cocoa-palms bowed with their feathery crests above
+a vegetation richly verdurous. The browns and yellows
+of the native villages, so rich in tone, so foreign of aspect,
+excited my unaccustomed vision. Graceful figures, warm
+and dusky of colouring, passed to and fro. The groves of
+broad leafed bananas; the group of white mission houses;
+the balmy, sensuous air; the transparent water, in which
+the very fish were strange in form and hue,&mdash;all things
+soever, land and water, sea and sky, seemed to cry aloud
+to my eager, wondering soul, "Hither, oh fortunate youth,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+hast thou come to a world new, perfect, and complete in
+itself&mdash;to a land of Nature's fondness and profuse luxuriance,
+to that A&iuml;denn, long lost, mysteriously concealed for
+ages from all mankind."</p>
+
+<p>At the Marist Mission at Tongatabu I was received most
+kindly by the venerable Father Chevron, the head of the
+Church in Tonga. His had been a life truly remarkable.
+For fifty years he had laboured unceasingly among the savage
+races of Polynesia, had had hairbreadth escapes, and
+passed through deadliest perils. Like many of his colleagues
+he was unknown to fame, dying a few years later,
+beloved and respected by all, yet comparatively "unhonoured
+and unsung." During the whole course of my experiences
+in the Pacific I have never heard the roughest trader
+speak an ill word of the Marist Brothers. Their lives of
+ceaseless toil and honourable poverty tell their own tale.
+The Roman Catholic Church may well feel proud of these
+her most devoted servants.</p>
+
+<p>One morning Captain Robertson joined me; the Father
+seemed pleased to see him. On my mentioning how kindly
+they had treated me, a stranger and a Protestant, he
+replied,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, my lad; they are different from most of the
+missionaries in Tonga, anyway, as many a shipwrecked
+sailor has found. If a ship were cast away, and the crew
+hadn't a biscuit apiece to keep them from starving, they
+wouldn't get so much as a piece of yam from some of the
+reverend gentlemen."</p>
+
+<p>I asked Father Chevron if he knew Captain Peese and
+Captain Hayston.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! I am acquainted with both; of the latter I can
+only say that when I met him here I forgot all the bad reports
+I had heard about him. He cannot be the man he is
+reputed to be."</p>
+
+<p>I was sorry to part with the good Father when the time
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+came to leave. But a native messenger arrived next day with
+a note from the captain, who intended sailing at daylight.</p>
+
+<p>So I said farewell and went on board.</p>
+
+<p>We called at Hapai and Vavau, the two other ports of
+the Friendly Islands, sighting the peak of Upolu, in the
+Navigators', three days after leaving the latter place.</p>
+
+<p>We rounded the south-east point of Upolu next day,
+running in so close to the shore that we could see the natives
+walking on the beaches. Saw a whaleboat, manned by
+islanders and steered by a white man, shoot through an
+opening in the reef opposite Flupata. For him we tarried
+not, in spite of a signal, running in as we were with the
+wind dead aft, and at four o'clock in the afternoon anchored
+in Apia harbour, opposite the American consulate.</p>
+
+<p>The scenery around Apia harbour is beauteous beyond
+description. Spacious bays unfold themselves as you approach,
+each revealing the silvery white-sanded beach
+fringed with cocoa-palms; stretching afar towards the hills
+lies undulating forest land chequered with the white houses
+of the planters. The harbour itself consists of a horseshoe
+bay, extending from Matautu to Mullinu Point.
+Fronting the passage a mountain rears its summit cloud-enwrapped
+and half-hidden, narrow paths wind through deep
+gorges, amid which you catch here and there the sheen of a
+mountain-torrent. On the south the land heads in a graceful
+sweep to leeward, until lost in the all-enveloping sea-mists
+of the tropics, while the straggling town, white-walled,
+reed-roofed, peeps through a dark-green grove of
+the bananas and cocoa-palms which fringe the beach.</p>
+
+<p>At this precise period I paid but little attention to the
+beauties of Apia, for in a canoe paddled by a Samoan boy
+sat my friend George. I hailed him; what a look of joy
+and surprise rippled over his dark countenance as he recognised
+me! With a few strokes of the paddle the canoe shot
+alongside and he sprang on deck.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+"I knew you would come," he said; "I boarded every
+ship that put in here since I landed. Going to live here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think so, George! I have some money and trade with
+me; if I get a chance I'll start somewhere in Samoa."</p>
+
+<p>He was delighted, and said I would make plenty of
+money by and by. He wouldn't hear of my going to an
+hotel. I must come with him. He had a Samoan wife at
+Lellepa, a village about a mile from Apia on the Matautu
+side.</p>
+
+<p>It was dark when we landed. As we walked towards his
+home George pointed out a house standing back from the
+beach, which, he said, belonged to Captain Hayston.</p>
+
+<p>That personage had just left Samoa, and was now cruising
+in the Line Islands, where he had a number of traders.
+He was expected back in two months. A short time before
+I arrived, the American gunboat <i>Narraganset</i> had suddenly
+put in an appearance in Apia where Hayston's brig
+was lying. Her anchor had barely sounded bottom, before
+an armed boat's crew left her side, boarded, took Hayston
+prisoner, and kept possession of the <i>Leonora</i>.</p>
+
+<p>There was wild excitement that day in Apia. Many of
+the residents had a strong liking for Hayston and expressed
+sympathy for him. Others, particularly the German
+element, were jubilant, and expressed a hope that he
+would be taken to America in irons.</p>
+
+<p>The captain of the <i>Narraganset</i> then notified his seizure
+to the foreign consuls, and solicited evidence regarding
+alleged acts of piracy and kidnapping. During this time
+Hayston was, so the Americans stated, in close confinement
+on board the man-of-war, but it was the general opinion
+that he was treated more as a guest than a prisoner. The
+trial came on at the stated time, but resulted in his acquittal.
+Either the witnesses were unreliable or afraid of
+vengeance, for nothing of a criminal nature could be elicited
+from them. Hayston was then conducted back to his brig,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+and in half-an-hour he had "dressed ship" in honour of the
+event. The next act was to give his crew liberty&mdash;when
+those bright particular stars sallied forth on shore, all more
+or less drunk, in company with the blue jackets from the
+man-of-war, and immediately set about "painting the town
+red," and looking for the witnesses who had testified
+against their commander. On the next night Hayston
+gave a ball to the officers, and, doubtless, from that time
+felt his position secure, as far as danger from warships of
+his own country was concerned.</p>
+
+<p>All this was told to me by George as we walked along the
+track to his house, where we arrived just in time for a good
+supper. The place was better built than the ordinary native
+houses. The floor was covered with handsome clean mats
+on which, on the far end of the room, his wife and two
+daughters by a former marriage were sitting. They seemed
+so delighted at the idea of having me to live with them,
+that in a few minutes I felt quite at home. The evening
+meal was ready on the mats; the smell of roast pork and
+bread-fruit whetted my appetite amazingly; nor was it
+appeased until George and his wife had helped me to food
+enough to satisfy a boarding-school.</p>
+
+<p>After supper the family gathered round the lamp which
+was placed in the middle of the room. There they went
+through the evening prayers; a hymn was sung, after which
+a chapter was read from a Samoan Testament, followed by
+a prayer from the master of the house.</p>
+
+<p>I found that the custom of morning and evening prayers
+was never neglected in any Samoan household; for, whether
+the Samoans are really religious or no, they keep up a
+better semblance of it than many who have whiter skins.</p>
+
+<p>That night George, who by the way was called Tuluia by
+his wife and daughters, made plans for our future. As we
+sat talking the others retired to a far corner, where they
+sat watching us, their big dark eyes dilated with interest.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+We agreed to buy a boat between us and make trading trips
+to the windward port as far as Aleipata. Then after smoking
+a number of "salui" or native cigarettes, we turned in.</p>
+
+<p>All next day we were incommoded by crowds of inquisitive
+visitors, who came to have a look at me and learn why
+I had come to Samoa&mdash;George having told them merely
+that I was his "uo," or friend, treated most of them with
+scant courtesy, explaining that the natives about Apia are
+thorough loafers and beggars, and warning me not to sell
+any of them my "trade" unless I received cash in return.
+In the afternoon I landed my effects, but could scarcely get
+into the house for the crowds.</p>
+
+<p>George's wife, it appeared, had been so indiscreet as to
+tell some of her relations that I had rifles for sale; as a
+consequence there were fully a hundred men eager to see
+them. Some had money, others wanted credit, others
+desired loose powder, and kept pointing to a shed close by,
+saying, "Panla pana fanua" (powder for the cannon). I
+discovered that under the shed lay a big gun which Patiole
+and Asi, two chiefs, had bought from Captain Hayston for
+six hundred dollars, but had run out of ammunition.</p>
+
+<p>I had no powder to sell, but George found me a cash
+buyer for one of my Winchesters at seventy-five dollars.
+I could have sold the other three for sixty dollars each, but
+he advised me to keep them in order to get a better price
+up the coast. It was just on the eve of the second native
+war, so the Samoans were buying arms in large quantities.
+From some Californians' trading vessels they had brought
+about three hundred breech-loaders, and Hayston had sold
+them the cannon aforesaid, which he had brought from
+China in the <i>Leonora</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The chief, Malietoa, had an idea of carrying the war
+into the enemy's country. His plan was to charter a vessel,
+and take five hundred men to Tuvali, the largest island in
+the group. Hayston had met a deputation of chiefs, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+told them that for a thousand dollars he would land that
+number of Malietoa's warriors in any part of the group.
+Moreover, if they gave him ten dollars for every shot fired,
+he would land them under cover of four guns. But they
+were not to bring their arms, and were to arrange to have
+taumualuas, or native boats, to meet the brig off the
+coast and put them on board. This, he explained, was
+necessary to prevent the vessel being seized if they met a
+man-of-war, and so getting him into serious trouble.</p>
+
+<p>The chiefs took this proposition in eagerly at first, but,
+on thinking it over, suspicions arose as to their reaching
+their destination safely; and, finally, after the usual
+amount of fawning and flattering, in which every Samoan
+is an adept, they told Hayston that they could not raise
+sufficient money, and so the matter ended.</p>
+
+<p>The following months of my sojourn in Samoa passed
+quickly. George and I bought a cutter in which we made
+several trips to the windward villages, whence we ran down
+to the little island of Manono, situated between Upolu and
+Savaii. There we did a good business, selling our trade
+for cash to the people of Manono, and buying a cargo of
+yams to take to Apia, to sell to the natives there, who were
+short of food owing to the outbreak of hostilities.</p>
+
+<p>On our way up we took advantage of a westerly wind,
+and made the passage inside the reef, calling at the villages
+of Multifanna and Saleimoa&mdash;visiting even places with
+only a few houses nestling amongst the cocoa-palms.</p>
+
+<p>We left Saleimoa at dusk, and although we were deeply
+laden, we made good way. Whilst at the village I heard
+that a large Norwegian ship laden with guano had put into
+Apia, having sprung a leak and run short of provisions;
+also that there was not a yam to be had in the place. Our
+informant was a deserter from a man-of-war, living at
+Saleimoa. He had been tattooed, and was a thorough
+Samoan in appearance, but was anxious to get a passage to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+New Britain, being afraid to remain longer in his present
+quarters. He was known as "Flash Jack," and was held
+to be a desperate character. After a few drinks he became
+communicative, telling me certain things which he had
+better have kept to himself. He informed me that he
+intended to ship with Hayston, whose brig was expected
+daily with a hundred recruits for Goddeffroy and Sons'
+plantations. He advised me to keep my yams until the
+<i>Leonora's</i> cargo of "boys" arrived, as the Germans would
+pay me my own price for them, being short of food for
+their plantation labourers. In another few minutes Jack
+was drunk, and wanted to fight us, when two of his wives
+came on board, and after beating him with pieces of wood,
+carried him on shore and laid him in his bunk.</p>
+
+<p>I determined, however, to take his advice about the
+yams, and was cogitating as to the price I should ask for
+them, when George, who was steering, called my attention
+to two "taumualuas" full of men, paddling quickly in from
+sea through an opening in the reef.</p>
+
+<p>Not apprehending danger we kept on. Our boat was
+well known along the coast by the Tua Massaga or Malietoa
+faction, and we merely supposed that these boats were
+coming down from Apia to the leeward ports. It was a
+clear night; George called out the usual Samoan greeting,
+used when canoes meet at night. The next moment we saw
+them stop paddling, when, without a word of warning, we
+received a volley, the bullets striking the cutter in at least
+twenty places. How we escaped is a mystery. George
+got a cut on the shoulder from a piece of our saucepan,
+which was lying against the mast. It flew to pieces when
+struck, and I thought a shell had exploded.</p>
+
+<p>Flinging ourselves flat on the deck, George called out to
+the canoes, which were now paddling quickly after us, and
+told them who we were, at the same time lowering our jib
+and foresail. The taumualuas dashed up, one on each side.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+Luckily some of the warriors instantly recognised us. They
+expressed great sorrow, and explained that they had mistaken
+us for a boat bringing up a war party from Savaii.</p>
+
+<p>Every man was armed with a rifle, mostly modelled on
+the German needle-gun, and as they were all in full fighting
+costume they had a striking and picturesque effect. After
+mutual expressions of regard and a general consumption of
+cigarettes, we gave them a bottle of grog to keep out the
+cold night air, sold them some cartridges from my own
+private stock, and with many a vociferous "To Fa," we
+sailed away, and left them in the passage waiting for the
+expected invaders.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h2>SAMOA TO MILL&Eacute;</h2>
+
+
+<p>Just as we parted from our warlike friends who had so
+nearly put an end to our cruises, one of the chiefs sang out
+that a large brig, painted white, was out at sea beating up
+to Apia. Turning his information over in my mind, the
+conviction grew upon me that she must be Hayston's vessel,
+the <i>Leonora</i>. It proved to be correct, for as we ran past
+Mulinu Point we saw her entering the passage leading to
+the harbour. She was about a mile distant from us, but I
+could see that she was a beautifully-built vessel, and could
+well believe the tales of her extraordinary speed. The
+Norwegian guano-man, an immense ship, the <i>Otto and
+Antoine</i>, was lying in the roadstead, and as the <i>Leonora</i>
+came to her moorings, we ran up between the two vessels
+and dropped anchor.</p>
+
+<p>During the next few minutes I received no less than
+three different offers for our sixteen tons of yams. These
+I declined, and after waiting till I perceived that most of
+the shore visitors had left the brig, I took our dingey and
+pulled aboard.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Hayston was below, and the Chinese steward
+conducted me into his presence. He looked at me steadily
+for a moment, as if trying to recall where he had seen me
+before, and then after my few words of explanation, gave
+me a hearty welcome to the South Seas.</p>
+
+<p>Having told him how I came to visit Samoa, I offered
+him my yams, which he gladly purchased, paying me a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+good price for them in United States gold coin. This transaction
+being concluded, he asked me to meet him next
+day, when we could have a good long chat, at the same
+time desiring me to keep secret the fact of our previous
+meeting. What his reasons were I never knew; but as he
+seemed anxious on this matter, I told him that I had seldom
+mentioned the circumstance, and to no one in Samoa,
+with the exception of my mate Tuluia. I had indeed made
+few other acquaintances.</p>
+
+<p>Although I should much have liked to have had a look
+round the brig, I could see the Captain wished to get on
+shore, so after shaking hands with him I returned to our
+cutter, where, in a few minutes, the brig's longboat came
+alongside, and we set to work getting out the yams. Hayston
+paid me without demanding to have them weighed,
+and George's dark face was wreathed in smiles when I
+showed him the money. He explained that two tons were
+very bad, and had they been seen by a purchaser would
+have been rejected.</p>
+
+<p>Although only a Kanaka, George possessed true commercial
+instincts, and I felt sure he would grow rich.</p>
+
+<p>The native war was now at its height, and the lines of
+the hostile party were so close to Matautu, the eastern part
+of Apia, that bullets were whistling over our heads all day
+long. The yam season being over, and the copra trade at
+a standstill, we gave up the cutter and settled for a while
+on shore. It was during this period that I was a constant
+visitor at the house of Mr. Lewis, the American Consul,
+where I generally found Hayston in company with Captain
+Edward Hamilton, the pilot, and another American, a
+whisky-loving, kava-drinking old salt, brimful of fun and
+good humour. He had been twenty years in Samoa, and
+was one of the best linguists I ever met with; was known
+to every native in the group, and had been several trips
+with Hayston to the north-west islands. He followed no
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+known occupation, but devoted his time to idling and
+attending native dances.</p>
+
+<p>Many a merry evening we spent together while the
+<i>Leonora</i> was recruiting, and I began to think Hayston was
+the most entertaining man I had ever met. He made no
+secret of some of his exploits, and in particular referred to
+the way in which he had beaten a certain German firm in
+the way of business, even breaking up their stations in the
+Line Islands. At that time these merchants had acquired
+a bad name for the underhand manner in which they had
+treated English and American traders; and for any man to
+gain an advantage over them was looked upon as a meritorious
+action.</p>
+
+<p>By many people who cherished animosity against Hayston
+I had been led at first to look upon him as a thorough-going
+pirate and a bloodthirsty ruffian. Yet here I found
+him, if not respected, at least deemed a fit associate for
+respectable men. Moreover, his word was considered as
+good security in business as another man's bond. I well
+remember the days when he used to visit me at Leliepa,
+and we amused ourselves with pistol practice. He was a
+wonderful shot, and his skill excited the loud applause of
+the native chiefs. One fat old fellow, known as Pulumakau
+(the bullock), begged him to spend a day now and then
+in the lines with the native forces, and exercise his skill
+upon the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>One day he took me on board with him in order to show
+me over the brig. He intended to leave in a few days, and
+I remarked, as we were pulled on board, that I should
+dearly like to have a trip with him some day.</p>
+
+<p>He was silent for a minute, and then replied, "No! I
+shall be glad enough of your company as my guest, as I
+have taken a fancy to you; but it will be better for you to
+keep clear of me."</p>
+
+<p>When we got on board I was struck with the beautiful
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
+order in which the vessel was kept, aloft and below; there
+was not a rope yarn out of place. Descending to the cabin
+I found it splendidly furnished for a vessel of her size.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Leonora</i> was 250 tons register, and had been built
+for the opium trade. During her career in Chinese seas
+she acquired the reputation of being the fastest vessel on
+the coast. She then carried eight guns. She had been
+several times attacked by pirates, who were invariably
+beaten off with loss. At the time of my visit she carried
+but one gun, which stood on the main deck, Hayston having
+sold two others of the same calibre to the natives. But
+for this, as far as I could see, she had a most peaceful
+appearance.</p>
+
+<p>On the main deck, just abaft the foc'sle, was a deckhouse
+divided into compartments, forming the cook's galley
+and boats' crews' quarters, together with those belonging
+to the first and second mates. On the top of the house a
+whale-boat was carried, leaving room for two sentries to
+keep guard, a precaution which I afterwards found was, on
+certain occasions, highly necessary for the vessel's safety.
+The foc'sle was large, for she carried between twenty-five
+and thirty men. The thing that struck me most, however,
+was the bulkhead, which was loop-holed for rifles, so that
+if any disturbance took place in the forehold, which was
+sometimes filled with Kanaka labourers, the rebels could be
+shot down with ease and accuracy.</p>
+
+<p>The most noticeable things about the gear were the topsails
+she carried, Cunningham's patent, in which there
+were no reef points. The topsail yards revolved, so that
+you could reef as much as you liked, and all the work could
+be done from the main deck by the down haul. Many captains
+dislike this patent, but it behaved splendidly on the
+<i>Leonora</i> for all that.</p>
+
+<p>The crew, or most of them, were ashore, and only the
+second mate, the Chinese carpenter, the steward, and ship's
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+boys were on board. The mate was a muscular Fijian half-caste
+named Bill Hicks, known as a fighting man all over
+Polynesia. A native girl, called Liva, was sitting on the
+main hatch making a bowl of kava.</p>
+
+<p>"Halloa! Liva," said the Captain, as we passed along the
+deck, "I thought you were married to one of the Dutch
+clerks at Goddeffroy's?"</p>
+
+<p>"Avoe, lava, alii." "Quite true, Captain, but I've come
+to stay with Bill for a week."</p>
+
+<p>The Captain and second mate laughed, and next day I
+learned that Bill had gone to the clerk's house at Matafele,
+the German quarter of the town, and though there were
+other Germans present, told Liva to pack up her clothes and
+come with him. She, nothing loth, did as he told her, and
+the Germans, seeing mischief in the half-caste's eye,
+offered no opposition.</p>
+
+<p>The departure of the <i>Leonora</i> took place a few days afterwards,
+and I accepted the position of supercargo in a ketch
+which the junior partner of one of the principal firms in
+Samoa wished to send to the Marshalls to be sold. I
+expressed my doubts of her sea-worthiness for so long a
+voyage. However, he said there was no danger, as it would
+be a fine weather passage all the way through, adding that
+the king of Arnu, or Arrowsmith's Island, had commissioned
+Captain Hayston to buy a vessel for him in Samoa.</p>
+
+<p>I thought his proposition over, and next day stated my
+willingness to undertake the venture, the owners promising
+to put the vessel in repair as soon as possible. She was
+hauled up to the beach in front of the British consulate,
+where for the next few weeks carpenters were at work,
+patching up and covering her rotten bottom with a thick
+coating of chunam. Notwithstanding these precautions no
+one except old Tapoleni, the Dutch skipper, could be induced
+to take charge of her.</p>
+
+<p>During the time she was on the beach I made a trip to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+the beautiful village of Tiavea, doing a week's trading and
+pigeon shooting. On my return I found the town in a high
+state of excitement owing to a succession of daring robberies
+of the various stores. Strong suspicions were entertained
+with respect to a herculean American negro, known
+as Black Tom, who kept an extremely disorderly hotel
+where seamen were known to be enticed and robbed.</p>
+
+<p>The old vessel was launched at last, and, to the manifest
+surprise of everybody, refrained from springing a leak.
+Things might easily have been worse; for what with the
+great age of her timber and the thickness of her hull the
+carpenters were barely able to make the copper hold.</p>
+
+<p>Next day we took in our stores. I was surprised at the
+casks of beef, tins of biscuits, and quantities of other provisions
+put on board, and thought the owners extremely
+liberal. This favourable state of feeling lasted till we
+were well at sea, when I discovered all the beef to be bad,
+and the remainder of the stores unfit for any well-brought-up
+pig. When everything was aboard the owners gave me
+the following document:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ <span class="smcap">Apia</span>, <i>3rd December, 187_</i>.
+</div>
+
+<p>Dear Sir,&mdash;You will proceed to Mill&eacute;, Mulgrave Island, for the
+purpose of selling the ketch <i>E. A. Wilson</i>. You will find Captain
+Hayston there waiting for you; so you will please consult with him,
+as he is acquainted with the parties who wish to purchase her. Try
+to obtain oil and copra to the amount of &pound;500 for the vessel. Ship
+whatever produce you may get on board the <i>Leonora</i>, and get Captain
+Hayston to sign bills of lading. Do not sell the chronometer unless
+you get a good price for it. Sell the few things you take to the best
+advantage; none of the Samoans are to remain, but must come back
+to Apia. Have the ketch painted on your arrival at Mill&eacute;. Wishing
+you a prosperous and speedy voyage.&mdash;We are, etc.,</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ <span class="smcap">Bascom &amp; Co.</span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>I quote this letter <i>in extenso</i>, for later on it plays an important
+part in my narrative. Having carefully read it
+Mr. Bascom shook hands with me, wished me a pleasant
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+voyage, and departed. I went aboard, the vessel being
+already hove short, and, as I thought, only waiting my
+arrival to sail.</p>
+
+<p>Things looked much otherwise as I stepped on deck.
+The skipper was drunk and helpless. The decks were
+thronged with shore natives&mdash;men and women nearly all
+crying and half drunk, bidding farewell to one or other of
+the crew.</p>
+
+<p>The mate, Jim Knowles, was a Tongan half-caste, who
+was afterwards hanged in Fiji for shooting Larsen, one of
+the Messrs. Goddeffroy's captains, dead on his own ship.
+He was the only sober man on board. He told me that one
+of Tapoleni's friends had come on board, and that she had
+been stowed away by that worthy, who swore that he would
+not leave her behind. To this Maa Maa I had a particular
+aversion, and always hated to see her come on board. She
+was ugly enough in all conscience, and had always been
+said to be the cause of quarrels and fights whenever the
+skipper took her on a trip. Taking Knowles with me, we
+lugged her on deck screaming and biting. As she refused
+to get into a canoe, Knowles threw her overboard, where
+some sympathising friends picked her up.</p>
+
+<p>Just as this incident terminated I received a note from
+the owners, telling me to delay the vessel's departure for
+half-an-hour. Wondering what was in the wind, I set
+about restoring order. I found a lot of liquor in the foc'sle,
+which I took aft and locked up. Then with Knowles' aid
+I succeeded in clearing the decks of the women and shore
+loafers, who were lying about in all stages of intoxication.</p>
+
+<p>At eleven o'clock we saw two boats pulling off from the
+shore, and noticed armed Samoans among the crews. As
+they came alongside I saw seated in one of them the figures
+of Black Tom and his son Johnny, both heavily ironed.
+In the stern sat his Samoan wife, a woman named Musia.
+A number of white residents were in charge of the lot,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+and I was informed that at an impromptu mass meeting,
+held that morning, it had been decided to expatriate Tom
+and his family for the good of the country; they had seized
+this favourable opportunity of carrying their resolution
+into effect.</p>
+
+<p>This was a pretty state of affairs. I need scarcely explain
+my indignation at having two such characters as Black
+Tom and his son foisted on me as passengers. I was about
+to get into a boat and let them carry their own prisoners
+away, when I was told that I could land him and his family
+at the first land we made. This would be Quiros Island,
+bearing N.N.W. from Apia.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, gentlemen," I replied, "and as everybody
+here happens to be drunk, I'll feel obliged if you will be
+good enough to lift the anchor and let us get away."</p>
+
+<p>Tom and his family were accordingly put in the hold,
+and the new-comers having got the anchor up bade me
+farewell, chuckling at having rid themselves of Black Tom
+so cleverly. Whereupon they got into the boats and pulled
+ashore.</p>
+
+<p>It was blowing stiffly as we ran through the passage, and
+certainly we presented a pretty spectacle, with our running
+gear all in disorder, and the crew drunk in the lee scuppers.
+I had the keys of the prisoners' irons, so giving the
+tiller to Knowles, I went below and liberated them.</p>
+
+<p>"Tom," I said, "my instructions are to keep you in irons
+till we made the first land. Now, I've got nothing against
+you, but I don't want your company, and I consider I was
+served a shabby trick when they put you on board. I
+mean to be even with them. They said the first land.
+Now, I'll stand on this tack till midnight; then I'll put
+about and land you on the coast."</p>
+
+<p>The negro's bloodshot eyes showed blind fury when I
+first approached him, but his look softened as I spoke. He
+laughed, evidently enjoying my suggestion.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>
+"Thank you, sir, for taking the bracelets off us, but I
+don't care about landing in Samoa again, and I'll face the
+voyage with you. You're the first man that's spoke a kind
+word to me since I was rushed and tied in my own house&mdash;treated
+like a wild beast, and, by &mdash;&mdash;! I'll do any mortal
+thing in this world for you."</p>
+
+<p>He then begged me not to land him at Quiros, but to let
+him remain on board until we met Captain Hayston who,
+he was sure, would give him a trading station. I promised
+him this, and in return, being a splendid cook, he provided
+me during the remainder of the voyage with all sorts
+of sea delicacies.</p>
+
+<p>I will not speak of the dangers of that wearisome voyage;
+the drunkenness that I tried in vain to suppress; the
+erratic course we made to our destination. The skipper
+sobered up every two or three days, took the sun, worked
+out the ship's position, and let me steer any course I liked.
+Then he would fly to his bottle of "square-face," until I
+thought it necessary to rouse him again in order to ascertain
+our whereabouts. At last, after a forty-two days'
+passage, we sighted the low-lying coral islands enclosing
+the spacious lagoon of Mill&eacute;.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h2>THE BRIG LEONORA</h2>
+
+
+<p>The island of Mill&eacute; is situated in the Radac or eastern
+portion of the Marshall group, discovered by a captain of
+that name in 1788. On the charts it bears the name of the
+Mulgrave Lagoon, and the reason is not far to seek. For
+the most part the islands of Polynesia are of volcanic origin,
+whilst the lagoons, which sometimes pass for islands,
+are exclusively of coral formation. The minute insects
+which form them build their submarine wall in a circle,
+which growing for ages, until it rises at low water above
+sea-level, gradually collects sand and debris, when it decomposes
+and becomes a solid. Then comes a day when
+wandering cocoa-nuts float to it and take up their abode on
+its shores. Gradually a ring of land is formed, varying in
+width, covered with a wreath of palms, sheltering within
+its circumference a peaceful sea, into which access is attainable
+by scattered channels only.</p>
+
+<p>The spot we had reached was of this description.</p>
+
+<p>Day was breaking when we first sighted the tops of the
+cocoa-palms, and putting the ketch dead before the wind
+we ran down to the passage. On going aloft I was glad to
+see the spars of a vessel showing about three miles distant.
+As none of the crew had ever visited the place before, we
+lay to and fired a gun. In about half-an-hour we saw a
+boat pulling towards us, with a tall man standing up steering.
+It was Hayston. Jumping aboard he shook me
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
+warmly by the hand, and said, "So you see we've met
+again! What sort of passage did you have?"</p>
+
+<p>I recounted our misfortunes, adding the information that
+the ketch leaked terribly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! that's just like Bascom," he remarked. "He told
+me that he'd send her down as sound as a bell. I never
+had a chance of looking at her when she was on the beach
+at Apia, and I certainly thought he would act squarely
+with me. But we'll talk business by and by."</p>
+
+<p>He now took command of the ketch, and brought us into
+the lagoon, where we dropped anchor in ten fathoms alongside
+the brig. I then formally handed over my vessel to
+him, and wished the king of Arnu joy of his bargain.
+After receiving full particulars of the voyage, he called the
+skipper aft.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Captain Westendorf," he said, "you have most
+fortunately reached here safely, but more through good
+luck than good management. I know you to be an experienced
+and capable navigator, so that had you attended to
+your duty you would have made Mill&eacute; ten or fifteen days,
+earlier. Now, you can go ashore and live with my trader
+till you get a passage back to Samoa, for I'll be hanged if
+I take you back. As for your crew, I don't want them
+either; you can take them with you or turn them adrift.
+The ketch I intend to leave here until I return from Ascension;
+but mark this&mdash;<i>and you know me</i>&mdash;don't attempt to
+board her during my absence; good day!"</p>
+
+<p>I felt sorry at seeing the good-natured "Tapoleni" so
+humiliated; for with the exception of that one failing
+which has obscured brighter intellects, and which was the
+cause of all his troubles, he was a thoroughly honest old
+fellow.</p>
+
+<p>Black Tom and his wife elected to remain at Mill&eacute; until
+they found a suitable island on which to open a trading
+station. They parted from me with many professions of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>
+gratitude which I think were sincere. He afterwards became
+a wealthy man&mdash;such are fortune's vagaries in the
+islands; his son Johnny earnestly begged me to intercede
+with Captain Hayston on his account, and not to leave him
+on shore at Mill&eacute;. I made the request, and the Captain
+told him to come aboard the <i>Leonora</i>.</p>
+
+<p>During the afternoon Hayston and I went over the ketch
+in order to inspect the stores, gear, etc., when he asked
+me, now that my responsibility had ended, what were my
+intentions as to future movements? I told him I proposed
+to charter a native canoe for Arnu, there to await a passing
+vessel and a passage to Samoa. From this course, however,
+he dissuaded me, pointing out that I might have to
+stay there six months. He then offered me the position of
+supercargo on his brig at a fair salary, pressing for an
+immediate answer.</p>
+
+<p>Thinking it better to be earning money than leading a
+life of idleness among the natives, I consented. "I accept
+your offer, Captain," I said; "but there is one thing I wish
+you to understand, I am coming with you, not for the sake
+of the pay, but because I don't want to loaf about the Marshall
+group like a beach-comber, and, moreover, I should
+like to visit the Carolines. I don't particularly want to
+return to Samoa, and if I see a place I like I'll start trading.
+Now, I am willing to do duty as supercargo, even
+without pay, but I won't lend a hand in any transaction
+that I don't like the look of. So at our first difference you
+can set me ashore."</p>
+
+<p>Hayston looked me straight in the face and held out his
+hand&mdash;"Well, now, that's a fair deal. I give you my
+word that I won't ask you to join in anything doubtful.
+The traders round here are the greatest scoundrels unhung,
+and I have to treat them as they treat me. My books are
+in a bad state, and you'll find work enough putting them
+straight; but I'll be glad of your company aboard, even if
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+you never do a hand's turn." So the bargain was closed.
+I got my chest from the hold and sent it aboard the brig;
+the steward receiving instructions that I was to occupy the
+port side of the cabin. At dusk Hayston gave some of
+the crew liberty, and sent the rest with the mates to haul
+the ketch in and beach her as the tide was full. While he
+stood watching her from the brig's deck, he suddenly remarked
+that they were making a mess of it, and calling two
+boys to bring the dingey alongside, he was pulled into the
+shore.</p>
+
+<p>There was a number of young women on board, natives
+of the Kingsmill group, good-looking, but wild in appearance.
+I was on deck and they were below, where I heard
+them laughing and talking, and saw they were seated on
+the lounge that ran round the cabin. They all seemed
+very merry over a game, much like "knucklebones," which
+they were playing with shells. A large canoe was bearing
+down on us from one of the islands in the lagoon, and just
+as she ran up in the wind ahead of us, allowing the topsail
+to drift down alongside, I heard a man's voice mingling
+with the girls'.</p>
+
+<p>I was going forward to have a close look at the canoe,
+when I saw the Captain close alongside in the dingey. He
+had sailed out to the brig, having let the two boys remain
+on shore to assist at the ketch. Just as he stepped over
+the sail, the owner of the voice I had heard ran out of the
+cabin. Hayston gripped him by the arm, and I heard him
+sing out, "What, would you knife me?" The next minute
+the man was seized in the powerful arms, lifted high above
+his head, and then dashed upon the deck, where he lay
+perfectly still.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain disappeared in the cabin, and running up I
+lifted the man's head. His back and neck seemed broken,
+and though I called loudly no one came from below. There
+were a lot of Arunai natives in the hold sleeping and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+smoking, but they took no notice of my calls, which, as I
+didn't know a word of their language, did not surprise me.
+The canoe had now come alongside, and the Captain reappeared
+upon deck. The chief seemed pleased to see him,
+and then a lot of natives clambered on board and carried
+the wounded man aboard their barque.</p>
+
+<p>Having given them eight or ten pounds of tobacco, Hayston
+told them, partly in English and partly in the Mill&eacute;
+dialect, that the man was shamming dead, and if he woke
+up on board they could chuck him overboard and let him
+swim. Then they hoisted sail again and stood away.</p>
+
+<p>I felt horrified, for, although the Captain was certainly
+justified in defending himself from a man armed with a
+knife, I was shocked at witnessing the result. He, however,
+insisted that the fellow was only "foxing," and so the
+matter ended. When the boats returned from the ketch,
+I heard the women remark to the sailors that Si&#257;k&eacute; (Jack)
+had run away in a canoe, because "Kaptin" had beat him.</p>
+
+<p>At daylight next morning we got under weigh, and I was
+astonished at the manner in which Hayston handled the
+brig through the narrow passage. After accomplishing this
+feat, we bore away for Ujillong, and the steward called us
+to breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>Our destination was the almost unknown chain of coral
+islets forming Ujillong or Providence Island. Some fifteen
+months previously, Hayston had discovered a passage
+through the reef there, and sailed his brig in. He was
+delighted with the security afforded by the magnificent
+lagoon inside. The islets were covered with cocoa-nuts, and
+he at once decided upon forming a principal trading station
+there, making it a centre from whence he could work the
+islands in the North Pacific. There were only thirty natives
+on the whole lagoon, and with these he succeeded in establishing
+friendly relations, setting them to work in erecting
+dwelling-houses and oil-sheds.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
+We left in charge two white men named Jerry Jackson
+and Whistling Bill, together with a number of Line Island
+natives who were to assist in making oil. Hayston told me
+he intended to settle there himself and cruise among the
+Carolines and Marshalls, whilst Captain Peese, his colleague,
+would run a small vessel to China, making Ujillong
+his headquarters. On this occasion he expected to find that
+a large quantity of oil had been made in his absence, and
+was anxious to get there as quickly as possible.</p>
+
+<p>During the day I had leisure to observe the crew, and
+considering that none of them were white men, the way in
+which the brig was worked was simply admirable. They
+treated the officers with great freedom of manner, but before
+the Captain they seemed absolutely to cower. There being
+some thirty of them they were by no means over-worked.
+They were allowed as much liquor as they chose to buy at
+a dollar a bottle for gin, beer at fifty cents, and rum at a
+dollar. With such license one would naturally think that
+insubordination would be rife. It was not so. But though
+they never broke out at sea, when once the brig anchored
+they became fiends incarnate. Gambling and drinking then
+commenced. The sounds of oaths, yells, and blows floated
+up from the foc'sle, mingling with the screams of the
+women, and the night was made horrible with their din.</p>
+
+<p>Individual members of the crew of this strange vessel I
+shall describe later on&mdash;for the present <i>place aux dames</i>!
+Every officer had a native wife, and the Chinese carpenter
+two. Most of these women were natives of Arurai or Hope
+Island, one of the Kingsmill group. They were darker in
+complexion than the other Polynesians, and prone to violent
+jealousy of their protectors. It was by no means uncommon
+to see two of these girls fighting like demons on the main
+deck with their national weapons, wooden daggers set round
+with shark's teeth, while blood poured in streams from their
+lacerated limbs and bodies. There were several girls from
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
+Ocean and Pleasant Island, near the equator. Very good-looking
+were these last, and fair as to complexion. The
+principal belle, whose name was Nellie, was a very handsome
+half-caste&mdash;a native of Hope Island. Her father, a
+deserter from a whaler, had acquired such influence with
+the natives that they made him a war chief. He led them
+when they cut off an American whaler and killed the whole
+crew. Discarding civilised clothing, he became a native in
+all but colour, and finally met his death in a skirmish with
+a hostile tribe. This girl was his daughter, and had been
+given as a present to Hayston by the king of Arurai. Along
+with her beauty she had a violent and dangerous temper,
+and was never backward in using her knife on any woman
+that provoked her.</p>
+
+<p>We had merely dropped Mill&eacute; astern of us, when Hayston
+changed his mind about going to Arurai, and bore away to
+Pleasant Island. He told me that he had forgotten a
+promise made to the traders there to bring them supplies,
+but that he would call at Providence on our way back from
+the Carolines.</p>
+
+<p>Pleasant Island (or Naura) is generally considered one of
+the Gilbert group, although it is far to the leeward, and the
+natives, together with those of Ocean Island (or Paanup),
+consider themselves a distinct people. The former island
+is in latitude 0.25 S., longitude 167.5 E., and the latter in
+latitude 0.505, longitude 169.30 E.</p>
+
+<p>"We've got a bully breeze," said the Captain; "and there
+is a straight run of five hundred miles before we sight the
+cocoa-nuts on Pleasant Island. I'll show you what the
+<i>Leonora</i> can do."</p>
+
+<p>Our course was something about S.W. by W., the wind
+increasing in strength as we put the helm up for Pleasant
+Island, and during the afternoon, so quickly was the brig
+slipping through the water, that Hayston said we should
+do the distance&mdash;four hundred and ninety-five miles&mdash;in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+forty-eight hours. I was astonished at the rate we travelled,
+and the Captain himself seemed pleased. Calling
+the hands aft, he gave them a glass of grog all round, and
+told the women to go on the main deck and dance. This
+created considerable amusement, for as the brig was running
+dead before the wind, and occasionally giving rolls, the
+dancers losing their balance got some heavy falls into the
+scuppers, while the others laughed and enjoyed their misfortunes.</p>
+
+<p>We ran up under the leeside of the island just forty-four
+hours after leaving Mill&eacute;, a trifle over eleven knots an hour.
+In a few minutes we were boarded by the traders, of whom
+there were six. They were certainly a rough lot. As each
+man lived under the protection of a particular chief, the
+island being divided into six districts, there was the keenest
+business rivalry among them.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston called them down below, when they were soon
+pretty well drunk.</p>
+
+<p>They had plenty of dollars, and bought largely of arms
+and ammunition. I was employed, with the second mate,
+in getting up the guns, principally Snider rifles, from the
+lazarette. I called to them, one by one, to come and pick
+what they wanted; however they seemed quite satisfied to
+let me give them what I liked.</p>
+
+<p>The brig was standing off and on, close into the land, in
+charge of the boatswain, the mate being ill; Hayston was
+singing "The Zouave," and the traders were applauding
+uproariously, whilst two were dancing with Nellie and Sara,
+shouting and yelling like lunatics. The only one that was
+sober was a fine young fellow who seemed ill, and was supported
+by a native. This young fellow paid me for the
+arms bought by his comrades, saying, "They're all drunk
+now, and as I don't go in for that kind of thing myself,
+they've got me to do this business for them." The man
+who was dancing with Sara had a bag of dollars in his hand,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+and as he waltzed round the cabin he kept swinging it
+about and striking the woodwork of the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>Carl, the sick man, called out to him, "I say, Ned, let me
+have that money now, I'm settling up for you." Swinging
+the bag of dollars round, Ned sent it full at liberty, and
+struck Carl in the chest, knocking him down. I picked him
+up, and thought by the pallor of his face that he was either
+killed or seriously injured.</p>
+
+<p>The native who was with him called to some of his comrades,
+and a young woman came down and took his head in
+her lap, while I got a decanter of water. After a while he
+came round, and told me he was not much hurt, but that the
+bag of money was heavy and had bruised his chest greatly.</p>
+
+<p>"You dog," he said, getting up and walking over to the
+other man, who was now sitting at the table talking to the
+Captain, "as sure as my name's Carl I'll make you suffer
+for this."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come," said Hayston, "it was only Ned's rough
+play. I don't think he meant to hurt you. Besides, I don't
+want to see white men fighting on board my ship."</p>
+
+<p>"Look here, Captain," said he, pulling off his shirt, "look
+at my body, and tell me if Ned thought me a fit subject for
+a joke."</p>
+
+<p>It makes me shudder now. There was an awful gash on
+his back, extending from his right shoulder to below the
+ribs on the right side. It was roughly sewn up here and
+there, and seemed to be healing, but the blow on the chest
+had made it bleed anew; a dark stream was soaking down
+his leg to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"By heaven! that is a terrible cut," said the Captain;
+"how in thunder did you get mauled like that?"</p>
+
+<p>Carl, who was still very faint, told us that some time ago
+he had a fight with a native, and licked him. One night,
+as he was lying face downward on his mat, this man crept
+into his hut and struck him with a shark tooth sword. His
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+native wife, who was coming into the house at the time,
+carrying two shells of toddy, dropped them, and flinging her
+arms round the man's legs, tripped him up, and held him,
+while Carl, all smothered in blood, shot him dead with his
+revolver.</p>
+
+<p>"Ned!" said the Captain gravely, when Carl's tale was
+told, "did you know this young fellow had this gash in his
+back when you hove the bag at him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I did! why, d&mdash;n him, can't he take a joke?
+Naura's a rough shop for a man that can't stand a bit of
+fun."</p>
+
+<p>"Put up your hands, you cowardly dog!" said the Captain,
+and in an instant the drunken traders cleared a space.
+"I'll teach you to hurt a wounded man."</p>
+
+<p>Ned was as big a man as the Captain, and seemed to be
+the leading spirit of the gang. But the other traders,
+though armed with navy revolvers and derringers, did not
+seem inclined to interfere.</p>
+
+<p>At the first round the big trader went down like a bullock,
+and lay on the cabin floor apparently lifeless. Hayston was
+like a mad animal when he tried to get him up, and the
+man fell helpless. Picking him up in his arms like a child,
+he carried him on deck, the rest of us following.</p>
+
+<p>"Here! Naura men, where's Ned's boat?" he called out.</p>
+
+<p>It was towing astern, and some one having hauled it up,
+Hayston dropped the man into it like a log of wood.</p>
+
+<p>Then his good temper returned instantly, and he paid
+Carl every attention, insisting on dressing his wound. We
+remained out by Pleasant Island all day, and shipped a lot
+of oil, for which Hayston paid the traders in arms and
+ammunition; we then stood away for Ocean Island.</p>
+
+<p>I learned that Carl had been a petty officer on board the
+U.S. cruiser <i>Wish-ton-wish</i>, but had deserted and made his
+way to Pleasant Island. He seemed superior to his companions
+in every way, and I was glad to be able to give him
+some books.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+He told me that he belonged to the New England States,
+but that he could never return, and would put a bullet
+through his head rather than be taken back a disgraced
+man. I bade him farewell with regret, and learned two
+years afterwards that, a month after I saw him, he had
+blown his brains out, as the U.S. corvette <i>Rowena</i> touched
+at the island. Poor Carl! How many a tale of wasted life,
+of reckless deeds, and early death, could every island of the
+South Sea tell.</p>
+
+<p>Although Hayston was an utterly reckless man in most
+matters, he was by no means foolhardy where the lives of
+others were concerned. During the time we spent at Pleasant
+Island every precaution was taken against a surprise.</p>
+
+<p>All the crew carried revolvers, and two men were posted
+in the fore and main-tops armed with Winchesters. The
+natives of this island had cut off many ships in past years,
+and were now so well armed and determined that the utmost
+caution was needed.</p>
+
+<p>It was here that I met an American named Maule&mdash;about
+as hard a specimen of an old style South Sea trader
+as one could fall across. He was extremely anxious that
+I should purchase two native girls from him. They were
+under his charge. It seems their father had been killed,
+and his own wife objected to their presence in his house.</p>
+
+<p>I told him that I was supercargo, and therefore could not
+speculate on my own account. Besides, that sort of traffic
+was entirely out of my line. If he had curios, weapons, or
+Naura gods, I would deal, but there I drew the line.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, blame my cats! if you ain't too disgustin' partickler!
+Want to stuff yer cabin with kyurosities and
+graven images, instead of dellikit young women. Now,
+lookee hyar&mdash;jest you take them two gals o' mine for thirty
+dollars, and you'll jest double your money from king Abinoka.
+He's jest mad after Naura girls, and buys 'em up by
+the dozen."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+Finding that I wouldn't invest, he tried the Captain,
+telling him that the girls were anxious to get away from
+Pleasant Island, as their father was dead, and having no
+brothers, they could not get food enough from the people.
+His wife was jealous too, and had beaten them.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, well!" said the Captain, "bring them aboard, and
+I'll give them a passage somewhere. I suppose by and by
+you'll tell some man-of-war captain that I stole them." So
+the trader sent them on board, and received in exchange
+some boats' gear and a keg of molasses.</p>
+
+<p>The girls went aft, and remained with the others in the
+cabin for a few days. When we sighted Ocean Island,
+Hayston called me on deck, and said, "Come and see a bit
+of fun."</p>
+
+<p>Old Mary was told to bring up her flock. The two Pleasant
+Island girls came up with the rest. They were about
+fourteen and fifteen years of age, and, from their close similarity,
+probably the children of the same mother&mdash;a somewhat
+unusual thing in the Gilbert group. They seemed
+frightened at being called up, and clung closely to Sara and
+Nellie. Their hair, Pleasant Island fashion, hung down
+straight upon their backs, and was carefully oiled and
+combed. A girdle of Pandanus leaf was their only garment.
+Speaking kindly to them, the Captain asked them if they
+would like to go ashore there and live. I give the conversation.</p>
+
+<p><i>Captain.</i>&mdash;"Well, will you go ashore here?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Girls.</i>&mdash;"Are there plenty of cocoa-nuts and fish?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Captain.</i>&mdash;"Pretty fair; but there are not always plenty."</p>
+
+<p><i>Girls.</i>&mdash;"What chiefs will take us and give us food?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Captain.</i>&mdash;"I don't know&mdash;there are more women there
+than men. All the young men have gone away in whaleships."</p>
+
+<p><i>Girls.</i>&mdash;"That's bad; the Ocean Island women will soon
+kill us strangers."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
+<i>Captain.</i>&mdash;"Most likely. Would you like to stay on the
+ship if I get you husbands?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Girls.</i>&mdash;"Yes! where are they?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Captain.</i>&mdash;"Boatswain, send Sunday and boy George
+here."</p>
+
+<p>These were two boys who had been sailing with Hayston
+for some years. Both were about sixteen. Of George I
+will speak later on. Having come aft, the Captain, addressing
+them, said he was pleased at their steadiness, and as a
+reward for their good conduct, he had at great expense procured
+them wives, whom he hoped they would treat well.
+His speech was a humorous one, and the crew standing
+round grinned approvingly&mdash;Sunday and boy George being,
+apparently, looked upon as lucky youths, for the girls were
+undeniably good-looking. In fact, I never saw an ill-looking
+Pleasant islander.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Terau and N'jilong, you must draw lots for first
+pick. Carpenter, bring me two splinters of wood."</p>
+
+<p>They were instructed by the other native girls how to
+draw lots, the result being that Terau picked boy George,
+and her sister took Sunday.</p>
+
+<p>"Steward!" commanded Hayston, "bring up a couple of
+bottles of grog. And you, Sunday and boy George! before
+you begin your married life just listen to me! Call all
+hands aft!"</p>
+
+<p>The crew came aft, and the Captain, who now seemed
+quite serious, said, "Now, boys, I have given these girls to
+Sunday and boy George. Don't let me hear of any one
+attempting to interfere with them, and if one of you puts
+his head into the boys' house while the girls are there alone,
+I'll make it warm for him. There's a couple of bottles of
+grog for the watch to drink their healths, and the steward
+has two more for the watch below. For'ard now, and you,
+boys, go and ask the supercargo for some cloth to rig your
+girls out with."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+The <i>Leonora</i> was certainly a very sociable and domesticated
+ship.</p>
+
+<p>We lay off and on at Ocean Island for a day or two, and
+engaged twenty-seven natives to proceed to Ponap&eacute; (Ascension
+Island) to work for Cappelle and Milne, a German
+firm. Then we made an easterly course to Taputanea (or
+Drummond Island), one of the Gilbert group, where Hayston
+had a trader.</p>
+
+<p>The Drummond islanders are notorious throughout the
+Pacific for treachery and ferocity. They frequently cut off
+vessels, and murder all hands, being led on these occasions
+by renegade white men. When Commodore White's ships
+visited this spot in 1842 they murdered one of his seamen.
+A fight ensued, in which many were killed, and the town of
+Utiroa was laid in ashes. But the lesson had no great
+effect, and Hayston told me that they would not hesitate to
+attempt the capture of any vessel that could not make a
+good resistance.</p>
+
+<p>We sighted the island at night-time, and lay off Utiroa
+till daylight. Then after putting the brig in a state of
+defence, and giving the command to the Fiji half-caste,
+Bill, telling him also to shoot a certain native if he saw
+him come alongside, Hayston had the longboat and whaleboat
+lowered.</p>
+
+<p>Into the former he put a great quantity of trade, principally
+gin, rum, and firearms, giving me charge of the latter
+to cover him. I had six men with me, each armed with a
+Vetterlich rifle, and I carried my own Winchester&mdash;eighteen
+shot. Hayston gave me full instructions how to act
+if he was attacked; then we made for the town of Utiroa,
+the boats keeping alongside of each other. As we were
+pulling Hayston told me that he wished to get ashore
+before the canoes left, in order to interview his trader Jim
+in the presence of the people. This fellow, it appeared,
+was a fighting man who had great influence over the
+Drum<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>mond
+Island natives, with whom bloodshed and murder
+were acts of everyday occurrence. He always aided them
+in their tribal fights, and evinced a partiality for taking life
+that had won their warmest admiration. Hayston had
+brought him from Ponap&eacute;, where he was the terror of the
+white men, swaggering about the ports of the island, and
+using his pistol on any one that resented his conduct. But
+he was a good trader for all that, and had been placed in
+this trust because no other man could be found willing to
+risk his life among such a treacherous race.</p>
+
+<p>Jim had not been installed a week at Utiroa, when a
+chief named Tabirau gave him one of his daughters for a
+wife, and was paid for her in trade according to custom.
+Shortly afterwards the girl ran home again, saying that the
+white man had beaten her for spoiling a razor.</p>
+
+<p>Jim took his rifle, went to his father-in-law's house, and
+demanded the girl back. A number of natives followed up,
+anticipating that he would be killed, for Tabirau was a
+chief of note, not averse to the extermination of white men.
+As they expected, he refused to give up the girl unless Jim
+paid more trade, alleging that one of the muskets paid for
+her was no good. Without a moment's hesitation the
+trader shot him through the body, killing him instantly,
+and then clubbed the girl to death with the butt end of his
+rifle.</p>
+
+<p>Instead of being murdered by the natives for this atrocious
+deed, he was looked upon as a hero, and all Tabirau's
+land, canoes, and property were made over to him. The
+people of Utiroa elected him to be their commercial ruler,
+refusing to sell oil or produce to any ship without his
+advice or consent. For a while his conduct had quite satisfied
+Hayston, until he learned that Jim had sold a lot of his
+oil to a Californian trader, boasting, besides, that Hayston
+dared not bring him to task for it.</p>
+
+<p>It was now the Captain's intention to assert his authority,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
+and break the trader's power over the natives. For this
+purpose he determined to meet him on shore, and let the
+natives see which was the better man.</p>
+
+<p>As we approached the beach we saw fully five hundred
+natives assembled; all were armed, and many dressed in
+their thick armour of fibre, and wearing helmets of the
+skin of the porcupine fish. There was great excitement
+among them, though many of them seemed glad to see
+Hayston, calling out "Tiaka po, Kaptin" (How do you do).
+The main body, however, seemed ready to dispute our landing.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep close up!" the Captain called out to me, "and
+don't let any of them see your arms, but be ready to drop it
+into them the first shot that is fired. But, for God's sake,
+don't miss. That villain Jim, you see, isn't here, though;
+those fellows mean mischief. However, land I must, and
+will." He then told the crew to run the boat on the beach,
+and standing up in the stern, called out to natives that he
+knew, pretending to see nothing unusual in their manner.
+At the moment that he stepped on the beach the whole body
+of natives formed in solid line in front of him, while hundreds
+of rifle muzzles were almost thrust in his face. He
+looked steadily at them, and commenced to talk with his
+hands in his trousers' pocket.</p>
+
+<p>I forgot my instructions, and my crew seemed equally
+excited at the Captain's danger, for, without being told, they
+ran the whaleboat ashore and we all jumped out. The men
+in the other boat were standing up rifle in hand, and they
+followed us.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain was speaking calmly to the natives, when he
+turned and saw me. "For God's sake, go back to the
+boats," he said, in a quiet tone; then raising his hand
+threateningly and roaring like a lion, he repeated the order
+in the Drummond Island dialect. I understood this hint,
+so we ran back, but kept our arms ready. Hayston's order
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>
+to me seemed to have a good effect, for the fierce looks of
+the natives relaxed, and soon afterwards he called out that
+it was all right, and told me to give him two muskets and
+a box of tobacco out of the longboat. This was a present
+for two of the principal chiefs, who now shook hands with
+him, saying that Jim was in his house, and had told them
+that if Captain Hayston put his foot inside he would shoot
+him. Our former opponents seemed pretty equally divided
+in their opinions. Half of them were eager to see the fight
+between Jim and the Captain, and the others were ready to
+massacre the whole of us if but a single act of hostility was
+committed on either side.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston ordered me then to come with him, and asked
+the natives' permission to allow me to bring my Winchester,
+as I was frightened of them. The boats were shoved out,
+the crew being told to jump ashore if they heard any firing,
+and fight their way to Jim's house. As I joined the Captain
+on the beach he told me that the natives thought he
+meant to kill Jim, and that they had felt him all over to
+see if he had concealed any arms, but that they seemed
+satisfied when they found none. I was astonished at his
+recklessness in not bringing weapons, and as we were
+escorted along the road by the natives, I told him that I had
+a derringer hidden among some tobacco in a canvas bag
+slung round my waist.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no!" he said. "It will never do to see you give it
+to me now. Besides, I don't want any shooting if I can
+help it. There are many of these natives who will be glad
+to see Jim's power broken, and I want to get my hands on
+him before he puts a bullet into me. The rest is easy
+enough. If you see him taking a shot at me before I come
+up to him, you can use that rifle; but don't kill him if you
+can help it, and don't be alarmed about yourself. Take
+hold of this old nigger's hand who is walking beside you
+and you'll be all right. Just keep laughing and talking."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+After a long walk we got up to the trader's house, and
+here the natives made a halt. I was beginning to feel
+horribly scared, and wished we were on board the brig
+again. Presently we were told that Jim was inside, and
+would not come out because he was sick. Walking steadily
+forward the Captain advanced to within a few feet of the
+house, and called out, "Well, this is a nice sort of welcome,
+Jim! Come out and show yourself."</p>
+
+<p>The door opened, and I could see that the place was filled
+with natives, all of whom carried guns and seemed much
+excited.</p>
+
+<p>Then Jim made his appearance and walked slowly up to
+the Captain. He was a tall man, dressed in pyjamas, with
+two navy revolvers in his belt. With his heavy red moustache
+and bloodshot eyes, he looked his character well&mdash;that
+of an unscrupulous and remorseless ruffian. Hayston
+had seated himself on a fallen cocoa-nut tree with his hands
+full of papers.</p>
+
+<p>"How d'ye do, Jim?" he said, extending his hand to the
+trader and rising as he spoke. The moment the trader's
+hand touched his, he seized him by the throat and shook
+him like a dog shaking a rat; then spun him round violently
+and threw him against the stern of a canoe, where he
+lay half stunned. The natives gave a roar, but the Captain
+held up his hands&mdash;the tide seemed to turn at once in our
+favour, and one man went up to the trader, took away his
+pistols, and gave them to Hayston. The Captain addressed
+the principal chiefs, whom he told that Jim had robbed
+him, and that after he had made presents to the people, he
+intended to take the rest of the trade away.</p>
+
+<p>We were moving into the house to take possession, when
+the trader, who had now recovered himself, got up and addressed
+the natives. I did not understand what he said, but
+Hayston evidently did. The effect of Jim's harangue was
+to render the natives undecided as to what course to adopt.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
+One man, who spoke good English and had a rifle with a
+sword bayonet attached, said it did not matter if any one
+was killed, but they thought their white man did not have
+fair play.</p>
+
+<p>"Jim," said the Captain, in his smoothest tones, "you say
+you can whip any man in the Pacific in four rounds. Well!
+now you have an opportunity to prove your words. If you
+are a better man than I am, I will let you keep what trade
+you have got, and shake hands afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>Jim stripped to the waist, and called for one of his
+women to bring him a pair of "taka" or "cinnet" sandals,
+as he was barefooted.</p>
+
+<p>He was shaking with rage and excitement, while Hayston
+showed no concern whatever. From the jump the trader
+forced the fighting, but in less time than I describe it, both
+of his eyes were nearly closed, and he had a terrific cut on
+his cheekbone. Some women then ran in and begged the
+Captain to desist. I believe he could have killed his man in
+another five minutes. He asked Jim if he was satisfied and
+would shake hands. But the trader would not answer, and
+then the Captain's face grew dark. Seizing him again by
+the throat he nearly strangled him, his eyes protruding horribly
+as he worked his arms in the air. When he let him
+go he fell like a log. "Carry him down to the boats and
+make him fast," he said to the interpreter.</p>
+
+<p>We entered his house unmolested, and I took an inventory
+of his goods. There was very little trade left, but the
+natives said he had a lot of money given him by the skipper
+of the Californian vessel. This we found in a large soup
+and bouilli tin in his chest. It amounted to nearly seven
+hundred dollars, mostly in U.S. half-dollar coins.</p>
+
+<p>The natives begged the Captain not to close the station
+up; if Jim was going away, they wished some one in his
+place. He said he would consider their wish after he got
+on board; but they must first help him to raft off twenty
+casks of oil that were lying in Jim's oil-shed<ins title="Transcriber's Note: added .">.</ins></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+We got off to the boats at last. The old man still kept
+hold of my left hand. This, the Captain had told me, he
+had done to protect me if any fighting took place; that if
+fighting had resulted I would not have been killed, but
+would have been regarded as the old man's prize. The
+natives launched their canoes and followed the boats in
+swarms when we set sail for the brig. As soon as we got
+alongside, Hayston asked the second mate if the native he
+had spoken of had shown up.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Bill; "he's gone away to Samoa, so they say
+here."</p>
+
+<p>Hayston seemed pleased at this news, telling me that this
+man was a special enemy of his, into whom he meant to put
+a bullet if he could drop across him. As he was gone away
+he was saved an unpleasant task. Jim was taken for'ard,
+and the carpenter was ordered to put him in irons; thereupon
+he sulkily explained that he didn't intend to turn
+rusty.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, then, Jim," replied the Captain. "I'm glad
+we're going to be friends again. But you can go ashore at
+Makin and stay there."</p>
+
+<p>He then called for a man among his crew to take Jim's
+place on shore. After some hesitation a sturdy Rotumah
+native said he didn't mind, if the Captain gave him a wife.
+He couldn't speak the language, and if he took a Taputana
+woman she might plot to kill him and he be none the wiser.</p>
+
+<p>"Boys!" called out the Captain, "is any one of you
+willing to give Willie his wife? I'll make it up to him.
+Besides, there'll be plenty more going through the Marshall
+group."</p>
+
+<p>No one appeared struck with the idea. So the Captain
+called Sunday aft, and held brief conversation with him,
+after which the boy went into the deckhouse and brought
+out his wife and N'jilong. The poor girl shed a few tears
+at first and clung to Sunday's neck, but he finally induced
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+her to go with Willie. She had come aboard almost naked,
+but went away with a well-filled chest and any amount of
+finery.</p>
+
+<p>She parted from her sister in an apathetic manner, but
+her tears began to flow afresh when Sunday turned coolly
+from her and pursued his duties on the deck. Savage
+though she might be, she felt the parting from the hardened
+young wretch whom she had come to look on as her partner.
+However she lost nothing by the change. Her new husband
+was a steady, good fellow who treated her kindly. Years
+afterwards I met them both on one of the Ellice Islands and
+received a warm welcome. Willie had legally married her
+in Fiji, and they seemed a most affectionate couple, with
+children in whom their chief pride in life was centred.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h2>CAPTAIN BEN PEESE</h2>
+
+
+<p>For the next few weeks we cruised about among the
+islands of the Kingsmill and Gilbert groups, collectively
+known as the Line Islands. The most southerly of them
+is Arurai or Hope Island, in the latitude 2.41 S., longitude
+177 E.&mdash;the most northerly, Makin or Butaritu, in latitude
+3.20, 45 N.</p>
+
+<p>We did good business generally going through this group,
+and steady going trade it was, varied only by the mad
+drunken bouts and wild dances which took place when we
+were at anchor&mdash;these last beyond description.</p>
+
+<p>Just then I was badly hurt fishing on shore one day. It
+was peculiarly a South Sea accident. I was standing on a
+jutting ledge of coral, holding my rod, when it suddenly
+broke off, allowing me to fall downwards on sharp edges,
+where I was terribly cut about the legs and body. The
+green or live coral has the property of making a festering
+wound whenever it pierces the true skin, and for weeks,
+with my unhealed wounds, I was nearly mad with pain.
+The Captain did all he could for me, having a netted hammock
+slung on deck, where I could see all that was going on.
+One day in a fit of pain I fell out and nearly cracked my
+skull. All the native girls on board were most kind and
+patient in nursing me. So the Captain said the least I
+could do was to marry one, if only out of gratitude and to
+brush away the flies.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever some people might call these poor girls they
+had at least one virtue, which, like charity, covereth a
+mul<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>titude
+of sins. Pity for any one in bodily pain they possessed
+in the highest degree. Many an hour did they sit
+beside me, bathing my aching head with a sponge and salt
+water&mdash;this last the universal and infallible cure.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>We called at Peru or Francis Island, where we obtained
+nine natives&mdash;five men and four young women. The
+islanders here are rude and insulting to all strangers not
+carrying arms, and almost as threatening as those of Taputana.
+I was, however, too ill to go on shore here.</p>
+
+<p>After a two months' cruise through this group we bore
+away for Strong's Island, distant some five hundred miles.
+We had favourable winds, and the brig's speed was something
+wonderful. In thirty-eight hours we had covered a
+distance of four hundred and ninety miles, when the lofty
+hills of this gem of the North Pacific, covered with brightest
+verdure, gladdened our eyes after the long, low-lying chains
+of islets and atolls of the Marshall and Kingsmill groups.</p>
+
+<p>The brave "north-east trade" that had borne us so gallantly
+along died away to a zephyr as we drew near the
+land, and saw once more the huge rollers thundering on the
+weather point of the island.</p>
+
+<p>Calling first at Chabral harbour we did a little trading,
+and then sailed down the coast close to the shore&mdash;so deep
+runs the water&mdash;till we reached Utw&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>Here we found three American whalers put in for food
+and water. Hayston seemed anxious to get away, so, after
+exchanging courtesies with the skippers, we ran round to
+Coquille harbour, where we lay several days trading and
+painting ship. We cleared the harbour at daylight, with
+the sea as smooth as glass and wind so light that the
+<i>Leonora</i> could scarcely stem the strong easterly current.
+Still keeping a north-west course, we sailed away over the
+summer sea while scarce a ripple broke its glassy surface,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
+until we sighted Pingelap or M'Askill's, a hundred and
+fifty miles from Strong's Island.</p>
+
+<p>These were discovered by Captain Musgrave, of the
+American whaler <i>Sugar Cane</i>, in 1793. They are densely
+covered with cocoa-palms, and though wholly of coral
+formation, are a good height above sea-level.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain had a trader here named Sam Biggs&mdash;a
+weak-kneed, gin-drinking cockney. How ever such a character
+could have found his way to these almost unknown
+islands passed my comprehension! We ran in close to the
+village&mdash;so near that, the wind being light, we nearly
+drifted onto the beach, and lowered the starboard quarter
+boat to tow out again.</p>
+
+<p>Whilst waiting for the trader I had a good look at the
+village, which I was surprised to hear contained 500 inhabitants.
+As, however, these islands&mdash;there are three of
+them, Takai, Tugula, and Pingelap&mdash;are wondrous fertile,
+they support their populations easily.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the trader came off in a canoe, and, shambling
+along the deck, went down below to give in his report. He
+said that things were very bad. A few months back the
+American missionary brig <i>Morning Star</i> had called and
+prevailed on the king to allow two teachers to be landed.
+After making presents to the chiefs and principal men,
+they had got their promise to accept Christianity and to
+send the white man Biggs about his business. They had
+also told the natives that Captain Hayston was coming
+with the intention of carrying them off in bondage to work
+on the plantations in Samoa. Also that Mr. Morland, the
+chief missionary, was now in Honolulu, begging for a man-of-war
+to come to Pingelap and fight Captain Hayston's
+ship with his big guns and sink her.</p>
+
+<p>All South Sea islanders are easily influenced. In a few
+hours after the teachers landed the whole village declared
+for Christianity, burned their idols, and renounced the devil
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+and all his works, <i>i.e.</i> Captain Hayston and the brig
+<i>Leonora</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain's face darkened as he listened; then he asked
+the trader what he had done in the matter. The man,
+blinking his watery eyes, said he had done nothing; that he
+was afraid the natives would kill him, and asked to be
+taken away.</p>
+
+<p>Jumping up from the table, Hayston grasped him by the
+collar, and asked me to look at him and say what he should
+do with such a white-livered hound, who would let one of
+the finest islands in the Pacific be handed over to the sanctimonious
+pack on board the <i>Morning Star</i>, and let the best
+trading station he, Hayston, owned be ruined?</p>
+
+<p>I suggested that he should be detained on board till we
+met the <i>Morning Star</i>, and then be given to Mr. Morland to
+keep.</p>
+
+<p>"By &mdash;&mdash;! just the thing! but just let me tell you, you
+drunken hound, that when I picked you up a starving beach-comber
+in Ponap&eacute;, I thought you had at least enough sense
+to know that I am not a man to be trifled with. I was the
+first man to place a trader on Pingelap. I overcame the
+natives' hostility, and made this one of the safest islands
+in the group for whaleships to call at. Now I have lost
+a thousand dollars by your cowardice. So take this to
+remember it by."</p>
+
+<p>Then, holding him by one hand, he shook him like a rag,
+finally slinging him up the companion way, and telling the
+men to tie him up.</p>
+
+<p>"Lower away the longboat," he roared, "I'll teach the
+Pingelap gentry how to dance." I went with him, as I
+wanted to get some bananas and young cocoa-nuts. In five
+minutes we drew up on the beach.</p>
+
+<p>The head-men of the island now came forward to meet
+the Captain, and to express their pleasure at seeing him.
+But he was not to be mollified, and sternly bade them follow
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+him to the largest house in the town where he would talk to
+them.</p>
+
+<p>The boy Sunday, who was a native of Pingelap, came
+with us to act as interpreter. Behind the crowd of natives
+were the two Hawaiian teachers, dressed in white linen
+shirts and drill trousers. They had their wives with them,
+dressed in mixed European and native costume.</p>
+
+<p>None of us had arms, nor did we think them necessary.
+Hitherto these people had been slavish admirers of Hayston,
+and he assured me that he would reassert his former influence
+over them in ten minutes. The crowd swarmed into
+the council-house and sat down on their mats. The Captain
+remained standing.</p>
+
+<p>His grand, imposing form, as he stood in the centre of
+the house and held up his hands for silence, seemed to awe
+them as would a demi-god, and murmurs of applause broke
+from them involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell them, Sunday," he said, fixing his piercing blue
+eyes on the cowering forms of the two missionary teachers,
+"that I have come to talk peace, not to fight. Ask them
+who it was years ago, when the hurricane came and destroyed
+their houses and plantations&mdash;when their little
+ones were crying with hunger&mdash;that brought them to his
+ship and fed them? Have they forgotten who it was that
+carried them to Ponap&eacute;, and there let them live on his land
+and fed them on his food till they grew tired of the strange
+land, and then brought them back to their homes again?"</p>
+
+<p>Sunday translated, and the silence was unbroken till the
+Captain resumed, "Did not the men of Pingelap say then
+that no man should be more to them than me&mdash;that no one
+else should place a white man here? And now a strange
+ship comes, and the men of Pingelap have turned their
+faces from me?"</p>
+
+<p>A scene of wild excitement followed, the greater number
+crowding round the Captain, while with outstretched hands
+and bent heads they signified respect.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+The two teachers were walking quickly away with their
+wives, when the Captain called them back, and in a pleasant
+voice invited them to come on board and see if there was
+anything there that they would like their wives to have for
+a present.</p>
+
+<p>Before returning on board Sunday told the Captain that
+the chiefs and people desired to express their sorrow at
+receiving the missionaries, and that they would be glad if
+he took them away. Since the visit of the <i>Morning Star</i>
+an epidemic had broken out resembling measles, which had
+already carried off fifty or sixty of them. Already their
+superstitious fears led them to regard the sickness as a
+punishment for having broken their treaty with Hayston.
+So they offered us six young women as a present; also
+ten large turtles, and humbly begged him to allow his
+trader to remain.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain made answer that he did not want six young
+women&mdash;there were plenty on board already; but he would
+take two, with the ten turtles, and ten thousand cocoa-nuts.
+The said presents were then cheerfully handed over; the
+two girls and the turtles going off in the Captain's boat,
+while the cocoa-nuts were formed into a raft and floated
+alongside the ship.</p>
+
+<p>While these weighty matters were being arranged I
+walked round to the weather side of the island with Sunday,
+who wanted to show me a pool in which the natives
+kept some captive turtle. On our way we came across some
+young boys and girls catching fish with a seine. They
+brought us some and lit a fire. We stayed about an hour
+with them, having great fun bathing in the surf.</p>
+
+<p>Happening to look out to sea, I saw a big ship coming
+round the point under easy sail; from her rig and the number
+of boats she carried I knew her at once to be a whaler.
+We ran ashore and dressed, and as two of the children
+offered to show us a short cut through the forest to the
+vil<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>lage,
+we ran all the way and got opposite the brig just in
+time to see the Captain leaving her side to board the whaler.
+I hailed the brig, and they sent me the dingey, in which I
+followed Hayston. She proved to be the <i>Josephine</i>, just out
+from Honolulu&mdash;a clean ship, not having taken a fish.
+The captain was a queer-looking old fellow dressed like a
+fisherman. He received us with civility, yet looked at the
+Captain curiously. His crew were all under arms. Each
+man had a musket, a lance, or a whaling spade&mdash;these two
+last very formidable weapons&mdash;in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Long was candid, and admitted that as soon as
+he sighted our brig he had armed his men, for the wind
+was so light that he would have no chance of getting away.
+Hayston laughingly asked him if he thought the brig was a
+pirate.</p>
+
+<p>The whaler replied, "Why, certainly. Old Morland and
+Captain Melton told me two years ago that you sailed a
+brig with a crew of darned cut-throat niggers, and would
+take a ship if you wanted her, so I made up my mind to
+have a bit of shootin' if you boarded us."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Captain Long," said Hayston, in his easy, pleasant
+way, "come over to my little vessel and see the pirate
+at home."</p>
+
+<p>The invitation was accepted, and as we pulled over amicably,
+the skipper cast an admiring glance at the graceful
+<i>Leonora</i> as she floated o'er the still, untroubled deep. As
+we stepped over the ship's side we were met by Bill Hicks,
+the second mate, whose savage countenance was illumined
+by a broad smile as he silently pointed to the queer entertainment
+before us.</p>
+
+<p>"Great ancestral ghosts! d'ye carry a troupe of ackeribats
+aboard this hyar brig?" quoth the skipper, pointing
+to four undraped figures capering about in the mad abandonment
+of a Hawaiian national dance.</p>
+
+<p>The mate explained briefly that he had given the native
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+teachers grog, after which nothing would satisfy them but
+to show the crew how they used to dance in Lakaina in
+the good old days. Their wives were also exhilarated, and
+having thrown off their European clothes, were dancing with
+more vigour than decorum to the music of an accordion and
+a violin. The Hope Island girl, Nellie, was seated in a
+boat we carried on deck playing the accordion, and
+with her were the rest of the girls laughing and clapping
+their hands at the antics of the dancers. The stalwart
+Portuguese, Antonio, was perched on the water-tank
+with his fiddle, and the rest of the crew who were not
+at work getting the cocoa-nuts on board were standing
+around encouraging the quartette by shouts and admiring
+remarks.</p>
+
+<p>As the whaling skipper gazed with astonishment at the
+sight, Hayston said, "Ay, there you see the Honolulu
+native teacher in his true colours. His Christianity is like
+ours&mdash;no better, no worse&mdash;to be put on and off like a
+garment. Once give a Sandwich Island missionary a taste
+of grog and his true instincts appear in spite of himself.
+There is <i>nothing</i> either of those men would not do now for a
+dollar; and yet in a day or two they will put on their white
+shirts, and begin to preach again to these natives who are
+better men than themselves."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>We went below, and after a glass of wine or two the
+skipper was about to leave, after promising to sell us some
+bolts of canvas, when the Chinese steward announced that
+they were fighting on deck. We ran up and saw Antonio
+and boy George struggling with knives in their hands.
+The Captain caught Antonio a crack on the head, which
+sent him down very decisively, and then pitched George
+roughly into the boat with the girls, telling them to stop
+their infernal din. The two teachers' wives were then
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
+placed in old Mary's care below, and told to lie down and
+sleep.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The two Pingelap girls who came on board were very
+young, and seemed frightened at their surroundings, wailing
+and moaning with fear, so Hayston gave them trinkets
+and sent them back to the chiefs, getting two immense
+turtles in exchange.</p>
+
+<p>The wind now died away. All night the brig lay drifting
+on the glassy sea. At breakfast-time we were almost
+alongside of the whaler, and the two crews were exchanging
+sailors' courtesies when five or six whales hove in sight.</p>
+
+<p>All was changed in a moment. Four boats were lowered
+as if by magic from the whaler, and the crews were pulling
+like demons for the huge prizes.</p>
+
+<p>The whales were travelling as quickly as the boats, but
+towards the ships, and in another quarter of an hour three
+of the boats got fast, the fourth boat also, but had to cut
+away again.</p>
+
+<p>Our crew cheered the boats, and as there was no wind for
+the vessel to work up to the dead whales which were being
+towed up, I took the brig's longboat and six men to help
+the boats to get the whales alongside.</p>
+
+<p>A breeze sprung up at noon, so after bidding good-bye to
+the whaler, we stood away for Ponap&eacute;, making W.N.W.
+We were ten days out from Pingelap before we sighted
+Ponap&eacute;'s cloud-capped peaks. The wind was very light for
+the whole way, the brig having barely steerage way on her.
+Hayston was anxious to reach the island, for there he expected
+to meet his partner, the notorious Captain Ben
+Peese.</p>
+
+<p>Here he told me that if things went well with them they
+would make a fortune in a few years; that he had bought
+Peese's schooner and sent him to Hong Kong with a load
+of oil to sell, arranging to meet him in Jakoits harbour in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>
+Ponap&eacute; on a day named. They were then to proceed to
+Providence Island, which was a dense grove of cocoa-nut
+trees. He was sanguine of filling two hundred and fifty
+casks now in the brig's hold with oil when we reached
+there.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty miles from shore we spoke an American whaleship
+from New London. She was "trying out," and signalled
+to send a boat. The Captain, taking me with him,
+went on board, when we were met by a pleasant, white-haired
+old man, Captain Allan.</p>
+
+<p>His first words were, "Well, Captain Hayston, I have
+bad news. Peese has turned against you. He returned to
+Ponap&eacute; from China a week ago, and cleared out your two
+stations of everything of value. He had a big schooner
+called the <i>Vittoria</i>, and after gutting the stations, he told
+the chiefs at Kiti harbour that you had sent him for the
+cattle running there. He took them all away&mdash;thirty-six
+head."</p>
+
+<p>The Captain said nothing. Turning away he looked at
+the brig, as if in thought, then asked Allan if he knew
+where Peese had gone.</p>
+
+<p>"To Manila; Peese has made friends there, and engaged
+with the Governor-General of the Philippines to supply
+the garrison with forty head of cattle. I knew the cattle
+were yours, and warned the chiefs not to let Peese take
+them away. But he threatened them with a visit from a
+Spanish man-of-war, and Miller backed him up. He had a
+strong party with him to enforce his demands."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Allan!" Hayston said very deliberately
+and calmly; "I was half afraid something like this would
+happen, but I thought the man I took out of the slums of
+Shanghai and helped like a brother was the last person to
+have robbed me. It has shown me the folly of trusting
+any one. You are busy, Allan! so will leave you."</p>
+
+<p>Bidding adieu to the good skipper we stepped into our
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+boat. Hayston was silent for ten minutes. Then he put
+his hand on my knee, and looking into my face with the
+expression I had never seen him wear since he fought the
+trader at Drummond Island, said, "Hilary! did you ever
+know me to say I would do a thing and not do it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No! but I have often wished you would <i>not</i> keep your
+word so strictly. Some day you will regret it."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps so. But listen to me. This man&mdash;this Peese&mdash;I
+found in Shanghai years ago, ill and starving. There
+was something in his face which roused my interest; I took
+him on board my vessel and treated him as a brother. I
+was then high in favour with the Chinese authorities. Not
+as I am now&mdash;hunted from port to port&mdash;forced to take
+up this island life and associate with ruffians who would
+shoot and rob me if they did not fear me. I went to a
+mandarin&mdash;a man who knew the stuff I was made of, and
+what I had done in the Chinese service&mdash;and asked for
+preferment for Peese. It was done. In a week he was
+put in command of a transport, and with his commission
+in his hand he came aboard my ship and swore he would
+never forget who it was that had saved him. He spoke
+but the bare truth, for I tell you this man was dying&mdash;dying
+of starvation. Well! it was he who led me afterwards,
+by his insidious advice and by collusion with Portuguese
+collie merchants, into risky dealings. At first all
+went well. We so used our positions in the Imperial service
+that we made over fifteen thousand dollars in three
+months, exclusive of the money used in bribing Chinese
+officials. The end came by and by, when I nearly lost my
+head in rescuing Peese from a gunboat in which he lay a
+prisoner. Anyhow I lost my rank, and the Viceroy issued
+a proclamation in the usual flowing language, depriving me
+of all honours previously conferred. We escaped, it is
+true, but China was closed to me for ever. Since then I
+have stood to Peese faithfully. Now, you see the result.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
+He is a d&mdash;d clever fellow, and a good sailor, no doubt
+of that. But mind me when I say that I'll find him, if I
+beggar myself to do it. And when I find him, he dies!"</p>
+
+<p>I said nothing. He could not well let such treachery
+and ingratitude pass, and Peese would deserve his fate.
+However, they never met. Peese, like Hayston, appeared
+to have his hand against every man, as every man had his
+hand against Peese.</p>
+
+<p>He met his fate after this fashion:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>A daring act of piracy&mdash;seizing a Spanish revenue vessel
+under the very guns of a fort&mdash;and working her out to
+sea with sweeps, outlawed him. Caught at one of his old
+haunts in the Pelew Islands, he was heavily ironed and
+put on board the cruiser <i>Hernandez Pizarro</i>, for conveyance
+to Manila, to await trial.</p>
+
+<p>One day he begged the officers of the corvette to allow
+him on deck as the heat was stifling. He was brought up
+and his leg-irons widened so that he could walk. Peese
+was always an exceedingly polite man. He thanked the
+officers for their courtesy, and begged for a cigar.</p>
+
+<p>This was given him, and he slowly walked the decks,
+dragging his clanking chains, but apparently enjoying the
+flavour of his cigar. Standing against a gun, he took a
+last look at the blue cloudless sky above him, and then
+quietly dropped overboard. The weight of his irons, of
+course, sank him "deeper than plummet lies".... So,
+and in such manner, was the appropriate and befitting ending
+of Benjamin Peese, master mariner&mdash;"<i>Requiescat in
+pace!</i>"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<h2>CRUISING AMONG THE CAROLINES</h2>
+
+
+<p>Our first port of call at Ponap&eacute; was Jakoits harbour. It
+was here we were to land some Line Islanders we had
+brought from various places in the Gilbert group. Hayston
+had brought them to the order of the firm of Johann Guldenstern
+and Sons of Hamburg, whose agents and managers
+at Ponap&eacute; were Messrs. Capelle and Milne. Their trading
+stations were at Jakoits Islands, where resided the manager
+of the business. The senior partner of the firm&mdash;a burly,
+bullying Scot&mdash;had for some time been carrying on a
+rather heated correspondence with Hayston, whom he had
+accused of kidnapping the firm's traders. He had not
+as yet encountered the Captain, but had told various whaling
+skippers and others that if half a dozen good men
+would back him up, he would seize Hayston, and keep
+him prisoner till H.M. warships <i>Tuscarora</i> or <i>Jamestown</i>
+turned up.</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally Hayston had by letter warned him to beware,
+as he was not a man to be trifled with. Talk and
+threats are easy when the enemy is distant; so Miller, during
+his cruisings in the schooner <i>Matauta</i>, would exhibit to
+various traders the particular pistol he intended to use on
+Hayston. Representing a powerful firm, he had almost
+unlimited influence in Ponap&eacute;. Hayston told me that he
+believed Peese would never have dared to have looted his
+trading stations and taken his cattle if Miller had not sided
+with him.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+"Now," said the Captain, as we were slowly sailing into
+Jakoits, "I'm in a bit of a fix. I must let Miller come
+aboard and treat him civilly for a bit, or he will pretend
+he knows nothing of this consignment of natives I have for
+him. He lies easily, and may declare that he has received
+no instructions from Kleber, the manager at Samoa, to
+receive these niggers from me, much less pay for them.
+But once I have the cash in hand, or his firm's draft, I
+mean to bring him up with a round turn."</p>
+
+<p>We dropped anchor in the lovely harbour, almost underneath
+the precipitous Jakoits Islands, on which were the
+trading stations. There were five whalers lying at anchor,
+having run in according to custom to get wood, water, and
+other necessaries. One of these was a brig, the <i>Rameses</i>
+of Honolulu. Dismantled and deserted-looking&mdash;in a
+little secluded cove&mdash;she had not a soul on board but the
+captain, and he was mad. Of him and his vessel later on.</p>
+
+<p>A Yankee beach-comber of a pilot, named Joe Kelman,
+met us as we came in; not that his services were required,
+but evidently for his own gratification, as he was bursting
+with news. As he pulled alongside the Captain told me
+that he was a creature of Miller's, and a thundering scoundrel
+on his own account as well. But he would settle it
+with him and his principal also in a few days.</p>
+
+<p>With a countenance expressive of the deepest sorrow the
+beach-comber, as he sent glass after glass of grog down his
+throat, told his doleful tale&mdash;how Peese had come with
+a crew of murdering Spaniards, and played h&mdash;l with the
+"Capting's" property; stole every hoof of his cattle, but
+four which were now running at Kiti harbour; how Capting
+Miller had been real cut up at seeing Peese acting so
+piratical, and said that though he and Captain Hayston
+was sorter enemies, he thought Peese was "blamed downright
+ongrateful," etc.</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right, Joe," answered the Captain with the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+pleasantest laugh, "that's only a stroke of bad luck for me.
+I bear Captain Miller no ill will from the letters he has
+written me, and for this part&mdash;we are both hot-tempered
+men, and may have felt ourselves injured by each other's
+acts&mdash;as he tried to save my property, I shall be glad to
+meet him and thank him personally."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's suthinlike," said the beach-comber, "I'd
+be real sorry to see two such fine lookin' men shootin' bullets
+into each other. Besides, pore Miller's sick. Guess
+I'll cut ashore now, Captain. Kin I take any message?"</p>
+
+<p>Hayston said he would give him a few lines, and, sitting
+down, wrote a short but polite note to Miller, stating that
+he had a number of labourers for him, which he would be
+glad to have inspected and landed. He regretted his illness,
+but would come ashore as soon as he (Miller) was well
+enough to receive him.</p>
+
+<p>The beach-comber took the letter and went ashore. Hayston
+turned to me with a laugh: "Do you see that? The
+gin-drinking scoundrel is playing pilot-fish. He has come
+to learn if I suspect anything of the game his master is
+playing. Here's a canoe; you'll see I'll get the truth out
+of these natives."</p>
+
+<p>The canoe was paddled by a very old man and a boy.
+There were also a lot of young girls. The Captain declined
+to entertain visitors at present, there being too much work
+to do, and cross-examined the old man as to Miller and his
+men. He said there were no white men now at Jakoits;
+furthermore, that when the <i>Leonora</i> was sighted, Miller
+had gone off to the four whaleships and had a long talk
+with the captains. He had taken two guns from the <i>Seabreeze</i>,
+and loaded them as soon as he got ashore. The
+natives were told there were going to be a big fight; that
+Captain Miller had got sixty natives in his house, and the
+two guns placed in front of the landing-place. Hayston
+gave the old man a present, and suggested that he should
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
+dispose of his cargo to one of the whaleships. The old
+fellow shook his head sadly, saying he had come too
+late.</p>
+
+<p>Turning to me, the Captain said, "There's news for you;
+Miller must have thought I meant to go for him as soon as
+we met, and has his people ready to give me a warm reception.
+If I had not these Kanakas on board I'd give him
+as much fighting as he cares for, and put a firestick in his
+station to finish up with." A few minutes later we saw a
+boat put off from Jakoits with a big burly man sitting in
+the stern. At the same time one of the whalers' boats came
+aboard, in which were the four captains. He greeted them
+warmly, and we all trooped below.</p>
+
+<p>One of them, a wizened little man with a wonderful
+vocabulary of curses, said, looking at the others: "Well,
+gentlemen, before we accept Captain Hayston's hospitality
+we ought to tell him that we lent Captain Miller two guns
+to sink this brig with."</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen," said Hayston, standing at the head of his
+table, with his hands resting upon it, "I know all about
+that, but you are none the less welcome. Miller will be
+here in a few minutes, and I must beg of you not to let
+him know that I have been informed of the warm reception
+he had prepared for me. Besides, they tell me he is ill."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, h&mdash;l! Ill! That's curious; he was in powerful
+good health an hour or two ago," and the skippers looked
+at each other and winked. Presently we returned to the
+deck, just as the bluff personage of whom we were talking
+clambered up the ship's side and came aft.</p>
+
+<p>The whaling captains and I watched the meeting with
+intense interest. Miller was evidently ill at ease, but
+seeing Hayston walking towards him with outstretched
+hand and a smile on his face, he made a great effort at self-command,
+and shook hands vigorously.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we've met at last, Captain Hayston, and ye see
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+I'm no feared to come aboard and speak up till ye like a
+man."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear sir," replied Hayston, grasping his hand with
+a prolonged shake, "I was just telling these gentlemen how
+I regretted to hear of your illness, for, although we have
+carried on such a paper warfare, I'm convinced that we
+only need to meet to become good friends."</p>
+
+<p>Here one of the American captains came up, and, looking
+the new-comer straight in the face, said, "Well, I <i>am</i>
+surprised at meeting you here. Reckon you can sick and
+well quicker'n any man I ever come across."</p>
+
+<p>No notice was taken by Miller of this and other sarcastic
+remarks while he hurried on his business with Hayston.
+Much grog was drunk, and then the Captain passed the
+word for all hands to muster on deck&mdash;the crew to starboard,
+the Kanaka passengers on the port side.</p>
+
+<p>The "labour" was then inspected, and passed by their
+new proprietor, who, now very jovial and unsteady on his
+pins, took them on shore without delay. He returned
+shortly and paid for them in cash. Next morning several
+traders came on board, and any amount of beach-combers,
+for Ponap&eacute; is their paradise. Mr. Miller came with an
+invitation to visit him on shore. Having business to
+attend to I stayed on board, promising to follow later on.
+As Hayston was leaving the brig, Miller said, in presence
+of the traders,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Eh, Captain Hayston, but ye're no siccan a terrible
+crater as they mak' ye oot. Man, I hae my doots if ye
+could pommel me so sevairly as ye've inseenuated."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Miller," said the Captain, stopping dead, and taking
+him by the shoulder, "you are now on board my ship,
+and I will say nothing further than that if you have any
+doubt on the subject I am perfectly willing, as soon as we
+reach your station, to convince you that you are mistaken."</p>
+
+<p>The traders, who had hitherto backed up their colleague,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+applauded loudly, evidently expecting Miller to take up
+the challenge. He, however, preferred to treat it as a joke.
+I knew that the Captain was labouring under suppressed
+wrath because he was so cool and polite. I knew, by the
+ring in his voice, that he meant mischief, and at any
+moment looked to see the hot blood surging to his brow,
+and his fierce nature assert itself.</p>
+
+<p>About an hour later the mate of one of the whaleships
+came on board to have dinner with me, and told me that
+Hayston had given Miller a terrible thrashing in his own
+house, in the presence of his backers and the American
+captains. It seems that Hayston led the conversation up
+to Captain Peese's recent visit, and then suddenly asked
+Miller if he had not told the natives that Captain Peese
+must take the cattle, and that he (Hayston) dared not show
+up in Ponap&eacute; again, or else he would long since have appeared
+on the scene.</p>
+
+<p>Possibly Miller thought his only chance was to brazen it
+out, for, though he had a following of the lowest roughs
+and beach-combers, who were at that moment loafing about
+his house and grounds, and Hayston was unarmed, he
+could see by the coolness of the American captains that he
+could not count on their support. At last he said, with a
+forced laugh,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Come, let us have nae mair fule's talk. We can be
+good friends pairsonally, if we would fain cut each other's
+throats in business. I'll make no secret of it, I did say so,
+and thocht I was playing a good joke on ye."</p>
+
+<p>"So that's your idea of a joke, is it," said Hayston,
+grimly, "but now I must have mine, and as it takes a
+surgical operation to get one into a Scotchman's brain, I'll
+begin at once."</p>
+
+<p>He gave Miller a fearful knocking about there and then.
+The captains picked him up senseless, with a head considerably
+altered for the worse. After which Hayston washed
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+his hands, and went on board one of the whaleships to
+dinner.</p>
+
+<p>He then sent for the chiefs of the various districts, telling
+them to meet him at Miller and Lapelle's station on a
+certain day and hour. When they were all assembled, he
+induced Miller to say that he sincerely regretted having
+told them such lies, as he knew the cattle did belong to
+Captain Hayston. Finally they shook hands, and swore to
+be friends in future; Hayston, in a tone of solicitude,
+informing him that he would send him some arnica, as his
+head appeared very bad still. The parting scene must have
+been truly ludicrous. Shaking him warmly by the hand,
+Hayston said, "Good-bye, old fellow; we've settled our little
+difficulty, and will be better friends in future. If I've
+lost cattle, I've gained a friend." Begging the favour of a
+kiss from the women present he then departed, full of
+honours and dignities; and in another hour we were sailing
+round the coast to Metalauia harbour.</p>
+
+<p>Here we bought a quantity of hawkbill turtle shell.
+While it was being got on board, the Captain and I spent
+two days on shore exploring the mysterious ruins and
+ancient fortifications which render the island so deeply
+interesting; wonderful in size, Cyclopean in structure.
+It is a long-buried secret by whom and for what purpose
+they were erected. None remain to tell. "Their memorial
+is perished with them."</p>
+
+<p>In one of the smaller islands on which those ruins are
+situated, Hayston told me that a Captain Williams, in
+1836, had found over &pound;10,000 worth of treasure. He himself
+believed that there were rich deposits in other localities
+not far distant.</p>
+
+<p>To this end we explored a series of deathly cold dungeons,
+but found nothing except a heavy disc of a metal
+resembling copper several feet under ground.</p>
+
+<p>This was lying with its face to the stone wall of the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+subterranean chamber&mdash;had lain there probably for centuries.</p>
+
+<p>Its weight was nearly that of fifty pounds. It had three
+holes in the centre. We could form no idea as to its probable
+use or meaning. I was unwilling to part with it, however,
+and taking it on board, put it in my cabin.</p>
+
+<p>While we were at Metalauia, Joe Keogh came on board,
+bringing with him three native girls from the Andema
+group, a cluster of large coral islands near the mainland,
+belonging to the three chiefs of the Kit&eacute; district. He
+had gone forward, when the Captain saw him and called
+him aft.</p>
+
+<p>He at once accused Joe of being treacherous, telling him
+that the whaling captains had given him a written statement
+to the effect that he had taken a letter from Miller
+to the Mortlock group, where an American cruiser was
+surveying, asking the captain if he would take Hayston to
+California, as he (Miller) and Keogh would engage to entice
+him ashore and capture him if the cruiser was close at hand.</p>
+
+<p>Not being able to deny the charge, Keogh was badly
+beaten, and sent away without the girls, who were taken
+aft. Like the Ponap&eacute; natives, they were very light-coloured,
+wearing a quantity of feather head-dress and other
+native finery. They agreed to remain on board during the
+cruise through the Caroline group, and were then to be
+landed at their own islands.</p>
+
+<p>They were then sent to keep the steward company in the
+cabin, and put to making hats and mats, in which they
+excelled. At Kit&eacute; harbour we took on board the bull and
+three cows which Peese had not succeeded in catching. On
+returning to Jakoits harbour in a fortnight's time, I was
+told that I might take up my quarters on shore, while the
+cabin was redecorated. I therefore got a canoe and two
+natives, with which I amused myself with visiting the
+native village and pigeon-shooting.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+One day I fell across a deserted whaling brig. Her crew
+had run away, and the ship having contracted debts, was
+seized by Miller and Lapelle. The captain alone was left.
+He was now ship-keeper, and his troubles had so preyed
+on his mind that he had become insane.</p>
+
+<p>I watched him. It was a strange and weird spectacle;
+there lay the vessel, silent, solitary&mdash;"a painted ship upon
+a painted ocean."</p>
+
+<p>Her brooding inmate would sometimes pace the deck for
+hours with his arms folded; then would throw himself
+into a cane lounge, and fixing his eyes upon the sky, mutter
+and talk to himself.</p>
+
+<p>At other times he would imagine that the ship was surrounded
+by whales, and rush wildly about the decks, calling
+on the officers to lower the boats. Not succeeding, he
+would in despair peer down the dark, deserted foc'sle, begging
+the crew to be men, and get out the boats.</p>
+
+<p>We cruised now for some weeks to and fro among the
+lovely islands of the Caroline group, trading in turtle shell,
+of which we bought great quantities. What a halcyon time
+it was! There was a luxurious sense of dreamy repose,
+which seemed unreal from its very completeness.</p>
+
+<p>The gliding barque, the summer sea, the lulling breeze,
+the careless, joyous children of nature among whom we
+lived,&mdash;all were fairy-like in combination.</p>
+
+<p>When one thought of the hard and anxious toilers of
+civilisation, from whom we had come out, I could fancy
+that we had reached the lotus-land of the ancients, and
+could well imagine a fixed unwillingness to return to a less
+idyllic life. Hayston was apparently in no hurry.</p>
+
+<p>At any particular island that pleased him he would lie at
+anchor for days. Then we would explore the wondrous
+woods, and have glorious shooting trips on shore.</p>
+
+<p>We met some truly strange and original characters in
+these waters&mdash;white men as well as natives. The former,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>
+often men of birth and culture, were completely lost to the
+world, to their former friends and kinsfolk.</p>
+
+<p>Return? not they! Why should they go back? Here they
+had all things which are wont to satisfy man here below.
+A paradise of Eden-like beauty, amid which they wandered
+day by day all unheeding of the morrow; food, houses,
+honours, wives, friends, kinsfolk, all provided for them in
+unstinted abundance, and certain continuity, by the guileless
+denizens of these fairy isles amid this charmed main.
+Why&mdash;why, indeed, should they leave the land of magical
+delights for the cold climate and still more glacial moral
+atmosphere of their native land, miscalled home?</p>
+
+<p>Then, perhaps, in the former life beyond these crystal
+seas&mdash;where the boom of the surf upon the reef is not
+heard, and the whispering palm leaves never talk at midnight&mdash;some
+imprudence, some mistake at cards may have
+occurred, who knows! These things happen so easily.</p>
+
+<p>The temptation of a moment&mdash;a lack of resolve at the
+fateful crisis&mdash;and they are so deadly difficult of reparation.
+Difficult&mdash;nay impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Where, then, can mortal find such an asylum for weary
+body and restless soul as this land of Lethe? Where life is
+one long dream of bliss, and where death comes as a lingering
+friend rather than a swift executioner.</p>
+
+<p>It added materially to my enjoyment of the whole adventure,
+that wherever we went we were always honoured
+personages, favoured guests. Everywhere the people had
+the greatest admiration for Hayston's personal qualities&mdash;his
+strength, his fearlessness, his prompt determination in
+the face of danger and difficulty. That his word was
+invariably law to them was fully evident.</p>
+
+<p>One day, however, as a kind of drawback to all these
+satisfactions, I suddenly noticed that the girl Terau, who
+had been given to boy George, appeared to be very ill, if
+not dying. That young savage had obtained permission
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+from the Captain to keep her on board, although she was
+most anxious to get ashore at Ponap&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>She would often get into one of the boats and sit there all
+day&mdash;sad and silent&mdash;knitting a head-dress from the fibres
+of the banana plant. Not being able to talk to her myself,
+I got a native of Ocean Island, whose dialect resembled her
+own, to ask her if she was ill.</p>
+
+<p>The girl made no answer. She covered her face with her
+hands. I then saw that every movement of her body gave
+her pain. At length she murmured something to the Ocean
+islander, slowly took from her shoulders the mat which
+covered them, and looking at me, said, "Teorti fra mati
+Terau" (George has nearly killed Terau). I was horrified
+to see that the poor girl's back was cut and swelled dreadfully.
+Her side, also, she said, was very bad, and it hurt
+her to breathe.</p>
+
+<p>We lifted her carefully out of the boat, and carried her
+between us to the skylight, where we placed her in a comfortable
+position.</p>
+
+<p>I found the Captain lying down, and asked him to come
+on deck, where, lifting the mat from the girl's bruised
+shoulders, I showed him the terrible state she was in.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to allow such brutality to be practised on
+a poor girl? Why, I believe she is dying!"</p>
+
+<p>He said nothing, except "Come below." Sitting down at
+the table, he said, "I will not punish that boy. But I
+would be glad if you will see him, and induce him to treat
+the girl kindly."</p>
+
+<p>I called George, who was in the deck-house playing cards,
+and asked him what he would take for Terau.</p>
+
+<p>The lad thought for a moment, and asked me if the Captain
+had told me to come to him about her?</p>
+
+<p>I said, "Yes! he had." But that I wanted him either to
+give or sell me the girl, adding that he had better be quick
+about it, as Terau seemed sinking fast.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+"Oh! if that is so, you give me what you like for her.
+Don't want no dead girls 'bout me."</p>
+
+<p>I called up three of the crew as witnesses, whereupon
+George sold me the victim of his brutality for ten dollars
+and a German concertina.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, George," I said, "I am going to put Terau ashore,
+and if you touch her again, or even speak to her, I'll knock
+your infernal soul out of your black body."</p>
+
+<p>He grinned, and replied that he was only too glad to get
+rid of her; and returning into the deck-house, began at once
+to play on the concertina.</p>
+
+<p>A few days after this transaction we touched at Ngatik
+or Los Valientes Island, and I was pleased to find here a
+trader whose wife was a native of Pleasant Island.</p>
+
+<p>I asked them if they would like to have Terau to live
+with them, and the wife at once expressed her willingness
+as well as joy at seeing one of her own countrywomen.</p>
+
+<p>Returning on board, I inquired of Terau if she would not
+like to go ashore and live with these people, who would
+treat her kindly. During my ownership she had regained
+her strength in great degree, Nellie having agreed to attend
+on her, and the Chinese steward saw that she had nourishing
+food.</p>
+
+<p>She preferred to go ashore, being still afraid of George's
+ill-treatment; I did not tell her of the trader's wife being
+a countrywoman, trusting it would prove a joyful surprise.
+I was not mistaken. The two women rushed into each
+other's arms, and wept in their impulsive fashion. I felt
+certain that here poor Terau would receive kind treatment.</p>
+
+<p>Before returning on board the trader told me that Terau
+had related her story to them, and that the Ngatik women,
+who were in the house, told her to make the white man who
+had been so kind to her "the present of poverty." This
+ceremonial consisted in her cutting off her hair close to the
+head, and, together with an empty cocoa-nut shell and a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+small fish, offering it to me. The trader said this was to
+express her gratitude&mdash;the empty shell and small fish
+signifying poverty, while the gift of hair denoted that she
+was a bondswoman to me for life.</p>
+
+<p>I felt sorry that the poor child should have cut off her
+beautiful hair, which was tied round the centre with a band
+of pandanus leaf, and put in my hand; but I felt a glow of
+pleasure at being able to place her with people who would
+be good to her; and thanking her for the gift, to which she
+added a thick plate of turtle shell, I said farewell, and
+returned to the brig.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain called me below, and shook my hand.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm glad," he said, "that poor girl has left the ship;
+but I must repay you the money you gave George for her."</p>
+
+<p>This I refused to take. I felt well repaid by the unmistakable
+gratitude Terau had evinced towards me from the
+moment the Ocean islander and I had carried her pain-racked
+form below.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<h2>POISONED ARROWS</h2>
+
+
+<p>The weather had changed, and been cloudy and dull for
+several days. We were all rather in the doldrums too.
+We had been bearing eastward on the line. Suddenly Hayston
+said, "Suppose we put in at Santa Cruz. We want
+the water casks filled. I'm not very fond of the island, for
+all its name. Sacred names and bloodshed often go together
+with Spaniards. However, I know the harbour well, and
+the yams are first-rate." So at daylight we bore up, at
+eight bells we entered the heads with both anchors bent
+to the chains, and at noon were beating up the harbour.
+By two o'clock we cast anchor in thirty fathoms. Out
+came the canoes, and we soon began trading with the
+natives.</p>
+
+<p>We kept pretty strict watch, however. The men, to my
+fancy, had a sullen expression, and the women, though not
+bad-looking, seemed as if it cost them an effort to look
+pleasant.</p>
+
+<p>Our girls wouldn't have anything to say to them. Hope
+Island Nellie, in particular, said she'd like to shoot half of
+them; that they'd killed a cousin of hers, who was only
+scratched with a poisoned arrow, and that it was one of the
+Captain's mad tricks to go there at all.</p>
+
+<p>However, Hayston, as usual, was spurred on by opposition
+to have his own way, and to do even more than he
+originally intended. He told me afterwards that he only
+wanted to get some yams in the harbour, and that the water
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+would have held out longer&mdash;until we got to a known safe
+island.</p>
+
+<p>So on Sunday we sent two boats on shore, and got the
+casks filled with water immediately. Our provisions were
+taken out and examined. Trading with the natives went
+on merrily.</p>
+
+<p>On Monday the weather was fine. We got a couple of
+rafts out with water, and laid in yams enough to last for
+the rest of our cruise. Hayston laughed, and said there
+was nothing like showing natives that you were not afraid
+of them. "Eh, Nellie? What you think now?"</p>
+
+<p>"Think Captain big fool," said Nellie, who was in a bad
+temper that morning. "Ha! you see boat crew; by God!
+man wounded&mdash;I see them carry him along."</p>
+
+<p>Sure enough, we could see the two boats' crews coming
+down to the beach. They were carrying one man, while
+two supported another, who seemed hardly able to walk.
+"Get out the boats!" roared Hayston. "I'll teach the
+scoundrels to touch a crew of mine."</p>
+
+<p>All was now bustle and commotion. Every man on the
+ship that could be spared, and Hope Island Nellie to boot,
+who had begged to be allowed to go with the attacking
+party, and whose ruffled temper was restored to equanimity
+by the chance of having a shot at her foes, and avenging
+her cousin's death. We left a boat's crew watch, and made
+for the shore, Nellie sitting in the bow of the Captain's
+boat with a Winchester rifle across her knees, and her eyes
+sparkling with a light I had never seen in a woman's face
+before. It was the light of battle come down through the
+veins of chiefs and warriors of her people for centuries
+uncounted.</p>
+
+<p>We left a couple of men in each boat, telling them to
+keep on and off until we returned; the wounded men were
+carefully laid on mats in one of their own boats; and forth
+we went&mdash;a light-hearted storming party, and attacked the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+town of the treacherous devils. Hayston was in a frightful
+rage, cursing himself one moment for relaxing his usual
+caution, and devoting the Santa Cruz natives in the next
+to all the fiends of hell for their infernal causeless treachery.
+He raged up again and again to the cluster of huts, thickly
+built together with palisades here and there, which made excellent
+cover for shooting from, backed up by the green wall
+of the primeval forest. I could not but admire him as he
+stood there&mdash;grand, colossal, fearless, as though he bore a
+charmed life, while the deadly quivering arrows flew thick,
+and more than one man was hit severely. Only that our fire
+was quick and deadly with the terrible Winchester repeaters,
+and that the savages&mdash;bold at first&mdash;were mowed down
+so quickly that they had to retreat to a distance which rendered
+their arrows powerless, we should have had a muster
+roll with gaps in it of some seriousness. Hayston was a
+splendid rifle shot, and for quick loading and firing had few
+equals. Every native that showed himself within range
+went down ere he could fit an arrow to his bowstring.
+And there was Hope Island Nellie by his side, firing nearly
+as fast, and laughing like a child at play whenever one of
+her shots told.</p>
+
+<p>Then the arrows grew fewer. Just before they ceased I
+had fired at a tall native who had been conspicuous through
+the fight. He fell on his face. Nellie gave a shout, and
+loaded her own rifle on the chance of another shot, straining
+her bright and eager eyes to see if another lurking form
+was near enough for danger. Well for me was it that she
+did so! Staggering to his feet, a wounded native fitted an
+arrow to his bow, and sent it straight for my breast before I
+could raise my gun to my shoulder. Nellie made a snap
+shot at him, and, either from exhaustion or the effect of her
+bullet, he fell prone and motionless.</p>
+
+<p>I felt a scratch on my arm&mdash;bare to the shoulder&mdash;as if
+a forest twig had raised the skin. "Look!" said Nellie,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+and her face changed. As she spoke, she passed her finger
+over the place, and showed it bloodstained. "The crawling
+brute's arrow hit you there. Let me suck the poison. If
+you don't"&mdash;as I made a gesture of dissent&mdash;"you die,
+twel' days."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be a fool!" said Hayston. "You're a dead man
+if you don't. As it is, you must run your chance. Some
+of these fellows will lose the number of their mess, I'm
+sorry to say."</p>
+
+<p>So the girl, who had been but the moment before thirsting
+for blood, and firing into the mob of half-frightened,
+yet ferocious savages, pressed her soft lips on my arm, like
+a young mother soothing a babe, and with all womanly
+tenderness bound up the injured place, which had now
+begun to smart, and, to my excited imagination, commenced
+to throb from wrist to shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Strange child, isn't she?" laughed Hayston. "If she'd
+only been born white, and been to boarding-school down
+east, what a sensation she'd have created in a ball-room!"</p>
+
+<p>"Better as she is, perhaps," said I. "She has lived her
+life with few limitations, and enjoyed most of it."</p>
+
+<p>The excited crew rushed in and finished every wounded
+man in a position to show fight. Nellie did not join in
+this, but stood leaning on her rifle&mdash;<i>la belle sauvage</i>, if ever
+there was one&mdash;brave, beautiful, with a new expression
+like that of a roused lioness on her parted lips and blazing
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>As for Hayston, he was a fatalist by constitution and
+theory. "A man must die when his time comes," he had
+often said to me. "Until the hour of fate he cannot die.
+Why, then, should he waste his emotions by giving way to
+the meanest of all attributes&mdash;personal fear?"</p>
+
+<p>He had none, at any rate. He would have walked up to
+the block without haste or reluctance, had beheading been
+the fashionable mode of execution in his day, chaffed his
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+executioner, and with a bow and a smile for the handsomest
+woman among the spectators, quitted with easy
+grace a world which had afforded him a fair share of its
+rarest possessions.</p>
+
+<p>By his order the town was fired and quickly reduced to
+ashes, thus destroying a number of articles&mdash;mats, utensils,
+wearing apparel, weapons, etc.&mdash;which, requiring, as
+they do, considerable skill and expenditure of time, are
+regarded as valuable effects by all savages.</p>
+
+<p>The attack had been early in the day. We cut down as
+many cocoa-nut trees as we could, and finally departed for
+the ship, towing out with us a small fleet of canoes, to be
+broken up when we got to the brig. The sick men were
+sent below, and such remedies as we knew of were applied.
+They were&mdash;all but one&mdash;silent and downhearted. They
+knew by experience the sure and deadly effect of the
+poison manufactured among the Line Islands. Subtle and
+penetrating! But little hope of recovery remains.</p>
+
+<p>About four o'clock next morning we began to heave at
+the windlass, and got under weigh at eight. The wind was
+light and variable, and our progress slow. As we got
+abreast of the hostile village we gave them a broadside.
+But the sullen devils of Santa Cruz were not cowed yet.
+A second fleet of canoes swarmed around the ship. They
+made signals of submission and a desire to trade, but when
+they got near enough sent a cloud of arrows at the ship,
+many of which stuck quivering in the masts, though luckily
+no one was hit. Their yells and screams of wrath were like
+the tumult of a hive of demons. We were luckily well
+prepared, and we let them have the carronades over and
+over again, sinking a dozen of their canoes, and doing good
+execution among the crews when their black heads popped
+up like corks as they swam for the nearest canoes. While
+this took place we unbent the starboard chain, stowed it
+and the anchor, and clearing the heads, bade adieu to the
+inhospitable isle.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+On the next day all hands were engaged in cleaning our
+armoury, which it certainly appeared necessary to keep in
+good order. Hope Island Nellie polished her Winchester
+rifle till it shone again, besides showing an acquaintance
+with the machinery of the lock and repeating gear was
+nothing new to her.</p>
+
+<p>"You ought to make a notch in the stock for every man
+you kill, Nellie," said Hayston, as we were lying on the
+deck in the afternoon, while the <i>Leonora</i> was gliding on
+her course like the fair ocean bird that she was.</p>
+
+<p>Nellie frowned. "No like that talk," she answered.
+"Might have to put 'nother notch yet for Nellie&mdash;who
+knows?"</p>
+
+<p>"Who knows, indeed, Nellie?" answered the Captain.
+"None of us can foresee our fate," he added with a tinge
+of sadness, which so often mingled with his apparently
+most careless moments. "We don't even know who's going
+to die from those arrow scratches yet."</p>
+
+<p>Here the girl looked over at me. "How you feel,
+Hil'ree?" she said, as her voice softened and lost its
+jesting tone.</p>
+
+<p>"Feel good," I said, "think getting better."</p>
+
+<p>"You no know," she answered gravely. "You wait."
+And she began to count. She went over the fingers of her
+small, delicately-formed left hand,&mdash;wonderful in shape
+are the hands and feet of some of these Island girls,&mdash;and
+after counting from little finger to thumb <i>twice</i>, touched
+the two first fingers, and looked up. "How many?" she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Twelve," I said; I had followed the counts with care,
+you may be sure.</p>
+
+<p>"Twel' day, you see," she said; "perhaps you all right&mdash;perhaps"&mdash;and
+here she gave a faint but accurate limitation
+of the dreadful shudder which precedes the unspeakable
+agonies of tetanus.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+"Nellie's right," said Hayston; "keep up your spirits,
+for you won't know till then whether you're to go to sleep
+in your hammock in blue water or not."</p>
+
+<p>This was a cheerful prospect, but I had come through
+many perils, and missed the grim veteran by so many close
+shaves, that I had grown to be something of a fatalist like
+Hayston.</p>
+
+<p>"Well! if I go under it won't be your fault, Nellie! So,
+Captain, remember I make over to her all the stuff in my
+trade chest. Send any letters and papers to the address
+you know in Sydney, and a bank draft for what you will
+find in the dollar bag. Nellie will have some good dresses
+anyhow."</p>
+
+<p>"Dress be hanged!" quoth Nellie, who was emphatic in
+her language sometimes. "You go home to mother yet;"
+and she arose and left hurriedly. Poor Nellie!</p>
+
+<p>In that day when we and others who have sinned, after
+fullest knowledge of good and evil "know the right and yet
+the wrong pursue," shall be arraigned for deeds done in the
+flesh, will the same doom be meted out to this frank, untaught
+child of Nature and her sisters? I trow not. I
+must say that for a day or two before the fated twelfth
+which Nellie so stoutly insisted upon, I felt slightly anxious.
+What an end to all one's hopes, longings, and glorious
+imaginings, to be racked with tortures indescribable
+before dying like a poisoned hound, all because of the
+instinctive, senseless act of a stupid savage!</p>
+
+<p>To die young, too, with the world but opening before
+me! Life with its thousand possibilities just unrolled!
+One's friends, too,&mdash;the weeping mother and sisters, whose
+grief would never wholly abate this side of time; the old
+man's fixed expression of sorrow. These thoughts passed
+through my brain, with others arising from and mingled
+with them, as I left my hammock early on the twelfth day.
+I dressed quickly, and going on deck, that daily miracle
+occurred&mdash;"the glorious sun uprist."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+The dawnlight now began to infuse the pearly rim, which,
+imperceptibly separating from the azure grey horizon,
+deepened as it touched the edge of the vast ocean plain.
+Faintly glimmering, how magically it transformed from a
+dim, neutral-tinted waste to an opaline clarity of hue&mdash;a
+fuller crimson. Then the wondrous golden globe heaved
+itself over the edge of our water-world all silently, and the
+day, the 19th of October, began its course.</p>
+
+<p>Should I live to see its close?</p>
+
+<p>How strange if all this time the subtle poison should
+have lurked in one's veins until the exact moment, when,
+like a modern engine of devilry&mdash;an infernal machine with
+a clock and apparatus&mdash;set to strike and detonate at a
+given and calculated hour, the death-stroke should sound!</p>
+
+<p>We had breakfasted, and were lying on the deck chatting
+and reading, as the <i>Leonora</i> glided over the heaving bosom
+of the main&mdash;the sun shining&mdash;the seabirds sailing
+athwart our course with outstretched, moveless wings&mdash;the
+sparkling waters reflecting a thousand prismatic colours,
+as the brig swiftly sped along her course&mdash;all nature gaily
+bright, joyous, and unheeding. Suddenly one of the
+wounded men, Henry Stephens by name, raised himself
+from his mat with a cry so wild and unearthly that half
+the crew and people started to their feet.</p>
+
+<p>"My God!" he exclaimed, as he sank down again upon
+his mat, "I'm a dead man&mdash;those infernal arrows."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Harry!" said Nellie, who by this time was bending
+over him, "don't give in&mdash;by and by better&mdash;you get
+down to bunk. Carry him down, you boys!"</p>
+
+<p>Two of the crew lifted the poor fellow, who even as they
+raised him had another fearful paroxysm, drawing his
+frame together almost double, so that the men could scarcely
+retain their hold.</p>
+
+<p>"Carry him gently, boys!" said Hayston; "go to the steward
+for some brandy and laudanum, that will ease the pain."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+"And is there no cure&mdash;no means of stopping this awful
+agony?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not when tetanus once sets in," said Hayston; "it's
+not the first case I've seen."</p>
+
+<p>The other man was quite a young fellow, and famed
+among us for his entire want of fear upon each and every
+occasion. He laughed and joked the whole time of the fight
+with the Santa Cruz islanders, said that every bullet had
+its billet, and that his time had not come. "He believed,"
+he said, "also that half the talk about death by poisoned
+arrows was fancy. Men got nervous, and frightened themselves
+to death." He was not one of that sort anyhow. He
+had laughed and joked with both of us, and even now, when
+poor Harry Stephens was carried below, and we could hear
+his cries as the increasing torture of the paroxysms overcame
+his courage and self-control, he joked still.</p>
+
+<p>The day was a sad one. Still the brig glided on through
+the azure waveless deep&mdash;still the tropic birds hung
+motionless above us&mdash;still the breeze whispered through
+our swelling sails, until the soft, brief twilight of the
+tropic eve stole upon us, and the stars trembled one by one
+in the dusky azure, so soon to be "thick inlaid with patines
+of bright gold."</p>
+
+<p>"Reckon I've euchred the bloodthirsty niggers this
+time," said Dick, with a careless laugh, lighting his pipe
+as he spoke. "This is 'Twelfth night.' That's the end of
+the time the cussed poison takes to ripen, isn't it, Nellie?"
+he laughed. "It regular puts me in mind of old Christmas
+days in England, and us schoolboys counting the days after
+the New Year! What a jolly time it was! Won't I be
+glad to see the snow, and the bare hedges, and the holly
+berries, and the village church again? Dashed if I don't
+stay there next time I get a chance, and cut this darned
+slaving, privateering life. I'll&mdash;oh! my God&mdash;ah&mdash;a&mdash;h!"</p>
+
+<p>His voice, in spite of all his efforts, rose from a startled
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+cry to a long piercing shriek, such as it curdled our blood
+to hear.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston came up from the cabin, followed by Nellie and
+the other girls. All crowded round him in silence. They
+knew well at the first cry he was a doomed man.</p>
+
+<p>"Carry him down, lads!" he said, as he laid his hand
+on his forehead and passed it quietly over his clustering
+hair&mdash;"poor Dick! poor fellow!" At this moment another
+frightful spasm shook the seaman's frame, and scarcely
+could the men who had lifted him from the deck on which
+he had been lying control his tortured limbs. As they
+reached the lower deck another terrible cry reached our
+ears, while the continuous groaning of the poor fellow first
+attacked made a ghastly and awful accompaniment to the
+screams of the latest victim.</p>
+
+<p>As for me, I walked forward and sat as near as I could
+get to the <i>Leonora's</i> bows, where I lit my pipe and awaited
+the moment in which only too probably my own summons
+would come in a like pang of excruciating agony. The
+gleaming phosphorescent wavelets of that calm sea fell in
+broken fire from the vessel's side, while the hissing, splashing
+sound deadened the recurring shrieks of the doomed
+sufferers, and soothed my excited nerves.</p>
+
+<p>Now that death was so near, in such a truly awful shape,
+I began seriously to reflect upon the imprudence, nay, more,
+the inexcusable folly of continuing a life exposed to such
+terrible hazards.</p>
+
+<p>If my life was spared I would resolve, like poor Dick,
+to stay at home in future. The resolution might avail me
+as little as it had done in his case.</p>
+
+<p>As I sat hour after hour gazing into the endless shadow
+and gleam of the great deep, a strange feeling of peace and
+resignation seemed to pass suddenly over my troubled
+spirit. I felt almost tempted to plunge beneath the calm
+bosom of the main, and so end for aye the doubt, the fear,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+the rapture, and despair of this mysterious human life.
+All suddenly the moon rose, sending before her a brilliant
+pathway, adown which, in my excited imagination, angels
+might glide, bearing messages of pardon or reprieve. A
+distinct sensation of hope arose in my mind. A dark form
+glided to my side, and seated itself on the rail.</p>
+
+<p>"You hear eight bell?" she said. "Listen now, you all
+right&mdash;no more poison&mdash;he go away." She held my hand&mdash;the
+pulse was steady and regular. In spite of my efforts
+at calmness and self-control, I was sensible of a strange
+exaltation of spirit. The heaven above, the sea below,
+seemed animate with messengers of pardon and peace.
+Even poor Nellie, the untaught child of a lonely isle,
+"placed far amid the melancholy main," seemed transformed
+into a celestial visitant, and her large, dark eyes
+glowed in the light of the mystic moon rays.</p>
+
+<p>"You well, man Hil'ree!" she said in the foc'sle vernacular.
+"No more go mat&eacute;. Nellie so much glad," and
+here her soft low tones were so instinct with deepest human
+feeling that I took her in my arms and folded her in a warm
+embrace.</p>
+
+<p>"How's poor Dick?" I asked, as we walked aft to where
+Hayston and the rest of the cabin party were seated.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Dick dead!" she said; "just die before me come
+up."</p>
+
+<p>The people we had brought for the big firm, mostly Line
+Island natives, were quiet and easily controlled. Hayston
+now and then executed orders of this sort, though he would
+have scorned the idea of turning the <i>Leonora</i> into a labour
+vessel. He was naturally too humane to permit any ill-treatment
+of the recruits, and having his crew under full
+control, always made matters as pleasant for these dark-skinned
+"passengers" as possible.</p>
+
+<p>But there were voyages of very different kind,&mdash;voyages
+when the recruiting agents were thoroughly unscrupulous,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+caring only for the numbers&mdash;by fair means or foul&mdash;to
+be made up. Sometimes dark deeds were done. Blood
+was shed like water; partly from the fierce, intractable
+nature of the islanders&mdash;sometimes in pure self-defence.
+But "strange things happen at sea." One labour cruise of
+which Hayston told me&mdash;he heard it from an English
+trader who saw the affair&mdash;was much of that complexion.
+We had plenty of time for telling stories in the long calm
+days which sometimes ran into weeks. And this was one
+of them.</p>
+
+<p>One day a white painted schooner, with gaff-headed
+mainsail, and flying the German flag, anchored off Kabakada,
+a populous village on the north coast of New Britain.
+She was on a labour cruise for the German plantations in
+Samoa.</p>
+
+<p>Not being able to secure her full complement of "boys"
+in the New Hebrides and Solomon groups, she had come
+northward to fill up with recruits from the naked savages
+of the northern coast of New Britain.</p>
+
+<p>In those days the German flag had not been formally
+hoisted over New Britain and New Ireland, and apart from
+the German trading station at Matupi in Blanche Bay,
+which faces the scarred and blackened sides of a smouldering
+volcano springing abruptly from the deep waters of the
+bay, the trading stations were few and far between.</p>
+
+<p>At Kabakada, where the vessel had anchored, there were
+two traders. One was a noisy, vociferous German, who
+had once kept a liquor saloon in Honolulu, but, moved by
+tales of easily accumulated wealth in New Britain, he had
+sold his business, and settled at his present location among
+a horde of the most treacherous natives in the South Seas.
+His rude good nature had been his safety; for although,
+through ignorance of the native character, he was continually
+placing his life in danger, he was quick to make
+amends, and being of a generous disposition and a man of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+means, enjoyed a prestige among the natives possessed by
+no other white man.</p>
+
+<p>His colleague&mdash;or rather his opponent, for they traded
+for opposition firms&mdash;was a small, dark Frenchman, an
+ex-bugler of the Chasseurs d'Afrique, who had spent some
+years of enforced retirement at New Caledonia. His advent
+to New Britain had been made in the most private
+manner, and his reminiscences of the voyage from the convict
+colony with his four companions were not of a cheerful
+nature.</p>
+
+<p>Ten miles away, at the head of a narrow bay that split
+the forest-clad mountains like a Norwegian fiord, lived
+another trader, an English seaman. He had been on the
+island about two years, and was well-nigh sickened of it.
+Frequently recurring attacks of the deadly malarial fever
+had weakened and depressed him, and he longed to return
+to the open, breezy islands of eastern Polynesia, where he
+had no need to start from his sleep at night, and, rifle in
+hand, peer out into the darkness at the slightest noise.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The labour schooner anchored about a mile from the
+German trader's house, and about two hours afterwards the
+boat of the Englishman was seen pulling round Cape Luen,
+and making for Charlie's station. This was because all
+three traders, being on friendly terms, it would have been
+considered "playing it low down" for any one of them to
+have boarded the schooner alone.</p>
+
+<p>The day was swelteringly hot, and the sea between the
+gloomy outlines of Mau Island and the long, curving, palm-shaded
+beaches of New Britain shore was throwing off great
+clouds of hot, steamy mist. As the Englishman's boat was
+about half-way between the steep-wooded point of Cape
+Luen and Kabakada, she altered her course and ran into
+the beach, where, surrounded by a cluster of native huts,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+was the station of Pierre. This was to save the little
+Frenchman the trouble of launching his clumsy boat.
+Pierre, dressed in white pyjamas, with a heavy Lefaucheux
+revolver in his belt and a Snider rifle in his hand, came
+out of his house. Addressing his two wives in emphatic
+language, and warning them to fire off guns if anything
+happened during his absence on board the schooner, he
+swaggered down the beach and into the boat.</p>
+
+<p>"How are you, Pierre?" said the Englishman, languidly.
+"I knew you and Hans Muller would expect me to board
+the schooner with you, or else I wouldn't have come. Curse
+the place, the people, the climate, and everything!"</p>
+
+<p>The little Frenchman grinned, "Yes, it ees ver' hot; but
+nevare mind. Ven ve get to de 'ouse of de German we
+shall drink some gin and feel bettare. Last veek he buy
+four case of gin from a valeship, and now le bon Dieu send
+this schooner, from vich we shall get more."</p>
+
+<p>"What a drunken little beast you are!" said the Englishman,
+sourly. "But after all, I suppose you enjoy life more
+than I do. I'd drink gin like water if I thought it would
+kill me quick enough."</p>
+
+<p>"My friend, it is but the fevare that now talks in you.
+See me! I am happy. I drink, I smoke, I laugh. I have
+two wife to make my caf&eacute; and look aftare my house. Some
+day I walk in the bush, then, whouff, a spear go through
+me, and my two wife will weep ven they see me cut up for
+<i>rosbif</i>, and perhaps eat a piece themselves."</p>
+
+<p>The Englishman laughed. The picture Pierre drew was
+likely to be a true one in one respect. Not a mile from
+the spot where the boat was at that moment were the
+graves of a trading captain, his mate, and two seamen, who
+had been slaughtered by the natives under circumstances of
+the most abominable treachery. And right before them,
+on the white beach of Mau Island, a whaler's boat's crew
+had been speared while filling their water casks, the natives
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+who surrounded them appearing to be animated by the
+greatest friendliness.</p>
+
+<p>Such incidents were common enough in those days among
+the islands to the westward of New Guinea, and the people
+of New Britain were no worse than those of other islands.
+They were simply treacherous, cowardly savages, and though
+occasionally indulging in cannibalistic feasts upon the
+bodies of people of their own race, they never killed white
+men for that purpose. Many a white man has been speared
+or shot there, but their bodies were spared that atrocity&mdash;so
+in that respect Pierre did his young wives an injustice.
+They would, if occasion needed it, readily poison him, or
+steal his cartridges and leave him to be slaughtered without
+the chance of making resistance, but they wouldn't eat him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>"It's the <i>Samoa</i>," said the German, as he shook hands
+with us. "And the skipper is a d&mdash;d Dutchman, but a
+good sort" (having once sailed in a Yankee timber ship,
+trading between Sydney and the Pacific slope, Hans was
+now an American), "and as soon as it gets a bit cool, we'll
+go off. I know the recruiter, he's a chap with one arm."</p>
+
+<p>"What?" said the Englishman, "you don't mean Captain
+Kyte, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"That's the man. He's a terror. Guldensterns pay
+him $200 a month regular to recruit for them, and he gets
+a bonus of $10 each for every nigger as well. We must
+try and get him a few here to fill up."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>You</i> can," said the Englishman, "but I won't. I'm not
+going to tout for an infernal Dutch black-birder."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>As soon as a breeze set in the three traders sailed off.
+The schooner was a fine lump of a vessel of about 190 tons
+register, and her decks were crowded with male and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+female recruits from the Solomon group. There were
+about fifty in all&mdash;thirty-five or forty men and about a
+dozen women.</p>
+
+<p>The captain of the schooner and his "recruiter," Captain
+Kyte, received the traders with great cordiality. In a few
+minutes the table was covered with bottles of beer, kummel,
+and other liquor, and Hans was asserting with great
+vehemence his ability to procure another thirty "boys."</p>
+
+<p>Kyte, a thin man, with deep-set grey eyes, and a skin
+tanned by twenty years' wanderings in the South Seas,
+listened quietly to the trader's vapourings, and then said,
+"All right, Hans! I think, though, we can leave it till to-morrow,
+and if you can manage to get me twenty 'boys,'
+I'll give you five dollars a head for them, cash."</p>
+
+<p>The traders remained on board for an hour or two, and
+in the meanwhile the captain of the schooner sent a boat
+ashore to fill water casks from the creek near the trader's
+house. Six natives got in&mdash;four of whom were seamen
+from the schooner and two Solomon Island recruits; these
+two recruits led to all the subsequent trouble.</p>
+
+<p>Kyte was a wonderfully entertaining man, and although
+his one arm was against him (he had lost the other one by
+the bursting of a shell), he contrived to shoot very straight,
+and could hold his own anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>He was full of cynical humour, and the Englishman,
+though suffering from latent fever, could not but be amused
+at the disrespectful manner in which the American spoke
+of his employers. The German firm which in a small way
+was the H.E.I.C. of the Pacific; indeed, their actions in
+many respects, when conducting trading arrangements with
+the island chiefs, were very similar to those of the Great
+East India Company&mdash;they always had an armed force to
+back them up.</p>
+
+<p>"I should think you have natives enough on board as it
+is, Captain Kyte," the Englishman was saying, "without
+taking any more."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+"Well, so I have in one way. But these d&mdash;d greedy
+Dutchmen (looking the captain and mate of the schooner
+full in the face) like to see me come into Apia harbour with
+about 180 or 200 on board. The schooner is only fit to
+carry about ninety. Of course the more I have the more
+dollars I get. But it's mighty risky work, I can tell you.
+I've got nearly sixty Solomon boys on board now, and I
+could have filled down there, but came up along here instead.
+You see, when we've got two or three different
+mobs on board from islands widely apart they can't concoct
+any general scheme of treachery, and I can always
+play one crowd off against the other. Now, these Solomon
+Island niggers know me well, and they wouldn't try any
+cutting off business away up here&mdash;it's too far from home.
+But I wouldn't trust them when we are beating back through
+the Solomons on our way to Samoa&mdash;that's the time I've
+got a pull on them, by having New Britain niggers on
+board."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't let your crew carry arms on board, I see,"
+said the Englishman.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't. There's no necessity for it, I reckon. If
+we were anywhere about the Solomon Islands, and had a
+lot of recruits on board, I take d&mdash;d good care that every
+man is armed then. But here, in New Britain, we could
+safely give every rifle in the ship to the 'recruits' themselves,
+and seeing armed men about them always irritates
+them. As a matter of fact, these 'boys' now on board
+would fight like h&mdash;l for us if the New Britain niggers
+tried to take the ship. Some men, however," and his eyes
+rested on Pierre, Hans, and the captain, "like to carry a
+small-arms factory slung around 'em. Have another drink,
+gentlemen? Hallo, what the h&mdash;l is that?" and he was
+off up on deck, the other four white men after him.</p>
+
+<p>The watering party had come back, but the two Solomon
+islanders (the recruits) lay in the bottom of the boat, both
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
+dead, and with broken spears sticking all over their bodies.
