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+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.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #55780 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/55780)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Strife of the Sea, by T. Jenkins Hains
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Strife of the Sea
-
-Author: T. Jenkins Hains
-
-Release Date: October 20, 2017 [EBook #55780]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STRIFE OF THE SEA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Charlie Howard and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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-
-
-[Illustration: IN THE WAKE OF THE WEATHER CLOTH.--See Pages 305-320.]
-
-
-
-
- THE STRIFE
- OF THE SEA
-
- T. JENKINS HAINS
-
- AUTHOR OF “THE WIND-JAMMERS,” ETC.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK
- THE BAKER & TAYLOR CO.
- _33-37 East Seventeenth St., Union Sq., North_
-
-
-
-
-Copyright, 1903, by THE BAKER & TAYLOR CO.
-
- Copyright, 1901 and 1902, by HARPER & BROS.
- Copyright, 1902 and 1903, by THE SUCCESS CO.
- Copyright, 1902 and 1903, by THE INDEPENDENT.
- Copyright, 1903, by THE BUTTERICK PUB. CO. (LTD.)
-
-_Published October, 1903._
-
-
-
-
-TO
-
-ROBERT MACKAY
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: CONTENTS]
-
-
- PAGE
- THE OLD MAN OF SAND KEY, 11
-
- THE OUTCAST, 37
-
- THE SEA DOG, 77
-
- THE CAPE HORNERS, 101
-
- THE LOGGERHEAD, 135
-
- THE WHITE FOLLOWER, 165
-
- KING ALBICORE, 199
-
- THE NIBBLERS, 227
-
- JOHNNY SHARK, 251
-
- A TRAGEDY OF THE SOUTH ATLANTIC, 277
-
- IN THE WAKE OF THE WEATHER-CLOTH, 313
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- CLAWING OFF THE CAPE, _Frontispiece_
-
- _Facing Page_
- THE GREAT SHAPE SAILED FOR THE TOP OF THE BUOY, 44
-
- FULL INTO THE CENTER KING ALBICORE TORE HIS WAY, 214
-
- THE LINE WAS WHIZZING OUT, 300
-
-
-
-
-THE STRIFE OF THE SEA
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _THE OLD MAN OF SAND KEY_]
-
-
-He was an old man when he first made his appearance on the reef at
-the Sand Key Light. This was years ago, but one could tell it even
-then by the way he drew in his chin, or rather pouch, in a dignified
-manner as he soared in short circles over the outlying coral ledges
-which shone vari-colored in the sunshine beneath the blue waters of
-the Gulf Stream. He had fished alone for many seasons without joining
-the smaller and more social birds, and the keepers had grown to know
-him. He was a dignified and silent bird, and his stately flight and
-ponderous waddle over the dry reef had made it quite evident that he
-was a bird with a past. Sandy Shackford, the head keeper, knew him well
-and relied implicitly upon his judgment as to the location of certain
-denizens of the warm Stream. He had come back again after a month’s
-absence, and was circling majestically over the coral banks not a
-hundred fathoms from the light.
-
-The day was beautiful and the sunshine was hot. The warm current of
-the Gulf flowed silently now with the gentle southwest wind, and the
-white sails of the spongers from Havana and Key West began to dot the
-horizon. Here and there a large barracouta or albicore would dart like
-a streak of shimmering silver through the liquid, and the old man would
-cast his glance in the direction of the vanishing point with a ready
-pinion to sweep headlong at the mullet or sailor’s-choice which were
-being pursued.
-
-His gray head was streaked with penciled feathers which grew longer
-as they reached his neck, and his breast was colored a dull, mottled
-lead. His back and wings gave a general impression of gray and black,
-the long pinions of the latter being furnished with stiff quills which
-tapered with a lighter shade to the tips. His beak and pouch were of
-more than ordinary proportions, for the former was heavy and hooked
-at the end and the latter was large and elastic, capable of holding a
-three-pound mullet.
-
-He soared slowly over the reef for some time, and the keeper watched
-him, sitting upon the rail of the lantern smoking his pipe, while his
-assistant filled the body of the huge lamp and trimmed its several
-wicks.
-
-To the westward a slight ripple showed upon the surface of the quiet
-sea. The pelican sighted it and stood away toward it, for it looked
-like a mackerel that had come to the surface to take in the sunshine
-and general beauty of the day. In a moment the old man had swung over
-the spot at a height of about a hundred feet; then suddenly folding his
-wings, he straightened out his body, opened his beak, and shot straight
-downwards upon the doomed fish. It was literally a bolt from heaven
-from out of a clear sky. The lower beak expanded as it hit the water
-and opened the pouch into a dipper which scooped up the mackerel,
-while the weight of the heavy body falling from the great height
-carried everything below the surface with a resounding splash that
-could be heard distinctly upon the light. Then up he came from the dive
-with the fish struggling frantically in his tough leathern sack. He
-rested a moment to get his breath and then stretched forth his pinions
-again and rose in a great circle into the clear blue air.
-
-“The old man’s fishin’ mackerel this mornin’,” said Sandy, “an’ I
-reckon I’ll get the dory an’ try a squid over along the edge o’ the
-Stream as soon as the breeze makes.”
-
-“Well, take care you don’t lose nothin’,” said Bill with a grin.
-
-“Whatcher mean?” snarled the older keeper.
-
-“Nothin’,” answered the assistant.
-
-“Then don’t say it,” said Sandy, and he walked down the steps of the
-spider-like structure, muttering ominously, until he reached the reef
-a hundred feet below, where, hauled high and dry, lay his boat. Sandy
-was an old man, and had depended upon false teeth for some years. The
-last time he had gone fishing he had lost them from his boat, and
-as he could not leave the light he had nearly starved to death. In
-desperation at last he had set the ensign union down and signaled for
-assistance, the second keeper Bill being ashore on leave, and after
-the U.S.S. _Ohio_ had come all the way from Key West to find out the
-cause of the trouble he had been forced to explain to the officer his
-humiliating disaster. As the danger of landing in the surf had been
-great and the services of the man-of-war had been required for a whole
-day, he had been forced to listen to a lecture upon the absurdity of
-his behavior that did little to encourage him, and it was only his
-emaciated appearance and unfeigned weakness from loss of food that
-saved him his position as keeper.
-
-He shoved his small boat off and sprang into her. Then he stepped the
-mast, and hauling aft the sheet swung her head around and stood off
-the reef, riding easily over the low swell. High above him was the
-lantern, and he looked up to see Bill gazing down at him and pointing
-toward the southward, where a ripple showed the breaching fish. His
-lines were in the after locker, and he soon had them out, one of
-them with a wooden squid trolling over the stern as the little craft
-gathered headway.
-
-The memory of his former disaster now came upon him, and he took out
-his teeth, which were new, and examined the plates upon which they were
-fastened. A small hole in either side showed, and through these he
-rove a piece of line. Then he placed the teeth back in his mouth and
-fastened the ends of the line back of his ear.
-
-“Let ’em drop an’ be danged to it, they’ll git back mighty quick this
-time,” he muttered. “I wonder where that old pelican left the school of
-fish?”
-
-The old bird had satisfied his present needs and had flown away to a
-distant part of the outlying bank, where he was now proceeding to
-enjoy his catch at leisure. Far away to the northward, where Key West
-showed above the horizon, a long line of black specks were rapidly
-approaching through the air. They were the regular fishermen of the
-reef, and they were bound out to sea this morning for their daily meal.
-On they came in single file like a line of soldiers, their distance
-apart remaining regular and the motions of their leader followed with
-military precision. Every time he would strike the air several sharp
-strokes with his wings, the motion would be instantly taken up by the
-long line of followers flapping their own in unison.
-
-The “old man” heeded them very little indeed as he quietly ate his
-fish, and they knew enough not to bother him. They sailed majestically
-past and swung in huge circles over the blue Gulf to locate the passing
-school.
-
-The old man mused as he ate, and wondered at their stupidity. Even the
-light-keeper knew as much as they. There was the breaching school a
-mile away to windward, and the stupid birds were still watching him.
-
-He saw his wives go past in line. There was old Top-knot, a wise and
-ugly companion of former days, her penciled feathers on her neck rubbed
-the wrong way. Behind her came a young son, an ingrate, who even now
-would try to steal the fish from him did he but leave it for a moment
-to dive for another. He glanced at him and ate steadily on. He would
-finish his fish first and look out for his ungrateful son afterwards.
-
-Further behind came his youngest companion, one who had hatched forth
-twelve stout birds during the past few years and who was still supple
-and vigorous, her smooth feathers still showing a gloss very pretty to
-look at. But she gave him no notice, and he ate in silence until they
-all passed far beyond and sighted at last the breaching mackerel.
-
-When he had finished he sat stately and dignified upon the sand of the
-reef, all alone. Far away to the southward, where the high mountains of
-the Cuban shore rose above the line of water when he soared aloft, a
-thin smoke rose from some passing steamer. To the northward the spars
-of the shipping at Key West stuck above the calm sea. All about was
-peaceful, bright, and beautiful daylight, and the ugly spider-like
-tower of the Sand Key Light stood like a huge sentinel as though to
-guard the scene.
-
-The day was so quiet that the sullen splashes of the fisher birds
-sounded over the smooth surface of the sea, and the breeze scarcely
-rippled the blue water. The deep Gulf rolled and heaved in the
-sunshine, and the drone of the small breakers that fell upon the
-reef sounded low and had a sleepy effect upon the old fellow who had
-finished his fish.
-
-He sat with his pouch drawn in and his long, heavy beak resting upon
-his neck, which he bent well into the shape of a letter S. Now and
-then he would close an eye as the glare from the white coral in the
-sunshine became too bright. The man in the boat was trolling back and
-forth through the school of fish with hardly enough way on his craft
-to make them strike, but every now and then he saw him haul aboard a
-shimmering object that struggled and fought for freedom. Above, and at
-a little distance, soared the pelicans. Every now and then one would
-suddenly fold its wings and make a straight dive from the height of a
-hundred feet or more, striking the sea with a splash that sent up a
-little jet of foam.
-
-The sun rose higher and the scorching reef glared in the fierce light.
-The old man shifted his feet on the burning sand and looked about him
-for a spot where he might bring another fish and lie quiet for the
-afternoon. He turned his head toward the westward, where Mangrove Key
-rose like a dark green bush a few feet above the water of the reef. Two
-small specks were in the blue void above it, and his eyes instantly
-detected them and remained staring at them with unwinking gaze.
-
-The specks grew larger rapidly, but they were a long way off yet, and
-he might be mistaken as to what they were. He had seen them rise above
-the blue line before, and if they were what he took them to be there
-would be trouble on the reef before long. Yes, he was not mistaken.
-They rose steadily, coming on a straight line for him, and now they
-were only a mile distant. Then he noticed one of the objects swerve
-slightly to the eastward and he saw they were, indeed, a pair of the
-great bald eagles from the Everglades of Florida.
-
-He was an old man, and he gazed steadily at them without much concern,
-although he knew they meant death to all who opposed their path. They
-were pirates. They were the cruelest of killers and as implacable and
-certain in their purpose as the Grim Destroyer himself. The pelicans
-fishing for their living over the reef were good and easy prey. A
-sudden dash among them, with beak and talons cutting and slashing
-right and left, and there would be some full pouches of fish to empty.
-It was much better to let the stupid birds fill up first and then sweep
-among them. Then, after despoiling them of their hard-gotten catch,
-they would carry as much of the plunder as they cared for to some
-sheltering key to devour at leisure.
-
-The white head of the leading pirate shone in the sunshine and his
-fierce eyes were fixed upon the fishermen. The old man was apparently
-unnoticed, although there was little within the sweep of that savage
-gaze that was left unmarked. Those eyes could see the slightest object
-on land or sea far beyond the reach of ordinary vision. They had even
-this morning, probably, been watching the fishermen from some distant
-key miles away to the northward.
-
-The old man was a huge, tough old fellow, and he dreaded nothing. He
-gazed at the fishermen and a feeling of disdain for their weakness
-came upon him. He thought of his old scolding mate, Top-knot. What a
-scared old bird she would be in a moment with that great eagle sailing
-straight as a bullet for her, his beak agape, and his hoarse scream
-sounding in her wake. How she would make for the open sea, only to be
-caught in a few moments and torn until she disgorged her fish. His
-eldest son would make a show of fight, perhaps, and in a very few
-minutes would be a badly used up pelican. As for the rest, how they
-would wildly and silently strike for the open ocean, going in single
-file as was their custom, only to be overtaken one by one, until they
-were all ripped and torn by the fierce fighters, who would follow
-leisurely along behind, striking and clutching, screaming and calling
-to increase their fright and dismay.
-
-He was almost amused at the prospect, for the pirate birds seemed to
-know him instinctively for a barren prize and swept with the speed of
-the wind past him and over the reef to the blue waters of the Gulf
-beyond, where the fishermen were still unaware of their approach. He
-would watch and see the skirmish, for no harm could come to him even
-though all the rest were killed and wounded. He swung himself around
-and gazed seaward again, and suddenly the thought of his uselessness
-came upon him.
-
-Why should he sit there and see this thing done--he, an old man? He
-had led the flock for many years. Should he, the father of many and
-the companion of all in former days, see them cut up by two enemies?
-What if they no longer cared for him? What if the younger birds were
-ungrateful and would steal his fish? Was he not the old leader, the
-one they all had looked to in the years gone by? Did not even the men
-in the tower treat his knowledge with respect? And here a couple of
-fierce marauders from the forests of the land had passed him to wreak
-their will upon the timid birds whose leader had grown old. Memories
-of former days came to him, and something made him raise his head very
-straight and draw his pouch close in.
-
-He sat gazing for a few moments longer. The eagles now had closed up
-half the distance, for they were going with a rush. A pelican saw
-them and headed straight out to sea, striking the air wildly with
-outstretched pinions. Then in they dashed with hoarse cries that caused
-the keeper in the boat to luff into the wind to witness the struggle.
-
-The old man launched his weight into the air, and with a few sudden
-strokes rose to the height of a couple of fathoms above the sea,
-bearing down toward the screaming birds with the rapidity of an express
-train.
-
-Above Sandy Shackford a very mixed affair was taking place. The two
-eagles had dashed into the pelicans without warning and were within
-striking distance before many of them could even turn to flee. Old
-Top-knot had just caught a fine fish and was in the act of rising with
-it when the leading eagle swooped down upon her with a shrill scream.
-She was an old and nervous bird and a touch from any other creature
-she dreaded at all times. Now, right behind her came a giant shape,
-with glaring eyes and gaping beak, a very death’s-head, white and
-grisly, while beneath were a pair of powerful feet, armed with sharp
-talons, ready to seize her in a deadly grip. She gave a desperate leap
-to clear the sea and stretch her wings, but the sight was too much
-for her, and she sank back upon the surface. The great eagle was too
-terrifying for her old nerves, and she sat helpless.
-
-In an instant the eagle was upon her. He seized her fiercely in his
-talons and struck her savagely in the back, and the poor old bird
-instantly disgorged her newly caught fish. Her savage assailant
-hesitated a moment before striking her down for good and all, while he
-watched the fish swim away into the depths below. Then he turned to
-finish her.
-
-At that instant there was a tremendous rush through the air, and a huge
-body struck him full in the breast, knocking him floundering upon the
-sea. The old man had come at him as straight as a bullet from a gun,
-and, with the full force of his fifteen pounds sailing through the air,
-had struck him with his tough old body, that had been hardened by many
-a high dive from above.
-
-The eagle was taken completely aback, and struggled quickly into the
-air to get out of that vicinity, while the old man, carried along by
-the impetus of his rush, soared around in a great circle and came
-slowly back to renew the attack. In a moment the eagle had recovered,
-and, with true game spirit, swung about to meet this new defender of
-the fishermen. They met in mid-air, about two fathoms above the sea,
-and Sandy Shackford cheered wildly for his old acquaintance as he
-landed a heavy blow with his long, hooked bill.
-
-“Go it, old man!” he cried. “Give it to him. Oh, if I had my gun,
-wouldn’t I soak him for ye!”
-
-The other birds had fled seaward, and were now almost out of sight,
-being pursued by the second eagle. One limp form floated on the sea to
-mark the course of the marauder. Old Top-knot had recovered from the
-shock, and was now making a line for Cuba. The old man was the only one
-left, and he was detaining the great bald eagle for his last fight, the
-fight of his life.
-
-Around and around they soared. The eagle was wary and did not wish
-to rush matters with the determined old man, who, with beak drawn
-back, sailed about ready for a stroke. Then, disdaining the clumsy
-old fellow, the bald eagle made a sudden rush as though he would end
-the matter right there. The old man met him, and there was a short
-scrimmage in the air which resulted in both dropping to the sea.
-Here the old man had the advantage. The eagle could not swim, his
-powerful talons not being made for propelling him over the water. The
-old man managed to hold his own, although he received a savage cut
-from the other’s strong beak. This round was a draw. During this time
-the second eagle had seen that his companion was not following the
-startled game, and he returned just in time to see him disengage from
-a whirlwind of wings and beaks and wait a moment to decide just how he
-would finish off the old fellow who had the hardihood to dispute his
-way. Then he joined the fight, and together they swooped down upon the
-old man for the finish.
-
-He met them with his head well up and wings outstretched, and gave them
-so much to do that they were entirely taken up with the affair and
-failed to notice Sandy Shackford, who was creeping up, paddling with
-all his strength with an oar-blade.
-
-The encounter could not last long. The old fellow was rapidly
-succumbing to the attacks of his powerful antagonists, and although he
-still kept the mix-up in a whirl of foam with his desperate struggles,
-he could not hope to last against two such pirates as were now pitted
-against him. One of them struck him fiercely and tore his throat open,
-ripping his pouch from end to end. He was weakening fast and knew the
-struggle must end in another rush. Both eagles came at him at once,
-uttering hoarse cries, and drawing back his head he made one last,
-desperate stroke with his hooked beak. Then something seemed to crash
-down upon his foes from above. An oar-blade whirled in the sunshine and
-struck the leading eagle upon the head, knocking him lifeless upon the
-sea. Then the other rose quickly and started off to the northward as
-the form of the keeper towered above in the bow of the approaching boat.
-
-Sandy Shackford picked the great white-headed bird from the water and
-dropped him into the boat and the old man looked on wondering. He had
-known the keeper for a long time, but had never been at close quarters.
-
-“Poor old man,” said Sandy. “Ye look mighty badly used up.” And then he
-made a motion toward him.
-
-But the old pelican wanted no sympathy. His was the soul of the leader,
-and he scorned help. Stretching forth his wings with a mighty effort,
-he arose from the sea. The reef lay but a short distance away, and he
-would get ashore to rest. The pain in his throat was choking him, but
-he would sit quiet a while and get well. He would not go far, but he
-would be alone. The whole sea shimmered dizzily in the sunshine, but a
-little rest and the old bones would be right again. He would be quiet
-and alone.
-
-“Poor old man,” said Sandy, as he watched him sail away. “He’s a dead
-pelican, but he made a game fight.”
-
-Then he hauled in his lines, and, squaring away before the wind, ran
-down to the light with the eagle and a dozen fine fish in the bottom of
-his dory.
-
-The next day the old man was not fishing on the reef. The other birds
-came back--all except one. But the old man failed to show up during the
-whole day.
-
-The next day and the next came and went, and Sandy, who looked
-carefully every morning for the old fellow, began to give up all hope
-of seeing him again. Then, in the late afternoon when the other birds
-were away, the old man came sailing slowly over the water and landed
-stiffly upon the coral of a point just awash at the end of the key.
-
-As the sun was setting, the old man swung himself slowly around to
-face it. He drew his head well back and held himself dignified and
-stately as he walked to the edge of the surf. There he stopped, and as
-the flaming orb sank beneath the western sea, the old man still stood
-watching it as it disappeared.
-
-Sandy Shackford lit the lantern, and the sudden tropic night fell upon
-the quiet ocean.
-
-In the morning the keeper looked out, and the old man was sitting
-silent and stationary as before. When the day wore on and he did not
-start out fishing Sandy took the dory and rowed to the jutting reef. He
-walked slowly toward the old man, not wishing to disturb him, but to
-help him if he could. He drew near, and the old bird made no motion.
-He reached slowly down, and the head he touched was cold.
-
-Sitting there, with the setting sun shining over the southern sea, the
-old man had died. He was now cold and stiff, but even in death he sat
-straight and dignified. He had died as a leader should.
-
-“Poor old man,” said Sandy. “His pouch was cut open an’ he jest
-naterally starved to death--couldn’t hold no fish, an’ as fast as he’d
-catch ’em they’d get away. It was a mean way to kill a fine old bird.
-Ye have my sympathy, old man. I came nigh goin’ the same way once
-myself.”
-
-And then, as if not to disturb him, the keeper walked on his toes to
-his boat and shoved off.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The Outcast]
-
-
-The day was bright and the sunshine glistened upon the smooth water
-of Cumberland Sound. The sand beach glared in the fierce rays and the
-heat was stifling. What little breeze there was merely ruffled the
-surface of the water, streaking it out into fantastic shapes upon the
-oily swell which heaved slowly in from the sea. Far away the lighthouse
-stood out white and glinting, the trees about the tall tower looking
-inviting with their shade. The swell snored low and sullenly upon the
-bar, where it broke into a line of whiteness, and the buoys rode the
-tide silently, making hardly a ripple as it rushed past.
-
-Riley, the keeper of the light, was fishing. His canoe was anchored
-close to the shore in three fathoms of water, and he was pulling up
-whiting in spite of the ebb, which now went so fast that it was
-with difficulty he kept his line upon the bottom. When he landed his
-fiftieth fish they suddenly stopped biting. He changed his bait, but to
-no purpose. Then he pulled up his line and spat upon his hook for luck.
-
-Even this remedy for wooing the goddess of fortune failed him, and he
-mopped his face and wondered. Then he looked over the side.
-
-For some minutes he could see nothing but the glint of the current
-hurrying past. The sunshine dazzled him. Then he shaded his eyes and
-tried to pierce the depths beneath the boat.
-
-The water was as crystal, and gradually the outlines of the soft bottom
-began to take form. He could follow the anchor rope clear down until a
-cross showed where the hook took the ground.
-
-Suddenly he gave a start. In spite of the heat he had a chill run up
-his spine. Then he gazed fixedly down, straight down beneath the small
-boat’s bottom.
-
-A huge pair of eyes were looking up at him with a fixed stare. At first
-they seemed to be in the mud of the bottom, two unwinking glassy eyes
-about a foot apart, with slightly raised sockets. They were almost
-perfectly round, and although he knew they must belong to a creature
-lying either to or against the current, he could not tell which side
-the body must lie. Gradually a movement forward of the orbs attracted
-his attention, and he made out an irregular outline surrounding a
-section of undulating mud. This showed the expanse of the creature’s
-body, lying flat as it was, and covering an area of several yards. It
-showed the proportions of the sea-devil, the huge ray whose shark-like
-propensities made it the most dreaded of the inhabitants of the Sound.
-There he lay looking serenely up at the bottom of the boat with his
-glassy eyes fixed in that grisly stare, and it was little wonder he was
-called the devil-fish.
-
-Riley spat overboard in disgust, and drew in his line. There was no use
-trying to fish with that horrible thing lying beneath. He got out the
-oars and then took hold of the anchor line and began to haul it in,
-determined to seek a fishing drop elsewhere or go home. As he hauled
-the line, the great creature below noticed the boat move ahead. He
-watched it for some seconds, and then slid along the bottom, where the
-hook was buried in the mud.
-
-It was easy to move his huge bulk. The side flukes had but to be
-ruffled a little, and the great form would move along like a shadow.
-He could see the man in the boat when he bent over the side, and he
-wondered several times whether he should take the risk of a jump
-aboard. He was a scavenger, and not hard to please in the matter of
-diet. Anything that was alive was game to his maw. He had watched for
-more than an hour before the light-keeper had noticed it, and now the
-boat was drawing away. His brain was very small, and he could not
-overcome a peculiar feeling that danger was always near the little
-creature above. He kept his eyes fixed on the boat’s bottom, and slid
-along under her until his head brought up against the anchor line, now
-taut as Riley hove it short to break out the hook. This was provoking,
-and he opened a wicked mouth armed with rows of shark-like teeth. Then
-the anchor broke clear and was started upward, and the boat began to
-drift away in the current.
-
-The spirit of badness took possession of him. He was annoyed. The boat
-would soon go away if the anchor was withdrawn, so he made a grab for
-it and seized the hook, or fluke, in his mouth, and started out to sea.
-Riley felt the sudden tug from below. He almost guessed what it was,
-and quick as lightning took a turn with the line about the forward
-seat. Then, as the boat’s headway increased rapidly, he took the bight
-of the line aft and seated himself so as to keep her head up and not
-bury in the rush. His knife was at hand ready for a sudden slash at the
-line in case of emergency.
-
-“If he’ll let go abreast o’ the p’int, all right,” said Riley. “I seen
-lots harder ways o’ getting about than this.”
-
-The tide was rushing out with great rapidity, and going along with it
-the boat fairly flew. Riley watched the shore slip past, and looked
-anxiously toward the lighthouse for the head keeper to see him. It
-would give the old man a turn, he thought, to see a boat flying through
-the water with the occupant sitting calmly aft taking it easy. It made
-him laugh outright to imagine the head keeper’s look of astonishment.
-Then he saw the figure of the old man standing upon the platform of the
-tower gazing out to sea. He roared out at the top of his voice, hoping
-to attract attention, but the distance was too great.
-
-Meanwhile the sea-devil was sliding along the bottom, heading for the
-line of white where the surf fell over the bank of the outer bar.
-The hook, or fluke, of the anchor was held securely in his powerful
-jaws, and the force necessary to tow the following craft was felt very
-little. The great side fins, or flukes, merely moved with a motion
-which caused no exertion to such a frame, and the long tail, armed with
-its deadly spear of poisoned barbs, slewed slightly from right to left,
-steering the creature with accuracy. And while he went his mind was
-working, trying to think how he could get the man from the boat after
-he had taken him out to sea beyond any help from the shore. A sea-devil
-he was, and rightly named. This he very well knew, and the thought made
-him fearless. He had rushed many schools of mullet and other small
-fish, who fled in frantic terror at his approach. He had slid into
-a school of large porpoises, the fishermen who seldom gave way for
-anything, and he sent them plunging in fear for the deep water. Once he
-had, in sheer devilry, leaped upon a huge logger-head turtle weighing
-half a ton, just to see if he could take a nip of his neck before the
-frightened fellow could draw in his head behind the safe shelter of his
-shell. He could stand to the heaviest shark that had ever entered the
-Sound, and had once driven his spear through the jaws of a monster who
-had sneaked up behind him unawares and tried to get a grip upon his
-flukes. All had shown a wholesale respect for his powers, and he had
-grown more and more malignant as he grew in size and strength. Even his
-own family had at last sought other waters on account of his peculiarly
-ferocious temper.
-
-Now he would try the new game in the craft above, and he felt little
-doubt as to the outcome. A sudden dash and twist might demoralize the
-floating tow, and as he neared the black can buoy which marked the
-channel, he gave a tremendous rush ahead, then a sudden sheer to the
-right, and with a quick slew he was heading back again in the opposite
-direction.
-
-[Illustration: THE GREAT SHAPE SAILED FOR THE TOP OF THE BUOY.]
-
-Riley felt the sudden jerk ahead. He was as far as he wished to go
-down the shore, but had hesitated to cut the line in the hope that the
-devil would let go. Lines were not plentiful, and to lose this one
-meant an end to fishing for several days. The canoe shot ahead with
-prodigious speed. Riley seized the knife and was about to cut loose,
-when there was a sudden sheer to starboard, and before he could do
-anything the canoe was jerked quickly over upon its side. He leaped to
-the rail and tried to right it, but almost instantly it was whirled
-about and capsized. The sea-devil now dropped the anchor and turned his
-attention to the boat. The fluke, taking the ground in the channel,
-anchored the craft a few feet distant from the can buoy, and Riley was
-climbing upon the upturned boat’s bottom as the creature came up. Lying
-flat upon the keel, Riley balanced himself so as to keep clear of the
-sea, watching the big black can swinging to and fro in the current. If
-he could but seize the ring in the top he might pull himself to a place
-of safety.
-
-The devil came back slowly, looking about for the occupant of the small
-boat. He was not in sight, and the craft was perfectly empty. This
-puzzled him, and he began circling around to see if he had overlooked
-him in the tideway. Then he saw a movement upon the boat, and made out
-the keeper lying upon the keel. He came slowly up to the side of the
-craft, and Riley saw a huge shadow rising alongside of him, spreading
-out a full two fathoms across the wings, or flukes. The ugly eyes
-were fixed upon him, and he yelled in terror. It was like some horrid
-nightmare, only he knew the deadly nature of the creature, and realized
-what a fate was in store for him once the devil had him fast.
-
-The devil was in no hurry to rush matters, however, for now that the
-boat was again stationary he would investigate the subject before
-making an attack. He was not hungry.
-
-Riley edged away from the huge shadow as far as he could, and called
-frantically for help. The can buoy swung close to him, and he looked up
-to see if it were possible to make the spring for the top. To miss it
-meant certain death. Then it swung away again, and he closed his eyes
-to shut out the horrid shape rising beside the boat.
-
-The mouth of the devil was under a breadth of shovel-shaped nose, and
-it could not be brought to bear at once. It would necessitate a leap to
-grab Riley, and as the devil was in no hurry he swam slowly along the
-sunken gunwale waiting for a better opportunity to seize the victim. He
-was apparently certain of his game, and he would take his time.
-
-Riley shrieked again and again in terror, clinging with a frantic
-clutch to the capsized boat.
-
-About this time, Samuels, the keeper, who was in the tower, happened to
-turn around far enough to notice the black speck of the upturned boat.
-He was expecting Riley to show up about this time of day, and the speck
-upon the surface of the Sound attracted his attention. In a few moments
-he made it out to be the boat bottom up.
-
-Instantly he sprang for his glasses. He saw Riley lying upon the
-bottom. He rushed to the beach as fast as he could and pushed out in
-a dory. His companion was in danger from drowning, and he would rescue
-him if possible. He knew nothing of the danger that lurked below the
-surface of the sea. The sea-devil was out of sight, and his small
-dorsal fin would not show any great distance.
-
-Riley howled and clung to the bottom of the boat, while Samuels strove
-to reach him, and all the time the devil swam slowly fore and aft along
-the side trying to decide whether to make the leap or push the boat
-bodily over again. The last method appeared to be the least irksome,
-and he gave the boat a good shove with his nose.
-
-Riley felt the heeling of the craft, and clutched frantically at the
-now slanting keel. She was turning over again, and in an instant he
-would be in the water. The thought of the ending gave him a madman’s
-energy. He saw the buoy swinging closer and closer to him as the craft
-was pushed along sideways. Then a sudden eddy of the tide swung it
-within a few feet of the boat.
-
-The devil, seeing the boat turning slowly over, pushed harder. In an
-instant the man upon the bottom would be in the water and easy to
-seize. He gave a sudden shove, throwing the capsized craft almost upon
-its side. As he did so Riley made a last desperate effort. He arose
-quick as lightning and balanced for an instant on the settling canoe.
-Then he sprang with all his strength for the ring-bolt in the top of
-the buoy.
-
-Whether it was luck or the desperate strength of despair, he just
-managed to get the fingers of his right hand into the ring. The can
-toppled over as though it would capsize and land him in the sea, but
-with his legs in the water almost up to his waist, it brought up on its
-bearings, balanced by the heavy weight below. Then he hauled himself up
-and tried to get his legs around the iron.
-
-At each effort the can would twist slowly in the sea, and down he would
-come again into the water, holding on by the ring above his head.
-
-The sea-devil gave the craft a tremendous push which sent it clear
-over, and then he slipped under it to find the game on the side beyond.
-The man was gone, but he saw him hanging to the buoy close by, and he
-gave a sudden dash to seize him. At that instant Riley clambered like a
-cat upon the swinging iron, and by almost superhuman balancing he sat
-up on the top, some four feet clear of the water, his legs swinging on
-either side, making frantic efforts to keep his unstable craft from
-turning around in the current and spilling him into the death-trap
-which now lurked below in plain view. He prayed for a whale iron, and
-screamed for help. Then he swore furiously and madly at the shape with
-the stony eyes which, as implacable as death itself, lay watching him
-as though certain of the ultimate outcome of the affair. Without even
-his knife he would not be able to make the least resistance. A harpoon
-iron would have fixed things differently. Oh, for one to throw at the
-hideous thing waiting for him! How he would like to see the barbs sink
-into that hard hide and pierce its vitals. He raved at it, and cursed
-it frantically, but the sea-devil lay there silently watching, knowing
-well that it was but a question of a few minutes before he would be at
-his mercy.
-
-The hot afternoon sun beat pitilessly upon the clinging wretch upon the
-can buoy, and the heat upon his bare head made the water dance about
-him. But to lose his balance was fatal, and he clung and cried, prayed
-and screamed, cursed and raved, alternately, adjusting his trembling
-body to each movement of his float.
-
-As the minutes flew by, Samuels, who was rowing to him with rapid
-strokes, heard his outcries, and turned to look. He could not
-understand the man’s wild terror. It was evident that there was no time
-to lose, and he bent to the oars again. Suddenly he heard a piercing
-scream. He turned, and in time to see a great shape rise from the water
-like a gigantic bat, and sail right for the top of the can buoy. It
-struck it fair, and the thud of the huge body resounded over the sea.
-Then it fell slanting off into the water with a great splash, and when
-he looked at the top of the can there was nothing but a piece of blue
-cloth hanging to the ring-bolt. Riley was gone.
-
-In an instant Samuels sprang to his feet and stood looking at the
-eddying current, paralyzed with horror at the sight. The hot sunshine
-and smooth sea were still all around him, but the monstrous shape had
-disappeared and his companion along with it. Now he knew why Riley had
-screamed and cursed so frantically. It was not the fear of drowning
-that had called forth such madness. But even while he stood there
-in the sunlight a horrible nightmare seemed to be taking possession
-of him, and he was trembling and helpless. He gave a hoarse cry and
-set his teeth to control his shaking nerves. Then his brain began
-its normal working again, and he seized his oars and gave several
-tremendous strokes in the direction of the buoy, looking over his
-shoulder and feeling his scalp tightening upon his head. There was a
-cold chill in his blood, as though the weather were winter instead of
-torrid July.
-
-Suddenly something showed on the surface just under the boat’s bow. He
-shivered in spite of himself, but the thought of his comrade nerved
-him for the ordeal. He sprang forward, knife in hand, to seize it if
-it were Riley’s form, or face the monster if he appeared. A white hand
-came slowly upward. With a desperate effort Samuels reached over and
-jerked the form of his assistant into the boat, and as he did so a huge
-shadow darkened the water beneath him.
-
-The sea-devil, carried along by the momentum of his rush, had knocked
-his victim into the water from the buoy top, but had swept past him
-before he could swing about far enough to seize him in his jaws. This
-was all that saved Riley.
-
-Instantly Samuels, who had a stout craft, seized his oars and pulled
-for the lighthouse, gazing fixedly upon the smooth water astern of
-him, and shivering with a nervous shake at each ripple in the wake
-of his boat, lest it were made by the denizen below the surface. But
-nothing followed. The Sound was as smooth as glass, and the sunshine
-and silence were undisturbed. The great ray had missed his victim, and
-was swimming slowly around the can buoy looking for him. He had failed
-to notice Samuels pick him up, although he had seen his boat pass.
-
-While Samuels watched astern he saw the capsized craft near the buoy
-move suddenly, as though some power were exerted upon it from below.
-The sight caused him to bend with renewed vigor to his oars, and, with
-his heart sending his blood jerking through his temples with a pulse
-he seemed almost to hear, he drove his boat for the beach and landed
-safely. As he did so Riley sat up and looked about him with eyes that
-were like those of a man in a dream. His lips were swollen to a livid
-blue and he puffed through them, making a ghastly sound as they
-quivered with his breath. Samuels spoke to him, but he would only gaze
-about him and make the blowing noise with his mouth. Then the elder
-keeper took him gently by the arm and led him painfully up the sand
-to the lighthouse dwelling. The next day the victim was raving. It
-would take a long time for the poor fellow to regain his equilibrium,
-and absolute rest and quiet were the only thing that would steady the
-terribly shaken nerves. Samuels took the man to the nearest town, and
-then went back to tend the light alone.
-
-The following week Samuels spent brooding over the horrible affair. The
-log of the keeper refers to it several times, and it was like a wild
-nightmare to him during his watch on the tower during darkness. During
-the daytime he thought of it continually, and began to devise different
-methods for the capture of the sea-devil, which he believed to be still
-in the entrance of the Sound. He had sent word of the unfortunate
-Riley’s condition to the inspector, and was tending the light alone
-when the new assistant came to relieve him. When he arrived he found
-Samuels hard at work upon a set of harpoons and lines which he had
-been preparing for his hunt, while a couple of large shark-hooks lay
-in the small boat ready baited. Two small boats were made ready, and
-the shark-hooks and lines were placed in one. The other contained five
-lilly-irons of the grummet-and-toggle pattern and two hundred fathoms
-of small line capable of holding the small boat while being towed at
-any speed. With this outfit they began to spend the days upon the
-waters of the Sound, rowing in company to the various fishing drops,
-and trying for a bite upon the great hooks.
-
-Not a sign of the sea-devil had there been since the day the keeper
-had met him. The weather was clear and fine, and the sea smooth.
-Nothing rose to break the even surface. But Samuels hunted quietly on,
-never losing faith that some day the monster would break water again
-and give him a chance for either a harpoon or hook. In his boat he
-carried a long whale lance with its heart-shaped head as sharp as a
-razor, covered in a wooden scabbard to keep off the dampness. It would
-penetrate any living body a full fathom, and nothing of flesh and blood
-could withstand its stroke.
-
-The sixth day out the new keeper began to give up hope of seeing
-anything like the game they sought. He carried ordinary hand lines,
-and busied himself fishing during their stays at the different drops.
-Sea bass, drum, and sheeps-head were biting lively, and he managed to
-make good use of the time they were away from the light. Toward the
-late afternoon the fish suddenly stopped biting. It was the beginning
-of the flood tide, and therefore not in keeping with the usual state of
-affairs. Something was the matter, and Samuels began to pay attention
-to his shark lines.
-
-In a short time one of them began to go in little jerks. It was loose,
-with a turn around a cleat so that it might run with any sudden pull.
-Then it began to go steadily, going faster and faster, as fathom after
-fathom of it flaked overboard. As a shark is never jerked for some
-moments after he has taken bait, on account of his habit of holding a
-morsel in his mouth sometimes for minutes before swallowing it, the
-line was let run. After a shark gets it well in hand he suddenly bolts
-the food and makes off. Then is the time to set back with a full force
-upon the line in order to drive the barb of the hook into his tough
-throat. The chain leader of the hook will then be the only thing he can
-set his teeth upon, and he will be fast if the barb once gets under the
-tough hide.
-
-Samuels let the line go for nearly a minute before a quickening in the
-movement told him that the fellow at the other end had swallowed the
-bait and was making away. Then rising slowly to his feet he let the
-line run through his fingers until he took a good brace upon the seat
-of his boat with his foot. Then he grasped the line suddenly with both
-hands, and setting back upon it with all his strength he stopped it
-for an instant. The next moment there was a whir of whistling line.
-He had dropped it and it was flying overboard. Before ten fathoms of
-line had gone, Samuels had it on the cleat again and was snubbing it in
-jerks which sent his boat as deep as her after gunwale. Soon, however,
-the line began to give a little. Foot by foot he hauled it in, until a
-long dark form showed beneath the surface of the water. It was only a
-shark after all, and he was given a taste of the whale lance to quiet
-him.
-
-While he was engaged in this he heard a sudden roar behind him, and he
-turned in time to see a gigantic form disappear in a tremendous smother
-of foam. It sounded like a small cannon, and he well knew there was
-only one creature in the Sound that could break water with such a rush
-and smash.
-
-The shark was forgotten, and as soon as possible the hook was rebaited
-and cast. The other line was now watched, and the painter of the other
-boat was passed over to make them tow together if the line should be
-taken.
-
-Suddenly the new keeper, who had been looking steadily over the side
-into the clear water, gave a shout and pointed below.
-
-Just a fathom beneath the boat’s keel a gigantic shadow drew slowly up.
-It was a giant ray, the dreaded sea-devil they had been waiting for.
-
-Samuels gazed down at it and could see the stony eyes fixed upon him.
-Grasping a harpoon he sent it with all his force down into the depths.
-It was a wild throw. But he had waited so long that he could not miss
-any chance.
-
-The long shank of the iron disappeared in the foam of the splash. Then
-there was a moment’s pause. Almost instantly afterwards the line was
-flying furiously over the side. The toggle had penetrated, and they
-were fast.
-
-The assistant keeper tossed over the anchor buoys to mark the slipped
-moorings, and then Samuels snubbed the line.
-
-Instantly the boats were jerked half under water. Settling back as far
-as they could, they both tried to keep the bows of the towing craft
-from being towed under, and the line had to be slacked again and again
-to save them. Away they went, one behind the other, the ray leading,
-Samuels’ boat next, with him in the stern-sheets, holding a turn of
-the line which led over the runner in the stem, and the new keeper,
-standing with steering oar in hand, slewing his flying craft first one
-side and then the other to keep dead in the wake.
-
-The breeze making from the sea sent the spray over the boats in sheets,
-but they held on. The devil was heading for the bar under full speed,
-for the iron had pricked him sorely in the side, and he was a little
-taken aback at this sudden reception. He could not yet grasp the
-situation, and would circle about before coming close to the small
-craft again. But there was something dragging upon him that began to
-cause alarm. There was a line to the thing that pricked so sore. The
-feeling at first caused a desire to escape from the unknown enemy,
-but gradually as the pain increased anger began to take the place of
-fright, and he tried to find out just who his enemies were. He swerved
-near the can buoy and broached clear of the sea to get a better view.
-The crash he made as he struck the sea again sent the spray high in the
-air, and the line was whirled out with renewed force.
-
-But the men behind him had no thought of letting go. With lance in hand
-Samuels waited patiently for a chance to haul line. As long as the
-toggle would hold there was little chance for the iron drawing, for the
-skin of the ray was as tough as leather, and the flesh beneath it was
-firm.
-
-On and on they went, the flood tide setting strong against them. The
-swell from beyond the bar was now felt, and the ocean sparkled in the
-sunshine where it was ruffled by the outside breeze. Two, three miles
-were traversed, but there was no slacking of the tremendous pace. The
-ray evidently intended to get to sea before attempting to make any
-change in his actions. He was going at a ten-knot gait, keeping now
-close to the bottom, and heading right through the north breaker,
-which rolled in curved lines of white foam upon the bar. The channel
-he cared not the least for, and Samuels watched the roaring line of
-white with concern. The small boats would make bad weather of the
-surf, even though the sea was smooth, for the swell rose high and fell
-heavily, making a deep rumbling snore which grew louder and louder as
-they approached. Far away the lighthouse shone in the sunshine, and the
-buoys stood out like black specks to mark the way through the channel.
-
-Samuels got out his hatchet ready for a sudden cut at the line if
-the surf proved too dangerous. They were nearing the inner line of
-breakers, and it would be only a matter of minutes before they were
-either through or swamped. There must be some hasty judgment, but it
-must be as accurate as it would be hasty, for there would be no chance
-to change his mind when the water rose ahead. It was breaking in a
-good fathom and more.
-
-The sea-devil seemed to know what was in store for the boats towing
-behind. He broached again and took a good look astern where they flew
-along behind him. Then with redoubled speed he tore through the inner
-line of breaking water, and before Samuels could grab the hatchet to
-cut loose, his boat rose upon a crested breaker and plunged headlong
-over into the trough beyond, pulling the assistant through, and almost
-swamping him. It was now too late to let go. Ahead was another wall of
-rising water which would break in an instant, and the only thing to do
-was to go on and trust to the boat’s riding over it all right. To turn
-the slightest, one side or the other, meant to be rolled over in the
-rush of foam.
-
-Samuels held on grimly. Once outside he hoped to haul line and come to
-close quarters with the devil. Then he would deal with him in a more
-satisfactory manner. That long lance would be brought into play, and
-the fight would be with the odds upon his side. But he had reckoned
-somewhat hastily with this outcast of the ocean. All the fearless
-cunning of the sea-scavenger was being brought into play. The pain
-in his side where the iron held was making him more and more savage.
-He saw it was useless to run away, for the iron held his pursuers to
-him. He had only intended to make a short run at the beginning, and
-then turn to meet whatever there was in the shape of a foe. There was
-little fear in his make-up. The sudden alarm at the stroke of the iron
-was merely the natural instinct of the wild creature to keep out of
-harm’s way. He had intended to come back and try his hand with the
-small craft, only he would not run into unknown trouble. It would be
-wiser to take things easy and approach the matter slowly, watching a
-good chance to make a rush in when a fitting opportunity occurred. But
-because he would go slow he would be none the less implacable. He had
-never withdrawn from a fight yet, and his peculiar tenacity had more
-than once brought him off victor when the odds were against him. He
-was wary--an old wary fighter who began the struggle slowly only to
-learn the forces opposed to him. When the issue was well begun he would
-break forth in a fury unequaled in any other denizen of the ocean. The
-continual pain of the pulling-iron was now goading him into a condition
-of frenzied fury. In a moment he would turn, just as soon as he had
-the small craft well into the foaming water, where he knew it would be
-difficult to navigate.
-
-Samuels had thought of the ray’s probable run for shoal water, and
-dreaded coming up with him in the surf. He could not turn his small
-boat broadside to the breakers without getting rolled over and swamped,
-and his oars would be useless to pull clear with the iron fast. He
-hoped the ray would make for the bottom in the deep water beyond
-and pull him through. Just as the outer breaker rose ahead the line
-suddenly slacked.
-
-This was what Samuels dreaded most, and he began to haul in hand over
-hand. Instead, however, of the line leading ahead, it suddenly let
-off to starboard, and he was forced to let it go and take to his oars
-to keep the boat’s head to the sea that was now upon her. He called
-to the new keeper, who let go the line between the boats, to take out
-his oars also. Both now headed straight for the crest, which instantly
-broke over them, half filling Samuels’ craft and settling her almost
-to the gunwales. At that moment the line came taut with a jerk. It
-swung the boat’s head off broadside to the sea, and the next minute the
-breaker rolled her over and over. As it did so a giant form rose like a
-huge bat from the foam with mouth agape and flukes extended, its tail
-stretching out behind, and the line from the harpoon trailing. Down it
-came with a crash which resounded above the roar of the surf, and the
-boat disappeared from view.
-
-Samuels had by good luck been thrown clear of the craft when the sea
-struck, and his head appeared a fathom distant just as the devil
-crashed down. It was a close call. Then, as the half-sinking boat
-returned slowly, bottom up, to the surface, he made for it with all
-speed.
-
-Beside it floated the long wooden handle of the lance, the blade
-resting upon the bottom a fathom below. He seized it as he grasped the
-keel, and calling for the keeper in the other boat to look out, he
-made ready for the devil’s return, for the line was not pulling the
-boat away, showing that the slack had not been taken up, and that the
-creature was still close by.
-
-He was not wrong in this. The huge devil swerved almost as soon as he
-disappeared below the surface and headed back again slowly to where the
-boat lay in the foam of the breaker. He kept close to the bottom and
-came like a shadow over the sand.
-
-The sun was shining brightly and objects could be seen easily. Samuels
-soon made out a dark object creeping up from the side where the ray
-had gone down. The water was hardly over his head when the seas broke,
-and between them it was not more than four and a half feet deep. He
-could keep his head out and his feet upon the sand until the rising
-crest would lift him clear, when, by holding to the upturned boat’s
-keel, he could keep his head out until the breaker had passed, the tide
-setting him rapidly towards the deeper water inside the bar.
-
-The keeper in the other boat saw the shadow and called out, at the same
-time getting a harpoon ready and resting upon his oars. The smooth
-between breakers gave both a good chance to note the position of the
-approaching monster.
-
-The sea-devil came slowly up, his eyes showing through the clear water
-and the line from the iron trailing behind him. When within a couple of
-fathoms he made a sudden rush at the capsized boat.
-
-The new keeper threw his iron well. It landed fairly in the top of the
-broad back and sank deep, but it did not in the least stop the savage
-rush. The huge bulk rose to the surface at the instant the iron struck
-and came straight for Samuels, who held the lance ready in one hand and
-clung to the keel of his boat with the other. He drove the long, sharp
-weapon a full two feet into the monster’s vitals and then ducked behind
-the sunken gunwale to avoid the teeth.
-
-There was a terrific commotion in the sea. The devil bit savagely at
-Samuels’ arm, but missed it, his teeth coming upon the gunwale of the
-boat and shearing out a piece. Then he gave a tremendous rush upon the
-craft and drove it before him until it disappeared under the surface.
-The great ray smote the sea with his flukes and strove after his prey,
-but the lance was firmly planted in him, and, try as he might, he could
-get no nearer than the length of the handle to the keeper, for with
-this grasped firmly in both hands Samuels went below the surface only
-to get his foothold again and reappear to be driven along before the
-furious creature.
-
-Meanwhile the new keeper came hauling line from the rear. There
-was a smooth between the seas, and he pulled the boat close to the
-floundering devil before he knew what was taking place. Then, with
-three irons ready, he drove one after the other in quick succession
-into the monster. Taken from the rear in this manner the devil whirled
-about. His barbed spear in his tail he drove with accuracy at the form
-in the boat, striking the keeper in the thick of the thigh and piercing
-it through and through. He fell with a yell, clutching the boat to
-keep from being drawn overboard, and the spear broke off short, the
-poisonous barbs remaining in the flesh.
-
-The sudden diversion saved Samuels. He managed to withdraw his lance,
-and by an almost superhuman effort he drove it again into the devil
-just as a sea broke over him. When he came to the surface again he was
-exhausted and expected to fall a victim, but the great creature made
-no attack and only swam around in a circle, apparently dazed.