+The rest of the crew were wounded&mdash;one badly.</p>
+
+<p>In two minutes Captain Kyte had the story. They were
+just filling the last cask when they were rushed, and the
+two Solomon islanders speared and clubbed to death. The
+rage of the attackers seemed specially directed against the
+two recruits, and the crew&mdash;who were natives of Likaiana
+(Stewart's Island)&mdash;said that after the first volley of
+spears no attempt was made to prevent their escape.</p>
+
+<p>The face of Captain Kyte had undergone a curious
+change. It had turned to a dull leaden white, and his
+dark grey eyes had a spark of fire in them as he turned to
+the captain of the schooner.</p>
+
+<p>"What business had you, you blundering, dunder-headed,
+Dutch swab, to let two of my recruits go ashore in that
+boat? Haven't you got enough sense to know that it was
+certain death for them. Two of my best men, too. Bougainville
+boys. By &mdash;&mdash;! you'd better jump overboard.
+You're no more fit for a labour schooner than I am to teach
+dancing in a ladies' school."</p>
+
+<p>The captain made no answer. He was clearly in fault.
+As it was, no one of the boat's crew were killed, but that
+was merely because their European clothing showed them
+to be seamen. The matter was more serious for Kyte than
+any one else on board. The countrymen of the murdered
+boys looked upon him as the man chiefly responsible. He
+knew only one way of placating them&mdash;by paying some
+of the dead boys' relations a heavy indemnity, and immediately
+began a consultation with five Solomon islanders who
+came from the same island.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>In the mean time the three traders returned to the shore,
+and Hans, with his usual thick-headedness, immediately
+"put his foot in it," by demanding a heavy compensation
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+from the chief of the village for the killing of the two
+men.</p>
+
+<p>The chief argued, very reasonably from his point of view,
+that the matter didn't concern him.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't care what you think," wrathfully answered the
+little trader, "I want fifty coils, of fifty fathoms each, of
+<i>dewarra</i>. If I don't get it"&mdash;here he touched his revolver.</p>
+
+<p>Now, dewarra is the native money of New Britain; it is
+formed of very small white shells of the cowrie species,
+perforated with two small holes at each end, and threaded
+upon thin strips of cane or the stalk of the cocoa-nut leaf.
+A coil of dewarras would be worth in European money, or
+its trade equivalent, about fifty dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The chief wasn't long in giving his answer. His lips,
+stained a hideous red by the betel nut juice, opened in a
+derisive smile and revealed his blackened teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"He will fight," he answered.</p>
+
+<p>"You've done it now, Hans," said the Englishman, "you
+might as well pack up and clear out in the schooner. You
+have no more sense than a hog. By the time I get back to
+my station I'll find it burnt and all my trade gone. However,
+I don't care much; but I hope to see you get wiped
+out first. You deserve it."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>All that night the native village was in a state of turmoil,
+and when daylight came it was deserted by the inhabitants,
+who had retreated to their bush-houses; the French trader,
+who had walked along the beach to his station, returned at
+daylight and reported that not a native was in his town,
+even his two wives had gone. Nothing, however, of his
+trade had been touched.</p>
+
+<p>"That's a good sign for you," said the Englishman. "If
+I were you, Pierre, I would go quietly back, and start mending
+your fence or painting your boat as if nothing had
+happened. They won't meddle with you."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+But this was strongly objected to by his fellow-trader,
+and just then a strange sound reached them,&mdash;the wild cries
+and howls of chorus, in a tongue unknown to the three men.
+It came from the sea, and going to the door they saw the
+schooner's two whaleboats, packed as full of natives as they
+could carry, close in to the shore. Instead of oars they
+were propelled by canoe paddles, and at each stroke the
+native rowers fairly made the boats leap and surge like
+steam launches in a sea-way. But the most noticeable
+thing to the eyes of the traders was the glitter of rifle
+barrels that appeared between the double row of paddlers.
+In another five minutes the leading boat was close enough
+for the traders to see that the paddlers who lined the gunwales
+from stem to stern had their faces daubed with red
+and blue, and their fighting ornaments on. In the body of
+the boats, crouching on their hams, with elbows on knees,
+and upright rifles, were the others, packed as tightly as
+sardines.</p>
+
+<p>"Mein Gott!" gasped Muller, "they have killed all
+hands on the schooner and are coming for us. Look at the
+rifles." He dashed into his trade-room and brought out
+about half a dozen Sniders, and an Epsom salts box full of
+cartridges. "Come on, boys, load up as quick as you can."</p>
+
+<p>"You thundering ass," said the Englishman, "look again;
+can't you see Kyte's in one boat steering?"</p>
+
+<p>In another minute, with a roar from the excited savages,
+the first boat surged up on the beach, and a huge, light-skinned
+savage seized Kyte in his arms as if he were a child
+and placed him on the land. Then every man leaped out and
+stood, rifle in hand, waiting for the other boat. Again the
+same fierce cry as the second boat touched the shore; then
+silence, as they watched with dilated eyes and gleaming
+teeth the movements of the white man.</p>
+
+<p>For one moment he stood facing them with outstretched
+hand uplifted in warning to check their eager rush. Then
+he turned to the traders&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+"The devils have broken loose. Have you fellows any
+of your own natives that you don't want to get hurt? If
+so, get them inside the house, and look mighty smart
+about it."</p>
+
+<p>"There's not a native on the beach," said the German,
+"every mother's son of them has cleared into the bush,
+except this man's boat's crew," pointing to the English
+trader; "they're in the house all right. But look out,
+Captain Kyte, those fellows in the bush mean fight. There's
+two thousand people in this village, and many of them have
+rifles&mdash;Sniders&mdash;and plenty cartridges. I know, because
+it was I who sold them."</p>
+
+<p>Kyte smiled grimly. There was a steely glitter of suppressed
+excitement in his keen grey eyes. Then he again
+held up his hand to his followers&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Blood for blood, my children. But heed well my words&mdash;kill
+not the women and children; now, go!"</p>
+
+<p>Like bloodhounds slipped from the leash, the brown
+bodies and gleaming rifle barrels went by the white men
+in one wild rush, and passed away out of sight into the
+comparatively open forest that touched the edge of the
+trader's clearing.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>"There they go," said Kyte quietly, as he sat down on the
+edge of the trader's verandah and lit a cigar, "and they'll
+give those smart niggers of yours a dressing down that will
+keep them quiet for the next five years (he was right, they
+did). Well, I had to let them have their own way. They
+told me that if I didn't let them have revenge for the two
+men that I would be unlucky before I got to Samoa,&mdash;a
+polite way of saying that they would seize the schooner and
+cut our throats on the way up. So to save unpleasantness,
+I gave each man a Snider and twenty-five cartridges, and
+told them to shoot as many <i>pigs and fowls</i> as they liked.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+You should have heard the beggars laugh. By the way, I
+hope they do shoot some, we want pork badly."</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo, they've got to Tubarigan's, the chief's bush-house,
+and fired it!" said Muller.</p>
+
+<p>A column of black smoke arose from the side of the
+mountain, and in another second or two loud yells and cries
+of defiance mingled with the thundering reports of the
+Sniders and the crackling of the flames.</p>
+
+<p>The little Frenchman and Muller played nervously with
+their rifles for a moment or two; then meeting the answering
+look in each other's eyes, they dashed into the trees and
+up the jungle-clad mountain side in the direction of the
+smoke and fighting.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The native houses in New Britain are built of cane, neatly
+lashed together with coir cinnet, and the roofs thatched with
+broad-leaved grass or sugar-cane leaves. They burn well,
+and as the cane swells to the heat each joint bursts with a
+crack like a pistol shot.</p>
+
+<p>"Look now," said Kyte to his companion, pointing along
+the tops of the hills. Clouds of black smoke and sheets of
+flame were everywhere visible, and amidst the continuous
+roar of the flames, the crackling of the burning cane-work
+of the native houses, and the incessant reports of the
+Sniders, came savage shouts and yells from the raiders, and
+answering cries of defiance from the New Britain men, who
+retreated slowly to the grassy hills of the interior, whence
+they watched the total destruction of some four or five of
+their villages. These bush-houses are constructed with
+great care and skill by the natives, and are generally only
+a short distance from the main village on the beach; every
+bush-house stands surrounded by a growth of carefully-tended
+crotons of extraordinary beauty and great variety of
+colour, and in the immediate vicinity is the owner's plantation
+of yams, taro, sugar-cane, bananas, and betel nuts.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
+In the course of an hour or two the Solomon islanders
+ceased firing, and then the two white men, looking out on
+the beach, saw a number of the beaten villagers fleeing
+down to the shore, about half a mile away, and endeavouring
+to launch canoes.</p>
+
+<p>"By &mdash;&mdash;!" exclaimed Kyte, "my fellows have outflanked
+them, and are driving them down to the beach. I
+might get some after all for the schooner. Will you lend
+me your boat's crew to head them off? They are going to
+try and get to Mau Island."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the Englishman, "I won't. If Pierre and the
+German are such idiots as to go shooting niggers in another
+man's quarrel, that's no reason why I should take a hand
+in it."</p>
+
+<p>Kyte nodded good-humouredly, and seemed to abandon
+the idea; but he went into the house after a while, and
+came out again with a long Snider in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>In a few minutes the Solomon islanders began to return
+in parties of two or three, then came the two white men,
+excited and panting with the lust of killing.</p>
+
+<p>Kyte held a whispered consultation with one of his
+"boys,"&mdash;a huge fellow, whose body was reeking with perspiration
+and blood from the scratches received in the
+thorny depths of the jungle,&mdash;and then pointed to the
+beach where four or five white-painted canoes had been
+launched, and were making for an opening in the reef. To
+reach this opening they would have to pass in front of the
+trader's house, for which they now headed.</p>
+
+<p>Kyte waited a moment or two till the leading canoe was
+within four or five hundred yards, then he raised his rifle,
+and placing it across the stump of his left arm, fired. The
+ball plumped directly amidships, and two of the paddlers
+fell. The rest threw away their paddles and spears, and
+swam to the other canoes.</p>
+
+<p>"Now we've got them," said Kyte, and taking about
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+twenty of his boys, he manned his two boats and pulled
+out, intercepting the canoes before they could get through
+the reef into the open.</p>
+
+<p>Then commenced an exciting chase. The refugees swam
+and dived about in the shallow water like frightened fish,
+but their pursuers were better men at that game than they,
+and of superior physique. In twenty minutes they were all
+captured, except one, who sprang over the edge of the reef
+into deep water and was shot swimming.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>There were about five-and-twenty prisoners, and when
+they were brought back in the boats and taken on board the
+schooner it was found that the chief was among them. It
+may have occurred to him in the plantation life of the after
+time that he had better have stayed quiet. The Englishman,
+disgusted with the whole affair, went off with the
+other white men, leaving his boat's crew for safety in the
+trader's house, for had the Solomon islanders seen them
+they would have made quick work of them, or else Kyte, to
+save their lives, would have offered to take them as recruits.</p>
+
+<p>The two other traders decided to leave in the schooner.
+They had made the locality too warm for themselves, and
+urged the Englishman to follow their example.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said, "I've been a good while here now, and
+I've never shot a nigger yet for the fun of the thing. I'll
+take my chance with them for a bit longer. The chances
+are you fellows will get your throats cut before I do."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>However, the schooner arrived safely at Samoa with her
+live cargo, but Kyte reported to his owners that it would
+not be advisable to recruit in New Britain for a year or two.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<h2>HALCYON DAYS</h2>
+
+
+<p>We were now bound for Arrecifos Island, Hayston's
+central station, but had first to call at Pingelap and Strong's
+Island, where we were to land our cattle and ship a few
+tuns of oil.</p>
+
+<p>Nine days after leaving Ponap&eacute;, as the sun broke through
+the tropic haze, the lookout reported smoke in sight. The
+Captain and I at once went aloft, and with our glasses made
+out a steamer a long distance off.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston said he thought it was the <i>Resacca</i>, an American
+cruiser. Possibly she might overhaul us and take us into
+Ponap&eacute;. Unless the breeze freshened we could not get
+away from her.</p>
+
+<p>We were heading N.N.E. close hauled, and the steamer
+appeared to be making for Ponap&eacute;. She was sure to see us
+within an hour unless she changed her course.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Leonora</i> was kept away a couple of points, but the
+wind was light, and we were only travelling about four
+knots.</p>
+
+<p>At breakfast time we could see the man-of-war's spars
+from the deck, and the breeze was dying away. The Captain
+and I went on the foreyard and watched her.</p>
+
+<p>She had not as yet changed her course, but apparently
+did not seem anxious to overtake us.</p>
+
+<p>At length Hayston said with a laugh, as he took a long
+look at her, "All right, keep full, and by (to the man at the
+wheel) &mdash;&mdash;, brace up the yards again, she doesn't want to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+stop us. It's that old Spanish gunboat from Manila, a
+'side wheeler.' I was told she was coming down to Ponap&eacute;
+from Guam to look after some escaped Tagalau prisoners.
+She'd never catch us if she wanted to with anything like a
+breeze."</p>
+
+<p>That night the Captain seemed greatly relieved. He told
+me that it would prove a bad business for him if an American
+cruiser took him; and although he did not anticipate
+meeting with one in these parts, he gave me full instructions
+how to act in the event of his seizure. He placed in
+my charge two bags of gold coin of two thousand dollars
+each, and a draft for a thousand dollars on Goddefroys' in
+Samoa.</p>
+
+<p>After which he declared that the ship was getting dull
+lately, and ordered the steward's boy to beat the gong and
+call out the girls for a dance.</p>
+
+<p>For the next hour or two wild merriment prevailed. Antonio,
+the Portuguese, with his violin, and the Captain with
+his flute, furnished the music, while half a dozen of the
+girls were soon dancing with some of the picturesque ruffians
+of the foc'sle.</p>
+
+<p>For days and days we had scarcely shifted tack or sheet,
+so gentle and steady was the wind that filled our sails; but
+the easterly equatorial counter current that prevails in these
+calm seas was sweeping us steadily on towards Strong's
+Island at the rate of two or three knots an hour.</p>
+
+<p>On some days we would lower a floating target and practise
+with the long gun carried amidships, on others the Captain
+and I would pass away an hour or two shooting at
+bottles with our rifles or revolvers.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston was a splendid shot, and loud were the exclamations
+from the crew when he made an especially clever
+shot; at other times he would sit on the skylight, and with
+the girls around him, sewing or card-playing, tell me anecdotes
+of his career when in the service of the Chinese Government.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+There were on board two children, a boy and girl&mdash;Toby
+and Kitty&mdash;natives of Arurai or Hope Island. They were
+the Captain's particular pets, in right of which he allowed
+them full liberty to tease any one on the ship.</p>
+
+<p>He was strongly attached to these children, and often
+told me that he intended to provide for them.</p>
+
+<p>Their father, who was one of his boat's crew, had fallen
+at his side when the natives of the island had boarded the
+vessel. On his next cruise he called at Arurai and took
+them on board, the head chief freely giving his permission
+to adopt them. I mention this boy and girl more particularly,
+because the American missionaries had often stated
+in the Honolulu journals "that Hayston had kidnapped
+them after having killed their father."</p>
+
+<p>His story was that on his first visit to the Pelew Islands
+with Captain Peese, the vessel they owned, a small brigantine,
+was attacked by the natives in the most daring manner,
+although the boarding nettings were up and every preparation
+made to repel them.</p>
+
+<p>He had with him ten seamen&mdash;mostly Japanese. Captain
+Peese was acting as first mate. An intelligent writer
+has described these Pelew islanders, the countrymen of the
+young Prince Lee Boo, whose death in England caused
+genuine sorrow, as "delicate in their sentiments, friendly
+in their disposition, and, in short, a people that do honour
+to the human race."</p>
+
+<p>The Captain's description of the undaunted manner in
+which fifty of these noble islanders climbed up the side of
+the brigantine, and slashed away at the nettings with their
+heavy swords, was truly graphic. Stripped to the waist
+they fought gallantly and unflinchingly, though twelve of
+their number had been killed by the fire of musketry from
+the brigantine. One of them had seized Captain Peese by
+his beard, and, dragging him to the side, stabbed him in the
+neck, and threw him into the prahu alongside, where his
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+head would have soon left his body, when Hayston and a
+Japanese sailor dashed over after him, and killed the two
+natives that were holding him down, while another was
+about to decapitate him. At this stage three of the brigantine's
+crew lay dead and nearly all were wounded, Hayston
+having a fearful slash on the thigh.</p>
+
+<p>There were seventeen islanders killed and many badly
+wounded before they gave up the attempt to cut off the
+vessel.</p>
+
+<p>The father of Kitty and Toby was the steward. He had
+been fighting all through like a demon, having for his weapon
+a carpenter's squaring axe. He had cut one islander down
+with a fearful blow on the shoulder, which severed the arm,
+the limb falling on the deck, when he was attacked by three
+others. One of these was shot by a Japanese sailor, and
+another knocked down by the Captain, when the poor
+steward was thrust through from behind and died in a few
+minutes.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain spoke highly of the courage and intelligence
+of the Pelew islanders, and said that the cause of the attack
+upon the vessel was that, being under the Portuguese
+flag&mdash;the brigantine was owned by merchants in Macao&mdash;the
+natives had sought to avenge the bombardment of one
+of their principal towns by two Portuguese gunboats a year
+previously.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston afterwards established friendly relations with
+these very people who had attacked him, and six months
+afterwards slept ashore at their village alone and unarmed.</p>
+
+<p>From that day his perfect safety was assured. He succeeded
+in gaining the friendship of the principal chiefs by
+selling them a hundred breech-loading rifles and ten thousand
+cartridges, giving them two years' time to pay for them.
+He also gave nearly a thousand dollars' worth of powder and
+cartridges to the relatives of the men killed in attempting
+to cut off the brigantine.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+Such was one of the many romantic incidents in Hayston's
+career in the wild islands still further to the north-west.
+That he was a man of lion-like courage and marvellous
+resolution under the most desperate circumstances was
+known to all who ever sailed with him. Had not his recklessness
+and uncontrollable passions hurried him on to the
+commission of deeds that darkened for ever his good name,
+his splendid qualities would have earned him fame and fortune
+in any of those national enterprises which have in all
+ages transformed the adventurer into the hero.</p>
+
+<p>One day, while we sat talking together, gazing upon the
+unruffled deep,&mdash;he had been explaining the theory of the
+ocean currents, as well as the electrical phenomena of the
+Caroline group, where thunder may be heard perhaps six
+times a year, and lightning seen not once,&mdash;I unthinkingly
+asked him why he did not commit his observations to paper,
+as I felt sure that the large amount of facts relating to the
+meteorology of the Pacific, of which he was possessed, would
+be most valuable, and as such secure fitting recognition by
+the scientific world.</p>
+
+<p>He smiled bitterly, then answered, "Hilary, my boy, it is
+too late. I am an outlaw in fact, if not in name. The
+world's doors are closed, and society has turned its back on
+me. Out of ten professed friends nine are false, and would
+betray me to-morrow. When I think of what I once was,
+what I might have been, and to what I have now fallen, I
+am weary of existence. So I take the world as it comes,
+with neither hope nor fear for the morrow, knowing that if
+I do not make blue shark's meat, I am doomed to leave my
+bones on some coral islet."</p>
+
+<p>And thus the days wore on. We still drifted under cloudless
+skies, over the unfretted surface of the blue Pacific,
+the brig's sails ever and anon swelling out in answer to the
+faint, mysterious breeze-whispers, to fall languidly back
+against her spars and cordage.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+Passing the Nuknor or Monteverde Islands, discovered
+by Don Juan Monteverde in 1806, in the Spanish frigate
+<i>La Pala</i>, we sailed onward with the gentle N.E. trades to
+Overluk, and then to Losap. Like the people of Nuknor,
+the Losap islanders were a splendid race and most hospitable.
+Then we made the Mortlock group, once so dreaded
+by whaleships. These fierce and warlike islanders made
+most determined efforts to cut off the whaleships <i>Dolly
+Primrose</i> and <i>Heavenly City</i>. To us, however, they were
+most amiable in demeanour, and loud cries of welcome
+greeted the Captain from the crowd of canoes which
+swarmed around the brig.</p>
+
+<p>Then commenced one of the reckless orgies with which
+the brig's crew were familiar. Glad to escape the scene, I
+left the brig and wandered about in the silent depths of
+the island forest.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain here, as elsewhere, was evidently regarded
+as a visitor of immense importance, for as I passed through
+the thickly populated villages the people were cooking vast
+quantities of pigs, poultry, and pigeons.</p>
+
+<p>The women and girls were decorating their persons with
+wreaths of flowers, and the warriors making preparations
+for a big dance to take place at night. I had brought my
+gun with me, and shot some of the magnificent pigeons
+which throng the island woods, which I presented to the
+native girls, a merry group of whom followed me with
+offerings of cocoa-nuts, and a native dish made of baked
+bananas, flavoured with the juice of the sugar-cane.</p>
+
+<p>I could not have eaten a fiftieth part of what was
+offered, but as declining would have been regarded as a
+rudeness, I begged them to take it to the chief's house
+for me.</p>
+
+<p>On my return a singular and characteristic scene presented
+itself. I could not help smiling as I thought what
+a shock it would have given many of my steady-going
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
+friends and relatives in Sydney, most of whom, if untravelled,
+resemble nothing so much as the inhabitants of English
+country towns, and are equally apt to be displeased
+at any departure from the British standard of manners
+and morals.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain was seated on a mat in the great council-house
+of the tribe, talking business with a white-headed
+warrior, whom he introduced as the king of the Mortlock
+group. The women had decorated the Captain's neck and
+broad breast with wreaths&mdash;two girls were seated a little
+farther off, binding into his hat the tail-feathers of the
+tropic bird. He seemed in a merry mood, and whispering
+something to the old man, pointed to me.</p>
+
+<p>In a moment a dozen young girls bounded up, and with
+laughing eyes and lips, commenced to circle around me in
+a measure, the native name of which means "a dance for
+a husband."</p>
+
+<p>They formed a pretty enough picture, with their waving
+arms and flowing flower-crowned hair. I plead guilty to
+applauding vociferously, and rewarding them with a quantity
+of the small red beads which the Mortlock girls sew
+into their head-dresses.</p>
+
+<p>Thus, with but slight variations, our life flowed, if monotonously,
+pleasantly, even luxuriously on&mdash;as we sailed to
+and fro amid these charmed isles, from Namoluk to Truk,
+thence to the wondrously beautiful Royalist Islands, inhabited
+by a wild vigorous race. They also made much of us
+and gave dances and games in honour of our visit.</p>
+
+<p>And still we sailed and sailed. Days passed, and weeks.
+Still glided we over the summer sea&mdash;still gazed we at
+a cloudless sky&mdash;still felt we the languorous, sighing
+breath of the soft South Pacific winds.</p>
+
+<p>Day by day the same flock of predatory frigate birds
+skimmed and swept o'er the glittering ocean plain, while
+high overhead the wandering tropic birds hung motionless,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>
+with their scarlet tail-feathers floating like lance pennons
+in relief against the bright blue heavens.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the Captain had all a true seaman's dislike to seeing
+a sea-bird shot. One day, off Ocean Island, Jansen,
+the mate, came out of the cabin with a long, smooth bore,
+which he proceeded to load with buck shot, glancing the
+while at two graceful tropic birds, which, with snow-white
+wings outspread, were poised in air directly over the deck,
+apparently looking down with wondering eye at the scene
+below.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you going to shoot, Jansen?" inquired the
+Captain, in a mild voice.</p>
+
+<p>The mate pointed to the birds, and remarked that his
+girl wanted the feathers for a head-dress. He was bringing
+the gun to his shoulder, when a quick "Put down that
+musket," nearly caused him to drop it.</p>
+
+<p>"Jansen!" said the Captain, "please to remember this,&mdash;never
+let me see you or any other man shoot a sea-bird
+from the deck of this ship. Your girl can live without the
+feathers, I presume, and what is more to the point, I <i>forbid</i>
+you to do it."</p>
+
+<p>The mate growled something in an undertone, and was
+turning away to his cabin, when Hayston sprang upon him
+like a panther, and seizing him by the throat, held him
+before him.</p>
+
+<p>"By &mdash;&mdash;! Jansen," he said, "don't tempt me too far.
+I told you as civilly as possible not to shoot the birds&mdash;yet
+you turn away and mutter mutinously before my men.
+Listen to me! though you are no seaman, and a thorough
+'soldier,' I treat you well for peace' sake. But once give
+me a sidelook, and as sure as God made me, I'll trice you
+up to the mainmast, and let a nigger flog you."</p>
+
+<p>He released his hold of the mate's throat after this warning.
+The cowed bully staggered off towards his cabin.
+After which the Captain's mood changed with customary
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+suddenness; he came aft, and began a game with Kitty and
+her brother&mdash;apparently having forgotten the very existence
+of Jansen.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The calm, bright weather still prevailed&mdash;the light air
+hardly filling our sails&mdash;the current doing all the work.
+When one afternoon, taking a look from aloft, I descried
+the loom of Kusaie or Strong's Island, on the farthest
+horizon.</p>
+
+<p>"Land ho!" The watch below, just turning out, take
+up the cry as it goes from mouth to mouth on deck. Some
+of them gaze longingly, making calculations as to the
+amount of liberty they are likely to get, as well as the
+work that lies before them.</p>
+
+<p>Early next morning we had drifted twenty miles nearer,
+whereupon the Captain decided to run round to the weather
+side of the island first, and interview the king, before going
+to <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'Utwe'">Utw&eacute;</ins>
+or South harbour, where we proposed to do the
+most of our trading.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, after breakfast, a serious disturbance arose
+between the Chinese carpenter and Bill Hicks, the fierce
+Fijian half-caste, who was second mate. The carpenter's
+provisional spouse was a handsome young woman from the
+Gilbert group, who rejoiced in the name of Ni-a-bon (Shades
+of Night). Of her, the carpenter, a tall, powerfully-built
+Chinaman, who had sailed for years with Hayston in the
+China Seas, was intensely jealous. So cunning, however,
+was she in evading suspicion, that though every one on
+board was aware of the state of affairs, her lawful protector
+suspected nothing.</p>
+
+<p>However, on this particular morning, Nellie, the Hope
+Island girl, being reproved by the second mate for throwing
+pine apple and banana peel into the ship's dingey, flew
+into a violent rage, and told the carpenter that the second
+mate was stealing Ni-a-bon&mdash;and, moreover, had persuaded
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+her to put something into his, the carpenter's, food, to make
+him "go mat&eacute;," <i>i.e.</i> sicken and die.</p>
+
+<p>Seizing an axe, the Chinaman sallied on deck, and commenced
+to exact satisfaction by aiming a blow at Ni-a-bon,
+who was playing cards with the other girls. The girl
+Mila averted the blow, and the whole pack fled shrieking
+to the Captain, who at once called upon Bill for explanation.</p>
+
+<p>He did not deny the impeachment, and offered to fight
+the carpenter for Ni-a-bon. The Captain decided this to be
+eminently right and proper; but thought the carpenter was
+hardly a match for the mate with fists. Bill promptly suggested
+knives. This seemed to choke off the carpenter, as,
+amid howls from the women, he stepped back into his
+cabin, only to reappear in the doorway with a rifle, and to
+send a bullet at the mate's head, which missed him.</p>
+
+<p>"At him, Billy," cried the Captain, "give him a good
+licking&mdash;but <i>don't hurt his arms</i>; there's a lot of work to
+be done to the bulwarks when we get the anchor down
+again."</p>
+
+<p>The second mate at once seized the carpenter, and dragging
+him out of his cabin, in a few minutes had so knocked
+his features about that he was hardly recognisable.</p>
+
+<p>Ni-a-bon was then called up before the Captain and questioned
+as to her preference, when, with many smiles and
+twisting about of her hands, she confessed to an ardent
+attachment to the herculean Bill.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain told Bill that he would have to pay the
+carpenter for damages, which he assessed at ten dollars, the
+amount being given, not for personal injury, but for the loss
+sustained by his annexation of the fascinating Ni-a-bon.</p>
+
+<p>At sunset we once more were off Chabral harbour, where
+we ran in and anchored&mdash;<i>within fifty yards</i> of the king's
+house.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<h2>MURDER AND SHIPWRECK</h2>
+
+
+<p>We found the island in a state of excitement. Two
+whaleships had arrived, bringing half a dozen white men,
+and who had a retinue of nearly a hundred natives from
+Ocean and Pleasant Islands. The white men had to leave
+Pleasant Island on account of a general engagement which
+had taken place; had fled to the ships for safety, taking
+with them their native wives, families, and adherents.</p>
+
+<p>The other men were from Ocean Island, a famine having
+set in from drought in that lovely isle. They had also
+taken passage with their native following, to seek a more
+temporarily favoured spot. The fertility of Kusaie (Strong's
+Island) had decided them to remain.</p>
+
+<p>Strange characters, in truth, were these same traders,
+now all quartered at Chabral harbour! They were not
+without means, and so far had conducted themselves decently.
+But their retinue of savage warriors had struck
+terror into the hearts of the milder natives of Kusaie.</p>
+
+<p>Let me draw from the life one of the patriarchs of the
+movement, on the occasion of his embarkation.</p>
+
+<p>Ocean Island, lat. 0&deg; 50&prime; south, long. 168&deg; east.</p>
+
+<p>A fantastic, lonely, forbidding-looking spot. Circular in
+form, with rounded summit, and a cruel upheaved coral
+coast, split up into ravines running deep into the land.
+Here and there, on ledges overlooking the sea, are perched
+tiny villages, inhabited by as fierce and intractable a race
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+of Malayo-Polynesians as ever lacerated each other's bodies
+with sharks'-tooth daggers, after the mad drunkenness produced
+by sour toddy.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Mister Robert Ridley, aged seventy, sitting on a case in
+his house, on the south-west point of Paanopa, as its people
+call Ocean Island, with a bottle of "square face" before
+him, from which he refreshes himself, without the intervention
+of a glass, is one of the few successful deserters
+from the convict army of New South Wales. At the present
+moment he is an ill-used man. For seven years he has
+been the boss white man of Paanopa, ever since he left
+the neighbouring Naura or Pleasant Island, after seeing
+his comrades fall in the ranks one by one, slain by bullet
+or the scarce less deadly drink demon. Now, solitary and
+saturnine, he has to bow to Fate and quit his equatorial
+cave of Adullam, because a mysterious Providence has
+afflicted his island with a drought.</p>
+
+<p>From out the open door he sees the <i>Josephine</i>, of New Bedford,
+Captain Jos Long, awaiting the four whaleboats now
+on the little beach below his house, which are engaged in
+conveying on board his household goods and chattels, his
+wives and his children, with <i>their</i> children, and a dusky
+retinue of blood-relations and retainers; for the drought
+had made food scarce. Blood had been shed over the
+ownership of certain cocoa-nut trees; and old Bob Ridley
+has decided to bid farewell to his island, and to make for
+Ponap&eacute; in the Carolines. So the old man sits alone and
+awaits a call from the last boat. Perhaps he feels unusual
+emotion stirring him, as the faint murmur of voices ascends
+from the beach. He would be alone for awhile to conjure
+up strange memories of the past, or because the gin bottle
+is but half emptied.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+"The <i>Josephine</i>, of New Bedford!" he mutters, as a
+grim smile passes over his bronzed, sin-wrinkled countenance;
+"why, <i>t'other one</i> was from New Bedford too. This
+one's larger&mdash;a six-boat ship&mdash;and carries a big afterguard.
+Still the job could be done agin. But&mdash;what's
+the good now! If Joe, the Portuguese, was here with me
+I'd say it <i>could</i> be done." Another gulp at the "square
+face." "Damn it! I'm an old fool. There's too many
+of these here cussed blubber-hunting Yankees about now.
+Say we took the ship, we'd never get away with her.
+Please God, I'll go to Ponap&eacute; and live like a d&mdash;d gentleman.
+There's some of the old crowd there now, and I
+a'n't so old yet."</p>
+
+<p>And here, maybe, the old renegade falls a thinking
+afresh of "the other one" from New Bedford, that made
+this very island on the evening of the 3rd of December
+1852.</p>
+
+<p>Out nearly two years, and working up from the Line
+Islands towards Honolulu, the skipper had tried to make
+Pleasant Island, to get a boat-load of pigs for his crew, but
+light winds and strong currents had drifted him away, till,
+at dawn, he saw the rounded summits of Ocean Island pencilled
+faintly against the horizon, and stood away for it.
+"We can get a few boat-loads of pigs and 'punkins' there,
+anyhow," he said to the mate.</p>
+
+<p>The mate had been there before, and didn't like going
+again. That was in 1850. Sixteen white men lived there
+then, ten of whom were runaway convicts from Sydney
+or Norfolk Island. He told his captain that they were
+part of a gang of twenty-seven who had at various times
+been landed from whalers at Pleasant Island in 1845.
+They had separated&mdash;some going away in the <i>Sallie</i>
+whaler, and others finding their way to Ocean Island.
+Now, the <i>Sallie was never heard of again</i>, the mate remarked.
+The captain of the <i>Inga</i> looked grave, but he had set his
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+heart upon the pigs and "punkins." So at dusk the brig
+hove to, close to the south-west point, and as no boats
+came off the skipper went ashore.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>There were nearly a thousand people on Ocean Island
+then, and he felt a trifle queer as the boat was rushed
+by the wild, long-haired crowd, and carried bodily on
+shore.</p>
+
+<p>Through the gathering darkness he saw the forms of
+white men trying to push their way through the yellow
+crowd of excited natives. Presently a voice called out,
+"Don't be scared, mister! Let the niggers have their way
+and carry up the boat."</p>
+
+<p>He let them have their way, and after being glared at by
+the red light of cocoa-nut torches borne by the women, he
+was conducted to one of three houses occupied by the six
+gentlemen who had arranged to leave the continent of
+Australia without beat of drum.</p>
+
+<p>Bob Ridley's house was the scene of rude and reckless
+revelry that night. A jar of the <i>Inga's</i> rum had been sent
+for, and seated around on the boxes that lined the side
+of the room the six convicts drank the raw spirit like milk,
+and plied the captain for news of the outer world two years
+old. Surrounding the house was a throng of eager, curious
+natives, no longer noisy, but strangely silent as their rolling,
+gleaming eyes gloated over the stone jar on the table.
+Presently a native, called "Jack" by his white fellow residents,
+comes to the door and makes a quick sign to Bob
+and a man named Brady, who rose and followed him into
+a shed used as a cook-house. Jack's story is soon told.
+He had been to the brig. She had thirty-two hands, but
+three men were sick. A strict watch was kept by the
+mate, not more than ten natives were allowed on board at
+once. In the port bow boats and the starboard quarter
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+boats hanging on the davits there were two sailors armed
+with muskets.</p>
+
+<p>Another of the white men now slunk into the cook-house
+where the three talked earnestly. Then Brady went back
+and told the captain that the brig was getting into the set
+of the outer currents, and would be out of sight of land by
+daylight unless he made sail and worked in close again.
+Upon which the captain shook hands all around, and was
+escorted to his boat, promising to be back at daylight and
+get his load of "punkins."</p>
+
+<p>Brady and two others went with the captain for company,
+and on the way out one of his new friends&mdash;a tall,
+ghastly creature, eternally twisting his long fingers and
+squirting tobacco juice from his evil-seeming mouth&mdash;told
+the captain that he "orter let his men take a run ashore to
+get some cocoa-nuts and have a skylark." When they got
+aboard the captain told the mate to take the sentries out of
+the boats, to make sail, and run in close out of the currents,
+as it was all right. The captain and the guests went below
+to open another jar, while the mate and cooper roused up the
+hands who were lying about yarning and smoking, and told
+them to make sail. In the house ashore Bob Ridley with
+his two companions and Jack were planning <i>how the job
+was to be done</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Two boats came ashore at daylight, and in addition to
+the crews there were ten or a dozen liberty men who had
+leave till noon to have a run about the island. The captain
+still bent on his "punkins," took a boat-steerer and
+two other hands to put the coveted vegetables into bags
+and carry them down to the boats. The pumpkins, Ridley
+said, grew on his own land quite close; the men could pick
+them off the vines, and the natives carry them down. So
+they set off up the hill until the pumpkin patch was
+reached. Here old Bob suddenly felt ill, and thought he
+would go back to take a swig at the rum jar and return, but
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+if the captain wanted a good view from the top of the
+island Jack would show him round. So leaving the men
+to bag the pumpkins, the skipper and Jack climbed the
+path winding through the cocoa-nuts to the top of the hill.
+The sun was hot already, and the captain thirsty. Jack,
+out of his hospitable heart, suggested a drink. There were
+plenty of cocoa-nuts around growing on short, stumpy
+trees, a couple of which he twisted off, and without husking
+one with his teeth, as is often done, cut a hole in the
+green husk and presented it to the skipper to drink from.
+The nut was a heavy one; taking it in both hands the
+doomed sailor raised it to his lips and threw back his head.
+That was his last sight of the summer sky that has smiled
+down on so many a deed of blood and rapine. For Jack
+at that moment lifted his right arm and drove the knife to
+the hilt through his heart.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>As Jack hurried back to be in good time for the "grand
+coup"&mdash;the cutting off of the brig&mdash;he saw that the boat-steerer
+and his two hands <i>had finished gathering the pumpkins</i>.
+Two bags were filled and tied, while beside them
+were the three bodies of the gatherers, each decently covered
+with a spreading cocoa-nut branch. The ten "liberty
+men" had been induced by a bevy of laughing island nymphs
+to accompany them along the ledge of the steep coast cliff
+to a place where, as Jack had told them, they would find
+plenty of nuts&mdash;a species of almond peculiar to Ocean and
+Pleasant Islands. Half-an-hour's walk took them out of
+sight and hearing of the <i>Inga</i>, and then the "liberty men"
+saw that the girls had somehow dropped behind, and were
+running with trembling feet into the maze of the undergrowth.
+The startled men found themselves in an amphitheatre
+of jagged rough coral boulders, covered over with
+a dense verdure of creepers, when suddenly Brady and fifty
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+other devils swept down upon them without a cry. It was
+soon over. Then the blood-stained mob hurried back to the
+little beach.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The mate of the <i>Inga</i> was a raw-boned Yankee from
+Martha's Vineyard. Fearless, and yet watchful, he had
+struck the tall renegade as "a chap as was agoin' to give
+them trouble if they didn't stiffen him fust in the cabin."
+It was then noon, and as eight bells struck the crew began
+to get dinner. The mate, before he went below, took a look
+at the shore and fancied he saw the boat shoving off with
+the captain.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," chimed in Wilkins, one of the guests, "that's him;
+he's got a boat-load, and all the canoes comin' off 's a lot of
+our own niggers bringin' off cocoa-nuts."</p>
+
+<p>"Then let's get dinner right away," answered the mate,
+who knew the captain would make sail as soon as ever he
+found his "punkins" safe aboard.</p>
+
+<p>Had he known that the captain was lying staring up at
+the sun on the hilltop among the dwarf palms, he might
+even then have made a fight of it, short of half the crew
+as he was.</p>
+
+<p>It was not to be.</p>
+
+<p>They went below&mdash;he and his guests, the third mate and
+the carpenter; the cooper was left in charge of the ship.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The boats and canoes came alongside at once, pulling
+hard. Suddenly the cooper heard a cry from a man in the
+waist of the ship that chilled his blood, while over the bulwarks
+swarmed the copper-skinned crowd, knife and club in
+hand. As he rushed to the companion, the tall renegade
+looked up and saw the time had come.</p>
+
+<p>Then began the butchery. The ship's officers rushed on
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+deck, leaving behind only the negro steward and a boy with
+the three convicts. Two shots were fired in the cabin, after
+which the three demons hurried up to join in the mel&eacute;e.
+In ten minutes there was not a man of the crew alive, except
+the cooper in the maintop, with a bloody whale-spade
+in his fast relaxing grasp. Brady and Bob were agreed "to
+give the old cove a chance to get eat up by the sharks," and
+ironically advised him to take a header and swim ashore.
+But the cooper, with his feet dangling over the futtocks
+and his head sunk on his chest, made no sign. He fell back
+as a streak of red ran slowly between the planking of the
+maintop and trickled down the mast to the deck.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was a disappointment when the white murderers gathered
+in the cabin to find so small a quantity of rum in the
+<i>Inga's</i> lazarette. But they were consoled by two bags of
+Mexican dollars&mdash;"Money for the punkins," grinned Brady,
+which would buy them twice as much as they wanted when
+next ship came along. And then as the principal business
+was over, the harmony began, and amidst rum and unholy
+jesting, a division of the effects in the cabins was made,
+while unto Jack and his myrmidons were abandoned all
+and sundry that could be found <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'for'rard'">for'ard</ins>.</p>
+
+<p>When the heavy-laden boats had been sent again and
+again to the shore, a fire was lighted in the cabin by the tall
+renegade, and the white men pushed off. But it suddenly
+occurred to Messrs. Ridley and Brady that "such a hell of a
+blaze might be seen by some other blubber-hunters a long
+way on a dark night," so the boat was put back and the brig
+hurriedly scuttled. And you can drop a lead line close to
+the edge of the reef anywhere about Ocean Island, and get
+no soundings at forty fathoms.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+Soon after we anchored an urgent message was sent to
+the Captain by King Tokusar and Queen S&ecirc;, imploring him
+to come ashore and advise them. The Captain had of late
+seemed averse to going anywhere without my company, and
+asked me to come with him. So, getting into the whaleboat,
+we were pulled on shore, landing at a massively-built
+stone wharf which formed part of the royal premises.</p>
+
+<p>I may here mention that the headquarters of the American
+Mission had been at Kusaie for many years. The people
+were all Christians, and to a certain degree educated.
+Their island took rank, therefore, as the most successful
+result of missionary enterprise in the North Pacific.</p>
+
+<p>A native college had been built, to which were brought
+from outlying islands those natives who were destined for
+the ministry. However, about a year previously the Board
+of Mission had changed their headquarters to Ebon, an
+island of the Marshall group, leaving but one native missionary
+on Kusaie in charge of the flock. His name was
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'Liliak Sa'">Likiak S&acirc;</ins>.
+There are coloured Chadbands as well as white
+ones; and for pure, unmitigated hypocrisy the European
+professor would have had but little show in a prize contest.</p>
+
+<p>The head of the American Mission, Mr. Morland, had
+built himself an exceedingly comfortable stone house in
+L&ecirc;l&eacute;. As he was away at present in the brig <i>Morning Star</i>,
+his residence was occupied by his fellow-worker,
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'Liliak Sa'">Likiak S&acirc;</ins>,
+his wife, and an exceedingly pretty girl named Kitty of
+Ebon, who acted as housekeeper to Mr. and Mrs. Morland
+when at home.</p>
+
+<p>The missionaries had tried hard to prevent the people of
+Kusaie from selling produce to the whaleships, alleging that
+their visits were fruitful of harm. The old king, however,
+whose power had declined sensibly since the arrival of the
+missionaries, withstood their orders; and finally insisted
+upon the privilege of permitting them to visit the island,
+and to purchase the pigs, poultry, and fruit from the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+islanders which would otherwise lie useless on their
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>This King Tokusar was a curious compound of shrewdness,
+generosity, cant, and immorality, each alternately
+gaining the upper hand.</p>
+
+<p>On entering the "palace," which was exceedingly well
+furnished, we found him seated in an armchair in his reception
+room. He was dressed in a black frock-coat and white
+duck trousers: the latter somewhat of a military cut, falling
+over patent leather shoes. On one side of the chair, lying
+on its broad arm, was a ponderous copy of the Scriptures in
+the Kusaie dialect. On the other arm was placed one of
+the long clay pipes known as churchwardens.</p>
+
+<p>Behind him, with her much bejewelled fingers clasping
+the back of her consort's chair, was Queen S&ecirc;, a pretty little
+woman, with a pleasant, animated expression of countenance.
+Further inside the apartment were the queen's
+female attendants, sitting in the ungraceful manner peculiar
+to the Pingelap and Kusaie women.</p>
+
+<p>The king looked worn and ill, as he croaked out, "How
+you do, Captain? I glad to see you again. I thank God
+he bin good to you&mdash;give you good voyage. How much
+oil you bin buy at Ponap&eacute;?"</p>
+
+<p>Shaking hands warmly with the king, Hayston introduced
+me in form, and then to Her Majesty, who smiled graciously,
+tossing back her wavy black hair, so as to show her massive
+gold ear-rings. Chairs were brought, when a truly amusing
+conversation took place.</p>
+
+<p><i>King.</i>&mdash;"Well, Captain! you d&mdash;d clever man. I want
+you give me advice. You see&mdash;all these men come to
+Kusaie. Well&mdash;me afraid, take my island altogether.
+What you think?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Captain.</i>&mdash;"Oh no, king! I'll see they do you no harm.
+I think some of them go away in the <i>Leonora</i>."</p>
+
+<p><i>King.</i>&mdash;(Much doubting) "Oh! thank you. I no want
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+too many white men here&mdash;no Christians like Kusaie men.
+No believe God, no Jesus Christ." (Then with sudden
+change of tone) "I say, Capt'n Hayston, one of you men
+no pay my people when you here last&mdash;no pay anybody."</p>
+
+<p><i>Captain.</i>&mdash;"Very bad man, king, how much he cheat
+people out of?"</p>
+
+<p><i>King.</i>&mdash;(With inquiring look at queen) "Oh! about three
+dollars."</p>
+
+<p><i>Captain.</i>&mdash;"I'll attend to it, king&mdash;I'll see it paid."</p>
+
+<p><i>King.</i>&mdash;"Thank you, Capt'n. What you say this young
+gentleman's name?"</p>
+
+<p><i>Captain.</i>&mdash;"His name is Hilary Telfer."</p>
+
+<p><i>King.</i>&mdash;"You like Strong's Island, young gentleman?
+Pretty girl, eh? Same as Captain?" Here he gave a wheezing
+laugh, and clapped his hands on the Captain's knees.</p>
+
+<p>I told him I thought the Strong Island girls very pretty.
+The queen communicated this to the attendants. After
+which I was the recipient of various nods and winks and
+wreathed smiles.</p>
+
+<p>An enormous roasted hog was then carried in by two of the
+king's cooks, after which a number of servitors appeared
+carrying taro, yams, and other vegetables&mdash;again yet more,
+bearing quantities of fish. We seated ourselves at a small
+table&mdash;the Captain opposite the king, while the lively little
+queen and I were <i>vis-a-vis</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Make up to her," whispered the Captain, "flatter her to
+the masthead if you wish to be in clover for the rest of your
+stay. Never mind old Tokusar."</p>
+
+<p>Acting on this hint I got on famously with her South Sea
+majesty, discovering in due course that she was a really
+clever little woman, as well as an outrageous flirt.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the boats came ashore again, and the steward
+was ushered in, carrying a large box.</p>
+
+<p>"King!" said the Captain, "I know you are sick, and
+need something to make you strong. Pray accept a small
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+present from my table." The present consisted of two
+bottles of brandy, with the same quantity of gin, and a
+dozen of beer.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! thank you, Capt'n&mdash;you really very kind. By
+George! I like you too much."</p>
+
+<p>The queen cast a reproachful glance at Hayston. I could
+see she did not appreciate the gift. Her lord soon had a
+bottle of brandy opened, out of which he poured himself an
+able seaman's dose. The Captain took a little, and I&mdash;for
+once in my life&mdash;shared a bottle of Tennant's bitter beer
+with a real queen.</p>
+
+<p>The king rose up, with a broad smile illumining his
+wrinkled face, and said, with his glass to his lips, "Capt'n,
+and Capt'n's friend, I glad to see you." Presently, however,
+with a scared face, he said something to his consort at
+which she seemed disconcerted, and then told us they had
+forgotten to say grace.</p>
+
+<p>This, in a solemn manner, Hayston requested me to do,
+and, as I was bending my head and muttering the half-forgotten
+formula, the king leaned over and whispered to
+him, "I say, Capt'n, how many labour boys you want take
+away in brig?"</p>
+
+<p>This made me collapse entirely, and I indulged in a
+hearty laugh. The Captain and the queen followed suit,
+and, at some distance, the king's cackling merriment.</p>
+
+<p>It certainly was a jolly dinner. The king was growing
+madder ever minute, alternately quoting Scripture and
+swearing atrociously. After which he told me that he
+liked to be good friends with Mr. Morland, and that he had
+given up all his bad habits. But, changing his mood again,
+he confided to me that he wished he was young again, and
+concluded by expressing a decided opinion as to the beauty
+of Kitty of Ebon, Mrs. Morland's housekeeper.</p>
+
+<p>The queen now rose from the table and asked me to
+smoke a cigar. She produced a work-box in which were
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+cigarettes and some Manila cheroots. Most graciously she
+lighted one for me.</p>
+
+<p>The king was now more than half-seas over. He laughed
+hilariously at the Captain's stories, and, with some double-barrelled
+oaths, announced his determination to return to
+the worship of the heathen gods and to increase the number
+of his wives.</p>
+
+<p>Queen S&ecirc; smiled, and blowing out the smoke from
+between her pouting red lips, said, "Hear the old fool
+talk!"</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>That night there was high revel on board the <i>Leonora</i>
+after we had taken our farewell of the king and queen.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston decided to take advantage of the land breeze,
+and so get away to South harbour at once, as we had business
+to do there. Chabral harbour was a difficult place to
+get out of, though easy enough to get into.</p>
+
+<p>The trade winds blow steadily here for seven months out
+of the twelve. Now, though the largest ship afloat may
+run in easily through the deep and narrow passage, there is
+not room enough to beat out against the north-east wind.
+Neither can she tow out, as there is always a heavy swell
+rolling in through the passage, wind or no wind. Kedging
+out is also simply impossible, owing to the extraordinary
+depth of water.</p>
+
+<p>In 1836, the <i>Falcon</i> of London, a whaleship, lay in Chabral
+harbour for 120 days. She had ventured in for wood and
+water. On making a fifth attempt to tow out with her five
+boats, she touched and went to pieces on the reef.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston, however, had run in, knowing that at this
+season of the year&mdash;from January to March&mdash;the winds
+were variable, a land breeze generally springing up at dusk.</p>
+
+<p>I stated that there was revelry on board the brig that
+night. The fact was that the Captain, in the presence of
+the king, queen, and myself, had made agreement with the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+refugee traders to take them to whatever island they preferred.
+The king was strongly averse to their retinue of
+excitable natives being domiciled among the peaceful Kusaie
+people. Inspired with courage by the presence of Hayston,
+he had told the traders that he wished them to vacate L&ecirc;l&eacute;.
+If they did arrange to leave in the <i>Leonora</i>, he told them
+that they could establish themselves at Utw&eacute; (South harbour),
+and there remain until they got away in a passing
+whaler or China-bound ship.</p>
+
+<p>After conferring with Hayston, most of the traders
+decided to take his offer of conveying them and their following
+to Ujilong (Providence Island), which was his own
+property, and there enter into engagement with him to
+make oil for five years. Two others agreed to proceed to
+the sparsely populated but beautiful Eniwetok (or Brown's
+group), where were vast quantities of cocoa-nuts, and only
+thirty natives. These two men had a following of thirty
+Ocean islanders, and were in high delight at the prospect
+of having an island to themselves and securing a fortune
+after a few years of oil-making.</p>
+
+<p>As the merry clink of the windlass pauls echoed amidst
+the verdurous glens and crags of the mountains that surround
+L&ecirc;l&eacute;, the traders, with their wives, families, and
+followers, pulled off in their whaleboats and came aboard.</p>
+
+<p>What a picture did the brig make as she spread her
+snowy canvas to the land-breeze! Laden with the perfume
+of a thousand flowers, cooled by its passage through the
+primeval forest, it swept us along towards the passage,
+upon the right steering through which so much depended.
+The traders had half a dozen whaleboats; these, with two
+belonging to the <i>Leonora</i>, were towing astern, with a native
+in each.</p>
+
+<p>The passage, as I have said before, was deep but narrow.
+As the traders gazed on either side and watched the immense
+green rollers dashing with resistless force past the brig's
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+side, they looked apprehensively at the Captain and then at
+their boats astern.</p>
+
+<p>Right in the centre an enormous billow came careering
+along at the speed of an express train. Though it had no
+"breaking curl" on its towering crest, I instinctively placed
+my hands in the starboard boat davits, expecting to see the
+vast volume of water sweep our decks. Some of the traders
+sprang into the main rigging just as the brig lifted to the
+sea, to plunge downward with a swift and graceful motion,
+never losing her way for a moment. No man of our crew
+took the least notice. They knew what the brig could do,
+they knew the Captain, and no more anticipated a disaster
+than a mutiny.</p>
+
+<p>We made open water safely. Then the Captain descended
+from the fore-yard, whence he had been conning the ship.
+"Well, gentlemen," he said, "here we are, all on board the
+<i>Leonora</i>! I hope you think well of her."</p>
+
+<p>The traders emphatically asserted that she was a wonder.
+Then, as we did not intend to enter Utw&eacute; harbour till the
+morning, we shortened sail. The brig was placed under
+her topsails only, and we glided slowly and smoothly down
+the coast. Still the reef surge was thundering on the starboard
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>The light of the native villages&mdash;for the sudden night
+of the tropics was upon us&mdash;glimmered through the groves
+of cocoa-nuts and bread-fruit trees that fringed the snowy
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'beeches'">beaches</ins>.
+A shadowy, dreamy landscape, blurred and indistinct
+at times, while ever and anon the back-borne spume
+of the breakers fell in rain-mist over all, as they reared
+and raved, only to dash themselves in mad turmoil on the
+javelins of jagged coral.</p>
+
+<p>It was a strange scene. Yet stranger still were the
+dramatis person&aelig;&mdash;the wild band of traders that clustered
+around the giant form of the Captain, as he lay smoking
+his cigar on the skylight, in friendly converse with all.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+Foremost in position and seniority comes old Harry
+Terry, a stalwart, grizzled veteran, brown-cheeked and
+bright-eyed still. Full of yarns of his cruise with Captain
+Waldegrave of H.M. <i>Seringapatan</i>, and Captain Thomas
+Thompson in the <i>Talbot</i> frigate, on the coast of South
+America. Clear and honest is his eye, yet he has a worn
+and saddened look, as from a sorrow, long past, half-forgotten,
+yet never to be wholly erased from memory's
+tablet. A deserter&mdash;of course. Yet had he a true Briton's
+love for the flag which he had once sailed and fought under.
+By his side stand four stalwart half-caste sons, hearkening
+with glistening eyes to the Captain's tales of lands they had
+never seen, scarcely heard of,&mdash;of polar bears, icebergs,
+dog sledges, Esquimaux, reindeer, far amid the solitudes of
+the frozen North.</p>
+
+<p>Close by old Harry sits a tall, red-bearded man, with a
+look of latent humour in his countenance, which proclaims
+his nationality even if the richness of his brogue were not
+in evidence. This is Pleasant Island Bill, a merry good-for-nothing,
+with a warm heart and unlimited capacity for
+whisky. In his belt he carries&mdash;perhaps from force of
+habit&mdash;a heavy navy revolver, before which many a fierce
+Pleasant islander has gone down in the bloody &eacute;meutes so
+common in that wild spot. Behind Bill is his wife Tiaro&mdash;a
+fair-skinned native of Taputanea (Drummond's Island).
+She is certainly the "savage woman" of the poet's fancy&mdash;handsome
+withal, as, with her hand on her husband's
+shoulder, she gazes admiringly at the herculean figure of
+the far-famed Rover of the South Seas, the dreaded Captain
+of the <i>Leonora</i>. Near to or behind Tiaro are the other
+traders' wives, with their wild-eyed, graceful children.</p>
+
+<p>Beside me, sitting upon a bundle of sleeping mats, is a
+bronzed and handsome young fellow, Charlie Wilder by
+name, a veritable Adonis of the South Seas. With clear-cut
+features and bright brown curling locks, contrasting
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+well with a dark, drooping moustache, he lolls languidly on
+the mats, gazing dreamily at times at the animated forms
+and faces around him. He was the ideal sea rover&mdash;much
+untrammelled by the canons of more civilised life. To
+each of his four young wives he appeared equally devoted.
+Though a <i>blas&eacute;</i>, exquisite in manner, he was a man who
+simply laughed at wounds and death. A dangerous antagonist,
+too, as some of his fellow-traders had good reason to
+know.</p>
+
+<p>There was yet another trader&mdash;a tall young American,
+who had run away at Pleasant Island from the whaleship
+<i>Seagull</i>&mdash;a difference of opinion with the captain having
+resulted in Seth's being put in irons.</p>
+
+<p>Besides Dick Mills the boat-steerer, who had deserted
+also from a whaler, there was another well-known trader,
+a true type of the old-time escaped convict. Burnt browner
+than a coffee berry is old Bob Ridley, scarred, weather-beaten,
+and, in accordance with the fashion of runaway
+sailors in the early days, tattooed like a Marquesas islander.
+Very "dour" and dangerous was this veteran&mdash;thinking
+no more of settling a difference with his ever-ready revolver
+than of filling his ancient clay pipe. He had with him
+two sons and three daughters, all married save the youngest
+girl. Sons and daughters alike had intermarried with
+natives, and the old man himself&mdash;his first wife being
+dead&mdash;had possessed himself of a girl of tender years but
+unyielding character. A native of Rapa-nui or Easter
+Island, she possessed in a high degree the personal beauty
+for which her race is famed throughout Polynesia. The
+old trader, it seems, had lately visited Tahiti, and there
+had dropped across the beautiful L&#257;lia, and rescued her
+from the streets of Papeite. When he returned to Pleasant
+Island she accompanied him. She was a clever damsel, and
+having once been an inmate of the military camp at Tahiti,
+gave herself great airs over her step-children, though she
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+was the junior of the youngest girl. Amongst other accomplishments
+L&#257;lia could swear fluently both in French and
+English, having besides a thorough command of whaleship
+oaths which, I may observe, are unique in their way, and
+never seen in print.</p>
+
+<p>Singing and dancing were kept up until the galley fire
+was lit and coffee served out. Then as the tropic sea-mist
+was dispelled by the first sun rays, we saw, at no great
+distance, the verdurous hills that enclose with emerald walls
+the harbour of Utw&eacute;. Far back, yet seeming but a cable's
+length from the brig, rose the rugged coast, two thousand
+feet in air, of Mount Crozier.</p>
+
+<p>The inner shore of the harbour, sheltered by the reef from
+the fury of the terrific rollers, is surrounded by a broad belt
+of darkest green mangroves and hibiscus, forming a dense
+barrier, monotonous in colouring, but blending harmoniously
+with sea and sky. A well-nigh impassable forest
+coloured the landscape from sea to mountain top. Only
+near the shore were groves of cocoa-palms waving their
+plumy banners to the soft trade breezes. Interspersed at
+intervals one descried plantations of bananas and sugar-cane,
+yams and taro. The humidity of the climate shows
+itself in the surpassing richness of the vegetation. Mountain
+torrents foam and "rivulets dance their wayward
+round" in many a sequestered glen. Cane thickets springing
+densely from the deep alluvial mould form a safe retreat
+for the wild boar, while the stately purple plumaged pigeons
+preen themselves in the green gloom of this paradisal wild.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain walked the quarter-deck, giving orders to
+make sail on the brig, glancing in a half amused, yet contemptuous
+manner at the recumbent figures of the traders
+who, overcome by their potations, lay slumbering on the deck.</p>
+
+<p>Utw&eacute; is but a small harbour, so that the Captain felt vexed
+when daylight broke and revealed four whalers lying at
+anchor in the little port, allowing us no room. But one of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+them had his canvas loosed, and we caught the strains of
+"Shenandoah" as the crew lifted the anchor. We backed
+our main-yard and lay to, while she sailed out. A fine sight
+it was, as the whaler stood out through the narrow passage!
+The huge rollers dashing swiftly past her weather-beaten
+sides, made her roll so heavily that the boats on the davits
+nearly touched the water with their keels. She came close
+under our stern. Her captain stood up in one of the boats
+and took off his hat.</p>
+
+<p>"How air you, Capt'n?" he drawled; "that's a beautiful
+brig of yours. I've heard a deal of the <i>Leonora</i> and Captain
+Hayston. I'm real sorry I hav'n't time to board you
+and have a chat. There's another blubber-hunter coming
+out after me, so you'd better wait awhile."</p>
+
+<p>Hayston answered him politely, and the <i>Marathon</i> soon
+ran round the lee side of the island. In a quarter of an
+hour she was followed by another ship, after which we filled
+again and ran in, anchoring between the mangroves and the
+<i>Europa</i> and <i>St. George</i>, New Bedford whaleships.</p>
+
+<p>Our first care was to land the cattle, and here the traders
+and whalers were treated to a lively scene. The mate
+Jansen, of whom I have before spoken, had been knocked
+off duty by the Captain, who told him that he was no seaman,
+and a cowardly dog besides, as he was always ready to
+ill treat the native crew, but would not stand up to him.</p>
+
+<p>An incident, in which I was an actor, goes to show the
+savage nature of the brute. One day, during our stay at
+Ponap&eacute;, I happened to require a pair of steelyards that lay
+in his cabin; on going for them he used insulting language,
+and dared me to enter. He was lying in his bunk, and his
+bloodshot eyes glared with rage as he took a pistol from
+under his pillow. Keeping one eye on the pistol I went in
+and took the steelyards. He leaped out, and a struggle
+began. We fell on the deck&mdash;his whole weight upon me&mdash;but
+I managed to get hold of the pistol, which I threw
+over<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>board.
+As he freed himself and rose, he gave me a savage
+kick on the knee which lamed me for a week. But I drew
+back and landed him a left-hander, which catching him fair
+in the face, sent him down senseless, while a stream of
+blood poured from his mouth and ears.</p>
+
+<p>"Malie! malie!" shouted Black Johnny in Samoan (the
+equivalent to "<i>habet</i>"), and the crew took up the cry in
+tones of deep approval.</p>
+
+<p>We never spoke again after this encounter.</p>
+
+<p>However, just before we made ready to land the cattle,
+he came aft and begged the Captain to reinstate him.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Jansen!" said Hayston, "I cannot permit you to
+resume duty as mate of this brig. I have given the position
+to Fiji Bill, as you are not fit for it. However, I will see
+how you behave for the future, and may give you another
+chance. Go on deck and assist to get these cattle into the
+water."</p>
+
+<p>The traders and whalers were watching the operation
+with great interest. The longboat, in charge of Fiji Billy,
+was ready to tow the cattle on shore as soon as they were
+lowered into the water. The first beast was swung safely
+out of the main hold and over the side, when the tackle
+parted aloft and the animal plunged into the sea, just missing
+the boat. For a moment there was silence. We all ran
+to the side, where we saw the bullock reappear and strike
+bravely out for the mangroves, which he reached in safety.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain walked slowly over to Jansen, who was
+engaged in bullying the boatswain.</p>
+
+<p>"Who rigged that tackle?" he asked in his most unruffled
+tones; but I could see the colour mounting to his
+forehead, as the laughter of the whaling crews fell upon
+his ear.</p>
+
+<p>"I did," growled Jansen (edging towards his cabin, in
+which he always kept loaded firearms), his sullen face
+showing fear and hatred combined.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+"Keep to the deck, sir," broke forth the Captain, who
+had foreseen this movement; the harsh, severe tones I
+knew foretold disaster. "D&mdash;n you, sir, you are neither
+good enough for an officer nor man before the mast. There
+is not a kanaka on board this brig but could have rigged
+that tackle in a seaman-like manner. Boy George, or even
+one of the girls, could have made a better fist of it. You
+have disgraced the brig in the presence of other ships. Go
+to your bunk till after breakfast."</p>
+
+<p>And now Jansen brought immediate punishment on himself.
+With one hand on the door of the deckhouse, he
+turned round and muttered, "Why didn't you let the
+women do it, then?"</p>
+
+<p>The next moment both men were struggling fiercely on
+the deck,&mdash;Jansen making frantic efforts to fire a pistol he
+had concealed in the bosom of his shirt; but the hand
+which held it was gripped by the Captain, and the muzzle
+pointed upwards.</p>
+
+<p>Jansen was an extremely powerful man, and, amid the
+babel of tongues that were let loose, I heard one trader
+say, "By &mdash;&mdash;! he's got the best of the Captain."</p>
+
+<p>But I noticed that while Jansen was almost spent, and
+was breathing stertorously, the Captain had not yet put
+forth the tremendous strength which, on sea or shore, I
+never saw equalled. He was still holding Jansen's hand
+with a vice-like grasp, when the pistol fell to the deck.
+Suddenly freeing himself, he stepped back and dealt two
+blows with wonderful quickness on the mate's face, cutting
+his forehead and cheek to the bone. The man staggered
+wildly&mdash;his features streaming with blood&mdash;then fell
+senseless against one of the crew, who darted aside and let
+him drop on the deck. A murmur of applause, mingled
+with cries of pity from the women, arose from the spectators,
+while the whaler crews rent the air with cheers for
+"Bully Hayston."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+The Captain drew forth his handkerchief, with which he
+removed a slight stain upon his face, then said in a mild
+and pleasant voice, as if nothing had occurred, "Steward!
+bring me a glass of water. Bill (to the Fijian) get these
+other beasts up and put them ashore. Antonio! get Jansen's
+traps together, and put them and him into the boat.
+The man that points a pistol at me on board of this brig
+only does it once. As I don't wish to hurt him again, I
+must get rid of him."</p>
+
+<p>The cattle were soon landed and eating their fill on the
+rich tract of littoral between Utw&eacute; and Coquille.</p>
+
+<p>That day I bought various articles of trade&mdash;including
+ten tons of yams for Arrecifos. The Captain never interfered
+with my dealings with the natives; so when
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'Liliak Sa'">Likiak S&acirc;</ins>
+the missionary went to him, and in a whining tone complained
+of my paying them in trade, he got the following
+answer: "Don't want your people to be paid in trade, don't
+you? Precisely so! you white chokered schemer&mdash;you
+whited sepulchre! you want to see these hard-working
+slaves of natives paid in cash, so that you and your brethren
+may rob the poor devils of every dollar for church
+tithes. The supercargo has my fullest confidence, and will
+not rob any native of a cent. Go and talk to him."</p>
+
+<p>The missionary came to the trade-room, where I was selling
+pigeon shot and powder to a man named Sree, and said
+that he wished the natives paid in cash. Every Strong's
+islander can speak English. So I turned to those present
+and asked if I had suggested their taking trade instead of
+dollars. On receiving this answer in the negative I told
+him to clear out. He disregarded me, upon which I assisted
+him to leave the cabin, while L&#257;lia and Kitty covered him
+with flour from the pantry.</p>
+
+<p>This provided me with a persistent and bitter enemy.</p>
+
+<p>About six o'clock the Captain went below, but rather
+hastily returned, casting an anxious look to seaward. "The
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+glass is falling fast," he said, "I can't make it out. I have
+never known it to blow hard here at this time of year.
+Still it is banking up to the westward."</p>
+
+<p>He hailed the whaleships, and saw that they had also
+noticed the glass falling. In a few minutes the two captains
+boarded us to have a consultation. The heavy, lowering
+cloud to seaward had deepened in gloom, and the three
+captains gazed anxiously at it.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen!" said Hayston, "we are in a bad place if
+it comes on to blow. The land-breeze has died away, and
+that it is going to blow from the sou'-west I am convinced.
+We cannot tow out in the face of such a swell, even if
+we had daylight to try it. To beat out by night would be
+madness."</p>
+
+<p>The faces of the Yankee skippers lengthened visibly as
+they begged Hayston to make a suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said at length, "your ships may ride out a
+blow, for you've room to swing in, and if you send down
+your light spars and be quick about it, and your cables
+don't part, you'll see daylight. But with me it is different.
+I cannot give the brig a fathom more cable; there
+are coral boulders all around us, and the first one she
+touches will knock a hole in her bottom. But now every
+man must look to himself. I have two hundred people on
+board, and my decks are lumbered up with them. Adios!
+gentlemen, go on board and get your spars down for God's
+sake."</p>
+
+<p>Then the Captain turned all his attention to getting the
+brig ready for the storm that was even then close upon us.
+In the shortest time our royal and topgallant yards were
+down, the decks cleared of lumber, the native passengers
+sent below, and five fathoms of cable hove in. Hayston
+knew the brig would swing round with her head to the passage
+as soon as the gale struck her, and unless he hove in
+cable, must strike on one of the boulders he had spoken of.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+As yet there was not a breath of air, for after the last
+whisper of the land-breeze had died away, the atmosphere
+became surcharged with electricity, and the rollers commenced
+to sound a ceaseless thunder, as they dashed themselves
+upon the reef, such as I had never heard before. A
+pall of darkness settled over us, and though the whaleships
+were so near that the voices of their crews sounded
+strange and ghostlike in our ears, we could see nothing
+except the dull glow of the lamps alight in the cabins&mdash;showing
+through the ports.</p>
+
+<p>Then we heard the voice of Captain Grant of the <i>St.
+George</i>, "Stand by, Captain Hayston, it's coming along as
+solid as a wall."</p>
+
+<p>A fierce gust whistled through the cordage, and then a
+great white cloud of rain, salt spume, and spray enveloped
+the brig, as with a shrill, humming drone, like a thousand
+bagpipes in full blast, the full force of the gale struck us.
+The brig heeled over, then swung quickly round to her
+anchor, while the crew, every man at his station, sought
+through the inky blackness that followed the rain squall to
+see how the whaleships fared.</p>
+
+<p>But now the darkness deepened, if such were possible.
+No star shone through the funereal gloom; while the enormous
+rollers, impelled by the increasing force of the wind,
+swept in quickest succession through the narrow passage.
+The three ships rolled heavily.</p>
+
+<p>"Harry!" called out the Captain to the oldest trader,
+"take your boats and land as many of the people as you
+can. The sea is getting up fast&mdash;in half-an-hour it will
+be breaking aboard the brig."</p>
+
+<p>The traders' boats were made fast to the ship's stern,
+except two on deck.</p>
+
+<p>These were now hauled alongside, and old Harry, with
+his four stalwart sons&mdash;splendid fellows they were physically&mdash;manned
+one, and taking about fifty of their
+follow<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>ers,
+who sprang over the side and were hauled into the boat,
+the sons gave a wild shout and disappeared into the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>The other boat was equally lucky in not being stove in.
+Pleasant Island Bill was in charge, and in a lull of the
+wind I heard him call out to those on deck to throw the
+women overboard and he would pick them up.</p>
+
+<p>Five or six of them leaped overboard and, swimming like
+otters, gained the boat; many others naturally held back.
+Standing on the deck clinging to the Captain's knees were
+the two children, Toby and Kitty. Seizing Kitty in his
+arms the Captain tossed her into the black waters close to
+the boat, where one of the crew caught her by the hair and
+pulled her in. Toby gave a yell of alarm and tried to dart
+below, but I caught him and slung him over after Kitty.
+Bill nearly missed catching him as he rose to the surface,
+but he was taken in. Then the boat headed for the shore,
+now only discernible by the white line of foam breaking;
+into the mangroves.</p>
+
+<p>And now our troubles recommenced. The waters of the
+harbour, generally placid as a mill-pond, were now running
+mountains high, so quickly had the sea got up. The Captain,
+who was standing at the stern sounding, and apparently
+as cool as if he were trout fishing, beckoned me to
+him, and placing his mouth to my ear, shouted&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Four fathoms under our stern&mdash;little enough if the sea
+gets worse. But if the wind hauls another point we'll
+touch that big coral mushroom on the port quarter, and then
+it's good-bye to the <i>Leonora</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>The words had hardly left his lips when a strange and
+awful lull of the wind occurred, rendering more intense the
+enshrouding darkness, more dread and distinct the seething
+wash and roar of the seas that broke on the weather
+reef.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain sprang into the main rigging and held up
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+his hand to feel if the wind was coming from a new quarter.
+For some minutes the brig rolled so madly that it was
+all he could do to hold on.</p>
+
+<p>Then his strong, fearless voice sounded out: "Men!
+who will man a boat to take a line to the <i>Europa</i>? If I
+can get a hawser to the whaler to keep the brig's stern from
+this boulder under our port quarter, it may save the ship.
+If not, we must strike. There's a lull now, and a boat
+could get away."</p>
+
+<p>After a momentary hesitation, Antonio the Portuguese,
+Johnny Tilton, and two natives volunteered.</p>
+
+<p>"Good lads!" cried the Captain; "stand by, men, to
+lower away the whaleboat." In a few minutes she was in
+the water, and a whale-line made fast to a stout hawser
+was coiled away in the bow, as with an encouraging cheer
+from those on deck, the men gave way, and passing under
+our stern made for the <i>Europa</i>.</p>
+
+<p>After twenty minutes of anxiety, for we could see nothing,
+nor tell whether the boat had reached the <i>Europa</i>
+safely or been stove in alongside, we saw her dart past the
+stern again, and Antonio called out, "All right, Captain,
+heave away on the hawser, the end's fast to the <i>Europa</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Well done, lads!" cried the Captain; "but stay where
+you are, and I'll get some more women on shore."</p>
+
+<p>The strange lull still continued, but a lurid glare showed
+me the glass still falling steadily; when I told the Captain
+this he sighed, for he knew that our best chance of safety
+was gone. But he was a man of action.</p>
+
+<p>"Go below, Hilary!" he said quietly, "and get all the
+papers, letters, and articles of value together&mdash;I'll send
+them on shore with the women."</p>
+
+<p>In the cabin were eight or ten women; they gazed at me
+with terror-stricken faces. "On deck, Mary!" I said.
+"On deck all of you! there's a boat alongside, and some of
+you can get ashore."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+Five of them, with old Mary, at once left the cabin, and
+I heard their wild cries and screams of alarm as they were
+seized by the Captain and crew, and thrown overboard to
+be picked up by the boat.</p>
+
+<p>L&#257;lia and the others remained in the cabin, clinging to
+each other and sobbing with fear.</p>
+
+<p>I picked up a heavy trade chest, and laying mats and
+rugs along the bottom and sides, stowed into it the chronometers,
+a couple of sextants, charts, and what gold and
+silver coin was in the Captain's secretary; also as many
+Winchester carbines and cartridges as it would hold.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, girls! help me carry this on deck," I said in
+Samoan to L&#257;lia, who understood the language. We
+dragged the heavy box on deck, and, by wonderful good
+luck, it was lowered into the boat, which was now under
+the ship's quarter, and in imminent danger of being
+stove in.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain desired me to go ashore in the longboat and
+take charge of the boat. I was just about to jump when
+the brig gave a fearful plunge, and before she could recover,
+a heavy roller crashed over the waist and nearly
+smothered me. By clinging to the iron boat davits near
+me, I managed to save myself from being carried overboard
+with the debris of spars and timber that swept aft.
+When I regained my breath I could see nothing of the boat.
+She had, however, been swept ashore, and all in her landed
+safely except Bill, who was knocked overboard, but washed
+up into the mangroves.</p>
+
+<p>I felt the Captain's hand on my shoulder, as he asked
+me if I thought the boat had gone under.</p>
+
+<p>"I think not, or we should have heard some of them
+calling out; they can all swim."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, perhaps so," he replied, "but I fear not. I
+don't care a cent about the loss of the dollars, but Bill is a
+good fellow."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+L&#257;lia had clung to the davits with me when the sea
+struck us, and was now almost exhausted. So with the
+Captain's help I carried her below into the now deserted
+cabin, for the other women were gone; had, I supposed,
+been washed overboard, for they were standing with us
+when we lowered the chest.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain then hastened on deck, telling me that the
+wind was coming away from the south. He had scarcely
+left me when I heard the dismal drone of the gale again,
+and his voice shouting to the carpenter to stand by and cut
+away the masts, for the seas were now breaking clean over
+the bows, and sweeping along the decks with resistless force.</p>
+
+<p>Being almost hove short, the ship could not rise quickly
+enough to the seas, and was besides rolling so much that she
+threatened to turn turtle every minute. It was impossible
+for any one to cross the deck, so madly was the brig rolling,
+and so fiercely were the seas sweeping her decks in
+quick succession; and so for a while all hands waited till a
+better chance offered to cut away.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time I had dragged out another trade chest,
+and first securing my own papers and placing them in the
+bottom, I filled it with such articles as I thought would
+prove valuable if we did not save the ship.</p>
+
+<p>L&#257;lia rendered me great assistance now. I filled a wineglass
+of brandy from the decanter, and made her drink it,
+for her teeth were chattering, and her lips blue with cold
+and terror combined.</p>
+
+<p>Together we managed to get the chest half-way up the
+companion, when another plunge made me slip, and the
+heavy box jammed the girl's feet against the side of
+the companion lining. I called loudly for help, as I could
+not extricate her from under the box. Fortunately, four
+native seamen heard me, and lifted the chest off her legs.</p>
+
+<p>Then I heard the Captain's voice calling out, "Well
+done, boys! Rotumah men, brave fellows, in a boat!"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+Carrying the girl below again, I dropped her in the steward's
+cabin, told her to stay there till I came back, and ran
+on deck.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain met me, and, pointing to a dark, indistinct
+mass, rising and falling near the ship's stern, said, "There's
+real grit for you!"</p>
+
+<p>It was one of the trader's whaleboats, manned by four
+Rotumah men and a native of Danger Island. Two of
+these brave fellows had been washed ashore in the second
+sea that had struck us, and with three others, who had
+reached the mangroves in another boat, had put out again
+to return to the brig and save their shipmates.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain now called out to those who were left on
+board, and told them that there was a chance of some of
+them getting ashore, by jumping over as the boat approached
+and getting into her. As for himself, if three or four good
+men would stand by him, he would attempt to cut away the
+masts, and perhaps save the ship as the hawser was made
+fast to the <i>Europa</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It was a new one, and might not part; but if it did,
+nothing could help the brig from sticking on the detached
+coral boulders that lay so close under the stern.</p>
+
+<p>Seizing her child in her arms, a powerfully-built Ocean
+Island woman sprang into the seething foam-caldron, and
+disregarding our cries to make for the boat, struck out for
+the nearest point of the mangroves. Next morning the
+child was found unharmed on a small beach, more than a
+mile away, and the body of the mother lying dead beside
+her, with a fearful gash on her temple and one foot missing,&mdash;the
+poor babe gazing at the cold face, and wondering
+why she did not wake when she called to her. Then others
+followed the women, some getting into the boat, and others
+letting the sea take them in the direction of the shore.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is the second mate?" shouted the Captain to the
+coxswain of the rescuing boat.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+"On shore with the traders, sir; all the boats but one
+are stove in on the beach, and he can't get out again."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, lads, don't attempt to come out again; but
+wait a minute." Then turning to me, "You must go
+ashore now in this boat. She has not many in her; and if
+her head is kept right into the break between the mountains
+she'll run up into the mangroves."</p>
+
+<p>But I said I would take my chance with the ship. I was
+a good swimmer, and in that time of danger, even despair,
+I could not leave the Captain.</p>
+
+<p>He pressed my hand silently, then called out, "All right,
+men, give way, the supercargo stays with me and the ship";
+one dash of the oars, a wailing cry, a shout which out-toned
+it, and the boat disappeared, as if swallowed up by
+the darkness or the deep.</p>
+
+<p>We were not clustered together aft. Those of the crew
+that had stood by the ship were hanging on to the main
+rigging. The Captain, who had hitherto intended cutting
+away both masts at once, told me he fancied the ship was
+straining and plunging less, and that he would only cut
+away as a last resource.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly he bent his glance at the hawser that was made
+fast to the <i>Europa</i>, and then pointed over to the seething
+water under our stern. I saw we were almost over a huge
+coral boulder, which every now and then showed itself bare.</p>
+
+<p>"By &mdash;&mdash;! those fellows on board the <i>Europa</i> are paying
+out the hawser. We were fifty feet from that rock when
+the hawser was made fast and had a strain on it, and now
+it's right under her stern. Can any of you see the whaler's
+cabin lights?"</p>
+
+<p>The men looked through the blinding mists of spray that
+flew in our faces, and stung like whip-lashes when the brig
+was lifted high on a towering sea. The hawser tightened
+like an iron bar, but suddenly fell as if it had parted or
+been cast off.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+"The cursed dogs!" said the Captain, opening and shutting
+his hands spasmodically, "they are paying out, and
+letting us go to the devil!"</p>
+
+<p>And now a tremendous sea swept along and broke just as
+it reached abreast the mainmast. We felt the brig strike.
+Sea after sea tumbled in over the bulwarks, and a solid
+sheet of water broke over us in the main rigging, sweeping
+three or four men overboard.</p>
+
+<p>When I cleared my throat of the water I had swallowed,
+I saw the Captain with a rifle in his hand, and then followed
+the flash as he fired in the direction of the <i>Europa</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," I cried, "what good will that do? She may
+be ashore herself in as bad a fix as we are."</p>
+
+<p>He pushed me aside as I placed my hand on his arm.
+"Stand clear, Hilary! I tell you these cowardly hounds
+are deliberately wrecking me. That ship is in a safe place,
+and could ride out a heavier gale than this."</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," I began, when another sea lifted the brig's
+bow high in the air; then, with a dull crash, we struck
+stern on, and I saw the hawser had either parted or been
+cut away. The rudder had been torn from the stern-post,
+and ripped its way through the timbers with a fearful tearing
+sound. Again the Captain's face showed itself to me
+almost as white as the hell of boiling foam around us.</p>
+
+<p>"My ship is dearer to me than my life!" he said, as he
+cast the rifle from him and stood gazing out into the howling
+storm, amid which all the voices of earth and air seemed
+to be contending.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, with a pang of pity, I remembered that L&#257;lia
+was in the steward's cabin. I dashed down below. Already
+the water was running into the hold, and as I gained
+the cabin the ship once more struck violently under my
+feet.</p>
+
+<p>"L&#257;lia! L&#257;lia!" I called, "come with me. Can you
+walk?"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+The girl was sitting up in the bunk, her hair unloosed,
+her eyes dilated with terror, as she gazed into the dimly-lighted
+cabin, and saw the water washing around it.</p>
+
+<p>She could hardly stand with the pain in her bruised feet,
+but I lifted her out. Then she tore off her dress, stripped
+to the waist, and, hand in hand, we succeeded in gaining
+the companion-way just as a torrent of water filled the
+cabin and put out the lamps.</p>
+
+<p>I felt the Captain's hand grasp me round the waist as we
+stumbled out on deck, and heard him say, "Hold on to me,
+Hilary! hold on like grim death, my girl!" as we were
+swept along by a sea against the bulwarks on the starboard
+side.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the men had clung to a boat that we carried on
+top of the deck-house, which had been washed over the
+side. They had no oars, but the backwater from the reef
+dashed her up against the ship, and I have an indistinct
+remembrance of the Captain dragging us along with him,
+and attempting to lift the girl up, when a towering wave
+struck us right amidships and drove us all over together
+on top of the boat, which was already stove in.</p>
+
+<p>I should have gone under then but for L&#257;lia, for I had
+got a blow on the side from a piece of wreckage. Anyhow,
+what followed I cannot remember, for when I came
+to my senses it was daylight, and I was lying under some
+cocoa-nut trees with L&#257;lia, and one of Harry Skilling's
+native retainers named Karta, bathing my back with fresh
+water.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>My first inquiry was for the Captain, and I was relieved
+to hear from L&#257;lia that he was visible at that moment,
+directing the crew to save wreckage from the brig. The
+two whaleships had ridden out the gale in safety, and the
+<i>Europa</i> was already under weigh. I thought it just as well
+it was so, for Hayston would, I am sure, have attempted
+to seize her.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+L&#257;lia told me that we clung to the boat till she struck a
+coral rock and went to pieces. Then every one was separated.
+She had been seized by Karta, and, still keeping
+hold of me, the three of us had come ashore together. She
+said also that my back was badly cut with the coral. The
+poor girl had a terrible gash on her arm, and this she had
+neglected to attend to me. I had a deep wound on my face,
+which caused me great pain, as a piece of tough coral had
+broken off in it.</p>
+
+<p>L&#257;lia was almost nude, and I had only the remnants of
+a pair of duck trousers. We did not feel cold, however, as
+the storm had ceased, and the sun was now shining brightly.
+The wind had gone down, and the harbour was nearly as
+smooth as a mountain lake. The only visible sign of the
+disaster of the night was the maintopmast of the <i>Leonora</i>,
+showing where she had gone down.</p>
+
+<p>From the bank of mangroves on which we were located
+there was no access to the village of Utw&eacute;, where the rest
+of the ship's company were. Deep channels separated the
+two portions of the harbour. Karta was about to swim
+over to tell the Captain where I was, when L&#257;lia caught
+him by the arm and pointed to the water. I have read a
+good many tall yarns about sharks, but never till now
+could I believe in their being as numerous as a shoal of
+minnows.</p>
+
+<p>The channels were simply alive with the brutes dashing
+to and fro, lashing the water into foam, and contesting
+with each other for dark objects floating near the surface.
+I shuddered instinctively, but L&#257;lia laughed, and explained
+that the dead bodies were those of pigs washed overboard
+from the brig.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the tall figure of Karta attracted the notice of
+some of the people on the other side, and L&#257;lia said the
+"ariki vaka" was coming over to us in one of the traders'
+whaleboats.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+The Captain sprang out of the boat, and seeing me lying
+down with my head in the girl's lap thought I was dead.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear boy," he said, taking both my hands and pressing
+them, "are you badly hurt?"</p>
+
+<p>I showed him my back, and said I felt most pain in my
+side, and whereupon I suffered ten excruciating pains in
+one as he extracted the piece of flat coral from my face.
+He then called one of the boat's crew, and told him to take
+off his shirt, one sleeve of which he tore off and bound up
+L&#257;lia's arm. He then gave her the mutilated garment to
+cover her bare body, saying in his old cheerful manner that
+her husband was all right, and was out searching the
+beaches for her. She made a gesture of indifference, and
+then fainted away. As soon as she revived she was lifted
+into the boat, and we pushed off for the village.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain kept pressing my hand all the way over, and
+told me that since daylight he had been looking among the
+wreckage coming ashore and searching the beach for me,
+when some one saw our three figures in the cocoa-nut grove,
+and said two were white. Hayston knew this must be
+L&#257;lia and myself, as she had a very fair skin. He was
+sincerely pleased at my escape, and no words need express
+my relief at his safety.</p>
+
+<p>He took us forthwith to one of the villagers' houses, and
+told the people to attend to us, and see that we wanted for
+nothing. He further insisted that I should not attempt to
+render him any assistance until I was perfectly recovered.
+I could only nod acquiescence, as my side was paining me
+terribly.</p>
+
+<p>A warm grasp of my hand and a kind look to L&#257;lia and
+he was gone.</p>
+
+<p>One of the Kusaie women in the house told us that a
+message had gone up to the king, and that a native doctor
+named Srulik would soon come down and cure my back with
+leaves in the island fashion. She also informed L&#257;lia that
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+her husband had gone away in a canoe to look for her
+body, with two natives, but that he had come across a case
+of gin, and was now dead drunk on the opposite side of
+Utw&eacute;. It is hardly to be expected that a young girl could
+feel love for a man of her husband's years; but tears of
+humiliation coursed down her cheeks when the woman
+added that he had already asked an Ocean Island girl to be
+wife to him.</p>
+
+<p>About four o'clock in the afternoon messengers arrived
+from L&ecirc;l&eacute; with a message of regret from the king to Captain
+Hayston, and an invitation for me to Chabral harbour,
+so that I could get better quickly; and he could send his
+own boat for me. But I did not want to be separated from
+the Captain, and said I would come and visit him when I
+got permission.</p>
+
+<p>Queen S&ecirc; sent me a large basket of cooked pigeons and
+fruit. Taking out a few for myself and L&#257;lia, I sent the
+rest to the Captain, who was glad of them for his weary
+and hungry men.</p>
+
+<p>For the next few days I suffered fearfully with the pain
+in my side, and though the Captain visited me twice a day,
+and tried all he could to cheer me up, I fell into a hopeless
+state of despondency. All the time L&#257;lia had remained in
+the house, her husband, not having finished the case of
+gin, never coming near her. Her stepsons and daughters
+disliked her, and therefore avoided the house where we
+were staying.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain told me that her arm was cut to the bone,
+and that the trade chest that had fallen against her had injured
+one foot badly. Never as long as I live shall I forget
+the unwearied attention and kindness which the poor girl
+showed me during our stay in the village. Though lame,
+and with only the use of one arm, she never left my side,
+and strove by every means in her power to allay the agony
+I endured&mdash;answering to my petulance and irritability
+only with smiles and kind words.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+The Captain told me that he had saved a good many articles
+from the wreck; that the big trade chest had come
+ashore, and that the money and firearms were in a safe
+place. A quantity of liquor had also been saved, and
+already some fierce fights had taken place, but the traders
+had in most instances behaved well, and assisted him to
+maintain order. He told me also that L&#257;lia's husband had
+taken away a lot of liquor into the impassable forest that
+lines the north side of Utw&eacute;, and, with two of his sons and
+several women, was having a big carouse.</p>
+
+<p>"The virtuous and Christian Strong's islanders had," he
+said, "stolen about a thousand dollars' worth of trade that
+had been washed ashore. But," he added quietly, "I'll
+talk to them like a father as soon as I get a house built,
+and knock the devil out of those Pleasant islanders besides.
+They seem disposed to cut all our throats."</p>
+
+<p>A couple of days after this, Hayston came to me with a
+letter from L&#257;lia's husband, which he handed to me. I
+don't know whether amusement or indignation predominated
+as I read it, written as it was on a piece of account
+paper.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ <span class="smcap">Strong's Island</span>, <i>March 11th</i>.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+ Supercargo <i>Leonora</i> Brig.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Friend.</span>&mdash;I heer my wife have took up with you, and say
+she do'ent want anny mo-ar truck with her lawful husban. Captin
+Hayston say No, but she must be cotton strong to you, not to come
+to me when I look for her neerly one week amung two thousan sharks,
+as I can prove, but I bare you no ill-wil, for I got anuther wife, but
+you must give me the three rings she ware, and I warn you I'm not
+responsble.&mdash;I remane, your true and sincere friend.</p>
+
+<p><i>P.S.</i>&mdash;Lal can read as well as me, and you can let her read this.
+She is a good girl, and I bear no ill-wil.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>The Captain laughed when I read out this precious document,
+and told me not to take matters so seriously. He
+then sat down and chatted for half-an-hour, saying that
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+as soon as he had finished saving the wreckage, he had
+called the traders together, and laid certain proposals before
+them to which they had agreed.</p>
+
+<p>These were that the traders and their followers would
+consider themselves under his direction, in which case he
+would engage to provide food for them during their stay
+on the island. They were not to have any commercial
+dealings with the people of Strong's Island, and their
+natives were to assist the crew of the <i>Leonora</i> in erecting
+houses for their joint accommodation. After which he
+would endeavour to charter a vessel, probably a passing
+whaleship, to take the whole lot of us to Providence Island.
+Should no vessel call in six months' time, he would take a
+boat's crew and make for Mill&eacute; Lagoon, six hundred miles
+distant. If the ketch I had brought down from Samoa was
+still afloat, he would bring her back, and take the people in
+detachments to Providence Island. He feared, however,
+that no more whalers would be calling in for ten months,
+as the <i>St. George</i> and <i>Europa</i> were the last of the fleet
+which was making, vi&acirc; Japan, for the Siberian coast,
+"right whaling."</p>
+
+<p>He left us then, saying he had established a little republic
+on the narrow strip of land that lay on the sea-side of
+Utw&eacute; village.</p>
+
+<p>Then I gave L&#257;lia the letter I had received from her
+reprobate husband. She read it in silence and returned it
+to me, but I could see that the heartless old scoundrel's
+words had wounded her deeply. She took off some rings
+from her fingers, and sent them to the Captain to hand to
+the old man. "Do you think," she said, "that I can ever
+get back to Rapa-nui?" (Easter Island.)</p>
+
+<p>Her father, she went on to say, was dead, and her mother
+had been among those unfortunate people who in 1866 were
+seized by three Peruvian slavers and taken to work the
+guano deposits on the Chincha Islands. She, when about
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+fourteen, had married one of the captains of one of the
+ships owned by the great firm of Brander of Tahiti. The
+tales she told me of his brutality and ill-usage during his
+drunken fits of passion moved me to sincere pity. The
+unmitigated rascal deliberately sold his child wife to an
+American (or a man who called himself one), and by him
+she was taken to San Francisco and delivered into yet more
+hopeless slavery. Here she made the acquaintance of a
+Tahitian half-caste. She and this girl succeeded in escaping
+and paying their passages to Tahiti, where they landed
+penniless and starving.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>From Tahiti she was taken by her present husband.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<h2>A KING AND QUEEN</h2>
+
+
+<p>On the next day I walked to the new village in course of
+formation, when I received from whites and natives alike
+a most flattering reception. Outside of the sandy spit a
+solid sea-wall of coral had been built, the ground had been
+levelled, and an enormous dwelling-house erected. This
+was the work of the Ocean and Pleasant islanders. It was
+the Captain's house, and from a hole in the gable floated
+the starry banner of the great Republic. This flag had
+been the joint work of Nellie and Mila. It was composed
+of strips of white calico, navy blue and Turkey red. At
+the further end of the sea-wall stood the traders' houses;
+opposite the captains' were those of their people. Every
+one seemed busy, and the greatest animation pervaded the
+scene, while a number of Strong's islanders, squatted down
+in front of the big house, surveyed the operations with dismay.
+They dreaded, and with good reason, the fierce and
+intractable natives of Pleasant Island, who would have
+been only too pleased to have cut their throats and taken
+possession of their beautiful home altogether.</p>
+
+<p>I was received by the Captain at the door of his house,
+and although the girls had frequently been to visit me,
+and bring fruit and fish from the Captain when I was sick,
+I was made as much of as if I had been dead and buried
+and come to life again. The Captain's merry blue eyes
+looked searchingly into mine, as I seated myself in an easy
+chair, "You see what it is to be <i>l'ami du maison</i>."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
+I acknowledged the compliment, and then turned to shake
+hands with little Toby, who with a number of other children
+were being entertained by a sort of pig and yam tea-party
+by the Captain, each youngster having in his hand a
+junk of yam and piece of pork.</p>
+
+<p>Those of the crew who were in the vicinity now came in,
+and I had quite a levee. Black Johnny nearly wrung my
+hand off. I was glad to see the Captain looking so bright,
+and evidently on such good terms with those around him.
+I could not but be struck with the way in which the traders,
+resolute and determined men themselves, deferred to his
+slightest wish.</p>
+
+<p>For a few minutes he walked up and down the long matted
+floor, apparently lost in thought, while I sat and talked
+with the light-hearted, merry creatures around me. Suddenly
+stopping, he came up, and placed his hand on my
+shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>"Hilary! I like this island so well, that as Henry the
+Fifth said in France, when the French queen asked him
+how he liked her country: I mean to keep it."</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," I said, startled and alarmed, "are you serious?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes and no! If I cannot get a ship to take us to Providence
+Island within six months I will upset the missionaries'
+apple-cart and take possession of the island. If a
+ship does call here, and I can charter her, I am bound in
+honour to fulfil my promise to these traders."</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," I said, "there are two hundred and fifty men
+on Strong's Island; surely you would not dispossess them?
+Besides, they will fight."</p>
+
+<p>"So much the better," he said, with a smile of contempt,
+"once let a quarrel break out between them and these
+Ocean and Pleasant islanders, and every native of Kusaie
+will have his throat cut in twenty-four hours."</p>
+
+<p>I turned the subject, for I saw by his stern expression
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
+that he meant what he said, and that any trifling incident
+would perhaps bring matters to an issue.</p>
+
+<p>Presently he began again. "Yes, these Pleasant islanders,
+who two weeks ago were all attached to these traders, are
+now heart and soul devoted to me. They know I am a
+better man, according to their ideas, than all the traders put
+together, and if I stepped out of the house now and told
+them I would lead them, they would follow me and burn
+old Tokusar's town over his head, cut off a passing ship, or
+do any other devilry such as their bloody instincts revel in."</p>
+
+<p>I tried to turn his thoughts into another channel, and
+succeeded so far that when I rose to return he was laughing
+and joking in his usual manner. He pointed out to me a
+separate part of the house, and told me that as soon as I
+liked to take possession he would be glad to see me in it.</p>
+
+<p>I explained to him that for the present I had better remain
+in the native house, as the king daily sent me food, and
+considered me his guest. In this he concurred, as he said
+if the king took a liking to a white man he would live in
+clover. He advised me to go and see him as soon as I was
+strong, or else his dignity would be touched. Also that I
+would find it well to keep good friends with Queen S&ecirc;.</p>
+
+<p>When I returned to the native house, however, I felt
+"sick unto death," and cast myself down on the mats in
+despair. The hurt I had received in the side seemed to have
+also affected my chest, as I could hardly breathe without
+suffering agonies. Happily I became unconscious; when I
+opened my eyes I found the Captain beside my mat, and
+during the whole night he remained with me and encouraged
+my sinking spirits. When daylight came he examined me
+carefully, after which he told me, that from the darkening
+colour of my skin, and the agony I felt from the slightest
+pressure, he thought I had received internal injury. He
+therefore insisted upon my coming over to his village, so
+that I might be under his immediate control. To this I
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+consented at last, although young Harry (as we called Harry
+Waters) was eager that I should come and live with him on
+the north side of Utw&eacute;, where Hayston had formed a sub-station
+to make oil and given him charge.</p>
+
+<p>I liked Harry very much; he was the only one of the
+traders whose age approached my own. His bearing and
+behaviour, too, contrasted favourably with those of his
+drunken and dissolute colleagues. However, I had to
+decline his kind offer, although, to my amusement, he
+emphatically asserted that I would be no trouble to him,
+as he had four wives, and Rosa, the youngest of them, was
+a clever nurse. I paid the Strong islanders who had
+attended on me, and then inquired of L&#257;lia what she
+intended to do? She had, of course, no money to pay the
+people for keeping her, and the old custom of extending
+hospitality to strangers had naturally died out since the
+coming of the missionaries.</p>
+
+<p>I had no other way of showing my gratitude than by
+offering her money. This she refused, but said she would
+be glad to get some clothes or material to make them. I
+gave a native money, and sent him up to L&ecirc;l&eacute;, where he
+bought several dresses from Kitty of Ebon, and as she was
+the same height and figure as L&#257;lia, they fitted her capitally.</p>
+
+<p>A couple of days after I had taken up my quarters with
+the Captain she came to see me, and say good-bye. She
+told me she was going to live at a village near L&ecirc;l&eacute;, and
+teach the Strong's Island women hat-making, at which she
+was clever. She would stay there till she got tired of it.
+I was sincerely sorry, and was not ashamed to show it,
+"being weak from my wound," and hardly able to refrain
+from tears. I felt quite pleased when the Captain came up
+and shook her little hand warmly, telling her that she
+really ought not to leave us. "Mind, L&#257;lia, come to me if
+you are in any trouble, and I will see you righted," he said
+in parting.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+"I know that, Captain! very well," she answered, looking
+up with a strange, sorrowful look in her large bright eyes,
+"but I must go now." Whereupon she walked slowly down
+the beach, and getting into a canoe with two Kusaie
+women, waved her hand and was soon out of sight.</p>
+
+<p>I recovered slowly, but after a while was able to get about
+and to take an inventory of the property saved, while the
+Captain amused himself by overlooking the building of a
+large oil-store. He had demanded an immediate payment
+of two hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts from the king,
+as part indemnity for the property stolen by the natives
+from the wreck. The king dared not refuse, and now a
+huge pile of cocoa-nuts was accumulating near the oil-shed,
+where the Pleasant islanders were daily scraping the nuts
+and making oil. A number of butts had come ashore, which
+were utilised for the oil, so that the village had already
+gained a settled look. About this time the Captain gave
+way to occasional bursts of passion, inflicting severe beatings
+upon two of the traders, who had got drunk and were
+careering about with rifles in their hands, threatening to
+shoot any one that interfered with them.</p>
+
+<p>He also accused old Harry Terry of plotting with the
+king, and a violent scene ensued. Some of the natives still
+sided with their old master, and with knives and shark-tooth
+daggers surrounded him, uttering cries of defiance at the
+Captain.</p>
+
+<p>I was in the big house when the row commenced, and saw
+the excited savages running up to where the Captain and
+old Harry stood. An encounter seemed imminent.</p>
+
+<p>Boy George, with Nellie and the other women, now
+rushed in and demanded of me to give them the Winchester
+and Snider rifles, which stood ready loaded in a corner of
+the house. But, knowing that the Captain was ready to
+assert his authority without arms, I refused, and locking
+them up in a trade chest sat down upon it. I knew that
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+the first shot would be followed by a scene of bloodshed
+and murder. George was persistent, saying the Captain
+would be killed, but changed his tone when he walked in
+unharmed, but with his fingers bleeding. Harry had given
+in when he saw the Captain dart in amongst the natives
+surrounding him, and knock two of the ringleaders down,
+but denied that he had been plotting to usurp Hayston's
+authority. A hollow reconciliation then took place, but
+there was bad blood between them from that time. He told
+me that I had done wisely in locking up the arms, and gave
+me the key to keep, as I had, he confessed, shown more
+prudence than himself. Then he sat down and began to
+sing like a schoolboy on a holiday.</p>
+
+<p>One day we took the boat and went up a creek flowing
+into the harbour. We were the only men, as the crew
+consisted of Ocean Island women and some of the girls from
+the brig.</p>
+
+<p>We were going to land them across the creek, where they
+intended to construct a fish weir, as the harbour was a bad
+place to fish in on account of the swarms of fierce and
+daring sharks.</p>
+
+<p>Among the girls in the boat were two from Ocean Island,
+being of the party landed from the whaleships at Chabral
+harbour. One of these was the new wife of the old convict
+trader. She had come down on a visit, and kept us amused
+with her descriptions of the orgies and drunken freaks of
+the fierce old man, whose conduct had frightened&mdash;no easy
+matter&mdash;all who came into contact with him.</p>
+
+<p>As we crossed over the in-shore reef and got into the
+channel of the creek, I saw a canoe with three figures in it
+ahead of us, and told the Captain that I thought I recognised
+L&#257;lia. He said it was hardly possible, as she lived
+six miles away on the coast, and was not likely to come
+down here. At this mention of L&#257;lia her successor looked
+frightened, and said she would like to go back, but was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+overruled by the others, who laughed at her fears. After
+rowing up the creek as far as the boat would go, the girls
+got out, and the Captain and I took our rifles and started up
+a spur in the mountain on the chance of getting a shot at
+the wild pigs.</p>
+
+<p>We struck into the dense woodland, and in a few minutes
+the voices of the laughing girls sounded subdued and far
+away. The gloom of the primeval forest seemed to be
+deepened by the vast structure and domelike tops of the
+mighty trees, whose thick branches formed an almost perfect
+canopy, while underneath our footsteps fell soundless on the
+thick carpet of rotting leaves.</p>
+
+<p>Here the Captain and I took different routes, agreeing
+to meet on the summit of the spur. As I walked along the
+silence that enshrouded all things seemed to weigh heavily;
+the darkening gloom of the forest began to fill me with
+childish fancies and misgivings. My nerves became strung
+to such a pitch that the harsh croak of some brooding
+frigate bird, or the sudden booming note of a wood pigeon,
+set my heart bumping against my ribs with that strange,
+undefined feeling which, if it be not premonition, is nearly
+akin to it.</p>
+
+<p>I had ascended half-way to the spur when I heard a shot.</p>
+
+<p>Its prolonged and tumultuous echoes startled the denizens
+of the forest, winged and quadrupedal, and as they died
+away a wild chorus of shrieks and growls seemed to electrify
+me into life. Waiting till silence resumed sway I
+called aloud to the Captain. Far down below I heard his
+answering call. Then he queried, "Have you shot anything?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I have not fired."</p>
+
+<p>"Quick," he shouted, "come down&mdash;there's mischief
+among the women."</p>
+
+<p>Rushing down the leaf-strewn spur I soon joined him.
+We ran together till we reached the boat. There a tragedy
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+had been enacted. The girls were huddled up in the boat,
+which was drifting about from bank to bank. As we
+dashed through the scrub they pointed to a patch of green-sward
+amongst the cocoa-nut trees, saying, "She is killed."</p>
+
+<p>There, lying on her face quite dead, was the Ocean
+Island girl with a bullet through her breast. The ball had
+passed completely through her body, and though her limbs
+were still quivering with muscular action, she must have
+died in a few seconds after she was struck.</p>
+
+<p>The girls told us that while they were making the weir
+she had gone up to a pool of fresh water among the rocks
+to look for fresh-water shrimps. A few minutes after they
+heard a shot; she staggered forward and fell on her face
+dead.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain and I looked at one another. Each read the
+thoughts that passed through the other's mind&mdash;L&#257;lia had
+fired the shot! But, calling the women out of the boat, the
+Captain sternly forbade them to mention L&#257;lia's name in
+connection with the matter, and said that they must all keep
+silence. A grave was hastily dug in the soft alluvial of
+the shadowy forest glade, where the body of the poor girl,
+wrapped in garments of her companions, was hastily buried.</p>
+
+<p>I did not understand the meaning of the secrecy which
+was evidently considered necessary, until the Captain told
+me that as the girl was in his charge at the time of her
+death, he would be held responsible, and that the uncertain
+temper of her countrymen might at any time cause an
+outbreak.</p>
+
+<p>We returned to the boat, and the women, as we neared
+the village, were instructed by the Captain to answer all
+inquiries for the dead girl by saying she had disappeared.
+Her countrymen took her departure very quietly, and came
+to the conclusion that the evil spirits of the mountain had
+carried her away, and their superstition forbade search.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+I cannot, even after the time that has elapsed, recall
+without a pang of regret the total change in the Captain's
+demeanour and conduct at this time. Some demon appeared
+to have taken possession of him. His terrific bursts
+of violence drove every soul away at times, none daring to
+venture near him until he had cooled down except myself,
+to whom he never addressed a harsh or angry word. One
+day he declared that the men of the <i>Leonora</i> and some of
+the Pleasant islanders were concocting a meeting, and I
+was sickened and horrified at seeing three of each lashed
+to cocoa-nut trees, while the huge figure of Antonio, the
+black Portuguese, towered above the crowd as he flogged
+them. The Captain stood by with a pistol in each hand
+as, with a countenance blanched and disturbed with passion,
+he ordered Antonio to lay it on well.</p>
+
+<p>I went into the house and, sitting down, tried to think
+out a course for myself. The Captain came in after a while
+and, drawing a seat to the window, gazed moodily out upon
+the sparkling, breeze-rippled sea. Then I knew that the
+dark hour had passed, and that he would listen to reason.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," I said, "I can stay here no longer with you.
+I am sick of seeing men flogged till their backs are like
+raw meat, even though they are mutinous. If I thought
+any words of mine would do good, I would earnestly beg
+of you to adopt milder measures. Every day that passes
+you run the gauntlet, so to speak, of these men's deadly
+hatred, I know; for how can I avoid hearing the mutterings
+and seeing the fierce glances of the people&mdash;that you
+are surrounded with foes, and that any moment may be
+your last."</p>
+
+<p>He placed his hand on my shoulder in his old way.
+"True, my lad, true; but if they are dangerous to meddle
+with, so am I. The white men, young Harry excepted,
+would gladly see me lying out there on the sand with a
+bullet hole in my skull; but, by &mdash;&mdash;, I'll shoot every
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+mother's son of them if I detect any treachery.... And
+so you wish to leave me?"</p>
+
+<p>I considered a moment and then answered, "Sorry am I
+to say it, but I do."</p>
+
+<p>"Come out to the beach, my lad, and talk to me there.
+This house is stifling; another month of this life would
+send me mad."</p>
+
+<p>We walked along the weather side for about a mile, then
+seating ourselves on a huge flat rock, watched the rollers
+tumbling in over the reef and hissing along the sand at our
+feet. Hayston then spoke freely to me of his troubles, his
+hopes, and disappointments, begging me to remain with
+him&mdash;going, indeed, the length of a half promise to use
+gentler methods of correction in future.</p>
+
+<p>I yielded for a time, but after another week the fights
+and floggings, followed by threats of vengeance, commenced
+anew. Two incidents also, following close upon
+one another, led me to sever my connection with the Captain
+finally, though in a friendly spirit.</p>
+
+<p>The first was an attack single-handed upon the Kusaie
+village of Utw&eacute;, driving the men before him like a flock of
+sheep. Some who ventured to resist were felled by blows
+of his fist. Then he picked out half a dozen of the youngest
+women, and drove them to the men's quarters, telling
+them to keep them till the husbands and families ransomed
+them.</p>
+
+<p>This was all because he had been told that Likiak S&acirc;
+had been to the village, and urged the natives to remove
+to L&ecirc;l&eacute;, where a man-of-war was expected to arrive
+from Honolulu, and that Hayston dared not follow them
+there.</p>
+
+<p>The next matter that went wrong was that he desired me
+to bring the trade books, and go over the various traders'
+accounts with him.</p>
+
+<p>One of these books was missing, although I remembered
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+placing the whole bundle in the big chest with the charts
+and chronometers. He declared that the loss of this book,
+with some important accounts of his trading stations in
+the Line and Marshall Islands, rendered the others valueless.</p>
+
+<p>I felt aggrieved at the imputation of carelessness, and
+having never since first I knew him felt any fear of expressing
+myself clearly, told him that he must have lost it,
+or it would have been with the others.</p>
+
+<p>Starting from his seat with his face livid with rage, he
+passionately denied having lost it. Then he strode into
+his room, and with savage oaths drove out the women,
+cursing them as the cause of the brig's loss and all his
+misfortunes.</p>
+
+<p>The next moment he appeared with his arms full of
+chronometers, and, standing in the doorway, tore the costly
+instruments from their cases and dashed them to pieces on
+the coral flagstones at his feet. Then, swearing he would
+fire the station and roast every one in it, with his hands
+beating and clutching at the air, his face working with
+passion, he walked, staggering like a drunken man, to the
+beach, and threw himself down on a boulder.</p>
+
+<p>Three hours after, taking little Kitty and Toby with me,
+I found him still there, resting his head on his hand and
+gazing out upon the sea.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," I said, "I have come to say farewell."</p>
+
+<p>He slowly raised his head, and with sorrow depicted on
+his countenance, gave me his hand.</p>
+
+<p>I pressed it and turned away. I packed up my belongings,
+and then calling to Nellie, told her to give the Captain
+a note which I left on his table, and with a handshake
+to each of the wondering girls, made my way through the
+village, and thence to the bank of a lagoon that runs parallel
+to the southern coast of Strong's Island. I knew that
+I could walk to Coquille harbour in about a day, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+thither I decided to go, as at the village of Mo&#363;t dwelt a
+man named Kusis, who had several times pressed me to
+visit him.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was a bright moonlight night, so that I had no difficulty
+in making my way along the lonely coast. The
+lagoon, solemnly still and silver-gleaming, lay between me
+and the mainland. The narrow strip on the ocean side was
+not more than half a mile wide; on the lagoon border was
+a thicket well-nigh impassable.</p>
+
+<p>The mood of melancholy that impressed me at parting
+with a man to whom, in spite of his faults, I was sincerely
+attached, weighed heavily. The deep silence of the night,
+unbroken save by the murmuring plumes of the cocoa-nut
+palms as they swayed to the breath of the trade-wind, and
+the ceaseless plaints of the unresting surge, completed the
+feeling of loneliness and desolation.</p>
+
+<p>At length I reached the end of the narrow spit that ran
+parallel to the lofty mainland, and found that I had to
+cross over the reef that connected it to the main, this reef
+forming the southern end of the lagoon.</p>
+
+<p>The country was entirely new to me, but once I gained
+the white beach that fringed the leeside of the island, I
+knew that I need only follow it along till I reached the
+village of Mo&#363;t, about four miles distant from the end of
+the lagoon. I hung my bundle across my Winchester and
+commenced the crossing. The tide was out and the reef
+bare, but here and there were deep pools through which I
+had to pick my steps carefully, being confused besides by
+the lines of dazzling moon-rays.</p>
+
+<p>When nearly across, and walking up to my waist through
+a channel that led between the coral patches, I saw a
+strange, dark shape moving quickly towards me. "A
+shark!" I thought, but the next minute the black mass
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+darted past me at an angle, when I saw it was an innocent
+turtle that was doubtless more frightened than I. After
+this adventure I gained the white beach, which lay shining
+like a silver girdle under the moon-rays, and flung myself
+down on the safe yielding sand. The spot was silent as
+the grave. The murmurous rhythm of the surf sounded
+miles distant, and but rose to the faintest lulling sound, as
+I made a pillow of my worldly goods and sank into dreamless
+sleep.</p>
+
+<p>It was the earliest dawn when the chill breath of the
+land-breeze touched my cheek, and sent a shiver through
+my somewhat exhausted frame. I arose, and looking
+round found that I was not wholly alone: several huge
+<ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'turtle'">turtles</ins>
+had been keeping me company during the night,
+having come ashore to lay their eggs. As soon as I stood
+up they scrambled and floundered away in dire fright. I
+felt badly in need of a smoke, but having no matches,
+decided to eat something instead. I had not far to seek
+for a breakfast. Picking up a couple of sprouting cocoa-nuts
+from the ground, I husked them by beating them
+against a tree-trunk, and made a much needed meal from
+the sweet kernels.</p>
+
+<p>Although I was still far from well, and the pain in my
+side had returned with tenfold vigour, I felt a new-born
+elasticity of spirit. The glow of the tropic sun lighted up
+the slumberous main spread out in azure vastness before
+me.</p>
+
+<p>Shouldering my bundle and rifle, my sole worldly possessions,
+except utterly valueless money and papers in the
+Captain's care, I descended to the beach and walked along
+in the hard sand. At about six o'clock I came abreast of
+two lovely verdure-clad islets, rising from the shallow
+waters which lay between the outer reefs and the mainland,
+and I knew I must be near Mo&#363;t.</p>
+
+<p>Then I saw a canoe shoot out from the land about a
+quar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>ter
+of a mile distant, with the native in it standing up
+poling it along. The next bend of the beach brought me
+in full view of the picturesque village. A loud cry of
+wonder greeted me. The next moment I was surrounded
+by smiling villagers. I felt a thrill of pride at the thought
+that of all those who had been cast away in the <i>Leonora</i>,
+none would have been welcomed so warmly as I was now
+by those simple, kind-hearted people.</p>
+
+<p>"Kusis' friend, Kusis' friend has come!" the men
+called aloud. Crowding around, and taking my rifle and
+bundle from me, I was escorted to the farther end of the
+village, where out of a pretty little house embowered in a
+grove of palms, a man sprang out and fairly hugged me.</p>
+
+<p>This was Kusis, in whose frank and open countenance
+nothing but joyous welcome and boundless hospitality
+could be read. Taking me by the hand, he led me inside.
+My cares were over for the present, evidently.</p>
+
+<p>Words of mine can but faintly describe the generosity
+and kindness of these people to me during my lengthened
+sojourn among them. The memory of the peaceful days
+which I passed in that unknown, lovely village can never
+be effaced.</p>
+
+<p>Kusis, it seems, had often been to see me when I lay
+sick at Utw&eacute;, and was unconscious of his presence. The
+Captain and L&#257;lia had told me of how he would come softly
+into the house, bringing a present of fruit or fish for "the
+sick white boy," as he called me. He would sit by my
+side and gaze anxiously at me for hours at a time, always
+questioning the Captain concerning me. When I got better
+I had long chats with him, and to his inexpressible delight,
+gave him a shot gun which I had bought from the
+carpenter for a pound of tobacco. He had no shot, but he
+told me he could make some from strips of lead, and as
+there was plenty of that from the wreckage that came
+ashore, the Captain gave him as much as he could carry in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+the canoe, besides a large tin of powder and plenty of
+caps.</p>
+
+<p>He was a tall, large-framed man for a Strong's islander&mdash;magnificently
+built, and with a heart in proportion. His
+wife Tulp&eacute;, and his only daughter, a little girl named
+Kinie, made up the family. He evidently wished to complete
+it by making me his son, for his sole aim in life
+seemed to be to keep me with him.</p>
+
+<p>Unlike the people of Utw&eacute;, the villagers of Mo&#363;t were
+utterly unsophisticated, besides being free from the cant
+and hypocrisy that nearly always attaches to the native
+character when they profess Christianity. No doubt this
+was the result of their village being so distant from L&ecirc;l&eacute;,
+where the natives were for ever chanting psalms and
+hymns, and keeping the letter of the law, while at the
+same time they departed as widely from the spirit as their
+heathen forefathers had ever done.</p>
+
+<p>After a while I received a letter from Captain Hayston,
+and with it a large parcel. The letter ran as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><span class="smcap">My dear Boy.</span>&mdash;Have you entirely deserted me? I hope not.
+Come and see me again, even if you only stop a day: I miss you
+greatly, and the evenings are very dull without you to talk to. I gave
+that fellow Miles, the boatswain, a bad beating, and he has cleared
+out to the mountains with the Pleasant islanders. Had you been here
+you would have got him off. As it is, I have lost three men. Accept
+the things I send. (The hat was made for you by a friend.) They
+will do for presents for your Kusaie friends. Let me know when you
+can come up, and I will send the whaleboat.&mdash;Yours sincerely,</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature">
+ <span class="smcap">W. H. Hayston.</span>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>I sent back my thanks, saying that I would come and see
+him, but should come overland, as the messenger was returning
+in a canoe. Kusis put in two turtle as "present
+for Captin."</p>
+
+<p>I opened the parcel, which I found contained all sorts of
+articles likely to be useful to me, with ten pounds of
+to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>bacco,
+and a bag of small scarlet and white beads, the
+delight of a Strong's Island girl's heart. Rolled up in a
+native sash was a beautifully-made Panama hat. This
+latter was a gift from L&#257;lia, and at once excited the admiration
+of Kusis and <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'Tulpe'">Tulp&eacute;</ins>,
+when they examined its texture.
+The childish delight of Kinie, when I gave her the
+beads, gave me the greatest pleasure, and although her
+father and mother looked with glistening eyes at the other
+articles which I wished them to take, they firmly refused
+the offered gifts, Kusis only taking a few sticks of tobacco,
+and his wife a silk handkerchief with some needles
+and thread.</p>
+
+<p>I was rapidly regaining my strength, now felt in much
+higher spirits as I accompanied Kusis on his shooting and
+fishing trips, returning home to the bright faces and welcoming
+smiles of his wife and daughter. After another
+week Kusis and I set out to visit the Captain, who, though
+I was thoroughly happy and contented with my new
+friends, was never absent from my thoughts. He received
+us with unaffected pleasure, and, calling his steward and
+making us sit down to lunch, he gave me an account of
+what had been doing since I had left.</p>
+
+<p>The village had now a settled appearance, and the people
+were all busy making oil, another two hundred and fifty
+thousand cocoa-nuts having been paid by the king. The
+Captain asked me if there were not a vast quantity of cocoa-nuts
+at Coquille harbour, and on my assenting, said he
+would send a gang of Pleasant islanders under Fiji Bill and
+Antonio to live there, and collect the third part of the
+indemnity&mdash;another two hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts.</p>
+
+<p>This I begged him not to do, pointing out the injustice
+of such an action, inasmuch as the people of Coquille had
+no hand in stealing the property from the brig, and it
+would be cruel to make them pay for the misdoings of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+others. I told him also that at Coquille were situated the
+largest taro and yam plantations, with the best turtle fisheries,
+that I was sure the natives would destroy the plantations
+and abandon the villages if they had the savage
+Pleasant islanders quartered upon them. Besides, we
+might have to remain another eight or nine months on the
+island before the whaling fleet called here again, and that
+it was absolutely indispensable that he should be able to
+command a supply of food to subsist nearly a hundred and
+fifty people.</p>
+
+<p>Kusis, who was seated on the mats near us, eagerly
+watched the Captain. At length a look of content overspread
+his face as the Captain said he would not touch the
+cocoa-nuts in Coquille harbour. To Kusis he said, "Tell
+your people to have no fear as long as the king continues
+to pay up, but once let me see any 'soldiering,' or desire
+to avoid paying the fine, I'll strip the island from Mount
+Crozier to the reef."</p>
+
+<p>Then we strolled to and fro on the Plaza, as we called
+the local esplanade in front of the big house, and the Captain
+told me to come and look at his turtle pond, in which
+were a number of green turtle, and also the two hawkbills
+sent by Kusis.</p>
+
+<p>I found that several of the traders had now openly broken
+with him, and leaving their native following, had retired
+to L&ecirc;l&eacute;, where they were under the protection of the king.
+The number of girls in the big house had now increased to
+nine or ten. At the time of my visit some were engaged
+in weaving an immense mat to cover the whole floor, others
+were drying and picking tobacco leaves for making cigars.
+Two of the new arrivals, I could see, were native girls.
+I asked the Captain what they were doing there. He answered
+somewhat testily, "Did I think they came to teach
+Sunday-school?"</p>
+
+<p>I remained that night, and we spent a merry evening.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+In the morning, after a breakfast of turtle eggs and roast
+pig, Kusis and I prepared to return.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain urged me to go by way of Chabral harbour,
+and pay my promised visit to the king.</p>
+
+<p>"In that case I might let him know how his Majesty was
+taking matters." Kusis also urged me to see the king,
+who was anxious that I should spend a week with him.</p>
+
+<p>We got a canoe to carry us across to the north arm of
+the harbour, where I remained an hour or two with young
+Harry, who had established quite a small village.</p>
+
+<p>When we entered the fence surrounding his place, we
+found him lying in a hammock, slung between two pandanus-trees,
+smoking his morning pipe, and having his hair
+combed by two pretty little witches named Rosa and Taloe.</p>
+
+<p>This was Harry's idea of island luxury. He always
+alleged that sleeping gave him a headache, and that having
+his hair brushed drove it away, particularly if the combing
+was performed by the soft hands of one of his four houris.</p>
+
+<p>He sprang up and welcomed me heartily, urging me to
+stay all night. But I was anxious to get on. However,
+I said I should be glad to see him at Mo&#363;t, when he could
+bring his family with him, and give them a week's feast
+on pork and turtle.</p>
+
+<p>Harry presently took me into a small room, saying,
+"Look here!" The place was closely packed with liquor
+in small kegs. These had been washed ashore, and he had
+found them, only a few days since, high up in the mangroves.
+The Captain told him to store it, as it was dangerous
+stuff to bring to Utw&eacute;. The Pleasant islanders are
+very fond of liquor, after imbibing which they always want
+to fight and kill some one, and generally do.</p>
+
+<p>We had a glass of grog together, after which I said good-bye
+to the good-natured, handsome young trader and his
+wives, whom he used to call the "Three Graces, with another
+thrown in."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+Kusis and I reached the south side of Chabral harbour
+about sunset. I was freshly enchanted with the loveliness
+of the scene, accustomed as I had become to this paradisal
+quarter of the globe. The trade-wind had died away, the
+transparent waters of the harbour reflected in their blue
+depths the tall shadows of the towering mountains that
+overhung the harbour on three sides.</p>
+
+<p>A canoe put across from the king's wharf when I fired a
+shot to attract attention. So wonderfully clear was the
+atmosphere, so unbroken the silence of the lonely bay,
+that the quick "tweep, tweep" of the paddle, as it struck
+the water, reached our ears as distinctly as if the canoe
+was but a few yards distant, instead of nearly half a
+mile.</p>
+
+<p>The old king received me graciously, but soon commenced
+a string of complaints, interlarded with Scripture
+quotations rounded off by quaint oaths. He feared the
+Captain greatly, and yet was anxious to keep up his
+authority. Then, with every grievance that was laid before
+me, he drank a stiff glass of grog to wash it down
+with, and insisted on my keeping him company.</p>
+
+<p>Queen S&ecirc; now came in, saying in her prettiest English,
+"Oh! you naughty boy! Why you no come see king, see
+<i>me</i>? Long time promise, but never come out. How you
+bad pain side? How many Strong's Island girl Captain
+got now? I never see man like that. Debil, I believe.
+You got any wife yet?"</p>
+
+<p>I told the queen I was still unmarried, and thought I
+should remain so.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! no, you say so now. By and by get like Captain.
+But don't you steal girl like him. You come to me! I
+pick you out nice girl. Cook, sew, make pyjamas; very
+pretty face too."</p>
+
+<p>By this time old Tokusar was asleep, with his head on
+the table, his inevitable Bible open at the Psalms of David
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+(printed in the Kusaie dialect) in the leaf of his armchair,
+and the half-emptied gin bottle encircled by his left arm.</p>
+
+<p>Queen S&ecirc; was a tiny little creature&mdash;very good-looking,
+even at this time of her life&mdash;being about five-and-twenty,
+which is considered the <i>pass&eacute;e</i> period in Polynesia. She
+was extremely vain, but had a quick perception of humour.
+She and the Captain always got on famously together.</p>
+
+<p>Drawing our chairs up to a side table, she brought me
+a number of bound volumes of <i>Leslie's Illustrated Paper</i>,
+sent to her by the queen of Hawaii.</p>
+
+<p>While I looked at the pictures she plied me with questions,
+principally at random, about Captain Hayston, who,
+I was not long in discovering, had been a former admirer.
+Going into a side room, she unlocked a small box, and
+brought me out a photo of a gentleman wearing a post-captain's
+uniform in her Britannic Majesty's navy. "What
+do you think of him?" she asked. "Very, oh! very handsome
+man&mdash;that Captain Damer. Oh! that long time
+ago. I love him; he love me too"&mdash;and then, pointing
+to poor old Tokusar, "King know all about it. He don't
+like me to talk about Captain Damer. But, oh! such handsome
+man! He tell me I loveliest girl in all the world.
+What you think yourself? What Captain tell you; he
+think me pretty too?"</p>
+
+<p>Her Majesty was an expert angler for flattery. I was
+not indisposed to humour a pretty woman, and a queen,
+and was evidently rising in her estimation. I resolved to
+turn my good fortune to account, by inducing her to effect
+a reconciliation between the king and the Captain, who
+wanted the king to visit him at Utw&eacute;, to see the wonderful
+change he had effected there. He felt certain that, when
+the king saw the magnitude of the station, knowing that
+it must, sooner or later, come into his possession when he,
+Hayston, left the island, he would forgive all that had
+passed.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+Once the subject was broached I became an ardent advocate
+for the Captain, and told the queen how anxious he
+was to be on good terms with the king again. In fact, so
+eloquent did I become, partly through the potency of the
+schnapps of which I had partaken, that I represented the
+Captain as devoured with grief at losing the king's and
+her friendship.</p>
+
+<p>The queen listened gravely, and then extending her
+shapely hand, caught me by the ear, and laughed, "Oh!
+you bad boy! Captain Hayston think Tokusar old fool;
+told <i>me</i> so plenty time. Well, never mind, I try make
+everything all right."</p>
+
+<p>The queen, as beseemed her, had a number of young
+women with her, sitting round the sides of the great room.
+Some were making the girdles that the Kusaie natives of
+both sexes wear round the waist under their other garments.
+They are woven on an ingeniously constructed
+loom, the banana fibres which form the material being
+stained in various bright colours. These girls were sitting
+in the manner peculiar to the Strong's Island women, with
+their eyes cast down&mdash;it being considered a boldness to
+look at either the king or queen. When speaking to either
+their eyes were always bent on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>The king, being carefully placed on a cane lounge, a
+meal was brought in. Both Kusis and I were presented
+with food enough to last for a month. As the queen bade
+me good-night she passed her arm round me, and tenderly
+inquired, "How my poor side feel?" adding that I was
+a very good boy, because I was kind to Strong's Island
+man. She also informed me that I could kiss her, which
+I did. Then putting the post-captain's photo in her bosom
+she went to bed, finally telling me that she "will make
+king friend once more with Captain."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+For the next six months I lived with the kind-hearted
+Kusis, his wife, and little daughter. Except for an
+occasional visit to the Captain or the king, nothing disturbed
+the pleasing monotony of my existence.</p>
+
+<p>Why Kusis should have taken such a violent and wholly
+unreasonable attachment to me is a mystery I never could
+unravel. Yet such is island life. And how strange it is,
+and hard of comprehension! Women take their fancies
+here, as in other worlds (surely this is a world in itself,
+distinct, mystic, unreal), but the extraordinary point in
+the social system is, that men will, as a matter of mere
+caprice, conceive the most ardent friendship for an utter
+stranger. In pursuance of which passion they will entertain
+him for any time which he likes to stay; will guide,
+help, and defend him, risking, and indeed sacrificing their
+lives for him in the most reckless and devoted manner.
+Such was the deep and sudden affection of Kusis for me.
+How he acquired it I don't in the least know. All my
+personal property seemed to be mixed up with his. As
+the weather was not favourable for attention to detail, I
+preferred to leave things as they were. My life at this
+time was chiefly uneventful. Yet it was not always so.
+I was fishing one day near the end of the lagoon which
+extends from Utw&eacute; to the lee side of the island. After I
+had anchored my canoe a very strange incident indeed
+occurred.</p>
+
+<p>The sun had just set, and I had cast out my hooks, and
+was able to fill my pipe, when I saw two boatsful of Pleasant
+islanders land on the narrow fringe of the north side of the
+lagoon. There were about twenty men and seven or eight
+women. I saw that they had with them a small keg, doubtless
+one of the kegs of rum which had been washed ashore,
+and which they had discovered in the mangroves. A fire
+was lit. The women began to sing and the men to dance;
+and as the fiery spirit was passed round in cocoa-nut shells
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+to the men&mdash;for the women touched none&mdash;a wild orgie
+began.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly bright flashes appeared from out the darkness
+in the surrounding grove, and the reverberating echoes of
+gun-shots pealed over the water, and ran far back, from
+mountain, crag, and cave.</p>
+
+<p>Three of the dancers fell, either killed or wounded.
+Then the dark forms of their previously unseen enemies
+appeared through the firelight. The white shells worn in
+strings round their necks told me that they were Ocean
+islanders, between whom and the Pleasant islanders feuds
+were of common occurrence. Then began a bloody hand-to-hand
+fight, the twilight silence being broken by yells of
+rage and screams of mortal agony. When the Ocean
+islanders were beaten off seven or eight bodies lay motionless
+on the ground.</p>
+
+<p>I quietly pulled up the anchor, and let the canoe drift
+towards the mainland. I did not care about visiting the
+scene of the fight as I had no arms with me, and learnt by
+experience the folly of meddling with the Pleasant islanders
+when they were sober. When they were drunk I knew
+that they would as soon cut my throat as not.</p>
+
+<p>I mentioned this matter to the Captain on my next visit.
+He told me with a grim smile that he knew there had been
+a fight up the lagoon; so much the better, as he found the
+Pleasant islanders harder to manage every day, and the
+sooner their number was reduced the better.</p>
+
+<p>One day, when Kusis and I were coming across the
+lagoon with some pigeons I had shot, we met the Pingelap
+girl, Peloa, paddling a canoe furiously, her plump face
+showing great excitement. "She had been sent for us,"
+she said, "by the Captain. There was a sail in sight.
+I was to hasten back to Mo&#363;t, where I would find a boat
+outside the reef which he had sent down for me. I was to
+try and board the ship, in case he could not do so from
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
+Utw&eacute;, and tell the master that a shipwrecked crew were
+on the island."</p>
+
+<p>Peloa hauled her canoe up on a little beach, and got in
+with us. We three then paddled along till we got abreast
+of the two islets near Mo&#363;t. We then saw a whaleboat
+coming round the point with a lug sail. She soon ran in
+for me, and I found she was manned by Pleasant islanders,
+who told me that the ship was coming round the point,
+about three miles off the land.</p>
+
+<p>There was a strong breeze, and we slipped through the
+water at a great rate so as to meet the ship. As soon as
+we cleared the point I saw her coming down before the
+wind about two miles distant.</p>
+
+<p>She was a large ship, and was running straight for us
+with her yards squared. At first I thought she had seen
+us, but she kept steadily on her course. Then I saw her
+take in her light sails and heave to. Standing up in the
+boat, I could distinguish a whaleboat under a fore and aft
+sail close to her. Behind this boat were two others, which,
+from their black paint and peculiarly-cut sails, I knew to
+be those the Captain had at Utw&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>The ship lay to till the first whaleboat boarded her, and
+then, to my great surprise, the yards were swung round, the
+light sails again set, and she stood on her course, but kept
+the wind more on her quarter so as to make the most of
+the breeze.</p>
+
+<p>By this time I had got almost within hailing distance of
+the ship. She was deep in the water, and was, I supposed,
+some coal-laden ship bound from New South Wales to
+China, which had taken the outside or easier route to her
+destination. When the whaleboat lowered her sail and ran
+alongside, I saw that she was the king's new boat, and contained
+but two men. These, my crew said, looked like the
+two deserters from the <i>St. George</i>. As soon as they got on
+board the boat was hoisted in without delay, and, as I have
+said, the ship kept on her course.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+It was of no use attempting to overtake her, as she was
+travelling now about twelve knots, so I signalled for the
+other two boats, and they ran down after us till we got
+under the lee of the land again in smooth water.</p>
+
+<p>The men in these boats told me the following tale:&mdash;About
+daylight that morning the king's whaleboat, which
+was anchored in Utw&eacute; harbour, was found to be missing.