-
-Samuels lost no time in getting aboard the still floating craft, taking
-the towline with him. She was full of water from the breaker which had
-rolled in, but it had struck her fairly in the bow and she would float
-a little longer. He reached for the oars and held her head to the sea,
-while the other raised himself in spite of the agony of his poisoned
-wound and bailed for his life.
-
-The sea-devil was mortally hurt and was failing fast. He came to the
-surface and made one blind rush at the boat, but he missed and received
-the last iron fairly between the eyes. Then he began to go slowly
-away, following the flood tide, and towing both boats in through the
-breakers to the smooth water beyond. In a short time the motion ceased,
-and Samuels hauled in the lines until he was just over the body in two
-fathoms of water and clear of the surf on the bar. Then he turned his
-attention to his wounded comrade, and by great force pulled the long,
-barbed spine through the flesh of his thigh and sucked the wound. As
-the tide was flooding, they left the capsized boat fast to the devil on
-the bottom below, knowing it would not get far adrift, and made their
-way to the light, where the keeper’s wound was carefully cauterized and
-bound up.
-
-The great ray lay quiet for some time, his flukes acting as suckers
-to hold him down. Then, the feeling that his end was at hand coming
-gradually upon him, he fought against the deadly weakness of his
-wounds. Summing up all the remaining energy within his giant frame, he
-rose to the surface to make one last, desperate rally and annihilate
-the towing craft. He breached clear of the sea and fell with a
-resounding crash upon the fabric, smashing it completely. Then he tore
-it with his teeth and flung the splinters broadcast, reaching wildly
-for anything which looked like a human form. Then he suddenly stopped
-and a quiver passed through him. He gave a mighty smash with his flukes
-upon the remains of the boat, and then his life went out. He sank
-slowly down upon the clean sand below, and the ground-sharks of the
-reef came silently in to their feast.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE SEADOG]
-
-
-He was a yellow brute, mangy, lean, and treacherous-looking. He had
-been in two ships where dogs were not particularly liked by the
-officers, and the last one had gone ashore in the darkness during a
-northeast gale off the Frying Pan. How he had come ashore from the
-wreck was a detail beyond his reasoning. Here he was on the beach of
-North Carolina, and not one of his shipmates was left to take care of
-him.
-
-He had at first foraged among the bushes of beach myrtle and through
-the pine woods, stealing into the light-keeper’s yard at Bald Head
-during the hours of darkness, and rummaging through his garbage for a
-bit of food to keep the life within his mangy hide. He had now been
-ashore for nearly five months, and during all that time he had shown
-an aversion to the light-keeper’s society. There was no other human
-habitation on the island, and the light-keeper had fired a charge of
-bird-shot at him on two occasions. This had not given him greater
-confidence in strangers, and that which he had had was of a suspicious
-kind, born and nurtured aboard ship, where a kick was the usual
-salutation. He was as sly as a wolf and as wild as a razor-back hog,
-for he had gradually fallen upon the resources of the wild animal, and
-his one thought was for himself.
-
-He had broken away into the night howling after the last reception
-by the light-keeper at the Bald Head tower, and sore and stiff he
-had crawled into the bushes to pick at the tiny pellets that stung
-so fiercely. In the future he would be more careful. He must watch.
-Eternal vigilance was the price for his worthless life. All the evil
-desires and instincts begotten through a line of rascally curs now
-began to grow within him. He would not repress them, for was it not
-manifest that he must exercise every selfish desire to its utmost if
-he would live? His eyes took on that wild, hunted look of the beast
-with whom all are at war, and his teeth showed fiercely at each and
-every sound. A sullen savageness of mind came upon him more and more
-every day, until after these months of wildness he had dropped back
-again into the natural state of his forefathers. He was a wild dog in
-every sense. As wild as the hogs who rooted through the pine woods or
-tore through the swamp, lean as deer and alert to every danger, the
-degenerates of the well-bred pigs of the early settlers.
-
-Sometimes he would run along the edge of the beach in the sunlight and
-watch the surf, but even this was dangerous, for once the light-keeper
-happened to be out hunting and sent a rifle bullet singing past his
-ears. He broke for cover again, and seldom ventured forth except
-after the sun went down. In the daytime he would go slinking through
-the gloom of the dense thickets with ears cocked and senses alert,
-watching like a wolf for the slightest sign of danger. A wolf is seldom
-seen unless he means to be, and the yellow dog soon became as retiring.
-
-Small game furnished food during this season, for the creeks swarmed
-with fish and crabs, which were often caught in shallows at low water,
-and gophers were plentiful, but sometimes when the wind was howling
-and soughing through the forest, and the rain rattling and whistling
-through the clearings, he would try the light-keeper’s back yard again,
-and grab a defenseless duck or goose that happened to be within reach.
-Their squawking was music to his ears, for he remembered the flash and
-stinging pain following his earlier attempts to procure food, and he
-would dash furiously through the timber with his prize, nor stop until
-many miles were between him and the bright eye that flamed high in the
-air above and could be seen fifteen miles or more up the beach. The
-lighthouse was an excellent guide for him in all kinds of weather,
-but it was especially useful on very dark and stormy nights. To him it
-meant a guide out of danger, even as it did to his earlier masters, and
-he soon learned to navigate by it.
-
-He grew more and more savage as his life in the wilderness went on, and
-as his savageness increased so likewise did his cunning.
-
-William Ripley, the light-keeper, and his assistant, were both
-good hunters. They had plenty of time during daylight to make long
-excursions along the beach, and through the pine woods, and they often
-brought home a hog or two. They were worried at the visits from the
-strange animal who left footprints like those of a dog, and who kept
-always well out of sight after his first visits, when a glimpse of
-yellow had flashed through the darkness, giving something tangible to
-fire at. They had seen the vessel come ashore on the outer shoals, some
-twelve miles away, and had seen her gradually break up without being
-able to lend a hand at saving her crew. Nothing had washed on the
-beach that had signs of life, and it had never occurred to them that
-a yellow dog had been a survivor of that tragedy. The wreck had been
-visited afterwards, and the vessel’s name discovered, but nothing was
-ever heard of the men who had manned her, and who had evidently gone
-to the port of missing ships. Their interest in the matter ended after
-getting a few fathoms of line and a bit of iron-work, and the shifting
-sands of the treacherous Frying Pan soon swallowed up all trace of the
-disaster.
-
-But ducks and geese were scarce and valuable. There was a thief abroad,
-and something must be done. The cold weather was approaching, and
-already frost had turned the leaves of some of the trees. Soon a slight
-fall of snow announced that winter was upon the coast in earnest.
-
-The cold was hard upon the outcast. His thin hair was but poor
-protection against the wind, and the food of the creeks was
-disappearing. He was getting more and more savage and desperate,
-and the great eye that shone above him through the blackness was
-attractive, for it showed where there lay plenty. Often, when the gale
-blew from the northward, and the weather was thick, the wild ducks and
-geese came rushing down the wind and headed for the eye that shone
-so brightly in the night. It had a peculiar dazzling fascination for
-them, and they would go driving at it with a rush of a hundred miles an
-hour, only to find too late that it was surrounded by a heavy wire net.
-Then, before they could swerve off, they were upon it with a terrific
-smash. Headlong into the iron meshes they would drive until, flattened
-and distorted lumps of flesh and feathers, they would go tumbling down
-to the ground beneath. In the morning the keeper would see traces of
-their feathers and sometimes a duck or two, but more often he saw the
-footprints of the strange animal that so resembled either a dog or wolf.
-
-“I reckon it’s about time we caught up with that un,” said Ripley, one
-morning; “there aint been no wolves around this here island sence I kin
-remember, an’ I’m bound to find out jest what kind o’ critter this one
-is. Why, what d’ye s’pose he done last night, hey?”
-
-“Don’t ask me no riddles when I’m sleepy,” said the assistant.
-
-“Oh, well, it’s no matter, then,” said Ripley, and he turned into the
-house.
-
-“Well, what?” asked the assistant.
-
-“The first thing he done was to eat the seat out’n your pants you left
-hangin’ on the line, but that’s no matter----”
-
-“What next?” asked the assistant, awakening a little.
-
-“Well, he chewed the uppers off’n your rubber boots, them ones you said
-cost five dollars----”
-
-“Name o’ sin, no! Did he? Where’s the gun, quick----”
-
-“Hold on a bit. Wait a minute,” interrupted Ripley. “There aint no
-hurry about the case. I was jest a-sayin’----”
-
-“Go on,” said the assistant earnestly.
-
-“Well, then, don’t interrupt me no more. That blamed critter got old
-red-head by th’ neck an’ walked off with him, an’ there aint no better
-rooster ever been hatched. That’s erbout all.”
-
-“You kin hand me down the rifle,” said the assistant; “that critter or
-me leaves this here island, an’ that’s a fact.”
-
-The track led down the beach, and there was no trouble following it.
-The assistant started off at a swinging pace, determined to cover the
-distance between himself and the thief before midday.
-
-But the track soon led into the scrub and was lost. When it was taken
-up again it was a good half-mile farther down the shore. Here it swung
-along easily for a short distance until a heavy belt of timber was
-reached, and where the ground was hard and covered with pine-needles.
-There all trace of it was swallowed up as soon as it struck the pines.
-The assistant came home that evening a tired but no wiser man. That
-night the outcast saw the man-tracks, and knew he had been followed,
-and the spirit of deviltry entered deeper into his pariah soul. He
-would make them sorry for his nightly visits. All were enemies to him,
-and the more harm he could do to everything alive the better it would
-be. Savagely he snarled at the footprints. As the moon rose he saw the
-beautiful light silvering the cold ocean, and it stirred something in
-his hard heart. He raised his nose high in the air and let forth a long
-howl of fierce defiance and wrath.
-
-Slinking through the darkening shadows of the forest, the outcast made
-his way to the clearing wherein the great eye rose above the ground to
-the height of a hundred feet or more. Here he halted upon the outer
-edge, where the thicket hid him in its black shadow. Then he raised
-his voice in such a prolonged howl that the fowls secured within the
-coops of the yard set up a vast cackling. He changed his position in
-time to avoid a charge of buckshot which tore through the thicket and
-rattled about the leaves beneath the trees. Then he slunk away for a
-little while, only to return again and give vent to his feelings in a
-succession of yelping barks, such as had never disturbed the quiet of
-the island before. Another charge of shot rattled about him, but he
-was now far too wary to get hit, and his hatred was greater than his
-fear. It gave him a savage joy to listen to the crack of the gun or the
-sharper snap of the rifle, for he knew it worried the keeper to hear
-him and know he was near. Night after night he now came, and many were
-the shots fired at him, but all to no avail. He would do any mischief
-he could, and woe to any duck or chicken that came within his reach.
-His high, yelping howl resounded through the clearing and sounded above
-the dull roar of the surf, making night hideous to the keeper on watch
-in the light above.
-
-Once he caught a loose fowl, and its feathers were strewn about the
-yard. Again he found a string of fine fish the keeper had hung up for
-the night. They went the way of the ill-fated. His keen sense of smell
-told him many things the keepers did not wish him to know, and he
-managed to keep out of harm’s way.
-
-But this could not last. Ripley was an old hunter, and was not to be
-disturbed beyond reason. He brought out an old mink-trap, with steel
-jaws of great power, and he buried it in the sand on the edge of the
-clearing, smoothing the rumpled surface of the ground so that nothing
-showed, and strewing the place with dead leaves. Then he killed a
-sea-gull and dropped it almost directly over the steel jaws. The
-outcast would doubtless smell it and stop a moment to investigate. He
-had only to step upon the ground in the near vicinity and his leg would
-be instantly clasped in a steel embrace.
-
-The first night the keeper watched for him. It was very dark, and the
-cold north wind soughed through the pines, and the surf thundered. The
-cold made the keeper’s teeth chatter a little as he watched in silence
-from his place upon the outer rail of the tower. He had his rifle with
-him for a finish, should the trap take hold.
-
-The outcast came slinking along late that night. He was hungry and
-wet, and the light attracted him as it did always on particularly bad
-nights, for it stood for the mark of plenty, the only thing on the
-barren island that kept a glimmering of the past in his sullen mind.
-He noticed a peculiar smell as he skirted the fringe of the cover, and
-soon spied the dead gull. How came it there, was the question. Gulls
-did not die ashore. At least, he had never seen one. But he knew them
-in the air. There was something suspicious in the matter. Why should a
-gull be dead so close to the lighthouse? He began to investigate, and
-drew near the danger zone.
-
-But months of wildness had made him cunning. All the sly instincts of
-the races of animals from which he had sprung had been developing. He
-approached the bait slowly, barely moving, and touching the ground ever
-so lightly with his paws. Then he halted. No, it would not do. There
-was something wrong with that bird, showing like a bit of white in the
-darkness. He could smell it plainly. It was the scent of a man. He drew
-slowly off, and began nosing about for the trail, and soon found it. He
-followed along, and it led straight to the dwelling where the keeper
-lived. Then he went back a little way into the scrub and sat upon his
-haunches, and, in spite of his cold and hunger, he lifted up his voice
-in a long, dismal howl, that to the keeper’s ears had an unmistakable
-ring of derision.
-
-Night after night the trap was set, but the pariah kept clear. Then,
-one day, it grew thick, and a cold wind began setting in from the sea.
-Before night it was howling and snoring away with hurricane force,
-driving the seas roaring up the sands, and tearing their tops into
-smothers of snowy spume drift.
-
-The pariah came to the beach and tried to look seaward to see what was
-coming with that fearful rushing blast, but the wind was so strong and
-the snow so blinding that he soon took to the cover, and headed for the
-light, in the hope he might pick up something to eat in the vicinity
-of the keeper’s dwelling. Before going to the yard he looked again
-seaward and saw a light flash out. He did not know what it meant, but
-he knew it was off on the Frying Pan, far out on the treacherous shoals
-where a thundering smother of rolling whiteness flashed and gleamed now
-and again. Then he skirted the clearing, and brought up back of the
-fowl-house, where now all the ducks and chickens were secured at night.
-
-He went forward, trying to smell his way, but the snow was too much for
-him. Then he stopped a moment. He located the house and started again,
-when suddenly, “Snap!”
-
-Something had leaped from the ground and seized his foreleg in a
-viselike grip. He sprang forward and fought to get away, but it was
-of no use. The thing had him fast with an awful grasp that cut into
-his flesh and squeezed his leg so tight that it soon became numb.
-With snarling growls, he fought desperately on, twisting and turning,
-struggling and biting, but all to no purpose. He was fast. Then the
-state of affairs began to dawn upon him, and he desisted, for the agony
-was supreme. Sitting there in the flying snow of the winter’s night,
-with the roar of the storm sounding over him, he raised his voice in a
-long, yelping bark of challenge and disdain.
-
-But in spite of his howling no one came near him. The snow grew deeper
-and the wind roared with terrific force, blinding him so that the great
-eye above was scarcely visible. He remained quiet now, and waited
-patiently for the daylight, which would mean his end. His sufferings
-were terrible, but he could not help it, and soon a sullen stupor came
-upon him.
-
-In the dim gray of the early morning forms were seen walking about the
-lighthouse. They were men, and among them was the keeper. The others
-wore clothes that reminded the pariah of former days, and one stranger
-seemed to be familiar to him. This was a man, short, broad, and
-bearded, with bow legs set wide apart, and long arms with huge hands
-and crooked fingers. He was ugly, and reminded him of the crabs he had
-seen and captured in the streams during the summer. There was something
-of the crab about the queer little fellow, and his very ugliness
-attracted the dog’s attention. It brought back some memory of past
-days, a memory that was not all unpleasant, yet indistinct and unreal.
-
-As the day dawned and the snow grew deeper the outcast waited no
-longer. He held up his nose and let forth a howl that was heard above
-the snore of the gale, and which brought the light-keeper to attention.
-He came running with a club, and behind him followed the stranger with
-the crablike body.
-
-“Sink me if I aint got ye at last, ye varmint!” yelled the keeper as he
-drew near. Then he halted. “A dog--what--jest a common everyday dog?
-But I’ll make a good dog out o’ ye in a minute. All dead dogs is good
-dogs, an’ you’ll do.”
-
-He advanced with raised club, and the pariah crouched for a spring. He
-would try for one last good bite. All the savageness of his mixed blood
-surged through his fierce mind. He gave a low growl and showed his
-teeth, and his eyes were like bits of yellow flame.
-
-“Hold on thar, stranger; don’t kill that ’ar dog. Wait a bit,” said the
-ugly man, waddling up behind. “What, caught ’im in a trap?”
-
-“Sure I got him in a trap. D’ye want me to loose him?” asked the keeper
-testily.
-
-“That’s erbout the size o’ my games,” said the ugly man. “Yew may think
-it a go, but that ’ar dog looks uncommon like the one I lost aboard the
-_Seagull_ when she went ashore hereabouts last year. He ware a good
-dog, part wolf, part hound, and the rest a mixture I don’t exactly
-remember. Lemme try ’im?”
-
-“Gwan, man; that critter is been stealin’ chickens since last summer,”
-said the keeper, but at the same time he allowed the ugly fellow to
-have his way.
-
-“Hey, Sammy, Sammy, Sammy!” said the ugly sailor. “Don’t yew know me,
-Sammy?” And he bent forward toward him.
-
-The pariah gazed at him. What did he mean? What was that voice? It
-sounded like that of the man who had brought him aboard the vessel he
-had gone ashore in. The only human who had never struck him or offered
-him harm. He hardly remembered the ugly fellow, for he had only been in
-the ship a short time before she was lost.
-
-“Strange, that looks like the critter sure enough. I went ashore here
-in the _Seagull_ a year ago, an’ here I goes ashore agin in this
-howlin’ wind an’ sees the dog I lost. Strange, keeper, it’s strange,
-hey?”
-
-“He do appear to know ye, an’ that’s a fact,” said the keeper. “Would
-ye like me to loose him off? Better do it afore the assistant comes
-down, fer he’s got it in fer this dog.”
-
-“Wait a bit,” said the ugly fellow, and he advanced closer to the
-outcast. He put out his hand, and the dog wavered. Should he seize
-it? He could crush it and tear it badly in his teeth before he
-could withdraw it, and they would probably kill him anyway in the
-end. But there was something in the ugly man’s eye that restrained
-him--something that spoke of former times when all was not strife. No,
-he would not bite him.
-
-“Turn the critter loose; he’s my dog fer sure,” said the ugly man. “All
-he wants is some grub. I reckon yew’d be savage, too, if yew had been
-out in the snow all night. I knows I ware when I come in half drowned
-this mornin’.”
-
-The keeper pried the trap open and the cur went free.
-
-“Come, Sammy, Sammy, Sammy!” said the ugly fellow, and he led the way
-to the house.
-
-The pariah hesitated. His foot was useless, but he could go on three
-legs. There was the timber a short distance away. He looked at it for
-an instant. Then he saw the ugly man beckoning with his great crooked
-finger. He lowered his head and gave a short whine. Then he limped
-slowly after him to the house.
-
-A little later the ugly man fed him and bound up the wounded paw, while
-the assistant mumbled something about rubber boots and breeches worth
-about seven dollars a pair.
-
-“Messmates,” said the ugly sailor, shifting his crablike body and
-sticking out his great bushy face with its red beard, “that ’ar dog
-ware a good dog, part wolf, part hound, an’ the rest I don’t exactly
-recollect, but he ware a good dog. Treat a dog good an’ he’ll be a good
-dog. Treat ’im bad an’ he’ll be a bad dog. When ye go erbout more among
-men, as I does, yew’ll see that what I says is so. An’ men is mostly
-like dogs.”
-
-The assistant kept quiet, for there was something peculiarly aggressive
-in that misshapen man. The animal was led away with a string, and went
-in the boat to Wilmington with the wrecked crew.
-
-Two years later another ship was added to the list of those whose
-bones rest in the sands of the Frying Pan Shoals. She ran on the outer
-breaker during the night, and in the morning the keeper saw a floating
-object on the shore. He went to it and found the body of a man whose
-peculiar figure he recognized. A life-buoy was strapped about his
-waist, and in his great crooked fingers was a line. The keeper hauled
-it in, and on the end of it he found the dead body of the yellow beast
-that had stolen his fowls. They had gone to their end together.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The Cape Horners]
-
-
-To the southward of where the backbone of the western hemisphere
-dips beneath the sea rises a group of ragged, storm-swept crags and
-peaks,--the wild rocks of the Diego Ramirez. Past them flows the
-current of the great Antarctic Drift, sweeping from the father of all
-oceans--the vast South Pacific,--away to the eastward, past the bleak
-pinnacles of Cape Horn, to disperse itself through the Lemaire Strait
-and Falkland Channel northward into the Atlantic Ocean.
-
-With the wild snore of the great west wind sounding over them, and the
-chaotic thunder of the Pacific Ocean falling upon their sides, they
-are lonely and inhospitable, and are seldom, if ever, visited by man.
-Only now and then he sees them, when the wind-jammer fighting to go
-past the last corner gets driven close in to the land of fire. Then,
-on some bleak and dreary morning, when the west wind is roaring through
-downhaul and clewline and under the storm topsails, the heavy drift
-may break away for a few minutes and show the wary navigator a glimpse
-of the death-trap under his lee that will add a few gray hairs to his
-head, and bring the watch below tumbling on deck to man the braces.
-
-Bare of vegetation and desolate as they are, the rocks are inhabited.
-To the leeward of the great Cape Horn sea that crashes upon them, the
-ledges and shelves are full of life. In the shelter, the strange forms
-sit and gaze seaward, peering this way and that, squawking and scolding
-in hoarse voices that might be heard above the surf-thunder. They
-appear like great geese sitting on their tails, for they sit upright,
-their feet being placed well down on their long bodies, giving them a
-grotesque look that is sometimes absurdly human.
-
-They have no wings,--only little rudiments covered with fine hairlike
-feathers that serve as side fins when swimming. They never flap them,
-as do their cousins, the Cape pigeons and albatrosses. In fact, their
-bodies are covered with short, close, hairlike feathers, very minute,
-seldom wider than a pencil’s point, and lying tight to the skin, like
-scales on a fish. These figures have birdlike heads, not unlike those
-of diver-ducks, and they have beautiful black eyes, with red rings
-around them. They are the creatures that hold sway over the barren
-crags, waddling and walking about in their absurd way until a great
-man-seal shows his bristling whiskers close to the ledge. Then they
-gave forth the loud, long-drawn, wild cry that is so well known to the
-Cape Horner, waddle to the brink, plunge headlong into the sea, and
-disappear.
-
-They are the penguins of the southern zone, half bird, half fish, and,
-one might say, half human, to judge by their upright waddle on their
-webbed feet.
-
-The one whose story is now to be told was hatched on the Ramirez, high
-above the lift of the Cape sea, and beyond the reach of straying seals.
-
-He belonged to a brood of three, and first saw the light a little after
-New Year’s Day, or midsummer there. There was no sheltering nest to
-guard him against the bleak wind, which is nearly as cold in summer
-as in winter. He came into the world on a bare rock and announced
-himself by a strange, chirping sound that caused his mother to waddle
-off a few feet and gaze at him in astonishment. He was followed by his
-two brothers, and, within a very short time, showed an inclination to
-follow his parent down the ledge and into the dark water where the kelp
-weed floated in sheltered spots between the rocks. He was but a fluffy
-ball, of the size of a baby’s fist, but he stood with dignity upon his
-short legs and labored over the rough places, sometimes falling and
-rolling over a step in the rock until, with a splash, he landed in the
-sea.
-
-At last! That was the place he was meant for. How fine it was to scull
-one’s self furiously along the surface and then suddenly dive and go
-shooting through the depths, coming up again to see if his parent were
-at hand; for, in spite of the delightful novelty of life, there was
-within him a strange feeling of fear, something that made him seek his
-mother’s side continually. The heavy snore of the great Cape Horn sea,
-breaking to windward of the rocks, sounded a deep note of menace, a
-warning of the fierce, wild world in which only the hardiest could hope
-to survive, and yet it seemed to tell of a power that ruled his destiny.
-
-His brothers swam near, and he was joined by countless myriads of other
-birds. With penguins, strength ashore exists solely in numbers, and the
-bare cliffs must be covered with sturdy birds ready to snap and strike
-fiercely with their strong, sharp beaks at each and every intruder,
-if they would have security. Woe to the albatross or mollemoke that
-attempts a landing on the sacred shore! He will be met by an army of
-powerful birds walking erect as soldiers and stabbing and biting with
-incredible power.
-
-Soon this young one’s downy feathers hardened. They did not grow
-like those of an ordinary bird. They were hardened almost to bone,
-and pressed so stiff against his skin that it would be difficult to
-distinguish them from the scales of a rockfish or a cod. His wings were
-no more than flippers, exactly like those of a turtle, and were without
-a bending joint at the pinion. They were devoid of feathers also, but,
-as he would never use them in the air, this made it all the better.
-They could scull him along faster under the sea. Already he could go
-fast enough to catch any fish in the vicinity, and, as for the great
-seals, they simply amused him with their clumsy attempts to catch him.
-On land he could hop about on his short legs, but he preferred the
-water for safety, and seldom took to the rocks.
-
-During this period of his life he kept well with the crowd of
-companions about him. Even the albatrosses, the huge destroyers, kept
-their distance, for, as they would swoop down in great circles near
-the young birds, they would meet an almost solid phalanx of screaming
-and snapping beaks, and would sweep about in giant curves until, seeing
-no chance to rush in, they would stand out to sea again and disappear.
-
-Gradually, as the months passed, the older penguins began to scatter.
-Some went farther and farther off shore, until, at length, when the
-cold July sun swept but a small arc of a circle above the horizon, they
-left the rocks and faced the wild ocean that sweeps past the Horn. Our
-young one now felt a desire to roam with the rest, and, one day, when
-the snore of the gale droned over the barren lumps, bringing thick
-squalls of sleet and snow, he put out into the open sea and headed away
-for the Strait of Magellan.
-
-Away through the dark water he went, his feeling of loneliness
-increasing as the land disappeared. The very majesty of that great
-waste of rolling sea impressed him, and an instinctive longing to
-realize what it meant came over him. He raised his head into the air
-and gave forth a long, deep, sonorous cry; but the dark ocean made no
-answer, the only sound being the distant noise of some combing crest
-that broke and rolled away to the southward. There was not a living
-thing in sight.
-
-Through the gloom he made his way with the feeling of adventure
-growing. He kept a lookout for small fish, and repeatedly dived to a
-great depth, but, even down there, where the light failed entirely,
-there was nothing. Only once during the day did he see anything alive,
-and this was after hours of swimming. A dark object showed upon the
-slope of a swell. It looked like a triangular knife-blade, and cut the
-water easily, while the dark shadow beneath the surface appeared almost
-as inert as a log or a piece of wreckage. The penguin drew nearer to
-it to investigate, for one of his strongest feelings was a desire to
-find out about things. Then the object drew toward him and appeared to
-be drifting to meet him. Suddenly there was a rush through the water.
-The protruding fin ripped the surface of the rolling swell, and, as
-it came on the forward slope, the penguin saw a pair of enormous jaws
-opening in front of him, while a row of teeth showed white in the dark
-water. He made a sudden swerve aside and missed the opening by a hair’s
-breadth. Before the shark could turn to pursue him, he dived and set
-off at a great rate of speed below the surface, and was soon out of the
-way. He had learned to look for danger wherever he might meet another
-such peculiar-shaped object, and the lesson would be of use, for there
-is no sea where sharks are not found.
-
-Between Terra del Fuego and Staten Land lies the narrow water of
-Lemaire Strait. Through this channel the current rushes with incredible
-speed, swirling around the reefs and foaming over the sunken ledges
-that line the shore. The tussock-covered hills of barren shingle form
-a background so bleak and uninhabited that many of the large sea fowl
-find it safe to trust themselves upon the cliffs where nothing may
-approach from shoreward to take them unawares. The rocks are covered
-with weed, and plenty of whale-food drifts upon them, so that there
-is always a supply for winter. There the penguin landed after days of
-cruising, and waddled on shore for the first time since leaving the
-place of his birth.
-
-To the westward, across the strait, the fires from the hills where the
-savages dwelt shone in the gloom of the twilight. They were attractive,
-and often he would sit and watch them in the growing gloom of the
-long winter evenings after he had come ashore from a day’s fishing,
-wondering at the creatures who made them. The light was part of his
-mental enjoyment, and sometimes, after looking for an hour or more, he
-would raise his head, which had a long, sharp beak, and, with lungs
-full of air, let forth a wild, lonely cry. For days and days he would
-come and go, seeing no companions save the raucous whale-birds who
-would come in on the rock and who had no sympathy with his fishing.
-They were mere parasites, and depended upon the great animals to show
-them their food.
-
-As the months passed and the sun began to stay longer above the
-horizon, he became more and more lonesome. A longing for companionship
-came upon him, and he would sit and gaze at the fires across the strait
-until he gave vent to his feelings with his voice.
-
-One day, when the sun shone brightly, he came upon the ledge and
-rested. He was not very tired, but the sun was warm and the bright rays
-were trying to his eyes after the long gloom of the winter. The ragged
-mountains stood up clearly from across the strait, but the fires would
-not shine in the sunlight. He stood looking for a time, and then broke
-forth into a long-drawn call. To his astonishment an answering note
-came sounding over the water. He repeated his cry and listened. From
-far away in the sunshine a weird cry was wafted across the sea. It
-thrilled him. He was not afraid, for the cry was one of yearning, and
-he wanted companionship. He sat and waited until he saw a small object
-on the rise of a swell. It came nearer, and then he saw it was one of
-his own race, and dived into the sea and went to meet the stranger.
-
-How smooth was the newcomer’s coat and how white the breast! He looked
-the female over critically, and a strange feeling of companionship
-pervaded his being. Then he went toward her and greeted her, sidling up
-and rubbing his head against her soft neck and swimming around her in
-circles. The sun shone brightly and the air was warm. The very joy of
-life was in him, and he stretched forth his head and called and called
-to the ledges and reefs, sea and sky, to bear witness that he would no
-longer live alone, but would thenceforth take the beautiful stranger
-with him and protect her. He climbed upon the ledge, she following,
-and, proud as a peacock, strutted back and forth in his enjoyment of
-her good will and comradeship.
-
-They strayed about the rocks and swam in the sheltered places among
-the reefs for a few days, but a desire to go into the great world to
-the southward and make a snug home for the coming summer began to make
-him restless. The warm sunshine made life a joy in spite of the thick
-coating of fat and feathers, and the high cliffs of Tierra del Fuego
-seemed to offer a tempting abode for the warmer months. His pretty
-companion shared his joy, and also his desire to go out into the great
-sea to the southward and find a suitable place on some rock or ledge
-where they could make a home.
-
-They started off shore one morning and swam side by side for many
-leagues, skirting the sheer and dangerous Horn and meeting many more
-couples who, like themselves, were looking for a suitable place
-for a summer sojourn while the bright sun should last. They met a
-vast crowd of their kind making an inner ledge of the Ramirez their
-stopping-place, and there they halted. It was pleasant to be sociable
-when united to a proud companion, and they went among the throng until
-they found a place on the rocks where they could climb ashore easily.
-Our friend led the way up the slope and found a level spot among the
-stones where his mate could sit and be near the tide. She would lay her
-eggs there, and he would take care that she fared well.
-
-Weeks passed and two white shells shone in marked contrast to the
-surrounding stones and gravel. His mate had laid two beautiful eggs,
-and her care for them kept him busy fishing for two. Yet he was very
-happy. He would make short trips to the outlying reef and seize a fish.
-Then he would hurry home with it, and together they would eat it while
-his mate sat calmly upon the eggs, keeping them warm and waiting for
-the first “peep” to show the entrance into this world of her firstborn.
-All about, the other couples had their nests, consisting only of the
-bare stones, for there was no drift or weed out there to use, and they
-sat in great numbers close enough to call to each other in case a
-marauding albatross or mollemoke should come in from the sea and try
-to steal eggs.
-
-Day after day he fished and brought his mate the spoils, often sitting
-on the eggs himself while she took a plunge into the cold water for
-exercise and change. He was satisfied and the world was bright with the
-joy of life.
-
-One day his mate waddled quickly from the nest. Where before there had
-been two shining white eggs, two little yellow puff-balls lay on the
-stones, and they made a noise that showed him his offspring were strong
-and healthy young ones. He strutted up and down the ledge, proud and
-straight, while his mate gave forth cries of satisfaction and nestled
-down again to give the delicate little ones shelter. He almost forgot
-to go fishing, and only a call from his patient mate recalled him to
-the fact that she must be fed. He stepped down the rocks, and, as he
-dived into the sea, cried aloud for joy.
-
-Out near the Ramirez the fish were playing in the sunshine. He made
-his way thither, his breast high with the happiness of his existence.
-Other fowl were there fishing. He joined them, but gave no heed to a
-long object that came slowly over the water from the land of fire. It
-headed toward the cliffs where the sea fowl dwelt, and two half-naked
-savages propelled it with paddles. They were hunting for eggs, and the
-rocks offered a tempting place to land, for the great crowd of birds
-told plainly of the summer breeding-place. They ran the canoe into a
-sheltered spot among the rocks where the heave of the sea was slight,
-and then sprang ashore. Up they climbed and stood upon the level where
-the penguin females sat and called wildly for their mates.
-
-A savage stooped and began gathering eggs, pushing away the birds or
-knocking them on the head with a stick, when, with their sharp beaks,
-they protested against the robbery. He was a horribly filthy fellow,
-and his ugly body was partly covered with skins of birds and sealskin.
-He noticed a female sitting close, calling to our penguin for help,
-and the bird seemed to be very fine and large, with a good skin. He
-made a pass with his club and smote her on the head. She struggled
-desperately to get away, but could not. The blow partly stunned her.
-The little ones scurried off as she rose, and the savage saw there were
-no eggs to be had from her. But he would have her skin anyway, so, with
-a furious stroke of his weapon, he knocked her lifeless at his feet.
-Then he picked her up and went on.
-
-Later in the afternoon the male came back from fishing. He climbed the
-cliffs and looked about him. His mate and young were missing, and he
-sent forth his deep, sonorous cry. But it was not answered. Other birds
-took it up, but there was no answering call from the mate, and the
-little dark speck that rose and fell upon the heave of the swell away
-in toward the shore of Tierra del Fuego gave no token of her fate.
-
-All night he wandered over the rocks, his wild note of calling sounding
-far out to sea. In the morning he stood once more upon the spot where,
-a few days before, the mate of his bosom sat proudly upon the white
-eggs. The empty shells were all that were left. He stood gazing out to
-sea, and then his instinct told him he would see his family no more. He
-gave one long-drawn cry, plunged into the sea, and was gone. The great
-west wind came roaring over the sea before the sun set, and before it
-he held his way. He would go far away from the scene of his summer’s
-life. The vast ocean would be his home, and the memories of the ledge
-be a thing of the past.
-
-For many days the penguin roamed over the huge rolling hills of water.
-The vastness of the ocean and its grandeur soothed him, though he
-still called out at intervals when the sadness of his life was strong
-upon him. Then came a day when sea and sky seemed to blend in one wild
-whirl, and a hurricane from the high, ragged hills of Patagonia swept
-the Antarctic Drift. Away he went before it, and the wildness of it was
-joy, the deepening roar of the wind and crash of Cape combers making
-music for his spirit. He headed for the middle of the current between
-the land where the Pacific flows through and meets the western ocean,
-the stretch of sea that reaches away past the South Shetlands to the
-south pole.
-
-How wild and lonely was the storm-swept sea! Great hills of rolling
-water, fifty feet in height, with stately and majestic rush, passed
-to the eastward, their tops crowned with huge white combing crests
-and their sides streaked and flecked with long stripes of white
-foam. Above, the dull banks of hurtling vapor flew wildly away to
-somewhere in the distance, far beyond the reach of vision. It was more
-comfortable beneath the surface than above it, and our penguin drove
-headlong before the sea two fathoms below the foam, only coming up
-once in a while to breathe. On and on he drove for hours, until hunger
-warned him to keep a lookout for fish, as he occasionally came up
-for air, and to see if there were signs of the oily surface denizens
-showing in the sweep of that great, lonely sea. Suddenly an object
-attracted his attention. It was a mere speck on the storm-torn horizon,
-but he knew it must be of considerable size. It was different from
-anything he had ever before seen, for above it three long, tapering
-sticks stood upward, and upon the middle one a strip of white, like
-the wing of an albatross, caught the weight of the wild west wind.
-He was interested, and drove along toward it until the object loomed
-high above him, and the deep snore of the gale sounded like a heavy
-roaring comber tearing through the many lines of the rigging and under
-the strip of white canvas. The great thing would rise upon the crest
-of a giant wave and fling its long, pointed end high into the gale,
-the rushing sea striking it and smashing over in a white smother like
-the surge on the rocks. Then down it would swing slowly until it would
-reach the hollow between the moving hills, and the penguin could see
-upon its body, its tall sticks rolling to windward and the roar of the
-gale deepening into a thunderous, rushing sound, until the advancing
-sea would lift it again and roll it toward the lee. The sight of the
-huge monster wallowing about, hardly making the slightest way through
-the water, interested the penguin. It seemed like a floating rock
-without life, and he felt a curiosity to know if it were alive. He rose
-partly from the sea and uttered a long-drawn, hoarse call that floated
-down the gale and swept over the great hulk. Nothing happened, and he
-repeated the call,--a far-reaching, wild, deep, resonant cry.
-
-But the great ship swung along slowly, as before, and he dived under
-her to see what was below.
-
-In the forecastle the dim light of the summer day made a dismal and
-cheerless scene. The watch below had turned in, all standing, their wet
-clothes wrapped about them in their “pews,” or bunks, making a vapor in
-the cold air through which the light of the swinging lamp shone dimly.
-The gray light from outside filtered in at the side ports and spoke
-of the cold, hard day on deck. Once in a while some shivering wretch
-would turn in his poultice of soaking flannel and get a fresh piece
-of icy-cold cloth against his skin that would call forth maledictions
-on the Horn, the weather, and the hove-to ship. In a corner of the
-forecastle a pile of soaking clothes moved, and a moan sounded above
-the noise without.
-
-“Stow it, Sammy; you’ll be all right soon, my boy,” said a voice in a
-bunk above him.
-
-“Oh, but it’s so cold, Tom,” whispered the pile of clothes. “I can’t
-last much longer, and they might let me die warm, at least.”
-
-“What’s the little man sayin’?” asked a deep voice opposite. “Wants to
-die warm, does he? Say, Sammy, me son, you’ll be warm mighty soon after
-you’re dead; why in thunder don’t you put up with a bit o’ cold till
-then, boy?”
-
-“You’re a blamed brute, bos’n,” said the first speaker, “an’ if I
-wa’n’t mighty well used up I’d soak you a good whanging for that. Yer
-know the poor boy’s sick wid scurvy, an’ aint likely to pull through.”
-
-“I’ll ware ye out when th’ watch is called, yer preacher,” said the
-bos’n confidently. “Talk away, for you’ll only get it all the worse
-when I shucks my dunnage.” Then, as if the matter were settled, he
-snugged up in his soaking bunk and hove down to warm a piece of his
-steaming covering until it should cease to send a chill through his big
-frame and he could wander into dreamland.
-
-The shivering form of the boy in the corner moved again, and he groaned
-in agony. It was useless for him to try to sleep with his limbs swollen
-and his flesh almost bursting with the loathsome disease. The pile of
-wet clothes upon him could not keep him warm, and each shiver sent
-agony through him. He would die unless he could get relief soon, and
-there the ship was off the Horn in June, the beginning of winter,
-without one chance in fifty of making port in less than two months.
-
-In his half-delirious state he lived many of his early schooldays
-again, and then followed thoughts of those who were nearest to him.
-He must die. His grave must be in that great, dark void beneath. Oh,
-the loneliness of that great ocean! What would it be like far below in
-the blackness of the vast deep, beyond the heave of the great sea, in
-the very bosom of the great world of silence? The horror of it caused
-him to groan. Would anyone punish the cruel ship-owners and captain
-who had so foully murdered him with the cheap and filthy food? What
-would anyone care after he had gone? What would he care, away down in
-that everlasting blackness, where no one would ever see him again? He
-lay upon his back and stared with red and swollen eyes at the bunk
-above him where Tom, the quartermaster, snored loud enough to be heard
-above the dull, thunderous roar overhead. In another hour the watch
-must turn out, but they would let him lie by; him, a dying ship’s-boy.
-But would he die outright? Would his soul live down there in that
-awful blackness, where they must soon heave his body? He had heard of
-sailors’ spirits haunting ships. Could his do so? Was there a hideous
-devil below waiting for him? He had heard there was. Far down in the
-bottomless abyss some monster might await him. He gazed with staring
-eyes at the dim lamp, and longed for a little light and sunshine to
-relieve the terrible gloom of the Antarctic winter day.
-
-Then there broke upon his ears a wild, sonorous, deep-drawn cry
-sounding over the storm-swept sea. It was not human. What was it? Was
-it for him? The thought made him sick with terror. He groaned aloud,
-and Tom turned over in his wet clothes until the sudden chill of moving
-from the one steaming place made him grumble audibly.
-
-“What was it, Tom?” he whispered.
-
-“What?” growled the sailor surlily.
-
-“There----” and the cry was repeated.
-
-Tom growled a little and then rolled snug again. Suddenly he started
-up. “A man might as well freeze to death on deck as in this unholy
-frozen hole,” he said. Then he climbed stiffly down from his bunk,
-clapped his sou’wester on his head, and, tying the flaps snug under his
-chin, he slid back the forecastle door with a bang, and landed on the
-main deck.
-
-There he stood a minute watching the great fabric straining under her
-lower maintopsail, hove to in that sea that the Cape Horner knows so
-well and dreads so much. In the waist, the foam on deck told of a flood
-of icy water that poured again and again over the topgallant rail and
-crashed like a Niagara upon the deck planks, rushing to leeward through
-the ports in the bulwarks and carrying everything movable along with it.
-
-He watched his chance, and dodged around the corner of the deck house,
-where the port watch huddled to keep clear of the wind and the sea.
-
-“Merry Fourth o’ July to ye,” bawled a man of the watch, as he came
-among them.
-
-“What’s the matter? Can’t ye find enough work to do whin yer turn
-comes?” asked another.
-
-“Where’s the whale-iron?” asked Tom, of Chips, who had come out of his
-room to get a look around.
-
-The carpenter looked at him queerly. “What d’ye want wid it?” he asked.
-
-“Listen!” said Tom.
-
-Then the cry of the sea fowl sounded again.
-
-“Penguin?” said Chips.
-
-“Turkey,” said Tom, with a smile. “If we can get the steward to give us
-a bit o’ salt pork fat we can git him, or I’m a soger.”
-
-He was an old whaleman, and the carpenter hesitated no longer. He led
-the way into his room in the forward house where he kept his tools, and
-the iron was brought forth. A word to the mate on watch, and the sailor
-was fast in the lee forerigging, standing upon the shear-pole, with the
-iron ready to heave. The fat was tossed over the side, and he waited.
-
-In the dark, cold hole of the forecastle the drawn lips of the sick
-boy were parted, showing his blue and swollen gums. He was grinning
-horribly. “Take him away. Oh, take him away!” he was moaning. “Hear him
-a-callin’ me? Don’t let him get me, Tom; take him away, take him away!
-It’s the devil callin’ me!”
-
-All the fear and anguish that can burn through a disordered brain
-was upon the little fellow, and the dismal cry lent a reality to his
-delirious thoughts. Suddenly he half rose in his bunk, and then the
-latent spark of manhood, which was developing even in spite of his
-sufferings, came to his aid. He thought of the Great Power which ruled
-his fate, and shook himself into full consciousness, glancing up at the
-aperture through which the dim light filtered as if he half expected to
-see a vision that would give him strength. Then he felt that he would
-face the end calmly, and meet whatever was in store as a man should.
-Perhaps the captain and owners could not help matters, after all. He
-could hear the song of the gale more distinctly, and once the tramp of
-the men as they tailed onto the maintopsail brace. They were jamming
-the yard hard on the backstay, and there was no show of a slant yet. He
-must lie quiet and wait, listening to the weird cry that caused him to
-shiver and see fantastic figures upon the carlines above his head.
-
-Out on the great, high-rolling sea, the penguin had scented a peculiar
-substance. He drew nearer the great fabric that rolled and swung so
-loggily on the sea. He sent forth a wild cry, and drove headlong after
-a piece of white matter that floated in the foam of the side wash. He
-seized it and swallowed it. Then he came closer.
-
-A form stood in the rigging above him, motionless, as if made of wood,
-and a long, pointed thing was balanced in the air. A piece of fat
-showed right beneath, and he went for it, in spite of the feeling of
-dread that came upon him. He was hungry, and would snatch it and then
-get away. He reached it, and at that instant something struck him in
-the back, carrying him beneath the surface. Then his life went out.
-
-“A fine turkey, an’ that’s a fact,” said Chips, a moment later. “Get
-something to put him in, quick; the lad will have a stew, fer sure.
-’Twill well-nigh cure him, and, anyways, it’ll keep him a-goin’ until
-we speak a wessel fer fresh grub.”
-
-The second mate came forward.
-
-“Eight bells, ye starbowlines,” he bawled into the forecastle; “turn
-out, or I’ll be right in there wid ye! One o’ ye bring Sammy’s mess
-things. He’s got turkey fer dinner. Come, wake up, sonny! There aint
-no devil or nothin’ a-chasin’ ye. Ye’ll be all right in a week o’
-Sundays. Bring that beef juice right in here, Chips. Hold his head,
-Tom,--there,--make him drink it while it’s hot.”
-
-In a little while the hot broth made from the bird’s flesh warmed the
-boy’s body, and his mind was clear again. The forecastle was empty,
-and the wild cry he had heard no longer sounded above the gale. He
-felt stronger, and his terror had vanished. A feeling of ease grew
-within his poisoned body. A gleam of faint sunlight came through the
-open door, and as he looked he knew that the God he felt had given him
-strength had been kind. He knew no prayer, or word of thanks, but his
-spirit was warm with gratitude. He smiled his thanks at his shipmates,
-and closed his eyes. Then he slept.
-
-A crowd of swearing and jostling men awakened him as they came tumbling
-below some hours afterwards.
-
-“Grub ahoy!” bawled one. Then the mess-kid came in steaming from the
-galley, and upon it was a large fowl.
-
-“Hi, yi, turkey, ahoy! Turkey, ’e was a good old man!” cried a Swede.
-
-“An’ divil a bit will anyone but th’ bye git,” said the big bos’n.
-“It’s sorry I am, Thomas, me dear, that I have tew whang ye afther yer
-noble raid on ther poulthry.”
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The LOGGER-HEAD]
-
-
-He was probably named by sailors because of his fancied resemblance
-to a certain piece of ship’s gear, but the Conchs of the Bahama Bank
-believed he deserved his name in its true meaning, for he was certainly
-the most stupid fellow on the reef. Those who knew him and watched him
-crawl up the glistening white coral sand that glared in the heat of
-the torrid sunshine never took the trouble to harm him, although the
-law of the reef is very much like it is elsewhere. The strongest or
-quickest-witted only might endure.
-
-But the conch who first turned him, or rather attempted to turn
-him, found that his dead weight of six hundred pounds of shell and
-leather-like beef was not worth the trouble. Turtles of more manageable
-size were plentiful, and there was no use of straining one’s self
-trying to upset such a monster. He drew his knife to kill, but the
-stupid one had sense enough to withdraw his head within the wall of
-bony shell, and the black man called maledictions upon him for turning
-the edge of his weapon. Then he smote him over the back with his
-turning stave and called him a worthless one because he refused to
-contribute himself to the Conch’s larder, and passed on.
-
-The loggerhead paid small heed to the man’s behavior. The bright
-sunshine was warming the white sands, and the blue water of the Gulf
-Stream was rippling past the cay, while above him the beautiful little
-lumpy clouds, bunches of pure white vapor, were floating away to the
-southward. It was enough to live without bothering with those who
-fished upon the waters of the reef or the great swarm of creatures who
-inhabited the clear depths. Everywhere the sea denizens seemed to be
-in continual tumult, some trying to build homes among the sponges and
-growths of the coral banks, and others hurrying to and fro through the
-clear blue liquid with no especial purpose he could fathom. Then there
-were the destroyers who came and went with a rush, chasing the smaller
-to shelter and splashing a great deal of water in their efforts to
-capture those weaker than themselves.
-
-The loggerhead poked forth his nose and gazed about him, wondering at
-the beauty of the world, and gave the struggling swarms but a passing
-glance. Then he laboriously hauled himself up the warming sands until
-he reached high-water mark.
-
-The Conch had walked far away down the cay where his boat was hauled
-up. His companion sat in the stern-sheets and lazily bailed the water
-from her. When he had finished, the two men shoved her off and hoisted
-a small sail. Then swinging her bow around before the breeze, they
-headed away toward the distant line of white which showed to the
-eastward where a larger cay of the Bank rose from the sea. After they
-had gone the loggerhead watched the rippling water along the shore.
-Soon the head of a huge turtle appeared, and in a few minutes the great
-form of another like himself hauled slowly and lazily up the beach.
-
-Before dark several followers had hauled up to high-water mark. On the
-cay was soft fine sand of a nature not unlike that of more northern
-beaches, and this had banked above the coral to a depth of three or
-more feet.
-
-With flippers of horny hardness and gigantic power the females began to
-cut their way down. They scooped and scooped until they had holes at
-least two feet deep nicely rounded and firmly packed on the sides as
-though they were cemented. Then they dropped slowly egg after egg into
-the little pits until a hundred or more had packed themselves into the
-receptacles. The shells of the eggs were soft like leather, and each
-egg had a small dent which showed it was fresh. Then as the night wore
-on they softly covered the pits with sand and carefully smoothed them
-over until not the slightest trace of any disturbance of the surface
-showed. It was nice work, for the sand was soft, and the signs of
-digging were easily made, but hard to conceal, and it was nearly dawn
-before the females were satisfied with their efforts. Then they slipped
-slowly down the sand into the sea and disappeared to return no more.