+The two deserters from the <i>St. George</i> were also gone.
+Captain Hayston instantly offered to send his boat in pursuit
+of the runaways, and curiously, just as they were
+being launched, there came a cry of "Sail ho." The Captain
+then saw the ship a long way off, and told the crews
+to try and board her, and get her to run in close to the land,
+and that he would then come off himself. In the mean
+time he manned one of the trader's whaleboats with a
+native crew, and sent her round to Coquille to pick me up,
+as he fancied the ship would be easier boarded from there
+than from Utw&eacute;. The three boats left together, two standing
+right out to sea, and the other running down the coast
+to pick me up.</p>
+
+<p>When the two boats were within three miles of the ship,
+they noticed the fore and aft sail of the king's whaleboat
+showing up now and then as she rose and sunk again in
+the heavy swell, and noticed that she was also heading to
+meet the ship. The rest I had observed myself.</p>
+
+<p>I suspected something from the manner of the coxswain
+in charge of the king's two boats, but did not question him,
+and telling him to give the Captain full particulars of our
+endeavour to board the ship, I got ashore in a smooth part
+of the reef, and walked back to Mo&#363;t, where I found the
+villagers in a great state of excitement, under the impression
+that I had gone away in the ship.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston afterwards admitted that he had supplied the
+deserters with sextant, compass, and chart, had also given
+them provisions, and fifty dollars in money. They
+prom<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>ised
+him to make straight for Ponap&eacute;, and wait there till
+some Californian ship called, which they would endeavour
+to charter, on the part of Hayston, to beat up to Strong's
+Island, and take us all away to Providence Island. Barney
+was a good navigator, and could he only have kept fairly
+sober would have long since had a ship of his own. He
+eagerly accepted the Captain's offer, and the next morning
+the crew of the king's whaleboat found she had disappeared;
+then followed the strange series of events by which Barney
+and his mate got on board the ship and evaded pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>Barney was a highly intelligent individual, as the sequel
+will show, and was capable of making a rapid calculation
+of probabilities. He afterwards visited Samoa, and gave
+this account of his escape.</p>
+
+<p>He said that when the Captain provided him with "a
+jewel of a whaleboat," he honestly intended to fulfil his
+promises. He lost some time in trying to persuade a native
+girl named Luta to share his fortunes, but she was afraid
+of a long voyage in a small boat. His pleadings, moreover,
+were cut short by the Captain, who told him to hurry up,
+and get out of the harbour before daylight.</p>
+
+<p>As soon, then, as Barney sighted the ship a plan suggested
+itself to him. Once on deck he introduced himself
+to the Captain as "Captain Casey," and said, "For heaven's
+sake, sir, don't delay another moment. There are two boat-loads
+of bloody, cut-throat pirates coming after me, and they
+mane to take the ship! Have you never heard of 'Bully
+Hayston'?"</p>
+
+<p>The skipper <i>had</i> heard of him,&mdash;things true, and untrue
+likewise. Then Barney told him a tale of how the <i>Leonora</i>
+had been wrecked on the island, and that ever since the
+fierce Captain and crew had planned to cut off the first ship
+that touched at the island&mdash;that he (Barney) and his mate
+had owned a small trading cutter, which Hayston had seized
+two days ago&mdash;but that he had managed to escape with
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
+one of his men, and thanked God that he was able to reach
+the ship in time, and save every one's throat from being
+cut.</p>
+
+<p>The ship's captain took all this in; Barney's boat was
+hoisted in, and the ship kept away. The two boats, with
+their crews of excited natives yelling and shouting, gave
+colour to Barney's narrative, and when he pointed to my
+boat, and said, "Holy saints! there's another of the villains
+coming out under the lee side with a boat-load of
+pirates too," the captain's funk was complete. He landed
+Barney and his companion at Ponap&eacute;, and, purely out of
+compassion, bought the king's whaleboat and her contents
+for a hundred dollars, so that Mr. Barney landed there with
+a hundred and fifty dollars in his pocket, and got a free
+passage later on to Manila as a distressed American seaman.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain took matters philosophically when the boats
+returned, saying that he never had expected to see Barney
+again. After which he resumed his oil-making and the
+government of his "kingdom by the sea" as usual.</p>
+
+<p>As for me, my life was a quiet, deeply enjoyable one. I
+began at times to doubt whether I should ever wish to
+change it. But against this phase of lotus-eating contentment
+arose from time to time a haunting dread, lest by evil
+chance I should ever sink down into the position of those
+renegades from civilisation, whom I had known, in the
+strange world of "The Islands," and as often pitied or despised.
+In this Robinson Crusoe existence I even felt a
+mild interest in the three cattle that we had landed at
+Utw&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>They had found their way over to the lee side of the
+island, and made their way along the beach to Mo&#363;t.</p>
+
+<p>One day little Kinie met them, and, with hair flying loose
+and eyes dilated in an agony of terror, fled wildly home.
+She explained to me incoherently "that she had met three
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+huge pigs, with, long teeth growing out of their heads and
+eyes as big as cocoa-nuts."</p>
+
+<p>Kusis and I, with some natives, went out and found them
+walking slowly along the beach. At the sound of my voice
+they stopped and let me come up to them, smelling me all
+over. I had only a mat round my waist, for my European
+clothes were only worn on great occasions; but they evidently
+knew me for a different being to those around them.
+We drove them to a rich piece of meadow land, where they
+remained during the rest of my stay on the island&mdash;fat,
+quiet, and contented.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Early one morning I made ready for a start back to Coquille
+harbour, and found Kusis awaiting me in the king's
+courtyard.</p>
+
+<p>Shortly after the queen came out and told me that I must
+wait for breakfast, or the king would be offended. Old
+Tokusar then appeared, none the worse for the night's
+potations, and we sat down to a very good breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>He told me that he had intended to go and see the Captain's
+village at Utw&eacute;, but that Likiak S&acirc;, had dissuaded him
+by telling him that Hayston would seize and imprison him.</p>
+
+<p>I assured the king that this was a pure invention, upon
+which both he and the queen said they would take my word
+before that of Likiak S&acirc;, and from the kindness of the king
+and his subjects at Chabral harbour, I felt certain that my
+intercession with Hayston on behalf of the villages at
+Coquille had placed me high in their regard.</p>
+
+<p>The queen pointed to a pile of beautiful mats, quantities
+of cooked fowls, pigeons, pork, fish, and fruit, which were
+being carried in and deposited in the courtyard, telling me
+that they were presents from the king and herself, and
+would be taken down to Mo&#363;t for me by native carriers.</p>
+
+<p>As I was bidding my royal friends good-bye, promising
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+to come and see them whenever I got tired of Mo&#363;t, Kitty
+of Ebon came in, and quite bore out the description Hayston
+had given me of her remarkable beauty. She seemed
+a very intelligent girl, and was much admired by the king,
+who kept nudging me, and saying in his wheezy, croaking
+voice, "Um, ah! What you tink girl like that?"</p>
+
+<p>He then fell into moody silence, upon which Queen S&ecirc;
+gave him a scornful glance, exclaiming, "For shame! old
+man like you, sick all the time, look so much at young girl
+like Kitty Ebon! Captain Hayston teach you all that."</p>
+
+<p>I learnt from Kitty that L&#257;lia was then at her house on
+a visit, and, telling the king and queen of her kindness to
+me when I was ill at Utw&eacute;, said I should like to go and see
+her, as Kitty's house lay in the direction Kusis and I were
+taking. The queen generously gave me a small work-box,
+with the necessary fittings, which she said I could give to
+L&#257;lia. It was quite a handsome affair, and had been given
+to the queen by a ship captain; but she had never used it.
+Shaking hands with Tokusar and Queen S&ecirc;, we set out on
+our journey, Kusis leading the way, Kitty of Ebon and I
+following, and the carriers in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>Kitty was very lively, and startlingly simple in manner.
+She made me laugh at her description of the flirtations of
+Captain Hayston and the queen when he had visited
+Strong's Island three years before in company with Captain
+Ben Peese. For a missionary's housekeeper Kitty of Ebon
+was something unique, and her lively sallies kept me
+amused in her excellent English all the way. I was
+pleased to see L&#257;lia, who was looking as beautiful as
+ever. Indeed, it was hard to say which was the handsomer,
+she or the hostess.</p>
+
+<p>I gave her the work-box, which seemed to please her very
+much. Then Kitty proposed a game of cards, saying it was
+all right, as we need not play for money, and no one would
+tell Mr. Morland. But I had to decline, and, saying
+good-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>bye
+to them with some regrets, I rejoined Kusis, much
+wondering inwardly whether L&#257;lia, with her sad, bright
+eyes, soft voice, and gentle manner, could really have been
+the perpetrator of the cruel deed in the mountain forest
+of Utw&eacute;.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<h2>"MY LORDS OF THE ADMIRALTY"</h2>
+
+
+<p>In October I received another letter from the Captain,
+asking me to meet him in Chabral harbour. He had become
+so tired of waiting for a ship that he had decided to start
+in a boat for Mill&eacute;. He had effected a reconciliation with
+the king, and was paying him a friendly visit. He meant
+to arrange with him regarding the people and the management
+of the station at Utw&eacute; during his absence.</p>
+
+<p>I left Mo&#363;t at daylight, and, as I said good-bye to Tulp&eacute;
+and the little daughter, how little I thought that I should
+never cross their hospitable threshold again!</p>
+
+<p>Kusis came with me, and we took the route by the
+weather side of the island, reaching L&ecirc;l&eacute; in the afternoon.
+On my way to the king's house we came across a number of
+women catching shrimps in the rivulet that runs into
+Chabral harbour, and among them were Kitty of Ebon and
+L&#257;lia.</p>
+
+<p>These two called to us to stop, as they had news for me.
+Coming out of the water, they threw off their wet clothes
+and put on dry ones. Then the four of us sat down on a
+low coral wall under the shade of some trees.</p>
+
+<p>Kitty of Ebon began the conversation by saying that the
+Captain had arrived the night before, and had a long talk
+with the king, whom he told that he was going to try and
+reach Mill&eacute; in the largest of the ship's boats, though he
+would have to contend against the north-east trades the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+whole way. He wished the king to become responsible
+for the management and safety of the station of Utw&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>This the king didn't see his way to do, as he could never
+control the Pleasant islanders. The remaining white men
+at Chabral harbour would regain their control over them as
+soon as Hayston had left; that it was not wise of the Captain
+to attempt to reach Mill&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>He also showed great fear of being punished if the Captain
+came back and found his station pillaged.</p>
+
+<p>Kitty of Ebon, who was present at the interview, further
+narrated that the king, finding that Hayston was bent on
+setting out for Mill&eacute;, made another proposal to the Captain,
+who had accepted it on the condition that I would concur.
+This was that all the oil, boats, and stores, with the women,
+should be conveyed to Chabral harbour and put under the
+king's protection, who professed then to be anxious that I
+should come and live with him in case the traders made an
+attack on him, and tried to seize the property or carry off
+the women.</p>
+
+<p>Both Kitty and L&#257;lia urged me not to do this, for, they
+said, "as soon as the Captain goes away there will be fighting
+here; the king is weak, and the traders do not fear
+him. Besides, they are plotting with Likiak S&acirc;, the missionary,
+who has promised them to win the king over.
+They say that you and Black Johnny are the only two men
+that will stand by the Captain's property when guns and
+knives are out, as young Harry is to stay at Utw&eacute; till the
+Captain returns."</p>
+
+<p>I inquired of the girls what the traders proposed doing
+with me?</p>
+
+<p>"Shoot you, Black Johnny, and young Harry. Then,
+when the Captain is once away, they will be strong enough,
+and the king will not interfere with them."</p>
+
+<p>L&#257;lia then told me that one of the trader's wives had told
+her that they had arranged to have us three shot by some
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+of their natives as soon as the Captain had left for Mill&eacute;.
+The girls again urged me not to comply with the king's
+request, and to dissuade Hayston from his intended voyage.
+Indeed, they tried to prevent me from going to the
+king at all, Kitty urging me to come to her house, and
+write a letter to the Captain asking him to meet me
+there.</p>
+
+<p>The thought of the Captain being a victim, as well as
+myself and young Harry, to such treachery decided me in
+an instant, and breaking away from the women, Kusis and
+I soon reached the king's house.</p>
+
+<p>The traders who were living at Chabral kept carefully
+within doors. When I reached the courtyard of the king's
+house I found no one there but His Majesty and Likiak S&acirc;
+engaged in earnest conversation. The native missionary
+glanced uneasily at me, and I at once opened out on him by
+calling him a treacherous dog, striking him at the same
+time, and threatening him with the Captain's vengeance.
+He picked himself up and left.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is the Captain?" I said to the king.</p>
+
+<p>"In my oil-shed," he answered in a troubled voice.</p>
+
+<p>But I said nothing to him, and, finding Hayston, shortly
+made him acquainted with what I had learnt from Kitty of
+Ebon. His face darkened as he strode off to the king.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the natives called out that there was a
+vessel in sight, upon which he turned back, and together we
+walked to the beach in time to see a fine fore and aft
+schooner sailing in, which Hayston declared was the
+<i>Matautu</i>, belonging to Captain Warner.</p>
+
+<p>"He would never have ventured in if he knew I was
+here," quoth the Captain grimly; "and if I had a few of
+my boys he'd never go out again, unless the schooner had a
+new master."</p>
+
+<p>I reasoned with him against the folly of such an action,
+when he said that he would use fair means at first, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+would try and charter the <i>Matautu</i>. He then went to
+the king, and I could see meant mischief. I was glad
+to notice the traders getting into canoes and making for
+the schooner, where they no doubt thought they would
+be safe, as Hayston had only two native boys with him,
+and would hardly attempt to tackle the schooner single-handed.</p>
+
+<p>Likiak S&acirc; was again with the king when we returned.
+However, he ran away at once, narrowly missing a chair
+which the Captain threw at him. Old Tokusar seemed
+scared, as he watched the Captain's darkening face. He
+inquired in a shaking voice, "Why you so much angry?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because," answered the Captain, "the men who have
+been living on my food have been plotting against me, and
+that scheming missionary is at the bottom of it; but look
+you, King Tokusar, and mark my words well! If I suspect
+you, too, I will burn your house and town, and drown you
+like a rat in your own turtle pond!"</p>
+
+<p>"Captain," I said, "what folly! You are here almost
+alone, and all but in the power of your enemies. Return to
+the boats and get back to Utw&eacute;."</p>
+
+<p>He calmed down almost immediately, and said he would
+see Captain Warner. He asked me to come with him. I
+mentioned the fact of the traders being on board the ship,
+and urged him to be cautious.</p>
+
+<p>We got in the boats, and pulled towards the schooner.
+Before we were half-way across the Captain laughed contemptuously,
+and pointed to the traders, who were already
+leaving the schooner's side in canoes, and making rapidly
+for the western side of the harbour.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Warner seemed under great excitement when
+we stepped on deck, but the cordial manner of Hayston's
+greeting at once reassured him, so that we were received
+most politely and asked below.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Warner seemed so intensely amiable that I
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+could hardly help laughing, and as he kept his glass constantly
+filled, or rather emptied, his amiability increased
+proportionately.</p>
+
+<p>In the course of conversation a discussion arose as to
+some business transactions with Hayston while we were at
+Ponap&eacute;, and the skipper laughingly remarked that he had
+over-reached him in the matter. The Captain, who was
+now perfectly calm, gave a pleasantly-worded denial, and
+said, "No, Captain Warner, I think my supercargo must
+have got to windward of <i>you</i> there."</p>
+
+<p>A quarrel ensued forthwith. The burly skipper became
+offensive, and it ended in our agreeing to meet with pistols
+on the beach at daylight next morning.</p>
+
+<p>However, at dawn the <i>Matautu</i> had towed out with the
+first breath of the land-breeze, and was already outside
+the passage standing to the westward. So the duel did not
+come off. I honestly think the skipper was not afraid,
+but I suspect he decided not to risk another encounter with
+Hayston, and so thought discretion was the better part of
+valour.</p>
+
+<p>Next day we again heard the stirring cry of "Sail ho!"
+The new arrival was the <i>Morning Star</i> from Honolulu,
+from which about ten o'clock landed the Rev. Mr. Morland&mdash;a
+portly, white bearded old gentleman, who at once
+made his way to his residence, while the Captain and I
+returned to South harbour. Kusis went home, with a
+promise from me to follow him next day, the honest fellow
+begging me to delay as little as possible.</p>
+
+<p>It was dark when we started, and a fierce black squall
+struck us just after we got out of the passage, nearly capsizing
+the boat. The Captain thought we had better return,
+but I was anxious to get back to Mo&#363;t, and said I was sure
+the squall would not last. So we reefed the sail and dashed
+out to sea close-hauled, for the squall came from the westward,
+and was dead against us. However, the wind
+con<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>tinued
+to increase, and the little boat shipped two or three
+heavy seas. So we agreed to turn back.</p>
+
+<p>We went about in a lull, and had made the entrance to
+the passage, as we thought, when the Captain called out,
+"Look out! here comes a sea!"</p>
+
+<p>Looking back, I saw a huge black roller almost on top of
+us. The next minute I felt we had touched. I shouted,
+"By Jove! we're not in the passage at all&mdash;it's only a
+creek in the reef. Jump out, quick!"</p>
+
+<p>We all sprang out of the boat on to the jagged coral, then
+the waves, poised high in air, dashed down upon us, and
+we were all washed clear over into a pool of smooth water.
+The boat was capsized, and with broken masts and oars
+gone, was swept in far ahead of us, till she disappeared in
+the darkness. We clung to the reef as best we could, and
+succeeded in reaching a coral "mushroom" that was just
+a wash. "We'll be all right here," said the Captain, in his
+cool, cheerful way; "are you boys all right?"&mdash;the two
+native boys were, like ourselves, cut about the arms and
+legs by the coral. But they thought nothing of that.
+What they dreaded were the <i>sharks</i>!</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately the tide was falling, and the coral knoll was
+gradually showing more of its surface above the water.
+Otherwise none of us would have reached the shore; for
+in these deep water passages the sharks literally swarm.</p>
+
+<p>A sea occasionally broke close to us, but not with sufficient
+force to wash any of us away. Suddenly the Captain
+said, "Boys, I see some people fishing ashore with torches,"
+and he gave a resounding hail. An answer came back, and,
+what was more to the purpose, a canoe, in which we were
+rescued from our precarious position and taken ashore.
+The boat was searched for, and found drifting out to sea.
+But as long as I live I shall never forget the horrible feeling
+of standing on that coral knoll, in the wave-washed
+darkness, knowing that if we were once dislodged there was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+no chance of escaping the sharks. We were all good swimmers,
+but the Kusaie natives told us that the passage of
+Chabral harbour was swarming with the dreaded reef-shark,
+that seeks its prey, chiefly turtle, in the foam and swirl of
+the breakers on the reef. We slept that night in a native
+house, some distance from the village of L&ecirc;l&eacute;, and at daylight
+proceeded along the beach to the king's house. The
+old king did not appear; the queen was very hospitable to
+us, but seemed nervous and constrained in her manner to
+the Captain. Once when I was standing apart from him,
+she said in a low tone that I had better return to Mo&#363;t,
+where I would be safe, adding, "Don't stay along with Captain.
+Man-of-war come from Honolulu to take him away.
+By and by I tell him."</p>
+
+<p>I afterwards regretted that I did not attach more importance
+to her warning, and tell the Captain; subsequent
+events showed that both the king and queen had been informed
+by Mr. Morland of the impending arrival of a man-of-war,
+which had been searching for Hayston for months
+previously. Later in the day, while the Captain was
+superintending repairs to the boat, Mr. Morland and the
+native colleague were announced. The white missionary
+requested to see the Captain. I may mention, that during
+our cruise to the north-west in the <i>Leonora</i> we had occasionally
+met with the missionary brig, <i>Morning Star</i>, and
+had been visited by Mr. Morland once or twice.</p>
+
+<p>On this occasion he met us with the usual smile and outstretched
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you do, Captain Hayston? I am glad&mdash;very
+glad to see you, and yet sorry; for you have my sincere
+sympathy for the loss of your beautiful vessel."</p>
+
+<p>"Morland!" came the quick reply, "you know you are
+lying most infernally. You are no more pleased to see me
+than I am to see you. Our interests are too antagonistic for
+us to take kindly to each other. So let us at least be candid!"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
+"Oh! Captain Hayston!" rejoined Mr. Morland, "you
+terribly unkind man! Why must you hate the poor parson
+so? Oh! my friend, my countryman, let us shake hands
+as fellow-Christians should do when they meet in these
+lonely, beautiful spots of God's bright universe!"</p>
+
+<p>Hayston smiled, but if he had but known that Mr. Morland
+was, even then, anxiously looking for the tall spars
+of one of Her Majesty's warships, and had actually been in
+communication with her captain a few days previously, he
+would possibly have half-strangled his pleasant-mannered
+visitor then and there.</p>
+
+<p>After a short chat the missionary returned to the king's
+house with the Captain, while I busied myself with the
+repairs of the boat, when the startling cry of "Sail ho!"
+rang through the quiet village. I ran up to the king's
+house, and found the Captain in the courtyard playing a
+game of dominoes with Queen S&ecirc;.</p>
+
+<p>The missionary and Likiak S&acirc; were just coming out from
+an interview with the king. The air of exultation on their
+faces as they saw the natives hurrying to and fro at the
+cry of "Sail ho!" struck me at once.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain sprang up at once, and said, "Let us take the
+boat and go out to her, she may want a pilot"; and we
+walked through the house to the stone wharf that abutted
+on one side of the king's establishment. We jumped into
+the boat, and with a crew of four natives pulled quickly
+out of the passage. On gaining the open we could see no
+sail, and concluded that the ship must be coming round the
+north-eastern side of the island, where she had been sighted
+by the natives. We then set sail, and commenced beating
+to windward, and about half-an-hour afterwards, as the
+little boat rode on the swell, we got a sight of the lofty
+masts and square yards of a man-of-war under steam, as
+she rounded the high land on the north-east side of the
+island<ins title="Transcriber's Note: added missing .">.</ins></p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+With a sudden exclamation the Captain stood up and
+gazed at the steamer. He then seated himself and seemed
+lost in thought. The great vessel came steadily on, then
+altered her course by a couple of points, and steered in the
+direction of the passage. I could see that she was under a
+full head of steam, and was travelling at a great rate. A
+volume of thick smoke was issuing from the yellow funnel,
+and as there is always a heavy sea off the windward side of
+Strong's Island she rolled tremendously, the water pouring
+from her black painted sides in sheets.</p>
+
+<p>The Captain watched her intently. "That's a man-of-war,
+Hilary! and a Britisher too," he said. "Though she
+may be an American&mdash;the <i>Portsmouth</i> or the <i>Jamestown</i>;
+I can't tell with that smoke blowing ahead of her. If she's
+an American cruiser, she'll take me prisoner right enough.
+It's no use attempting to escape now. It's too late; I must
+take my chance. In that case you must get away to Utw&eacute;
+as quick as possible, and do the best you can with the
+station and the people. You know where the money is
+stowed away, and what to do with it if we are fated not to
+meet again."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>As he said these words the smoke cleared away from the
+cruiser, and we had a splendid view of her as she rose
+majestically to a heavy sea, and fell gracefully into the
+trough again. "A Britisher, by &mdash;&mdash;!" exclaimed the
+Captain, "and a beauty too; give way, my lads, she's
+stopped her engines. Let us get aboard, and I'll soon learn
+what's in store for me."</p>
+
+<p>In order that it may be understood what reason the Captain
+had for these strong suspicions of arrest and imprisonment,
+I will here make quotation from the <i>Queensland
+Government Gazette</i>, an official journal of severely correct
+character, which, like "the <i>Apparatus</i>, cannot lie."</p>
+
+
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></div>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ <span class="smcap">Colonial Secretary's Office,</span><br />
+ <span class="smcap">Brisbane</span>, <i>20th August 1875</i>.
+</div>
+
+<p>His Excellency directs the subjoined circular despatch received
+from the Secretary of State for the Colonies, together with the enclosed
+correspondence with the Board of Admiralty, respecting the
+proceedings in the South Seas of W. H. Hayston, a United States'
+subject, and master of the American brig <i>Leonora</i>, to be published
+in the <i>Gazette</i> for general information.</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ <span class="smcap">A. Macalister.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+ The Admiralty to the Colonial Office.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ <span class="smcap">Admiralty</span>, <i>12th January 1875</i>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;I am commanded by the my Lords Commissioners of the
+Admiralty to transmit herewith, for the information of the Earl of
+Carnarvon, a letter and its enclosures from Commodore Goodenough,
+Senior Naval Officer of the Australasian Station, reporting the proceedings
+of W. H. Hayston, a citizen of the United States, and master
+of the late American brig <i>Leonora</i>. It is requested that these
+papers be returned in order that they may be sent to the Foreign
+Office.&mdash;I am, etc.</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ (Signed) <span class="smcap">Robert Hall</span>.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-rank center smaller">
+ The Under Secretary of State,<br />Colonial Office.
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+ Admiral Cochrane to the Admiralty.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ <i>Repulse</i> <span class="smcap">at Callao</span>, <i>28th February 1875</i>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;I have the honour to forward for the information of their
+Lordships a copy of correspondence which I have received from
+Commodore Goodenough, commanding the Australian Station.</p>
+
+<p>2. The correspondence has reference to the very irregular conduct
+of a master of a trading brig lately wrecked. The master is believed
+to be an American.</p>
+
+<p>3. Commodore Goodenough requested that the documents containing
+evidence tending to substantiate the charges against the said master
+should be forwarded to the American admiral commanding the
+North Pacific Station. The islands where the occurrences referred to
+took place are not included in the Pacific Station.&mdash;I am, etc.</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ (Signed) <span class="smcap">A. A. Cochrane.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-rank center smaller">
+ Rear Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.
+</div>
+
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ H.M.S. <i>Repulse</i>,<br />
+ <span class="smcap">Callao</span>, <i>28th February 1875</i>.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;I have the honour to forward for your perusal copies of correspondence
+I have received from Commodore Goodenough in command
+of H.M. ships on the Australian Station, relative to the highly
+irregular proceedings of a master of a vessel trading among the South
+Sea Islands. He is believed to be an American citizen.</p>
+
+<p>I should be much gratified if circumstances enable you to cause
+inquiry into the subject of the charges enumerated.&mdash;I have, etc.</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ (Signed) <span class="smcap">A. A. Cochrane.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-rank center smaller">
+ Rear Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+ Circular.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ <span class="smcap">Downing Street</span>, <i>13th May 1875</i>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;I have the honour to transmit to you copies of a correspondence
+with the Board of Admiralty respecting the proceedings in the
+South Seas of W. H. Hayston, a United States' subject, and master of
+the late American brig <i>Leonora</i>. In connection with the lawless conduct
+of Hayston, as reported in the papers now transmitted, I beg to
+refer you to my predecessor's Circular Despatch of 22nd December
+1875, relating to the proceedings in the case of the <i>Atlantic</i>, and I
+desire to express my entire concurrence in the hope expressed by
+Lord Kimberley, that no opportunity may be lost of bringing the man
+to trial.&mdash;I have, etc.</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ <span class="smcap">Carnarvon.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-rank center smaller">
+ To the Officer administering the<br />Government of Queensland.
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+Proceedings of H.M.S. <i>Rosario</i> in the South Sea Islands. Criminal
+acts of Mr. W. H. Hayston, master of the brig <i>Leonora</i>.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ H.M.S. <i>Pearl</i>, <i>16th November 1874</i>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;I have the honour to enclose for the information of the
+Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, a Report and various papers
+furnished to me by Commander Dupont of H.M.S. <i>Rosario</i>, concerning
+a Mr. William H. Hayston, master of the late American brig
+<i>Leonora</i>.</p>
+
+<p>2. This Mr. Hayston has long been known among the Pacific
+Islands as a collector of produce, and has the reputation of
+defraud<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>ing
+natives and lifting produce collected by other traders. He has
+been spoken of in correspondence between this and the Chinese Station
+as "the notorious Captain Hayston," but hitherto no evidence on
+which he could be convicted of any piratical act has been brought
+before me.</p>
+
+<p>3. It seemed possible that Commander Dupont, while cruising in
+H.M.S. <i>Rosario</i> among the Gilbert and Ellice Islands, and watching
+the labour traffic, might be able to gather some evidence which would
+enable him to detain this person, who is doing much harm among
+the islands. A copy of my orders to Commander Dupont is enclosed.</p>
+
+<p>4. Commander Dupont seems only to have obtained the evidence
+which he desired against Hayston after he had learned of his escape,
+and he is satisfied from inspection of Hayston's papers that he is an
+American citizen.</p>
+
+<p>5. Commander Dupont brought away with him from Strong's
+Island the crew of Hayston's vessel, the <i>Leonora</i>, which was wrecked
+there in March last, and also one Hilary Telfer, who had proceeded
+from Samoa to Mill&eacute; as supercargo of a vessel called the <i>E. A. Wilson</i>,
+and belonging to the sons and daughters of Mr. Wilson, H.M. Consul
+from Samoa.</p>
+
+<p>6. This Mr. Telfer carried with him from Samoa orders from
+Mr. Wilson to put the <i>E. A. Wilson</i> and the cargo into Hayston's
+hands to be sold, and in course of business appears to have become so
+mixed up in Hayston's affairs, that the latter made him his agent and
+entrusted him with letters to all his subordinate agents, informing
+them that he had been seized by the <i>Rosario</i> for conveyance to
+Sydney.</p>
+
+<p>7. I was in Samoa in H.M.S. <i>Pearl</i> in November 1873. The
+ketch <i>E. A. Wilson</i> was then there under repairs. Mr. S. D. Wilson
+told me nothing of his intentions regarding the vessel, but gave me
+to understand that Mr. Hayston was a great rascal, who had cleverly
+outwitted all inquiries. He offered to obtain evidence from a half-caste,
+and at my desire took the statements (which proved valueless)
+on oath. Yet on December 3, 1873, he enters into communication
+with this man, against whom he had pretended to give me information.</p>
+
+<p>8. I consider the whole affair as most unsatisfactory, even regarding
+Mr. Wilson as a trader. In the position of Her Majesty's Acting
+Consul, I consider that he has been guilty of improper behaviour, rendering
+him unworthy to occupy such a position. The desirability of
+appointing a non-trading Consul in Samoa has already been pointed
+out by both myself and my predecessor on this Station.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+9. The papers I enclose concerning Hayston will illustrate the life
+of a modern South-Sea filibuster.&mdash;I have the honour to be, your
+obedient servant,</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ <span class="smcap">James G. Goodenough,</span><br />
+ Captain and Commodore, 2nd Class,<br />
+ Commanding Australian Station.<br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-rank center smaller">
+ To the Secretary.
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+ Enclosure No. 2.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ H.M.S. <i>Rosario</i>,<br />
+ <span class="smcap">At Sea</span>, Lat. 2&deg; 26&prime; N., Long. 167&deg; 19&prime; E.,<br />
+ <i>10th October 1874</i>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;With reference to Mr. Hayston, master of the American
+brig <i>Leonora</i>, I beg to forward the following statement of facts relative
+to him that I have been able to collect among the different islands
+visited during my present cruise:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>1. There can be no doubt but that Mr. Hayston is a shrewd, unprincipled
+man, who has committed acts of violence towards the
+natives, and been guilty of unjustifiable acts towards other persons.
+Yet, so greatly has his name got to be feared, by both natives and
+white men on the islands, that, though it was evident that at nearly
+all the islands I visited he was well known, it was impossible to find
+out much about him.</p>
+
+<p>2. With respect to Mr. Dunn's business, what evidence I could get
+was mainly in Hayston's favour, and tended to show that Dunn's
+agents had sold the trade to Hayston instead of his taking it. This is
+certainly the case as regards an Englishman named George Winchcombe,
+whom I found living on Nukufutau, one of the Ellice group.
+He himself stated to me that he left Sydney with Dunn, in the understanding
+that he was to be found at a station on one of the islands.
+He complained that Dunn treated him badly on board, and eventually
+sent him on shore on the island of Apaiari (Gilbert group) to collect
+trade. He was dissatisfied with his life, much in dread of the natives,
+and on Hayston's coming there in the beginning of 1873, he begged
+him to take him off the island, and offered to sell him all the trade he
+had collected. Hayston accordingly took him. At another island,
+Tarawa, the only white resident had heard that some trade had been
+removed by Hayston, but was not on the island at the time. At other
+islands I heard things relative to Dunn's property, but could get
+nothing but hearsay evidence. I could not find a single individual,
+either white or native, who could furnish me with any positive evidence
+or proof against Hayston.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+On entering Chabral harbour (Strong's Island) Mr. Hayston, as
+I have reported in my letter of proceedings, came out to meet the
+ship in a boat. He told that his vessel had been wrecked in South
+harbour of the island on the 15th of March this year, since which date
+he had been living on shore collecting oil.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Morland, an American missionary, who had just arrived from
+Ebon Island, and numerous white men&mdash;the late crew of the <i>Leonora</i>&mdash;were
+also there. A schooner under the German flag, Mr. Miller
+an Englishman master, lay in the harbour. I commenced making
+inquiries as quietly as possible about Hayston, but here, as at other
+places, I met with disinclination from all traders to tell me anything
+they might know; Mr. Miller, though hinting that Hayston had
+robbed him not long since, would at first say nothing, nor was it till
+after considerable persuasion and the delay of some days that I got
+the enclosed statement, with the various witnesses in the matter,
+from him.</p>
+
+<p>But as he was sailing under German colours, I could not believe
+my duty was to do more than receive the statements and forward it
+through you to the German Consul in Sydney.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston, apprised by some of the crew of the inquiries that had
+been made, left the island in a boat on the night of the 27th. His
+design was, I believe, either to make the island of Ascension or that
+of Pingelap. At their own request, and also considering it a good
+thing for the island to be rid of them, I took five of the crew of the
+<i>Leonora</i> on board for passage to Sydney, and also one other person
+who had been a passenger on board, and also, from what I could hear,
+a great friend of Hayston. This Hilary Telfer was the person who
+had been sent by Mr. Wilson, British Consul at Samoa, as supercargo
+of the ketch that I met at Mill&eacute;, but leaving his charge there, had
+gone to sea with Hayston and been with him since January. I deemed
+it advisable that he should be removed, there being no chance of his
+getting back to Mill&eacute; from Strong's Island, and also because the chief
+particularly desired his removal, as being likely to stir up trouble in
+the island. These six persons are now on board.</p>
+
+<p>I visited Mr. Hayston's residence at South harbour; he had made
+a regular settlement of it, and had collected a large quantity of oil.
+No less than five young women were living in his house, who had all
+with one exception been living on board the <i>Leonora</i>. That vessel
+was sunk in fourteen fathoms, her topmast head a few feet above
+water.</p>
+
+<p>The first mate I left on the island, recommending him to take
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+charge of Hayston's property. The second mate, William Hicks, ran
+away into the bush and couldn't be found, otherwise I should have
+taken him to Sydney with the others. Thinking the case over quietly
+afterwards, I cannot see how I could have arrested Hayston. It is,
+therefore, with great regret that I am obliged to report my failure to
+collect sufficient evidence against him to warrant my doing so. The
+case of Mr. Dunn must have failed from want of such evidence.&mdash;I
+have, etc., etc.</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ <span class="smcap">A. E. Dupont</span>,<br />
+ Commander.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ To Commodore J. G. Goodenough,<br />H.M.S. <i>Pearl</i>.
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+Enclosure No. 13.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+<span class="smcap">Messrs. Miller and Warne to Mr. Hilary Telfer, Supercargo.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>,&mdash;You will proceed from hence to Mill&eacute;, Mulgrave Island,
+for the purpose of selling the ketch <i>A.E.W.</i> You will find Captain
+Hayston there waiting for you, so you will please consult with him, as
+he is acquainted with the people who wish to purchase the ketch.
+Try to obtain oil or copra to the amount of &pound;500 for her. Ship whatever
+produce you may get on board the <i>Leonora</i>, and get Captain
+Hayston to sign bills of lading. Do not sell the chronometer unless
+you get a good price for it. Sell the few things you take to the best
+advantage. None of the Samoans are to remain, but to come back to
+Apia. Have the ketch painted at Mill&eacute;.&mdash;Wishing you a prosperous
+and speedy voyage, we are, etc.,</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ (Signed) <span class="smcap">Miller and Warne.</span><br />
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+ Enclosure No. 15.
+</div>
+
+<p>Know all men by these presents that I, William Henry Hayston,
+Master mariner, now residing on Strong's Island, in the North Pacific
+Ocean, have made, constituted, and appointed Hilary Telfer, of Sydney,
+New South Wales, at present residing on this island of Kusaie
+(or Strong's Island), to be my true and lawful agent for me, and, in
+my place and stead, to enter into and take possession of my station
+situated at Maloe, near the village of Utw&eacute;, South harbour, on the
+above-named island. Also all my oil, casks, tobacco, and other trade
+which may be on said station. Also boats, canoe, pigs, fowls, possessions&mdash;all
+and everything, whether of value or not, together with my
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+furniture and private effects, and to take full charge of all my business
+on the above-named island during my trip to the eastward.</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ (Signed) <span class="smcap">W. H. Hayston</span>,<br />
+ <span class="smaller">In the presence of the undersigned witness,<br />
+ this 19th August 1874.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ (Signed) <span class="smcap">Charles Roberts</span>.
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+ Enclosure No. 16.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ <span class="smcap">Memorandum of Instructions for Mr. Hilary Telfer.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;As I am about to leave Strong's Island, and have given you
+power to act on my behalf, I wish you to close up all my affairs in the
+best manner you can. You will look after the property I leave behind,
+and dispose of it to the best advantage. Out of the remainder of the
+oil you can pay yourself for the chronometer, and Mr. Harry Skillings
+for the trade I had from him. Sell the balance, including the large
+cargo-boat, as soon as an opportunity offers. Anything left over you
+can give to the people that have been kind to you, and the natives.
+Out of the proceeds of the sale you can pay for the passage of my
+natives to Samoa, if they want to go there. If not, see them back on
+their own island, or on some of the Kingsmill group, that they may
+get with their own country people.</p>
+
+<p>My native boy Toby I wish you to take to Samoa, and look after
+him as well as you can; also Kitty, as they have no father or mother.
+Both were given to me by the king of Hope Island. The stores I left
+behind are for you and the natives to live on till you can get away.
+Be careful of the little trade I leave you, as the Strong's islanders
+want payment for everything you get of them to eat. You will also
+bear in mind that the king owes me 12,100 cocoa-nuts, the balance of
+the 48,000 that he agreed to pay me for the property stolen by the
+Strong's islanders at the time of the loss of the brig.</p>
+
+<p>I write an accompanying letter to each of my agents. You will
+have to settle with them by their own accounts, as my trade-book was
+lost, as you know. The balance, after paying for your own passage
+and expense, you can hand over to my agent at Samoa.&mdash;Wishing
+you a safe arrival there and every success, I remain, yours in good
+faith,</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ (Signed) <span class="smcap">W. H. Hayston.</span>
+</div>
+
+
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span></div>
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+ Circular.
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ <span class="smcap">Downing Street</span>, <i>31st May 1875</i>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Sir</span>,&mdash;With reference to my circular despatch of 13th instant, I
+have the honour to transmit to you the accompanying copy of a note
+addressed by the Duc de Decazes to Her Majesty's Minister at Paris,
+in consequence of the communication on the subject of the lawless
+proceedings of W. H. Hayston in the South Seas, which the Earl of
+Derby caused to be made to the French Government, also those of
+Germany and the United States.&mdash;I am, etc.,</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ <span class="smcap">Carnarvon.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-rank center smaller">
+ The Officer Administering<br />the Government of Queensland.
+</div>
+
+
+<div class="letter-heading center">
+ <span class="smcap">The Duc de Decazes to Mr. Adams.</span>
+</div>
+
+<p>(Copy.)</p>
+
+<div class="letter-address center">
+ <span class="smcap">Paris</span>, <i>le 10 mai 1875</i>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">M. le Ministre</span>,&mdash;J'ai port&eacute; &agrave; la connaissance de mon coll&egrave;gue
+les informations que vous m'avez fait l'honneur de me transmettre,
+relativement &agrave; un personnage dangereux, du nom de Hayston, qui se
+serait signal&eacute; par de nombreux actes de d&eacute;pr&eacute;dation dans les Iles de
+l'Oc&eacute;anie. M. l'Amiral de Montaigne r&eacute;pondant &agrave; ma communication
+m'annonce qu'il signalera par le premier <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'courier'">courrier</ins>
+cet individu au Commandant en Chef de notre division navale dans l'Oc&eacute;an Pacifique.
+Il adressera en outre &agrave; M. l'Amiral Rebout les instructions n&eacute;cessaires
+pour que ce <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'filibustier'">flibustier</ins>
+Psoit surveill&eacute; de pr&egrave;s et mis, le cas
+&eacute;ch&eacute;ant, hors d'&eacute;tat de poursuivre son industrie criminelle.&mdash;Agr&eacute;ez,
+etc.,</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ (Signed) <span class="smcap">Duc de Decazes.</span>
+</div>
+
+<div class="letter-rank center smaller">
+ M. Adams.
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<h2>H.M.S. ROSARIO</h2>
+
+
+<p>As we pulled up alongside we saw her bulwarks forward
+crowded with the blue-jackets. The Captain's quick eye,
+which nothing escaped, detected among them the bronzed
+faces of Dan Gardiner and another trader whom he had
+left at Providence Island.</p>
+
+<p>"She's come to take me, sure enough," he said to me.
+"The moment I looked at those two fellows they dropped
+back out of sight. Never mind, come aboard and I'll see
+it through."</p>
+
+<p>As soon as we gained the deck he advanced towards a
+group of officers standing on the quarter-deck, and, raising
+his hat, said, "Good morning, gentlemen. I am Captain
+Hayston of the brig <i>Leonora</i>, cast away on this island in
+the earlier part of the year."</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's silence; then a tall man, the
+captain of the cruiser, stepped out from the others, surveyed
+Hayston from head to foot, and said, "Oh, ah, indeed!
+then you are the very man I am looking for. This
+is Her Majesty's ship <i>Rosario</i>, and you are a prisoner, Mr.
+Hayston!"</p>
+
+<p>Hayston simply bowed and said nothing, retiring to the
+port side, where he was placed under the charge of the
+sergeant-major of marines, who, as also all others on board,
+looked with intense curiosity at the man of whose doings
+they had heard so much in their cruises in the Pacific
+Ocean.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+The man-of-war captain then demanded my name, after
+which I was considerably staggered by the announcement
+that he had instructions to apprehend me on the charge of
+stealing the ketch <i>E. A. Wilson</i>, the property of Messrs.
+Miller and Warne of Samoa.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston at once came forward, and, addressing the captain,
+said that I had simply brought that vessel to him at
+Mill&eacute;, and could produce written instructions from the
+owners to hand the vessel over to him. To this no answer
+was returned, and silence was maintained, for the <i>Rosario</i>
+was now entering the passage, and so interested was I at
+the novel surroundings of a man-of-war under steam, and
+so lost in admiration of the perfect discipline on board,
+that for the time being I forgot that the Captain of the
+<i>Leonora</i> was a prisoner, and that I was also apprehended
+on a serious charge.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly and gracefully the great ship steamed through the
+passage, and brought up within a cable's length of the
+king's wharf, where the anchor plunged below to its
+resting-place on the coral bottom. No sooner had the
+man-of-war come to anchor than Mr. Morland and the
+native missionary, who followed him like a shadow, came
+on board, and were received by Her Majesty's representative.
+A consultation took place, after which I was separated
+from my companion, and, without being able to
+exchange a word of farewell, was hurried down to the gun-room.
+As I placed my foot on the ladder leading to the
+"'tween decks" I turned. He waved his hand to me in
+farewell. <i>We never met again!</i></p>
+
+<p>While I was detained in the gun-room a midshipman
+told me that Captain Hayston had been permitted to go on
+shore, under the charge of an officer, to collect his personal
+effects and write letters, as he had been informed that I
+would not be permitted to have any further communication
+with him.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+The midshipman said that Mr. Morland had seemed surprised
+at Captain Hayston's not being put in irons, and
+was at that moment collecting evidence in order to formulate
+a series of charges against him before the captain of
+the <i>Rosario</i>. My informant added, "If Captain Hayston
+is such a blood-thirsty ruffian as he is described to be he
+certainly shows no indication of it."</p>
+
+<p>Several of the warrant officers now gathered around and
+pressed me with questions concerning Hayston. One of
+them jocularly inquired where the Captain's harem was
+located, adding that it was a pity to separate him from
+them, and that there was plenty of room on board the
+<i>Rosario</i> for ladies.</p>
+
+<p>I was burning with anxiety to know on what particular
+charge Hayston had been arrested, and how the captain of
+the <i>Rosario</i> had heard of the loss of the <i>Leonora</i>. They
+told me then that the <i>Rosario</i> had been searching for Hayston
+for some time, under instructions from the Commodore
+of the Australian Station, to whom representations had
+been made concerning alleged depredations committed by
+him (Hayston) in the Line Islands. The <i>Rosario</i> had
+visited a number of islands, and endeavoured to obtain
+evidence against Hayston, but that it had resulted in a failure,
+nearly every one, when it came to the point, declining
+to make any statement against him. The captain of the
+man-of-war then decided to proceed to Arrecifos, or Providence
+Island, which he knew to be one of Hayston's dep&ocirc;ts.
+On arrival he learned from the two white men there that
+so long an interval had passed since his last visit that they
+fancied that the <i>Leonora</i> had been lost.</p>
+
+<p>These two men were taken on board, and the <i>Rosario</i>
+made for Strong's Island. When within 400 miles she met
+the little <i>Matautu</i>, who signalled a wish to speak. As soon
+as Captain Warner boarded the man-of-war he informed
+the commander of the loss of the <i>Leonora</i>, and of Hayston's
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+presence on the island. He also handed in several written
+charges made by himself against Hayston, and, as well as
+I can remember from what I was told, was about to return
+to his schooner when the <i>Morning Star</i> hove in sight.</p>
+
+<p>On board of the missionary brig was Mr. Morland, and a
+consultation then took place between the two captains and
+this gentleman, who was, of course, delighted to hear of
+the loss of the <i>Leonora</i>, and that Captain Hayston was to
+be taken prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Matautu</i> then bore away on her course, and the
+<i>Morning Star</i>, after landing Mr. Morland at the weather
+side of the island, went on her way, leaving him ashore,
+perfectly assured of his own safety and the immediate
+presence of the <i>Rosario</i> in Chabral harbour.</p>
+
+<p>I could now understand the hints given me by the queen,
+as well as the expression of triumph on the faces of the
+missionaries as they returned from their interview with the
+king.</p>
+
+<p>Presently an officer came down and asked me if I wished
+to obtain my effects from the shore. I at once sent a message
+to Kusis to bring me a small chest, in which were my
+worldly goods, as well as my power of attorney and letters
+of instructions from former employers in Samoa. I was
+going to make inquiries about Hayston, when the officer
+requested me kindly enough not to ask him questions, as he
+could give me no information. He told me, however, that
+the captain of the <i>Rosario</i> was at that moment engaged in
+hearing charges against Hayston made by the king, Mr.
+Morland, and two or three of the traders from Pleasant
+Island. Also that some of the crew of the <i>Leonora</i> had
+been induced to come forward and make statements. I also
+learned that Hayston had been taken to South harbour in
+charge of an officer, for what purpose I could never learn,
+unless it was to give him an opportunity of escaping, as he
+could easily have written his letters in the king's house.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+Two of the boats' crews were piped away, and I was told
+by an old quarter-master, with a humorous grin, that some
+of the officers had gone away in the boats to South harbour
+to have a look at the "pirate's village, and bring away the
+unfortunate female captives." All this time I was kept in
+close confinement, and the time passed wearily away. I
+was growing tired of the ceaseless questions from every one
+that came near me about Hayston, the <i>Leonora</i>, and our
+voyage from the Carolines till the brig was cast away.</p>
+
+<p>At night, however, the boats returned, and after the crews
+had been piped down to supper the good old sergeant-major
+of marines, suspecting the anxiety I was in as to Hayston's
+movements, startled me by telling me that he had escaped
+from custody when at South Island harbour.</p>
+
+<p>He told me that as soon as the boat reached the village
+they found the place in a state of wildest confusion. A
+messenger had come down along the coast and told the
+Captain's people that a man-of-war was at L&ecirc;l&eacute;, and that
+Captain Hayston had been taken prisoner, put in irons, and
+was to be shot or hanged at once. A number of Strong's
+Island natives followed the man-of-war boats down from
+Chabral harbour, and these at once attempted to rush and
+ransack the station, which they were only prevented from
+doing by the presence of the blue-jackets.</p>
+
+<p>Hayston was escorted to his station, where he was at once
+surrounded by the girls belonging to the house and many
+others, among them being the carpenter's, steward's, boatswain's,
+and Antonio's wives&mdash;all clinging to him and
+impeding his movements.</p>
+
+<p>Calling them all together, with such others of the natives
+as had not fled from the village at the sight of the blue-jackets,
+he told them that they need not be under any alarm,
+that he was going away in the man-of-war, and might not
+return for a long time&mdash;perhaps many moons, but that the
+supercargo, Hilary Telfer, would be with them shortly,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+and they must be guided by him. Of course the Captain
+never for a minute imagined that I was then under the
+closest surveillance, and therefore would be utterly powerless
+to carry out his promises made to them.</p>
+
+<p>He then quietly seated himself, and wrote a quantity of
+letters to his agents in the different islands in the Line and
+Marshall groups. These letters he directed and enclosed
+to me, together with a power of attorney which he had
+previously drawn up, and a letter of instructions&mdash;all of
+which he laid on the table.</p>
+
+<p>He then told his captors that he was ready to return with
+them, when (according to the statement made by the marines
+on their return to L&ecirc;l&eacute;) he suddenly exerted his vast
+strength, and knocking several of them down, sprang into
+the sea and gained the mangroves on the opposite side of
+the harbour.</p>
+
+<p>On my inquiring from the marine officer why he had not
+been pursued, that gentleman winked at me, and replied,
+"No orders, my boy, no orders; besides he swam like a
+beaver, and to search the mangroves for one man would take
+a month of Sundays." Thinking the matter over, I came
+to the conclusion that for some reason I could not fathom,
+the captain of the man-of-war was not particularly anxious
+to keep Hayston a prisoner, though I had heard him declare
+to Mr. Morland that the naval authorities would at last rid
+the Pacific of this man, who was a source of terror and
+dread from New Zealand to the China Seas.</p>
+
+<p>When the boats returned from Utw&eacute; they brought up the
+man Jansen, whom Hayston had beaten and disgraced. He
+called himself, and was recognised by the captain of the
+<i>Rosario</i> as the chief officer of the <i>Leonora</i>, although he had
+long since lost his position on account of his rascally conduct.
+He seemed brimful of evidence as to Hayston's
+misdeeds, and I was afterwards informed that when brought
+into the ward-room of the man-of-war the officers expected
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+to have some thrilling stories of rapine and bloodshed.
+However, they were disappointed, as his evidence was little
+more than confirmatory of that of Captain Warner of the
+<i>Matautu</i>, in reference to the taking of some gear from the
+brig <i>Kamehameha the Fourth</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Morland and Likiak S&acirc; appeared to be the leading
+spirits in obtaining charges against the absent Hayston,
+for the commander of the man-of-war was strictly neutral,
+and certainly not furiously indignant at his escape. They
+succeeded in obtaining his approval of the appointment of
+Jansen to take charge of the people and the station, under
+the supervision of King Tokusar, at Utw&eacute;. It was at this
+juncture that the letters written by Hayston to his agents, as
+well as the power of attorney and letters of instruction to
+me, were produced by Mr. Morland. How they came to be
+in that gentleman's hands I do not know. A rough draft
+was made by him for the king's perusal, he said, and the
+originals were then brought to me by one of the lieutenants,
+who also handed me a bundle of papers which he said had
+been brought on board by a native.</p>
+
+<p>These papers were my power of attorney, to hand over
+the ketch <i>E. A. Wilson</i> to Captain Hayston, and also a letter
+of instructions in reference to the crew&mdash;copies of which
+the reader has already seen. Feeling confident that I had
+but to show these documents to Commander Dupont to
+insure an interview and my instant release, I requested to
+be ushered into the autocrat's presence. The Reverend
+Mr. Morland was present, and greeted me with such a smile
+of active benevolence that I longed to kick him.</p>
+
+<p>When I presented the letter to Captain Dupont I was
+considerably surprised when he denounced them as forgeries,
+calling me at the same time a d&mdash;d piratical scoundrel
+and accomplished young villain, adding that my cruel
+behaviour in aiding and abetting Hayston in his villainies
+made him regret that he could not run me up to the
+yard<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>arm
+as a warning. He finished this tirade by tearing up
+my papers and throwing them at me. Calling the sergeant
+of marines, he ordered me put in irons, from which, however,
+I was released before the <i>Rosario</i> put to sea.</p>
+
+<p>Early next morning, much to my relief, there appeared
+on board the black shining face of Johnny Tilton, the young
+negro, who among others of the crew had been brought away
+from Utw&eacute;, in one of the man-of-war boats. Johnny, with
+his shipmates, was taken below and examined by the captain
+and Mr. Morland. But as there was nothing against
+him personally or the Fijian half-caste Bill, they were
+permitted to return ashore. Before leaving, Johnny requested
+to be allowed to see me, which was granted.</p>
+
+<p>The moment I saw his face I knew he had something of
+importance to tell me, for looking at the marine standing
+sentry over me, he said in Samoan, "Le&mdash;alu u&#257; sola i
+te po" (the Captain escaped in the night).</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!" I replied, "I know that already."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! but I mean that he has taken the small boat and
+gone away altogether. Listen, I'll tell you all about it.
+After the man-of-war boats had gone away from Utw&eacute;, and
+the Captain had escaped into the mangroves, a number of
+the Strong's islanders came down and said they were going
+to loot the place. Then the king sent down word that the
+captain of the man-of-war had declared that the station now
+belonged to him (the king), and that he could do what he
+liked with the place. The king forbade any of the people
+to go into the Captain's house till Jansen came down with
+Likiak S&acirc;, as these two had been appointed by the king and
+Mr. Morland to take charge. Well, there was a lot of us
+ran away into the mountains at the very first when we
+heard the Captain was taken prisoner. Bill Hicks and I
+were among them, also boy George and Sunday. Before we
+left I went to the Captain's house and told the girls that
+we were running away, and our wives were coming with us,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+and asked them what they intended to do. Old Mary said
+she would wait and see first if it were true about the Captain
+being taken prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>"All the young women, too, though they were very frightened,
+said they would stay. I got Hope Island Nellie to give
+me three Winchester rifles and a bag of cartridges from the
+back of the big house. I cut a hole through the side of the
+Captain's sleeping-place, and Nellie passed the rifles out to
+me quietly. I told Nellie that we were going to hide in the
+mountains till we saw whether the man-of-war wanted to
+catch us as well as the Captain. If not we would return to
+Utw&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>"I took the rifles and wrapped them up in a long mat,
+and went down to the lagoon, where I found a canoe and
+took it. Bill and the others were waiting for me; they told
+me that the man-of-war boats were coming into the harbour,
+and that the Captain was in one of them; we watched them
+carefully and saw them go out of the harbour. Then Bill
+began to talk against the Captain, and said he would be
+glad if he were shot. He asked me if I was willing to
+make a dash into the village and help him to bring away
+Nellie and Sara, as if the Captain was taken away in the
+man-of-war he was going to have them for himself.</p>
+
+<p>"I told him that until Captain Hayston was taken away
+or dead that I intended to stick to him. So we nearly had
+a fight over it. Then Bill said all of a sudden that he
+intended to have Sara and Nellie, right or wrong. And as
+he had nothing to fear from the man-of-war, he would try
+if he couldn't fool the captain, and pretend he could tell
+him all about Captain Hayston robbing Captain Daly's
+station on the Line Islands.</p>
+
+<p>"I told him I was not going to turn dog on the Captain,
+and he might do his dirty work himself.</p>
+
+<p>"So off he went, and we saw him cross over in a canoe to
+young Harry's place, and knew he was going along the beach
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+to Chabral harbour. Then I talked to the others, and asked
+them what we ought to do, for I was afraid we would not
+see the Captain any more. Boy George laughed, and said
+he didn't care, but he meant to be beforehand with Bill and
+run off with Sara; that if I had any sense I would run off
+with Nellie, and let the other girls go adrift. He said we
+could easily live in the mountains till the man-of-war was
+gone, and then go back to Utw&eacute;. But I said I wouldn't do
+that, and that they would find that Sara would fight like a
+wild cat if boy George or any one else tried to take her
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Boy George then said if she wouldn't come he would
+put a bullet through her, and take Mila or Nellie instead.
+So then we had a row; he called me a black thief and said
+I could go to h&mdash;l. He and the others cleared out and left
+me alone.</p>
+
+<p>"It was then very dark, and as everything seemed quiet,
+I walked across the coral and got into the house on the point
+where some Strong's Island people live, the one you were
+brought to when you were washed ashore. The man and
+his wife Nadup were frightened at first; but they were good
+to me, and gave me food, and then they told me Jansen was
+in charge of the station; that the Pleasant islanders were
+fled into the bush, and that the girls in the big house had
+run away when they saw him coming to them, drunk, with a
+loaded rifle in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Only Nellie and little Kitty and Toby stayed behind.
+Nellie had a Winchester rifle and pointed it at Jansen, who
+was afraid to come into the house. Then she, Kitty, and
+the little boy collected as many of the Captain's things as
+they could carry, and taking a canoe, put out to sea, intending
+to paddle round to Mo&#363;t, where they thought they
+would find you, who would tell them all about the Captain,
+and whether he was killed or not.</p>
+
+<p>"But, after they had gone four or five miles, the outrigger
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+came off and the canoe capsized. They swam ashore and
+then walked back to Utw&eacute;, where they were told by some
+natives that you were also a prisoner on board the man-of-war.
+And the last that had been seen of Nellie, Kitty,
+and the boy, was that they started to walk to Chabral harbour
+to try and see the captain of the man-of-war, as they
+were afraid that Jansen would kill them.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," continued Black Johnny, "when I heard that
+you were also a prisoner I thought I would run away into
+the bush again, as I knew Jansen would put a bullet into
+me whenever he saw me if I did not get first shot. Just as
+I was thinking very hard what I should do, I heard some
+one walking on the broken coral outside the house. I knew
+the footstep; it was the Captain! I crept outside, and saw
+him standing up leaning against a stone wall. He had two
+pistols in his sash and a Winchester rifle in his hand. He
+seemed to be considering. I whistled softly, and then
+spoke. He shook hands with me, and then raised his rifle
+and pointed it at the head of the Strong's islander, who,
+with his wife Nadup, had followed me. They ran outside
+and threw themselves on the ground, and grovelled in the
+way they do to old Tokusar, and swore they would not tell
+that the Captain had come back.</p>
+
+<p>"We then had a hasty talk, and I told him about you
+being a prisoner. But he said you would soon be set free
+again and would return to Utw&eacute;, and I must stick to you
+and help to keep order; that after the man-of-war had gone
+he would come back again. When I told him that the
+station was broken up, and that Jansen was in charge of
+thirty Strong's islanders, and that the girls had run away,
+he said it was a bad case, and, picking up his rifle, he asked
+me where Jansen was sleeping. I saw what he meant to
+do, and begged him to let things be as they were, and not
+kill Jansen while the man-of-war was here.</p>
+
+<p>"So he thought awhile, and then said if he could find a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+boat he would get away, as he didn't think the man-of-war
+would follow him. By and by he would come back again,
+when he hoped to find you and me here all safe.</p>
+
+<p>"The Strong's Island women then told us that the dingey
+had been brought down from Chabral harbour by Jansen,
+and was then lying outside the coral at anchor. 'She'll
+do,' said the Captain; 'lend me a hand, and we'll bring
+her ashore.' But I made him lie quiet while I went for
+her; and I can tell you I was in a terrible funk all the
+time about sharks as soon as I began to swim out. Anyway
+I brought her in all right; and then the man and his
+wife brought a lot of cocoa-nuts and cooked food, and put
+it into the boat. I gave the Captain all the cartridges I
+had. He told me that he got the pistols from the place in
+the bush that you know of, and the rifle from young Harry,
+and that everything else there was all right."</p>
+
+<p>By this I knew that Hayston had visited a place in the
+bush where he had secreted his bags of money, besides
+firearms and ammunition.</p>
+
+<p>Going on with his talk the young negro said, "When
+everything was ready the Captain told me he meant to sail
+round the lee side of the island, and hide the boat in the
+mangroves till the man-of-war had gone, and then he would
+return and wipe out Jansen and the traders.</p>
+
+<p>"He told me, though (for he felt sure of your being set
+free again), that if it so happened that he did not return
+in ten days you would know that he had cleared out towards
+the north-west, and would try to reach the Pelew Islands.
+He said if he reached there he would soon get a vessel, as
+there were always plenty of small Spanish schooners about
+those islands, and he could easily put his hand on one or
+two people in the Pelews who would help him to take one.
+I asked him what we should do if, when we came back to
+Utw&eacute;, you found that Jansen was too strong for us? He
+said we should make no attempt to take forcible possession,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+but go and live with your people at Mo&#363;t. That as soon
+as the girls knew where we were they would be certain to
+come to us with little Kitty and Toby. That we must wait
+till he returned, as he would never desert us.</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said Johnny, whose glistening eyes showed how
+deeply attached he was to his Captain, "the poor fellow!
+he shook hands with me, and said I was made of the right
+stuff, and that the Almighty made a mistake when he gave
+me a black skin. Then, telling me to keep a stout heart,
+he got in and hoisted the sail. It was very dark, but there
+was a good land-breeze, and he sailed the dingey right
+along the edge of the reef till he came to the passage, and
+disappeared in the darkness. I ran across the strip of land
+on the sea-side of the lagoon and waited till I saw him
+pass.</p>
+
+<p>"In about half-an-hour I saw the little boat sailing along
+close into the shore, just outside of the breakers, rising and
+falling like a sea-gull on the top of the heavy seas. I could
+see the Captain's figure in the stern, and every moment
+expected to see her lifted high up on a roller and dashed
+on the reef. But though I shouted to him to keep farther
+out, the white figure in the stern never moved, and my
+voice was lost in the roaring of the surf.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, as I saw him still keeping steady to the southward,
+just clear of the last sweep of the seas before they
+curled and broke on the reef, I remembered that only a few
+cables' lengths from the breakers there was always a strong
+current setting to the north, and that with a light breeze the
+boat would never stem it. That was why he hugged the
+shore so closely. At last, as I kept running through
+the undergrowth following the boat, I came to that place
+where there is a thick cane scrub. When I got through it
+he was nearly out of sight, and I sat on a boulder and
+watched the sail gradually covered up by the night."</p>
+
+<p>Such, in effect, was the young negro's story. I could
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+not help being affected by his evident sorrow, and told
+him that I feared there was no chance of me at least ever
+seeing the Captain again. Then, when the time came to
+part, I shook his hand warmly, and advised him to sever
+his connection with the <i>Leonora's</i> crew; also to go and see
+the king, who would not, at any rate, object to his remaining
+on the island to follow out the Captain's wishes as
+far as lay in his power.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after Black Johnny had bid me good-bye young
+Harry came to say farewell, and with him Kusis and his
+family, and L&#257;lia.</p>
+
+<p>Harry told me that he saw the Captain after his escape,
+and urged him not to think of returning to Utw&eacute; just then,
+as Jansen had a strong force of natives with him, and
+would certainly try to take or shoot him. But he was
+determined to find out how matters stood, and bidding
+Harry good-bye, set out across the mangrove swamp that
+lined the shore from Harry's station to the village at Utw&eacute;.
+He gave him the Winchester and cartridges, and the Captain
+assured him that he would not fire a shot except in
+self-defence.</p>
+
+<p>I told Harry what I had learned from the young negro
+about the Captain's final movements, and that I was being
+taken away as a prisoner. He seemed very bitter against
+the other traders, whom he spoke of as trembling like
+whipped hounds before the Captain's frown when he was
+free, and who now, when he was a ruined and broken man,
+were loud in their threats and vapourings.</p>
+
+<p>He also told me that he had received a letter from the
+king and Mr. Morland, commanding him to deliver up to
+Jansen all oil, casks, boats, and other property in his possession
+belonging to Captain Hayston, and threatening him
+with deportation from the island if he refused. To this he
+sent a written reply to the effect, that unless the king and
+Mr. Morland could back up their demand by a boat's crew
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+from the man-of-war, he would shoot the first man who
+stepped inside his fence.</p>
+
+<p>They then appealed to Commander Dupont, who told
+them that as young Harry was an American citizen, he
+could not force him to give up the property, but advised
+the king and Mr. Morland to take the law into their own
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>Young Harry then armed his wives and native servants
+with rifles, and telling them to make short work of any one
+attempting to seize Captain Hayston's property, set out for
+Chabral harbour to interview the king. He told me that
+when he reached the king's house he found there the other
+traders, Mr. Morland, and the commander of the man-of-war.
+On the latter gentleman inquiring who he was, and
+what he wanted, Harry answered him very concisely by
+furnishing his name and nationality. He then stated that
+he had not come to see him (Commander Dupont), but the
+king, of whom he wished to ask by what right he dared to
+send him a letter threatening him with deportation from
+the island unless he consented to give up Captain Hayston's
+property. He warned him to be careful how he interfered
+with an American citizen, as there was an American
+cruiser now in the Caroline Islands. He (the king)
+would find he had made a serious mistake if he committed
+any outrage upon a citizen of the United States.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have seen the look in the British officer's
+face," said Harry, "when I stepped up to the old king, and
+nearly touching his face with my hand, said, 'and I warn
+you, king, that the captain of an American cruiser will
+listen to the tale and redress the wrongs of the honest
+American citizen. He would think little of knocking your
+town about your ears.'"</p>
+
+<p>The old king never spoke, but glanced first towards the
+British officer and then to the missionary, but as neither
+of them offered suggestions, the poor old fellow could only
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+mutter something to the effect that he was like a little fish
+in a pool, afraid of the sea because of the bigger fish, and
+afraid to stay lest the frigate birds should seize him.
+Young Harry quite enjoyed relating the scene to me, and
+said that as he was going away the king held out his hand
+and inquired in a shaky voice, "I say, Harry, what you
+tink, what you do? Suppose Captain Hayston come back,
+what become of King Tokusar? Oh! by God! now I be
+'fraid every day; think I hear Captain Hayston speak me;
+make noise like bullock; I think better be poor native, no
+more king."</p>
+
+<p>Harry refused to advise the king, and then taking a good
+look at the white men present, said, "Well, good-bye,
+King Tokusar! I am going back to my station&mdash;the station
+I am minding for Captain Hayston. I have six men
+and four women all armed, and the American flag on a pole
+in front of my door; and the first man that attempts to do
+me any mischief, white, black, or yellow, <i>I'll shoot him</i>.
+You can ask the white men from Pleasant Island if I am
+not a man of my word. They know me."</p>
+
+<p>Harry then got into his boat and pulled on board the
+man-of-war, where the first lieutenant very kindly allowed
+him to see me. I felt sincere regret at parting with Harry,
+telling him to beware of the other traders. I repeated
+what had been told me by Kitty of Ebon and L&#257;lia. He
+laughed, and said he was always prepared, and meant to
+do justice to the trust reposed in him by Captain Hayston.
+"I'm the wrong man," he said on leaving, "to abandon any
+station and property left in my charge." Then, with oft-repeated
+wishes that we might meet again, after hearing of
+the Captain's safety we parted.</p>
+
+<p>Then came again good simple Kusis and his people with
+L&#257;lia. She had in charge little Kitty and Toby. Poor
+Toby clung to my legs and sobbed as if his heart was
+breaking, when I told him that I did not know when the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+Captain would come back again. If no one else loved his
+master Toby did, and I tried in vain to assuage his grief.
+I was glad to hear from L&#257;lia that she was going to young
+Harry's place with the two children. There I knew they
+would be well treated and cared for.</p>
+
+<p>"Look!" said she, pointing to the little fellow, "the
+Captain had two good friends besides yourself, young
+Harry, and the nigger Johnny, but this little fellow has
+never ceased crying for 'Captin' since he left the village
+in South harbour. Never mind, little Toby, we will wait
+and the 'Captin' will be sure to come;" and then she
+stooped down, and tried by kissing and coaxing to prevent
+him from giving utterance to his doleful wails and sobs of
+grief.</p>
+
+<p>L&#257;lia told me, as with glistening eyes and trembling
+hands we said farewell, that her one hope now was to be
+able to get back to her distant home on Easter Island, that
+Captain Hayston would return with a ship; and, if he
+went towards Samoa or Tahiti, take her with him for that
+portion of the many thousand miles that lay between
+Strong's Island and her native land. That he would do
+this she felt confident. "For," she said, "he once told
+me that he would stand by me if I was in trouble&mdash;it was
+when we were all washed ashore together&mdash;you remember?
+<i>and he never breaks his word</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Whatever L&#257;lia's past life had been, I could never help
+admiring her many noble traits of character. I owed her
+life-long gratitude for her heroic self-sacrifice on the fateful
+night of the wreck of the <i>Leonora</i>; by me, at least, she
+will never be forgotten. Poor L&#257;lia! Brave, loving, lovely
+child of the charmed isles of the southern main! reckless
+alike in love and hate, who shall judge? who condemn
+thee? Not I!</p>
+
+<p>Kusis, Tulp&eacute;, and Kinie clung to me as if they could not
+bear to say farewell. I see before me often the honest,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+kindly countenance of Kusis as, with his hand clasped in
+mine, he looked trustfully into my face and made me promise
+that some day I would return and live with him once
+more. And so freshly at that time came the remembrance
+of the happy days I had passed in his quiet home, dreaming
+the hours away within sight of the heaving bosom of
+the blue, boundless Pacific Ocean, so deliciously restful
+after the stormy life of the <i>Leonora</i> and her wild commander,
+that I believe I really intended to return to
+Strong's Island some day; but, as we used to say at Sydney
+college, "<i>D&icirc;s aliter visum</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Queen S&ecirc; sent me a letter as follows:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear Friend</span>,&mdash;Kitty Ebon send L&#257;lia to see you. We all very
+sorry, but must not say so, because Mr. Morland very strong man
+now. Where you think Captain Hayston go in little boat? I 'fraid
+he die in boat. I very sorry for Captain&mdash;very kind man&mdash;but bad
+man to natives sometimes.</p>
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ <span class="smcap">Queen S&ecirc;</span>.
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>Enclosed were these pencilled lines from Kitty of
+Ebon:&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><span class="smcap">My dear Friend</span>,&mdash;All the people from Mo&#363;t been to Mr. Morland
+to ask why you are in prison, and he says you will be hung for
+stealing a ship. We all very sorry, all Mo&#363;t people love you very
+much&mdash;and me too. Good-bye, dear friend, come back to Kusis and
+Mo&#363;t people, for I don't think you be hanged in Fiji.&mdash;Your sincere
+friend,</p>
+
+
+<div class="letter-signature center">
+ <span class="smcap">Catherine Ebon</span>.
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<p>But when the light-hearted blue-jackets manned the capstan
+and merrily footed it round to lively music, and the
+great steamer's head was pointed to the passage, my
+thoughts were far away, where in fancy I discerned a tiny
+boat breasting the vast ocean swell, while sitting aft with
+his face turned to the westward, his strong brown hand on
+the tiller, was the once dreaded Captain of the <i>Leonora</i>;
+the lawless rover of the South Seas; the man whose name
+was known and feared from the South Pole to Japan, and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
+yet through all, my true friend and most indulgent commander.
+With all his faults, our constant association had
+enabled me to appreciate his many noble qualities and fine
+natural impulses. And as the black hull of the <i>Rosario</i>
+rose and fell to the sea, her funnel the while pouring forth
+volumes of sable smoke, the island gradually sunk astern,
+but the memories connected with it and Captain Hayston
+will abide with me for ever.</p>
+
+<p>Harry Skillings I never saw again, but heard that he
+went to Truk in the North-west Carolines. Black Johnny
+was murdered in New Britain. The other Harry with his
+native wife fell victims to the treacherous savages of the
+Solomon Islands. Jansen died a few years since on Providence
+Island. Some of the other traders and members of
+the crew I have heard of from time to time, scattered far and
+wide over the Isles of the Pacific. L&#257;lia died in Honolulu
+about five years since, constant in her attempts to reach
+her distant home on Easter Island.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<h2>NORFOLK ISLAND&mdash;ARCADIA</h2>
+
+
+<p>And now, my innocence and lack of complicity in Hayston's
+irregularities having been established, a revulsion of
+feeling took place in the minds of the captain and officers
+of the <i>Rosario</i> with regard to me.</p>
+
+<p>After the fullest explanations furnished by the traders
+and others, backed up by the manifest sympathy and good-will
+of the inhabitants of Strong Island, it became apparent
+that some sort of reparation was due to me. This took the
+form of a courteous invitation to accept a passage to Sydney
+in H.M.S. <i>Rosario</i>, and to join the officers' mess on the
+voyage. "I'm afraid that we acted hastily in your case,
+Mr. Telfer!" said Captain Dupont. "You have been thoroughly
+cleared of all accusations made against you. I am
+bound to say they were very few. And you seem chiefly to
+have acted as a peacemaker and a power for good. I have
+gathered that you are anxious to rejoin your friends in
+Sydney. I shall be glad to have your company on the
+return voyage. What do you say? I trust you will not
+refuse; I shall otherwise think you have not forgiven my
+apparent harshness."</p>
+
+<p>Thus pressed to return to family and friends&mdash;from
+whom, at times, in spite of my inborn roving propensities,
+the separation had cost me dear&mdash;what could I do but thank
+the manly and courteous potentate, and comply with an
+invitation so rarely granted to a South Sea adventurer. I
+was the more loth to lose the opportunity as there had come
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+upon me of late a violent fit of homesickness which I in
+vain strove to combat.</p>
+
+<p>I had in truth now no particular reason for remaining at
+Kusaie, or indeed anywhere in the South Seas. Hayston
+was gone; his magnetic influence no longer controlled my
+will, as in our first acquaintance. The <i>Leonora</i>&mdash;our
+pride and boast, our peerless floating home&mdash;no longer
+"walked the waters like a thing of life," but lay dead, dismantled,
+dishonoured on the ruthless coral rocks which had
+crushed the life out of her on that fatal night.</p>
+
+<p>I realised now with thankfulness that I had narrowly
+escaped being liable as an accessory for some of Hayston's
+ultra-legal proceedings&mdash;to call them by no harsher name.</p>
+
+<p>How often, indeed, in the reckless daring of boyhood is
+the fatal line crossed which severs imprudence from crime!
+The inexorable fiat of human justice knows no shade of
+criminality. "Guilty or not guilty," goes forth the verdict.
+There is no appeal on earth. And the faulty, but
+not all evil-natured victim, is doomed to live out all the
+years of a life branded as a felon, or maddened by the fears
+which must ever torture the fugitive from justice!</p>
+
+<p>If I stayed in the South Seas on my present footing, nothing
+remained but the trader's life, pure and simple. I had
+little doubt but that I could make a living, perhaps a competence
+in years to come. But that meant exile in every sense of
+the word. Complete severance from my kindred, whom my
+soul yearned to see again; from the friends of my boyhood;
+from the loved and lovely land of my birth; from the thousand
+and one luxuries, material and intellectual, which are
+comprehended in the word civilisation. I had slaked my
+thirst for adventure, danger, and mystery. I had carried
+my life in my hand, so to speak, and times without number
+had doubted whether I should retain that more or less
+valuable possession for the next ten minutes. I had felt
+the poisoned arrows at Santa Cruz hurtling around me, even
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+hiss through my waving locks, when the death-scratch
+summoned a man on either hand. I had nearly been "blue
+sharks' meat" as Hayston phrased it, on coral strand amid
+"the cruel crawling foam." All chances and risks I had
+taken heedlessly in the past. But now I began to feel that
+I must pronounce the momentous decision which would
+make or mar my future career. The island life was very
+fair. For one moment I saw myself the owner of a trading
+station on Pingelap or Arurai. I am sitting in a large,
+cool house, on soft, parti-coloured mats, surrounded by
+laughing girls garlanded and flower-crowned. Around and
+above, save in the plantation which surrounds the house, is
+the soft green light of the paradisal woodland illumining
+its incredible wealth of leafage, fruit, and flowers. Before
+me lies the endless, azure sea-plain. And oh, my sea! my
+own, my beloved sea!&mdash;loved in childhood, youth, and age,
+if such be granted to me! In my ears are the magical murmurous
+surge-voices, to the lulling of which I have so often
+slept like a tired child. Fruit and flowers&mdash;love and war&mdash;manly
+effort&mdash;danger&mdash;high health&mdash;boundless liberty,&mdash;all
+things necessary to the happiness of primeval man,
+before he became sophisticated by the false wisdom of these
+later ages, should I not possess in profusion? Why, then,
+should I not remain in this land of changeless summer&mdash;this
+magic treasure-house of all delights of land and sea?</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Long and anxiously did I ponder over my decision.
+Those only who have known the witchery of the "summer
+Isles of Eden," have felt the charm of the dream-life of
+the Southern Main&mdash;the sorcery of that lotus-eating existence,
+alternating with the fierce hazards and stormy delights
+which give a richness to life unknown to a guarded,
+narrowed civilisation&mdash;can gauge my irresolution.</p>
+
+<p>I had well-nigh resolved to adhere to the trader's
+life<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>&mdash;until
+I had made a fortune with which I could return in
+triumph&mdash;when I thought of my mother! The old house,
+with its broad, stone-paved verandah came back to me&mdash;the
+large, "careless-ordered" garden with its trailing, tropical
+shrubs and fruit-trees&mdash;the lordly araucarias, the boat-house,
+the stone-walled bath wherein I had learned to swim&mdash;all
+came back in that moment when memory recalled the
+scenes and surroundings of my early life. I could hear a
+voice ever low and sweet, as in the days of my childhood,
+which said, "Oh! my boy! my boy! come back&mdash;let me
+see my darling's face before I die."</p>
+
+<p>I was conquered&mdash;the temptations of the strange life,
+with its sorceries and phantasms, which had so long
+enveloped me, were swept away like a ghost-procession at
+dawn. And in their place came the steadfast resolve to
+return to the home of my youth, thenceforward to pursue
+such modes of life as might be marked out for me. In a
+new land like my birth-place, with a continent for an arena,
+I had no fear but that a career would open itself for me.
+In no country under heaven are there so many chances of
+success, so many roads to fortune, as in the lone wastes
+upon which the Southern Cross looks down. On land or
+sea&mdash;the tracks are limitless&mdash;the avenues to fortune
+innumerable. Gold was to be had for the seeking; silver
+and gems lay as yet in their desert solitudes, only awaiting
+the adventurer who, strong in the daring of manhood,
+should compel the waste to disclose its secrets&mdash;only
+awaited the hour and the man.</p>
+
+<p>For such enterprises was I peculiarly fitted. So much
+could then be said without boast or falsehood on my part.
+My frame, inured to withstand every change of temperature
+which sea or land could furnish, was of unusual strength.
+By hard experience I had learned to bear myself masterfully
+among men of widely various dispositions and characters.
+I took my stand henceforth as a citizen of the
+world<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>&mdash;as
+a rover on sea and land&mdash;as more than a suppliant to
+fortune, a "Conquistador."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The homeward voyage being now fairly commenced, I
+began to speculate on the probabilities of my future career.
+During the years which I had passed among the islands I
+had acquired experience&mdash;more or less valuable&mdash;but very
+little cash. This was chiefly in consequence of our crowning
+disaster, the wreck of the <i>Leonora</i>. But for that untoward
+gale, my share of the proceeds of the venture would
+have exceeded the profits of all my other trading enterprises.
+As it was, I was left, if not altogether penniless,
+still in a position which would debar me from making more
+than a brief stay with my friends in Sydney, unless I consented
+to be beholden to them for support. That I held to
+be impossible. For a few weeks I felt that my finances
+would hold out. And after that, was there not a whole
+world of adventures&mdash;risks, hardships, dangers, if you
+will&mdash;all that makes life worth living&mdash;open before me;
+the curtain had fallen upon one act of the life drama of
+Hilary Telfer. What of that? Were there not four more,
+at least, to come?</p>
+
+<p>Even the princess had not arrived. There had been a
+"first robber" on the boards, perhaps&mdash;even more of that
+persuasion. But the principal stage business was only
+commencing&mdash;the d&eacute;nouement was obviously far off.
+Thereupon my hopes rose as if freshly illumined. My
+sanguine nature&mdash;boundless in faith, fertile in expedient&mdash;reasserted
+itself. Temporarily depressed, more in sympathy
+with Hayston than with my own ill-luck, it seemed
+more vigorous and elastic in rebound than ever. The
+memory of my island life became faint and dreamily indistinct.
+The forms of Hayston, the king and queen, of
+L&#257;lia, with sad, reproachful gaze&mdash;of Hope Island Nellie,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+lifting a rifle with the mien of an angered goddess&mdash;of
+Kitty of Ebon, incarnate daughter of the dusky Venus&mdash;of
+the bronzed and wrinkled trader, with blood and to spare
+on his sinewy hand&mdash;of young Harry and the negro
+Johnny. All these forms and faces, once so familiar,
+seemed to recede into the misty distance until they faded
+away from my mental vision.</p>
+
+<p>With them passed into shadow-land the joyous life of my
+youth&mdash;of the untrammelled, care-free existence&mdash;such as
+no man may find again in this world of slow, tracking care
+and hasty disenchantment. "Was I wise?" I asked myself
+again and again, in quitting it for the hard and anxious
+pursuits of the Continent? Were there not a dozen
+places besides Strong's Island where I should be welcomed,
+f&ecirc;ted, caressed, almost worshipped as a restored divinity?
+Was it well to abandon the rank which I had acquired
+among these simple people? Was it&mdash; But no. For
+ever had I made the decision. Once resolved, I disliked
+changing my plans. Burdened with a regret which for
+days I could neither subdue nor remove, I adhered unflinchingly
+to my resolution, and addressed myself to the steady
+contemplation of the future.</p>
+
+<p>Now had commenced for me a new life&mdash;a new world
+socially speaking. The quiet reserve and unemotional
+bearing of the British officer was substituted for the frank
+accost and reckless speech of the island trader or wandering
+mariner. I was prompt, however, to assimilate the
+modish bearing of my companions, and assisted by some
+natural alertness, or perhaps inherited tendencies, soon
+became undistinguishable from the honourables and lordlings
+of the gun-room. Upon my repose of manner, indeed,
+I was often complimented. "By Jove, old fellow,"
+one of the offshoots of the British aristocracy would say,
+"one would think you had been at Rugby or Eton. And I
+suppose you have never seen England. Certainly you have
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+the pull of us in make and shape. I can't think how they
+grow such fellows,&mdash;more English than the English,&mdash;with
+your blue eyes and fair hair, too, in these God-forsaken
+regions."</p>
+
+<p>"Because," I said, "I am of as pure English blood as
+yourself; have been reared, and moulded, and surrounded
+by English people, and have all the traditions of the old
+country at my fingers' end. For the rest, I hold that this
+end of the world is more favourable to the growth of Anglo-Saxons,
+as you call yourselves, than the other."</p>
+
+<p>"Well! it looks like it, I must say," said my new friend.
+"I only hope that when the time comes for fighting, by sea
+and land&mdash;and, mark my words, come it will&mdash;that you
+will be found as stanch as I think you are."</p>
+
+<p>"Be sure we shall be," said I. "We have inherited the
+true English 'grit,' as Americans say. You all said <i>they</i>
+couldn't fight when their war began; when it finished, the
+world gave a different verdict. We are our fathers' sons,
+neither more nor less. The bull-dog and the game-cock
+still fight to the death in our country. Many a time have
+I seen it. And so will we when our time comes, and when
+we think it worth our while."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>We carried an order from the New South Wales Government
+to call in at Norfolk Island&mdash;once the ocean prison
+of the more desperate felons of the old convict r&eacute;gime, who
+had been replaced by the descendants of the Pitcairn
+islanders. They, in their turn the descendants of mutinous
+sailors and Tahitian women&mdash;now the most moral, God-fearing,
+and ideally perfect race on the face of the earth.</p>
+
+<p>What a miracle had been wrought! Who could have
+imagined that the last days of a rough old sailor, spent
+among the survivors of a group of savage women who had
+butchered their mates, could have so firmly fixed the morale
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+of a whole community that virtue should have indelibly
+impressed <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'itelf'">itself</ins>
+upon a hundred families. Sydney lies
+about S.S.W. from Kusaie, but to avoid passing through
+the dangers of the New Hebrides, and the reef-studded
+vicinity of New Caledonia, a direct south course with a
+little easting was decided upon.</p>
+
+<p>We made Norfolk Island, the distance being about two
+thousand miles, in ten days' easy steaming from Strong's
+Island. This lovely island was discovered by Cook in
+1774.</p>
+
+<p>A military man writing of it in 1798, draws a comparison
+between it and Sydney much to the disadvantage of the
+latter. "The air is soft (he says) and the soil inexpressibly
+productive. It is a perfect section of paradise. Our
+officers and their wives were sensibly affected at their departure,
+and what they regarded as banishment to Sydney."</p>
+
+<p>Another officer writing of it in 1847, says: "It is by
+nature a paradise adorned with all the choicest gifts of
+nature&mdash;climate, scenery, and vegetable productions; by
+art and man's policy turned into an earthly hell, disfigured
+by crime, misery, and despair."</p>
+
+<p>The island had been brought into a high state of cultivation
+by convict labour. Its roads, buildings, and gardens
+were in admirable order. But with the establishment of
+the new r&eacute;gime&mdash;a different race with different tasks&mdash;much
+was neglected, a part became decayed and ruinous.
+The island is now partitioned into blocks of fifty acres, of
+which each adult male is allowed one, drawn for and decided
+by lot.</p>
+
+<p>Whale fishing is the favourite and most profitable occupation.
+From this and the sale of farm produce, which
+finds a market in Sydney, the inhabitants are furnished
+with all their needs require. Their wants are few, simple,
+and easily supplied.</p>
+
+<p>The old convict town with its huge, dilapidated
+bar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>racks,
+gaol-officers' quarters, and servants' houses, is situated
+on the south-east edge of the island, where the little
+Nepean islet gives sufficient shelter to form a precarious
+roadstead available in certain winds. The old town is
+occupied by the Pitcairn islanders&mdash;in number about three
+hundred.</p>
+
+<p>Five miles across the island, on its north-eastern shore,
+and communicating with it by a fair road, lies the Melanesian
+Mission estate of a thousand acres. Sloping gently
+down to a low cliff and a rocky shore, the land is an undulating
+meadow, broken by ravines, and covered with a
+thick sward of conch grass or "doubh," said to have been
+imported from India, whence we drew our chief food supplies
+so many a year ago. Nothing more beautiful in a
+state of nature had ever been seen, I thought, when I first
+cast my admiring eyes on it. Here and there gigantic,
+graceful pines (<i>Araucaria excelsa</i>) stood in stately groves.
+Higher up on the flanks of Mount Pitt (a thousand feet
+above) grow the lemon and guava, cotton and wild tobacco.
+The island is nine hundred miles from Sydney and thirteen
+hundred and fifty from Cape Pillar, Tasmania. The
+Nepean and Phillip Islands lie to the south of the main
+island.</p>
+
+<p>We were in such a hurry to see the famous island and
+still more famous islanders, that we omitted a precaution
+which had been earnestly impressed upon us the day before.
+This was not to attempt to land unless we had a
+Pitcairner to steer. When the long swell of the Pacific
+rolls in upon the shallow beaches of Sydney Bay there is
+no more dangerous place in the world&mdash;the roadstead of
+Madras hardly excepted&mdash;than the boat harbour at Norfolk
+Island.</p>
+
+<p>Like most sailors, and man-of-war's men in particular,
+the crew was reckless and confident. For myself, I was a
+fair hand in a boat, and had mixed in so many cases of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+touch-and-go, where all hands would have fed the sharks
+in a few more minutes, that I had lost any sense of caution
+that I might have originally possessed. As we neared
+the shore, rising and falling upon the tremendous billows,
+which told of a scarce passed gale, I felt a sense of exhilaration
+to which I had been long a stranger. A party of the
+islanders, seeing a boat leave the ship, had come down to
+watch our landing, apparently with interest. As we came
+closer I noticed them talking rapidly to one another, and
+occasionally waving their arms to one side or the other as
+if to direct our steering. There were several women in the
+group, but as we neared the landing my attention was rivetted
+upon a girl who stood out some distance from the
+others at the end of a rocky point, which jutted beyond the
+narrow beach.</p>
+
+<p>I had seen strikingly beautiful faces and faultless forms
+among the island girls, as all unconscious, they threw
+themselves into attitudes so graceful and unstudied that a
+sculptor would have coveted them for models. Among
+these children of nature, roaming at will through their
+paradisal isles, the perfection of the human form had
+doubtless been developed. But there was a subtle charm
+about this girl, as she stood with bare feet beside the plashing
+wave,&mdash;a statuesque presentment of nobility, courage,
+and refinement which I had never before recognised in living
+woman. Tall and slender of frame, she yet possessed the
+rounded outlines which, in all island women, promise a
+fuller development in the matured stage of womanhood.
+Her features were delicately regular; in her large dark
+eyes there was an expression of strong interest, deepening
+almost into fear, as she gazed at our incoming boat. She
+had bent slightly forward, and stood poised on her rock
+as if waiting for a signal to plunge into the boiling surf.
+Her complexion was so fair that, but for her attitude, which
+spoke her a daughter of the sea, one which no mortal born
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+away from the music of the surges could have assumed, I
+might have taken her for an Englishwoman.</p>
+
+<p>"In the name of all the divine maidens since Nausicaa"
+(I had not quite forgotten my <i>Odyssey</i>, rusty though was
+my Greek) "who can she be?" thought I.</p>
+
+<p>At this point my reflections and conjectures came to an
+abrupt end, as, indeed, nearly did also "the fever called
+living" in my particular case. I felt the boat rise heavenwards
+on the back of a tremendous roller. The islanders
+shouted as though to warn us of danger, the steersman gave
+the tiller a wrong turn, or omitted to give it the right one,
+and the next moment the boat was buried beneath an avalanche
+of foam, with crew and passengers struggling for
+their lives. I could swim well, that is, of course, comparatively,
+for the difference between the best performance of
+a white man&mdash;well practised from youth though he be&mdash;and
+of an islander is as that of a dog and a fish. Still,
+having risen to the surface, I made no doubt but that I
+could easily gain a landing. In this I was deceived. As
+in other spots, the constant surf concealed a treacherous
+undertow against which the ordinary swimmer is powerless.
+Again and again did I gain foothold, to be swept
+back by the resistless power of the backward current.
+Each time I became weaker, and at length, after a long
+fruitless struggle, I closed my eyes and resigned myself to
+my fate. Borne backward and half fainting, I saw the
+whole party of natives in the water mingling with the crew,
+who, like myself, had been making desperate efforts to
+reach the landing.</p>
+
+<p>My senses were leaving me; darkness was before my
+eyes, when dimly, as in a dream, I seemed to mark the girl
+upon the rock plunge with the gliding motion of a seal into
+the boiling foam. Her bosom shone as with outstretched
+arms she parted the foaming tide, her short under-dress,
+reaching only to the knees, offered no impediment to the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+freedom of her limbs. I felt soft arms around me. A
+cloud of dusky hair enveloped me. Strains of unearthly
+music floated in my ears. It was the dirge of the mermaidens,
+as they wail over the drowned sailor and bear him
+with song and lament to his burial cavern. All suddenly
+it ceased.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The mid-day sun had pierced the roof and side of the
+cottage wherein I was lying upon a couch, softly matted.
+When I awoke I looked around. Surely I had been
+drowned, and must be dead and gone! How, then, was I
+once more in a place where the sun shone, where there were
+mats and signs of ordinary life? I closed my eyes in half-denial
+of the evidences of my so-called senses. Then, as I
+raised myself with difficulty, the door opened and a man
+entered.</p>
+
+<p>He was a tall, grandly developed Pitcairner, one of the
+men who had been on board the night before. His face
+was dark, with the tint of those races which, though far
+removed from the blackness of the Ethiop, are yet distinct
+from the pure white family of mankind. But his eyes,
+curiously, were of bright and distinct blue, in hereditary
+transmission, doubtless, from that ancestor who had formed
+one of the historic mutineers of the <i>Bounty</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"You've had a close shave, Hilary. That's your name,
+I believe. A trifle more salt water and you'd have been
+with the poor chap that's drowned. We got all the crew
+out but him."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought I <i>was</i> drowned," I replied, "but I begin to
+perceive that I'm alive. I see you're of the same opinion,
+so I suppose it's all right."</p>
+
+<p>"It's not a thing to laugh at," the Pitcairner said gravely.
+"God saw fit to save you this time. To Him and Miranda
+you owe your thanks for being where you are now."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+"There are people in Sydney," I said, "who will be foolish
+enough to be glad of it, and after I have a little time to
+think, I daresay I shall be pleased myself. But who is
+Miranda, and how did she save me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Miranda Christian, my cousin, is the girl you saw
+standing on the rock. She had a strong fight of it to get
+you in, and but for one of us going on each side neither of
+you would have come out. We had been hard at it trying
+to save the crew, and nearly left it too late. She was just
+about done."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be uneasy till I thank her. What a brave girl!
+And what am I to call you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fletcher Quintal, and her cousin," the islander replied,
+drawing himself up and looking at me with a steady gaze.
+"You won't see her till the afternoon. She has gone home
+to rest after staying with you till you came to. My sister,
+Dorcas, will bring you food directly, and perhaps you'd
+better rest yourself too till sundown. Then some of us
+will pay you a visit. Good morning."</p>
+
+<p>A pleasant-faced damsel, with the sparkling eyes and
+perfect teeth of the race, came in shortly afterwards, who
+smilingly informed me that her name was Dorcas Quintal,
+and that her cousin Miranda had told her she was not to
+talk much to me.</p>
+
+<p>However, during the time occupied in making a creditable
+lunch&mdash;all things considered,&mdash;I succeeded in convincing
+her that I was strong enough for a decent dose of
+gossip, in the course of which I learned several interesting
+pieces of information about Miranda, who certainly had
+posed as my Guardian Angel in the late accident. She
+was, according to Dorcas, the leader in all sports and pastimes,
+and also the most learned and accomplished damsel
+on the island. "She sang and played in their church choir.
+She had read all the poets in the world," Dorcas believed.
+"She could recite pages and pages of poetry and history.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+Altogether she was a wonderful girl to be born and brought
+up in such a place as Norfolk Island, where we never see
+any one"&mdash;here Dorcas wreathed her lips into an expressive
+pout&mdash;"that is, except captains of ships and strangers
+like yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"So she is quite perfect," I said, "alike on land and sea.
+I can vouch for the last. I suppose she can pull an oar
+and is quite at home in a boat?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed she is," answered Dorcas, warming up. "She
+can sail a cutter with any man on the island, and steer a
+whaleboat besides. You should see her standing up with
+the big steer oar in those tiny hands of hers."</p>
+
+<p>"So, then, she has no faults?" I queried, a little mischievously.</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled. "I suppose we have all some here as
+in other places. She is rather proud and quiet, the other
+girls say. I never saw it, and if there is anything else you
+must find it out for yourself. And now, as you have finished
+eating and drinking, I must go. Miranda will be
+here by and by."</p>
+
+<p>"Only one word, Dorcas," said I, as she turned towards
+the doorway. "How many admirers has she&mdash;all the
+young men in the island, I suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only one," she replied, impressively, "my brother,
+Fletcher Quintal. He would die for her."</p>
+
+<p>"And she?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl paused before replying, and gazed earnestly at
+me.</p>
+
+<p>"She says she will never marry." And with that she
+passed out and left me to my meditations.</p>
+
+<p>I must have been fatigued, even bruised and battered by
+my conflict with sea and shore, as I felt a kind of lassitude
+creep over me, and presently fell into a dreamless sleep,
+which lasted till the sun was low and the dimness of the
+light told me that the day had passed.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>
+I raised myself and saw Miranda sitting on a low stool
+near the window, or the aperture which served for one. As
+I turned, she smiled and came towards me, putting out her
+hand for me to take, and gazing into my face with a frank
+pleasure of the unspoiled woman of the woods and fields.
+"I have to thank you for my life," I said, as I pressed
+her hand warmly. "It is of no great value to any one,
+as things have been going lately, but being such as it is,
+you have my warmest gratitude. I should hardly have
+changed for the worse if I had been lying beside poor Bill
+Dacre."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not talk in that mocking way," she said, with
+a pained expression like that of a hurt child. "God has
+given us all a life to use for some good purpose. Surely
+you have friends? perhaps a mother and sisters, who
+would weep when they heard you were lying under the
+waves?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are right, Miranda, and I will not talk foolishly
+again; but I thank you with my whole heart for your noble
+courage in risking your life to save mine. I wonder now
+how we both got to land, in spite of that beastly undertow?"</p>
+
+<p>"I never could have done it without help," she said. "I
+was nearly exhausted, yet I did not like to let you go, when
+Fletcher Quintal and Peter Mills, who had each brought out
+a man, swam in again, and we came in between them."</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to be quite at home in the water," I said.
+"I thought I could swim, and at Strong's Island and other
+places could hold my own with the natives pretty well.
+But I found my mistake here."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course we all swim well," she replied, smiling, "and
+know how to manage a boat. It would be curious if we
+did not; there is little else to do, in Norfolk Island, except
+when we are working in the fields. Our life is sometimes
+dull, I must allow."</p>
+
+<p>"I hear that you can do all sorts of other things," I said.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+"That you are the chief musician and teacher, besides
+being commander of the fleet."</p>
+
+<p>"Dorcas has been chattering, I am afraid," she answered,
+while a blush rose to her brow, tingeing the pallor of her
+ivory cheek with faint carmine. "I certainly have a variety
+of occupations, and very fortunate it is! Otherwise, I don't
+know what would happen to me, for I am scarcely as contented
+as my cousins and the other girls on the island."</p>
+
+<p>"It is the old story," I said. "Now, why should you
+not be contented on this lovely island where you have all
+you could wish for in the world&mdash;perfect freedom, a
+matchless climate, exercise, adventure, the love of your
+kinsfolk, everything that satisfies the heart of woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Everything necessary to satisfy a woman's heart!" she
+said, rising and walking to where the casement admitted a
+view of the heaving deep with the <i>Rosario</i> lying on and off.
+"Can you look at the boundless ocean with its thousand
+paths to the cities of the earth and not wish to roam? To
+see the glories of the old world, all the varied richly-coloured
+life of ancient nations that I have read of and see in my
+dreams? Do you think men only are impatient of a
+hemmed-in life? It is not so. Women have their longings
+for a wider range, a larger sphere; and yet I am perhaps
+the only girl on the island that feels what I have
+described."</p>
+
+<p>"You must have read much," I said, rather startled at
+this burst of feeling from the lips of a Norfolk Island
+damsel&mdash;a child of the most contented community in the
+world. "These strange yearnings must have been awakened
+in you through the word-painting of these wicked authors."</p>
+
+<p>"And why not?" she answered, with heightened colour
+and flashing eye. "That my world is one of books I do not
+deny. I have daily tasks and occupations, but my evenings
+are my own, and in them I read and muse. Then this little
+island, with its patient, primitive people, seems to fade
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+away. I spend hours in Italy, where I revel in Florence,
+the Pitti Palace, the Arno, and roam the streets of the
+Eternal City amid the monuments of the world's grandest
+era, their very decay 'an Empire's dust.' I fall asleep often
+when reclining on the banks of 'Tiber, Father Tiber, to
+whom the Romans pray.' But, oh! if I begin to wander
+away in the track of my visions I shall never stop. And
+you," she continued with an eager glance, "you, who have
+seen men and cities, are you contented to linger away your
+life under cocoa-palms and bread-fruit trees, taking in glorious
+ease among simple savages until you become one yourself
+in all but the colour? Is this what you were born and
+reared and educated for?"</p>
+
+<p>As the girl thus spoke, with head upraised and exalted
+mien, her wondrous eyes flashing with almost unearthly
+light, her mobile lineaments changing with each varying
+mood, she looked in her strange and unfamiliar beauty like
+some virgin prophetess of the days of old, rousing her
+countrymen to deeds of patriotic valour or self-sacrificing
+heroism.</p>
+
+<p>All enthusiasm is contagious, more especially when the
+enthusiast is fair to look upon, and belongs to that sex for,
+or on account of which, so much of the world's strife has
+resulted.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time I began seriously to ask myself what
+motives had led me to waste so large a portion of my
+youth in heedless wandering among these fairy isles. What
+were my aims in life? What did I propose to myself?
+As I looked at the girl's face, aglow with the fire of a
+noble ambition, I felt humbled and ashamed.</p>
+
+<p>"You have spoken truly, Miranda," I replied, after a
+long pause, during which my fair questioner looked with a
+far-away gaze across the ocean plain, now quenching its
+thousand shifting gleams in the quick-falling tropic night.
+"I have been idly careless and unheeding of the future,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>
+satisfied with the day's toil and the day's pleasure. But I
+am going back to my people in Australia; there I shall
+begin a new life. It is a land of duty, of labour, and its
+enduring reward. There I shall renew the tension of my
+moral fibre which has been too long relaxed. But you
+must not be too hard on me. I have had to face losses,
+dangers, and misfortunes. I have been wrecked; I lost
+everything I had in the world. I have been ill; have been
+wounded; and, but for some of those simple islanders you
+seem to despise, I should not have been a living man
+to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not despise them," she said; "of course every one
+knows that we are descended from those of Tahiti. I only
+say that they are not fit companions for white men&mdash;I
+mean of educated white men who in the end become as bad
+as they are&mdash;even worse&mdash;much worse. But tell me about
+your being ill. And who tended you? Was it a woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will tell you all about it to-morrow if you will walk
+with me and show me some of the scenery of this beautiful
+island of yours. But it is a long story, and it is too late to
+begin to-night."</p>
+
+<p>"I should like it above all things," she said frankly,
+"though you must have seen so many grand places in your
+roamings that our poor landscapes will hardly interest
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Much depends on the guide," I said, as I gazed admiringly
+at her eloquent countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"I know that," she answered, meeting my too ardent
+gaze with perfect unconsciousness of any hidden meaning.
+"They tell me I am the best guide on the island, and indeed
+I should be, for my father and I were never tired of exploring
+and finding out traces of the old occupation by the
+Sydney Government, and many curious discoveries we
+made. So I will come here after breakfast to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>She was true to her appointment, and then commenced
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+a series of delightful rambles which, perhaps, I more truly
+enjoyed than many later and more pretentious travels.</p>
+
+<p>In despite of Miranda's depreciation of her lovely isle we
+found endless excuses for interest and admiration. It was
+truly a wonderful little "kingdom by the sea." Scraped
+along the side of a hill would be one of the beautiful roads
+constructed by the forced labour of the convicts which at
+one time almost filled the island. Rising from the valley
+slope were gigantic ferns, broad-leaved palms, lemons,
+oranges, guavas, all originally imported, but now flourishing
+in the wildest luxuriance in the rich soil and semi-tropical
+climate; while above all, stately and columnar,
+rose the great Araucaria peculiar to the island&mdash;the Norfolk
+Island pine of the colonists.</p>
+
+<p>Hand in hand we roamed together through this Eden
+amid the main, as though our great progenitors had again
+been transplanted to this wondrous wild&mdash;a latter day
+Adam, by whose side smiled a sinless Eve&mdash;pure as her
+prototype, and yet informed of much of the lore which
+men had wrested from the rolling ages. Together we
+explored the gloomy corridors and echoing halls of the
+ruinous prison houses&mdash;once the dark abodes of sorrow,
+torment, and despair unutterable.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda shuddered at the thought that these dismal
+cells and courtyards had echoed to the cries of criminals
+under the lash&mdash;to the clanking of chains&mdash;had even
+witnessed the death penalty inflicted on the murderer and
+the mutineer.</p>
+
+<p>Mute and terrible witnesses were they to the guilt to
+which human nature may descend&mdash;to the abysmal depths
+of despair into which the felon and the outcast may be
+hurled, when, hopeless of help from God or man, he
+abandons himself to all the baser instincts.</p>
+
+<p>We seldom lingered amid these sullen retreats, around
+which Miranda always declared she heard sighs and
+groan<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>ings,
+sobs, and even shrieks, as though the spirits of those
+who had suffered, and mourned, and died amidst the horrors
+unspeakable of prison life still lingered amid the ruins of
+their place of torment.</p>
+
+<p>How strange, well-nigh impossible, it even seemed to me
+that the very earth, the dumb witness of crime immeasurable,
+was not polluted irredeemably by the deeds that she
+had perforce endured and condoned. And now&mdash;stranger
+than aught that dreaming poet or seer imagined&mdash;that
+this Inferno should have been transmuted into an Arcadia,
+purer and more stainless than the fabled land of old, and
+peopled by the most obediently moral and conscientious
+family of mankind that had ever gathered the fruits of the
+earth since the days of our first parents.</p>
+
+<p>Day after day followed of this charmed life&mdash;magical,
+unreal, only in that it transcended all my other experiences
+in the degree that the glamour of fairyland and the companionship
+of the queen of Elfland may have exceeded the
+memorials of Ercildoune. If he was enchanted, I was spellbound
+even as true Thomas. Never had I met with a
+companion who combined all the charm of womanhood&mdash;the
+grace and joyousness of girlhood's most resistless period&mdash;with
+the range of thought and intellectual progress which
+this singular girl, amid her lonely isle and restricted companionship,
+had explored. And withal, she had remained
+in her almost infantine unconsciousness of evil&mdash;her virginal,
+instinctive repulsion of all things forbidden and debarred&mdash;like
+a being of another planet.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Naturally an end arrived to this blissful state of things.
+The man-of-war after a few days was compelled to continue
+her voyage and perform her allotted duties, which comprehended
+surveys of uncharted coast-lines and suspected rocks.
+I had to choose between going on to Sydney and remaining in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+this charmed isle. And here inclination and duty appeared
+to draw different ways with equal strength. I was naturally
+anxious to return to my birth-place, my family, and
+friends. My feelings of home-sickness had returned with
+redoubled strength after being long in abeyance. But all
+such doubts and distrusts were swept away like storm wrack
+before the swelling surges of Miranda's own isle. I was
+fain to yield to the resistless force of the passion which
+now dominated, nay, consumed me. True, I had not as
+yet definitely assured myself that this purest pearl of
+womanhood was within my grasp. I had made no proffer
+of my affections. I had not, in so many words, solicited
+the priceless gift of hers. But I was not so unskilled in
+affairs of the heart as to mistake many a sign and symbol
+from Love's own alphabet, denoting that the outworks of
+the citadel were yielding, and that the fortress would ere
+long open gate and drawbridge to the invader.</p>
+
+<p>True to nature's own teaching, Miranda had not scrupled
+to confess and dilate upon the pleasure my companionship
+afforded her, to declare that never before in her life had
+she been half so happy, to wonder if my sisters would not
+die of joy when I returned, to chide me for my long absence
+from them and from such a home as I had often described
+to her. And all this with the steady eye and frank expression
+of girlish pleasure, which a less unsophisticated damsel
+would scarcely have acknowledged without conscious blushes
+and downcast eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda, on the other hand, stated her sensations calmly
+and fearlessly, her wondrous eyes meeting mine with all
+the trustful eagerness of a happy child, as if it was the
+most natural thing in the world. "You see, Hilary," she
+would say, laying her hand lightly on my arm, and looking
+up in an appealing manner, "I have never met any one
+before who seems to understand my feelings as you do
+apparently by instinct. You have travelled and been in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+other places besides the islands, and you have read books&mdash;nearly
+all those which I have. You know that story in
+the <i>Arabian Nights</i> about the prince that was changed into
+a bird? He knew that he was a prince, yet he was condemned
+to be dumb, and was unable to convey his feelings,
+because to all the world he was only a bird.</p>
+
+<p>"I sometimes think we Pitcairn girls live the life of
+birds&mdash;like that one," and she pointed to a soaring white-winged
+sea-bird, which presently darted downwards, falling
+like a stone upon the blue ocean wave. "We swim
+and fish, we are almost more on the sea than the land, we
+sleep on the land like that white bird, walk a little, talk a
+little,&mdash;that is our whole life. I think the bird has the
+best of it, as she can fly and we cannot."</p>
+
+<p>"But you all seem happy and contented," I said, "you
+and your cousins."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>They</i> are, but I seem to have been born under a different
+star. I must have inherited some of the restless,
+adventurous spirit of my ancestor, Fletcher Christian.</p>
+
+<p>"The feeling of unrest and the desire to see the world&mdash;the
+wonderful, ancient, beautiful world of which we, in this
+island prison, for lovely as it is, it is but a prison for free
+souls&mdash;becomes so intense at times that I almost dread lest
+I should end my life like his."</p>
+
+<p>"And in what way was that?" I asked. "God forbid
+you should ever do a deed so terrible," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you not know? He used to go every day to the
+top of a high cliff on the south side of Pitcairn to gaze over
+the ocean&mdash;as I have done hundreds of times&mdash;thinking,
+perhaps, of the wonderlands beyond, where he had forfeited
+the right to live by his own act; and&mdash;and one day he
+threw himself over the cliff, and they found his body on the
+rocks below. Poor Fletcher! I can partly understand his
+feelings."</p>
+
+<p>This was but one of our many conversations, always
+fas<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>cinating
+to me, as affording the rare privilege of exploring
+a mind naturally of high intelligence, developed by patient
+thought and a wide range of reading,&mdash;the island library,
+enriched by many generous gifts, being by no means a poor
+one,&mdash;guarded from deterioration by an exquisite natural
+refinement, yet withal clear and limpid as the transparent
+seas which encircled her home, where the more deeply the
+eye penetrated the more precious were the treasures disclosed.</p>
+
+<p>So it came to pass that the <i>Rosario</i> sailed without me.
+The Captain and my jolly comrades of the gun-room chaffed
+me about what they called my imprudent attachment.
+"You'll have to turn Pitcairner," they said, "and settle
+down after old Nobbs has spliced you upon a fifty-acre
+patch, where you can grow sweet potatoes, yams, and maize
+to the end of your days. Surely a fellow like you, with a
+family to go back to, has something better in view than
+that!"</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not stay on the island," I said, "I intend to live
+in Australia, perhaps near Sydney."</p>
+
+<p>"Then your island princess will run away and leave you
+disconsolate. They can't live away from their people and
+where they were brought up. Some of them insisted on
+going back to Pitcairn, and are there now. They could not
+be persuaded from it. They had to let them go. They
+would have died else."</p>
+
+<p>"I have resolved," I said. "I will take all risks. You
+shall all come and see us in Sydney. We will live at
+North Shore, and have a yacht built on the lines of the
+<i>Leonora</i>. Adios!"</p>
+
+<p>So we parted. The <i>Rosario</i> got up steam, and once more
+I watched the black cloud of smoke pouring from her funnels
+and the waves breaking as she moved majestically
+across the bright-hued ocean.</p>
+
+<p>Up to the last moment my simple and warm-hearted
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>
+friends on the island had serious doubts as to whether I
+was not going off in the <i>Rosario</i>. They could hardly understand
+how I could prefer remaining as their guest and
+friend when the glory and dignity of a man-of-war&mdash;their
+highest expression of maritime splendour&mdash;were open
+to me.</p>
+
+<p>They had, it is true, implored me to stay with them for
+a few months longer&mdash;the young men were equally pressing
+with the older members of the community. With artless
+candour the girls promised that if I would stay Miranda
+should be my constant companion, and, except on Sundays,
+when, as their chief musician and organist, she could not
+naturally be spared, I should have a monopoly of her
+society.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem to like her so much," Dorcas Quintal repeatedly
+exclaimed. "And I am certain she likes you more
+than any one she has ever seen. The worst of it is that
+she will be so sorry when you have to go away. Clara
+Young nearly died when her friend went away. That was
+two years ago. But she got over it in time, and now she is
+happily married. But she <i>did</i> try to drown herself one day,
+only we were too quick for her."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a bad thing to have strangers for friends," I said,
+"if it may end so tragically when they leave. I wonder
+you entertain such dangerous visitors."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose we can't help it," the girl replied, laughingly.
+"It is so pleasant to talk with men who know the great
+world we can only read about. We just take our chance.
+We have plenty to do, and that prevents us from fretting
+too much. I daresay you will hear a little crying to-night.
+We are all very sorry the big ship is gone."</p>
+
+<p>"It's the old, old story, Dorcas! Girls are a good deal
+alike all the world over, I suppose, in many of their ways.
+But you Pitcairners are certainly different in some respects
+to any women I know anywhere."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+"What do you mean?" asked the girl, eagerly. "I
+know we are simple, and have never been taught very
+much."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't that. I will tell you before I go, or rather, I
+will tell Miranda, and she shall tell you what I say."</p>
+
+<p>So, with the full approbation of friends and relations of
+every degree of relationship, and, what was of more consequence,
+with the good-will of the spiritual pastor and master
+of the island, whose authority was absolute and unquestioned,
+Miranda and I pursued our untroubled way. In
+this wondrous Arcadia there were no jealousies, no scandals,
+no asking of intentions, no fiery, disappointed aspirants, no
+infuriated brothers,&mdash;these obstacles to pure and true love
+were evidently the outcome of a higher or a lower stage of
+civilisation. No evil consequences had ever occurred from
+unrestricted freedom of intercourse between the young
+people since the formation of the community. No such
+result was regarded as possible. Immutably fixed in my
+own course, I knew that nothing&mdash;humanly speaking&mdash;could
+affect my unalterable resolve. I had discovered a
+pearl of womanhood, matchless in beauty of mind and body,
+combining the higher mental qualities, indeed, with such
+physical perfection as no girl reared under less fortunate
+conditions was likely to possess. With regard to the
+future, if she consented to link her fate with mine I was
+ready to take all the risks of fortune. The fickle goddess
+has always favoured the brave, and with Miranda at my
+side I felt that I could lead the forlorn hopes of desperate
+endeavour, or endure uncomplainingly the toil and self-denial
+of the humblest station. I had, it is true, led a
+careless, somewhat epicurean life in the past, surrendering
+myself perhaps too readily to the charm of island life. But
+this was of the past, and the half-instinctive folly period of
+youth. Henceforth I would essay the culture of the mental
+qualities with which I had been reasonably gifted, turning
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>
+to account also that very sound and thorough early tuition
+through which I had fortunately passed. Thus equipped,
+and with a helpmate at once loving and practical&mdash;devoted
+to duty and the highest forms of unselfish charity&mdash;ambitious
+only for intellectual experience and development&mdash;I
+felt that hope became certainty and success a mere matter
+of detail. After the departure of the <i>Rosario</i> I became
+almost a son by adoption among the elders of the community.
+I learned to accommodate myself to their ways,
+after a fashion which was rendered more easy by my years
+of familiarity with island life. At the same time I was
+careful not to infringe in the slightest degree upon their
+peculiar customs, or to shock those religious prejudices
+which were so earnestly accepted in the community. It
+was taken for granted that I would settle among them in
+right of my bride. If I decided to marry Miranda, or any
+other island maiden, I should be put in possession of a
+landed estate of fifty acres, where I might dream away life
+in a round of labour that was half recreation, wandering
+amid the island groves, reclining under giant ferns or lofty
+pines, bathing in crystal founts or clear-hued seas at dawn
+or under the yellow moon. Passing contentedly from
+youth to middle age, from that half-way stage to a later
+span of life, which in this enchanted land implied little or
+no diminution of natural powers. Should it be so?</p>
+
+<p>This question I had asked Miranda more than once.
+But she would not consent to take it seriously. One day,
+however, I compelled her to listen, though she had again
+declared that we were so happy as we were that no change
+could be for the better, possibly for the worse&mdash;even.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Miranda," I answered, "I must leave the island.
+Did we not hear from the last whaler that called in for
+fresh provisions that my old friend&mdash;the friend of the
+family, Captain Carryall, was to touch here in the <i>Florentia</i>?"
+He was the best known, the most popular of all
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+the skippers next to Captain Hayston. Unlike him, however,
+his reputation was spotless, while for fair dealing and
+adherence to his promises his fame was proverbial. "Shall
+I go with him?" I said, "and must I go alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"And would you leave me?" she asked, imploringly&mdash;her
+dark eyes turned towards my face in a passion of
+reproachful tenderness, of which she herself scarce understood
+the meaning, "Oh! I thought once that I could let
+you go, though it has been life and happiness untold having
+you to talk to and read with. I fancied I should only
+mourn for you for a while&mdash;like the other island girls who
+weep and lament, and then dry their tears and dance and
+sing as if nothing had happened. But, oh! It is not so
+with me. They always say the Fletcher-Christians are
+different. I shall die! I shall die! I know I shall."</p>
+
+<p>And with that she cast herself on my neck, sobbing as
+though her heart would break. In the same breath declaring
+that she would never consent to spoil my life by marriage
+with a poor savage island girl, but a few degrees
+superior to the women of Pingelap and Ocean Island whom
+she had so often despised.</p>
+
+<p>By degrees I persuaded her to listen to my pleadings,
+and then calmly set before her my plans for the future.
+We must be married here, and after remaining on the
+island, living the idyllic life we were revelling in now, we
+would sail for Sydney in the <i>Florentia</i>, or some other vessel,
+and there begin life in earnest. Some employment would
+be found, doubtless, which would pave the way, by which
+I might make a serious effort towards a career, perhaps
+a competency in the future, or even a fortune.</p>
+
+<p>I had but little difficulty in carrying out my plan. The
+elders of the community, the relations and friends of
+Miranda, were overjoyed at the prospect of her marriage
+with a person of my position, who might also be enabled
+to do them many a good turn if I settled in Sydney, a port
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+with which they had close business relations. I found, too,
+that I was not altogether an unknown personage. Some
+of the young men who had made voyages in whaleships
+had heard of my companionship with Captain Hayston.
+However, it would seem that all the natives whom they
+had met had given a good account of me as a fair dealer,
+and, moreover, generous in my treatment of them,&mdash;an
+apparently unimportant matter at the time, but serious
+enough now. Miranda told me afterwards, that had it
+been otherwise nothing would have induced her guardians
+to give their consent, or her to defy their decision.</p>
+
+<p>As it was, however, all seemed <i>couleur de rose</i>. No great
+preparations were needed. The simple island fashion was
+not encumbered with any great multiplication of garments.
+On the happy day Miranda was escorted to the modest
+building which did duty for a church by a band of white-robed
+maidens, in whose dark hair was wreathed the crimson
+blossoms of the coral plant and the hibiscus, with little
+other adornment but nature's furnishing in the flower-time
+of life. My comrades were selected from the younger men
+of the island, among whom I had always taken care to stand
+well, joining in their sports, and entering as an equal competitor
+their athletic contests. I was therefore looked
+upon as a most desirable acquaintance, able to hold my
+own, moreover, in all manly accomplishments (except
+swimming), and much esteemed for a gift of relating
+adventures in strange lands, and describing the foreign
+manners and customs with which a roving life had made
+me familiar.</p>
+
+<p>It might have been imagined that a girl so singularly
+gifted and attractive as Miranda would have had lovers in
+abundance, by whom a successful aspirant like myself would
+be regarded with jealousy. Unlikely as it may appear I
+observed no feeling of this kind. In that strange society,
+the passions which rage so fiercely in more civilised
+com<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>munities
+appeared to have lost their force, or to flow with
+the peaceful motion of the incoming tide rather than the
+resistless rush of a mountain torrent, which love, hate,
+jealousy, and envy in other lands so often resemble. The
+young men admired Miranda, indeed, worshipped her from
+afar. But they seemed rather elated by her good fortune,
+as it so appeared to them, than enviously disposed, and
+had no thought of other than the warmest friendship for
+their more fortunate companion. Even Fletcher Quintal,
+who might have been expected to view with dislike, if
+not a stronger sensation, my marriage with his favourite
+cousin, had apparently no feeling of this sort. He certainly
+expressed none, but congratulated me with all the
+warmth which a brother might be supposed to exhibit
+at the marriage of his best loved sister with his dearest
+friend. Truly it <i>was</i> the long lost rediscovered Arcadia.
+There were moments when I doubted whether it was
+wise to leave a land where care was unknown; where
+want, with its attendant evils, had never been heard of;
+where there were no rich men to envy; no bad ones to
+fear; no poor to despise; where no one died but of old
+age or mishap; whence all the ills that flesh is heir to
+had, like the snakes of Ireland, been banished by some
+good genius, and only the gifts of virtue, contentment,
+and regulated industry remained. But there was wild blood
+in my veins, long dormant as it had lain. The murmur of
+the ocean seemed to call me with a tone of magical power.
+I longed for the wave-music once more&mdash;for the voyage
+which was to speed me to my birthland. I hurried on the
+preparations for our wedding, and, lingering though were
+all the slow sweet hours, endless the days, almost tedious
+the soft starlight glow of the summer nights, the day of
+days at last dawned that was to herald the happiness of a
+life-time.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+Our small domain had been carefully measured and
+marked out for us. A cottage had been built, thatched
+with palm leaves, floored with the soft mats of the island,
+simply furnished, and, as it happened, near to a bubbling
+spring, and shaded by the wondrous wild orange, which
+here grows almost to the height and girth of a forest tree.
+It happened to be the flower-time of these charming fruit
+bearers, so that wreaths and garlands of the blossom sacred
+to Hymen were plentiful and profuse.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<h2>EPITHALAMIUM</h2>
+
+
+<p>Our marriage day! Oh, day of days! Dawn of a new
+existence! All nature seemed to sympathise with us in
+our supernal joy. For us, for us alone in all the world the
+streamlets murmured, the breezes whispered together, the
+wavelets plashed musically, the blue sky glowed, the sun
+shone goldingly. The venerable pastor of the community&mdash;he
+who had watched over every man and woman present
+from infancy, who had christened, and married, and buried
+the whole population of the island as they require these
+offices&mdash;read the time-honoured service of the Church of
+England, which was followed with deepest reverential
+attention by all present. When he blessed our union in
+the solemn language of the ritual familiar to me in the
+days of my childhood, every head was bowed, each woman's
+eye was wet with heart-felt sympathy and warmest affection
+for their erst-while playmate.</p>
+
+<p>The day was cloudless, a breeze at times sighed through
+the fragrant foliage of the grove wherein the little church
+had been built. The wavelets murmured on the beach,
+and the unresting surges seemed but to exchange loving
+memories of coral islands and crystal seas, of waving palms
+and the green gladness of tropic forests, of maidens,
+feather-crowned and flower-bejewelled, dancing on silver
+strands beneath the full-orbed midnight moon, or gliding,
+a laughing bevy of syrens, beneath the translucent wave.
+No sullen, dirge-like refrain on that paradisal day brought
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>
+from the ocean voices the memory of drifting wrecks, of
+stormy seas, of drowned seamen&mdash;no hint of danger, of
+despair, of pestilence, and death; and yet all these phases
+of experience I had known and reckoned with even in my
+short life.</p>
+
+<p>No; these and kindred ills were forgotten, banished from
+earth and sea. On this blissful morn the golden age of the
+earth seemed to have returned. Recalling the half-forgotten
+classics of my boyhood, I could fancy that I saw fauns
+peeping through the leaves of the orange grove, that the
+ages had reverted to the freshness of the elder world, when
+the flush of the fair Arcadian life informed all things with
+divinity.</p>
+
+<p>And Miranda, my bride of brides! what words can
+describe her as she stood, with an expression half-timid,
+half-rapt, and inspired, before the humble altar that day?
+Her simple dress of virgin white which but slightly concealed
+while it outlined the curves of her statuesque form;
+her large dark eyes, which had often appeared to me to
+hold a shade of melancholy, were now irradiated by the
+love-light which she, in the purity and innocence of her
+heart, made no attempt to conceal. Her soft, abundant
+tresses had been gathered up into becoming form and
+classic simplicity, and, save a wreath of scarlet berries and
+the traditional orange blossom, she wore no ornament.
+As all unconscious of her maiden loveliness she stood beside
+me, with her head raised and an expectant smile which
+disclosed her pearly teeth, she seemed to my enraptured
+gaze a daughter of the wave,&mdash;no mortal maiden, but
+a being compact of air and sea and sky, visible but beneath
+the moonbeams, and unrevealed to the dwellers of the garish
+day.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>We had been but a month wedded; our simple home, our
+tiny domain, our forest rambles, our sea-baths at dawn and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>
+eve, as yet contented us&mdash;filled us with all fullest delight
+in which mortal beings can revel beneath this ethereal
+dome. And yet the spirit of unrest, the veritable serpent
+of the world's fairest Aidenns, gradually found means to
+discover himself.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda and I had, indeed, begun to discuss our projected
+voyage to Sydney, and I had many times described
+to her an ideal home on one of the thousand and one bays
+which render the northern shore of the unrivalled Sydney
+harbour matchless in beauty and convenience for those
+who, like myself, have salt water in their blood. She
+agreed with me, that with a boat, a garden, a bath-house,
+and a cottage built of the beautiful white, pink-veined sandstone,
+which is so abundant beneath and around Sydney,
+existence might be endured away from her island home,
+with the aid of books and the inspiring idea of the coming
+fortune.</p>
+
+<p>"And even if we do not make money," she said, "as
+people call it&mdash;what a strange idea it seems to me, who
+have hardly ever seen any&mdash;we shall be happy. I can't
+imagine people who are married and love each other ever
+being unhappy. Then your mother and sisters&mdash;I am so
+much afraid of them. They will regard me as a kind of
+savage, I am sure; and, indeed, compared with them, or
+real civilised people, I am afraid that I shall feel like one.
+And, oh! shall we ever be happier than we are now?
+Why should we change? Do you think we can come back
+now and then and visit my people? I should break my
+heart if I thought I should see them no more!"</p>
+
+<p>I promised this and other things, doubtless, at the time.
+But before we had completed the conversation about our
+future life&mdash;which indeed supplied us with endless subjects
+of interest&mdash;the great island wonder-sign appeared.
+A shout&mdash;a rush of excited people past our hut told of a
+ship in sight. We were down at the beach nearly as soon
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+as the others, and as a long, low barque came up before the
+wind, something told me that she was the <i>Florentia</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A boat&mdash;a whaleboat, with a kanaka crew&mdash;put off soon
+after she was at anchor, and in the tall man at the steer-oar,
+whose commanding figure, even at that distance, I
+seemed to know, there was no difficulty in identifying our
+old friend Captain Carryall.</p>
+
+<p>Directly he jumped ashore, a dozen of the islanders
+dashed into the surf and ran the boat up on the beach.
+Our recognition was mutual.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, young fellow!" he said, "I've been hunting you
+up half over the South Seas. Wherever have you stowed
+yourself all this time? Why, what a man you've grown&mdash;a
+couple of inches taller than me, and I'm no pony. Brown
+as a berry, too! You'll have to come home with me this
+trip. Your old man's beginning to get anxious about you&mdash;and
+you know he's not much in that line&mdash;and your
+mother and sisters."</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Carryall," I said, "there's no necessity for more
+reasons. I'm going to Sydney with you if you'll give me a
+passage."</p>
+
+<p>"Half a dozen if you want it," quoth the jolly sailor.
+"And now I must have a word with my friends. Anybody
+been married since I was here last; no Quintals&mdash;no
+Millses! Mary, how's this? Dorcas&mdash;Grace&mdash;Mercy
+Young, I'm ashamed of you. And Miranda! Nobody run
+away with you yet? I see I must take you to Sydney and
+show you at a Government House ball. Then they'd see
+what a Pitcairn girl was like."</p>
+
+<p>"You may do that yet," I said, "for, seriously, Miranda
+is now Mrs. Hilary Telfer. We have been married more
+than a month."</p>
+
+<p>The captain could not refrain from giving a prolonged
+whistle at this announcement, which certainly appeared to
+take him by surprise. However, he rallied with ease and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+celerity, and addressing Miranda, whose hand he took as he
+spoke, said, "My dear! let me congratulate the son of my
+old friend, Captain Telfer, upon his marriage with the best,
+cleverest, and prettiest girl I have fallen across in all my
+wanderings. I don't suppose you have any great amount of
+capital to begin life with; but if two young people like you
+don't manage to find some path to fortune in a country like
+Australia, I'm a Dutchman. He needs to be a good fellow,
+and a man all round, to be worthy of Miranda Christian;
+but he can't help, as the son of his father and his mother,
+being all that, and more. So now, my dear! you must let
+me kiss you, as your husband's old friend, and wish you all
+happiness."</p>
+
+<p>Miranda blushed as the warm-hearted fellow folded her
+in his arms, but submitted with becoming grace; and leaving
+her among her young friends, he and I strolled away
+towards our hut to talk over affairs more at leisure.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, youngster!" said he, laying his hand on my
+shoulder, "I suppose you've had enough island life for a
+while, and won't be sorry to see Sydney Heads again. Nor
+I either. I've been out fifteen months this time, and that's
+rather long to be away from one's home and picaninnies.
+They'll be glad to see your face again at Rose Bay, I'll be
+bound. But they certainly will be taken aback when you
+turn up as a married man. Nineteen times out of twenty
+it's a mistake to tie one's self up for life at your age. But
+all depends upon getting the right woman, and Miranda is
+the one woman in a thousand that a man might be proud to
+marry, whether he was rich or poor, and to work and wear
+out his life for all his days. I've known her since she was
+a baby, and, taking her all round, I don't know her equal
+anywhere. It seems queer to say so, considering her birth
+and bringing up. But these Pitcairners are well known to
+be the best and finest women, in all womanly ways, that
+the world can show. And your wife is, and has always
+been, the flower of the flock."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>
+I grasped the captain's hand. I knew that I had secured
+a powerful ally; and though I felt so secure in the wisdom
+of my choice that no disapprobation of family and friends
+would have had power to affect me, yet, in such matters, it
+is well to have a friend at court, and the captain's reputation
+for sense and sagacity stood so high, that I felt not
+only my relatives, but my acquaintances and friends, would
+be strongly swayed by his judgment.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that we've got so far," he said, "you had better
+make your arrangements to sail with me on Sunday morning;
+this is Thursday, but my passengers want to see the
+island and the people of whom they have heard so much."</p>
+
+<p>"Passengers!" I said. "How many? and where from?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I picked them up at Honolulu. Half a dozen,
+and very nice people, too. They came in an English yacht
+that went to San Francisco for them, and they wanted to
+see Australia, and so came with me. They're rather big
+people at home, I believe, though they're very quiet, and
+give themselves no airs."</p>
+
+<p>"Any ladies?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are two married couples, and a young lady, with
+her brother."</p>
+
+<p>"That's very serious, captain," said I. "I don't quite
+know how Miranda will get on with travelling Englishwomen&mdash;they're
+rather difficult sometimes."</p>
+
+<p>"Miranda will get on with any one," answered the captain,
+with a decided air. "She will sit on my right hand,
+as a bride, and no one in my ship will show her less than
+proper respect. Anyhow, these people are not that sort.
+You'll see she's all ready to start on Sunday morning.
+'The better the day, the better the deed.'"</p>
+
+<p>So the captain went to pay a visit to the people of the
+settlement, among whom his free, pleasant manner and
+generous bearing had made him most popular. The girls
+crowded around him, laughing and plying him with
+ques<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>tions
+about the commissions he had promised to execute for
+them, and the presents he had brought. These attentions
+he never omitted. Full of curiosity they were, too, about
+the English ladies on board. "How they were dressed?"
+"How long they would stay in Sydney?" "What they
+would think of the poor Pitcairn girls?" and so on.</p>
+
+<p>With the elders he told of the whaleships he had spoken,
+and of their cargoes of oil&mdash;of the Quintals, or Youngs,
+Mills, or M'Coys who were harpooners and boat-steerers
+on board some of the Sydney whalers, and of the chances
+of their "lay" or share of profit being a good one. Besides
+all this, the captain consented to act as their ambassador
+to the Governor-General in Sydney, and lay before that
+potentate certain defects of their island administration&mdash;small,
+perhaps, in themselves, but highly important to the
+members of an isolated community. In addition to all
+this, he (as I heard afterwards) specially attended to my
+marriage with Miranda, of which he highly approved; telling
+the old pastor and the elders of the community that he
+had known my father for ever so many years; that he was
+highly respected now, when retired, but had been well
+known in the South Seas and New Zealand many years
+ago as the captain of the <i>Orpheus</i>, one of the most successful
+whalers that ever sailed through Sydney Heads.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Telfer of the <i>Orpheus</i>!" said one of the oldest
+men of the group, "I remember him well. I was cast away
+on Easter Island the time the <i>Harriet</i> was wrecked in a
+hurricane. He gave me a free passage to Tahiti, a suit of
+clothes, and ten dollars when I left the ship. He wanted
+me to finish the voyage with him and go to Sydney. I was
+sorry afterwards I didn't. He was a fine man, and a better
+seaman never trod plank. No wonder Hilary is such a fine
+chap. I can see the likeness now. I don't hold with our
+young women going off this island in a general way, but
+Miranda is a lucky girl to have Captain Telfer's son for a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>
+husband." All this the captain told me afterwards with
+slight embellishments and variations of his own.</p>
+
+<p>My reputation had fairly gone before, but this light
+thrown on my parentage placed me in a most exalted position&mdash;next
+to their spiritual pastor and master, before
+whom they bowed in genuine respect and reverence. Perhaps
+there is no man in the whole world more honoured
+and admired in the South Seas than the captain of a ship.