-Their task was done.
-
-The huge loggerhead who had led the way up the beach watched the
-departing turtles as they went to sea. The sound of the murmuring ocean
-was in the morning air, the song of the south sea awakening the day
-as the soft wind sighed over heaving swell and rippled the beautiful
-wavelets until they rolled into little combers and flashed white in the
-sunshine. All about him was the light of the tropic dawn. The sweet
-breath of the trade wind fanned his iron-hard head and he opened his
-eyes lazily to watch the sunrise. It was well. The beauty of the world
-attracted him.
-
-Far away on the horizon the spurts of foam showed the beginning of the
-strenuous life of the destroyers. He watched them lazily and wondered
-at their fierceness, their uselessness of purpose. Then he saw a form
-coming down the beach and looked eastward where the boat of the Conchs
-had made the shore again.
-
-The black man went slowly along the beach prodding the sand at
-high-water mark wherever he saw the tracks of turtles. He had a long,
-thin piece of iron with a sharp end which he drove into the sand and
-withdrew again, looking at the end to see if there was any sign of
-egg-yolk adhering to it. Once he struck a place where a turtle had
-scooped out a nest, and the dripping iron caused him to give a cry to
-his companion in the boat. Then he threw down a sack and dug until he
-had unearthed the eggs, which he transferred quickly to the bag, and
-picking up his iron staff he went along, bending down to watch the
-tracks more closely.
-
-The loggerhead watched him out of the corner of his eye and thought of
-the turtle who had lost her eggs, but the whole thing interested him
-but little and he made his way slowly down the sand to avoid being hit
-over the head with the iron rod because the Conch did not like him.
-
-The Conch saw him as he gained the surf, but he knew him, and shaking
-his staff at him he went along searching for more prizes.
-
-The great loggerhead swam easily just below the surface where the
-sunlight filtered down and made the liquid a bright blue. He had no
-object, and held his course across the Gulf Stream, letting himself
-drift with the current. It was well to live and the uselessness of
-effort was more apparent to him since he had seen the Conch’s work on
-the cay of the Bahama Bank.
-
-The warm stream was rushing silently northward and the gentle wind
-caused but little roll to the sea. The loggerhead could lie upon the
-surface and poke his head out, getting a glimpse of the eternal rim of
-the circle which had no break. But he cared nothing for land, and the
-sea was sparkling and blue. The sun overhead sent down hot rays which
-he felt through his thick armor of shell, but when it grew too warm
-he cooled himself by sinking a few feet below the surface for several
-minutes.
-
-Several big barnacles which had attached themselves to his underbody
-made navigation tiresome, for he had to drag them through the water
-along with him, but it was too much trouble to scrape them off. He had
-seen some of his fellows do this on the rocks of the Florida Reef, but
-it was laborious work and he preferred to take things easy.
-
-He was not an old turtle. Some of his fellows had lived for several
-centuries and were old before he was born. But he had grown very large
-since the day he first saw the sun shining over the reef at Roncador.
-He was but a tiny little fellow then, and his shell was so soft that
-he felt the sun burn through it. His leather-like skin on his neck was
-tender and even his bony beak could hardly cut the soft Gulf weed. His
-flippers were dark and soft and very unlike the huge scaly paddles he
-now used to scull himself along. He was quite rapid in his movements
-then, but life upon the tropical sea had gradually had the effect of
-making him sluggish and philosophical. The sunshine was all he cared
-for.
-
-He had no trouble getting enough to eat without fighting for it. It
-seemed a great waste of energy to be eternally chasing other and weaker
-creatures, and now he had drifted instinctively back to the habits of
-his forefathers. He took things very coolly. When a savage shark or
-albicore made a strike at him he did not retaliate by snapping at them
-with his huge beak which would now slice out a couple of pounds of wood
-from a floating log and shear through anything living. He simply hauled
-in his paddles and stump of a tail to the sheltering safety of his
-armor and the vigorous fish might chop all day at him for all he cared.
-Their teeth might scratch his shell a little, but the powerful arch of
-his back made it impossible to crush him and a few scratches upon his
-plates would not injure him in any way whatever. His head he might draw
-in until his ugly beak and steady eyes looked out of a sort of cavern.
-It was trifling with sudden death to come within the radius of a foot
-of that nose, and the vigorous fish after tormenting him a few minutes
-generally gave him a shove and left him in disgust.
-
-After they had gone away he would slowly and lazily shove out his
-paddles again and proceed to scull himself leisurely on his way, his
-small, dull mind undisturbed at the affront. Such creatures were a
-nuisance to him, but they were in existence and it was not for him to
-worry because they were. He would go along in the sunshine and soft
-air in his easy way, and when these no longer attracted him he would
-draw in his head, upset himself, then, thrusting it forward again, go
-sculling for the cool depths where he would spend many hours among the
-beautiful marine growths fathoms below the surface upon the coral
-reef, and where the faint light of the sun filtering down made objects
-dim and uncertain. All was quiet here, and it was the ideal place for
-repose.
-
-It had taken many years of wandering to get the loggerhead as far
-north as the Bahama Bank. He had let himself drift along, and here
-he was at last in the core of the great Florida Stream, going to the
-northward at a rate which would have astonished him very much had he
-known its velocity. It is doubtful even if he had known it that he
-would have made any effort to either stem it or get clear, for he now
-had the reposeful habit strong in his nature, and he took things as
-they came. Nothing had as yet caused him the slightest harm, and there
-was no reason to get excited at anything. Life was pleasant. Effort was
-useless.
-
-He would float along upon the bright blue surface of the warm stream
-and poke his head up into the clear sweet air and sunshine. It was
-enough. The life of albicore or dolphin was not for him. Theirs
-was all effort, savage strife, and a sudden death. He might lie and
-ponder at their lot with his head slightly raised and his paddles at
-rest, but while he might notice them in their desperate play he had a
-supreme contempt for them all. He had already lived as long as three
-generations of them, and they had done nothing save fight and slay.
-
-As he floated away he soon found many of his old acquaintances were
-disappearing. The savage amber-jack and fat sunfish would pass him now
-and then, but they were always heading south. Only his companions, the
-flying fish, seemed to care as little as he for their whereabouts. The
-flying fish were not afraid of him, and they were his friends. He held
-them in high disdain for their cowardice, for they were always timorous
-and ready for flight at the first sign of an approaching fish, and it
-was more contempt than pity he had for those who were caught. The more
-fortunate he would watch with languid interest.
-
-The lives of all were so full of strife they were eminently
-unsuccessful from his point of view, and it was only because the little
-flyers were so pretty when they whirled upward from the blue water and
-with whirring wings sailed away, that he liked them better than the
-rest. They always knew where the best Gulf weed was to be had and never
-disputed his claim to the largest share of any that he found. It was
-manifest to him that he was a superior being, quite above the rest of
-his fellows, and with the instinctive feeling common to all animals,
-he felt that this superiority was a special gift from the great power
-which he felt ruled his destiny. His dull brain worked slowly. There
-was no quickening of his sluggish circulation to brighten his wits.
-
-It was quite a fortnight after leaving the Bahama Bank that he began
-to notice that the water about him was not quite so blue as before and
-that there was a chill in it which he did not like. It stirred him
-to action and he began paddling westward after the setting sun. The
-next day a low shore appeared on the horizon with a bright sand beach
-shining like a white band between the dark line of hammock and the
-sparkling sea. He headed for it, thinking to haul out a little while
-and sun himself upon the hot beach, for the air was much cooler than
-what he had been accustomed to and the Gulf weed was scarce.
-
-In spite of his unwieldy size the loggerhead was not slow when he once
-started to use his great paddles. He kept up a steady stroke with all
-four, his large front ones sculling him along like two oar-blades,
-bending at each return, and his smaller hind ones shoving him ahead
-with quick, jerky strokes. His head was thrust forward, and he went
-along a few feet below the surface like a great oval shadowy shape.
-
-In a little while he drew near the beach. It was a long sand-spit
-stretching out to sea, upon which the long roll of the Atlantic swell
-fell with a deep, sullen roar. Beyond the spit was a quiet lagoon, and
-there was an opening through the line of breakers.
-
-He paddled slowly in, keeping clear of the surf, poking his head up
-now and then to get his bearings correctly. Upon the inner end of the
-bar he saw three strange forms. They were absurd-looking creatures
-with long legs and bills, their heads having light gray penciled
-feathers giving them the appearance of being bald, as their wings and
-breasts were dark. Their large eyes were watching the incoming tide
-as it swirled through the inlet, and when they saw him they set up a
-vast noise of protest, scolding loudly and threatening him. He felt
-instinctively that these birds were timid creatures in spite of their
-fierce threats, and a sudden movement toward them sent them shrieking
-away in terror. This amused him, and he went in through the smooth
-water unmolested.
-
-Inside the lagoon was a long stretch of shoal water. Sculling along
-close to the bottom so that but a few inches were between him and the
-hard sand, he went swiftly up the sound. A great sand shark lay in
-front of him, his long body barely moving, the sunlight playing upon
-his flanks and his dorsal fin just awash. The loggerhead gave him a
-brush with his paddle as he went past and the great fish shot ahead a
-full fathom with the touch. He was not used to being brushed against,
-and it startled him. Then he turned and chopped at the turtle, but his
-teeth met the armor of shell and several broke with the impact. The
-loggerhead went steadily on. The water was now getting warmer again and
-the sunshine made it very bright, for it was shoal and the white sand
-reflected the rays from the bottom, hurting his eyes with the glare.
-
-He found a sloping beach and hauled lazily out into the heat of a
-cloudless day.
-
-The quiet of the lagoon was attractive to the turtle. He spent many
-days drifting about its shallow depths feeding upon the drift-weed and
-small shell-fish the tide drove into the inlet. He was well content to
-lie upon the surface and watch the shear-waters go sailing past, their
-beaks skimming the smooth sea, the tips sometimes cutting like a knife
-through the yielding medium, ready to snatch up any unwary mullet or
-small fry that happened upon the surface in their path. Often a great
-pelican would come in from the sea and fish for a few hours over the
-schools of mullet or whiting until with heavy pouch and tired pinions
-he would withdraw to the sand-spit to gorge himself with the tender
-morsels.
-
-The loggerhead was amused at the harried schools of fish as they
-scurried in terror for a shelter. He felt his superiority over all the
-other denizens of the lagoon, and the poor little creatures hurrying in
-terror from the destroyers filled him as before with disdain.
-
-One day a fishing schooner hove to off the inlet. Boats were lowered
-and a long seine placed in them. The net was very strong and its
-leadline so heavy it took eight men to haul it. They headed slowly
-in for the inlet and lay off the entrance for some time waiting for
-the tide to favor an attempt to make the opening through the breakers.
-They headed the long rollers, rowing easily, and one man stood in the
-bow of the leading boat watching the shoaling water, ready to warn the
-helmsman in time to prevent getting ashore.
-
-Soon they saw the way clear ahead and the rowers put some strength into
-their stroke, sending the small craft rapidly in. They went through the
-entrance safely, although a breaker rolling close to the outer edge of
-the sand-spit half filled the leading boat. Then they rested on their
-oars and began to clear the net.
-
-The loggerhead was far away up the lagoon when the fishermen entered.
-He saw them as they were stretching the seine across the entrance of
-the inlet and watched them haul it slowly up the slue, driving all the
-fish before them. The mullet were jumping in terror and the whiting
-were hurrying for the shoal water half a mile away. The great sand
-shark who lay off the entrance saw the closing trap in time to make a
-lunge past the end of the line, splashing the man in the bow with a
-vigorous slap of his tail as he swung across and clear. He made a chop
-at the trailing net, but missed it in his hurry. Then he went sullenly
-to sea.
-
-The fishermen landed on either side of the narrow lagoon and started to
-walk the net slowly up, gradually closing the space above into smaller
-and smaller scope. In half an hour they had gone more than halfway, and
-the frightened schools of fish began to grow more and more restless as
-they saw the strangers approaching. Some of them tried the meshes of
-the seine, but they were too small for any save the tiniest mullet to
-go through, and they fled back again to the shallow water farther up.
-
-The loggerhead was resting upon the surface watching the men. They had
-not yet noticed him, but he had gone so long without harm from anyone
-that he anticipated none. He was satisfied that his superiority to
-all other creatures put him beyond the pale of becoming a victim to
-anything.
-
-Suddenly a fisherman noticed him and yelled to his companions across
-the slue, pointing at the bony beak that showed above the surface. His
-companions were too far away to hear what he said, but their sharp eyes
-followed his signals and they soon noticed the turtle.
-
-The net was drawing in closer and closer, the water was getting
-shoaler, and the men were walking the lines ahead more rapidly. The
-fish imprisoned beyond its scope now saw their danger plainly and
-they tore the water into foam in their frantic efforts to escape. The
-loggerhead saw them and watched them lazily, much amused at their
-struggles. His contempt for them grew so supreme that when they rushed
-past him in one of their frantic plunges he snapped viciously at a
-lagging mullet and very nearly cut him in two. Then he sank slowly
-down to the sandy bottom below, for the hurrying fish annoyed him.
-
-The net was now nearly up to the end of the slue, and a giant leader
-of the mullet school made a mighty dash for liberty. He tore down the
-lagoon and rising with a sudden sweep upward, leaped high in the air
-and plunged over the line of corks which floated the top of the trap.
-
-He went free. Another, encouraged by his example, made the dash also
-and went over. The rest, seeing the leaders leap to liberty, made a
-dash in unison and with a mighty rush plunged at the floating line of
-buoys. Hundreds went over in spite of the fishermen, who manned their
-boats and rowed along the net, holding it aloft wherever they saw the
-crowd coming. Some gave out at the jump and drove against the deadly
-meshes, and others, finding the crowd too close for them, swerved at
-the line and flowed past in a solid phalanx of shimmering silver to
-swim back and make a new trial.
-
-The cries of the men and the rush of the passing schools began to
-make the loggerhead restless. There was something very extraordinary
-taking place. He was angry at the miserable fish who were so useless
-and helpless. His contempt finally became so great that he concluded
-that he would go down to the other end of the slue where the sand shark
-usually lay waiting for the little fish to come out in deep water. He
-started to scull himself forward and had just made headway when he
-suddenly brought up against the net.
-
-The water was less than ten feet deep where he was, and he followed the
-obstruction upward to the surface, thinking to find it end before he
-came into view of the men. But the line of buoys held it well up and
-his head popped out of the water before he realized that he could not
-pass. A man in a boat made a vicious lunge at him with a boat-hook, but
-he got out of the way and followed the net along trying to find a way
-to get through.
-
-The mullet and whiting were now leaping by scores over the corked line.
-Their active life had made them fleet and strong. They had fought for
-existence from the beginning, and the trap about them was but another
-of the many obstacles they must surmount if they would endure. They
-were terrified, but they acted quickly and sensibly, their fright
-not causing them to overlook any possible means of escape. They were
-getting clear in spite of the shouting men who were now hauling line
-as fast as they could. Several large skates and a couple of flounders
-who had lived up the slue were vainly trying to burrow under the
-heavy leadline that swept the bottom. The loggerhead noticed them as
-he passed, but they paid no heed to him. A troop of crabs were being
-hustled along the bottom by the weighted line. They were snapping at
-everything that came in their reach.
-
-The loggerhead began to get anxious to go away. He made a savage lunge
-at the meshes closing about him and he drove his head through a great
-rent he made with his beak. His paddles, or flippers, however, caught
-in the snare and he struggled wildly and with gigantic power to get
-through. His tremendous struggles soon drew the corked line below the
-surface and brought the fishermen hurrying in their boats to find out
-what caused the trouble. They gazed down into the depths and soon made
-out the giant shape struggling frantically. Seizing the lines of the
-seine they quickly hauled the loggerhead to the surface, where one of
-them grasped his hind paddle and held it long enough to get a bowline
-around it. Then they rowed to the shore, towing him ignominiously
-behind the craft, while the few remaining mullet, who were too small
-and weak to make the leap for liberty, crowded swiftly through the gap
-and headed for the open sea.
-
-Even the skates now made for the opening in the trap. They rose to the
-surface with difficulty, but managed to get clear. In less than five
-minutes every living thing in the shape of a fish had escaped.
-
-The fishermen landed their prize and tried to haul him out of the
-water. The loggerhead objected to this, and he began to haul them
-bodily into the sea. The water was riled and he appeared monstrous in
-the foam. They could not tell what kind of creature he was, but it was
-for them to get him ashore, and six of them hauled on the line while
-two, wading in, began to pry at him with oars to turn him upon his
-back. In a little while they had him rolled over and helpless. Then
-they came close to examine their victim.
-
-“I’d be willing to lose half a ton of fish fer a fine green turtle,”
-said the leader of the men. “He’s a corker, an’ that’s a fact.”
-
-“Looks to me like he’s nothin’ but one o’ them loggerheads,” said an
-old fisherman; “if he is, he’s played it on us fine.”
-
-They looked at the markings on his shell and pulled out his flippers.
-Then the leader mopped his streaming face with a handkerchief. The old
-fisherman looked up sheepishly and grinned.
-
-“He aint wuth his weight in mud. Turn him lose an’ let him slide,” he
-said.
-
-A sailor rapped him over the head and spoke feelingly. Then they cut
-the line adrift and went to gather in their torn net.
-
-The loggerhead lay upon his back and waited. He was annoyed at the
-disturbance. It was provoking to be turned over by a lot of fishermen.
-
-The mullet had seen him hauled out by the flipper, and he grew angry at
-the thought. He tried to twist round and get upon his belly, but could
-not.
-
-All day he lay in the hot sunshine and snapped viciously at the
-sand-crabs who came to examine him. Then, as the tide raised and
-floated him, he managed to get again upon his paddles. He was
-disgusted. Far away down the lagoon a ripple on the water showed the
-returning mullet. He gazed at them for a moment, then hauled himself
-clear of the bottom. His ugly beak was stuck far out, and with steady
-strokes he pointed it for the open sea. He passed the returning
-fish, and they wondered at him. Then he went through the opening and
-disappeared into the great ocean to the eastward.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: The White FOLLOWER]
-
-
-He was a little more than fourteen feet across the tips of his
-outspread wings, more than two fathoms, and his white breast, full
-and rounded, was as broad as that of the man who stood at the wheel
-and watched him go soaring past. The very tips of his huge wings were
-black as jet, showing in marked contrast to the unbroken whiteness of
-the rest of his feathers, and the only other dark spot upon his snowy
-form was his eye. This was as black and shiny as the lanyards in the
-rigging. It was large and held a steady gaze, fearless yet curious, so
-that when the man at the wheel looked up the bird tilted his head to
-one side to get a better view of him. The giant beak, nearly a foot in
-length and of heavy bone, had a strangely hooked end, which swelled
-a little in size from the middle portion. It was a serviceable pair
-of shears which could cut a five-pound fish in two at a bite. The two
-webbed feet, as large again as those of a swan, were held close in
-to the short tail feathers so as not to offer resistance to the air,
-through which the bird went at the speed of an express train. Silent
-and otherwise motionless, save for that turn of the head, the great
-creature swept past. Not a movement of leg or pinion, not a feather
-disturbed in that headlong rush. With the great wings stretched far out
-and slightly bowed, he held his way and tore past the fast-running ship
-as though she were at anchor, instead of plowing through the southern
-ocean at the rate of ten knots an hour with the wind behind her. Then,
-as she was left far astern, he tilted himself a little, and off into
-the curve of a tremendous circle he swerved, swinging with the speed of
-the wind over the rolling wave-tops until he had covered at least three
-miles upon the arc and was heading swiftly back again to repeat the
-maneuver.
-
-All the time that large black and shining pair of eyes watched the
-surface of the sea. Not a morsel of anything went overboard unobserved.
-From a distance of a mile or more the huge bird would note the smallest
-bits of food or grease which the cook would toss over the side when
-cleaning his coppers for a new mess of salt junk. Sailing over the bits
-of floating stuff he would hover a moment to see if they were really
-worth tasting. If so, he would soar in smaller and smaller circles
-until he would breast a sea. Then, dropping his legs and bracing his
-feet to retard the slowing flight, he would sink into the water and
-check himself with both feet and wings until his body finally rested
-gracefully upon surface. Folding his pinions slowly and a little
-stiffly, he would propel himself like a huge goose toward the floating
-prize and make a pass at it with his beak. Salt-pork rind, gristle,
-anything that had grease or taste to it, was chopped by the bony shears
-and quickly bolted. It mattered little just what it was as long as it
-had some grease or taste to it. His appetite was not squeamish.
-
-When nothing remained he would slowly and stiffly again stretch out
-those wings and face to windward. Then he would propel himself along
-into the breeze until he rose upon a sea. A quick couple of strokes
-with the pinions and a sudden push with both feet generally lifted the
-great body clear of the water before it began to sink down the slope of
-the succeeding sea. After that it was but a detail to rise higher and
-higher into the clear air without perceptible motion save of rushing
-ahead and circling in spiral curves, which no mathematician might
-describe or define as a means of ascending.
-
-The ship was something over six hundred miles off shore. She was
-heading for the last corner of the world, Cape Horn, to turn it and
-then go northward up the South Pacific. She would head up the middle of
-the great ocean and at times she would not be within a thousand miles
-of any land whatever.
-
-For more than two weeks the albatross had followed in the wake, his
-tireless pinions showing no signs of weakening by the continuous
-flight. Steadily night and day he had followed, and the men aboard
-had watched him with the awe all deep-water men feel for the giant
-birds, which seem to be able to soar through space for a lifetime
-without tiring. Sometimes when he came up astern he slackened his pace
-by some method and remained for a short moment poised a few fathoms
-above the man at the wheel. Then his steady look as he slanted his
-head sideways made the man have a queer feeling, as though he were
-almost in communication with a stranger from the realms of space. When
-the captain happened on deck he paid considerable attention to the
-follower, but he never thought to harm him. The Winchester, which he
-often used to take snap-shots at blackfish, was always laid aside at
-his approach.
-
-The great bird noted this. He was not afraid of the rifle, for although
-he saw the effects of the shot, he knew nothing of its power. The
-man was a creature of the earth like himself, and he had no reason
-to suspect him of harmful purposes simply on that account. He was
-interested in him, and a not unfriendly feeling came within his breast.
-
-In the latitude of the “roaring forties” the weather is uncertain.
-Sometimes it blows high and sometimes low, which latter means it is
-dead calm for a spell. Under these conditions a sailing ship naturally
-comes to a sudden stop, and, with clewed-up courses, rolls and switches
-away often for days without making more than a degree of southing.
-
-It was during one of these calm spells that the captain began to
-formulate a plan which would bring him in closer contact with the
-great bird which still soared and circled about the ship. He rigged a
-trolling line with a bit of wood for a float near the hook. Then he
-baited it with a piece of salt beef and tossed it over the side.
-
-The ship was barely moving, but still had headway enough to get away
-from the bait. When it was fifty fathoms astern the captain held the
-line and waited.
-
-The albatross soon sighted the piece of beef and circled slowly toward
-it. Then as it floated in clear view he settled upon the surface of the
-sea and paddled up to it and gave it a chop. He cut away half the beef,
-but missed the hook, and the captain’s jerk upon the line merely pulled
-it from him. He made another grab, and as he did so the line tautened
-and the barb of the hook caught under his beak.
-
-Hand over hand the captain hauled him in. He spread forth his wings and
-backed water hard with his feet, but the seaman kept a steady strain
-upon the line and prevented the hook from slipping clear. Soon he was
-directly under the ship’s counter, and as she squatted down into the
-hollow of a swell the captain quickly hauled the bird over the rail to
-the deck.
-
-Inside the poop-rail it was impossible for the albatross to get headway
-enough to rise into the air, the wind was so unfavorable in the
-shelter. While he might waddle about upon the white planks it was as
-impossible for him to get away as though he had been chained by the
-leg. It was most provoking to be in such an absurd position. The man at
-the wheel grinned at him, and the mate came up to take a better look
-at close quarters. He stretched forth his wings and tried to rise by a
-series of powerful strokes, but it was in vain. He only managed to go
-plunging into the rail before he got his feet clear of the planks. This
-made him angry and he snapped at the mate, making a savage chop with
-his great beak, which came together with a loud clap. But the seaman
-jumped aside, and the captain admonished him to keep away.
-
-Gradually the feeling of being upon a floating thing with other
-creatures seemed less strange. It was remarkable how different the
-ship was now that he was on board it from what it appeared while he
-was a few fathoms in the air. Yet he had followed it so long that he
-had become accustomed to it, and the unpleasant sensation of becoming
-suddenly a prisoner aboard gave place to that of curiosity. The captain
-brought some choice fat and ordered the steward to keep the slush from
-the coppers as clean as possible and give the stranger as much as he
-wished. After eating several pounds he lost for the time all desire to
-get away and waddled about the quarter-deck perfectly satisfied with
-the sudden change in his condition.
-
-The ship’s dog rushed up and made a savage attack, and for a few
-minutes the great bird was frightened, for the noise was distracting
-and a sudden bite gave him pain. Then the captain dragged the animal
-away and gave the newcomer a choice piece of salt pork to make up for
-the lack of courtesy shown by the dog.
-
-There was much of the dog’s spirit aboard the ship, although it was
-not manifest to the albatross. Among the men forward were several
-who had much the same feeling for their fellows. Under the cover of
-bluff and honest exteriors they concealed dispositions like that of
-the dog. They were a type of what is known as “sea lawyer,” and were
-always dwelling upon the grievances of sailors and the rascality of
-mates and masters. Close and intelligent observers would have noticed
-at once that the faults their leader saw in others were the ones rising
-to the surface in himself and which he was trying to conceal. He was
-saturnine, and his ugly little eyes held an unpleasant look every time
-he came in the vicinity of either the mate or captain. The second
-officer was in the other watch and therefore not often about to give
-him orders.
-
-As the vessel gradually made her way southward and the hardships became
-more trying with the colder weather, the feeling aboard among the men
-who listened to the grumbler became more sinister. The captain was not
-such a man as to let things go unnoticed, but as long as there was no
-direct disobedience of orders he took no action and let the mate warm
-up the discontented men with extra work, for it is well known that
-hard work will do more for an ugly crew than any medicine.
-
-The captain spent much time on deck and made a pet of the bird he
-had captured. He was a generous man and lonesome among the rough
-fellows who made up the crew, for his position forbade any intercourse
-whatever with anyone except his first officer. Even this seaman, able
-and intelligent as he was, could not be made more of than a slight
-acquaintance. Such is the rule aboard deep-water ships, for discipline
-must be enforced if safety is to be considered.
-
-During many lonely hours the master tried to reconcile the dog to the
-newcomer. The old wolf spirit bred through thousands of generations
-of the land animal was not easy to pacify. It was the old spirit of
-suspicion for strangers based upon the experience of hundreds of
-ancestors, who had perhaps trusted not wisely but too well in the
-days when all living things were at war with each other and only the
-strongest and most cunning might survive. It was as evident in the
-dog as in the men of the forecastle, and the master studied carefully
-and comprehensively to subdue it, or at least pacify it to an extent
-that strife might be averted. Kindness and unselfishness were the two
-antidotes he would employ.
-
-The great bird was not slow to notice his friendship. After a day or
-two he was on the lookout for the master, who appeared regularly to
-take his morning observation for longitude, and he walked laboriously
-up to him in spite of the dog’s yelping. There was something in the
-man’s behavior that made him instinctively his friend. Finally even
-the dog’s suspicions were allayed, and instead of seizing the bird’s
-feathers in the rear to jerk them and then dodge the snap of the beak,
-he met the bird face to face and refrained from either a bite or bark.
-The two became reconciled.
-
-During several days the albatross waddled about the quarter-deck and
-was fed, until the captain, fearing that he would grow so fat he would
-be unable to fly, finally took him in his arms one day and placed him
-upon the rail. Then he tied a bit of fancy red cord about his leg so
-that he might distinguish him from other birds that would follow in
-the ship’s wake. The great bird had long ago learned to eat from the
-man’s hand and took care not to chop too close to the fingers with
-his powerful beak. The master would stroke the beautiful white head
-and smooth the snowy feathers until the petting became a thing looked
-forward to. It was a smooth day in the latitude of the Falklands when
-he determined to set the captive free, and the dark water seemed
-less attractive than usual under the gloom of the overcast sky. The
-lonely cry of a stray penguin broke now and again upon the ears of the
-listening seaman and had a depressing effect.
-
-With a last caress he gave the pet a gentle push to start him. The
-great black eyes looked hard at the sailor, and then, with the giant
-wings outstretched, he swung off in a graceful swoop, curving upward
-as the falling body nearly touched the sea. He was gone.
-
-That night it came on to blow hard from the westward. The ship, nearing
-the latitude of the Horn, was shortened down to her lower topsails,
-and with the wind snoring away under them and past each taut downhaul,
-clewline, and halyard, she was hove to. It was necessary to try to keep
-her from sagging off to the eastward, for in this latitude every mile
-counts.
-
-During the morning watch the mate had reason to call the captain, for
-with a falling glass and shifting wind, he was on the lookout for a
-definite change.
-
-The captain came on deck and took in the situation. It was still dark,
-but the growing light on the horizon told of the approaching day. He
-stood near the man at the wheel a moment and the mate went forward
-where the green seas sometimes rose above the topgallant rail and fell
-upon the deck as the staggering ship plunged into the trough. Through
-the dim, misty light of the early morning he saw the watch turning out
-to clew down the foretopsail, and as the foremost man took the ratlines
-he turned and walked to the binnacle to watch the shifting course.
-
-The increasing gale and gloomy prospects had caused the grumbling
-element among the crew to be more careless than usual, in spite of the
-master’s efforts to pacify them. The leader of the malcontents came aft
-with two others to take a pull in the spanker sheet, for upon the boom
-had been bent the storm trysail to hold the vessel’s head up to the
-gale while hove to. The men hauled surlily upon the line, but it came
-in so slowly that the mate came aft and spoke to them to stir them up.
-Then they flattened it in, but the stout landsman, or ordinary seaman,
-who was taking in the slack upon the cleat, failed to catch a turn. A
-tremendous sea hove the ship to leeward almost upon her beam-ends. The
-struggling men were hove against the lee rail, and the sheet, whirling
-loose from the fellow’s hands, caught a turn about his body and in an
-instant he was flung over the side. The captain, who had just stepped
-out from the wheel-house, made a grab to seize him, and a turn of the
-now flying line caught him around the ankle and jerked him also over
-the rail into the sea. Then followed the dreaded cry of “man overboard”
-and the confusion of a crew of men without a leader.
-
-The mate with ready knife cut away the lashings of the quarter-buoys
-and let them go overboard. Then he tried to fling a line, but the ship
-was moving too fast. She was forereaching heavily, but in that sea it
-was madness to think of trying to stop her by laying the yards aback,
-or losing control of her in any way. She must go on. They might shorten
-her down enough to stop her, but even if they could do so within half
-an hour she would be too far away to see a man in the water and the sea
-too heavy to think of lowering a small boat.
-
-Daylight was breaking over the stormy ocean and the roar from aloft was
-sounding louder with the increasing gale. Many of the men forward had
-not seen the incident and the cries of those upon the foretopsail yard
-to those on deck could be heard. From a bunch at the weather clewline
-came a faint strain of a “chanty”:
-
- “‘Ole stormy, ’e was a good ole man--
- Singing yo, ho, ho--with a hey--bar-rrr.’”
-
-The absurd chorus struck forcibly upon the ears of the master, who
-with both hands gripped the life-buoy and kept his head clear of the
-breaking seas. The mate, leaning over the taffrail, bawled something to
-him he could not understand, and then the ship drifted to leeward with
-the faint sound of singing still in his ears:
-
- “‘Ole stormy, ’e’ll come walking home,
- Singing yo, ho, ho--with a hey--bar-rrrrr.
-
- “‘le stormy, ’e has gone to sea--
- But ’e’ll not come back, with a hey--bar-r-rr-rr.’”
-
-The words of a “chanty” are generally grotesque and meaningless, but
-it was this very absurdity that struck the listening master as fraught
-with meaning. It was significant of his ending. He would not come back
-again.
-
-The water was quite cold, and to make certain that he would not lose
-his hold upon the cork float he passed his head through the circular
-opening and made his body fast with the hand-line to the buoy at both
-sides, so that he would balance evenly. He would do all he could to
-live, and if he floated long enough they might pick him up after all.
-The minutes dragged into hours, and cold and exhaustion caused his mind
-to wander. He fancied he saw green fields again and was back in the
-land of his birth.
-
-The suffering of passing was almost over and it held no terrors for
-him. He had tried to do what he could aboard the ship to make things
-less hard for his men. Perhaps if he had been more savage he would have
-done better, for there are some men who cannot be touched save through
-great bodily fear.
-
-The dawn of the southern day had broken over the heaving ocean, and
-at times he would try instinctively to look for the ship. She had
-disappeared. Nothing but the great rolling seas as far as the eye
-could reach, and these turned now and again into grass-grown hills
-before his failing vision.
-
-It was late in the morning, after the daylight had become strong, that
-he fancied he heard a dull, thunderous noise. It had little effect upon
-him now, for he was too far gone to pay much attention. The noise grew
-louder and louder as the minutes passed and suddenly his dulled brain
-became alert again. He looked toward where the sound came from, and
-it was from the northward and behind him, and through the haze of the
-flying spume-drift he saw the dark gray shadows of rocks. He fancied
-his mind was at fault, and in spite of the heavy roar which now filled
-the air he paid little attention. Then he was hove nearer the ledge and
-felt the rush of the lifting sea.
-
-It spurred him to recover. He dashed the salt water from his eyes and
-made a desperate effort to realize his position. Then a great, high
-rolling surge that had run for miles across the southern ocean picked
-him up on its crest and bore him shoreward with the speed of the wind.
-As it broke into a white smother of foam he saw clearly at last that he
-was being hurled upon the rocks. He struggled to keep his head out of
-the boiling rush and looked for a place where he would strike. To hit
-the ledge at the speed he was going meant instant death, and he tried
-to see if there was no slue or opening into which he might be hurled.
-The current of the Antarctic had caused an eddy within a few miles of
-the rocks of Hermite Isle, in which he had drifted, and it had carried
-him toward the land at a rapid rate.
-
-Rising upon the roll of the crest, he just managed to keep from
-striking until the weight and speed of the breaker had been exhausted.
-Then by chance and the aid of the buoy he managed to float into a
-crevice between the rocks and cling there until the back-wash had left
-him almost high and dry. With the last remaining energy left he hauled
-his body clear of the tide and lost consciousness.
-
-When he regained his senses the sun was well up on the northwestern
-horizon. The wind had gone down considerably, and heavy, oily-looking
-clouds were hurrying past overhead, with breaks between them. He felt
-the sting of sleet upon his face and the chill from his wet clothes
-almost paralyzed him. He staggered to his feet and gazed about him.
-Then he crawled higher up the rocks.
-
-There was no doubt about it, he was upon the rocks of Cape Horn. He was
-clear in his mind now and remembered his struggles, and he had seen the
-ragged hump too often not to recognize it at once. How his ship had
-been driven in so close was hard to guess, but he knew the treacherous
-currents of the Drift and remembered that a careless helmsman might
-very easily nurse the vessel off her course with the help of an unknown
-set to the northward.
-
-While he looked about him he became aware that he needed nourishment
-very badly. He was faint with the long swim and continued exposure to
-the cold water and he must have remained unconscious for many hours
-after coming ashore. There was nothing to eat upon the ledge. Tufts
-of the great tussac-grass shot up here and there upon the heights
-above him, but there was nothing that looked as if it might be used to
-prolong his life.
-
-But a seaman is never beaten until he dies. The master would not
-despair. He sat a moment and studied the question. Then he arose again
-and clambered painfully up the crags, hoping that he might find some
-Cape pigeon eggs upon the higher terraces. There was not a sign of
-anything except a great rock-hopper, or penguin, who skipped nimbly
-down and plunged into the sea with a loud cry before the sailor could
-reach him. Some thirty feet above the ledge upon which he landed he
-discovered a pool of half-stagnant water, but it was not salty and
-came from the melted snow and sleet. He drank some and felt better,
-although it made him colder. He felt through his clothes for a match,
-but found the metal case in which he carried them had failed to keep
-out the sea water. His numb fingers could scarcely open the case, but
-he finally placed the little sticks in a lee, where he hoped they would
-dry enough to light. Then he sat down and waited, and before he knew it
-he had fallen asleep.
-
-The sun had swung up again in the northeast when he opened his eyes
-and the weather was less ugly. He tried his matches. First one was
-scratched carefully upon a dry piece of stone. The head crumbled slowly
-away. A bit of smoke seemed to start from it and the seaman’s heart
-beat rapidly. Then the head fell away, leaving the bare stick. It was
-worthless. He tried another of his scanty store. He grasped the little
-stick close to its head of composition and drew it very carefully upon
-the rock. A bunch of finely shredded grass, perfectly dry, was rolled
-into a ball to catch the first spurt of flame. The match cracked
-softly and at each noise the sailor’s heart seemed to stop. His hand
-shook violently. Then the head of the match crumbled again, and his
-spirits sank within him. It was life or death, for he must have warmth
-soon or perish. He had only three more fuses and he stopped a little to
-think of some way he might make them burn. He gazed steadily at them
-for a long time and then took up one. It failed.
-
-Hope died away as he took up the other two. He struck them carefully
-as before, but they were spoiled. Then he cast the grass from him and
-looked out to sea.
-
-He had been gazing for a long time before he was aware of a form which
-appeared circling over the ocean beyond the lift of the breakers. It
-was that of a huge albatross, which had come in from the sea and was
-apparently looking for a sheltered place upon the Horn to rest. The
-master gazed at the great white form skimming along over the wave-tops
-and remembered his pet. The bird appeared larger than the one he had
-caught, but all of the great Cape albatrosses were so much alike that
-he could not distinguish between them. He watched the bird circle about
-him and finally noticed that he had been discovered, for the creature
-came nearer and nearer at each sweep until he caught the look of its
-eye as it bent its head a little in order to observe him better. The
-albatross was evidently hungry and it might take very little indeed
-to invite an attack. The bird was practically carnivorous, for it ate
-anything in the way of flesh it could capture. It was very powerful
-and could get the best of a man without much trouble, provided the
-man was incapable of vigorous defense. The thought made him alert and
-brought to his own hungry self the idea of capture. He might do worse
-than eat a thirty-pound bird during his stay ashore. He could not
-cook the creature, but that would be of but small consequence in his
-present state. The food was the main thing and it was necessary to get
-something at once.
-
-The bird came closer and closer until finally with outstretched wings
-and projecting feet it backed against its own headway and settled upon
-the ledge not twenty feet distant.
-
-The captain’s heart beat high with expectation. He lay perfectly still
-watching it, hoping that it would come near enough for him to grasp it.
-If it was strong enough to conquer, it was well; he would soon be dead
-anyway without food. If he could master it by gripping its throat, he
-might live for many days.
-
-The bird came straight toward him. He was quiet as a cat waiting for
-a spring, his eyes glaring at it as it approached. Then something
-attracted his attention. Upon the foot of the bird was a bit of cord.
-Yes, there was no mistake, it was his pet, the bird he had captured. He
-started up with a cry, but the bird came steadily toward him without
-fear, and in an instant was poking his great beak into his hand for
-food.
-
-The seaman’s heart was beating wildly. Here was food enough for a week
-right in his grasp. He had but to seize the bird’s neck quickly and
-with the little strength he had left he could strangle it. The thought
-called forth all the wild wolf spirit in his nature. He was trembling
-with the excitement. But, as he looked down upon the beautiful, smooth
-white neck of his former pet, he wavered. Something within him rose
-against a deed of violence. He stroked the soft feathers and looked
-at the creature, who was probably almost as hungry as himself. No, he
-would commit no horrid act. He would probably starve anyhow, and it
-would be better to die than to have such a conscience. Then all of the
-beast fell away from him and he felt better.
-
-But while he sat and stroked the great bird his mind was active. The
-albatross would not remain there long. He would follow some vessel for
-the beef-fat from her coppers, and as the thought came to him he began
-a plan to attract attention.
-
-He tore from his shirt a long piece of linen. This was a piece having
-his name written upon it in indelible ink which had stood the wash of
-the laundry. It would stand the wash of the sea. He made it fast to the
-bird’s leg, and the bight of it he brought up over the back beneath
-the wings, tying it loosely and leading the other end down so that it
-could be fastened to the other leg. The thin cloth lying loose would
-prevent the bird from cutting it with its beak, for the edges of that
-appendage, while very sharp, were not laid as close together as those
-of a pair of shears, and the thin cloth would work between them. Upon
-the top of the piece he wrote with his own blood, “Cape Horn, Hermite
-Isle, Help.” Underneath this he put the date, and let his laundry mark
-do for signature. Then he led the bird gently to the edge of the rock
-and pushed him over.
-
-Afterward he settled down in his bed of tussac and waited for the end
-he now felt was at hand. He prayed to the God he had felt in the breath
-of the trade wind and roar of the storm, the power which was manifest
-in all nature. Then a feeling of peace came upon him and his sufferings
-were over; he had collapsed.
-
-Two days later the Norwegian bark _Eric_ was working to the westward
-past Cape St. John. Her captain had noticed a great albatross following
-his vessel all day, and saw the bird had something fast to its leg.
-Being of a very superstitious nature the master did everything he could
-to attract the bird’s attention and draw him close enough to observe
-the hanging cloth more thoroughly. He was astonished to find the bird
-quite tame, and had no difficulty in hauling it on deck with a baited
-hook. He took off the rag and read the inscription, which had luckily
-kept clear and dry, for the weather had been cold and the sleet squalls
-had not caused the writing to run.
-
-Being in the neighborhood of the Horn, he did what no one but a very
-superstitious master would have done without great trepidation. He
-stood under all sail for Hermite Isle and hove his ship to not three
-miles from the rocks. The weather was better than usual and he had no
-difficulty in lowering a small boat and making a landing.
-
-As the craft drew near the land the white life-buoy attracted the
-helmsman’s attention, lying high up on the rocks and showing out
-strongly against the background of black ledge. The boat was headed
-into a rift or slue, and two of the men managed to spring out of her,
-the rest keeping her clear of the rocks, which, although sheltered in
-the slue, felt the tremendous lift and back-wash of the heavy swell
-outside. The master was found unconscious in his bed of tussac-grass.
-
-By care and skill they managed to get him into the small boat alive
-and started for the bark that was riding safely in the offing. They
-hurried back aboard and came alongside just as the Norwegian navigator
-set the great bird free again. The men rested upon their oars and
-watched the albatross as it stretched forth its wings and bore away to
-the southward. A man standing in the lee rigging held a line to throw
-to the bow oarsmen, but he hesitated and watched the majestic flight.
-The officer in the boat looked instinctively upward, and, as the huge
-creature soared away, he took off his cap and bowed his head.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: KING ALBICORE]
-
-
-He came from a race of giants. His ancestors had held sway over the
-great breadth of the Pacific for many centuries, and were the lords of
-the South Sea. When he first saw the light it was where the towering
-peaks of Juan Fernandez rose above the eastern sea, like the backs
-of huge marine monsters, from the deep ocean, topped by a heavy pall
-of vapor which rose densely for miles into the blue above and spread
-out like an enormous umbrella. Between the darkening under surface of
-the higher layers of white, reaching down to the green hills beneath,
-rectangular sections of steel-blue showed the semi-tropic rainfall.
-They were sharply outlined against the clear sky beyond, for off the
-land the sky was devoid of a single trade-cloud.
-
-All around was peaceful calm. The great Pacific, father of waters, was
-resting. Only the high-rolling swell from far away to the westward came
-majestically onward toward the shore, rising higher and higher as it
-met, deep down, the resistance of the outlying reefs, until it threw
-its crest far into the air, and, with a thunderous roar of welcome,
-rushed white and churning against the iron-hard cliffs, which received
-it silently and hurled it backward as if coldly repellent of its
-embrace.
-
-The sun had shone strongly for days upon the smooth, heaving swell,
-and out upon the sunken ledges where the albicore lingered; the rays
-filtered down to the solid rock. Here, sheltered by the reef beyond,
-the breakers did not disturb the ocean denizens. The deep-toned thunder
-of the fall on the outer barrier filled the air, but beneath the
-surface of the clear water all was quiet in the sunshine. The king was
-a young one of a large family. Scores of his brothers and sisters lay
-close to the bottom peering in and out among the forests of kelp, and
-enjoying the rays of the warm sun, for the albicore is essentially a
-surface fish. The heat and light were very pleasant to them, and they
-were growing strong and healthy.
-
-The older fish had come inshore some weeks before our hero was born,
-but food was plentiful about the island and they still lingered. They
-had spawned and had seen their young brought forth. Now their duty
-was done and they swarmed about the ledges or plunged playfully about
-the slues in the reef, chasing the smaller fish to shelter in pure
-wantonness. They lingered on when it was time for them to take to the
-great stretch of ocean to the westward and make room for others of the
-deep ocean tribes. Now the young were about in great numbers, and they
-seemed almost to crowd the waters in the sheltered coves. It was high
-time to go to sea again, and on the morrow the leaders of the school
-would start for the open ocean to the west, where the sun sank out of
-sight. Those who could follow might be safe, for the older fish were
-very strong, and their numbers would prevent any of the hanger-on crowd
-of sullen sharks from coming too near the flanks of the moving throng.
-
-A leader passed while our young one was watching the light. He was a
-great fish six feet in length, his sides shimmering like silver. His
-long, sinuous body apparently made no motion, save that it went ahead
-slowly and steadily, and his eyes sparkled like glistening crystals.
-His thin, tapering head seemed barely to disturb the medium about him
-as he went through it, and the only vibration of the light rays near
-him was caused by the huge mouth, which, although shut, showed heavy
-projecting lips and a half-concealed row of pointed teeth that rippled
-the water slightly as he slipped past. He was a long, powerful fellow,
-capable of great speed, and a stroke from those jaws of his meant
-death to anything in the sea of his size except the shark. Even the
-tough hide of this scavenger would not protect him from a frightful
-cut when the long, muscular body was launched at him with the speed
-of an arrow. A dark shadow which had come near the edge of the broken
-water gradually drew away with the albicore’s approach, and the young
-one experienced a feeling of relief instinctively which he could not
-understand. He was a very sensitive young one, all nerves, and the
-uneasiness which possessed him when the large relative drew away caused
-him to make an effort to follow. But the great albicore took no notice
-of him, nor waited, but suddenly made a dart ahead, leaving only the
-vision of a silvery flash.
-
-Other large fellows came and went while the younger ones strayed about
-the shoal water and chased the herring spawn or whale-food, eating much
-and gaining strength hourly.
-
-High above the bare rocks a shaggy goat nibbled the grass of the
-hillside, and to the southward a chunky, dirty bark lay with her
-courses hauled up and her mainyards aback, while a dense smoke arose
-from her trying-out furnace. Alongside of her the carcass of a freshly
-killed whale rolled just awash in the swell, attracting countless
-thousands of whalebirds and loafing sharks.
-
-The young albicore grew very nervous as the sun sank behind the sea
-in the far west, dyeing the waves a deep crimson. He was remarkably
-sensitive for an ocean fish. Instinct told him that he would fare
-better away from that reef after the last full-grown albicore had gone.
-They had been going to sea all day by twos and threes, but had paid
-not the slightest attention to him or any of his younger mates. The
-longing for the open ocean came upon him and with it a nameless dread.
-He had no mother to guide him, no father to protect him. They had gone
-to sea with the rest and left him to shift for himself. But there was
-something in the deepening roar of the surf and the moaning of the
-sea among the sunken ledges that spoke of an all-pervading Power that
-would guide him onward to whatever life held in store. And yet with it
-all was that nameless fear and dread which made him alert to every
-vibration of the water. Darkness came suddenly, and some of his smaller
-companions began to seek shelter of the more shallow water within the
-coves and between the rocks. Their shimmering bodies grew less and less
-distinct until only the phosphorescent flare of the disturbed water
-when they moved gave notice of their presence. The semi-tropical night
-fell upon the peaceful ocean.
-
-All that night the great fish moved westward. In the morning, just
-before the sun rose, the last of the laggards had started off into deep
-water, leaving the high cliffs like a wall in the eastward, while the
-somber bank of vapor rose again from the land and cast a gloom over the
-outlying reef.
-
-While the young fish were waiting for the growing light to guide them
-in the wake of their forbears, there was a sudden commotion on the
-edge of the surf. Numerous plunges and splashes told of a horde of
-rapidly moving bodies advancing through the shoal water of the reef.
-The feeling of terror that had come over our young one the day before
-now seemed to pervade the entire crowd that scurried here and there in
-the gloom. Everywhere there seemed to be a state of wild alarm. Bunches
-of the smaller fish tried to find shelter in deep, dark holes where the
-kelp weed formed mats and snaky tangles. Then, just as the first rays
-of the morning sun glistened upon the crest of a great roller, there
-was a sudden rush through the water all about, and dark forms came
-plunging onward with incredible speed.
-
-Our young one caught a glimpse of a great fish high in the air heading
-for him, and the next instant there were several huge gaping mouths
-between pairs of shining eyes rushing upon him from all sides. He saw
-his young comrades seized and swallowed, their frantic efforts to
-escape availing them not the least. Then with a wild terror, which
-spurred him to frantic action, he rushed seaward. A giant mouth made a
-snap at him as he went past. A huge form rose in the air and dropped
-upon him with jaws gaping. He made a mad dodge and just missed the
-rows of teeth, while the stroke of the falling body almost stunned
-him. Then he recovered and tore for the outer breakers. The bonita had
-struck inshore, and lucky would be the small fish who could escape
-their rush.
-
-Away into the deepening blue of the ocean he sped headlong with all
-his energy. He looked neither to the right nor left, but held his way
-straight ahead with the terror of those fierce monsters vibrating
-through his whole being. On and on, without a thought of rest or
-slacking his speed, he pushed until the bright sunshine showed him a
-desolate waste of fathomless blue void around and beneath him, and a
-bluer void above, with the little lumpy trade-clouds swinging past
-overhead. He was heading almost due west, and as the day wore on and
-his terror gave place to fatigue, he slacked his speed enough to take a
-careful look about him. There was not a living thing in sight.