+And now that the name of my father's barque, once pretty
+well known south of the line, had been recalled from the
+past, every doubt as to the future of Miranda and myself
+was set at rest.</p>
+
+<p>We were invested, so to speak, with the blessing of the
+whole community, and began our modest preparations with
+added cheerfulness and resolve.</p>
+
+<p>In the afternoon we saw a boat put off from the <i>Florentia</i>
+and the visitors land. They were five in number. We
+could see them walk over to the village, where they were
+met by some of the principal people and a few of the women
+and girls. We had been making ready for our voyage, and
+having finished our simple meal, sat in the shade of our
+orange tree, near the door, and awaited the strangers whom
+I judged rightly that curiosity and the captain would bring
+to our dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>In less than an hour's time we saw them strolling along
+the path which led to our nest. As they approached we
+arose and went to meet them, when the captain with all
+due form introduced us, "The Honourable Mr. and Mrs.
+Craven, Colonel Percival, Mr. Vavasour, and his sister, Miss
+Vavasour." Mrs. Percival had remained on board, as her
+little boy of four or five years old was not well. Miranda,
+rather to my surprise, was perfectly unembarrassed, and
+talked away to the stranger ladies as if she had been accustomed
+to the society business all her life.</p>
+
+<p>I could see that they were pleased and surprised at her
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span>
+appearance, as also gratified with the manner in which she
+invited them to inspect our simple dwelling.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! what a charming nest of a place&mdash;quite a bower of
+bliss!" cried Miss Vavasour. "I declare I will come here
+when I am married and spend my honeymoon. What shade
+and fragrance combined! What a lovely crystal lakelet to
+bathe in! and I suppose, Mrs. Telfer, you go out fishing in
+that dear canoe? What an ideal life!"</p>
+
+<p>"I quite agree with you and feel quite envious," said
+Mrs. Craven. "Charlie and I have been married too long
+to have our honeymoon over again; but it would have been
+idyllic, wouldn't it, Charlie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Splendid place to smoke in," assented her husband.
+"No hounds meet nearer than Sydney, though, I presume.
+Drawback rather, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You men are always thinking of horses, and hounds or
+guns," pouted Miss Vavasour. "What can one want with
+them here? What can life offer more than this endless
+summer, this fairy bower, this crystal wave, this air which
+is a living perfume? It is an earthly paradise."</p>
+
+<p>"And the beloved object," added Mrs. Craven, with quiet
+humour. "You have left him out. It would be an incomplete
+paradise without Adam."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! here he comes!" exclaimed Miranda (as she told
+me afterwards), who had not been attending to the enthusiastic
+speech, but was watching bird-like for my approach.</p>
+
+<p>"Who? Adam?" said Miss Vavasour, laughingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no!" answered she, smiling at the apparent absurdity.
+"You must excuse me a little, but I was looking out
+for Hilary."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, then, ladies!" said the cheerful voice of Captain
+Carryall, "we must get back to our boat. It's dangerous
+to stop ashore all night, isn't it, Miranda? We must leave
+you to finish your packing. It's a long voyage to Sydney,
+eh? It may be years before you see the island again."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+We all went down together to the boat, where the visitors
+were seen off by all the young people of the island, the
+girls wondering with respectful admiration at the English
+ladies' dresses, hats, boots, and shoes&mdash;in fact, at everything
+they did and said as well. It was a revelation to
+them, not that they had any envious feeling about those
+cherished possessions. They had been too well trained
+for that, and were secure in the guidance of their deeply-rooted
+religious faith and lofty moral code. On the other
+hand, their visitors admired sincerely the noble forms and
+free, graceful bearing of the island maidens, as well as the
+splendid athletic development of the men.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, you Thursday Quintal, come and show these
+ladies how you can handle a steer-oar," called out the captain.
+"He was the boat-steerer on board the <i>Florentia</i> one
+voyage, and steered in the pulling race for whaleboats at
+the regatta on anniversary day, which we won the year
+before last in Sydney harbour. We'll bring you ashore in
+the morning."</p>
+
+<p>"Ay, ay, captain," said the young fellow, showing his
+splendid teeth in a pleasant smile. "It will feel quite
+natural to take an oar in a boat of yours again."</p>
+
+<p>The wind had freshened during the afternoon, and the
+rollers on the beach lifted the whaleboat as she came up to
+the landing rather higher than the ladies fancied. However,
+they were carefully seated, and at the captain's word,
+"Give way, my lads," the crew picked her up in great style,
+while Quintal, standing with easy grace at the stern, the
+sixteen foot oar in his strong grasp, directed her course
+with instinctive skill so as to avoid the growing force of
+the wave. As he stood there&mdash;tall, muscular, glorious in
+the grace and dignity of early manhood&mdash;he seemed the
+embodiment of a sculptor's dream.</p>
+
+<p>"What a magnificent figure!" said Mrs. Craven to her
+young friend. "How rare it is to see such a form in Mayfair!"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+"I surmise, as our American girl said at Honolulu,"
+replied Miss Vavasour, "that you might look a long time
+before you saw such a man among our 'Johnnies'; and
+what eyes and teeth he has! Really I feel inclined to
+rebel. Here's this Mr. Telfer, too, and what a grand-looking
+fellow he is, and an English gentleman besides in all
+his ways. He can make his way to this out of the way
+speck in the ocean, and secure a Miranda for a life companion&mdash;glorious
+girl she is too&mdash;while we poor English
+spins have to wait till a passable <i>pretendu</i> comes along,&mdash;old,
+bald, stupid, or diminutive, as the case may be,&mdash;and
+are bound to take him under penalty of dying old maids.
+I call it rank injustice, and I'd head a revolution tomorrow;
+and oh!&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The interjection which closed the speech of this ardent
+woman's righter was caused by the onward course of a
+breaking wave, which was not avoided so deftly as usual,
+and splashed the speaker and Mrs. Craven.</p>
+
+<p>"Hulloa! Quintal, what are you about?" said the captain,
+"is this your steering that I've been blowing about to these
+ladies and gentlemen? Miss Vavasour! I'm afraid it's
+your fault, you know the rule aboard ship? Passengers are
+requested not to speak to the man at the wheel."</p>
+
+<p>"But there's no regulation, captain, that the man at the
+steer-oar is not to look at the passengers," said Mrs. Craven.
+"However, here we are nearly on board, so there's no harm
+done, and we're only a trifle damped."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Clear-hued&mdash;calm&mdash;waveless&mdash;dawned our farewell
+day. I was glad of it. Rain and storm-clouds lower the
+spirits more distinctly when one is about to make a departure
+than at any other time, besides the inconvenience of
+wet or bedraggled garments. It was the Sabbath day, and
+the pastor arranged a special service in commemoration of
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>
+Miranda's marriage and departure from the island. All
+the ship's company that could be spared came, of course;
+the visitors made a point of attending. The little church
+was crowded. Except the youngest children and their
+guardians, every soul on the island was there.</p>
+
+<p>After the Church of England service, which the islanders
+had at their fingers' ends, and in which they all most
+reverently joined, hymns were sung, in which the rich
+voices of the young girls were heard to great advantage.
+There was a strange and subtle harmony pervading the
+part-singing, which seemed natural to the race, more particularly
+in those parts in which the whole of the congregation
+joined. As Miranda played on the harmonium, it may
+have occurred to her friends and playmates for the last
+time, many of them could not restrain their tears. The
+aged pastor after the Liturgy preached a feeling and sympathetic
+address, which certainly went to the hearts of all
+present. He made particular allusion to our union and
+departure.</p>
+
+<p>"One of the children of the island," he said, "who had
+endeared herself to all by her unselfish kindness of heart,
+who had been marked out by uncommon gifts, both mental
+and physical, was to leave them that day. She might be
+absent for years, perhaps they might not see her face again,&mdash;that
+face upon which no one had seen a frown, nor hear
+that voice which had never uttered an unkind word," here
+the greater part of the congregation, male and female, fell
+a-weeping and lamenting loudly. "But they must take
+comfort; our beloved one was not departing alone, she had
+been joined in holy matrimony with a youth of whom any
+damsel might feel proud; he was the husband of her choice,
+the son of a master mariner well known and highly respected
+in former years throughout the wide Pacific. He
+himself had often heard of him in old days, and the son of
+such a father was worthy to be loved and trusted. The
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>
+child of our hearts would go forth, even as Rebecca left
+her home and her people with Isaac, and God's blessing
+would surely rest upon all her descendants as upon the
+children of the promise.</p>
+
+<p>"He would ask all now assembled to join in prayers for
+the welfare of Hilary Telfer and Miranda, his wife."</p>
+
+<p>As the venerable man pronounced the words of the benediction,
+echoed audibly by the whole of the congregation,
+the sobs of the women were audible, while tears and stifled
+sighs were the rule, and not the exception. As the congregation
+rose from their knees, he walked down to the <i>Florentia's</i>
+boats, it having been so arranged by the captain, who
+had invited all who could by any means attend, to lunch on
+board his vessel. Farewells were said on the beach to all
+who were perforce detained by age, infirmity, or other
+causes, and at length we were safely seated in the captain's
+boat, and putting off, were followed by a perfect fleet of
+every size and carrying capacity.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda hid her face and wept silently. I did not
+attempt to persuade her to moderate her grief, as the outlet
+of over-strung feelings, of genuine and passionate regret,
+it was a natural and healthful safety-valve for an overburdened
+heart.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I was ever more impressed with our
+Church service," said Mrs. Craven. "That dear, venerable
+old man, and his truly wonderful congregation! How
+earnestly they listened, and how reverently they behaved!"</p>
+
+<p>"Think of our rustics in a village church!" said Miss
+Vavasour, "the conceited choir, the sleeping labourers, the
+giggling school children, where do you ever see anything
+like what we have witnessed to-day? However did they
+manage to grow up so blameless, and to keep so good and
+pure minded? Can you tell me, Mr. Telfer?"</p>
+
+<p>"My knowledge of my wife's people is chiefly from hearsay,"
+I said; "I can remember the old tale of the Mutiny
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>
+of the <i>Bounty</i> when I was a school-boy in Sydney. Captain
+Bligh, of the ill-fated ship, was afterwards the Governor
+of New South Wales. Whether his conduct provoked the
+mutiny, of which Miranda's great grandfather was the
+leader, or whether the crew were overcome by the temptations
+of a life in that second garden of Eden, Tahiti, has
+been disputed, and perhaps can never be definitely known.
+This much is certain, that the sole surviving mutineer,
+John Adams, deeply repentant, changed his rule of life.
+Morning and evening prayer was established, and a system
+of instruction for the children and young people regularly
+carried out. Such was the apparently accidental commencement
+of the religious teaching of the little community at
+the beginning of the century. Some of the results you
+have witnessed to-day."</p>
+
+<p>"It certainly is the most wonderful historiette in the
+whole world," said Miss Vavasour, who had listened with
+deep interest. "I never saw so many nice people in one
+place before&mdash;all good&mdash;all kind&mdash;all contented, and all
+happy. It makes one believe in the millennium; I must
+try what I can do with our village when I get back to
+Dorsetshire."</p>
+
+<p>"You'll have your work cut out for you, Miss Vavasour,"
+said Colonel Percival. "Fancy the old poachers and the
+hardened tramps, the beer-drinking yokels and the rough
+field-hands. Work of years, and doubtful then."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! dear, why do we call ourselves civilised, I wonder?"
+sighed the enthusiastic damsel, just awakened to a sense of
+the duties of property in correlation with the "rights."
+"I really believe Englishmen&mdash;the lower classes, of course&mdash;are
+the most ill-mannered, uncivilised people in the
+world. Look at those dear islanders, how polite and unselfish
+they are in their behaviour to each other, and to
+us! It makes me feel ashamed of my country. Why, even
+at a presentation to Her Majesty people push, and crush,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+and look as black as thunder if you tread on their absurd
+trains."</p>
+
+<p>"You ought to come out and join the Melanesian Mission,
+my dear," said Mrs. Craven. "There is no knowing,
+with your energy and convictions, what good you might do."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I could," said the girl eagerly. "But I'm not
+good enough, I wish I was. If I felt I could keep up my
+present feelings I'd go to-morrow. But I'm selfish and
+worldly-minded, like my neighbours in Christendom. It
+would be no use. I should only spoil my own life, and not
+mend theirs."</p>
+
+<p>"Such has been the confession of many an earnest reformer,
+who had started in life with high hopes and a
+scorn of consequences," said Mr. Vavasour quietly; "it is
+by far the most common result of heroic self-sacrifice. If
+we did not occasionally see the accomplished fact, as in this
+case, we might well despair."</p>
+
+<p>"And this was an accident of accidents," said Miss
+Vavasour sorrowfully. "No missionary society sent away
+the pioneer preachers to the heathen with prayers, and
+flags, and collections. No, here is the grandest feat ever
+accomplished in the world's history. The most religious,
+contented, consistent community in the whole world evolved
+from a crew of runaway sailors and a few poor savage
+women! Really there must be some good in human nature
+after all, reviled and insulted as it is by all the extra good
+people."</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Florentia</i> had not had so large a party on board since
+the last successful affair in Sydney harbour. That one included
+dancing, which did not enter into this entertainment.
+Nothing, however, could have gone off better. The curiosity
+of the young women about the ladies' belongings was
+amply gratified, and the luncheon voted the very best one
+at which they had ever been entertained.</p>
+
+<p>A mirthful and joyous gathering it was. The visitors
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+were charmed with, the naturally refined and courteous
+manners of the guests. And, finally, as the day wore on,
+and the breeze from the land promised a good offing,
+Miranda came up from her cabin, to which she had elected
+to retire, and bade farewell to friends and kinsfolk, who
+departed in their boats, much less saddened of mien than
+they had been in the morning.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Once more at sea. The <i>Florentia</i>, though a whaler, and
+not ornamented up to yachting form, was yet extremely
+neat and spotlessly clean, as far as could be managed by a
+smart and energetic captain. She was a fast sailer, and as
+the wind off the land freshened at sundown, she spread
+most of her canvas and sped before the breeze after a
+fashion which would have made her a not unworthy comrade
+of the <i>Leonora</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda had retired to her cabin. Her heart was too
+full for jesting converse, and after she had watched the
+last speck of her loved island disappear below the horizon,
+she was fain to go below to hide her tears, and relieve her
+feelings by unrestrained indulgence in grief.</p>
+
+<p>For my part, after a cheerful dinner in the cuddy, I
+remained long on deck, pacing up and down, and revolving
+in my mind plans for our future. As I felt the accustomed
+sway of the vessel, listened to the creaking of the rigging,
+which was music in my ears, and watched the waves fall
+back from her sides in hissing foam-flakes, as the aroused
+vessel, feeling the force of the rising gale, drove through
+the darkening wave-masses, and seemed to defy the menace
+of the deep, the memories of my early island life came back
+to me. The luxurious, halcyon days, the starlit, silent
+nights, when ofttimes I had wandered to the shore, and
+seating myself on a coral rock, gazed over the boundless
+watery waste, wondering ever about my career, my destined
+fate.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>Then returned the strange and wayward memories of
+Hayston and his lawless associates&mdash;the reckless traders,
+the fierce half-castes, the savage islanders! Again I heard
+the soft voices of L&#257;lia, Nellie, Kitty of Ebon, and smiled
+as I recalled their pleading, infantine ways, their flashing
+eyes, so eloquent in love or hate. All were gone; all had
+become phantoms of the past. With that stage and season
+of my life they had passed away&mdash;irrevocably, eternally&mdash;and
+now I possessed an incentive to labour, ambition, and
+self-denial such as I had never before known. With such
+a companion as Miranda, where was the man who would
+not have displayed the higher qualities of his nature, who
+would not have risen to the supremest effort of labour,
+valour, or self-abnegation? Before Heaven I vowed that
+night, that neither toil nor trouble, difficulty nor danger,
+should deter me from the pursuit of fortune and distinction.
+So passed our first day at sea.</p>
+
+<p>With the one that followed the gale abated, and as the
+<i>Florentia</i> swept southward under easy sail, comfort was
+restored. The passengers settled themselves down to the
+enjoyment of that absolute rest and passive luxuriousness
+which characterise board-ship life in fine weather. Miss
+Vavasour and Miranda were soon deep in earnest conversation,
+both for the time disregarding the books with which
+they had furnished themselves. Mrs. Craven had devoted
+herself to an endless task of knitting, which apparently
+supplied a substitute for thought, reading, recreation, and
+conversation.</p>
+
+<p>I was talking to the captain when a lady came up the
+companion, followed by the colonel, who half lifted, half
+led a fine little boy of four or five years of age.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said the captain, with a sudden movement towards
+the new arrivals, "I see Mrs. Percival has come on deck.
+Come over and be introduced." We walked over, and I received
+a formal bow from a handsome, pale woman, who
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>
+had evidently been sojourning in the East. There is a certain
+similarity in all "Indian women," as they are generally
+called, which extends even to manner and expression. Long
+residence in a hot climate robs them of their roses, while
+the habit of command, resulting from association with an
+inferior race, gives them a tinge of hauteur&mdash;not to say
+unconscious insolence of manner&mdash;which is scarcely agreeable
+to those who, from circumstances, they may deem to
+be socially inferior.</p>
+
+<p>So it was that Miranda, in spite of Miss Vavasour's nods
+and signals, received but the faintest recognition, and retreated
+to her chair somewhat chilled by her reception.
+She, however, took no apparent notice of the slight, and
+was soon absorbed in conversation with Miss Vavasour,
+her brother, and Mrs. Craven, who had moved up her chair
+to join the party. The colonel deserted his former friends
+to devote himself to his family duties, while the captain
+and I walked forward and commenced a discussion which
+had, at any rate, a strong personal interest for me.</p>
+
+<p>"Now look here, Hilary," said he, as he lighted a fresh
+cigar. He had been smoking on the quarter-deck under
+protest, as it were, and thus commenced: "Listen to me,
+my boy! I've been thinking seriously about you and
+Miranda. Your start in life when you get to Sydney is
+important. I think I can give you a bit of advice worth
+following. You understand all the dialects between here
+and the Line Islands, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"More than eight," I answered; "I can talk with nearly
+every islander from here to the Gilberts. I have learned
+so much, at any rate, in my wanderings."</p>
+
+<p>"And a very good thing, too, for it's not a thing that can
+be picked up in a year, no matter how a man may work,
+and he's useless or nearly so without it; you can keep accounts,
+write well, and all that?"</p>
+
+<p>I replied that I had a number of peculiar accounts to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+keep as supercargo to the <i>Leonora</i>, as well as all Hayston's
+business letters to write; that my office books were always
+considered neat, complete, and well kept. Then he suddenly
+said, "You are the very man we want!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who are we, and what is the man wanted for?" I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"For the South Sea Island trade, and no other," said
+Captain Carryall, putting his hand on my shoulder. "Old
+Paul Frankston (you've heard of him) and I have laid it
+out to establish a regular mercantile house in Sydney for
+the development of the island trade. The old man will back
+us, and the name of Paul Frankston is good from New Zealand
+to the North Pole and back again. I will do the whaling,
+cruising, and cargo business&mdash;cocoa-nut oil, copra, and curios&mdash;while
+you will live in one of those nice white houses
+at North Shore, somewhere about Neutral Bay, where you
+can see the ships come through the Heads; Miranda can
+have a skiff, and you a ten-tonner, so as not to forget your
+boating and your sea-legs. What do you think of that, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is a splendid idea!" I cried, "and poor Miranda will
+be within sound of the sea. If she were not, she would pine
+away like her own araucarias which will not live outside of
+the wave music. But how about the cash part of it? I
+haven't much. Most of my savings went down in the <i>Leonora</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we'll manage that somehow! Old Paul will work
+that part of the arrangement. I daresay your father will
+advance what will make your share equal, or nearly so, to
+ours."</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds well," I said. "With partners like Mr.
+Frankston and yourself a man ought to be able to do something.
+I know almost every island where trade can be got,
+and the price to a cowrie that should be paid. There ought
+to be a fortune in it in five years. What a pity Hayston
+couldn't have had such a chance."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+"He'd have had the cash, and the other partners the
+experience, in less than that time," said the captain, smiling
+sardonically. "He was a first-rate organiser if he had not
+been such a d&mdash;d scoundrel. He had some fine qualities,
+I allow; as a seaman he had no equal. In the good old
+fighting days he would have been a splendid robber baron.
+But in these modern times, where there is a trifle of law
+and order in most countries, even in the South Seas he was
+out of place."</p>
+
+<p>"He was far from a model mariner," I said, "but it hurts
+me to hear him condemned. He had splendid points in his
+character, and no one but myself will ever know how much
+good there was mixed up with his recklessness and despair.
+I left him, but I couldn't help being fond of him to the
+last."</p>
+
+<p>"It was a good thing for you that you did&mdash;a very good
+thing. You will live to be thankful for it. He was a dangerous
+beggar, and neither man nor woman could escape his
+fascination. However, that's all past and gone now. You're
+married and settled, remember, and you're to be Hilary
+Telfer, Esq., J.P., and all the rest of it directly, and the
+only sea-going business you can have for the future is to be
+Commodore of the Neutral Bay Yacht Club, or some such
+title and distinction. And now I've done for the present.
+You go and see what Miranda thinks of it. I won't agree
+to anything unless she consents."</p>
+
+<p>Miranda was charmed with the idea of a mercantile marine
+enterprise, so much in accordance with her previous
+habits and experiences. The added inducement of living
+on the sea-shore, with a boat, a jetty, and a bathing-house,
+decided her. She implicitly believed in Captain Carryall's
+power and ability to make our fortune; was also certain
+that, with Mr. Frankston's commercial aid, we should soon be
+as rich as the Guldensterns, the Rothschilds of the Pacific.
+She surrendered herself thereupon to a dream of bliss,
+al<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>loyed
+only at intervals by a tinge of apprehension that the
+great undiscovered country of Sydney society might prove
+hostile or indifferent.</p>
+
+<p>So much she communicated to Miss Vavasour as she and
+Mrs. Craven were reclining side by side on their deck chairs,
+while the <i>Florentia</i> was gliding along on another day all
+sunshine, azure, and favouring breeze.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you be afraid, my dear," said the kind-hearted Mrs.
+Craven, "you and your husband are quite able to hold your
+own in Sydney society or any other; indeed, I shall be
+inclined to bet that you'd be the rage rather than otherwise.
+I wish I had you in Northamptonshire, I'd undertake to
+'knock out' (as Charlie says) the local belles in a fortnight."</p>
+
+<p>Miranda laughed the childishly happy laugh of unspoiled
+girlhood. "Dear Mrs. Craven, how good of you to say so;
+but, of course, I know I'm a sort of savage, who will improve
+in a year or two if every one is as kind as you and
+Miss Vavasour here; but suppose they should be like her,"
+and she motioned towards Mrs. Percival.</p>
+
+<p>This lady had never relaxed the coldness and hauteur
+towards Miranda and myself. She had been unable to
+modify her "Indian manner," as Captain Carryall and Mr.
+Vavasour called it, and about which they made daily
+jokes.</p>
+
+<p>As she passed the little group, she bowed slightly and
+without relaxation of feature, going forward to the waist
+of the ship, where she sat down and was soon absorbed in
+a book. The three friends smiled at each other, and continued
+their conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"I should like to dress you for a garden-party, Miranda,"
+said Miss Vavasour; "let me see now, a real summer day,
+such as we sometimes get in dear old England&mdash;not like
+this one perhaps, but very nice. A lovely old manor house
+like Gravenhurst or Hunsdon&mdash;such a lawn, such old
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+trees, such a river, a marquee under an elm a hundred
+years old, and the county magnates marching in from their
+carriages."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, how delicious!" cried Miranda. "I have read
+such descriptions in books, but you&mdash;oh, how happy you
+must be to have lived it all!"</p>
+
+<p>"It's very nice, but as to the happiness, that doesn't
+always follow," confessed the English girl with a half
+sigh. "I almost think you have the greater share of that.
+Anyhow, just as the company are assembled, I am seen
+walking down from the house. We are of the house party,
+you know, Miranda and I. She is dressed in a soft, white,
+embroidered muslin, very simply made, with a little, a very
+little Valenciennes lace. Its long straight folds hang
+gracefully around her matchless figure, and are confined at
+the waist by a broad, white moir&eacute; sash; white gloves,
+a white moir&eacute; parasol, a large Gainsborough hat with
+fleecy white feathers, and Miranda's costume is complete&mdash;the
+very embodiment of fresh, fair girlhood, unspotted
+from the world of fashion and folly."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<h2>A SWIM FOR LIFE</h2>
+
+
+<p>The words died on her lips as a shriek, wild, agonising,
+despairing, rang through the air, and startled not only the
+little group of pleased listeners, but all who happened to be
+on deck at the time. We started up and gazed towards the
+spot whence the cry had come. The colonel, who had been
+reading on the opposite side of the deck, calmly smoking
+the while, dropped his book and only saved his meerschaum
+by a cricketer's smart catch. The captain came
+bounding up from below, followed by the steward and his
+boy; the foc'sle hands, with the black cook, hurled themselves
+aft. All guessed the cause as they saw Mrs. Percival
+wringing her hands frantically and gazing at an object in
+the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Her boy had fallen overboard! Yes! the little fellow,
+active and courageous beyond his years, had tried to crawl
+up to the shrouds while his mother's eyes were engaged in
+the perusal of the leading novel of the day. Weary of
+inaction, the poor little chap had done a little climbing on
+his own account, and an unexpected roll of the ship had
+sent him overboard. Light as the wind was, he was
+already a long way astern.</p>
+
+<p>Long before all these observations were made, however,
+and while the astonished spectators were questioning their
+senses as to the meaning of the confusion, Miranda had
+sprung upon the rail, and in the next moment, with hands
+clasped above her head, was parting the smooth waters.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+Rising to the surface, she swam with rapid and powerful
+strokes towards the receding form of the still floating
+child. With less rapidity of motion, I cast myself into
+the heaving waste of water, not that I doubted Miranda's
+ability to overtake and bear up the child, but from simple
+inability to remain behind while all that was worth living
+for on earth was adrift upon the wave.</p>
+
+<p>I followed in her wake, and though I failed to keep near
+her, for the Pitcairn islanders are among the fastest
+swimmers in the world, I yet felt that I might be of some
+use or aid. Long before I could overtake her she had
+caught up the little fellow, and lifting him high above
+the water, was swimming easily towards me.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you foolish boy!" she cried, "why did you come
+after me? do you want to be drowned again?" Here she
+smiled and showed her lovely teeth as if it was rather a
+good joke. It may have been, but at that time and place
+I was not in the humour to perceive it.</p>
+
+<p>"I came for the same reason that you did, I suppose&mdash;because
+I could not stay behind. If anything had happened
+to you what should I have done? Here comes the
+boat, though, and we can talk it over on board."</p>
+
+<p>Some little time had been expended in lowering the boat.
+The ship had been brought to, but even then&mdash;and with
+so light a wind&mdash;it was astonishing what a distance we
+had fallen behind. It was a curious sensation, such specks
+as we were upon the immense water-plain which stretched
+around to the horizon. However, the <i>Florentia</i> was strongly
+in evidence, and nearer and nearer came the whaleboat, with
+the captain at the steer-oar, and the men pulling as if they
+were laying on a crack harpooner to an eighty barrel whale.</p>
+
+<p>We were now swimming side by side, Miranda talking
+to the little fellow, who had never lost consciousness, and
+did not seem particularly afraid of his position.</p>
+
+<p>"How tremendously hard they are pulling!" I said;
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+"they are making the boat spin again. One would think
+they were pulling for a wager."</p>
+
+<p>"So they are," answered she, "for three lives, and perhaps
+another. See there! God in His mercy protect us."</p>
+
+<p>I followed the direction of her turned head, and my heart
+stood still as my eye caught the fatal sign of the monster's
+presence at no great distance from us. It was <i>the back fin
+of a shark</i>!</p>
+
+<p>"Do your best, my beloved," she continued; "we must
+keep together, and if he overtakes us before the boat reaches,
+splash hard and shout as loud as you can. I have seen a
+shark frightened before now; but please God it may not
+come to that."</p>
+
+<p>The boat came nearer&mdash;still nearer&mdash;but, as it seemed
+to us, all too slowly. The men were pulling for their lives,
+I could notice, and the captain frantically urging them on.
+They had seen the dreaded signal before us, and had commenced
+to race from that moment. But for some delay in
+the tackle for lowering, they would have been up to us
+before now.</p>
+
+<p>As it was we did our best. I would have taken the child,
+but Miranda would not allow me. "His weight is nothing
+in the water," she said, "and I could swim faster than you,
+even with him." This she showed me she could do by
+shooting ahead with the greatest ease, and then allowing
+me to overtake her. I had to let her have her own way.
+We were lessening the distance between us and the boat,
+but the sea demon had a mind to overtake us, and our
+hearts almost failed as we noticed the sharp black fin gaining
+rapidly upon us. Still there was one chance, that he
+would not pursue us to the very side of the boat. It was
+a terrible moment. With every muscle strained to the
+uttermost, with lung, and sinew, and every organ taxed to
+utmost tension, I most certainly beat any previous record
+in swimming that I had ever attained. Miranda, with
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+apparently but little effort, kept slightly ahead. The last
+few yards&mdash;shorter than the actual distance&mdash;appeared to
+divide us from the huge form of the monster now distinctly
+visible beneath the water, when with one frantic yell and a
+dash at the oars, which took every remaining pound of
+strength out of the willing crew, the boat shot up within
+equal distance. At a signal from the captain every oar was
+raised and brought down again with a terrific splash into
+the water, and a simultaneous yell. The effort was successful.
+The huge creature, strangely timid in some respects,
+stopped, and with one powerful side motion of fins and tail
+glided out of the line of pursuit. At the same moment the
+boat swept up, and eager arms lifted Miranda and her
+burden into it. My hand was on the gunwale until
+I saw her safe, whence with a slight amount of assistance
+I gained the mid-thwart.</p>
+
+<p>"Saved, thank God!" cried the captain, with fervent
+expression, "but a mighty close thing; the next time you
+take a bath of this kind, my dear Miranda, with sharks
+around, you must let me know beforehand, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Some one would have had to go, captain," she answered;
+"we couldn't see the dear little fellow drowned before our
+eyes. It was only a trifle after all&mdash;a swim in smooth
+water on a fine day: I didn't reckon on a shark being so
+close, I must say."</p>
+
+<p>"I saw the naughty shark," said the little fellow, now
+quite recovered and in his usual spirits. "How close he
+came! do you think he would have eaten us all, captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my boy&mdash;without salt; you would never have
+seen your papa and mamma again if it had not been for
+this lady here."</p>
+
+<p>"But you took us in the boat, captain," argued the little
+fellow; "he can't catch us in here, can he?"</p>
+
+<p>"But the lady caught you in her arms long before the
+boat came up, my dear, or else you would have been
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+drowned over and over again; that confounded tackle
+caught, or else we should have been up long before. It's
+a good thing they were not lowering for a whale, or my
+first mate's language would have been something to remember
+till the voyage after next. However, here we are all
+safe, Charlie, and there's your mother looking out for you."</p>
+
+<p>A painfully eager face was that which gazed from the
+vessel as we rowed alongside. Every trace of the languor
+partly born of the tropic sun and partly of aristocratic
+<i>morgue</i> was gone from the countenance of Mrs. Percival, as
+her boy, laughing and prattling, was carried up the rope
+ladder and lifted on deck. His mother clasped him now
+passionately in her arms, sobbing, blessing, kissing him, and
+crying aloud that God had restored her child from the dead.
+"Oh, my boy! my boy!" she repeated again and again;
+"your mother would have died too, if you had been drowned,
+she would never have lived without you."</p>
+
+<p>By this time Miranda had reached the deck, where she was
+received with a hearty British cheer from the ship's company,
+while the passengers crowded around her as if she
+had acquired a new character in their eyes. But Mrs.
+Percival surpassed them all; kneeling before Miranda she
+bowed herself to the deck, as if in adoration, and kissed her
+wet feet again and again.</p>
+
+<p>"You have saved my child from a terrible death at the
+risk of your own and your husband's lives," she said.
+"May God forget me if I forget your noble act this day! I
+have been proud and unkind in my manner to you, my dear.
+I humble myself at your feet, and implore your pardon.
+But henceforth, Miranda Telfer, you and I are sisters. If
+I do not do something in requital it will go hard with me
+and Charlie."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, my dear Sybil," interposed the husband, "do you
+observe that Mrs. Telfer has not had time to change her
+dress&mdash;very wet it seems to be&mdash;and I suppose Master
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+Charlie will be none the worse for being put to bed and
+well scolded, the young rascal. Come, my dear."</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Percival, doubtless, felt a world of joy and relief
+when the light of his eyes and the joy of his heart stood
+safe and sound on the deck of the <i>Florentia</i> again, but it is
+not the wont of the British aristocrat to give vent to his
+emotions, even the holiest, in public. The veil of indifference
+is thrown over them, and men may but guess at the
+volcanic forces at work below that studiously calm exterior.</p>
+
+<p>So, laying his hand gently but firmly on his wife's arm,
+he led her to her cabin, with her boy still clasped in her
+arms as if she yet feared to lose him, and they disappeared
+from our eyes. As for Miranda and myself, such immersions
+had been daily matters of course, and were regarded
+as altogether too trifling occurrences to require more than
+the necessary changes of clothing.</p>
+
+<p>We both appeared in our places at the next meal, when
+Miranda was besieged with questions as to her sensations,
+mingled with praises of her courage and endurance in that
+hour of deadly peril.</p>
+
+<p>"And <i>her</i> child, too," said Mrs. Craven; "what a lesson
+of humility it ought to teach her! Had you, my dear girl,
+been swayed by any of the meaner motives which actuate
+men and women her foolish pride might have cost her
+child's life."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, surely no one <i>could</i> have had such thoughts when
+that dear little boy fell overboard! I couldn't help Mrs.
+Percival not liking me. I really did not think much about
+it; but when I saw the poor little face in the sea, more
+startled, indeed, than frightened, I felt as if I must go in
+after him. It was quite a matter of course."</p>
+
+<p>After this incident it may be believed that we were indeed
+a happy family on board the <i>Florentia</i>. Every one
+vied with every one else in exhibiting respect and admiration
+towards Miranda. Mrs. Percival would not hear of a
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>
+refusal that we should come and stay with her, when we
+had done all that was proper and dutiful in the family home.
+Miss Vavasour and Mrs. Craven depended on me to show
+them all the beauties of Sydney harbour; while Captain
+Carryall pledged himself to place Mr. Frankston's yacht at
+the service of his passengers generally, and to render them
+competent to champion the much-vaunted glories of the
+unrivalled harbour to all friends, foes, and doubters on the
+other side of the world.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Percival privately interrogated the captain as to
+the nature of the commercial undertaking in which he was
+about to arrange a partnership for me, and begged as a
+favour, being a man of ample means, that he might be permitted
+to advance the amount of my share. The captain
+solemnly promised him that if there was any difficulty in
+the proposed arrangement on account of my deficiency of
+cash he should be requested to supply it. "He seemed to
+feel easy in his mind after I told him this, my boy," said
+the commander, with that mixture of simplicity and astuteness
+which distinguished him, "but fancy old Paul and
+your father admitting outside capital in one of their trade
+ventures!"</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>"This time to-morrow we shall be going through Sydney
+Heads," said the first mate to me as we walked the deck
+about an hour after sunrise one morning, "that is, if the
+wind holds."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray Heaven it may," said I, "then we shall have a
+view of the harbour and city worth seeing. It makes all
+the difference. We might have a cloudy day, or be tacking
+about till nightfall, and the whole effect would be lost." I
+was most anxious not only that Miranda's first sight of my
+native land and her future home should impress her favourably,
+but I was naturally concerned that our friends should
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>
+not suppose that the descriptions of the Queen City of the
+South, with which the captain and I had regaled them,
+were overdrawn. We sat late at supper that night talking
+over the wonderful events and experiences that were to
+occur on the morrow. Plans were discussed, probable
+residence and inland travel calculated, the Fish River caves
+and the Blue Mountains were, of course, to be visited&mdash;all
+kinds of expeditions and slightly incongruous journeys to
+be carried out.</p>
+
+<p>Colonel and Mrs. Percival had been asked to stay at
+Government House during their visit, which was comparatively
+short; while Mr. and Mrs. Craven and Miss Vavasour
+were to go primarily to Petty's Hotel, which had been
+highly recommended; and the gentlemen had intimation
+that they would receive notices of their being admitted as
+honorary members of the Australian and Union Clubs.
+With such cheerful expectations and forecasts we parted
+for the night.</p>
+
+<p>The winds were kind. "The breeze stuck to us," as the
+mate expressed it, and about an hour after the time he had
+mentioned we were within a mile of the towering sandstone
+portals of that erstwhile strange, silent harbour into which
+the gallant seaman Cook, old England's typical mariner,
+had sailed a hundred years ago.</p>
+
+<p>I had been on deck since dawn. Now that we were so
+near the home of my childhood, the thoughts of old days,
+and the parents, brothers, sisters, from whom I had been
+so long separated, rushed into my mind, until I felt almost
+suffocated with contending emotions. How would they
+receive us? Would they be prepared to see me a married
+man? Would their welcome to Miranda be warm or formal?
+I began to foresee difficulties&mdash;even dangers of
+family disruption&mdash;consequences which before had never
+entered into the calculation.</p>
+
+<p>However, for the present these serious reflections were
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>
+put to flight by expressions of delight from the whole body
+of passengers, headed by Miranda, who then came on deck.
+By this time the good ship <i>Florentia</i> had closely approached
+the comparatively narrow entrance, the frowning buttresses
+of sandstone, against which the waves, now dashed with
+hoarse and angry murmur, rose almost above us, while a
+long line of surges, lit up by the red dawn fires, menaced
+us on either hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, what a lovely entrance!" said Miss Vavasour, after
+gazing long and earnestly at the scene. "It seems like the
+gate of an enchanted lake. What magnificent rock-masses,
+and what light and colour the sun brings out! It is something
+like a sun&mdash;warm, glowing, irradiating everything
+even at this early hour&mdash;and what a sky! The dream tone
+of a painter! I congratulate you, you dear darling Miranda,
+and you, Mr. Telfer, on having such a day for home-coming.
+It is a good omen&mdash;I am sure it must be. Nothing but
+good could happen on such a glorious day."</p>
+
+<p>"The day is perfection, but more than one good ship
+coming through this entrance at night has mistaken the
+indentation on the other side of the South Head for the true
+passage, and gone to pieces on the rocks below that promontory.
+But, at any rate, <i>we</i> are now safely inside; and
+where is there a harbour in the world to match it?"</p>
+
+<p>As we passed Middle harbour and drew slowly up the
+great waterway, which affords perhaps more deep anchorage
+than any other in the world, the ladies were loud in
+their expressions of admiration. "Look at those sweet
+white houses on the shores of the pretty little bays!" said
+Mrs. Craven; "and what lovely gardens and terraces
+stretching down to the beaches!"</p>
+
+<p>"And there is a Norfolk Island pine, one&mdash;two&mdash;ever
+so many," cried Miranda. "I did not think <i>they</i> grew
+here, I am sure now that I shall be happy."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course!" said Miss Vavasour, "what is to
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+hinder you? And you are to live in one of those pretty
+cream-coloured cottages&mdash;what lovely stone it must be!&mdash;with
+a garden just like that one on the point, and a boat-house
+and a jetty. One of those little steamers that I see
+fussing about will land Mr. Telfer, when he returns from
+the city, or you can get into that little boat that lies moored
+below, and row across the bay for him."</p>
+
+<p>Miranda's eyes filled as she glanced at the pretty villas
+and more pretentious mansions, past which we glided, some
+half-covered with climbers, or buried amid tropical shrubs
+of wild luxuriance. Her heart was too deeply stirred for
+jesting at that moment. She could only press her friend's
+hand and smile, as if pleading for a less humorous view of
+so important a subject.</p>
+
+<p>The harbour itself was full of interest to the strangers.
+Vessels of all sizes and shapes&mdash;coasters, colliers, passenger-boats,
+yachts, and steam launches, passed and re-passed
+in endless succession. Two men-of-war lay peacefully
+at anchor in Farm Cove, a Messagerie steamer in the
+stream, while a huge P. &amp; O. mail-boat outward bound
+moved majestically towards the Heads through which we
+had so recently entered.</p>
+
+<p>We had just cleared Point Piper, where I remember
+spending the joyous holidays of long ago with my schoolmates,
+the sons of the fine old English gentleman who then
+dwelt there, when a sailing boat sped swiftly towards us,
+in which stood a stout, middle-aged man waving his hat
+frantically.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that is Paul Frankston himself come to overhaul
+us," said the captain, raising his glass. "He's sailor
+enough to recognise the rig of the <i>Florentia</i>, and if we had
+been a little nearer his bay, he'd have wanted us to stop
+the ship and lunch with him in a body. As it is I feel
+sure he'll capture some of the party."</p>
+
+<p>"What splendid hospitality!" said Mrs. Percival. "Is
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+that sort of thing usual here? you must be something like
+us Indians in your ways."</p>
+
+<p>"There is a good deal of likeness, I think," said the
+captain. "I suppose the heat accounts for it. It's too hot
+to refuse, most of the year. But here comes Paul!"</p>
+
+<p>The sailing boat by this time had run alongside and
+doused her sail, while one of the crew held on to a rope
+thrown to him, as the owner presented himself on deck
+with more agility than might have been expected from a
+man of his age.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Charley, my boy, so you're in at last&mdash;thought
+you were lost, or had run away and sold the ship, ha, ha!
+What sort of a voyage have you had? Passengers, too&mdash;pray
+introduce me. Is there anything I can do for them in
+Sydney? Must be something. Perhaps I shall hear by
+and by. Who's this youngster?</p>
+
+<p>"No! surely not the son of my old friend, Captain Telfer?
+Now I remember the boy that ran away to the islands, or
+would have done so, if they hadn't let him go. Quite right,
+I ran away myself and a fine time I had there. I must tell
+you what happened to me there once, eh! Charley?"</p>
+
+<p>Here the old gentleman began to laugh so heartily that
+he was forced to suspend his narration, while the captain
+regarded him with an expression which conveyed a slight
+look of warning. "But I am forgetting. By the way,
+Charley, have you any curios in your cabin?" The captain
+nodded, and the two old friends disappeared down the
+companion. Only, however, to reappear in a very few minutes,
+which we employed in favourable criticism.</p>
+
+<p>"What a fine hearty old gentleman!" said Mrs. Craven,
+"any one can see that he is an Englishman by his figure
+and the way he talks; though I suppose colonists are not
+so very different."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Frankston has been a good deal about the world,"
+I said. "But he was born in Sydney, and has spent the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+greater part of his life near this very spot. He was at sea
+in his earlier years, but has been on shore since he married.
+He is now a wealthy man, and one of the leading Sydney
+merchants."</p>
+
+<p>"One would think he was a sea captain now," said Miss
+Vavasour. "He looks quite as much like one as a merchant;
+but I suppose every one can sail a boat here."</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite right, Miss Vavasour. Every one who is
+born in Sydney learns to swim and sail a boat as soon as
+possible after he can walk. There is no place in the world
+where there are so many yachtsmen. On holidays you may
+see doctors, lawyers, clergymen, even judges, sailing their
+boats&mdash;doing a good deal of their own work in the 'able
+seaman' line; and, to tell truth, looking occasionally much
+more like pirates than sober professional men."</p>
+
+<p>About this time Mr. Frankston reappeared, carrying in
+his hand a couple of grass-er-garments, which he appeared
+to look upon as very precious. "These are for my little
+girl," he said, "she has just come down from the bush with
+her husband to spend the hot months with her old father.
+It will give her the greatest pleasure to see these ladies and
+their husbands at Marahmee, next Saturday, when we can
+have a little picnic in the harbour and a sail in my yacht,
+the <i>Sea-gull</i>. The captain will tell you that I am to be
+trusted with a lively boat still."</p>
+
+<p>"I never wish to go to sea with a better sailor," said the
+captain, "and if our friends have no other engagements,
+I can promise them a delightful day and a view of some of
+the finest scenery south of the line."</p>
+
+<p>Barring unforeseen or indispensable engagements every
+one promised to go. Mr. Frankston averred that they had
+done him a great&mdash;an important service. He was getting
+quite hipped&mdash;he was indeed&mdash;when his daughter luckily
+recognised the <i>Florentia</i> coming up the harbour. She is a
+sailor's daughter, you know&mdash;has an eye for a ship&mdash;and
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+started him off to meet his old friend Captain Carryall, and
+secure him for dinner. Now he felt quite another man,
+and would say good-bye. Before leaving he must have a
+word with his young friend.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear boy," said he, laying his hand on my shoulder,
+"I have known your father ever so many years. We were
+younger men then, and saw something of each other in
+more than one bit of fun; and at least one or two very
+queer bits of fighting in the Bay of Islands; so that we
+know each other pretty well. I've heard what Carryall has
+to say about you and your charming wife. I think we shall
+be able to 'fix up,' as our American friends say, our little
+mercantile arrangement very neatly. But that's not what
+I wanted to talk to you about. You've been away a good
+while, so many years, we'll say."</p>
+
+<p>"I have indeed," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;you've grown from a boy into a man, and a devilish
+fine one too." Here the dear old chap patted me on
+the back and looked up at my face, a great deal higher up
+than his. "Well! naturally, you've changed. So have
+your people, your young brothers and sisters have turned
+into men and women while you've been away. And then
+again, another change&mdash;a great one too&mdash;you're married."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! thank God I am."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure you have good reason, my boy. But my idea
+is this, people&mdash;the best of people&mdash;don't like surprises,&mdash;even
+one's own friends. Now, what I want you to do is
+to bring your wife and come and stay at Marahmee for a
+week, while they're getting your rooms ready for you at
+North Shore. There's nobody there now but Antonia and
+her husband. It wants another pair of young people to
+enliven the place a bit. And Charley Carryall will go over
+and tell them all about you and your pretty Miranda, while
+you and I settle our partnership affairs."</p>
+
+<p>I could see how it was; our good old friend, with a
+kind<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span>ness
+and delicacy of feeling which I have rarely seen
+equalled, had all along made up his mind that Miranda
+and I should begin our Sydney experiences with a visit to
+his hospitable mansion. After a talk with the captain, for
+which purpose he had feigned an interest in South Sea
+"curios," they had come to the conclusion that it would be
+more prudent that the family should have a few days to
+accustom themselves to the idea of my marriage. In the
+mean time his daughter, Mrs. Neuchamp, would be able to
+give Miranda the benefit of her experience as a Sydney
+matron of some years' standing, and to ensure that she
+made her introduction under favourable circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda, naturally nervous at the idea of then and there
+making her appearance among a group of relatives wholly
+unknown to her, was much relieved at the delay thus
+granted, and cheerfully acceded to the proposed arrangement.</p>
+
+<p>"That being all settled, I'll get home and have everything
+ready for you when you arrive. The captain will
+take care of you. He knows the road out, eh, Charley?
+night or day; so good-bye till dinner time. Seven o'clock
+sharp."</p>
+
+<p>Still talking, Mr. Frankston descended to his boat, and
+making a long board, proceeded to beat down the harbour
+on his homeward voyage, waving his handkerchief at intervals
+until he rounded a point and was lost to our gaze.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was not very long after this interview that we found
+ourselves in our berth at the Circular Quay, where, unlike
+Melbourne and some other ports, nothing more was needed
+for disembarkation but to step on shore into the city. Our
+good comrades of so many days were carried off in cabs to
+their destinations, with the exception of the Percivals, who,
+having been invited to Government House, found an
+aide-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>de-camp
+and the viceregal carriage awaiting them on the
+wharf. At such a time there is always a certain amount of
+fuss and anxiety with reference to luggage, rendering farewells
+occasionally less sentimental than might have been
+expected from the character of marine friendships. But it
+was not so in our experience. Miss Vavasour and Mrs.
+Craven exchanged touching farewells with Miranda, mingled
+with solemn promises to meet at given dates&mdash;to write&mdash;to
+do all sorts of things necessary for their keeping up the
+flame of friendship. Then at the last moment Colonel and
+Mrs. Percival came up. "My dearest Miranda," said this
+lady, "don't forget that you are my sister, not in word only.
+Put me to the proof whenever you need a sister's aid, and
+it shall be always at your service. Kiss Auntie Miranda,
+Charlie darling, and tell her you will always love her."</p>
+
+<p>"She picked me up out of the sea, when the naughty
+shark was going to eat us all. She's a good auntie, isn't
+she, mother?" said the little chap responding readily.
+"Good-bye, Auntie Miranda."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not a man of many words, Mr. Telfer!" said the
+colonel; "but if I can be of service to you, now or at any
+future time I shall be offended if you do not let me know;"
+and then the stern soldier shook my hand in a way which
+gave double meaning to the pledge.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was yet early in the day, and the captain had duties
+to attend to which would keep him employed until the
+evening. "I've ordered a carriage at six," he said, "when
+we'll start for Marahmee, which is about half-an-hour's
+drive. Until that time you can go ashore if you like; the
+Botanical Gardens are just round that point, or walk down
+George Street, or in any other way amuse yourselves.
+Meanwhile, consider yourselves at home also."</p>
+
+<p>"I think we'll stay at home then, captain, for the
+pres<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>ent,"
+said Miranda, "and watch the people on shore. You
+have no idea how they interest me. Everything is so new.
+Remember that I have never seen a carriage in my life
+before, or a cab, or a soldier; there goes one now&mdash;isn't
+he beautiful to behold? I shall sit here and make Hilary
+tell me the names of all the specimens as they come into
+view."</p>
+
+<p>"That will do capitally," said the captain. "I might
+have known that you could amuse yourself without help
+from any one."</p>
+
+<p>The time passed quickly enough, with the aid of lunch.
+The decks were cleared by six o'clock, by which time we
+were ready for the hired barouche when it drove up.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda and I had employed our time so well that she
+had learnt the names of various types of character, and
+many products of civilisation, of which she had been before
+necessarily ignorant, except from books. "It is a perfect
+object lesson," she said. "How delightful it is to be able
+to see the things and people that I have only read about!
+I feel like those people in the <i>Arabian Nights</i> who had
+been all their lives in a glass tower on a desert island.
+Not that our dear Norfolk Island was a desert&mdash;very far
+from it. And now I am going to the first grand house I
+ever saw, and to live in it&mdash;more wonderful still. I feel
+like a princess in a fairy tale," she went on, as she smilingly
+skipped into the carriage. "Everything seems so
+unreal. Do you think this will turn into a pumpkin, drawn
+by mice, like poor Cinderella's? Hers was a chariot,
+though. What is a chariot?"</p>
+
+<p>"I remember riding in one when I was a small boy," I
+answered; "and, by the same token, I had caught a number
+of locusts, and put them into my hat. I was invited to
+uncover, as the day was warm. When I did so, the locusts
+flew all about the closed-up carriage and into everybody's
+face. But chariots are old-fashioned now."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+Onward we passed along the South Head road, while
+below us lay the harbour with its multitudinous bays,
+inlets, promontories, and green knolls, in so many instances
+crowned with white-walled gardens, surrounding villas and
+mansions, all built of pale-hued, delicately-toned sandstone.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! what a lovely, delicious bay!" cried Miranda;
+"and these are the Heads, where we came in. Good-bye,
+old ocean, playfellow of my childhood; farewell, wind of
+the sea, for a while. But I shall live near you still, and
+hear you in my dreams. I should die&mdash;I should feel suffocated&mdash;if
+nothing but woods and forests were to be
+seen."</p>
+
+<p>"If you don't die until you can't see the ocean, or feel
+the winds about here, you will live a long time, my dear,"
+said the captain. "I don't know a more sea-going population
+anywhere than this Sydney one. Half the people you
+meet here have been a voyage, and the boys take to a boat
+as the bush lads do to a horse. But here we are at the
+Marahmee gates, and there's my pet Antonia on the verandah
+ready to receive us."</p>
+
+<p>As we drove up the avenue, which was not very long, a
+very pretty, graceful young woman came swiftly to meet
+us. I knew this must be Mrs. Neuchamp, formerly Antonia
+Frankston, the old man's only child. She was not grown
+up when I left Sydney, and I heard that she had lately
+married a young Englishman, who had come out with letters
+of introduction to Mr. Frankston. We had seen each
+other last, as boy and girl, long years ago.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Captain Charley," she said, making as though she
+would have embraced the skipper, "what do you mean by
+being so long away? We began to think that you were
+lost&mdash;that the <i>Florentia</i> had run on a reef&mdash;all sorts of
+things&mdash;been cut off by the islanders, perhaps. But now
+you <i>are</i> back with all sorts of island stories to tell dad, and
+a few curios for me. And you are Mrs. Telfer! Papa has
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+told me all about you&mdash;his latest admiration, evidently.
+But you mustn't get melancholy when he deserts you; he
+is a passionate adorer while it lasts, but is always carried
+away by the next fresh face, generally a complete contrast
+to the last. I am sure we shall be great friends. I used
+to dance with your husband when we were children. Do
+you remember that party at Mrs. Morton's? You have
+grown considerably since then, and so handsome, too, I
+suppose I may say&mdash;now we are all married&mdash;no wonder
+Miranda fell in love with you. You're to call me Antonia,
+my dear; and now come upstairs, and I'll show you your
+rooms which I have been getting ready all the morning.
+Papa and Ernest will be here in a few minutes."</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Neuchamp evidently takes after her father," I
+said, "who can say more kind things in fewer minutes than
+any one I ever knew&mdash;and do them, too, which is more to
+the purpose. I am so glad that Miranda has had the
+chance of making her acquaintance before she sees many
+other people."</p>
+
+<p>"She is a dear, good, unselfish girl," said the captain,
+"and was always the same from a child, when she used to
+sit on my knee in this very verandah, and get me to tell
+her the names of the ships. I never saw a child so thoughtful
+for other people, always wondering what she could do
+for them; she is just the same to this day. She will be
+an invaluable friend for our Miranda, I foresee. She can
+give her all sorts of hints about housekeeping, and I've no
+doubt one or two about dress and the minor society matters.
+Not that Miranda wants much teaching in that or any other
+way. Nature made her a lady, and gave her the look of a
+sea princess, and nothing could alter her."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you ever hear of a handsome young woman being
+spoiled by flattery, captain?" I said. "I don't want to
+anticipate such a disaster, but it strikes me that if you are
+all going to be so very complimentary, I shall have to go
+on the other tack to keep the compass level."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span>
+"There are dispositions that flattery falls harmless from,"
+said the captain solemnly; "there are women that cannot
+be spoiled,&mdash;not so many, perhaps, but you have got one
+of them, Antonia is another. They will make a good pair,
+and I'll back them to do their duty and keep a straight
+course, fair weather or foul, against any two, married or
+single, that I ever saw, and I've seen a good many women
+in my time. But now we had better be ready for dinner,
+for old Paul and Mr. Neuchamp will be here directly."</p>
+
+<p>They were not long in making their appearance, and a
+very merry dinner it was. Mr. Frankston wanted to hear
+all about the islands, and Mrs. Neuchamp was much interested
+in Captain Hayston, and thought he resembled one
+of the buccaneers of the Spanish Main, for whom she had a
+sentimental admiration in her girlhood.</p>
+
+<p>"What a pity that all the romantic and picturesque
+people should be so wicked!" she asked. "How is it, and
+what law of nature can it be that arranges that so many
+good and worthy people are so deadly uninteresting?"</p>
+
+<p>"Antonia is not quite in earnest, my dear Mrs. Telfer!"
+said Mr. Neuchamp, remarking Miranda's wondering look;
+"she knows well that it is more difficult to live up to a high
+ideal than to fall below it. There is a false glamour about
+men like Hayston, I admit, by which people who are swayed
+by feeling rather than reason are often attracted."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid that Captain Hayston was a wicked man,"
+said Miranda, "though I can't get Hilary to tell me much
+about him. However, there were very different accounts,
+some describing him as being generous and heroic, and
+others as cruel and unprincipled."</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever he was, there was no doubt about his being
+a sailor every inch of him," said Captain Charley. "I saw
+him handle his ship in a gale of wind through a dangerous
+channel, and I never forgot it."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose he had his faults like the rest of us," said
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+Mr. Frankston, who did not seem inclined to pursue the
+subject. "Never mind, when Frankston, Telfer, and Co.
+get the control of the South Sea Island trade, there won't
+be any room for dashing filibusters, will there, Charley?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope not; his day is over," said the captain. "I am
+sorry for him, too, for he was one of the grandest men and
+finest seamen God Almighty ever permitted to sail upon
+His ocean. Under a different star he might have been an
+ornament to the service and an honour to his country."</p>
+
+<p>After dinner we all sat out on the broad verandah, where
+we lighted our cigars, and enjoyed the view over the sleeping
+waters of the bay. It was a glorious night, undimmed
+by mist or cloud. The harbour lights flamed brightly,
+anear and afar, while steamers passing to the different
+points of the endless harbourage lighted up the glittering
+plain with their variegated lamps, as if an operatic effect
+were intended.</p>
+
+<p>"What a wondrous sight!" said Miranda. "It certainly
+is a scene of enchantment, though it loses some of its beauty
+in my eyes from being so restless and exciting. There is
+no solitude; all is motion and effort, as is the city by day.
+Our sea-view is as still and silent as if our island had just
+been discovered. It lends an air of solemnity to the night
+which this brilliant, many-coloured vision seems to want."</p>
+
+<p>"Antonia and I enjoy this sort of thing thoroughly,"
+said Mr. Neuchamp; "our country is hot and dry as the
+summer comes on, and the glare is something to remember.
+But I must say I prefer the winter of the interior. The
+nights are heavenly, the mid-day warm without being
+oppressive, and the mornings are delightfully cool and
+bracing."</p>
+
+<p>"As weather it is as nearly perfect as it can be," assented
+Mrs. Neuchamp, backing up her husband. "Then the rides
+and drives on the firm sandy turf and the delightful natural
+roads! It's nice to think you can drive thirty or forty
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+miles in any direction without going off your own run.
+Miranda must come and stay with me for a month or two
+when you get settled, Mr. Telfer. We must see if she
+can't be persuaded to leave the seaside for a while."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll make up a party," said Mr. Frankston; "it's a
+long time since I have seen any station life. I had half a
+mind to try squatting once myself. But I'm like Miranda&mdash;I
+don't sleep well unless I can hear the surge in the
+night; but for a month or two, in May or June, it would
+be great fun, and do us all good, I expect."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my dear dad," said his daughter, patting his
+shoulder, "think of the riding and driving. You're not too
+old to ride, you know. I'll lend you Osmond&mdash;he's my
+horse now, and he's a pearl of hackneys. I'll ride out with
+you, and Ernest can take Miranda and Courtenay in the
+four-in-hand drag."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's a bargain, my dear!" said her father.
+"When the summer is over and the autumn has nearly
+come to an end, and the nights and mornings are growing
+fresh and crisp, that's the time to see the interior at its
+best. I haven't forgotten the feel of a bush-morning at
+sunrise; there's something very exhilarating about it."</p>
+
+<p>"Is there not?" replied Mrs. Neuchamp, "'as you see
+the vision splendid, of the sunlit plains extended,' an ocean
+of verdure. You trace the river by the heavy timber on its
+banks, and the slowly-rising mists along its course. Then
+the sun, a crimson and gold shield against the cloudless
+azure, the cattle low in the great river meadows, you hear
+the crack of a stockwhip as the horses come galloping in like
+a regiment of cavalry, and the day has begun. It seems
+like a new world awakening to life."</p>
+
+<p>"I know a young woman," said her husband, "whose
+'inward eye' by no means made 'the bliss of solitude' when
+she first went into the bush."</p>
+
+<p>"That was because I was newly married&mdash;torn away
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+from my childhood's home, and all that," laughed his wife.
+"Besides, you used to stay away unconscionably long sometimes;
+now everything looks different. You will have to
+pass through that stage, my dear Miranda. So prepare
+yourself."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure Hilary will never stay away from our home
+unless he is obliged; and then I must sew and sing till he
+comes back, like my countrywomen at Norfolk Island and
+Pitcairn when their men are at sea."</p>
+
+<p>"A very good custom, too," said Paul. "That reminds
+me that we must have some music to-night. Antonia will
+lead the way, and our cigars will taste all the better in the
+verandah."</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Neuchamp had a fine voice and a fine ear. She had
+been well taught, and played her own accompaniments,
+while she sang several favourite songs of her father's, and
+a duet with her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, it's your turn, Miranda," said Mr. Frankston.
+"I've heard all about you from the captain."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be very glad to sing," she answered, seating herself
+at the piano, "if you care for my simple songs. I
+have always been fond of music, but our poor little harmonium
+was, for a long time, my only instrument. What
+shall I sing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sing the 'Lament of Susannah M'Coy for her drowned
+lover,'" said the captain, "that was a song brought from
+Pitcairn, wasn't it? I always liked it the best of all the
+island sing songs."</p>
+
+<p>"It is simple," replied Miranda, "but it is true; I believe
+the poor girl used to sit by the sea-shore singing it at
+night, and died of grief a year afterwards."</p>
+
+<p>She struck a few chords on the grand Erard piano, and
+commenced a wailing, dirge-like melody, "a long, low
+island song," inexpressibly mournful. The movement was
+chiefly low-toned, and in the minor key, but at times it rose
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+to a higher pitch, into which was thrown the agonised
+sorrow of irrevocable love, the endless regret, the void
+immeasurable and eternal, the hopeless despair of a desolated
+existence.</p>
+
+<p>The words were simple, and more in recitative than
+rhythm. There was a certain monotony and repetition,
+but as an expression of passionate and hopeless sorrow it
+was strangely complete.</p>
+
+<p>The tale was old as life and death, as love and joy, hope
+and despair. The maiden watching and waiting, during
+the voyage of the whaleship, the year long through. The
+sudden delight of the vessel being sighted; the boats going
+off; the intensity of the anxiety; the returning crew; the
+eager scanning of the passengers; the refusal to believe in
+mischance; the guarded half-told tale, then the unmistakable
+word of doom! <i>He had been drowned at sea</i>; the fearless,
+fortunate harpooner had, in the sudden flurry of the
+death-stricken whale, been thrown overboard and stunned.
+When the half-capsized boat was righted, Johnnie Mills
+was missing! They rowed round and round, all vainly,
+then sadly returned to the vessel. This was the tale they
+had to tell, the tale Susannah M'Coy had to hear. Her
+over-wrought feelings found relief in the "Maiden's Lament,"
+and after her death her girl companions in singing
+it preserved the memory of the maiden and her lover,
+of his doom and her unhappy fate.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing unusually melodious in the song itself,
+but as the low, rich notes of Miranda's voice struck on the
+ear of the listeners, those who had not heard before seemed
+spell-bound. Not a motion was made, not a sound escaped
+them, as they listened with an intentness which said far
+more than the ready and general praise at its close. Knowing,
+as I did, the extraordinary quality of her voice, I had
+expected that some such effect would be produced, but I
+hardly reckoned on such complete and universal admiration.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
+When the cry of the heartbroken girl rose and echoed
+through the large room, the effect was electrical; the
+higher notes were sweet and clear, without a suspicion of
+hardness, and yet had wondrous under-tones of tears, such
+as I never heard in another woman's voice. Long before
+the wailing notes had faded into nothingness Mrs. Neuchamp's
+eyes were wet. While old Paul, Mr. Neuchamp,
+and the captain, seemed in no great hurry to express their
+approval.</p>
+
+<p>"That's the most wonderful song I ever heard," said the
+old man. "I've heard the girls in Nukuheva sing one
+something like it, and there are notes in Miranda's voice
+that take me back to my youth, the island days, and the
+good old times when Paul Frankston was young and foolish.
+God's blessing on them! Miranda! my dear, take an
+old man's thanks. I foresee that I shall have two daughters:
+one at Marahmee in the summer, and the other in the
+winter, when Antonia is in the bush."</p>
+
+<p>After this no one would hear of her leaving off. She
+sang other songs which were not all sorrowful. Some had
+a livelier tone, and the transient gleam which lit up the
+dark eyes told that mirth had its due place in her rich and
+many-sided nature.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like to hear one of our hymns now?" she
+asked, with the simplicity of a child. "We used to sing
+them in parts, and many a night when the moon was at the
+full did we sit on the beach and sing for hours. I can hear
+the surge now, and it puts me in mind of our dear old
+home."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, by all means," said Antonia, and without further
+prelude, she began a well-known hymn, the deep tones of
+her voice rising and falling as if in a cathedral, while the
+organ-like chords which she evoked from the Erard favoured
+the faultless rendering. We involuntarily joined in, and I
+saw Antonia looking admiringly at the singer, as with head
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+upraised, and all the fervour of a medi&aelig;val penitent, she
+poured forth a volume of melodious adoration.</p>
+
+<p>All were silent for some seconds after the last cadence
+had died away. At length the pause was broken by
+Antonia.</p>
+
+<p>"After that lovely hymn, my dear Miranda, let me first
+thank you warmly for the pleasure you have given us all,
+and then suggest that we retire. The gentlemen may stay
+and smoke a while longer, but this has been an exciting
+day for us, and you require rest. Besides, you have to
+make acquaintance with your new relations."</p>
+
+<p>"A sensible suggestion, my darling," said Mr. Frankston.
+"So we'll say good night to Mrs. Telfer and yourself. We
+must have one more cigar in the verandah while we think
+over that great song of hers."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>It was arranged between Mr. Frankston and the captain
+that I should take my bride to my old home on the morning
+after next, and present her to my family. It might have
+been thought that, after so long an absence from my parents,
+it would have been more in keeping with filial duty to have
+rushed off at once and, in a manner, cast myself at their
+feet like the prodigal. But that unlucky, yet eventually
+fortunate younger son, did not bring a wife with him, in
+which case the paternal welcome might have been less
+distinct. I had put myself in the hands of my more experienced
+friends, who, as men of the world, knew the value
+of first impressions.</p>
+
+<p>"You and Miranda will be all the better for a day's rest,
+and a little cheering up at Marahmee," had said the captain.
+"Antonia, too, will see that your sea princess is properly
+turned out, and fit to bear inspection by the ladies of the
+family. <i>They</i> won't have much to criticise, I'll be bound.
+I'm an early man, so I'll go and breakfast with your father,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+and give him a general idea of your doings and prospects.
+You had better turn up about mid-day. It will be high tide
+then, and Miranda will see Isola Bella at its best. Come
+on board the <i>Florentia</i> first, and I'll send you over in proper
+style."</p>
+
+<p>Acting upon this prudent advice, Miranda and I alighted
+from the Marahmee carriage at the Circular Quay, and once
+more set foot on board the <i>Florentia</i>, where we found the
+captain ready to receive us. He made us come down into
+the cuddy and partake of fruit and wine (that is, Miranda
+took the first and I the latter), while he gave us a sketch
+of his interview with my father.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="cb" />
+<div><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span></div>
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<h2>"OUR JACK'S COME HOME TO-DAY"</h2>
+
+
+<p>"The old skipper was walking in the garden, glass in
+hand. I knew I should find him up, though it was soon
+after sunrise. No fear of <i>his</i> being in bed and the sun up.
+'Hallo! Carryall,' he said, 'I was just thinking about
+you; thought I could make out the <i>Florentia</i> yesterday.
+What sort of a voyage have you had, and what luck among
+the right whales?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Pretty fair. Rather longer out than I expected, but
+didn't do badly after all; had some trading among the
+islands; cocoa-nut oil has gone up, and the copra I got will
+pay handsomely.'</p>
+
+<p>"'That's good news,' he said; 'and look here, Carryall,
+my boy, I've been thinking lately that a very paying
+business might be put together by going in regularly for
+island trading. They're ready and willing to take our
+goods, and their raw material&mdash;oil, copra, fruit, ever so
+many things that they are only too glad to sell&mdash;would
+pay a handsome percentage on the outlay. What is wanted
+is a partner here with capital, a few ships to go regularly
+round the islands, and a manager who knows the language
+and understands the natives. If I were a little younger,
+by Jove! I'd go into it myself. You'll stay and breakfast
+with us of course. We're not late people. By the
+by you haven't heard of my boy in your travels, have
+you?'</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+"'Well I <i>have</i> heard of him, and&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'Heard of him!' he said, not giving me time to get
+further; 'where? what was he doing?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, he was supercargo on board the <i>Leonora</i>&mdash;Hayston's
+brig. They had been at Ocean Island just before
+me.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Hayston, Bully Hayston?' the old man said, looking
+stern. 'I'm sorry he was mixed up with that fellow. A
+fine seaman, but a d&mdash;d scoundrel, from all I've heard
+of him; what were they doing there? However, I know
+young fellows must buy their experience. Perhaps he's
+left him by this time.'</p>
+
+<p>"'The <i>Leonora</i> was wrecked in Chabral harbour,' I said,
+'and her bones lie on the coral reef there. She'll never
+float again.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Ha! and did Hilary get off safe? I suppose it was
+a heavy gale. Heard anything of him since?'</p>
+
+<p>"'He stayed at Mo&#363;t for some time,' I said, 'and then
+was lucky enough to get a passage to Sydney in the <i>Rosario</i>,
+but he left her at Norfolk Island.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Left her&mdash;left her&mdash;why the devil didn't he come on
+in her, and see his old father, and mother, and sisters?
+Hang the fellow, has he no natural feeling? Here have
+we been wearing our hearts out with anxiety all these
+years, and his poor mother having a presentiment (as she
+calls it) that he's drowned or sold into slavery, or something,
+and d&mdash;mn me, sir! the young rascal goes and stays
+to have a picnic at Norfolk Island! The next thing we'll
+hear, I suppose, is that he's married one of these Pitcairn
+Island girls. Not but what he might do worse, for
+I never saw such a lot of fine-looking lasses in my life, as
+I did the last time I was there; and as good as they are
+handsome, by George! But to stay there, so near home
+too! If I didn't know that he was a good boy, and as
+honest as the day, from his cradle upwards, I'd say he was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>
+an unnatural young&mdash; But I won't miscall the lad. To
+stay there&mdash;'</p>
+
+<p>"'But he didn't stay there, captain.'</p>
+
+<p>"'What!' he roared, 'didn't stay there&mdash;went back to
+the islands, I suppose, to have a little more beach-combing
+and loafing? Why couldn't he have come home when he
+was so near? He <i>might</i> have thought of his poor mother,
+if he didn't give <i>me</i> credit for caring to see his face again.'</p>
+
+<p>"And here the old skipper frowned, and put on a terribly
+stern expression. 'Why, he might have come home and
+married a wife, and settled down and been the comfort of
+our old age.'</p>
+
+<p>"'So he has!' I said; 'that is, he is married, and he has
+come to Sydney.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Married? Come to Sydney? How can that be?
+Why isn't he here? Carryall, my boy, you wouldn't play
+a joke on an old man? No, sir! you wouldn't <i>dare</i> to do
+it. How <i>could</i> he come to Sydney and be married?'</p>
+
+<p>"'He came with me in the <i>Florentia</i>,' I said, 'and brought
+his wife with him.' And here, Miranda, my dear, I told
+him what a very unpleasant young woman you were, and
+took about a quarter of an hour to do it; at the end of
+which narration the breakfast bell rang.</p>
+
+<p>"'Come into the house, Carryall,' he said, 'and tell it
+all to his mother. I'll break it to her by saying that you
+bring news of Hilary, and that he's quite well, and so on,
+and likely to come home soon.'</p>
+
+<p>"So we went in. I shall never forget the look that
+came into your mother's eyes when the skipper said, 'Here's
+Captain Carryall straight from the islands; he's brought
+you girls some shells and curios as usual, and better than
+that, news of Hilary.'</p>
+
+<p>"'News of my boy, my darling Hilary! Good news, I
+hope. Oh, Captain Carryall! say it's good. Oh! <i>where</i> is
+he, and what was he doing?'</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span>
+"'It is good news, my dear lady,' said I, 'or I should
+not have come over to tell you. I saw him quite lately as
+near Sydney as Norfolk Island.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Of course he was coming here&mdash;coming here; he
+would not have the heart to stay away from his poor father
+and mother any longer, when he was so near as that. And
+was he quite well? Oh! my boy&mdash;my precious Hilary!
+What would I not give if he were to come here and settle
+down for good?'</p>
+
+<p>"'He is thinking of doing so,' I said. 'His fixed intention
+was to marry and live in Sydney for the rest of his
+days.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Thank God! thank God in His mercy!' she said,
+clasping her hands. 'And do you think he will be here
+soon&mdash;how many weeks?'</p>
+
+<p>"'It will not be a matter of weeks, but days; I know
+that he took his passage in a certain ship, and that you
+may expect him every hour.'</p>
+
+<p>"Then she looked keenly at me. Your mother is a
+clever woman. She began to think I had been leading her
+on.</p>
+
+<p>"'You are not treating me as a child, Charles Carryall,
+are you? My son is here, and you have been afraid to tell
+me so. Is it not so?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Only a harmless deception, my dear Mrs. Telfer.
+Your son and his wife came here in my vessel. They
+stayed at Paul Frankston's last night, and will be here at
+mid-day.'</p>
+
+<p>"The dear lady looked as if she could not realise it for a
+moment, then sat back in her chair, and raised her eyes as
+if in prayer.</p>
+
+<p>"One of the girls moved as if to support her, but she
+waved her off. 'No, my dear, you need not be afraid. I
+shall not faint; I have borne many things, and can bear
+this. I am returning thanks to our Almighty Father, who
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span>
+has restored my son to me. "My son, who was lost, and is
+found." My son, who was dead to me, and is now restored
+to life. Oh, God! most heartily and humbly do I thank
+Thee&mdash;most merciful&mdash;most loving!'</p>
+
+<p>"After this we were a very happy party. The girls, of
+course, wanted to know all about Miranda here"&mdash;here my
+darling smiled, and took his hand; "I dashed off a sketch,
+and some day you can ask Mariana and Elinor&mdash;both
+great friends of mine they are&mdash;if it is a good likeness."</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid it was too good," sighed Miranda, "and
+they will be dreadfully disappointed."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The end of it was that we left the <i>Florentia</i> at eight bells,
+in great state and majesty, in a whaleboat&mdash;upon which
+Miranda insisted, despising the captain's gig as a trumpery
+skiff&mdash;and a picked crew, with the skipper himself as the
+steer-oar.</p>
+
+<p>"That's really something like," she said, as she stepped
+lightly on to the thwart. "If there was a little swell on,
+I should feel quite myself again, and think of the dear days
+when I was a happy little island girl, bare-footed and bare-headed,
+and thought going off to a strange vessel through
+the great, solemn, sweeping rollers the wildest enjoyment.
+But I am a happy girl now," she added, with a look in her
+deep eyes which expressed a world of love and rich content;
+"only the thought of learning to be a lady sometimes
+troubles me."</p>
+
+<p>"You will never need to do <i>that</i>," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"There is the house?" I cried; "there's Isola Bella!" as
+we rounded a point, and a picturesque stone house came
+full into view. It had been built in the early days of the
+colony by an Imperial officer, long resident in Italy, and
+showed the period in its massive stone walls, Florentine
+fa&ccedil;ade, and wide, paved verandah. The site was elevated
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>
+above the lake-like waters of the bay, towards which a
+winding walk led, terminating in a massive stone pier, into
+which iron rings and stanchions had been let. The beach
+was white and smooth, though the tide ran high, and the
+wavelets rippled close to the pale sandstone rocks, which
+lent a tone of delicacy and purity to the foreshore.</p>
+
+<p>The weather-stained walls of the house were half covered
+with climbers, a wilderness of tropical shrubs, and richly-blooming
+flower-thickets. There were glades interspersed,
+carpeted with the thick-swarded couch or "dhoub" grass,
+originally imported from India, and which, nourished by
+the coast showers, and delighting in a humid atmosphere,
+preserves its general freshness of colour the long Australian
+summer through.</p>
+
+<p>I had been so preoccupied with speculations as to Miranda's
+reception by my family, that my own emotions, on
+returning to my childhood's home, lay in abeyance. Now,
+however, at the near view of the house&mdash;the pier, the
+walled-in sea-bath&mdash;the scenes and adventures of my
+earliest youth came back with overwhelming force and
+clearness. There was the boat-house, into which I had
+paddled so many a time after nightfall, returning from fishing
+or sailing excursions. There was the flagstaff on which
+was displayed the Union Jack and other flags on great
+occasions. The old flag floated in the breeze to-day. I
+knew for what reason and celebration. I could see my
+mother, as of old, walking down to the pier to welcome and
+embrace, or to remonstrate and fondly chide when I had
+remained absent in stormy weather. How many fears and
+anxieties had I not caused to agitate that loving heart! And
+my stern and mostly silent parent&mdash;did I not once surprise
+him in scarce dignified sorrow at my night-long absence
+and probable untimely decease. Yet all his words were,
+"God forgive you, my boy, for the misery you have caused
+us this night."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
+And now the years had passed&mdash;had flown rather, crowded
+as they were with incident&mdash;that had changed the heedless
+boy into the man,&mdash;matured, perhaps, by too early worldly
+knowledge, and the grim comradeship of danger and death.
+I had returned safely, bringing my sheaves with me in the
+guise of one dearer to me than life. I had, during the
+intervals of reflection I had lately enjoyed, repented fully
+of the unconsciously selfish sins of my youth, and was fixed
+in firm resolve to atone, so far as in me lay, by care and
+consideration in the future.</p>
+
+<p>As we dashed alongside of the pier, the years rolled back,
+and as of old I saw my mother pacing the well-known path
+to the boat. She was followed by my father at a short distance.
+I fancied that the dear form told of the lapse of
+time, in less firm step and the bent figure which age compels.
+My father was erect as ever, and his eye swept the far horizon
+of outer seas as of old; but surely his hair and beard
+were whiter.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda's step was first upon the pier&mdash;she needed no
+help in leaving or entering a boat. Side by side we walked
+to meet my mother, who, with a sob of joy, folded me in
+her arms. "My boy! my boy!" was all she could articulate
+for some moments; then, gently disengaging herself, "and
+this is my new daughter?" she said. "May God bless and
+keep you both, my children, and preserve for us the great
+happiness which His providence has ordained this day."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, neighbour!" in the well-remembered greeting
+which he affected, rang out here my father's clear tones, "and
+so you have finished your cruise for a while! What a man
+you have grown!" he exclaimed, as he looked upwards half-admiringly
+at my head and shoulders, markedly above his
+own. "Filled out, bronzed, you look a sailor, man, all
+over."</p>
+
+<p>"And so you wouldn't give the Sydney girls a chance,
+and have <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original read 'brough'">brought</ins>
+a wife back with you for fear there
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+mightn't be a 'currency lass' to spare. I must say I
+admire your taste, my boy. No one can fault that. Welcome,
+my dear Miranda, to your own and your husband's
+home. Give your old father a kiss and the ceremony is
+complete." Here the governor gravely embraced his new
+daughter, and then, holding her at arm's length, regarded
+her admiringly, till she playfully ran back to the girls.
+"Charley here guarantees she is as good as she is handsome.
+He said better, indeed; but that's impossible. No
+woman with her looks could be better inside than out. So,
+Hilary, my boy, I congratulate you on your choice. You've
+fallen on your feet in love and friendship both, according
+to what Carryall tells me of Paul Frankston's partnership arrangement.
+And now we'll come up to the house and drink
+the bride's health. I feel as if I needed a refresher after all
+this excitement. I little thought when I saw Charley come
+over so early what was in store for us, eh, mother?"</p>
+
+<p>Before we reached the house the two girls, Mariana and
+Elinor, had taken possession of Miranda and carried her upstairs
+to the rooms which were to be allotted to us while we
+dwelt at Isola Bella. "Now that the other boys are up the
+country," said Mariana, who was the elder, "we have more
+houseroom than we need. So, directly we heard that you
+were in Sydney, Elinor and I set to work and arranged
+these two rooms, so that you and Miranda should be quite
+independent. There's such a pretty view of the harbour.
+You can use this one as a sitting-room, and there's a smaller
+dressing-room which he can make a den of. Men always
+like a place to be untidy in."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, how nice it will be," said Elinor, the younger one,
+whom I remember a curly-headed romp of ten when I left
+home, "to have a mate for rowing and boat-sailing. Mariana
+here doesn't care for boats, and dislikes rough weather.
+I suppose no weather would frighten you. Oh, what lovely
+trips we shall have, and mother can't be nervous when you
+are with me."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
+"I suppose you think Miranda is a sort of mermaid,"
+said I, now arrived and joining in the conversation, "and
+impossible to be drowned. But what would become of me
+if anything happened to her? Do you think I can trust
+her with you? What a grand room! I remember it well
+in old days when it used to be the guest chamber. I was
+only allowed into it now and then, and always under inspection.
+I feel the promotion."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, we'll run away and leave you," said Mariana.
+"Lunch is nearly ready; you will hear the bell."</p>
+
+<p>We sat down on a couch and gazed into each other's eyes
+with clasped hands. The harbour, with its variously composed
+fleet, lay wide and diversified before us. Every conceivable
+vessel&mdash;barge, steamer, collier, skiff, yacht, and
+row-boat&mdash;made progress adown and across its waters.
+How fair a scene it was on this, one of the loveliest days
+which sun and sky and wavelets deep ever combined to
+fashion! After all my adventures by seas and lands&mdash;after
+all the sharp contrasts of my chequered life&mdash;now lotus-eating
+amid the groves or by the founts of an earthly paradise&mdash;now
+ignorant, from one day to another, of the hour
+when the death-knell would sound&mdash;now free and joyous,
+handsomely dressed, in foreign seaports with ruffling swagger
+and chinking dollars&mdash;anon ragged, shoeless, shipwrecked,
+and forlorn&mdash;nay, starving, but for the charity
+of the soft-hearted heathens whom we in our pride are
+prone to despise.</p>
+
+<p>And now I was at home again. Home! sweet home! in
+fullest sense of the word&mdash;welcomed, beloved, f&ecirc;ted!
+What had I done to deserve this love and trust now so
+profusely showered upon me? My better angel, too, my
+darling Miranda, by my side, sharing in all this wealth of
+affection. How could I have foretold that such good fortune
+would be mine, all unworthy that I felt myself, when,
+bruised and bleeding, I was hurled ashore in the midnight
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+storm from the wrecked <i>Leonora</i>?&mdash;when I felt in thought
+the deadly shudder which ever follows the scratch of the
+poisoned arrow&mdash;when I sank to eternal rest (as I then
+supposed) beneath the surf-tormented shore of the island?
+How had I jostled death, disease, danger in every form and
+shape,&mdash;and now, almost without thought or volition of
+my own, I was placed in possession of all those things for
+which through a long life so many men toil and struggle
+vainly and unsuccessfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank God! thank God!" I exclaimed aloud involuntarily,
+for truly our hearts were filled in that hour of realised
+peace and happiness with grateful wonder.</p>
+
+<p>"Let us give Him thanks," whispered Miranda, "who
+only has done this wondrous thing for us."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Captain Carryall, my father, and Mr. Frankston were men
+of action&mdash;all through their lives the deed had followed
+quick on the resolve. Thus, within a week after our
+arrival, premises were purchased on the shore of the bay;
+stores and warehouses were planned, while upon an office
+in the chief business centre of Sydney, at no great distance
+from Macquarie Square, a legend of the period presented
+the firm of "Carryall, Telfer, and Company, South Sea
+merchants and purchasers of island produce." This was
+the commencement, as it turned out, of a prosperous mercantile
+enterprise, ramifying in divers directions. It was
+arranged not only to purchase or to ship on commission the
+raw material so easily procurable, but to advance on whaling
+and trading ventures; the projectors, better equipped
+with experience than capital, being always willing to pay
+high interest, for which indeed the margin of profit amply
+provided. Here I was in my element, whether directing
+labourers, interviewing seamen, shouting in the vernacular
+to the native crews, or calculating the value of cargoes.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span>
+My father came over every other day to watch me at my
+work, and of my style of management he was pleased to
+express approval. "You have not altogether wasted your
+time, my boy," he said one day. "The great thing in all
+these matters is energy. With that and reasonable experience
+a man is sure to be successful in a new country&mdash;indeed
+in any country. Pluck and perseverance mean
+everything in life. Never despair. You know our family
+motto&mdash;<i>Fortuna favet fortibus</i>. And you would smile if I
+told you how often in the history of my life a bold bid for
+fame or fortune has been my only resource."</p>
+
+<p>Whether I had exhibited the proverbial fortitude, or
+whether, indeed, the capricious goddess was mollified in my
+case, cannot with certainty be decided. The fact, however,
+was there, that our luck, from whatever cause, was in the
+ascendant, inasmuch as business of a profitable nature
+began to pour in upon us. The average gains beyond expenses
+were so apparent that it was evident that before
+long we should be in a position to set up housekeeping on
+our own account.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time nothing could be more harmonious and
+satisfactory than our composite home life at Isola Bella,
+difficult as it is sometimes to arrange the housing of two
+families, however closely related, under one roof. The
+natural amiability of Miranda's nature fortunately prevented
+the slightest friction. Constitutionally anxious to
+please, it was the chief article of her simple faith to seek
+the happiness of others rather than her own. Prompt in
+compliance, eager to learn all minor matters with which
+she had been necessarily unacquainted, ready to join in the
+harmless mirth of the hour, or to tell of the wonders of her
+island home, she was, as all agreed, a constant source of
+interest and entertainment.</p>
+
+<p>More than all, her pervading, fervent, religious faith endeared
+her to the pious heart of my dearest mother, in
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+whose visits to the poor and in charitable ministrations she
+was by choice her constant companion; while her unfeigned
+pity for the half-fed, half-clothed children of the neglected
+classes with which every city abounds excited my mother's
+wonder and admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"Your wife is a pearl of womanhood, my dear Hilary,"
+she would say to me. "You are a good boy; I hope you
+are worthy of her. I can hardly think that any man could
+be. When you see the women so many men are fated to
+pass their lives with, you have indeed reason to be thankful."</p>
+
+<p>"So I am, my dear old mother," I would say. "Every
+day I feel minded to sing a song of joy and gratitude. I
+feel as life was a new discovery and creation. I am in a
+Paradise where no serpent that ever crawled has power to
+harm my Eve. I feel sometimes as if there was an unreal
+perfection about it all, too bright to last."</p>
+
+<p>So indeed it appeared to me at that time. Fully employed
+as I was by day and in the exercise of all the faculties
+that my island life had served to train, it was impossible
+to overtask the health of mind and body in which I revelled.
+I was sensible, too, that the joint enterprise upon
+which I had embarked was growing and improving daily,
+while much of its success was attributed by Mr. Frankston
+and Captain Carryall to my management. At night, when
+I returned there was one who never failed to catch sight of
+my skiff when half across the bay. Then our family evenings,
+cheered with song and harmless mirth, were truly
+restful after the labours of the day.</p>
+
+<p>Our neighbours, too, with all the old friends of the
+family, seemed desirous to welcome the son of the house
+who had been so long absent, and had wandered so far.
+Whether from curiosity, or a higher feeling, they were
+equally anxious to call upon "the son's wife." The positions,
+and dispositions, manners, and habitudes of the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
+different types were well explained to Miranda by my
+socially-experienced sisters, so that she was saved from
+any misapprehension which might so easily have arisen.</p>
+
+<p>Our friends the Neuchamps, too, were often with us, and
+made the greater part of our quiet recreations. On alternate
+Sundays nothing would content Mr. Frankston short
+of our all dining with him, to be sent back in his sailing
+boat if the weather was favourable, or to remain for the
+night in the ample guest-chambers of Marahmee if otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>Our Saturday afternoons, indeed, were almost entirely
+devoted to picnics and cruises in his yacht, at which time
+he insisted upon Miranda steering, or, as he said, taking
+command, at which times he was always loud in admiration
+of her nautical skill&mdash;declaring, indeed, that she was fit
+to take charge of any vessel in Her Majesty's navy.</p>
+
+<p>We had also seen a good deal of our fellow passengers,
+Mr. and Miss Vavasour, who, after a first introduction, were
+always included in Mr. Frankston's Saturday picnic invitations.
+That lively damsel professed a great admiration for
+Mr. Frankston, who responded so promptly that Antonia
+reproached him for turning faithless to Miranda.</p>
+
+<p>"It's his nature, he can't help it," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"But Miss Vavasour will have some day to suffer whatever
+pangs are supposed to fall to the lot of the deserted
+fair; then she will repent of her fascinations."</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all&mdash;sufficient for the day, you know. I begin
+to think that one's admirers ought to be past their first
+youth. They're more thoroughly appreciative. 'On his
+frank features middle age Had scarcely set its signet sage,'
+and so on. I'm sure that quite describes Mr. Frankston.
+How should you like me for a mamma-in-law, Mrs. Neuchamp?
+Marahmee is such a dear house, and these yachting
+parties are all that are wanted to make life perfect."</p>
+
+<p>"I give my consent," said Antonia, "but beware of delay.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+'Men were deceivers ever,' and if you wait more than a
+fortnight your charms will be on the wane, so I warn
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I like decision," responded Miss Vavasour, "but perhaps
+'two weeks,' as our American friend used to say, is
+<i>rather hurried</i> legislation. The trousseau business and the
+milliner's objections would be fatal. Even Miranda must
+have stood out for a longer respite. How long did you
+take, Miranda, dear? You're the pattern woman, you know,
+the first girl I ever saw that men and women equally
+delighted to honour."</p>
+
+<p>Miranda blushed charmingly, then looking up with her
+clear, frank eyes, that always appeared to me to be fountains
+of truth, as she replied&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Hilary and I were married just a month after he asked
+me to be his wife, you know very well."</p>
+
+<p>So, jesting lightly, and with a breeze that sufficed just
+to fill the great sails of the yacht, we glided along until we
+had explored the recesses of Middle harbour,&mdash;a spacious
+inlet winding amid the thick growing semi-tropical forest
+which clothed the slopes of the bays and promontories to
+the water's edge.</p>
+
+<p>Here and there were small clearings in which might be
+discovered a tent or cabin, just sufficient for the needs of a
+couple of bachelors or a hermit, who here desired to live
+during his holiday amid this "boundless contiguity of
+shade"&mdash;"The world forgetting, and the world forgot."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, how lovely!" said Mrs. Percival, as we swept round
+a point and came suddenly upon a fairy-like nook, a tiny
+bay with milk-white strand and fantastic sandstone rocks.
+There was a fenced enclosure around a cabin. There was
+a boat, with rude stone pier and boat-house. The owner, in
+cool garb and broad-leafed sombrero, was seated on a rock
+reading, and occasionally dabbling his bare feet in the rippling
+tide. As the yacht glided past in the deep water which
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
+came so close to his possessions, he raised his hat to the
+ladies, and resumed his studies.</p>
+
+<p>"What a picture of peace and restful enjoyment!" said
+Mrs. Craven. "How I envy men who can seclude themselves
+like this within an hour's sail from a city! Now,
+people are so fond of generalising about colonists, and how
+wrong they are! They always describe them as wildly
+energetic and restless people, perpetually rushing about in
+search of gain or gold."</p>
+
+<p>"That's Thorndale," said one of the younger guests.
+"He works hard enough at his business when he is about
+it, but his notion of enjoyment is to come here on a Saturday
+with only a boat-keeper, to fish, and read, and smoke
+till Monday morning, when he goes back to his law and his
+office."</p>
+
+<p>"Sensible fellow!" said the colonel. "There's nothing
+like tent life to recruit a man's health after a spell of official
+work. We used to manage that in India, when we
+couldn't go all the way to the hills, by forming small encampments
+of a dozen or twenty fellows, having a mess-house
+in common, and living in tents or huts separately
+when we were not hunting or shooting. Splendid life while
+it lasted! Sent us back twice the men we were, when we
+left the lines!"</p>
+
+<p>We anchored for lunch in one of the fairy nooks of which
+that enchanted region is so lavish. There was tea for the
+ladies and something presumably stronger for the seniors.
+We had mirth and pleasantries, spoken and acted&mdash;all
+went merrily in that charmed sunshine and beneath the
+shadowy sea-woods. We had songs&mdash;"A mellow voice
+Fitz Eustace had"&mdash;that is, one of the young fellows,
+native and to the manner born, lifted up his tuneful pipe
+and made us all laugh, the air he sang being certainly not
+"wild and sad,"&mdash;the reverse, indeed.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, is not this an ideal picnic,&mdash;a day rescued from
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
+that terrible fiend Ennui, that haunts us all?" cried Miss
+Vavasour. "I might truthfully, perhaps, except myself,
+who am frivolous, and therefore easily amused&mdash;but of
+course it sounds well to complain and be mysterious. But,
+really, this is life indeed! The climate makes up for any
+little deficiency. I shall positively go home and arrange
+my affairs, make sure of my allowance being paid quarterly,
+then take a cottage near Miranda, on that sweet North
+Shore,&mdash;isn't that what you call it?&mdash;and live happy ever
+afterwards like a 'maid of Llangollen.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing can be nicer," said Mrs. Neuchamp. "We'll
+all three live here in the summer, within reach of the sea-breeze.
+In June you must come up and stay with me at
+Rainbar; then you will know what the glory of winter in
+our Riverina is like."</p>
+
+<p>The breeze freshened as we glided swiftly on our homeward
+course. We had expended most of the daylight
+before we left our fairy bower. Sunset banners flared o'er
+the western horizon. "White and golden-crimson, blue,"
+fading imperceptibly into the paler tones, and swift-appearing
+shades which veil the couch of the day god. The stars
+tremulously gleamed at first timidly, then brightly scintillating
+in pure and clustered radiance. Our merry converse
+had gradually lessened, then ceased and died away.
+All seemed impressed by the solemnity of the hour&mdash;the
+hush of sea and land&mdash;the shimmering phosphorescent
+sparkle of the silver-seeming plain over which we swept all
+swift and silently. Then the lights of the city, brilliant,
+profuse, widely scattered as in a lower firmament!</p>
+
+<p>Miss Vavasour sat with Miranda's hand in hers. "How
+lovely to live in an hour like this, and yet it is like this
+with such surroundings that I should like to die."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" said Miranda, "we must all die when God
+wills it. It is not good to talk so, my dear."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+During the next week our good friends and fellow-passengers
+of the <i>Florentia</i> were to leave us on their return
+voyage. We arranged to meet as often as we could manage
+the leisure, and, as it happened, there was to be a ball at
+Government House&mdash;one of the great functions of the
+season, which, it was decided, would be an appropriate
+conclusion to our comradeship. Mr. and Mrs. Neuchamp
+were going back to their station, Captain Carryall was
+under sailing orders, and our friends the Colonel and Mrs.
+Percival were leaving for India and "going foreign"
+generally.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda was not eager to attend the extremely grand,
+and, as far as she was concerned, strange entertainment.
+But the whole party were most anxious for her to make her
+appearance in public&mdash;at least on that occasion. Partly
+from natural curiosity, partly on account of my wishes,
+and my sisters' and Mrs. Neuchamp's strong persuasion,
+she consented&mdash;pleading, however, to be relieved from all
+anxiety on the score of her dress.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! we'll take that responsibility," said Elinor. "Antonia
+Neuchamp is generally admitted to dress in perfect
+taste. We'll compose a becoming ball-dress amongst us or
+die&mdash;something simple and yet not wholly out of the
+fashion, and becoming to Miranda's style of beauty."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid you'll make me vain," she answered, smiling.
+"What will you do if I spend all Hilary's money on dress?
+However, it must be a lovely sight. I have read of balls
+and grand entertainments, of course, and when I was a girl
+longed to be able to take part in them. Now that I am
+married," and here she gazed at me with those tender,
+truthful eyes, "I seem not to care for mere pleasure. It
+leads to nothing, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"You are going to be a pattern wife, Miranda, I see,"
+said Mariana, my elder sister. "You must not spoil Hilary,
+you know. He will think he is the only man in the world."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span>
+"And is he not for me?" she asked, eagerly. Then
+blushing at the quick betrayal of her inmost heart, she
+added, "Should it not be so? Are civilised people in a
+great city anxious to attract admiration even after they are
+married?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are people who do this and more in all societies,
+my dear," said my mother, with a seriousness which rebuked
+our inclination to smile at Miranda's ignorance of the world.
+"But do you, my dear child, cling fast to the faith in which
+you have been reared. You will neither be of them nor
+among them that follow the multitude to do evil."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think there is as much evil in Miranda as would
+fill a teaspoon," said Elinor. "This isle of hers must have
+been a veritable Eden, or she must have come down from
+the moon, dear creature. You must be very good to deserve
+her, I can tell you, Master Hilary."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>The day arrived, the night of which was to realise all
+manner of rose-coloured visions, in which the youth and
+maidens of Sydney had for weeks indulged. It was to be
+the ball of the season. The grand entertainment at which
+a royal personage, who had arrived in a man-of-war but
+recently, had consented to be present! The officers of the
+squadron were, of course, invited. They were gratified that
+the ball was fixed for a week previous to their sailing on
+an extended cruise among the islands. As it happened, too,
+the great pastoral section&mdash;the proprietors of the vast
+estates of the interior&mdash;were still at their clubs and hotels,
+not yet departed for their annual sojourn amid the limitless
+wastes of "The Bush." The <i>jeunesse dor&eacute;e</i> of the city, the
+<i>flaneurs</i>, and civil servants who, like the poor, are "always
+with us," were specially available. Lastly, the Governor's
+wife had openly stated that she wished to show her friends,
+the Percivals, what we could do in Sydney. And she was
+not a woman to fail in any of her undertakings.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+It was arranged that we should comply with Paul Frankston's
+imperious mandate, and meet at Marahmee early in
+the day for the greater convenience of driving thence to
+Government House, instead of taking steamboat from the
+North Shore. All our plans prospered exceedingly. The
+day was calm and fair; the night illumined by the soft radiance
+of the moon. We dined in great peace and contentment,
+the ladies having devoted&mdash;as it appeared to me&mdash;the
+greater portion of the afternoon to the befitting adornments
+of their persons. We were all in good spirits. I had
+reason indeed to be so, for that day I had concluded a highly
+profitable trade arrangement, which augured well for my
+future mercantile career.</p>
+
+<p>"What a glorious night!" said Paul Frankston. "Don't
+be afraid of that Moselle, Ernest, it's some of my own importing&mdash;a
+rare wine, as most judges think. Do you remember
+the ball we went to, Antonia, given by that fellow
+Sch&auml;fer? Such a swell he looked, and how well he did the
+thing! He has different quarters now, if all's true that
+we hear."</p>
+
+<p>"The poor Count!" answered Mrs. Neuchamp, "I can't
+help feeling sorry for him though he was an imposter. Is
+it really true that they put him in prison in Batavia?
+What a fate after such a brilliant career!"</p>
+
+<p>"Carryall was there last year and saw him. Got an
+order, you know, from the Dutch authorities. Said he was
+fairly cheerful; expected to be out in three years."</p>
+
+<p>"He was very near not being imprisoned in Batavia or
+anywhere else," interposed Mr. Neuchamp, with some show
+of asperity. "If Jack Windsor had come up a little earlier
+in the fray we'd have broken the scoundrel's neck, or otherwise
+saved the hangman a task."</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Ernest, you mustn't bear malice," said his wife,
+reprovingly; "after all it was Harriet Folleton and not me
+whom he wished to carry off. It was an afterthought try
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>ing
+to make me accompany her. But 'all's well that ends
+well.' He has paid for his misdeeds in full."</p>
+
+<p>"Not half as much as he deserves," growled Neuchamp,
+who evidently declined to perceive the humorous side of the
+affair&mdash;the attempted abduction of an imprudent beauty
+and heiress, besides the ultra-felonious taking away of Miss
+Frankston, as she was then&mdash;as a pendant to a career of
+general swindling and imposture practised upon the good
+people of Sydney. Mr. Frankston's eyes began to glitter,
+too, at the reminiscence. So the conversation was changed.</p>
+
+<p>"I really believe that women never wholly repudiate
+admiration," continued Mr. Neuchamp, reflectively, "however
+unprincipled and abandoned the 'first robber' may be.
+It's a curious psychical problem."</p>
+
+<p>"You know that is untrue, Ernest," quoth Mrs. Neuchamp,
+with calm decision. "Don't let me hear you say
+such things." An hour later our carriages had taken up
+position in the apparently endless line of vehicles which
+stretched along Macquarie Street and the lamplit avenues
+which led to it. After nearly an hour's waiting, as it
+seemed to me, we drove through the lofty freestone gateway
+which led to the viceregal mansion, and descended
+within the portico, amid a guard of honour and attendant
+aides-de-camp. Passing through a vestibule, and being duly
+divested of wraps in the cloak-rooms, we were finally ushered
+into the Viceroy's presence, and duly announced.</p>
+
+<p>Paul Frankston took the lead, with Miranda on his arm.
+I followed with Mrs. Neuchamp, whose husband escorted
+my sisters. As we were announced by name, I noticed
+that Colonel and Mrs. Percival, with a few other people of
+distinction, were standing on the dais, close to the Governor
+and Lady Rochester, the latter talking to a young man in
+naval uniform, whom I conjectured to be the Prince. As
+we approached I saw Mrs. Percival speak to Lady Rochester,
+who at once came forward and greeted us warmly.
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>
+"Mr. Frankston," she said, "I know the Governor wishes
+to talk to you about the fortifications; will you and your
+party come up here and stay with us. And so this is Mrs.
+Telfer, the heroine of my friend, Mrs. Percival's romance!
+I am delighted to see her and congratulate you, Mr. Telfer,
+on bringing us such a sea princess for your bride. She has
+all the air of it, I declare."</p>
+
+<p>Miranda secured a seat near Mrs. Percival, who watched
+with pleasure her evident admiration, mingled with a certain
+awe, of the brilliant, unaccustomed scene before her.
+Much to her relief Miss Vavasour came up with the Cravens,
+and commenced a critical review of Miranda's and
+other dresses, which soon obliterated all trace of timidity
+and strangeness.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my princess," began Miss Vavasour, "and how
+does this gay and festive scene strike you? Isn't it a fairy
+tale&mdash;a dream of the <i>Arabian Nights</i>? Don't you expect
+to see the fairy godmother come when the clock strikes
+twelve, and your carriage turn into a pumpkin and white
+mice?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is a scene of enchantment," said Miranda. "I hardly
+expected anything so dazzlingly beautiful. How the naval
+uniforms seem to light up the throng, and the soldiers too.
+I don't wonder at all the pretty things we read about them
+in books."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, they do strike the unaccustomed eye," said Miss
+Vavasour. "I wish I saw them for the first time. I'm
+afraid I'm growing old. Oh! my coming-out ball! I
+didn't sleep for a week before in anticipation of delicious
+joy, or a week after in retrospection. Ah! me, my youth
+is slipping away unsatisfied, I much fear. And now, unless
+my eyes deceive me, we are going to have the first quadrille.
+Miranda, we must show these good people that we dance in
+our island. How about partners and a <i>vis-a-vis</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>We were not left long in doubt. One of the
+aides-de-<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>camp,
+a gorgeous apparition in gold and scarlet, came up
+bowing, and intimated his Royal Highness' wish to dance
+with Mrs. Telfer. This, of course, was equivalent to a
+command. I looked for some indecision or hesitation on
+the part of Miranda. But it appeared to her evidently just
+as much a part of the proceedings as if (as had happened
+before) she had been asked to dance with the captain of a
+man-of-war at one of their island f&ecirc;tes, where waltz, quadrille,
+and polka had long been familiar. I had provided
+myself with an enviable partner in the shape of Mrs. Neuchamp;
+and her husband having promptly arranged matters
+with Miss Vavasour, we betook ourselves to the next set,
+where we had a full view of the viceregal party. My
+sisters had apparently no difficulty in deciding between
+several aspirants for their respective hands, as they and
+their partners helped to make up the set.</p>
+
+<p>When the melodious crash broke forth, in commencement
+from Herr K&ouml;nigsmark's musicians, recruited from
+an Austrian military band which had visited Australia,
+a murmur of admiration made itself audible, as the Prince
+and his partner stepped forth in the opening measure of
+the dance. I turned my head and was lost in astonishment
+as I noticed the unconscious grace with which Miranda
+moved&mdash;calm as when rivalling the fairies in rhythmic
+measure on a milk white beach beside the moonlit wave.
+How many a time had I watched her!</p>
+
+<p>"Who in the world is that lovely creature dancing with
+the Prince?" I heard a middle-aged dame behind me ask.
+"She has a foreign appearance, and I think she is the
+most exquisitely beautiful woman I ever saw in my life.
+What a figure, too! How she smiles, what teeth, what
+eyes! Is there any news of a migration of angels? Such
+strange things happen nowadays on account of electricity
+and all that. Who and what is she, Mary Kingston, again
+I ask you?"</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>
+"My dear Arabella!" answered the other dame, evidently
+one of the aristocracy of the land, "you are so enthusiastic!
+She came with the Frankston party. That's her husband
+quite close to us, dancing with Mrs. Neuchamp. He's the
+son of Captain Telfer of North Shore, and has been away
+among the islands and nobody knows where for ever so
+long. He married her at Norfolk Island. I believe she is
+one of those wonderful Pitcairn people that we hear such
+good accounts of."</p>
+
+<p>"H'm; he's a young man of distinctly good taste, I must
+say. I wish my Cavendish had gone to the islands too, if
+that is the sort of girl they grow there. Mrs. Percival
+seems to be a great chum of hers. How did that come
+about?"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe they came back in the <i>Florentia</i> together.
+Captain Carryall touched at Norfolk Island on the way
+from Honolulu, and it seems that Mrs. Percival's little boy
+fell overboard on the voyage, and the girl was into the sea
+after him like a shot, and swam with him in her arms till
+the boats came. There was something about a shark too.
+Mrs. Percival tells everybody she saved his life. No
+wonder she raves about her."</p>
+
+<p>"What a pearl of a girl! No wonder, indeed! And to
+think of her having a world of courage and fire in her with
+all that delicacy and beauty. I can't take my eyes off her.
+The Prince admires her, apparently, too; and she smiles
+like a pleased child, with as little thought of vanity or harm,
+I dare swear, as a baby. She ought to be a princess, no
+doubt of it. So I see it's the last figure. I must go and
+look up my old friend, Paul Frankston, and make him tell
+me all about her."</p>
+
+<p>After the dance and the usual promenade, Mrs. Neuchamp
+and I recovered our respective spouses, and took the opportunity
+to make a detour of the ball-room, and even to go
+through the next apartment, where refreshments were
+pro<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>curable,
+into the ample gardens. The night was superbly
+beautiful. The full moon lit up the grove of tropical
+foliage and richly-flowering plants, the glades carpeted with
+velvet lawn, the wide sea-plain traversed by shimmering
+pathways of silver. Below, in the sleeping bay, lay several
+men-of-war, half in shadow, half illuminated with coloured
+lamps hanging from their rigging. Gay and mirthful, grave
+or earnest, the frequent partners passed to and fro like
+shadows of revellers beneath the moon, or turned to the
+lower paths to gaze at the motionless vessels, the silver sea,
+the whispering wave. It was an ecstatic experience, a fairy
+pageant, a supernal revelation of an enchanted landscape.</p>
+
+<p>Miranda pressed my arm. "Oh, Hilary! how lovely all
+this is! But you must not laugh at me. Now that I have
+seen it, I do not think I shall be anxious to follow it up.
+There is something almost intoxicating about it all. I can
+imagine it unfitting people for their everyday life."</p>
+
+<p>We had hardly returned to the ball-room when the glorious
+strains of the "Tausend und einer nacht" waltz pealed
+forth from the band, and hurrying and anxious swains in
+search of their partners, not always easy to discover in such
+a crush, were seen in every direction. Instant request was
+preferred to Miranda by a naval officer high in command,
+but to my surprise, as we had not spoken on the subject,
+she graciously, but firmly, declined the honour. He protested,
+but she quietly repeated her negative: "I only
+dance round dances with my husband, Captain Harley! and,
+indeed, these not very often."</p>
+
+<p>He was inclined to be persistent, though most courteous.
+"I am sure you used to dance them once. Indeed, I heard
+such an account of your waltzing, Mrs. Telfer."</p>
+
+<p>"That was before I was married, Captain Harley!" she
+replied, with such evident belief that this explanation fully
+answered every objection that neither the captain nor I
+could help smiling.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+"Look at your friend, Mrs. Neuchamp!" he said, as that
+dainty matron came gliding past with a military partner,
+looking like the very impersonation of the waltz, "and
+Mrs. Craven, and Mrs. Percival."</p>
+
+<p>"I am so sorry that I can't comply," she answered.
+"They are quite right to dance waltzes if they please. I
+do not care for them now, and am only going to have one
+with Hilary to-night. He is fond of it, I know. I will
+dance the Lancers with you, if you like."</p>
+
+<p>"Anything with <i>you</i>," murmured the captain gallantly,
+as he carefully wrote her name on his card, and departed
+to secure a partner for the yet unfinished portion of the
+dance.</p>
+
+<p>"I see by this lovely programme," she said, "that there
+is another waltz, a polka, and then the Lancers, which I
+used to know very well; and after that I will dance the
+next waltz with you, Hilary, just to feel what this wonderful
+floor is like. You are not angry with me for refusing
+Captain Harley? I really feel as if I <i>could</i> not do it."</p>
+
+<p>"You can follow your own way, my dear!" I said, "in
+this and all minor matters. It concerns you chiefly; and,
+considering how many husbands think their wives are
+rather too fond of dancing, I shall certainly not quarrel
+with mine for not caring for it enough."</p>
+
+<p>I was not altogether without interest as to this set of
+Lancers which she had promised to the gallant captain of
+the <i>Arethusa</i>, knowing as I did that the fashion had changed
+considerably since the Lancers was a decorous, somewhat
+dull dance, differing from the quadrille only in a more
+complicated series of evolutions, and, like that very proper
+performance, affording much opportunity for conversation.
+Not intending to take part in it myself, and being, indeed,
+more than sufficiently entertained as a spectator of the
+novel spectacle, I stationed myself near the "tops," one
+couple of which Miranda's partner elected to be. I saw by
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+the composition of the set, and the looks of some of the
+youths and maidens who eagerly took their places with
+their pre-arranged <i>vis-a-vis</i>, that the pace would be rapid
+and the newest variations introduced.</p>
+
+<p>I provided, therefore, for a <i>contretemps</i>. My younger
+sister having professed herself tired with the previous
+waltz, had declined the invitation of a partner not wholly
+acceptable as it appeared to me. I therefore persuaded
+her to walk up with me to a seat near Miranda, so that we,
+as I explained, might see how she got on.</p>
+
+<p>What I anticipated exactly came to pass. The first few
+non-committal quadrille steps were got through without
+unusual display, but when Miranda saw the damsel next to
+her leaning back as far as she could manage, while her
+partner swung her round several times, as if he either
+wished to lift her entirely off her feet, or drag her arms out
+of the sockets, a look of amazement overspread her features.
+She stopped with a startled air, commingled with distaste,
+and saying to her surprised partner, "I cannot dance like
+this&mdash;I did not know&mdash;why did no one tell me?"&mdash;walked
+like a queen to the nearest seat. Now my foresight
+came in. Knowing that a girl of nineteen would be willing
+to dance with a naval officer of the rank and fashion of
+Captain Harley, if she was ready to drop with fatigue, I
+said promptly, "Allow me to introduce you to my sister
+Captain Harley, who will, I am sure, be happy to take my
+wife's place;" a look of joyful acquiescence lit up her countenance,
+and before any serious hitch took place in the
+figure the vacancy was filled.</p>
+
+<p>I fancied that my sister Elinor, who was at the age when
+girls are not disinclined for a little daring frolic out of pure
+gladsomeness, performed her part in the figures with somewhat
+less unreserve after noticing the look of quiet surprise
+with which Miranda observed some of the more vivacious
+couples.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
+We contented ourselves, when the next series of waltzes
+commenced, with a single dance, which we enjoyed as thoroughly
+as the perfection of floor, music, and surroundings
+warranted.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, what a floor!" said Miranda; "if I were as fond
+of dancing as I used to be, I could dance all night; and
+such music! Quite heavenly, if it is not wicked to say so.
+And there is the sea, too, with the moonlight on it as in old
+days! We have been taken to an enchanted castle!</p>
+
+<p>"But there is something different. I can hardly describe
+my feelings. Why, I cannot explain, but going back
+to dancing now for the mere pleasure of it, when I have
+entered upon the serious duties of life, appears like returning
+to one's childish passion for dolls and playthings."</p>
+
+<p>"And yet, how many married people of both sexes are
+dancing now, not with each other either."</p>
+
+<p>"I see them, and I wonder. I am not surprised at married
+men dancing&mdash;if they like it. If they come at all,
+they may as well do so as sit down and get weary. But I
+think the married women should leave the round dances to
+the girls."</p>
+
+<p>"Would not balls be rather slow if the married women
+only danced squares?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see why. Yet many of the girls have no partners&mdash;wall-flowers,
+I think you call them. And that is hardly fair, surely."</p>
+
+<p>As this dance only came before supper, which was now
+near at hand, we danced it out. I hardly noticed until the
+music closed how many of the other couples had stopped, or
+that quite a crowd had collected around us. This was a tribute,
+I found, to Miranda's performance, which had an ease
+and grace of movement such as I never saw any living woman
+possess. She hardly seemed to use the ordinary means of
+progression. Hers was a half-aerial motion, in time to
+every note and movement of the music, while the rhythmic
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>
+sway and yielding grace of her figure presented the idea of
+a mermaiden floating through the translucent waves rather
+than that of a mortal woman.</p>
+
+<p>As she swayed dreamily to the wondrous music of "Tausend
+und einer nacht," her head thrown slightly back, her
+parted lips, her wondrous eyes, her faultless form so impressed
+the by-standers with the ideal of supreme beauty,
+that they scarce repressed an audible murmur as the music
+ceased and the dance came to an end.</p>
+
+<p>When supper was announced there was the usual crush,
+but before the doors were opened a few of the more favoured
+guests, including the Frankstons and ourselves, were conducted
+by one of the aides-de-camp to a place near the viceregal
+party. Miranda was taken possession of by another
+of our naval friends, who seemed to think that they had
+special claims upon her, as having knowledge of her island
+home. I was requested to take in our good friend and
+fellow-voyager Mrs. Percival, who was more warm and effusive
+in praise of Miranda than I ever thought possible
+before her child's danger broke through the crust of her
+ordinary manner. Now nothing could have been more sisterly
+and unreserved than her tone and expression.</p>
+
+<p>"It has been quite a luxury to all of us to look on at that
+wonderful darling of a wife of yours dancing! The whole
+room, including Lady Rochester, was in ecstasies, I assure
+you. You came in for your share of compliments also,
+which I mustn't make you vain by repeating. How exquisitely,
+how charmingly she does dance! I have seen some of
+the best <i>danseuses</i> in Europe and India&mdash;on and off the
+stage&mdash;and not one worthy to be named with her. She is
+a dream of grace&mdash;the very poetry of motion. I said so
+before to-night, and now every one agrees with me. It is
+rather a disappointment in some quarters that she declines
+to dance except with you. It would seem odd for some
+people, but being the woman she is I understand it."</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span>
+"She is free to follow her own course socially," I said.
+"She will soon decide upon her line of action, and will not
+be turned from it by outside influence. Fortunately she
+and my mother are much in harmony as to leading principles,
+which relieves my mind considerably."</p>
+
+<p>"You are fortunate in that, then, as in several other
+respects; may I add that I think you worthy of your good
+fortune. I trust that my boy's simple prayers for your
+welfare&mdash;and he prays for you both every night&mdash;may be
+answered."</p>
+
+<p>Just before the conclusion of the supper I saw that
+Miranda had been presented to his Excellency the Governor,
+who was standing near the Prince. Both of these
+personages were most complimentary and flattering in their
+attention to her, and when we left, as we had arranged,
+immediately after that most important function supper,
+leaving the girls to go home with Mr. and Mrs. Neuchamp,
+we were gratified to think that we could not have been
+more graciously received&mdash;treated even with distinction&mdash;and
+that nothing had occurred to detract in the slightest
+degree from the unwonted pleasure and modest triumph
+of the night.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>After this, our first experience of "society," in the higher
+sense of the word, unexpectedly agreeable, as it had been,
+Miranda's fixed resolve, in which I fully concurred, was to
+detach ourselves from it and its code of obligations, except
+at rare intervals&mdash;to live our own lives, and to trouble
+ourselves as little as might be with the tastes and fancies
+of others.</p>
+
+<p>I was likely to have my time fully occupied in the development
+of my business. Miranda had, partly from observation,
+partly from information supplied by my mother
+and sisters, discovered that there was even in prosperous,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
+easy going, naturally favoured Sydney a section of ill-fed,
+ill-clothed, ill-taught poor. "While I meet them daily, such
+as I never saw on our island, I cannot occupy myself with
+the vanities of life." My mother was delighted to find a
+daughter willing to co-operate with her in the benevolent
+plans of relief which she was always organising for the
+poor and the afflicted. Between them a notable increase
+of efficiency took place in the management of children's
+hospitals, soup-kitchens, and other institutions, commonly
+regarded with indifference, if not dislike, by the well-to-do
+members of society. Outside of these duties, our chief
+pleasure at the end of the week, when only we could afford
+the time, was a cruise in our sailing boat the <i>Harpooner</i>,
+which soon came to be known as one of the fastest in the
+harbour, as well as one that was rarely absent from the
+Saturday's regatta, when a stiff breeze was sending the spray
+aloft.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Our life henceforth was that of the happy nations "that
+have no history." My business prospered, and as it largely
+increased and developed from its original proportions,
+Captain Carryall began to tire of his voyages and settled
+down on shore.</p>
+
+<p>Within a year of the founding of our commercial enterprise
+one of the ideal houses we had so often pictured came
+into our possession. In an afternoon stroll, Miranda and I
+had ventured into a deserted garden, lured by the masses of
+crimson blooms on a great double hibiscus. The heavy
+entrance-gate was awry&mdash;the stone pillars decaying&mdash;the
+avenue weed-grown and neglected&mdash;the shrubberies trodden
+down and disfigured by browsing cattle. Exploring further
+behind a screen of thick-growing pines, we found the house,&mdash;a
+noble, wide-balconied freestone building, which I well
+remembered in my boyhood. Then it was inhabited, carefully
+tended, and ringing with the voices of happy boys
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span>
+and girls in holiday-time. What blight had fallen on the
+place, or on the pleasant family that once dwelt there?
+On the north-eastern side the land sloped down to a little
+bay, sheltered from the prevailing wind, and provided with
+pier and boat-house&mdash;all marine conveniences, in short.
+"Oh! if we had a house like this," said Miranda, clapping
+her hands, "how happy we should be! Not that I am
+otherwise now; but I should enjoy having this for our own.
+We could soon renovate the poor garden." I assented, but
+said nothing at the time&mdash;resolved to take counsel of our
+good friend and trusted adviser then and now&mdash;who else
+but Paul Frankston?</p>
+
+<p>From him I learned the history of the house and its old-time
+inmates. Some were dead and some were gone. The
+story was long. The gist of it was, however, that it was
+now in the hands of certain trustees for the benefit of the
+heirs-at-law. "I think I can find out about it," he concluded.
+"And now come down and look at my little boat.
+I've had some painting and gilding done lately; I want
+you all&mdash;father, mother, sisters, wife, and everybody&mdash;to
+come for a sail next Saturday. I'm going to have a race
+with Richard Jones to the Heads and back, and I want
+your wife to steer. Then we'll win, I'm sure, and we'll call
+in at Edenhall&mdash;that's the name of the old place you saw&mdash;been
+its name for fifty years or more&mdash;and we'll have
+another look at it."</p>
+
+<p>I said "Yes, by all means."</p>
+
+<p>The next Saturday proved to be a day specially provided
+by the gods for boat-sailing. The wind was in the right
+quarter, the weather fine. The <i>Sea-gull</i> swept across the
+harbour like a veritable sea-bird, spreading her broad wings.
+The whole party had punctually assembled at our jetty
+after an early lunch. The breeze freshened as the day
+wore on; we had our friendly race against an old comrade
+of Mr. Frankston's&mdash;like him, not all ignorant of the ways
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
+of those who go down to the deep in ships&mdash;which we won
+handsomely, thanks to Miranda's steering, as Paul loudly
+averred. And that young woman herself, as the <i>Sea-gull</i>
+went flying past her sister yacht in the concluding tack,
+lying down "gunnel under," with every inch of canvas on
+that she dared carry, was as eager and excited as if she had
+been paddling for her life in one of the canoe races of her
+childhood.</p>
+
+<p>We got back to Neutral Bay in time for afternoon tea, a
+little later than the established hour. But instead of having
+it on board, Paul proposed to have it at Edenhall, where he
+said he had permission to go whenever he pleased. He had
+arranged with the caretaker too.</p>
+
+<p>We landed at the long unused pier. "How many times
+have I been here before, in poor old Dartmoor's time," said
+Mr. Frankston, "and how many a jolly night have I spent
+within those old walls! Well, well! time goes on, and our
+friends, where are they? Life's a sad business at best.
+However, we can't make it better by crying over our losses.
+Ladies and gentlemen, follow me!"</p>
+
+<p>With a sudden change of tone and manner, Paul stepped
+briskly along the upward winding path, long unused, which
+led to the house. The hall door stood open, and passing
+along a noble hall and turning to the right, we entered a
+dining-room of fine proportions. In this was an improvised
+table on trestles whereon was spread a tempting collation.
+Two men servants, whom I recognised as the Marahmee
+butler and footman, stood ready to serve the company. A
+needful amount of sweeping and repair had been effected.
+The windows had been cleaned, and a fine view of the bay
+thereby afforded. Altogether the effect was as striking as
+it was unexpected; a general exclamation broke from the
+company.</p>
+
+<p>"Ladies and gentlemen," said Paul, "I have prepared a
+surprise for you, I know; but oblige me by making your
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span>selves
+at home for the present, and dining with me in this
+informal fashion&mdash;I will explain by and by."</p>
+
+<p>The day was nearly spent. It would probably be near
+the time of twilight, which in summer in Australia is nearer
+nine o'clock than eight, before we reached our homes. So
+the majority of the guests hailed the idea as one of Paul's
+eccentric notions with which he was wont to amuse his
+intimates. The Marahmee champagne was proverbial, and
+after a reasonable number of corks had been drawn a progressive
+degree of cheerfulness was reached. Paul rose to
+his feet, and requested the usual solemnities to be observed,
+as he was about to propose a toast. "Those of my friends
+who have been here before, in its happier times, will
+remember the former owner of this once pleasant home.
+Little is left now save the evidences of decay and desertion&mdash;the
+memories of a long past happy day. But there is no
+reason why it should not be again inhabited, again be filled
+with pleasant and pleasure-giving inhabitants. It is solid
+and substantial; if somewhat old-fashioned, all the better
+I say. There was no jerry building in the old days. The
+garden is here&mdash;to be easily renewed in beauty&mdash;the jetty,
+and the boat-house. The sea is here, much as I remember
+when as a boy I used to get 'congewoi' for bait off those
+very rocks."</p>
+
+<p>"Hear, hear!" from the guests, and Mr. Richard Jones.</p>
+
+<p>"And now I come to a piece of news which I am sure
+you will hear with pleasure. The house and grounds have
+been purchased by a young friend of mine, whose health,
+with that of his charming wife, I now ask you to drink with
+all the honours. The health of Mr. and Mrs. Telfer, their
+long life and prosperity! and may we all have many as
+pleasant a sail round the harbour as we have had to-day,
+and come here to enjoy ourselves at the end of it."</p>
+
+<p>The applause which followed was tumultuous. Paul has
+sprung a surprise upon his guests with a vengeance. I was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+as much astonished as anybody; for though I knew that he
+had promised to make inquiries about the price put upon
+the property, I had no idea that he would go further in the
+matter, still less that he would purchase it on my account,
+as it was evident that he had done.</p>
+
+<p>I said a few words, chiefly to the effect that it seemed to
+me quite unnecessary to go through the form of exerting
+myself for my advancement in life, as my friends, Mr.
+Frankston and Captain Carryall, were bent on making my
+fortune for me. I trusted to prove not wholly unworthy
+of such unselfish friendship, and thanking them all in the
+name of my wife and myself, trusted that a meeting like
+this would often conclude a happy day such as we had just
+completed. As for Miranda, she went up to the old man,
+and placing her hand in his, looked up into his face with an
+expression of heartfelt gratitude, which hardly needed the
+addition of her words: "You have made us both perfectly
+happy&mdash;what can I say? My heart will not let me speak.
+We have nothing to wish for now in this world."</p>
+
+<p>The old man looked at her with an expression of mingled
+admiration and paternal affection. "I have two daughters
+now," he said, "and two sons; I was always wishing to
+have another pair, to gossip with when Antonia and Ernest
+were away. Now I have found them I am sure. The only
+thing we want now is another boat."</p>
+
+<p>Miranda's eyes glistened at the allusion, and she looked
+as if she was only prevented, by a half-instinctive doubt as
+to the fitness of the occasion, from embracing Paul before
+the assembled company.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb" />
+
+<p>Years have passed since that day. Children's voices
+have long since echoed in the wide verandahs and amid the
+shrubberies of Edenhall. The house, thoroughly renovated,
+is one of the most comfortable, if not the most aristocratic,
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+of the many embowered mansions which look over the Haven
+Beauteous.</p>
+
+<p>My boys have been "water babies" from earliest childhood,
+and we can turn out a crew not easy to beat, particularly
+when their mother can be persuaded to steer. My
+girls have inherited a large proportion of their mother's
+fearless spirit, though people say not one has equalled her
+in beauty. Their partners in the dance, however, appear to
+consider them sufficiently good-looking, if one may judge
+by the competition which their appearance at balls usually
+produces.</p>
+
+<p>Our business, always aided by the cool heads and steady
+courage of the senior partners, has increased, with the
+growth of the city of Sydney and the development of the
+island trade, beyond all hope and expectation. I am a rich
+man now, and, indeed, somewhat in danger of the occasional
+mood of discontent with the uneventful, unvarying tide of
+success upon which life's barque appears ever to float. But
+one look at Miranda's face, serenely happy in her children,
+in her daily life of charity and almsgiving, in the devoted
+love and trust of my parents, is all-sufficient to banish all
+vagrant ideas.</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes, in the train of unbidden fancies which throng
+the portals of the mind, the scenes and sounds of a far
+clime claim right of audience. Again I see the paradisal
+woodland, the mysterious mountain forest, the ceaseless
+moan of the billow upon the reef sounds in my ear; while
+forms, now fair, now fierce, flit, shadow-like, across the scene.
+I hear again the soft voices of the island girls as in frolic
+race they troop to beach or stream. I see the sad, bright
+eyes of L&#257;lia, or mark the fierce regard of Hope Island
+Nellie as she stands with bared bosom full in the track of
+the deadly arrow flight. I hear the lion roar of Hayston
+as he quells a mutiny, or towers, alone and unarmed, above
+a crowd of hostile islanders. I shudder in thought at the
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>
+dangers which I have escaped. Once more sounds from
+afar the weird voice of the tempest in the midnight wreck
+of the <i>Leonora</i>. Lastly, the harbour lights disappear as I
+sit in my cane lounge in the verandah of Edenhall, and in
+place of the wooded heights and distant city I see the
+breakers upon the reef of Ocean Island, and discern a solitary
+figure in the stern of a small boat sailing out into the
+illimitable gloom; I fall a musing upon the mysterious
+problems of Fate&mdash;of man's life and the strange procession
+of circumstance&mdash;until the hour strikes and I retire.
+Yet my thoughts are still dominated by the majestic
+figure of the Captain, grand in his natural good qualities,
+grand in his fearless courage, his generosity, his friendship&mdash;grand
+even in his vices. He was not without resemblance
+to a yet more famous corsair, immortalised by the
+poet&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Who died and left a name to other times,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Link'd with one virtue and a thousand crimes.</span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<h2>THE END</h2>
+
+
+<div class="tnote"><h3>Transcriber's Note</h3>
+
+<p>Any changes made to spelling or punctuation are indicated by dotted
+lines under the corrections. Scroll the mouse over the word and the
+original text will <ins title="Transcriber's Note: original reads 'apprear'">appear</ins>.</p>
+
+<p>Instances of inconsistent hyphenation have been left intact.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Modern Buccaneer, by Rolf Boldrewood
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MODERN BUCCANEER ***
+
+***** This file should be named 35431-h.htm or 35431-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/4/3/35431/
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Erica Pfister-Altschul and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This book was produced from scanned images of public
+domain material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+
+
+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
diff --git a/35431-h/images/map-1200.png b/35431-h/images/map-1200.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2d14f42
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431-h/images/map-1200.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/35431-h/images/map-600.png b/35431-h/images/map-600.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..9242313
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431-h/images/map-600.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/35431-h/images/mmco-logo.png b/35431-h/images/mmco-logo.png
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..78dfff6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431-h/images/mmco-logo.png
Binary files differ
diff --git a/35431.txt b/35431.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..d4fea53
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11869 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of A Modern Buccaneer, by Rolf Boldrewood
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: A Modern Buccaneer
+
+Author: Rolf Boldrewood
+
+Release Date: February 28, 2011 [EBook #35431]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MODERN BUCCANEER ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Erica Pfister-Altschul and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This book was produced from scanned images of public
+domain material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+A MODERN BUCCANEER
+
+[Illustration]
+
+I desire to acknowledge my indebtedness to Mr. Louis Becke, author of
+_By Reef and Palm_, as to the South Sea Island portion of _A Modern
+Buccaneer_, with the exception of the chapter headed "Poisoned Arrows,"
+which is founded upon the diary of a Whaling Cruise by my late father.
+
+[Illustration: _Boldrewood's "Modern Buccaneer"_ _Walker & Boutall sc._]
+
+
+
+
+A MODERN BUCCANEER
+
+
+BY
+ROLF BOLDREWOOD
+
+AUTHOR OF 'ROBBERY UNDER ARMS'
+
+
+London
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO.
+AND NEW YORK
+1894
+
+_All rights reserved_
+
+
+COPYRIGHT
+1894
+BY
+MACMILLAN AND CO.
+
+
+_First Edition (3 Vols.) April 1894_
+_Second Edition (1 Vol.) October 1894_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ MY FIRST VOYAGE 1
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+ WILLIAM HENRY HAYSTON 13
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+ IN SAMOA 20
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ SAMOA TO MILLE 32
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+ THE BRIG LEONORA 41
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ CAPTAIN BEN PEESE 62
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ CRUISING AMONG THE CAROLINES 74
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ POISONED ARROWS 87
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ HALCYON DAYS 111
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+ MURDER AND SHIPWRECK 121
+
+ CHAPTER XI.
+ A KING AND QUEEN 159
+
+ CHAPTER XII.
+ "MY LORDS OF THE ADMIRALTY" 189
+
+ CHAPTER XIII.
+ H.M.S. ROSARIO 206
+
+ CHAPTER XIV.
+ NORFOLK ISLAND--ARCADIA 225
+
+ CHAPTER XV.
+ EPITHALAMIUM 255
+
+ CHAPTER XVI.
+ A SWIM FOR LIFE 277
+
+ CHAPTER XVII.
+ "OUR JACK'S COME HOME TO-DAY" 303
+
+
+
+
+A MODERN BUCCANEER
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+MY FIRST VOYAGE
+
+
+Born near Sydney harbour, nursery of the seamen of the South, I could
+swim almost as soon as I could walk, and sail a boat at an age when most
+children are forbidden to go near the water. We came of a salt-water
+stock. My father had been a sea-captain for the greater part of his
+life, after a youth spent in every kind of craft, from a cutter to a
+man-of-war. No part of the habitable globe was unfamiliar to him: from
+India to the Pole, from Russia to the Brazils, from the China Sea to the
+Bight of Benin--every harbour was a home.
+
+He had nursed one crew frost-bitten in Archangel, when the blankets had
+to be cut up for mittens; had watched by the beds of another, decimated
+by yellow fever in Jamaica; had marked up the "death's-head and
+cross-bones" in the margin of the log-book, to denote the loss by
+tetanus of the wounded by poisoned arrows on Bougainville Island; and
+had fought hand to hand with the stubborn Maories of Taranaki. Wounds
+and death, privation and pestilence, wrecks and tempests were with him
+household words, close comrades. What were they but symbols,
+nature-pictures, the cards dealt by fate? You lost the stake or rose a
+winner. Men who had played the game of life all round knew this. He
+accepted fortune, fair or foul, as he did the weather--a favour or a
+force of nature to be enjoyed or defied. But to be commented upon, much
+less complained of? Hardly. And as fate had willed it, the worn though
+unwearied sea-king had seen fit to heave anchor, so to speak, and moor
+his vessels--for he owned more than one--in this the fairest haven of
+the southern main. Once before in youth had he seen and never forgotten
+the frowning headlands, beyond which lay so peerless a harbour, such
+wealth of anchorage, so mild a clime, so boundless an extent of virgin
+soil; from which he, "a picked man of countries," even then prophesied
+wealth, population, and empire in the future.
+
+Here, then, a generation later, he brought his newly-wedded wife. Here
+was I, Hilary Telfer, destined to see the light.
+
+From the mid-city street of Sydney is but a stone's throw to the wharves
+and quays, magnificent water-ways in which those ocean palaces of the
+present day, the liners of the P. and O. and the Orient, lie moored, and
+but a plank divides the impatient passenger from the busy mart. Not that
+such stately ships were visitors in my school-boy days. Sydney was then
+a grass-grown, quiet seaport, boasting some fifty thousand inhabitants,
+with a fleet of vessels small in size and of humble tonnage.
+
+But, though unpretending of aspect, to the eager-hearted, imaginative
+school-boy they were rich as Spanish galleons. For were they not laden
+with uncounted treasure, weighed down with wealth beyond the fabled
+hoards of the pirates of the Spanish Main, upon whose dark deeds and
+desperate adventures I had so greedily feasted?
+
+Each vessel that swept through the Heads at midnight, or marked the
+white-walled mansions and pine-crowned promontories rise faintly out of
+the pearl-hued dawn, was for me a volume filled with romance and
+mystery. Sat there not on the forecastle of that South Sea whaler,
+silent, scornful, imperturbable, the young Maori chief, nursing in his
+breast the deep revenge for a hasty blow, which on the return voyage to
+New Zealand and the home of his tribe was to take the form of a massacre
+of the whole ship's company?
+
+Yes, captain and officers, passengers and crew, every man on that ship
+paid the death penalty for the mate's hard word and blow. The insult to
+a Rangatira must be wiped out in blood.
+
+The trader of the South Sea Islands was a marine marvel which I was
+never weary of studying.
+
+I generally managed to make friends with one or other of the crew, who
+permitted me to explore the lower deck and feed my fancy upon the
+treasures from that paradise with which the voyager from an enchanted
+ocean had surely freighted his vessel. Strange bows and arrows--the
+latter poison-tipped, as I was always assured, perhaps as a
+precautionary measure--piles of shaddocks, tons of bananas, idols,
+skulls, spears, clubs, woven cloth of curious fabric, an endless store
+of unfamiliar foreign commodities.
+
+Among the crew were always a few half-castes mingled with the grizzled,
+weather-beaten British sea-dogs. Perhaps a boat's crew of the islanders
+themselves, born sailors, and as much at home in water as on land.
+
+Seldom did I leave, however unwillingly, the deck of one of these fairy
+barques, without registering a vow that the year in which I left school
+should see me a gay sailor-boy, bound on my first voyage in search of
+dangerous adventures and that splendidly untrammelled career which was
+so surely to result in fortune and distinction.
+
+Then the whaleships! In that old time, Sydney harbour was rarely without
+a score or more of them. In their way they were portents and wonders of
+the deep. Fortune failed them at times. The second year might find them
+far from full of the high-priced whale-oil. The capricious cetacean was
+not to be depended upon in migration from one "whaling ground" to
+another. Sometimes a "favourite" ship--lucky in spite of
+everything--would come flaunting in after an absence of merely eleven or
+twelve months--such were the _Florentia_ and the _Proteus_--full to the
+hatches, while three long years would have elapsed before her consort,
+sailing on the same day and fitted up much in the same way, would crawl
+sadly into Snail's or Neutral Bay, battered and tempest-tossed, but
+three-quarter full even then, a mark for the rough wit of the port, to
+pay off an impoverished crew and confront unsmiling or incredulous
+owners.
+
+Every kind of disaster would have befallen her. When she got fast to a
+ninety-barrel whale, her boats would be stoven in. When all was well, no
+cheery shout of "There she spouts!" would be heard for days. Savage
+islanders would attack her doggedly, and hardly be beaten off. Every
+kind of evil omen would be justified, until the crew came to believe
+that they were sailing with an Australian Vanderdecken, and would never
+see a port again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The grudging childish years had rolled by, and now I was seventeen years
+of age--fitted, as I fully believed, to begin the battle of life in
+earnest, and ardent for the fray. As to my personal qualifications for a
+life on the ocean wave, and well I knew no other would have contented
+me, let the reader judge. At the age when tall lads are often found to
+have out-grown their strength, I had attained the fullest stature of
+manhood; wide-chested and muscular, constant exercise with oar and sail
+had developed my frame and toughened my sinews, until I held myself,
+with some reason, to be a match in strength and activity for most men I
+was likely to meet.
+
+In the rowing contests to which Australians of the shore have always
+been devoted, more particularly the privileged citizens of Sydney, I had
+always taken a leading part. More than once, in a hard-fought finish,
+had I been lifted out fainting or insensible.
+
+My curling fair hair and blue eyes bore token of our Norse blood and
+Anglo-Norman descent. The family held a tradition that our surname came
+from Taillefer, the warrior minstrel who rode in the forefront of Duke
+William's army at Hastings. Strangely, too, a passionate love of song
+had always clung to the race. "Sir Hilary charged at Agincourt," as
+saith the ballad. Roving and adventure ran in the blood for generations
+uncounted.
+
+For all that trouble arose when I announced my resolve. My schoolmates
+had settled down in the offices of merchants, bankers, and lawyers, why
+could not I do the same? My mother's tears fell fast as she tried in
+vain to dissuade me from my resolution. My father was neutral. He knew
+well the intensity of the feeling. "If born in a boy," he said, "as it
+was in me, it is his fate--nothing on earth can turn him from it; if you
+stop him you will make a bad landsman and spoil a good sailor. Let him
+go! he must take his chance like another man. God is above the wave as
+over the earth. If it be his fate, the perils of the deep will be no
+more than the breezes of the bay."
+
+It was decided at length that I should be allowed to go on my way. To
+the islands of the South Pacific my heart pointed as truly as ever did
+compass needle to the North.
+
+I had read every book that had ever been written about them, from
+Captain Cook's _Voyages_ to _The Mutiny of the Bounty_. In my dreams how
+many times had I seen the purple mountains, the green glow of the fairy
+woodlands, had bathed in the crystal streams, and heard the endless surf
+music on the encircling reef, cheered the canoes loaded with fruit
+racing for their market in the crimson flush of the paradisal morn, or
+lingered amidst the Aidenns of the charmed main, where the
+flower-crowned children of nature--maidens beauteous as angels--roamed
+in careless happiness and joyous freedom! It was an entrancing picture.
+
+Why should I stay in this prosaic land, where men wore the hideous
+costume of their forefathers, and women, false to all canons of art,
+still clung to their outworn garb?
+
+What did I care for the sheep and cattle, the tending of which enriched
+my compatriots?
+
+A world of romance, mystery, and adventure lay open and inviting. The
+die was cast. The spell of the sea was upon me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My father's accumulations had amounted to a reasonable capital, as
+things went in those Arcadian non-speculative days. He was not
+altogether without a commercial faculty, which had enabled him to make
+prudent investments in city and suburban lands. These the steadily
+improving markets were destined to turn into value as yet undreamed of.
+
+It was not thought befitting that I should ship as an apprentice or
+foremost hand, though I was perfectly willing, even eager, for a start
+in any way. A more suitable style of equipment was arranged. An
+agreement was entered into with the owner of a vessel bound for San
+Francisco via Honolulu, by which a proportion of the cargo was purchased
+in my name, and I was, after some discussion, duly installed as
+supercargo. It may be thought that I was too young for such a
+responsible post. But I was old for my age. I had a man's courage and
+ambition. I had studied navigation to some purpose; could "hand reef and
+steer," and in the management of a boat, or acquaintance with every
+rope, sail, and spar on board of a vessel, I held myself, if not an A.
+B., fully qualified for that rank and position.
+
+Words would fail to describe my joy and exultation when I found myself
+at length on blue water, in a vessel which I might fairly describe as
+"our little craft," bound for foreign parts and strange cities. I
+speedily made the acquaintance of the crew--a strangely assembled lot,
+mostly shady as to character and reckless as to speech, but without
+exception true "sailor men." At that time of day, employment on the high
+seas was neither so easy to obtain nor so well paid as at present. The
+jolly tars of the period were therefore less independent and inclined to
+cavil at minor discomforts. Once shipped, they worked with a will, and
+but little fault could be found with their courage or seamanship.
+
+Among other joys and delights which I promised myself, had been a closer
+acquaintance with the life and times of a picturesque and romantic
+personage, known and feared, if all tales were true, throughout the
+South Seas. This was the famous, the celebrated Captain Hayston, whose
+name was indeed a spell to conjure with from New Zealand to the Line
+Islands.
+
+Much that could excite a boyish imagination had been related to me
+concerning him. One man professing an intimate knowledge had described
+him as "a real pirate." Could higher praise be awarded? I put together
+all the tales I had heard about him--his great stature and vast
+strength, his reckless courage, his hair-breadth escapes, his wonderful
+brig,--cousin german, no doubt, to the "long low wicked-looking craft"
+in the pages of _Tom Cringle's Log_, and other veracious historiettes,
+"nourishing a youth sublime," in the long bright summer days of old;
+those days when we fished and bathed, ate oysters, and read alternately
+from early morn till the lighthouse on the South Head flashed out! My
+heroes had been difficult to find hitherto; they had mostly eluded my
+grasp. But this one was real and tangible. He would be fully up to
+description. His splendid scorn of law and order, mercy or moderation,
+his unquestioned control over mutinous crews and fierce islanders,
+illumined by occasional homicides and abductions, all these splendours
+and glories so stirred my blood, that I felt, if I could only once
+behold my boyhood's idol, I should not have lived in vain. Among the
+crew, fortunately for me as I then thought, was a sailor who had
+actually known in the flesh the idol of my daydreams.
+
+"And it's the great Captain Hayston you'd like to hear about," said Dan
+Daly, as we sat together in the foc'sle head of the old barque
+_Clarkstone_, before we made Honolulu. Dan had been a South Sea
+beach-comber and whaler; moreover, had been marooned, according to his
+own account, escaping only by a miracle; a trader's head-man--once,
+indeed, more than half-killed by a rush of natives on the station. With
+every kind of dangerous experience short of death and burial he was
+familiar. On which account I regarded him with a fine boyish admiration.
+What a night was it, superbly beautiful, when I hung upon his words, as
+we sat together gazing over the moonlit water! We had changed our course
+owing to some dispute about food between captain and crew, and were now
+heading for the island of Rurutu, where fresh provisions were
+attainable. As I listened spellbound and entranced, the barque's bows
+slowly rose and fell, the wavering moonlight streamed down upon the
+deck, the sails, the black masses of cordage, while ghostly shadows
+moved rhythmically, in answering measure to every motion of the vessel.
+
+"You must know," said Dan, in grave commencement, "it's nigh upon five
+years ago, when I woke up one morning in the 'Calaboose' as they call
+the 'lock-up' in Papiete, with a broken head. It's the port of the
+island of Tahiti. I was one of the hands of the American brig
+_Cherokee_, and we'd put in there on our way to San Francisco from
+Sydney. The skipper had given us liberty, so we went ashore and began
+drinking and having some fun. There was some wahines in it, in
+coorse--that's whats they call the women in thim parts. Somehow or other
+I got a knock on the head, and remimbered nothing more until I woke up
+in the 'Calaboose,' where I was charged with batin' a native till he was
+nigh dead. To make a long story short, I got six months 'hard,' and the
+ship sailed away without me.
+
+"When I'd served my time, I walks into the American Consulate and asks
+for a passage to California.
+
+"'Clear out,' says the Consul, 'you red-headed varmint, I have nothing
+to say to you, after beating an inoffensive native in the manner you
+did.'
+
+"'By the powers,' says I to myself, 'you're a big blackguard, Dan Daly,
+when you've had a taste of liquor, but if I remimber batin' any man
+black, white, or whitey-brown, may I be keel-hauled. Howsomdever, that
+says nothing, the next thing's a new ship.'
+
+"So I steps down to the wharf and aboord a smart-looking schooner that
+belonged to Carl Brander, a big merchant in Tahiti, as rich as the
+Emperor of China, they used to say. The mate was aboord. 'Do you want
+any hands?' says I.
+
+"'We do,' says he. 'You've a taking colour of hair for this trade, my
+lad.'
+
+"'How's that?'
+
+"'Why, the girls down at Rimitara and Rurutu will just make love to you
+in a body. Red hair's the making of a man in thim parts.'
+
+"Upon this I signed articles for six months in the schooner, and next
+day we sailed for a place called Bora-bora in the north-west. We didn't
+stay there long, but got under weigh for Rurutu next day. We weren't
+hardly clear of Bora-bora when we sights a brigantine away to windward
+and bearing down on us before the wind. As soon as she got close enough,
+she signalled that she wanted to send a boat aboard, so we hove to and
+waited.
+
+"Our skipper had a look at the man who was steering the boat, whin he
+turns as pale as a sheet, and says he to the mate, 'It's that devil
+Hayston! and that's the brigantine he and Captain Ben Peese ran away
+with from Panama.'
+
+"However, up alongside came the boat, and as fine a looking man as ever
+I set eyes on steps aboord amongst us.
+
+"'How do ye do, Captain?' says he. 'Where from and whither bound?'
+
+"The skipper was in a blue funk, I could see, for this Bully Hayston had
+a terrible bad name, so he answers him quite polite and civil.
+
+"'Can you spare me half a coil of two-inch Manilla?' asks the stranger,
+'and I'll pay you your own price?'
+
+"The skipper got him the rope, the strange captain pays for it, and they
+goes below for a glass of grog. In half an hour, up on deck they comes
+again, our skipper half-seas over and laughing fit to kill himself.
+
+"'By George!' says he, 'you're the drollest card I ever came across.
+D--n me! if I wouldn't like to take a trip with you myself!' and with
+that he struggles to the skylight and falls in a heap across it.
+
+"'Who's the mate of this schooner?' sings out Hayston, in such a changed
+voice that it made me jump.
+
+"'I am!' said the mate, who was standing in the waist.
+
+"'Then where's that Mangareva girl of yours? Come, look lively! I know
+all about her from that fellow there,' pointing to the skipper.
+
+"The mate had a young slip of a girl on board. She belonged to an island
+called Mangareva, and was as pretty a creature, with her big soft eyes
+and long curling hair, as ever I'd seen in my life. The mate just trated
+her the same as he would the finest lady, and was going to marry her at
+the next island where there was a missionary. When he heard who the
+strange captain was, he'd planted her down in the hold and covered her
+up with mats. He was a fine manly young chap, and as soon as he saw
+Hayston meant to take 'Taloo,' that was her name, he pulls out a pistol
+and says, 'Down in the hold, Captain Hayston! and as long as God gives
+me breath you'll never lay a finger on her. I'll put a bullet through
+her head rather than see her fall into the hands of a man like you.' The
+strange captain just gives a laugh and pulls his long moustache. Then he
+walks up to the mate and slaps him on the shoulder.
+
+"'You've got the right grit in you,' says he. 'I'd like to have a man
+like you on board my ship;' and the next second he gripped the pistol
+out of the mate's hand and sent it spinning along the deck. The mate
+fought like a tiger, but he was a child in the other man's grasp. All
+the time Hayston kept up that devilish laugh of his. Then, as he saw me
+and Tom Lynch coming to help the mate, he says something in a foreign
+lingo, and the boat's crew jumps on board amongst us, every one of them
+with a pistol. But for all that they seems a decent lot of chaps.
+
+"Hayston still held the mate by his wrists, laughing in his face as if
+he was having the finest fun in the world, when up comes Taloo out of
+the hold by way of the foc'sle bulk-head, with her long hair hanging
+over her shoulders, and the tears streaming down her cheeks.
+
+"She flings herself down at the Captain's feet, and clasps her arms
+round his knees.
+
+"'No, no! no kill Ted!' she kept on crying, just about all the English
+she knew.
+
+"'You pretty little thing,' says he, 'I wouldn't hurt your Ted for the
+world.' Then he lets go the mate and takes her hand and shakes it.
+
+"'What's your name, my man?'
+
+"'Ted Bannington!' says the mate.
+
+"'Well, Ted Bannington, look here; if you'd showed any funk I'd have
+taken the girl in spite of you and your whole ship's company. If a man
+don't think a woman good enough to fight for, he deserves to lose her if
+a better man comes along.'
+
+"Taloo put out one little hand, the other hand and arm was round the
+mate's neck, shaking like a leaf too.
+
+"'I'm so sorry if I've hurt your wrists,' says he to the mate, most
+polite. Then he gave some orders to the boat's crew, who pulled away to
+the brigantine. After they had gone he walked aft with the mate, the two
+chatting like the best friends in the world, and I'll be hanged if that
+same mate wasn't laughing fit to split at some of the yarns the other
+chap was spinning, sitting on the skylight, with the Captain lying at
+their feet as drunk as Davy's sow.
+
+"Presently the boat comes alongside agin, and a chap walks aft and gives
+the strange captain a parcel.
+
+"'You'll please accept this as a friendly gift from Bully Hayston,' says
+he to the mate; and then he takes a ten-dollar piece out of his pocket
+and gives it to Taloo. 'Drill a hole in it, and hang it round the neck
+of your first child for luck.'
+
+"He shakes hands with her and the mate, jumps into the boat, and steers
+for the brigantine. In another ten minutes she squared away and stood to
+the south-east.
+
+"'Come here, Dan,' says the mate to me; 'see what he's given me!' 'Twas
+a beautiful chronometer bran new, in a splendid case. The mate said he'd
+never seen one like it before.
+
+"Well, that was the first time I ever seen Bully Hayston, though I did a
+few times afterwards, and the brigantine too.
+
+"They do say he's a thundering scoundrel, but a pleasanter-spoken
+gentleman I never met in my life."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+WILLIAM HENRY HAYSTON
+
+
+These were the first particulars I ever heard of the man who had
+afterwards so great an influence upon my destiny that no incident of my
+sojourn with him will ever be forgotten. A man with whom I went into the
+jaws of death and returned unhurt. A man who, no matter what his faults
+may have been, possessed qualities which, had they been devoted to
+higher aims in life, might have rendered him the hero of a nation.
+
+Our Captain's altercation with the crew nearly blossomed into a mutiny.
+This was compromised, however, one of the conditions of peace being that
+we should touch at Rurutu, one of the five islands forming the Tubuai
+group. This we accordingly did, and, steering for San Francisco,
+experienced no further adventures until we sighted the Golden Gate. When
+our cargo was sold I left the ship.
+
+My occupation being from this time gone, I used to stroll down to the
+wharf from my lodgings in Harvard Street to look at the foreign vessels.
+Wandering aimlessly, I one day made the acquaintance of a "hard-shell
+down-easter," with the truly American name of Slocum, master of a
+venerable-looking rate called the _Constitution_. He himself was a
+dried-up specimen of the old style of Yankee captain, with a face that
+resembled in colour a brown painted oilskin, and hands like an
+albatross's feet. He had been running for a number of years to Tahiti,
+taking out timber and returning with island produce.
+
+Not being a proud man, he permitted me to stand drinks for him in a
+well-known liquor saloon in Third Street, where we had long yarns over
+his trading adventures in the Pacific.
+
+One Sunday morning, I remember it as if yesterday, we were sitting in a
+private room off the bar. Slocum was advising me to come with him on his
+next trip and share the luxuries of the _Constitution's_ table, for
+which he asked the modest sum of a hundred dollars to Tahiti and back,
+when we heard some one enter and address the bar-keeper. "Great Scott!"
+came the reply, "it's Captain Hayston! How air you, Captain, and whar
+d'ye come from?"
+
+"I've come to try and find Ben Peese. We're going to form a new station
+at Arrecifu. He left me at Yap in the Carolines to come here and buy a
+schooner with a light draught; but he never turned up; I'm afraid that
+after he left Yap he met with some accident."
+
+The moment Slocum heard the stranger's voice his face underwent a
+marvellous change. All his assurance seemed to have left him. He
+whispered to me, "That's Bully Hayston! I guess I'll lie low till he
+clears out. I don't want to be seen with him, as it'll sorter damage my
+character. Besides, he's such a vi'lent critter."
+
+The next moment we heard the new-comer say to the barman,--
+
+"Say, Fred, I've been down to that old schooner the _Constitution_, but
+couldn't find Slocum aboard. They told me he often came here to get a
+cheap drink. I want him to take a letter to Tahiti. Do you know where he
+is?"
+
+Slocum saw it was of no use attempting to "lie low," so with a nervous
+hand he opened the door.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I've knocked about the world a good deal since I sat in the little back
+parlour in Third Street, Frisco, but neither before nor since I left
+Strong's Island have I seen such a splendid specimen of humanity as the
+man who then entered.
+
+Much that I am about to relate I learned during my later experience.
+
+William Henry Hayston was born in one of the Western States of America,
+and received his education at Norfolk, Virginia. As his first
+appointment he obtained a cadetship in the United States Revenue
+Service, subsequently retiring to become captain of one of the large
+lake steamers.
+
+In '55 he joined the navy, serving with great gallantry under Admiral
+Farragut. The reported reason of his leaving the service was a
+disagreement with Captain Carroll, afterwards commander of the rebel
+cruiser _Shenandoah_. So bitter was their feud, that years afterwards,
+when that vessel was in the South Pacific, her commander made no secret
+of his ardent wish to meet Hayston and settle accounts with him, even to
+the death.
+
+Hayston was a giant in stature: six feet four in height, with a chest
+that measured, from shoulder to shoulder, forty-nine inches; and there
+was nothing clumsy about him, as his many antagonists could testify. His
+strength was enormous, and he was proud of it. But, apart from his
+magnificent physique, Hayston was one of the most remarkably handsome
+men about this time that I have ever seen. His hair fell in clusters
+across his forehead, above laughing eyes of the brightest blue; his nose
+was a bold aquiline; a well-cut, full-lipped mouth that could set like
+fate was covered by a huge moustache. A Vandyke beard completed the
+_tout ensemble_ of a visage which, once seen, was rarely forgotten by
+friend or foe. Taking him altogether, what with face, figure, and
+manner, he had a personal magnetism only too fatally attractive, as many
+a man--ay, and woman too--knew to their cost. He was my beau ideal of a
+naval officer--bold and masterful, yet soft and pleasant-voiced withal
+when he chose to conciliate. His sole disfigurement--not wholly so,
+perhaps, in the eye of his admirers--was a sabre cut which extended from
+the right temple to his ear.
+
+For his character, the one controlling influence in his life was an
+ungovernable temper. It was utterly beyond his mastery. Let any one
+offend him, and though he might have been smiling the instant before,
+the blue eyes would suddenly turn almost black, his face become a deep
+purple. Then it was time for friend or foe to beware. For I never saw
+the man that could stand up to him. Strangely enough, I have sometimes
+seen him go laughing through a fight until he had finished his man. At
+other times his cyclone of a mood would discharge itself without warning
+or restraint. It was probably this appalling temper that gained him a
+character for being bloodthirsty; for, once roused, nothing could stop
+him. Yet I do him the justice to say that I never once witnessed an act
+of deliberate cruelty at his hands. In the islands he was surrounded by
+a strange collection of the greatest scoundrels unhung. There, of
+necessity, his rule was one of "blood and iron."
+
+And now for his pleasing traits. He was one of the most fascinating
+companions possible. He possessed a splendid baritone voice and affected
+the songs of Schumann and the German composers. He was an accomplished
+musician, playing on the pianoforte, violin, and, in default of a better
+instrument, even on the accordion. He spoke German, French, and Spanish,
+as well as the island languages, fluently. Generous to a fault, in spite
+of repeated lessons, he would insist on trusting again and again those
+in whom he believed. But once convinced that he had been falsely dealt
+with, the culprit would have fared nearly as well in the jaws of a
+tiger. He was utterly without fear, under any and all circumstances,
+even the most desperate, and was naturally a hater of every phase of
+meanness or cowardice. But one more trait, and my sketch is complete.
+He had a fatal weakness where the fairer sex was concerned. To one of
+them he owed his first war with society. To the consequences of that
+false step might have been traced the reckless career which dishonoured
+his manhood and led to the final catastrophe.
+
+"Come, gentlemen!" he said on entering--in so pleasant and kindly a
+tone, that I felt drawn towards him at once, "let us sit down and have a
+drink together."
+
+We went back to the room, Slocum, I could see, feeling intensely
+uncomfortable, fidgeting and twisting. As we sat down I took a good look
+at the man of whom I had heard so much. Heard of his daring deeds in the
+China seas; of a wild career in the Pacific Islands; of his bold
+defiance of law and order; besides strange tales of mysterious cruises
+in the north-west among the Caroline and Pellew Islands.
+
+"And how air yer, Captain?" said Slocum with forced hilarity.
+
+"I'm devilish glad to see _you_," replied Hayston; "what about that
+barque of mine you stripped down at the Marshalls, you porpoise-hided
+skunk?"
+
+"True as gospel, Captain, I didn't know she was yours. There was a
+trader at Arnu, you know the man, an Italian critter, but they call him
+George Brown, and he says to me, 'Captain Slocum,' says he, 'there's a
+big lump of a timber-ship cast away on one of them reefs near Alluk, and
+if you can get up to her you'll make a powerful haul. She's new
+coppered, and hasn't broke up yet.' So I gave him fifty dollars, and
+promised him four hundred and fifty more if his news was reliable; if
+that ain't the solid facts of the case I hope I may be paralysed."
+
+"Oh! so it was George who put you on to take my property, was it? and he
+my trader too; well, Slocum, I can't blame you. But now I'll tell you my
+'_facts_': that barque was wrecked; the skipper and crew were picked up
+by Ben Peese and taken to China. He bought the barque for me for four
+hundred dollars, and I beat up to Arnu, and asked George if he would get
+me fifty Arnu natives to go with me to the wreck and either try and
+float it or strip her. The d--d Marcaroni-eating sweep promised to get
+me the men in a week or two, so I squared away for Madura, where I had
+two traders. Bad weather came on, and when I got back to Arnu, the
+fellow told me that a big canoe had come down from the Radacks and
+reported that the barque had gone to pieces. The infernal scoundrel! Had
+I known that he had put you on to her I'd have taken it out of his hide.
+Who is this young gentleman?"
+
+"A friend of mine, Captain, thinking of takin' a voyage with me for
+recruitin' of his health," and the lantern-jawed Slocum introduced us.
+
+Drawing his seat up to me, Hayston placed his hand on my shoulder, and
+said with a laugh, looking intensely at Slocum, who was nervously
+twisting his fingers, "Oh! a recruitin' of his health, is he? or rather
+recruitin' of your pocket? I'm glad I dropped in on you and made his
+acquaintance. I could tell him a few droll stories about the pious
+Slocum."
+
+Slocum said nothing, but laughed in a sickly way.
+
+Leaning forward with a smiling face, he said, "What did you clear out of
+my barque, you good Slocum?"
+
+"Nigh on a thousand dollars."
+
+"You know you lie, Slocum! you must have done better than that."
+
+"I kin show my receipts if you come aboard," he answered in shaky tones.
+
+"Well, I'll take your word, you sanctimonious old shark, and five
+hundred dollars for my share."
+
+"Why, sartin, Captain! that's fair and square," said the other, as his
+sallow face lighted up, "I'll give you the dollars to-morrow morning."
+
+"Right you are. Come to the Lick house at ten o'clock. Say, my pious
+friend, what would our good Father Damien think if I told him that
+pretty story about the six Solomon Island people you picked up at sea,
+and sold to a sugar planter?"
+
+The trader's visage turned green, as with a deprecating gesture towards
+me he seemed to implore Hayston's silence.
+
+"Ha! ha! don't get scared. Business matters, my lad," he said, turning
+to me his merry blue eyes, and patting me on the back. "Where are you
+staying here?"
+
+I told him. Then as we were rising to go, speaking to me, and looking
+Slocum in the face, he said, "Don't have any truck with Master Slocum,
+he'll skin you of every dollar you've got, and like as not turn you
+adrift at some place you can't get away from. Isn't that so, my saintly
+friend?"
+
+Slocum flinched like a whipped hound, but said nothing. Then, shaking
+hands with me, and saying if ever I came to the Pacific and dropped
+across him or Captain Ben Peese I should meet a hearty welcome, he
+strode out, with the shambling figure of the down-easter under his lee.
+
+That was the last I saw of the two captains for many a long day, for a
+few days later the _Constitution_ cleared out for Tahiti, and I couldn't
+learn anything more about Hayston. Whether he was then in command of a
+vessel, or had merely come up as passenger in some other ship, I could
+not ascertain. All the bar-keeper knew about him was that he was a
+gentleman with plenty of money and a h--l of a temper, if anybody
+bothered him with questions.
+
+Little I thought at the time that we were fated to meet again, or that
+where we once more forgathered would be under the tropic sun of
+Polynesia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+IN SAMOA
+
+
+From what I have said about Hayston, it will readily be understood that
+every tale relating to him was strangely exciting to my boyish mind. For
+me he was the incarnation of all that was utterly reckless, possibly
+wicked, and of course, as such, possessed a fascination that a better
+man would have failed to inspire.
+
+My hero, however, had disappeared, and with him all zest seemed to have
+gone out of life at Frisco. So after mooning about for a few weeks I
+resolved on returning to Sydney.
+
+My friends on the Pacific slope did their best to dissuade me, trying to
+instil the idea into my head that I was cut out for a merchant prince by
+disposition and intellect. But I heeded not the voice of the charmer.
+The only walk in life for which I felt myself thoroughly fitted was that
+of an armed cruiser through the South Sea Islands. All other vocations
+were tame and colourless in comparison. I could fancy myself parading
+the deck of my vessel, pistol at belt, dagger in sheath, a band of
+cut-throats trembling at my glance, and a bevy of dark-skinned
+princesses ready to die for me at a moment's notice, or to keep the
+flies from bothering, whichever I preferred.
+
+I may state "right here," as the Yankees have it, that I did not become
+a "free trader," though at one time I had a close shave of being run up
+to the yardarm of a British man-of-war in that identical capacity. But
+this came later on.
+
+I returned, therefore, to my native Sydney in due course of time, and as
+a wholesome corrective after my somewhat erratic experiences, was placed
+by my father in a merchant's office. But the colourless monotony became
+absolutely killing. It was awful to be stuck there, adding up columns of
+pounds, shillings, and pence, and writing business letters, while there
+was stabbing, shooting, and all sorts of wild excitement going on "away
+down in the islands."
+
+It was about this time that I made the acquaintance of certain South Sea
+Islanders belonging to whalers or trading vessels. With one of them,
+named George, a native of Raratonga, I became intimate. He impressed me
+with his intelligence, and amused me with his descriptions of island
+life. He had just returned from a whaling voyage in the barque
+_Adventurer_ belonging to the well-known firm of Robert Towns & Company.
+
+So when George, having been paid off in Sydney with a handsome cheque,
+confided to me that he intended going back to the Navigators' Islands,
+where he had previously spent some years, in order to open a small
+trading station, my unrest returned. He had a hundred pounds which he
+wished to invest in trade-goods, so I took him round the Sydney firms
+and saw him fairly dealt with. A week afterwards he sailed to Samoa via
+Tonga, in the _Taoji Vuna_, a schooner belonging to King George of that
+ilk.
+
+Before he left he told me that two of his countrymen were trading for
+Captain Hayston--one at Marhiki, and one at Fakaofo, in the Union group.
+Both had made money, and he believed that Captain Hayston had fixed upon
+Apia, the chief port of Samoa, as his head-quarters.
+
+Need I say that this information interested me greatly, and I asked
+George no end of questions. But the schooner was just leaving the wharf
+in tow of a tug, and my dark-skinned friend having shipped as an A. B.,
+was no longer of the "leisure classes." So, grasping my hand, and
+telling me where to hear of him if I ever came to Samoa, we parted.
+
+Before going further let me explain the nature of a Polynesian trader's
+mission.
+
+On the greater number of the islands white men are resident, who act as
+agents for a firm of merchants, for masters of vessels, or on their own
+account. In some cases a piece of ground is rented from the king or
+chief whereon to make the trading station. In others the rulers are paid
+a protection fee. Then, if a trader is murdered, his principal can claim
+blood for blood. This, however, is rarely resorted to. A trader once
+settled on his station proceeds to obtain cocoa-nuts from the natives,
+for which he pays in dollars or "trade." He further employs them to
+scrape the fruit into troughs exposed to the sun, by which process the
+cocoa-nut oil is extracted. Of late years "copra" has taken the place of
+the oil. This material--the dried kernel of the nut--has become far more
+valuable; for when crushed by powerful machinery the refuse is pressed
+into oil-cake, and proved to be excellent food for cattle.
+
+To be a good trader requires pluck, tact, and business capacity. Many
+traders meet their death for want of one or other of these attributes.
+All through the South Seas, more especially in the Line Islands, are to
+be found the most reckless desperadoes living. Their uncontrolled
+passions lead them to commit acts which the natives naturally resent;
+the usual result being that if the trader fails to kill or terrorise
+them, they do society a kindness by ridding it of him. Then comes the
+not infrequent shelling of a native village by an avenging man-of-war.
+And thus civilisation keeps ever moving onwards.
+
+The traders were making fortunes in the South Seas at that time,
+according to George. I returned to business with a mind full of
+projects. The glamour of the sea, the magic attraction of blue water,
+was again upon me; I was powerless to resist. My father smiled. My
+mother and sisters wept afresh. I bowed myself, nevertheless, to my
+fate. In a fortnight I bade my relations farewell--all unworthy as I
+felt myself of their affection. Inwardly exultant, though decently
+uncheerful, I took passage a fortnight later in a barque trading to the
+Friendly and Navigators' Islands. She was called the _Rotumah_,
+belonging to Messrs. M'Donald, Smith, & Company, of Hunter Street,
+Sydney. Her captain was a Canadian named Robertson, of great experience
+in the island trade.
+
+There were two other passengers--a lady going to join her brother who
+was in business at Nukulofa, in Tonga, and a fine old French priest whom
+we were taking to Samoa. The latter was very kind to me, and during our
+passage through the Friendly Islands I was frequently the guest of his
+brother missionaries at their various stations in the groups.
+
+How shall I describe my feelings, landed at last among the charmed isles
+of the South, where I had come to stay, I told myself? Generally
+speaking, how often is there a savour of disappointment, of anticipation
+unrealised, when the wish is achieved! But the reality here was beyond
+the most brilliant mental pictures ever painted. All things were fresh
+and novel; the coral reefs skirting the island shore upon which the surf
+broke ceaselessly with sullen roar; cocoa-palms bowed with their
+feathery crests above a vegetation richly verdurous. The browns and
+yellows of the native villages, so rich in tone, so foreign of aspect,
+excited my unaccustomed vision. Graceful figures, warm and dusky of
+colouring, passed to and fro. The groves of broad leafed bananas; the
+group of white mission houses; the balmy, sensuous air; the transparent
+water, in which the very fish were strange in form and hue,--all things
+soever, land and water, sea and sky, seemed to cry aloud to my eager,
+wondering soul, "Hither, oh fortunate youth, hast thou come to a world
+new, perfect, and complete in itself--to a land of Nature's fondness and
+profuse luxuriance, to that Aidenn, long lost, mysteriously concealed
+for ages from all mankind."
+
+At the Marist Mission at Tongatabu I was received most kindly by the
+venerable Father Chevron, the head of the Church in Tonga. His had been
+a life truly remarkable. For fifty years he had laboured unceasingly
+among the savage races of Polynesia, had had hairbreadth escapes, and
+passed through deadliest perils. Like many of his colleagues he was
+unknown to fame, dying a few years later, beloved and respected by all,
+yet comparatively "unhonoured and unsung." During the whole course of my
+experiences in the Pacific I have never heard the roughest trader speak
+an ill word of the Marist Brothers. Their lives of ceaseless toil and
+honourable poverty tell their own tale. The Roman Catholic Church may
+well feel proud of these her most devoted servants.
+
+One morning Captain Robertson joined me; the Father seemed pleased to
+see him. On my mentioning how kindly they had treated me, a stranger and
+a Protestant, he replied,--
+
+"Ay, ay, my lad; they are different from most of the missionaries in
+Tonga, anyway, as many a shipwrecked sailor has found. If a ship were
+cast away, and the crew hadn't a biscuit apiece to keep them from
+starving, they wouldn't get so much as a piece of yam from some of the
+reverend gentlemen."
+
+I asked Father Chevron if he knew Captain Peese and Captain Hayston.
+
+"Yes! I am acquainted with both; of the latter I can only say that when
+I met him here I forgot all the bad reports I had heard about him. He
+cannot be the man he is reputed to be."
+
+I was sorry to part with the good Father when the time came to leave.
+But a native messenger arrived next day with a note from the captain,
+who intended sailing at daylight.
+
+So I said farewell and went on board.
+
+We called at Hapai and Vavau, the two other ports of the Friendly
+Islands, sighting the peak of Upolu, in the Navigators', three days
+after leaving the latter place.
+
+We rounded the south-east point of Upolu next day, running in so close
+to the shore that we could see the natives walking on the beaches. Saw a
+whaleboat, manned by islanders and steered by a white man, shoot through
+an opening in the reef opposite Flupata. For him we tarried not, in
+spite of a signal, running in as we were with the wind dead aft, and at
+four o'clock in the afternoon anchored in Apia harbour, opposite the
+American consulate.
+
+The scenery around Apia harbour is beauteous beyond description.
+Spacious bays unfold themselves as you approach, each revealing the
+silvery white-sanded beach fringed with cocoa-palms; stretching afar
+towards the hills lies undulating forest land chequered with the white
+houses of the planters. The harbour itself consists of a horseshoe bay,
+extending from Matautu to Mullinu Point. Fronting the passage a mountain
+rears its summit cloud-enwrapped and half-hidden, narrow paths wind
+through deep gorges, amid which you catch here and there the sheen of a
+mountain-torrent. On the south the land heads in a graceful sweep to
+leeward, until lost in the all-enveloping sea-mists of the tropics,
+while the straggling town, white-walled, reed-roofed, peeps through a
+dark-green grove of the bananas and cocoa-palms which fringe the beach.
+
+At this precise period I paid but little attention to the beauties of
+Apia, for in a canoe paddled by a Samoan boy sat my friend George. I
+hailed him; what a look of joy and surprise rippled over his dark
+countenance as he recognised me! With a few strokes of the paddle the
+canoe shot alongside and he sprang on deck.
+
+"I knew you would come," he said; "I boarded every ship that put in here
+since I landed. Going to live here?"
+
+"I think so, George! I have some money and trade with me; if I get a
+chance I'll start somewhere in Samoa."
+
+He was delighted, and said I would make plenty of money by and by. He
+wouldn't hear of my going to an hotel. I must come with him. He had a
+Samoan wife at Lellepa, a village about a mile from Apia on the Matautu
+side.
+
+It was dark when we landed. As we walked towards his home George pointed
+out a house standing back from the beach, which, he said, belonged to
+Captain Hayston.
+
+That personage had just left Samoa, and was now cruising in the Line
+Islands, where he had a number of traders. He was expected back in two
+months. A short time before I arrived, the American gunboat
+_Narraganset_ had suddenly put in an appearance in Apia where Hayston's
+brig was lying. Her anchor had barely sounded bottom, before an armed
+boat's crew left her side, boarded, took Hayston prisoner, and kept
+possession of the _Leonora_.
+
+There was wild excitement that day in Apia. Many of the residents had a
+strong liking for Hayston and expressed sympathy for him. Others,
+particularly the German element, were jubilant, and expressed a hope
+that he would be taken to America in irons.
+
+The captain of the _Narraganset_ then notified his seizure to the
+foreign consuls, and solicited evidence regarding alleged acts of piracy
+and kidnapping. During this time Hayston was, so the Americans stated,
+in close confinement on board the man-of-war, but it was the general
+opinion that he was treated more as a guest than a prisoner. The trial
+came on at the stated time, but resulted in his acquittal. Either the
+witnesses were unreliable or afraid of vengeance, for nothing of a
+criminal nature could be elicited from them. Hayston was then conducted
+back to his brig, and in half-an-hour he had "dressed ship" in honour
+of the event. The next act was to give his crew liberty--when those
+bright particular stars sallied forth on shore, all more or less drunk,
+in company with the blue jackets from the man-of-war, and immediately
+set about "painting the town red," and looking for the witnesses who had
+testified against their commander. On the next night Hayston gave a ball
+to the officers, and, doubtless, from that time felt his position
+secure, as far as danger from warships of his own country was concerned.
+
+All this was told to me by George as we walked along the track to his
+house, where we arrived just in time for a good supper. The place was
+better built than the ordinary native houses. The floor was covered with
+handsome clean mats on which, on the far end of the room, his wife and
+two daughters by a former marriage were sitting. They seemed so
+delighted at the idea of having me to live with them, that in a few
+minutes I felt quite at home. The evening meal was ready on the mats;
+the smell of roast pork and bread-fruit whetted my appetite amazingly;
+nor was it appeased until George and his wife had helped me to food
+enough to satisfy a boarding-school.
+
+After supper the family gathered round the lamp which was placed in the
+middle of the room. There they went through the evening prayers; a hymn
+was sung, after which a chapter was read from a Samoan Testament,
+followed by a prayer from the master of the house.
+
+I found that the custom of morning and evening prayers was never
+neglected in any Samoan household; for, whether the Samoans are really
+religious or no, they keep up a better semblance of it than many who
+have whiter skins.
+
+That night George, who by the way was called Tuluia by his wife and
+daughters, made plans for our future. As we sat talking the others
+retired to a far corner, where they sat watching us, their big dark eyes
+dilated with interest. We agreed to buy a boat between us and make
+trading trips to the windward port as far as Aleipata. Then after
+smoking a number of "salui" or native cigarettes, we turned in.
+
+All next day we were incommoded by crowds of inquisitive visitors, who
+came to have a look at me and learn why I had come to Samoa--George
+having told them merely that I was his "uo," or friend, treated most of
+them with scant courtesy, explaining that the natives about Apia are
+thorough loafers and beggars, and warning me not to sell any of them my
+"trade" unless I received cash in return. In the afternoon I landed my
+effects, but could scarcely get into the house for the crowds.
+
+George's wife, it appeared, had been so indiscreet as to tell some of
+her relations that I had rifles for sale; as a consequence there were
+fully a hundred men eager to see them. Some had money, others wanted
+credit, others desired loose powder, and kept pointing to a shed close
+by, saying, "Panla pana fanua" (powder for the cannon). I discovered
+that under the shed lay a big gun which Patiole and Asi, two chiefs, had
+bought from Captain Hayston for six hundred dollars, but had run out of
+ammunition.
+
+I had no powder to sell, but George found me a cash buyer for one of my
+Winchesters at seventy-five dollars. I could have sold the other three
+for sixty dollars each, but he advised me to keep them in order to get a
+better price up the coast. It was just on the eve of the second native
+war, so the Samoans were buying arms in large quantities. From some
+Californians' trading vessels they had brought about three hundred
+breech-loaders, and Hayston had sold them the cannon aforesaid, which he
+had brought from China in the _Leonora_.
+
+The chief, Malietoa, had an idea of carrying the war into the enemy's
+country. His plan was to charter a vessel, and take five hundred men to
+Tuvali, the largest island in the group. Hayston had met a deputation of
+chiefs, and told them that for a thousand dollars he would land that
+number of Malietoa's warriors in any part of the group. Moreover, if
+they gave him ten dollars for every shot fired, he would land them under
+cover of four guns. But they were not to bring their arms, and were to
+arrange to have taumualuas, or native boats, to meet the brig off the
+coast and put them on board. This, he explained, was necessary to
+prevent the vessel being seized if they met a man-of-war, and so getting
+him into serious trouble.
+
+The chiefs took this proposition in eagerly at first, but, on thinking
+it over, suspicions arose as to their reaching their destination safely;
+and, finally, after the usual amount of fawning and flattering, in which
+every Samoan is an adept, they told Hayston that they could not raise
+sufficient money, and so the matter ended.
+
+The following months of my sojourn in Samoa passed quickly. George and I
+bought a cutter in which we made several trips to the windward villages,
+whence we ran down to the little island of Manono, situated between
+Upolu and Savaii. There we did a good business, selling our trade for
+cash to the people of Manono, and buying a cargo of yams to take to
+Apia, to sell to the natives there, who were short of food owing to the
+outbreak of hostilities.
+
+On our way up we took advantage of a westerly wind, and made the passage
+inside the reef, calling at the villages of Multifanna and
+Saleimoa--visiting even places with only a few houses nestling amongst
+the cocoa-palms.
+
+We left Saleimoa at dusk, and although we were deeply laden, we made
+good way. Whilst at the village I heard that a large Norwegian ship
+laden with guano had put into Apia, having sprung a leak and run short
+of provisions; also that there was not a yam to be had in the place. Our
+informant was a deserter from a man-of-war, living at Saleimoa. He had
+been tattooed, and was a thorough Samoan in appearance, but was anxious
+to get a passage to New Britain, being afraid to remain longer in his
+present quarters. He was known as "Flash Jack," and was held to be a
+desperate character. After a few drinks he became communicative, telling
+me certain things which he had better have kept to himself. He informed
+me that he intended to ship with Hayston, whose brig was expected daily
+with a hundred recruits for Goddeffroy and Sons' plantations. He advised
+me to keep my yams until the _Leonora's_ cargo of "boys" arrived, as the
+Germans would pay me my own price for them, being short of food for
+their plantation labourers. In another few minutes Jack was drunk, and
+wanted to fight us, when two of his wives came on board, and after
+beating him with pieces of wood, carried him on shore and laid him in
+his bunk.
+
+I determined, however, to take his advice about the yams, and was
+cogitating as to the price I should ask for them, when George, who was
+steering, called my attention to two "taumualuas" full of men, paddling
+quickly in from sea through an opening in the reef.
+
+Not apprehending danger we kept on. Our boat was well known along the
+coast by the Tua Massaga or Malietoa faction, and we merely supposed
+that these boats were coming down from Apia to the leeward ports. It was
+a clear night; George called out the usual Samoan greeting, used when
+canoes meet at night. The next moment we saw them stop paddling, when,
+without a word of warning, we received a volley, the bullets striking
+the cutter in at least twenty places. How we escaped is a mystery.
+George got a cut on the shoulder from a piece of our saucepan, which was
+lying against the mast. It flew to pieces when struck, and I thought a
+shell had exploded.
+
+Flinging ourselves flat on the deck, George called out to the canoes,
+which were now paddling quickly after us, and told them who we were, at
+the same time lowering our jib and foresail. The taumualuas dashed up,
+one on each side. Luckily some of the warriors instantly recognised us.
+They expressed great sorrow, and explained that they had mistaken us for
+a boat bringing up a war party from Savaii.
+
+Every man was armed with a rifle, mostly modelled on the German
+needle-gun, and as they were all in full fighting costume they had a
+striking and picturesque effect. After mutual expressions of regard and
+a general consumption of cigarettes, we gave them a bottle of grog to
+keep out the cold night air, sold them some cartridges from my own
+private stock, and with many a vociferous "To Fa," we sailed away, and
+left them in the passage waiting for the expected invaders.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+SAMOA TO MILLE
+
+
+Just as we parted from our warlike friends who had so nearly put an end
+to our cruises, one of the chiefs sang out that a large brig, painted
+white, was out at sea beating up to Apia. Turning his information over
+in my mind, the conviction grew upon me that she must be Hayston's
+vessel, the _Leonora_. It proved to be correct, for as we ran past
+Mulinu Point we saw her entering the passage leading to the harbour. She
+was about a mile distant from us, but I could see that she was a
+beautifully-built vessel, and could well believe the tales of her
+extraordinary speed. The Norwegian guano-man, an immense ship, the _Otto
+and Antoine_, was lying in the roadstead, and as the _Leonora_ came to
+her moorings, we ran up between the two vessels and dropped anchor.
+
+During the next few minutes I received no less than three different
+offers for our sixteen tons of yams. These I declined, and after waiting
+till I perceived that most of the shore visitors had left the brig, I
+took our dingey and pulled aboard.
+
+Captain Hayston was below, and the Chinese steward conducted me into his
+presence. He looked at me steadily for a moment, as if trying to recall
+where he had seen me before, and then after my few words of explanation,
+gave me a hearty welcome to the South Seas.
+
+Having told him how I came to visit Samoa, I offered him my yams, which
+he gladly purchased, paying me a good price for them in United States
+gold coin. This transaction being concluded, he asked me to meet him
+next day, when we could have a good long chat, at the same time desiring
+me to keep secret the fact of our previous meeting. What his reasons
+were I never knew; but as he seemed anxious on this matter, I told him
+that I had seldom mentioned the circumstance, and to no one in Samoa,
+with the exception of my mate Tuluia. I had indeed made few other
+acquaintances.
+
+Although I should much have liked to have had a look round the brig, I
+could see the Captain wished to get on shore, so after shaking hands
+with him I returned to our cutter, where, in a few minutes, the brig's
+longboat came alongside, and we set to work getting out the yams.
+Hayston paid me without demanding to have them weighed, and George's
+dark face was wreathed in smiles when I showed him the money. He
+explained that two tons were very bad, and had they been seen by a
+purchaser would have been rejected.
+
+Although only a Kanaka, George possessed true commercial instincts, and
+I felt sure he would grow rich.
+
+The native war was now at its height, and the lines of the hostile party
+were so close to Matautu, the eastern part of Apia, that bullets were
+whistling over our heads all day long. The yam season being over, and
+the copra trade at a standstill, we gave up the cutter and settled for a
+while on shore. It was during this period that I was a constant visitor
+at the house of Mr. Lewis, the American Consul, where I generally found
+Hayston in company with Captain Edward Hamilton, the pilot, and another
+American, a whisky-loving, kava-drinking old salt, brimful of fun and
+good humour. He had been twenty years in Samoa, and was one of the best
+linguists I ever met with; was known to every native in the group, and
+had been several trips with Hayston to the north-west islands. He
+followed no known occupation, but devoted his time to idling and
+attending native dances.
+
+Many a merry evening we spent together while the _Leonora_ was
+recruiting, and I began to think Hayston was the most entertaining man I
+had ever met. He made no secret of some of his exploits, and in
+particular referred to the way in which he had beaten a certain German
+firm in the way of business, even breaking up their stations in the Line
+Islands. At that time these merchants had acquired a bad name for the
+underhand manner in which they had treated English and American traders;
+and for any man to gain an advantage over them was looked upon as a
+meritorious action.
+
+By many people who cherished animosity against Hayston I had been led at
+first to look upon him as a thorough-going pirate and a bloodthirsty
+ruffian. Yet here I found him, if not respected, at least deemed a fit
+associate for respectable men. Moreover, his word was considered as good
+security in business as another man's bond. I well remember the days
+when he used to visit me at Leliepa, and we amused ourselves with pistol
+practice. He was a wonderful shot, and his skill excited the loud
+applause of the native chiefs. One fat old fellow, known as Pulumakau
+(the bullock), begged him to spend a day now and then in the lines with
+the native forces, and exercise his skill upon the enemy.
+
+One day he took me on board with him in order to show me over the brig.
+He intended to leave in a few days, and I remarked, as we were pulled on
+board, that I should dearly like to have a trip with him some day.
+
+He was silent for a minute, and then replied, "No! I shall be glad
+enough of your company as my guest, as I have taken a fancy to you; but
+it will be better for you to keep clear of me."
+
+When we got on board I was struck with the beautiful order in which the
+vessel was kept, aloft and below; there was not a rope yarn out of
+place. Descending to the cabin I found it splendidly furnished for a
+vessel of her size.
+
+The _Leonora_ was 250 tons register, and had been built for the opium
+trade. During her career in Chinese seas she acquired the reputation of
+being the fastest vessel on the coast. She then carried eight guns. She
+had been several times attacked by pirates, who were invariably beaten
+off with loss. At the time of my visit she carried but one gun, which
+stood on the main deck, Hayston having sold two others of the same
+calibre to the natives. But for this, as far as I could see, she had a
+most peaceful appearance.
+
+On the main deck, just abaft the foc'sle, was a deckhouse divided into
+compartments, forming the cook's galley and boats' crews' quarters,
+together with those belonging to the first and second mates. On the top
+of the house a whale-boat was carried, leaving room for two sentries to
+keep guard, a precaution which I afterwards found was, on certain
+occasions, highly necessary for the vessel's safety. The foc'sle was
+large, for she carried between twenty-five and thirty men. The thing
+that struck me most, however, was the bulkhead, which was loop-holed for
+rifles, so that if any disturbance took place in the forehold, which was
+sometimes filled with Kanaka labourers, the rebels could be shot down
+with ease and accuracy.
+
+The most noticeable things about the gear were the topsails she carried,
+Cunningham's patent, in which there were no reef points. The topsail
+yards revolved, so that you could reef as much as you liked, and all the
+work could be done from the main deck by the down haul. Many captains
+dislike this patent, but it behaved splendidly on the _Leonora_ for all
+that.
+
+The crew, or most of them, were ashore, and only the second mate, the
+Chinese carpenter, the steward, and ship's boys were on board. The mate
+was a muscular Fijian half-caste named Bill Hicks, known as a fighting
+man all over Polynesia. A native girl, called Liva, was sitting on the
+main hatch making a bowl of kava.
+
+"Halloa! Liva," said the Captain, as we passed along the deck, "I
+thought you were married to one of the Dutch clerks at Goddeffroy's?"
+
+"Avoe, lava, alii." "Quite true, Captain, but I've come to stay with
+Bill for a week."
+
+The Captain and second mate laughed, and next day I learned that Bill
+had gone to the clerk's house at Matafele, the German quarter of the
+town, and though there were other Germans present, told Liva to pack up
+her clothes and come with him. She, nothing loth, did as he told her,
+and the Germans, seeing mischief in the half-caste's eye, offered no
+opposition.
+
+The departure of the _Leonora_ took place a few days afterwards, and I
+accepted the position of supercargo in a ketch which the junior partner
+of one of the principal firms in Samoa wished to send to the Marshalls
+to be sold. I expressed my doubts of her sea-worthiness for so long a
+voyage. However, he said there was no danger, as it would be a fine
+weather passage all the way through, adding that the king of Arnu, or
+Arrowsmith's Island, had commissioned Captain Hayston to buy a vessel
+for him in Samoa.
+
+I thought his proposition over, and next day stated my willingness to
+undertake the venture, the owners promising to put the vessel in repair
+as soon as possible. She was hauled up to the beach in front of the
+British consulate, where for the next few weeks carpenters were at work,
+patching up and covering her rotten bottom with a thick coating of
+chunam. Notwithstanding these precautions no one except old Tapoleni,
+the Dutch skipper, could be induced to take charge of her.
+
+During the time she was on the beach I made a trip to the beautiful
+village of Tiavea, doing a week's trading and pigeon shooting. On my
+return I found the town in a high state of excitement owing to a
+succession of daring robberies of the various stores. Strong suspicions
+were entertained with respect to a herculean American negro, known as
+Black Tom, who kept an extremely disorderly hotel where seamen were
+known to be enticed and robbed.
+
+The old vessel was launched at last, and, to the manifest surprise of
+everybody, refrained from springing a leak. Things might easily have
+been worse; for what with the great age of her timber and the thickness
+of her hull the carpenters were barely able to make the copper hold.
+
+Next day we took in our stores. I was surprised at the casks of beef,
+tins of biscuits, and quantities of other provisions put on board, and
+thought the owners extremely liberal. This favourable state of feeling
+lasted till we were well at sea, when I discovered all the beef to be
+bad, and the remainder of the stores unfit for any well-brought-up pig.
+When everything was aboard the owners gave me the following document:--
+
+ APIA, _3rd December, 187 _.
+
+ Dear Sir,--You will proceed to Mille, Mulgrave Island, for the
+ purpose of selling the ketch _E. A. Wilson_. You will find
+ Captain Hayston there waiting for you; so you will please
+ consult with him, as he is acquainted with the parties who wish
+ to purchase her. Try to obtain oil and copra to the amount of
+ L500 for the vessel. Ship whatever produce you may get on board
+ the _Leonora_, and get Captain Hayston to sign bills of lading.
+ Do not sell the chronometer unless you get a good price for it.
+ Sell the few things you take to the best advantage; none of the
+ Samoans are to remain, but must come back to Apia. Have the
+ ketch painted on your arrival at Mille. Wishing you a prosperous
+ and speedy voyage.--We are, etc.,
+
+ BASCOM & CO.
+
+I quote this letter _in extenso_, for later on it plays an important
+part in my narrative. Having carefully read it Mr. Bascom shook hands
+with me, wished me a pleasant voyage, and departed. I went aboard, the
+vessel being already hove short, and, as I thought, only waiting my
+arrival to sail.
+
+Things looked much otherwise as I stepped on deck. The skipper was drunk
+and helpless. The decks were thronged with shore natives--men and women
+nearly all crying and half drunk, bidding farewell to one or other of
+the crew.
+
+The mate, Jim Knowles, was a Tongan half-caste, who was afterwards
+hanged in Fiji for shooting Larsen, one of the Messrs. Goddeffroy's
+captains, dead on his own ship. He was the only sober man on board. He
+told me that one of Tapoleni's friends had come on board, and that she
+had been stowed away by that worthy, who swore that he would not leave
+her behind. To this Maa Maa I had a particular aversion, and always
+hated to see her come on board. She was ugly enough in all conscience,
+and had always been said to be the cause of quarrels and fights whenever
+the skipper took her on a trip. Taking Knowles with me, we lugged her on
+deck screaming and biting. As she refused to get into a canoe, Knowles
+threw her overboard, where some sympathising friends picked her up.
+
+Just as this incident terminated I received a note from the owners,
+telling me to delay the vessel's departure for half-an-hour. Wondering
+what was in the wind, I set about restoring order. I found a lot of
+liquor in the foc'sle, which I took aft and locked up. Then with
+Knowles' aid I succeeded in clearing the decks of the women and shore
+loafers, who were lying about in all stages of intoxication.
+
+At eleven o'clock we saw two boats pulling off from the shore, and
+noticed armed Samoans among the crews. As they came alongside I saw
+seated in one of them the figures of Black Tom and his son Johnny, both
+heavily ironed. In the stern sat his Samoan wife, a woman named Musia. A
+number of white residents were in charge of the lot, and I was informed
+that at an impromptu mass meeting, held that morning, it had been
+decided to expatriate Tom and his family for the good of the country;
+they had seized this favourable opportunity of carrying their resolution
+into effect.
+
+This was a pretty state of affairs. I need scarcely explain my
+indignation at having two such characters as Black Tom and his son
+foisted on me as passengers. I was about to get into a boat and let them
+carry their own prisoners away, when I was told that I could land him
+and his family at the first land we made. This would be Quiros Island,
+bearing N.N.W. from Apia.
+
+"All right, gentlemen," I replied, "and as everybody here happens to be
+drunk, I'll feel obliged if you will be good enough to lift the anchor
+and let us get away."
+
+Tom and his family were accordingly put in the hold, and the new-comers
+having got the anchor up bade me farewell, chuckling at having rid
+themselves of Black Tom so cleverly. Whereupon they got into the boats
+and pulled ashore.
+
+It was blowing stiffly as we ran through the passage, and certainly we
+presented a pretty spectacle, with our running gear all in disorder, and
+the crew drunk in the lee scuppers. I had the keys of the prisoners'
+irons, so giving the tiller to Knowles, I went below and liberated them.
+
+"Tom," I said, "my instructions are to keep you in irons till we made
+the first land. Now, I've got nothing against you, but I don't want your
+company, and I consider I was served a shabby trick when they put you on
+board. I mean to be even with them. They said the first land. Now, I'll
+stand on this tack till midnight; then I'll put about and land you on
+the coast."
+
+The negro's bloodshot eyes showed blind fury when I first approached
+him, but his look softened as I spoke. He laughed, evidently enjoying my
+suggestion.
+
+"Thank you, sir, for taking the bracelets off us, but I don't care about
+landing in Samoa again, and I'll face the voyage with you. You're the
+first man that's spoke a kind word to me since I was rushed and tied in
+my own house--treated like a wild beast, and, by ----! I'll do any
+mortal thing in this world for you."
+
+He then begged me not to land him at Quiros, but to let him remain on
+board until we met Captain Hayston who, he was sure, would give him a
+trading station. I promised him this, and in return, being a splendid
+cook, he provided me during the remainder of the voyage with all sorts
+of sea delicacies.
+
+I will not speak of the dangers of that wearisome voyage; the
+drunkenness that I tried in vain to suppress; the erratic course we made
+to our destination. The skipper sobered up every two or three days, took
+the sun, worked out the ship's position, and let me steer any course I
+liked. Then he would fly to his bottle of "square-face," until I thought
+it necessary to rouse him again in order to ascertain our whereabouts.
+At last, after a forty-two days' passage, we sighted the low-lying coral
+islands enclosing the spacious lagoon of Mille.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE BRIG LEONORA
+
+
+The island of Mille is situated in the Radac or eastern portion of the
+Marshall group, discovered by a captain of that name in 1788. On the
+charts it bears the name of the Mulgrave Lagoon, and the reason is not
+far to seek. For the most part the islands of Polynesia are of volcanic
+origin, whilst the lagoons, which sometimes pass for islands, are
+exclusively of coral formation. The minute insects which form them build
+their submarine wall in a circle, which growing for ages, until it rises
+at low water above sea-level, gradually collects sand and debris, when
+it decomposes and becomes a solid. Then comes a day when wandering
+cocoa-nuts float to it and take up their abode on its shores. Gradually
+a ring of land is formed, varying in width, covered with a wreath of
+palms, sheltering within its circumference a peaceful sea, into which
+access is attainable by scattered channels only.
+
+The spot we had reached was of this description.
+
+Day was breaking when we first sighted the tops of the cocoa-palms, and
+putting the ketch dead before the wind we ran down to the passage. On
+going aloft I was glad to see the spars of a vessel showing about three
+miles distant. As none of the crew had ever visited the place before, we
+lay to and fired a gun. In about half-an-hour we saw a boat pulling
+towards us, with a tall man standing up steering. It was Hayston.
+Jumping aboard he shook me warmly by the hand, and said, "So you see
+we've met again! What sort of passage did you have?"
+
+I recounted our misfortunes, adding the information that the ketch
+leaked terribly.
+
+"Oh! that's just like Bascom," he remarked. "He told me that he'd send
+her down as sound as a bell. I never had a chance of looking at her when
+she was on the beach at Apia, and I certainly thought he would act
+squarely with me. But we'll talk business by and by."
+
+He now took command of the ketch, and brought us into the lagoon, where
+we dropped anchor in ten fathoms alongside the brig. I then formally
+handed over my vessel to him, and wished the king of Arnu joy of his
+bargain. After receiving full particulars of the voyage, he called the
+skipper aft.
+
+"Well, Captain Westendorf," he said, "you have most fortunately reached
+here safely, but more through good luck than good management. I know you
+to be an experienced and capable navigator, so that had you attended to
+your duty you would have made Mille ten or fifteen days, earlier. Now,
+you can go ashore and live with my trader till you get a passage back to
+Samoa, for I'll be hanged if I take you back. As for your crew, I don't
+want them either; you can take them with you or turn them adrift. The
+ketch I intend to leave here until I return from Ascension; but mark
+this--_and you know me_--don't attempt to board her during my absence;
+good day!"
+
+I felt sorry at seeing the good-natured "Tapoleni" so humiliated; for
+with the exception of that one failing which has obscured brighter
+intellects, and which was the cause of all his troubles, he was a
+thoroughly honest old fellow.
+
+Black Tom and his wife elected to remain at Mille until they found a
+suitable island on which to open a trading station. They parted from me
+with many professions of gratitude which I think were sincere. He
+afterwards became a wealthy man--such are fortune's vagaries in the
+islands; his son Johnny earnestly begged me to intercede with Captain
+Hayston on his account, and not to leave him on shore at Mille. I made
+the request, and the Captain told him to come aboard the _Leonora_.
+
+During the afternoon Hayston and I went over the ketch in order to
+inspect the stores, gear, etc., when he asked me, now that my
+responsibility had ended, what were my intentions as to future
+movements? I told him I proposed to charter a native canoe for Arnu,
+there to await a passing vessel and a passage to Samoa. From this
+course, however, he dissuaded me, pointing out that I might have to stay
+there six months. He then offered me the position of supercargo on his
+brig at a fair salary, pressing for an immediate answer.
+
+Thinking it better to be earning money than leading a life of idleness
+among the natives, I consented. "I accept your offer, Captain," I said;
+"but there is one thing I wish you to understand, I am coming with you,
+not for the sake of the pay, but because I don't want to loaf about the
+Marshall group like a beach-comber, and, moreover, I should like to
+visit the Carolines. I don't particularly want to return to Samoa, and
+if I see a place I like I'll start trading. Now, I am willing to do duty
+as supercargo, even without pay, but I won't lend a hand in any
+transaction that I don't like the look of. So at our first difference
+you can set me ashore."
+
+Hayston looked me straight in the face and held out his hand--"Well,
+now, that's a fair deal. I give you my word that I won't ask you to join
+in anything doubtful. The traders round here are the greatest scoundrels
+unhung, and I have to treat them as they treat me. My books are in a bad
+state, and you'll find work enough putting them straight; but I'll be
+glad of your company aboard, even if you never do a hand's turn." So
+the bargain was closed. I got my chest from the hold and sent it aboard
+the brig; the steward receiving instructions that I was to occupy the
+port side of the cabin. At dusk Hayston gave some of the crew liberty,
+and sent the rest with the mates to haul the ketch in and beach her as
+the tide was full. While he stood watching her from the brig's deck, he
+suddenly remarked that they were making a mess of it, and calling two
+boys to bring the dingey alongside, he was pulled into the shore.
+
+There was a number of young women on board, natives of the Kingsmill
+group, good-looking, but wild in appearance. I was on deck and they were
+below, where I heard them laughing and talking, and saw they were seated
+on the lounge that ran round the cabin. They all seemed very merry over
+a game, much like "knucklebones," which they were playing with shells. A
+large canoe was bearing down on us from one of the islands in the
+lagoon, and just as she ran up in the wind ahead of us, allowing the
+topsail to drift down alongside, I heard a man's voice mingling with the
+girls'.
+
+I was going forward to have a close look at the canoe, when I saw the
+Captain close alongside in the dingey. He had sailed out to the brig,
+having let the two boys remain on shore to assist at the ketch. Just as
+he stepped over the sail, the owner of the voice I had heard ran out of
+the cabin. Hayston gripped him by the arm, and I heard him sing out,
+"What, would you knife me?" The next minute the man was seized in the
+powerful arms, lifted high above his head, and then dashed upon the
+deck, where he lay perfectly still.
+
+The Captain disappeared in the cabin, and running up I lifted the man's
+head. His back and neck seemed broken, and though I called loudly no one
+came from below. There were a lot of Arunai natives in the hold sleeping
+and smoking, but they took no notice of my calls, which, as I didn't
+know a word of their language, did not surprise me. The canoe had now
+come alongside, and the Captain reappeared upon deck. The chief seemed
+pleased to see him, and then a lot of natives clambered on board and
+carried the wounded man aboard their barque.
+
+Having given them eight or ten pounds of tobacco, Hayston told them,
+partly in English and partly in the Mille dialect, that the man was
+shamming dead, and if he woke up on board they could chuck him overboard
+and let him swim. Then they hoisted sail again and stood away.
+
+I felt horrified, for, although the Captain was certainly justified in
+defending himself from a man armed with a knife, I was shocked at
+witnessing the result. He, however, insisted that the fellow was only
+"foxing," and so the matter ended. When the boats returned from the
+ketch, I heard the women remark to the sailors that Siake (Jack) had
+run away in a canoe, because "Kaptin" had beat him.
+
+At daylight next morning we got under weigh, and I was astonished at the
+manner in which Hayston handled the brig through the narrow passage.
+After accomplishing this feat, we bore away for Ujillong, and the
+steward called us to breakfast.
+
+Our destination was the almost unknown chain of coral islets forming
+Ujillong or Providence Island. Some fifteen months previously, Hayston
+had discovered a passage through the reef there, and sailed his brig in.
+He was delighted with the security afforded by the magnificent lagoon
+inside. The islets were covered with cocoa-nuts, and he at once decided
+upon forming a principal trading station there, making it a centre from
+whence he could work the islands in the North Pacific. There were only
+thirty natives on the whole lagoon, and with these he succeeded in
+establishing friendly relations, setting them to work in erecting
+dwelling-houses and oil-sheds.
+
+We left in charge two white men named Jerry Jackson and Whistling Bill,
+together with a number of Line Island natives who were to assist in
+making oil. Hayston told me he intended to settle there himself and
+cruise among the Carolines and Marshalls, whilst Captain Peese, his
+colleague, would run a small vessel to China, making Ujillong his
+headquarters. On this occasion he expected to find that a large quantity
+of oil had been made in his absence, and was anxious to get there as
+quickly as possible.
+
+During the day I had leisure to observe the crew, and considering that
+none of them were white men, the way in which the brig was worked was
+simply admirable. They treated the officers with great freedom of
+manner, but before the Captain they seemed absolutely to cower. There
+being some thirty of them they were by no means over-worked. They were
+allowed as much liquor as they chose to buy at a dollar a bottle for
+gin, beer at fifty cents, and rum at a dollar. With such license one
+would naturally think that insubordination would be rife. It was not so.
+But though they never broke out at sea, when once the brig anchored they
+became fiends incarnate. Gambling and drinking then commenced. The
+sounds of oaths, yells, and blows floated up from the foc'sle, mingling
+with the screams of the women, and the night was made horrible with
+their din.
+
+Individual members of the crew of this strange vessel I shall describe
+later on--for the present _place aux dames_! Every officer had a native
+wife, and the Chinese carpenter two. Most of these women were natives of
+Arurai or Hope Island, one of the Kingsmill group. They were darker in
+complexion than the other Polynesians, and prone to violent jealousy of
+their protectors. It was by no means uncommon to see two of these girls
+fighting like demons on the main deck with their national weapons,
+wooden daggers set round with shark's teeth, while blood poured in
+streams from their lacerated limbs and bodies. There were several girls
+from Ocean and Pleasant Island, near the equator. Very good-looking
+were these last, and fair as to complexion. The principal belle, whose
+name was Nellie, was a very handsome half-caste--a native of Hope
+Island. Her father, a deserter from a whaler, had acquired such
+influence with the natives that they made him a war chief. He led them
+when they cut off an American whaler and killed the whole crew.
+Discarding civilised clothing, he became a native in all but colour, and
+finally met his death in a skirmish with a hostile tribe. This girl was
+his daughter, and had been given as a present to Hayston by the king of
+Arurai. Along with her beauty she had a violent and dangerous temper,
+and was never backward in using her knife on any woman that provoked
+her.
+
+We had merely dropped Mille astern of us, when Hayston changed his mind
+about going to Arurai, and bore away to Pleasant Island. He told me that
+he had forgotten a promise made to the traders there to bring them
+supplies, but that he would call at Providence on our way back from the
+Carolines.
+
+Pleasant Island (or Naura) is generally considered one of the Gilbert
+group, although it is far to the leeward, and the natives, together with
+those of Ocean Island (or Paanup), consider themselves a distinct
+people. The former island is in latitude 0.25 S., longitude 167.5 E.,
+and the latter in latitude 0.505, longitude 169.30 E.
+
+"We've got a bully breeze," said the Captain; "and there is a straight
+run of five hundred miles before we sight the cocoa-nuts on Pleasant
+Island. I'll show you what the _Leonora_ can do."
+
+Our course was something about S.W. by W., the wind increasing in
+strength as we put the helm up for Pleasant Island, and during the
+afternoon, so quickly was the brig slipping through the water, that
+Hayston said we should do the distance--four hundred and ninety-five
+miles--in forty-eight hours. I was astonished at the rate we travelled,
+and the Captain himself seemed pleased. Calling the hands aft, he gave
+them a glass of grog all round, and told the women to go on the main
+deck and dance. This created considerable amusement, for as the brig was
+running dead before the wind, and occasionally giving rolls, the dancers
+losing their balance got some heavy falls into the scuppers, while the
+others laughed and enjoyed their misfortunes.
+
+We ran up under the leeside of the island just forty-four hours after
+leaving Mille, a trifle over eleven knots an hour. In a few minutes we
+were boarded by the traders, of whom there were six. They were certainly
+a rough lot. As each man lived under the protection of a particular
+chief, the island being divided into six districts, there was the
+keenest business rivalry among them.
+
+Hayston called them down below, when they were soon pretty well drunk.
+
+They had plenty of dollars, and bought largely of arms and ammunition. I
+was employed, with the second mate, in getting up the guns, principally
+Snider rifles, from the lazarette. I called to them, one by one, to come
+and pick what they wanted; however they seemed quite satisfied to let me
+give them what I liked.
+
+The brig was standing off and on, close into the land, in charge of the
+boatswain, the mate being ill; Hayston was singing "The Zouave," and the
+traders were applauding uproariously, whilst two were dancing with
+Nellie and Sara, shouting and yelling like lunatics. The only one that
+was sober was a fine young fellow who seemed ill, and was supported by a
+native. This young fellow paid me for the arms bought by his comrades,
+saying, "They're all drunk now, and as I don't go in for that kind of
+thing myself, they've got me to do this business for them." The man who
+was dancing with Sara had a bag of dollars in his hand, and as he
+waltzed round the cabin he kept swinging it about and striking the
+woodwork of the cabin.
+
+Carl, the sick man, called out to him, "I say, Ned, let me have that
+money now, I'm settling up for you." Swinging the bag of dollars round,
+Ned sent it full at liberty, and struck Carl in the chest, knocking him
+down. I picked him up, and thought by the pallor of his face that he was
+either killed or seriously injured.
+
+The native who was with him called to some of his comrades, and a young
+woman came down and took his head in her lap, while I got a decanter of
+water. After a while he came round, and told me he was not much hurt,
+but that the bag of money was heavy and had bruised his chest greatly.
+
+"You dog," he said, getting up and walking over to the other man, who
+was now sitting at the table talking to the Captain, "as sure as my
+name's Carl I'll make you suffer for this."
+
+"Come, come," said Hayston, "it was only Ned's rough play. I don't think
+he meant to hurt you. Besides, I don't want to see white men fighting on
+board my ship."
+
+"Look here, Captain," said he, pulling off his shirt, "look at my body,
+and tell me if Ned thought me a fit subject for a joke."
+
+It makes me shudder now. There was an awful gash on his back, extending
+from his right shoulder to below the ribs on the right side. It was
+roughly sewn up here and there, and seemed to be healing, but the blow
+on the chest had made it bleed anew; a dark stream was soaking down his
+leg to the ground.
+
+"By heaven! that is a terrible cut," said the Captain; "how in thunder
+did you get mauled like that?"
+
+Carl, who was still very faint, told us that some time ago he had a
+fight with a native, and licked him. One night, as he was lying face
+downward on his mat, this man crept into his hut and struck him with a
+shark tooth sword. His native wife, who was coming into the house at
+the time, carrying two shells of toddy, dropped them, and flinging her
+arms round the man's legs, tripped him up, and held him, while Carl, all
+smothered in blood, shot him dead with his revolver.
+
+"Ned!" said the Captain gravely, when Carl's tale was told, "did you
+know this young fellow had this gash in his back when you hove the bag
+at him?"
+
+"Of course I did! why, d--n him, can't he take a joke? Naura's a rough
+shop for a man that can't stand a bit of fun."
+
+"Put up your hands, you cowardly dog!" said the Captain, and in an
+instant the drunken traders cleared a space. "I'll teach you to hurt a
+wounded man."
+
+Ned was as big a man as the Captain, and seemed to be the leading spirit
+of the gang. But the other traders, though armed with navy revolvers and
+derringers, did not seem inclined to interfere.
+
+At the first round the big trader went down like a bullock, and lay on
+the cabin floor apparently lifeless. Hayston was like a mad animal when
+he tried to get him up, and the man fell helpless. Picking him up in his
+arms like a child, he carried him on deck, the rest of us following.
+
+"Here! Naura men, where's Ned's boat?" he called out.
+
+It was towing astern, and some one having hauled it up, Hayston dropped
+the man into it like a log of wood.
+
+Then his good temper returned instantly, and he paid Carl every
+attention, insisting on dressing his wound. We remained out by Pleasant
+Island all day, and shipped a lot of oil, for which Hayston paid the
+traders in arms and ammunition; we then stood away for Ocean Island.
+
+I learned that Carl had been a petty officer on board the U.S. cruiser
+_Wish-ton-wish_, but had deserted and made his way to Pleasant Island.
+He seemed superior to his companions in every way, and I was glad to be
+able to give him some books.
+
+He told me that he belonged to the New England States, but that he could
+never return, and would put a bullet through his head rather than be
+taken back a disgraced man. I bade him farewell with regret, and learned
+two years afterwards that, a month after I saw him, he had blown his
+brains out, as the U.S. corvette _Rowena_ touched at the island. Poor
+Carl! How many a tale of wasted life, of reckless deeds, and early
+death, could every island of the South Sea tell.
+
+Although Hayston was an utterly reckless man in most matters, he was by
+no means foolhardy where the lives of others were concerned. During the
+time we spent at Pleasant Island every precaution was taken against a
+surprise.
+
+All the crew carried revolvers, and two men were posted in the fore and
+main-tops armed with Winchesters. The natives of this island had cut off
+many ships in past years, and were now so well armed and determined that
+the utmost caution was needed.
+
+It was here that I met an American named Maule--about as hard a specimen
+of an old style South Sea trader as one could fall across. He was
+extremely anxious that I should purchase two native girls from him. They
+were under his charge. It seems their father had been killed, and his
+own wife objected to their presence in his house.
+
+I told him that I was supercargo, and therefore could not speculate on
+my own account. Besides, that sort of traffic was entirely out of my
+line. If he had curios, weapons, or Naura gods, I would deal, but there
+I drew the line.
+
+"Well, blame my cats! if you ain't too disgustin' partickler! Want to
+stuff yer cabin with kyurosities and graven images, instead of dellikit
+young women. Now, lookee hyar--jest you take them two gals o' mine for
+thirty dollars, and you'll jest double your money from king Abinoka.
+He's jest mad after Naura girls, and buys 'em up by the dozen."
+
+Finding that I wouldn't invest, he tried the Captain, telling him that
+the girls were anxious to get away from Pleasant Island, as their father
+was dead, and having no brothers, they could not get food enough from
+the people. His wife was jealous too, and had beaten them.
+
+"Well, well!" said the Captain, "bring them aboard, and I'll give them a
+passage somewhere. I suppose by and by you'll tell some man-of-war
+captain that I stole them." So the trader sent them on board, and
+received in exchange some boats' gear and a keg of molasses.
+
+The girls went aft, and remained with the others in the cabin for a few
+days. When we sighted Ocean Island, Hayston called me on deck, and said,
+"Come and see a bit of fun."
+
+Old Mary was told to bring up her flock. The two Pleasant Island girls
+came up with the rest. They were about fourteen and fifteen years of
+age, and, from their close similarity, probably the children of the same
+mother--a somewhat unusual thing in the Gilbert group. They seemed
+frightened at being called up, and clung closely to Sara and Nellie.
+Their hair, Pleasant Island fashion, hung down straight upon their
+backs, and was carefully oiled and combed. A girdle of Pandanus leaf was
+their only garment. Speaking kindly to them, the Captain asked them if
+they would like to go ashore there and live. I give the conversation.
+
+_Captain._--"Well, will you go ashore here?"
+
+_Girls._--"Are there plenty of cocoa-nuts and fish?"
+
+_Captain._--"Pretty fair; but there are not always plenty."
+
+_Girls._--"What chiefs will take us and give us food?"
+
+_Captain._--"I don't know--there are more women there than men. All the
+young men have gone away in whaleships."
+
+_Girls._--"That's bad; the Ocean Island women will soon kill us
+strangers."
+
+_Captain._--"Most likely. Would you like to stay on the ship if I get
+you husbands?"
+
+_Girls._--"Yes! where are they?"
+
+_Captain._--"Boatswain, send Sunday and boy George here."
+
+These were two boys who had been sailing with Hayston for some years.
+Both were about sixteen. Of George I will speak later on. Having come
+aft, the Captain, addressing them, said he was pleased at their
+steadiness, and as a reward for their good conduct, he had at great
+expense procured them wives, whom he hoped they would treat well. His
+speech was a humorous one, and the crew standing round grinned
+approvingly--Sunday and boy George being, apparently, looked upon as
+lucky youths, for the girls were undeniably good-looking. In fact, I
+never saw an ill-looking Pleasant islander.
+
+"Now, Terau and N'jilong, you must draw lots for first pick. Carpenter,
+bring me two splinters of wood."
+
+They were instructed by the other native girls how to draw lots, the
+result being that Terau picked boy George, and her sister took Sunday.
+
+"Steward!" commanded Hayston, "bring up a couple of bottles of grog. And
+you, Sunday and boy George! before you begin your married life just
+listen to me! Call all hands aft!"
+
+The crew came aft, and the Captain, who now seemed quite serious, said,
+"Now, boys, I have given these girls to Sunday and boy George. Don't let
+me hear of any one attempting to interfere with them, and if one of you
+puts his head into the boys' house while the girls are there alone, I'll
+make it warm for him. There's a couple of bottles of grog for the watch
+to drink their healths, and the steward has two more for the watch
+below. For'ard now, and you, boys, go and ask the supercargo for some
+cloth to rig your girls out with."
+
+The _Leonora_ was certainly a very sociable and domesticated ship.
+
+We lay off and on at Ocean Island for a day or two, and engaged
+twenty-seven natives to proceed to Ponape (Ascension Island) to work for
+Cappelle and Milne, a German firm. Then we made an easterly course to
+Taputanea (or Drummond Island), one of the Gilbert group, where Hayston
+had a trader.
+
+The Drummond islanders are notorious throughout the Pacific for
+treachery and ferocity. They frequently cut off vessels, and murder all
+hands, being led on these occasions by renegade white men. When
+Commodore White's ships visited this spot in 1842 they murdered one of
+his seamen. A fight ensued, in which many were killed, and the town of
+Utiroa was laid in ashes. But the lesson had no great effect, and
+Hayston told me that they would not hesitate to attempt the capture of
+any vessel that could not make a good resistance.
+
+We sighted the island at night-time, and lay off Utiroa till daylight.
+Then after putting the brig in a state of defence, and giving the
+command to the Fiji half-caste, Bill, telling him also to shoot a
+certain native if he saw him come alongside, Hayston had the longboat
+and whaleboat lowered.
+
+Into the former he put a great quantity of trade, principally gin, rum,
+and firearms, giving me charge of the latter to cover him. I had six men
+with me, each armed with a Vetterlich rifle, and I carried my own
+Winchester--eighteen shot. Hayston gave me full instructions how to act
+if he was attacked; then we made for the town of Utiroa, the boats
+keeping alongside of each other. As we were pulling Hayston told me that
+he wished to get ashore before the canoes left, in order to interview
+his trader Jim in the presence of the people. This fellow, it appeared,
+was a fighting man who had great influence over the Drummond Island
+natives, with whom bloodshed and murder were acts of everyday
+occurrence. He always aided them in their tribal fights, and evinced a
+partiality for taking life that had won their warmest admiration.
+Hayston had brought him from Ponape, where he was the terror of the
+white men, swaggering about the ports of the island, and using his
+pistol on any one that resented his conduct. But he was a good trader
+for all that, and had been placed in this trust because no other man
+could be found willing to risk his life among such a treacherous race.
+
+Jim had not been installed a week at Utiroa, when a chief named Tabirau
+gave him one of his daughters for a wife, and was paid for her in trade
+according to custom. Shortly afterwards the girl ran home again, saying
+that the white man had beaten her for spoiling a razor.
+
+Jim took his rifle, went to his father-in-law's house, and demanded the
+girl back. A number of natives followed up, anticipating that he would
+be killed, for Tabirau was a chief of note, not averse to the
+extermination of white men. As they expected, he refused to give up the
+girl unless Jim paid more trade, alleging that one of the muskets paid
+for her was no good. Without a moment's hesitation the trader shot him
+through the body, killing him instantly, and then clubbed the girl to
+death with the butt end of his rifle.
+
+Instead of being murdered by the natives for this atrocious deed, he was
+looked upon as a hero, and all Tabirau's land, canoes, and property were
+made over to him. The people of Utiroa elected him to be their
+commercial ruler, refusing to sell oil or produce to any ship without
+his advice or consent. For a while his conduct had quite satisfied
+Hayston, until he learned that Jim had sold a lot of his oil to a
+Californian trader, boasting, besides, that Hayston dared not bring him
+to task for it.
+
+It was now the Captain's intention to assert his authority, and break
+the trader's power over the natives. For this purpose he determined to
+meet him on shore, and let the natives see which was the better man.
+
+As we approached the beach we saw fully five hundred natives assembled;
+all were armed, and many dressed in their thick armour of fibre, and
+wearing helmets of the skin of the porcupine fish. There was great
+excitement among them, though many of them seemed glad to see Hayston,
+calling out "Tiaka po, Kaptin" (How do you do). The main body, however,
+seemed ready to dispute our landing.
+
+"Keep close up!" the Captain called out to me, "and don't let any of
+them see your arms, but be ready to drop it into them the first shot
+that is fired. But, for God's sake, don't miss. That villain Jim, you
+see, isn't here, though; those fellows mean mischief. However, land I
+must, and will." He then told the crew to run the boat on the beach, and
+standing up in the stern, called out to natives that he knew, pretending
+to see nothing unusual in their manner. At the moment that he stepped on
+the beach the whole body of natives formed in solid line in front of
+him, while hundreds of rifle muzzles were almost thrust in his face. He
+looked steadily at them, and commenced to talk with his hands in his
+trousers' pocket.
+
+I forgot my instructions, and my crew seemed equally excited at the
+Captain's danger, for, without being told, they ran the whaleboat ashore
+and we all jumped out. The men in the other boat were standing up rifle
+in hand, and they followed us.
+
+The Captain was speaking calmly to the natives, when he turned and saw
+me. "For God's sake, go back to the boats," he said, in a quiet tone;
+then raising his hand threateningly and roaring like a lion, he repeated
+the order in the Drummond Island dialect. I understood this hint, so we
+ran back, but kept our arms ready. Hayston's order to me seemed to have
+a good effect, for the fierce looks of the natives relaxed, and soon
+afterwards he called out that it was all right, and told me to give him
+two muskets and a box of tobacco out of the longboat. This was a present
+for two of the principal chiefs, who now shook hands with him, saying
+that Jim was in his house, and had told them that if Captain Hayston put
+his foot inside he would shoot him. Our former opponents seemed pretty
+equally divided in their opinions. Half of them were eager to see the
+fight between Jim and the Captain, and the others were ready to massacre
+the whole of us if but a single act of hostility was committed on either
+side.
+
+Hayston ordered me then to come with him, and asked the natives'
+permission to allow me to bring my Winchester, as I was frightened of
+them. The boats were shoved out, the crew being told to jump ashore if
+they heard any firing, and fight their way to Jim's house. As I joined
+the Captain on the beach he told me that the natives thought he meant to
+kill Jim, and that they had felt him all over to see if he had concealed
+any arms, but that they seemed satisfied when they found none. I was
+astonished at his recklessness in not bringing weapons, and as we were
+escorted along the road by the natives, I told him that I had a
+derringer hidden among some tobacco in a canvas bag slung round my
+waist.
+
+"No, no!" he said. "It will never do to see you give it to me now.
+Besides, I don't want any shooting if I can help it. There are many of
+these natives who will be glad to see Jim's power broken, and I want to
+get my hands on him before he puts a bullet into me. The rest is easy
+enough. If you see him taking a shot at me before I come up to him, you
+can use that rifle; but don't kill him if you can help it, and don't be
+alarmed about yourself. Take hold of this old nigger's hand who is
+walking beside you and you'll be all right. Just keep laughing and
+talking."
+
+After a long walk we got up to the trader's house, and here the natives
+made a halt. I was beginning to feel horribly scared, and wished we were
+on board the brig again. Presently we were told that Jim was inside, and
+would not come out because he was sick. Walking steadily forward the
+Captain advanced to within a few feet of the house, and called out,
+"Well, this is a nice sort of welcome, Jim! Come out and show yourself."
+
+The door opened, and I could see that the place was filled with natives,
+all of whom carried guns and seemed much excited.
+
+Then Jim made his appearance and walked slowly up to the Captain. He was
+a tall man, dressed in pyjamas, with two navy revolvers in his belt.
+With his heavy red moustache and bloodshot eyes, he looked his character
+well--that of an unscrupulous and remorseless ruffian. Hayston had
+seated himself on a fallen cocoa-nut tree with his hands full of papers.
+
+"How d'ye do, Jim?" he said, extending his hand to the trader and rising
+as he spoke. The moment the trader's hand touched his, he seized him by
+the throat and shook him like a dog shaking a rat; then spun him round
+violently and threw him against the stern of a canoe, where he lay half
+stunned. The natives gave a roar, but the Captain held up his hands--the
+tide seemed to turn at once in our favour, and one man went up to the
+trader, took away his pistols, and gave them to Hayston. The Captain
+addressed the principal chiefs, whom he told that Jim had robbed him,
+and that after he had made presents to the people, he intended to take
+the rest of the trade away.
+
+We were moving into the house to take possession, when the trader, who
+had now recovered himself, got up and addressed the natives. I did not
+understand what he said, but Hayston evidently did. The effect of Jim's
+harangue was to render the natives undecided as to what course to
+adopt. One man, who spoke good English and had a rifle with a sword
+bayonet attached, said it did not matter if any one was killed, but they
+thought their white man did not have fair play.
+
+"Jim," said the Captain, in his smoothest tones, "you say you can whip
+any man in the Pacific in four rounds. Well! now you have an opportunity
+to prove your words. If you are a better man than I am, I will let you
+keep what trade you have got, and shake hands afterwards."
+
+Jim stripped to the waist, and called for one of his women to bring him
+a pair of "taka" or "cinnet" sandals, as he was barefooted.
+
+He was shaking with rage and excitement, while Hayston showed no concern
+whatever. From the jump the trader forced the fighting, but in less time
+than I describe it, both of his eyes were nearly closed, and he had a
+terrific cut on his cheekbone. Some women then ran in and begged the
+Captain to desist. I believe he could have killed his man in another
+five minutes. He asked Jim if he was satisfied and would shake hands.
+But the trader would not answer, and then the Captain's face grew dark.
+Seizing him again by the throat he nearly strangled him, his eyes
+protruding horribly as he worked his arms in the air. When he let him go
+he fell like a log. "Carry him down to the boats and make him fast," he
+said to the interpreter.
+
+We entered his house unmolested, and I took an inventory of his goods.
+There was very little trade left, but the natives said he had a lot of
+money given him by the skipper of the Californian vessel. This we found
+in a large soup and bouilli tin in his chest. It amounted to nearly
+seven hundred dollars, mostly in U.S. half-dollar coins.
+
+The natives begged the Captain not to close the station up; if Jim was
+going away, they wished some one in his place. He said he would consider
+their wish after he got on board; but they must first help him to raft
+off twenty casks of oil that were lying in Jim's oil-shed.
+
+We got off to the boats at last. The old man still kept hold of my left
+hand. This, the Captain had told me, he had done to protect me if any
+fighting took place; that if fighting had resulted I would not have been
+killed, but would have been regarded as the old man's prize. The natives
+launched their canoes and followed the boats in swarms when we set sail
+for the brig. As soon as we got alongside, Hayston asked the second mate
+if the native he had spoken of had shown up.
+
+"No," said Bill; "he's gone away to Samoa, so they say here."
+
+Hayston seemed pleased at this news, telling me that this man was a
+special enemy of his, into whom he meant to put a bullet if he could
+drop across him. As he was gone away he was saved an unpleasant task.
+Jim was taken for'ard, and the carpenter was ordered to put him in
+irons; thereupon he sulkily explained that he didn't intend to turn
+rusty.
+
+"All right, then, Jim," replied the Captain. "I'm glad we're going to be
+friends again. But you can go ashore at Makin and stay there."
+
+He then called for a man among his crew to take Jim's place on shore.
+After some hesitation a sturdy Rotumah native said he didn't mind, if
+the Captain gave him a wife. He couldn't speak the language, and if he
+took a Taputana woman she might plot to kill him and he be none the
+wiser.
+
+"Boys!" called out the Captain, "is any one of you willing to give
+Willie his wife? I'll make it up to him. Besides, there'll be plenty
+more going through the Marshall group."
+
+No one appeared struck with the idea. So the Captain called Sunday aft,
+and held brief conversation with him, after which the boy went into the
+deckhouse and brought out his wife and N'jilong. The poor girl shed a
+few tears at first and clung to Sunday's neck, but he finally induced
+her to go with Willie. She had come aboard almost naked, but went away
+with a well-filled chest and any amount of finery.
+
+She parted from her sister in an apathetic manner, but her tears began
+to flow afresh when Sunday turned coolly from her and pursued his duties
+on the deck. Savage though she might be, she felt the parting from the
+hardened young wretch whom she had come to look on as her partner.
+However she lost nothing by the change. Her new husband was a steady,
+good fellow who treated her kindly. Years afterwards I met them both on
+one of the Ellice Islands and received a warm welcome. Willie had
+legally married her in Fiji, and they seemed a most affectionate couple,
+with children in whom their chief pride in life was centred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+CAPTAIN BEN PEESE
+
+
+For the next few weeks we cruised about among the islands of the
+Kingsmill and Gilbert groups, collectively known as the Line Islands.
+The most southerly of them is Arurai or Hope Island, in the latitude
+2.41 S., longitude 177 E.--the most northerly, Makin or Butaritu, in
+latitude 3.20, 45 N.
+
+We did good business generally going through this group, and steady
+going trade it was, varied only by the mad drunken bouts and wild dances
+which took place when we were at anchor--these last beyond description.
+
+Just then I was badly hurt fishing on shore one day. It was peculiarly a
+South Sea accident. I was standing on a jutting ledge of coral, holding
+my rod, when it suddenly broke off, allowing me to fall downwards on
+sharp edges, where I was terribly cut about the legs and body. The green
+or live coral has the property of making a festering wound whenever it
+pierces the true skin, and for weeks, with my unhealed wounds, I was
+nearly mad with pain. The Captain did all he could for me, having a
+netted hammock slung on deck, where I could see all that was going on.
+One day in a fit of pain I fell out and nearly cracked my skull. All the
+native girls on board were most kind and patient in nursing me. So the
+Captain said the least I could do was to marry one, if only out of
+gratitude and to brush away the flies.
+
+Whatever some people might call these poor girls they had at least one
+virtue, which, like charity, covereth a multitude of sins. Pity for any
+one in bodily pain they possessed in the highest degree. Many an hour
+did they sit beside me, bathing my aching head with a sponge and salt
+water--this last the universal and infallible cure.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We called at Peru or Francis Island, where we obtained nine
+natives--five men and four young women. The islanders here are rude and
+insulting to all strangers not carrying arms, and almost as threatening
+as those of Taputana. I was, however, too ill to go on shore here.
+
+After a two months' cruise through this group we bore away for Strong's
+Island, distant some five hundred miles. We had favourable winds, and
+the brig's speed was something wonderful. In thirty-eight hours we had
+covered a distance of four hundred and ninety miles, when the lofty
+hills of this gem of the North Pacific, covered with brightest verdure,
+gladdened our eyes after the long, low-lying chains of islets and atolls
+of the Marshall and Kingsmill groups.
+
+The brave "north-east trade" that had borne us so gallantly along died
+away to a zephyr as we drew near the land, and saw once more the huge
+rollers thundering on the weather point of the island.
+
+Calling first at Chabral harbour we did a little trading, and then
+sailed down the coast close to the shore--so deep runs the water--till
+we reached Utwe.
+
+Here we found three American whalers put in for food and water. Hayston
+seemed anxious to get away, so, after exchanging courtesies with the
+skippers, we ran round to Coquille harbour, where we lay several days
+trading and painting ship. We cleared the harbour at daylight, with the
+sea as smooth as glass and wind so light that the _Leonora_ could
+scarcely stem the strong easterly current. Still keeping a north-west
+course, we sailed away over the summer sea while scarce a ripple broke
+its glassy surface, until we sighted Pingelap or M'Askill's, a hundred
+and fifty miles from Strong's Island.
+
+These were discovered by Captain Musgrave, of the American whaler _Sugar
+Cane_, in 1793. They are densely covered with cocoa-palms, and though
+wholly of coral formation, are a good height above sea-level.
+
+The Captain had a trader here named Sam Biggs--a weak-kneed,
+gin-drinking cockney. How ever such a character could have found his way
+to these almost unknown islands passed my comprehension! We ran in close
+to the village--so near that, the wind being light, we nearly drifted
+onto the beach, and lowered the starboard quarter boat to tow out again.
+
+Whilst waiting for the trader I had a good look at the village, which I
+was surprised to hear contained 500 inhabitants. As, however, these
+islands--there are three of them, Takai, Tugula, and Pingelap--are
+wondrous fertile, they support their populations easily.
+
+Presently the trader came off in a canoe, and, shambling along the deck,
+went down below to give in his report. He said that things were very
+bad. A few months back the American missionary brig _Morning Star_ had
+called and prevailed on the king to allow two teachers to be landed.
+After making presents to the chiefs and principal men, they had got
+their promise to accept Christianity and to send the white man Biggs
+about his business. They had also told the natives that Captain Hayston
+was coming with the intention of carrying them off in bondage to work on
+the plantations in Samoa. Also that Mr. Morland, the chief missionary,
+was now in Honolulu, begging for a man-of-war to come to Pingelap and
+fight Captain Hayston's ship with his big guns and sink her.
+
+All South Sea islanders are easily influenced. In a few hours after the
+teachers landed the whole village declared for Christianity, burned
+their idols, and renounced the devil and all his works, _i.e._ Captain
+Hayston and the brig _Leonora_.
+
+The Captain's face darkened as he listened; then he asked the trader
+what he had done in the matter. The man, blinking his watery eyes, said
+he had done nothing; that he was afraid the natives would kill him, and
+asked to be taken away.
+
+Jumping up from the table, Hayston grasped him by the collar, and asked
+me to look at him and say what he should do with such a white-livered
+hound, who would let one of the finest islands in the Pacific be handed
+over to the sanctimonious pack on board the _Morning Star_, and let the
+best trading station he, Hayston, owned be ruined?
+
+I suggested that he should be detained on board till we met the _Morning
+Star_, and then be given to Mr. Morland to keep.
+
+"By ----! just the thing! but just let me tell you, you drunken hound,
+that when I picked you up a starving beach-comber in Ponape, I thought
+you had at least enough sense to know that I am not a man to be trifled
+with. I was the first man to place a trader on Pingelap. I overcame the
+natives' hostility, and made this one of the safest islands in the group
+for whaleships to call at. Now I have lost a thousand dollars by your
+cowardice. So take this to remember it by."
+
+Then, holding him by one hand, he shook him like a rag, finally slinging
+him up the companion way, and telling the men to tie him up.
+
+"Lower away the longboat," he roared, "I'll teach the Pingelap gentry
+how to dance." I went with him, as I wanted to get some bananas and
+young cocoa-nuts. In five minutes we drew up on the beach.
+
+The head-men of the island now came forward to meet the Captain, and to
+express their pleasure at seeing him. But he was not to be mollified,
+and sternly bade them follow him to the largest house in the town where
+he would talk to them.
+
+The boy Sunday, who was a native of Pingelap, came with us to act as
+interpreter. Behind the crowd of natives were the two Hawaiian teachers,
+dressed in white linen shirts and drill trousers. They had their wives
+with them, dressed in mixed European and native costume.
+
+None of us had arms, nor did we think them necessary. Hitherto these
+people had been slavish admirers of Hayston, and he assured me that he
+would reassert his former influence over them in ten minutes. The crowd
+swarmed into the council-house and sat down on their mats. The Captain
+remained standing.
+
+His grand, imposing form, as he stood in the centre of the house and
+held up his hands for silence, seemed to awe them as would a demi-god,
+and murmurs of applause broke from them involuntarily.
+
+"Tell them, Sunday," he said, fixing his piercing blue eyes on the
+cowering forms of the two missionary teachers, "that I have come to talk
+peace, not to fight. Ask them who it was years ago, when the hurricane
+came and destroyed their houses and plantations--when their little ones
+were crying with hunger--that brought them to his ship and fed them?
+Have they forgotten who it was that carried them to Ponape, and there
+let them live on his land and fed them on his food till they grew tired
+of the strange land, and then brought them back to their homes again?"
+
+Sunday translated, and the silence was unbroken till the Captain
+resumed, "Did not the men of Pingelap say then that no man should be
+more to them than me--that no one else should place a white man here?
+And now a strange ship comes, and the men of Pingelap have turned their
+faces from me?"
+
+A scene of wild excitement followed, the greater number crowding round
+the Captain, while with outstretched hands and bent heads they signified
+respect.
+
+The two teachers were walking quickly away with their wives, when the
+Captain called them back, and in a pleasant voice invited them to come
+on board and see if there was anything there that they would like their
+wives to have for a present.
+
+Before returning on board Sunday told the Captain that the chiefs and
+people desired to express their sorrow at receiving the missionaries,
+and that they would be glad if he took them away. Since the visit of the
+_Morning Star_ an epidemic had broken out resembling measles, which had
+already carried off fifty or sixty of them. Already their superstitious
+fears led them to regard the sickness as a punishment for having broken
+their treaty with Hayston. So they offered us six young women as a
+present; also ten large turtles, and humbly begged him to allow his
+trader to remain.
+
+The Captain made answer that he did not want six young women--there were
+plenty on board already; but he would take two, with the ten turtles,
+and ten thousand cocoa-nuts. The said presents were then cheerfully
+handed over; the two girls and the turtles going off in the Captain's
+boat, while the cocoa-nuts were formed into a raft and floated alongside
+the ship.
+
+While these weighty matters were being arranged I walked round to the
+weather side of the island with Sunday, who wanted to show me a pool in
+which the natives kept some captive turtle. On our way we came across
+some young boys and girls catching fish with a seine. They brought us
+some and lit a fire. We stayed about an hour with them, having great fun
+bathing in the surf.
+
+Happening to look out to sea, I saw a big ship coming round the point
+under easy sail; from her rig and the number of boats she carried I knew
+her at once to be a whaler. We ran ashore and dressed, and as two of the
+children offered to show us a short cut through the forest to the
+village, we ran all the way and got opposite the brig just in time to
+see the Captain leaving her side to board the whaler. I hailed the brig,
+and they sent me the dingey, in which I followed Hayston. She proved to
+be the _Josephine_, just out from Honolulu--a clean ship, not having
+taken a fish. The captain was a queer-looking old fellow dressed like a
+fisherman. He received us with civility, yet looked at the Captain
+curiously. His crew were all under arms. Each man had a musket, a lance,
+or a whaling spade--these two last very formidable weapons--in his hand.
+
+Captain Long was candid, and admitted that as soon as he sighted our
+brig he had armed his men, for the wind was so light that he would have
+no chance of getting away. Hayston laughingly asked him if he thought
+the brig was a pirate.
+
+The whaler replied, "Why, certainly. Old Morland and Captain Melton told
+me two years ago that you sailed a brig with a crew of darned cut-throat
+niggers, and would take a ship if you wanted her, so I made up my mind
+to have a bit of shootin' if you boarded us."
+
+"Well, Captain Long," said Hayston, in his easy, pleasant way, "come
+over to my little vessel and see the pirate at home."
+
+The invitation was accepted, and as we pulled over amicably, the skipper
+cast an admiring glance at the graceful _Leonora_ as she floated o'er
+the still, untroubled deep. As we stepped over the ship's side we were
+met by Bill Hicks, the second mate, whose savage countenance was
+illumined by a broad smile as he silently pointed to the queer
+entertainment before us.
+
+"Great ancestral ghosts! d'ye carry a troupe of ackeribats aboard this
+hyar brig?" quoth the skipper, pointing to four undraped figures
+capering about in the mad abandonment of a Hawaiian national dance.
+
+The mate explained briefly that he had given the native teachers grog,
+after which nothing would satisfy them but to show the crew how they
+used to dance in Lakaina in the good old days. Their wives were also
+exhilarated, and having thrown off their European clothes, were dancing
+with more vigour than decorum to the music of an accordion and a violin.
+The Hope Island girl, Nellie, was seated in a boat we carried on deck
+playing the accordion, and with her were the rest of the girls laughing
+and clapping their hands at the antics of the dancers. The stalwart
+Portuguese, Antonio, was perched on the water-tank with his fiddle, and
+the rest of the crew who were not at work getting the cocoa-nuts on
+board were standing around encouraging the quartette by shouts and
+admiring remarks.
+
+As the whaling skipper gazed with astonishment at the sight, Hayston
+said, "Ay, there you see the Honolulu native teacher in his true
+colours. His Christianity is like ours--no better, no worse--to be put
+on and off like a garment. Once give a Sandwich Island missionary a
+taste of grog and his true instincts appear in spite of himself. There
+is _nothing_ either of those men would not do now for a dollar; and yet
+in a day or two they will put on their white shirts, and begin to preach
+again to these natives who are better men than themselves."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We went below, and after a glass of wine or two the skipper was about to
+leave, after promising to sell us some bolts of canvas, when the Chinese
+steward announced that they were fighting on deck. We ran up and saw
+Antonio and boy George struggling with knives in their hands. The
+Captain caught Antonio a crack on the head, which sent him down very
+decisively, and then pitched George roughly into the boat with the
+girls, telling them to stop their infernal din. The two teachers' wives
+were then placed in old Mary's care below, and told to lie down and
+sleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The two Pingelap girls who came on board were very young, and seemed
+frightened at their surroundings, wailing and moaning with fear, so
+Hayston gave them trinkets and sent them back to the chiefs, getting two
+immense turtles in exchange.
+
+The wind now died away. All night the brig lay drifting on the glassy
+sea. At breakfast-time we were almost alongside of the whaler, and the
+two crews were exchanging sailors' courtesies when five or six whales
+hove in sight.
+
+All was changed in a moment. Four boats were lowered as if by magic from
+the whaler, and the crews were pulling like demons for the huge prizes.
+
+The whales were travelling as quickly as the boats, but towards the
+ships, and in another quarter of an hour three of the boats got fast,
+the fourth boat also, but had to cut away again.
+
+Our crew cheered the boats, and as there was no wind for the vessel to
+work up to the dead whales which were being towed up, I took the brig's
+longboat and six men to help the boats to get the whales alongside.
+
+A breeze sprung up at noon, so after bidding good-bye to the whaler, we
+stood away for Ponape, making W.N.W. We were ten days out from Pingelap
+before we sighted Ponape's cloud-capped peaks. The wind was very light
+for the whole way, the brig having barely steerage way on her. Hayston
+was anxious to reach the island, for there he expected to meet his
+partner, the notorious Captain Ben Peese.
+
+Here he told me that if things went well with them they would make a
+fortune in a few years; that he had bought Peese's schooner and sent him
+to Hong Kong with a load of oil to sell, arranging to meet him in
+Jakoits harbour in Ponape on a day named. They were then to proceed to
+Providence Island, which was a dense grove of cocoa-nut trees. He was
+sanguine of filling two hundred and fifty casks now in the brig's hold
+with oil when we reached there.
+
+Twenty miles from shore we spoke an American whaleship from New London.
+She was "trying out," and signalled to send a boat. The Captain, taking
+me with him, went on board, when we were met by a pleasant, white-haired
+old man, Captain Allan.
+
+His first words were, "Well, Captain Hayston, I have bad news. Peese has
+turned against you. He returned to Ponape from China a week ago, and
+cleared out your two stations of everything of value. He had a big
+schooner called the _Vittoria_, and after gutting the stations, he told
+the chiefs at Kiti harbour that you had sent him for the cattle running
+there. He took them all away--thirty-six head."
+
+The Captain said nothing. Turning away he looked at the brig, as if in
+thought, then asked Allan if he knew where Peese had gone.
+
+"To Manila; Peese has made friends there, and engaged with the
+Governor-General of the Philippines to supply the garrison with forty
+head of cattle. I knew the cattle were yours, and warned the chiefs not
+to let Peese take them away. But he threatened them with a visit from a
+Spanish man-of-war, and Miller backed him up. He had a strong party with
+him to enforce his demands."
+
+"Thank you, Allan!" Hayston said very deliberately and calmly; "I was
+half afraid something like this would happen, but I thought the man I
+took out of the slums of Shanghai and helped like a brother was the last
+person to have robbed me. It has shown me the folly of trusting any one.
+You are busy, Allan! so will leave you."
+
+Bidding adieu to the good skipper we stepped into our boat. Hayston was
+silent for ten minutes. Then he put his hand on my knee, and looking
+into my face with the expression I had never seen him wear since he
+fought the trader at Drummond Island, said, "Hilary! did you ever know
+me to say I would do a thing and not do it?"
+
+"No! but I have often wished you would _not_ keep your word so strictly.
+Some day you will regret it."
+
+"Perhaps so. But listen to me. This man--this Peese--I found in Shanghai
+years ago, ill and starving. There was something in his face which
+roused my interest; I took him on board my vessel and treated him as a
+brother. I was then high in favour with the Chinese authorities. Not as
+I am now--hunted from port to port--forced to take up this island life
+and associate with ruffians who would shoot and rob me if they did not
+fear me. I went to a mandarin--a man who knew the stuff I was made of,
+and what I had done in the Chinese service--and asked for preferment for
+Peese. It was done. In a week he was put in command of a transport, and
+with his commission in his hand he came aboard my ship and swore he
+would never forget who it was that had saved him. He spoke but the bare
+truth, for I tell you this man was dying--dying of starvation. Well! it
+was he who led me afterwards, by his insidious advice and by collusion
+with Portuguese collie merchants, into risky dealings. At first all went
+well. We so used our positions in the Imperial service that we made over
+fifteen thousand dollars in three months, exclusive of the money used in
+bribing Chinese officials. The end came by and by, when I nearly lost my
+head in rescuing Peese from a gunboat in which he lay a prisoner. Anyhow
+I lost my rank, and the Viceroy issued a proclamation in the usual
+flowing language, depriving me of all honours previously conferred. We
+escaped, it is true, but China was closed to me for ever. Since then I
+have stood to Peese faithfully. Now, you see the result. He is a d--d
+clever fellow, and a good sailor, no doubt of that. But mind me when I
+say that I'll find him, if I beggar myself to do it. And when I find
+him, he dies!"
+
+I said nothing. He could not well let such treachery and ingratitude
+pass, and Peese would deserve his fate. However, they never met. Peese,
+like Hayston, appeared to have his hand against every man, as every man
+had his hand against Peese.
+
+He met his fate after this fashion:--
+
+A daring act of piracy--seizing a Spanish revenue vessel under the very
+guns of a fort--and working her out to sea with sweeps, outlawed him.
+Caught at one of his old haunts in the Pelew Islands, he was heavily
+ironed and put on board the cruiser _Hernandez Pizarro_, for conveyance
+to Manila, to await trial.
+
+One day he begged the officers of the corvette to allow him on deck as
+the heat was stifling. He was brought up and his leg-irons widened so
+that he could walk. Peese was always an exceedingly polite man. He
+thanked the officers for their courtesy, and begged for a cigar.
+
+This was given him, and he slowly walked the decks, dragging his
+clanking chains, but apparently enjoying the flavour of his cigar.
+Standing against a gun, he took a last look at the blue cloudless sky
+above him, and then quietly dropped overboard. The weight of his irons,
+of course, sank him "deeper than plummet lies".... So, and in such
+manner, was the appropriate and befitting ending of Benjamin Peese,
+master mariner--"_Requiescat in pace!_"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+CRUISING AMONG THE CAROLINES
+
+
+Our first port of call at Ponape was Jakoits harbour. It was here we
+were to land some Line Islanders we had brought from various places in
+the Gilbert group. Hayston had brought them to the order of the firm of
+Johann Guldenstern and Sons of Hamburg, whose agents and managers at
+Ponape were Messrs. Capelle and Milne. Their trading stations were at
+Jakoits Islands, where resided the manager of the business. The senior
+partner of the firm--a burly, bullying Scot--had for some time been
+carrying on a rather heated correspondence with Hayston, whom he had
+accused of kidnapping the firm's traders. He had not as yet encountered
+the Captain, but had told various whaling skippers and others that if
+half a dozen good men would back him up, he would seize Hayston, and
+keep him prisoner till H.M. warships _Tuscarora_ or _Jamestown_ turned
+up.
+
+Occasionally Hayston had by letter warned him to beware, as he was not a
+man to be trifled with. Talk and threats are easy when the enemy is
+distant; so Miller, during his cruisings in the schooner _Matauta_,
+would exhibit to various traders the particular pistol he intended to
+use on Hayston. Representing a powerful firm, he had almost unlimited
+influence in Ponape. Hayston told me that he believed Peese would never
+have dared to have looted his trading stations and taken his cattle if
+Miller had not sided with him.
+
+"Now," said the Captain, as we were slowly sailing into Jakoits, "I'm in
+a bit of a fix. I must let Miller come aboard and treat him civilly for
+a bit, or he will pretend he knows nothing of this consignment of
+natives I have for him. He lies easily, and may declare that he has
+received no instructions from Kleber, the manager at Samoa, to receive
+these niggers from me, much less pay for them. But once I have the cash
+in hand, or his firm's draft, I mean to bring him up with a round turn."
+
+We dropped anchor in the lovely harbour, almost underneath the
+precipitous Jakoits Islands, on which were the trading stations. There
+were five whalers lying at anchor, having run in according to custom to
+get wood, water, and other necessaries. One of these was a brig, the
+_Rameses_ of Honolulu. Dismantled and deserted-looking--in a little
+secluded cove--she had not a soul on board but the captain, and he was
+mad. Of him and his vessel later on.
+
+A Yankee beach-comber of a pilot, named Joe Kelman, met us as we came
+in; not that his services were required, but evidently for his own
+gratification, as he was bursting with news. As he pulled alongside the
+Captain told me that he was a creature of Miller's, and a thundering
+scoundrel on his own account as well. But he would settle it with him
+and his principal also in a few days.
+
+With a countenance expressive of the deepest sorrow the beach-comber, as
+he sent glass after glass of grog down his throat, told his doleful
+tale--how Peese had come with a crew of murdering Spaniards, and played
+h--l with the "Capting's" property; stole every hoof of his cattle, but
+four which were now running at Kiti harbour; how Capting Miller had been
+real cut up at seeing Peese acting so piratical, and said that though he
+and Captain Hayston was sorter enemies, he thought Peese was "blamed
+downright ongrateful," etc.
+
+"That's all right, Joe," answered the Captain with the pleasantest
+laugh, "that's only a stroke of bad luck for me. I bear Captain Miller
+no ill will from the letters he has written me, and for this part--we
+are both hot-tempered men, and may have felt ourselves injured by each
+other's acts--as he tried to save my property, I shall be glad to meet
+him and thank him personally."
+
+"Well, that's suthinlike," said the beach-comber, "I'd be real sorry to
+see two such fine lookin' men shootin' bullets into each other. Besides,
+pore Miller's sick. Guess I'll cut ashore now, Captain. Kin I take any
+message?"
+
+Hayston said he would give him a few lines, and, sitting down, wrote a
+short but polite note to Miller, stating that he had a number of
+labourers for him, which he would be glad to have inspected and landed.
+He regretted his illness, but would come ashore as soon as he (Miller)
+was well enough to receive him.
+
+The beach-comber took the letter and went ashore. Hayston turned to me
+with a laugh: "Do you see that? The gin-drinking scoundrel is playing
+pilot-fish. He has come to learn if I suspect anything of the game his
+master is playing. Here's a canoe; you'll see I'll get the truth out of
+these natives."
+
+The canoe was paddled by a very old man and a boy. There were also a lot
+of young girls. The Captain declined to entertain visitors at present,
+there being too much work to do, and cross-examined the old man as to
+Miller and his men. He said there were no white men now at Jakoits;
+furthermore, that when the _Leonora_ was sighted, Miller had gone off to
+the four whaleships and had a long talk with the captains. He had taken
+two guns from the _Seabreeze_, and loaded them as soon as he got ashore.
+The natives were told there were going to be a big fight; that Captain
+Miller had got sixty natives in his house, and the two guns placed in
+front of the landing-place. Hayston gave the old man a present, and
+suggested that he should dispose of his cargo to one of the whaleships.
+The old fellow shook his head sadly, saying he had come too late.
+
+Turning to me, the Captain said, "There's news for you; Miller must have
+thought I meant to go for him as soon as we met, and has his people
+ready to give me a warm reception. If I had not these Kanakas on board
+I'd give him as much fighting as he cares for, and put a firestick in
+his station to finish up with." A few minutes later we saw a boat put
+off from Jakoits with a big burly man sitting in the stern. At the same
+time one of the whalers' boats came aboard, in which were the four
+captains. He greeted them warmly, and we all trooped below.
+
+One of them, a wizened little man with a wonderful vocabulary of curses,
+said, looking at the others: "Well, gentlemen, before we accept Captain
+Hayston's hospitality we ought to tell him that we lent Captain Miller
+two guns to sink this brig with."
+
+"Gentlemen," said Hayston, standing at the head of his table, with his
+hands resting upon it, "I know all about that, but you are none the less
+welcome. Miller will be here in a few minutes, and I must beg of you not
+to let him know that I have been informed of the warm reception he had
+prepared for me. Besides, they tell me he is ill."
+
+"Oh, h--l! Ill! That's curious; he was in powerful good health an hour
+or two ago," and the skippers looked at each other and winked. Presently
+we returned to the deck, just as the bluff personage of whom we were
+talking clambered up the ship's side and came aft.
+
+The whaling captains and I watched the meeting with intense interest.
+Miller was evidently ill at ease, but seeing Hayston walking towards him
+with outstretched hand and a smile on his face, he made a great effort
+at self-command, and shook hands vigorously.
+
+"Well, we've met at last, Captain Hayston, and ye see I'm no feared to
+come aboard and speak up till ye like a man."
+
+"My dear sir," replied Hayston, grasping his hand with a prolonged
+shake, "I was just telling these gentlemen how I regretted to hear of
+your illness, for, although we have carried on such a paper warfare, I'm
+convinced that we only need to meet to become good friends."
+
+Here one of the American captains came up, and, looking the new-comer
+straight in the face, said, "Well, I _am_ surprised at meeting you here.
+Reckon you can sick and well quicker'n any man I ever come across."
+
+No notice was taken by Miller of this and other sarcastic remarks while
+he hurried on his business with Hayston. Much grog was drunk, and then
+the Captain passed the word for all hands to muster on deck--the crew to
+starboard, the Kanaka passengers on the port side.
+
+The "labour" was then inspected, and passed by their new proprietor,
+who, now very jovial and unsteady on his pins, took them on shore
+without delay. He returned shortly and paid for them in cash. Next
+morning several traders came on board, and any amount of beach-combers,
+for Ponape is their paradise. Mr. Miller came with an invitation to
+visit him on shore. Having business to attend to I stayed on board,
+promising to follow later on. As Hayston was leaving the brig, Miller
+said, in presence of the traders,--
+
+"Eh, Captain Hayston, but ye're no siccan a terrible crater as they mak'
+ye oot. Man, I hae my doots if ye could pommel me so sevairly as ye've
+inseenuated."
+
+"Mr. Miller," said the Captain, stopping dead, and taking him by the
+shoulder, "you are now on board my ship, and I will say nothing further
+than that if you have any doubt on the subject I am perfectly willing,
+as soon as we reach your station, to convince you that you are
+mistaken."
+
+The traders, who had hitherto backed up their colleague, applauded
+loudly, evidently expecting Miller to take up the challenge. He,
+however, preferred to treat it as a joke. I knew that the Captain was
+labouring under suppressed wrath because he was so cool and polite. I
+knew, by the ring in his voice, that he meant mischief, and at any
+moment looked to see the hot blood surging to his brow, and his fierce
+nature assert itself.
+
+About an hour later the mate of one of the whaleships came on board to
+have dinner with me, and told me that Hayston had given Miller a
+terrible thrashing in his own house, in the presence of his backers and
+the American captains. It seems that Hayston led the conversation up to
+Captain Peese's recent visit, and then suddenly asked Miller if he had
+not told the natives that Captain Peese must take the cattle, and that
+he (Hayston) dared not show up in Ponape again, or else he would long
+since have appeared on the scene.
+
+Possibly Miller thought his only chance was to brazen it out, for,
+though he had a following of the lowest roughs and beach-combers, who
+were at that moment loafing about his house and grounds, and Hayston was
+unarmed, he could see by the coolness of the American captains that he
+could not count on their support. At last he said, with a forced
+laugh,--
+
+"Come, let us have nae mair fule's talk. We can be good friends
+pairsonally, if we would fain cut each other's throats in business. I'll
+make no secret of it, I did say so, and thocht I was playing a good joke
+on ye."
+
+"So that's your idea of a joke, is it," said Hayston, grimly, "but now I
+must have mine, and as it takes a surgical operation to get one into a
+Scotchman's brain, I'll begin at once."
+
+He gave Miller a fearful knocking about there and then. The captains
+picked him up senseless, with a head considerably altered for the worse.
+After which Hayston washed his hands, and went on board one of the
+whaleships to dinner.
+
+He then sent for the chiefs of the various districts, telling them to
+meet him at Miller and Lapelle's station on a certain day and hour. When
+they were all assembled, he induced Miller to say that he sincerely
+regretted having told them such lies, as he knew the cattle did belong
+to Captain Hayston. Finally they shook hands, and swore to be friends in
+future; Hayston, in a tone of solicitude, informing him that he would
+send him some arnica, as his head appeared very bad still. The parting
+scene must have been truly ludicrous. Shaking him warmly by the hand,
+Hayston said, "Good-bye, old fellow; we've settled our little
+difficulty, and will be better friends in future. If I've lost cattle,
+I've gained a friend." Begging the favour of a kiss from the women
+present he then departed, full of honours and dignities; and in another
+hour we were sailing round the coast to Metalauia harbour.
+
+Here we bought a quantity of hawkbill turtle shell. While it was being
+got on board, the Captain and I spent two days on shore exploring the
+mysterious ruins and ancient fortifications which render the island so
+deeply interesting; wonderful in size, Cyclopean in structure. It is a
+long-buried secret by whom and for what purpose they were erected. None
+remain to tell. "Their memorial is perished with them."
+
+In one of the smaller islands on which those ruins are situated, Hayston
+told me that a Captain Williams, in 1836, had found over L10,000 worth
+of treasure. He himself believed that there were rich deposits in other
+localities not far distant.
+
+To this end we explored a series of deathly cold dungeons, but found
+nothing except a heavy disc of a metal resembling copper several feet
+under ground.
+
+This was lying with its face to the stone wall of the subterranean
+chamber--had lain there probably for centuries.
+
+Its weight was nearly that of fifty pounds. It had three holes in the
+centre. We could form no idea as to its probable use or meaning. I was
+unwilling to part with it, however, and taking it on board, put it in my
+cabin.
+
+While we were at Metalauia, Joe Keogh came on board, bringing with him
+three native girls from the Andema group, a cluster of large coral
+islands near the mainland, belonging to the three chiefs of the Kite
+district. He had gone forward, when the Captain saw him and called him
+aft.
+
+He at once accused Joe of being treacherous, telling him that the
+whaling captains had given him a written statement to the effect that he
+had taken a letter from Miller to the Mortlock group, where an American
+cruiser was surveying, asking the captain if he would take Hayston to
+California, as he (Miller) and Keogh would engage to entice him ashore
+and capture him if the cruiser was close at hand.
+
+Not being able to deny the charge, Keogh was badly beaten, and sent away
+without the girls, who were taken aft. Like the Ponape natives, they
+were very light-coloured, wearing a quantity of feather head-dress and
+other native finery. They agreed to remain on board during the cruise
+through the Caroline group, and were then to be landed at their own
+islands.
+
+They were then sent to keep the steward company in the cabin, and put to
+making hats and mats, in which they excelled. At Kite harbour we took on
+board the bull and three cows which Peese had not succeeded in catching.
+On returning to Jakoits harbour in a fortnight's time, I was told that I
+might take up my quarters on shore, while the cabin was redecorated. I
+therefore got a canoe and two natives, with which I amused myself with
+visiting the native village and pigeon-shooting.
+
+One day I fell across a deserted whaling brig. Her crew had run away,
+and the ship having contracted debts, was seized by Miller and Lapelle.
+The captain alone was left. He was now ship-keeper, and his troubles had
+so preyed on his mind that he had become insane.
+
+I watched him. It was a strange and weird spectacle; there lay the
+vessel, silent, solitary--"a painted ship upon a painted ocean."
+
+Her brooding inmate would sometimes pace the deck for hours with his
+arms folded; then would throw himself into a cane lounge, and fixing his
+eyes upon the sky, mutter and talk to himself.
+
+At other times he would imagine that the ship was surrounded by whales,
+and rush wildly about the decks, calling on the officers to lower the
+boats. Not succeeding, he would in despair peer down the dark, deserted
+foc'sle, begging the crew to be men, and get out the boats.
+
+We cruised now for some weeks to and fro among the lovely islands of the
+Caroline group, trading in turtle shell, of which we bought great
+quantities. What a halcyon time it was! There was a luxurious sense of
+dreamy repose, which seemed unreal from its very completeness.
+
+The gliding barque, the summer sea, the lulling breeze, the careless,
+joyous children of nature among whom we lived,--all were fairy-like in
+combination.
+
+When one thought of the hard and anxious toilers of civilisation, from
+whom we had come out, I could fancy that we had reached the lotus-land
+of the ancients, and could well imagine a fixed unwillingness to return
+to a less idyllic life. Hayston was apparently in no hurry.
+
+At any particular island that pleased him he would lie at anchor for
+days. Then we would explore the wondrous woods, and have glorious
+shooting trips on shore.
+
+We met some truly strange and original characters in these waters--white
+men as well as natives. The former, often men of birth and culture,
+were completely lost to the world, to their former friends and kinsfolk.
+
+Return? not they! Why should they go back? Here they had all things
+which are wont to satisfy man here below. A paradise of Eden-like
+beauty, amid which they wandered day by day all unheeding of the morrow;
+food, houses, honours, wives, friends, kinsfolk, all provided for them
+in unstinted abundance, and certain continuity, by the guileless
+denizens of these fairy isles amid this charmed main. Why--why, indeed,
+should they leave the land of magical delights for the cold climate and
+still more glacial moral atmosphere of their native land, miscalled
+home?
+
+Then, perhaps, in the former life beyond these crystal seas--where the
+boom of the surf upon the reef is not heard, and the whispering palm
+leaves never talk at midnight--some imprudence, some mistake at cards
+may have occurred, who knows! These things happen so easily.
+
+The temptation of a moment--a lack of resolve at the fateful crisis--and
+they are so deadly difficult of reparation. Difficult--nay impossible.
+
+Where, then, can mortal find such an asylum for weary body and restless
+soul as this land of Lethe? Where life is one long dream of bliss, and
+where death comes as a lingering friend rather than a swift executioner.
+
+It added materially to my enjoyment of the whole adventure, that
+wherever we went we were always honoured personages, favoured guests.
+Everywhere the people had the greatest admiration for Hayston's personal
+qualities--his strength, his fearlessness, his prompt determination in
+the face of danger and difficulty. That his word was invariably law to
+them was fully evident.
+
+One day, however, as a kind of drawback to all these satisfactions, I
+suddenly noticed that the girl Terau, who had been given to boy George,
+appeared to be very ill, if not dying. That young savage had obtained
+permission from the Captain to keep her on board, although she was most
+anxious to get ashore at Ponape.
+
+She would often get into one of the boats and sit there all day--sad and
+silent--knitting a head-dress from the fibres of the banana plant. Not
+being able to talk to her myself, I got a native of Ocean Island, whose
+dialect resembled her own, to ask her if she was ill.
+
+The girl made no answer. She covered her face with her hands. I then saw
+that every movement of her body gave her pain. At length she murmured
+something to the Ocean islander, slowly took from her shoulders the mat
+which covered them, and looking at me, said, "Teorti fra mati Terau"
+(George has nearly killed Terau). I was horrified to see that the poor
+girl's back was cut and swelled dreadfully. Her side, also, she said,
+was very bad, and it hurt her to breathe.
+
+We lifted her carefully out of the boat, and carried her between us to
+the skylight, where we placed her in a comfortable position.
+
+I found the Captain lying down, and asked him to come on deck, where,
+lifting the mat from the girl's bruised shoulders, I showed him the
+terrible state she was in.
+
+"Do you mean to allow such brutality to be practised on a poor girl?
+Why, I believe she is dying!"
+
+He said nothing, except "Come below." Sitting down at the table, he
+said, "I will not punish that boy. But I would be glad if you will see
+him, and induce him to treat the girl kindly."
+
+I called George, who was in the deck-house playing cards, and asked him
+what he would take for Terau.
+
+The lad thought for a moment, and asked me if the Captain had told me to
+come to him about her?
+
+I said, "Yes! he had." But that I wanted him either to give or sell me
+the girl, adding that he had better be quick about it, as Terau seemed
+sinking fast.
+
+"Oh! if that is so, you give me what you like for her. Don't want no
+dead girls 'bout me."
+
+I called up three of the crew as witnesses, whereupon George sold me the
+victim of his brutality for ten dollars and a German concertina.
+
+"Now, George," I said, "I am going to put Terau ashore, and if you touch
+her again, or even speak to her, I'll knock your infernal soul out of
+your black body."
+
+He grinned, and replied that he was only too glad to get rid of her; and
+returning into the deck-house, began at once to play on the concertina.
+
+A few days after this transaction we touched at Ngatik or Los Valientes
+Island, and I was pleased to find here a trader whose wife was a native
+of Pleasant Island.
+
+I asked them if they would like to have Terau to live with them, and the
+wife at once expressed her willingness as well as joy at seeing one of
+her own countrywomen.
+
+Returning on board, I inquired of Terau if she would not like to go
+ashore and live with these people, who would treat her kindly. During my
+ownership she had regained her strength in great degree, Nellie having
+agreed to attend on her, and the Chinese steward saw that she had
+nourishing food.
+
+She preferred to go ashore, being still afraid of George's
+ill-treatment; I did not tell her of the trader's wife being a
+countrywoman, trusting it would prove a joyful surprise. I was not
+mistaken. The two women rushed into each other's arms, and wept in their
+impulsive fashion. I felt certain that here poor Terau would receive
+kind treatment.
+
+Before returning on board the trader told me that Terau had related her
+story to them, and that the Ngatik women, who were in the house, told
+her to make the white man who had been so kind to her "the present of
+poverty." This ceremonial consisted in her cutting off her hair close to
+the head, and, together with an empty cocoa-nut shell and a small fish,
+offering it to me. The trader said this was to express her
+gratitude--the empty shell and small fish signifying poverty, while the
+gift of hair denoted that she was a bondswoman to me for life.
+
+I felt sorry that the poor child should have cut off her beautiful hair,
+which was tied round the centre with a band of pandanus leaf, and put in
+my hand; but I felt a glow of pleasure at being able to place her with
+people who would be good to her; and thanking her for the gift, to which
+she added a thick plate of turtle shell, I said farewell, and returned
+to the brig.
+
+The Captain called me below, and shook my hand.
+
+"I'm glad," he said, "that poor girl has left the ship; but I must repay
+you the money you gave George for her."
+
+This I refused to take. I felt well repaid by the unmistakable gratitude
+Terau had evinced towards me from the moment the Ocean islander and I
+had carried her pain-racked form below.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+POISONED ARROWS
+
+
+The weather had changed, and been cloudy and dull for several days. We
+were all rather in the doldrums too. We had been bearing eastward on the
+line. Suddenly Hayston said, "Suppose we put in at Santa Cruz. We want
+the water casks filled. I'm not very fond of the island, for all its
+name. Sacred names and bloodshed often go together with Spaniards.
+However, I know the harbour well, and the yams are first-rate." So at
+daylight we bore up, at eight bells we entered the heads with both
+anchors bent to the chains, and at noon were beating up the harbour. By
+two o'clock we cast anchor in thirty fathoms. Out came the canoes, and
+we soon began trading with the natives.
+
+We kept pretty strict watch, however. The men, to my fancy, had a sullen
+expression, and the women, though not bad-looking, seemed as if it cost
+them an effort to look pleasant.