-
-Hunger soon came upon him and stirred him to further action. He began
-searching the sea for food. Soon one of his former companions came up
-almost as exhausted as himself with the run for life, and together they
-swam slowly along just beneath the surface in the roll of the swell.
-
-As the day passed more of his youthful relatives hove in sight until by
-night six followers held their way in his wake. These were all who had
-gotten to sea. Few indeed had escaped. The day had marked the death of
-countless young fish, for the bonita spared nothing that came in their
-path.
-
-The seven albicore cruised in company, capturing what small surface
-fish accident cast in their way, but all the time they held a general
-course to the westward and northward to where the coral reefs rose
-from the bed of the equatorial ocean. Day after day they swam steadily
-on, the young albicore leading. Their silvery bodies grew apace and
-their backs took on a shifting blue color, so that looking down from
-above, it would have been hard to tell them from the surrounding blue
-depths. Sometimes the ugly and noisy bos’n-birds would swoop down as
-though to strike them, but by sinking a few feet beneath the surface
-the albicore easily escaped. At night the seven swam beneath a tropic
-moon, and as they went their courage grew rapidly with their size.
-Unfortunately they approached an unknown peak lying below the surface
-of the great ocean. Here they were chased by a huge dolphin who haunted
-the vicinity. Three of their number fell prey to him before they could
-get away. A week or two later the remaining four fell in with a roaming
-pair of bonita. Two more went the way of the weak.
-
-The remaining pair of albicore now cruised onward together, our hero
-leading as before, until they came to Tahiti, in the South Sea. Long
-accustomed to danger now, they approached the shore warily, their
-tapering bodies scarcely disturbing the sea. The albicore had grown
-very fast, developing during these weeks of travel into powerful fish.
-The teeth of the male leader began to show sharply beyond his lips.
-He was growing more and more muscular, and the long swim was hardening
-him. He was sturdy and shrewd, and the wild instinctive fear that had
-governed his younger actions now gave place to a feeling of confidence.
-His mate had also developed into a strong fish, and as they swam slowly
-in through the outer breakers of the barrier reef, their long, sinuous
-bodies armed with jaws and teeth which were not to be despised, smaller
-fish approached to welcome them. The albicore received them coldly,
-heading straight into the sheltered coves of coral, where they would
-rest from their long run. Here they stopped at last and set about
-making a new home.
-
-During the months that followed the albicore grew several feet longer.
-Our leader was now nearly six feet in length, with his long jaws armed
-with razor-like teeth, his tapering flanks with silvery scales covering
-muscles of great hardness and power. And with that power came a
-consciousness of his worth. His wild life and flight made him careful
-of the denizens of the coral banks. He grew cold and thoughtful until,
-as he reached his final development physically, he was a dignified and
-quiet fellow. The smaller sociable fish of the reef did not understand
-him. Theirs was a life of ease and comparative safety, and their
-thoughts seldom went beyond the boundaries of the outer barrier. They
-fussed among themselves and voted the great stranger and his companion
-surly company. The inquisitive little sunfish would sometimes take a
-peep in at the cove where the albicore usually lay in the sunshine on
-bright afternoons, but there was something in the great fish’s manner
-that the little reefer could not understand, and he set him down for
-a villain, keeping at a distance and looking askance always at those
-ragged teeth that peeped out from the long, sharp jaws. Even the mullet
-were warned, and gave the albicore a wide berth, while all the time he
-lay there with his thoughts far away where the peaks of Juan Fernandez
-rose from the sea. He was indeed a stranger in a strange place.
-Finally he was left alone with his mate.
-
-The little sociable fish were heeded not at all by the albicore. He
-went to the reef daily and caught what small game he wished. His
-dignified movements were even watched by the great ground shark who lay
-daily under the shelter of the outer barrier, waiting to snap up any
-unwary traveler who might be unfortunate enough to be caught in the
-rolling surf and lose control of himself. Once only did the shark come
-in contact with the stranger. It was when the albicore had been rolled
-shoreward in the roaring surge. The lurking monster thought it a good
-chance to strike. He received a savage cut over the eye that left him
-somewhat bewildered and much more respectful of the powerful stranger’s
-rights in the vicinity.
-
-As the season changed and the trade-wind shifted to the eastward,
-bringing with it little watery clouds, the two albicore became more
-and more restless. The future king’s sensitive nature became more and
-more imbued with the feeling that he must return to the waters of his
-birth to take his place among those of his kind. He would be needed.
-The bonita would come again, and there might be no albicore leader to
-protect those who had escaped their last assault, and who would return
-to the beautiful peaks that rose from the sea of his birth. There
-was a feeling within him that he must be there for a purpose. He was
-something more than a mere cruising pirate of the reefs of the South
-Pacific. The petty life of little sociable fish was not for such as
-he. There was something for him to do before he died, and this feeling
-became stronger and stronger until one rainy morning he started out
-accompanied by his faithful mate.
-
-He was now at the fullness of his powers, a full-grown albicore of the
-southern ocean. All the inheritance of the race of giants from whom he
-had sprung was in his strong frame and lightning-like actions. He could
-dart so swiftly the eye could hardly follow his form, and by a slight
-swerve upwards he could spring high into the air above, leaving the
-sea ten feet or more below him, and then with head pointed gracefully
-downward, he would plunge into the blue depths, slipping his long,
-sinuous body so easily into the unresisting medium that there would be
-hardly a splash to mark his entrance. There were strength and grace in
-all his movements, and he was as bold as he was beautiful.
-
-The speed of the fastest ship was slow as compared with his tremendous
-pace, so although he took his time and spent several days hunting upon
-the surface of the sea, it was but a short run for him to Mas-a-fuera.
-It was a very different passage from the one made when as a little
-fellow he voyaged out.
-
-[Illustration: FULL INTO THE CENTRE KING ALBICORE TORE HIS WAY.]
-
-The high, grim cliffs of Mas-a-fuera rise a sheer thousand feet on
-the north side of the island, and the wind is usually southerly. This
-makes a ponderous lee, the only sea being the heave of the offshore
-swell. Many denizens of the deep ocean come in here to rest and
-search for food, and even the great cachalot, or sperm-whale, often
-takes a quiet cruise through the clear depths to enjoy the stillness,
-and incidentally look up a stray octopus or cuttle fish who might be
-ensconced within some ocean cavern in the cliffs.
-
-It was toward this sheltered lee-shore our albicore held his way.
-Above the heights the huge pall of vapor rose as in his younger days,
-standing out clearly against the void of blue, as sharply outlined as a
-heavy cumulus cloud. There was no mistaking the place. He felt like a
-sailor who had made a long voyage and had sighted the home port at last.
-
-As he went shoreward, followed by his mate, he noticed many silvery
-flashes in the water between him and the land. Drawing nearer he saw
-that these were caused by countless albicore. Soon he was amid a throng
-of his fellows numbering thousands, all making their way toward the
-sheltered sea in the lee of the island. With the spirit and instinct
-born in him and developed by his roaming life, he at once took the
-lead of this vast school and led them slowly in to the submerged rocks
-which would shelter them during their stay. Great numbers of females,
-heavy with spawn, straggled from the flanks of the column, but he swam
-around them, forcing them all into an almost solid phalanx of moving
-fish. The memory of the bonita was still fresh within him. He would
-take no chances with these helpless kindred. They seemed to recognize
-his leadership without question, and followed quietly wherever he led
-the way. Now and then some frisky younger member of the horde would
-make a sudden start to sheer away, but with a rush our leader was
-upon him, and he was forced back again. As they drew near the island
-a school of porpoises made a dash among them. These fellows drove the
-more timid in frantic throngs until our leader came plunging to the
-rescue followed by a few of the largest and boldest of the school. In a
-few minutes the warm-blooded animals had received some severe strokes
-from the razor-like teeth and they went plunging seaward. Then the mass
-of albicore went in and took possession of the rocks, the smaller fish
-fleeing before them.
-
-Here at last our hero was in the waters he loved. Game was plentiful
-and the schools of the albicore led by him along the sunken rocks found
-it easy to keep supplied. His great size, greater than even the largest
-of that vast host, made his leadership unquestioned. Everything stood
-clear of his rush except the sullen sharks, and even they took care not
-to precipitate trouble by hanging too closely about the rear of his
-foraging parties as they went their way along the shore.
-
-During the whole season the albicore hung about the reefs of
-Mas-a-fuera and Juan Fernandez Island. The young had come forth and the
-sheltered places inside the outer breakers were teeming with them. Our
-leader had driven to sea all other fish who were at all antagonistic
-to them, and peaceful tranquillity reigned. Once or twice a growing
-fellow, who had reached six feet or more in length, wanted to try
-conclusions with the leader, but he soon had enough after encountering
-the sharp teeth, and took his place among the followers. He was their
-king. A king by election and superiority, he led them steadily until
-the season waned, and the time for the bonita to strike inshore came at
-hand.
-
-As this time drew near the feeling of unrest began to show itself among
-the school. Stragglers began to leave the reef and seek the open ocean
-with the instinctive longing for that safety which exists there. Our
-king watched them go by pairs and sometimes dozens, but he made no
-attempt to stop them. There would be enough to look out for without
-them, and they could well be spared.
-
-Finally the time came for the general movement. He had marshaled the
-great host of albicore from the adjacent reefs, and together in one
-vast throng they left for open ocean, going to the northward to avoid
-the enemy who would attack from the south and west. The bonita were
-not as large or as heavy as themselves individually, but they were the
-strongest creatures of their size in the ocean, and their countless
-numbers made them absolutely fearless. They would attack anything that
-stood in their path, and their great vitality and quickness made them
-the most dreaded of all the foraging bands of sea-wolves which roamed
-the South Sea.
-
-The solid phalanx of albicore started offshore at sunrise, the king in
-the van and the younger and more helpless bringing up in the rear of
-the column; but as before many of the young had been overlooked as they
-loitered among the sheltered places in the rocks.
-
-The head of the moving mass was a full mile from shore before the end
-of the crowd had begun to leave, and as the sun shone upon the calm
-ocean, its rays struck glancing along the flanks of thousands of moving
-bodies, making the water seem like shimmering silver as the light
-flashed from the bright scales. There was no wind at all, and far away
-to the westward our leader thought he saw a peculiar disturbance of the
-sea surface. He took a leap into the air to get a better view and was
-followed by many of his companions, who usually imitated his example
-in all his movements. As he rose in the sunshine his glistening armor
-reflected the light and made him visible for miles. What he had seen
-upon the western skyline was enough. As far as the eye could reach the
-ocean had spurted white at his plunge, for the bonita had seen him, and
-with a front of several miles in extent they were plunging toward the
-band of albicore, tearing the calm surface to foam with their rush. It
-was as though some mighty explosion had taken place and spurted the sea
-upward in little jets along the front of a sunken reef, for the bonita
-acted almost in unison in spite of their vast numbers. They were now in
-full charge.
-
-When two rapidly moving bodies, of almost equal weight, meet, the one
-having the swifter movement will prevail. King Albicore understood
-this principle instinctively, and instantly darted forward. His
-followers joined him, and away they rushed straight for the line of
-breaking water which drew nearer and nearer as the moments flew by. The
-rear of the column, finding the head leaving at speed, closed up the
-gap and came onward until soon the entire mass of albicore were driving
-headlong to the westward as fast as they could go.
-
-It was a magnificent sight to watch those charging columns. A million
-bonita charging a hundred thousand albicore. Nowhere on land could such
-vast hosts of large living creatures marshal. The sea was ruffled and
-foamed for miles with the disturbance of the fleeting bodies, and from
-above the bos’n-birds could watch the long line of pointed heads making
-the ocean darken with a huge shadow as the hordes rushed onward.
-
-A mile, then a half--a quarter, and still the ruffling lines of ocean
-surface seemed to draw nearer with undiminished speed. There was a
-seeming instant of quiet. A space of apparently unruffled water. And
-then they met.
-
-Like an eruption from some subterranean crater the sea sprung upward.
-The long lines of pointed heads struck together. Bodies flung high in
-the air. Tails, heads, quivering sides streaming from ugly gashes, were
-thrown into the sunlight, and then upon the quiet of the morning there
-broke a deep, dull, moaning roar of immense volume.
-
-Full into the center of the great army the king albicore tore his
-way. Bonita snapped and flashed upon all sides, their vigorous bodies
-fairly quivering with the rapidity of their movements, but with his
-jaws cutting like a pair of flying shears, he held his way while his
-sturdy followers entered behind him and forced the gap. Into this, like
-a wedge, pressed the body of the column, cutting and fighting with
-incredible fury. Comrades fell out by the hundred, chopped and torn
-by the bonita who surged in upon the flanks, but the great mass of
-albicore tore its way through, killing everything in its path.
-
-Away they went straight ahead. The bonita fell away sullenly from the
-solid ranks, and in half an hour the last albicore had gone through the
-gap in close column, leaving the sea and its scavengers to wipe out the
-marks of their passage. There was no changing front to that horde. The
-course was straight ahead. It was certain death to be left behind.
-
-The bonita held their way toward the reefs of Mas-a-fuera and were soon
-out of sight in the East.
-
-But King Albicore, what of him?
-
-With flanks cut and ripped almost to ribbons he stuck at the head of
-the column. No sheering this way or that. The feeling had come upon
-him that he had done his duty. He had fulfilled his mission. He, the
-king, had led his comrades to victory, and he must pay the great debt
-which falls to all sons of nature. Silently and steadily he went along,
-his instinct telling him his time had come. But with it there were no
-regrets.
-
-He had done all he could for his kind, and like a king he would die.
-
-The bright sunshine would fade and the blue water would disappear
-forever. They would forget him, and another leader would take his
-place. But he knew he had done his duty and knew he had done it well,
-and the great throng would live to be thankful for his prowess.
-
-The sunlight seemed to be fading and darkness appeared to be coming
-upon the ocean, yet he knew it was not quite midday. He turned to take
-one look at the mighty host he had brought to sea. They were still
-following him faithfully.
-
-Then the light went out. He turned upon his side and sank downward
-through the blue depths, while the albicore held their way to the coral
-reefs of the South Sea.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _The NIBBLERS_]
-
-
-The “Nibblers” received their name from Mr. Keon, second officer of
-the steamship _Spitfire_ of the Great American Fruit Company’s line
-running to the tropics for bananas. The family, commonly speaking,
-were simply ship’s rats, but Mr. Keon was of a romantic and discerning
-turn of mind, and after making their acquaintance he christened them
-comprehensively.
-
-To Mr. Keon they were much more than ordinary rats. He knew the whole
-family intimately from old Mrs. Nibbler, the mother, down to little
-Tiny, the smallest and most timid youngster of the lot, and to be known
-by the second officer was a privilege not granted to all who came
-aboard the fruit ship. He was a man who possessed an enormous fund of
-material from which he could draw without effort for sea stories, and,
-according to many authorities, consequently possessed a large amount
-of “gray matter” in his head. Whether this came outside in the form of
-hair, or remained inside in the form of brains, it is not necessary to
-inquire. He told the story of “The Nibblers,” sitting one night on the
-edge of the forward hatch with the full tropic moon behind him and the
-soft wind of the Florida Stream blowing the smoke from his pipe away to
-leeward, and enough of it was remembered to get his name down as that
-of a very remarkable man.
-
-“Ye see,” said he, after we had been watching the antics of a huge rat
-who was scampering around the edge of the hatchway, “that feller has
-got as much sense as you have. It’s ole Toby, one o’ the old fellers
-what’s been aboard this vessel since she carried her first cargo. He’s
-a most uncommon old rat, an’ that’s a fact. He’s as happy an ole raskil
-as ever haunted a ship’s bilge, an’ he aint afeared o’ much. I seen
-him chase a cat clean into the galley door onct, and he would ha’ got
-her but fer the fool ‘doctor’ heavin’ a pan at him. See how quick he
-kin jump. Just look at them whiskers, hey?
-
-“I remember when I first seen him, away back in the eighties, when
-Captain Jackson took command. He ware a young feller then an’ the
-captain’s wife used to come o’ evenings an’ sit on the bridge jest over
-this forrad hatch. She ware a fine-lookin’ gal, an’ that’s a fact, a
-heap finer-lookin’ than the ole man. He warn’t nothin’ much fer looks
-anyway, a little chap with a squint an’ grizzled whiskers fer all the
-world like ole Toby’s there, but he ware a terrier fer handlin’ canvas
-in the ole days. I seen him onct--but no matter, that aint got nothin’
-to do with what I’m goin’ to tell ye.
-
-“Ye see, the gal was mighty pretty. I don’t know as I ever seen a woman
-as good-lookin’. She had golden hair, an’ eyes as soft an’ blue----”
-
-“Go on with the yarn,” interrupted the bos’n; “we’ll let the girl go.”
-
-Keon smoked on in silence after this as though he had taken offense,
-but we soon saw by the look of his eyes that he was far away from that
-fore hatch.
-
-“The second mate used to sit right here,” he went on at last, “an’ she
-would look over the bridge rail on fine evenings an’ watch the Nibblers
-goin’ an’ comin’ around this hole. Rats is like all other animals,
-includin’ humans, in respects to selections, an’ the way these fellows
-would fight an’ scrap fer each other was somethin’ funny to see. The
-biggest an’ strongest rat would knock the other out an’ take up with
-one o’ the young an’ frivolous females, jest like it occurs in story
-books. He was the hero, big an’ strong an’ fine-lookin’, an’ o’ course
-the gal rat would care fer him like females care fer all heroes. He was
-supposed to have all the fine qualities o’ rat in his make-up, jest
-like a hero has, an’ the way he would go a-scamperin’ around after
-some little feller who wasn’t strong enough to stand to him was funny
-to see. The captain’s wife used to come to the rail an’ look down an’
-watch them fer hours, an’ laugh an’ laugh when some fellow like big
-Toby there would put the rest out the way, an’ the second mate he would
-sit there close by durin’ the dog-watch, an’ watch, too, but he warn’t
-always lookin’ at the rats. Then when he had to go on the bridge he had
-to meet that queer little captain who waren’t no bigger’n a good-sized
-mouse. He didn’t reach much more’n up to the second mate’s shoulder.
-Sometimes the young woman looked hard at the two when they were
-together, an’ the skipper would get nervous, fer he thought a lot o’
-her--an’ so did the second mate. The men forrads used to notice a thing
-or two, an’ they called the skipper ‘Squeak Jackson,’ he was so little
-an’ small in his voice. But he kept his temper an’ never let on as to
-what he thought o’ his size, fer he had been a good one.
-
-“Ye see, rats don’t have no consciences. That’s where they differs with
-humans. Fools don’t have none to speak on, but sometimes there comes
-a time to most men when they wonders what about the little feller what
-gets licked. It’s all right in stories o’ love, and no one bothers at
-the time about the weaklin’ who can’t hold his own, but really when it
-comes down to hard fact without all the romance o’ women in it, there’s
-somethin’ sorrowful about the poor feller who can’t hold his way agin
-the stronger one. He aint done nothin’ wrong in bein’ weak, an’ he was
-born that way, so why blame him fer it? Sometimes it seems as if the
-world was wrong, always goin’ sides with the fine, handsome hero o’
-the affair who can drive off the weaklin’ an’ rescue the female. What
-about the feller who was born weak an’ small, aint he got no feelin’s?
-But nobody cares a rap fer him. It’s nature. It shows humans are mostly
-animals, an’ as fer me I sometimes feel I lost somethin’ by not bein’
-born a rat.
-
-“Ye see, the _Spitfire_ was in the banana trade then. Bananas are the
-devil to carry if they get ripe on you, and get switchin’ around below.
-I seen the banana slush four feet deep in the lower hold, an’ ye know
-banana juice is about as acid as anythin’ goin’, an’ it cuts iron
-into holes an’ pits quicker’n you can tell o’ it. Ye got to be mighty
-careful cleanin’ a banana ship’s bilge if you don’t want her to get
-pitted, an’ her bottom like a piece o’ blottin’ paper soft enough to
-poke yer foot through with a kick. It takes a man who knows how to take
-care o’ a banana ship to keep her up!
-
-“I don’t know how rats come to be in ships, but they come by the
-hundreds. Mebbe they come in the fruit, or stores. Anyways, there they
-be, an’ there’s no way to git rid o’ them.
-
-“Ye see, there has to be a ceiling of wood in an iron ship to keep
-the fruit off’n the plates, an’ it’s in atween this that the little
-critters git. They aint no more like a shore rat than you are. They are
-all sailors, every one o’ them, an’ they stan’ their watches same as
-you an’ me. You see these fellers running around here now, but there’s
-a lot more below that won’t come on deck until I go below. Toby there
-is in my watch, an’ I feed him. Them that aint in my watch won’t come
-out till the bell strikes, an’ then they peep up, an’ if they see the
-mate out they come on deck an’ look fer the grub some fellers in his
-watch fetches up now an’ then.
-
-“But what I was tellin’ was this. We took aboard a lot o’ fresh ones
-down to Montego Bay, an’ among ’em was that old fat female rat ye see
-there sittin’ on the edge o’ the coamin’. She’s the mother o’ half a
-hundred now, but when she first come aboard she was a young an’ frisky
-rat as ever you see. She’d been aboard a week or two afore I noticed
-her, but on the way south again, one night when we struck into the warm
-water, I noticed her come on deck with a lot more. It was just such a
-night as this an’ the little skipper an’ his wife were on the bridge
-a-lookin’ down at the black hole o’ the fore hatch. Soon the gal made
-out the rats a-runnin’ an’ jumpin’ around the opening an’ the second
-mate sat there waitin’ fer the bells to strike afore he went on watch.
-
-“That ole rat was skippin’ away from a whole crowd o’ young rats what
-was a-followin’ her around, an’ that big Toby there he was gettin’ sort
-o’ interested. He was a young rat then, ye see, an’ he looked on sort
-o’ solemn like fer a while an’ let ’em skip around, but I seen that he
-wasn’t goin’ to stand still long. Suddenly he gave a squeak. Then the
-frolickin’ stopped sudden like an’ Toby come forrads.
-
-“Well, sir, you may not believe it, but he went straight up to that
-handsome young female an’ said ‘How d’ye do’ as plain as ye please. I
-don’t mean to say he spoke, but that was his action, an’ no mistakin’,
-fer the pair stood nose to nose fer the space o’ half a minute. Then
-they went off together to another part o’ the deck, an’ ye ought to
-seen how them other young rats took it. It was comical an’ that’s a
-fact. He had done the polite to that female rat an’ was gettin’ along
-handsome’ an’ the gal above was laughin’ at it, while the skipper
-walked athwartships an’ took no notice.
-
-“Toby hadn’t been more’n two minutes with his fair one when up comes
-a sassy-lookin’ rat, about as big as a kitten. He was lookin’ fer
-trouble, that rat, fer he jest walked right up an’ lit into Toby
-without waitin’ fer further orders. Sink me, if that weren’t a scrap.
-Ye never would think them little critters would take on so. A pair o’
-bulldogs warn’t in it with them rats, an’ the rest all crowded around,
-comin’ up slowly, an’ lookin’ to see which one would do fer the other.
-
-“Well, sir, the second mate sat still lookin’ on, an’ the gal was
-lookin’ down from above over the bridge rail. The night was bright
-enough fer to see things pretty well on deck, an’ the gal’s eyes showed
-interest. It was the same old story, the choosin’ o’ the hero, only
-they was rats, an’ there wasn’t no doubt that we wanted the best one to
-win: him that was the biggest an’ strongest an’ best-lookin’.
-
-“It’s been a long time ago now, but ye would think that ole rat would
-still have the marks o’ that fight on him, an’ mebbe he has. They
-grabbed at each other with them long teeth, an’ I tell you they made
-the fur fly fer a few minutes. The sassy big rat made a pass an’
-grabbed Toby by the leg, an’ sech a squealin’ ye never heard. But that
-female rat sat quiet, an’ jest kept lookin’ on, waitin’ fer the finish.
-Toby saw he was in a bad fix. He was gettin’ the worst o’ the fight,
-fer that rat had him fast enough by the hind leg. It was up an’ down
-an’ all over the deck forrads, the old fellow squealin’ an’ bitin’, an’
-that sassy-lookin’ rat jest holdin’ on fer further orders. It looked
-blue fer Toby an’ he seen somethin’ must be done sudden if he wanted
-that fine female rat fer a side pardner down in the bilge. He stopped
-his squealin’ an’ was quiet fer a minute, thinkin’ an’ tryin’ to plan
-out some kind o’ game fer to git away an’ get his grip on that sassy
-rat that was slowly sawin’ his leg off. All to onct he give a jerk.
-Then he bent his body double an’ rolled on his back like a ball. That
-brought his enemy up alongside him an’ the next minute he was fast to
-him amidships, gettin’ a good grip o’ the feller’s belly.
-
-“I tell you he must have pinched right hard. That sassy-lookin’ rat
-couldn’t stand the bite, an’ let go the leg grip he had, squealin’ an’
-twistin’ to get away. But no sirree. Old Toby had him fer sure this
-time, an’ he jest settled right down to business, shakin’ an’ pullin’,
-fer there aint nothin’ a rat kin stand less than a good shakin’. Pretty
-soon the feller began to give up an’ try to get away, squealin’ a
-different sort o’ squeal from the sassy squeal he began with.
-
-“Then Toby goes fer him harder than ever, but jest as he was tryin’ to
-get a new hold, the fellow up an’ bolts fer the open hatchway, an’ the
-fight was over. Then all hands scrambled below, an’ Toby walks right
-up to the fine female rat what was waitin’ fer him an’ they goes off
-together. Then the gal on the bridge laughs right out an’ says ‘Bully
-boy,’ an’ the second mate looks up an’ sees the look in her eyes,
-an’--well, I dunno, after that they used to come together somehow until
-the skipper speaks up one day an’ asks the second mate his business.
-
-“‘Ye seem to have too much to do,’ says he one evenin’ to the second
-mate, ‘an’ if I was you I’d keep more by meself, or mebbe I’ll take ye
-in hand a bit.’
-
-“That second mate was thinkin’ o’ them rats, an’ speaks up: ‘You kin
-try yer hand when we gets in port. I’m an officer here an’ can’t get no
-show, but on the beach I’ll take yer skin or I’m a soger,’ says he.
-
-“An’ so the captain was too proud to take advantage o’ his position,
-an’ waits until the vessel was in at Port Antonio. Then he steps ashore
-an’ tells the second mate to follow him an’ take a lickin’.
-
-“Well, sir, there aint no use tellin’ how that fight come off. It took
-three hours to put that dinky little skipper temporarily to sleep, an’
-the fellers what seen the scrap tells a thing or two about it,--but
-they was only niggers an’ didn’t count. Anyways, the second mate
-was as well pounded as a beefsteak, but he was a hero, an’ that’s a
-fact. He was a pretty good sort o’ man, an’ some says he was fairly
-good-lookin’. Anyways, he was way ahead in looks o’ that dinky little
-skipper, an’ the gal, I believe, thought so too. Yessir, it ware the
-same ole story o’ choosin’ the hero over again, jest like it takes
-place in story books--only a bit different, fer the gal was already
-married in this case, an’ sech doin’s never is printed except in
-papers. But that second mate, he ware the hero jest the same.
-
-“When the _Spitfire_ went to sea again there was a mighty quiet sort o’
-skipper aboard, an’ a second mate who was a-lookin’ out fer squalls.
-There was evidently goin’ to be a change aboard at the end of the
-passage. But all the time that gal she jest kept to herself, an’ by the
-look o’ her eyes she ware tellin’ the second mate plainer ’n mud that
-he ware the man fer her. The dinky little skipper could see it too.
-
-“The night she went to sea the second mate was sittin’ on the edge o’
-the hatchway here as usual when it come on eight bells, an’ he seen
-all that new load o’ rats a-gettin’ ashore fast. It aint no good sign
-to see rats gettin’ out o’ a ship. They generally leave afore she goes
-down, an’ when the second mate seen them a-goin’ ashore he was fer
-followin’ them. Then he thinks o’ that gal again an’ stays, fer you may
-not believe it, but ole Toby, there, an’ his mate wouldn’t go ashore.
-They stays on deck at the last minute when the second officer was
-gettin’ ready to clear an’ when he seen it he says he’d stay too. It
-sort o’ put him in mind o’ hisself.
-
-“It began to come on to blow the day after we passed Cape Maysi. Ye
-know how it is in the windward passage, so it didn’t bother us much.
-But along about dark the glass began to drop sudden like, until it got
-down about three marks below where it ought to stayed. The air was
-warm an’ sultry comin’ hot from the s’uthard. The haze what comes with
-the hurricane was raisin’ plain in sight, an’ the dinky little skipper
-puts her head to the east’ard to clear the center, fer it ware jest in
-our wake.
-
-“I seen it blow before, but sink me if ever it blew anywhere’s like
-that. The sea ware jest a roarin’ hill leapin’ up with a cross heave
-in it, an’ the air was like a solid wall when it struck. No, sir, ye
-couldn’t stand on the bridge. It would have picked ye up bodily an’
-hove ye overboard. The roar ware deafenin’, an’ we hove her to on the
-starboard tack to work clear, an’ jest then, by some luck or other,
-she waded right into the center o’ that whirl where the seas ware jest
-standin’ right up on end.
-
-“Ye can’t do nothin’ with a ship caught in the center of one o’ them
-circular storms. It blows in sech squalls that there aint no way
-a tellin’ which way it’s comin’, only it comes with sech a mighty
-weight that no ship kin stan’ to it. An’ the sea falls down on ye from
-anywhere at all till the decks are under tons o’ water, an’ everythin’
-gone to the devil stove up.
-
-“The _Spitfire_ ware knocked over in one o’ the rushes o’ hot wind
-that ripped the funnel out o’ her. Then an almighty sea broke right
-amidships an’ tore the side o’ the house away an’ flooded the engine
-room. It ware lookin’ kind o’ bad fer us, an’ when the engineer come
-on deck half drowned, an’ said the engine ware done fer an’ the water
-a-comin’ in about two feet at a jump, we made up our minds the ole ship
-ware done fer, an’ the best thing ware to get clear as soon as we could.
-
-“But no small boat could have lived in that sea a minute. There wasn’t
-anything to do but wait until the gale wore down, which it did after
-about three hours of the heaviest blowin’ I ever seen. Then she eased
-up an’ the ole ship was jest decks out in a sea what would make yer
-hair white to look at.
-
-“We made a lee o’ the side an’ lowered down the boats before daybreak,
-that dinky little skipper jest a-standin’ an’ lookin’ on an’ never
-a-sayin’ a word.
-
-“The first officer he takes the first boat what swings clear, an’ then
-the gal she looks down at the second mate. He puts her in the next
-boat an’ they lower it down an’ they scramble to get in, fer the ship
-is wallowin’ in that nasty sea an’ feels dead. Some fool fumbles the
-tackle an’ nearly capsized the craft, but the second mate he grabs
-the line in time to save it an’ she goes clear. The men rush to find
-places, an’ then the second mate stan’s there alone with that dinky
-little skipper, who hasn’t spoken or moved from the chart-house door.
-
-“It’s all mighty plain. The fellers from below, white with scare an’
-tremblin’ as they grab the ship’s sides. Some pushes the others an’
-then they curse and swear to kill each other when there aint enough
-breath in them to speak out loud.
-
-“‘Be ye a-goin’ in that boat, sir?’ says the second mate to his
-captain.
-
-“‘Go an’ be d----d,’ says the dinky little skipper.
-
-“An’ the second officer jumps in an’ the painter is cast off. Then the
-little skipper stan’s out an’ watches them slowly go away--watches them
-drawin’ off further an’ further, an’ his eyes is on the gal in the
-boat, an’ his hands is folded on his breast. That’s the last they sees
-o’ him as he stands there with the risin’ sun a-shinin’ on him an’ the
-blue sea washin’ nigh up to the ole hooker’s deck.
-
-“Fer seven days an’ nights the fellers in that boat has a time with it.
-Then there comes a ship bound in an’ takes ’em aboard, an’ in a few
-days they finds themselves in New York, the second mate an’ the gal
-hardly speakin’.
-
-“When they comes ashore the first man the gal sees is that dinky little
-skipper a-waitin’ there on the dock, jest as natural an’ chipper as if
-he wasn’t the ugliest skipper ever in a decent ship. An’ funniest of
-all she jest naturally goes an’ flings herself at him like a dolphin
-at a bait, landin’ right in his arms. Fer, ye see, that old hooker
-_Spitfire_ warn’t so badly used up as the engineer thought, an’ when
-the sea went down she didn’t make no more water to speak of. The next
-mornin’ a vessel comes along an’ lends a hand to the dinky little
-feller aboard, an’ pretty soon the engine is a-goin’ an’ the ole ship
-is headin’ away on her course with one o’ the company’s ships alongside
-to see her through. There aint no salvage to pay, an’ all is taut as a
-gantline.”
-
-Here Mr. Keon stopped and knocked the ashes from his pipe. The great
-rat he called Toby scampered down the hatchway as the bells struck off,
-warning us that the first watch was at hand.
-
-“What became of the little captain?” asked the bos’n.
-
-“Oh, that little feller got the finest ship in the company’s fleet.
-He’s commodore now, ye see,” said the second mate, “an’ we got ‘Peepin’
-Shaw’ in his place.”
-
-“Did they discharge the officers that deserted?” asked a sailor.
-
-Mr. Keon looked sorrowfully at him and rose from the hatchway. Then he
-stopped a moment and fumbled his pipe.
-
-“D’ye think second officers sech as me are plentiful abouts, hey?” he
-asked.
-
-He was a powerfully built man and showed to some advantage in his
-working clothes of light duck.
-
-“Second mates sech as me aint to be picked up everywhere, ye might
-know, an’ this ship has never had but one since she was launched,” and
-he went on the bridge for his watch on deck.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: JOHNNY SHARK]
-
-
-In the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean, about six hundred miles to
-the eastward of Cape St. Roque, rises the peculiar peak called the St.
-Paul’s Rock. It is some sixty feet above the sea level, and is a ragged
-granite point. Within a cable’s length of it the bottom apparently
-falls out of the ocean, for it takes nearly three miles of piano wire
-with an enormous deep-sea lead attached to find the half-liquid ooze
-below. If the blue water were suddenly to subside the tiny point of the
-St. Paul’s would present a different appearance. It would then be the
-highest pinnacle of a most colossal mountain.
-
-It is on the edge of the calm belt, close to the equator, and the blue
-depths surrounding its huge flanks are seldom, if ever, disturbed by a
-storm. Only the steady trade swell rolling gently in upon its sides
-forms a white ring about it, and the dull roar of the southern ocean
-is but a low monotonous thunder that would hardly frighten the timid
-flying fish.
-
-Besides this there is nothing save the occasional snore of a sea
-breaking over a submerged peak to disturb the silence; for here
-desolation and loneliness reign supreme. It is as though a bit of the
-Great Silence of the ocean bed were raised up to be burned in the glare
-of the torrid sunshine, and fanned by the breath of the unending trade
-wind.
-
-But, if the peak is devoid of life, a look into the beautiful blue
-abyss alongside shows a different state. All kinds of shell-fish
-inhabit the hospitable caverns beneath, and fish can be seen darting
-here and there through the bunches of seaweed. The busy coral works
-steadfastly at his never-ending toil. The sea-crabs, star-fish, and
-their myriad brethren are all visible.
-
-Sometimes a couple of albicore will dart past below the surface, or
-a flash of white reveal the quick strike of a dolphin, followed
-instantly by a shower of glittering gems that break from the surface
-and scatter,--the flying fish that have escaped those rapid jaws.
-
-Then a huge dark shadow will rise slowly out of the blue invisibility
-below, and all the smaller fish will disappear. The shadow will take
-form, and will be that of an old shark lazily policing the rocks for
-pieces of the game that are deserted. He is a large brute, but in spite
-of his enormous fins and tail he is quite willing that others shall do
-his work of the chase for him.
-
-If there happens to be an injured fish near, the great tail will give
-one or two powerful strokes, and chop! Those jaws, armed with half a
-dozen rows of sawlike teeth, with the points of those above fitting
-into the spaces between those below, seldom have to strike twice.
-
-The first motion upon the part of the monster is a signal which
-produces a strange effect. No sooner has he bolted the game than from
-all around rise dark-brown and gray shadows. These congregate about
-him, and he lazily swims away, leaving probably half a hundred of his
-relations to search the clear depths for what might be left.
-
-And such relatives! One has a head half a fathom wide, his eyes peering
-wickedly from the curving sides of his shovel-like nose. Another has
-stripes like those of the tiger on land, and is hardly less ugly
-in disposition. Let the old fellow who first tackled the game get
-a slit in his hide and the striped fellow see it. He will find his
-affectionate relative’s knowledge of the fact announced by a sudden
-chop. Then there will be a general mix-up, and if he is still active
-and strong enough he may live to dine upon the unsympathetic cousin.
-But more than likely the cousin will be re-enforced by a host of
-hungry comrades, whose ideas of fair play are somewhat biased by an
-uncontrollable appetite for anything nutritious. If this is the case he
-will apparently melt into that beautiful blue void about him, leaving
-but a slight stain which will soon disappear. It was here in these
-abodes of the genus carcharodon that our hero was born.
-
-He was one of a school of six when he first saw the light, and his five
-brothers and sisters were so like him that the great mother shark could
-hardly tell them apart. When she opened her enormous mouth one day to
-receive them and give them shelter while a desperate sword-fish swung
-his weapon in her face, she made a miscount when shutting her jaws, and
-one belated little fellow was quickly swallowed by the insolent enemy.
-The mother made a dash and chopped off a piece of the sword-fish’s tail
-as he fled before her wrath, but he escaped in spite of this.
-
-During his babyhood Johnny Shark had many trials. There were the
-hideous little pilot fish to deal with. They were always following him
-around trying to rob him of his rights. Then his brothers also lacked
-in unselfishness, and he fought them, one and all, from the beginning,
-until his disposition became somewhat combative.
-
-During this period of his life his skin was of a most beautiful
-velvety gray, shading to white on his belly. His hard bony lips formed
-a sheath for his cutters, and they fitted in behind them as snug as a
-sword in a scabbard. They were very small, but the same shape as his
-mother’s triangles, and he could work them on their bases as though
-hinged in his jaws. He was but little more than a foot in length, and
-he kept close to his mother’s side, ready to shelter should a fierce
-albicore or any of the giant mackerel tribe take a notion that he would
-make a good meal.
-
-And yet he could venture deep in the shadow of the mountain defiles,
-where in some of the huge caverns gigantic, many-armed monsters, with
-huge beaks and eyes a foot in diameter, lay waiting, seizing whatever
-unfortunate fish happened within the sweep of their snaky tentacles.
-In fact all around him was an eternal war. Everything seemed to be
-fighting with everything else and only the luckiest and most powerful
-beings seemed to last many changes of the moon.
-
-As for his brothers and sisters they were like himself, keeping close
-to his mother, and ready for a refuge within her huge jaws at the first
-sign of an approaching enemy.
-
-As he grew slowly he began to develop a wandering spirit. He would
-leave the protecting shadow of his mother when she would float lazily
-upon the surface, and explore the ragged fringe of foam to see what
-might be had in the way of diversion. Once a great bonita made a dash
-at him, but he saw him coming in time, and turning he chopped him
-savagely. The taste of blood seemed to invigorate him, for he hung
-fiercely upon his now fleeing enemy until he tore away, leaving a
-mouthful of himself in the tightly locked jaws. He was too lazy to
-follow up his victory. A fat porpoise chased his wounded assailant
-until he conquered him and made him his meal.
-
-In fact, he seldom cared for violent exercise, and could hardly
-understand the foolish savagery of some of the warmer-blooded denizens
-about him. When he fought he generally made a sure thing of it. He
-would take no chances where a wound or exhaustion meant certain death.
-There were plenty of small rockfish that were too stupid to run when he
-approached, and he could always get enough of them without playing the
-game of death for the pleasure of it.
-
-Once a school of giants came to the Rocks, and he lay in the shadow
-of a crag wondering at their size. They were sperm whales, and their
-leader was an enormous old fellow whose fat sides were studded with
-barnacles. These seemed to trouble him, and he would roll slowly up to
-a peak near the surface where the sunlight filtered down through the
-blue, and rub his belly for hours at a time, scraping off thousands of
-the parasites. Then the stupid little fishes would dart out from their
-hiding places to catch them, and he would dash among them before they
-could get back again. While the monsters lay near the Rocks a very
-long and thin relative of Johnny’s mother paid them a visit. His tail
-was enormous, and it was evident he was fast. He seemed to have some
-business with his parent, for soon afterwards she followed him off to
-sea where one of the whales lay sleeping with the water breaking gently
-over her back.
-
-When they were close to her they made a sudden dash, the lean shark
-leaping high in air and falling with a tremendous whack upon the
-sleeping victim, while his mother chopped her savagely in the sides. It
-was all so sudden he hardly had time to get away, for in an instant the
-sleeping whale awoke and tore the sea into foam with her flukes.
-
-His mother, however, heeded the outfly but little and held gamely on.
-The whale tried to turn and seize her in the long thin jaw that was
-studded with enormous teeth, but nothing could dislodge the grip of
-her triangles. And all the time the thin fellow in company would throw
-himself in the air and smash the whale terrific blows with his lean
-tail.
-
-The noise must have been an uproar, for in a very few minutes the great
-leader who had been rubbing his belly came plunging through the water
-towards them, leaving a great path of white foam to mark his course.
-
-Then the whale sounded, carrying his mother out of sight below. Instead
-of following, the thresher shark dodged the great bull leader and made
-off, leaving the mother shark to get away as best she could.
-
-She came up with the whale half a mile away, and then finding herself
-deserted she let go and started to make off. As she did so she
-encountered the big bull coming after her. She ducked from his bite,
-but he smote her such a blow with his flukes as she dodged past that
-she was hardly able to escape.
-
-The next day she grew weaker, and a sword-fish, seeing her, gave her a
-final taste of his weapon, and began to chop her up. Instead of driving
-him away, several other sharks, that now appeared, openly joined him in
-accomplishing her destruction, and soon she disappeared entirely.
-
-With no protection save his own teeth, the little shark now went
-his way among the peaks. Deep down in the blue abyss he would sink
-until the terrible pressure would force him up again to the world of
-sunlight. Sometimes he would stay for hours a mile or more down in
-caverns and caves of the mountain side, guided alone by the sense of
-smell and that delicate sense of feeling peculiar to his kind. Each and
-every motion of the sea caused a vibration that instinct explained.
-Once a huge arm reached out from a hiding place and circled him within
-its embrace, but before it could draw him in he had chopped it in two,
-and leisurely ate what remained as he swam on.
-
-He was growing strong now, and his triangular teeth developed saw
-edges, making the most perfect cutting machines possible to devise. His
-skin was tough and coarse, a bony substance forming upon it that made
-it almost tooth-proof to ordinary fish.
-
-He developed a roving disposition, and the vicinity of the great
-mountain became too well known. He started off to the westward where
-the sun seemed to sink in a deep golden-red ocean, and he cruised along
-near the surface, his dorsal fin and tip of tail just awash.
-
-Out upon the lonely ocean he quickened his movement. There was nothing,
-nothing but the never-ending sea ahead, with the soft murmur of the
-trade wind turning the glistening surface a darker blue, while from
-miles and miles away to windward came the low song of the South Sea.
-
-On and on he went until hunger made him look about for a victim. He
-was not particular as to who or what this creature might be, for his
-own powers produced an apathy of fear for all dangerous denizens of
-the deep. He was changing now, and no longer shunned a conflict with
-anything that formerly might have wounded his soft sides.
-
-One day a whale passed in his wake. The huge bulk of the creature
-might have appalled any fish, but he was hungry, and the fat blubber
-was tempting. His own three fathoms of lean, hard flank seemed meager
-enough.
-
-With a quick movement he turned and made straight for the cachalot.
-The monster opened his mouth by dropping his long, thin under jaw, and
-made a chop at him, but he swerved and sank his triangles deep in the
-blubber of the animal’s neck, covering a good hundred pounds of him.
-
-The whale plunged wildly, lashing right and left with his powerful
-tail, finally throwing himself clear of the sea and falling again with
-a stupendous crash. But the shark held grimly on. Rolling over and over
-the animal tried to throw himself clear of that grip. The blubber was
-tearing out in a huge ribbon where the triangles had cut it clear, and
-the blood was showing upon the white fat. The sea was a surf upon a
-submerged reef. And all the time the shark jerked and wrenched, dodged
-and pulled until the huge mouthful came clear.
-
-Quickly the whale turned to chop with that long jaw studded with huge
-points of ivory. Quicker still slewed the shark. The whale missed, and
-the shark again sank those terrible cutters deep in the hole already
-made in the animal’s neck. This time it was flesh that felt the bite,
-and the pain maddened the leviathan. With a bellow like a bull he
-started off, dragging the shark along with him as though he had been
-but a tiny pilot fish.
-
-On and on the great whale tore, while the shark hung helpless by his
-side. The whale was doing all the work, and all he had to do was to
-hold on. Gradually the pace eased a little, and finally stopped. Then
-down, straight down into the abyss below, plunged the leviathan.
-
-But even here the shark still held his grip. The pressure became
-enormous in that cold blackness, but he could stand it as well as the
-monster.
-
-Then, after an hour of twisting and rolling, they came quickly to the
-surface again, the whale somewhat tired. Now was the shark’s chance.
-Letting go his hold he made a sudden fresh chop to tear the bite out,
-and he backed away with a huge piece of flesh. The whale turned as
-quickly as possible, but he was tired now, and the shark chopped him
-again and again, savagely tearing out great pieces of blubber and beef.
-
-The sea was dyed red, and the surging of flukes and threshing about
-brought several wandering sharks from the depth to see what it all
-meant. One of these, a huge killer, joined the fight against the whale,
-and soon he also chopped and tore the wound into a great hole. The
-fight now became general, as the strangers took a hand. The worried
-whale rolled and smote right and left, but our shark tore him deeper
-and deeper.
-
-One of the newcomers ventured across the whale’s head, and was promptly
-seized in the long thin jaw that swung up and cut him in halves. All
-except the first assailant left the whale to eat the unfortunate shark,
-and the two fighters were alone again for some minutes.
-
-The whale now became weaker, and except for an occasional lunge lay
-quietly beating the sea with his flukes.
-
-The shark now began to bolt large pieces of him at his leisure, and the
-rest seeing him at work came sneaking back again. They formed a circle
-around the dying monster, and rushed in and chopped him whenever they
-dared. In a little while he began swimming slowly in a circle, and
-then finally stopped. He gave one final sidelong blow with his flukes
-that broke every bone in a shark’s body that happened in its way. Then
-he lay still and rolled upon his sides. He was dead. And now from the
-lonely depths where all was apparently a void, the scavengers came
-sneaking forth.
-
-Big sharks and little sharks, hammerhead and shovel-nose, all began to
-circle about the huge carcass, and watch for a place to chop a piece of
-blubber out. They crowded and jostled each other, and sometimes even
-fought for a place alongside. Above them the whale-birds screamed and
-squawked as they hovered and lit for an instant to tear at the juicy
-covering of the carcass.
-
-Our fighter had by this time gorged himself with several hundred pounds
-of whale beef, and being tired from the exertion of the encounter, he
-swam slowly away.
-
-In the following weeks of cruising he found smaller game, but he now
-felt a contempt for all other creatures. He had vanquished the largest
-animal alive, and the feeling that he could conquer anything made him
-slow to tackle smaller fish.
-
-For months he cruised to the westward and skirted the shores of the
-continent, finding enough to eat around the river mouths. In one harbor
-where there was much offal he lived for several years, only going to
-sea for a draught of fresh salt water now and then. He grew steadily in
-size until he reached full twenty feet in length.
-
-His hide was now of a dull grayish-brown, shading to white on his
-belly. Upon it the little hard lumps of bony substance thickened. His
-jaws were nearly three feet wide, and he now had six rows of triangles,
-the outside and largest being over an inch on a side clear of the gums.
-His eyes were large and bright, and his nose broad and sensitive.
-
-Several ugly little fish followed him around wherever he went. They had
-flat tops to their heads, and looked like black corrugated chunks of
-rubber with tails to them, the corrugated part of their heads being on
-top. With these slits they sucked strongly to the shark when he swam,
-making him tow them about without any exertion on their part. His hide,
-however, was too thick to mind a little thing like that, and he finally
-came to know each one so well by sight that he never made a chop at
-them. They were about the only living things he let pass him.
-
-As time passed he developed a taste for company. A desire to meet his
-kind came upon him, and he left the lazy life in the harbor and went to
-sea again.
-
-He traveled through the West Indies, and there one bright hot day on
-the reef he met a shark that appeared most friendly. It was a new
-feeling that came upon him at the meeting, a desire to live in the
-companionship of the stranger for a time. He even found himself letting
-her take the first choice of some barracuda he had killed, and from one
-thing leading to another he waxed very affectionate.
-
-They traveled together during a moon, and then they found a warm spot
-on the Bahama Bank where the hot stream flowed past beautiful coral
-hills that rose from the blue depths.
-
-Here they lingered for some time, his mate giving birth to five
-soft-skinned little sharks. He was not much interested in this and once
-made a chop at one of the youngsters, cutting him in half.
-
-For this his mate made a chop at him, and nearly cut off his side fin.
-Then, finding that everything was not as pleasant as it had seemed, he
-cruised away again to the southward.
-
-One day he came to a queer thing floating upon the water. It was not
-unlike a whale as viewed from underneath, but every now and then a
-peculiar creature with arms and legs swaying wildly, dropped from it
-and went to the bottom. Then, staying but a moment to collect some
-shell-fish, it would rise again to the surface.
-
-This interested him, and he lay by watching. Then, the smell of these
-creatures being somewhat appetizing, he made a dash at one as he arose.
-
-He came to the surface with the man in his jaws, and he saw the
-whalelike object was full of similar animals. They shouted and made a
-great noise when they saw their fellow chopped in halves and carried
-away by him.