+
+Our girls wouldn't have anything to say to them. Hope Island Nellie, in
+particular, said she'd like to shoot half of them; that they'd killed a
+cousin of hers, who was only scratched with a poisoned arrow, and that
+it was one of the Captain's mad tricks to go there at all.
+
+However, Hayston, as usual, was spurred on by opposition to have his own
+way, and to do even more than he originally intended. He told me
+afterwards that he only wanted to get some yams in the harbour, and that
+the water would have held out longer--until we got to a known safe
+island.
+
+So on Sunday we sent two boats on shore, and got the casks filled with
+water immediately. Our provisions were taken out and examined. Trading
+with the natives went on merrily.
+
+On Monday the weather was fine. We got a couple of rafts out with water,
+and laid in yams enough to last for the rest of our cruise. Hayston
+laughed, and said there was nothing like showing natives that you were
+not afraid of them. "Eh, Nellie? What you think now?"
+
+"Think Captain big fool," said Nellie, who was in a bad temper that
+morning. "Ha! you see boat crew; by God! man wounded--I see them carry
+him along."
+
+Sure enough, we could see the two boats' crews coming down to the beach.
+They were carrying one man, while two supported another, who seemed
+hardly able to walk. "Get out the boats!" roared Hayston. "I'll teach
+the scoundrels to touch a crew of mine."
+
+All was now bustle and commotion. Every man on the ship that could be
+spared, and Hope Island Nellie to boot, who had begged to be allowed to
+go with the attacking party, and whose ruffled temper was restored to
+equanimity by the chance of having a shot at her foes, and avenging her
+cousin's death. We left a boat's crew watch, and made for the shore,
+Nellie sitting in the bow of the Captain's boat with a Winchester rifle
+across her knees, and her eyes sparkling with a light I had never seen
+in a woman's face before. It was the light of battle come down through
+the veins of chiefs and warriors of her people for centuries uncounted.
+
+We left a couple of men in each boat, telling them to keep on and off
+until we returned; the wounded men were carefully laid on mats in one of
+their own boats; and forth we went--a light-hearted storming party, and
+attacked the town of the treacherous devils. Hayston was in a frightful
+rage, cursing himself one moment for relaxing his usual caution, and
+devoting the Santa Cruz natives in the next to all the fiends of hell
+for their infernal causeless treachery. He raged up again and again to
+the cluster of huts, thickly built together with palisades here and
+there, which made excellent cover for shooting from, backed up by the
+green wall of the primeval forest. I could not but admire him as he
+stood there--grand, colossal, fearless, as though he bore a charmed
+life, while the deadly quivering arrows flew thick, and more than one
+man was hit severely. Only that our fire was quick and deadly with the
+terrible Winchester repeaters, and that the savages--bold at first--were
+mowed down so quickly that they had to retreat to a distance which
+rendered their arrows powerless, we should have had a muster roll with
+gaps in it of some seriousness. Hayston was a splendid rifle shot, and
+for quick loading and firing had few equals. Every native that showed
+himself within range went down ere he could fit an arrow to his
+bowstring. And there was Hope Island Nellie by his side, firing nearly
+as fast, and laughing like a child at play whenever one of her shots
+told.
+
+Then the arrows grew fewer. Just before they ceased I had fired at a
+tall native who had been conspicuous through the fight. He fell on his
+face. Nellie gave a shout, and loaded her own rifle on the chance of
+another shot, straining her bright and eager eyes to see if another
+lurking form was near enough for danger. Well for me was it that she did
+so! Staggering to his feet, a wounded native fitted an arrow to his bow,
+and sent it straight for my breast before I could raise my gun to my
+shoulder. Nellie made a snap shot at him, and, either from exhaustion or
+the effect of her bullet, he fell prone and motionless.
+
+I felt a scratch on my arm--bare to the shoulder--as if a forest twig
+had raised the skin. "Look!" said Nellie, and her face changed. As she
+spoke, she passed her finger over the place, and showed it bloodstained.
+"The crawling brute's arrow hit you there. Let me suck the poison. If
+you don't"--as I made a gesture of dissent--"you die, twel' days."
+
+"Don't be a fool!" said Hayston. "You're a dead man if you don't. As it
+is, you must run your chance. Some of these fellows will lose the number
+of their mess, I'm sorry to say."
+
+So the girl, who had been but the moment before thirsting for blood, and
+firing into the mob of half-frightened, yet ferocious savages, pressed
+her soft lips on my arm, like a young mother soothing a babe, and with
+all womanly tenderness bound up the injured place, which had now begun
+to smart, and, to my excited imagination, commenced to throb from wrist
+to shoulder.
+
+"Strange child, isn't she?" laughed Hayston. "If she'd only been born
+white, and been to boarding-school down east, what a sensation she'd
+have created in a ball-room!"
+
+"Better as she is, perhaps," said I. "She has lived her life with few
+limitations, and enjoyed most of it."
+
+The excited crew rushed in and finished every wounded man in a position
+to show fight. Nellie did not join in this, but stood leaning on her
+rifle--_la belle sauvage_, if ever there was one--brave, beautiful, with
+a new expression like that of a roused lioness on her parted lips and
+blazing eyes.
+
+As for Hayston, he was a fatalist by constitution and theory. "A man
+must die when his time comes," he had often said to me. "Until the hour
+of fate he cannot die. Why, then, should he waste his emotions by giving
+way to the meanest of all attributes--personal fear?"
+
+He had none, at any rate. He would have walked up to the block without
+haste or reluctance, had beheading been the fashionable mode of
+execution in his day, chaffed his executioner, and with a bow and a
+smile for the handsomest woman among the spectators, quitted with easy
+grace a world which had afforded him a fair share of its rarest
+possessions.
+
+By his order the town was fired and quickly reduced to ashes, thus
+destroying a number of articles--mats, utensils, wearing apparel,
+weapons, etc.--which, requiring, as they do, considerable skill and
+expenditure of time, are regarded as valuable effects by all savages.
+
+The attack had been early in the day. We cut down as many cocoa-nut
+trees as we could, and finally departed for the ship, towing out with us
+a small fleet of canoes, to be broken up when we got to the brig. The
+sick men were sent below, and such remedies as we knew of were applied.
+They were--all but one--silent and downhearted. They knew by experience
+the sure and deadly effect of the poison manufactured among the Line
+Islands. Subtle and penetrating! But little hope of recovery remains.
+
+About four o'clock next morning we began to heave at the windlass, and
+got under weigh at eight. The wind was light and variable, and our
+progress slow. As we got abreast of the hostile village we gave them a
+broadside. But the sullen devils of Santa Cruz were not cowed yet. A
+second fleet of canoes swarmed around the ship. They made signals of
+submission and a desire to trade, but when they got near enough sent a
+cloud of arrows at the ship, many of which stuck quivering in the masts,
+though luckily no one was hit. Their yells and screams of wrath were
+like the tumult of a hive of demons. We were luckily well prepared, and
+we let them have the carronades over and over again, sinking a dozen of
+their canoes, and doing good execution among the crews when their black
+heads popped up like corks as they swam for the nearest canoes. While
+this took place we unbent the starboard chain, stowed it and the anchor,
+and clearing the heads, bade adieu to the inhospitable isle.
+
+On the next day all hands were engaged in cleaning our armoury, which it
+certainly appeared necessary to keep in good order. Hope Island Nellie
+polished her Winchester rifle till it shone again, besides showing an
+acquaintance with the machinery of the lock and repeating gear was
+nothing new to her.
+
+"You ought to make a notch in the stock for every man you kill, Nellie,"
+said Hayston, as we were lying on the deck in the afternoon, while the
+_Leonora_ was gliding on her course like the fair ocean bird that she
+was.
+
+Nellie frowned. "No like that talk," she answered. "Might have to put
+'nother notch yet for Nellie--who knows?"
+
+"Who knows, indeed, Nellie?" answered the Captain. "None of us can
+foresee our fate," he added with a tinge of sadness, which so often
+mingled with his apparently most careless moments. "We don't even know
+who's going to die from those arrow scratches yet."
+
+Here the girl looked over at me. "How you feel, Hil'ree?" she said, as
+her voice softened and lost its jesting tone.
+
+"Feel good," I said, "think getting better."
+
+"You no know," she answered gravely. "You wait." And she began to count.
+She went over the fingers of her small, delicately-formed left
+hand,--wonderful in shape are the hands and feet of some of these Island
+girls,--and after counting from little finger to thumb _twice_, touched
+the two first fingers, and looked up. "How many?" she asked.
+
+"Twelve," I said; I had followed the counts with care, you may be sure.
+
+"Twel' day, you see," she said; "perhaps you all right--perhaps"--and
+here she gave a faint but accurate limitation of the dreadful shudder
+which precedes the unspeakable agonies of tetanus.
+
+"Nellie's right," said Hayston; "keep up your spirits, for you won't
+know till then whether you're to go to sleep in your hammock in blue
+water or not."
+
+This was a cheerful prospect, but I had come through many perils, and
+missed the grim veteran by so many close shaves, that I had grown to be
+something of a fatalist like Hayston.
+
+"Well! if I go under it won't be your fault, Nellie! So, Captain,
+remember I make over to her all the stuff in my trade chest. Send any
+letters and papers to the address you know in Sydney, and a bank draft
+for what you will find in the dollar bag. Nellie will have some good
+dresses anyhow."
+
+"Dress be hanged!" quoth Nellie, who was emphatic in her language
+sometimes. "You go home to mother yet;" and she arose and left
+hurriedly. Poor Nellie!
+
+In that day when we and others who have sinned, after fullest knowledge
+of good and evil "know the right and yet the wrong pursue," shall be
+arraigned for deeds done in the flesh, will the same doom be meted out
+to this frank, untaught child of Nature and her sisters? I trow not. I
+must say that for a day or two before the fated twelfth which Nellie so
+stoutly insisted upon, I felt slightly anxious. What an end to all one's
+hopes, longings, and glorious imaginings, to be racked with tortures
+indescribable before dying like a poisoned hound, all because of the
+instinctive, senseless act of a stupid savage!
+
+To die young, too, with the world but opening before me! Life with its
+thousand possibilities just unrolled! One's friends, too,--the weeping
+mother and sisters, whose grief would never wholly abate this side of
+time; the old man's fixed expression of sorrow. These thoughts passed
+through my brain, with others arising from and mingled with them, as I
+left my hammock early on the twelfth day. I dressed quickly, and going
+on deck, that daily miracle occurred--"the glorious sun uprist."
+
+The dawnlight now began to infuse the pearly rim, which, imperceptibly
+separating from the azure grey horizon, deepened as it touched the edge
+of the vast ocean plain. Faintly glimmering, how magically it
+transformed from a dim, neutral-tinted waste to an opaline clarity of
+hue--a fuller crimson. Then the wondrous golden globe heaved itself over
+the edge of our water-world all silently, and the day, the 19th of
+October, began its course.
+
+Should I live to see its close?
+
+How strange if all this time the subtle poison should have lurked in
+one's veins until the exact moment, when, like a modern engine of
+devilry--an infernal machine with a clock and apparatus--set to strike
+and detonate at a given and calculated hour, the death-stroke should
+sound!
+
+We had breakfasted, and were lying on the deck chatting and reading, as
+the _Leonora_ glided over the heaving bosom of the main--the sun
+shining--the seabirds sailing athwart our course with outstretched,
+moveless wings--the sparkling waters reflecting a thousand prismatic
+colours, as the brig swiftly sped along her course--all nature gaily
+bright, joyous, and unheeding. Suddenly one of the wounded men, Henry
+Stephens by name, raised himself from his mat with a cry so wild and
+unearthly that half the crew and people started to their feet.
+
+"My God!" he exclaimed, as he sank down again upon his mat, "I'm a dead
+man--those infernal arrows."
+
+"Poor Harry!" said Nellie, who by this time was bending over him, "don't
+give in--by and by better--you get down to bunk. Carry him down, you
+boys!"
+
+Two of the crew lifted the poor fellow, who even as they raised him had
+another fearful paroxysm, drawing his frame together almost double, so
+that the men could scarcely retain their hold.
+
+"Carry him gently, boys!" said Hayston; "go to the steward for some
+brandy and laudanum, that will ease the pain."
+
+"And is there no cure--no means of stopping this awful agony?"
+
+"Not when tetanus once sets in," said Hayston; "it's not the first case
+I've seen."
+
+The other man was quite a young fellow, and famed among us for his
+entire want of fear upon each and every occasion. He laughed and joked
+the whole time of the fight with the Santa Cruz islanders, said that
+every bullet had its billet, and that his time had not come. "He
+believed," he said, "also that half the talk about death by poisoned
+arrows was fancy. Men got nervous, and frightened themselves to death."
+He was not one of that sort anyhow. He had laughed and joked with both
+of us, and even now, when poor Harry Stephens was carried below, and we
+could hear his cries as the increasing torture of the paroxysms overcame
+his courage and self-control, he joked still.
+
+The day was a sad one. Still the brig glided on through the azure
+waveless deep--still the tropic birds hung motionless above us--still
+the breeze whispered through our swelling sails, until the soft, brief
+twilight of the tropic eve stole upon us, and the stars trembled one by
+one in the dusky azure, so soon to be "thick inlaid with patines of
+bright gold."
+
+"Reckon I've euchred the bloodthirsty niggers this time," said Dick,
+with a careless laugh, lighting his pipe as he spoke. "This is 'Twelfth
+night.' That's the end of the time the cussed poison takes to ripen,
+isn't it, Nellie?" he laughed. "It regular puts me in mind of old
+Christmas days in England, and us schoolboys counting the days after the
+New Year! What a jolly time it was! Won't I be glad to see the snow, and
+the bare hedges, and the holly berries, and the village church again?
+Dashed if I don't stay there next time I get a chance, and cut this
+darned slaving, privateering life. I'll--oh! my God--ah--a--h!"
+
+His voice, in spite of all his efforts, rose from a startled cry to a
+long piercing shriek, such as it curdled our blood to hear.
+
+Hayston came up from the cabin, followed by Nellie and the other girls.
+All crowded round him in silence. They knew well at the first cry he was
+a doomed man.
+
+"Carry him down, lads!" he said, as he laid his hand on his forehead and
+passed it quietly over his clustering hair--"poor Dick! poor fellow!" At
+this moment another frightful spasm shook the seaman's frame, and
+scarcely could the men who had lifted him from the deck on which he had
+been lying control his tortured limbs. As they reached the lower deck
+another terrible cry reached our ears, while the continuous groaning of
+the poor fellow first attacked made a ghastly and awful accompaniment to
+the screams of the latest victim.
+
+As for me, I walked forward and sat as near as I could get to the
+_Leonora's_ bows, where I lit my pipe and awaited the moment in which
+only too probably my own summons would come in a like pang of
+excruciating agony. The gleaming phosphorescent wavelets of that calm
+sea fell in broken fire from the vessel's side, while the hissing,
+splashing sound deadened the recurring shrieks of the doomed sufferers,
+and soothed my excited nerves.
+
+Now that death was so near, in such a truly awful shape, I began
+seriously to reflect upon the imprudence, nay, more, the inexcusable
+folly of continuing a life exposed to such terrible hazards.
+
+If my life was spared I would resolve, like poor Dick, to stay at home
+in future. The resolution might avail me as little as it had done in his
+case.
+
+As I sat hour after hour gazing into the endless shadow and gleam of the
+great deep, a strange feeling of peace and resignation seemed to pass
+suddenly over my troubled spirit. I felt almost tempted to plunge
+beneath the calm bosom of the main, and so end for aye the doubt, the
+fear, the rapture, and despair of this mysterious human life. All
+suddenly the moon rose, sending before her a brilliant pathway, adown
+which, in my excited imagination, angels might glide, bearing messages
+of pardon or reprieve. A distinct sensation of hope arose in my mind. A
+dark form glided to my side, and seated itself on the rail.
+
+"You hear eight bell?" she said. "Listen now, you all right--no more
+poison--he go away." She held my hand--the pulse was steady and regular.
+In spite of my efforts at calmness and self-control, I was sensible of a
+strange exaltation of spirit. The heaven above, the sea below, seemed
+animate with messengers of pardon and peace. Even poor Nellie, the
+untaught child of a lonely isle, "placed far amid the melancholy main,"
+seemed transformed into a celestial visitant, and her large, dark eyes
+glowed in the light of the mystic moon rays.
+
+"You well, man Hil'ree!" she said in the foc'sle vernacular. "No more go
+mate. Nellie so much glad," and here her soft low tones were so instinct
+with deepest human feeling that I took her in my arms and folded her in
+a warm embrace.
+
+"How's poor Dick?" I asked, as we walked aft to where Hayston and the
+rest of the cabin party were seated.
+
+"Poor Dick dead!" she said; "just die before me come up."
+
+The people we had brought for the big firm, mostly Line Island natives,
+were quiet and easily controlled. Hayston now and then executed orders
+of this sort, though he would have scorned the idea of turning the
+_Leonora_ into a labour vessel. He was naturally too humane to permit
+any ill-treatment of the recruits, and having his crew under full
+control, always made matters as pleasant for these dark-skinned
+"passengers" as possible.
+
+But there were voyages of very different kind,--voyages when the
+recruiting agents were thoroughly unscrupulous, caring only for the
+numbers--by fair means or foul--to be made up. Sometimes dark deeds were
+done. Blood was shed like water; partly from the fierce, intractable
+nature of the islanders--sometimes in pure self-defence. But "strange
+things happen at sea." One labour cruise of which Hayston told me--he
+heard it from an English trader who saw the affair--was much of that
+complexion. We had plenty of time for telling stories in the long calm
+days which sometimes ran into weeks. And this was one of them.
+
+One day a white painted schooner, with gaff-headed mainsail, and flying
+the German flag, anchored off Kabakada, a populous village on the north
+coast of New Britain. She was on a labour cruise for the German
+plantations in Samoa.
+
+Not being able to secure her full complement of "boys" in the New
+Hebrides and Solomon groups, she had come northward to fill up with
+recruits from the naked savages of the northern coast of New Britain.
+
+In those days the German flag had not been formally hoisted over New
+Britain and New Ireland, and apart from the German trading station at
+Matupi in Blanche Bay, which faces the scarred and blackened sides of a
+smouldering volcano springing abruptly from the deep waters of the bay,
+the trading stations were few and far between.
+
+At Kabakada, where the vessel had anchored, there were two traders. One
+was a noisy, vociferous German, who had once kept a liquor saloon in
+Honolulu, but, moved by tales of easily accumulated wealth in New
+Britain, he had sold his business, and settled at his present location
+among a horde of the most treacherous natives in the South Seas. His
+rude good nature had been his safety; for although, through ignorance of
+the native character, he was continually placing his life in danger, he
+was quick to make amends, and being of a generous disposition and a man
+of means, enjoyed a prestige among the natives possessed by no other
+white man.
+
+His colleague--or rather his opponent, for they traded for opposition
+firms--was a small, dark Frenchman, an ex-bugler of the Chasseurs
+d'Afrique, who had spent some years of enforced retirement at New
+Caledonia. His advent to New Britain had been made in the most private
+manner, and his reminiscences of the voyage from the convict colony with
+his four companions were not of a cheerful nature.
+
+Ten miles away, at the head of a narrow bay that split the forest-clad
+mountains like a Norwegian fiord, lived another trader, an English
+seaman. He had been on the island about two years, and was well-nigh
+sickened of it. Frequently recurring attacks of the deadly malarial
+fever had weakened and depressed him, and he longed to return to the
+open, breezy islands of eastern Polynesia, where he had no need to start
+from his sleep at night, and, rifle in hand, peer out into the darkness
+at the slightest noise.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The labour schooner anchored about a mile from the German trader's
+house, and about two hours afterwards the boat of the Englishman was
+seen pulling round Cape Luen, and making for Charlie's station. This was
+because all three traders, being on friendly terms, it would have been
+considered "playing it low down" for any one of them to have boarded the
+schooner alone.
+
+The day was swelteringly hot, and the sea between the gloomy outlines of
+Mau Island and the long, curving, palm-shaded beaches of New Britain
+shore was throwing off great clouds of hot, steamy mist. As the
+Englishman's boat was about half-way between the steep-wooded point of
+Cape Luen and Kabakada, she altered her course and ran into the beach,
+where, surrounded by a cluster of native huts, was the station of
+Pierre. This was to save the little Frenchman the trouble of launching
+his clumsy boat. Pierre, dressed in white pyjamas, with a heavy
+Lefaucheux revolver in his belt and a Snider rifle in his hand, came out
+of his house. Addressing his two wives in emphatic language, and warning
+them to fire off guns if anything happened during his absence on board
+the schooner, he swaggered down the beach and into the boat.
+
+"How are you, Pierre?" said the Englishman, languidly. "I knew you and
+Hans Muller would expect me to board the schooner with you, or else I
+wouldn't have come. Curse the place, the people, the climate, and
+everything!"
+
+The little Frenchman grinned, "Yes, it ees ver' hot; but nevare mind.
+Ven ve get to de 'ouse of de German we shall drink some gin and feel
+bettare. Last veek he buy four case of gin from a valeship, and now le
+bon Dieu send this schooner, from vich we shall get more."
+
+"What a drunken little beast you are!" said the Englishman, sourly. "But
+after all, I suppose you enjoy life more than I do. I'd drink gin like
+water if I thought it would kill me quick enough."
+
+"My friend, it is but the fevare that now talks in you. See me! I am
+happy. I drink, I smoke, I laugh. I have two wife to make my cafe and
+look aftare my house. Some day I walk in the bush, then, whouff, a spear
+go through me, and my two wife will weep ven they see me cut up for
+_rosbif_, and perhaps eat a piece themselves."
+
+The Englishman laughed. The picture Pierre drew was likely to be a true
+one in one respect. Not a mile from the spot where the boat was at that
+moment were the graves of a trading captain, his mate, and two seamen,
+who had been slaughtered by the natives under circumstances of the most
+abominable treachery. And right before them, on the white beach of Mau
+Island, a whaler's boat's crew had been speared while filling their
+water casks, the natives who surrounded them appearing to be animated
+by the greatest friendliness.
+
+Such incidents were common enough in those days among the islands to the
+westward of New Guinea, and the people of New Britain were no worse than
+those of other islands. They were simply treacherous, cowardly savages,
+and though occasionally indulging in cannibalistic feasts upon the
+bodies of people of their own race, they never killed white men for that
+purpose. Many a white man has been speared or shot there, but their
+bodies were spared that atrocity--so in that respect Pierre did his
+young wives an injustice. They would, if occasion needed it, readily
+poison him, or steal his cartridges and leave him to be slaughtered
+without the chance of making resistance, but they wouldn't eat him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"It's the _Samoa_," said the German, as he shook hands with us. "And the
+skipper is a d--d Dutchman, but a good sort" (having once sailed in a
+Yankee timber ship, trading between Sydney and the Pacific slope, Hans
+was now an American), "and as soon as it gets a bit cool, we'll go off.
+I know the recruiter, he's a chap with one arm."
+
+"What?" said the Englishman, "you don't mean Captain Kyte, do you?"
+
+"That's the man. He's a terror. Guldensterns pay him $200 a month
+regular to recruit for them, and he gets a bonus of $10 each for every
+nigger as well. We must try and get him a few here to fill up."
+
+"_You_ can," said the Englishman, "but I won't. I'm not going to tout
+for an infernal Dutch black-birder."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As soon as a breeze set in the three traders sailed off. The schooner
+was a fine lump of a vessel of about 190 tons register, and her decks
+were crowded with male and female recruits from the Solomon group.
+There were about fifty in all--thirty-five or forty men and about a
+dozen women.
+
+The captain of the schooner and his "recruiter," Captain Kyte, received
+the traders with great cordiality. In a few minutes the table was
+covered with bottles of beer, kummel, and other liquor, and Hans was
+asserting with great vehemence his ability to procure another thirty
+"boys."
+
+Kyte, a thin man, with deep-set grey eyes, and a skin tanned by twenty
+years' wanderings in the South Seas, listened quietly to the trader's
+vapourings, and then said, "All right, Hans! I think, though, we can
+leave it till to-morrow, and if you can manage to get me twenty 'boys,'
+I'll give you five dollars a head for them, cash."
+
+The traders remained on board for an hour or two, and in the meanwhile
+the captain of the schooner sent a boat ashore to fill water casks from
+the creek near the trader's house. Six natives got in--four of whom were
+seamen from the schooner and two Solomon Island recruits; these two
+recruits led to all the subsequent trouble.
+
+Kyte was a wonderfully entertaining man, and although his one arm was
+against him (he had lost the other one by the bursting of a shell), he
+contrived to shoot very straight, and could hold his own anywhere.
+
+He was full of cynical humour, and the Englishman, though suffering from
+latent fever, could not but be amused at the disrespectful manner in
+which the American spoke of his employers. The German firm which in a
+small way was the H.E.I.C. of the Pacific; indeed, their actions in many
+respects, when conducting trading arrangements with the island chiefs,
+were very similar to those of the Great East India Company--they always
+had an armed force to back them up.
+
+"I should think you have natives enough on board as it is, Captain
+Kyte," the Englishman was saying, "without taking any more."
+
+"Well, so I have in one way. But these d--d greedy Dutchmen (looking the
+captain and mate of the schooner full in the face) like to see me come
+into Apia harbour with about 180 or 200 on board. The schooner is only
+fit to carry about ninety. Of course the more I have the more dollars I
+get. But it's mighty risky work, I can tell you. I've got nearly sixty
+Solomon boys on board now, and I could have filled down there, but came
+up along here instead. You see, when we've got two or three different
+mobs on board from islands widely apart they can't concoct any general
+scheme of treachery, and I can always play one crowd off against the
+other. Now, these Solomon Island niggers know me well, and they wouldn't
+try any cutting off business away up here--it's too far from home. But I
+wouldn't trust them when we are beating back through the Solomons on our
+way to Samoa--that's the time I've got a pull on them, by having New
+Britain niggers on board."
+
+"You don't let your crew carry arms on board, I see," said the
+Englishman.
+
+"No, I don't. There's no necessity for it, I reckon. If we were anywhere
+about the Solomon Islands, and had a lot of recruits on board, I take
+d--d good care that every man is armed then. But here, in New Britain,
+we could safely give every rifle in the ship to the 'recruits'
+themselves, and seeing armed men about them always irritates them. As a
+matter of fact, these 'boys' now on board would fight like h--l for us
+if the New Britain niggers tried to take the ship. Some men, however,"
+and his eyes rested on Pierre, Hans, and the captain, "like to carry a
+small-arms factory slung around 'em. Have another drink, gentlemen?
+Hallo, what the h--l is that?" and he was off up on deck, the other four
+white men after him.
+
+The watering party had come back, but the two Solomon islanders (the
+recruits) lay in the bottom of the boat, both dead, and with broken
+spears sticking all over their bodies. The rest of the crew were
+wounded--one badly.
+
+In two minutes Captain Kyte had the story. They were just filling the
+last cask when they were rushed, and the two Solomon islanders speared
+and clubbed to death. The rage of the attackers seemed specially
+directed against the two recruits, and the crew--who were natives of
+Likaiana (Stewart's Island)--said that after the first volley of spears
+no attempt was made to prevent their escape.
+
+The face of Captain Kyte had undergone a curious change. It had turned
+to a dull leaden white, and his dark grey eyes had a spark of fire in
+them as he turned to the captain of the schooner.
+
+"What business had you, you blundering, dunder-headed, Dutch swab, to
+let two of my recruits go ashore in that boat? Haven't you got enough
+sense to know that it was certain death for them. Two of my best men,
+too. Bougainville boys. By ----! you'd better jump overboard. You're no
+more fit for a labour schooner than I am to teach dancing in a ladies'
+school."
+
+The captain made no answer. He was clearly in fault. As it was, no one
+of the boat's crew were killed, but that was merely because their
+European clothing showed them to be seamen. The matter was more serious
+for Kyte than any one else on board. The countrymen of the murdered boys
+looked upon him as the man chiefly responsible. He knew only one way of
+placating them--by paying some of the dead boys' relations a heavy
+indemnity, and immediately began a consultation with five Solomon
+islanders who came from the same island.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the mean time the three traders returned to the shore, and Hans, with
+his usual thick-headedness, immediately "put his foot in it," by
+demanding a heavy compensation from the chief of the village for the
+killing of the two men.
+
+The chief argued, very reasonably from his point of view, that the
+matter didn't concern him.
+
+"I don't care what you think," wrathfully answered the little trader, "I
+want fifty coils, of fifty fathoms each, of _dewarra_. If I don't get
+it"--here he touched his revolver.
+
+Now, dewarra is the native money of New Britain; it is formed of very
+small white shells of the cowrie species, perforated with two small
+holes at each end, and threaded upon thin strips of cane or the stalk of
+the cocoa-nut leaf. A coil of dewarras would be worth in European money,
+or its trade equivalent, about fifty dollars.
+
+The chief wasn't long in giving his answer. His lips, stained a hideous
+red by the betel nut juice, opened in a derisive smile and revealed his
+blackened teeth.
+
+"He will fight," he answered.
+
+"You've done it now, Hans," said the Englishman, "you might as well pack
+up and clear out in the schooner. You have no more sense than a hog. By
+the time I get back to my station I'll find it burnt and all my trade
+gone. However, I don't care much; but I hope to see you get wiped out
+first. You deserve it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All that night the native village was in a state of turmoil, and when
+daylight came it was deserted by the inhabitants, who had retreated to
+their bush-houses; the French trader, who had walked along the beach to
+his station, returned at daylight and reported that not a native was in
+his town, even his two wives had gone. Nothing, however, of his trade
+had been touched.
+
+"That's a good sign for you," said the Englishman. "If I were you,
+Pierre, I would go quietly back, and start mending your fence or
+painting your boat as if nothing had happened. They won't meddle with
+you."
+
+But this was strongly objected to by his fellow-trader, and just then a
+strange sound reached them,--the wild cries and howls of chorus, in a
+tongue unknown to the three men. It came from the sea, and going to the
+door they saw the schooner's two whaleboats, packed as full of natives
+as they could carry, close in to the shore. Instead of oars they were
+propelled by canoe paddles, and at each stroke the native rowers fairly
+made the boats leap and surge like steam launches in a sea-way. But the
+most noticeable thing to the eyes of the traders was the glitter of
+rifle barrels that appeared between the double row of paddlers. In
+another five minutes the leading boat was close enough for the traders
+to see that the paddlers who lined the gunwales from stem to stern had
+their faces daubed with red and blue, and their fighting ornaments on.
+In the body of the boats, crouching on their hams, with elbows on knees,
+and upright rifles, were the others, packed as tightly as sardines.
+
+"Mein Gott!" gasped Muller, "they have killed all hands on the schooner
+and are coming for us. Look at the rifles." He dashed into his
+trade-room and brought out about half a dozen Sniders, and an Epsom
+salts box full of cartridges. "Come on, boys, load up as quick as you
+can."
+
+"You thundering ass," said the Englishman, "look again; can't you see
+Kyte's in one boat steering?"
+
+In another minute, with a roar from the excited savages, the first boat
+surged up on the beach, and a huge, light-skinned savage seized Kyte in
+his arms as if he were a child and placed him on the land. Then every
+man leaped out and stood, rifle in hand, waiting for the other boat.
+Again the same fierce cry as the second boat touched the shore; then
+silence, as they watched with dilated eyes and gleaming teeth the
+movements of the white man.
+
+For one moment he stood facing them with outstretched hand uplifted in
+warning to check their eager rush. Then he turned to the traders--
+
+"The devils have broken loose. Have you fellows any of your own natives
+that you don't want to get hurt? If so, get them inside the house, and
+look mighty smart about it."
+
+"There's not a native on the beach," said the German, "every mother's
+son of them has cleared into the bush, except this man's boat's crew,"
+pointing to the English trader; "they're in the house all right. But
+look out, Captain Kyte, those fellows in the bush mean fight. There's
+two thousand people in this village, and many of them have
+rifles--Sniders--and plenty cartridges. I know, because it was I who
+sold them."
+
+Kyte smiled grimly. There was a steely glitter of suppressed excitement
+in his keen grey eyes. Then he again held up his hand to his followers--
+
+"Blood for blood, my children. But heed well my words--kill not the
+women and children; now, go!"
+
+Like bloodhounds slipped from the leash, the brown bodies and gleaming
+rifle barrels went by the white men in one wild rush, and passed away
+out of sight into the comparatively open forest that touched the edge of
+the trader's clearing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"There they go," said Kyte quietly, as he sat down on the edge of the
+trader's verandah and lit a cigar, "and they'll give those smart niggers
+of yours a dressing down that will keep them quiet for the next five
+years (he was right, they did). Well, I had to let them have their own
+way. They told me that if I didn't let them have revenge for the two men
+that I would be unlucky before I got to Samoa,--a polite way of saying
+that they would seize the schooner and cut our throats on the way up. So
+to save unpleasantness, I gave each man a Snider and twenty-five
+cartridges, and told them to shoot as many _pigs and fowls_ as they
+liked. You should have heard the beggars laugh. By the way, I hope they
+do shoot some, we want pork badly."
+
+"Hallo, they've got to Tubarigan's, the chief's bush-house, and fired
+it!" said Muller.
+
+A column of black smoke arose from the side of the mountain, and in
+another second or two loud yells and cries of defiance mingled with the
+thundering reports of the Sniders and the crackling of the flames.
+
+The little Frenchman and Muller played nervously with their rifles for a
+moment or two; then meeting the answering look in each other's eyes,
+they dashed into the trees and up the jungle-clad mountain side in the
+direction of the smoke and fighting.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The native houses in New Britain are built of cane, neatly lashed
+together with coir cinnet, and the roofs thatched with broad-leaved
+grass or sugar-cane leaves. They burn well, and as the cane swells to
+the heat each joint bursts with a crack like a pistol shot.
+
+"Look now," said Kyte to his companion, pointing along the tops of the
+hills. Clouds of black smoke and sheets of flame were everywhere
+visible, and amidst the continuous roar of the flames, the crackling of
+the burning cane-work of the native houses, and the incessant reports of
+the Sniders, came savage shouts and yells from the raiders, and
+answering cries of defiance from the New Britain men, who retreated
+slowly to the grassy hills of the interior, whence they watched the
+total destruction of some four or five of their villages. These
+bush-houses are constructed with great care and skill by the natives,
+and are generally only a short distance from the main village on the
+beach; every bush-house stands surrounded by a growth of
+carefully-tended crotons of extraordinary beauty and great variety of
+colour, and in the immediate vicinity is the owner's plantation of yams,
+taro, sugar-cane, bananas, and betel nuts.
+
+In the course of an hour or two the Solomon islanders ceased firing, and
+then the two white men, looking out on the beach, saw a number of the
+beaten villagers fleeing down to the shore, about half a mile away, and
+endeavouring to launch canoes.
+
+"By ----!" exclaimed Kyte, "my fellows have outflanked them, and are
+driving them down to the beach. I might get some after all for the
+schooner. Will you lend me your boat's crew to head them off? They are
+going to try and get to Mau Island."
+
+"No," said the Englishman, "I won't. If Pierre and the German are such
+idiots as to go shooting niggers in another man's quarrel, that's no
+reason why I should take a hand in it."
+
+Kyte nodded good-humouredly, and seemed to abandon the idea; but he went
+into the house after a while, and came out again with a long Snider in
+his hand.
+
+In a few minutes the Solomon islanders began to return in parties of two
+or three, then came the two white men, excited and panting with the lust
+of killing.
+
+Kyte held a whispered consultation with one of his "boys,"--a huge
+fellow, whose body was reeking with perspiration and blood from the
+scratches received in the thorny depths of the jungle,--and then pointed
+to the beach where four or five white-painted canoes had been launched,
+and were making for an opening in the reef. To reach this opening they
+would have to pass in front of the trader's house, for which they now
+headed.
+
+Kyte waited a moment or two till the leading canoe was within four or
+five hundred yards, then he raised his rifle, and placing it across the
+stump of his left arm, fired. The ball plumped directly amidships, and
+two of the paddlers fell. The rest threw away their paddles and spears,
+and swam to the other canoes.
+
+"Now we've got them," said Kyte, and taking about twenty of his boys,
+he manned his two boats and pulled out, intercepting the canoes before
+they could get through the reef into the open.
+
+Then commenced an exciting chase. The refugees swam and dived about in
+the shallow water like frightened fish, but their pursuers were better
+men at that game than they, and of superior physique. In twenty minutes
+they were all captured, except one, who sprang over the edge of the reef
+into deep water and was shot swimming.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were about five-and-twenty prisoners, and when they were brought
+back in the boats and taken on board the schooner it was found that the
+chief was among them. It may have occurred to him in the plantation life
+of the after time that he had better have stayed quiet. The Englishman,
+disgusted with the whole affair, went off with the other white men,
+leaving his boat's crew for safety in the trader's house, for had the
+Solomon islanders seen them they would have made quick work of them, or
+else Kyte, to save their lives, would have offered to take them as
+recruits.
+
+The two other traders decided to leave in the schooner. They had made
+the locality too warm for themselves, and urged the Englishman to follow
+their example.
+
+"No," he said, "I've been a good while here now, and I've never shot a
+nigger yet for the fun of the thing. I'll take my chance with them for a
+bit longer. The chances are you fellows will get your throats cut before
+I do."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+However, the schooner arrived safely at Samoa with her live cargo, but
+Kyte reported to his owners that it would not be advisable to recruit in
+New Britain for a year or two.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HALCYON DAYS
+
+
+We were now bound for Arrecifos Island, Hayston's central station, but
+had first to call at Pingelap and Strong's Island, where we were to land
+our cattle and ship a few tuns of oil.
+
+Nine days after leaving Ponape, as the sun broke through the tropic
+haze, the lookout reported smoke in sight. The Captain and I at once
+went aloft, and with our glasses made out a steamer a long distance off.
+
+Hayston said he thought it was the _Resacca_, an American cruiser.
+Possibly she might overhaul us and take us into Ponape. Unless the
+breeze freshened we could not get away from her.
+
+We were heading N.N.E. close hauled, and the steamer appeared to be
+making for Ponape. She was sure to see us within an hour unless she
+changed her course.
+
+The _Leonora_ was kept away a couple of points, but the wind was light,
+and we were only travelling about four knots.
+
+At breakfast time we could see the man-of-war's spars from the deck, and
+the breeze was dying away. The Captain and I went on the foreyard and
+watched her.
+
+She had not as yet changed her course, but apparently did not seem
+anxious to overtake us.
+
+At length Hayston said with a laugh, as he took a long look at her, "All
+right, keep full, and by (to the man at the wheel) ----, brace up the
+yards again, she doesn't want to stop us. It's that old Spanish gunboat
+from Manila, a 'side wheeler.' I was told she was coming down to Ponape
+from Guam to look after some escaped Tagalau prisoners. She'd never
+catch us if she wanted to with anything like a breeze."
+
+That night the Captain seemed greatly relieved. He told me that it would
+prove a bad business for him if an American cruiser took him; and
+although he did not anticipate meeting with one in these parts, he gave
+me full instructions how to act in the event of his seizure. He placed
+in my charge two bags of gold coin of two thousand dollars each, and a
+draft for a thousand dollars on Goddefroys' in Samoa.
+
+After which he declared that the ship was getting dull lately, and
+ordered the steward's boy to beat the gong and call out the girls for a
+dance.
+
+For the next hour or two wild merriment prevailed. Antonio, the
+Portuguese, with his violin, and the Captain with his flute, furnished
+the music, while half a dozen of the girls were soon dancing with some
+of the picturesque ruffians of the foc'sle.
+
+For days and days we had scarcely shifted tack or sheet, so gentle and
+steady was the wind that filled our sails; but the easterly equatorial
+counter current that prevails in these calm seas was sweeping us
+steadily on towards Strong's Island at the rate of two or three knots an
+hour.
+
+On some days we would lower a floating target and practise with the long
+gun carried amidships, on others the Captain and I would pass away an
+hour or two shooting at bottles with our rifles or revolvers.
+
+Hayston was a splendid shot, and loud were the exclamations from the
+crew when he made an especially clever shot; at other times he would sit
+on the skylight, and with the girls around him, sewing or card-playing,
+tell me anecdotes of his career when in the service of the Chinese
+Government.
+
+There were on board two children, a boy and girl--Toby and
+Kitty--natives of Arurai or Hope Island. They were the Captain's
+particular pets, in right of which he allowed them full liberty to tease
+any one on the ship.
+
+He was strongly attached to these children, and often told me that he
+intended to provide for them.
+
+Their father, who was one of his boat's crew, had fallen at his side
+when the natives of the island had boarded the vessel. On his next
+cruise he called at Arurai and took them on board, the head chief freely
+giving his permission to adopt them. I mention this boy and girl more
+particularly, because the American missionaries had often stated in the
+Honolulu journals "that Hayston had kidnapped them after having killed
+their father."
+
+His story was that on his first visit to the Pelew Islands with Captain
+Peese, the vessel they owned, a small brigantine, was attacked by the
+natives in the most daring manner, although the boarding nettings were
+up and every preparation made to repel them.
+
+He had with him ten seamen--mostly Japanese. Captain Peese was acting as
+first mate. An intelligent writer has described these Pelew islanders,
+the countrymen of the young Prince Lee Boo, whose death in England
+caused genuine sorrow, as "delicate in their sentiments, friendly in
+their disposition, and, in short, a people that do honour to the human
+race."
+
+The Captain's description of the undaunted manner in which fifty of
+these noble islanders climbed up the side of the brigantine, and slashed
+away at the nettings with their heavy swords, was truly graphic.
+Stripped to the waist they fought gallantly and unflinchingly, though
+twelve of their number had been killed by the fire of musketry from the
+brigantine. One of them had seized Captain Peese by his beard, and,
+dragging him to the side, stabbed him in the neck, and threw him into
+the prahu alongside, where his head would have soon left his body, when
+Hayston and a Japanese sailor dashed over after him, and killed the two
+natives that were holding him down, while another was about to
+decapitate him. At this stage three of the brigantine's crew lay dead
+and nearly all were wounded, Hayston having a fearful slash on the
+thigh.
+
+There were seventeen islanders killed and many badly wounded before they
+gave up the attempt to cut off the vessel.
+
+The father of Kitty and Toby was the steward. He had been fighting all
+through like a demon, having for his weapon a carpenter's squaring axe.
+He had cut one islander down with a fearful blow on the shoulder, which
+severed the arm, the limb falling on the deck, when he was attacked by
+three others. One of these was shot by a Japanese sailor, and another
+knocked down by the Captain, when the poor steward was thrust through
+from behind and died in a few minutes.
+
+The Captain spoke highly of the courage and intelligence of the Pelew
+islanders, and said that the cause of the attack upon the vessel was
+that, being under the Portuguese flag--the brigantine was owned by
+merchants in Macao--the natives had sought to avenge the bombardment of
+one of their principal towns by two Portuguese gunboats a year
+previously.
+
+Hayston afterwards established friendly relations with these very people
+who had attacked him, and six months afterwards slept ashore at their
+village alone and unarmed.
+
+From that day his perfect safety was assured. He succeeded in gaining
+the friendship of the principal chiefs by selling them a hundred
+breech-loading rifles and ten thousand cartridges, giving them two
+years' time to pay for them. He also gave nearly a thousand dollars'
+worth of powder and cartridges to the relatives of the men killed in
+attempting to cut off the brigantine.
+
+Such was one of the many romantic incidents in Hayston's career in the
+wild islands still further to the north-west. That he was a man of
+lion-like courage and marvellous resolution under the most desperate
+circumstances was known to all who ever sailed with him. Had not his
+recklessness and uncontrollable passions hurried him on to the
+commission of deeds that darkened for ever his good name, his splendid
+qualities would have earned him fame and fortune in any of those
+national enterprises which have in all ages transformed the adventurer
+into the hero.
+
+One day, while we sat talking together, gazing upon the unruffled
+deep,--he had been explaining the theory of the ocean currents, as well
+as the electrical phenomena of the Caroline group, where thunder may be
+heard perhaps six times a year, and lightning seen not once,--I
+unthinkingly asked him why he did not commit his observations to paper,
+as I felt sure that the large amount of facts relating to the
+meteorology of the Pacific, of which he was possessed, would be most
+valuable, and as such secure fitting recognition by the scientific
+world.
+
+He smiled bitterly, then answered, "Hilary, my boy, it is too late. I am
+an outlaw in fact, if not in name. The world's doors are closed, and
+society has turned its back on me. Out of ten professed friends nine are
+false, and would betray me to-morrow. When I think of what I once was,
+what I might have been, and to what I have now fallen, I am weary of
+existence. So I take the world as it comes, with neither hope nor fear
+for the morrow, knowing that if I do not make blue shark's meat, I am
+doomed to leave my bones on some coral islet."
+
+And thus the days wore on. We still drifted under cloudless skies, over
+the unfretted surface of the blue Pacific, the brig's sails ever and
+anon swelling out in answer to the faint, mysterious breeze-whispers, to
+fall languidly back against her spars and cordage.
+
+Passing the Nuknor or Monteverde Islands, discovered by Don Juan
+Monteverde in 1806, in the Spanish frigate _La Pala_, we sailed onward
+with the gentle N.E. trades to Overluk, and then to Losap. Like the
+people of Nuknor, the Losap islanders were a splendid race and most
+hospitable. Then we made the Mortlock group, once so dreaded by
+whaleships. These fierce and warlike islanders made most determined
+efforts to cut off the whaleships _Dolly Primrose_ and _Heavenly City_.
+To us, however, they were most amiable in demeanour, and loud cries of
+welcome greeted the Captain from the crowd of canoes which swarmed
+around the brig.
+
+Then commenced one of the reckless orgies with which the brig's crew
+were familiar. Glad to escape the scene, I left the brig and wandered
+about in the silent depths of the island forest.
+
+The Captain here, as elsewhere, was evidently regarded as a visitor of
+immense importance, for as I passed through the thickly populated
+villages the people were cooking vast quantities of pigs, poultry, and
+pigeons.
+
+The women and girls were decorating their persons with wreaths of
+flowers, and the warriors making preparations for a big dance to take
+place at night. I had brought my gun with me, and shot some of the
+magnificent pigeons which throng the island woods, which I presented to
+the native girls, a merry group of whom followed me with offerings of
+cocoa-nuts, and a native dish made of baked bananas, flavoured with the
+juice of the sugar-cane.
+
+I could not have eaten a fiftieth part of what was offered, but as
+declining would have been regarded as a rudeness, I begged them to take
+it to the chief's house for me.
+
+On my return a singular and characteristic scene presented itself. I
+could not help smiling as I thought what a shock it would have given
+many of my steady-going friends and relatives in Sydney, most of whom,
+if untravelled, resemble nothing so much as the inhabitants of English
+country towns, and are equally apt to be displeased at any departure
+from the British standard of manners and morals.
+
+The Captain was seated on a mat in the great council-house of the tribe,
+talking business with a white-headed warrior, whom he introduced as the
+king of the Mortlock group. The women had decorated the Captain's neck
+and broad breast with wreaths--two girls were seated a little farther
+off, binding into his hat the tail-feathers of the tropic bird. He
+seemed in a merry mood, and whispering something to the old man, pointed
+to me.
+
+In a moment a dozen young girls bounded up, and with laughing eyes and
+lips, commenced to circle around me in a measure, the native name of
+which means "a dance for a husband."
+
+They formed a pretty enough picture, with their waving arms and flowing
+flower-crowned hair. I plead guilty to applauding vociferously, and
+rewarding them with a quantity of the small red beads which the Mortlock
+girls sew into their head-dresses.
+
+Thus, with but slight variations, our life flowed, if monotonously,
+pleasantly, even luxuriously on--as we sailed to and fro amid these
+charmed isles, from Namoluk to Truk, thence to the wondrously beautiful
+Royalist Islands, inhabited by a wild vigorous race. They also made much
+of us and gave dances and games in honour of our visit.
+
+And still we sailed and sailed. Days passed, and weeks. Still glided we
+over the summer sea--still gazed we at a cloudless sky--still felt we
+the languorous, sighing breath of the soft South Pacific winds.
+
+Day by day the same flock of predatory frigate birds skimmed and swept
+o'er the glittering ocean plain, while high overhead the wandering
+tropic birds hung motionless, with their scarlet tail-feathers floating
+like lance pennons in relief against the bright blue heavens.
+
+Now, the Captain had all a true seaman's dislike to seeing a sea-bird
+shot. One day, off Ocean Island, Jansen, the mate, came out of the cabin
+with a long, smooth bore, which he proceeded to load with buck shot,
+glancing the while at two graceful tropic birds, which, with snow-white
+wings outspread, were poised in air directly over the deck, apparently
+looking down with wondering eye at the scene below.
+
+"What are you going to shoot, Jansen?" inquired the Captain, in a mild
+voice.
+
+The mate pointed to the birds, and remarked that his girl wanted the
+feathers for a head-dress. He was bringing the gun to his shoulder, when
+a quick "Put down that musket," nearly caused him to drop it.
+
+"Jansen!" said the Captain, "please to remember this,--never let me see
+you or any other man shoot a sea-bird from the deck of this ship. Your
+girl can live without the feathers, I presume, and what is more to the
+point, I _forbid_ you to do it."
+
+The mate growled something in an undertone, and was turning away to his
+cabin, when Hayston sprang upon him like a panther, and seizing him by
+the throat, held him before him.
+
+"By ----! Jansen," he said, "don't tempt me too far. I told you as
+civilly as possible not to shoot the birds--yet you turn away and mutter
+mutinously before my men. Listen to me! though you are no seaman, and a
+thorough 'soldier,' I treat you well for peace' sake. But once give me a
+sidelook, and as sure as God made me, I'll trice you up to the mainmast,
+and let a nigger flog you."
+
+He released his hold of the mate's throat after this warning. The cowed
+bully staggered off towards his cabin. After which the Captain's mood
+changed with customary suddenness; he came aft, and began a game with
+Kitty and her brother--apparently having forgotten the very existence of
+Jansen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The calm, bright weather still prevailed--the light air hardly filling
+our sails--the current doing all the work. When one afternoon, taking a
+look from aloft, I descried the loom of Kusaie or Strong's Island, on
+the farthest horizon.
+
+"Land ho!" The watch below, just turning out, take up the cry as it goes
+from mouth to mouth on deck. Some of them gaze longingly, making
+calculations as to the amount of liberty they are likely to get, as well
+as the work that lies before them.
+
+Early next morning we had drifted twenty miles nearer, whereupon the
+Captain decided to run round to the weather side of the island first,
+and interview the king, before going to Utwe or South harbour, where we
+proposed to do the most of our trading.
+
+Suddenly, after breakfast, a serious disturbance arose between the
+Chinese carpenter and Bill Hicks, the fierce Fijian half-caste, who was
+second mate. The carpenter's provisional spouse was a handsome young
+woman from the Gilbert group, who rejoiced in the name of Ni-a-bon
+(Shades of Night). Of her, the carpenter, a tall, powerfully-built
+Chinaman, who had sailed for years with Hayston in the China Seas, was
+intensely jealous. So cunning, however, was she in evading suspicion,
+that though every one on board was aware of the state of affairs, her
+lawful protector suspected nothing.
+
+However, on this particular morning, Nellie, the Hope Island girl, being
+reproved by the second mate for throwing pine apple and banana peel into
+the ship's dingey, flew into a violent rage, and told the carpenter that
+the second mate was stealing Ni-a-bon--and, moreover, had persuaded her
+to put something into his, the carpenter's, food, to make him "go mate,"
+_i.e._ sicken and die.
+
+Seizing an axe, the Chinaman sallied on deck, and commenced to exact
+satisfaction by aiming a blow at Ni-a-bon, who was playing cards with
+the other girls. The girl Mila averted the blow, and the whole pack fled
+shrieking to the Captain, who at once called upon Bill for explanation.
+
+He did not deny the impeachment, and offered to fight the carpenter for
+Ni-a-bon. The Captain decided this to be eminently right and proper; but
+thought the carpenter was hardly a match for the mate with fists. Bill
+promptly suggested knives. This seemed to choke off the carpenter, as,
+amid howls from the women, he stepped back into his cabin, only to
+reappear in the doorway with a rifle, and to send a bullet at the mate's
+head, which missed him.
+
+"At him, Billy," cried the Captain, "give him a good licking--but _don't
+hurt his arms_; there's a lot of work to be done to the bulwarks when we
+get the anchor down again."
+
+The second mate at once seized the carpenter, and dragging him out of
+his cabin, in a few minutes had so knocked his features about that he
+was hardly recognisable.
+
+Ni-a-bon was then called up before the Captain and questioned as to her
+preference, when, with many smiles and twisting about of her hands, she
+confessed to an ardent attachment to the herculean Bill.
+
+The Captain told Bill that he would have to pay the carpenter for
+damages, which he assessed at ten dollars, the amount being given, not
+for personal injury, but for the loss sustained by his annexation of the
+fascinating Ni-a-bon.
+
+At sunset we once more were off Chabral harbour, where we ran in and
+anchored--_within fifty yards_ of the king's house.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+MURDER AND SHIPWRECK
+
+
+We found the island in a state of excitement. Two whaleships had
+arrived, bringing half a dozen white men, and who had a retinue of
+nearly a hundred natives from Ocean and Pleasant Islands. The white men
+had to leave Pleasant Island on account of a general engagement which
+had taken place; had fled to the ships for safety, taking with them
+their native wives, families, and adherents.
+
+The other men were from Ocean Island, a famine having set in from
+drought in that lovely isle. They had also taken passage with their
+native following, to seek a more temporarily favoured spot. The
+fertility of Kusaie (Strong's Island) had decided them to remain.
+
+Strange characters, in truth, were these same traders, now all quartered
+at Chabral harbour! They were not without means, and so far had
+conducted themselves decently. But their retinue of savage warriors had
+struck terror into the hearts of the milder natives of Kusaie.
+
+Let me draw from the life one of the patriarchs of the movement, on the
+occasion of his embarkation.
+
+Ocean Island, lat. 0 deg. 50' south, long. 168 deg. east.
+
+A fantastic, lonely, forbidding-looking spot. Circular in form, with
+rounded summit, and a cruel upheaved coral coast, split up into ravines
+running deep into the land. Here and there, on ledges overlooking the
+sea, are perched tiny villages, inhabited by as fierce and intractable a
+race of Malayo-Polynesians as ever lacerated each other's bodies with
+sharks'-tooth daggers, after the mad drunkenness produced by sour toddy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mister Robert Ridley, aged seventy, sitting on a case in his house, on
+the south-west point of Paanopa, as its people call Ocean Island, with a
+bottle of "square face" before him, from which he refreshes himself,
+without the intervention of a glass, is one of the few successful
+deserters from the convict army of New South Wales. At the present
+moment he is an ill-used man. For seven years he has been the boss white
+man of Paanopa, ever since he left the neighbouring Naura or Pleasant
+Island, after seeing his comrades fall in the ranks one by one, slain by
+bullet or the scarce less deadly drink demon. Now, solitary and
+saturnine, he has to bow to Fate and quit his equatorial cave of
+Adullam, because a mysterious Providence has afflicted his island with a
+drought.
+
+From out the open door he sees the _Josephine_, of New Bedford, Captain
+Jos Long, awaiting the four whaleboats now on the little beach below his
+house, which are engaged in conveying on board his household goods and
+chattels, his wives and his children, with _their_ children, and a dusky
+retinue of blood-relations and retainers; for the drought had made food
+scarce. Blood had been shed over the ownership of certain cocoa-nut
+trees; and old Bob Ridley has decided to bid farewell to his island, and
+to make for Ponape in the Carolines. So the old man sits alone and
+awaits a call from the last boat. Perhaps he feels unusual emotion
+stirring him, as the faint murmur of voices ascends from the beach. He
+would be alone for awhile to conjure up strange memories of the past, or
+because the gin bottle is but half emptied.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"The _Josephine_, of New Bedford!" he mutters, as a grim smile passes
+over his bronzed, sin-wrinkled countenance; "why, _t'other one_ was from
+New Bedford too. This one's larger--a six-boat ship--and carries a big
+afterguard. Still the job could be done agin. But--what's the good now!
+If Joe, the Portuguese, was here with me I'd say it _could_ be done."
+Another gulp at the "square face." "Damn it! I'm an old fool. There's
+too many of these here cussed blubber-hunting Yankees about now. Say we
+took the ship, we'd never get away with her. Please God, I'll go to
+Ponape and live like a d--d gentleman. There's some of the old crowd
+there now, and I a'n't so old yet."
+
+And here, maybe, the old renegade falls a thinking afresh of "the other
+one" from New Bedford, that made this very island on the evening of the
+3rd of December 1852.
+
+Out nearly two years, and working up from the Line Islands towards
+Honolulu, the skipper had tried to make Pleasant Island, to get a
+boat-load of pigs for his crew, but light winds and strong currents had
+drifted him away, till, at dawn, he saw the rounded summits of Ocean
+Island pencilled faintly against the horizon, and stood away for it. "We
+can get a few boat-loads of pigs and 'punkins' there, anyhow," he said
+to the mate.
+
+The mate had been there before, and didn't like going again. That was in
+1850. Sixteen white men lived there then, ten of whom were runaway
+convicts from Sydney or Norfolk Island. He told his captain that they
+were part of a gang of twenty-seven who had at various times been landed
+from whalers at Pleasant Island in 1845. They had separated--some going
+away in the _Sallie_ whaler, and others finding their way to Ocean
+Island. Now, the _Sallie was never heard of again_, the mate remarked.
+The captain of the _Inga_ looked grave, but he had set his heart upon
+the pigs and "punkins." So at dusk the brig hove to, close to the
+south-west point, and as no boats came off the skipper went ashore.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There were nearly a thousand people on Ocean Island then, and he felt a
+trifle queer as the boat was rushed by the wild, long-haired crowd, and
+carried bodily on shore.
+
+Through the gathering darkness he saw the forms of white men trying to
+push their way through the yellow crowd of excited natives. Presently a
+voice called out, "Don't be scared, mister! Let the niggers have their
+way and carry up the boat."
+
+He let them have their way, and after being glared at by the red light
+of cocoa-nut torches borne by the women, he was conducted to one of
+three houses occupied by the six gentlemen who had arranged to leave the
+continent of Australia without beat of drum.
+
+Bob Ridley's house was the scene of rude and reckless revelry that
+night. A jar of the _Inga's_ rum had been sent for, and seated around on
+the boxes that lined the side of the room the six convicts drank the raw
+spirit like milk, and plied the captain for news of the outer world two
+years old. Surrounding the house was a throng of eager, curious natives,
+no longer noisy, but strangely silent as their rolling, gleaming eyes
+gloated over the stone jar on the table. Presently a native, called
+"Jack" by his white fellow residents, comes to the door and makes a
+quick sign to Bob and a man named Brady, who rose and followed him into
+a shed used as a cook-house. Jack's story is soon told. He had been to
+the brig. She had thirty-two hands, but three men were sick. A strict
+watch was kept by the mate, not more than ten natives were allowed on
+board at once. In the port bow boats and the starboard quarter boats
+hanging on the davits there were two sailors armed with muskets.
+
+Another of the white men now slunk into the cook-house where the three
+talked earnestly. Then Brady went back and told the captain that the
+brig was getting into the set of the outer currents, and would be out of
+sight of land by daylight unless he made sail and worked in close again.
+Upon which the captain shook hands all around, and was escorted to his
+boat, promising to be back at daylight and get his load of "punkins."
+
+Brady and two others went with the captain for company, and on the way
+out one of his new friends--a tall, ghastly creature, eternally twisting
+his long fingers and squirting tobacco juice from his evil-seeming
+mouth--told the captain that he "orter let his men take a run ashore to
+get some cocoa-nuts and have a skylark." When they got aboard the
+captain told the mate to take the sentries out of the boats, to make
+sail, and run in close out of the currents, as it was all right. The
+captain and the guests went below to open another jar, while the mate
+and cooper roused up the hands who were lying about yarning and smoking,
+and told them to make sail. In the house ashore Bob Ridley with his two
+companions and Jack were planning _how the job was to be done_.
+
+Two boats came ashore at daylight, and in addition to the crews there
+were ten or a dozen liberty men who had leave till noon to have a run
+about the island. The captain still bent on his "punkins," took a
+boat-steerer and two other hands to put the coveted vegetables into bags
+and carry them down to the boats. The pumpkins, Ridley said, grew on his
+own land quite close; the men could pick them off the vines, and the
+natives carry them down. So they set off up the hill until the pumpkin
+patch was reached. Here old Bob suddenly felt ill, and thought he would
+go back to take a swig at the rum jar and return, but if the captain
+wanted a good view from the top of the island Jack would show him round.
+So leaving the men to bag the pumpkins, the skipper and Jack climbed the
+path winding through the cocoa-nuts to the top of the hill. The sun was
+hot already, and the captain thirsty. Jack, out of his hospitable heart,
+suggested a drink. There were plenty of cocoa-nuts around growing on
+short, stumpy trees, a couple of which he twisted off, and without
+husking one with his teeth, as is often done, cut a hole in the green
+husk and presented it to the skipper to drink from. The nut was a heavy
+one; taking it in both hands the doomed sailor raised it to his lips and
+threw back his head. That was his last sight of the summer sky that has
+smiled down on so many a deed of blood and rapine. For Jack at that
+moment lifted his right arm and drove the knife to the hilt through his
+heart.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As Jack hurried back to be in good time for the "grand coup"--the
+cutting off of the brig--he saw that the boat-steerer and his two hands
+_had finished gathering the pumpkins_. Two bags were filled and tied,
+while beside them were the three bodies of the gatherers, each decently
+covered with a spreading cocoa-nut branch. The ten "liberty men" had
+been induced by a bevy of laughing island nymphs to accompany them along
+the ledge of the steep coast cliff to a place where, as Jack had told
+them, they would find plenty of nuts--a species of almond peculiar to
+Ocean and Pleasant Islands. Half-an-hour's walk took them out of sight
+and hearing of the _Inga_, and then the "liberty men" saw that the girls
+had somehow dropped behind, and were running with trembling feet into
+the maze of the undergrowth. The startled men found themselves in an
+amphitheatre of jagged rough coral boulders, covered over with a dense
+verdure of creepers, when suddenly Brady and fifty other devils swept
+down upon them without a cry. It was soon over. Then the blood-stained
+mob hurried back to the little beach.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The mate of the _Inga_ was a raw-boned Yankee from Martha's Vineyard.
+Fearless, and yet watchful, he had struck the tall renegade as "a chap
+as was agoin' to give them trouble if they didn't stiffen him fust in
+the cabin." It was then noon, and as eight bells struck the crew began
+to get dinner. The mate, before he went below, took a look at the shore
+and fancied he saw the boat shoving off with the captain.
+
+"Yes," chimed in Wilkins, one of the guests, "that's him; he's got a
+boat-load, and all the canoes comin' off 's a lot of our own niggers
+bringin' off cocoa-nuts."
+
+"Then let's get dinner right away," answered the mate, who knew the
+captain would make sail as soon as ever he found his "punkins" safe
+aboard.
+
+Had he known that the captain was lying staring up at the sun on the
+hilltop among the dwarf palms, he might even then have made a fight of
+it, short of half the crew as he was.
+
+It was not to be.
+
+They went below--he and his guests, the third mate and the carpenter;
+the cooper was left in charge of the ship.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The boats and canoes came alongside at once, pulling hard. Suddenly the
+cooper heard a cry from a man in the waist of the ship that chilled his
+blood, while over the bulwarks swarmed the copper-skinned crowd, knife
+and club in hand. As he rushed to the companion, the tall renegade
+looked up and saw the time had come.
+
+Then began the butchery. The ship's officers rushed on deck, leaving
+behind only the negro steward and a boy with the three convicts. Two
+shots were fired in the cabin, after which the three demons hurried up
+to join in the melee. In ten minutes there was not a man of the crew
+alive, except the cooper in the maintop, with a bloody whale-spade in
+his fast relaxing grasp. Brady and Bob were agreed "to give the old cove
+a chance to get eat up by the sharks," and ironically advised him to
+take a header and swim ashore. But the cooper, with his feet dangling
+over the futtocks and his head sunk on his chest, made no sign. He fell
+back as a streak of red ran slowly between the planking of the maintop
+and trickled down the mast to the deck.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a disappointment when the white murderers gathered in the cabin
+to find so small a quantity of rum in the _Inga's_ lazarette. But they
+were consoled by two bags of Mexican dollars--"Money for the punkins,"
+grinned Brady, which would buy them twice as much as they wanted when
+next ship came along. And then as the principal business was over, the
+harmony began, and amidst rum and unholy jesting, a division of the
+effects in the cabins was made, while unto Jack and his myrmidons were
+abandoned all and sundry that could be found for'ard.
+
+When the heavy-laden boats had been sent again and again to the shore, a
+fire was lighted in the cabin by the tall renegade, and the white men
+pushed off. But it suddenly occurred to Messrs. Ridley and Brady that
+"such a hell of a blaze might be seen by some other blubber-hunters a
+long way on a dark night," so the boat was put back and the brig
+hurriedly scuttled. And you can drop a lead line close to the edge of
+the reef anywhere about Ocean Island, and get no soundings at forty
+fathoms.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Soon after we anchored an urgent message was sent to the Captain by King
+Tokusar and Queen Se, imploring him to come ashore and advise them. The
+Captain had of late seemed averse to going anywhere without my company,
+and asked me to come with him. So, getting into the whaleboat, we were
+pulled on shore, landing at a massively-built stone wharf which formed
+part of the royal premises.
+
+I may here mention that the headquarters of the American Mission had
+been at Kusaie for many years. The people were all Christians, and to a
+certain degree educated. Their island took rank, therefore, as the most
+successful result of missionary enterprise in the North Pacific.
+
+A native college had been built, to which were brought from outlying
+islands those natives who were destined for the ministry. However, about
+a year previously the Board of Mission had changed their headquarters to
+Ebon, an island of the Marshall group, leaving but one native missionary
+on Kusaie in charge of the flock. His name was Likiak Sa. There are
+coloured Chadbands as well as white ones; and for pure, unmitigated
+hypocrisy the European professor would have had but little show in a
+prize contest.
+
+The head of the American Mission, Mr. Morland, had built himself an
+exceedingly comfortable stone house in Lele. As he was away at present
+in the brig _Morning Star_, his residence was occupied by his
+fellow-worker, Likiak Sa, his wife, and an exceedingly pretty girl named
+Kitty of Ebon, who acted as housekeeper to Mr. and Mrs. Morland when at
+home.
+
+The missionaries had tried hard to prevent the people of Kusaie from
+selling produce to the whaleships, alleging that their visits were
+fruitful of harm. The old king, however, whose power had declined
+sensibly since the arrival of the missionaries, withstood their orders;
+and finally insisted upon the privilege of permitting them to visit the
+island, and to purchase the pigs, poultry, and fruit from the islanders
+which would otherwise lie useless on their hands.
+
+This King Tokusar was a curious compound of shrewdness, generosity,
+cant, and immorality, each alternately gaining the upper hand.
+
+On entering the "palace," which was exceedingly well furnished, we found
+him seated in an armchair in his reception room. He was dressed in a
+black frock-coat and white duck trousers: the latter somewhat of a
+military cut, falling over patent leather shoes. On one side of the
+chair, lying on its broad arm, was a ponderous copy of the Scriptures in
+the Kusaie dialect. On the other arm was placed one of the long clay
+pipes known as churchwardens.
+
+Behind him, with her much bejewelled fingers clasping the back of her
+consort's chair, was Queen Se, a pretty little woman, with a pleasant,
+animated expression of countenance. Further inside the apartment were
+the queen's female attendants, sitting in the ungraceful manner peculiar
+to the Pingelap and Kusaie women.
+
+The king looked worn and ill, as he croaked out, "How you do, Captain? I
+glad to see you again. I thank God he bin good to you--give you good
+voyage. How much oil you bin buy at Ponape?"
+
+Shaking hands warmly with the king, Hayston introduced me in form, and
+then to Her Majesty, who smiled graciously, tossing back her wavy black
+hair, so as to show her massive gold ear-rings. Chairs were brought,
+when a truly amusing conversation took place.
+
+_King._--"Well, Captain! you d--d clever man. I want you give me advice.
+You see--all these men come to Kusaie. Well--me afraid, take my island
+altogether. What you think?"
+
+_Captain._--"Oh no, king! I'll see they do you no harm. I think some of
+them go away in the _Leonora_."
+
+_King._--(Much doubting) "Oh! thank you. I no want too many white men
+here--no Christians like Kusaie men. No believe God, no Jesus Christ."
+(Then with sudden change of tone) "I say, Capt'n Hayston, one of you men
+no pay my people when you here last--no pay anybody."
+
+_Captain._--"Very bad man, king, how much he cheat people out of?"
+
+_King._--(With inquiring look at queen) "Oh! about three dollars."
+
+_Captain._--"I'll attend to it, king--I'll see it paid."
+
+_King._--"Thank you, Capt'n. What you say this young gentleman's name?"
+
+_Captain._--"His name is Hilary Telfer."
+
+_King._--"You like Strong's Island, young gentleman? Pretty girl, eh?
+Same as Captain?" Here he gave a wheezing laugh, and clapped his hands
+on the Captain's knees.
+
+I told him I thought the Strong Island girls very pretty. The queen
+communicated this to the attendants. After which I was the recipient of
+various nods and winks and wreathed smiles.
+
+An enormous roasted hog was then carried in by two of the king's cooks,
+after which a number of servitors appeared carrying taro, yams, and
+other vegetables--again yet more, bearing quantities of fish. We seated
+ourselves at a small table--the Captain opposite the king, while the
+lively little queen and I were _vis-a-vis_.
+
+"Make up to her," whispered the Captain, "flatter her to the masthead if
+you wish to be in clover for the rest of your stay. Never mind old
+Tokusar."
+
+Acting on this hint I got on famously with her South Sea majesty,
+discovering in due course that she was a really clever little woman, as
+well as an outrageous flirt.
+
+Presently the boats came ashore again, and the steward was ushered in,
+carrying a large box.
+
+"King!" said the Captain, "I know you are sick, and need something to
+make you strong. Pray accept a small present from my table." The
+present consisted of two bottles of brandy, with the same quantity of
+gin, and a dozen of beer.
+
+"Oh! thank you, Capt'n--you really very kind. By George! I like you too
+much."
+
+The queen cast a reproachful glance at Hayston. I could see she did not
+appreciate the gift. Her lord soon had a bottle of brandy opened, out of
+which he poured himself an able seaman's dose. The Captain took a
+little, and I--for once in my life--shared a bottle of Tennant's bitter
+beer with a real queen.
+
+The king rose up, with a broad smile illumining his wrinkled face, and
+said, with his glass to his lips, "Capt'n, and Capt'n's friend, I glad
+to see you." Presently, however, with a scared face, he said something
+to his consort at which she seemed disconcerted, and then told us they
+had forgotten to say grace.
+
+This, in a solemn manner, Hayston requested me to do, and, as I was
+bending my head and muttering the half-forgotten formula, the king
+leaned over and whispered to him, "I say, Capt'n, how many labour boys
+you want take away in brig?"
+
+This made me collapse entirely, and I indulged in a hearty laugh. The
+Captain and the queen followed suit, and, at some distance, the king's
+cackling merriment.
+
+It certainly was a jolly dinner. The king was growing madder ever
+minute, alternately quoting Scripture and swearing atrociously. After
+which he told me that he liked to be good friends with Mr. Morland, and
+that he had given up all his bad habits. But, changing his mood again,
+he confided to me that he wished he was young again, and concluded by
+expressing a decided opinion as to the beauty of Kitty of Ebon, Mrs.
+Morland's housekeeper.
+
+The queen now rose from the table and asked me to smoke a cigar. She
+produced a work-box in which were cigarettes and some Manila cheroots.
+Most graciously she lighted one for me.
+
+The king was now more than half-seas over. He laughed hilariously at the
+Captain's stories, and, with some double-barrelled oaths, announced his
+determination to return to the worship of the heathen gods and to
+increase the number of his wives.
+
+Queen Se smiled, and blowing out the smoke from between her pouting red
+lips, said, "Hear the old fool talk!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That night there was high revel on board the _Leonora_ after we had
+taken our farewell of the king and queen.
+
+Hayston decided to take advantage of the land breeze, and so get away to
+South harbour at once, as we had business to do there. Chabral harbour
+was a difficult place to get out of, though easy enough to get into.
+
+The trade winds blow steadily here for seven months out of the twelve.
+Now, though the largest ship afloat may run in easily through the deep
+and narrow passage, there is not room enough to beat out against the
+north-east wind. Neither can she tow out, as there is always a heavy
+swell rolling in through the passage, wind or no wind. Kedging out is
+also simply impossible, owing to the extraordinary depth of water.
+
+In 1836, the _Falcon_ of London, a whaleship, lay in Chabral harbour for
+120 days. She had ventured in for wood and water. On making a fifth
+attempt to tow out with her five boats, she touched and went to pieces
+on the reef.
+
+Hayston, however, had run in, knowing that at this season of the
+year--from January to March--the winds were variable, a land breeze
+generally springing up at dusk.
+
+I stated that there was revelry on board the brig that night. The fact
+was that the Captain, in the presence of the king, queen, and myself,
+had made agreement with the refugee traders to take them to whatever
+island they preferred. The king was strongly averse to their retinue of
+excitable natives being domiciled among the peaceful Kusaie people.
+Inspired with courage by the presence of Hayston, he had told the
+traders that he wished them to vacate Lele. If they did arrange to leave
+in the _Leonora_, he told them that they could establish themselves at
+Utwe (South harbour), and there remain until they got away in a passing
+whaler or China-bound ship.
+
+After conferring with Hayston, most of the traders decided to take his
+offer of conveying them and their following to Ujilong (Providence
+Island), which was his own property, and there enter into engagement
+with him to make oil for five years. Two others agreed to proceed to the
+sparsely populated but beautiful Eniwetok (or Brown's group), where were
+vast quantities of cocoa-nuts, and only thirty natives. These two men
+had a following of thirty Ocean islanders, and were in high delight at
+the prospect of having an island to themselves and securing a fortune
+after a few years of oil-making.
+
+As the merry clink of the windlass pauls echoed amidst the verdurous
+glens and crags of the mountains that surround Lele, the traders, with
+their wives, families, and followers, pulled off in their whaleboats and
+came aboard.
+
+What a picture did the brig make as she spread her snowy canvas to the
+land-breeze! Laden with the perfume of a thousand flowers, cooled by its
+passage through the primeval forest, it swept us along towards the
+passage, upon the right steering through which so much depended. The
+traders had half a dozen whaleboats; these, with two belonging to the
+_Leonora_, were towing astern, with a native in each.
+
+The passage, as I have said before, was deep but narrow. As the traders
+gazed on either side and watched the immense green rollers dashing with
+resistless force past the brig's side, they looked apprehensively at
+the Captain and then at their boats astern.
+
+Right in the centre an enormous billow came careering along at the speed
+of an express train. Though it had no "breaking curl" on its towering
+crest, I instinctively placed my hands in the starboard boat davits,
+expecting to see the vast volume of water sweep our decks. Some of the
+traders sprang into the main rigging just as the brig lifted to the sea,
+to plunge downward with a swift and graceful motion, never losing her
+way for a moment. No man of our crew took the least notice. They knew
+what the brig could do, they knew the Captain, and no more anticipated a
+disaster than a mutiny.
+
+We made open water safely. Then the Captain descended from the
+fore-yard, whence he had been conning the ship. "Well, gentlemen," he
+said, "here we are, all on board the _Leonora_! I hope you think well of
+her."
+
+The traders emphatically asserted that she was a wonder. Then, as we did
+not intend to enter Utwe harbour till the morning, we shortened sail.
+The brig was placed under her topsails only, and we glided slowly and
+smoothly down the coast. Still the reef surge was thundering on the
+starboard hand.
+
+The light of the native villages--for the sudden night of the tropics
+was upon us--glimmered through the groves of cocoa-nuts and bread-fruit
+trees that fringed the snowy beaches. A shadowy, dreamy landscape,
+blurred and indistinct at times, while ever and anon the back-borne
+spume of the breakers fell in rain-mist over all, as they reared and
+raved, only to dash themselves in mad turmoil on the javelins of jagged
+coral.
+
+It was a strange scene. Yet stranger still were the dramatis
+personae--the wild band of traders that clustered around the giant form
+of the Captain, as he lay smoking his cigar on the skylight, in friendly
+converse with all.
+
+Foremost in position and seniority comes old Harry Terry, a stalwart,
+grizzled veteran, brown-cheeked and bright-eyed still. Full of yarns of
+his cruise with Captain Waldegrave of H.M. _Seringapatan_, and Captain
+Thomas Thompson in the _Talbot_ frigate, on the coast of South America.
+Clear and honest is his eye, yet he has a worn and saddened look, as
+from a sorrow, long past, half-forgotten, yet never to be wholly erased
+from memory's tablet. A deserter--of course. Yet had he a true Briton's
+love for the flag which he had once sailed and fought under. By his side
+stand four stalwart half-caste sons, hearkening with glistening eyes to
+the Captain's tales of lands they had never seen, scarcely heard of,--of
+polar bears, icebergs, dog sledges, Esquimaux, reindeer, far amid the
+solitudes of the frozen North.
+
+Close by old Harry sits a tall, red-bearded man, with a look of latent
+humour in his countenance, which proclaims his nationality even if the
+richness of his brogue were not in evidence. This is Pleasant Island
+Bill, a merry good-for-nothing, with a warm heart and unlimited capacity
+for whisky. In his belt he carries--perhaps from force of habit--a heavy
+navy revolver, before which many a fierce Pleasant islander has gone
+down in the bloody emeutes so common in that wild spot. Behind Bill is
+his wife Tiaro--a fair-skinned native of Taputanea (Drummond's Island).
+She is certainly the "savage woman" of the poet's fancy--handsome
+withal, as, with her hand on her husband's shoulder, she gazes
+admiringly at the herculean figure of the far-famed Rover of the South
+Seas, the dreaded Captain of the _Leonora_. Near to or behind Tiaro are
+the other traders' wives, with their wild-eyed, graceful children.
+
+Beside me, sitting upon a bundle of sleeping mats, is a bronzed and
+handsome young fellow, Charlie Wilder by name, a veritable Adonis of the
+South Seas. With clear-cut features and bright brown curling locks,
+contrasting well with a dark, drooping moustache, he lolls languidly on
+the mats, gazing dreamily at times at the animated forms and faces
+around him. He was the ideal sea rover--much untrammelled by the canons
+of more civilised life. To each of his four young wives he appeared
+equally devoted. Though a _blase_, exquisite in manner, he was a man who
+simply laughed at wounds and death. A dangerous antagonist, too, as some
+of his fellow-traders had good reason to know.
+
+There was yet another trader--a tall young American, who had run away at
+Pleasant Island from the whaleship _Seagull_--a difference of opinion
+with the captain having resulted in Seth's being put in irons.
+
+Besides Dick Mills the boat-steerer, who had deserted also from a
+whaler, there was another well-known trader, a true type of the old-time
+escaped convict. Burnt browner than a coffee berry is old Bob Ridley,
+scarred, weather-beaten, and, in accordance with the fashion of runaway
+sailors in the early days, tattooed like a Marquesas islander. Very
+"dour" and dangerous was this veteran--thinking no more of settling a
+difference with his ever-ready revolver than of filling his ancient clay
+pipe. He had with him two sons and three daughters, all married save the
+youngest girl. Sons and daughters alike had intermarried with natives,
+and the old man himself--his first wife being dead--had possessed
+himself of a girl of tender years but unyielding character. A native of
+Rapa-nui or Easter Island, she possessed in a high degree the personal
+beauty for which her race is famed throughout Polynesia. The old trader,
+it seems, had lately visited Tahiti, and there had dropped across the
+beautiful Lalia, and rescued her from the streets of Papeite. When he
+returned to Pleasant Island she accompanied him. She was a clever
+damsel, and having once been an inmate of the military camp at Tahiti,
+gave herself great airs over her step-children, though she was the
+junior of the youngest girl. Amongst other accomplishments Lalia
+could swear fluently both in French and English, having besides a
+thorough command of whaleship oaths which, I may observe, are unique in
+their way, and never seen in print.
+
+Singing and dancing were kept up until the galley fire was lit and
+coffee served out. Then as the tropic sea-mist was dispelled by the
+first sun rays, we saw, at no great distance, the verdurous hills that
+enclose with emerald walls the harbour of Utwe. Far back, yet seeming
+but a cable's length from the brig, rose the rugged coast, two thousand
+feet in air, of Mount Crozier.
+
+The inner shore of the harbour, sheltered by the reef from the fury of
+the terrific rollers, is surrounded by a broad belt of darkest green
+mangroves and hibiscus, forming a dense barrier, monotonous in
+colouring, but blending harmoniously with sea and sky. A well-nigh
+impassable forest coloured the landscape from sea to mountain top. Only
+near the shore were groves of cocoa-palms waving their plumy banners to
+the soft trade breezes. Interspersed at intervals one descried
+plantations of bananas and sugar-cane, yams and taro. The humidity of
+the climate shows itself in the surpassing richness of the vegetation.
+Mountain torrents foam and "rivulets dance their wayward round" in many
+a sequestered glen. Cane thickets springing densely from the deep
+alluvial mould form a safe retreat for the wild boar, while the stately
+purple plumaged pigeons preen themselves in the green gloom of this
+paradisal wild.
+
+The Captain walked the quarter-deck, giving orders to make sail on the
+brig, glancing in a half amused, yet contemptuous manner at the
+recumbent figures of the traders who, overcome by their potations, lay
+slumbering on the deck.
+
+Utwe is but a small harbour, so that the Captain felt vexed when
+daylight broke and revealed four whalers lying at anchor in the little
+port, allowing us no room. But one of them had his canvas loosed, and
+we caught the strains of "Shenandoah" as the crew lifted the anchor. We
+backed our main-yard and lay to, while she sailed out. A fine sight it
+was, as the whaler stood out through the narrow passage! The huge
+rollers dashing swiftly past her weather-beaten sides, made her roll so
+heavily that the boats on the davits nearly touched the water with their
+keels. She came close under our stern. Her captain stood up in one of
+the boats and took off his hat.
+
+"How air you, Capt'n?" he drawled; "that's a beautiful brig of yours.
+I've heard a deal of the _Leonora_ and Captain Hayston. I'm real sorry I
+hav'n't time to board you and have a chat. There's another
+blubber-hunter coming out after me, so you'd better wait awhile."
+
+Hayston answered him politely, and the _Marathon_ soon ran round the lee
+side of the island. In a quarter of an hour she was followed by another
+ship, after which we filled again and ran in, anchoring between the
+mangroves and the _Europa_ and _St. George_, New Bedford whaleships.
+
+Our first care was to land the cattle, and here the traders and whalers
+were treated to a lively scene. The mate Jansen, of whom I have before
+spoken, had been knocked off duty by the Captain, who told him that he
+was no seaman, and a cowardly dog besides, as he was always ready to ill
+treat the native crew, but would not stand up to him.
+
+An incident, in which I was an actor, goes to show the savage nature of
+the brute. One day, during our stay at Ponape, I happened to require a
+pair of steelyards that lay in his cabin; on going for them he used
+insulting language, and dared me to enter. He was lying in his bunk, and
+his bloodshot eyes glared with rage as he took a pistol from under his
+pillow. Keeping one eye on the pistol I went in and took the steelyards.
+He leaped out, and a struggle began. We fell on the deck--his whole
+weight upon me--but I managed to get hold of the pistol, which I threw
+overboard. As he freed himself and rose, he gave me a savage kick on
+the knee which lamed me for a week. But I drew back and landed him a
+left-hander, which catching him fair in the face, sent him down
+senseless, while a stream of blood poured from his mouth and ears.
+
+"Malie! malie!" shouted Black Johnny in Samoan (the equivalent to
+"_habet_"), and the crew took up the cry in tones of deep approval.
+
+We never spoke again after this encounter.
+
+However, just before we made ready to land the cattle, he came aft and
+begged the Captain to reinstate him.
+
+"Mr. Jansen!" said Hayston, "I cannot permit you to resume duty as mate
+of this brig. I have given the position to Fiji Bill, as you are not fit
+for it. However, I will see how you behave for the future, and may give
+you another chance. Go on deck and assist to get these cattle into the
+water."
+
+The traders and whalers were watching the operation with great interest.
+The longboat, in charge of Fiji Billy, was ready to tow the cattle on
+shore as soon as they were lowered into the water. The first beast was
+swung safely out of the main hold and over the side, when the tackle
+parted aloft and the animal plunged into the sea, just missing the boat.
+For a moment there was silence. We all ran to the side, where we saw the
+bullock reappear and strike bravely out for the mangroves, which he
+reached in safety.
+
+The Captain walked slowly over to Jansen, who was engaged in bullying
+the boatswain.
+
+"Who rigged that tackle?" he asked in his most unruffled tones; but I
+could see the colour mounting to his forehead, as the laughter of the
+whaling crews fell upon his ear.
+
+"I did," growled Jansen (edging towards his cabin, in which he always
+kept loaded firearms), his sullen face showing fear and hatred
+combined.
+
+"Keep to the deck, sir," broke forth the Captain, who had foreseen this
+movement; the harsh, severe tones I knew foretold disaster. "D--n you,
+sir, you are neither good enough for an officer nor man before the mast.
+There is not a kanaka on board this brig but could have rigged that
+tackle in a seaman-like manner. Boy George, or even one of the girls,
+could have made a better fist of it. You have disgraced the brig in the
+presence of other ships. Go to your bunk till after breakfast."
+
+And now Jansen brought immediate punishment on himself. With one hand on
+the door of the deckhouse, he turned round and muttered, "Why didn't you
+let the women do it, then?"
+
+The next moment both men were struggling fiercely on the deck,--Jansen
+making frantic efforts to fire a pistol he had concealed in the bosom of
+his shirt; but the hand which held it was gripped by the Captain, and
+the muzzle pointed upwards.
+
+Jansen was an extremely powerful man, and, amid the babel of tongues
+that were let loose, I heard one trader say, "By ----! he's got the best
+of the Captain."
+
+But I noticed that while Jansen was almost spent, and was breathing
+stertorously, the Captain had not yet put forth the tremendous strength
+which, on sea or shore, I never saw equalled. He was still holding
+Jansen's hand with a vice-like grasp, when the pistol fell to the deck.
+Suddenly freeing himself, he stepped back and dealt two blows with
+wonderful quickness on the mate's face, cutting his forehead and cheek
+to the bone. The man staggered wildly--his features streaming with
+blood--then fell senseless against one of the crew, who darted aside and
+let him drop on the deck. A murmur of applause, mingled with cries of
+pity from the women, arose from the spectators, while the whaler crews
+rent the air with cheers for "Bully Hayston."
+
+The Captain drew forth his handkerchief, with which he removed a slight
+stain upon his face, then said in a mild and pleasant voice, as if
+nothing had occurred, "Steward! bring me a glass of water. Bill (to the
+Fijian) get these other beasts up and put them ashore. Antonio! get
+Jansen's traps together, and put them and him into the boat. The man
+that points a pistol at me on board of this brig only does it once. As I
+don't wish to hurt him again, I must get rid of him."
+
+The cattle were soon landed and eating their fill on the rich tract of
+littoral between Utwe and Coquille.
+
+That day I bought various articles of trade--including ten tons of yams
+for Arrecifos. The Captain never interfered with my dealings with the
+natives; so when Likiak Sa the missionary went to him, and in a whining
+tone complained of my paying them in trade, he got the following answer:
+"Don't want your people to be paid in trade, don't you? Precisely so!
+you white chokered schemer--you whited sepulchre! you want to see these
+hard-working slaves of natives paid in cash, so that you and your
+brethren may rob the poor devils of every dollar for church tithes. The
+supercargo has my fullest confidence, and will not rob any native of a
+cent. Go and talk to him."
+
+The missionary came to the trade-room, where I was selling pigeon shot
+and powder to a man named Sree, and said that he wished the natives paid
+in cash. Every Strong's islander can speak English. So I turned to those
+present and asked if I had suggested their taking trade instead of
+dollars. On receiving this answer in the negative I told him to clear
+out. He disregarded me, upon which I assisted him to leave the cabin,
+while Lalia and Kitty covered him with flour from the pantry.
+
+This provided me with a persistent and bitter enemy.
+
+About six o'clock the Captain went below, but rather hastily returned,
+casting an anxious look to seaward. "The glass is falling fast," he
+said, "I can't make it out. I have never known it to blow hard here at
+this time of year. Still it is banking up to the westward."
+
+He hailed the whaleships, and saw that they had also noticed the glass
+falling. In a few minutes the two captains boarded us to have a
+consultation. The heavy, lowering cloud to seaward had deepened in
+gloom, and the three captains gazed anxiously at it.
+
+"Gentlemen!" said Hayston, "we are in a bad place if it comes on to
+blow. The land-breeze has died away, and that it is going to blow from
+the sou'-west I am convinced. We cannot tow out in the face of such a
+swell, even if we had daylight to try it. To beat out by night would be
+madness."
+
+The faces of the Yankee skippers lengthened visibly as they begged
+Hayston to make a suggestion.
+
+"Well," he said at length, "your ships may ride out a blow, for you've
+room to swing in, and if you send down your light spars and be quick
+about it, and your cables don't part, you'll see daylight. But with me
+it is different. I cannot give the brig a fathom more cable; there are
+coral boulders all around us, and the first one she touches will knock a
+hole in her bottom. But now every man must look to himself. I have two
+hundred people on board, and my decks are lumbered up with them. Adios!
+gentlemen, go on board and get your spars down for God's sake."
+
+Then the Captain turned all his attention to getting the brig ready for
+the storm that was even then close upon us. In the shortest time our
+royal and topgallant yards were down, the decks cleared of lumber, the
+native passengers sent below, and five fathoms of cable hove in. Hayston
+knew the brig would swing round with her head to the passage as soon as
+the gale struck her, and unless he hove in cable, must strike on one of
+the boulders he had spoken of.
+
+As yet there was not a breath of air, for after the last whisper of the
+land-breeze had died away, the atmosphere became surcharged with
+electricity, and the rollers commenced to sound a ceaseless thunder, as
+they dashed themselves upon the reef, such as I had never heard before.
+A pall of darkness settled over us, and though the whaleships were so
+near that the voices of their crews sounded strange and ghostlike in our
+ears, we could see nothing except the dull glow of the lamps alight in
+the cabins--showing through the ports.
+
+Then we heard the voice of Captain Grant of the _St. George_, "Stand by,
+Captain Hayston, it's coming along as solid as a wall."
+
+A fierce gust whistled through the cordage, and then a great white cloud
+of rain, salt spume, and spray enveloped the brig, as with a shrill,
+humming drone, like a thousand bagpipes in full blast, the full force of
+the gale struck us. The brig heeled over, then swung quickly round to
+her anchor, while the crew, every man at his station, sought through the
+inky blackness that followed the rain squall to see how the whaleships
+fared.
+
+But now the darkness deepened, if such were possible. No star shone
+through the funereal gloom; while the enormous rollers, impelled by the
+increasing force of the wind, swept in quickest succession through the
+narrow passage. The three ships rolled heavily.
+
+"Harry!" called out the Captain to the oldest trader, "take your boats
+and land as many of the people as you can. The sea is getting up
+fast--in half-an-hour it will be breaking aboard the brig."
+
+The traders' boats were made fast to the ship's stern, except two on
+deck.
+
+These were now hauled alongside, and old Harry, with his four stalwart
+sons--splendid fellows they were physically--manned one, and taking
+about fifty of their followers, who sprang over the side and were
+hauled into the boat, the sons gave a wild shout and disappeared into
+the darkness.
+
+The other boat was equally lucky in not being stove in. Pleasant Island
+Bill was in charge, and in a lull of the wind I heard him call out to
+those on deck to throw the women overboard and he would pick them up.
+
+Five or six of them leaped overboard and, swimming like otters, gained
+the boat; many others naturally held back. Standing on the deck clinging
+to the Captain's knees were the two children, Toby and Kitty. Seizing
+Kitty in his arms the Captain tossed her into the black waters close to
+the boat, where one of the crew caught her by the hair and pulled her
+in. Toby gave a yell of alarm and tried to dart below, but I caught him
+and slung him over after Kitty. Bill nearly missed catching him as he
+rose to the surface, but he was taken in. Then the boat headed for the
+shore, now only discernible by the white line of foam breaking; into the
+mangroves.
+
+And now our troubles recommenced. The waters of the harbour, generally
+placid as a mill-pond, were now running mountains high, so quickly had
+the sea got up. The Captain, who was standing at the stern sounding, and
+apparently as cool as if he were trout fishing, beckoned me to him, and
+placing his mouth to my ear, shouted--
+
+"Four fathoms under our stern--little enough if the sea gets worse. But
+if the wind hauls another point we'll touch that big coral mushroom on
+the port quarter, and then it's good-bye to the _Leonora_!"
+
+The words had hardly left his lips when a strange and awful lull of the
+wind occurred, rendering more intense the enshrouding darkness, more
+dread and distinct the seething wash and roar of the seas that broke on
+the weather reef.
+
+The Captain sprang into the main rigging and held up his hand to feel
+if the wind was coming from a new quarter. For some minutes the brig
+rolled so madly that it was all he could do to hold on.
+
+Then his strong, fearless voice sounded out: "Men! who will man a boat
+to take a line to the _Europa_? If I can get a hawser to the whaler to
+keep the brig's stern from this boulder under our port quarter, it may
+save the ship. If not, we must strike. There's a lull now, and a boat
+could get away."
+
+After a momentary hesitation, Antonio the Portuguese, Johnny Tilton, and
+two natives volunteered.
+
+"Good lads!" cried the Captain; "stand by, men, to lower away the
+whaleboat." In a few minutes she was in the water, and a whale-line made
+fast to a stout hawser was coiled away in the bow, as with an
+encouraging cheer from those on deck, the men gave way, and passing
+under our stern made for the _Europa_.
+
+After twenty minutes of anxiety, for we could see nothing, nor tell
+whether the boat had reached the _Europa_ safely or been stove in
+alongside, we saw her dart past the stern again, and Antonio called out,
+"All right, Captain, heave away on the hawser, the end's fast to the
+_Europa_."
+
+"Well done, lads!" cried the Captain; "but stay where you are, and I'll
+get some more women on shore."
+
+The strange lull still continued, but a lurid glare showed me the glass
+still falling steadily; when I told the Captain this he sighed, for he
+knew that our best chance of safety was gone. But he was a man of
+action.
+
+"Go below, Hilary!" he said quietly, "and get all the papers, letters,
+and articles of value together--I'll send them on shore with the women."
+
+In the cabin were eight or ten women; they gazed at me with
+terror-stricken faces. "On deck, Mary!" I said. "On deck all of you!
+there's a boat alongside, and some of you can get ashore."
+
+Five of them, with old Mary, at once left the cabin, and I heard their
+wild cries and screams of alarm as they were seized by the Captain and
+crew, and thrown overboard to be picked up by the boat.
+
+Lalia and the others remained in the cabin, clinging to each other
+and sobbing with fear.
+
+I picked up a heavy trade chest, and laying mats and rugs along the
+bottom and sides, stowed into it the chronometers, a couple of sextants,
+charts, and what gold and silver coin was in the Captain's secretary;
+also as many Winchester carbines and cartridges as it would hold.
+
+"Here, girls! help me carry this on deck," I said in Samoan to Lalia,
+who understood the language. We dragged the heavy box on deck, and, by
+wonderful good luck, it was lowered into the boat, which was now under
+the ship's quarter, and in imminent danger of being stove in.
+
+The Captain desired me to go ashore in the longboat and take charge of
+the boat. I was just about to jump when the brig gave a fearful plunge,
+and before she could recover, a heavy roller crashed over the waist and
+nearly smothered me. By clinging to the iron boat davits near me, I
+managed to save myself from being carried overboard with the debris of
+spars and timber that swept aft. When I regained my breath I could see
+nothing of the boat. She had, however, been swept ashore, and all in her
+landed safely except Bill, who was knocked overboard, but washed up into
+the mangroves.
+
+I felt the Captain's hand on my shoulder, as he asked me if I thought
+the boat had gone under.
+
+"I think not, or we should have heard some of them calling out; they can
+all swim."
+
+"Well, perhaps so," he replied, "but I fear not. I don't care a cent
+about the loss of the dollars, but Bill is a good fellow."
+
+Lalia had clung to the davits with me when the sea struck us, and was
+now almost exhausted. So with the Captain's help I carried her below
+into the now deserted cabin, for the other women were gone; had, I
+supposed, been washed overboard, for they were standing with us when we
+lowered the chest.
+
+The Captain then hastened on deck, telling me that the wind was coming
+away from the south. He had scarcely left me when I heard the dismal
+drone of the gale again, and his voice shouting to the carpenter to
+stand by and cut away the masts, for the seas were now breaking clean
+over the bows, and sweeping along the decks with resistless force.
+
+Being almost hove short, the ship could not rise quickly enough to the
+seas, and was besides rolling so much that she threatened to turn turtle
+every minute. It was impossible for any one to cross the deck, so madly
+was the brig rolling, and so fiercely were the seas sweeping her decks
+in quick succession; and so for a while all hands waited till a better
+chance offered to cut away.
+
+In the mean time I had dragged out another trade chest, and first
+securing my own papers and placing them in the bottom, I filled it with
+such articles as I thought would prove valuable if we did not save the
+ship.
+
+Lalia rendered me great assistance now. I filled a wineglass of
+brandy from the decanter, and made her drink it, for her teeth were
+chattering, and her lips blue with cold and terror combined.
+
+Together we managed to get the chest half-way up the companion, when
+another plunge made me slip, and the heavy box jammed the girl's feet
+against the side of the companion lining. I called loudly for help, as I
+could not extricate her from under the box. Fortunately, four native
+seamen heard me, and lifted the chest off her legs.
+
+Then I heard the Captain's voice calling out, "Well done, boys! Rotumah
+men, brave fellows, in a boat!"
+
+Carrying the girl below again, I dropped her in the steward's cabin,
+told her to stay there till I came back, and ran on deck.
+
+The Captain met me, and, pointing to a dark, indistinct mass, rising and
+falling near the ship's stern, said, "There's real grit for you!"
+
+It was one of the trader's whaleboats, manned by four Rotumah men and a
+native of Danger Island. Two of these brave fellows had been washed
+ashore in the second sea that had struck us, and with three others, who
+had reached the mangroves in another boat, had put out again to return
+to the brig and save their shipmates.
+
+The Captain now called out to those who were left on board, and told
+them that there was a chance of some of them getting ashore, by jumping
+over as the boat approached and getting into her. As for himself, if
+three or four good men would stand by him, he would attempt to cut away
+the masts, and perhaps save the ship as the hawser was made fast to the
+_Europa_.
+
+It was a new one, and might not part; but if it did, nothing could help
+the brig from sticking on the detached coral boulders that lay so close
+under the stern.
+
+Seizing her child in her arms, a powerfully-built Ocean Island woman
+sprang into the seething foam-caldron, and disregarding our cries to
+make for the boat, struck out for the nearest point of the mangroves.
+Next morning the child was found unharmed on a small beach, more than a
+mile away, and the body of the mother lying dead beside her, with a
+fearful gash on her temple and one foot missing,--the poor babe gazing
+at the cold face, and wondering why she did not wake when she called to
+her. Then others followed the women, some getting into the boat, and
+others letting the sea take them in the direction of the shore.
+
+"Where is the second mate?" shouted the Captain to the coxswain of the
+rescuing boat.
+
+"On shore with the traders, sir; all the boats but one are stove in on
+the beach, and he can't get out again."
+
+"All right, lads, don't attempt to come out again; but wait a minute."
+Then turning to me, "You must go ashore now in this boat. She has not
+many in her; and if her head is kept right into the break between the
+mountains she'll run up into the mangroves."
+
+But I said I would take my chance with the ship. I was a good swimmer,
+and in that time of danger, even despair, I could not leave the Captain.
+
+He pressed my hand silently, then called out, "All right, men, give way,
+the supercargo stays with me and the ship"; one dash of the oars, a
+wailing cry, a shout which out-toned it, and the boat disappeared, as if
+swallowed up by the darkness or the deep.
+
+We were not clustered together aft. Those of the crew that had stood by
+the ship were hanging on to the main rigging. The Captain, who had
+hitherto intended cutting away both masts at once, told me he fancied
+the ship was straining and plunging less, and that he would only cut
+away as a last resource.
+
+Suddenly he bent his glance at the hawser that was made fast to the
+_Europa_, and then pointed over to the seething water under our stern. I
+saw we were almost over a huge coral boulder, which every now and then
+showed itself bare.
+
+"By ----! those fellows on board the _Europa_ are paying out the hawser.
+We were fifty feet from that rock when the hawser was made fast and had
+a strain on it, and now it's right under her stern. Can any of you see
+the whaler's cabin lights?"
+
+The men looked through the blinding mists of spray that flew in our
+faces, and stung like whip-lashes when the brig was lifted high on a
+towering sea. The hawser tightened like an iron bar, but suddenly fell
+as if it had parted or been cast off.
+
+"The cursed dogs!" said the Captain, opening and shutting his hands
+spasmodically, "they are paying out, and letting us go to the devil!"
+
+And now a tremendous sea swept along and broke just as it reached
+abreast the mainmast. We felt the brig strike. Sea after sea tumbled in
+over the bulwarks, and a solid sheet of water broke over us in the main
+rigging, sweeping three or four men overboard.
+
+When I cleared my throat of the water I had swallowed, I saw the Captain
+with a rifle in his hand, and then followed the flash as he fired in the
+direction of the _Europa_.
+
+"Captain," I cried, "what good will that do? She may be ashore herself
+in as bad a fix as we are."
+
+He pushed me aside as I placed my hand on his arm. "Stand clear, Hilary!
+I tell you these cowardly hounds are deliberately wrecking me. That ship
+is in a safe place, and could ride out a heavier gale than this."
+
+"Captain," I began, when another sea lifted the brig's bow high in the
+air; then, with a dull crash, we struck stern on, and I saw the hawser
+had either parted or been cut away. The rudder had been torn from the
+stern-post, and ripped its way through the timbers with a fearful
+tearing sound. Again the Captain's face showed itself to me almost as
+white as the hell of boiling foam around us.
+
+"My ship is dearer to me than my life!" he said, as he cast the rifle
+from him and stood gazing out into the howling storm, amid which all the
+voices of earth and air seemed to be contending.
+
+Suddenly, with a pang of pity, I remembered that Lalia was in the
+steward's cabin. I dashed down below. Already the water was running into
+the hold, and as I gained the cabin the ship once more struck violently
+under my feet.
+
+"Lalia! Lalia!" I called, "come with me. Can you walk?"
+
+The girl was sitting up in the bunk, her hair unloosed, her eyes dilated
+with terror, as she gazed into the dimly-lighted cabin, and saw the
+water washing around it.
+
+She could hardly stand with the pain in her bruised feet, but I lifted
+her out. Then she tore off her dress, stripped to the waist, and, hand
+in hand, we succeeded in gaining the companion-way just as a torrent of
+water filled the cabin and put out the lamps.
+
+I felt the Captain's hand grasp me round the waist as we stumbled out on
+deck, and heard him say, "Hold on to me, Hilary! hold on like grim
+death, my girl!" as we were swept along by a sea against the bulwarks on
+the starboard side.
+
+Some of the men had clung to a boat that we carried on top of the
+deck-house, which had been washed over the side. They had no oars, but
+the backwater from the reef dashed her up against the ship, and I have
+an indistinct remembrance of the Captain dragging us along with him, and
+attempting to lift the girl up, when a towering wave struck us right
+amidships and drove us all over together on top of the boat, which was
+already stove in.
+
+I should have gone under then but for Lalia, for I had got a blow on
+the side from a piece of wreckage. Anyhow, what followed I cannot
+remember, for when I came to my senses it was daylight, and I was lying
+under some cocoa-nut trees with Lalia, and one of Harry Skilling's
+native retainers named Karta, bathing my back with fresh water.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My first inquiry was for the Captain, and I was relieved to hear from
+Lalia that he was visible at that moment, directing the crew to save
+wreckage from the brig. The two whaleships had ridden out the gale in
+safety, and the _Europa_ was already under weigh. I thought it just as
+well it was so, for Hayston would, I am sure, have attempted to seize
+her.
+
+Lalia told me that we clung to the boat till she struck a coral rock
+and went to pieces. Then every one was separated. She had been seized by
+Karta, and, still keeping hold of me, the three of us had come ashore
+together. She said also that my back was badly cut with the coral. The
+poor girl had a terrible gash on her arm, and this she had neglected to
+attend to me. I had a deep wound on my face, which caused me great pain,
+as a piece of tough coral had broken off in it.
+
+Lalia was almost nude, and I had only the remnants of a pair of duck
+trousers. We did not feel cold, however, as the storm had ceased, and
+the sun was now shining brightly. The wind had gone down, and the
+harbour was nearly as smooth as a mountain lake. The only visible sign
+of the disaster of the night was the maintopmast of the _Leonora_,
+showing where she had gone down.
+
+From the bank of mangroves on which we were located there was no access
+to the village of Utwe, where the rest of the ship's company were. Deep
+channels separated the two portions of the harbour. Karta was about to
+swim over to tell the Captain where I was, when Lalia caught him by
+the arm and pointed to the water. I have read a good many tall yarns
+about sharks, but never till now could I believe in their being as
+numerous as a shoal of minnows.
+
+The channels were simply alive with the brutes dashing to and fro,
+lashing the water into foam, and contesting with each other for dark
+objects floating near the surface. I shuddered instinctively, but
+Lalia laughed, and explained that the dead bodies were those of pigs
+washed overboard from the brig.
+
+Presently the tall figure of Karta attracted the notice of some of the
+people on the other side, and Lalia said the "ariki vaka" was coming
+over to us in one of the traders' whaleboats.
+
+The Captain sprang out of the boat, and seeing me lying down with my
+head in the girl's lap thought I was dead.
+
+"My dear boy," he said, taking both my hands and pressing them, "are you
+badly hurt?"
+
+I showed him my back, and said I felt most pain in my side, and
+whereupon I suffered ten excruciating pains in one as he extracted the
+piece of flat coral from my face. He then called one of the boat's crew,
+and told him to take off his shirt, one sleeve of which he tore off and
+bound up Lalia's arm. He then gave her the mutilated garment to cover
+her bare body, saying in his old cheerful manner that her husband was
+all right, and was out searching the beaches for her. She made a gesture
+of indifference, and then fainted away. As soon as she revived she was
+lifted into the boat, and we pushed off for the village.
+
+The Captain kept pressing my hand all the way over, and told me that
+since daylight he had been looking among the wreckage coming ashore and
+searching the beach for me, when some one saw our three figures in the
+cocoa-nut grove, and said two were white. Hayston knew this must be
+Lalia and myself, as she had a very fair skin. He was sincerely
+pleased at my escape, and no words need express my relief at his safety.
+
+He took us forthwith to one of the villagers' houses, and told the
+people to attend to us, and see that we wanted for nothing. He further
+insisted that I should not attempt to render him any assistance until I
+was perfectly recovered. I could only nod acquiescence, as my side was
+paining me terribly.
+
+A warm grasp of my hand and a kind look to Lalia and he was gone.
+
+One of the Kusaie women in the house told us that a message had gone up
+to the king, and that a native doctor named Srulik would soon come down
+and cure my back with leaves in the island fashion. She also informed
+Lalia that her husband had gone away in a canoe to look for her
+body, with two natives, but that he had come across a case of gin, and
+was now dead drunk on the opposite side of Utwe. It is hardly to be
+expected that a young girl could feel love for a man of her husband's
+years; but tears of humiliation coursed down her cheeks when the woman
+added that he had already asked an Ocean Island girl to be wife to him.
+
+About four o'clock in the afternoon messengers arrived from Lele with a
+message of regret from the king to Captain Hayston, and an invitation
+for me to Chabral harbour, so that I could get better quickly; and he
+could send his own boat for me. But I did not want to be separated from
+the Captain, and said I would come and visit him when I got permission.
+
+Queen Se sent me a large basket of cooked pigeons and fruit. Taking out
+a few for myself and Lalia, I sent the rest to the Captain, who was
+glad of them for his weary and hungry men.
+
+For the next few days I suffered fearfully with the pain in my side, and
+though the Captain visited me twice a day, and tried all he could to
+cheer me up, I fell into a hopeless state of despondency. All the time
+Lalia had remained in the house, her husband, not having finished the
+case of gin, never coming near her. Her stepsons and daughters disliked
+her, and therefore avoided the house where we were staying.
+
+The Captain told me that her arm was cut to the bone, and that the trade
+chest that had fallen against her had injured one foot badly. Never as
+long as I live shall I forget the unwearied attention and kindness which
+the poor girl showed me during our stay in the village. Though lame, and
+with only the use of one arm, she never left my side, and strove by
+every means in her power to allay the agony I endured--answering to my
+petulance and irritability only with smiles and kind words.
+
+The Captain told me that he had saved a good many articles from the
+wreck; that the big trade chest had come ashore, and that the money and
+firearms were in a safe place. A quantity of liquor had also been saved,
+and already some fierce fights had taken place, but the traders had in
+most instances behaved well, and assisted him to maintain order. He told
+me also that Lalia's husband had taken away a lot of liquor into the
+impassable forest that lines the north side of Utwe, and, with two of
+his sons and several women, was having a big carouse.
+
+"The virtuous and Christian Strong's islanders had," he said, "stolen
+about a thousand dollars' worth of trade that had been washed ashore.
+But," he added quietly, "I'll talk to them like a father as soon as I
+get a house built, and knock the devil out of those Pleasant islanders
+besides. They seem disposed to cut all our throats."
+
+A couple of days after this, Hayston came to me with a letter from
+Lalia's husband, which he handed to me. I don't know whether
+amusement or indignation predominated as I read it, written as it was on
+a piece of account paper.
+
+ STRONG'S ISLAND, _March 11th_.
+
+ Supercargo _Leonora_ Brig.
+
+ DEAR FRIEND.--I heer my wife have took up with you, and say she
+ do'ent want anny mo-ar truck with her lawful husban. Captin
+ Hayston say No, but she must be cotton strong to you, not to
+ come to me when I look for her neerly one week amung two thousan
+ sharks, as I can prove, but I bare you no ill-wil, for I got
+ anuther wife, but you must give me the three rings she ware, and
+ I warn you I'm not responsble.--I remane, your true and sincere
+ friend.
+
+ _P.S._--Lal can read as well as me, and you can let her read
+ this. She is a good girl, and I bear no ill-wil.
+
+The Captain laughed when I read out this precious document, and told me
+not to take matters so seriously. He then sat down and chatted for
+half-an-hour, saying that as soon as he had finished saving the
+wreckage, he had called the traders together, and laid certain proposals
+before them to which they had agreed.
+
+These were that the traders and their followers would consider
+themselves under his direction, in which case he would engage to provide
+food for them during their stay on the island. They were not to have any
+commercial dealings with the people of Strong's Island, and their
+natives were to assist the crew of the _Leonora_ in erecting houses for
+their joint accommodation. After which he would endeavour to charter a
+vessel, probably a passing whaleship, to take the whole lot of us to
+Providence Island. Should no vessel call in six months' time, he would
+take a boat's crew and make for Mille Lagoon, six hundred miles distant.
+If the ketch I had brought down from Samoa was still afloat, he would
+bring her back, and take the people in detachments to Providence Island.
+He feared, however, that no more whalers would be calling in for ten
+months, as the _St. George_ and _Europa_ were the last of the fleet
+which was making, via Japan, for the Siberian coast, "right whaling."
+
+He left us then, saying he had established a little republic on the
+narrow strip of land that lay on the sea-side of Utwe village.
+
+Then I gave Lalia the letter I had received from her reprobate
+husband. She read it in silence and returned it to me, but I could see
+that the heartless old scoundrel's words had wounded her deeply. She
+took off some rings from her fingers, and sent them to the Captain to
+hand to the old man. "Do you think," she said, "that I can ever get back
+to Rapa-nui?" (Easter Island.)
+
+Her father, she went on to say, was dead, and her mother had been among
+those unfortunate people who in 1866 were seized by three Peruvian
+slavers and taken to work the guano deposits on the Chincha Islands.
+She, when about fourteen, had married one of the captains of one of the
+ships owned by the great firm of Brander of Tahiti. The tales she told
+me of his brutality and ill-usage during his drunken fits of passion
+moved me to sincere pity. The unmitigated rascal deliberately sold his
+child wife to an American (or a man who called himself one), and by him
+she was taken to San Francisco and delivered into yet more hopeless
+slavery. Here she made the acquaintance of a Tahitian half-caste. She
+and this girl succeeded in escaping and paying their passages to Tahiti,
+where they landed penniless and starving.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From Tahiti she was taken by her present husband.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+A KING AND QUEEN
+
+
+On the next day I walked to the new village in course of formation, when
+I received from whites and natives alike a most flattering reception.
+Outside of the sandy spit a solid sea-wall of coral had been built, the
+ground had been levelled, and an enormous dwelling-house erected. This
+was the work of the Ocean and Pleasant islanders. It was the Captain's
+house, and from a hole in the gable floated the starry banner of the
+great Republic. This flag had been the joint work of Nellie and Mila. It
+was composed of strips of white calico, navy blue and Turkey red. At the
+further end of the sea-wall stood the traders' houses; opposite the
+captains' were those of their people. Every one seemed busy, and the
+greatest animation pervaded the scene, while a number of Strong's
+islanders, squatted down in front of the big house, surveyed the
+operations with dismay. They dreaded, and with good reason, the fierce
+and intractable natives of Pleasant Island, who would have been only too
+pleased to have cut their throats and taken possession of their
+beautiful home altogether.
+
+I was received by the Captain at the door of his house, and although the
+girls had frequently been to visit me, and bring fruit and fish from the
+Captain when I was sick, I was made as much of as if I had been dead and
+buried and come to life again. The Captain's merry blue eyes looked
+searchingly into mine, as I seated myself in an easy chair, "You see
+what it is to be _l'ami du maison_."
+
+I acknowledged the compliment, and then turned to shake hands with
+little Toby, who with a number of other children were being entertained
+by a sort of pig and yam tea-party by the Captain, each youngster having
+in his hand a junk of yam and piece of pork.
+
+Those of the crew who were in the vicinity now came in, and I had quite
+a levee. Black Johnny nearly wrung my hand off. I was glad to see the
+Captain looking so bright, and evidently on such good terms with those
+around him. I could not but be struck with the way in which the traders,
+resolute and determined men themselves, deferred to his slightest wish.
+
+For a few minutes he walked up and down the long matted floor,
+apparently lost in thought, while I sat and talked with the
+light-hearted, merry creatures around me. Suddenly stopping, he came up,
+and placed his hand on my shoulder.
+
+"Hilary! I like this island so well, that as Henry the Fifth said in
+France, when the French queen asked him how he liked her country: I mean
+to keep it."
+
+"Captain," I said, startled and alarmed, "are you serious?"
+
+"Yes and no! If I cannot get a ship to take us to Providence Island
+within six months I will upset the missionaries' apple-cart and take
+possession of the island. If a ship does call here, and I can charter
+her, I am bound in honour to fulfil my promise to these traders."
+
+"Captain," I said, "there are two hundred and fifty men on Strong's
+Island; surely you would not dispossess them? Besides, they will fight."
+
+"So much the better," he said, with a smile of contempt, "once let a
+quarrel break out between them and these Ocean and Pleasant islanders,
+and every native of Kusaie will have his throat cut in twenty-four
+hours."
+
+I turned the subject, for I saw by his stern expression that he meant
+what he said, and that any trifling incident would perhaps bring matters
+to an issue.
+
+Presently he began again. "Yes, these Pleasant islanders, who two weeks
+ago were all attached to these traders, are now heart and soul devoted
+to me. They know I am a better man, according to their ideas, than all
+the traders put together, and if I stepped out of the house now and told
+them I would lead them, they would follow me and burn old Tokusar's town
+over his head, cut off a passing ship, or do any other devilry such as
+their bloody instincts revel in."
+
+I tried to turn his thoughts into another channel, and succeeded so far
+that when I rose to return he was laughing and joking in his usual
+manner. He pointed out to me a separate part of the house, and told me
+that as soon as I liked to take possession he would be glad to see me in
+it.
+
+I explained to him that for the present I had better remain in the
+native house, as the king daily sent me food, and considered me his
+guest. In this he concurred, as he said if the king took a liking to a
+white man he would live in clover. He advised me to go and see him as
+soon as I was strong, or else his dignity would be touched. Also that I
+would find it well to keep good friends with Queen Se.
+
+When I returned to the native house, however, I felt "sick unto death,"
+and cast myself down on the mats in despair. The hurt I had received in
+the side seemed to have also affected my chest, as I could hardly
+breathe without suffering agonies. Happily I became unconscious; when I
+opened my eyes I found the Captain beside my mat, and during the whole
+night he remained with me and encouraged my sinking spirits. When
+daylight came he examined me carefully, after which he told me, that
+from the darkening colour of my skin, and the agony I felt from the
+slightest pressure, he thought I had received internal injury. He
+therefore insisted upon my coming over to his village, so that I might
+be under his immediate control. To this I consented at last, although
+young Harry (as we called Harry Waters) was eager that I should come and
+live with him on the north side of Utwe, where Hayston had formed a
+sub-station to make oil and given him charge.
+
+I liked Harry very much; he was the only one of the traders whose age
+approached my own. His bearing and behaviour, too, contrasted favourably
+with those of his drunken and dissolute colleagues. However, I had to
+decline his kind offer, although, to my amusement, he emphatically
+asserted that I would be no trouble to him, as he had four wives, and
+Rosa, the youngest of them, was a clever nurse. I paid the Strong
+islanders who had attended on me, and then inquired of Lalia what she
+intended to do? She had, of course, no money to pay the people for
+keeping her, and the old custom of extending hospitality to strangers
+had naturally died out since the coming of the missionaries.
+
+I had no other way of showing my gratitude than by offering her money.
+This she refused, but said she would be glad to get some clothes or
+material to make them. I gave a native money, and sent him up to Lele,
+where he bought several dresses from Kitty of Ebon, and as she was the
+same height and figure as Lalia, they fitted her capitally.
+
+A couple of days after I had taken up my quarters with the Captain she
+came to see me, and say good-bye. She told me she was going to live at a
+village near Lele, and teach the Strong's Island women hat-making, at
+which she was clever. She would stay there till she got tired of it. I
+was sincerely sorry, and was not ashamed to show it, "being weak from my
+wound," and hardly able to refrain from tears. I felt quite pleased when
+the Captain came up and shook her little hand warmly, telling her that
+she really ought not to leave us. "Mind, Lalia, come to me if you are
+in any trouble, and I will see you righted," he said in parting.
+
+"I know that, Captain! very well," she answered, looking up with a
+strange, sorrowful look in her large bright eyes, "but I must go now."
+Whereupon she walked slowly down the beach, and getting into a canoe
+with two Kusaie women, waved her hand and was soon out of sight.
+
+I recovered slowly, but after a while was able to get about and to take
+an inventory of the property saved, while the Captain amused himself by
+overlooking the building of a large oil-store. He had demanded an
+immediate payment of two hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts from the
+king, as part indemnity for the property stolen by the natives from the
+wreck. The king dared not refuse, and now a huge pile of cocoa-nuts was
+accumulating near the oil-shed, where the Pleasant islanders were daily
+scraping the nuts and making oil. A number of butts had come ashore,
+which were utilised for the oil, so that the village had already gained
+a settled look. About this time the Captain gave way to occasional
+bursts of passion, inflicting severe beatings upon two of the traders,
+who had got drunk and were careering about with rifles in their hands,
+threatening to shoot any one that interfered with them.
+
+He also accused old Harry Terry of plotting with the king, and a violent
+scene ensued. Some of the natives still sided with their old master, and
+with knives and shark-tooth daggers surrounded him, uttering cries of
+defiance at the Captain.
+
+I was in the big house when the row commenced, and saw the excited
+savages running up to where the Captain and old Harry stood. An
+encounter seemed imminent.
+
+Boy George, with Nellie and the other women, now rushed in and demanded
+of me to give them the Winchester and Snider rifles, which stood ready
+loaded in a corner of the house. But, knowing that the Captain was ready
+to assert his authority without arms, I refused, and locking them up in
+a trade chest sat down upon it. I knew that the first shot would be
+followed by a scene of bloodshed and murder. George was persistent,
+saying the Captain would be killed, but changed his tone when he walked
+in unharmed, but with his fingers bleeding. Harry had given in when he
+saw the Captain dart in amongst the natives surrounding him, and knock
+two of the ringleaders down, but denied that he had been plotting to
+usurp Hayston's authority. A hollow reconciliation then took place, but
+there was bad blood between them from that time. He told me that I had
+done wisely in locking up the arms, and gave me the key to keep, as I
+had, he confessed, shown more prudence than himself. Then he sat down
+and began to sing like a schoolboy on a holiday.
+
+One day we took the boat and went up a creek flowing into the harbour.
+We were the only men, as the crew consisted of Ocean Island women and
+some of the girls from the brig.
+
+We were going to land them across the creek, where they intended to
+construct a fish weir, as the harbour was a bad place to fish in on
+account of the swarms of fierce and daring sharks.
+
+Among the girls in the boat were two from Ocean Island, being of the
+party landed from the whaleships at Chabral harbour. One of these was
+the new wife of the old convict trader. She had come down on a visit,
+and kept us amused with her descriptions of the orgies and drunken
+freaks of the fierce old man, whose conduct had frightened--no easy
+matter--all who came into contact with him.
+
+As we crossed over the in-shore reef and got into the channel of the
+creek, I saw a canoe with three figures in it ahead of us, and told the
+Captain that I thought I recognised Lalia. He said it was hardly
+possible, as she lived six miles away on the coast, and was not likely
+to come down here. At this mention of Lalia her successor looked
+frightened, and said she would like to go back, but was overruled by
+the others, who laughed at her fears. After rowing up the creek as far
+as the boat would go, the girls got out, and the Captain and I took our
+rifles and started up a spur in the mountain on the chance of getting a
+shot at the wild pigs.
+
+We struck into the dense woodland, and in a few minutes the voices of
+the laughing girls sounded subdued and far away. The gloom of the
+primeval forest seemed to be deepened by the vast structure and domelike
+tops of the mighty trees, whose thick branches formed an almost perfect
+canopy, while underneath our footsteps fell soundless on the thick
+carpet of rotting leaves.
+
+Here the Captain and I took different routes, agreeing to meet on the
+summit of the spur. As I walked along the silence that enshrouded all
+things seemed to weigh heavily; the darkening gloom of the forest began
+to fill me with childish fancies and misgivings. My nerves became strung
+to such a pitch that the harsh croak of some brooding frigate bird, or
+the sudden booming note of a wood pigeon, set my heart bumping against
+my ribs with that strange, undefined feeling which, if it be not
+premonition, is nearly akin to it.
+
+I had ascended half-way to the spur when I heard a shot.
+
+Its prolonged and tumultuous echoes startled the denizens of the forest,
+winged and quadrupedal, and as they died away a wild chorus of shrieks
+and growls seemed to electrify me into life. Waiting till silence
+resumed sway I called aloud to the Captain. Far down below I heard his
+answering call. Then he queried, "Have you shot anything?"
+
+"No, I have not fired."
+
+"Quick," he shouted, "come down--there's mischief among the women."
+
+Rushing down the leaf-strewn spur I soon joined him. We ran together
+till we reached the boat. There a tragedy had been enacted. The girls
+were huddled up in the boat, which was drifting about from bank to bank.
+As we dashed through the scrub they pointed to a patch of green-sward
+amongst the cocoa-nut trees, saying, "She is killed."
+
+There, lying on her face quite dead, was the Ocean Island girl with a
+bullet through her breast. The ball had passed completely through her
+body, and though her limbs were still quivering with muscular action,
+she must have died in a few seconds after she was struck.
+
+The girls told us that while they were making the weir she had gone up
+to a pool of fresh water among the rocks to look for fresh-water
+shrimps. A few minutes after they heard a shot; she staggered forward
+and fell on her face dead.
+
+The Captain and I looked at one another. Each read the thoughts that
+passed through the other's mind--Lalia had fired the shot! But,
+calling the women out of the boat, the Captain sternly forbade them to
+mention Lalia's name in connection with the matter, and said that
+they must all keep silence. A grave was hastily dug in the soft alluvial
+of the shadowy forest glade, where the body of the poor girl, wrapped in
+garments of her companions, was hastily buried.
+
+I did not understand the meaning of the secrecy which was evidently
+considered necessary, until the Captain told me that as the girl was in
+his charge at the time of her death, he would be held responsible, and
+that the uncertain temper of her countrymen might at any time cause an
+outbreak.
+
+We returned to the boat, and the women, as we neared the village, were
+instructed by the Captain to answer all inquiries for the dead girl by
+saying she had disappeared. Her countrymen took her departure very
+quietly, and came to the conclusion that the evil spirits of the
+mountain had carried her away, and their superstition forbade search.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I cannot, even after the time that has elapsed, recall without a pang of
+regret the total change in the Captain's demeanour and conduct at this
+time. Some demon appeared to have taken possession of him. His terrific
+bursts of violence drove every soul away at times, none daring to
+venture near him until he had cooled down except myself, to whom he
+never addressed a harsh or angry word. One day he declared that the men
+of the _Leonora_ and some of the Pleasant islanders were concocting a
+meeting, and I was sickened and horrified at seeing three of each lashed
+to cocoa-nut trees, while the huge figure of Antonio, the black
+Portuguese, towered above the crowd as he flogged them. The Captain
+stood by with a pistol in each hand as, with a countenance blanched and
+disturbed with passion, he ordered Antonio to lay it on well.
+
+I went into the house and, sitting down, tried to think out a course for
+myself. The Captain came in after a while and, drawing a seat to the
+window, gazed moodily out upon the sparkling, breeze-rippled sea. Then I
+knew that the dark hour had passed, and that he would listen to reason.
+
+"Captain," I said, "I can stay here no longer with you. I am sick of
+seeing men flogged till their backs are like raw meat, even though they
+are mutinous. If I thought any words of mine would do good, I would
+earnestly beg of you to adopt milder measures. Every day that passes you
+run the gauntlet, so to speak, of these men's deadly hatred, I know; for
+how can I avoid hearing the mutterings and seeing the fierce glances of
+the people--that you are surrounded with foes, and that any moment may
+be your last."
+
+He placed his hand on my shoulder in his old way. "True, my lad, true;
+but if they are dangerous to meddle with, so am I. The white men, young
+Harry excepted, would gladly see me lying out there on the sand with a
+bullet hole in my skull; but, by ----, I'll shoot every mother's son of
+them if I detect any treachery.... And so you wish to leave me?"
+
+I considered a moment and then answered, "Sorry am I to say it, but I
+do."
+
+"Come out to the beach, my lad, and talk to me there. This house is
+stifling; another month of this life would send me mad."
+
+We walked along the weather side for about a mile, then seating
+ourselves on a huge flat rock, watched the rollers tumbling in over the
+reef and hissing along the sand at our feet. Hayston then spoke freely
+to me of his troubles, his hopes, and disappointments, begging me to
+remain with him--going, indeed, the length of a half promise to use
+gentler methods of correction in future.
+
+I yielded for a time, but after another week the fights and floggings,
+followed by threats of vengeance, commenced anew. Two incidents also,
+following close upon one another, led me to sever my connection with the
+Captain finally, though in a friendly spirit.
+
+The first was an attack single-handed upon the Kusaie village of Utwe,
+driving the men before him like a flock of sheep. Some who ventured to
+resist were felled by blows of his fist. Then he picked out half a dozen
+of the youngest women, and drove them to the men's quarters, telling
+them to keep them till the husbands and families ransomed them.
+
+This was all because he had been told that Likiak Sa had been to the
+village, and urged the natives to remove to Lele, where a man-of-war was
+expected to arrive from Honolulu, and that Hayston dared not follow them
+there.
+
+The next matter that went wrong was that he desired me to bring the
+trade books, and go over the various traders' accounts with him.
+
+One of these books was missing, although I remembered placing the whole
+bundle in the big chest with the charts and chronometers. He declared
+that the loss of this book, with some important accounts of his trading
+stations in the Line and Marshall Islands, rendered the others
+valueless.
+
+I felt aggrieved at the imputation of carelessness, and having never
+since first I knew him felt any fear of expressing myself clearly, told
+him that he must have lost it, or it would have been with the others.
+
+Starting from his seat with his face livid with rage, he passionately
+denied having lost it. Then he strode into his room, and with savage
+oaths drove out the women, cursing them as the cause of the brig's loss
+and all his misfortunes.
+
+The next moment he appeared with his arms full of chronometers, and,
+standing in the doorway, tore the costly instruments from their cases
+and dashed them to pieces on the coral flagstones at his feet. Then,
+swearing he would fire the station and roast every one in it, with his
+hands beating and clutching at the air, his face working with passion,
+he walked, staggering like a drunken man, to the beach, and threw
+himself down on a boulder.
+
+Three hours after, taking little Kitty and Toby with me, I found him
+still there, resting his head on his hand and gazing out upon the sea.
+
+"Captain," I said, "I have come to say farewell."
+
+He slowly raised his head, and with sorrow depicted on his countenance,
+gave me his hand.
+
+I pressed it and turned away. I packed up my belongings, and then
+calling to Nellie, told her to give the Captain a note which I left on
+his table, and with a handshake to each of the wondering girls, made my
+way through the village, and thence to the bank of a lagoon that runs
+parallel to the southern coast of Strong's Island. I knew that I could
+walk to Coquille harbour in about a day, and thither I decided to go,
+as at the village of Mout dwelt a man named Kusis, who had several
+times pressed me to visit him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a bright moonlight night, so that I had no difficulty in making
+my way along the lonely coast. The lagoon, solemnly still and
+silver-gleaming, lay between me and the mainland. The narrow strip on
+the ocean side was not more than half a mile wide; on the lagoon border
+was a thicket well-nigh impassable.
+
+The mood of melancholy that impressed me at parting with a man to whom,
+in spite of his faults, I was sincerely attached, weighed heavily. The
+deep silence of the night, unbroken save by the murmuring plumes of the
+cocoa-nut palms as they swayed to the breath of the trade-wind, and the
+ceaseless plaints of the unresting surge, completed the feeling of
+loneliness and desolation.
+
+At length I reached the end of the narrow spit that ran parallel to the
+lofty mainland, and found that I had to cross over the reef that
+connected it to the main, this reef forming the southern end of the
+lagoon.
+
+The country was entirely new to me, but once I gained the white beach
+that fringed the leeside of the island, I knew that I need only follow
+it along till I reached the village of Mout, about four miles distant
+from the end of the lagoon. I hung my bundle across my Winchester and
+commenced the crossing. The tide was out and the reef bare, but here and
+there were deep pools through which I had to pick my steps carefully,
+being confused besides by the lines of dazzling moon-rays.
+
+When nearly across, and walking up to my waist through a channel that
+led between the coral patches, I saw a strange, dark shape moving
+quickly towards me. "A shark!" I thought, but the next minute the black
+mass darted past me at an angle, when I saw it was an innocent turtle
+that was doubtless more frightened than I. After this adventure I gained
+the white beach, which lay shining like a silver girdle under the
+moon-rays, and flung myself down on the safe yielding sand. The spot was
+silent as the grave. The murmurous rhythm of the surf sounded miles
+distant, and but rose to the faintest lulling sound, as I made a pillow
+of my worldly goods and sank into dreamless sleep.
+
+It was the earliest dawn when the chill breath of the land-breeze
+touched my cheek, and sent a shiver through my somewhat exhausted frame.
+I arose, and looking round found that I was not wholly alone: several
+huge turtles had been keeping me company during the night, having come
+ashore to lay their eggs. As soon as I stood up they scrambled and
+floundered away in dire fright. I felt badly in need of a smoke, but
+having no matches, decided to eat something instead. I had not far to
+seek for a breakfast. Picking up a couple of sprouting cocoa-nuts from
+the ground, I husked them by beating them against a tree-trunk, and made
+a much needed meal from the sweet kernels.
+
+Although I was still far from well, and the pain in my side had returned
+with tenfold vigour, I felt a new-born elasticity of spirit. The glow of
+the tropic sun lighted up the slumberous main spread out in azure
+vastness before me.
+
+Shouldering my bundle and rifle, my sole worldly possessions, except
+utterly valueless money and papers in the Captain's care, I descended to
+the beach and walked along in the hard sand. At about six o'clock I came
+abreast of two lovely verdure-clad islets, rising from the shallow
+waters which lay between the outer reefs and the mainland, and I knew I
+must be near Mout.
+
+Then I saw a canoe shoot out from the land about a quarter of a mile
+distant, with the native in it standing up poling it along. The next
+bend of the beach brought me in full view of the picturesque village. A
+loud cry of wonder greeted me. The next moment I was surrounded by
+smiling villagers. I felt a thrill of pride at the thought that of all
+those who had been cast away in the _Leonora_, none would have been
+welcomed so warmly as I was now by those simple, kind-hearted people.
+
+"Kusis' friend, Kusis' friend has come!" the men called aloud. Crowding
+around, and taking my rifle and bundle from me, I was escorted to the
+farther end of the village, where out of a pretty little house embowered
+in a grove of palms, a man sprang out and fairly hugged me.
+
+This was Kusis, in whose frank and open countenance nothing but joyous
+welcome and boundless hospitality could be read. Taking me by the hand,
+he led me inside. My cares were over for the present, evidently.
+
+Words of mine can but faintly describe the generosity and kindness of
+these people to me during my lengthened sojourn among them. The memory
+of the peaceful days which I passed in that unknown, lovely village can
+never be effaced.
+
+Kusis, it seems, had often been to see me when I lay sick at Utwe, and
+was unconscious of his presence. The Captain and Lalia had told me of
+how he would come softly into the house, bringing a present of fruit or
+fish for "the sick white boy," as he called me. He would sit by my side
+and gaze anxiously at me for hours at a time, always questioning the
+Captain concerning me. When I got better I had long chats with him, and
+to his inexpressible delight, gave him a shot gun which I had bought
+from the carpenter for a pound of tobacco. He had no shot, but he told
+me he could make some from strips of lead, and as there was plenty of
+that from the wreckage that came ashore, the Captain gave him as much as
+he could carry in the canoe, besides a large tin of powder and plenty
+of caps.
+
+He was a tall, large-framed man for a Strong's islander--magnificently
+built, and with a heart in proportion. His wife Tulpe, and his only
+daughter, a little girl named Kinie, made up the family. He evidently
+wished to complete it by making me his son, for his sole aim in life
+seemed to be to keep me with him.
+
+Unlike the people of Utwe, the villagers of Mout were utterly
+unsophisticated, besides being free from the cant and hypocrisy that
+nearly always attaches to the native character when they profess
+Christianity. No doubt this was the result of their village being so
+distant from Lele, where the natives were for ever chanting psalms and
+hymns, and keeping the letter of the law, while at the same time they
+departed as widely from the spirit as their heathen forefathers had ever
+done.
+
+After a while I received a letter from Captain Hayston, and with it a
+large parcel. The letter ran as follows:--
+
+ MY DEAR BOY.--Have you entirely deserted me? I hope not. Come
+ and see me again, even if you only stop a day: I miss you
+ greatly, and the evenings are very dull without you to talk to.
+ I gave that fellow Miles, the boatswain, a bad beating, and he
+ has cleared out to the mountains with the Pleasant islanders.
+ Had you been here you would have got him off. As it is, I have
+ lost three men. Accept the things I send. (The hat was made for
+ you by a friend.) They will do for presents for your Kusaie
+ friends. Let me know when you can come up, and I will send the
+ whaleboat.--Yours sincerely,
+
+ W. H. HAYSTON.
+
+I sent back my thanks, saying that I would come and see him, but should
+come overland, as the messenger was returning in a canoe. Kusis put in
+two turtle as "present for Captin."
+
+I opened the parcel, which I found contained all sorts of articles
+likely to be useful to me, with ten pounds of tobacco, and a bag of
+small scarlet and white beads, the delight of a Strong's Island girl's
+heart. Rolled up in a native sash was a beautifully-made Panama hat.
+This latter was a gift from Lalia, and at once excited the admiration
+of Kusis and Tulpe, when they examined its texture. The childish delight
+of Kinie, when I gave her the beads, gave me the greatest pleasure, and
+although her father and mother looked with glistening eyes at the other
+articles which I wished them to take, they firmly refused the offered
+gifts, Kusis only taking a few sticks of tobacco, and his wife a silk
+handkerchief with some needles and thread.
+
+I was rapidly regaining my strength, now felt in much higher spirits as
+I accompanied Kusis on his shooting and fishing trips, returning home to
+the bright faces and welcoming smiles of his wife and daughter. After
+another week Kusis and I set out to visit the Captain, who, though I was
+thoroughly happy and contented with my new friends, was never absent
+from my thoughts. He received us with unaffected pleasure, and, calling
+his steward and making us sit down to lunch, he gave me an account of
+what had been doing since I had left.
+
+The village had now a settled appearance, and the people were all busy
+making oil, another two hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts having
+been paid by the king. The Captain asked me if there were not a vast
+quantity of cocoa-nuts at Coquille harbour, and on my assenting, said he
+would send a gang of Pleasant islanders under Fiji Bill and Antonio to
+live there, and collect the third part of the indemnity--another two
+hundred and fifty thousand cocoa-nuts.
+
+This I begged him not to do, pointing out the injustice of such an
+action, inasmuch as the people of Coquille had no hand in stealing the
+property from the brig, and it would be cruel to make them pay for the
+misdoings of others. I told him also that at Coquille were situated the
+largest taro and yam plantations, with the best turtle fisheries, that I
+was sure the natives would destroy the plantations and abandon the
+villages if they had the savage Pleasant islanders quartered upon them.
+Besides, we might have to remain another eight or nine months on the
+island before the whaling fleet called here again, and that it was
+absolutely indispensable that he should be able to command a supply of
+food to subsist nearly a hundred and fifty people.
+
+Kusis, who was seated on the mats near us, eagerly watched the Captain.
+At length a look of content overspread his face as the Captain said he
+would not touch the cocoa-nuts in Coquille harbour. To Kusis he said,
+"Tell your people to have no fear as long as the king continues to pay
+up, but once let me see any 'soldiering,' or desire to avoid paying the
+fine, I'll strip the island from Mount Crozier to the reef."
+
+Then we strolled to and fro on the Plaza, as we called the local
+esplanade in front of the big house, and the Captain told me to come and
+look at his turtle pond, in which were a number of green turtle, and
+also the two hawkbills sent by Kusis.
+
+I found that several of the traders had now openly broken with him, and
+leaving their native following, had retired to Lele, where they were
+under the protection of the king. The number of girls in the big house
+had now increased to nine or ten. At the time of my visit some were
+engaged in weaving an immense mat to cover the whole floor, others were
+drying and picking tobacco leaves for making cigars. Two of the new
+arrivals, I could see, were native girls. I asked the Captain what they
+were doing there. He answered somewhat testily, "Did I think they came
+to teach Sunday-school?"
+
+I remained that night, and we spent a merry evening. In the morning,
+after a breakfast of turtle eggs and roast pig, Kusis and I prepared to
+return.
+
+The Captain urged me to go by way of Chabral harbour, and pay my
+promised visit to the king.
+
+"In that case I might let him know how his Majesty was taking matters."
+Kusis also urged me to see the king, who was anxious that I should spend
+a week with him.
+
+We got a canoe to carry us across to the north arm of the harbour, where
+I remained an hour or two with young Harry, who had established quite a
+small village.
+
+When we entered the fence surrounding his place, we found him lying in a
+hammock, slung between two pandanus-trees, smoking his morning pipe, and
+having his hair combed by two pretty little witches named Rosa and
+Taloe.
+
+This was Harry's idea of island luxury. He always alleged that sleeping
+gave him a headache, and that having his hair brushed drove it away,
+particularly if the combing was performed by the soft hands of one of
+his four houris.
+
+He sprang up and welcomed me heartily, urging me to stay all night. But
+I was anxious to get on. However, I said I should be glad to see him at
+Mout, when he could bring his family with him, and give them a week's
+feast on pork and turtle.
+
+Harry presently took me into a small room, saying, "Look here!" The
+place was closely packed with liquor in small kegs. These had been
+washed ashore, and he had found them, only a few days since, high up in
+the mangroves. The Captain told him to store it, as it was dangerous
+stuff to bring to Utwe. The Pleasant islanders are very fond of liquor,
+after imbibing which they always want to fight and kill some one, and
+generally do.
+
+We had a glass of grog together, after which I said good-bye to the
+good-natured, handsome young trader and his wives, whom he used to call
+the "Three Graces, with another thrown in."
+
+Kusis and I reached the south side of Chabral harbour about sunset. I
+was freshly enchanted with the loveliness of the scene, accustomed as I
+had become to this paradisal quarter of the globe. The trade-wind had
+died away, the transparent waters of the harbour reflected in their blue
+depths the tall shadows of the towering mountains that overhung the
+harbour on three sides.
+
+A canoe put across from the king's wharf when I fired a shot to attract
+attention. So wonderfully clear was the atmosphere, so unbroken the
+silence of the lonely bay, that the quick "tweep, tweep" of the paddle,
+as it struck the water, reached our ears as distinctly as if the canoe
+was but a few yards distant, instead of nearly half a mile.
+
+The old king received me graciously, but soon commenced a string of
+complaints, interlarded with Scripture quotations rounded off by quaint
+oaths. He feared the Captain greatly, and yet was anxious to keep up his
+authority. Then, with every grievance that was laid before me, he drank
+a stiff glass of grog to wash it down with, and insisted on my keeping
+him company.
+
+Queen Se now came in, saying in her prettiest English, "Oh! you naughty
+boy! Why you no come see king, see _me_? Long time promise, but never
+come out. How you bad pain side? How many Strong's Island girl Captain
+got now? I never see man like that. Debil, I believe. You got any wife
+yet?"
+
+I told the queen I was still unmarried, and thought I should remain so.
+
+"Oh! no, you say so now. By and by get like Captain. But don't you steal
+girl like him. You come to me! I pick you out nice girl. Cook, sew, make
+pyjamas; very pretty face too."
+
+By this time old Tokusar was asleep, with his head on the table, his
+inevitable Bible open at the Psalms of David (printed in the Kusaie
+dialect) in the leaf of his armchair, and the half-emptied gin bottle
+encircled by his left arm.
+
+Queen Se was a tiny little creature--very good-looking, even at this
+time of her life--being about five-and-twenty, which is considered the
+_passee_ period in Polynesia. She was extremely vain, but had a quick
+perception of humour. She and the Captain always got on famously
+together.
+
+Drawing our chairs up to a side table, she brought me a number of bound
+volumes of _Leslie's Illustrated Paper_, sent to her by the queen of
+Hawaii.
+
+While I looked at the pictures she plied me with questions, principally
+at random, about Captain Hayston, who, I was not long in discovering,
+had been a former admirer. Going into a side room, she unlocked a small
+box, and brought me out a photo of a gentleman wearing a post-captain's
+uniform in her Britannic Majesty's navy. "What do you think of him?" she
+asked. "Very, oh! very handsome man--that Captain Damer. Oh! that long
+time ago. I love him; he love me too"--and then, pointing to poor old
+Tokusar, "King know all about it. He don't like me to talk about Captain
+Damer. But, oh! such handsome man! He tell me I loveliest girl in all
+the world. What you think yourself? What Captain tell you; he think me
+pretty too?"
+
+Her Majesty was an expert angler for flattery. I was not indisposed to
+humour a pretty woman, and a queen, and was evidently rising in her
+estimation. I resolved to turn my good fortune to account, by inducing
+her to effect a reconciliation between the king and the Captain, who
+wanted the king to visit him at Utwe, to see the wonderful change he had
+effected there. He felt certain that, when the king saw the magnitude of
+the station, knowing that it must, sooner or later, come into his
+possession when he, Hayston, left the island, he would forgive all that
+had passed.
+
+Once the subject was broached I became an ardent advocate for the
+Captain, and told the queen how anxious he was to be on good terms with
+the king again. In fact, so eloquent did I become, partly through the
+potency of the schnapps of which I had partaken, that I represented the
+Captain as devoured with grief at losing the king's and her friendship.
+
+The queen listened gravely, and then extending her shapely hand, caught
+me by the ear, and laughed, "Oh! you bad boy! Captain Hayston think
+Tokusar old fool; told _me_ so plenty time. Well, never mind, I try make
+everything all right."
+
+The queen, as beseemed her, had a number of young women with her,
+sitting round the sides of the great room. Some were making the girdles
+that the Kusaie natives of both sexes wear round the waist under their
+other garments. They are woven on an ingeniously constructed loom, the
+banana fibres which form the material being stained in various bright
+colours. These girls were sitting in the manner peculiar to the Strong's
+Island women, with their eyes cast down--it being considered a boldness
+to look at either the king or queen. When speaking to either their eyes
+were always bent on the ground.
+
+The king, being carefully placed on a cane lounge, a meal was brought
+in. Both Kusis and I were presented with food enough to last for a
+month. As the queen bade me good-night she passed her arm round me, and
+tenderly inquired, "How my poor side feel?" adding that I was a very
+good boy, because I was kind to Strong's Island man. She also informed
+me that I could kiss her, which I did. Then putting the post-captain's
+photo in her bosom she went to bed, finally telling me that she "will
+make king friend once more with Captain."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For the next six months I lived with the kind-hearted Kusis, his wife,
+and little daughter. Except for an occasional visit to the Captain or
+the king, nothing disturbed the pleasing monotony of my existence.
+
+Why Kusis should have taken such a violent and wholly unreasonable
+attachment to me is a mystery I never could unravel. Yet such is island
+life. And how strange it is, and hard of comprehension! Women take their
+fancies here, as in other worlds (surely this is a world in itself,
+distinct, mystic, unreal), but the extraordinary point in the social
+system is, that men will, as a matter of mere caprice, conceive the most
+ardent friendship for an utter stranger. In pursuance of which passion
+they will entertain him for any time which he likes to stay; will guide,
+help, and defend him, risking, and indeed sacrificing their lives for
+him in the most reckless and devoted manner. Such was the deep and
+sudden affection of Kusis for me. How he acquired it I don't in the
+least know. All my personal property seemed to be mixed up with his. As
+the weather was not favourable for attention to detail, I preferred to
+leave things as they were. My life at this time was chiefly uneventful.
+Yet it was not always so. I was fishing one day near the end of the
+lagoon which extends from Utwe to the lee side of the island. After I
+had anchored my canoe a very strange incident indeed occurred.
+
+The sun had just set, and I had cast out my hooks, and was able to fill
+my pipe, when I saw two boatsful of Pleasant islanders land on the
+narrow fringe of the north side of the lagoon. There were about twenty
+men and seven or eight women. I saw that they had with them a small keg,
+doubtless one of the kegs of rum which had been washed ashore, and which
+they had discovered in the mangroves. A fire was lit. The women began to
+sing and the men to dance; and as the fiery spirit was passed round in
+cocoa-nut shells to the men--for the women touched none--a wild orgie
+began.
+
+Suddenly bright flashes appeared from out the darkness in the
+surrounding grove, and the reverberating echoes of gun-shots pealed over
+the water, and ran far back, from mountain, crag, and cave.
+
+Three of the dancers fell, either killed or wounded. Then the dark forms
+of their previously unseen enemies appeared through the firelight. The
+white shells worn in strings round their necks told me that they were
+Ocean islanders, between whom and the Pleasant islanders feuds were of
+common occurrence. Then began a bloody hand-to-hand fight, the twilight
+silence being broken by yells of rage and screams of mortal agony. When
+the Ocean islanders were beaten off seven or eight bodies lay motionless
+on the ground.
+
+I quietly pulled up the anchor, and let the canoe drift towards the
+mainland. I did not care about visiting the scene of the fight as I had
+no arms with me, and learnt by experience the folly of meddling with the
+Pleasant islanders when they were sober. When they were drunk I knew
+that they would as soon cut my throat as not.
+
+I mentioned this matter to the Captain on my next visit. He told me with
+a grim smile that he knew there had been a fight up the lagoon; so much
+the better, as he found the Pleasant islanders harder to manage every
+day, and the sooner their number was reduced the better.
+
+One day, when Kusis and I were coming across the lagoon with some
+pigeons I had shot, we met the Pingelap girl, Peloa, paddling a canoe
+furiously, her plump face showing great excitement. "She had been sent
+for us," she said, "by the Captain. There was a sail in sight. I was to
+hasten back to Mout, where I would find a boat outside the reef which
+he had sent down for me. I was to try and board the ship, in case he
+could not do so from Utwe, and tell the master that a shipwrecked crew
+were on the island."
+
+Peloa hauled her canoe up on a little beach, and got in with us. We
+three then paddled along till we got abreast of the two islets near
+Mout. We then saw a whaleboat coming round the point with a lug sail.
+She soon ran in for me, and I found she was manned by Pleasant
+islanders, who told me that the ship was coming round the point, about
+three miles off the land.
+
+There was a strong breeze, and we slipped through the water at a great
+rate so as to meet the ship. As soon as we cleared the point I saw her
+coming down before the wind about two miles distant.
+
+She was a large ship, and was running straight for us with her yards
+squared. At first I thought she had seen us, but she kept steadily on
+her course. Then I saw her take in her light sails and heave to.
+Standing up in the boat, I could distinguish a whaleboat under a fore
+and aft sail close to her. Behind this boat were two others, which, from
+their black paint and peculiarly-cut sails, I knew to be those the
+Captain had at Utwe.
+
+The ship lay to till the first whaleboat boarded her, and then, to my
+great surprise, the yards were swung round, the light sails again set,
+and she stood on her course, but kept the wind more on her quarter so as
+to make the most of the breeze.
+
+By this time I had got almost within hailing distance of the ship. She
+was deep in the water, and was, I supposed, some coal-laden ship bound
+from New South Wales to China, which had taken the outside or easier
+route to her destination. When the whaleboat lowered her sail and ran
+alongside, I saw that she was the king's new boat, and contained but two
+men. These, my crew said, looked like the two deserters from the _St.
+George_. As soon as they got on board the boat was hoisted in without
+delay, and, as I have said, the ship kept on her course.
+
+It was of no use attempting to overtake her, as she was travelling now
+about twelve knots, so I signalled for the other two boats, and they ran
+down after us till we got under the lee of the land again in smooth
+water.
+
+The men in these boats told me the following tale:--About daylight that
+morning the king's whaleboat, which was anchored in Utwe harbour, was
+found to be missing. The two deserters from the _St. George_ were also
+gone. Captain Hayston instantly offered to send his boat in pursuit of
+the runaways, and curiously, just as they were being launched, there
+came a cry of "Sail ho." The Captain then saw the ship a long way off,
+and told the crews to try and board her, and get her to run in close to
+the land, and that he would then come off himself. In the mean time he
+manned one of the trader's whaleboats with a native crew, and sent her
+round to Coquille to pick me up, as he fancied the ship would be easier
+boarded from there than from Utwe. The three boats left together, two
+standing right out to sea, and the other running down the coast to pick
+me up.
+
+When the two boats were within three miles of the ship, they noticed the
+fore and aft sail of the king's whaleboat showing up now and then as she
+rose and sunk again in the heavy swell, and noticed that she was also
+heading to meet the ship. The rest I had observed myself.
+
+I suspected something from the manner of the coxswain in charge of the
+king's two boats, but did not question him, and telling him to give the
+Captain full particulars of our endeavour to board the ship, I got
+ashore in a smooth part of the reef, and walked back to Mout, where I
+found the villagers in a great state of excitement, under the impression
+that I had gone away in the ship.
+
+Hayston afterwards admitted that he had supplied the deserters with
+sextant, compass, and chart, had also given them provisions, and fifty
+dollars in money. They promised him to make straight for Ponape, and
+wait there till some Californian ship called, which they would endeavour
+to charter, on the part of Hayston, to beat up to Strong's Island, and
+take us all away to Providence Island. Barney was a good navigator, and
+could he only have kept fairly sober would have long since had a ship of
+his own. He eagerly accepted the Captain's offer, and the next morning
+the crew of the king's whaleboat found she had disappeared; then
+followed the strange series of events by which Barney and his mate got
+on board the ship and evaded pursuit.
+
+Barney was a highly intelligent individual, as the sequel will show, and
+was capable of making a rapid calculation of probabilities. He
+afterwards visited Samoa, and gave this account of his escape.
+
+He said that when the Captain provided him with "a jewel of a
+whaleboat," he honestly intended to fulfil his promises. He lost some
+time in trying to persuade a native girl named Luta to share his
+fortunes, but she was afraid of a long voyage in a small boat. His
+pleadings, moreover, were cut short by the Captain, who told him to
+hurry up, and get out of the harbour before daylight.
+
+As soon, then, as Barney sighted the ship a plan suggested itself to
+him. Once on deck he introduced himself to the Captain as "Captain
+Casey," and said, "For heaven's sake, sir, don't delay another moment.
+There are two boat-loads of bloody, cut-throat pirates coming after me,
+and they mane to take the ship! Have you never heard of 'Bully
+Hayston'?"
+
+The skipper _had_ heard of him,--things true, and untrue likewise. Then
+Barney told him a tale of how the _Leonora_ had been wrecked on the
+island, and that ever since the fierce Captain and crew had planned to
+cut off the first ship that touched at the island--that he (Barney) and
+his mate had owned a small trading cutter, which Hayston had seized two
+days ago--but that he had managed to escape with one of his men, and
+thanked God that he was able to reach the ship in time, and save every
+one's throat from being cut.
+
+The ship's captain took all this in; Barney's boat was hoisted in, and
+the ship kept away. The two boats, with their crews of excited natives
+yelling and shouting, gave colour to Barney's narrative, and when he
+pointed to my boat, and said, "Holy saints! there's another of the
+villains coming out under the lee side with a boat-load of pirates too,"
+the captain's funk was complete. He landed Barney and his companion at
+Ponape, and, purely out of compassion, bought the king's whaleboat and
+her contents for a hundred dollars, so that Mr. Barney landed there with
+a hundred and fifty dollars in his pocket, and got a free passage later
+on to Manila as a distressed American seaman.
+
+The Captain took matters philosophically when the boats returned, saying
+that he never had expected to see Barney again. After which he resumed
+his oil-making and the government of his "kingdom by the sea" as usual.
+
+As for me, my life was a quiet, deeply enjoyable one. I began at times
+to doubt whether I should ever wish to change it. But against this phase
+of lotus-eating contentment arose from time to time a haunting dread,
+lest by evil chance I should ever sink down into the position of those
+renegades from civilisation, whom I had known, in the strange world of
+"The Islands," and as often pitied or despised. In this Robinson Crusoe
+existence I even felt a mild interest in the three cattle that we had
+landed at Utwe.
+
+They had found their way over to the lee side of the island, and made
+their way along the beach to Mout.
+
+One day little Kinie met them, and, with hair flying loose and eyes
+dilated in an agony of terror, fled wildly home. She explained to me
+incoherently "that she had met three huge pigs, with, long teeth
+growing out of their heads and eyes as big as cocoa-nuts."
+
+Kusis and I, with some natives, went out and found them walking slowly
+along the beach. At the sound of my voice they stopped and let me come
+up to them, smelling me all over. I had only a mat round my waist, for
+my European clothes were only worn on great occasions; but they
+evidently knew me for a different being to those around them. We drove
+them to a rich piece of meadow land, where they remained during the rest
+of my stay on the island--fat, quiet, and contented.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Early one morning I made ready for a start back to Coquille harbour, and
+found Kusis awaiting me in the king's courtyard.
+
+Shortly after the queen came out and told me that I must wait for
+breakfast, or the king would be offended. Old Tokusar then appeared,
+none the worse for the night's potations, and we sat down to a very good
+breakfast.
+
+He told me that he had intended to go and see the Captain's village at
+Utwe, but that Likiak Sa, had dissuaded him by telling him that Hayston
+would seize and imprison him.
+
+I assured the king that this was a pure invention, upon which both he
+and the queen said they would take my word before that of Likiak Sa, and
+from the kindness of the king and his subjects at Chabral harbour, I
+felt certain that my intercession with Hayston on behalf of the villages
+at Coquille had placed me high in their regard.
+
+The queen pointed to a pile of beautiful mats, quantities of cooked
+fowls, pigeons, pork, fish, and fruit, which were being carried in and
+deposited in the courtyard, telling me that they were presents from the
+king and herself, and would be taken down to Mout for me by native
+carriers.
+
+As I was bidding my royal friends good-bye, promising to come and see
+them whenever I got tired of Mout, Kitty of Ebon came in, and quite
+bore out the description Hayston had given me of her remarkable beauty.
+She seemed a very intelligent girl, and was much admired by the king,
+who kept nudging me, and saying in his wheezy, croaking voice, "Um, ah!
+What you tink girl like that?"
+
+He then fell into moody silence, upon which Queen Se gave him a scornful
+glance, exclaiming, "For shame! old man like you, sick all the time,
+look so much at young girl like Kitty Ebon! Captain Hayston teach you
+all that."
+
+I learnt from Kitty that Lalia was then at her house on a visit, and,
+telling the king and queen of her kindness to me when I was ill at Utwe,
+said I should like to go and see her, as Kitty's house lay in the
+direction Kusis and I were taking. The queen generously gave me a small
+work-box, with the necessary fittings, which she said I could give to
+Lalia. It was quite a handsome affair, and had been given to the
+queen by a ship captain; but she had never used it. Shaking hands with
+Tokusar and Queen Se, we set out on our journey, Kusis leading the way,
+Kitty of Ebon and I following, and the carriers in the rear.
+
+Kitty was very lively, and startlingly simple in manner. She made me
+laugh at her description of the flirtations of Captain Hayston and the
+queen when he had visited Strong's Island three years before in company
+with Captain Ben Peese. For a missionary's housekeeper Kitty of Ebon was
+something unique, and her lively sallies kept me amused in her excellent
+English all the way. I was pleased to see Lalia, who was looking as
+beautiful as ever. Indeed, it was hard to say which was the handsomer,
+she or the hostess.
+
+I gave her the work-box, which seemed to please her very much. Then
+Kitty proposed a game of cards, saying it was all right, as we need not
+play for money, and no one would tell Mr. Morland. But I had to decline,
+and, saying good-bye to them with some regrets, I rejoined Kusis, much
+wondering inwardly whether Lalia, with her sad, bright eyes, soft
+voice, and gentle manner, could really have been the perpetrator of the
+cruel deed in the mountain forest of Utwe.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+"MY LORDS OF THE ADMIRALTY"
+
+
+In October I received another letter from the Captain, asking me to meet
+him in Chabral harbour. He had become so tired of waiting for a ship
+that he had decided to start in a boat for Mille. He had effected a
+reconciliation with the king, and was paying him a friendly visit. He
+meant to arrange with him regarding the people and the management of the
+station at Utwe during his absence.
+
+I left Mout at daylight, and, as I said good-bye to Tulpe and the
+little daughter, how little I thought that I should never cross their
+hospitable threshold again!
+
+Kusis came with me, and we took the route by the weather side of the
+island, reaching Lele in the afternoon. On my way to the king's house we
+came across a number of women catching shrimps in the rivulet that runs
+into Chabral harbour, and among them were Kitty of Ebon and Lalia.
+
+These two called to us to stop, as they had news for me. Coming out of
+the water, they threw off their wet clothes and put on dry ones. Then
+the four of us sat down on a low coral wall under the shade of some
+trees.
+
+Kitty of Ebon began the conversation by saying that the Captain had
+arrived the night before, and had a long talk with the king, whom he
+told that he was going to try and reach Mille in the largest of the
+ship's boats, though he would have to contend against the north-east
+trades the whole way. He wished the king to become responsible for the
+management and safety of the station of Utwe.
+
+This the king didn't see his way to do, as he could never control the
+Pleasant islanders. The remaining white men at Chabral harbour would
+regain their control over them as soon as Hayston had left; that it was
+not wise of the Captain to attempt to reach Mille.
+
+He also showed great fear of being punished if the Captain came back and
+found his station pillaged.
+
+Kitty of Ebon, who was present at the interview, further narrated that
+the king, finding that Hayston was bent on setting out for Mille, made
+another proposal to the Captain, who had accepted it on the condition
+that I would concur. This was that all the oil, boats, and stores, with
+the women, should be conveyed to Chabral harbour and put under the
+king's protection, who professed then to be anxious that I should come
+and live with him in case the traders made an attack on him, and tried
+to seize the property or carry off the women.
+
+Both Kitty and Lalia urged me not to do this, for, they said, "as
+soon as the Captain goes away there will be fighting here; the king is
+weak, and the traders do not fear him. Besides, they are plotting with
+Likiak Sa, the missionary, who has promised them to win the king over.
+They say that you and Black Johnny are the only two men that will stand
+by the Captain's property when guns and knives are out, as young Harry
+is to stay at Utwe till the Captain returns."
+
+I inquired of the girls what the traders proposed doing with me?
+
+"Shoot you, Black Johnny, and young Harry. Then, when the Captain is
+once away, they will be strong enough, and the king will not interfere
+with them."
+
+Lalia then told me that one of the trader's wives had told her that
+they had arranged to have us three shot by some of their natives as
+soon as the Captain had left for Mille. The girls again urged me not to
+comply with the king's request, and to dissuade Hayston from his
+intended voyage. Indeed, they tried to prevent me from going to the king
+at all, Kitty urging me to come to her house, and write a letter to the
+Captain asking him to meet me there.
+
+The thought of the Captain being a victim, as well as myself and young
+Harry, to such treachery decided me in an instant, and breaking away
+from the women, Kusis and I soon reached the king's house.
+
+The traders who were living at Chabral kept carefully within doors. When
+I reached the courtyard of the king's house I found no one there but His
+Majesty and Likiak Sa engaged in earnest conversation. The native
+missionary glanced uneasily at me, and I at once opened out on him by
+calling him a treacherous dog, striking him at the same time, and
+threatening him with the Captain's vengeance. He picked himself up and
+left.
+
+"Where is the Captain?" I said to the king.
+
+"In my oil-shed," he answered in a troubled voice.
+
+But I said nothing to him, and, finding Hayston, shortly made him
+acquainted with what I had learnt from Kitty of Ebon. His face darkened
+as he strode off to the king.
+
+At that moment the natives called out that there was a vessel in sight,
+upon which he turned back, and together we walked to the beach in time
+to see a fine fore and aft schooner sailing in, which Hayston declared
+was the _Matautu_, belonging to Captain Warner.
+
+"He would never have ventured in if he knew I was here," quoth the
+Captain grimly; "and if I had a few of my boys he'd never go out again,
+unless the schooner had a new master."
+
+I reasoned with him against the folly of such an action, when he said
+that he would use fair means at first, and would try and charter the
+_Matautu_. He then went to the king, and I could see meant mischief. I
+was glad to notice the traders getting into canoes and making for the
+schooner, where they no doubt thought they would be safe, as Hayston had
+only two native boys with him, and would hardly attempt to tackle the
+schooner single-handed.
+
+Likiak Sa was again with the king when we returned. However, he ran away
+at once, narrowly missing a chair which the Captain threw at him. Old
+Tokusar seemed scared, as he watched the Captain's darkening face. He
+inquired in a shaking voice, "Why you so much angry?"
+
+"Because," answered the Captain, "the men who have been living on my
+food have been plotting against me, and that scheming missionary is at
+the bottom of it; but look you, King Tokusar, and mark my words well! If
+I suspect you, too, I will burn your house and town, and drown you like
+a rat in your own turtle pond!"
+
+"Captain," I said, "what folly! You are here almost alone, and all but
+in the power of your enemies. Return to the boats and get back to Utwe."
+
+He calmed down almost immediately, and said he would see Captain Warner.
+He asked me to come with him. I mentioned the fact of the traders being
+on board the ship, and urged him to be cautious.
+
+We got in the boats, and pulled towards the schooner. Before we were
+half-way across the Captain laughed contemptuously, and pointed to the
+traders, who were already leaving the schooner's side in canoes, and
+making rapidly for the western side of the harbour.
+
+Captain Warner seemed under great excitement when we stepped on deck,
+but the cordial manner of Hayston's greeting at once reassured him, so
+that we were received most politely and asked below.
+
+Captain Warner seemed so intensely amiable that I could hardly help
+laughing, and as he kept his glass constantly filled, or rather emptied,
+his amiability increased proportionately.
+
+In the course of conversation a discussion arose as to some business
+transactions with Hayston while we were at Ponape, and the skipper
+laughingly remarked that he had over-reached him in the matter. The
+Captain, who was now perfectly calm, gave a pleasantly-worded denial,
+and said, "No, Captain Warner, I think my supercargo must have got to
+windward of _you_ there."
+
+A quarrel ensued forthwith. The burly skipper became offensive, and it
+ended in our agreeing to meet with pistols on the beach at daylight next
+morning.
+
+However, at dawn the _Matautu_ had towed out with the first breath of
+the land-breeze, and was already outside the passage standing to the
+westward. So the duel did not come off. I honestly think the skipper was
+not afraid, but I suspect he decided not to risk another encounter with
+Hayston, and so thought discretion was the better part of valour.
+
+Next day we again heard the stirring cry of "Sail ho!" The new arrival
+was the _Morning Star_ from Honolulu, from which about ten o'clock
+landed the Rev. Mr. Morland--a portly, white bearded old gentleman, who
+at once made his way to his residence, while the Captain and I returned
+to South harbour. Kusis went home, with a promise from me to follow him
+next day, the honest fellow begging me to delay as little as possible.
+
+It was dark when we started, and a fierce black squall struck us just
+after we got out of the passage, nearly capsizing the boat. The Captain
+thought we had better return, but I was anxious to get back to Mout,
+and said I was sure the squall would not last. So we reefed the sail and
+dashed out to sea close-hauled, for the squall came from the westward,
+and was dead against us. However, the wind continued to increase, and
+the little boat shipped two or three heavy seas. So we agreed to turn
+back.
+
+We went about in a lull, and had made the entrance to the passage, as we
+thought, when the Captain called out, "Look out! here comes a sea!"
+
+Looking back, I saw a huge black roller almost on top of us. The next
+minute I felt we had touched. I shouted, "By Jove! we're not in the
+passage at all--it's only a creek in the reef. Jump out, quick!"
+
+We all sprang out of the boat on to the jagged coral, then the waves,
+poised high in air, dashed down upon us, and we were all washed clear
+over into a pool of smooth water. The boat was capsized, and with broken
+masts and oars gone, was swept in far ahead of us, till she disappeared
+in the darkness. We clung to the reef as best we could, and succeeded in
+reaching a coral "mushroom" that was just a wash. "We'll be all right
+here," said the Captain, in his cool, cheerful way; "are you boys all
+right?"--the two native boys were, like ourselves, cut about the arms
+and legs by the coral. But they thought nothing of that. What they
+dreaded were the _sharks_!
+
+Fortunately the tide was falling, and the coral knoll was gradually
+showing more of its surface above the water. Otherwise none of us would
+have reached the shore; for in these deep water passages the sharks
+literally swarm.
+
+A sea occasionally broke close to us, but not with sufficient force to
+wash any of us away. Suddenly the Captain said, "Boys, I see some people
+fishing ashore with torches," and he gave a resounding hail. An answer
+came back, and, what was more to the purpose, a canoe, in which we were
+rescued from our precarious position and taken ashore. The boat was
+searched for, and found drifting out to sea. But as long as I live I
+shall never forget the horrible feeling of standing on that coral knoll,
+in the wave-washed darkness, knowing that if we were once dislodged
+there was no chance of escaping the sharks. We were all good swimmers,
+but the Kusaie natives told us that the passage of Chabral harbour was
+swarming with the dreaded reef-shark, that seeks its prey, chiefly
+turtle, in the foam and swirl of the breakers on the reef. We slept that
+night in a native house, some distance from the village of Lele, and at
+daylight proceeded along the beach to the king's house. The old king did
+not appear; the queen was very hospitable to us, but seemed nervous and
+constrained in her manner to the Captain. Once when I was standing apart
+from him, she said in a low tone that I had better return to Mout,
+where I would be safe, adding, "Don't stay along with Captain.
+Man-of-war come from Honolulu to take him away. By and by I tell him."
+
+I afterwards regretted that I did not attach more importance to her
+warning, and tell the Captain; subsequent events showed that both the
+king and queen had been informed by Mr. Morland of the impending arrival
+of a man-of-war, which had been searching for Hayston for months
+previously. Later in the day, while the Captain was superintending
+repairs to the boat, Mr. Morland and the native colleague were
+announced. The white missionary requested to see the Captain. I may
+mention, that during our cruise to the north-west in the _Leonora_ we
+had occasionally met with the missionary brig, _Morning Star_, and had
+been visited by Mr. Morland once or twice.
+
+On this occasion he met us with the usual smile and outstretched hand.
+
+"How do you do, Captain Hayston? I am glad--very glad to see you, and
+yet sorry; for you have my sincere sympathy for the loss of your
+beautiful vessel."
+
+"Morland!" came the quick reply, "you know you are lying most
+infernally. You are no more pleased to see me than I am to see you. Our
+interests are too antagonistic for us to take kindly to each other. So
+let us at least be candid!"
+
+"Oh! Captain Hayston!" rejoined Mr. Morland, "you terribly unkind man!
+Why must you hate the poor parson so? Oh! my friend, my countryman, let
+us shake hands as fellow-Christians should do when they meet in these
+lonely, beautiful spots of God's bright universe!"
+
+Hayston smiled, but if he had but known that Mr. Morland was, even then,
+anxiously looking for the tall spars of one of Her Majesty's warships,
+and had actually been in communication with her captain a few days
+previously, he would possibly have half-strangled his pleasant-mannered
+visitor then and there.
+
+After a short chat the missionary returned to the king's house with the
+Captain, while I busied myself with the repairs of the boat, when the
+startling cry of "Sail ho!" rang through the quiet village. I ran up to
+the king's house, and found the Captain in the courtyard playing a game
+of dominoes with Queen Se.
+
+The missionary and Likiak Sa were just coming out from an interview with
+the king. The air of exultation on their faces as they saw the natives
+hurrying to and fro at the cry of "Sail ho!" struck me at once.
+
+The Captain sprang up at once, and said, "Let us take the boat and go
+out to her, she may want a pilot"; and we walked through the house to
+the stone wharf that abutted on one side of the king's establishment. We
+jumped into the boat, and with a crew of four natives pulled quickly out
+of the passage. On gaining the open we could see no sail, and concluded
+that the ship must be coming round the north-eastern side of the island,
+where she had been sighted by the natives. We then set sail, and
+commenced beating to windward, and about half-an-hour afterwards, as the
+little boat rode on the swell, we got a sight of the lofty masts and
+square yards of a man-of-war under steam, as she rounded the high land
+on the north-east side of the island.
+
+With a sudden exclamation the Captain stood up and gazed at the steamer.
+He then seated himself and seemed lost in thought. The great vessel came
+steadily on, then altered her course by a couple of points, and steered
+in the direction of the passage. I could see that she was under a full
+head of steam, and was travelling at a great rate. A volume of thick
+smoke was issuing from the yellow funnel, and as there is always a heavy
+sea off the windward side of Strong's Island she rolled tremendously,
+the water pouring from her black painted sides in sheets.
+
+The Captain watched her intently. "That's a man-of-war, Hilary! and a
+Britisher too," he said. "Though she may be an American--the
+_Portsmouth_ or the _Jamestown_; I can't tell with that smoke blowing
+ahead of her. If she's an American cruiser, she'll take me prisoner
+right enough. It's no use attempting to escape now. It's too late; I
+must take my chance. In that case you must get away to Utwe as quick as
+possible, and do the best you can with the station and the people. You
+know where the money is stowed away, and what to do with it if we are
+fated not to meet again."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As he said these words the smoke cleared away from the cruiser, and we
+had a splendid view of her as she rose majestically to a heavy sea, and
+fell gracefully into the trough again. "A Britisher, by ----!" exclaimed
+the Captain, "and a beauty too; give way, my lads, she's stopped her
+engines. Let us get aboard, and I'll soon learn what's in store for me."
+
+In order that it may be understood what reason the Captain had for these
+strong suspicions of arrest and imprisonment, I will here make quotation
+from the _Queensland Government Gazette_, an official journal of
+severely correct character, which, like "the _Apparatus_, cannot lie."
+
+
+ COLONIAL SECRETARY'S OFFICE,
+ BRISBANE, _20th August 1875_.
+
+ His Excellency directs the subjoined circular despatch received
+ from the Secretary of State for the Colonies, together with the
+ enclosed correspondence with the Board of Admiralty, respecting
+ the proceedings in the South Seas of W. H. Hayston, a United
+ States' subject, and master of the American brig _Leonora_, to
+ be published in the _Gazette_ for general information.
+
+ A. MACALISTER.
+
+
+ The Admiralty to the Colonial Office.
+
+ ADMIRALTY, _12th January 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I am commanded by the my Lords Commissioners of the
+ Admiralty to transmit herewith, for the information of the Earl
+ of Carnarvon, a letter and its enclosures from Commodore
+ Goodenough, Senior Naval Officer of the Australasian Station,
+ reporting the proceedings of W. H. Hayston, a citizen of the
+ United States, and master of the late American brig _Leonora_.
+ It is requested that these papers be returned in order that they
+ may be sent to the Foreign Office.--I am, etc.
+
+ (Signed) ROBERT HALL.
+
+ The Under Secretary of State,
+ Colonial Office.
+
+
+ Admiral Cochrane to the Admiralty.
+
+ _Repulse_ AT CALLAO, _28th February 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to forward for the information of their
+ Lordships a copy of correspondence which I have received from
+ Commodore Goodenough, commanding the Australian Station.
+
+ 2. The correspondence has reference to the very irregular
+ conduct of a master of a trading brig lately wrecked. The master
+ is believed to be an American.
+
+ 3. Commodore Goodenough requested that the documents containing
+ evidence tending to substantiate the charges against the said
+ master should be forwarded to the American admiral commanding
+ the North Pacific Station. The islands where the occurrences
+ referred to took place are not included in the Pacific
+ Station.--I am, etc.
+
+ (Signed) A. A. COCHRANE.
+
+ Rear Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.
+
+
+ H.M.S. _Repulse_,
+ CALLAO, _28th February 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to forward for your perusal copies of
+ correspondence I have received from Commodore Goodenough in
+ command of H.M. ships on the Australian Station, relative to the
+ highly irregular proceedings of a master of a vessel trading
+ among the South Sea Islands. He is believed to be an American
+ citizen.
+
+ I should be much gratified if circumstances enable you to cause
+ inquiry into the subject of the charges enumerated.--I have,
+ etc.
+
+ (Signed) A. A. COCHRANE.
+
+ Rear Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.
+
+
+ Circular.
+
+ DOWNING STREET, _13th May 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to transmit to you copies of a
+ correspondence with the Board of Admiralty respecting the
+ proceedings in the South Seas of W. H. Hayston, a United States'
+ subject, and master of the late American brig _Leonora_. In
+ connection with the lawless conduct of Hayston, as reported in
+ the papers now transmitted, I beg to refer you to my
+ predecessor's Circular Despatch of 22nd December 1875, relating
+ to the proceedings in the case of the _Atlantic_, and I desire
+ to express my entire concurrence in the hope expressed by Lord
+ Kimberley, that no opportunity may be lost of bringing the man
+ to trial.--I have, etc.
+
+ CARNARVON.
+
+ To the Officer administering the
+ Government of Queensland.
+
+
+ Proceedings of H.M.S. _Rosario_ in the South Sea Islands.
+ Criminal acts of Mr. W. H. Hayston, master of the brig _Leonora_.
+
+ H.M.S. _Pearl_, _16th November 1874_.
+
+ SIR,--I have the honour to enclose for the information of the
+ Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, a Report and various
+ papers furnished to me by Commander Dupont of H.M.S. _Rosario_,
+ concerning a Mr. William H. Hayston, master of the late American
+ brig _Leonora_.
+
+ 2. This Mr. Hayston has long been known among the Pacific
+ Islands as a collector of produce, and has the reputation of
+ defrauding natives and lifting produce collected by other
+ traders. He has been spoken of in correspondence between this
+ and the Chinese Station as "the notorious Captain Hayston," but
+ hitherto no evidence on which he could be convicted of any
+ piratical act has been brought before me.
+
+ 3. It seemed possible that Commander Dupont, while cruising in
+ H.M.S. _Rosario_ among the Gilbert and Ellice Islands, and
+ watching the labour traffic, might be able to gather some
+ evidence which would enable him to detain this person, who is
+ doing much harm among the islands. A copy of my orders to
+ Commander Dupont is enclosed.
+
+ 4. Commander Dupont seems only to have obtained the evidence
+ which he desired against Hayston after he had learned of his
+ escape, and he is satisfied from inspection of Hayston's papers
+ that he is an American citizen.
+
+ 5. Commander Dupont brought away with him from Strong's Island
+ the crew of Hayston's vessel, the _Leonora_, which was wrecked
+ there in March last, and also one Hilary Telfer, who had
+ proceeded from Samoa to Mille as supercargo of a vessel called
+ the _E. A. Wilson_, and belonging to the sons and daughters of
+ Mr. Wilson, H.M. Consul from Samoa.
+
+ 6. This Mr. Telfer carried with him from Samoa orders from Mr.
+ Wilson to put the _E. A. Wilson_ and the cargo into Hayston's
+ hands to be sold, and in course of business appears to have
+ become so mixed up in Hayston's affairs, that the latter made
+ him his agent and entrusted him with letters to all his
+ subordinate agents, informing them that he had been seized by
+ the _Rosario_ for conveyance to Sydney.
+
+ 7. I was in Samoa in H.M.S. _Pearl_ in November 1873. The ketch
+ _E. A. Wilson_ was then there under repairs. Mr. S. D. Wilson
+ told me nothing of his intentions regarding the vessel, but gave
+ me to understand that Mr. Hayston was a great rascal, who had
+ cleverly outwitted all inquiries. He offered to obtain evidence
+ from a half-caste, and at my desire took the statements (which
+ proved valueless) on oath. Yet on December 3, 1873, he enters
+ into communication with this man, against whom he had pretended
+ to give me information.
+
+ 8. I consider the whole affair as most unsatisfactory, even
+ regarding Mr. Wilson as a trader. In the position of Her
+ Majesty's Acting Consul, I consider that he has been guilty of
+ improper behaviour, rendering him unworthy to occupy such a
+ position. The desirability of appointing a non-trading Consul in
+ Samoa has already been pointed out by both myself and my
+ predecessor on this Station.
+
+ 9. The papers I enclose concerning Hayston will illustrate the
+ life of a modern South-Sea filibuster.--I have the honour to be,
+ your obedient servant,
+
+ JAMES G. GOODENOUGH,
+ Captain and Commodore, 2nd Class,
+ Commanding Australian Station.
+
+ To the Secretary.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 2.
+
+ H.M.S. _Rosario_,
+ AT SEA, Lat. 2 deg. 26' N., Long. 167 deg. 19' E.,
+ _10th October 1874_.
+
+ SIR,--With reference to Mr. Hayston, master of the American brig
+ _Leonora_, I beg to forward the following statement of facts
+ relative to him that I have been able to collect among the
+ different islands visited during my present cruise:--
+
+ 1. There can be no doubt but that Mr. Hayston is a shrewd,
+ unprincipled man, who has committed acts of violence towards the
+ natives, and been guilty of unjustifiable acts towards other
+ persons. Yet, so greatly has his name got to be feared, by both
+ natives and white men on the islands, that, though it was
+ evident that at nearly all the islands I visited he was well
+ known, it was impossible to find out much about him.
+
+ 2. With respect to Mr. Dunn's business, what evidence I could
+ get was mainly in Hayston's favour, and tended to show that
+ Dunn's agents had sold the trade to Hayston instead of his
+ taking it. This is certainly the case as regards an Englishman
+ named George Winchcombe, whom I found living on Nukufutau, one
+ of the Ellice group. He himself stated to me that he left Sydney
+ with Dunn, in the understanding that he was to be found at a
+ station on one of the islands. He complained that Dunn treated
+ him badly on board, and eventually sent him on shore on the
+ island of Apaiari (Gilbert group) to collect trade. He was
+ dissatisfied with his life, much in dread of the natives, and on
+ Hayston's coming there in the beginning of 1873, he begged him
+ to take him off the island, and offered to sell him all the
+ trade he had collected. Hayston accordingly took him. At another
+ island, Tarawa, the only white resident had heard that some
+ trade had been removed by Hayston, but was not on the island at
+ the time. At other islands I heard things relative to Dunn's
+ property, but could get nothing but hearsay evidence. I could
+ not find a single individual, either white or native, who could
+ furnish me with any positive evidence or proof against Hayston.
+
+ On entering Chabral harbour (Strong's Island) Mr. Hayston, as I
+ have reported in my letter of proceedings, came out to meet the
+ ship in a boat. He told that his vessel had been wrecked in
+ South harbour of the island on the 15th of March this year,
+ since which date he had been living on shore collecting oil.
+
+ Mr. Morland, an American missionary, who had just arrived from
+ Ebon Island, and numerous white men--the late crew of the
+ _Leonora_--were also there. A schooner under the German flag,
+ Mr. Miller an Englishman master, lay in the harbour. I commenced
+ making inquiries as quietly as possible about Hayston, but here,
+ as at other places, I met with disinclination from all traders
+ to tell me anything they might know; Mr. Miller, though hinting
+ that Hayston had robbed him not long since, would at first say
+ nothing, nor was it till after considerable persuasion and the
+ delay of some days that I got the enclosed statement, with the
+ various witnesses in the matter, from him.
+
+ But as he was sailing under German colours, I could not believe
+ my duty was to do more than receive the statements and forward
+ it through you to the German Consul in Sydney.
+
+ Hayston, apprised by some of the crew of the inquiries that had
+ been made, left the island in a boat on the night of the 27th.
+ His design was, I believe, either to make the island of
+ Ascension or that of Pingelap. At their own request, and also
+ considering it a good thing for the island to be rid of them, I
+ took five of the crew of the _Leonora_ on board for passage to
+ Sydney, and also one other person who had been a passenger on
+ board, and also, from what I could hear, a great friend of
+ Hayston. This Hilary Telfer was the person who had been sent by
+ Mr. Wilson, British Consul at Samoa, as supercargo of the ketch
+ that I met at Mille, but leaving his charge there, had gone to
+ sea with Hayston and been with him since January. I deemed it
+ advisable that he should be removed, there being no chance of
+ his getting back to Mille from Strong's Island, and also because
+ the chief particularly desired his removal, as being likely to
+ stir up trouble in the island. These six persons are now on
+ board.
+
+ I visited Mr. Hayston's residence at South harbour; he had made
+ a regular settlement of it, and had collected a large quantity
+ of oil. No less than five young women were living in his house,
+ who had all with one exception been living on board the
+ _Leonora_. That vessel was sunk in fourteen fathoms, her topmast
+ head a few feet above water.
+
+ The first mate I left on the island, recommending him to take
+ charge of Hayston's property. The second mate, William Hicks,
+ ran away into the bush and couldn't be found, otherwise I should
+ have taken him to Sydney with the others. Thinking the case over
+ quietly afterwards, I cannot see how I could have arrested
+ Hayston. It is, therefore, with great regret that I am obliged
+ to report my failure to collect sufficient evidence against him
+ to warrant my doing so. The case of Mr. Dunn must have failed
+ from want of such evidence.--I have, etc., etc.
+
+ A. E. DUPONT,
+ Commander.
+
+ To Commodore J. G. Goodenough,
+ H.M.S. _Pearl_.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 13.
+
+ MESSRS. MILLER AND WARNE TO MR. HILARY TELFER, SUPERCARGO.
+
+ DEAR SIR,--You will proceed from hence to Mille, Mulgrave
+ Island, for the purpose of selling the ketch _A.E.W._ You will
+ find Captain Hayston there waiting for you, so you will please
+ consult with him, as he is acquainted with the people who wish
+ to purchase the ketch. Try to obtain oil or copra to the amount
+ of L500 for her. Ship whatever produce you may get on board the
+ _Leonora_, and get Captain Hayston to sign bills of lading. Do
+ not sell the chronometer unless you get a good price for it.
+ Sell the few things you take to the best advantage. None of the
+ Samoans are to remain, but to come back to Apia. Have the ketch
+ painted at Mille.--Wishing you a prosperous and speedy voyage,
+ we are, etc.,
+
+ (Signed) MILLER AND WARNE.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 15.
+
+ Know all men by these presents that I, William Henry Hayston,
+ Master mariner, now residing on Strong's Island, in the North
+ Pacific Ocean, have made, constituted, and appointed Hilary
+ Telfer, of Sydney, New South Wales, at present residing on this
+ island of Kusaie (or Strong's Island), to be my true and lawful
+ agent for me, and, in my place and stead, to enter into and take
+ possession of my station situated at Maloe, near the village of
+ Utwe, South harbour, on the above-named island. Also all my oil,
+ casks, tobacco, and other trade which may be on said station.
+ Also boats, canoe, pigs, fowls, possessions--all and everything,
+ whether of value or not, together with my furniture and private
+ effects, and to take full charge of all my business on the
+ above-named island during my trip to the eastward.
+
+ (Signed) W. H. HAYSTON,
+ In the presence of the undersigned witness,
+ this 19th August 1874.
+
+ (Signed) CHARLES ROBERTS.
+
+
+ Enclosure No. 16.
+
+ MEMORANDUM OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR MR. HILARY TELFER.
+
+ SIR,--As I am about to leave Strong's Island, and have given you
+ power to act on my behalf, I wish you to close up all my affairs
+ in the best manner you can. You will look after the property I
+ leave behind, and dispose of it to the best advantage. Out of
+ the remainder of the oil you can pay yourself for the
+ chronometer, and Mr. Harry Skillings for the trade I had from
+ him. Sell the balance, including the large cargo-boat, as soon
+ as an opportunity offers. Anything left over you can give to the
+ people that have been kind to you, and the natives. Out of the
+ proceeds of the sale you can pay for the passage of my natives
+ to Samoa, if they want to go there. If not, see them back on
+ their own island, or on some of the Kingsmill group, that they
+ may get with their own country people.
+
+ My native boy Toby I wish you to take to Samoa, and look after
+ him as well as you can; also Kitty, as they have no father or
+ mother. Both were given to me by the king of Hope Island. The
+ stores I left behind are for you and the natives to live on till
+ you can get away. Be careful of the little trade I leave you, as
+ the Strong's islanders want payment for everything you get of
+ them to eat. You will also bear in mind that the king owes me
+ 12,100 cocoa-nuts, the balance of the 48,000 that he agreed to
+ pay me for the property stolen by the Strong's islanders at the
+ time of the loss of the brig.
+
+ I write an accompanying letter to each of my agents. You will
+ have to settle with them by their own accounts, as my trade-book
+ was lost, as you know. The balance, after paying for your own
+ passage and expense, you can hand over to my agent at
+ Samoa.--Wishing you a safe arrival there and every success, I
+ remain, yours in good faith,
+
+ (Signed) W. H. HAYSTON.
+
+
+ Circular.
+
+ DOWNING STREET, _31st May 1875_.
+
+ SIR,--With reference to my circular despatch of 13th instant, I
+ have the honour to transmit to you the accompanying copy of a
+ note addressed by the Duc de Decazes to Her Majesty's Minister
+ at Paris, in consequence of the communication on the subject of
+ the lawless proceedings of W. H. Hayston in the South Seas,
+ which the Earl of Derby caused to be made to the French
+ Government, also those of Germany and the United States.--I am,
+ etc.,
+
+ CARNARVON.
+
+ The Officer Administering
+ the Government of Queensland.
+
+
+ THE DUC DE DECAZES TO MR. ADAMS.
+
+ (Copy.)
+
+ PARIS, _le 10 mai 1875_.
+
+ M. LE MINISTRE,--J'ai porte a la connaissance de mon collegue
+ les informations que vous m'avez fait l'honneur de me
+ transmettre, relativement a un personnage dangereux, du nom de
+ Hayston, qui se serait signale par de nombreux actes de
+ depredation dans les Iles de l'Oceanie. M. l'Amiral de Montaigne
+ repondant a ma communication m'annonce qu'il signalera par le
+ premier courrier cet individu au Commandant en Chef de notre
+ division navale dans l'Ocean Pacifique. Il adressera en outre a
+ M. l'Amiral Rebout les instructions necessaires pour que ce
+ flibustier soit surveille de pres et mis, le cas echeant, hors
+ d'etat de poursuivre son industrie criminelle.--Agreez, etc.,
+
+ (Signed) DUC DE DECAZES.
+
+ M. Adams.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+H.M.S. ROSARIO
+
+
+As we pulled up alongside we saw her bulwarks forward crowded with the
+blue-jackets. The Captain's quick eye, which nothing escaped, detected
+among them the bronzed faces of Dan Gardiner and another trader whom he
+had left at Providence Island.
+
+"She's come to take me, sure enough," he said to me. "The moment I
+looked at those two fellows they dropped back out of sight. Never mind,
+come aboard and I'll see it through."
+
+As soon as we gained the deck he advanced towards a group of officers
+standing on the quarter-deck, and, raising his hat, said, "Good morning,
+gentlemen. I am Captain Hayston of the brig _Leonora_, cast away on this
+island in the earlier part of the year."
+
+There was a moment's silence; then a tall man, the captain of the
+cruiser, stepped out from the others, surveyed Hayston from head to
+foot, and said, "Oh, ah, indeed! then you are the very man I am looking
+for. This is Her Majesty's ship _Rosario_, and you are a prisoner, Mr.
+Hayston!"
+
+Hayston simply bowed and said nothing, retiring to the port side, where
+he was placed under the charge of the sergeant-major of marines, who, as
+also all others on board, looked with intense curiosity at the man of
+whose doings they had heard so much in their cruises in the Pacific
+Ocean.
+
+The man-of-war captain then demanded my name, after which I was
+considerably staggered by the announcement that he had instructions to
+apprehend me on the charge of stealing the ketch _E. A. Wilson_, the
+property of Messrs. Miller and Warne of Samoa.
+
+Hayston at once came forward, and, addressing the captain, said that I
+had simply brought that vessel to him at Mille, and could produce
+written instructions from the owners to hand the vessel over to him. To
+this no answer was returned, and silence was maintained, for the
+_Rosario_ was now entering the passage, and so interested was I at the
+novel surroundings of a man-of-war under steam, and so lost in
+admiration of the perfect discipline on board, that for the time being I
+forgot that the Captain of the _Leonora_ was a prisoner, and that I was
+also apprehended on a serious charge.
+
+Slowly and gracefully the great ship steamed through the passage, and
+brought up within a cable's length of the king's wharf, where the anchor
+plunged below to its resting-place on the coral bottom. No sooner had
+the man-of-war come to anchor than Mr. Morland and the native
+missionary, who followed him like a shadow, came on board, and were
+received by Her Majesty's representative. A consultation took place,
+after which I was separated from my companion, and, without being able
+to exchange a word of farewell, was hurried down to the gun-room. As I
+placed my foot on the ladder leading to the "'tween decks" I turned. He
+waved his hand to me in farewell. _We never met again!_
+
+While I was detained in the gun-room a midshipman told me that Captain
+Hayston had been permitted to go on shore, under the charge of an
+officer, to collect his personal effects and write letters, as he had
+been informed that I would not be permitted to have any further
+communication with him.
+
+The midshipman said that Mr. Morland had seemed surprised at Captain
+Hayston's not being put in irons, and was at that moment collecting
+evidence in order to formulate a series of charges against him before
+the captain of the _Rosario_. My informant added, "If Captain Hayston is
+such a blood-thirsty ruffian as he is described to be he certainly shows
+no indication of it."
+
+Several of the warrant officers now gathered around and pressed me with
+questions concerning Hayston. One of them jocularly inquired where the
+Captain's harem was located, adding that it was a pity to separate him
+from them, and that there was plenty of room on board the _Rosario_ for
+ladies.
+
+I was burning with anxiety to know on what particular charge Hayston had
+been arrested, and how the captain of the _Rosario_ had heard of the
+loss of the _Leonora_. They told me then that the _Rosario_ had been
+searching for Hayston for some time, under instructions from the
+Commodore of the Australian Station, to whom representations had been
+made concerning alleged depredations committed by him (Hayston) in the
+Line Islands. The _Rosario_ had visited a number of islands, and
+endeavoured to obtain evidence against Hayston, but that it had resulted
+in a failure, nearly every one, when it came to the point, declining to
+make any statement against him. The captain of the man-of-war then
+decided to proceed to Arrecifos, or Providence Island, which he knew to
+be one of Hayston's depots. On arrival he learned from the two white men
+there that so long an interval had passed since his last visit that they
+fancied that the _Leonora_ had been lost.
+
+These two men were taken on board, and the _Rosario_ made for Strong's
+Island. When within 400 miles she met the little _Matautu_, who
+signalled a wish to speak. As soon as Captain Warner boarded the
+man-of-war he informed the commander of the loss of the _Leonora_, and
+of Hayston's presence on the island. He also handed in several written
+charges made by himself against Hayston, and, as well as I can remember
+from what I was told, was about to return to his schooner when the
+_Morning Star_ hove in sight.
+
+On board of the missionary brig was Mr. Morland, and a consultation then
+took place between the two captains and this gentleman, who was, of
+course, delighted to hear of the loss of the _Leonora_, and that Captain
+Hayston was to be taken prisoner.
+
+The _Matautu_ then bore away on her course, and the _Morning Star_,
+after landing Mr. Morland at the weather side of the island, went on her
+way, leaving him ashore, perfectly assured of his own safety and the
+immediate presence of the _Rosario_ in Chabral harbour.
+
+I could now understand the hints given me by the queen, as well as the
+expression of triumph on the faces of the missionaries as they returned
+from their interview with the king.
+
+Presently an officer came down and asked me if I wished to obtain my
+effects from the shore. I at once sent a message to Kusis to bring me a
+small chest, in which were my worldly goods, as well as my power of
+attorney and letters of instructions from former employers in Samoa. I
+was going to make inquiries about Hayston, when the officer requested me
+kindly enough not to ask him questions, as he could give me no
+information. He told me, however, that the captain of the _Rosario_ was
+at that moment engaged in hearing charges against Hayston made by the
+king, Mr. Morland, and two or three of the traders from Pleasant Island.
+Also that some of the crew of the _Leonora_ had been induced to come
+forward and make statements. I also learned that Hayston had been taken
+to South harbour in charge of an officer, for what purpose I could never
+learn, unless it was to give him an opportunity of escaping, as he could
+easily have written his letters in the king's house.
+
+Two of the boats' crews were piped away, and I was told by an old
+quarter-master, with a humorous grin, that some of the officers had gone
+away in the boats to South harbour to have a look at the "pirate's
+village, and bring away the unfortunate female captives." All this time
+I was kept in close confinement, and the time passed wearily away. I was
+growing tired of the ceaseless questions from every one that came near
+me about Hayston, the _Leonora_, and our voyage from the Carolines till
+the brig was cast away.
+
+At night, however, the boats returned, and after the crews had been
+piped down to supper the good old sergeant-major of marines, suspecting
+the anxiety I was in as to Hayston's movements, startled me by telling
+me that he had escaped from custody when at South Island harbour.
+
+He told me that as soon as the boat reached the village they found the
+place in a state of wildest confusion. A messenger had come down along
+the coast and told the Captain's people that a man-of-war was at Lele,
+and that Captain Hayston had been taken prisoner, put in irons, and was
+to be shot or hanged at once. A number of Strong's Island natives
+followed the man-of-war boats down from Chabral harbour, and these at
+once attempted to rush and ransack the station, which they were only
+prevented from doing by the presence of the blue-jackets.
+
+Hayston was escorted to his station, where he was at once surrounded by
+the girls belonging to the house and many others, among them being the
+carpenter's, steward's, boatswain's, and Antonio's wives--all clinging
+to him and impeding his movements.
+
+Calling them all together, with such others of the natives as had not
+fled from the village at the sight of the blue-jackets, he told them
+that they need not be under any alarm, that he was going away in the
+man-of-war, and might not return for a long time--perhaps many moons,
+but that the supercargo, Hilary Telfer, would be with them shortly, and
+they must be guided by him. Of course the Captain never for a minute
+imagined that I was then under the closest surveillance, and therefore
+would be utterly powerless to carry out his promises made to them.
+
+He then quietly seated himself, and wrote a quantity of letters to his
+agents in the different islands in the Line and Marshall groups. These
+letters he directed and enclosed to me, together with a power of
+attorney which he had previously drawn up, and a letter of
+instructions--all of which he laid on the table.
+
+He then told his captors that he was ready to return with them, when
+(according to the statement made by the marines on their return to Lele)
+he suddenly exerted his vast strength, and knocking several of them
+down, sprang into the sea and gained the mangroves on the opposite side
+of the harbour.
+
+On my inquiring from the marine officer why he had not been pursued,
+that gentleman winked at me, and replied, "No orders, my boy, no orders;
+besides he swam like a beaver, and to search the mangroves for one man
+would take a month of Sundays." Thinking the matter over, I came to the
+conclusion that for some reason I could not fathom, the captain of the
+man-of-war was not particularly anxious to keep Hayston a prisoner,
+though I had heard him declare to Mr. Morland that the naval authorities
+would at last rid the Pacific of this man, who was a source of terror
+and dread from New Zealand to the China Seas.
+
+When the boats returned from Utwe they brought up the man Jansen, whom
+Hayston had beaten and disgraced. He called himself, and was recognised
+by the captain of the _Rosario_ as the chief officer of the _Leonora_,
+although he had long since lost his position on account of his rascally
+conduct. He seemed brimful of evidence as to Hayston's misdeeds, and I
+was afterwards informed that when brought into the ward-room of the
+man-of-war the officers expected to have some thrilling stories of
+rapine and bloodshed. However, they were disappointed, as his evidence
+was little more than confirmatory of that of Captain Warner of the
+_Matautu_, in reference to the taking of some gear from the brig
+_Kamehameha the Fourth_.
+
+Mr. Morland and Likiak Sa appeared to be the leading spirits in
+obtaining charges against the absent Hayston, for the commander of the
+man-of-war was strictly neutral, and certainly not furiously indignant
+at his escape. They succeeded in obtaining his approval of the
+appointment of Jansen to take charge of the people and the station,
+under the supervision of King Tokusar, at Utwe. It was at this juncture
+that the letters written by Hayston to his agents, as well as the power
+of attorney and letters of instruction to me, were produced by Mr.
+Morland. How they came to be in that gentleman's hands I do not know. A
+rough draft was made by him for the king's perusal, he said, and the
+originals were then brought to me by one of the lieutenants, who also
+handed me a bundle of papers which he said had been brought on board by
+a native.
+
+These papers were my power of attorney, to hand over the ketch _E. A.
+Wilson_ to Captain Hayston, and also a letter of instructions in
+reference to the crew--copies of which the reader has already seen.
+Feeling confident that I had but to show these documents to Commander
+Dupont to insure an interview and my instant release, I requested to be
+ushered into the autocrat's presence. The Reverend Mr. Morland was
+present, and greeted me with such a smile of active benevolence that I
+longed to kick him.
+
+When I presented the letter to Captain Dupont I was considerably
+surprised when he denounced them as forgeries, calling me at the same
+time a d--d piratical scoundrel and accomplished young villain, adding
+that my cruel behaviour in aiding and abetting Hayston in his villainies
+made him regret that he could not run me up to the yardarm as a
+warning. He finished this tirade by tearing up my papers and throwing
+them at me. Calling the sergeant of marines, he ordered me put in irons,
+from which, however, I was released before the _Rosario_ put to sea.
+
+Early next morning, much to my relief, there appeared on board the black
+shining face of Johnny Tilton, the young negro, who among others of the
+crew had been brought away from Utwe, in one of the man-of-war boats.
+Johnny, with his shipmates, was taken below and examined by the captain
+and Mr. Morland. But as there was nothing against him personally or the
+Fijian half-caste Bill, they were permitted to return ashore. Before
+leaving, Johnny requested to be allowed to see me, which was granted.
+
+The moment I saw his face I knew he had something of importance to tell
+me, for looking at the marine standing sentry over me, he said in
+Samoan, "Le--alu ua sola i te po" (the Captain escaped in the night).
+
+"Yes!" I replied, "I know that already."
+
+"Ah! but I mean that he has taken the small boat and gone away
+altogether. Listen, I'll tell you all about it. After the man-of-war
+boats had gone away from Utwe, and the Captain had escaped into the
+mangroves, a number of the Strong's islanders came down and said they
+were going to loot the place. Then the king sent down word that the
+captain of the man-of-war had declared that the station now belonged to
+him (the king), and that he could do what he liked with the place. The
+king forbade any of the people to go into the Captain's house till
+Jansen came down with Likiak Sa, as these two had been appointed by the
+king and Mr. Morland to take charge. Well, there was a lot of us ran
+away into the mountains at the very first when we heard the Captain was
+taken prisoner. Bill Hicks and I were among them, also boy George and
+Sunday. Before we left I went to the Captain's house and told the girls
+that we were running away, and our wives were coming with us, and asked
+them what they intended to do. Old Mary said she would wait and see
+first if it were true about the Captain being taken prisoner.
+
+"All the young women, too, though they were very frightened, said they
+would stay. I got Hope Island Nellie to give me three Winchester rifles
+and a bag of cartridges from the back of the big house. I cut a hole
+through the side of the Captain's sleeping-place, and Nellie passed the
+rifles out to me quietly. I told Nellie that we were going to hide in
+the mountains till we saw whether the man-of-war wanted to catch us as
+well as the Captain. If not we would return to Utwe.
+
+"I took the rifles and wrapped them up in a long mat, and went down to
+the lagoon, where I found a canoe and took it. Bill and the others were
+waiting for me; they told me that the man-of-war boats were coming into
+the harbour, and that the Captain was in one of them; we watched them
+carefully and saw them go out of the harbour. Then Bill began to talk
+against the Captain, and said he would be glad if he were shot. He asked
+me if I was willing to make a dash into the village and help him to
+bring away Nellie and Sara, as if the Captain was taken away in the
+man-of-war he was going to have them for himself.
+
+"I told him that until Captain Hayston was taken away or dead that I
+intended to stick to him. So we nearly had a fight over it. Then Bill
+said all of a sudden that he intended to have Sara and Nellie, right or
+wrong. And as he had nothing to fear from the man-of-war, he would try
+if he couldn't fool the captain, and pretend he could tell him all about
+Captain Hayston robbing Captain Daly's station on the Line Islands.
+
+"I told him I was not going to turn dog on the Captain, and he might do
+his dirty work himself.
+
+"So off he went, and we saw him cross over in a canoe to young Harry's
+place, and knew he was going along the beach to Chabral harbour. Then I
+talked to the others, and asked them what we ought to do, for I was
+afraid we would not see the Captain any more. Boy George laughed, and
+said he didn't care, but he meant to be beforehand with Bill and run off
+with Sara; that if I had any sense I would run off with Nellie, and let
+the other girls go adrift. He said we could easily live in the mountains
+till the man-of-war was gone, and then go back to Utwe. But I said I
+wouldn't do that, and that they would find that Sara would fight like a
+wild cat if boy George or any one else tried to take her away.
+
+"Boy George then said if she wouldn't come he would put a bullet through
+her, and take Mila or Nellie instead. So then we had a row; he called me
+a black thief and said I could go to h--l. He and the others cleared out
+and left me alone.
+
+"It was then very dark, and as everything seemed quiet, I walked across
+the coral and got into the house on the point where some Strong's Island
+people live, the one you were brought to when you were washed ashore.
+The man and his wife Nadup were frightened at first; but they were good
+to me, and gave me food, and then they told me Jansen was in charge of
+the station; that the Pleasant islanders were fled into the bush, and
+that the girls in the big house had run away when they saw him coming to
+them, drunk, with a loaded rifle in his hand.
+
+"Only Nellie and little Kitty and Toby stayed behind. Nellie had a
+Winchester rifle and pointed it at Jansen, who was afraid to come into
+the house. Then she, Kitty, and the little boy collected as many of the
+Captain's things as they could carry, and taking a canoe, put out to
+sea, intending to paddle round to Mout, where they thought they would
+find you, who would tell them all about the Captain, and whether he was
+killed or not.
+
+"But, after they had gone four or five miles, the outrigger came off
+and the canoe capsized. They swam ashore and then walked back to Utwe,
+where they were told by some natives that you were also a prisoner on
+board the man-of-war. And the last that had been seen of Nellie, Kitty,
+and the boy, was that they started to walk to Chabral harbour to try and
+see the captain of the man-of-war, as they were afraid that Jansen would
+kill them.
+
+"Well," continued Black Johnny, "when I heard that you were also a
+prisoner I thought I would run away into the bush again, as I knew
+Jansen would put a bullet into me whenever he saw me if I did not get
+first shot. Just as I was thinking very hard what I should do, I heard
+some one walking on the broken coral outside the house. I knew the
+footstep; it was the Captain! I crept outside, and saw him standing up
+leaning against a stone wall. He had two pistols in his sash and a
+Winchester rifle in his hand. He seemed to be considering. I whistled
+softly, and then spoke. He shook hands with me, and then raised his
+rifle and pointed it at the head of the Strong's islander, who, with his
+wife Nadup, had followed me. They ran outside and threw themselves on
+the ground, and grovelled in the way they do to old Tokusar, and swore
+they would not tell that the Captain had come back.
+
+"We then had a hasty talk, and I told him about you being a prisoner.
+But he said you would soon be set free again and would return to Utwe,
+and I must stick to you and help to keep order; that after the
+man-of-war had gone he would come back again. When I told him that the
+station was broken up, and that Jansen was in charge of thirty Strong's
+islanders, and that the girls had run away, he said it was a bad case,
+and, picking up his rifle, he asked me where Jansen was sleeping. I saw
+what he meant to do, and begged him to let things be as they were, and
+not kill Jansen while the man-of-war was here.
+
+"So he thought awhile, and then said if he could find a boat he would
+get away, as he didn't think the man-of-war would follow him. By and by
+he would come back again, when he hoped to find you and me here all
+safe.
+
+"The Strong's Island women then told us that the dingey had been brought
+down from Chabral harbour by Jansen, and was then lying outside the
+coral at anchor. 'She'll do,' said the Captain; 'lend me a hand, and
+we'll bring her ashore.' But I made him lie quiet while I went for her;
+and I can tell you I was in a terrible funk all the time about sharks as
+soon as I began to swim out. Anyway I brought her in all right; and then
+the man and his wife brought a lot of cocoa-nuts and cooked food, and
+put it into the boat. I gave the Captain all the cartridges I had. He
+told me that he got the pistols from the place in the bush that you know
+of, and the rifle from young Harry, and that everything else there was
+all right."
+
+By this I knew that Hayston had visited a place in the bush where he had
+secreted his bags of money, besides firearms and ammunition.
+
+Going on with his talk the young negro said, "When everything was ready
+the Captain told me he meant to sail round the lee side of the island,
+and hide the boat in the mangroves till the man-of-war had gone, and
+then he would return and wipe out Jansen and the traders.
+
+"He told me, though (for he felt sure of your being set free again),
+that if it so happened that he did not return in ten days you would know
+that he had cleared out towards the north-west, and would try to reach
+the Pelew Islands. He said if he reached there he would soon get a
+vessel, as there were always plenty of small Spanish schooners about
+those islands, and he could easily put his hand on one or two people in
+the Pelews who would help him to take one. I asked him what we should do
+if, when we came back to Utwe, you found that Jansen was too strong for
+us? He said we should make no attempt to take forcible possession, but
+go and live with your people at Mout. That as soon as the girls knew
+where we were they would be certain to come to us with little Kitty and
+Toby. That we must wait till he returned, as he would never desert us.
+
+"Then," said Johnny, whose glistening eyes showed how deeply attached he
+was to his Captain, "the poor fellow! he shook hands with me, and said I
+was made of the right stuff, and that the Almighty made a mistake when
+he gave me a black skin. Then, telling me to keep a stout heart, he got
+in and hoisted the sail. It was very dark, but there was a good
+land-breeze, and he sailed the dingey right along the edge of the reef
+till he came to the passage, and disappeared in the darkness. I ran
+across the strip of land on the sea-side of the lagoon and waited till I
+saw him pass.
+
+"In about half-an-hour I saw the little boat sailing along close into
+the shore, just outside of the breakers, rising and falling like a
+sea-gull on the top of the heavy seas. I could see the Captain's figure
+in the stern, and every moment expected to see her lifted high up on a
+roller and dashed on the reef. But though I shouted to him to keep
+farther out, the white figure in the stern never moved, and my voice was
+lost in the roaring of the surf.
+
+"Then, as I saw him still keeping steady to the southward, just clear of
+the last sweep of the seas before they curled and broke on the reef, I
+remembered that only a few cables' lengths from the breakers there was
+always a strong current setting to the north, and that with a light
+breeze the boat would never stem it. That was why he hugged the shore so
+closely. At last, as I kept running through the undergrowth following
+the boat, I came to that place where there is a thick cane scrub. When I
+got through it he was nearly out of sight, and I sat on a boulder and
+watched the sail gradually covered up by the night."
+
+Such, in effect, was the young negro's story. I could not help being
+affected by his evident sorrow, and told him that I feared there was no
+chance of me at least ever seeing the Captain again. Then, when the time
+came to part, I shook his hand warmly, and advised him to sever his
+connection with the _Leonora's_ crew; also to go and see the king, who
+would not, at any rate, object to his remaining on the island to follow
+out the Captain's wishes as far as lay in his power.
+
+Soon after Black Johnny had bid me good-bye young Harry came to say
+farewell, and with him Kusis and his family, and Lalia.
+
+Harry told me that he saw the Captain after his escape, and urged him
+not to think of returning to Utwe just then, as Jansen had a strong
+force of natives with him, and would certainly try to take or shoot him.
+But he was determined to find out how matters stood, and bidding Harry
+good-bye, set out across the mangrove swamp that lined the shore from
+Harry's station to the village at Utwe. He gave him the Winchester and
+cartridges, and the Captain assured him that he would not fire a shot
+except in self-defence.
+
+I told Harry what I had learned from the young negro about the Captain's
+final movements, and that I was being taken away as a prisoner. He
+seemed very bitter against the other traders, whom he spoke of as
+trembling like whipped hounds before the Captain's frown when he was
+free, and who now, when he was a ruined and broken man, were loud in
+their threats and vapourings.
+
+He also told me that he had received a letter from the king and Mr.
+Morland, commanding him to deliver up to Jansen all oil, casks, boats,
+and other property in his possession belonging to Captain Hayston, and
+threatening him with deportation from the island if he refused. To this
+he sent a written reply to the effect, that unless the king and Mr.
+Morland could back up their demand by a boat's crew from the
+man-of-war, he would shoot the first man who stepped inside his fence.
+
+They then appealed to Commander Dupont, who told them that as young
+Harry was an American citizen, he could not force him to give up the
+property, but advised the king and Mr. Morland to take the law into
+their own hands.
+
+Young Harry then armed his wives and native servants with rifles, and
+telling them to make short work of any one attempting to seize Captain
+Hayston's property, set out for Chabral harbour to interview the king.
+He told me that when he reached the king's house he found there the
+other traders, Mr. Morland, and the commander of the man-of-war. On the
+latter gentleman inquiring who he was, and what he wanted, Harry
+answered him very concisely by furnishing his name and nationality. He
+then stated that he had not come to see him (Commander Dupont), but the
+king, of whom he wished to ask by what right he dared to send him a
+letter threatening him with deportation from the island unless he
+consented to give up Captain Hayston's property. He warned him to be
+careful how he interfered with an American citizen, as there was an
+American cruiser now in the Caroline Islands. He (the king) would find
+he had made a serious mistake if he committed any outrage upon a citizen
+of the United States.
+
+"You should have seen the look in the British officer's face," said
+Harry, "when I stepped up to the old king, and nearly touching his face
+with my hand, said, 'and I warn you, king, that the captain of an
+American cruiser will listen to the tale and redress the wrongs of the
+honest American citizen. He would think little of knocking your town
+about your ears.'"
+
+The old king never spoke, but glanced first towards the British officer
+and then to the missionary, but as neither of them offered suggestions,
+the poor old fellow could only mutter something to the effect that he
+was like a little fish in a pool, afraid of the sea because of the
+bigger fish, and afraid to stay lest the frigate birds should seize him.
+Young Harry quite enjoyed relating the scene to me, and said that as he
+was going away the king held out his hand and inquired in a shaky voice,
+"I say, Harry, what you tink, what you do? Suppose Captain Hayston come
+back, what become of King Tokusar? Oh! by God! now I be 'fraid every
+day; think I hear Captain Hayston speak me; make noise like bullock; I
+think better be poor native, no more king."
+
+Harry refused to advise the king, and then taking a good look at the
+white men present, said, "Well, good-bye, King Tokusar! I am going back
+to my station--the station I am minding for Captain Hayston. I have six
+men and four women all armed, and the American flag on a pole in front
+of my door; and the first man that attempts to do me any mischief,
+white, black, or yellow, _I'll shoot him_. You can ask the white men
+from Pleasant Island if I am not a man of my word. They know me."
+
+Harry then got into his boat and pulled on board the man-of-war, where
+the first lieutenant very kindly allowed him to see me. I felt sincere
+regret at parting with Harry, telling him to beware of the other
+traders. I repeated what had been told me by Kitty of Ebon and Lalia.
+He laughed, and said he was always prepared, and meant to do justice to
+the trust reposed in him by Captain Hayston. "I'm the wrong man," he
+said on leaving, "to abandon any station and property left in my
+charge." Then, with oft-repeated wishes that we might meet again, after
+hearing of the Captain's safety we parted.
+
+Then came again good simple Kusis and his people with Lalia. She had
+in charge little Kitty and Toby. Poor Toby clung to my legs and sobbed
+as if his heart was breaking, when I told him that I did not know when
+the Captain would come back again. If no one else loved his master Toby
+did, and I tried in vain to assuage his grief. I was glad to hear from
+Lalia that she was going to young Harry's place with the two
+children. There I knew they would be well treated and cared for.
+
+"Look!" said she, pointing to the little fellow, "the Captain had two
+good friends besides yourself, young Harry, and the nigger Johnny, but
+this little fellow has never ceased crying for 'Captin' since he left
+the village in South harbour. Never mind, little Toby, we will wait and
+the 'Captin' will be sure to come;" and then she stooped down, and tried
+by kissing and coaxing to prevent him from giving utterance to his
+doleful wails and sobs of grief.
+
+Lalia told me, as with glistening eyes and trembling hands we said
+farewell, that her one hope now was to be able to get back to her
+distant home on Easter Island, that Captain Hayston would return with a
+ship; and, if he went towards Samoa or Tahiti, take her with him for
+that portion of the many thousand miles that lay between Strong's Island
+and her native land. That he would do this she felt confident. "For,"
+she said, "he once told me that he would stand by me if I was in
+trouble--it was when we were all washed ashore together--you remember?
+_and he never breaks his word_."
+
+Whatever Lalia's past life had been, I could never help admiring her
+many noble traits of character. I owed her life-long gratitude for her
+heroic self-sacrifice on the fateful night of the wreck of the
+_Leonora_; by me, at least, she will never be forgotten. Poor Lalia!
+Brave, loving, lovely child of the charmed isles of the southern main!
+reckless alike in love and hate, who shall judge? who condemn thee? Not
+I!
+
+Kusis, Tulpe, and Kinie clung to me as if they could not bear to say
+farewell. I see before me often the honest, kindly countenance of Kusis
+as, with his hand clasped in mine, he looked trustfully into my face and
+made me promise that some day I would return and live with him once
+more. And so freshly at that time came the remembrance of the happy days
+I had passed in his quiet home, dreaming the hours away within sight of
+the heaving bosom of the blue, boundless Pacific Ocean, so deliciously
+restful after the stormy life of the _Leonora_ and her wild commander,
+that I believe I really intended to return to Strong's Island some day;
+but, as we used to say at Sydney college, "_Dis aliter visum_."
+
+Queen Se sent me a letter as follows:--
+
+ DEAR FRIEND,--Kitty Ebon send Lalia to see you. We all very
+ sorry, but must not say so, because Mr. Morland very strong man
+ now. Where you think Captain Hayston go in little boat? I 'fraid
+ he die in boat. I very sorry for Captain--very kind man--but bad
+ man to natives sometimes.
+
+ QUEEN SE.
+
+Enclosed were these pencilled lines from Kitty of Ebon:--
+
+ MY DEAR FRIEND,--All the people from Mout been to Mr. Morland
+ to ask why you are in prison, and he says you will be hung for
+ stealing a ship. We all very sorry, all Mout people love you
+ very much--and me too. Good-bye, dear friend, come back to Kusis
+ and Mout people, for I don't think you be hanged in
+ Fiji.--Your sincere friend,
+
+ CATHERINE EBON.
+
+But when the light-hearted blue-jackets manned the capstan and merrily
+footed it round to lively music, and the great steamer's head was
+pointed to the passage, my thoughts were far away, where in fancy I
+discerned a tiny boat breasting the vast ocean swell, while sitting aft
+with his face turned to the westward, his strong brown hand on the
+tiller, was the once dreaded Captain of the _Leonora_; the lawless rover
+of the South Seas; the man whose name was known and feared from the
+South Pole to Japan, and yet through all, my true friend and most
+indulgent commander. With all his faults, our constant association had
+enabled me to appreciate his many noble qualities and fine natural
+impulses. And as the black hull of the _Rosario_ rose and fell to the
+sea, her funnel the while pouring forth volumes of sable smoke, the
+island gradually sunk astern, but the memories connected with it and
+Captain Hayston will abide with me for ever.
+
+Harry Skillings I never saw again, but heard that he went to Truk in the
+North-west Carolines. Black Johnny was murdered in New Britain. The
+other Harry with his native wife fell victims to the treacherous savages
+of the Solomon Islands. Jansen died a few years since on Providence
+Island. Some of the other traders and members of the crew I have heard
+of from time to time, scattered far and wide over the Isles of the
+Pacific. Lalia died in Honolulu about five years since, constant in
+her attempts to reach her distant home on Easter Island.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+NORFOLK ISLAND--ARCADIA
+
+
+And now, my innocence and lack of complicity in Hayston's irregularities
+having been established, a revulsion of feeling took place in the minds
+of the captain and officers of the _Rosario_ with regard to me.
+
+After the fullest explanations furnished by the traders and others,
+backed up by the manifest sympathy and good-will of the inhabitants of
+Strong Island, it became apparent that some sort of reparation was due
+to me. This took the form of a courteous invitation to accept a passage
+to Sydney in H.M.S. _Rosario_, and to join the officers' mess on the
+voyage. "I'm afraid that we acted hastily in your case, Mr. Telfer!"
+said Captain Dupont. "You have been thoroughly cleared of all
+accusations made against you. I am bound to say they were very few. And
+you seem chiefly to have acted as a peacemaker and a power for good. I
+have gathered that you are anxious to rejoin your friends in Sydney. I
+shall be glad to have your company on the return voyage. What do you
+say? I trust you will not refuse; I shall otherwise think you have not
+forgiven my apparent harshness."
+
+Thus pressed to return to family and friends--from whom, at times, in
+spite of my inborn roving propensities, the separation had cost me
+dear--what could I do but thank the manly and courteous potentate, and
+comply with an invitation so rarely granted to a South Sea adventurer. I
+was the more loth to lose the opportunity as there had come upon me of
+late a violent fit of homesickness which I in vain strove to combat.
+
+I had in truth now no particular reason for remaining at Kusaie, or
+indeed anywhere in the South Seas. Hayston was gone; his magnetic
+influence no longer controlled my will, as in our first acquaintance.
+The _Leonora_--our pride and boast, our peerless floating home--no
+longer "walked the waters like a thing of life," but lay dead,
+dismantled, dishonoured on the ruthless coral rocks which had crushed
+the life out of her on that fatal night.
+
+I realised now with thankfulness that I had narrowly escaped being
+liable as an accessory for some of Hayston's ultra-legal proceedings--to
+call them by no harsher name.
+
+How often, indeed, in the reckless daring of boyhood is the fatal line
+crossed which severs imprudence from crime! The inexorable fiat of human
+justice knows no shade of criminality. "Guilty or not guilty," goes
+forth the verdict. There is no appeal on earth. And the faulty, but not
+all evil-natured victim, is doomed to live out all the years of a life
+branded as a felon, or maddened by the fears which must ever torture the
+fugitive from justice!
+
+If I stayed in the South Seas on my present footing, nothing remained
+but the trader's life, pure and simple. I had little doubt but that I
+could make a living, perhaps a competence in years to come. But that
+meant exile in every sense of the word. Complete severance from my
+kindred, whom my soul yearned to see again; from the friends of my
+boyhood; from the loved and lovely land of my birth; from the thousand
+and one luxuries, material and intellectual, which are comprehended in
+the word civilisation. I had slaked my thirst for adventure, danger, and
+mystery. I had carried my life in my hand, so to speak, and times
+without number had doubted whether I should retain that more or less
+valuable possession for the next ten minutes. I had felt the poisoned
+arrows at Santa Cruz hurtling around me, even hiss through my waving
+locks, when the death-scratch summoned a man on either hand. I had
+nearly been "blue sharks' meat" as Hayston phrased it, on coral strand
+amid "the cruel crawling foam." All chances and risks I had taken
+heedlessly in the past. But now I began to feel that I must pronounce
+the momentous decision which would make or mar my future career. The
+island life was very fair. For one moment I saw myself the owner of a
+trading station on Pingelap or Arurai. I am sitting in a large, cool
+house, on soft, parti-coloured mats, surrounded by laughing girls
+garlanded and flower-crowned. Around and above, save in the plantation
+which surrounds the house, is the soft green light of the paradisal
+woodland illumining its incredible wealth of leafage, fruit, and
+flowers. Before me lies the endless, azure sea-plain. And oh, my sea! my
+own, my beloved sea!--loved in childhood, youth, and age, if such be
+granted to me! In my ears are the magical murmurous surge-voices, to the
+lulling of which I have so often slept like a tired child. Fruit and
+flowers--love and war--manly effort--danger--high health--boundless
+liberty,--all things necessary to the happiness of primeval man, before
+he became sophisticated by the false wisdom of these later ages, should
+I not possess in profusion? Why, then, should I not remain in this land
+of changeless summer--this magic treasure-house of all delights of land
+and sea?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Long and anxiously did I ponder over my decision. Those only who have
+known the witchery of the "summer Isles of Eden," have felt the charm of
+the dream-life of the Southern Main--the sorcery of that lotus-eating
+existence, alternating with the fierce hazards and stormy delights which
+give a richness to life unknown to a guarded, narrowed civilisation--can
+gauge my irresolution.
+
+I had well-nigh resolved to adhere to the trader's life--until I had
+made a fortune with which I could return in triumph--when I thought of
+my mother! The old house, with its broad, stone-paved verandah came back
+to me--the large, "careless-ordered" garden with its trailing, tropical
+shrubs and fruit-trees--the lordly araucarias, the boat-house, the
+stone-walled bath wherein I had learned to swim--all came back in that
+moment when memory recalled the scenes and surroundings of my early
+life. I could hear a voice ever low and sweet, as in the days of my
+childhood, which said, "Oh! my boy! my boy! come back--let me see my
+darling's face before I die."
+
+I was conquered--the temptations of the strange life, with its sorceries
+and phantasms, which had so long enveloped me, were swept away like a
+ghost-procession at dawn. And in their place came the steadfast resolve
+to return to the home of my youth, thenceforward to pursue such modes of
+life as might be marked out for me. In a new land like my birth-place,
+with a continent for an arena, I had no fear but that a career would
+open itself for me. In no country under heaven are there so many chances
+of success, so many roads to fortune, as in the lone wastes upon which
+the Southern Cross looks down. On land or sea--the tracks are
+limitless--the avenues to fortune innumerable. Gold was to be had for
+the seeking; silver and gems lay as yet in their desert solitudes, only
+awaiting the adventurer who, strong in the daring of manhood, should
+compel the waste to disclose its secrets--only awaited the hour and the
+man.
+
+For such enterprises was I peculiarly fitted. So much could then be said
+without boast or falsehood on my part. My frame, inured to withstand
+every change of temperature which sea or land could furnish, was of
+unusual strength. By hard experience I had learned to bear myself
+masterfully among men of widely various dispositions and characters. I
+took my stand henceforth as a citizen of the world--as a rover on sea
+and land--as more than a suppliant to fortune, a "Conquistador."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The homeward voyage being now fairly commenced, I began to speculate on
+the probabilities of my future career. During the years which I had
+passed among the islands I had acquired experience--more or less
+valuable--but very little cash. This was chiefly in consequence of our
+crowning disaster, the wreck of the _Leonora_. But for that untoward
+gale, my share of the proceeds of the venture would have exceeded the
+profits of all my other trading enterprises. As it was, I was left, if
+not altogether penniless, still in a position which would debar me from
+making more than a brief stay with my friends in Sydney, unless I
+consented to be beholden to them for support. That I held to be
+impossible. For a few weeks I felt that my finances would hold out. And
+after that, was there not a whole world of adventures--risks, hardships,
+dangers, if you will--all that makes life worth living--open before me;
+the curtain had fallen upon one act of the life drama of Hilary Telfer.
+What of that? Were there not four more, at least, to come?
+
+Even the princess had not arrived. There had been a "first robber" on
+the boards, perhaps--even more of that persuasion. But the principal
+stage business was only commencing--the denouement was obviously far
+off. Thereupon my hopes rose as if freshly illumined. My sanguine
+nature--boundless in faith, fertile in expedient--reasserted itself.
+Temporarily depressed, more in sympathy with Hayston than with my own
+ill-luck, it seemed more vigorous and elastic in rebound than ever. The
+memory of my island life became faint and dreamily indistinct. The forms
+of Hayston, the king and queen, of Lalia, with sad, reproachful
+gaze--of Hope Island Nellie, lifting a rifle with the mien of an
+angered goddess--of Kitty of Ebon, incarnate daughter of the dusky
+Venus--of the bronzed and wrinkled trader, with blood and to spare on
+his sinewy hand--of young Harry and the negro Johnny. All these forms
+and faces, once so familiar, seemed to recede into the misty distance
+until they faded away from my mental vision.
+
+With them passed into shadow-land the joyous life of my youth--of the
+untrammelled, care-free existence--such as no man may find again in this
+world of slow, tracking care and hasty disenchantment. "Was I wise?" I
+asked myself again and again, in quitting it for the hard and anxious
+pursuits of the Continent? Were there not a dozen places besides
+Strong's Island where I should be welcomed, feted, caressed, almost
+worshipped as a restored divinity? Was it well to abandon the rank which
+I had acquired among these simple people? Was it-- But no. For ever had I
+made the decision. Once resolved, I disliked changing my plans. Burdened
+with a regret which for days I could neither subdue nor remove, I
+adhered unflinchingly to my resolution, and addressed myself to the
+steady contemplation of the future.
+
+Now had commenced for me a new life--a new world socially speaking. The
+quiet reserve and unemotional bearing of the British officer was
+substituted for the frank accost and reckless speech of the island
+trader or wandering mariner. I was prompt, however, to assimilate the
+modish bearing of my companions, and assisted by some natural alertness,
+or perhaps inherited tendencies, soon became undistinguishable from the
+honourables and lordlings of the gun-room. Upon my repose of manner,
+indeed, I was often complimented. "By Jove, old fellow," one of the
+offshoots of the British aristocracy would say, "one would think you had
+been at Rugby or Eton. And I suppose you have never seen England.
+Certainly you have the pull of us in make and shape. I can't think how
+they grow such fellows,--more English than the English,--with your blue
+eyes and fair hair, too, in these God-forsaken regions."
+
+"Because," I said, "I am of as pure English blood as yourself; have been
+reared, and moulded, and surrounded by English people, and have all the
+traditions of the old country at my fingers' end. For the rest, I hold
+that this end of the world is more favourable to the growth of
+Anglo-Saxons, as you call yourselves, than the other."
+
+"Well! it looks like it, I must say," said my new friend. "I only hope
+that when the time comes for fighting, by sea and land--and, mark my
+words, come it will--that you will be found as stanch as I think you
+are."
+
+"Be sure we shall be," said I. "We have inherited the true English
+'grit,' as Americans say. You all said _they_ couldn't fight when their
+war began; when it finished, the world gave a different verdict. We are
+our fathers' sons, neither more nor less. The bull-dog and the game-cock
+still fight to the death in our country. Many a time have I seen it. And
+so will we when our time comes, and when we think it worth our while."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We carried an order from the New South Wales Government to call in at
+Norfolk Island--once the ocean prison of the more desperate felons of
+the old convict regime, who had been replaced by the descendants of the
+Pitcairn islanders. They, in their turn the descendants of mutinous
+sailors and Tahitian women--now the most moral, God-fearing, and ideally
+perfect race on the face of the earth.
+
+What a miracle had been wrought! Who could have imagined that the last
+days of a rough old sailor, spent among the survivors of a group of
+savage women who had butchered their mates, could have so firmly fixed
+the morale of a whole community that virtue should have indelibly
+impressed itself upon a hundred families. Sydney lies about S.S.W. from
+Kusaie, but to avoid passing through the dangers of the New Hebrides,
+and the reef-studded vicinity of New Caledonia, a direct south course
+with a little easting was decided upon.
+
+We made Norfolk Island, the distance being about two thousand miles, in
+ten days' easy steaming from Strong's Island. This lovely island was
+discovered by Cook in 1774.
+
+A military man writing of it in 1798, draws a comparison between it and
+Sydney much to the disadvantage of the latter. "The air is soft (he
+says) and the soil inexpressibly productive. It is a perfect section of
+paradise. Our officers and their wives were sensibly affected at their
+departure, and what they regarded as banishment to Sydney."
+
+Another officer writing of it in 1847, says: "It is by nature a paradise
+adorned with all the choicest gifts of nature--climate, scenery, and
+vegetable productions; by art and man's policy turned into an earthly
+hell, disfigured by crime, misery, and despair."
+
+The island had been brought into a high state of cultivation by convict
+labour. Its roads, buildings, and gardens were in admirable order. But
+with the establishment of the new regime--a different race with
+different tasks--much was neglected, a part became decayed and ruinous.
+The island is now partitioned into blocks of fifty acres, of which each
+adult male is allowed one, drawn for and decided by lot.
+
+Whale fishing is the favourite and most profitable occupation. From this
+and the sale of farm produce, which finds a market in Sydney, the
+inhabitants are furnished with all their needs require. Their wants are
+few, simple, and easily supplied.
+
+The old convict town with its huge, dilapidated barracks,
+gaol-officers' quarters, and servants' houses, is situated on the
+south-east edge of the island, where the little Nepean islet gives
+sufficient shelter to form a precarious roadstead available in certain
+winds. The old town is occupied by the Pitcairn islanders--in number
+about three hundred.
+
+Five miles across the island, on its north-eastern shore, and
+communicating with it by a fair road, lies the Melanesian Mission estate
+of a thousand acres. Sloping gently down to a low cliff and a rocky
+shore, the land is an undulating meadow, broken by ravines, and covered
+with a thick sward of conch grass or "doubh," said to have been imported
+from India, whence we drew our chief food supplies so many a year ago.
+Nothing more beautiful in a state of nature had ever been seen, I
+thought, when I first cast my admiring eyes on it. Here and there
+gigantic, graceful pines (_Araucaria excelsa_) stood in stately groves.
+Higher up on the flanks of Mount Pitt (a thousand feet above) grow the
+lemon and guava, cotton and wild tobacco. The island is nine hundred
+miles from Sydney and thirteen hundred and fifty from Cape Pillar,
+Tasmania. The Nepean and Phillip Islands lie to the south of the main
+island.
+
+We were in such a hurry to see the famous island and still more famous
+islanders, that we omitted a precaution which had been earnestly
+impressed upon us the day before. This was not to attempt to land unless
+we had a Pitcairner to steer. When the long swell of the Pacific rolls
+in upon the shallow beaches of Sydney Bay there is no more dangerous
+place in the world--the roadstead of Madras hardly excepted--than the
+boat harbour at Norfolk Island.
+
+Like most sailors, and man-of-war's men in particular, the crew was
+reckless and confident. For myself, I was a fair hand in a boat, and had
+mixed in so many cases of touch-and-go, where all hands would have fed
+the sharks in a few more minutes, that I had lost any sense of caution
+that I might have originally possessed. As we neared the shore, rising
+and falling upon the tremendous billows, which told of a scarce passed
+gale, I felt a sense of exhilaration to which I had been long a
+stranger. A party of the islanders, seeing a boat leave the ship, had
+come down to watch our landing, apparently with interest. As we came
+closer I noticed them talking rapidly to one another, and occasionally
+waving their arms to one side or the other as if to direct our steering.
+There were several women in the group, but as we neared the landing my
+attention was rivetted upon a girl who stood out some distance from the
+others at the end of a rocky point, which jutted beyond the narrow
+beach.
+
+I had seen strikingly beautiful faces and faultless forms among the
+island girls, as all unconscious, they threw themselves into attitudes
+so graceful and unstudied that a sculptor would have coveted them for
+models. Among these children of nature, roaming at will through their
+paradisal isles, the perfection of the human form had doubtless been
+developed. But there was a subtle charm about this girl, as she stood
+with bare feet beside the plashing wave,--a statuesque presentment of
+nobility, courage, and refinement which I had never before recognised in
+living woman. Tall and slender of frame, she yet possessed the rounded
+outlines which, in all island women, promise a fuller development in the
+matured stage of womanhood. Her features were delicately regular; in her
+large dark eyes there was an expression of strong interest, deepening
+almost into fear, as she gazed at our incoming boat. She had bent
+slightly forward, and stood poised on her rock as if waiting for a
+signal to plunge into the boiling surf. Her complexion was so fair that,
+but for her attitude, which spoke her a daughter of the sea, one which
+no mortal born away from the music of the surges could have assumed, I
+might have taken her for an Englishwoman.
+
+"In the name of all the divine maidens since Nausicaa" (I had not quite
+forgotten my _Odyssey_, rusty though was my Greek) "who can she be?"
+thought I.
+
+At this point my reflections and conjectures came to an abrupt end, as,
+indeed, nearly did also "the fever called living" in my particular case.
+I felt the boat rise heavenwards on the back of a tremendous roller. The
+islanders shouted as though to warn us of danger, the steersman gave the
+tiller a wrong turn, or omitted to give it the right one, and the next
+moment the boat was buried beneath an avalanche of foam, with crew and
+passengers struggling for their lives. I could swim well, that is, of
+course, comparatively, for the difference between the best performance
+of a white man--well practised from youth though he be--and of an
+islander is as that of a dog and a fish. Still, having risen to the
+surface, I made no doubt but that I could easily gain a landing. In this
+I was deceived. As in other spots, the constant surf concealed a
+treacherous undertow against which the ordinary swimmer is powerless.
+Again and again did I gain foothold, to be swept back by the resistless
+power of the backward current. Each time I became weaker, and at length,
+after a long fruitless struggle, I closed my eyes and resigned myself to
+my fate. Borne backward and half fainting, I saw the whole party of
+natives in the water mingling with the crew, who, like myself, had been
+making desperate efforts to reach the landing.
+
+My senses were leaving me; darkness was before my eyes, when dimly, as
+in a dream, I seemed to mark the girl upon the rock plunge with the
+gliding motion of a seal into the boiling foam. Her bosom shone as with
+outstretched arms she parted the foaming tide, her short under-dress,
+reaching only to the knees, offered no impediment to the freedom of her
+limbs. I felt soft arms around me. A cloud of dusky hair enveloped me.
+Strains of unearthly music floated in my ears. It was the dirge of the
+mermaidens, as they wail over the drowned sailor and bear him with song
+and lament to his burial cavern. All suddenly it ceased.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The mid-day sun had pierced the roof and side of the cottage wherein I
+was lying upon a couch, softly matted. When I awoke I looked around.
+Surely I had been drowned, and must be dead and gone! How, then, was I
+once more in a place where the sun shone, where there were mats and
+signs of ordinary life? I closed my eyes in half-denial of the evidences
+of my so-called senses. Then, as I raised myself with difficulty, the
+door opened and a man entered.
+
+He was a tall, grandly developed Pitcairner, one of the men who had been
+on board the night before. His face was dark, with the tint of those
+races which, though far removed from the blackness of the Ethiop, are
+yet distinct from the pure white family of mankind. But his eyes,
+curiously, were of bright and distinct blue, in hereditary transmission,
+doubtless, from that ancestor who had formed one of the historic
+mutineers of the _Bounty_.
+
+"You've had a close shave, Hilary. That's your name, I believe. A trifle
+more salt water and you'd have been with the poor chap that's drowned.
+We got all the crew out but him."
+
+"I thought I _was_ drowned," I replied, "but I begin to perceive that
+I'm alive. I see you're of the same opinion, so I suppose it's all
+right."
+
+"It's not a thing to laugh at," the Pitcairner said gravely. "God saw
+fit to save you this time. To Him and Miranda you owe your thanks for
+being where you are now."
+
+"There are people in Sydney," I said, "who will be foolish enough to be
+glad of it, and after I have a little time to think, I daresay I shall
+be pleased myself. But who is Miranda, and how did she save me?"
+
+"Miranda Christian, my cousin, is the girl you saw standing on the rock.
+She had a strong fight of it to get you in, and but for one of us going
+on each side neither of you would have come out. We had been hard at it
+trying to save the crew, and nearly left it too late. She was just about
+done."
+
+"I shall be uneasy till I thank her. What a brave girl! And what am I to
+call you?"
+
+"Fletcher Quintal, and her cousin," the islander replied, drawing
+himself up and looking at me with a steady gaze. "You won't see her till
+the afternoon. She has gone home to rest after staying with you till you
+came to. My sister, Dorcas, will bring you food directly, and perhaps
+you'd better rest yourself too till sundown. Then some of us will pay
+you a visit. Good morning."
+
+A pleasant-faced damsel, with the sparkling eyes and perfect teeth of
+the race, came in shortly afterwards, who smilingly informed me that her
+name was Dorcas Quintal, and that her cousin Miranda had told her she
+was not to talk much to me.
+
+However, during the time occupied in making a creditable lunch--all
+things considered,--I succeeded in convincing her that I was strong
+enough for a decent dose of gossip, in the course of which I learned
+several interesting pieces of information about Miranda, who certainly
+had posed as my Guardian Angel in the late accident. She was, according
+to Dorcas, the leader in all sports and pastimes, and also the most
+learned and accomplished damsel on the island. "She sang and played in
+their church choir. She had read all the poets in the world," Dorcas
+believed. "She could recite pages and pages of poetry and history.
+Altogether she was a wonderful girl to be born and brought up in such a
+place as Norfolk Island, where we never see any one"--here Dorcas
+wreathed her lips into an expressive pout--"that is, except captains of
+ships and strangers like yourself."
+
+"So she is quite perfect," I said, "alike on land and sea. I can vouch
+for the last. I suppose she can pull an oar and is quite at home in a
+boat?"
+
+"Indeed she is," answered Dorcas, warming up. "She can sail a cutter
+with any man on the island, and steer a whaleboat besides. You should
+see her standing up with the big steer oar in those tiny hands of hers."
+
+"So, then, she has no faults?" I queried, a little mischievously.
+
+The girl smiled. "I suppose we have all some here as in other places.
+She is rather proud and quiet, the other girls say. I never saw it, and
+if there is anything else you must find it out for yourself. And now, as
+you have finished eating and drinking, I must go. Miranda will be here
+by and by."
+
+"Only one word, Dorcas," said I, as she turned towards the doorway. "How
+many admirers has she--all the young men in the island, I suppose?"
+
+"Only one," she replied, impressively, "my brother, Fletcher Quintal. He
+would die for her."
+
+"And she?"
+
+The girl paused before replying, and gazed earnestly at me.
+
+"She says she will never marry." And with that she passed out and left
+me to my meditations.
+
+I must have been fatigued, even bruised and battered by my conflict with
+sea and shore, as I felt a kind of lassitude creep over me, and
+presently fell into a dreamless sleep, which lasted till the sun was low
+and the dimness of the light told me that the day had passed.
+
+I raised myself and saw Miranda sitting on a low stool near the window,
+or the aperture which served for one. As I turned, she smiled and came
+towards me, putting out her hand for me to take, and gazing into my face
+with a frank pleasure of the unspoiled woman of the woods and fields. "I
+have to thank you for my life," I said, as I pressed her hand warmly.
+"It is of no great value to any one, as things have been going lately,
+but being such as it is, you have my warmest gratitude. I should hardly
+have changed for the worse if I had been lying beside poor Bill Dacre."
+
+"You must not talk in that mocking way," she said, with a pained
+expression like that of a hurt child. "God has given us all a life to
+use for some good purpose. Surely you have friends? perhaps a mother and
+sisters, who would weep when they heard you were lying under the waves?"
+
+"You are right, Miranda, and I will not talk foolishly again; but I
+thank you with my whole heart for your noble courage in risking your
+life to save mine. I wonder now how we both got to land, in spite of
+that beastly undertow?"
+
+"I never could have done it without help," she said. "I was nearly
+exhausted, yet I did not like to let you go, when Fletcher Quintal and
+Peter Mills, who had each brought out a man, swam in again, and we came
+in between them."
+
+"You seem to be quite at home in the water," I said. "I thought I could
+swim, and at Strong's Island and other places could hold my own with the
+natives pretty well. But I found my mistake here."
+
+"Of course we all swim well," she replied, smiling, "and know how to
+manage a boat. It would be curious if we did not; there is little else
+to do, in Norfolk Island, except when we are working in the fields. Our
+life is sometimes dull, I must allow."
+
+"I hear that you can do all sorts of other things," I said. "That you
+are the chief musician and teacher, besides being commander of the
+fleet."
+
+"Dorcas has been chattering, I am afraid," she answered, while a blush
+rose to her brow, tingeing the pallor of her ivory cheek with faint
+carmine. "I certainly have a variety of occupations, and very fortunate
+it is! Otherwise, I don't know what would happen to me, for I am
+scarcely as contented as my cousins and the other girls on the island."
+
+"It is the old story," I said. "Now, why should you not be contented on
+this lovely island where you have all you could wish for in the
+world--perfect freedom, a matchless climate, exercise, adventure, the
+love of your kinsfolk, everything that satisfies the heart of woman?"
+
+"Everything necessary to satisfy a woman's heart!" she said, rising and
+walking to where the casement admitted a view of the heaving deep with
+the _Rosario_ lying on and off. "Can you look at the boundless ocean
+with its thousand paths to the cities of the earth and not wish to roam?
+To see the glories of the old world, all the varied richly-coloured life
+of ancient nations that I have read of and see in my dreams? Do you
+think men only are impatient of a hemmed-in life? It is not so. Women
+have their longings for a wider range, a larger sphere; and yet I am
+perhaps the only girl on the island that feels what I have described."
+
+"You must have read much," I said, rather startled at this burst of
+feeling from the lips of a Norfolk Island damsel--a child of the most
+contented community in the world. "These strange yearnings must have
+been awakened in you through the word-painting of these wicked authors."
+
+"And why not?" she answered, with heightened colour and flashing eye.
+"That my world is one of books I do not deny. I have daily tasks and
+occupations, but my evenings are my own, and in them I read and muse.
+Then this little island, with its patient, primitive people, seems to
+fade away. I spend hours in Italy, where I revel in Florence, the Pitti
+Palace, the Arno, and roam the streets of the Eternal City amid the
+monuments of the world's grandest era, their very decay 'an Empire's
+dust.' I fall asleep often when reclining on the banks of 'Tiber, Father
+Tiber, to whom the Romans pray.' But, oh! if I begin to wander away in
+the track of my visions I shall never stop. And you," she continued with
+an eager glance, "you, who have seen men and cities, are you contented
+to linger away your life under cocoa-palms and bread-fruit trees, taking
+in glorious ease among simple savages until you become one yourself in
+all but the colour? Is this what you were born and reared and educated
+for?"
+
+As the girl thus spoke, with head upraised and exalted mien, her
+wondrous eyes flashing with almost unearthly light, her mobile
+lineaments changing with each varying mood, she looked in her strange
+and unfamiliar beauty like some virgin prophetess of the days of old,
+rousing her countrymen to deeds of patriotic valour or self-sacrificing
+heroism.
+
+All enthusiasm is contagious, more especially when the enthusiast is
+fair to look upon, and belongs to that sex for, or on account of which,
+so much of the world's strife has resulted.
+
+For the first time I began seriously to ask myself what motives had led
+me to waste so large a portion of my youth in heedless wandering among
+these fairy isles. What were my aims in life? What did I propose to
+myself? As I looked at the girl's face, aglow with the fire of a noble
+ambition, I felt humbled and ashamed.
+
+"You have spoken truly, Miranda," I replied, after a long pause, during
+which my fair questioner looked with a far-away gaze across the ocean
+plain, now quenching its thousand shifting gleams in the quick-falling
+tropic night. "I have been idly careless and unheeding of the future,
+satisfied with the day's toil and the day's pleasure. But I am going
+back to my people in Australia; there I shall begin a new life. It is a
+land of duty, of labour, and its enduring reward. There I shall renew
+the tension of my moral fibre which has been too long relaxed. But you
+must not be too hard on me. I have had to face losses, dangers, and
+misfortunes. I have been wrecked; I lost everything I had in the world.
+I have been ill; have been wounded; and, but for some of those simple
+islanders you seem to despise, I should not have been a living man
+to-day."
+
+"I do not despise them," she said; "of course every one knows that we
+are descended from those of Tahiti. I only say that they are not fit
+companions for white men--I mean of educated white men who in the end
+become as bad as they are--even worse--much worse. But tell me about
+your being ill. And who tended you? Was it a woman?"
+
+"I will tell you all about it to-morrow if you will walk with me and
+show me some of the scenery of this beautiful island of yours. But it is
+a long story, and it is too late to begin to-night."
+
+"I should like it above all things," she said frankly, "though you must
+have seen so many grand places in your roamings that our poor landscapes
+will hardly interest you."
+
+"Much depends on the guide," I said, as I gazed admiringly at her
+eloquent countenance.
+
+"I know that," she answered, meeting my too ardent gaze with perfect
+unconsciousness of any hidden meaning. "They tell me I am the best guide
+on the island, and indeed I should be, for my father and I were never
+tired of exploring and finding out traces of the old occupation by the
+Sydney Government, and many curious discoveries we made. So I will come
+here after breakfast to-morrow."
+
+She was true to her appointment, and then commenced a series of
+delightful rambles which, perhaps, I more truly enjoyed than many later
+and more pretentious travels.
+
+In despite of Miranda's depreciation of her lovely isle we found endless
+excuses for interest and admiration. It was truly a wonderful little
+"kingdom by the sea." Scraped along the side of a hill would be one of
+the beautiful roads constructed by the forced labour of the convicts
+which at one time almost filled the island. Rising from the valley slope
+were gigantic ferns, broad-leaved palms, lemons, oranges, guavas, all
+originally imported, but now flourishing in the wildest luxuriance in
+the rich soil and semi-tropical climate; while above all, stately and
+columnar, rose the great Araucaria peculiar to the island--the Norfolk
+Island pine of the colonists.
+
+Hand in hand we roamed together through this Eden amid the main, as
+though our great progenitors had again been transplanted to this
+wondrous wild--a latter day Adam, by whose side smiled a sinless
+Eve--pure as her prototype, and yet informed of much of the lore which
+men had wrested from the rolling ages. Together we explored the gloomy
+corridors and echoing halls of the ruinous prison houses--once the dark
+abodes of sorrow, torment, and despair unutterable.
+
+Miranda shuddered at the thought that these dismal cells and courtyards
+had echoed to the cries of criminals under the lash--to the clanking of
+chains--had even witnessed the death penalty inflicted on the murderer
+and the mutineer.
+
+Mute and terrible witnesses were they to the guilt to which human nature
+may descend--to the abysmal depths of despair into which the felon and
+the outcast may be hurled, when, hopeless of help from God or man, he
+abandons himself to all the baser instincts.
+
+We seldom lingered amid these sullen retreats, around which Miranda
+always declared she heard sighs and groanings, sobs, and even shrieks,
+as though the spirits of those who had suffered, and mourned, and died
+amidst the horrors unspeakable of prison life still lingered amid the
+ruins of their place of torment.
+
+How strange, well-nigh impossible, it even seemed to me that the very
+earth, the dumb witness of crime immeasurable, was not polluted
+irredeemably by the deeds that she had perforce endured and condoned.
+And now--stranger than aught that dreaming poet or seer imagined--that
+this Inferno should have been transmuted into an Arcadia, purer and more
+stainless than the fabled land of old, and peopled by the most
+obediently moral and conscientious family of mankind that had ever
+gathered the fruits of the earth since the days of our first parents.
+
+Day after day followed of this charmed life--magical, unreal, only in
+that it transcended all my other experiences in the degree that the
+glamour of fairyland and the companionship of the queen of Elfland may
+have exceeded the memorials of Ercildoune. If he was enchanted, I was
+spellbound even as true Thomas. Never had I met with a companion who
+combined all the charm of womanhood--the grace and joyousness of
+girlhood's most resistless period--with the range of thought and
+intellectual progress which this singular girl, amid her lonely isle and
+restricted companionship, had explored. And withal, she had remained in
+her almost infantine unconsciousness of evil--her virginal, instinctive
+repulsion of all things forbidden and debarred--like a being of
+another planet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Naturally an end arrived to this blissful state of things. The
+man-of-war after a few days was compelled to continue her voyage and
+perform her allotted duties, which comprehended surveys of uncharted
+coast-lines and suspected rocks. I had to choose between going on to
+Sydney and remaining in this charmed isle. And here inclination and
+duty appeared to draw different ways with equal strength. I was
+naturally anxious to return to my birth-place, my family, and friends.
+My feelings of home-sickness had returned with redoubled strength after
+being long in abeyance. But all such doubts and distrusts were swept
+away like storm wrack before the swelling surges of Miranda's own isle.
+I was fain to yield to the resistless force of the passion which now
+dominated, nay, consumed me. True, I had not as yet definitely assured
+myself that this purest pearl of womanhood was within my grasp. I had
+made no proffer of my affections. I had not, in so many words, solicited
+the priceless gift of hers. But I was not so unskilled in affairs of the
+heart as to mistake many a sign and symbol from Love's own alphabet,
+denoting that the outworks of the citadel were yielding, and that the
+fortress would ere long open gate and drawbridge to the invader.
+
+True to nature's own teaching, Miranda had not scrupled to confess and
+dilate upon the pleasure my companionship afforded her, to declare that
+never before in her life had she been half so happy, to wonder if my
+sisters would not die of joy when I returned, to chide me for my long
+absence from them and from such a home as I had often described to her.
+And all this with the steady eye and frank expression of girlish
+pleasure, which a less unsophisticated damsel would scarcely have
+acknowledged without conscious blushes and downcast eyes.
+
+Miranda, on the other hand, stated her sensations calmly and fearlessly,
+her wondrous eyes meeting mine with all the trustful eagerness of a
+happy child, as if it was the most natural thing in the world. "You see,
+Hilary," she would say, laying her hand lightly on my arm, and looking
+up in an appealing manner, "I have never met any one before who seems to
+understand my feelings as you do apparently by instinct. You have
+travelled and been in other places besides the islands, and you have
+read books--nearly all those which I have. You know that story in the
+_Arabian Nights_ about the prince that was changed into a bird? He knew
+that he was a prince, yet he was condemned to be dumb, and was unable to
+convey his feelings, because to all the world he was only a bird.
+
+"I sometimes think we Pitcairn girls live the life of birds--like that
+one," and she pointed to a soaring white-winged sea-bird, which
+presently darted downwards, falling like a stone upon the blue ocean
+wave. "We swim and fish, we are almost more on the sea than the land, we
+sleep on the land like that white bird, walk a little, talk a
+little,--that is our whole life. I think the bird has the best of it, as
+she can fly and we cannot."
+
+"But you all seem happy and contented," I said, "you and your cousins."
+
+"_They_ are, but I seem to have been born under a different star. I must
+have inherited some of the restless, adventurous spirit of my ancestor,
+Fletcher Christian.
+
+"The feeling of unrest and the desire to see the world--the wonderful,
+ancient, beautiful world of which we, in this island prison, for lovely
+as it is, it is but a prison for free souls--becomes so intense at times
+that I almost dread lest I should end my life like his."
+
+"And in what way was that?" I asked. "God forbid you should ever do a
+deed so terrible," I said.
+
+"Do you not know? He used to go every day to the top of a high cliff on
+the south side of Pitcairn to gaze over the ocean--as I have done
+hundreds of times--thinking, perhaps, of the wonderlands beyond, where
+he had forfeited the right to live by his own act; and--and one day he
+threw himself over the cliff, and they found his body on the rocks
+below. Poor Fletcher! I can partly understand his feelings."
+
+This was but one of our many conversations, always fascinating to me,
+as affording the rare privilege of exploring a mind naturally of high
+intelligence, developed by patient thought and a wide range of
+reading,--the island library, enriched by many generous gifts, being by
+no means a poor one,--guarded from deterioration by an exquisite natural
+refinement, yet withal clear and limpid as the transparent seas which
+encircled her home, where the more deeply the eye penetrated the more
+precious were the treasures disclosed.
+
+So it came to pass that the _Rosario_ sailed without me. The Captain and
+my jolly comrades of the gun-room chaffed me about what they called my
+imprudent attachment. "You'll have to turn Pitcairner," they said, "and
+settle down after old Nobbs has spliced you upon a fifty-acre patch,
+where you can grow sweet potatoes, yams, and maize to the end of your
+days. Surely a fellow like you, with a family to go back to, has
+something better in view than that!"
+
+"I shall not stay on the island," I said, "I intend to live in
+Australia, perhaps near Sydney."
+
+"Then your island princess will run away and leave you disconsolate.
+They can't live away from their people and where they were brought up.
+Some of them insisted on going back to Pitcairn, and are there now. They
+could not be persuaded from it. They had to let them go. They would have
+died else."
+
+"I have resolved," I said. "I will take all risks. You shall all come
+and see us in Sydney. We will live at North Shore, and have a yacht
+built on the lines of the _Leonora_. Adios!"
+
+So we parted. The _Rosario_ got up steam, and once more I watched the
+black cloud of smoke pouring from her funnels and the waves breaking as
+she moved majestically across the bright-hued ocean.
+
+Up to the last moment my simple and warm-hearted friends on the island
+had serious doubts as to whether I was not going off in the _Rosario_.
+They could hardly understand how I could prefer remaining as their guest
+and friend when the glory and dignity of a man-of-war--their highest
+expression of maritime splendour--were open to me.
+
+They had, it is true, implored me to stay with them for a few months
+longer--the young men were equally pressing with the older members of
+the community. With artless candour the girls promised that if I would
+stay Miranda should be my constant companion, and, except on Sundays,
+when, as their chief musician and organist, she could not naturally be
+spared, I should have a monopoly of her society.
+
+"You seem to like her so much," Dorcas Quintal repeatedly exclaimed.
+"And I am certain she likes you more than any one she has ever seen. The
+worst of it is that she will be so sorry when you have to go away. Clara
+Young nearly died when her friend went away. That was two years ago. But
+she got over it in time, and now she is happily married. But she _did_
+try to drown herself one day, only we were too quick for her."
+
+"It is a bad thing to have strangers for friends," I said, "if it may
+end so tragically when they leave. I wonder you entertain such dangerous
+visitors."
+
+"I suppose we can't help it," the girl replied, laughingly. "It is so
+pleasant to talk with men who know the great world we can only read
+about. We just take our chance. We have plenty to do, and that prevents
+us from fretting too much. I daresay you will hear a little crying
+to-night. We are all very sorry the big ship is gone."
+
+"It's the old, old story, Dorcas! Girls are a good deal alike all the
+world over, I suppose, in many of their ways. But you Pitcairners are
+certainly different in some respects to any women I know anywhere."
+
+"What do you mean?" asked the girl, eagerly. "I know we are simple, and
+have never been taught very much."
+
+"It isn't that. I will tell you before I go, or rather, I will tell
+Miranda, and she shall tell you what I say."
+
+So, with the full approbation of friends and relations of every degree
+of relationship, and, what was of more consequence, with the good-will
+of the spiritual pastor and master of the island, whose authority was
+absolute and unquestioned, Miranda and I pursued our untroubled way. In
+this wondrous Arcadia there were no jealousies, no scandals, no asking
+of intentions, no fiery, disappointed aspirants, no infuriated
+brothers,--these obstacles to pure and true love were evidently the
+outcome of a higher or a lower stage of civilisation. No evil
+consequences had ever occurred from unrestricted freedom of intercourse
+between the young people since the formation of the community. No such
+result was regarded as possible. Immutably fixed in my own course, I
+knew that nothing--humanly speaking--could affect my unalterable
+resolve. I had discovered a pearl of womanhood, matchless in beauty of
+mind and body, combining the higher mental qualities, indeed, with such
+physical perfection as no girl reared under less fortunate conditions
+was likely to possess. With regard to the future, if she consented to
+link her fate with mine I was ready to take all the risks of fortune.
+The fickle goddess has always favoured the brave, and with Miranda at my
+side I felt that I could lead the forlorn hopes of desperate endeavour,
+or endure uncomplainingly the toil and self-denial of the humblest
+station. I had, it is true, led a careless, somewhat epicurean life in
+the past, surrendering myself perhaps too readily to the charm of island
+life. But this was of the past, and the half-instinctive folly period of
+youth. Henceforth I would essay the culture of the mental qualities with
+which I had been reasonably gifted, turning to account also that very
+sound and thorough early tuition through which I had fortunately passed.
+Thus equipped, and with a helpmate at once loving and practical--devoted
+to duty and the highest forms of unselfish charity--ambitious only for
+intellectual experience and development--I felt that hope became
+certainty and success a mere matter of detail. After the departure of
+the _Rosario_ I became almost a son by adoption among the elders of the
+community. I learned to accommodate myself to their ways, after a
+fashion which was rendered more easy by my years of familiarity with
+island life. At the same time I was careful not to infringe in the
+slightest degree upon their peculiar customs, or to shock those
+religious prejudices which were so earnestly accepted in the community.
+It was taken for granted that I would settle among them in right of my
+bride. If I decided to marry Miranda, or any other island maiden, I
+should be put in possession of a landed estate of fifty acres, where I
+might dream away life in a round of labour that was half recreation,
+wandering amid the island groves, reclining under giant ferns or lofty
+pines, bathing in crystal founts or clear-hued seas at dawn or under the
+yellow moon. Passing contentedly from youth to middle age, from that
+half-way stage to a later span of life, which in this enchanted land
+implied little or no diminution of natural powers. Should it be so?
+
+This question I had asked Miranda more than once. But she would not
+consent to take it seriously. One day, however, I compelled her to
+listen, though she had again declared that we were so happy as we were
+that no change could be for the better, possibly for the worse--even.
+
+"Then, Miranda," I answered, "I must leave the island. Did we not hear
+from the last whaler that called in for fresh provisions that my old
+friend--the friend of the family, Captain Carryall, was to touch here in
+the _Florentia_?" He was the best known, the most popular of all the
+skippers next to Captain Hayston. Unlike him, however, his reputation
+was spotless, while for fair dealing and adherence to his promises his
+fame was proverbial. "Shall I go with him?" I said, "and must I go
+alone?"
+
+"And would you leave me?" she asked, imploringly--her dark eyes turned
+towards my face in a passion of reproachful tenderness, of which she
+herself scarce understood the meaning, "Oh! I thought once that I could
+let you go, though it has been life and happiness untold having you to
+talk to and read with. I fancied I should only mourn for you for a
+while--like the other island girls who weep and lament, and then dry
+their tears and dance and sing as if nothing had happened. But, oh! It
+is not so with me. They always say the Fletcher-Christians are
+different. I shall die! I shall die! I know I shall."
+
+And with that she cast herself on my neck, sobbing as though her heart
+would break. In the same breath declaring that she would never consent
+to spoil my life by marriage with a poor savage island girl, but a few
+degrees superior to the women of Pingelap and Ocean Island whom she had
+so often despised.
+
+By degrees I persuaded her to listen to my pleadings, and then calmly
+set before her my plans for the future. We must be married here, and
+after remaining on the island, living the idyllic life we were revelling
+in now, we would sail for Sydney in the _Florentia_, or some other
+vessel, and there begin life in earnest. Some employment would be found,
+doubtless, which would pave the way, by which I might make a serious
+effort towards a career, perhaps a competency in the future, or even a
+fortune.
+
+I had but little difficulty in carrying out my plan. The elders of the
+community, the relations and friends of Miranda, were overjoyed at the
+prospect of her marriage with a person of my position, who might also be
+enabled to do them many a good turn if I settled in Sydney, a port with
+which they had close business relations. I found, too, that I was not
+altogether an unknown personage. Some of the young men who had made
+voyages in whaleships had heard of my companionship with Captain
+Hayston. However, it would seem that all the natives whom they had met
+had given a good account of me as a fair dealer, and, moreover, generous
+in my treatment of them,--an apparently unimportant matter at the time,
+but serious enough now. Miranda told me afterwards, that had it been
+otherwise nothing would have induced her guardians to give their
+consent, or her to defy their decision.
+
+As it was, however, all seemed _couleur de rose_. No great preparations
+were needed. The simple island fashion was not encumbered with any great
+multiplication of garments. On the happy day Miranda was escorted to the
+modest building which did duty for a church by a band of white-robed
+maidens, in whose dark hair was wreathed the crimson blossoms of the
+coral plant and the hibiscus, with little other adornment but nature's
+furnishing in the flower-time of life. My comrades were selected from
+the younger men of the island, among whom I had always taken care to
+stand well, joining in their sports, and entering as an equal competitor
+their athletic contests. I was therefore looked upon as a most desirable
+acquaintance, able to hold my own, moreover, in all manly
+accomplishments (except swimming), and much esteemed for a gift of
+relating adventures in strange lands, and describing the foreign manners
+and customs with which a roving life had made me familiar.
+
+It might have been imagined that a girl so singularly gifted and
+attractive as Miranda would have had lovers in abundance, by whom a
+successful aspirant like myself would be regarded with jealousy.
+Unlikely as it may appear I observed no feeling of this kind. In that
+strange society, the passions which rage so fiercely in more civilised
+communities appeared to have lost their force, or to flow with the
+peaceful motion of the incoming tide rather than the resistless rush of
+a mountain torrent, which love, hate, jealousy, and envy in other lands
+so often resemble. The young men admired Miranda, indeed, worshipped her
+from afar. But they seemed rather elated by her good fortune, as it so
+appeared to them, than enviously disposed, and had no thought of other
+than the warmest friendship for their more fortunate companion. Even
+Fletcher Quintal, who might have been expected to view with dislike, if
+not a stronger sensation, my marriage with his favourite cousin, had
+apparently no feeling of this sort. He certainly expressed none, but
+congratulated me with all the warmth which a brother might be supposed
+to exhibit at the marriage of his best loved sister with his dearest
+friend. Truly it _was_ the long lost rediscovered Arcadia. There were
+moments when I doubted whether it was wise to leave a land where care
+was unknown; where want, with its attendant evils, had never been heard
+of; where there were no rich men to envy; no bad ones to fear; no poor
+to despise; where no one died but of old age or mishap; whence all the
+ills that flesh is heir to had, like the snakes of Ireland, been
+banished by some good genius, and only the gifts of virtue, contentment,
+and regulated industry remained. But there was wild blood in my veins,
+long dormant as it had lain. The murmur of the ocean seemed to call me
+with a tone of magical power. I longed for the wave-music once more--for
+the voyage which was to speed me to my birthland. I hurried on the
+preparations for our wedding, and, lingering though were all the slow
+sweet hours, endless the days, almost tedious the soft starlight glow of
+the summer nights, the day of days at last dawned that was to herald the
+happiness of a life-time.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Our small domain had been carefully measured and marked out for us. A
+cottage had been built, thatched with palm leaves, floored with the soft
+mats of the island, simply furnished, and, as it happened, near to a
+bubbling spring, and shaded by the wondrous wild orange, which here
+grows almost to the height and girth of a forest tree. It happened to be
+the flower-time of these charming fruit bearers, so that wreaths and
+garlands of the blossom sacred to Hymen were plentiful and profuse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+EPITHALAMIUM
+
+
+Our marriage day! Oh, day of days! Dawn of a new existence! All nature
+seemed to sympathise with us in our supernal joy. For us, for us alone
+in all the world the streamlets murmured, the breezes whispered
+together, the wavelets plashed musically, the blue sky glowed, the sun
+shone goldingly. The venerable pastor of the community--he who had
+watched over every man and woman present from infancy, who had
+christened, and married, and buried the whole population of the island
+as they require these offices--read the time-honoured service of the
+Church of England, which was followed with deepest reverential attention
+by all present. When he blessed our union in the solemn language of the
+ritual familiar to me in the days of my childhood, every head was bowed,
+each woman's eye was wet with heart-felt sympathy and warmest affection
+for their erst-while playmate.
+
+The day was cloudless, a breeze at times sighed through the fragrant
+foliage of the grove wherein the little church had been built. The
+wavelets murmured on the beach, and the unresting surges seemed but to
+exchange loving memories of coral islands and crystal seas, of waving
+palms and the green gladness of tropic forests, of maidens,
+feather-crowned and flower-bejewelled, dancing on silver strands beneath
+the full-orbed midnight moon, or gliding, a laughing bevy of syrens,
+beneath the translucent wave. No sullen, dirge-like refrain on that
+paradisal day brought from the ocean voices the memory of drifting
+wrecks, of stormy seas, of drowned seamen--no hint of danger, of
+despair, of pestilence, and death; and yet all these phases of
+experience I had known and reckoned with even in my short life.