-
-Now the taste of this peculiar creature was very good--much better, in
-fact, than the fish he had been eating. For a long time after his meal
-he waited a few fathoms below the surface, hoping another would descend.
-
-Finally, he noticed a long line trailing away from the floating thing
-above. He watched it and smelled it, and found there was something
-tied to the end. He was a little afraid that there was something wrong
-with that line and a sudden fear came upon him. He hesitated. Then his
-old careless spirit came back, and he nosed the bait, finding it some
-kind of flesh he had never tasted before. He pushed it about while the
-instinctive fear of the peculiar smell held him. Then he made a chop
-and bolted the lump.
-
-The line, however, would not cut. He chopped and chopped, again and
-again, backing away, but to no purpose.
-
-Suddenly the line became taut. A sharp pain struck him in the throat,
-and he knew he was fast to the line by some sharp thing in the flesh he
-had bolted.
-
-He became panic-stricken and fled away. But no sooner would he forge
-ahead a few fathoms than that line would draw so tight the pain was
-unbearable. He would be slowly and surely pulled back again.
-
-This lasted for some minutes, and then his old spirit of apathy came
-upon him, and he allowed the line drag him where it chose, while he
-held it like a vice in his jaws.
-
-Soon he found himself at the surface, and the strange creatures like
-the one he had eaten made a great noise. There were several flashes
-like lightning, only not so bright, and with the noise like thunder he
-felt heavy blows upon his head. He made a desperate dash away, and tore
-the line slack for many fathoms, but the pain in his throat stopped him
-from going farther. Then he was lifted slowly back to the surface again.
-
-There he lay a huge, dark shadow under the clear water. He was growing
-faint and dizzy from the blows upon his head, and the last he saw of
-the bright sunlight was the blue water foaming about him, and a row of
-eyes looking over the edge of the floating thing.
-
-They passed a bowline over his tail and hitched the throat-halliard
-block to it. Then they hoisted him tail first into the air, and cut
-the hook from his mouth. A diver cut off his tail and hung it on the
-jib-boom end for luck. Later they cut him adrift and he sank slowly
-down to the white coral below, lying there upon his side, a grisly
-sight. The shadow above disappeared, and then the scavengers of the
-reef came creeping up to do their work.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: A TRAGEDY OF THE SOUTH ATLANTIC]
-
-
-The whaling schooner _Erin_ was a modern vessel. She had a little of
-the “old greaser” about her. She had been built and fitted out at New
-Bedford, Mass., the mother-port of nearly all good whaling craft, and
-she was manned by men who had served their time in whaling ships.
-Her tonnage was not over three hundred, but she was so strongly put
-together that she looked somewhat heavier than she really was. Her
-bow was like that of a clipper, and her stern had the modern overhang
-of a cruising yacht, but her beam was great and her top-sides bulky,
-showing a tumble-home like that of the ancient frigates. Therefore,
-she was not considered fast. Her spars were short and stumpy, and she
-had no foreboom, owing to chunky smokestack that arose from her main
-deck, over which the foresail passed. She was flushed fore and aft,
-save for a heavy-built superstructure over her engines, through which
-the smokestack protruded, and it was evident that she could stand a
-great amount of rough usage. Being built for southern whaling in the
-vicinity of Cape Horn, she needed all the strength that could be put
-into her, and Captain Jackson, her commander, always kept her down to a
-draught of fifteen feet, even when running light, to enable her to hold
-up to the tremendous rolling seas off the Cape. Forward, she carried
-a peculiar sort of cannon on her forecastle, which fired an exploding
-harpoon weighing a hundred pounds, heavy enough to put a quietus upon
-any ordinary member of the whale family. Her boats and other gear
-were of the usual type; but, as she was not to carry oil, either in
-bulk or casks, her deck was devoid of the ordinary furnace of the
-sperm-whaler, and her hold of the odor which comes from the usual mass
-of rancid blubber when packed for a long voyage from the Arctic Ocean,
-in vessels hunting the right whale. She was, in fact, a stanch, trim
-little vessel. Her crew of thirty men had been selected and shipped,
-and Captain Jackson cleared for his last cruise.
-
-When well off shore, the boiler was cooled and sails set, for there
-must be no waste of coal, and the _Erin_ stood to the southward on her
-long run to the Falkland Islands, where she would begin her hunt for
-the giants of the southern ocean.
-
-The run south was made without any unusual experience. On the
-sixty-first day out she raised the huge mountains of Patagonia to the
-westward, and, shortening sail so as to drift not over four knots
-an hour, she hauled on the wind and stood through the “black water”
-between the Falk Islands and Staten Land.
-
-In December and January, the Antarctic summer months, the air is quite
-cold as far north as the fiftieth parallel. The “blow” of a whale
-stands out sharply against the sky as the warm air in the animal’s
-lungs turns into vapor, giving the hunter a chance to see it at a
-distance of several miles. Objects seem to lift from off the horizon as
-in a mirage, only they are not inverted.
-
-Here, in the summer season, the great rorqual, or finback whale,
-disports himself in ease and security, for, until lately, he has had
-few known enemies, and has been unmolested by man. Dozens of these
-great creatures often follow a huge bull leader, and they jump and
-plunge about as lively as they would if their weight were reckoned in
-pounds instead of tons.
-
-The huge, timid creature who led a school under the shadow of Tierra
-del Fuego, that season, was a giant of his kind. One hundred feet of
-solid bulk was between the tips of his tremendous flukes and the end
-of his hideous head. A hundred tons of bone and sinew, covered with a
-coating of thin blubber, to keep out the cold of the icy seas.
-
-His head was ugly and flat-looking, and his mouth a hideous cavern,
-full of slabs of whalebone, from which depended masses of horrible
-hair to act as a sieve for the whale-food poured down his gullet. His
-back slanted away to a place amidships, where a lumpy knob rose, as if
-he were a hunchback, and from there aft he sloped in long and sinuous
-lines to the spread of his tail or flukes, which were fully two fathoms
-across. The blades of the _Erin’s_ wheel were not nearly so large or
-so powerful as the blades of bone and cartilage that drove him ahead
-through the yielding medium, or raised the tons of flesh and blood to
-a height that showed a full fathom or more of clear sky under his thin
-belly when he breached. He was a giant, a descendant from prehistoric
-ages when monsters of his kind were more common than they are to-day.
-It is doubtful if ever anything existed in flesh or blood of greater
-size.
-
-How old the giant was no one could learn. His age could hardly have
-been less than two centuries, for whales grow slowly. They are like
-other warm-blooded animals, and it takes many years to build up a mass
-of a hundred tons of flesh fiber. He was known to Captain Jackson,
-who had seen him on former voyages, but as yet he had not made his
-acquaintance; for, in spite of the old whale’s size and age, he was
-very timid. He would rush from a pair of fierce “killers,”--the dreaded
-sharks who attack toothless whales,--and only his tremendous size and
-activity would prevent them from following him. Consequently, whenever
-Jackson lowered his small boats, with the intention of making him a
-visit, the old fellow would wait only long enough to allow the boats
-to approach within fifty fathoms of him. Then he would begin to edge
-away, and, before the whale-gun could be brought to bear, he would be
-in full flight to windward, his flock or school following in his wake.
-Many were the maledictions cast upon him by the whalemen, whose tired
-muscles bore witness to his speed, and, finally, he was left alone to
-roam at will in the “black water.” Where he went to, at the beginning
-of winter, it was impossible to tell, but, at the first easterly blow,
-he would disappear, bound for other parts, leaving nothing behind but a
-crew of angry sailors, and taking with him the memory of an undisturbed
-old age.
-
-On that December morning, when Captain Jackson hauled on the wind and
-stood offshore, the sun shone brilliantly. The wind was light and
-from the southwest, and objects stood up plainly from the sea. The
-lookout at the masthead had just been relieved, when the time-worn cry
-of “blo-o-ow” reached the deck. Away to the southward rose the jets,
-looking almost as high as water spouts, as the warm vapor condensed in
-the cool air. It was a large school, or, more properly speaking, herd,
-for a finback is no more a fish than is a cow. Jackson came on deck and
-watched the blows, counting them over and over to get the exact number
-of his game. Whalebone at so much a ton was within easy distance,
-and it looked as if a few thousand dollars’ worth of the substance
-would find its way below hatches by dinner time. The forward gun was
-overhauled and the line and harpoon cleared, the latter being charged
-with a heavy load of powder. The explosion would open the huge barbs
-of the harpoon and drive them deeper into the monster, expanding in
-his flesh, making it absolutely impossible to withdraw them by pulling
-on the line. They would not hunt him after the manner of the tame and
-harmless sperm whale, that can be killed with about as much ease as a
-cow in a pasture, in spite of all the sailors’ yarns to the contrary.
-
-The whales paid no attention whatever to the schooner. They played a
-quiet, frolicsome game, breaching and sounding, and coming often to
-the surface to breathe. There were some young ones among them, and the
-huge leader, the giant bull, seemed to take a special pride in one
-whose antics were more pronounced than the rest. He would come near
-it and seem almost to touch it gently with his side flipper, and the
-little fellow would make a breach clear out of the water, apparently
-with pure joy at the notice bestowed. Then he would come alongside the
-big fellow and snuggle up to him in a most affectionate manner, and
-the giant would roll toward him and put out his great arm or flipper,
-as if to bestow a caress. He was a very affectionate old fellow, and,
-as the vessel drew nearer, his size and actions were remarked by the
-mate, who called the skipper’s attention to them. Just then the great
-whale breached, and the sun, striking fairly upon his dark side,
-showed several deep lines that looked like huge scars. His long, thin
-shape and hideous head were plainly outlined against the sky, and, as
-he struck, the sea resounded with the crash. He disappeared, and the
-little fellow breached and followed him.
-
-“That’s the big coward, the leader,” said Jackson. “You kin tell him by
-them cuts he has in his sides, an’ there aint nothin’ bigger afloat. He
-is an old one and wary. You wouldn’t think a whale with them scars on
-him would be scared at a little boat, hey? Them was cut a long time
-ago, mebbe, but they were done in a fight sech as ye’ve never seen.”
-
-“Mebbe he got licked?” suggested the mate.
-
-“He wouldn’t be here if he had,” said Jackson. “Howsomever, here he is,
-and it’s our business to get him and cut him up, if we kin.”
-
-To stop the leader of the whales was the object, for, if he was
-held, the rest would either scatter or await developments. In either
-case they would not get very far away, and could be reckoned with
-afterwards. The _Erin_ was held pointed toward the spot where the whale
-was expected to rise, and the mate went forward and stood behind the
-gun with the harpoon loaded in it, and ready for a shot as soon as he
-should come within twenty fathoms. The old coward, however, had seen
-the approaching ship, and, with a peculiar movement of his flukes upon
-the water, he gave the signal for danger.
-
-Somewhere in that oily brain the memory of his past life was stored
-in a strangely simple but vivid manner. He remembered, although he
-was unable to reason it all out like the human being who hunted him;
-but, a thousand moons before, he had gone forth in the ocean from his
-birthplace in the South Pacific, and had held his way proudly and with
-force. Fiercely he had fought for everything he took of the world’s
-belongings, and the joy of battle had run warm in his blood. It had
-surged through his great frame at the sight of a stranger, and he had
-striven and conquered all who had opposed him or refused to do his
-will. Many had died, for a sea fight is usually to the death, and the
-strangeness of the passion had gradually worked its way into the old
-mind, and he held aloof. The experience of a hundred years taught him
-something. The oily brain learned slowly. The instinct, or feeling, had
-gradually come upon him that to fight is a great waste of energy, for
-life was more pleasant in the companionship of his many wives and young
-ones, and continual strife was not the right thing. To avoid it, if
-possible, was the thought uppermost in his old head; so, when he saw
-the approaching schooner, he gave a warning stroke upon the sea.
-
-Instantly all the whales sounded.
-
-But Captain Jackson was an old whaleman. He was after whales, and he
-had come thousands of miles to hunt them. The animals must come up
-again, soon, and to be near the spot where they would reappear would
-probably mean a capture. With a keen sense of reasoning, the bull knew
-that bodies that travel through the air must necessarily be retarded
-by the wind. Therefore, to windward he led the herd, and Jackson did
-not underestimate his cunning. With fires started under the boiler, the
-_Erin_ held her way straight into the eye of the breeze, and the mate
-leaned over the forecastle rail, gun-lanyard in hand, peering into the
-clear depths for the dark shadow below that would show the presence
-of a rising monster. Jackson stood at the wheel with the signal pull
-in his hand, waiting to “shake her up” at the first sign of the game.
-The wheel turned slowly below, and the slight jar of machinery
-vibrating the hull was the only sound save the stirred water abaft the
-rudder from the thrust of the screw, gurgling and murmuring in a soft
-undertone.
-
-The whalemen were gathered about the forecastle head, or stood near
-the boat falls, ready to lower away at a signal, and secure their
-victim. The sun shone strongly, and objects were visible at a great
-depth below the surface of the sea. Ten minutes passed, and Jackson
-was getting nervous. He had tried to gauge the rapidity of the old
-bull’s headway through the water, and had figured that he would come up
-somewhere in the vicinity of the vessel on her course. But not a sign
-of a whale had shown, and ten minutes had passed. They must be badly
-gallied, indeed, to stay under much longer. The old bull was cunning;
-but he, Jackson, knew a thing or two. It was pitting the old brain of
-an animal with a century or two of experience against that of an old
-man with keen intelligence. The skipper felt confident. He would take
-a long shot at the big fellow, and, once fast to him, whalebone would
-be plentiful for a few days. While the mate was leaning over the rail
-forward, looking down into the depths, he noticed a sudden darkening of
-the water just ahead of the vessel. He sprang to the cannon and stood
-ready to fire. The great shadow rose toward the surface, and the men
-saw instantly that it was a huge whale. Jackson was right, to a hair.
-The great bull was coming up under the jib-boom end. A man raised his
-hand aloft and gave a low cry, while the rest stood back from the gun
-to escape the shock of the heavy discharge and powder-blast. Jackson
-rushed to the rail and leaned over.
-
-But the great shadow did not materialize into anything more. It
-remained deep down beneath the surface, fully twenty feet below, and,
-as the schooner forged ahead, it drifted alongside, a few fathoms
-distant. The signal was made to stop the engines, and both the schooner
-and the whale lay quietly drifting, the animal deep down and perfectly
-safe from a shot.
-
-“It’s the coward, all right,” said Jackson, coming to the mate’s side;
-“that big coward bull what won’t show up for nothin’. I never seen sech
-a scary whale. Look at him--sink me, jest look at him! Blamed if he
-didn’t wink at me. Will ye look at that eye?”
-
-The old whale was lying almost motionless, and his eye could be seen
-distinctly. He was watching the vessel carefully, and the rippling
-water from the bends actually did give him the appearance of opening
-and closing one eye as the waves of light flashed upon it. He seemed to
-be very much absorbed in profound contemplation of the ship. Perhaps
-he had not expected to find her so close aboard when he intended
-to breach for a breath of air. However, there was plenty of time.
-Breathing was something he was not obliged to indulge in more than
-once every half-hour or two, and he would not come up until he had put
-a little more distance between himself and the vessel. All hands were
-peering over the side at him when, suddenly, several blows sounded
-close aboard. All about, jets of spray and vapor shot skyward, and
-fully a dozen whales breached and then disappeared again. The mate
-rushed for the gun and Jackson sprang to the engine signal, while the
-second and third officers, “bos’n,” harpooners, and the rest, ran for
-their gear. When they looked over the side again the shadow of the
-giant had disappeared, and the sea was as quiet as a lake. In a few
-minutes a huge form breached about a quarter of a mile ahead--the bull
-had breathed, and was quietly going to windward. The animals were not
-badly gallied as the word is applied to thoroughly frightened whales.
-They had gone along at a steady, but not fast, gait, and had come up
-together as if at a signal. The schooner was not troubling them very
-much, and the sea was wide. There was room enough for all.
-
-The high, grim cliffs of Staten Land rose higher and higher as the
-morning wore on. The _Erin_ was heading inshore, still pointing into
-the breeze, and now and then a great spurt of foam and a blow would
-show where the whales led the way straight ahead.
-
-“Of all the low-lived critters I ever see, that cowardly bull air the
-meanest,” said Jackson, after seven bells had struck; “but I’ll fix
-him, if I chase him clear to ’Frisco. I won’t mind burning a few tons
-o’ coal fer him. Put an extra charge of powder in behind that iron, and
-loose off at him when we come within thirty fathom.”
-
-“Looks like he’ll be a-climbing the mounting ahead thar in a minute,”
-said the mate, motioning toward the high and ragged hills which rose
-out of the sea.
-
-“We’ll strike ile in half an hour, or I’m a sojer,” said the skipper
-decisively. “You tend ter yer own, and don’t give no advice, an’, if
-there’s any climbin’ to be done, I’ll do it.”
-
-The animals still held along inshore, and it looked as if they would
-soon be in shallow water. The leadline was gotten out when the vessel
-came within half a mile of the rocks, and a sounding was taken. No
-bottom was found at fifty fathoms, and she was allowed to drift further
-in, her engines barely turning fast enough to give her steering way.
-The land was very near, and Jackson was nervous. The heavy snore of the
-swell upon the ledges sounded plainly over the sunlit sea, and every
-now and then a spurt of foam showed that, although the ocean was calm,
-there were heavy breakers falling upon the shore, caused by the lift
-of the offshore heave. That barren island was not an inviting coast,
-and to strike upon a sunken ledge would mean disaster. Jackson stood
-upon the poop, with his hand upon the signal, ready to reverse the
-engines and swing clear, when there seemed to be a slowing down in the
-movements of the game ahead. Then the water whitened about the ship,
-and the cause became evident. They were running through a great mass of
-whale-food, and the tiny gelatinous bodies were so thick that the color
-of the sea was changed by them. Jackson rang off the engine.
-
-“We’ve got ’em now,” he said quietly, and watched the surface of the
-ocean.
-
-The big bull whale had run into the mass of food, and had slowed down
-a little to allow quantities of it to pour down his gullet. There was
-no unseemly haste in getting away from the pursuing stranger. He would
-suddenly slew to the southward, when he reached four or five fathoms of
-water, and then the pace could be increased until the following craft
-would be dropped behind. He was a cool-headed old bull, and there was
-no occasion for nervousness--all would have gone well with the whole
-herd, if it had not been for a willful young cow.
-
-As the _Erin_ slowed down the whales ahead were swimming upon the
-surface, taking in the food in enormous quantities, apparently enjoying
-their dinner, and showing no interest in the vessel that held along,
-with her sinister purpose, in their wake. She barely rippled the water,
-as she went through it, and Mr. Collins, the mate, stood behind the gun
-on the forecastle, with the lanyard in his hand, ready to fire at any
-back that might break water within thirty fathoms. The rest crowded
-about the rail and waited, some standing by the line, ready to snub it
-as soon as a stricken animal should become weak enough to allow them.
-
-The young cow that lagged behind the rest was not very large, but she
-had a thousand pounds or more of good bone in her mouth, and she had
-breached dead in front of the vessel, with her tail toward it. The bull
-saw the distance gradually closing between his followers and the ship,
-and he gave again that peculiar stroke with his flukes which meant
-danger. All save the lagging whale instantly sounded. She was enjoying
-the food, and failed to regard the signal, and the _Erin_, going up
-astern, quietly approached her.
-
-On account of a whale’s peculiar development, it is difficult for it
-to see directly ahead or astern, and an object approaching exactly
-in line can do so quite often without being perceived until within
-close range. The schooner came drifting slowly down upon the animal,
-and was within thirty fathoms, when the big bull suddenly breached a
-short distance ahead, the little fellow who had been under his care
-being with him. Again he gave the sea a heavy blow with his flukes and
-disappeared, and nothing broke the smooth surface.
-
-But the young cow was obstinate. She enjoyed the food, and failed to
-note how close the ship had approached. Suddenly the mate straightened
-himself and looked along the cannon sights. There was a flash and a
-loud report, and the exploding harpoon was launched full at the broad
-back that lay drifting almost awash just ahead. The heavy missile went
-straight to its mark.
-
-“Stand by to haul line!” came the order, while the mate sprang forward
-and slipped another charge into the harpoon gun.
-
-The line whizzed out for a few fathoms before the men could snub it,
-but there was no need for a second shot. The missile had done its
-work, and the stricken cow began the flurry that ends in death. Round
-and round she went in a circle, convulsively throwing herself clear of
-the sea and lashing the water into a lather with her flukes. Blood dyed
-the foam and her spiracles were crimson. Then she slowed down, and,
-with a few shudders of her great frame, lay motionless.
-
-The fluke chain was gotten out, and she was soon fast alongside.
-A man was sent aloft to watch, and the operation of removing the
-whalebone blades from the mouth began. While this was going on, the
-rest of the herd did not run away or get gallied. The big bull was
-seen approaching, after a time; and, for an hour, while the work of
-cutting in went on, he came up repeatedly at a short distance from the
-vessel. The men thought little of this, as the whale-food was thick,
-but Jackson pondered at the strangeness of the old fellow’s behavior.
-He was an old whaleman, and knew that, at the death of one, the rest
-of a school usually get badly gallied, and seldom wait for a second
-attack. A sperm whale will stand, but a finback, never; and, as the old
-bull rose again and again close aboard, he watched him furtively from
-the corner of his eye while superintending the work overside. In spite
-of the fact that the cow was fat, the blubber was not stripped. She
-was cast adrift early in the afternoon, having yielded a mass of prime
-bone, and her carcass floated astern, to be devoured by the countless
-sharks and birds that come, apparently by magic, from the void of sea
-and sky.
-
-It was late in the afternoon when the _Erin_ started ahead again, and
-the mate took his place at the gun. No sooner had the carcass floated a
-half-mile distant than the old bull was seen to swim alongside of it.
-The schooner was turned slowly around and headed back again.
-
-The old bull had come up to the carcass and examined it. The cow was
-quite dead, and the fact that she had been killed by the stranger
-gradually became clear to him. Suspicion became conviction on his
-part, and he turned toward the rest of his charges and led the way
-straight out to sea. Away out toward the Falkland Islands he headed,
-and reluctantly the rest followed. The pace was increased to a rapid
-gait, and soon the pursuing vessel was under a full head of steam,
-plowing through the heavy swell at a great rate, in an effort to keep
-the flying herd in sight. The sun sank behind the ragged peaks to the
-westward, and the darkness soon put a stop to the chase. Jackson had
-secured one of the herd, but the others were gallied and were headed
-offshore, where they disappeared in the gathering darkness. Soon the
-engine was rung off and the vessel put under easy canvas for the night,
-while Jackson walked the poop and gave forcible expression to his
-opinion of the old coward who had so ignominiously run away.
-
-[Illustration: THE LINE WAS WHIZZING OUT.]
-
-Away into the vastness of the southern ocean the old fellow led his
-charges, always keeping the little whale he had with him close
-aboard. He missed the mate who had been slain, but he knew that she
-had disregarded his warning. He had done all he could. Now he would
-take the rest far away to other feeding grounds, and the ocean would
-leave no trail to show the stranger whither he had gone. The young one
-near him needed protection, and he would keep him close until he was
-large enough to look out for himself. On the edge of Falkland Channel
-was plenty of food at that season of the year, and a few hundred miles
-would put the stranger safely out of sight. The old brain longed for
-rest and quiet. Strife was a useless thing, fit only for the young and
-unthinking, or those possessed with the killing spirit.
-
-The morning dawned, and, as the sun rose slanting from the southern
-ocean, the old bull took a look around. Nothing broke the even line
-of the horizon, and then, the feeling that the stranger had been left
-behind coming upon him, he slowed the tremendous pace. One hundred
-miles of trackless sea had been placed between him and the rocks of
-Staten Land.
-
-For many weeks the herd cruised to the northward of the Falkland
-Islands, the old bull still keeping the young whale under his
-protecting care. Finally there was born a pretty little baby whale with
-rounded lines, weighing, perhaps, a little more than half a ton. A pair
-of the fierce “killer” sharks soon scented the tender little fellow,
-and made a concerted rush, one day, to seize him before the older
-whales could prevent; but the bull smote one a blow with his flukes
-that crushed him as flat as if a house had fallen upon him, and the
-other took flight. He was a watchful old fellow, and had to keep on the
-lookout night and day, for the mother whale was weak, and would recover
-slowly.
-
-As the days passed the weather began to change. The zone of the
-“variables,” or that of the “roaring forties,” is not to be depended
-upon long for sunshine and pleasant breezes. One day it started in for
-a gale from the eastward, and the sea was white with rolling combers.
-The whale-food was driven south, and the animals were forced to follow.
-The sun shone only for a short time each day, being but a few degrees
-above the sea line, and the high-rolling sea made life upon the surface
-uncomfortable. The bull headed for the South Orkney Islands, and for
-days the little band of giants went along below the surface, only
-coming up every now and then to breathe.
-
-As they made their way southward, the wind grew less violent. The high
-black cliffs of the islands offered no shelter to vessels, but to the
-whales the lee of the land was comfortable, and the sea was swarming
-with food. There they would rest a while and take life easy, beyond the
-reach of the hurricanes from Cape Horn.
-
-The old bull guided the band among the sunken peaks, and for weeks they
-fattened under his care, when one bleak morning he came to the surface
-of the sea and noticed a black shape approaching. There was something
-strangely familiar in the outlines, and, after watching it for some
-minutes, he remembered the schooner _Erin_.
-
-She was heading straight toward the whales, and was going slowly, as if
-in no particular hurry, and upon her forecastle was the same murderous
-gun which had slain the cow near Le Maire Strait.
-
-The young whale, who was in company, breached playfully into full view
-and sounded. The vessel did not change her course, but headed straight
-for the cow with the newborn calf, who was feeding a mile distant to
-the southward.
-
-The old bull instantly struck the water with his flukes and headed for
-her. The rest of the herd took notice of the warning, and sank from
-view; but, whether the cow failed to notice it, or her young one was
-disobedient, it was too late to find out. The schooner made a sudden
-spurt of speed, and, coming close to the mother, fired the harpoon into
-her before she fairly realized what was taking place.
-
-The dull boom of the shot told the old whale what had happened, before
-he came up to look. When he arrived within a hundred fathoms, the
-mother was in her last agony, and her little baby was being towed along
-with her, being unable to realize its mother’s death, and still holding
-to her with all the tenderness of a child.
-
-The old bull lay watching events, and once tried to make the little
-fellow let go by giving the sea some tremendous slaps with his flukes;
-but he was too young to understand, and, while the bull watched, a boat
-was lowered and the sailors began their work of destruction. They rowed
-slowly toward the infant, and suddenly one rose in the bow and hurled a
-harpoon into his soft baby side. The little fellow gave a spring upward
-in his agony. A man quickly pulled him alongside the boat and another
-drove a lance through him.
-
-Jackson was standing upon the poop, looking on, and the mate was on
-the forecastle, loading the gun for another shot when an opportunity
-should offer. The men in the waist were overhauling the fluke chain
-to make fast to the dead mother, while the man at the wheel held the
-spokes idly. The skipper turned toward him.
-
-“Seems to me that that’s the old cowardly bull we fell in with to th’
-no’th’ard; aint it?” he asked.
-
-“Yes, sir; it looks like him fer sure,” answered the man; “jest see
-him, sir.”
-
-As they looked, the great whale lay watching the men in the boat.
-His old oily brain was working, and the rapid events of the last
-few minutes were gradually making an impression on his mind. He was
-wondering at the slaughter, and could hardly understand how it was done
-so quickly. The mother had been a favorite for many years, yet there
-she lay, suddenly dead before him. Would the strange craft follow him
-over the seas, and kill off the herd one by one, until all were gone?
-The boat approaching the young whale stirred his attention. He smote
-the sea savagely with his flukes to warn him of the danger. Then the
-iron went home, and the little fellow was dead beside his mother.
-Something flashed suddenly through the old brain. The pent-up reserve
-of years seemed to give way within him, all thought of safety fell
-away, and the old feeling of the conqueror rose within his heart.
-
-“Good Lord, what’s a-comin’?” gasped Jackson.
-
-His remark was not addressed to anyone in particular, but was caused by
-a terrific commotion in the sea which caused the men to drop their gear
-and look out over the side to see what was taking place.
-
-The coward, the giant bull who had fled so often from them, was heading
-straight for the small boat and was tearing the southern ocean into
-foam with his flukes. Straight as a harpoon from the gun forward, he
-shot with tremendous speed, hurling his hundred tons of bone and sinew
-like a living avalanche upon the doomed craft.
-
-“Starn all,” was the hoarse yell from the third officer, who stood upon
-the stern-sheets and swung madly upon the steering oar. Men strained
-their necks forward over the schooner’s rail to see. The unfortunate
-men at the oars of the whaleboat struggled wildly. An oar snapped.
-There was a wild cry, and some sprang up to dive over the side into the
-sea. At that instant the whale leaped high in the air, clearing the
-water fully two fathoms. Then he crashed down upon the boat, wiping all
-out in a tremendous smother of spray. He was close to the _Erin_, and
-the mate stood waiting. There was a loud report as Collins fired the
-exploding harpoon into him, taking him almost “on the fly,” as it were,
-and then as he disappeared beneath the surface there was a heavy jar
-that shook the _Erin_ from stem to stern. She had been rammed.
-
-For an instant not a man aboard moved. Then Jackson, with a face as
-white as chalk, came forward and called below to the engineer.
-
-The line was whizzing out upon the forecastle head, showing that
-Collins had made the shot of his life. He had struck the whale, but
-just where he had no idea. He stood watching the line as it flaked away
-with the rapidity of lightning, but said no word to the men to have it
-snubbed. He had felt the heavy jar beneath the schooner’s keel, and
-knew what it meant as plainly as if he had seen the stroke.
-
-Two,--three,--four,--five hundred fathoms went whirling over the side,
-and silence still reigned aboard. The sea had smoothed again where the
-whaleboat had been a few moments before, but the only signs of her were
-a few floating splinters. Not a man ever appeared again.
-
-Suddenly the strain was broken.
-
-“Water comin’ in fast below, sir,” was the word passed on deck.
-
-Jackson walked aft as if in a dream. The mate left the gun, and the
-last fathom of the line flaked overboard unheeded. It brought up
-suddenly, taut as a bowstring, then snapped. The mate paid not the
-least attention to it, but went slowly aft.
-
-“Shall we provision the boats, sir?” he asked, as he approached the
-captain.
-
-Jackson stared at him. “D’ye know what it means?” asked the old
-whaleman huskily.
-
-The mate nodded. Half an hour later, four boats full of men were
-heading northward for the Falkland Islands, and the only thing that
-remained upon the spot where the _Erin_ had floated a short time before
-was the carcass of a mother whale with her baby alongside, while above
-them the birds hovered and screamed as if to mark the grave of the lost
-ship.
-
-The next year a Scottish whaleman from the Falklands fell in with an
-old bull whale whose starboard side bore a tremendous wound, partly
-healed. He was so wary, however, that he was soon lost sight of, and
-the school that followed him gave no chance for a catch.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: IN THE WAKE OF THE WEATHER-CLOTH]
-
-
-We had raised the great tower of the Hatteras lighthouse in the dim
-gray of the early morning. The huge spark flashed and faded as the lens
-swung slowly about its axis some fifteen miles to the south’ard of us.
-Objects now began to be more distinct, and our masthead could be made
-out against the leaden background above. Up there the fierce song of
-the gale roared dismally as the little vessel rose upon the giant Gulf
-sea, and swung her straining fabric to windward. Then, quartering the
-heave of the foam-crested hill, she would drop slowly down that dread
-incline and roll desperately to leeward as she started to meet the
-rushing hill to windward and above her.
-
-With a bit of the gaff hoisted, and leach and luff lashed fast down,
-we were trying to forereach to the eastward and clear the death-trap
-under our lee--the fatal diamond of the Hatteras Shoals. Buck and I had
-been on deck all the day before, and all night, and we welcomed the
-growing light as only hard-pressed men at sea can welcome it. It meant
-a respite from the black hell about us, and the heavy snore of some
-giant comber would no longer make us catch our breath in the dread it
-might be the beginning of that white reach where no vessel that enters
-comes forth again.
-
-We could see we had many miles between us and the end--miles that
-meant many minutes which might be utilized in the fight for life. We
-were heading nearly east now, and the stanch little craft was making
-better than south, while the gale had swung up to nor’-nor’east. She
-was forereaching ahead, though going fast to leeward, and it looked as
-if we might claw off into the wild Gulf Stream, where in spite of the
-sea lay safety. To leeward lay certain death, the wild death of a lost
-ship in the white smother that rolled with the chaotic thunder of riven
-hills of water.
-
-Buck’s face was calm and white in the morning light, and his oilskins
-hung about him in dismal folds. White streaks of salt showed under
-his eyes, which were partly sheltered by his sou’wester, and the deep
-lines in his wet cheeks gave him a worn-out look. He must have been
-very tired, for as I came from behind the piece of canvas lashed on
-the weather quarter to serve as a weather-cloth, he left the wheel and
-dropped down behind the bulwarks.
-
-“Begins to look better,” I bawled, taking off the becket from the wheel
-spokes, which had been hove hard down all night. “She needs a bit of
-nursing,” and Buck nodded and grinned as he ducked from the flying
-drift.
-
-She was doing well now, and after trying to ease her a while I put the
-wheel back in the becket and bawled down the scuttle to our little
-black boy to get us some junk and ship’s bread.
-
-Our other man, John, a Swede, had turned in dead beat out an hour
-before, and as we four were all hands, I thought it just as well to let
-him sleep as long as he could. As master, I would have to stay on deck
-anyway.
-
-Buck and I crouched in the lee of the bulwarks and tarpaulin, munching
-the junk and watching the little ship ride the sea. We could do nothing
-except let her head as close as we dared to the gale.
-
-As long as the canvas held all would be well. The close-reefed mainsail
-would have been blown away in the rush of that fierce blast, and it
-would have been folly to try to drive her into that appalling sea. If
-anything started we were lost men. She was only a twenty-ton vessel,
-but she had a good nine feet of keel under her, and could hold on
-grimly. We had used a sea anchor for twenty-four hours, but while it
-held her head to the sea it caused her to drift dead to leeward, so we
-had at last cut it adrift and put a bit of storm staysail on her to
-work ahead.
-
-“I’m glad we didn’t run durin’ the night,” said Buck, “she wouldn’t ’a’
-done it an’ gone clear--just look at that fellow!”
-
-As he spoke a giant sea rose on the weather beam, a great mass of blue
-water capped with a white comber. The little vessel’s head dropped down
-the foam-streaked hollow until we were almost becalmed under the sea
-that followed. A dirty, dangerous sea to run in.
-
-“I thought you might have run when we saw how bad it was--an’ trust
-to luck to go clear. But fight on, says I, even when you know you’re
-losing. If you’d started to run you’d never been able to swing her up
-again if we’d had to--an’ now we’ll go clear. She’ll stand it.”
-
-Buck was an American and John a Swede. The latter had hinted at running
-off before the storm when we found ourselves close in. Buck cursed him
-in my presence in true American fashion.
-
-“Never give up a fight because you’re beat at the start,” says I.
-“It’s them that fights when they have to, an’ because it’s right,
-that always win. We did seem dead beat last night, an’ when that light
-flashed out bright I was almost willing to say Amen. But I knew it ware
-wrong, an’ we must fight it out. A man that fights to win is no sailor.
-It’s him that fights when he _knows_ he will lose--an’ then maybe he
-won’t lose after all.”
-
-The sun showed a little through a break in the flying scud, and the
-water looked a beautiful blue, streaked with great patches of white.
-Buck was gazing hard to the southward and could make nothing out except
-the Hatteras Light. He was tired, and refused to move from a wash of
-foam along the deck where he sat.
-
-“You see,” he said, wiping the spray from his face, “a man can’t tell
-nothin’ in this world. There’s no use tryin’ to at sea--an’ the more
-you risk sometimes the more you win. It isn’t always judgment. There
-ware old man Richards. He knew the coast, but he trusted his judgment
-too much--an’ I’m the bum ye see now. I don’t mean nothin’ agin your
-boat, Cap’n.
-
-“You remember Richards? Had the ole _Pocosin_. Used to run her from
-Nassau to Hunter’s P’int. ’Taint much of a run, even for that kind o’
-hooker, but in the winter this Cape is hell, an’ that’s a fact. You kin
-almost jump from wrack to wrack from the Core Bank to Bodie’s Island.
-I’ve seen forty vessels, big an’ small, on the beach here in one
-season--an’ we aint out o’ the business yet, either.”
-
-We were drifting down fast on the outer shoal, and I could see, or
-fancy I could see, the Ocracoke Lighthouse. The wind had increased a
-little with sunrise as usual in a northeaster, but it seemed to be
-working a bit more to the northward and getting colder.
-
-“It was just such a day as this. We hove the _Pocosin_ up when she was
-almost in sight of the Capes and not ten hours’ run from Norfolk. But
-she ware ramming her nose into it harder and harder, an’ there we was.
-We couldn’t get no farther.
-
-“It ware pretty bad when we started inshore, with the glass a-fallin’
-an’ the sky like the inside of a lead pot. Then came the breeze and big
-northeast sea what stopped us.
-
-“We couldn’t push her through that sea. It was more’n common heavy, and
-even with the whole mainsail on her she wouldn’t do a thing but rear up
-on her hind legs an’ throw herself into it so she’d go out o’ sight to
-her foremast. Man, she ware an’ old boat, an’ if she’d kept the racket
-up she’d have split in two!
-
-“We could see Cape Henry light by dark, but it warn’t no use, so we
-wore around before it ware too late an’ got the foresail an’ jib stowed
-safe. Then we came to on the port tack, lowering down the mainsail and
-reefing it to balance the bit o’ staysail forrads. ’Twas a piece o’
-work takin’ in that mainsail, an’ that’s the truth. You may search me
-if it didn’t fair blow the hair off yer head by this time. I don’t mind
-a bit o’ breeze, Cap’n, but when I say it ware blowin’ then, it aint
-more’n half the truth. It ware fair howlin’.
-
-“We got the sail on the boom, and then that same boom took charge for
-twenty red-hot minutes while she threw it from port to starboard--an’
-all hands hangin’ onto the mainsheet tryin’ to get it in when it
-slacked with the throw.
-
-“‘Balance-reef her,’ says the old man, an’ we lashed her down, givin’
-about ten feet o’ leach rope hoisted taut with the peak downhaul
-fast to windward. Then everything was made snug, an’ with the bit o’
-staysail hauled to the mast we hung on to see what would happen next.”
-
-Buck rose for a minute and gazed steadily to the southward as though he
-had seen something. Then he settled down again.
-
-“Me? I was mate, you know. I’d been with Richards over a year. He had
-his wife an’ daughter aboard that trip--yessir--about as fine--she was
-about seventeen.”
-
-A sea struck the vessel while Buck was looking to leeward, but he paid
-no attention to it as the spray filled his collar. He seemed to be
-so deeply occupied in some object that I began to get a bit nervous,
-and reached for the glasses to try and pick out a new danger. But he
-evidently saw nothing, for he went on slowly after a bit.
-
-“There were six of us men and a little coon boy in the galley. It gave
-us three men in a watch, an’ that ware enough. I saw we were goin’ to
-the south’ard fast, the sea was northerly yet, but the wind was working
-fast to the eastward and we waren’t reaching off a little bit. She was
-heavy with lumber an’ goin’ sideways like a crab--not shoving her nose
-ahead like we are now. It was dead to leeward, and you know how that is
-to the north’ard of Core Bank or Lookout.
-
-“The old man had the wheel fast hard down and was standin’ there
-watchin’ her take them seas. It was growing dark an’ them fellers
-from the Gulf looked ugly. They just wiped her clean from end to end,
-roarin’ over her an’ smotherin’ everything.
-
-“‘We got to fight fer it to-night,’ said I. ‘Better try the
-close-reefed mainsail before it’s too late. A bit o’ fore-reachin’ an’
-we’ll clear.’
-
-“‘’Twon’t stand,’ says he, ‘’twon’t stand ten minutes in this breeze.
-Let her go. If she won’t go clear we’ll run her fer Ocracoke. It’s high
-water at eight-bells to-night.’
-
-“That may have been good judgment, but you know that entrance is a warm
-place at night in a roarin’ northeaster. I got a bit nervous an’ spoke
-up again after an hour or two.
-
-“‘Better try her with the mainsail; we’ve got to fight her off,’ I said
-again.
-
-“‘’Taint no use,’ said he. ‘Let her go. A man never dies till his time
-comes.’
-
-“I’d heard that sayin’ before, but I never knew just how a feller could
-reckon on his time. Seemed to me somebody’s was comin’ along before
-daylight. Finally I kept on asking the old man an’ argufyin’--for there
-was the two women--an’ he gave in. Before twelve that night we had her
-under a single reef and shovin’ off for dear life. It ware blowin’
-harder now, an’ the first thing away went that staysail. Then we tried
-a bit o’ jib, but she gave a couple o’ plunges and drove her head under
-a good fathom. When she lifted it up the jib ware gone.
-
-“There we ware with the old hooker a-broachin’ to an’ no head sail on
-her. The seas ware comin’ over her like a cataract and the dull roar
-soundin’ louder an’ louder. There ware the two women below----
-
-“Still the fight waren’t half over. Ther ware the new foresail to close
-reef. It would have held an hour or two. That would have driven us off
-far enough to have gone through the slue. But no. The old man had had
-enough.
-
-“‘Take in the mainsail,’ he bawled, and all hands wrastled for half
-an hour with that sail while all the time we were goin’ fast to the
-south’ard. ‘Close reef foresail,’ says he; ‘we’ll try an’ run her
-through.’ Then he took the lashin’s off the wheel.
-
-“There ware no use sayin’ nothin’ more. We ware hardly able to speak as
-it was. We put the peak o’ that foresail on her an’ the old man ran the
-wheel hard up. It ware near daybreak now, and she paid off an’ streaked
-away before it through a roarin’ white sea. Just as she struck her gait
-we saw the flash o’ the Hatteras Light.
-
-“The old man saw it. It ware bright enough for all hands. So bright my
-heart gave one big jump an’ then seemed to stop. There ware the two
-women below, the girl--we tore along into the night with six men an’
-one little black boy holdin’ on to anything they could an’ lookin’ out
-over the jib-boom end----”
-
-Buck was silent for a moment. Then he went on.
-
-“It had to come. I saw it first. Just a great white spout o’ foam in
-the blackness ahead. It ware the outer edge o’ the Diamond Shoal.”
-
-Buck’s voice died away in the roar about us and close as I was to him
-I could hear nothing he said, though I saw his lips move. I went
-to the binnacle and peered into it. The lighthouse was drawing to
-the westward. The roar aloft was deepening as she swung herself to
-windward, but she was making good weather of it and holding on like
-grim death.
-
-“How did you get through?” I asked, ducking down again behind the
-shelter.
-
-“We didn’t. We didn’t get through. The _Pocosin’s_ there yet--or what’s
-left of her. One more hour of fightin’ off under that reefed foresail
-an’ we’d have got to sea--we’d have gone clear. There waren’t nothin’
-happened--just a smashing crash in the night. Man, ye couldn’t hear or
-see nothin’. Both masts gone with the first jolt, an’ up she broaches
-to a sea what was breakin’ clear out in seven fathoms. I tried to get
-aft--good God! I tried to get to the companion----”
-
-Buck was looking steadily to leeward and the drift was trickling out of
-his eyes.
-
-When he turned he smiled and his tired face looked years older as
-he wiped it with the cuff of his oilskin. The gale roared and snored
-overhead, but breaks in the flying scud told that the storm-center was
-working to the northward and the cold meant it would go to stay.
-
-“I don’t know but what’s that’s so about a feller not goin’ till his
-time comes, Cap’n. I came in the next day on a bit o’ the mainmast,
-a little more dead than alive, but I’m tellin’ you fairly, Cap’n,
-if it waren’t fer you an’ your little ship, I’d just as soon have
-gone to leeward this mornin’. A feller gets sort o’ lonesome at
-times--especially when he’s got no ties----”
-
-“Haven’t you any?” I asked cheerfully.
-
-Buck looked slowly up and his eyes met mine. They rested there for a
-moment. His lips moved for a little, but I heard nothing he said. Then
-he let his gaze droop to the deck planks and bowed his head.
-
-A long time he sat there while I watched the lighthouse draw more and
-more to the westward. Suddenly he looked up.
-
-“She’s all clear now, sir, an’ if you say so I’ll go below an’ start a
-bit o’ fire.”
-
-“Go ahead, and tell Arthur to come here?” I said.
-
-I watched him as he staggered below. He was tired out, wet, and
-despondent. The fate of the _Pocosin_ was too evident for me to ask
-questions. I respected him for not mentioning the girl again. It was
-evident what she had been to him. It was long ago, but the memory was
-fresh before him. He was passing near the grave of the one woman he had
-loved, and there was more than the salt drift in his eyes as he went
-down the companion. In a few minutes a stream of black smoke poured
-from the funnel in the deck and was whirled away to leeward. Soon
-the smell of frying bacon was swept aft, and I went below to a warm
-breakfast to be followed by a nap, while the plunging little vessel
-rode safely into the great Gulf sea. We had gone past the graveyard of
-the Diamond Shoals.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.
-
-Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.
-
-Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained; occurrences of
-inconsistent hyphenation have not been changed.
-
-Chapter names have been combined with the illustrations preceding
-the chapters.
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Strife of the Sea, by T. Jenkins Hains
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: The Strife of the Sea
-
-Author: T. Jenkins Hains
-
-Release Date: October 20, 2017 [EBook #55780]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STRIFE OF THE SEA ***
-
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-Produced by Charlie Howard and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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-</pre>
-
-
-<div id="i_frontis" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 36.8125em;">
- <img src="images/i_002.jpg" width="589" height="407" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">IN THE WAKE OF THE WEATHER CLOTH.—See Pages <a href="#ip_313">305–320</a>.</div></div>
-
-<h1 class="gesperrt">THE STRIFE<br />OF THE SEA</h1>
-
-<p class="p1 center large vspace">
-<span class="gesperrt">T. JENKINS HAINS</span><br />
-
-<span class="p1 small wspace">AUTHOR OF “THE WIND-JAMMERS,” ETC.</span></p>
-
-<div id="if_i_003" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 18.3125em;">
- <img src="images/i_003.jpg" width="293" height="324" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="p2 center vspace"><span class="gesperrt">NEW YORK</span><br />
-<span class="large wspace">THE BAKER &amp; TAYLOR CO.</span><br />
-<i>33–37 East Seventeenth St., Union Sq., North</i></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center">Copyright, 1903, by THE BAKER &amp; TAYLOR CO.</p>
-
-<div class="p1 center smaller"><div class="inline-block">
-Copyright, 1901 and 1902, by <span class="smcap">Harper &amp; Bros</span>.<br />
-Copyright, 1902 and 1903, by <span class="smcap">The Success Co</span>.<br />
-Copyright, 1902 and 1903, by <span class="smcap">The Independent</span>.<br />
-Copyright, 1903, by <span class="smcap">The Butterick Pub. Co. (Ltd.)</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p class="p1 center"><i>Published October, 1903.</i></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center vspace">TO<br />
-
-<span class="larger wspace">ROBERT MACKAY</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">vii</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="CONTENTS" title="Contents">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="if_i_007" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.25em;">
- <img src="images/i_007.jpg" width="356" height="220" alt="Contents" />
-</div>
-
-<table id="toc" summary="Contents">
- <tr class="small">
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr">PAGE</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Old Man of Sand Key</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_11">11</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Outcast</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_37">37</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Sea Dog</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_77">77</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Cape Horners</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_101">101</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Loggerhead</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_135">135</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The White Follower</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_165">165</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">King Albicore</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_199">199</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Nibblers</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_227">227</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Johnny Shark</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_251">251</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">A Tragedy of the South Atlantic</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_277">277</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">In the Wake of the Weather-Cloth</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_313">313</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">viii</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="ILLUSTRATIONS" title="Illustrations" class="show">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="loi" summary="Illustrations">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Clawing off the Cape</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_frontis"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr"><i>Facing Page</i></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Great Shape Sailed for the Top of
- the Buoy</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_44">44</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Full into the Center King Albicore Tore
- His Way</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_214">214</a></td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">The Line Was Whizzing Out</span>,</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_300">300</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="THE_STRIFE_OF_THE_SEA" title="The Strife of the Sea" class="show"><span class="larger">THE STRIFE OF THE SEA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="THE_OLD_MAN_OF_SAND_KEY" title="The Old Man of Sand Key">THE OLD MAN OF SAND KEY</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_11" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.6875em;">
- <img src="images/i_011.jpg" width="363" height="595" alt="THE OLD MAN OF SAND KEY" />
- <div class="captionh"><i>THE OLD MAN OF SAND KEY</i></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> was an old man when he first made his
-appearance on the reef at the Sand Key
-Light. This was years ago, but one
-could tell it even then by the way he drew in his
-chin, or rather pouch, in a dignified manner as
-he soared in short circles over the outlying coral
-ledges which shone vari-colored in the sunshine
-beneath the blue waters of the Gulf Stream. He
-had fished alone for many seasons without joining
-the smaller and more social birds, and the
-keepers had grown to know him. He was a
-dignified and silent bird, and his stately flight
-and ponderous waddle over the dry reef had
-made it quite evident that he was a bird with a
-past. Sandy Shackford, the head keeper, knew
-him well and relied implicitly upon his judgment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-as to the location of certain denizens of the warm
-Stream. He had come back again after a month’s
-absence, and was circling majestically over the
-coral banks not a hundred fathoms from the
-light.</p>
-
-<p>The day was beautiful and the sunshine was
-hot. The warm current of the Gulf flowed
-silently now with the gentle southwest wind, and
-the white sails of the spongers from Havana
-and Key West began to dot the horizon. Here
-and there a large barracouta or albicore would
-dart like a streak of shimmering silver through
-the liquid, and the old man would cast his glance
-in the direction of the vanishing point with a
-ready pinion to sweep headlong at the mullet or
-sailor’s-choice which were being pursued.</p>
-
-<p>His gray head was streaked with penciled
-feathers which grew longer as they reached his
-neck, and his breast was colored a dull, mottled
-lead. His back and wings gave a general impression
-of gray and black, the long pinions of
-the latter being furnished with stiff quills which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-tapered with a lighter shade to the tips. His
-beak and pouch were of more than ordinary
-proportions, for the former was heavy and
-hooked at the end and the latter was large and
-elastic, capable of holding a three-pound mullet.</p>
-
-<p>He soared slowly over the reef for some time,
-and the keeper watched him, sitting upon the
-rail of the lantern smoking his pipe, while his
-assistant filled the body of the huge lamp and
-trimmed its several wicks.</p>
-
-<p>To the westward a slight ripple showed upon
-the surface of the quiet sea. The pelican sighted
-it and stood away toward it, for it looked like a
-mackerel that had come to the surface to take in
-the sunshine and general beauty of the day. In
-a moment the old man had swung over the spot
-at a height of about a hundred feet; then suddenly
-folding his wings, he straightened out his
-body, opened his beak, and shot straight downwards
-upon the doomed fish. It was literally a
-bolt from heaven from out of a clear sky. The
-lower beak expanded as it hit the water and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-opened the pouch into a dipper which scooped
-up the mackerel, while the weight of the heavy
-body falling from the great height carried
-everything below the surface with a resounding
-splash that could be heard distinctly upon the
-light. Then up he came from the dive with the
-fish struggling frantically in his tough leathern
-sack. He rested a moment to get his breath and
-then stretched forth his pinions again and rose
-in a great circle into the clear blue air.</p>
-
-<p>“The old man’s fishin’ mackerel this
-mornin’,” said Sandy, “an’ I reckon I’ll get the
-dory an’ try a squid over along the edge o’ the
-Stream as soon as the breeze makes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, take care you don’t lose nothin’,” said
-Bill with a grin.</p>
-
-<p>“Whatcher mean?” snarled the older keeper.</p>
-
-<p>“Nothin’,” answered the assistant.</p>
-
-<p>“Then don’t say it,” said Sandy, and he
-walked down the steps of the spider-like structure,
-muttering ominously, until he reached the
-reef a hundred feet below, where, hauled high and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-dry, lay his boat. Sandy was an old man, and
-had depended upon false teeth for some years.