+
+No; these and kindred ills were forgotten, banished from earth and sea.
+On this blissful morn the golden age of the earth seemed to have
+returned. Recalling the half-forgotten classics of my boyhood, I could
+fancy that I saw fauns peeping through the leaves of the orange grove,
+that the ages had reverted to the freshness of the elder world, when the
+flush of the fair Arcadian life informed all things with divinity.
+
+And Miranda, my bride of brides! what words can describe her as she
+stood, with an expression half-timid, half-rapt, and inspired, before
+the humble altar that day? Her simple dress of virgin white which but
+slightly concealed while it outlined the curves of her statuesque form;
+her large dark eyes, which had often appeared to me to hold a shade of
+melancholy, were now irradiated by the love-light which she, in the
+purity and innocence of her heart, made no attempt to conceal. Her soft,
+abundant tresses had been gathered up into becoming form and classic
+simplicity, and, save a wreath of scarlet berries and the traditional
+orange blossom, she wore no ornament. As all unconscious of her maiden
+loveliness she stood beside me, with her head raised and an expectant
+smile which disclosed her pearly teeth, she seemed to my enraptured gaze
+a daughter of the wave,--no mortal maiden, but a being compact of air
+and sea and sky, visible but beneath the moonbeams, and unrevealed to
+the dwellers of the garish day.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We had been but a month wedded; our simple home, our tiny domain, our
+forest rambles, our sea-baths at dawn and eve, as yet contented
+us--filled us with all fullest delight in which mortal beings can revel
+beneath this ethereal dome. And yet the spirit of unrest, the veritable
+serpent of the world's fairest Aidenns, gradually found means to
+discover himself.
+
+Miranda and I had, indeed, begun to discuss our projected voyage to
+Sydney, and I had many times described to her an ideal home on one of
+the thousand and one bays which render the northern shore of the
+unrivalled Sydney harbour matchless in beauty and convenience for those
+who, like myself, have salt water in their blood. She agreed with me,
+that with a boat, a garden, a bath-house, and a cottage built of the
+beautiful white, pink-veined sandstone, which is so abundant beneath and
+around Sydney, existence might be endured away from her island home,
+with the aid of books and the inspiring idea of the coming fortune.
+
+"And even if we do not make money," she said, "as people call it--what a
+strange idea it seems to me, who have hardly ever seen any--we shall be
+happy. I can't imagine people who are married and love each other ever
+being unhappy. Then your mother and sisters--I am so much afraid of
+them. They will regard me as a kind of savage, I am sure; and, indeed,
+compared with them, or real civilised people, I am afraid that I shall
+feel like one. And, oh! shall we ever be happier than we are now? Why
+should we change? Do you think we can come back now and then and visit
+my people? I should break my heart if I thought I should see them no
+more!"
+
+I promised this and other things, doubtless, at the time. But before we
+had completed the conversation about our future life--which indeed
+supplied us with endless subjects of interest--the great island
+wonder-sign appeared. A shout--a rush of excited people past our hut
+told of a ship in sight. We were down at the beach nearly as soon as
+the others, and as a long, low barque came up before the wind, something
+told me that she was the _Florentia_.
+
+A boat--a whaleboat, with a kanaka crew--put off soon after she was at
+anchor, and in the tall man at the steer-oar, whose commanding figure,
+even at that distance, I seemed to know, there was no difficulty in
+identifying our old friend Captain Carryall.
+
+Directly he jumped ashore, a dozen of the islanders dashed into the surf
+and ran the boat up on the beach. Our recognition was mutual.
+
+"Well, young fellow!" he said, "I've been hunting you up half over the
+South Seas. Wherever have you stowed yourself all this time? Why, what a
+man you've grown--a couple of inches taller than me, and I'm no pony.
+Brown as a berry, too! You'll have to come home with me this trip. Your
+old man's beginning to get anxious about you--and you know he's not much
+in that line--and your mother and sisters."
+
+"Captain Carryall," I said, "there's no necessity for more reasons. I'm
+going to Sydney with you if you'll give me a passage."
+
+"Half a dozen if you want it," quoth the jolly sailor. "And now I must
+have a word with my friends. Anybody been married since I was here last;
+no Quintals--no Millses! Mary, how's this? Dorcas--Grace--Mercy Young,
+I'm ashamed of you. And Miranda! Nobody run away with you yet? I see I
+must take you to Sydney and show you at a Government House ball. Then
+they'd see what a Pitcairn girl was like."
+
+"You may do that yet," I said, "for, seriously, Miranda is now Mrs.
+Hilary Telfer. We have been married more than a month."
+
+The captain could not refrain from giving a prolonged whistle at this
+announcement, which certainly appeared to take him by surprise. However,
+he rallied with ease and celerity, and addressing Miranda, whose hand
+he took as he spoke, said, "My dear! let me congratulate the son of my
+old friend, Captain Telfer, upon his marriage with the best, cleverest,
+and prettiest girl I have fallen across in all my wanderings. I don't
+suppose you have any great amount of capital to begin life with; but if
+two young people like you don't manage to find some path to fortune in a
+country like Australia, I'm a Dutchman. He needs to be a good fellow,
+and a man all round, to be worthy of Miranda Christian; but he can't
+help, as the son of his father and his mother, being all that, and more.
+So now, my dear! you must let me kiss you, as your husband's old friend,
+and wish you all happiness."
+
+Miranda blushed as the warm-hearted fellow folded her in his arms, but
+submitted with becoming grace; and leaving her among her young friends,
+he and I strolled away towards our hut to talk over affairs more at
+leisure.
+
+"Well, youngster!" said he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "I suppose
+you've had enough island life for a while, and won't be sorry to see
+Sydney Heads again. Nor I either. I've been out fifteen months this
+time, and that's rather long to be away from one's home and picaninnies.
+They'll be glad to see your face again at Rose Bay, I'll be bound. But
+they certainly will be taken aback when you turn up as a married man.
+Nineteen times out of twenty it's a mistake to tie one's self up for
+life at your age. But all depends upon getting the right woman, and
+Miranda is the one woman in a thousand that a man might be proud to
+marry, whether he was rich or poor, and to work and wear out his life
+for all his days. I've known her since she was a baby, and, taking her
+all round, I don't know her equal anywhere. It seems queer to say so,
+considering her birth and bringing up. But these Pitcairners are well
+known to be the best and finest women, in all womanly ways, that the
+world can show. And your wife is, and has always been, the flower of the
+flock."
+
+I grasped the captain's hand. I knew that I had secured a powerful ally;
+and though I felt so secure in the wisdom of my choice that no
+disapprobation of family and friends would have had power to affect me,
+yet, in such matters, it is well to have a friend at court, and the
+captain's reputation for sense and sagacity stood so high, that I felt
+not only my relatives, but my acquaintances and friends, would be
+strongly swayed by his judgment.
+
+"Now that we've got so far," he said, "you had better make your
+arrangements to sail with me on Sunday morning; this is Thursday, but my
+passengers want to see the island and the people of whom they have heard
+so much."
+
+"Passengers!" I said. "How many? and where from?"
+
+"Well, I picked them up at Honolulu. Half a dozen, and very nice people,
+too. They came in an English yacht that went to San Francisco for them,
+and they wanted to see Australia, and so came with me. They're rather
+big people at home, I believe, though they're very quiet, and give
+themselves no airs."
+
+"Any ladies?"
+
+"There are two married couples, and a young lady, with her brother."
+
+"That's very serious, captain," said I. "I don't quite know how Miranda
+will get on with travelling Englishwomen--they're rather difficult
+sometimes."
+
+"Miranda will get on with any one," answered the captain, with a decided
+air. "She will sit on my right hand, as a bride, and no one in my ship
+will show her less than proper respect. Anyhow, these people are not
+that sort. You'll see she's all ready to start on Sunday morning. 'The
+better the day, the better the deed.'"
+
+So the captain went to pay a visit to the people of the settlement,
+among whom his free, pleasant manner and generous bearing had made him
+most popular. The girls crowded around him, laughing and plying him with
+questions about the commissions he had promised to execute for them,
+and the presents he had brought. These attentions he never omitted. Full
+of curiosity they were, too, about the English ladies on board. "How
+they were dressed?" "How long they would stay in Sydney?" "What they
+would think of the poor Pitcairn girls?" and so on.
+
+With the elders he told of the whaleships he had spoken, and of their
+cargoes of oil--of the Quintals, or Youngs, Mills, or M'Coys who were
+harpooners and boat-steerers on board some of the Sydney whalers, and of
+the chances of their "lay" or share of profit being a good one. Besides
+all this, the captain consented to act as their ambassador to the
+Governor-General in Sydney, and lay before that potentate certain
+defects of their island administration--small, perhaps, in themselves,
+but highly important to the members of an isolated community. In
+addition to all this, he (as I heard afterwards) specially attended to
+my marriage with Miranda, of which he highly approved; telling the old
+pastor and the elders of the community that he had known my father for
+ever so many years; that he was highly respected now, when retired, but
+had been well known in the South Seas and New Zealand many years ago as
+the captain of the _Orpheus_, one of the most successful whalers that
+ever sailed through Sydney Heads.
+
+"Captain Telfer of the _Orpheus_!" said one of the oldest men of the
+group, "I remember him well. I was cast away on Easter Island the time
+the _Harriet_ was wrecked in a hurricane. He gave me a free passage to
+Tahiti, a suit of clothes, and ten dollars when I left the ship. He
+wanted me to finish the voyage with him and go to Sydney. I was sorry
+afterwards I didn't. He was a fine man, and a better seaman never trod
+plank. No wonder Hilary is such a fine chap. I can see the likeness now.
+I don't hold with our young women going off this island in a general
+way, but Miranda is a lucky girl to have Captain Telfer's son for a
+husband." All this the captain told me afterwards with slight
+embellishments and variations of his own.
+
+My reputation had fairly gone before, but this light thrown on my
+parentage placed me in a most exalted position--next to their spiritual
+pastor and master, before whom they bowed in genuine respect and
+reverence. Perhaps there is no man in the whole world more honoured and
+admired in the South Seas than the captain of a ship. And now that the
+name of my father's barque, once pretty well known south of the line,
+had been recalled from the past, every doubt as to the future of Miranda
+and myself was set at rest.
+
+We were invested, so to speak, with the blessing of the whole community,
+and began our modest preparations with added cheerfulness and resolve.
+
+In the afternoon we saw a boat put off from the _Florentia_ and the
+visitors land. They were five in number. We could see them walk over to
+the village, where they were met by some of the principal people and a
+few of the women and girls. We had been making ready for our voyage, and
+having finished our simple meal, sat in the shade of our orange tree,
+near the door, and awaited the strangers whom I judged rightly that
+curiosity and the captain would bring to our dwelling.
+
+In less than an hour's time we saw them strolling along the path which
+led to our nest. As they approached we arose and went to meet them, when
+the captain with all due form introduced us, "The Honourable Mr. and
+Mrs. Craven, Colonel Percival, Mr. Vavasour, and his sister, Miss
+Vavasour." Mrs. Percival had remained on board, as her little boy of
+four or five years old was not well. Miranda, rather to my surprise, was
+perfectly unembarrassed, and talked away to the stranger ladies as if
+she had been accustomed to the society business all her life.
+
+I could see that they were pleased and surprised at her appearance, as
+also gratified with the manner in which she invited them to inspect our
+simple dwelling.
+
+"Oh! what a charming nest of a place--quite a bower of bliss!" cried
+Miss Vavasour. "I declare I will come here when I am married and spend
+my honeymoon. What shade and fragrance combined! What a lovely crystal
+lakelet to bathe in! and I suppose, Mrs. Telfer, you go out fishing in
+that dear canoe? What an ideal life!"
+
+"I quite agree with you and feel quite envious," said Mrs. Craven.
+"Charlie and I have been married too long to have our honeymoon over
+again; but it would have been idyllic, wouldn't it, Charlie?"
+
+"Splendid place to smoke in," assented her husband. "No hounds meet
+nearer than Sydney, though, I presume. Drawback rather, isn't it?"
+
+"You men are always thinking of horses, and hounds or guns," pouted Miss
+Vavasour. "What can one want with them here? What can life offer more
+than this endless summer, this fairy bower, this crystal wave, this air
+which is a living perfume? It is an earthly paradise."
+
+"And the beloved object," added Mrs. Craven, with quiet humour. "You
+have left him out. It would be an incomplete paradise without Adam."
+
+"Oh! here he comes!" exclaimed Miranda (as she told me afterwards), who
+had not been attending to the enthusiastic speech, but was watching
+bird-like for my approach.
+
+"Who? Adam?" said Miss Vavasour, laughingly.
+
+"Oh, no!" answered she, smiling at the apparent absurdity. "You must
+excuse me a little, but I was looking out for Hilary."
+
+"Now, then, ladies!" said the cheerful voice of Captain Carryall, "we
+must get back to our boat. It's dangerous to stop ashore all night,
+isn't it, Miranda? We must leave you to finish your packing. It's a long
+voyage to Sydney, eh? It may be years before you see the island again."
+
+We all went down together to the boat, where the visitors were seen off
+by all the young people of the island, the girls wondering with
+respectful admiration at the English ladies' dresses, hats, boots, and
+shoes--in fact, at everything they did and said as well. It was a
+revelation to them, not that they had any envious feeling about those
+cherished possessions. They had been too well trained for that, and were
+secure in the guidance of their deeply-rooted religious faith and lofty
+moral code. On the other hand, their visitors admired sincerely the
+noble forms and free, graceful bearing of the island maidens, as well as
+the splendid athletic development of the men.
+
+"Here, you Thursday Quintal, come and show these ladies how you can
+handle a steer-oar," called out the captain. "He was the boat-steerer on
+board the _Florentia_ one voyage, and steered in the pulling race for
+whaleboats at the regatta on anniversary day, which we won the year
+before last in Sydney harbour. We'll bring you ashore in the morning."
+
+"Ay, ay, captain," said the young fellow, showing his splendid teeth in
+a pleasant smile. "It will feel quite natural to take an oar in a boat
+of yours again."
+
+The wind had freshened during the afternoon, and the rollers on the
+beach lifted the whaleboat as she came up to the landing rather higher
+than the ladies fancied. However, they were carefully seated, and at the
+captain's word, "Give way, my lads," the crew picked her up in great
+style, while Quintal, standing with easy grace at the stern, the sixteen
+foot oar in his strong grasp, directed her course with instinctive skill
+so as to avoid the growing force of the wave. As he stood there--tall,
+muscular, glorious in the grace and dignity of early manhood--he seemed
+the embodiment of a sculptor's dream.
+
+"What a magnificent figure!" said Mrs. Craven to her young friend. "How
+rare it is to see such a form in Mayfair!"
+
+"I surmise, as our American girl said at Honolulu," replied Miss
+Vavasour, "that you might look a long time before you saw such a man
+among our 'Johnnies'; and what eyes and teeth he has! Really I feel
+inclined to rebel. Here's this Mr. Telfer, too, and what a grand-looking
+fellow he is, and an English gentleman besides in all his ways. He can
+make his way to this out of the way speck in the ocean, and secure a
+Miranda for a life companion--glorious girl she is too--while we poor
+English spins have to wait till a passable _pretendu_ comes along,--old,
+bald, stupid, or diminutive, as the case may be,--and are bound to take
+him under penalty of dying old maids. I call it rank injustice, and I'd
+head a revolution tomorrow; and oh!--"
+
+The interjection which closed the speech of this ardent woman's righter
+was caused by the onward course of a breaking wave, which was not
+avoided so deftly as usual, and splashed the speaker and Mrs. Craven.
+
+"Hulloa! Quintal, what are you about?" said the captain, "is this your
+steering that I've been blowing about to these ladies and gentlemen?
+Miss Vavasour! I'm afraid it's your fault, you know the rule aboard
+ship? Passengers are requested not to speak to the man at the wheel."
+
+"But there's no regulation, captain, that the man at the steer-oar is
+not to look at the passengers," said Mrs. Craven. "However, here we are
+nearly on board, so there's no harm done, and we're only a trifle
+damped."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Clear-hued--calm--waveless--dawned our farewell day. I was glad of it.
+Rain and storm-clouds lower the spirits more distinctly when one is
+about to make a departure than at any other time, besides the
+inconvenience of wet or bedraggled garments. It was the Sabbath day, and
+the pastor arranged a special service in commemoration of Miranda's
+marriage and departure from the island. All the ship's company that
+could be spared came, of course; the visitors made a point of attending.
+The little church was crowded. Except the youngest children and their
+guardians, every soul on the island was there.
+
+After the Church of England service, which the islanders had at their
+fingers' ends, and in which they all most reverently joined, hymns were
+sung, in which the rich voices of the young girls were heard to great
+advantage. There was a strange and subtle harmony pervading the
+part-singing, which seemed natural to the race, more particularly in
+those parts in which the whole of the congregation joined. As Miranda
+played on the harmonium, it may have occurred to her friends and
+playmates for the last time, many of them could not restrain their
+tears. The aged pastor after the Liturgy preached a feeling and
+sympathetic address, which certainly went to the hearts of all present.
+He made particular allusion to our union and departure.
+
+"One of the children of the island," he said, "who had endeared herself
+to all by her unselfish kindness of heart, who had been marked out by
+uncommon gifts, both mental and physical, was to leave them that day.
+She might be absent for years, perhaps they might not see her face
+again,--that face upon which no one had seen a frown, nor hear that
+voice which had never uttered an unkind word," here the greater part of
+the congregation, male and female, fell a-weeping and lamenting loudly.
+"But they must take comfort; our beloved one was not departing alone,
+she had been joined in holy matrimony with a youth of whom any damsel
+might feel proud; he was the husband of her choice, the son of a master
+mariner well known and highly respected in former years throughout the
+wide Pacific. He himself had often heard of him in old days, and the son
+of such a father was worthy to be loved and trusted. The child of our
+hearts would go forth, even as Rebecca left her home and her people with
+Isaac, and God's blessing would surely rest upon all her descendants as
+upon the children of the promise.
+
+"He would ask all now assembled to join in prayers for the welfare of
+Hilary Telfer and Miranda, his wife."
+
+As the venerable man pronounced the words of the benediction, echoed
+audibly by the whole of the congregation, the sobs of the women were
+audible, while tears and stifled sighs were the rule, and not the
+exception. As the congregation rose from their knees, he walked down to
+the _Florentia's_ boats, it having been so arranged by the captain, who
+had invited all who could by any means attend, to lunch on board his
+vessel. Farewells were said on the beach to all who were perforce
+detained by age, infirmity, or other causes, and at length we were
+safely seated in the captain's boat, and putting off, were followed by a
+perfect fleet of every size and carrying capacity.
+
+Miranda hid her face and wept silently. I did not attempt to persuade
+her to moderate her grief, as the outlet of over-strung feelings, of
+genuine and passionate regret, it was a natural and healthful
+safety-valve for an overburdened heart.
+
+"I don't think I was ever more impressed with our Church service," said
+Mrs. Craven. "That dear, venerable old man, and his truly wonderful
+congregation! How earnestly they listened, and how reverently they
+behaved!"
+
+"Think of our rustics in a village church!" said Miss Vavasour, "the
+conceited choir, the sleeping labourers, the giggling school children,
+where do you ever see anything like what we have witnessed to-day?
+However did they manage to grow up so blameless, and to keep so good and
+pure minded? Can you tell me, Mr. Telfer?"
+
+"My knowledge of my wife's people is chiefly from hearsay," I said; "I
+can remember the old tale of the Mutiny of the _Bounty_ when I was a
+school-boy in Sydney. Captain Bligh, of the ill-fated ship, was
+afterwards the Governor of New South Wales. Whether his conduct provoked
+the mutiny, of which Miranda's great grandfather was the leader, or
+whether the crew were overcome by the temptations of a life in that
+second garden of Eden, Tahiti, has been disputed, and perhaps can never
+be definitely known. This much is certain, that the sole surviving
+mutineer, John Adams, deeply repentant, changed his rule of life.
+Morning and evening prayer was established, and a system of instruction
+for the children and young people regularly carried out. Such was the
+apparently accidental commencement of the religious teaching of the
+little community at the beginning of the century. Some of the results
+you have witnessed to-day."
+
+"It certainly is the most wonderful historiette in the whole world,"
+said Miss Vavasour, who had listened with deep interest. "I never saw so
+many nice people in one place before--all good--all kind--all contented,
+and all happy. It makes one believe in the millennium; I must try what I
+can do with our village when I get back to Dorsetshire."
+
+"You'll have your work cut out for you, Miss Vavasour," said Colonel
+Percival. "Fancy the old poachers and the hardened tramps, the
+beer-drinking yokels and the rough field-hands. Work of years, and
+doubtful then."
+
+"Oh! dear, why do we call ourselves civilised, I wonder?" sighed the
+enthusiastic damsel, just awakened to a sense of the duties of property
+in correlation with the "rights." "I really believe Englishmen--the
+lower classes, of course--are the most ill-mannered, uncivilised people
+in the world. Look at those dear islanders, how polite and unselfish
+they are in their behaviour to each other, and to us! It makes me feel
+ashamed of my country. Why, even at a presentation to Her Majesty people
+push, and crush, and look as black as thunder if you tread on their
+absurd trains."
+
+"You ought to come out and join the Melanesian Mission, my dear," said
+Mrs. Craven. "There is no knowing, with your energy and convictions,
+what good you might do."
+
+"I wish I could," said the girl eagerly. "But I'm not good enough, I
+wish I was. If I felt I could keep up my present feelings I'd go
+to-morrow. But I'm selfish and worldly-minded, like my neighbours in
+Christendom. It would be no use. I should only spoil my own life, and
+not mend theirs."
+
+"Such has been the confession of many an earnest reformer, who had
+started in life with high hopes and a scorn of consequences," said Mr.
+Vavasour quietly; "it is by far the most common result of heroic
+self-sacrifice. If we did not occasionally see the accomplished fact, as
+in this case, we might well despair."
+
+"And this was an accident of accidents," said Miss Vavasour sorrowfully.
+"No missionary society sent away the pioneer preachers to the heathen
+with prayers, and flags, and collections. No, here is the grandest feat
+ever accomplished in the world's history. The most religious, contented,
+consistent community in the whole world evolved from a crew of runaway
+sailors and a few poor savage women! Really there must be some good in
+human nature after all, reviled and insulted as it is by all the extra
+good people."
+
+The _Florentia_ had not had so large a party on board since the last
+successful affair in Sydney harbour. That one included dancing, which
+did not enter into this entertainment. Nothing, however, could have gone
+off better. The curiosity of the young women about the ladies'
+belongings was amply gratified, and the luncheon voted the very best one
+at which they had ever been entertained.
+
+A mirthful and joyous gathering it was. The visitors were charmed with,
+the naturally refined and courteous manners of the guests. And, finally,
+as the day wore on, and the breeze from the land promised a good offing,
+Miranda came up from her cabin, to which she had elected to retire, and
+bade farewell to friends and kinsfolk, who departed in their boats, much
+less saddened of mien than they had been in the morning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Once more at sea. The _Florentia_, though a whaler, and not ornamented
+up to yachting form, was yet extremely neat and spotlessly clean, as far
+as could be managed by a smart and energetic captain. She was a fast
+sailer, and as the wind off the land freshened at sundown, she spread
+most of her canvas and sped before the breeze after a fashion which
+would have made her a not unworthy comrade of the _Leonora_.
+
+Miranda had retired to her cabin. Her heart was too full for jesting
+converse, and after she had watched the last speck of her loved island
+disappear below the horizon, she was fain to go below to hide her tears,
+and relieve her feelings by unrestrained indulgence in grief.
+
+For my part, after a cheerful dinner in the cuddy, I remained long on
+deck, pacing up and down, and revolving in my mind plans for our future.
+As I felt the accustomed sway of the vessel, listened to the creaking of
+the rigging, which was music in my ears, and watched the waves fall back
+from her sides in hissing foam-flakes, as the aroused vessel, feeling
+the force of the rising gale, drove through the darkening wave-masses,
+and seemed to defy the menace of the deep, the memories of my early
+island life came back to me. The luxurious, halcyon days, the starlit,
+silent nights, when ofttimes I had wandered to the shore, and seating
+myself on a coral rock, gazed over the boundless watery waste, wondering
+ever about my career, my destined fate.
+
+Then returned the strange and wayward memories of Hayston and his
+lawless associates--the reckless traders, the fierce half-castes, the
+savage islanders! Again I heard the soft voices of Lalia, Nellie,
+Kitty of Ebon, and smiled as I recalled their pleading, infantine ways,
+their flashing eyes, so eloquent in love or hate. All were gone; all had
+become phantoms of the past. With that stage and season of my life they
+had passed away--irrevocably, eternally--and now I possessed an
+incentive to labour, ambition, and self-denial such as I had never
+before known. With such a companion as Miranda, where was the man who
+would not have displayed the higher qualities of his nature, who would
+not have risen to the supremest effort of labour, valour, or
+self-abnegation? Before Heaven I vowed that night, that neither toil nor
+trouble, difficulty nor danger, should deter me from the pursuit of
+fortune and distinction. So passed our first day at sea.
+
+With the one that followed the gale abated, and as the _Florentia_ swept
+southward under easy sail, comfort was restored. The passengers settled
+themselves down to the enjoyment of that absolute rest and passive
+luxuriousness which characterise board-ship life in fine weather. Miss
+Vavasour and Miranda were soon deep in earnest conversation, both for
+the time disregarding the books with which they had furnished
+themselves. Mrs. Craven had devoted herself to an endless task of
+knitting, which apparently supplied a substitute for thought, reading,
+recreation, and conversation.
+
+I was talking to the captain when a lady came up the companion, followed
+by the colonel, who half lifted, half led a fine little boy of four or
+five years of age.
+
+"Oh," said the captain, with a sudden movement towards the new arrivals,
+"I see Mrs. Percival has come on deck. Come over and be introduced." We
+walked over, and I received a formal bow from a handsome, pale woman,
+who had evidently been sojourning in the East. There is a certain
+similarity in all "Indian women," as they are generally called, which
+extends even to manner and expression. Long residence in a hot climate
+robs them of their roses, while the habit of command, resulting from
+association with an inferior race, gives them a tinge of hauteur--not to
+say unconscious insolence of manner--which is scarcely agreeable to
+those who, from circumstances, they may deem to be socially inferior.
+
+So it was that Miranda, in spite of Miss Vavasour's nods and signals,
+received but the faintest recognition, and retreated to her chair
+somewhat chilled by her reception. She, however, took no apparent notice
+of the slight, and was soon absorbed in conversation with Miss Vavasour,
+her brother, and Mrs. Craven, who had moved up her chair to join the
+party. The colonel deserted his former friends to devote himself to his
+family duties, while the captain and I walked forward and commenced a
+discussion which had, at any rate, a strong personal interest for me.
+
+"Now look here, Hilary," said he, as he lighted a fresh cigar. He had
+been smoking on the quarter-deck under protest, as it were, and thus
+commenced: "Listen to me, my boy! I've been thinking seriously about you
+and Miranda. Your start in life when you get to Sydney is important. I
+think I can give you a bit of advice worth following. You understand all
+the dialects between here and the Line Islands, don't you?"
+
+"More than eight," I answered; "I can talk with nearly every islander
+from here to the Gilberts. I have learned so much, at any rate, in my
+wanderings."
+
+"And a very good thing, too, for it's not a thing that can be picked up
+in a year, no matter how a man may work, and he's useless or nearly so
+without it; you can keep accounts, write well, and all that?"
+
+I replied that I had a number of peculiar accounts to keep as
+supercargo to the _Leonora_, as well as all Hayston's business letters
+to write; that my office books were always considered neat, complete,
+and well kept. Then he suddenly said, "You are the very man we want!"
+
+"Who are we, and what is the man wanted for?" I asked.
+
+"For the South Sea Island trade, and no other," said Captain Carryall,
+putting his hand on my shoulder. "Old Paul Frankston (you've heard of
+him) and I have laid it out to establish a regular mercantile house in
+Sydney for the development of the island trade. The old man will back
+us, and the name of Paul Frankston is good from New Zealand to the North
+Pole and back again. I will do the whaling, cruising, and cargo
+business--cocoa-nut oil, copra, and curios--while you will live in one
+of those nice white houses at North Shore, somewhere about Neutral Bay,
+where you can see the ships come through the Heads; Miranda can have a
+skiff, and you a ten-tonner, so as not to forget your boating and your
+sea-legs. What do you think of that, eh?"
+
+"It is a splendid idea!" I cried, "and poor Miranda will be within sound
+of the sea. If she were not, she would pine away like her own araucarias
+which will not live outside of the wave music. But how about the cash
+part of it? I haven't much. Most of my savings went down in the
+_Leonora_."
+
+"Oh, we'll manage that somehow! Old Paul will work that part of the
+arrangement. I daresay your father will advance what will make your
+share equal, or nearly so, to ours."
+
+"It sounds well," I said. "With partners like Mr. Frankston and yourself
+a man ought to be able to do something. I know almost every island where
+trade can be got, and the price to a cowrie that should be paid. There
+ought to be a fortune in it in five years. What a pity Hayston couldn't
+have had such a chance."
+
+"He'd have had the cash, and the other partners the experience, in less
+than that time," said the captain, smiling sardonically. "He was a
+first-rate organiser if he had not been such a d--d scoundrel. He had
+some fine qualities, I allow; as a seaman he had no equal. In the good
+old fighting days he would have been a splendid robber baron. But in
+these modern times, where there is a trifle of law and order in most
+countries, even in the South Seas he was out of place."
+
+"He was far from a model mariner," I said, "but it hurts me to hear him
+condemned. He had splendid points in his character, and no one but
+myself will ever know how much good there was mixed up with his
+recklessness and despair. I left him, but I couldn't help being fond of
+him to the last."
+
+"It was a good thing for you that you did--a very good thing. You will
+live to be thankful for it. He was a dangerous beggar, and neither man
+nor woman could escape his fascination. However, that's all past and
+gone now. You're married and settled, remember, and you're to be Hilary
+Telfer, Esq., J.P., and all the rest of it directly, and the only
+sea-going business you can have for the future is to be Commodore of the
+Neutral Bay Yacht Club, or some such title and distinction. And now I've
+done for the present. You go and see what Miranda thinks of it. I won't
+agree to anything unless she consents."
+
+Miranda was charmed with the idea of a mercantile marine enterprise, so
+much in accordance with her previous habits and experiences. The added
+inducement of living on the sea-shore, with a boat, a jetty, and a
+bathing-house, decided her. She implicitly believed in Captain
+Carryall's power and ability to make our fortune; was also certain that,
+with Mr. Frankston's commercial aid, we should soon be as rich as the
+Guldensterns, the Rothschilds of the Pacific. She surrendered herself
+thereupon to a dream of bliss, alloyed only at intervals by a tinge of
+apprehension that the great undiscovered country of Sydney society might
+prove hostile or indifferent.
+
+So much she communicated to Miss Vavasour as she and Mrs. Craven were
+reclining side by side on their deck chairs, while the _Florentia_ was
+gliding along on another day all sunshine, azure, and favouring breeze.
+
+"Don't you be afraid, my dear," said the kind-hearted Mrs. Craven, "you
+and your husband are quite able to hold your own in Sydney society or
+any other; indeed, I shall be inclined to bet that you'd be the rage
+rather than otherwise. I wish I had you in Northamptonshire, I'd
+undertake to 'knock out' (as Charlie says) the local belles in a
+fortnight."
+
+Miranda laughed the childishly happy laugh of unspoiled girlhood. "Dear
+Mrs. Craven, how good of you to say so; but, of course, I know I'm a
+sort of savage, who will improve in a year or two if every one is as
+kind as you and Miss Vavasour here; but suppose they should be like
+her," and she motioned towards Mrs. Percival.
+
+This lady had never relaxed the coldness and hauteur towards Miranda and
+myself. She had been unable to modify her "Indian manner," as Captain
+Carryall and Mr. Vavasour called it, and about which they made daily
+jokes.
+
+As she passed the little group, she bowed slightly and without
+relaxation of feature, going forward to the waist of the ship, where she
+sat down and was soon absorbed in a book. The three friends smiled at
+each other, and continued their conversation.
+
+"I should like to dress you for a garden-party, Miranda," said Miss
+Vavasour; "let me see now, a real summer day, such as we sometimes get
+in dear old England--not like this one perhaps, but very nice. A lovely
+old manor house like Gravenhurst or Hunsdon--such a lawn, such old
+trees, such a river, a marquee under an elm a hundred years old, and the
+county magnates marching in from their carriages."
+
+"Oh, how delicious!" cried Miranda. "I have read such descriptions in
+books, but you--oh, how happy you must be to have lived it all!"
+
+"It's very nice, but as to the happiness, that doesn't always follow,"
+confessed the English girl with a half sigh. "I almost think you have
+the greater share of that. Anyhow, just as the company are assembled, I
+am seen walking down from the house. We are of the house party, you
+know, Miranda and I. She is dressed in a soft, white, embroidered
+muslin, very simply made, with a little, a very little Valenciennes
+lace. Its long straight folds hang gracefully around her matchless
+figure, and are confined at the waist by a broad, white moire sash;
+white gloves, a white moire parasol, a large Gainsborough hat with
+fleecy white feathers, and Miranda's costume is complete--the very
+embodiment of fresh, fair girlhood, unspotted from the world of fashion
+and folly."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+A SWIM FOR LIFE
+
+
+The words died on her lips as a shriek, wild, agonising, despairing,
+rang through the air, and startled not only the little group of pleased
+listeners, but all who happened to be on deck at the time. We started up
+and gazed towards the spot whence the cry had come. The colonel, who had
+been reading on the opposite side of the deck, calmly smoking the while,
+dropped his book and only saved his meerschaum by a cricketer's smart
+catch. The captain came bounding up from below, followed by the steward
+and his boy; the foc'sle hands, with the black cook, hurled themselves
+aft. All guessed the cause as they saw Mrs. Percival wringing her hands
+frantically and gazing at an object in the sea.
+
+Her boy had fallen overboard! Yes! the little fellow, active and
+courageous beyond his years, had tried to crawl up to the shrouds while
+his mother's eyes were engaged in the perusal of the leading novel of
+the day. Weary of inaction, the poor little chap had done a little
+climbing on his own account, and an unexpected roll of the ship had sent
+him overboard. Light as the wind was, he was already a long way astern.
+
+Long before all these observations were made, however, and while the
+astonished spectators were questioning their senses as to the meaning of
+the confusion, Miranda had sprung upon the rail, and in the next moment,
+with hands clasped above her head, was parting the smooth waters.
+Rising to the surface, she swam with rapid and powerful strokes towards
+the receding form of the still floating child. With less rapidity of
+motion, I cast myself into the heaving waste of water, not that I
+doubted Miranda's ability to overtake and bear up the child, but from
+simple inability to remain behind while all that was worth living for on
+earth was adrift upon the wave.
+
+I followed in her wake, and though I failed to keep near her, for the
+Pitcairn islanders are among the fastest swimmers in the world, I yet
+felt that I might be of some use or aid. Long before I could overtake
+her she had caught up the little fellow, and lifting him high above the
+water, was swimming easily towards me.
+
+"Oh! you foolish boy!" she cried, "why did you come after me? do you
+want to be drowned again?" Here she smiled and showed her lovely teeth
+as if it was rather a good joke. It may have been, but at that time and
+place I was not in the humour to perceive it.
+
+"I came for the same reason that you did, I suppose--because I could not
+stay behind. If anything had happened to you what should I have done?
+Here comes the boat, though, and we can talk it over on board."
+
+Some little time had been expended in lowering the boat. The ship had
+been brought to, but even then--and with so light a wind--it was
+astonishing what a distance we had fallen behind. It was a curious
+sensation, such specks as we were upon the immense water-plain which
+stretched around to the horizon. However, the _Florentia_ was strongly
+in evidence, and nearer and nearer came the whaleboat, with the captain
+at the steer-oar, and the men pulling as if they were laying on a crack
+harpooner to an eighty barrel whale.
+
+We were now swimming side by side, Miranda talking to the little fellow,
+who had never lost consciousness, and did not seem particularly afraid
+of his position.
+
+"How tremendously hard they are pulling!" I said; "they are making the
+boat spin again. One would think they were pulling for a wager."
+
+"So they are," answered she, "for three lives, and perhaps another. See
+there! God in His mercy protect us."
+
+I followed the direction of her turned head, and my heart stood still as
+my eye caught the fatal sign of the monster's presence at no great
+distance from us. It was _the back fin of a shark_!
+
+"Do your best, my beloved," she continued; "we must keep together, and
+if he overtakes us before the boat reaches, splash hard and shout as
+loud as you can. I have seen a shark frightened before now; but please
+God it may not come to that."
+
+The boat came nearer--still nearer--but, as it seemed to us, all too
+slowly. The men were pulling for their lives, I could notice, and the
+captain frantically urging them on. They had seen the dreaded signal
+before us, and had commenced to race from that moment. But for some
+delay in the tackle for lowering, they would have been up to us before
+now.
+
+As it was we did our best. I would have taken the child, but Miranda
+would not allow me. "His weight is nothing in the water," she said, "and
+I could swim faster than you, even with him." This she showed me she
+could do by shooting ahead with the greatest ease, and then allowing me
+to overtake her. I had to let her have her own way. We were lessening
+the distance between us and the boat, but the sea demon had a mind to
+overtake us, and our hearts almost failed as we noticed the sharp black
+fin gaining rapidly upon us. Still there was one chance, that he would
+not pursue us to the very side of the boat. It was a terrible moment.
+With every muscle strained to the uttermost, with lung, and sinew, and
+every organ taxed to utmost tension, I most certainly beat any previous
+record in swimming that I had ever attained. Miranda, with apparently
+but little effort, kept slightly ahead. The last few yards--shorter than
+the actual distance--appeared to divide us from the huge form of the
+monster now distinctly visible beneath the water, when with one frantic
+yell and a dash at the oars, which took every remaining pound of
+strength out of the willing crew, the boat shot up within equal
+distance. At a signal from the captain every oar was raised and brought
+down again with a terrific splash into the water, and a simultaneous
+yell. The effort was successful. The huge creature, strangely timid in
+some respects, stopped, and with one powerful side motion of fins and
+tail glided out of the line of pursuit. At the same moment the boat
+swept up, and eager arms lifted Miranda and her burden into it. My hand
+was on the gunwale until I saw her safe, whence with a slight amount of
+assistance I gained the mid-thwart.
+
+"Saved, thank God!" cried the captain, with fervent expression, "but a
+mighty close thing; the next time you take a bath of this kind, my dear
+Miranda, with sharks around, you must let me know beforehand, eh?"
+
+"Some one would have had to go, captain," she answered; "we couldn't see
+the dear little fellow drowned before our eyes. It was only a trifle
+after all--a swim in smooth water on a fine day: I didn't reckon on a
+shark being so close, I must say."
+
+"I saw the naughty shark," said the little fellow, now quite recovered
+and in his usual spirits. "How close he came! do you think he would have
+eaten us all, captain?"
+
+"Yes, my boy--without salt; you would never have seen your papa and
+mamma again if it had not been for this lady here."
+
+"But you took us in the boat, captain," argued the little fellow; "he
+can't catch us in here, can he?"
+
+"But the lady caught you in her arms long before the boat came up, my
+dear, or else you would have been drowned over and over again; that
+confounded tackle caught, or else we should have been up long before.
+It's a good thing they were not lowering for a whale, or my first mate's
+language would have been something to remember till the voyage after
+next. However, here we are all safe, Charlie, and there's your mother
+looking out for you."
+
+A painfully eager face was that which gazed from the vessel as we rowed
+alongside. Every trace of the languor partly born of the tropic sun and
+partly of aristocratic _morgue_ was gone from the countenance of Mrs.
+Percival, as her boy, laughing and prattling, was carried up the rope
+ladder and lifted on deck. His mother clasped him now passionately in
+her arms, sobbing, blessing, kissing him, and crying aloud that God had
+restored her child from the dead. "Oh, my boy! my boy!" she repeated
+again and again; "your mother would have died too, if you had been
+drowned, she would never have lived without you."
+
+By this time Miranda had reached the deck, where she was received with a
+hearty British cheer from the ship's company, while the passengers
+crowded around her as if she had acquired a new character in their eyes.
+But Mrs. Percival surpassed them all; kneeling before Miranda she bowed
+herself to the deck, as if in adoration, and kissed her wet feet again
+and again.
+
+"You have saved my child from a terrible death at the risk of your own
+and your husband's lives," she said. "May God forget me if I forget your
+noble act this day! I have been proud and unkind in my manner to you, my
+dear. I humble myself at your feet, and implore your pardon. But
+henceforth, Miranda Telfer, you and I are sisters. If I do not do
+something in requital it will go hard with me and Charlie."
+
+"Now, my dear Sybil," interposed the husband, "do you observe that Mrs.
+Telfer has not had time to change her dress--very wet it seems to
+be--and I suppose Master Charlie will be none the worse for being put
+to bed and well scolded, the young rascal. Come, my dear."
+
+Colonel Percival, doubtless, felt a world of joy and relief when the
+light of his eyes and the joy of his heart stood safe and sound on the
+deck of the _Florentia_ again, but it is not the wont of the British
+aristocrat to give vent to his emotions, even the holiest, in public.
+The veil of indifference is thrown over them, and men may but guess at
+the volcanic forces at work below that studiously calm exterior.
+
+So, laying his hand gently but firmly on his wife's arm, he led her to
+her cabin, with her boy still clasped in her arms as if she yet feared
+to lose him, and they disappeared from our eyes. As for Miranda and
+myself, such immersions had been daily matters of course, and were
+regarded as altogether too trifling occurrences to require more than the
+necessary changes of clothing.
+
+We both appeared in our places at the next meal, when Miranda was
+besieged with questions as to her sensations, mingled with praises of
+her courage and endurance in that hour of deadly peril.
+
+"And _her_ child, too," said Mrs. Craven; "what a lesson of humility it
+ought to teach her! Had you, my dear girl, been swayed by any of the
+meaner motives which actuate men and women her foolish pride might have
+cost her child's life."
+
+"Oh, surely no one _could_ have had such thoughts when that dear little
+boy fell overboard! I couldn't help Mrs. Percival not liking me. I
+really did not think much about it; but when I saw the poor little face
+in the sea, more startled, indeed, than frightened, I felt as if I must
+go in after him. It was quite a matter of course."
+
+After this incident it may be believed that we were indeed a happy
+family on board the _Florentia_. Every one vied with every one else in
+exhibiting respect and admiration towards Miranda. Mrs. Percival would
+not hear of a refusal that we should come and stay with her, when we
+had done all that was proper and dutiful in the family home. Miss
+Vavasour and Mrs. Craven depended on me to show them all the beauties of
+Sydney harbour; while Captain Carryall pledged himself to place Mr.
+Frankston's yacht at the service of his passengers generally, and to
+render them competent to champion the much-vaunted glories of the
+unrivalled harbour to all friends, foes, and doubters on the other side
+of the world.
+
+Colonel Percival privately interrogated the captain as to the nature of
+the commercial undertaking in which he was about to arrange a
+partnership for me, and begged as a favour, being a man of ample means,
+that he might be permitted to advance the amount of my share. The
+captain solemnly promised him that if there was any difficulty in the
+proposed arrangement on account of my deficiency of cash he should be
+requested to supply it. "He seemed to feel easy in his mind after I told
+him this, my boy," said the commander, with that mixture of simplicity
+and astuteness which distinguished him, "but fancy old Paul and your
+father admitting outside capital in one of their trade ventures!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"This time to-morrow we shall be going through Sydney Heads," said the
+first mate to me as we walked the deck about an hour after sunrise one
+morning, "that is, if the wind holds."
+
+"Pray Heaven it may," said I, "then we shall have a view of the harbour
+and city worth seeing. It makes all the difference. We might have a
+cloudy day, or be tacking about till nightfall, and the whole effect
+would be lost." I was most anxious not only that Miranda's first sight
+of my native land and her future home should impress her favourably, but
+I was naturally concerned that our friends should not suppose that the
+descriptions of the Queen City of the South, with which the captain and
+I had regaled them, were overdrawn. We sat late at supper that night
+talking over the wonderful events and experiences that were to occur on
+the morrow. Plans were discussed, probable residence and inland travel
+calculated, the Fish River caves and the Blue Mountains were, of course,
+to be visited--all kinds of expeditions and slightly incongruous
+journeys to be carried out.
+
+Colonel and Mrs. Percival had been asked to stay at Government House
+during their visit, which was comparatively short; while Mr. and Mrs.
+Craven and Miss Vavasour were to go primarily to Petty's Hotel, which
+had been highly recommended; and the gentlemen had intimation that they
+would receive notices of their being admitted as honorary members of the
+Australian and Union Clubs. With such cheerful expectations and
+forecasts we parted for the night.
+
+The winds were kind. "The breeze stuck to us," as the mate expressed it,
+and about an hour after the time he had mentioned we were within a mile
+of the towering sandstone portals of that erstwhile strange, silent
+harbour into which the gallant seaman Cook, old England's typical
+mariner, had sailed a hundred years ago.
+
+I had been on deck since dawn. Now that we were so near the home of my
+childhood, the thoughts of old days, and the parents, brothers, sisters,
+from whom I had been so long separated, rushed into my mind, until I
+felt almost suffocated with contending emotions. How would they receive
+us? Would they be prepared to see me a married man? Would their welcome
+to Miranda be warm or formal? I began to foresee difficulties--even
+dangers of family disruption--consequences which before had never
+entered into the calculation.
+
+However, for the present these serious reflections were put to flight
+by expressions of delight from the whole body of passengers, headed by
+Miranda, who then came on deck. By this time the good ship _Florentia_
+had closely approached the comparatively narrow entrance, the frowning
+buttresses of sandstone, against which the waves, now dashed with hoarse
+and angry murmur, rose almost above us, while a long line of surges, lit
+up by the red dawn fires, menaced us on either hand.
+
+"Oh, what a lovely entrance!" said Miss Vavasour, after gazing long and
+earnestly at the scene. "It seems like the gate of an enchanted lake.
+What magnificent rock-masses, and what light and colour the sun brings
+out! It is something like a sun--warm, glowing, irradiating everything
+even at this early hour--and what a sky! The dream tone of a painter! I
+congratulate you, you dear darling Miranda, and you, Mr. Telfer, on
+having such a day for home-coming. It is a good omen--I am sure it must
+be. Nothing but good could happen on such a glorious day."
+
+"The day is perfection, but more than one good ship coming through this
+entrance at night has mistaken the indentation on the other side of the
+South Head for the true passage, and gone to pieces on the rocks below
+that promontory. But, at any rate, _we_ are now safely inside; and where
+is there a harbour in the world to match it?"
+
+As we passed Middle harbour and drew slowly up the great waterway, which
+affords perhaps more deep anchorage than any other in the world, the
+ladies were loud in their expressions of admiration. "Look at those
+sweet white houses on the shores of the pretty little bays!" said Mrs.
+Craven; "and what lovely gardens and terraces stretching down to the
+beaches!"
+
+"And there is a Norfolk Island pine, one--two--ever so many," cried
+Miranda. "I did not think _they_ grew here, I am sure now that I shall
+be happy."
+
+"Yes, of course!" said Miss Vavasour, "what is to hinder you? And you
+are to live in one of those pretty cream-coloured cottages--what lovely
+stone it must be!--with a garden just like that one on the point, and a
+boat-house and a jetty. One of those little steamers that I see fussing
+about will land Mr. Telfer, when he returns from the city, or you can
+get into that little boat that lies moored below, and row across the bay
+for him."
+
+Miranda's eyes filled as she glanced at the pretty villas and more
+pretentious mansions, past which we glided, some half-covered with
+climbers, or buried amid tropical shrubs of wild luxuriance. Her heart
+was too deeply stirred for jesting at that moment. She could only press
+her friend's hand and smile, as if pleading for a less humorous view of
+so important a subject.
+
+The harbour itself was full of interest to the strangers. Vessels of all
+sizes and shapes--coasters, colliers, passenger-boats, yachts, and steam
+launches, passed and re-passed in endless succession. Two men-of-war lay
+peacefully at anchor in Farm Cove, a Messagerie steamer in the stream,
+while a huge P. & O. mail-boat outward bound moved majestically towards
+the Heads through which we had so recently entered.
+
+We had just cleared Point Piper, where I remember spending the joyous
+holidays of long ago with my schoolmates, the sons of the fine old
+English gentleman who then dwelt there, when a sailing boat sped swiftly
+towards us, in which stood a stout, middle-aged man waving his hat
+frantically.
+
+"I believe that is Paul Frankston himself come to overhaul us," said the
+captain, raising his glass. "He's sailor enough to recognise the rig of
+the _Florentia_, and if we had been a little nearer his bay, he'd have
+wanted us to stop the ship and lunch with him in a body. As it is I feel
+sure he'll capture some of the party."
+
+"What splendid hospitality!" said Mrs. Percival. "Is that sort of thing
+usual here? you must be something like us Indians in your ways."
+
+"There is a good deal of likeness, I think," said the captain. "I
+suppose the heat accounts for it. It's too hot to refuse, most of the
+year. But here comes Paul!"
+
+The sailing boat by this time had run alongside and doused her sail,
+while one of the crew held on to a rope thrown to him, as the owner
+presented himself on deck with more agility than might have been
+expected from a man of his age.
+
+"Well, Charley, my boy, so you're in at last--thought you were lost, or
+had run away and sold the ship, ha, ha! What sort of a voyage have you
+had? Passengers, too--pray introduce me. Is there anything I can do for
+them in Sydney? Must be something. Perhaps I shall hear by and by. Who's
+this youngster?
+
+"No! surely not the son of my old friend, Captain Telfer? Now I remember
+the boy that ran away to the islands, or would have done so, if they
+hadn't let him go. Quite right, I ran away myself and a fine time I had
+there. I must tell you what happened to me there once, eh! Charley?"
+
+Here the old gentleman began to laugh so heartily that he was forced to
+suspend his narration, while the captain regarded him with an expression
+which conveyed a slight look of warning. "But I am forgetting. By the
+way, Charley, have you any curios in your cabin?" The captain nodded,
+and the two old friends disappeared down the companion. Only, however,
+to reappear in a very few minutes, which we employed in favourable
+criticism.
+
+"What a fine hearty old gentleman!" said Mrs. Craven, "any one can see
+that he is an Englishman by his figure and the way he talks; though I
+suppose colonists are not so very different."
+
+"Mr. Frankston has been a good deal about the world," I said. "But he
+was born in Sydney, and has spent the greater part of his life near
+this very spot. He was at sea in his earlier years, but has been on
+shore since he married. He is now a wealthy man, and one of the leading
+Sydney merchants."
+
+"One would think he was a sea captain now," said Miss Vavasour. "He
+looks quite as much like one as a merchant; but I suppose every one can
+sail a boat here."
+
+"You are quite right, Miss Vavasour. Every one who is born in Sydney
+learns to swim and sail a boat as soon as possible after he can walk.
+There is no place in the world where there are so many yachtsmen. On
+holidays you may see doctors, lawyers, clergymen, even judges, sailing
+their boats--doing a good deal of their own work in the 'able seaman'
+line; and, to tell truth, looking occasionally much more like pirates
+than sober professional men."
+
+About this time Mr. Frankston reappeared, carrying in his hand a couple
+of grass-er-garments, which he appeared to look upon as very precious.
+"These are for my little girl," he said, "she has just come down from
+the bush with her husband to spend the hot months with her old father.
+It will give her the greatest pleasure to see these ladies and their
+husbands at Marahmee, next Saturday, when we can have a little picnic in
+the harbour and a sail in my yacht, the _Sea-gull_. The captain will
+tell you that I am to be trusted with a lively boat still."
+
+"I never wish to go to sea with a better sailor," said the captain, "and
+if our friends have no other engagements, I can promise them a
+delightful day and a view of some of the finest scenery south of the
+line."
+
+Barring unforeseen or indispensable engagements every one promised to
+go. Mr. Frankston averred that they had done him a great--an important
+service. He was getting quite hipped--he was indeed--when his daughter
+luckily recognised the _Florentia_ coming up the harbour. She is a
+sailor's daughter, you know--has an eye for a ship--and started him off
+to meet his old friend Captain Carryall, and secure him for dinner. Now
+he felt quite another man, and would say good-bye. Before leaving he
+must have a word with his young friend.
+
+"My dear boy," said he, laying his hand on my shoulder, "I have known
+your father ever so many years. We were younger men then, and saw
+something of each other in more than one bit of fun; and at least one or
+two very queer bits of fighting in the Bay of Islands; so that we know
+each other pretty well. I've heard what Carryall has to say about you
+and your charming wife. I think we shall be able to 'fix up,' as our
+American friends say, our little mercantile arrangement very neatly. But
+that's not what I wanted to talk to you about. You've been away a good
+while, so many years, we'll say."
+
+"I have indeed," I replied.
+
+"Well--you've grown from a boy into a man, and a devilish fine one too."
+Here the dear old chap patted me on the back and looked up at my face, a
+great deal higher up than his. "Well! naturally, you've changed. So have
+your people, your young brothers and sisters have turned into men and
+women while you've been away. And then again, another change--a great
+one too--you're married."
+
+"Yes! thank God I am."
+
+"I am sure you have good reason, my boy. But my idea is this,
+people--the best of people--don't like surprises,--even one's own
+friends. Now, what I want you to do is to bring your wife and come and
+stay at Marahmee for a week, while they're getting your rooms ready for
+you at North Shore. There's nobody there now but Antonia and her
+husband. It wants another pair of young people to enliven the place a
+bit. And Charley Carryall will go over and tell them all about you and
+your pretty Miranda, while you and I settle our partnership affairs."
+
+I could see how it was; our good old friend, with a kindness and
+delicacy of feeling which I have rarely seen equalled, had all along
+made up his mind that Miranda and I should begin our Sydney experiences
+with a visit to his hospitable mansion. After a talk with the captain,
+for which purpose he had feigned an interest in South Sea "curios," they
+had come to the conclusion that it would be more prudent that the family
+should have a few days to accustom themselves to the idea of my
+marriage. In the mean time his daughter, Mrs. Neuchamp, would be able to
+give Miranda the benefit of her experience as a Sydney matron of some
+years' standing, and to ensure that she made her introduction under
+favourable circumstances.
+
+Miranda, naturally nervous at the idea of then and there making her
+appearance among a group of relatives wholly unknown to her, was much
+relieved at the delay thus granted, and cheerfully acceded to the
+proposed arrangement.
+
+"That being all settled, I'll get home and have everything ready for you
+when you arrive. The captain will take care of you. He knows the road
+out, eh, Charley? night or day; so good-bye till dinner time. Seven
+o'clock sharp."
+
+Still talking, Mr. Frankston descended to his boat, and making a long
+board, proceeded to beat down the harbour on his homeward voyage, waving
+his handkerchief at intervals until he rounded a point and was lost to
+our gaze.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was not very long after this interview that we found ourselves in our
+berth at the Circular Quay, where, unlike Melbourne and some other
+ports, nothing more was needed for disembarkation but to step on shore
+into the city. Our good comrades of so many days were carried off in
+cabs to their destinations, with the exception of the Percivals, who,
+having been invited to Government House, found an aide-de-camp and the
+viceregal carriage awaiting them on the wharf. At such a time there is
+always a certain amount of fuss and anxiety with reference to luggage,
+rendering farewells occasionally less sentimental than might have been
+expected from the character of marine friendships. But it was not so in
+our experience. Miss Vavasour and Mrs. Craven exchanged touching
+farewells with Miranda, mingled with solemn promises to meet at given
+dates--to write--to do all sorts of things necessary for their keeping
+up the flame of friendship. Then at the last moment Colonel and Mrs.
+Percival came up. "My dearest Miranda," said this lady, "don't forget
+that you are my sister, not in word only. Put me to the proof whenever
+you need a sister's aid, and it shall be always at your service. Kiss
+Auntie Miranda, Charlie darling, and tell her you will always love her."
+
+"She picked me up out of the sea, when the naughty shark was going to
+eat us all. She's a good auntie, isn't she, mother?" said the little
+chap responding readily. "Good-bye, Auntie Miranda."
+
+"I am not a man of many words, Mr. Telfer!" said the colonel; "but if I
+can be of service to you, now or at any future time I shall be offended
+if you do not let me know;" and then the stern soldier shook my hand in
+a way which gave double meaning to the pledge.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was yet early in the day, and the captain had duties to attend to
+which would keep him employed until the evening. "I've ordered a
+carriage at six," he said, "when we'll start for Marahmee, which is
+about half-an-hour's drive. Until that time you can go ashore if you
+like; the Botanical Gardens are just round that point, or walk down
+George Street, or in any other way amuse yourselves. Meanwhile, consider
+yourselves at home also."
+
+"I think we'll stay at home then, captain, for the present," said
+Miranda, "and watch the people on shore. You have no idea how they
+interest me. Everything is so new. Remember that I have never seen a
+carriage in my life before, or a cab, or a soldier; there goes one
+now--isn't he beautiful to behold? I shall sit here and make Hilary tell
+me the names of all the specimens as they come into view."
+
+"That will do capitally," said the captain. "I might have known that you
+could amuse yourself without help from any one."
+
+The time passed quickly enough, with the aid of lunch. The decks were
+cleared by six o'clock, by which time we were ready for the hired
+barouche when it drove up.
+
+Miranda and I had employed our time so well that she had learnt the
+names of various types of character, and many products of civilisation,
+of which she had been before necessarily ignorant, except from books.
+"It is a perfect object lesson," she said. "How delightful it is to be
+able to see the things and people that I have only read about! I feel
+like those people in the _Arabian Nights_ who had been all their lives
+in a glass tower on a desert island. Not that our dear Norfolk Island
+was a desert--very far from it. And now I am going to the first grand
+house I ever saw, and to live in it--more wonderful still. I feel like a
+princess in a fairy tale," she went on, as she smilingly skipped into
+the carriage. "Everything seems so unreal. Do you think this will turn
+into a pumpkin, drawn by mice, like poor Cinderella's? Hers was a
+chariot, though. What is a chariot?"
+
+"I remember riding in one when I was a small boy," I answered; "and, by
+the same token, I had caught a number of locusts, and put them into my
+hat. I was invited to uncover, as the day was warm. When I did so, the
+locusts flew all about the closed-up carriage and into everybody's face.
+But chariots are old-fashioned now."
+
+Onward we passed along the South Head road, while below us lay the
+harbour with its multitudinous bays, inlets, promontories, and green
+knolls, in so many instances crowned with white-walled gardens,
+surrounding villas and mansions, all built of pale-hued,
+delicately-toned sandstone.
+
+"Oh! what a lovely, delicious bay!" cried Miranda; "and these are the
+Heads, where we came in. Good-bye, old ocean, playfellow of my
+childhood; farewell, wind of the sea, for a while. But I shall live near
+you still, and hear you in my dreams. I should die--I should feel
+suffocated--if nothing but woods and forests were to be seen."
+
+"If you don't die until you can't see the ocean, or feel the winds about
+here, you will live a long time, my dear," said the captain. "I don't
+know a more sea-going population anywhere than this Sydney one. Half the
+people you meet here have been a voyage, and the boys take to a boat as
+the bush lads do to a horse. But here we are at the Marahmee gates, and
+there's my pet Antonia on the verandah ready to receive us."
+
+As we drove up the avenue, which was not very long, a very pretty,
+graceful young woman came swiftly to meet us. I knew this must be Mrs.
+Neuchamp, formerly Antonia Frankston, the old man's only child. She was
+not grown up when I left Sydney, and I heard that she had lately married
+a young Englishman, who had come out with letters of introduction to Mr.
+Frankston. We had seen each other last, as boy and girl, long years ago.
+
+"Well, Captain Charley," she said, making as though she would have
+embraced the skipper, "what do you mean by being so long away? We began
+to think that you were lost--that the _Florentia_ had run on a reef--all
+sorts of things--been cut off by the islanders, perhaps. But now you
+_are_ back with all sorts of island stories to tell dad, and a few
+curios for me. And you are Mrs. Telfer! Papa has told me all about
+you--his latest admiration, evidently. But you mustn't get melancholy
+when he deserts you; he is a passionate adorer while it lasts, but is
+always carried away by the next fresh face, generally a complete
+contrast to the last. I am sure we shall be great friends. I used to
+dance with your husband when we were children. Do you remember that
+party at Mrs. Morton's? You have grown considerably since then, and so
+handsome, too, I suppose I may say--now we are all married--no wonder
+Miranda fell in love with you. You're to call me Antonia, my dear; and
+now come upstairs, and I'll show you your rooms which I have been
+getting ready all the morning. Papa and Ernest will be here in a few
+minutes."
+
+"Mrs. Neuchamp evidently takes after her father," I said, "who can say
+more kind things in fewer minutes than any one I ever knew--and do them,
+too, which is more to the purpose. I am so glad that Miranda has had the
+chance of making her acquaintance before she sees many other people."
+
+"She is a dear, good, unselfish girl," said the captain, "and was always
+the same from a child, when she used to sit on my knee in this very
+verandah, and get me to tell her the names of the ships. I never saw a
+child so thoughtful for other people, always wondering what she could do
+for them; she is just the same to this day. She will be an invaluable
+friend for our Miranda, I foresee. She can give her all sorts of hints
+about housekeeping, and I've no doubt one or two about dress and the
+minor society matters. Not that Miranda wants much teaching in that or
+any other way. Nature made her a lady, and gave her the look of a sea
+princess, and nothing could alter her."
+
+"Did you ever hear of a handsome young woman being spoiled by flattery,
+captain?" I said. "I don't want to anticipate such a disaster, but it
+strikes me that if you are all going to be so very complimentary, I
+shall have to go on the other tack to keep the compass level."
+
+"There are dispositions that flattery falls harmless from," said the
+captain solemnly; "there are women that cannot be spoiled,--not so many,
+perhaps, but you have got one of them, Antonia is another. They will
+make a good pair, and I'll back them to do their duty and keep a
+straight course, fair weather or foul, against any two, married or
+single, that I ever saw, and I've seen a good many women in my time. But
+now we had better be ready for dinner, for old Paul and Mr. Neuchamp
+will be here directly."
+
+They were not long in making their appearance, and a very merry dinner
+it was. Mr. Frankston wanted to hear all about the islands, and Mrs.
+Neuchamp was much interested in Captain Hayston, and thought he
+resembled one of the buccaneers of the Spanish Main, for whom she had a
+sentimental admiration in her girlhood.
+
+"What a pity that all the romantic and picturesque people should be so
+wicked!" she asked. "How is it, and what law of nature can it be that
+arranges that so many good and worthy people are so deadly
+uninteresting?"
+
+"Antonia is not quite in earnest, my dear Mrs. Telfer!" said Mr.
+Neuchamp, remarking Miranda's wondering look; "she knows well that it is
+more difficult to live up to a high ideal than to fall below it. There
+is a false glamour about men like Hayston, I admit, by which people who
+are swayed by feeling rather than reason are often attracted."
+
+"I am afraid that Captain Hayston was a wicked man," said Miranda,
+"though I can't get Hilary to tell me much about him. However, there
+were very different accounts, some describing him as being generous and
+heroic, and others as cruel and unprincipled."
+
+"Whatever he was, there was no doubt about his being a sailor every inch
+of him," said Captain Charley. "I saw him handle his ship in a gale of
+wind through a dangerous channel, and I never forgot it."
+
+"I suppose he had his faults like the rest of us," said Mr. Frankston,
+who did not seem inclined to pursue the subject. "Never mind, when
+Frankston, Telfer, and Co. get the control of the South Sea Island
+trade, there won't be any room for dashing filibusters, will there,
+Charley?"
+
+"I hope not; his day is over," said the captain. "I am sorry for him,
+too, for he was one of the grandest men and finest seamen God Almighty
+ever permitted to sail upon His ocean. Under a different star he might
+have been an ornament to the service and an honour to his country."
+
+After dinner we all sat out on the broad verandah, where we lighted our
+cigars, and enjoyed the view over the sleeping waters of the bay. It was
+a glorious night, undimmed by mist or cloud. The harbour lights flamed
+brightly, anear and afar, while steamers passing to the different points
+of the endless harbourage lighted up the glittering plain with their
+variegated lamps, as if an operatic effect were intended.
+
+"What a wondrous sight!" said Miranda. "It certainly is a scene of
+enchantment, though it loses some of its beauty in my eyes from being so
+restless and exciting. There is no solitude; all is motion and effort,
+as is the city by day. Our sea-view is as still and silent as if our
+island had just been discovered. It lends an air of solemnity to the
+night which this brilliant, many-coloured vision seems to want."
+
+"Antonia and I enjoy this sort of thing thoroughly," said Mr. Neuchamp;
+"our country is hot and dry as the summer comes on, and the glare is
+something to remember. But I must say I prefer the winter of the
+interior. The nights are heavenly, the mid-day warm without being
+oppressive, and the mornings are delightfully cool and bracing."
+
+"As weather it is as nearly perfect as it can be," assented Mrs.
+Neuchamp, backing up her husband. "Then the rides and drives on the firm
+sandy turf and the delightful natural roads! It's nice to think you can
+drive thirty or forty miles in any direction without going off your own
+run. Miranda must come and stay with me for a month or two when you get
+settled, Mr. Telfer. We must see if she can't be persuaded to leave the
+seaside for a while."
+
+"We'll make up a party," said Mr. Frankston; "it's a long time since I
+have seen any station life. I had half a mind to try squatting once
+myself. But I'm like Miranda--I don't sleep well unless I can hear the
+surge in the night; but for a month or two, in May or June, it would be
+great fun, and do us all good, I expect."
+
+"Yes, my dear dad," said his daughter, patting his shoulder, "think of
+the riding and driving. You're not too old to ride, you know. I'll lend
+you Osmond--he's my horse now, and he's a pearl of hackneys. I'll ride
+out with you, and Ernest can take Miranda and Courtenay in the
+four-in-hand drag."
+
+"Well, that's a bargain, my dear!" said her father. "When the summer is
+over and the autumn has nearly come to an end, and the nights and
+mornings are growing fresh and crisp, that's the time to see the
+interior at its best. I haven't forgotten the feel of a bush-morning at
+sunrise; there's something very exhilarating about it."
+
+"Is there not?" replied Mrs. Neuchamp, "'as you see the vision splendid,
+of the sunlit plains extended,' an ocean of verdure. You trace the river
+by the heavy timber on its banks, and the slowly-rising mists along its
+course. Then the sun, a crimson and gold shield against the cloudless
+azure, the cattle low in the great river meadows, you hear the crack of
+a stockwhip as the horses come galloping in like a regiment of cavalry,
+and the day has begun. It seems like a new world awakening to life."
+
+"I know a young woman," said her husband, "whose 'inward eye' by no
+means made 'the bliss of solitude' when she first went into the bush."
+
+"That was because I was newly married--torn away from my childhood's
+home, and all that," laughed his wife. "Besides, you used to stay away
+unconscionably long sometimes; now everything looks different. You will
+have to pass through that stage, my dear Miranda. So prepare yourself."
+
+"I am sure Hilary will never stay away from our home unless he is
+obliged; and then I must sew and sing till he comes back, like my
+countrywomen at Norfolk Island and Pitcairn when their men are at sea."
+
+"A very good custom, too," said Paul. "That reminds me that we must have
+some music to-night. Antonia will lead the way, and our cigars will
+taste all the better in the verandah."
+
+Mrs. Neuchamp had a fine voice and a fine ear. She had been well taught,
+and played her own accompaniments, while she sang several favourite
+songs of her father's, and a duet with her husband.
+
+"Now, it's your turn, Miranda," said Mr. Frankston. "I've heard all
+about you from the captain."
+
+"I shall be very glad to sing," she answered, seating herself at the
+piano, "if you care for my simple songs. I have always been fond of
+music, but our poor little harmonium was, for a long time, my only
+instrument. What shall I sing?"
+
+"Sing the 'Lament of Susannah M'Coy for her drowned lover,'" said the
+captain, "that was a song brought from Pitcairn, wasn't it? I always
+liked it the best of all the island sing songs."
+
+"It is simple," replied Miranda, "but it is true; I believe the poor
+girl used to sit by the sea-shore singing it at night, and died of grief
+a year afterwards."
+
+She struck a few chords on the grand Erard piano, and commenced a
+wailing, dirge-like melody, "a long, low island song," inexpressibly
+mournful. The movement was chiefly low-toned, and in the minor key, but
+at times it rose to a higher pitch, into which was thrown the agonised
+sorrow of irrevocable love, the endless regret, the void immeasurable
+and eternal, the hopeless despair of a desolated existence.
+
+The words were simple, and more in recitative than rhythm. There was a
+certain monotony and repetition, but as an expression of passionate and
+hopeless sorrow it was strangely complete.
+
+The tale was old as life and death, as love and joy, hope and despair.
+The maiden watching and waiting, during the voyage of the whaleship, the
+year long through. The sudden delight of the vessel being sighted; the
+boats going off; the intensity of the anxiety; the returning crew; the
+eager scanning of the passengers; the refusal to believe in mischance;
+the guarded half-told tale, then the unmistakable word of doom! _He had
+been drowned at sea_; the fearless, fortunate harpooner had, in the
+sudden flurry of the death-stricken whale, been thrown overboard and
+stunned. When the half-capsized boat was righted, Johnnie Mills was
+missing! They rowed round and round, all vainly, then sadly returned to
+the vessel. This was the tale they had to tell, the tale Susannah M'Coy
+had to hear. Her over-wrought feelings found relief in the "Maiden's
+Lament," and after her death her girl companions in singing it preserved
+the memory of the maiden and her lover, of his doom and her unhappy
+fate.
+
+There was nothing unusually melodious in the song itself, but as the
+low, rich notes of Miranda's voice struck on the ear of the listeners,
+those who had not heard before seemed spell-bound. Not a motion was
+made, not a sound escaped them, as they listened with an intentness
+which said far more than the ready and general praise at its close.
+Knowing, as I did, the extraordinary quality of her voice, I had
+expected that some such effect would be produced, but I hardly reckoned
+on such complete and universal admiration.
+
+When the cry of the heartbroken girl rose and echoed through the large
+room, the effect was electrical; the higher notes were sweet and clear,
+without a suspicion of hardness, and yet had wondrous under-tones of
+tears, such as I never heard in another woman's voice. Long before the
+wailing notes had faded into nothingness Mrs. Neuchamp's eyes were wet.
+While old Paul, Mr. Neuchamp, and the captain, seemed in no great hurry
+to express their approval.
+
+"That's the most wonderful song I ever heard," said the old man. "I've
+heard the girls in Nukuheva sing one something like it, and there are
+notes in Miranda's voice that take me back to my youth, the island days,
+and the good old times when Paul Frankston was young and foolish. God's
+blessing on them! Miranda! my dear, take an old man's thanks. I foresee
+that I shall have two daughters: one at Marahmee in the summer, and the
+other in the winter, when Antonia is in the bush."
+
+After this no one would hear of her leaving off. She sang other songs
+which were not all sorrowful. Some had a livelier tone, and the
+transient gleam which lit up the dark eyes told that mirth had its due
+place in her rich and many-sided nature.
+
+"Would you like to hear one of our hymns now?" she asked, with the
+simplicity of a child. "We used to sing them in parts, and many a night
+when the moon was at the full did we sit on the beach and sing for
+hours. I can hear the surge now, and it puts me in mind of our dear old
+home."
+
+"Oh, by all means," said Antonia, and without further prelude, she began
+a well-known hymn, the deep tones of her voice rising and falling as if
+in a cathedral, while the organ-like chords which she evoked from the
+Erard favoured the faultless rendering. We involuntarily joined in, and
+I saw Antonia looking admiringly at the singer, as with head upraised,
+and all the fervour of a mediaeval penitent, she poured forth a volume of
+melodious adoration.
+
+All were silent for some seconds after the last cadence had died away.
+At length the pause was broken by Antonia.
+
+"After that lovely hymn, my dear Miranda, let me first thank you warmly
+for the pleasure you have given us all, and then suggest that we retire.
+The gentlemen may stay and smoke a while longer, but this has been an
+exciting day for us, and you require rest. Besides, you have to make
+acquaintance with your new relations."
+
+"A sensible suggestion, my darling," said Mr. Frankston. "So we'll say
+good night to Mrs. Telfer and yourself. We must have one more cigar in
+the verandah while we think over that great song of hers."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was arranged between Mr. Frankston and the captain that I should take
+my bride to my old home on the morning after next, and present her to my
+family. It might have been thought that, after so long an absence from
+my parents, it would have been more in keeping with filial duty to have
+rushed off at once and, in a manner, cast myself at their feet like the
+prodigal. But that unlucky, yet eventually fortunate younger son, did
+not bring a wife with him, in which case the paternal welcome might have
+been less distinct. I had put myself in the hands of my more experienced
+friends, who, as men of the world, knew the value of first impressions.
+
+"You and Miranda will be all the better for a day's rest, and a little
+cheering up at Marahmee," had said the captain. "Antonia, too, will see
+that your sea princess is properly turned out, and fit to bear
+inspection by the ladies of the family. _They_ won't have much to
+criticise, I'll be bound. I'm an early man, so I'll go and breakfast
+with your father, and give him a general idea of your doings and
+prospects. You had better turn up about mid-day. It will be high tide
+then, and Miranda will see Isola Bella at its best. Come on board the
+_Florentia_ first, and I'll send you over in proper style."
+
+Acting upon this prudent advice, Miranda and I alighted from the
+Marahmee carriage at the Circular Quay, and once more set foot on board
+the _Florentia_, where we found the captain ready to receive us. He made
+us come down into the cuddy and partake of fruit and wine (that is,
+Miranda took the first and I the latter), while he gave us a sketch of
+his interview with my father.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+"OUR JACK'S COME HOME TO-DAY"
+
+
+"The old skipper was walking in the garden, glass in hand. I knew I
+should find him up, though it was soon after sunrise. No fear of _his_
+being in bed and the sun up. 'Hallo! Carryall,' he said, 'I was just
+thinking about you; thought I could make out the _Florentia_ yesterday.
+What sort of a voyage have you had, and what luck among the right
+whales?'
+
+"'Pretty fair. Rather longer out than I expected, but didn't do badly
+after all; had some trading among the islands; cocoa-nut oil has gone
+up, and the copra I got will pay handsomely.'
+
+"'That's good news,' he said; 'and look here, Carryall, my boy, I've
+been thinking lately that a very paying business might be put together
+by going in regularly for island trading. They're ready and willing to
+take our goods, and their raw material--oil, copra, fruit, ever so many
+things that they are only too glad to sell--would pay a handsome
+percentage on the outlay. What is wanted is a partner here with capital,
+a few ships to go regularly round the islands, and a manager who knows
+the language and understands the natives. If I were a little younger, by
+Jove! I'd go into it myself. You'll stay and breakfast with us of
+course. We're not late people. By the by you haven't heard of my boy in
+your travels, have you?'
+
+"'Well I _have_ heard of him, and--'
+
+"'Heard of him!' he said, not giving me time to get further; 'where?
+what was he doing?'
+
+"'Well, he was supercargo on board the _Leonora_--Hayston's brig. They
+had been at Ocean Island just before me.'
+
+"'Hayston, Bully Hayston?' the old man said, looking stern. 'I'm sorry
+he was mixed up with that fellow. A fine seaman, but a d--d scoundrel,
+from all I've heard of him; what were they doing there? However, I know
+young fellows must buy their experience. Perhaps he's left him by this
+time.'
+
+"'The _Leonora_ was wrecked in Chabral harbour,' I said, 'and her bones
+lie on the coral reef there. She'll never float again.'
+
+"'Ha! and did Hilary get off safe? I suppose it was a heavy gale. Heard
+anything of him since?'
+
+"'He stayed at Mout for some time,' I said, 'and then was lucky
+enough to get a passage to Sydney in the _Rosario_, but he left her at
+Norfolk Island.'
+
+"'Left her--left her--why the devil didn't he come on in her, and see
+his old father, and mother, and sisters? Hang the fellow, has he no
+natural feeling? Here have we been wearing our hearts out with anxiety
+all these years, and his poor mother having a presentiment (as she calls
+it) that he's drowned or sold into slavery, or something, and d--mn me,
+sir! the young rascal goes and stays to have a picnic at Norfolk Island!
+The next thing we'll hear, I suppose, is that he's married one of these
+Pitcairn Island girls. Not but what he might do worse, for I never saw
+such a lot of fine-looking lasses in my life, as I did the last time I
+was there; and as good as they are handsome, by George! But to stay
+there, so near home too! If I didn't know that he was a good boy, and as
+honest as the day, from his cradle upwards, I'd say he was an unnatural
+young-- But I won't miscall the lad. To stay there--'
+
+"'But he didn't stay there, captain.'
+
+"'What!' he roared, 'didn't stay there--went back to the islands, I
+suppose, to have a little more beach-combing and loafing? Why couldn't
+he have come home when he was so near? He _might_ have thought of his
+poor mother, if he didn't give _me_ credit for caring to see his face
+again.'
+
+"And here the old skipper frowned, and put on a terribly stern
+expression. 'Why, he might have come home and married a wife, and
+settled down and been the comfort of our old age.'
+
+"'So he has!' I said; 'that is, he is married, and he has come to
+Sydney.'
+
+"'Married? Come to Sydney? How can that be? Why isn't he here? Carryall,
+my boy, you wouldn't play a joke on an old man? No, sir! you wouldn't
+_dare_ to do it. How _could_ he come to Sydney and be married?'
+
+"'He came with me in the _Florentia_,' I said, 'and brought his wife with
+him.' And here, Miranda, my dear, I told him what a very unpleasant
+young woman you were, and took about a quarter of an hour to do it; at
+the end of which narration the breakfast bell rang.
+
+"'Come into the house, Carryall,' he said, 'and tell it all to his
+mother. I'll break it to her by saying that you bring news of Hilary,
+and that he's quite well, and so on, and likely to come home soon.'
+
+"So we went in. I shall never forget the look that came into your
+mother's eyes when the skipper said, 'Here's Captain Carryall straight
+from the islands; he's brought you girls some shells and curios as
+usual, and better than that, news of Hilary.'
+
+"'News of my boy, my darling Hilary! Good news, I hope. Oh, Captain
+Carryall! say it's good. Oh! _where_ is he, and what was he doing?'
+
+"'It is good news, my dear lady,' said I, 'or I should not have come
+over to tell you. I saw him quite lately as near Sydney as Norfolk
+Island.'
+
+"'Of course he was coming here--coming here; he would not have the heart
+to stay away from his poor father and mother any longer, when he was so
+near as that. And was he quite well? Oh! my boy--my precious Hilary!
+What would I not give if he were to come here and settle down for good?'
+
+"'He is thinking of doing so,' I said. 'His fixed intention was to marry
+and live in Sydney for the rest of his days.'
+
+"'Thank God! thank God in His mercy!' she said, clasping her hands. 'And
+do you think he will be here soon--how many weeks?'
+
+"'It will not be a matter of weeks, but days; I know that he took his
+passage in a certain ship, and that you may expect him every hour.'
+
+"Then she looked keenly at me. Your mother is a clever woman. She began
+to think I had been leading her on.
+
+"'You are not treating me as a child, Charles Carryall, are you? My son
+is here, and you have been afraid to tell me so. Is it not so?'
+
+"'Only a harmless deception, my dear Mrs. Telfer. Your son and his wife
+came here in my vessel. They stayed at Paul Frankston's last night, and
+will be here at mid-day.'
+
+"The dear lady looked as if she could not realise it for a moment, then
+sat back in her chair, and raised her eyes as if in prayer.
+
+"One of the girls moved as if to support her, but she waved her off.
+'No, my dear, you need not be afraid. I shall not faint; I have borne
+many things, and can bear this. I am returning thanks to our Almighty
+Father, who has restored my son to me. "My son, who was lost, and is
+found." My son, who was dead to me, and is now restored to life. Oh,
+God! most heartily and humbly do I thank Thee--most merciful--most
+loving!'
+
+"After this we were a very happy party. The girls, of course, wanted to
+know all about Miranda here"--here my darling smiled, and took his hand;
+"I dashed off a sketch, and some day you can ask Mariana and
+Elinor--both great friends of mine they are--if it is a good likeness."
+
+"I am afraid it was too good," sighed Miranda, "and they will be
+dreadfully disappointed."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The end of it was that we left the _Florentia_ at eight bells, in great
+state and majesty, in a whaleboat--upon which Miranda insisted,
+despising the captain's gig as a trumpery skiff--and a picked crew, with
+the skipper himself as the steer-oar.
+
+"That's really something like," she said, as she stepped lightly on to
+the thwart. "If there was a little swell on, I should feel quite myself
+again, and think of the dear days when I was a happy little island girl,
+bare-footed and bare-headed, and thought going off to a strange vessel
+through the great, solemn, sweeping rollers the wildest enjoyment. But I
+am a happy girl now," she added, with a look in her deep eyes which
+expressed a world of love and rich content; "only the thought of
+learning to be a lady sometimes troubles me."
+
+"You will never need to do _that_," I said.
+
+"There is the house?" I cried; "there's Isola Bella!" as we rounded a
+point, and a picturesque stone house came full into view. It had been
+built in the early days of the colony by an Imperial officer, long
+resident in Italy, and showed the period in its massive stone walls,
+Florentine facade, and wide, paved verandah. The site was elevated
+above the lake-like waters of the bay, towards which a winding walk led,
+terminating in a massive stone pier, into which iron rings and
+stanchions had been let. The beach was white and smooth, though the tide
+ran high, and the wavelets rippled close to the pale sandstone rocks,
+which lent a tone of delicacy and purity to the foreshore.
+
+The weather-stained walls of the house were half covered with climbers,
+a wilderness of tropical shrubs, and richly-blooming flower-thickets.
+There were glades interspersed, carpeted with the thick-swarded couch or
+"dhoub" grass, originally imported from India, and which, nourished by
+the coast showers, and delighting in a humid atmosphere, preserves its
+general freshness of colour the long Australian summer through.
+
+I had been so preoccupied with speculations as to Miranda's reception by
+my family, that my own emotions, on returning to my childhood's home,
+lay in abeyance. Now, however, at the near view of the house--the pier,
+the walled-in sea-bath--the scenes and adventures of my earliest youth
+came back with overwhelming force and clearness. There was the
+boat-house, into which I had paddled so many a time after nightfall,
+returning from fishing or sailing excursions. There was the flagstaff on
+which was displayed the Union Jack and other flags on great occasions.
+The old flag floated in the breeze to-day. I knew for what reason and
+celebration. I could see my mother, as of old, walking down to the pier
+to welcome and embrace, or to remonstrate and fondly chide when I had
+remained absent in stormy weather. How many fears and anxieties had I
+not caused to agitate that loving heart! And my stern and mostly silent
+parent--did I not once surprise him in scarce dignified sorrow at my
+night-long absence and probable untimely decease. Yet all his words
+were, "God forgive you, my boy, for the misery you have caused us this
+night."
+
+And now the years had passed--had flown rather, crowded as they were
+with incident--that had changed the heedless boy into the man,--matured,
+perhaps, by too early worldly knowledge, and the grim comradeship of
+danger and death. I had returned safely, bringing my sheaves with me in
+the guise of one dearer to me than life. I had, during the intervals of
+reflection I had lately enjoyed, repented fully of the unconsciously
+selfish sins of my youth, and was fixed in firm resolve to atone, so far
+as in me lay, by care and consideration in the future.
+
+As we dashed alongside of the pier, the years rolled back, and as of old
+I saw my mother pacing the well-known path to the boat. She was followed
+by my father at a short distance. I fancied that the dear form told of
+the lapse of time, in less firm step and the bent figure which age
+compels. My father was erect as ever, and his eye swept the far horizon
+of outer seas as of old; but surely his hair and beard were whiter.
+
+Miranda's step was first upon the pier--she needed no help in leaving or
+entering a boat. Side by side we walked to meet my mother, who, with a
+sob of joy, folded me in her arms. "My boy! my boy!" was all she could
+articulate for some moments; then, gently disengaging herself, "and this
+is my new daughter?" she said. "May God bless and keep you both, my
+children, and preserve for us the great happiness which His providence
+has ordained this day."
+
+"Well, neighbour!" in the well-remembered greeting which he affected,
+rang out here my father's clear tones, "and so you have finished your
+cruise for a while! What a man you have grown!" he exclaimed, as he
+looked upwards half-admiringly at my head and shoulders, markedly above
+his own. "Filled out, bronzed, you look a sailor, man, all over."
+
+"And so you wouldn't give the Sydney girls a chance, and have brought a
+wife back with you for fear there mightn't be a 'currency lass' to
+spare. I must say I admire your taste, my boy. No one can fault that.
+Welcome, my dear Miranda, to your own and your husband's home. Give your
+old father a kiss and the ceremony is complete." Here the governor
+gravely embraced his new daughter, and then, holding her at arm's
+length, regarded her admiringly, till she playfully ran back to the
+girls. "Charley here guarantees she is as good as she is handsome. He
+said better, indeed; but that's impossible. No woman with her looks
+could be better inside than out. So, Hilary, my boy, I congratulate you
+on your choice. You've fallen on your feet in love and friendship both,
+according to what Carryall tells me of Paul Frankston's partnership
+arrangement. And now we'll come up to the house and drink the bride's
+health. I feel as if I needed a refresher after all this excitement. I
+little thought when I saw Charley come over so early what was in store
+for us, eh, mother?"
+
+Before we reached the house the two girls, Mariana and Elinor, had taken
+possession of Miranda and carried her upstairs to the rooms which were
+to be allotted to us while we dwelt at Isola Bella. "Now that the other
+boys are up the country," said Mariana, who was the elder, "we have more
+houseroom than we need. So, directly we heard that you were in Sydney,
+Elinor and I set to work and arranged these two rooms, so that you and
+Miranda should be quite independent. There's such a pretty view of the
+harbour. You can use this one as a sitting-room, and there's a smaller
+dressing-room which he can make a den of. Men always like a place to be
+untidy in."
+
+"Oh, how nice it will be," said Elinor, the younger one, whom I remember
+a curly-headed romp of ten when I left home, "to have a mate for rowing
+and boat-sailing. Mariana here doesn't care for boats, and dislikes
+rough weather. I suppose no weather would frighten you. Oh, what lovely
+trips we shall have, and mother can't be nervous when you are with me."
+
+"I suppose you think Miranda is a sort of mermaid," said I, now arrived
+and joining in the conversation, "and impossible to be drowned. But what
+would become of me if anything happened to her? Do you think I can trust
+her with you? What a grand room! I remember it well in old days when it
+used to be the guest chamber. I was only allowed into it now and then,
+and always under inspection. I feel the promotion."
+
+"Now, we'll run away and leave you," said Mariana. "Lunch is nearly
+ready; you will hear the bell."
+
+We sat down on a couch and gazed into each other's eyes with clasped
+hands. The harbour, with its variously composed fleet, lay wide and
+diversified before us. Every conceivable vessel--barge, steamer,
+collier, skiff, yacht, and row-boat--made progress adown and across its
+waters. How fair a scene it was on this, one of the loveliest days which
+sun and sky and wavelets deep ever combined to fashion! After all my
+adventures by seas and lands--after all the sharp contrasts of my
+chequered life--now lotus-eating amid the groves or by the founts of an
+earthly paradise--now ignorant, from one day to another, of the hour
+when the death-knell would sound--now free and joyous, handsomely
+dressed, in foreign seaports with ruffling swagger and chinking
+dollars--anon ragged, shoeless, shipwrecked, and forlorn--nay, starving,
+but for the charity of the soft-hearted heathens whom we in our pride
+are prone to despise.
+
+And now I was at home again. Home! sweet home! in fullest sense of the
+word--welcomed, beloved, feted! What had I done to deserve this love and
+trust now so profusely showered upon me? My better angel, too, my
+darling Miranda, by my side, sharing in all this wealth of affection.
+How could I have foretold that such good fortune would be mine, all
+unworthy that I felt myself, when, bruised and bleeding, I was hurled
+ashore in the midnight storm from the wrecked _Leonora_?--when I felt
+in thought the deadly shudder which ever follows the scratch of the
+poisoned arrow--when I sank to eternal rest (as I then supposed) beneath
+the surf-tormented shore of the island? How had I jostled death,
+disease, danger in every form and shape,--and now, almost without
+thought or volition of my own, I was placed in possession of all those
+things for which through a long life so many men toil and struggle
+vainly and unsuccessfully.
+
+"Thank God! thank God!" I exclaimed aloud involuntarily, for truly our
+hearts were filled in that hour of realised peace and happiness with
+grateful wonder.
+
+"Let us give Him thanks," whispered Miranda, "who only has done this
+wondrous thing for us."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Captain Carryall, my father, and Mr. Frankston were men of action--all
+through their lives the deed had followed quick on the resolve. Thus,
+within a week after our arrival, premises were purchased on the shore of
+the bay; stores and warehouses were planned, while upon an office in the
+chief business centre of Sydney, at no great distance from Macquarie
+Square, a legend of the period presented the firm of "Carryall, Telfer,
+and Company, South Sea merchants and purchasers of island produce." This
+was the commencement, as it turned out, of a prosperous mercantile
+enterprise, ramifying in divers directions. It was arranged not only to
+purchase or to ship on commission the raw material so easily procurable,
+but to advance on whaling and trading ventures; the projectors, better
+equipped with experience than capital, being always willing to pay high
+interest, for which indeed the margin of profit amply provided. Here I
+was in my element, whether directing labourers, interviewing seamen,
+shouting in the vernacular to the native crews, or calculating the value
+of cargoes. My father came over every other day to watch me at my work,
+and of my style of management he was pleased to express approval. "You
+have not altogether wasted your time, my boy," he said one day. "The
+great thing in all these matters is energy. With that and reasonable
+experience a man is sure to be successful in a new country--indeed in
+any country. Pluck and perseverance mean everything in life. Never
+despair. You know our family motto--_Fortuna favet fortibus_. And you
+would smile if I told you how often in the history of my life a bold bid
+for fame or fortune has been my only resource."
+
+Whether I had exhibited the proverbial fortitude, or whether, indeed,
+the capricious goddess was mollified in my case, cannot with certainty
+be decided. The fact, however, was there, that our luck, from whatever
+cause, was in the ascendant, inasmuch as business of a profitable nature
+began to pour in upon us. The average gains beyond expenses were so
+apparent that it was evident that before long we should be in a position
+to set up housekeeping on our own account.
+
+In the mean time nothing could be more harmonious and satisfactory than
+our composite home life at Isola Bella, difficult as it is sometimes to
+arrange the housing of two families, however closely related, under one
+roof. The natural amiability of Miranda's nature fortunately prevented
+the slightest friction. Constitutionally anxious to please, it was the
+chief article of her simple faith to seek the happiness of others rather
+than her own. Prompt in compliance, eager to learn all minor matters
+with which she had been necessarily unacquainted, ready to join in the
+harmless mirth of the hour, or to tell of the wonders of her island
+home, she was, as all agreed, a constant source of interest and
+entertainment.
+
+More than all, her pervading, fervent, religious faith endeared her to
+the pious heart of my dearest mother, in whose visits to the poor and
+in charitable ministrations she was by choice her constant companion;
+while her unfeigned pity for the half-fed, half-clothed children of the
+neglected classes with which every city abounds excited my mother's
+wonder and admiration.
+
+"Your wife is a pearl of womanhood, my dear Hilary," she would say to
+me. "You are a good boy; I hope you are worthy of her. I can hardly
+think that any man could be. When you see the women so many men are
+fated to pass their lives with, you have indeed reason to be thankful."
+
+"So I am, my dear old mother," I would say. "Every day I feel minded to
+sing a song of joy and gratitude. I feel as life was a new discovery and
+creation. I am in a Paradise where no serpent that ever crawled has
+power to harm my Eve. I feel sometimes as if there was an unreal
+perfection about it all, too bright to last."
+
+So indeed it appeared to me at that time. Fully employed as I was by day
+and in the exercise of all the faculties that my island life had served
+to train, it was impossible to overtask the health of mind and body in
+which I revelled. I was sensible, too, that the joint enterprise upon
+which I had embarked was growing and improving daily, while much of its
+success was attributed by Mr. Frankston and Captain Carryall to my
+management. At night, when I returned there was one who never failed to
+catch sight of my skiff when half across the bay. Then our family
+evenings, cheered with song and harmless mirth, were truly restful after
+the labours of the day.
+
+Our neighbours, too, with all the old friends of the family, seemed
+desirous to welcome the son of the house who had been so long absent,
+and had wandered so far. Whether from curiosity, or a higher feeling,
+they were equally anxious to call upon "the son's wife." The positions,
+and dispositions, manners, and habitudes of the different types were
+well explained to Miranda by my socially-experienced sisters, so that
+she was saved from any misapprehension which might so easily have
+arisen.
+
+Our friends the Neuchamps, too, were often with us, and made the greater
+part of our quiet recreations. On alternate Sundays nothing would
+content Mr. Frankston short of our all dining with him, to be sent back
+in his sailing boat if the weather was favourable, or to remain for the
+night in the ample guest-chambers of Marahmee if otherwise.
+
+Our Saturday afternoons, indeed, were almost entirely devoted to picnics
+and cruises in his yacht, at which time he insisted upon Miranda
+steering, or, as he said, taking command, at which times he was always
+loud in admiration of her nautical skill--declaring, indeed, that she
+was fit to take charge of any vessel in Her Majesty's navy.
+
+We had also seen a good deal of our fellow passengers, Mr. and Miss
+Vavasour, who, after a first introduction, were always included in Mr.
+Frankston's Saturday picnic invitations. That lively damsel professed a
+great admiration for Mr. Frankston, who responded so promptly that
+Antonia reproached him for turning faithless to Miranda.
+
+"It's his nature, he can't help it," she said.
+
+"But Miss Vavasour will have some day to suffer whatever pangs are
+supposed to fall to the lot of the deserted fair; then she will repent
+of her fascinations."
+
+"Not at all--sufficient for the day, you know. I begin to think that
+one's admirers ought to be past their first youth. They're more
+thoroughly appreciative. 'On his frank features middle age Had scarcely
+set its signet sage,' and so on. I'm sure that quite describes Mr.
+Frankston. How should you like me for a mamma-in-law, Mrs. Neuchamp?
+Marahmee is such a dear house, and these yachting parties are all that
+are wanted to make life perfect."
+
+"I give my consent," said Antonia, "but beware of delay. 'Men were
+deceivers ever,' and if you wait more than a fortnight your charms will
+be on the wane, so I warn you."
+
+"I like decision," responded Miss Vavasour, "but perhaps 'two weeks,' as
+our American friend used to say, is _rather hurried_ legislation. The
+trousseau business and the milliner's objections would be fatal. Even
+Miranda must have stood out for a longer respite. How long did you take,
+Miranda, dear? You're the pattern woman, you know, the first girl I ever
+saw that men and women equally delighted to honour."
+
+Miranda blushed charmingly, then looking up with her clear, frank eyes,
+that always appeared to me to be fountains of truth, as she replied--
+
+"Hilary and I were married just a month after he asked me to be his
+wife, you know very well."
+
+So, jesting lightly, and with a breeze that sufficed just to fill the
+great sails of the yacht, we glided along until we had explored the
+recesses of Middle harbour,--a spacious inlet winding amid the thick
+growing semi-tropical forest which clothed the slopes of the bays and
+promontories to the water's edge.
+
+Here and there were small clearings in which might be discovered a tent
+or cabin, just sufficient for the needs of a couple of bachelors or a
+hermit, who here desired to live during his holiday amid this "boundless
+contiguity of shade"--"The world forgetting, and the world forgot."
+
+"Oh, how lovely!" said Mrs. Percival, as we swept round a point and came
+suddenly upon a fairy-like nook, a tiny bay with milk-white strand and
+fantastic sandstone rocks. There was a fenced enclosure around a cabin.
+There was a boat, with rude stone pier and boat-house. The owner, in
+cool garb and broad-leafed sombrero, was seated on a rock reading, and
+occasionally dabbling his bare feet in the rippling tide. As the yacht
+glided past in the deep water which came so close to his possessions,
+he raised his hat to the ladies, and resumed his studies.
+
+"What a picture of peace and restful enjoyment!" said Mrs. Craven. "How
+I envy men who can seclude themselves like this within an hour's sail
+from a city! Now, people are so fond of generalising about colonists,
+and how wrong they are! They always describe them as wildly energetic
+and restless people, perpetually rushing about in search of gain or
+gold."
+
+"That's Thorndale," said one of the younger guests. "He works hard
+enough at his business when he is about it, but his notion of enjoyment
+is to come here on a Saturday with only a boat-keeper, to fish, and
+read, and smoke till Monday morning, when he goes back to his law and
+his office."
+
+"Sensible fellow!" said the colonel. "There's nothing like tent life to
+recruit a man's health after a spell of official work. We used to manage
+that in India, when we couldn't go all the way to the hills, by forming
+small encampments of a dozen or twenty fellows, having a mess-house in
+common, and living in tents or huts separately when we were not hunting
+or shooting. Splendid life while it lasted! Sent us back twice the men
+we were, when we left the lines!"
+
+We anchored for lunch in one of the fairy nooks of which that enchanted
+region is so lavish. There was tea for the ladies and something
+presumably stronger for the seniors. We had mirth and pleasantries,
+spoken and acted--all went merrily in that charmed sunshine and beneath
+the shadowy sea-woods. We had songs--"A mellow voice Fitz Eustace
+had"--that is, one of the young fellows, native and to the manner born,
+lifted up his tuneful pipe and made us all laugh, the air he sang being
+certainly not "wild and sad,"--the reverse, indeed.
+
+"Now, is not this an ideal picnic,--a day rescued from that terrible
+fiend Ennui, that haunts us all?" cried Miss Vavasour. "I might
+truthfully, perhaps, except myself, who am frivolous, and therefore
+easily amused--but of course it sounds well to complain and be
+mysterious. But, really, this is life indeed! The climate makes up for
+any little deficiency. I shall positively go home and arrange my
+affairs, make sure of my allowance being paid quarterly, then take a
+cottage near Miranda, on that sweet North Shore,--isn't that what you
+call it?--and live happy ever afterwards like a 'maid of Llangollen.'"
+
+"Nothing can be nicer," said Mrs. Neuchamp. "We'll all three live here
+in the summer, within reach of the sea-breeze. In June you must come up
+and stay with me at Rainbar; then you will know what the glory of winter
+in our Riverina is like."
+
+The breeze freshened as we glided swiftly on our homeward course. We had
+expended most of the daylight before we left our fairy bower. Sunset
+banners flared o'er the western horizon. "White and golden-crimson,
+blue," fading imperceptibly into the paler tones, and swift-appearing
+shades which veil the couch of the day god. The stars tremulously
+gleamed at first timidly, then brightly scintillating in pure and
+clustered radiance. Our merry converse had gradually lessened, then
+ceased and died away. All seemed impressed by the solemnity of the
+hour--the hush of sea and land--the shimmering phosphorescent sparkle of
+the silver-seeming plain over which we swept all swift and silently.
+Then the lights of the city, brilliant, profuse, widely scattered as in
+a lower firmament!
+
+Miss Vavasour sat with Miranda's hand in hers. "How lovely to live in an
+hour like this, and yet it is like this with such surroundings that I
+should like to die."
+
+"Hush!" said Miranda, "we must all die when God wills it. It is not good
+to talk so, my dear."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+During the next week our good friends and fellow-passengers of the
+_Florentia_ were to leave us on their return voyage. We arranged to meet
+as often as we could manage the leisure, and, as it happened, there was
+to be a ball at Government House--one of the great functions of the
+season, which, it was decided, would be an appropriate conclusion to our
+comradeship. Mr. and Mrs. Neuchamp were going back to their station,
+Captain Carryall was under sailing orders, and our friends the Colonel
+and Mrs. Percival were leaving for India and "going foreign" generally.
+
+Miranda was not eager to attend the extremely grand, and, as far as she
+was concerned, strange entertainment. But the whole party were most
+anxious for her to make her appearance in public--at least on that
+occasion. Partly from natural curiosity, partly on account of my wishes,
+and my sisters' and Mrs. Neuchamp's strong persuasion, she
+consented--pleading, however, to be relieved from all anxiety on the
+score of her dress.
+
+"Oh! we'll take that responsibility," said Elinor. "Antonia Neuchamp is
+generally admitted to dress in perfect taste. We'll compose a becoming
+ball-dress amongst us or die--something simple and yet not wholly out of
+the fashion, and becoming to Miranda's style of beauty."
+
+"I'm afraid you'll make me vain," she answered, smiling. "What will you
+do if I spend all Hilary's money on dress? However, it must be a lovely
+sight. I have read of balls and grand entertainments, of course, and
+when I was a girl longed to be able to take part in them. Now that I am
+married," and here she gazed at me with those tender, truthful eyes, "I
+seem not to care for mere pleasure. It leads to nothing, you know."
+
+"You are going to be a pattern wife, Miranda, I see," said Mariana, my
+elder sister. "You must not spoil Hilary, you know. He will think he is
+the only man in the world."
+
+"And is he not for me?" she asked, eagerly. Then blushing at the quick
+betrayal of her inmost heart, she added, "Should it not be so? Are
+civilised people in a great city anxious to attract admiration even
+after they are married?"
+
+"There are people who do this and more in all societies, my dear," said
+my mother, with a seriousness which rebuked our inclination to smile at
+Miranda's ignorance of the world. "But do you, my dear child, cling fast
+to the faith in which you have been reared. You will neither be of them
+nor among them that follow the multitude to do evil."
+
+"I don't think there is as much evil in Miranda as would fill a
+teaspoon," said Elinor. "This isle of hers must have been a veritable
+Eden, or she must have come down from the moon, dear creature. You must
+be very good to deserve her, I can tell you, Master Hilary."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The day arrived, the night of which was to realise all manner of
+rose-coloured visions, in which the youth and maidens of Sydney had for
+weeks indulged. It was to be the ball of the season. The grand
+entertainment at which a royal personage, who had arrived in a
+man-of-war but recently, had consented to be present! The officers of
+the squadron were, of course, invited. They were gratified that the ball
+was fixed for a week previous to their sailing on an extended cruise
+among the islands. As it happened, too, the great pastoral section--the
+proprietors of the vast estates of the interior--were still at their
+clubs and hotels, not yet departed for their annual sojourn amid the
+limitless wastes of "The Bush." The _jeunesse doree_ of the city, the
+_flaneurs_, and civil servants who, like the poor, are "always with us,"
+were specially available. Lastly, the Governor's wife had openly stated
+that she wished to show her friends, the Percivals, what we could do in
+Sydney. And she was not a woman to fail in any of her undertakings.
+
+It was arranged that we should comply with Paul Frankston's imperious
+mandate, and meet at Marahmee early in the day for the greater
+convenience of driving thence to Government House, instead of taking
+steamboat from the North Shore. All our plans prospered exceedingly. The
+day was calm and fair; the night illumined by the soft radiance of the
+moon. We dined in great peace and contentment, the ladies having
+devoted--as it appeared to me--the greater portion of the afternoon to
+the befitting adornments of their persons. We were all in good spirits.
+I had reason indeed to be so, for that day I had concluded a highly
+profitable trade arrangement, which augured well for my future
+mercantile career.
+
+"What a glorious night!" said Paul Frankston. "Don't be afraid of that
+Moselle, Ernest, it's some of my own importing--a rare wine, as most
+judges think. Do you remember the ball we went to, Antonia, given by
+that fellow Schaefer? Such a swell he looked, and how well he did the
+thing! He has different quarters now, if all's true that we hear."
+
+"The poor Count!" answered Mrs. Neuchamp, "I can't help feeling sorry
+for him though he was an imposter. Is it really true that they put him
+in prison in Batavia? What a fate after such a brilliant career!"
+
+"Carryall was there last year and saw him. Got an order, you know, from
+the Dutch authorities. Said he was fairly cheerful; expected to be out
+in three years."
+
+"He was very near not being imprisoned in Batavia or anywhere else,"
+interposed Mr. Neuchamp, with some show of asperity. "If Jack Windsor
+had come up a little earlier in the fray we'd have broken the
+scoundrel's neck, or otherwise saved the hangman a task."
+
+"Now, Ernest, you mustn't bear malice," said his wife, reprovingly;
+"after all it was Harriet Folleton and not me whom he wished to carry
+off. It was an afterthought trying to make me accompany her. But 'all's
+well that ends well.' He has paid for his misdeeds in full."
+
+"Not half as much as he deserves," growled Neuchamp, who evidently
+declined to perceive the humorous side of the affair--the attempted
+abduction of an imprudent beauty and heiress, besides the
+ultra-felonious taking away of Miss Frankston, as she was then--as a
+pendant to a career of general swindling and imposture practised upon
+the good people of Sydney. Mr. Frankston's eyes began to glitter, too,
+at the reminiscence. So the conversation was changed.
+
+"I really believe that women never wholly repudiate admiration,"
+continued Mr. Neuchamp, reflectively, "however unprincipled and
+abandoned the 'first robber' may be. It's a curious psychical problem."
+
+"You know that is untrue, Ernest," quoth Mrs. Neuchamp, with calm
+decision. "Don't let me hear you say such things." An hour later our
+carriages had taken up position in the apparently endless line of
+vehicles which stretched along Macquarie Street and the lamplit avenues
+which led to it. After nearly an hour's waiting, as it seemed to me, we
+drove through the lofty freestone gateway which led to the viceregal
+mansion, and descended within the portico, amid a guard of honour and
+attendant aides-de-camp. Passing through a vestibule, and being duly
+divested of wraps in the cloak-rooms, we were finally ushered into the
+Viceroy's presence, and duly announced.
+
+Paul Frankston took the lead, with Miranda on his arm. I followed with
+Mrs. Neuchamp, whose husband escorted my sisters. As we were announced
+by name, I noticed that Colonel and Mrs. Percival, with a few other
+people of distinction, were standing on the dais, close to the Governor
+and Lady Rochester, the latter talking to a young man in naval uniform,
+whom I conjectured to be the Prince. As we approached I saw Mrs.
+Percival speak to Lady Rochester, who at once came forward and greeted
+us warmly. "Mr. Frankston," she said, "I know the Governor wishes to
+talk to you about the fortifications; will you and your party come up
+here and stay with us. And so this is Mrs. Telfer, the heroine of my
+friend, Mrs. Percival's romance! I am delighted to see her and
+congratulate you, Mr. Telfer, on bringing us such a sea princess for
+your bride. She has all the air of it, I declare."
+
+Miranda secured a seat near Mrs. Percival, who watched with pleasure her
+evident admiration, mingled with a certain awe, of the brilliant,
+unaccustomed scene before her. Much to her relief Miss Vavasour came up
+with the Cravens, and commenced a critical review of Miranda's and other
+dresses, which soon obliterated all trace of timidity and strangeness.
+
+"Well, my princess," began Miss Vavasour, "and how does this gay and
+festive scene strike you? Isn't it a fairy tale--a dream of the _Arabian
+Nights_? Don't you expect to see the fairy godmother come when the clock
+strikes twelve, and your carriage turn into a pumpkin and white mice?"
+
+"It is a scene of enchantment," said Miranda. "I hardly expected
+anything so dazzlingly beautiful. How the naval uniforms seem to light
+up the throng, and the soldiers too. I don't wonder at all the pretty
+things we read about them in books."
+
+"Yes, they do strike the unaccustomed eye," said Miss Vavasour. "I wish
+I saw them for the first time. I'm afraid I'm growing old. Oh! my
+coming-out ball! I didn't sleep for a week before in anticipation of
+delicious joy, or a week after in retrospection. Ah! me, my youth is
+slipping away unsatisfied, I much fear. And now, unless my eyes deceive
+me, we are going to have the first quadrille. Miranda, we must show
+these good people that we dance in our island. How about partners and a
+_vis-a-vis_?"
+
+We were not left long in doubt. One of the aides-de-camp, a gorgeous
+apparition in gold and scarlet, came up bowing, and intimated his Royal
+Highness' wish to dance with Mrs. Telfer. This, of course, was
+equivalent to a command. I looked for some indecision or hesitation on
+the part of Miranda. But it appeared to her evidently just as much a
+part of the proceedings as if (as had happened before) she had been
+asked to dance with the captain of a man-of-war at one of their island
+fetes, where waltz, quadrille, and polka had long been familiar. I had
+provided myself with an enviable partner in the shape of Mrs. Neuchamp;
+and her husband having promptly arranged matters with Miss Vavasour, we
+betook ourselves to the next set, where we had a full view of the
+viceregal party. My sisters had apparently no difficulty in deciding
+between several aspirants for their respective hands, as they and their
+partners helped to make up the set.
+
+When the melodious crash broke forth, in commencement from Herr
+Koenigsmark's musicians, recruited from an Austrian military band which
+had visited Australia, a murmur of admiration made itself audible, as
+the Prince and his partner stepped forth in the opening measure of the
+dance. I turned my head and was lost in astonishment as I noticed the
+unconscious grace with which Miranda moved--calm as when rivalling the
+fairies in rhythmic measure on a milk white beach beside the moonlit
+wave. How many a time had I watched her!
+
+"Who in the world is that lovely creature dancing with the Prince?" I
+heard a middle-aged dame behind me ask. "She has a foreign appearance,
+and I think she is the most exquisitely beautiful woman I ever saw in my
+life. What a figure, too! How she smiles, what teeth, what eyes! Is
+there any news of a migration of angels? Such strange things happen
+nowadays on account of electricity and all that. Who and what is she,
+Mary Kingston, again I ask you?"
+
+"My dear Arabella!" answered the other dame, evidently one of the
+aristocracy of the land, "you are so enthusiastic! She came with the
+Frankston party. That's her husband quite close to us, dancing with Mrs.
+Neuchamp. He's the son of Captain Telfer of North Shore, and has been
+away among the islands and nobody knows where for ever so long. He
+married her at Norfolk Island. I believe she is one of those wonderful
+Pitcairn people that we hear such good accounts of."
+
+"H'm; he's a young man of distinctly good taste, I must say. I wish my
+Cavendish had gone to the islands too, if that is the sort of girl they
+grow there. Mrs. Percival seems to be a great chum of hers. How did that
+come about?"
+
+"I believe they came back in the _Florentia_ together. Captain Carryall
+touched at Norfolk Island on the way from Honolulu, and it seems that
+Mrs. Percival's little boy fell overboard on the voyage, and the girl
+was into the sea after him like a shot, and swam with him in her arms
+till the boats came. There was something about a shark too. Mrs.
+Percival tells everybody she saved his life. No wonder she raves about
+her."
+
+"What a pearl of a girl! No wonder, indeed! And to think of her having a
+world of courage and fire in her with all that delicacy and beauty. I
+can't take my eyes off her. The Prince admires her, apparently, too; and
+she smiles like a pleased child, with as little thought of vanity or
+harm, I dare swear, as a baby. She ought to be a princess, no doubt of
+it. So I see it's the last figure. I must go and look up my old friend,
+Paul Frankston, and make him tell me all about her."
+
+After the dance and the usual promenade, Mrs. Neuchamp and I recovered
+our respective spouses, and took the opportunity to make a detour of the
+ball-room, and even to go through the next apartment, where refreshments
+were procurable, into the ample gardens. The night was superbly
+beautiful. The full moon lit up the grove of tropical foliage and
+richly-flowering plants, the glades carpeted with velvet lawn, the wide
+sea-plain traversed by shimmering pathways of silver. Below, in the
+sleeping bay, lay several men-of-war, half in shadow, half illuminated
+with coloured lamps hanging from their rigging. Gay and mirthful, grave
+or earnest, the frequent partners passed to and fro like shadows of
+revellers beneath the moon, or turned to the lower paths to gaze at the
+motionless vessels, the silver sea, the whispering wave. It was an
+ecstatic experience, a fairy pageant, a supernal revelation of an
+enchanted landscape.
+
+Miranda pressed my arm. "Oh, Hilary! how lovely all this is! But you
+must not laugh at me. Now that I have seen it, I do not think I shall be
+anxious to follow it up. There is something almost intoxicating about it
+all. I can imagine it unfitting people for their everyday life."
+
+We had hardly returned to the ball-room when the glorious strains of the
+"Tausend und einer nacht" waltz pealed forth from the band, and hurrying
+and anxious swains in search of their partners, not always easy to
+discover in such a crush, were seen in every direction. Instant request
+was preferred to Miranda by a naval officer high in command, but to my
+surprise, as we had not spoken on the subject, she graciously, but
+firmly, declined the honour. He protested, but she quietly repeated her
+negative: "I only dance round dances with my husband, Captain Harley!
+and, indeed, these not very often."
+
+He was inclined to be persistent, though most courteous. "I am sure you
+used to dance them once. Indeed, I heard such an account of your
+waltzing, Mrs. Telfer."
+
+"That was before I was married, Captain Harley!" she replied, with such
+evident belief that this explanation fully answered every objection that
+neither the captain nor I could help smiling.
+
+"Look at your friend, Mrs. Neuchamp!" he said, as that dainty matron
+came gliding past with a military partner, looking like the very
+impersonation of the waltz, "and Mrs. Craven, and Mrs. Percival."
+
+"I am so sorry that I can't comply," she answered. "They are quite right
+to dance waltzes if they please. I do not care for them now, and am only
+going to have one with Hilary to-night. He is fond of it, I know. I will
+dance the Lancers with you, if you like."
+
+"Anything with _you_," murmured the captain gallantly, as he carefully
+wrote her name on his card, and departed to secure a partner for the yet
+unfinished portion of the dance.
+
+"I see by this lovely programme," she said, "that there is another
+waltz, a polka, and then the Lancers, which I used to know very well;
+and after that I will dance the next waltz with you, Hilary, just to
+feel what this wonderful floor is like. You are not angry with me for
+refusing Captain Harley? I really feel as if I _could_ not do it."
+
+"You can follow your own way, my dear!" I said, "in this and all minor
+matters. It concerns you chiefly; and, considering how many husbands
+think their wives are rather too fond of dancing, I shall certainly not
+quarrel with mine for not caring for it enough."
+
+I was not altogether without interest as to this set of Lancers which
+she had promised to the gallant captain of the _Arethusa_, knowing as I
+did that the fashion had changed considerably since the Lancers was a
+decorous, somewhat dull dance, differing from the quadrille only in a
+more complicated series of evolutions, and, like that very proper
+performance, affording much opportunity for conversation. Not intending
+to take part in it myself, and being, indeed, more than sufficiently
+entertained as a spectator of the novel spectacle, I stationed myself
+near the "tops," one couple of which Miranda's partner elected to be. I
+saw by the composition of the set, and the looks of some of the youths
+and maidens who eagerly took their places with their pre-arranged
+_vis-a-vis_, that the pace would be rapid and the newest variations
+introduced.
+
+I provided, therefore, for a _contretemps_. My younger sister having
+professed herself tired with the previous waltz, had declined the
+invitation of a partner not wholly acceptable as it appeared to me. I
+therefore persuaded her to walk up with me to a seat near Miranda, so
+that we, as I explained, might see how she got on.
+
+What I anticipated exactly came to pass. The first few non-committal
+quadrille steps were got through without unusual display, but when
+Miranda saw the damsel next to her leaning back as far as she could
+manage, while her partner swung her round several times, as if he either
+wished to lift her entirely off her feet, or drag her arms out of the
+sockets, a look of amazement overspread her features. She stopped with a
+startled air, commingled with distaste, and saying to her surprised
+partner, "I cannot dance like this--I did not know--why did no one tell
+me?"--walked like a queen to the nearest seat. Now my foresight came in.
+Knowing that a girl of nineteen would be willing to dance with a naval
+officer of the rank and fashion of Captain Harley, if she was ready to
+drop with fatigue, I said promptly, "Allow me to introduce you to my
+sister Captain Harley, who will, I am sure, be happy to take my wife's
+place;" a look of joyful acquiescence lit up her countenance, and before
+any serious hitch took place in the figure the vacancy was filled.
+
+I fancied that my sister Elinor, who was at the age when girls are not
+disinclined for a little daring frolic out of pure gladsomeness,
+performed her part in the figures with somewhat less unreserve after
+noticing the look of quiet surprise with which Miranda observed some of
+the more vivacious couples.
+
+We contented ourselves, when the next series of waltzes commenced, with
+a single dance, which we enjoyed as thoroughly as the perfection of
+floor, music, and surroundings warranted.
+
+"Oh, what a floor!" said Miranda; "if I were as fond of dancing as I
+used to be, I could dance all night; and such music! Quite heavenly, if
+it is not wicked to say so. And there is the sea, too, with the
+moonlight on it as in old days! We have been taken to an enchanted
+castle!
+
+"But there is something different. I can hardly describe my feelings.
+Why, I cannot explain, but going back to dancing now for the mere
+pleasure of it, when I have entered upon the serious duties of life,
+appears like returning to one's childish passion for dolls and
+playthings."
+
+"And yet, how many married people of both sexes are dancing now, not
+with each other either."
+
+"I see them, and I wonder. I am not surprised at married men dancing--if
+they like it. If they come at all, they may as well do so as sit down
+and get weary. But I think the married women should leave the round
+dances to the girls."
+
+"Would not balls be rather slow if the married women only danced
+squares?"
+
+"I don't see why. Yet many of the girls have no partners--wall-flowers,
+I think you call them. And that is hardly fair, surely."
+
+As this dance only came before supper, which was now near at hand, we
+danced it out. I hardly noticed until the music closed how many of the
+other couples had stopped, or that quite a crowd had collected around
+us. This was a tribute, I found, to Miranda's performance, which had an
+ease and grace of movement such as I never saw any living woman possess.
+She hardly seemed to use the ordinary means of progression. Hers was a
+half-aerial motion, in time to every note and movement of the music,
+while the rhythmic sway and yielding grace of her figure presented the
+idea of a mermaiden floating through the translucent waves rather than
+that of a mortal woman.
+
+As she swayed dreamily to the wondrous music of "Tausend und einer
+nacht," her head thrown slightly back, her parted lips, her wondrous
+eyes, her faultless form so impressed the by-standers with the ideal of
+supreme beauty, that they scarce repressed an audible murmur as the
+music ceased and the dance came to an end.
+
+When supper was announced there was the usual crush, but before the
+doors were opened a few of the more favoured guests, including the
+Frankstons and ourselves, were conducted by one of the aides-de-camp to
+a place near the viceregal party. Miranda was taken possession of by
+another of our naval friends, who seemed to think that they had special
+claims upon her, as having knowledge of her island home. I was requested
+to take in our good friend and fellow-voyager Mrs. Percival, who was
+more warm and effusive in praise of Miranda than I ever thought possible
+before her child's danger broke through the crust of her ordinary
+manner. Now nothing could have been more sisterly and unreserved than
+her tone and expression.
+
+"It has been quite a luxury to all of us to look on at that wonderful
+darling of a wife of yours dancing! The whole room, including Lady
+Rochester, was in ecstasies, I assure you. You came in for your share of
+compliments also, which I mustn't make you vain by repeating. How
+exquisitely, how charmingly she does dance! I have seen some of the best
+_danseuses_ in Europe and India--on and off the stage--and not one
+worthy to be named with her. She is a dream of grace--the very poetry of
+motion. I said so before to-night, and now every one agrees with me. It
+is rather a disappointment in some quarters that she declines to dance
+except with you. It would seem odd for some people, but being the woman
+she is I understand it."
+
+"She is free to follow her own course socially," I said. "She will soon
+decide upon her line of action, and will not be turned from it by
+outside influence. Fortunately she and my mother are much in harmony as
+to leading principles, which relieves my mind considerably."
+
+"You are fortunate in that, then, as in several other respects; may I
+add that I think you worthy of your good fortune. I trust that my boy's
+simple prayers for your welfare--and he prays for you both every
+night--may be answered."
+
+Just before the conclusion of the supper I saw that Miranda had been
+presented to his Excellency the Governor, who was standing near the
+Prince. Both of these personages were most complimentary and flattering
+in their attention to her, and when we left, as we had arranged,
+immediately after that most important function supper, leaving the girls
+to go home with Mr. and Mrs. Neuchamp, we were gratified to think that
+we could not have been more graciously received--treated even with
+distinction--and that nothing had occurred to detract in the slightest
+degree from the unwonted pleasure and modest triumph of the night.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After this, our first experience of "society," in the higher sense of
+the word, unexpectedly agreeable, as it had been, Miranda's fixed
+resolve, in which I fully concurred, was to detach ourselves from it and
+its code of obligations, except at rare intervals--to live our own
+lives, and to trouble ourselves as little as might be with the tastes
+and fancies of others.
+
+I was likely to have my time fully occupied in the development of my
+business. Miranda had, partly from observation, partly from information
+supplied by my mother and sisters, discovered that there was even in
+prosperous, easy going, naturally favoured Sydney a section of ill-fed,
+ill-clothed, ill-taught poor. "While I meet them daily, such as I never
+saw on our island, I cannot occupy myself with the vanities of life." My
+mother was delighted to find a daughter willing to co-operate with her
+in the benevolent plans of relief which she was always organising for
+the poor and the afflicted. Between them a notable increase of
+efficiency took place in the management of children's hospitals,
+soup-kitchens, and other institutions, commonly regarded with
+indifference, if not dislike, by the well-to-do members of society.
+Outside of these duties, our chief pleasure at the end of the week, when
+only we could afford the time, was a cruise in our sailing boat the
+_Harpooner_, which soon came to be known as one of the fastest in the
+harbour, as well as one that was rarely absent from the Saturday's
+regatta, when a stiff breeze was sending the spray aloft.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Our life henceforth was that of the happy nations "that have no
+history." My business prospered, and as it largely increased and
+developed from its original proportions, Captain Carryall began to tire
+of his voyages and settled down on shore.
+
+Within a year of the founding of our commercial enterprise one of the
+ideal houses we had so often pictured came into our possession. In an
+afternoon stroll, Miranda and I had ventured into a deserted garden,
+lured by the masses of crimson blooms on a great double hibiscus. The
+heavy entrance-gate was awry--the stone pillars decaying--the avenue
+weed-grown and neglected--the shrubberies trodden down and disfigured by
+browsing cattle. Exploring further behind a screen of thick-growing
+pines, we found the house,--a noble, wide-balconied freestone building,
+which I well remembered in my boyhood. Then it was inhabited, carefully
+tended, and ringing with the voices of happy boys and girls in
+holiday-time. What blight had fallen on the place, or on the pleasant
+family that once dwelt there? On the north-eastern side the land sloped
+down to a little bay, sheltered from the prevailing wind, and provided
+with pier and boat-house--all marine conveniences, in short. "Oh! if we
+had a house like this," said Miranda, clapping her hands, "how happy we
+should be! Not that I am otherwise now; but I should enjoy having this
+for our own. We could soon renovate the poor garden." I assented, but
+said nothing at the time--resolved to take counsel of our good friend
+and trusted adviser then and now--who else but Paul Frankston?
+
+From him I learned the history of the house and its old-time inmates.
+Some were dead and some were gone. The story was long. The gist of it
+was, however, that it was now in the hands of certain trustees for the
+benefit of the heirs-at-law. "I think I can find out about it," he
+concluded. "And now come down and look at my little boat. I've had some
+painting and gilding done lately; I want you all--father, mother,
+sisters, wife, and everybody--to come for a sail next Saturday. I'm
+going to have a race with Richard Jones to the Heads and back, and I
+want your wife to steer. Then we'll win, I'm sure, and we'll call in at
+Edenhall--that's the name of the old place you saw--been its name for
+fifty years or more--and we'll have another look at it."
+
+I said "Yes, by all means."
+
+The next Saturday proved to be a day specially provided by the gods for
+boat-sailing. The wind was in the right quarter, the weather fine. The
+_Sea-gull_ swept across the harbour like a veritable sea-bird, spreading
+her broad wings. The whole party had punctually assembled at our jetty
+after an early lunch. The breeze freshened as the day wore on; we had
+our friendly race against an old comrade of Mr. Frankston's--like him,
+not all ignorant of the ways of those who go down to the deep in
+ships--which we won handsomely, thanks to Miranda's steering, as Paul
+loudly averred. And that young woman herself, as the _Sea-gull_ went
+flying past her sister yacht in the concluding tack, lying down "gunnel
+under," with every inch of canvas on that she dared carry, was as eager
+and excited as if she had been paddling for her life in one of the canoe
+races of her childhood.
+
+We got back to Neutral Bay in time for afternoon tea, a little later
+than the established hour. But instead of having it on board, Paul
+proposed to have it at Edenhall, where he said he had permission to go
+whenever he pleased. He had arranged with the caretaker too.
+
+We landed at the long unused pier. "How many times have I been here
+before, in poor old Dartmoor's time," said Mr. Frankston, "and how many
+a jolly night have I spent within those old walls! Well, well! time goes
+on, and our friends, where are they? Life's a sad business at best.
+However, we can't make it better by crying over our losses. Ladies and
+gentlemen, follow me!"
+
+With a sudden change of tone and manner, Paul stepped briskly along the
+upward winding path, long unused, which led to the house. The hall door
+stood open, and passing along a noble hall and turning to the right, we
+entered a dining-room of fine proportions. In this was an improvised
+table on trestles whereon was spread a tempting collation. Two men
+servants, whom I recognised as the Marahmee butler and footman, stood
+ready to serve the company. A needful amount of sweeping and repair had
+been effected. The windows had been cleaned, and a fine view of the bay
+thereby afforded. Altogether the effect was as striking as it was
+unexpected; a general exclamation broke from the company.
+
+"Ladies and gentlemen," said Paul, "I have prepared a surprise for you,
+I know; but oblige me by making yourselves at home for the present, and
+dining with me in this informal fashion--I will explain by and by."
+
+The day was nearly spent. It would probably be near the time of
+twilight, which in summer in Australia is nearer nine o'clock than
+eight, before we reached our homes. So the majority of the guests hailed
+the idea as one of Paul's eccentric notions with which he was wont to
+amuse his intimates. The Marahmee champagne was proverbial, and after a
+reasonable number of corks had been drawn a progressive degree of
+cheerfulness was reached. Paul rose to his feet, and requested the usual
+solemnities to be observed, as he was about to propose a toast. "Those
+of my friends who have been here before, in its happier times, will
+remember the former owner of this once pleasant home. Little is left now
+save the evidences of decay and desertion--the memories of a long past
+happy day. But there is no reason why it should not be again inhabited,
+again be filled with pleasant and pleasure-giving inhabitants. It is
+solid and substantial; if somewhat old-fashioned, all the better I say.
+There was no jerry building in the old days. The garden is here--to be
+easily renewed in beauty--the jetty, and the boat-house. The sea is
+here, much as I remember when as a boy I used to get 'congewoi' for bait
+off those very rocks."
+
+"Hear, hear!" from the guests, and Mr. Richard Jones.
+
+"And now I come to a piece of news which I am sure you will hear with
+pleasure. The house and grounds have been purchased by a young friend of
+mine, whose health, with that of his charming wife, I now ask you to
+drink with all the honours. The health of Mr. and Mrs. Telfer, their
+long life and prosperity! and may we all have many as pleasant a sail
+round the harbour as we have had to-day, and come here to enjoy
+ourselves at the end of it."
+
+The applause which followed was tumultuous. Paul has sprung a surprise
+upon his guests with a vengeance. I was as much astonished as anybody;
+for though I knew that he had promised to make inquiries about the price
+put upon the property, I had no idea that he would go further in the
+matter, still less that he would purchase it on my account, as it was
+evident that he had done.
+
+I said a few words, chiefly to the effect that it seemed to me quite
+unnecessary to go through the form of exerting myself for my advancement
+in life, as my friends, Mr. Frankston and Captain Carryall, were bent on
+making my fortune for me. I trusted to prove not wholly unworthy of such
+unselfish friendship, and thanking them all in the name of my wife and
+myself, trusted that a meeting like this would often conclude a happy
+day such as we had just completed. As for Miranda, she went up to the
+old man, and placing her hand in his, looked up into his face with an
+expression of heartfelt gratitude, which hardly needed the addition of
+her words: "You have made us both perfectly happy--what can I say? My
+heart will not let me speak. We have nothing to wish for now in this
+world."
+
+The old man looked at her with an expression of mingled admiration and
+paternal affection. "I have two daughters now," he said, "and two sons;
+I was always wishing to have another pair, to gossip with when Antonia
+and Ernest were away. Now I have found them I am sure. The only thing we
+want now is another boat."
+
+Miranda's eyes glistened at the allusion, and she looked as if she was
+only prevented, by a half-instinctive doubt as to the fitness of the
+occasion, from embracing Paul before the assembled company.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Years have passed since that day. Children's voices have long since
+echoed in the wide verandahs and amid the shrubberies of Edenhall. The
+house, thoroughly renovated, is one of the most comfortable, if not the
+most aristocratic, of the many embowered mansions which look over the
+Haven Beauteous.
+
+My boys have been "water babies" from earliest childhood, and we can
+turn out a crew not easy to beat, particularly when their mother can be
+persuaded to steer. My girls have inherited a large proportion of their
+mother's fearless spirit, though people say not one has equalled her in
+beauty. Their partners in the dance, however, appear to consider them
+sufficiently good-looking, if one may judge by the competition which
+their appearance at balls usually produces.
+
+Our business, always aided by the cool heads and steady courage of the
+senior partners, has increased, with the growth of the city of Sydney
+and the development of the island trade, beyond all hope and
+expectation. I am a rich man now, and, indeed, somewhat in danger of the
+occasional mood of discontent with the uneventful, unvarying tide of
+success upon which life's barque appears ever to float. But one look at
+Miranda's face, serenely happy in her children, in her daily life of
+charity and almsgiving, in the devoted love and trust of my parents, is
+all-sufficient to banish all vagrant ideas.
+
+Sometimes, in the train of unbidden fancies which throng the portals of
+the mind, the scenes and sounds of a far clime claim right of audience.
+Again I see the paradisal woodland, the mysterious mountain forest, the
+ceaseless moan of the billow upon the reef sounds in my ear; while
+forms, now fair, now fierce, flit, shadow-like, across the scene. I hear
+again the soft voices of the island girls as in frolic race they troop
+to beach or stream. I see the sad, bright eyes of Lalia, or mark the
+fierce regard of Hope Island Nellie as she stands with bared bosom full
+in the track of the deadly arrow flight. I hear the lion roar of Hayston
+as he quells a mutiny, or towers, alone and unarmed, above a crowd of
+hostile islanders. I shudder in thought at the dangers which I have
+escaped. Once more sounds from afar the weird voice of the tempest in
+the midnight wreck of the _Leonora_. Lastly, the harbour lights
+disappear as I sit in my cane lounge in the verandah of Edenhall, and in
+place of the wooded heights and distant city I see the breakers upon the
+reef of Ocean Island, and discern a solitary figure in the stern of a
+small boat sailing out into the illimitable gloom; I fall a musing upon
+the mysterious problems of Fate--of man's life and the strange
+procession of circumstance--until the hour strikes and I retire. Yet my
+thoughts are still dominated by the majestic figure of the Captain,
+grand in his natural good qualities, grand in his fearless courage, his
+generosity, his friendship--grand even in his vices. He was not without
+resemblance to a yet more famous corsair, immortalised by the poet--
+
+ Who died and left a name to other times,
+ Link'd with one virtue and a thousand crimes.
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Notes
+
+The macrons in words like "L[a]lia" and "Mo[u]t" have been removed.
+
+The following corrections to spelling or punctuation have been made:
+
+ Page 59 Added missing period "."
+ Page 119 "Utwe" corrected to "Utwe"
+ Page 128 "for'rard" corrected to "for'ard"
+ Page 129 "Likiak Sa" corrected to "Likiak Sa"
+ Page 135 "beeches" corrected to "beaches"
+ Page 142 "Likiak Sa" corrected to "Likiak Sa"
+ Page 171 "turtle" corrected to "turtles"
+ Page 174 "Tulpe" corrected to "Tulpe"
+ Page 196 Added missing period "."
+ Page 205 "courier" corrected to "courrier"
+ "filibustier" corrected to "flibustier"
+ Page 232 "itelf" corrected to "itself"
+ Page 309 "brough" corrected to "brought"
+
+Instances of inconsistent hyphenation have been left intact.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of A Modern Buccaneer, by Rolf Boldrewood
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A MODERN BUCCANEER ***
+
+***** This file should be named 35431.txt or 35431.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/5/4/3/35431/
+
+Produced by David Edwards, Erica Pfister-Altschul and the
+Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+(This book was produced from scanned images of public
+domain material from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
+https://gutenberg.org/license).
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org.
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
+https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at
+809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
+business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact
+information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
+page at https://pglaf.org
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit https://pglaf.org
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including including checks, online payments and credit card
+donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ https://www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/35431.zip b/35431.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..2e2bb65
--- /dev/null
+++ b/35431.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..3ee46b5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #35431 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/35431)