-The last time he had gone fishing he had lost
-them from his boat, and as he could not leave the
-light he had nearly starved to death. In desperation
-at last he had set the ensign union down
-and signaled for assistance, the second keeper
-Bill being ashore on leave, and after the U.S.S.
-<i>Ohio</i> had come all the way from Key West to
-find out the cause of the trouble he had been
-forced to explain to the officer his humiliating
-disaster. As the danger of landing in the surf
-had been great and the services of the man-of-war
-had been required for a whole day, he had
-been forced to listen to a lecture upon the absurdity
-of his behavior that did little to encourage
-him, and it was only his emaciated appearance
-and unfeigned weakness from loss of food
-that saved him his position as keeper.</p>
-
-<p>He shoved his small boat off and sprang into
-her. Then he stepped the mast, and hauling aft
-the sheet swung her head around and stood off<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-the reef, riding easily over the low swell. High
-above him was the lantern, and he looked up to
-see Bill gazing down at him and pointing toward
-the southward, where a ripple showed the breaching
-fish. His lines were in the after locker, and
-he soon had them out, one of them with a wooden
-squid trolling over the stern as the little craft
-gathered headway.</p>
-
-<p>The memory of his former disaster now came
-upon him, and he took out his teeth, which were
-new, and examined the plates upon which they
-were fastened. A small hole in either side
-showed, and through these he rove a piece of
-line. Then he placed the teeth back in his mouth
-and fastened the ends of the line back of his
-ear.</p>
-
-<p>“Let ’em drop an’ be danged to it, they’ll git
-back mighty quick this time,” he muttered. “I
-wonder where that old pelican left the school of
-fish?”</p>
-
-<p>The old bird had satisfied his present needs
-and had flown away to a distant part of the outlying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span>
-bank, where he was now proceeding to enjoy
-his catch at leisure. Far away to the northward,
-where Key West showed above the horizon,
-a long line of black specks were rapidly approaching
-through the air. They were the
-regular fishermen of the reef, and they were
-bound out to sea this morning for their daily
-meal. On they came in single file like a line of
-soldiers, their distance apart remaining regular
-and the motions of their leader followed with
-military precision. Every time he would strike
-the air several sharp strokes with his wings, the
-motion would be instantly taken up by the
-long line of followers flapping their own in
-unison.</p>
-
-<p>The “old man” heeded them very little indeed
-as he quietly ate his fish, and they knew
-enough not to bother him. They sailed majestically
-past and swung in huge circles over
-the blue Gulf to locate the passing school.</p>
-
-<p>The old man mused as he ate, and wondered at
-their stupidity. Even the light-keeper knew as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
-much as they. There was the breaching school
-a mile away to windward, and the stupid birds
-were still watching him.</p>
-
-<p>He saw his wives go past in line. There was
-old Top-knot, a wise and ugly companion of
-former days, her penciled feathers on her neck
-rubbed the wrong way. Behind her came a
-young son, an ingrate, who even now would try
-to steal the fish from him did he but leave it for
-a moment to dive for another. He glanced at
-him and ate steadily on. He would finish his
-fish first and look out for his ungrateful son
-afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>Further behind came his youngest companion,
-one who had hatched forth twelve stout birds
-during the past few years and who was still
-supple and vigorous, her smooth feathers still
-showing a gloss very pretty to look at. But she
-gave him no notice, and he ate in silence until
-they all passed far beyond and sighted at last
-the breaching mackerel.</p>
-
-<p>When he had finished he sat stately and dignified<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-upon the sand of the reef, all alone. Far
-away to the southward, where the high mountains
-of the Cuban shore rose above the line of
-water when he soared aloft, a thin smoke rose
-from some passing steamer. To the northward
-the spars of the shipping at Key West stuck
-above the calm sea. All about was peaceful,
-bright, and beautiful daylight, and the ugly
-spider-like tower of the Sand Key Light stood
-like a huge sentinel as though to guard the
-scene.</p>
-
-<p>The day was so quiet that the sullen splashes
-of the fisher birds sounded over the smooth surface
-of the sea, and the breeze scarcely rippled
-the blue water. The deep Gulf rolled and heaved
-in the sunshine, and the drone of the small breakers
-that fell upon the reef sounded low and had a
-sleepy effect upon the old fellow who had finished
-his fish.</p>
-
-<p>He sat with his pouch drawn in and his long,
-heavy beak resting upon his neck, which he bent
-well into the shape of a letter S. Now and then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-he would close an eye as the glare from the white
-coral in the sunshine became too bright. The
-man in the boat was trolling back and forth
-through the school of fish with hardly enough
-way on his craft to make them strike, but every
-now and then he saw him haul aboard a shimmering
-object that struggled and fought for
-freedom. Above, and at a little distance, soared
-the pelicans. Every now and then one would
-suddenly fold its wings and make a straight
-dive from the height of a hundred feet or more,
-striking the sea with a splash that sent up a
-little jet of foam.</p>
-
-<p>The sun rose higher and the scorching reef
-glared in the fierce light. The old man shifted
-his feet on the burning sand and looked about
-him for a spot where he might bring another fish
-and lie quiet for the afternoon. He turned his
-head toward the westward, where Mangrove Key
-rose like a dark green bush a few feet above the
-water of the reef. Two small specks were in the
-blue void above it, and his eyes instantly detected<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-them and remained staring at them with unwinking
-gaze.</p>
-
-<p>The specks grew larger rapidly, but they were
-a long way off yet, and he might be mistaken as
-to what they were. He had seen them rise above
-the blue line before, and if they were what he
-took them to be there would be trouble on the
-reef before long. Yes, he was not mistaken.
-They rose steadily, coming on a straight line for
-him, and now they were only a mile distant.
-Then he noticed one of the objects swerve
-slightly to the eastward and he saw they were,
-indeed, a pair of the great bald eagles from the
-Everglades of Florida.</p>
-
-<p>He was an old man, and he gazed steadily at
-them without much concern, although he knew
-they meant death to all who opposed their path.
-They were pirates. They were the cruelest of
-killers and as implacable and certain in their
-purpose as the Grim Destroyer himself. The
-pelicans fishing for their living over the reef
-were good and easy prey. A sudden dash among<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-them, with beak and talons cutting and slashing
-right and left, and there would be some full
-pouches of fish to empty. It was much better to
-let the stupid birds fill up first and then sweep
-among them. Then, after despoiling them of
-their hard-gotten catch, they would carry as
-much of the plunder as they cared for to some
-sheltering key to devour at leisure.</p>
-
-<p>The white head of the leading pirate shone in
-the sunshine and his fierce eyes were fixed upon
-the fishermen. The old man was apparently
-unnoticed, although there was little within the
-sweep of that savage gaze that was left unmarked.
-Those eyes could see the slightest object
-on land or sea far beyond the reach of ordinary
-vision. They had even this morning,
-probably, been watching the fishermen from
-some distant key miles away to the northward.</p>
-
-<p>The old man was a huge, tough old fellow,
-and he dreaded nothing. He gazed at the fishermen
-and a feeling of disdain for their weakness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-came upon him. He thought of his old scolding
-mate, Top-knot. What a scared old bird she
-would be in a moment with that great eagle
-sailing straight as a bullet for her, his beak
-agape, and his hoarse scream sounding in her
-wake. How she would make for the open sea,
-only to be caught in a few moments and torn
-until she disgorged her fish. His eldest son
-would make a show of fight, perhaps, and in a
-very few minutes would be a badly used up pelican.
-As for the rest, how they would wildly and
-silently strike for the open ocean, going in single
-file as was their custom, only to be overtaken one
-by one, until they were all ripped and torn by
-the fierce fighters, who would follow leisurely
-along behind, striking and clutching, screaming
-and calling to increase their fright and dismay.</p>
-
-<p>He was almost amused at the prospect, for the
-pirate birds seemed to know him instinctively for
-a barren prize and swept with the speed of the
-wind past him and over the reef to the blue
-waters of the Gulf beyond, where the fishermen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-were still unaware of their approach. He would
-watch and see the skirmish, for no harm could
-come to him even though all the rest were killed
-and wounded. He swung himself around and
-gazed seaward again, and suddenly the thought
-of his uselessness came upon him.</p>
-
-<p>Why should he sit there and see this thing
-done—he, an old man? He had led the flock
-for many years. Should he, the father of many
-and the companion of all in former days, see
-them cut up by two enemies? What if they no
-longer cared for him? What if the younger
-birds were ungrateful and would steal his fish?
-Was he not the old leader, the one they all had
-looked to in the years gone by? Did not even
-the men in the tower treat his knowledge with
-respect? And here a couple of fierce marauders
-from the forests of the land had passed him to
-wreak their will upon the timid birds whose leader
-had grown old. Memories of former days came
-to him, and something made him raise his head
-very straight and draw his pouch close in.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-He sat gazing for a few moments longer.
-The eagles now had closed up half the distance,
-for they were going with a rush. A pelican saw
-them and headed straight out to sea, striking
-the air wildly with outstretched pinions. Then
-in they dashed with hoarse cries that caused the
-keeper in the boat to luff into the wind to witness
-the struggle.</p>
-
-<p>The old man launched his weight into the air,
-and with a few sudden strokes rose to the height
-of a couple of fathoms above the sea, bearing
-down toward the screaming birds with the rapidity
-of an express train.</p>
-
-<p>Above Sandy Shackford a very mixed affair
-was taking place. The two eagles had dashed
-into the pelicans without warning and were within
-striking distance before many of them could
-even turn to flee. Old Top-knot had just caught
-a fine fish and was in the act of rising with it
-when the leading eagle swooped down upon her
-with a shrill scream. She was an old and nervous
-bird and a touch from any other creature she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-dreaded at all times. Now, right behind her
-came a giant shape, with glaring eyes and
-gaping beak, a very death’s-head, white and
-grisly, while beneath were a pair of powerful
-feet, armed with sharp talons, ready to seize her
-in a deadly grip. She gave a desperate leap to
-clear the sea and stretch her wings, but the sight
-was too much for her, and she sank back upon
-the surface. The great eagle was too terrifying
-for her old nerves, and she sat helpless.</p>
-
-<p>In an instant the eagle was upon her. He
-seized her fiercely in his talons and struck her
-savagely in the back, and the poor old bird instantly
-disgorged her newly caught fish. Her
-savage assailant hesitated a moment before
-striking her down for good and all, while he
-watched the fish swim away into the depths below.
-Then he turned to finish her.</p>
-
-<p>At that instant there was a tremendous rush
-through the air, and a huge body struck him
-full in the breast, knocking him floundering
-upon the sea. The old man had come at him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-as straight as a bullet from a gun, and, with the
-full force of his fifteen pounds sailing through
-the air, had struck him with his tough old body,
-that had been hardened by many a high dive
-from above.</p>
-
-<p>The eagle was taken completely aback, and
-struggled quickly into the air to get out of that
-vicinity, while the old man, carried along by the
-impetus of his rush, soared around in a great
-circle and came slowly back to renew the attack.
-In a moment the eagle had recovered, and, with
-true game spirit, swung about to meet this new
-defender of the fishermen. They met in mid-air,
-about two fathoms above the sea, and Sandy
-Shackford cheered wildly for his old acquaintance
-as he landed a heavy blow with his long,
-hooked bill.</p>
-
-<p>“Go it, old man!” he cried. “Give it to
-him. Oh, if I had my gun, wouldn’t I soak
-him for ye!”</p>
-
-<p>The other birds had fled seaward, and were
-now almost out of sight, being pursued by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-second eagle. One limp form floated on the sea
-to mark the course of the marauder. Old Top-knot
-had recovered from the shock, and was now
-making a line for Cuba. The old man was the
-only one left, and he was detaining the great
-bald eagle for his last fight, the fight of his
-life.</p>
-
-<p>Around and around they soared. The eagle
-was wary and did not wish to rush matters with
-the determined old man, who, with beak drawn
-back, sailed about ready for a stroke. Then,
-disdaining the clumsy old fellow, the bald eagle
-made a sudden rush as though he would end the
-matter right there. The old man met him, and
-there was a short scrimmage in the air which
-resulted in both dropping to the sea. Here the
-old man had the advantage. The eagle could
-not swim, his powerful talons not being made
-for propelling him over the water. The old man
-managed to hold his own, although he received
-a savage cut from the other’s strong beak. This
-round was a draw. During this time the second<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-eagle had seen that his companion was not following
-the startled game, and he returned just
-in time to see him disengage from a whirlwind
-of wings and beaks and wait a moment to decide
-just how he would finish off the old fellow who
-had the hardihood to dispute his way. Then
-he joined the fight, and together they swooped
-down upon the old man for the finish.</p>
-
-<p>He met them with his head well up and wings
-outstretched, and gave them so much to do that
-they were entirely taken up with the affair and
-failed to notice Sandy Shackford, who was creeping
-up, paddling with all his strength with an
-oar-blade.</p>
-
-<p>The encounter could not last long. The old
-fellow was rapidly succumbing to the attacks
-of his powerful antagonists, and although he
-still kept the mix-up in a whirl of foam with his
-desperate struggles, he could not hope to last
-against two such pirates as were now pitted
-against him. One of them struck him fiercely
-and tore his throat open, ripping his pouch from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-end to end. He was weakening fast and knew
-the struggle must end in another rush. Both
-eagles came at him at once, uttering hoarse cries,
-and drawing back his head he made one last,
-desperate stroke with his hooked beak. Then
-something seemed to crash down upon his foes
-from above. An oar-blade whirled in the sunshine
-and struck the leading eagle upon the head,
-knocking him lifeless upon the sea. Then the
-other rose quickly and started off to the northward
-as the form of the keeper towered above
-in the bow of the approaching boat.</p>
-
-<p>Sandy Shackford picked the great white-headed
-bird from the water and dropped him
-into the boat and the old man looked on wondering.
-He had known the keeper for a long time,
-but had never been at close quarters.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor old man,” said Sandy. “Ye look
-mighty badly used up.” And then he made a
-motion toward him.</p>
-
-<p>But the old pelican wanted no sympathy. His
-was the soul of the leader, and he scorned help.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span>
-Stretching forth his wings with a mighty effort,
-he arose from the sea. The reef lay but a short
-distance away, and he would get ashore to rest.
-The pain in his throat was choking him, but he
-would sit quiet a while and get well. He would
-not go far, but he would be alone. The whole sea
-shimmered dizzily in the sunshine, but a little
-rest and the old bones would be right again. He
-would be quiet and alone.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor old man,” said Sandy, as he watched
-him sail away. “He’s a dead pelican, but he
-made a game fight.”</p>
-
-<p>Then he hauled in his lines, and, squaring
-away before the wind, ran down to the light with
-the eagle and a dozen fine fish in the bottom of
-his dory.</p>
-
-<p>The next day the old man was not fishing on
-the reef. The other birds came back—all except
-one. But the old man failed to show up
-during the whole day.</p>
-
-<p>The next day and the next came and went,
-and Sandy, who looked carefully every morning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-for the old fellow, began to give up all hope of
-seeing him again. Then, in the late afternoon
-when the other birds were away, the old man
-came sailing slowly over the water and landed
-stiffly upon the coral of a point just awash at
-the end of the key.</p>
-
-<p>As the sun was setting, the old man swung
-himself slowly around to face it. He drew his
-head well back and held himself dignified and
-stately as he walked to the edge of the surf.
-There he stopped, and as the flaming orb sank
-beneath the western sea, the old man still stood
-watching it as it disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Sandy Shackford lit the lantern, and the sudden
-tropic night fell upon the quiet ocean.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning the keeper looked out, and the
-old man was sitting silent and stationary as before.
-When the day wore on and he did not
-start out fishing Sandy took the dory and rowed
-to the jutting reef. He walked slowly toward
-the old man, not wishing to disturb him, but to
-help him if he could. He drew near, and the old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-bird made no motion. He reached slowly down,
-and the head he touched was cold.</p>
-
-<p>Sitting there, with the setting sun shining
-over the southern sea, the old man had died. He
-was now cold and stiff, but even in death he sat
-straight and dignified. He had died as a leader
-should.</p>
-
-<p>“Poor old man,” said Sandy. “His pouch
-was cut open an’ he jest naterally starved to
-death—couldn’t hold no fish, an’ as fast as he’d
-catch ’em they’d get away. It was a mean way
-to kill a fine old bird. Ye have my sympathy,
-old man. I came nigh goin’ the same way once
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p>And then, as if not to disturb him, the keeper
-walked on his toes to his boat and shoved off.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="THE_OUTCAST" title="The Outcast">THE OUTCAST</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_37" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.8125em;">
- <img src="images/i_037.jpg" width="365" height="590" alt="THE OUTCAST" />
- <div class="captionh">THE OUTCAST</div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> day was bright and the sunshine
-glistened upon the smooth water of
-Cumberland Sound. The sand beach
-glared in the fierce rays and the heat was
-stifling. What little breeze there was merely
-ruffled the surface of the water, streaking it out
-into fantastic shapes upon the oily swell which
-heaved slowly in from the sea. Far away the
-lighthouse stood out white and glinting, the trees
-about the tall tower looking inviting with their
-shade. The swell snored low and sullenly upon
-the bar, where it broke into a line of whiteness,
-and the buoys rode the tide silently, making
-hardly a ripple as it rushed past.</p>
-
-<p>Riley, the keeper of the light, was fishing.
-His canoe was anchored close to the shore in three
-fathoms of water, and he was pulling up whiting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-in spite of the ebb, which now went so fast that
-it was with difficulty he kept his line upon the
-bottom. When he landed his fiftieth fish they
-suddenly stopped biting. He changed his bait,
-but to no purpose. Then he pulled up his line
-and spat upon his hook for luck.</p>
-
-<p>Even this remedy for wooing the goddess of
-fortune failed him, and he mopped his face and
-wondered. Then he looked over the side.</p>
-
-<p>For some minutes he could see nothing but the
-glint of the current hurrying past. The sunshine
-dazzled him. Then he shaded his eyes and
-tried to pierce the depths beneath the boat.</p>
-
-<p>The water was as crystal, and gradually the
-outlines of the soft bottom began to take form.
-He could follow the anchor rope clear down
-until a cross showed where the hook took the
-ground.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he gave a start. In spite of the
-heat he had a chill run up his spine. Then he
-gazed fixedly down, straight down beneath the
-small boat’s bottom.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-A huge pair of eyes were looking up at him
-with a fixed stare. At first they seemed to be in
-the mud of the bottom, two unwinking glassy
-eyes about a foot apart, with slightly raised
-sockets. They were almost perfectly round,
-and although he knew they must belong to a
-creature lying either to or against the current,
-he could not tell which side the body must lie.
-Gradually a movement forward of the orbs attracted
-his attention, and he made out an irregular
-outline surrounding a section of undulating
-mud. This showed the expanse of the creature’s
-body, lying flat as it was, and covering an area
-of several yards. It showed the proportions of
-the sea-devil, the huge ray whose shark-like propensities
-made it the most dreaded of the inhabitants
-of the Sound. There he lay looking serenely
-up at the bottom of the boat with his
-glassy eyes fixed in that grisly stare, and it was
-little wonder he was called the devil-fish.</p>
-
-<p>Riley spat overboard in disgust, and drew in
-his line. There was no use trying to fish with that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-horrible thing lying beneath. He got out the
-oars and then took hold of the anchor line and
-began to haul it in, determined to seek a fishing
-drop elsewhere or go home. As he hauled the
-line, the great creature below noticed the boat
-move ahead. He watched it for some seconds,
-and then slid along the bottom, where the hook
-was buried in the mud.</p>
-
-<p>It was easy to move his huge bulk. The side
-flukes had but to be ruffled a little, and the great
-form would move along like a shadow. He could
-see the man in the boat when he bent over the
-side, and he wondered several times whether he
-should take the risk of a jump aboard. He was
-a scavenger, and not hard to please in the matter
-of diet. Anything that was alive was game to
-his maw. He had watched for more than an
-hour before the light-keeper had noticed it, and
-now the boat was drawing away. His brain was
-very small, and he could not overcome a peculiar
-feeling that danger was always near the little
-creature above. He kept his eyes fixed on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span>
-boat’s bottom, and slid along under her until his
-head brought up against the anchor line, now
-taut as Riley hove it short to break out the hook.
-This was provoking, and he opened a wicked
-mouth armed with rows of shark-like teeth.
-Then the anchor broke clear and was started upward,
-and the boat began to drift away in the
-current.</p>
-
-<p>The spirit of badness took possession of him.
-He was annoyed. The boat would soon go away
-if the anchor was withdrawn, so he made a grab
-for it and seized the hook, or fluke, in his mouth,
-and started out to sea. Riley felt the sudden
-tug from below. He almost guessed what it was,
-and quick as lightning took a turn with the line
-about the forward seat. Then, as the boat’s
-headway increased rapidly, he took the bight
-of the line aft and seated himself so as to keep
-her head up and not bury in the rush. His knife
-was at hand ready for a sudden slash at the line
-in case of emergency.</p>
-
-<p>“If he’ll let go abreast o’ the p’int, all right,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-said Riley. “I seen lots harder ways o’ getting
-about than this.”</p>
-
-<p>The tide was rushing out with great rapidity,
-and going along with it the boat fairly flew.
-Riley watched the shore slip past, and looked
-anxiously toward the lighthouse for the head
-keeper to see him. It would give the old man a
-turn, he thought, to see a boat flying through
-the water with the occupant sitting calmly aft
-taking it easy. It made him laugh outright to
-imagine the head keeper’s look of astonishment.
-Then he saw the figure of the old man standing
-upon the platform of the tower gazing out to
-sea. He roared out at the top of his voice, hoping
-to attract attention, but the distance was
-too great.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the sea-devil was sliding along the
-bottom, heading for the line of white where the
-surf fell over the bank of the outer bar. The
-hook, or fluke, of the anchor was held securely
-in his powerful jaws, and the force necessary to
-tow the following craft was felt very little. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-great side fins, or flukes, merely moved with a
-motion which caused no exertion to such a frame,
-and the long tail, armed with its deadly spear
-of poisoned barbs, slewed slightly from right
-to left, steering the creature with accuracy.
-And while he went his mind was working, trying
-to think how he could get the man from
-the boat after he had taken him out to sea
-beyond any help from the shore. A sea-devil
-he was, and rightly named. This he very well
-knew, and the thought made him fearless. He
-had rushed many schools of mullet and other
-small fish, who fled in frantic terror at his approach.
-He had slid into a school of large porpoises,
-the fishermen who seldom gave way for
-anything, and he sent them plunging in fear for
-the deep water. Once he had, in sheer devilry,
-leaped upon a huge logger-head turtle weighing
-half a ton, just to see if he could take a nip of
-his neck before the frightened fellow could draw
-in his head behind the safe shelter of his shell.
-He could stand to the heaviest shark that had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-ever entered the Sound, and had once driven his
-spear through the jaws of a monster who had
-sneaked up behind him unawares and tried to
-get a grip upon his flukes. All had shown a
-wholesale respect for his powers, and he had
-grown more and more malignant as he grew in
-size and strength. Even his own family had at
-last sought other waters on account of his peculiarly
-ferocious temper.</p>
-
-<p>Now he would try the new game in the craft
-above, and he felt little doubt as to the outcome.
-A sudden dash and twist might demoralize
-the floating tow, and as he neared the black
-can buoy which marked the channel, he gave a
-tremendous rush ahead, then a sudden sheer to
-the right, and with a quick slew he was heading
-back again in the opposite direction.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_44" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.125em;">
- <img src="images/i_047.jpg" width="386" height="593" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE GREAT SHAPE SAILED FOR THE TOP OF THE BUOY.</div></div>
-
-<p>Riley felt the sudden jerk ahead. He was as
-far as he wished to go down the shore, but had
-hesitated to cut the line in the hope that the
-devil would let go. Lines were not plentiful, and
-to lose this one meant an end to fishing for several<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-days. The canoe shot ahead with prodigious
-speed. Riley seized the knife and was
-about to cut loose, when there was a sudden sheer
-to starboard, and before he could do anything
-the canoe was jerked quickly over upon its side.
-He leaped to the rail and tried to right it, but
-almost instantly it was whirled about and capsized.
-The sea-devil now dropped the anchor
-and turned his attention to the boat. The
-fluke, taking the ground in the channel, anchored
-the craft a few feet distant from the can buoy,
-and Riley was climbing upon the upturned
-boat’s bottom as the creature came up. Lying
-flat upon the keel, Riley balanced himself so as
-to keep clear of the sea, watching the big black
-can swinging to and fro in the current. If he
-could but seize the ring in the top he might pull
-himself to a place of safety.</p>
-
-<p>The devil came back slowly, looking about
-for the occupant of the small boat. He was not
-in sight, and the craft was perfectly empty.
-This puzzled him, and he began circling around<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-to see if he had overlooked him in the tideway.
-Then he saw a movement upon the boat, and
-made out the keeper lying upon the keel. He
-came slowly up to the side of the craft, and Riley
-saw a huge shadow rising alongside of him,
-spreading out a full two fathoms across the
-wings, or flukes. The ugly eyes were fixed upon
-him, and he yelled in terror. It was like some
-horrid nightmare, only he knew the deadly nature
-of the creature, and realized what a fate
-was in store for him once the devil had him
-fast.</p>
-
-<p>The devil was in no hurry to rush matters,
-however, for now that the boat was again stationary
-he would investigate the subject before
-making an attack. He was not hungry.</p>
-
-<p>Riley edged away from the huge shadow as
-far as he could, and called frantically for help.
-The can buoy swung close to him, and he looked
-up to see if it were possible to make the spring
-for the top. To miss it meant certain death.
-Then it swung away again, and he closed his eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-to shut out the horrid shape rising beside the
-boat.</p>
-
-<p>The mouth of the devil was under a breadth of
-shovel-shaped nose, and it could not be brought
-to bear at once. It would necessitate a leap to
-grab Riley, and as the devil was in no hurry he
-swam slowly along the sunken gunwale waiting
-for a better opportunity to seize the victim. He
-was apparently certain of his game, and he would
-take his time.</p>
-
-<p>Riley shrieked again and again in terror,
-clinging with a frantic clutch to the capsized
-boat.</p>
-
-<p>About this time, Samuels, the keeper, who was
-in the tower, happened to turn around far enough
-to notice the black speck of the upturned boat.
-He was expecting Riley to show up about this
-time of day, and the speck upon the surface of
-the Sound attracted his attention. In a few
-moments he made it out to be the boat bottom up.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly he sprang for his glasses. He saw
-Riley lying upon the bottom. He rushed to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-beach as fast as he could and pushed out in a
-dory. His companion was in danger from
-drowning, and he would rescue him if possible.
-He knew nothing of the danger that lurked below
-the surface of the sea. The sea-devil was out
-of sight, and his small dorsal fin would not
-show any great distance.</p>
-
-<p>Riley howled and clung to the bottom of the
-boat, while Samuels strove to reach him, and
-all the time the devil swam slowly fore and aft
-along the side trying to decide whether to make
-the leap or push the boat bodily over again.
-The last method appeared to be the least irksome,
-and he gave the boat a good shove with his
-nose.</p>
-
-<p>Riley felt the heeling of the craft, and
-clutched frantically at the now slanting keel.
-She was turning over again, and in an instant
-he would be in the water. The thought of the
-ending gave him a madman’s energy. He saw
-the buoy swinging closer and closer to him as
-the craft was pushed along sideways. Then a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-sudden eddy of the tide swung it within a few
-feet of the boat.</p>
-
-<p>The devil, seeing the boat turning slowly over,
-pushed harder. In an instant the man upon the
-bottom would be in the water and easy to seize.
-He gave a sudden shove, throwing the capsized
-craft almost upon its side. As he did so Riley
-made a last desperate effort. He arose quick as
-lightning and balanced for an instant on the
-settling canoe. Then he sprang with all his
-strength for the ring-bolt in the top of the buoy.</p>
-
-<p>Whether it was luck or the desperate strength
-of despair, he just managed to get the fingers
-of his right hand into the ring. The can toppled
-over as though it would capsize and land him in
-the sea, but with his legs in the water almost up
-to his waist, it brought up on its bearings, balanced
-by the heavy weight below. Then he
-hauled himself up and tried to get his legs
-around the iron.</p>
-
-<p>At each effort the can would twist slowly in
-the sea, and down he would come again into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-the water, holding on by the ring above his
-head.</p>
-
-<p>The sea-devil gave the craft a tremendous
-push which sent it clear over, and then he slipped
-under it to find the game on the side beyond.
-The man was gone, but he saw him hanging to
-the buoy close by, and he gave a sudden dash to
-seize him. At that instant Riley clambered like
-a cat upon the swinging iron, and by almost
-superhuman balancing he sat up on the top, some
-four feet clear of the water, his legs swinging
-on either side, making frantic efforts to keep his
-unstable craft from turning around in the current
-and spilling him into the death-trap which
-now lurked below in plain view. He prayed for
-a whale iron, and screamed for help. Then he
-swore furiously and madly at the shape with the
-stony eyes which, as implacable as death itself, lay
-watching him as though certain of the ultimate
-outcome of the affair. Without even his knife
-he would not be able to make the least resistance.
-A harpoon iron would have fixed things differently.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-Oh, for one to throw at the hideous thing
-waiting for him! How he would like to see the
-barbs sink into that hard hide and pierce its
-vitals. He raved at it, and cursed it frantically,
-but the sea-devil lay there silently watching,
-knowing well that it was but a question of a few
-minutes before he would be at his mercy.</p>
-
-<p>The hot afternoon sun beat pitilessly upon the
-clinging wretch upon the can buoy, and the heat
-upon his bare head made the water dance about
-him. But to lose his balance was fatal, and he
-clung and cried, prayed and screamed, cursed
-and raved, alternately, adjusting his trembling
-body to each movement of his float.</p>
-
-<p>As the minutes flew by, Samuels, who was rowing
-to him with rapid strokes, heard his outcries,
-and turned to look. He could not understand
-the man’s wild terror. It was evident that there
-was no time to lose, and he bent to the oars
-again. Suddenly he heard a piercing scream.
-He turned, and in time to see a great shape rise
-from the water like a gigantic bat, and sail right<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
-for the top of the can buoy. It struck it fair,
-and the thud of the huge body resounded over the
-sea. Then it fell slanting off into the water with
-a great splash, and when he looked at the top of
-the can there was nothing but a piece of blue
-cloth hanging to the ring-bolt. Riley was gone.</p>
-
-<p>In an instant Samuels sprang to his feet and
-stood looking at the eddying current, paralyzed
-with horror at the sight. The hot sunshine and
-smooth sea were still all around him, but the monstrous
-shape had disappeared and his companion
-along with it. Now he knew why Riley
-had screamed and cursed so frantically. It was
-not the fear of drowning that had called forth
-such madness. But even while he stood there in
-the sunlight a horrible nightmare seemed to be
-taking possession of him, and he was trembling
-and helpless. He gave a hoarse cry and set his
-teeth to control his shaking nerves. Then his
-brain began its normal working again, and he
-seized his oars and gave several tremendous
-strokes in the direction of the buoy, looking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-over his shoulder and feeling his scalp tightening
-upon his head. There was a cold chill in
-his blood, as though the weather were winter instead
-of torrid July.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly something showed on the surface
-just under the boat’s bow. He shivered in spite
-of himself, but the thought of his comrade
-nerved him for the ordeal. He sprang forward,
-knife in hand, to seize it if it were Riley’s form,
-or face the monster if he appeared. A white
-hand came slowly upward. With a desperate
-effort Samuels reached over and jerked the form
-of his assistant into the boat, and as he did so
-a huge shadow darkened the water beneath
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The sea-devil, carried along by the momentum
-of his rush, had knocked his victim into the water
-from the buoy top, but had swept past him before
-he could swing about far enough to seize
-him in his jaws. This was all that saved Riley.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly Samuels, who had a stout craft,
-seized his oars and pulled for the lighthouse, gazing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-fixedly upon the smooth water astern of him,
-and shivering with a nervous shake at each ripple
-in the wake of his boat, lest it were made by the
-denizen below the surface. But nothing followed.
-The Sound was as smooth as glass, and
-the sunshine and silence were undisturbed. The
-great ray had missed his victim, and was swimming
-slowly around the can buoy looking for
-him. He had failed to notice Samuels pick him
-up, although he had seen his boat pass.</p>
-
-<p>While Samuels watched astern he saw the capsized
-craft near the buoy move suddenly, as
-though some power were exerted upon it from
-below. The sight caused him to bend with renewed
-vigor to his oars, and, with his heart sending
-his blood jerking through his temples with
-a pulse he seemed almost to hear, he drove his
-boat for the beach and landed safely. As he did
-so Riley sat up and looked about him with eyes
-that were like those of a man in a dream. His
-lips were swollen to a livid blue and he puffed
-through them, making a ghastly sound as they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-quivered with his breath. Samuels spoke to him,
-but he would only gaze about him and make the
-blowing noise with his mouth. Then the elder
-keeper took him gently by the arm and led him
-painfully up the sand to the lighthouse dwelling.
-The next day the victim was raving. It
-would take a long time for the poor fellow to regain
-his equilibrium, and absolute rest and quiet
-were the only thing that would steady the terribly
-shaken nerves. Samuels took the man to
-the nearest town, and then went back to tend the
-light alone.</p>
-
-<p>The following week Samuels spent brooding
-over the horrible affair. The log of the keeper
-refers to it several times, and it was like a wild
-nightmare to him during his watch on the tower
-during darkness. During the daytime he
-thought of it continually, and began to devise
-different methods for the capture of the sea-devil,
-which he believed to be still in the entrance of the
-Sound. He had sent word of the unfortunate
-Riley’s condition to the inspector, and was tending<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
-the light alone when the new assistant came to
-relieve him. When he arrived he found Samuels
-hard at work upon a set of harpoons and lines
-which he had been preparing for his hunt, while
-a couple of large shark-hooks lay in the small
-boat ready baited. Two small boats were made
-ready, and the shark-hooks and lines were placed
-in one. The other contained five lilly-irons of
-the grummet-and-toggle pattern and two hundred
-fathoms of small line capable of holding
-the small boat while being towed at any speed.
-With this outfit they began to spend the days
-upon the waters of the Sound, rowing in company
-to the various fishing drops, and trying
-for a bite upon the great hooks.</p>
-
-<p>Not a sign of the sea-devil had there been
-since the day the keeper had met him. The
-weather was clear and fine, and the sea smooth.
-Nothing rose to break the even surface. But
-Samuels hunted quietly on, never losing faith
-that some day the monster would break water
-again and give him a chance for either a harpoon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-or hook. In his boat he carried a long whale
-lance with its heart-shaped head as sharp as a
-razor, covered in a wooden scabbard to keep off
-the dampness. It would penetrate any living
-body a full fathom, and nothing of flesh and
-blood could withstand its stroke.</p>
-
-<p>The sixth day out the new keeper began to
-give up hope of seeing anything like the game
-they sought. He carried ordinary hand lines,
-and busied himself fishing during their stays at
-the different drops. Sea bass, drum, and sheeps-head
-were biting lively, and he managed to make
-good use of the time they were away from the
-light. Toward the late afternoon the fish suddenly
-stopped biting. It was the beginning of
-the flood tide, and therefore not in keeping with
-the usual state of affairs. Something was the
-matter, and Samuels began to pay attention to
-his shark lines.</p>
-
-<p>In a short time one of them began to go in
-little jerks. It was loose, with a turn around a
-cleat so that it might run with any sudden pull.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-Then it began to go steadily, going faster and
-faster, as fathom after fathom of it flaked overboard.
-As a shark is never jerked for some moments
-after he has taken bait, on account of his
-habit of holding a morsel in his mouth sometimes
-for minutes before swallowing it, the line
-was let run. After a shark gets it well in hand
-he suddenly bolts the food and makes off. Then
-is the time to set back with a full force upon the
-line in order to drive the barb of the hook into
-his tough throat. The chain leader of the hook
-will then be the only thing he can set his teeth
-upon, and he will be fast if the barb once gets
-under the tough hide.</p>
-
-<p>Samuels let the line go for nearly a minute
-before a quickening in the movement told him
-that the fellow at the other end had swallowed
-the bait and was making away. Then rising
-slowly to his feet he let the line run through his
-fingers until he took a good brace upon the seat
-of his boat with his foot. Then he grasped the
-line suddenly with both hands, and setting back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-upon it with all his strength he stopped it for an
-instant. The next moment there was a whir of
-whistling line. He had dropped it and it was
-flying overboard. Before ten fathoms of line
-had gone, Samuels had it on the cleat again
-and was snubbing it in jerks which sent his
-boat as deep as her after gunwale. Soon, however,
-the line began to give a little. Foot by foot
-he hauled it in, until a long dark form showed
-beneath the surface of the water. It was only a
-shark after all, and he was given a taste of the
-whale lance to quiet him.</p>
-
-<p>While he was engaged in this he heard a sudden
-roar behind him, and he turned in time to
-see a gigantic form disappear in a tremendous
-smother of foam. It sounded like a small cannon,
-and he well knew there was only one creature
-in the Sound that could break water with such a
-rush and smash.</p>
-
-<p>The shark was forgotten, and as soon as possible
-the hook was rebaited and cast. The other
-line was now watched, and the painter of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-other boat was passed over to make them tow
-together if the line should be taken.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the new keeper, who had been looking
-steadily over the side into the clear water,
-gave a shout and pointed below.</p>
-
-<p>Just a fathom beneath the boat’s keel a gigantic
-shadow drew slowly up. It was a giant ray,
-the dreaded sea-devil they had been waiting for.</p>
-
-<p>Samuels gazed down at it and could see the
-stony eyes fixed upon him. Grasping a harpoon
-he sent it with all his force down into the
-depths. It was a wild throw. But he had waited
-so long that he could not miss any chance.</p>
-
-<p>The long shank of the iron disappeared in the
-foam of the splash. Then there was a moment’s
-pause. Almost instantly afterwards the line was
-flying furiously over the side. The toggle had
-penetrated, and they were fast.</p>
-
-<p>The assistant keeper tossed over the anchor
-buoys to mark the slipped moorings, and then
-Samuels snubbed the line.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly the boats were jerked half under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span>
-water. Settling back as far as they could, they
-both tried to keep the bows of the towing craft
-from being towed under, and the line had to be
-slacked again and again to save them. Away
-they went, one behind the other, the ray leading,
-Samuels’ boat next, with him in the stern-sheets,
-holding a turn of the line which led over the runner
-in the stem, and the new keeper, standing
-with steering oar in hand, slewing his flying
-craft first one side and then the other to keep
-dead in the wake.</p>
-
-<p>The breeze making from the sea sent the spray
-over the boats in sheets, but they held on. The
-devil was heading for the bar under full speed,
-for the iron had pricked him sorely in the side,
-and he was a little taken aback at this sudden
-reception. He could not yet grasp the situation,
-and would circle about before coming close to the
-small craft again. But there was something
-dragging upon him that began to cause alarm.
-There was a line to the thing that pricked so
-sore. The feeling at first caused a desire to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-escape from the unknown enemy, but gradually
-as the pain increased anger began to take the
-place of fright, and he tried to find out just who
-his enemies were. He swerved near the can buoy
-and broached clear of the sea to get a better
-view. The crash he made as he struck the sea
-again sent the spray high in the air, and the
-line was whirled out with renewed force.</p>
-
-<p>But the men behind him had no thought of letting
-go. With lance in hand Samuels waited
-patiently for a chance to haul line. As long as
-the toggle would hold there was little chance for
-the iron drawing, for the skin of the ray was as
-tough as leather, and the flesh beneath it was
-firm.</p>
-
-<p>On and on they went, the flood tide setting
-strong against them. The swell from beyond
-the bar was now felt, and the ocean sparkled in
-the sunshine where it was ruffled by the outside
-breeze. Two, three miles were traversed, but
-there was no slacking of the tremendous pace.
-The ray evidently intended to get to sea before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-attempting to make any change in his actions.
-He was going at a ten-knot gait, keeping now
-close to the bottom, and heading right through
-the north breaker, which rolled in curved lines of
-white foam upon the bar. The channel he cared
-not the least for, and Samuels watched the roaring
-line of white with concern. The small boats
-would make bad weather of the surf, even though
-the sea was smooth, for the swell rose high and
-fell heavily, making a deep rumbling snore which
-grew louder and louder as they approached.
-Far away the lighthouse shone in the sunshine,
-and the buoys stood out like black specks to mark
-the way through the channel.</p>
-
-<p>Samuels got out his hatchet ready for a sudden
-cut at the line if the surf proved too dangerous.
-They were nearing the inner line of breakers,
-and it would be only a matter of minutes before
-they were either through or swamped. There
-must be some hasty judgment, but it must be as
-accurate as it would be hasty, for there would
-be no chance to change his mind when the water<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-rose ahead. It was breaking in a good fathom
-and more.</p>
-
-<p>The sea-devil seemed to know what was in
-store for the boats towing behind. He broached
-again and took a good look astern where they
-flew along behind him. Then with redoubled
-speed he tore through the inner line of breaking
-water, and before Samuels could grab the hatchet
-to cut loose, his boat rose upon a crested breaker
-and plunged headlong over into the trough beyond,
-pulling the assistant through, and almost
-swamping him. It was now too late to let go.
-Ahead was another wall of rising water which
-would break in an instant, and the only thing
-to do was to go on and trust to the boat’s riding
-over it all right. To turn the slightest, one side
-or the other, meant to be rolled over in the rush
-of foam.</p>
-
-<p>Samuels held on grimly. Once outside he
-hoped to haul line and come to close quarters
-with the devil. Then he would deal with him in
-a more satisfactory manner. That long lance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-would be brought into play, and the fight would
-be with the odds upon his side. But he had
-reckoned somewhat hastily with this outcast of
-the ocean. All the fearless cunning of the sea-scavenger
-was being brought into play. The
-pain in his side where the iron held was making
-him more and more savage. He saw it was useless
-to run away, for the iron held his pursuers
-to him. He had only intended to make a short
-run at the beginning, and then turn to meet
-whatever there was in the shape of a foe. There
-was little fear in his make-up. The sudden alarm
-at the stroke of the iron was merely the natural
-instinct of the wild creature to keep out of harm’s
-way. He had intended to come back and try his
-hand with the small craft, only he would not run
-into unknown trouble. It would be wiser to take
-things easy and approach the matter slowly,
-watching a good chance to make a rush in when
-a fitting opportunity occurred. But because he
-would go slow he would be none the less implacable.
-He had never withdrawn from a fight yet,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-and his peculiar tenacity had more than once
-brought him off victor when the odds were
-against him. He was wary—an old wary fighter
-who began the struggle slowly only to learn the
-forces opposed to him. When the issue was well
-begun he would break forth in a fury unequaled
-in any other denizen of the ocean. The continual
-pain of the pulling-iron was now goading him
-into a condition of frenzied fury. In a moment
-he would turn, just as soon as he had the small
-craft well into the foaming water, where he knew
-it would be difficult to navigate.</p>
-
-<p>Samuels had thought of the ray’s probable
-run for shoal water, and dreaded coming up with
-him in the surf. He could not turn his small
-boat broadside to the breakers without getting
-rolled over and swamped, and his oars would be
-useless to pull clear with the iron fast. He hoped
-the ray would make for the bottom in the deep
-water beyond and pull him through. Just as
-the outer breaker rose ahead the line suddenly
-slacked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-This was what Samuels dreaded most, and he
-began to haul in hand over hand. Instead, however,
-of the line leading ahead, it suddenly let
-off to starboard, and he was forced to let it go
-and take to his oars to keep the boat’s head to
-the sea that was now upon her. He called to the
-new keeper, who let go the line between the boats,
-to take out his oars also. Both now headed
-straight for the crest, which instantly broke over
-them, half filling Samuels’ craft and settling her
-almost to the gunwales. At that moment the
-line came taut with a jerk. It swung the boat’s
-head off broadside to the sea, and the next minute
-the breaker rolled her over and over. As it did
-so a giant form rose like a huge bat from the
-foam with mouth agape and flukes extended, its
-tail stretching out behind, and the line from the
-harpoon trailing. Down it came with a crash
-which resounded above the roar of the surf, and
-the boat disappeared from view.</p>
-
-<p>Samuels had by good luck been thrown
-clear of the craft when the sea struck, and his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span>
-head appeared a fathom distant just as the devil
-crashed down. It was a close call. Then, as the
-half-sinking boat returned slowly, bottom
-up, to the surface, he made for it with all
-speed.</p>
-
-<p>Beside it floated the long wooden handle of
-the lance, the blade resting upon the bottom a
-fathom below. He seized it as he grasped the
-keel, and calling for the keeper in the other
-boat to look out, he made ready for the devil’s
-return, for the line was not pulling the boat
-away, showing that the slack had not been
-taken up, and that the creature was still
-close by.</p>
-
-<p>He was not wrong in this. The huge devil
-swerved almost as soon as he disappeared below
-the surface and headed back again slowly to
-where the boat lay in the foam of the breaker.
-He kept close to the bottom and came like a
-shadow over the sand.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was shining brightly and objects
-could be seen easily. Samuels soon made out a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span>
-dark object creeping up from the side where the
-ray had gone down. The water was hardly over
-his head when the seas broke, and between them
-it was not more than four and a half feet deep.
-He could keep his head out and his feet upon
-the sand until the rising crest would lift him
-clear, when, by holding to the upturned boat’s
-keel, he could keep his head out until the breaker
-had passed, the tide setting him rapidly towards
-the deeper water inside the bar.</p>
-
-<p>The keeper in the other boat saw the shadow
-and called out, at the same time getting a harpoon
-ready and resting upon his oars. The
-smooth between breakers gave both a good
-chance to note the position of the approaching
-monster.</p>
-
-<p>The sea-devil came slowly up, his eyes showing
-through the clear water and the line from the
-iron trailing behind him. When within a couple
-of fathoms he made a sudden rush at the capsized
-boat.</p>
-
-<p>The new keeper threw his iron well. It landed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-fairly in the top of the broad back and sank
-deep, but it did not in the least stop the savage
-rush. The huge bulk rose to the surface at the
-instant the iron struck and came straight for
-Samuels, who held the lance ready in one hand
-and clung to the keel of his boat with the other.
-He drove the long, sharp weapon a full two feet
-into the monster’s vitals and then ducked behind
-the sunken gunwale to avoid the teeth.</p>
-
-<p>There was a terrific commotion in the sea.
-The devil bit savagely at Samuels’ arm, but
-missed it, his teeth coming upon the gunwale
-of the boat and shearing out a piece. Then he
-gave a tremendous rush upon the craft and
-drove it before him until it disappeared under
-the surface. The great ray smote the sea with
-his flukes and strove after his prey, but the lance
-was firmly planted in him, and, try as he might,
-he could get no nearer than the length of the
-handle to the keeper, for with this grasped
-firmly in both hands Samuels went below the
-surface only to get his foothold again and reappear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-to be driven along before the furious
-creature.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the new keeper came hauling line
-from the rear. There was a smooth between
-the seas, and he pulled the boat close to the
-floundering devil before he knew what was
-taking place. Then, with three irons ready, he
-drove one after the other in quick succession into
-the monster. Taken from the rear in this manner
-the devil whirled about. His barbed spear
-in his tail he drove with accuracy at the form in
-the boat, striking the keeper in the thick of the
-thigh and piercing it through and through.
-He fell with a yell, clutching the boat to keep
-from being drawn overboard, and the spear
-broke off short, the poisonous barbs remaining
-in the flesh.</p>
-
-<p>The sudden diversion saved Samuels. He
-managed to withdraw his lance, and by an almost
-superhuman effort he drove it again into the
-devil just as a sea broke over him. When he
-came to the surface again he was exhausted and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-expected to fall a victim, but the great creature
-made no attack and only swam around in a circle,
-apparently dazed.</p>
-
-<p>Samuels lost no time in getting aboard the
-still floating craft, taking the towline with him.
-She was full of water from the breaker which
-had rolled in, but it had struck her fairly in the
-bow and she would float a little longer. He
-reached for the oars and held her head to the sea,
-while the other raised himself in spite of the
-agony of his poisoned wound and bailed for his
-life.</p>
-
-<p>The sea-devil was mortally hurt and was failing
-fast. He came to the surface and made one
-blind rush at the boat, but he missed and received
-the last iron fairly between the eyes.
-Then he began to go slowly away, following the
-flood tide, and towing both boats in through
-the breakers to the smooth water beyond. In
-a short time the motion ceased, and Samuels
-hauled in the lines until he was just over
-the body in two fathoms of water and clear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-of the surf on the bar. Then he turned his attention
-to his wounded comrade, and by great
-force pulled the long, barbed spine through the
-flesh of his thigh and sucked the wound. As
-the tide was flooding, they left the capsized boat
-fast to the devil on the bottom below, knowing it
-would not get far adrift, and made their way
-to the light, where the keeper’s wound was carefully
-cauterized and bound up.</p>
-
-<p>The great ray lay quiet for some time, his
-flukes acting as suckers to hold him down. Then,
-the feeling that his end was at hand coming
-gradually upon him, he fought against the
-deadly weakness of his wounds. Summing up
-all the remaining energy within his giant frame,
-he rose to the surface to make one last, desperate
-rally and annihilate the towing craft. He
-breached clear of the sea and fell with a resounding
-crash upon the fabric, smashing it
-completely. Then he tore it with his teeth and
-flung the splinters broadcast, reaching wildly
-for anything which looked like a human form.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-Then he suddenly stopped and a quiver passed
-through him. He gave a mighty smash with his
-flukes upon the remains of the boat, and then
-his life went out. He sank slowly down upon
-the clean sand below, and the ground-sharks of
-the reef came silently in to their feast.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="THE_SEA_DOG" title="The Sea Dog">THE SEA DOG</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_77" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.3125em;">
- <img src="images/i_079.jpg" width="421" height="584" alt="THE SEA DOG" />
- <div class="captionh">THE SEADOG</div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> was a yellow brute, mangy, lean, and
-treacherous-looking. He had been in
-two ships where dogs were not particularly
-liked by the officers, and the last one had
-gone ashore in the darkness during a northeast
-gale off the Frying Pan. How he had come
-ashore from the wreck was a detail beyond his
-reasoning. Here he was on the beach of North
-Carolina, and not one of his shipmates was left
-to take care of him.</p>
-
-<p>He had at first foraged among the bushes of
-beach myrtle and through the pine woods, stealing
-into the light-keeper’s yard at Bald Head
-during the hours of darkness, and rummaging
-through his garbage for a bit of food to keep
-the life within his mangy hide. He had now
-been ashore for nearly five months, and during<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-all that time he had shown an aversion to the
-light-keeper’s society. There was no other human
-habitation on the island, and the light-keeper
-had fired a charge of bird-shot at him on
-two occasions. This had not given him greater
-confidence in strangers, and that which he had
-had was of a suspicious kind, born and nurtured
-aboard ship, where a kick was the usual salutation.
-He was as sly as a wolf and as wild as a
-razor-back hog, for he had gradually fallen
-upon the resources of the wild animal, and his
-one thought was for himself.</p>
-
-<p>He had broken away into the night howling
-after the last reception by the light-keeper at the
-Bald Head tower, and sore and stiff he had
-crawled into the bushes to pick at the tiny
-pellets that stung so fiercely. In the future
-he would be more careful. He must watch.
-Eternal vigilance was the price for his worthless
-life. All the evil desires and instincts begotten
-through a line of rascally curs now began to
-grow within him. He would not repress them,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-for was it not manifest that he must exercise
-every selfish desire to its utmost if he would live?
-His eyes took on that wild, hunted look of the
-beast with whom all are at war, and his teeth
-showed fiercely at each and every sound. A
-sullen savageness of mind came upon him more
-and more every day, until after these months
-of wildness he had dropped back again into the
-natural state of his forefathers. He was a wild
-dog in every sense. As wild as the hogs who
-rooted through the pine woods or tore through
-the swamp, lean as deer and alert to every danger,
-the degenerates of the well-bred pigs of the
-early settlers.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes he would run along the edge of
-the beach in the sunlight and watch the surf, but
-even this was dangerous, for once the light-keeper
-happened to be out hunting and sent a
-rifle bullet singing past his ears. He broke for
-cover again, and seldom ventured forth except
-after the sun went down. In the daytime he
-would go slinking through the gloom of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-dense thickets with ears cocked and senses alert,
-watching like a wolf for the slightest sign of
-danger. A wolf is seldom seen unless he means
-to be, and the yellow dog soon became as retiring.</p>
-
-<p>Small game furnished food during this season,
-for the creeks swarmed with fish and crabs, which
-were often caught in shallows at low water, and
-gophers were plentiful, but sometimes when the
-wind was howling and soughing through the
-forest, and the rain rattling and whistling
-through the clearings, he would try the light-keeper’s
-back yard again, and grab a defenseless
-duck or goose that happened to be within reach.
-Their squawking was music to his ears, for he
-remembered the flash and stinging pain following
-his earlier attempts to procure food, and he
-would dash furiously through the timber with
-his prize, nor stop until many miles were between
-him and the bright eye that flamed high in
-the air above and could be seen fifteen miles or
-more up the beach. The lighthouse was an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-excellent guide for him in all kinds of weather,
-but it was especially useful on very dark and
-stormy nights. To him it meant a guide out of
-danger, even as it did to his earlier masters, and
-he soon learned to navigate by it.</p>
-
-<p>He grew more and more savage as his life in
-the wilderness went on, and as his savageness increased
-so likewise did his cunning.</p>
-
-<p>William Ripley, the light-keeper, and his assistant,
-were both good hunters. They had
-plenty of time during daylight to make long excursions
-along the beach, and through the pine
-woods, and they often brought home a hog or
-two. They were worried at the visits from the
-strange animal who left footprints like those of
-a dog, and who kept always well out of sight
-after his first visits, when a glimpse of yellow had
-flashed through the darkness, giving something
-tangible to fire at. They had seen the vessel
-come ashore on the outer shoals, some twelve
-miles away, and had seen her gradually break up
-without being able to lend a hand at saving her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-crew. Nothing had washed on the beach that
-had signs of life, and it had never occurred to
-them that a yellow dog had been a survivor of
-that tragedy. The wreck had been visited afterwards,
-and the vessel’s name discovered, but
-nothing was ever heard of the men who had
-manned her, and who had evidently gone to the
-port of missing ships. Their interest in the matter
-ended after getting a few fathoms of line
-and a bit of iron-work, and the shifting sands of
-the treacherous Frying Pan soon swallowed up
-all trace of the disaster.</p>
-
-<p>But ducks and geese were scarce and valuable.
-There was a thief abroad, and something must
-be done. The cold weather was approaching,
-and already frost had turned the leaves of some
-of the trees. Soon a slight fall of snow announced
-that winter was upon the coast in
-earnest.</p>
-
-<p>The cold was hard upon the outcast. His
-thin hair was but poor protection against the
-wind, and the food of the creeks was disappearing.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-He was getting more and more savage and
-desperate, and the great eye that shone above
-him through the blackness was attractive, for it
-showed where there lay plenty. Often, when the
-gale blew from the northward, and the weather
-was thick, the wild ducks and geese came rushing
-down the wind and headed for the eye that shone
-so brightly in the night. It had a peculiar dazzling
-fascination for them, and they would go
-driving at it with a rush of a hundred miles an
-hour, only to find too late that it was surrounded
-by a heavy wire net. Then, before they could
-swerve off, they were upon it with a terrific
-smash. Headlong into the iron meshes they
-would drive until, flattened and distorted lumps
-of flesh and feathers, they would go tumbling
-down to the ground beneath. In the morning
-the keeper would see traces of their feathers
-and sometimes a duck or two, but more often he
-saw the footprints of the strange animal that so
-resembled either a dog or wolf.</p>
-
-<p>“I reckon it’s about time we caught up with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-that un,” said Ripley, one morning; “there
-aint been no wolves around this here island sence
-I kin remember, an’ I’m bound to find out jest
-what kind o’ critter this one is. Why, what d’ye
-s’pose he done last night, hey?”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t ask me no riddles when I’m sleepy,”
-said the assistant.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, well, it’s no matter, then,” said Ripley,
-and he turned into the house.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, what?” asked the assistant.</p>
-
-<p>“The first thing he done was to eat the seat
-out’n your pants you left hangin’ on the line, but
-that’s no matter——”</p>
-
-<p>“What next?” asked the assistant, awakening
-a little.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, he chewed the uppers off’n your rubber
-boots, them ones you said cost five dollars——”</p>
-
-<p>“Name o’ sin, no! Did he? Where’s the
-gun, quick——”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on a bit. Wait a minute,” interrupted
-Ripley. “There aint no hurry about the case.
-I was jest a-sayin’——”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-“Go on,” said the assistant earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, then, don’t interrupt me no more.
-That blamed critter got old red-head by th’ neck
-an’ walked off with him, an’ there aint no better
-rooster ever been hatched. That’s erbout all.”</p>
-
-<p>“You kin hand me down the rifle,” said the assistant;
-“that critter or me leaves this here
-island, an’ that’s a fact.”</p>
-
-<p>The track led down the beach, and there was
-no trouble following it. The assistant started
-off at a swinging pace, determined to cover the
-distance between himself and the thief before
-midday.</p>
-
-<p>But the track soon led into the scrub and was
-lost. When it was taken up again it was a good
-half-mile farther down the shore. Here it swung
-along easily for a short distance until a heavy
-belt of timber was reached, and where the ground
-was hard and covered with pine-needles. There
-all trace of it was swallowed up as soon as it
-struck the pines. The assistant came home that
-evening a tired but no wiser man. That night<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-the outcast saw the man-tracks, and knew he had
-been followed, and the spirit of deviltry entered
-deeper into his pariah soul. He would make
-them sorry for his nightly visits. All were enemies
-to him, and the more harm he could do to
-everything alive the better it would be. Savagely
-he snarled at the footprints. As the moon
-rose he saw the beautiful light silvering the cold
-ocean, and it stirred something in his hard heart.
-He raised his nose high in the air and let forth a
-long howl of fierce defiance and wrath.</p>
-
-<p>Slinking through the darkening shadows of
-the forest, the outcast made his way to the clearing
-wherein the great eye rose above the ground
-to the height of a hundred feet or more. Here
-he halted upon the outer edge, where the thicket
-hid him in its black shadow. Then he raised his
-voice in such a prolonged howl that the fowls
-secured within the coops of the yard set up a
-vast cackling. He changed his position in time
-to avoid a charge of buckshot which tore through
-the thicket and rattled about the leaves beneath<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-the trees. Then he slunk away for a little while,
-only to return again and give vent to his feelings
-in a succession of yelping barks, such as had
-never disturbed the quiet of the island before.
-Another charge of shot rattled about him, but he
-was now far too wary to get hit, and his hatred
-was greater than his fear. It gave him a savage
-joy to listen to the crack of the gun or the
-sharper snap of the rifle, for he knew it worried
-the keeper to hear him and know he was near.
-Night after night he now came, and many were
-the shots fired at him, but all to no avail. He
-would do any mischief he could, and woe to any
-duck or chicken that came within his reach. His
-high, yelping howl resounded through the clearing
-and sounded above the dull roar of the surf,
-making night hideous to the keeper on watch in
-the light above.</p>
-
-<p>Once he caught a loose fowl, and its feathers
-were strewn about the yard. Again he found a
-string of fine fish the keeper had hung up for
-the night. They went the way of the ill-fated.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-His keen sense of smell told him many things the
-keepers did not wish him to know, and he managed
-to keep out of harm’s way.</p>
-
-<p>But this could not last. Ripley was an old
-hunter, and was not to be disturbed beyond reason.
-He brought out an old mink-trap, with
-steel jaws of great power, and he buried it in
-the sand on the edge of the clearing, smoothing
-the rumpled surface of the ground so that nothing
-showed, and strewing the place with dead
-leaves. Then he killed a sea-gull and dropped it
-almost directly over the steel jaws. The outcast
-would doubtless smell it and stop a moment to investigate.
-He had only to step upon the ground
-in the near vicinity and his leg would be instantly
-clasped in a steel embrace.</p>
-
-<p>The first night the keeper watched for him.
-It was very dark, and the cold north wind
-soughed through the pines, and the surf thundered.
-The cold made the keeper’s teeth chatter
-a little as he watched in silence from his place
-upon the outer rail of the tower. He had his rifle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-with him for a finish, should the trap take
-hold.</p>
-
-<p>The outcast came slinking along late that
-night. He was hungry and wet, and the light
-attracted him as it did always on particularly
-bad nights, for it stood for the mark of plenty,
-the only thing on the barren island that kept a
-glimmering of the past in his sullen mind. He
-noticed a peculiar smell as he skirted the fringe
-of the cover, and soon spied the dead gull. How
-came it there, was the question. Gulls did not
-die ashore. At least, he had never seen one. But
-he knew them in the air. There was something
-suspicious in the matter. Why should a gull be
-dead so close to the lighthouse? He began to
-investigate, and drew near the danger zone.</p>
-
-<p>But months of wildness had made him cunning.
-All the sly instincts of the races of animals
-from which he had sprung had been developing.
-He approached the bait slowly, barely
-moving, and touching the ground ever so lightly
-with his paws. Then he halted. No, it would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-not do. There was something wrong with that
-bird, showing like a bit of white in the darkness.
-He could smell it plainly. It was the scent of a
-man. He drew slowly off, and began nosing
-about for the trail, and soon found it. He followed
-along, and it led straight to the dwelling
-where the keeper lived. Then he went back a
-little way into the scrub and sat upon his
-haunches, and, in spite of his cold and hunger,
-he lifted up his voice in a long, dismal howl, that
-to the keeper’s ears had an unmistakable ring of
-derision.</p>
-
-<p>Night after night the trap was set, but the
-pariah kept clear. Then, one day, it grew thick,
-and a cold wind began setting in from the sea.
-Before night it was howling and snoring away
-with hurricane force, driving the seas roaring up
-the sands, and tearing their tops into smothers
-of snowy spume drift.</p>
-
-<p>The pariah came to the beach and tried to
-look seaward to see what was coming with that
-fearful rushing blast, but the wind was so strong<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-and the snow so blinding that he soon took to the
-cover, and headed for the light, in the hope he
-might pick up something to eat in the vicinity of
-the keeper’s dwelling. Before going to the yard
-he looked again seaward and saw a light flash
-out. He did not know what it meant, but he
-knew it was off on the Frying Pan, far out on
-the treacherous shoals where a thundering
-smother of rolling whiteness flashed and gleamed
-now and again. Then he skirted the clearing,
-and brought up back of the fowl-house, where
-now all the ducks and chickens were secured at
-night.</p>
-
-<p>He went forward, trying to smell his way,
-but the snow was too much for him. Then he
-stopped a moment. He located the house and
-started again, when suddenly, “Snap!”</p>
-
-<p>Something had leaped from the ground and
-seized his foreleg in a viselike grip. He sprang
-forward and fought to get away, but it was of
-no use. The thing had him fast with an awful
-grasp that cut into his flesh and squeezed his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-leg so tight that it soon became numb. With
-snarling growls, he fought desperately on, twisting
-and turning, struggling and biting, but all
-to no purpose. He was fast. Then the state of
-affairs began to dawn upon him, and he desisted,
-for the agony was supreme. Sitting there in the
-flying snow of the winter’s night, with the roar
-of the storm sounding over him, he raised his
-voice in a long, yelping bark of challenge and
-disdain.</p>
-
-<p>But in spite of his howling no one came near
-him. The snow grew deeper and the wind roared
-with terrific force, blinding him so that the great
-eye above was scarcely visible. He remained
-quiet now, and waited patiently for the daylight,
-which would mean his end. His sufferings were
-terrible, but he could not help it, and soon a sullen
-stupor came upon him.</p>
-
-<p>In the dim gray of the early morning forms
-were seen walking about the lighthouse. They
-were men, and among them was the keeper. The
-others wore clothes that reminded the pariah of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
-former days, and one stranger seemed to be familiar
-to him. This was a man, short, broad, and
-bearded, with bow legs set wide apart, and long
-arms with huge hands and crooked fingers. He
-was ugly, and reminded him of the crabs he had
-seen and captured in the streams during the summer.
-There was something of the crab about
-the queer little fellow, and his very ugliness attracted
-the dog’s attention. It brought back
-some memory of past days, a memory that was
-not all unpleasant, yet indistinct and unreal.</p>
-
-<p>As the day dawned and the snow grew deeper
-the outcast waited no longer. He held up his
-nose and let forth a howl that was heard above
-the snore of the gale, and which brought the
-light-keeper to attention. He came running
-with a club, and behind him followed the stranger
-with the crablike body.</p>
-
-<p>“Sink me if I aint got ye at last, ye varmint!”
-yelled the keeper as he drew near. Then
-he halted. “A dog—what—jest a common
-everyday dog? But I’ll make a good dog out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-o’ ye in a minute. All dead dogs is good dogs,
-an’ you’ll do.”</p>
-
-<p>He advanced with raised club, and the pariah
-crouched for a spring. He would try for one
-last good bite. All the savageness of his mixed
-blood surged through his fierce mind. He gave
-a low growl and showed his teeth, and his eyes
-were like bits of yellow flame.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold on thar, stranger; don’t kill that ’ar
-dog. Wait a bit,” said the ugly man, waddling
-up behind. “What, caught ’im in a trap?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sure I got him in a trap. D’ye want me to
-loose him?” asked the keeper testily.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s erbout the size o’ my games,” said
-the ugly man. “Yew may think it a go, but
-that ’ar dog looks uncommon like the one I lost
-aboard the <i>Seagull</i> when she went ashore hereabouts
-last year. He ware a good dog, part
-wolf, part hound, and the rest a mixture I don’t
-exactly remember. Lemme try ’im?”</p>
-
-<p>“Gwan, man; that critter is been stealin’
-chickens since last summer,” said the keeper, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-at the same time he allowed the ugly fellow to
-have his way.</p>
-
-<p>“Hey, Sammy, Sammy, Sammy!” said the
-ugly sailor. “Don’t yew know me, Sammy?”
-And he bent forward toward him.</p>
-
-<p>The pariah gazed at him. What did he
-mean? What was that voice? It sounded like
-that of the man who had brought him aboard
-the vessel he had gone ashore in. The only human
-who had never struck him or offered him
-harm. He hardly remembered the ugly fellow,
-for he had only been in the ship a short time
-before she was lost.</p>
-
-<p>“Strange, that looks like the critter sure
-enough. I went ashore here in the <i>Seagull</i> a
-year ago, an’ here I goes ashore agin in this
-howlin’ wind an’ sees the dog I lost. Strange,
-keeper, it’s strange, hey?”</p>
-
-<p>“He do appear to know ye, an’ that’s a fact,”
-said the keeper. “Would ye like me to loose him
-off? Better do it afore the assistant comes down,
-fer he’s got it in fer this dog.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-“Wait a bit,” said the ugly fellow, and he
-advanced closer to the outcast. He put out his
-hand, and the dog wavered. Should he seize it?
-He could crush it and tear it badly in his teeth
-before he could withdraw it, and they would
-probably kill him anyway in the end. But there
-was something in the ugly man’s eye that restrained
-him—something that spoke of former
-times when all was not strife. No, he would not
-bite him.</p>
-
-<p>“Turn the critter loose; he’s my dog fer
-sure,” said the ugly man. “All he wants is
-some grub. I reckon yew’d be savage, too, if yew
-had been out in the snow all night. I knows
-I ware when I come in half drowned this
-mornin’.”</p>
-
-<p>The keeper pried the trap open and the cur
-went free.</p>
-
-<p>“Come, Sammy, Sammy, Sammy!” said the
-ugly fellow, and he led the way to the house.</p>
-
-<p>The pariah hesitated. His foot was useless,
-but he could go on three legs. There was the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-timber a short distance away. He looked at it
-for an instant. Then he saw the ugly man beckoning
-with his great crooked finger. He lowered
-his head and gave a short whine. Then he
-limped slowly after him to the house.</p>
-
-<p>A little later the ugly man fed him and bound
-up the wounded paw, while the assistant mumbled
-something about rubber boots and breeches worth
-about seven dollars a pair.</p>
-
-<p>“Messmates,” said the ugly sailor, shifting
-his crablike body and sticking out his great
-bushy face with its red beard, “that ’ar dog
-ware a good dog, part wolf, part hound, an’ the
-rest I don’t exactly recollect, but he ware a good
-dog. Treat a dog good an’ he’ll be a good dog.
-Treat ’im bad an’ he’ll be a bad dog. When ye
-go erbout more among men, as I does, yew’ll see
-that what I says is so. An’ men is mostly like
-dogs.”</p>
-
-<p>The assistant kept quiet, for there was something
-peculiarly aggressive in that misshapen
-man. The animal was led away with a string,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-and went in the boat to Wilmington with the
-wrecked crew.</p>
-
-<p>Two years later another ship was added to the
-list of those whose bones rest in the sands of the
-Frying Pan Shoals. She ran on the outer
-breaker during the night, and in the morning
-the keeper saw a floating object on the shore.
-He went to it and found the body of a man whose
-peculiar figure he recognized. A life-buoy was
-strapped about his waist, and in his great
-crooked fingers was a line. The keeper hauled
-it in, and on the end of it he found the dead
-body of the yellow beast that had stolen his fowls.
-They had gone to their end together.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="THE_CAPE_HORNERS" title="The Cape Horners">THE CAPE HORNERS</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_101" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.9375em;">
- <img src="images/i_103.jpg" width="431" height="592" alt="THE CAPE HORNERS" />
- <div class="captionh">THE CAPE HORNERS</div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">To</span> the southward of where the backbone
-of the western hemisphere dips beneath
-the sea rises a group of ragged, storm-swept
-crags and peaks,—the wild rocks of the
-Diego Ramirez. Past them flows the current of
-the great Antarctic Drift, sweeping from the
-father of all oceans—the vast South Pacific,—away
-to the eastward, past the bleak pinnacles of
-Cape Horn, to disperse itself through the Lemaire
-Strait and Falkland Channel northward
-into the Atlantic Ocean.</p>
-
-<p>With the wild snore of the great west wind
-sounding over them, and the chaotic thunder of
-the Pacific Ocean falling upon their sides, they
-are lonely and inhospitable, and are seldom, if
-ever, visited by man. Only now and then he sees
-them, when the wind-jammer fighting to go past<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-the last corner gets driven close in to the land of
-fire. Then, on some bleak and dreary morning,
-when the west wind is roaring through downhaul
-and clewline and under the storm topsails, the
-heavy drift may break away for a few minutes
-and show the wary navigator a glimpse of the
-death-trap under his lee that will add a few gray
-hairs to his head, and bring the watch below
-tumbling on deck to man the braces.</p>
-
-<p>Bare of vegetation and desolate as they are,
-the rocks are inhabited. To the leeward of the
-great Cape Horn sea that crashes upon them,
-the ledges and shelves are full of life. In the
-shelter, the strange forms sit and gaze seaward,
-peering this way and that, squawking and scolding
-in hoarse voices that might be heard above
-the surf-thunder. They appear like great geese
-sitting on their tails, for they sit upright, their
-feet being placed well down on their long bodies,
-giving them a grotesque look that is sometimes
-absurdly human.</p>
-
-<p>They have no wings,—only little rudiments<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-covered with fine hairlike feathers that serve as
-side fins when swimming. They never flap them,
-as do their cousins, the Cape pigeons and albatrosses.
-In fact, their bodies are covered with
-short, close, hairlike feathers, very minute, seldom
-wider than a pencil’s point, and lying tight
-to the skin, like scales on a fish. These figures
-have birdlike heads, not unlike those of diver-ducks,
-and they have beautiful black eyes, with
-red rings around them. They are the creatures
-that hold sway over the barren crags, waddling
-and walking about in their absurd way until a
-great man-seal shows his bristling whiskers close
-to the ledge. Then they gave forth the loud,
-long-drawn, wild cry that is so well known to
-the Cape Horner, waddle to the brink, plunge
-headlong into the sea, and disappear.</p>
-
-<p>They are the penguins of the southern zone,
-half bird, half fish, and, one might say, half human,
-to judge by their upright waddle on their
-webbed feet.</p>
-
-<p>The one whose story is now to be told was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-hatched on the Ramirez, high above the lift of
-the Cape sea, and beyond the reach of straying
-seals.</p>
-
-<p>He belonged to a brood of three, and first
-saw the light a little after New Year’s Day, or
-midsummer there. There was no sheltering nest
-to guard him against the bleak wind, which is
-nearly as cold in summer as in winter. He came
-into the world on a bare rock and announced himself
-by a strange, chirping sound that caused his
-mother to waddle off a few feet and gaze at him
-in astonishment. He was followed by his two
-brothers, and, within a very short time, showed
-an inclination to follow his parent down the ledge
-and into the dark water where the kelp weed
-floated in sheltered spots between the rocks. He
-was but a fluffy ball, of the size of a baby’s fist,
-but he stood with dignity upon his short legs
-and labored over the rough places, sometimes
-falling and rolling over a step in the rock until,
-with a splash, he landed in the sea.</p>
-
-<p>At last! That was the place he was meant for.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
-How fine it was to scull one’s self furiously along
-the surface and then suddenly dive and go shooting
-through the depths, coming up again to see
-if his parent were at hand; for, in spite of the delightful
-novelty of life, there was within him a
-strange feeling of fear, something that made
-him seek his mother’s side continually. The
-heavy snore of the great Cape Horn sea, breaking
-to windward of the rocks, sounded a deep
-note of menace, a warning of the fierce, wild
-world in which only the hardiest could hope to
-survive, and yet it seemed to tell of a power that
-ruled his destiny.</p>
-
-<p>His brothers swam near, and he was joined by
-countless myriads of other birds. With penguins,
-strength ashore exists solely in numbers,
-and the bare cliffs must be covered with sturdy
-birds ready to snap and strike fiercely with their
-strong, sharp beaks at each and every intruder,
-if they would have security. Woe to the albatross
-or mollemoke that attempts a landing on
-the sacred shore! He will be met by an army of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-powerful birds walking erect as soldiers and stabbing
-and biting with incredible power.</p>
-
-<p>Soon this young one’s downy feathers hardened.
-They did not grow like those of an ordinary
-bird. They were hardened almost to bone,
-and pressed so stiff against his skin that it would
-be difficult to distinguish them from the scales
-of a rockfish or a cod. His wings were no more
-than flippers, exactly like those of a turtle, and
-were without a bending joint at the pinion.
-They were devoid of feathers also, but, as he
-would never use them in the air, this made it all
-the better. They could scull him along faster
-under the sea. Already he could go fast enough
-to catch any fish in the vicinity, and, as for the
-great seals, they simply amused him with their
-clumsy attempts to catch him. On land he could
-hop about on his short legs, but he preferred the
-water for safety, and seldom took to the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>During this period of his life he kept well with
-the crowd of companions about him. Even the
-albatrosses, the huge destroyers, kept their distance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-for, as they would swoop down in great
-circles near the young birds, they would meet an
-almost solid phalanx of screaming and snapping
-beaks, and would sweep about in giant curves
-until, seeing no chance to rush in, they would
-stand out to sea again and disappear.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually, as the months passed, the older
-penguins began to scatter. Some went farther
-and farther off shore, until, at length, when the
-cold July sun swept but a small arc of a circle
-above the horizon, they left the rocks and faced
-the wild ocean that sweeps past the Horn. Our
-young one now felt a desire to roam with the rest,
-and, one day, when the snore of the gale droned
-over the barren lumps, bringing thick squalls of
-sleet and snow, he put out into the open sea and
-headed away for the Strait of Magellan.</p>
-
-<p>Away through the dark water he went, his
-feeling of loneliness increasing as the land disappeared.
-The very majesty of that great waste
-of rolling sea impressed him, and an instinctive
-longing to realize what it meant came over him.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-He raised his head into the air and gave forth a
-long, deep, sonorous cry; but the dark ocean
-made no answer, the only sound being the distant
-noise of some combing crest that broke and rolled
-away to the southward. There was not a living
-thing in sight.</p>
-
-<p>Through the gloom he made his way with the
-feeling of adventure growing. He kept a lookout
-for small fish, and repeatedly dived to a great
-depth, but, even down there, where the light
-failed entirely, there was nothing. Only once
-during the day did he see anything alive, and
-this was after hours of swimming. A dark object
-showed upon the slope of a swell. It looked
-like a triangular knife-blade, and cut the water
-easily, while the dark shadow beneath the surface
-appeared almost as inert as a log or a piece
-of wreckage. The penguin drew nearer to it to
-investigate, for one of his strongest feelings was
-a desire to find out about things. Then the object
-drew toward him and appeared to be drifting
-to meet him. Suddenly there was a rush<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-through the water. The protruding fin ripped
-the surface of the rolling swell, and, as it came on
-the forward slope, the penguin saw a pair of
-enormous jaws opening in front of him, while a
-row of teeth showed white in the dark water. He
-made a sudden swerve aside and missed the opening
-by a hair’s breadth. Before the shark could
-turn to pursue him, he dived and set off at a
-great rate of speed below the surface, and was
-soon out of the way. He had learned to look for
-danger wherever he might meet another such
-peculiar-shaped object, and the lesson would be
-of use, for there is no sea where sharks are not
-found.</p>
-
-<p>Between Terra del Fuego and Staten Land
-lies the narrow water of Lemaire Strait.
-Through this channel the current rushes with incredible
-speed, swirling around the reefs and
-foaming over the sunken ledges that line the
-shore. The tussock-covered hills of barren
-shingle form a background so bleak and uninhabited
-that many of the large sea fowl find it safe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-to trust themselves upon the cliffs where nothing
-may approach from shoreward to take them unawares.
-The rocks are covered with weed, and
-plenty of whale-food drifts upon them, so that
-there is always a supply for winter. There the
-penguin landed after days of cruising, and
-waddled on shore for the first time since leaving
-the place of his birth.</p>
-
-<p>To the westward, across the strait, the fires
-from the hills where the savages dwelt shone in
-the gloom of the twilight. They were attractive,
-and often he would sit and watch them in the
-growing gloom of the long winter evenings after
-he had come ashore from a day’s fishing, wondering
-at the creatures who made them. The light
-was part of his mental enjoyment, and sometimes,
-after looking for an hour or more, he
-would raise his head, which had a long, sharp
-beak, and, with lungs full of air, let forth a wild,
-lonely cry. For days and days he would come
-and go, seeing no companions save the raucous
-whale-birds who would come in on the rock and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-who had no sympathy with his fishing. They
-were mere parasites, and depended upon the
-great animals to show them their food.</p>
-
-<p>As the months passed and the sun began to
-stay longer above the horizon, he became more
-and more lonesome. A longing for companionship
-came upon him, and he would sit and gaze
-at the fires across the strait until he gave vent
-to his feelings with his voice.</p>
-
-<p>One day, when the sun shone brightly, he came
-upon the ledge and rested. He was not very
-tired, but the sun was warm and the bright rays
-were trying to his eyes after the long gloom of
-the winter. The ragged mountains stood up
-clearly from across the strait, but the fires would
-not shine in the sunlight. He stood looking for
-a time, and then broke forth into a long-drawn
-call. To his astonishment an answering note
-came sounding over the water. He repeated his
-cry and listened. From far away in the sunshine
-a weird cry was wafted across the sea. It
-thrilled him. He was not afraid, for the cry was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-one of yearning, and he wanted companionship.
-He sat and waited until he saw a small object
-on the rise of a swell. It came nearer, and then
-he saw it was one of his own race, and dived into
-the sea and went to meet the stranger.</p>
-
-<p>How smooth was the newcomer’s coat and how
-white the breast! He looked the female over
-critically, and a strange feeling of companionship
-pervaded his being. Then he went toward
-her and greeted her, sidling up and rubbing his
-head against her soft neck and swimming around
-her in circles. The sun shone brightly and the
-air was warm. The very joy of life was in him,
-and he stretched forth his head and called and
-called to the ledges and reefs, sea and sky, to
-bear witness that he would no longer live alone,
-but would thenceforth take the beautiful
-stranger with him and protect her. He climbed
-upon the ledge, she following, and, proud as a
-peacock, strutted back and forth in his enjoyment
-of her good will and comradeship.</p>
-
-<p>They strayed about the rocks and swam in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-sheltered places among the reefs for a few days,
-but a desire to go into the great world to the
-southward and make a snug home for the coming
-summer began to make him restless. The warm
-sunshine made life a joy in spite of the thick
-coating of fat and feathers, and the high cliffs of
-Tierra del Fuego seemed to offer a tempting
-abode for the warmer months. His pretty companion
-shared his joy, and also his desire to go
-out into the great sea to the southward and find
-a suitable place on some rock or ledge where
-they could make a home.</p>
-
-<p>They started off shore one morning and swam
-side by side for many leagues, skirting the sheer
-and dangerous Horn and meeting many more
-couples who, like themselves, were looking for a
-suitable place for a summer sojourn while the
-bright sun should last. They met a vast crowd
-of their kind making an inner ledge of the Ramirez
-their stopping-place, and there they halted.
-It was pleasant to be sociable when united to a
-proud companion, and they went among the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-throng until they found a place on the rocks
-where they could climb ashore easily. Our friend
-led the way up the slope and found a level spot
-among the stones where his mate could sit and
-be near the tide. She would lay her eggs
-there, and he would take care that she fared
-well.</p>
-
-<p>Weeks passed and two white shells shone in
-marked contrast to the surrounding stones and
-gravel. His mate had laid two beautiful eggs,
-and her care for them kept him busy fishing for
-two. Yet he was very happy. He would make
-short trips to the outlying reef and seize a fish.
-Then he would hurry home with it, and together
-they would eat it while his mate sat calmly upon
-the eggs, keeping them warm and waiting for
-the first “peep” to show the entrance into this
-world of her firstborn. All about, the other
-couples had their nests, consisting only of the
-bare stones, for there was no drift or weed out
-there to use, and they sat in great numbers close
-enough to call to each other in case a marauding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-albatross or mollemoke should come in from the
-sea and try to steal eggs.</p>
-
-<p>Day after day he fished and brought his mate
-the spoils, often sitting on the eggs himself while
-she took a plunge into the cold water for exercise
-and change. He was satisfied and the world
-was bright with the joy of life.</p>
-
-<p>One day his mate waddled quickly from the
-nest. Where before there had been two shining
-white eggs, two little yellow puff-balls lay on the
-stones, and they made a noise that showed him
-his offspring were strong and healthy young
-ones. He strutted up and down the ledge, proud
-and straight, while his mate gave forth cries of
-satisfaction and nestled down again to give the
-delicate little ones shelter. He almost forgot to
-go fishing, and only a call from his patient mate
-recalled him to the fact that she must be fed.
-He stepped down the rocks, and, as he dived into
-the sea, cried aloud for joy.</p>
-
-<p>Out near the Ramirez the fish were playing in
-the sunshine. He made his way thither, his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-breast high with the happiness of his existence.
-Other fowl were there fishing. He joined them,
-but gave no heed to a long object that came
-slowly over the water from the land of fire. It
-headed toward the cliffs where the sea fowl dwelt,
-and two half-naked savages propelled it with
-paddles. They were hunting for eggs, and the
-rocks offered a tempting place to land, for the
-great crowd of birds told plainly of the summer
-breeding-place. They ran the canoe into a sheltered
-spot among the rocks where the heave of
-the sea was slight, and then sprang ashore. Up
-they climbed and stood upon the level where the
-penguin females sat and called wildly for their
-mates.</p>
-
-<p>A savage stooped and began gathering eggs,
-pushing away the birds or knocking them on the
-head with a stick, when, with their sharp beaks,
-they protested against the robbery. He was a
-horribly filthy fellow, and his ugly body was
-partly covered with skins of birds and sealskin.
-He noticed a female sitting close, calling to our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
-penguin for help, and the bird seemed to be very
-fine and large, with a good skin. He made a
-pass with his club and smote her on the head.
-She struggled desperately to get away, but could
-not. The blow partly stunned her. The little
-ones scurried off as she rose, and the savage saw
-there were no eggs to be had from her. But he
-would have her skin anyway, so, with a furious
-stroke of his weapon, he knocked her lifeless at
-his feet. Then he picked her up and went on.</p>
-
-<p>Later in the afternoon the male came back
-from fishing. He climbed the cliffs and looked
-about him. His mate and young were missing,
-and he sent forth his deep, sonorous cry. But
-it was not answered. Other birds took it up,
-but there was no answering call from the mate,
-and the little dark speck that rose and fell upon
-the heave of the swell away in toward the shore
-of Tierra del Fuego gave no token of her fate.</p>
-
-<p>All night he wandered over the rocks, his wild
-note of calling sounding far out to sea. In the
-morning he stood once more upon the spot where,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-a few days before, the mate of his bosom sat
-proudly upon the white eggs. The empty shells
-were all that were left. He stood gazing out
-to sea, and then his instinct told him he would
-see his family no more. He gave one long-drawn
-cry, plunged into the sea, and was gone. The
-great west wind came roaring over the sea before
-the sun set, and before it he held his way. He
-would go far away from the scene of his summer’s
-life. The vast ocean would be his home,
-and the memories of the ledge be a thing of the
-past.</p>
-
-<p>For many days the penguin roamed over the
-huge rolling hills of water. The vastness of the
-ocean and its grandeur soothed him, though he
-still called out at intervals when the sadness of
-his life was strong upon him. Then came a day
-when sea and sky seemed to blend in one wild
-whirl, and a hurricane from the high, ragged
-hills of Patagonia swept the Antarctic Drift.
-Away he went before it, and the wildness of it
-was joy, the deepening roar of the wind and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-crash of Cape combers making music for his
-spirit. He headed for the middle of the current
-between the land where the Pacific flows through
-and meets the western ocean, the stretch of sea
-that reaches away past the South Shetlands to
-the south pole.</p>
-
-<p>How wild and lonely was the storm-swept sea!
-Great hills of rolling water, fifty feet in height,
-with stately and majestic rush, passed to the eastward,
-their tops crowned with huge white combing
-crests and their sides streaked and flecked
-with long stripes of white foam. Above, the
-dull banks of hurtling vapor flew wildly away to
-somewhere in the distance, far beyond the reach
-of vision. It was more comfortable beneath the
-surface than above it, and our penguin drove
-headlong before the sea two fathoms below the
-foam, only coming up once in a while to breathe.
-On and on he drove for hours, until hunger
-warned him to keep a lookout for fish, as he occasionally
-came up for air, and to see if there were
-signs of the oily surface denizens showing in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-sweep of that great, lonely sea. Suddenly an
-object attracted his attention. It was a mere
-speck on the storm-torn horizon, but he knew
-it must be of considerable size. It was different
-from anything he had ever before seen, for above
-it three long, tapering sticks stood upward, and
-upon the middle one a strip of white, like the
-wing of an albatross, caught the weight of the
-wild west wind. He was interested, and drove
-along toward it until the object loomed high
-above him, and the deep snore of the gale
-sounded like a heavy roaring comber tearing
-through the many lines of the rigging and under
-the strip of white canvas. The great thing
-would rise upon the crest of a giant wave and
-fling its long, pointed end high into the gale,
-the rushing sea striking it and smashing over in
-a white smother like the surge on the rocks.
-Then down it would swing slowly until it would
-reach the hollow between the moving hills, and
-the penguin could see upon its body, its tall sticks
-rolling to windward and the roar of the gale<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span>
-deepening into a thunderous, rushing sound,
-until the advancing sea would lift it again and
-roll it toward the lee. The sight of the huge
-monster wallowing about, hardly making the
-slightest way through the water, interested the
-penguin. It seemed like a floating rock without
-life, and he felt a curiosity to know if it were
-alive. He rose partly from the sea and uttered
-a long-drawn, hoarse call that floated down the
-gale and swept over the great hulk. Nothing
-happened, and he repeated the call,—a far-reaching,
-wild, deep, resonant cry.</p>
-
-<p>But the great ship swung along slowly, as before,
-and he dived under her to see what was
-below.</p>
-
-<p>In the forecastle the dim light of the summer
-day made a dismal and cheerless scene. The
-watch below had turned in, all standing, their
-wet clothes wrapped about them in their “pews,”
-or bunks, making a vapor in the cold air
-through which the light of the swinging lamp
-shone dimly. The gray light from outside filtered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-in at the side ports and spoke of the cold,
-hard day on deck. Once in a while some shivering
-wretch would turn in his poultice of soaking
-flannel and get a fresh piece of icy-cold cloth
-against his skin that would call forth maledictions
-on the Horn, the weather, and the hove-to
-ship. In a corner of the forecastle a pile of
-soaking clothes moved, and a moan sounded above
-the noise without.</p>
-
-<p>“Stow it, Sammy; you’ll be all right soon,
-my boy,” said a voice in a bunk above him.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but it’s so cold, Tom,” whispered the
-pile of clothes. “I can’t last much longer, and
-they might let me die warm, at least.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the little man sayin’?” asked a deep
-voice opposite. “Wants to die warm, does he?
-Say, Sammy, me son, you’ll be warm mighty
-soon after you’re dead; why in thunder don’t you
-put up with a bit o’ cold till then, boy?”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a blamed brute, bos’n,” said the first
-speaker, “an’ if I wa’n’t mighty well used up
-I’d soak you a good whanging for that. Yer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-know the poor boy’s sick wid scurvy, an’ aint
-likely to pull through.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll ware ye out when th’ watch is called, yer
-preacher,” said the bos’n confidently. “Talk
-away, for you’ll only get it all the worse when
-I shucks my dunnage.” Then, as if the matter
-were settled, he snugged up in his soaking bunk
-and hove down to warm a piece of his steaming
-covering until it should cease to send a chill
-through his big frame and he could wander into
-dreamland.</p>
-
-<p>The shivering form of the boy in the corner
-moved again, and he groaned in agony. It was
-useless for him to try to sleep with his limbs
-swollen and his flesh almost bursting with the
-loathsome disease. The pile of wet clothes upon
-him could not keep him warm, and each shiver
-sent agony through him. He would die unless
-he could get relief soon, and there the ship was
-off the Horn in June, the beginning of winter,
-without one chance in fifty of making port in less
-than two months.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-In his half-delirious state he lived many of
-his early schooldays again, and then followed
-thoughts of those who were nearest to him. He
-must die. His grave must be in that great, dark
-void beneath. Oh, the loneliness of that great
-ocean! What would it be like far below in the
-blackness of the vast deep, beyond the heave of
-the great sea, in the very bosom of the great
-world of silence? The horror of it caused him
-to groan. Would anyone punish the cruel ship-owners
-and captain who had so foully murdered
-him with the cheap and filthy food? What would
-anyone care after he had gone? What would
-he care, away down in that everlasting blackness,
-where no one would ever see him again? He lay
-upon his back and stared with red and swollen
-eyes at the bunk above him where Tom, the quartermaster,
-snored loud enough to be heard above
-the dull, thunderous roar overhead. In another
-hour the watch must turn out, but they would
-let him lie by; him, a dying ship’s-boy. But
-would he die outright? Would his soul live down<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-there in that awful blackness, where they must
-soon heave his body? He had heard of sailors’
-spirits haunting ships. Could his do so? Was
-there a hideous devil below waiting for him?
-He had heard there was. Far down in the bottomless
-abyss some monster might await him.
-He gazed with staring eyes at the dim lamp, and
-longed for a little light and sunshine to relieve
-the terrible gloom of the Antarctic winter day.</p>
-
-<p>Then there broke upon his ears a wild, sonorous,
-deep-drawn cry sounding over the storm-swept
-sea. It was not human. What was it?
-Was it for him? The thought made him sick
-with terror. He groaned aloud, and Tom turned
-over in his wet clothes until the sudden chill of
-moving from the one steaming place made him
-grumble audibly.</p>
-
-<p>“What was it, Tom?” he whispered.</p>
-
-<p>“What?” growled the sailor surlily.</p>
-
-<p>“There——” and the cry was repeated.</p>
-
-<p>Tom growled a little and then rolled snug
-again. Suddenly he started up. “A man<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-might as well freeze to death on deck as in this
-unholy frozen hole,” he said. Then he climbed
-stiffly down from his bunk, clapped his sou’wester
-on his head, and, tying the flaps snug under his
-chin, he slid back the forecastle door with a bang,
-and landed on the main deck.</p>
-
-<p>There he stood a minute watching the great
-fabric straining under her lower maintopsail,
-hove to in that sea that the Cape Horner knows
-so well and dreads so much. In the waist, the
-foam on deck told of a flood of icy water that
-poured again and again over the topgallant rail
-and crashed like a Niagara upon the deck planks,
-rushing to leeward through the ports in the bulwarks
-and carrying everything movable along
-with it.</p>
-
-<p>He watched his chance, and dodged around the
-corner of the deck house, where the port watch
-huddled to keep clear of the wind and the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>“Merry Fourth o’ July to ye,” bawled a man
-of the watch, as he came among them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-“What’s the matter? Can’t ye find enough
-work to do whin yer turn comes?” asked another.</p>
-
-<p>“Where’s the whale-iron?” asked Tom, of
-Chips, who had come out of his room to get a
-look around.</p>
-
-<p>The carpenter looked at him queerly. “What
-d’ye want wid it?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Listen!” said Tom.</p>
-
-<p>Then the cry of the sea fowl sounded again.</p>
-
-<p>“Penguin?” said Chips.</p>
-
-<p>“Turkey,” said Tom, with a smile. “If we
-can get the steward to give us a bit o’ salt pork
-fat we can git him, or I’m a soger.”</p>
-
-<p>He was an old whaleman, and the carpenter
-hesitated no longer. He led the way into his
-room in the forward house where he kept his
-tools, and the iron was brought forth. A word
-to the mate on watch, and the sailor was fast in
-the lee forerigging, standing upon the shear-pole,
-with the iron ready to heave. The fat was
-tossed over the side, and he waited.</p>
-
-<p>In the dark, cold hole of the forecastle the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-drawn lips of the sick boy were parted, showing
-his blue and swollen gums. He was grinning
-horribly. “Take him away. Oh, take him
-away!” he was moaning. “Hear him a-callin’
-me? Don’t let him get me, Tom; take him
-away, take him away! It’s the devil callin’
-me!”</p>
-
-<p>All the fear and anguish that can burn
-through a disordered brain was upon the little
-fellow, and the dismal cry lent a reality to his
-delirious thoughts. Suddenly he half rose in
-his bunk, and then the latent spark of manhood,
-which was developing even in spite of his sufferings,
-came to his aid. He thought of the Great
-Power which ruled his fate, and shook himself
-into full consciousness, glancing up at the aperture
-through which the dim light filtered as if
-he half expected to see a vision that would give
-him strength. Then he felt that he would face
-the end calmly, and meet whatever was in store
-as a man should. Perhaps the captain and
-owners could not help matters, after all. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span>
-could hear the song of the gale more distinctly,
-and once the tramp of the men as they tailed
-onto the maintopsail brace. They were jamming
-the yard hard on the backstay, and there
-was no show of a slant yet. He must lie quiet
-and wait, listening to the weird cry that caused
-him to shiver and see fantastic figures upon the
-carlines above his head.</p>
-
-<p>Out on the great, high-rolling sea, the penguin
-had scented a peculiar substance. He drew
-nearer the great fabric that rolled and swung
-so loggily on the sea. He sent forth a wild cry,
-and drove headlong after a piece of white matter
-that floated in the foam of the side wash. He
-seized it and swallowed it. Then he came closer.</p>
-
-<p>A form stood in the rigging above him, motionless,
-as if made of wood, and a long, pointed
-thing was balanced in the air. A piece of fat
-showed right beneath, and he went for it, in spite
-of the feeling of dread that came upon him. He
-was hungry, and would snatch it and then get
-away. He reached it, and at that instant something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
-struck him in the back, carrying him beneath
-the surface. Then his life went out.</p>
-
-<p>“A fine turkey, an’ that’s a fact,” said Chips,
-a moment later. “Get something to put him
-in, quick; the lad will have a stew, fer sure.
-’Twill well-nigh cure him, and, anyways, it’ll
-keep him a-goin’ until we speak a wessel fer fresh
-grub.”</p>
-
-<p>The second mate came forward.</p>
-
-<p>“Eight bells, ye starbowlines,” he bawled into
-the forecastle; “turn out, or I’ll be right in there
-wid ye! One o’ ye bring Sammy’s mess things.
-He’s got turkey fer dinner. Come, wake up,
-sonny! There aint no devil or nothin’ a-chasin’
-ye. Ye’ll be all right in a week o’ Sundays.
-Bring that beef juice right in here, Chips. Hold
-his head, Tom,—there,—make him drink it while
-it’s hot.”</p>
-
-<p>In a little while the hot broth made from the
-bird’s flesh warmed the boy’s body, and his mind
-was clear again. The forecastle was empty,
-and the wild cry he had heard no longer sounded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-above the gale. He felt stronger, and his terror
-had vanished. A feeling of ease grew within his
-poisoned body. A gleam of faint sunlight came
-through the open door, and as he looked he knew
-that the God he felt had given him strength had
-been kind. He knew no prayer, or word of
-thanks, but his spirit was warm with gratitude.
-He smiled his thanks at his shipmates, and closed
-his eyes. Then he slept.</p>
-
-<p>A crowd of swearing and jostling men awakened
-him as they came tumbling below some
-hours afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>“Grub ahoy!” bawled one. Then the mess-kid
-came in steaming from the galley, and upon
-it was a large fowl.</p>
-
-<p>“Hi, yi, turkey, ahoy! Turkey, ’e was a
-good old man!” cried a Swede.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ divil a bit will anyone but th’ bye git,”
-said the big bos’n. “It’s sorry I am, Thomas,
-me dear, that I have tew whang ye afther yer
-noble raid on ther poulthry.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="THE_LOGGERHEAD" title="The Loggerhead">THE LOGGERHEAD</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_135" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 23.125em;">
- <img src="images/i_137.jpg" width="370" height="586" alt="THE LOGGER-HEAD" />
- <div class="captionh">THE <span class="smcap">LOGGERHEAD</span></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> was probably named by sailors because
-of his fancied resemblance to a
-certain piece of ship’s gear, but the
-Conchs of the Bahama Bank believed he deserved
-his name in its true meaning, for he was certainly
-the most stupid fellow on the reef. Those who
-knew him and watched him crawl up the glistening
-white coral sand that glared in the heat of
-the torrid sunshine never took the trouble to
-harm him, although the law of the reef is very
-much like it is elsewhere. The strongest or
-quickest-witted only might endure.</p>
-
-<p>But the conch who first turned him, or rather
-attempted to turn him, found that his dead
-weight of six hundred pounds of shell and
-leather-like beef was not worth the trouble.
-Turtles of more manageable size were plentiful,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-and there was no use of straining one’s self trying
-to upset such a monster. He drew his knife
-to kill, but the stupid one had sense enough to
-withdraw his head within the wall of bony shell,
-and the black man called maledictions upon him
-for turning the edge of his weapon. Then he
-smote him over the back with his turning stave
-and called him a worthless one because he refused
-to contribute himself to the Conch’s larder, and
-passed on.</p>
-
-<p>The loggerhead paid small heed to the man’s
-behavior. The bright sunshine was warming
-the white sands, and the blue water of the Gulf
-Stream was rippling past the cay, while above
-him the beautiful little lumpy clouds, bunches
-of pure white vapor, were floating away to the
-southward. It was enough to live without
-bothering with those who fished upon the waters
-of the reef or the great swarm of creatures who
-inhabited the clear depths. Everywhere the sea
-denizens seemed to be in continual tumult, some
-trying to build homes among the sponges and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-growths of the coral banks, and others hurrying
-to and fro through the clear blue liquid with no
-especial purpose he could fathom. Then there
-were the destroyers who came and went with a
-rush, chasing the smaller to shelter and splashing
-a great deal of water in their efforts to capture
-those weaker than themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The loggerhead poked forth his nose and
-gazed about him, wondering at the beauty of the
-world, and gave the struggling swarms but a
-passing glance. Then he laboriously hauled
-himself up the warming sands until he reached
-high-water mark.</p>
-
-<p>The Conch had walked far away down the
-cay where his boat was hauled up. His companion
-sat in the stern-sheets and lazily bailed
-the water from her. When he had finished, the
-two men shoved her off and hoisted a small sail.
-Then swinging her bow around before the breeze,
-they headed away toward the distant line of
-white which showed to the eastward where a
-larger cay of the Bank rose from the sea.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
-After they had gone the loggerhead watched
-the rippling water along the shore. Soon the
-head of a huge turtle appeared, and in a few
-minutes the great form of another like himself
-hauled slowly and lazily up the beach.</p>
-
-<p>Before dark several followers had hauled up
-to high-water mark. On the cay was soft fine
-sand of a nature not unlike that of more northern
-beaches, and this had banked above the coral to
-a depth of three or more feet.</p>
-
-<p>With flippers of horny hardness and gigantic
-power the females began to cut their way down.
-They scooped and scooped until they had holes
-at least two feet deep nicely rounded and firmly
-packed on the sides as though they were
-cemented. Then they dropped slowly egg after
-egg into the little pits until a hundred or more
-had packed themselves into the receptacles.
-The shells of the eggs were soft like leather, and
-each egg had a small dent which showed it was
-fresh. Then as the night wore on they softly
-covered the pits with sand and carefully<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span>
-smoothed them over until not the slightest trace
-of any disturbance of the surface showed. It
-was nice work, for the sand was soft, and the
-signs of digging were easily made, but hard
-to conceal, and it was nearly dawn before the
-females were satisfied with their efforts. Then
-they slipped slowly down the sand into the sea
-and disappeared to return no more. Their task
-was done.</p>
-
-<p>The huge loggerhead who had led the way up
-the beach watched the departing turtles as they
-went to sea. The sound of the murmuring ocean
-was in the morning air, the song of the south
-sea awakening the day as the soft wind sighed
-over heaving swell and rippled the beautiful
-wavelets until they rolled into little combers and
-flashed white in the sunshine. All about him was
-the light of the tropic dawn. The sweet breath
-of the trade wind fanned his iron-hard head and
-he opened his eyes lazily to watch the sunrise.
-It was well. The beauty of the world attracted
-him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-Far away on the horizon the spurts of foam
-showed the beginning of the strenuous life of the
-destroyers. He watched them lazily and wondered
-at their fierceness, their uselessness of
-purpose. Then he saw a form coming down the
-beach and looked eastward where the boat of the
-Conchs had made the shore again.</p>
-
-<p>The black man went slowly along the beach
-prodding the sand at high-water mark wherever
-he saw the tracks of turtles. He had a long,
-thin piece of iron with a sharp end which he
-drove into the sand and withdrew again, looking
-at the end to see if there was any sign of egg-yolk
-adhering to it. Once he struck a place where
-a turtle had scooped out a nest, and the dripping
-iron caused him to give a cry to his companion
-in the boat. Then he threw down a sack and
-dug until he had unearthed the eggs, which he
-transferred quickly to the bag, and picking up
-his iron staff he went along, bending down to
-watch the tracks more closely.</p>
-
-<p>The loggerhead watched him out of the corner<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-of his eye and thought of the turtle who had
-lost her eggs, but the whole thing interested him
-but little and he made his way slowly down the
-sand to avoid being hit over the head with the
-iron rod because the Conch did not like him.</p>
-
-<p>The Conch saw him as he gained the surf,
-but he knew him, and shaking his staff at him he
-went along searching for more prizes.</p>
-
-<p>The great loggerhead swam easily just below
-the surface where the sunlight filtered down and
-made the liquid a bright blue. He had no object,
-and held his course across the Gulf Stream,
-letting himself drift with the current. It was
-well to live and the uselessness of effort was more
-apparent to him since he had seen the Conch’s
-work on the cay of the Bahama Bank.</p>
-
-<p>The warm stream was rushing silently northward
-and the gentle wind caused but little roll
-to the sea. The loggerhead could lie upon the
-surface and poke his head out, getting a glimpse
-of the eternal rim of the circle which had no
-break. But he cared nothing for land, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
-sea was sparkling and blue. The sun overhead
-sent down hot rays which he felt through his
-thick armor of shell, but when it grew too warm
-he cooled himself by sinking a few feet below the
-surface for several minutes.</p>
-
-<p>Several big barnacles which had attached
-themselves to his underbody made navigation
-tiresome, for he had to drag them through the
-water along with him, but it was too much
-trouble to scrape them off. He had seen some of
-his fellows do this on the rocks of the Florida
-Reef, but it was laborious work and he preferred
-to take things easy.</p>
-
-<p>He was not an old turtle. Some of his fellows
-had lived for several centuries and were old
-before he was born. But he had grown very
-large since the day he first saw the sun shining
-over the reef at Roncador. He was but a tiny
-little fellow then, and his shell was so soft that he
-felt the sun burn through it. His leather-like
-skin on his neck was tender and even his bony
-beak could hardly cut the soft Gulf weed. His<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-flippers were dark and soft and very unlike the
-huge scaly paddles he now used to scull himself
-along. He was quite rapid in his movements
-then, but life upon the tropical sea had gradually
-had the effect of making him sluggish and
-philosophical. The sunshine was all he cared
-for.</p>
-
-<p>He had no trouble getting enough to eat without
-fighting for it. It seemed a great waste of
-energy to be eternally chasing other and weaker
-creatures, and now he had drifted instinctively
-back to the habits of his forefathers. He took
-things very coolly. When a savage shark or
-albicore made a strike at him he did not retaliate
-by snapping at them with his huge beak which
-would now slice out a couple of pounds of wood
-from a floating log and shear through anything
-living. He simply hauled in his paddles and
-stump of a tail to the sheltering safety of his
-armor and the vigorous fish might chop all day
-at him for all he cared. Their teeth might
-scratch his shell a little, but the powerful arch<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
-of his back made it impossible to crush him and a
-few scratches upon his plates would not injure
-him in any way whatever. His head he might
-draw in until his ugly beak and steady eyes
-looked out of a sort of cavern. It was trifling
-with sudden death to come within the radius of
-a foot of that nose, and the vigorous fish after
-tormenting him a few minutes generally gave
-him a shove and left him in disgust.</p>
-
-<p>After they had gone away he would slowly
-and lazily shove out his paddles again and proceed
-to scull himself leisurely on his way, his
-small, dull mind undisturbed at the affront.
-Such creatures were a nuisance to him, but they
-were in existence and it was not for him to worry
-because they were. He would go along in the
-sunshine and soft air in his easy way, and when
-these no longer attracted him he would draw in
-his head, upset himself, then, thrusting it forward
-again, go sculling for the cool depths where
-he would spend many hours among the beautiful
-marine growths fathoms below the surface upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-the coral reef, and where the faint light of the
-sun filtering down made objects dim and uncertain.
-All was quiet here, and it was the ideal
-place for repose.</p>
-
-<p>It had taken many years of wandering to get
-the loggerhead as far north as the Bahama
-Bank. He had let himself drift along, and
-here he was at last in the core of the great
-Florida Stream, going to the northward at a rate
-which would have astonished him very much had
-he known its velocity. It is doubtful even if he
-had known it that he would have made any
-effort to either stem it or get clear, for he now
-had the reposeful habit strong in his nature, and
-he took things as they came. Nothing had as
-yet caused him the slightest harm, and there was
-no reason to get excited at anything. Life was
-pleasant. Effort was useless.</p>
-
-<p>He would float along upon the bright blue
-surface of the warm stream and poke his head up
-into the clear sweet air and sunshine. It was
-enough. The life of albicore or dolphin was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
-not for him. Theirs was all effort, savage
-strife, and a sudden death. He might lie and
-ponder at their lot with his head slightly raised
-and his paddles at rest, but while he might notice
-them in their desperate play he had a supreme
-contempt for them all. He had already lived as
-long as three generations of them, and they had
-done nothing save fight and slay.</p>
-
-<p>As he floated away he soon found many of his
-old acquaintances were disappearing. The
-savage amber-jack and fat sunfish would pass
-him now and then, but they were always heading
-south. Only his companions, the flying fish,
-seemed to care as little as he for their whereabouts.
-The flying fish were not afraid of him,
-and they were his friends. He held them in
-high disdain for their cowardice, for they were
-always timorous and ready for flight at the
-first sign of an approaching fish, and it was
-more contempt than pity he had for those who
-were caught. The more fortunate he would
-watch with languid interest.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-The lives of all were so full of strife they
-were eminently unsuccessful from his point of
-view, and it was only because the little flyers were
-so pretty when they whirled upward from the
-blue water and with whirring wings sailed away,
-that he liked them better than the rest. They
-always knew where the best Gulf weed was to be
-had and never disputed his claim to the largest
-share of any that he found. It was manifest to
-him that he was a superior being, quite above the
-rest of his fellows, and with the instinctive feeling
-common to all animals, he felt that this
-superiority was a special gift from the great
-power which he felt ruled his destiny. His dull
-brain worked slowly. There was no quickening
-of his sluggish circulation to brighten his
-wits.</p>
-
-<p>It was quite a fortnight after leaving the
-Bahama Bank that he began to notice that the
-water about him was not quite so blue as before
-and that there was a chill in it which he did not
-like. It stirred him to action and he began<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-paddling westward after the setting sun. The
-next day a low shore appeared on the horizon
-with a bright sand beach shining like a white
-band between the dark line of hammock and the
-sparkling sea. He headed for it, thinking to
-haul out a little while and sun himself upon the
-hot beach, for the air was much cooler than what
-he had been accustomed to and the Gulf weed
-was scarce.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his unwieldy size the loggerhead
-was not slow when he once started to use his great
-paddles. He kept up a steady stroke with all
-four, his large front ones sculling him along like
-two oar-blades, bending at each return, and his
-smaller hind ones shoving him ahead with quick,
-jerky strokes. His head was thrust forward,
-and he went along a few feet below the surface
-like a great oval shadowy shape.</p>
-
-<p>In a little while he drew near the beach. It
-was a long sand-spit stretching out to sea, upon
-which the long roll of the Atlantic swell fell with
-a deep, sullen roar. Beyond the spit was a quiet<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-lagoon, and there was an opening through the
-line of breakers.</p>
-
-<p>He paddled slowly in, keeping clear of the
-surf, poking his head up now and then to get his
-bearings correctly. Upon the inner end of the
-bar he saw three strange forms. They were
-absurd-looking creatures with long legs and bills,
-their heads having light gray penciled feathers
-giving them the appearance of being bald, as
-their wings and breasts were dark. Their large
-eyes were watching the incoming tide as it
-swirled through the inlet, and when they saw him
-they set up a vast noise of protest, scolding
-loudly and threatening him. He felt instinctively
-that these birds were timid creatures in
-spite of their fierce threats, and a sudden movement
-toward them sent them shrieking away in
-terror. This amused him, and he went in
-through the smooth water unmolested.</p>
-
-<p>Inside the lagoon was a long stretch of shoal
-water. Sculling along close to the bottom so
-that but a few inches were between him and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-hard sand, he went swiftly up the sound. A
-great sand shark lay in front of him, his long
-body barely moving, the sunlight playing upon
-his flanks and his dorsal fin just awash. The
-loggerhead gave him a brush with his paddle
-as he went past and the great fish shot ahead a
-full fathom with the touch. He was not used
-to being brushed against, and it startled him.
-Then he turned and chopped at the turtle, but
-his teeth met the armor of shell and several
-broke with the impact. The loggerhead went
-steadily on. The water was now getting warmer
-again and the sunshine made it very bright, for
-it was shoal and the white sand reflected the
-rays from the bottom, hurting his eyes with the
-glare.</p>
-
-<p>He found a sloping beach and hauled lazily
-out into the heat of a cloudless day.</p>
-
-<p>The quiet of the lagoon was attractive to the
-turtle. He spent many days drifting about its
-shallow depths feeding upon the drift-weed and
-small shell-fish the tide drove into the inlet. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-was well content to lie upon the surface and
-watch the shear-waters go sailing past, their
-beaks skimming the smooth sea, the tips sometimes
-cutting like a knife through the yielding
-medium, ready to snatch up any unwary mullet
-or small fry that happened upon the surface in
-their path. Often a great pelican would come in
-from the sea and fish for a few hours over the
-schools of mullet or whiting until with heavy
-pouch and tired pinions he would withdraw to
-the sand-spit to gorge himself with the tender
-morsels.</p>
-
-<p>The loggerhead was amused at the harried
-schools of fish as they scurried in terror for a
-shelter. He felt his superiority over all the
-other denizens of the lagoon, and the poor little
-creatures hurrying in terror from the destroyers
-filled him as before with disdain.</p>
-
-<p>One day a fishing schooner hove to off the
-inlet. Boats were lowered and a long seine
-placed in them. The net was very strong and
-its leadline so heavy it took eight men to haul it.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
-They headed slowly in for the inlet and lay off
-the entrance for some time waiting for the tide
-to favor an attempt to make the opening
-through the breakers. They headed the long
-rollers, rowing easily, and one man stood in the
-bow of the leading boat watching the shoaling
-water, ready to warn the helmsman in time to
-prevent getting ashore.</p>
-
-<p>Soon they saw the way clear ahead and the
-rowers put some strength into their stroke, sending
-the small craft rapidly in. They went
-through the entrance safely, although a breaker
-rolling close to the outer edge of the sand-spit
-half filled the leading boat. Then they rested
-on their oars and began to clear the net.</p>
-
-<p>The loggerhead was far away up the lagoon
-when the fishermen entered. He saw them as
-they were stretching the seine across the entrance
-of the inlet and watched them haul it slowly up
-the slue, driving all the fish before them. The
-mullet were jumping in terror and the whiting
-were hurrying for the shoal water half a mile<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-away. The great sand shark who lay off the
-entrance saw the closing trap in time to make a
-lunge past the end of the line, splashing the man
-in the bow with a vigorous slap of his tail as he
-swung across and clear. He made a chop at the
-trailing net, but missed it in his hurry. Then
-he went sullenly to sea.</p>
-
-<p>The fishermen landed on either side of the
-narrow lagoon and started to walk the net
-slowly up, gradually closing the space above
-into smaller and smaller scope. In half an
-hour they had gone more than halfway, and the
-frightened schools of fish began to grow more
-and more restless as they saw the strangers approaching.
-Some of them tried the meshes of
-the seine, but they were too small for any save
-the tiniest mullet to go through, and they
-fled back again to the shallow water farther
-up.</p>
-
-<p>The loggerhead was resting upon the surface
-watching the men. They had not yet noticed
-him, but he had gone so long without harm from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-anyone that he anticipated none. He was satisfied
-that his superiority to all other creatures put
-him beyond the pale of becoming a victim to
-anything.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a fisherman noticed him and yelled
-to his companions across the slue, pointing at
-the bony beak that showed above the surface.
-His companions were too far away to hear what
-he said, but their sharp eyes followed his signals
-and they soon noticed the turtle.</p>
-
-<p>The net was drawing in closer and closer, the
-water was getting shoaler, and the men were
-walking the lines ahead more rapidly. The fish
-imprisoned beyond its scope now saw their danger
-plainly and they tore the water into foam
-in their frantic efforts to escape. The loggerhead
-saw them and watched them lazily, much
-amused at their struggles. His contempt for
-them grew so supreme that when they rushed
-past him in one of their frantic plunges he
-snapped viciously at a lagging mullet and very
-nearly cut him in two. Then he sank slowly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-down to the sandy bottom below, for the hurrying
-fish annoyed him.</p>
-
-<p>The net was now nearly up to the end of the
-slue, and a giant leader of the mullet school
-made a mighty dash for liberty. He tore down
-the lagoon and rising with a sudden sweep upward,
-leaped high in the air and plunged over
-the line of corks which floated the top of the
-trap.</p>
-
-<p>He went free. Another, encouraged by his example,
-made the dash also and went over. The
-rest, seeing the leaders leap to liberty, made a
-dash in unison and with a mighty rush plunged
-at the floating line of buoys. Hundreds went
-over in spite of the fishermen, who manned their
-boats and rowed along the net, holding it aloft
-wherever they saw the crowd coming. Some
-gave out at the jump and drove against the
-deadly meshes, and others, finding the crowd too
-close for them, swerved at the line and flowed past
-in a solid phalanx of shimmering silver to swim
-back and make a new trial.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-The cries of the men and the rush of the passing
-schools began to make the loggerhead restless.
-There was something very extraordinary
-taking place. He was angry at the miserable
-fish who were so useless and helpless. His contempt
-finally became so great that he concluded
-that he would go down to the other end of the
-slue where the sand shark usually lay waiting for
-the little fish to come out in deep water. He
-started to scull himself forward and had just
-made headway when he suddenly brought up
-against the net.</p>
-
-<p>The water was less than ten feet deep where
-he was, and he followed the obstruction upward
-to the surface, thinking to find it end before he
-came into view of the men. But the line of
-buoys held it well up and his head popped out
-of the water before he realized that he could not
-pass. A man in a boat made a vicious lunge
-at him with a boat-hook, but he got out of the
-way and followed the net along trying to find a
-way to get through.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-The mullet and whiting were now leaping by
-scores over the corked line. Their active life
-had made them fleet and strong. They had
-fought for existence from the beginning, and
-the trap about them was but another of the many
-obstacles they must surmount if they would endure.
-They were terrified, but they acted
-quickly and sensibly, their fright not causing
-them to overlook any possible means of escape.
-They were getting clear in spite of the shouting
-men who were now hauling line as fast as they
-could. Several large skates and a couple of
-flounders who had lived up the slue were vainly
-trying to burrow under the heavy leadline that
-swept the bottom. The loggerhead noticed
-them as he passed, but they paid no heed to him.
-A troop of crabs were being hustled along the
-bottom by the weighted line. They were
-snapping at everything that came in their
-reach.</p>
-
-<p>The loggerhead began to get anxious to go
-away. He made a savage lunge at the meshes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-closing about him and he drove his head through
-a great rent he made with his beak. His
-paddles, or flippers, however, caught in the snare
-and he struggled wildly and with gigantic
-power to get through. His tremendous struggles
-soon drew the corked line below the surface
-and brought the fishermen hurrying in their
-boats to find out what caused the trouble. They
-gazed down into the depths and soon made out
-the giant shape struggling frantically. Seizing
-the lines of the seine they quickly hauled the
-loggerhead to the surface, where one of them
-grasped his hind paddle and held it long enough
-to get a bowline around it. Then they rowed
-to the shore, towing him ignominiously behind
-the craft, while the few remaining mullet, who
-were too small and weak to make the leap for
-liberty, crowded swiftly through the gap and
-headed for the open sea.</p>
-
-<p>Even the skates now made for the opening in
-the trap. They rose to the surface with difficulty,
-but managed to get clear. In less than<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-five minutes every living thing in the shape of a
-fish had escaped.</p>
-
-<p>The fishermen landed their prize and tried to
-haul him out of the water. The loggerhead
-objected to this, and he began to haul them
-bodily into the sea. The water was riled and he
-appeared monstrous in the foam. They could
-not tell what kind of creature he was, but it was
-for them to get him ashore, and six of them
-hauled on the line while two, wading in, began to
-pry at him with oars to turn him upon his back.
-In a little while they had him rolled over and
-helpless. Then they came close to examine their
-victim.</p>
-
-<p>“I’d be willing to lose half a ton of fish fer a
-fine green turtle,” said the leader of the men.
-“He’s a corker, an’ that’s a fact.”</p>
-
-<p>“Looks to me like he’s nothin’ but one o’ them
-loggerheads,” said an old fisherman; “if he is,
-he’s played it on us fine.”</p>
-
-<p>They looked at the markings on his shell and
-pulled out his flippers. Then the leader mopped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-his streaming face with a handkerchief. The old
-fisherman looked up sheepishly and grinned.</p>
-
-<p>“He aint wuth his weight in mud. Turn him
-lose an’ let him slide,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>A sailor rapped him over the head and spoke
-feelingly. Then they cut the line adrift and
-went to gather in their torn net.</p>
-
-<p>The loggerhead lay upon his back and waited.
-He was annoyed at the disturbance. It was provoking
-to be turned over by a lot of fishermen.</p>
-
-<p>The mullet had seen him hauled out by the
-flipper, and he grew angry at the thought. He
-tried to twist round and get upon his belly, but
-could not.</p>
-
-<p>All day he lay in the hot sunshine and snapped
-viciously at the sand-crabs who came to examine
-him. Then, as the tide raised and floated him,
-he managed to get again upon his paddles. He
-was disgusted. Far away down the lagoon a
-ripple on the water showed the returning mullet.
-He gazed at them for a moment, then hauled
-himself clear of the bottom. His ugly beak was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-stuck far out, and with steady strokes he pointed
-it for the open sea. He passed the returning
-fish, and they wondered at him. Then he went
-through the opening and disappeared into the
-great ocean to the eastward.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="THE_WHITE_FOLLOWER" title="The White Follower">THE WHITE FOLLOWER</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_165" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_167.jpg" width="424" height="582" alt="THE WHITE FOLLOWER" />
- <div class="captionh">THE WHITE <span class="smcap">FOLLOWER</span></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> was a little more than fourteen feet
-across the tips of his outspread wings,
-more than two fathoms, and his white
-breast, full and rounded, was as broad as that
-of the man who stood at the wheel and watched
-him go soaring past. The very tips of his huge
-wings were black as jet, showing in marked contrast
-to the unbroken whiteness of the rest of his
-feathers, and the only other dark spot upon his
-snowy form was his eye. This was as black and
-shiny as the lanyards in the rigging. It was
-large and held a steady gaze, fearless yet curious,
-so that when the man at the wheel looked up the
-bird tilted his head to one side to get a better
-view of him. The giant beak, nearly a foot in
-length and of heavy bone, had a strangely
-hooked end, which swelled a little in size from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-middle portion. It was a serviceable pair of
-shears which could cut a five-pound fish in two at
-a bite. The two webbed feet, as large again as
-those of a swan, were held close in to the short
-tail feathers so as not to offer resistance to the
-air, through which the bird went at the speed of
-an express train. Silent and otherwise motionless,
-save for that turn of the head, the great
-creature swept past. Not a movement of leg or
-pinion, not a feather disturbed in that headlong
-rush. With the great wings stretched far out
-and slightly bowed, he held his way and tore past
-the fast-running ship as though she were at
-anchor, instead of plowing through the southern
-ocean at the rate of ten knots an hour with the
-wind behind her. Then, as she was left far
-astern, he tilted himself a little, and off into the
-curve of a tremendous circle he swerved, swinging
-with the speed of the wind over the rolling
-wave-tops until he had covered at least three
-miles upon the arc and was heading swiftly back
-again to repeat the maneuver.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-All the time that large black and shining pair
-of eyes watched the surface of the sea. Not a
-morsel of anything went overboard unobserved.
-From a distance of a mile or more the huge bird
-would note the smallest bits of food or grease
-which the cook would toss over the side when
-cleaning his coppers for a new mess of salt junk.
-Sailing over the bits of floating stuff he would
-hover a moment to see if they were really worth
-tasting. If so, he would soar in smaller and
-smaller circles until he would breast a sea. Then,
-dropping his legs and bracing his feet to retard
-the slowing flight, he would sink into the
-water and check himself with both feet and wings
-until his body finally rested gracefully upon
-surface. Folding his pinions slowly and a little
-stiffly, he would propel himself like a huge goose
-toward the floating prize and make a pass at it
-with his beak. Salt-pork rind, gristle, anything
-that had grease or taste to it, was chopped by the
-bony shears and quickly bolted. It mattered
-little just what it was as long as it had some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-grease or taste to it. His appetite was not
-squeamish.</p>
-
-<p>When nothing remained he would slowly and
-stiffly again stretch out those wings and face to
-windward. Then he would propel himself along
-into the breeze until he rose upon a sea. A quick
-couple of strokes with the pinions and a sudden
-push with both feet generally lifted the great
-body clear of the water before it began to sink
-down the slope of the succeeding sea. After
-that it was but a detail to rise higher and higher
-into the clear air without perceptible motion
-save of rushing ahead and circling in spiral
-curves, which no mathematician might describe
-or define as a means of ascending.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was something over six hundred miles
-off shore. She was heading for the last corner
-of the world, Cape Horn, to turn it and then go
-northward up the South Pacific. She would head
-up the middle of the great ocean and at times
-she would not be within a thousand miles of any
-land whatever.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-For more than two weeks the albatross had
-followed in the wake, his tireless pinions showing
-no signs of weakening by the continuous
-flight. Steadily night and day he had followed,
-and the men aboard had watched him with the
-awe all deep-water men feel for the giant birds,
-which seem to be able to soar through space for
-a lifetime without tiring. Sometimes when he
-came up astern he slackened his pace by some
-method and remained for a short moment poised
-a few fathoms above the man at the wheel. Then
-his steady look as he slanted his head sideways
-made the man have a queer feeling, as though he
-were almost in communication with a stranger
-from the realms of space. When the captain
-happened on deck he paid considerable attention
-to the follower, but he never thought to harm
-him. The Winchester, which he often used to
-take snap-shots at blackfish, was always laid
-aside at his approach.</p>
-
-<p>The great bird noted this. He was not afraid
-of the rifle, for although he saw the effects of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-the shot, he knew nothing of its power. The
-man was a creature of the earth like himself, and
-he had no reason to suspect him of harmful
-purposes simply on that account. He was interested
-in him, and a not unfriendly feeling came
-within his breast.</p>
-
-<p>In the latitude of the “roaring forties” the
-weather is uncertain. Sometimes it blows high
-and sometimes low, which latter means it is dead
-calm for a spell. Under these conditions a sailing
-ship naturally comes to a sudden stop, and,
-with clewed-up courses, rolls and switches away
-often for days without making more than a degree
-of southing.</p>
-
-<p>It was during one of these calm spells that the
-captain began to formulate a plan which would
-bring him in closer contact with the great bird
-which still soared and circled about the ship.
-He rigged a trolling line with a bit of wood for a
-float near the hook. Then he baited it with a
-piece of salt beef and tossed it over the side.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was barely moving, but still had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
-headway enough to get away from the bait.
-When it was fifty fathoms astern the captain
-held the line and waited.</p>
-
-<p>The albatross soon sighted the piece of beef
-and circled slowly toward it. Then as it floated
-in clear view he settled upon the surface of the
-sea and paddled up to it and gave it a chop. He
-cut away half the beef, but missed the hook, and
-the captain’s jerk upon the line merely pulled
-it from him. He made another grab, and as
-he did so the line tautened and the barb of the
-hook caught under his beak.</p>
-
-<p>Hand over hand the captain hauled him in.
-He spread forth his wings and backed water hard
-with his feet, but the seaman kept a steady strain
-upon the line and prevented the hook from slipping
-clear. Soon he was directly under the
-ship’s counter, and as she squatted down into the
-hollow of a swell the captain quickly hauled
-the bird over the rail to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>Inside the poop-rail it was impossible for the
-albatross to get headway enough to rise into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span>
-air, the wind was so unfavorable in the shelter.
-While he might waddle about upon the white
-planks it was as impossible for him to get away
-as though he had been chained by the leg. It
-was most provoking to be in such an absurd position.
-The man at the wheel grinned at him, and
-the mate came up to take a better look at close
-quarters. He stretched forth his wings and
-tried to rise by a series of powerful strokes, but
-it was in vain. He only managed to go plunging
-into the rail before he got his feet clear of
-the planks. This made him angry and he
-snapped at the mate, making a savage chop with
-his great beak, which came together with a loud
-clap. But the seaman jumped aside, and the
-captain admonished him to keep away.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the feeling of being upon a floating
-thing with other creatures seemed less strange.
-It was remarkable how different the ship was now
-that he was on board it from what it appeared
-while he was a few fathoms in the air. Yet he
-had followed it so long that he had become accustomed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
-to it, and the unpleasant sensation of
-becoming suddenly a prisoner aboard gave place
-to that of curiosity. The captain brought some
-choice fat and ordered the steward to keep the
-slush from the coppers as clean as possible and
-give the stranger as much as he wished. After
-eating several pounds he lost for the time all
-desire to get away and waddled about the
-quarter-deck perfectly satisfied with the sudden
-change in his condition.</p>
-
-<p>The ship’s dog rushed up and made a savage
-attack, and for a few minutes the great bird was
-frightened, for the noise was distracting and a
-sudden bite gave him pain. Then the captain
-dragged the animal away and gave the newcomer
-a choice piece of salt pork to make up for
-the lack of courtesy shown by the dog.</p>
-
-<p>There was much of the dog’s spirit aboard the
-ship, although it was not manifest to the albatross.
-Among the men forward were several
-who had much the same feeling for their fellows.
-Under the cover of bluff and honest exteriors<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-they concealed dispositions like that of the dog.
-They were a type of what is known as “sea
-lawyer,” and were always dwelling upon the
-grievances of sailors and the rascality of mates
-and masters. Close and intelligent observers
-would have noticed at once that the faults their
-leader saw in others were the ones rising to the
-surface in himself and which he was trying to
-conceal. He was saturnine, and his ugly little
-eyes held an unpleasant look every time he came
-in the vicinity of either the mate or captain.
-The second officer was in the other watch and
-therefore not often about to give him orders.</p>
-
-<p>As the vessel gradually made her way southward
-and the hardships became more trying with
-the colder weather, the feeling aboard among the
-men who listened to the grumbler became more
-sinister. The captain was not such a man as to
-let things go unnoticed, but as long as there was
-no direct disobedience of orders he took no action
-and let the mate warm up the discontented men
-with extra work, for it is well known that hard<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-work will do more for an ugly crew than any
-medicine.</p>
-
-<p>The captain spent much time on deck and
-made a pet of the bird he had captured. He was
-a generous man and lonesome among the rough
-fellows who made up the crew, for his position
-forbade any intercourse whatever with anyone
-except his first officer. Even this seaman, able
-and intelligent as he was, could not be made more
-of than a slight acquaintance. Such is the rule
-aboard deep-water ships, for discipline must be
-enforced if safety is to be considered.</p>
-
-<p>During many lonely hours the master tried
-to reconcile the dog to the newcomer. The old
-wolf spirit bred through thousands of generations
-of the land animal was not easy to pacify.
-It was the old spirit of suspicion for strangers
-based upon the experience of hundreds of ancestors,
-who had perhaps trusted not wisely but too
-well in the days when all living things were at
-war with each other and only the strongest and
-most cunning might survive. It was as evident<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-in the dog as in the men of the forecastle, and
-the master studied carefully and comprehensively
-to subdue it, or at least pacify it to an extent
-that strife might be averted. Kindness and unselfishness
-were the two antidotes he would
-employ.</p>
-
-<p>The great bird was not slow to notice his
-friendship. After a day or two he was on the
-lookout for the master, who appeared regularly
-to take his morning observation for longitude,
-and he walked laboriously up to him in spite of
-the dog’s yelping. There was something in the
-man’s behavior that made him instinctively his
-friend. Finally even the dog’s suspicions were
-allayed, and instead of seizing the bird’s
-feathers in the rear to jerk them and then dodge
-the snap of the beak, he met the bird face to face
-and refrained from either a bite or bark. The
-two became reconciled.</p>
-
-<p>During several days the albatross waddled
-about the quarter-deck and was fed, until the
-captain, fearing that he would grow so fat he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-would be unable to fly, finally took him in his
-arms one day and placed him upon the rail.
-Then he tied a bit of fancy red cord about his
-leg so that he might distinguish him from other
-birds that would follow in the ship’s wake. The
-great bird had long ago learned to eat from the
-man’s hand and took care not to chop too close to
-the fingers with his powerful beak. The master
-would stroke the beautiful white head and smooth
-the snowy feathers until the petting became a
-thing looked forward to. It was a smooth day
-in the latitude of the Falklands when he determined
-to set the captive free, and the dark water
-seemed less attractive than usual under the gloom
-of the overcast sky. The lonely cry of a stray
-penguin broke now and again upon the ears of
-the listening seaman and had a depressing
-effect.</p>
-
-<p>With a last caress he gave the pet a gentle
-push to start him. The great black eyes looked
-hard at the sailor, and then, with the giant wings
-outstretched, he swung off in a graceful swoop,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-curving upward as the falling body nearly
-touched the sea. He was gone.</p>
-
-<p>That night it came on to blow hard from the
-westward. The ship, nearing the latitude of
-the Horn, was shortened down to her lower topsails,
-and with the wind snoring away under them
-and past each taut downhaul, clewline, and halyard,
-she was hove to. It was necessary to try
-to keep her from sagging off to the eastward, for
-in this latitude every mile counts.</p>
-
-<p>During the morning watch the mate had
-reason to call the captain, for with a falling glass
-and shifting wind, he was on the lookout for a
-definite change.</p>
-
-<p>The captain came on deck and took in the
-situation. It was still dark, but the growing
-light on the horizon told of the approaching
-day. He stood near the man at the wheel a
-moment and the mate went forward where the
-green seas sometimes rose above the topgallant
-rail and fell upon the deck as the staggering
-ship plunged into the trough. Through the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
-dim, misty light of the early morning he saw the
-watch turning out to clew down the foretopsail,
-and as the foremost man took the ratlines he
-turned and walked to the binnacle to watch the
-shifting course.</p>
-
-<p>The increasing gale and gloomy prospects
-had caused the grumbling element among the
-crew to be more careless than usual, in spite of
-the master’s efforts to pacify them. The leader
-of the malcontents came aft with two others to
-take a pull in the spanker sheet, for upon the
-boom had been bent the storm trysail to hold the
-vessel’s head up to the gale while hove to. The
-men hauled surlily upon the line, but it came in so
-slowly that the mate came aft and spoke to them
-to stir them up. Then they flattened it in, but
-the stout landsman, or ordinary seaman, who was
-taking in the slack upon the cleat, failed to catch
-a turn. A tremendous sea hove the ship to leeward
-almost upon her beam-ends. The struggling
-men were hove against the lee rail, and
-the sheet, whirling loose from the fellow’s hands,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-caught a turn about his body and in an instant
-he was flung over the side. The captain, who
-had just stepped out from the wheel-house, made
-a grab to seize him, and a turn of the now flying
-line caught him around the ankle and jerked him
-also over the rail into the sea. Then followed
-the dreaded cry of “man overboard” and the
-confusion of a crew of men without a leader.</p>
-
-<p>The mate with ready knife cut away the
-lashings of the quarter-buoys and let them go
-overboard. Then he tried to fling a line, but the
-ship was moving too fast. She was forereaching
-heavily, but in that sea it was madness to
-think of trying to stop her by laying the yards
-aback, or losing control of her in any way. She
-must go on. They might shorten her down
-enough to stop her, but even if they could do so
-within half an hour she would be too far away
-to see a man in the water and the sea too heavy
-to think of lowering a small boat.</p>
-
-<p>Daylight was breaking over the stormy ocean
-and the roar from aloft was sounding louder<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
-with the increasing gale. Many of the men forward
-had not seen the incident and the cries of
-those upon the foretopsail yard to those on deck
-could be heard. From a bunch at the weather
-clewline came a faint strain of a “chanty”:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="iq">“‘Ole stormy, ’e was a good ole man—<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Singing yo, ho, ho—with a hey—bar-rrr.’”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The absurd chorus struck forcibly upon the
-ears of the master, who with both hands gripped
-the life-buoy and kept his head clear of the
-breaking seas. The mate, leaning over the
-taffrail, bawled something to him he could not
-understand, and then the ship drifted to leeward
-with the faint sound of singing still in his ears:</p>
-
-<div class="poem-container">
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
-<span class="iq">“‘Ole stormy, ’e’ll come walking home,<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">Singing yo, ho, ho—with a hey—bar-rrrrr.<br /></span>
-</div><div class="stanza">
-<span class="iq">“‘Ole stormy, ’e has gone to sea—<br /></span>
-<span class="i0">But ’e’ll not come back, with a hey—bar-r-rr-rr.’”<br /></span>
-</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The words of a “chanty” are generally
-grotesque and meaningless, but it was this very
-absurdity that struck the listening master as
-fraught with meaning. It was significant of his
-ending. He would not come back again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
-The water was quite cold, and to make certain
-that he would not lose his hold upon the cork
-float he passed his head through the circular
-opening and made his body fast with the hand-line
-to the buoy at both sides, so that he would
-balance evenly. He would do all he could to
-live, and if he floated long enough they might
-pick him up after all. The minutes dragged
-into hours, and cold and exhaustion caused his
-mind to wander. He fancied he saw green
-fields again and was back in the land of his
-birth.</p>
-
-<p>The suffering of passing was almost over and
-it held no terrors for him. He had tried to do
-what he could aboard the ship to make things
-less hard for his men. Perhaps if he had been
-more savage he would have done better, for there
-are some men who cannot be touched save
-through great bodily fear.</p>
-
-<p>The dawn of the southern day had broken
-over the heaving ocean, and at times he would try
-instinctively to look for the ship. She had disappeared.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-Nothing but the great rolling seas
-as far as the eye could reach, and these turned
-now and again into grass-grown hills before his
-failing vision.</p>
-
-<p>It was late in the morning, after the daylight
-had become strong, that he fancied he heard a
-dull, thunderous noise. It had little effect upon
-him now, for he was too far gone to pay much
-attention. The noise grew louder and louder
-as the minutes passed and suddenly his dulled
-brain became alert again. He looked toward
-where the sound came from, and it was from the
-northward and behind him, and through the haze
-of the flying spume-drift he saw the dark gray
-shadows of rocks. He fancied his mind was at
-fault, and in spite of the heavy roar which now
-filled the air he paid little attention. Then he
-was hove nearer the ledge and felt the rush of the
-lifting sea.</p>
-
-<p>It spurred him to recover. He dashed the
-salt water from his eyes and made a desperate
-effort to realize his position. Then a great, high<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-rolling surge that had run for miles across the
-southern ocean picked him up on its crest and
-bore him shoreward with the speed of the wind.
-As it broke into a white smother of foam he saw
-clearly at last that he was being hurled upon the
-rocks. He struggled to keep his head out of the
-boiling rush and looked for a place where he
-would strike. To hit the ledge at the speed he
-was going meant instant death, and he tried to
-see if there was no slue or opening into which he
-might be hurled. The current of the Antarctic
-had caused an eddy within a few miles of the
-rocks of Hermite Isle, in which he had drifted,
-and it had carried him toward the land at a
-rapid rate.</p>
-
-<p>Rising upon the roll of the crest, he just
-managed to keep from striking until the weight
-and speed of the breaker had been exhausted.
-Then by chance and the aid of the buoy he
-managed to float into a crevice between the rocks
-and cling there until the back-wash had left him
-almost high and dry. With the last remaining<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
-energy left he hauled his body clear of the tide
-and lost consciousness.</p>
-
-<p>When he regained his senses the sun was well
-up on the northwestern horizon. The wind had
-gone down considerably, and heavy, oily-looking
-clouds were hurrying past overhead, with breaks
-between them. He felt the sting of sleet upon
-his face and the chill from his wet clothes almost
-paralyzed him. He staggered to his feet and
-gazed about him. Then he crawled higher up
-the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>There was no doubt about it, he was upon the
-rocks of Cape Horn. He was clear in his mind
-now and remembered his struggles, and he had
-seen the ragged hump too often not to recognize
-it at once. How his ship had been driven in so
-close was hard to guess, but he knew the treacherous
-currents of the Drift and remembered that
-a careless helmsman might very easily nurse the
-vessel off her course with the help of an unknown
-set to the northward.</p>
-
-<p>While he looked about him he became aware<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span>
-that he needed nourishment very badly. He was
-faint with the long swim and continued exposure
-to the cold water and he must have remained unconscious
-for many hours after coming ashore.
-There was nothing to eat upon the ledge. Tufts
-of the great tussac-grass shot up here and there
-upon the heights above him, but there was nothing
-that looked as if it might be used to prolong
-his life.</p>
-
-<p>But a seaman is never beaten until he dies.
-The master would not despair. He sat a moment
-and studied the question. Then he arose
-again and clambered painfully up the crags,
-hoping that he might find some Cape pigeon
-eggs upon the higher terraces. There was not
-a sign of anything except a great rock-hopper,
-or penguin, who skipped nimbly down and
-plunged into the sea with a loud cry before the
-sailor could reach him. Some thirty feet above
-the ledge upon which he landed he discovered a
-pool of half-stagnant water, but it was not salty
-and came from the melted snow and sleet. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-drank some and felt better, although it made him
-colder. He felt through his clothes for a match,
-but found the metal case in which he carried
-them had failed to keep out the sea water. His
-numb fingers could scarcely open the case, but
-he finally placed the little sticks in a lee, where
-he hoped they would dry enough to light. Then
-he sat down and waited, and before he knew it he
-had fallen asleep.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had swung up again in the northeast
-when he opened his eyes and the weather was less
-ugly. He tried his matches. First one was
-scratched carefully upon a dry piece of stone.
-The head crumbled slowly away. A bit of smoke
-seemed to start from it and the seaman’s heart
-beat rapidly. Then the head fell away, leaving
-the bare stick. It was worthless. He tried another
-of his scanty store. He grasped the little
-stick close to its head of composition and drew it
-very carefully upon the rock. A bunch of finely
-shredded grass, perfectly dry, was rolled into a
-ball to catch the first spurt of flame. The match<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span>
-cracked softly and at each noise the sailor’s
-heart seemed to stop. His hand shook violently.
-Then the head of the match crumbled again, and
-his spirits sank within him. It was life or death,
-for he must have warmth soon or perish. He had
-only three more fuses and he stopped a little to
-think of some way he might make them burn.
-He gazed steadily at them for a long time and
-then took up one. It failed.</p>
-
-<p>Hope died away as he took up the other two.
-He struck them carefully as before, but they
-were spoiled. Then he cast the grass from him
-and looked out to sea.</p>
-
-<p>He had been gazing for a long time before he
-was aware of a form which appeared circling
-over the ocean beyond the lift of the breakers.
-It was that of a huge albatross, which had come
-in from the sea and was apparently looking for
-a sheltered place upon the Horn to rest. The
-master gazed at the great white form skimming
-along over the wave-tops and remembered his
-pet. The bird appeared larger than the one he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span>
-had caught, but all of the great Cape albatrosses
-were so much alike that he could not distinguish
-between them. He watched the bird
-circle about him and finally noticed that he had
-been discovered, for the creature came nearer
-and nearer at each sweep until he caught the
-look of its eye as it bent its head a little in
-order to observe him better. The albatross was
-evidently hungry and it might take very little
-indeed to invite an attack. The bird was practically
-carnivorous, for it ate anything in the
-way of flesh it could capture. It was very powerful
-and could get the best of a man without
-much trouble, provided the man was incapable
-of vigorous defense. The thought made him
-alert and brought to his own hungry self the
-idea of capture. He might do worse than eat
-a thirty-pound bird during his stay ashore.
-He could not cook the creature, but that would be
-of but small consequence in his present state.
-The food was the main thing and it was necessary
-to get something at once.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
-The bird came closer and closer until finally
-with outstretched wings and projecting feet it
-backed against its own headway and settled
-upon the ledge not twenty feet distant.</p>
-
-<p>The captain’s heart beat high with expectation.
-He lay perfectly still watching it, hoping
-that it would come near enough for him to grasp
-it. If it was strong enough to conquer, it was
-well; he would soon be dead anyway without
-food. If he could master it by gripping its
-throat, he might live for many days.</p>
-
-<p>The bird came straight toward him. He was
-quiet as a cat waiting for a spring, his eyes
-glaring at it as it approached. Then something
-attracted his attention. Upon the foot of the
-bird was a bit of cord. Yes, there was no mistake,
-it was his pet, the bird he had captured.
-He started up with a cry, but the bird came
-steadily toward him without fear, and in an instant
-was poking his great beak into his hand
-for food.</p>
-
-<p>The seaman’s heart was beating wildly. Here<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
-was food enough for a week right in his grasp.
-He had but to seize the bird’s neck quickly and
-with the little strength he had left he could
-strangle it. The thought called forth all the
-wild wolf spirit in his nature. He was trembling
-with the excitement. But, as he looked down
-upon the beautiful, smooth white neck of his
-former pet, he wavered. Something within him
-rose against a deed of violence. He stroked the
-soft feathers and looked at the creature, who
-was probably almost as hungry as himself. No,
-he would commit no horrid act. He would probably
-starve anyhow, and it would be better to die
-than to have such a conscience. Then all of the
-beast fell away from him and he felt better.</p>
-
-<p>But while he sat and stroked the great bird
-his mind was active. The albatross would not
-remain there long. He would follow some vessel
-for the beef-fat from her coppers, and as the
-thought came to him he began a plan to attract
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>He tore from his shirt a long piece of linen.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span>
-This was a piece having his name written upon
-it in indelible ink which had stood the wash of the
-laundry. It would stand the wash of the sea.
-He made it fast to the bird’s leg, and the bight
-of it he brought up over the back beneath the
-wings, tying it loosely and leading the other end
-down so that it could be fastened to the other
-leg. The thin cloth lying loose would prevent
-the bird from cutting it with its beak, for the
-edges of that appendage, while very sharp, were
-not laid as close together as those of a pair of
-shears, and the thin cloth would work between
-them. Upon the top of the piece he wrote with
-his own blood, “Cape Horn, Hermite Isle,
-Help.” Underneath this he put the date, and let
-his laundry mark do for signature. Then he
-led the bird gently to the edge of the rock and
-pushed him over.</p>
-
-<p>Afterward he settled down in his bed of tussac
-and waited for the end he now felt was at hand.
-He prayed to the God he had felt in the breath
-of the trade wind and roar of the storm, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
-power which was manifest in all nature. Then
-a feeling of peace came upon him and his sufferings
-were over; he had collapsed.</p>
-
-<p>Two days later the Norwegian bark <i>Eric</i> was
-working to the westward past Cape St. John.
-Her captain had noticed a great albatross following
-his vessel all day, and saw the bird had something
-fast to its leg. Being of a very superstitious
-nature the master did everything he could
-to attract the bird’s attention and draw him
-close enough to observe the hanging cloth more
-thoroughly. He was astonished to find the bird
-quite tame, and had no difficulty in hauling it on
-deck with a baited hook. He took off the rag
-and read the inscription, which had luckily kept
-clear and dry, for the weather had been cold
-and the sleet squalls had not caused the writing
-to run.</p>
-
-<p>Being in the neighborhood of the Horn, he
-did what no one but a very superstitious master
-would have done without great trepidation. He
-stood under all sail for Hermite Isle and hove<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-his ship to not three miles from the rocks. The
-weather was better than usual and he had no
-difficulty in lowering a small boat and making a
-landing.</p>
-
-<p>As the craft drew near the land the white
-life-buoy attracted the helmsman’s attention, lying
-high up on the rocks and showing out
-strongly against the background of black ledge.
-The boat was headed into a rift or slue, and two
-of the men managed to spring out of her, the
-rest keeping her clear of the rocks, which, although
-sheltered in the slue, felt the tremendous
-lift and back-wash of the heavy swell outside.
-The master was found unconscious in his bed of
-tussac-grass.</p>
-
-<p>By care and skill they managed to get him
-into the small boat alive and started for the bark
-that was riding safely in the offing. They hurried
-back aboard and came alongside just as
-the Norwegian navigator set the great bird free
-again. The men rested upon their oars and
-watched the albatross as it stretched forth its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-wings and bore away to the southward. A man
-standing in the lee rigging held a line to throw
-to the bow oarsmen, but he hesitated and watched
-the majestic flight. The officer in the boat
-looked instinctively upward, and, as the huge
-creature soared away, he took off his cap and
-bowed his head.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="KING_ALBICORE" title="King Albicore">KING ALBICORE</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_199" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.1875em;">
- <img src="images/i_201.jpg" width="355" height="581" alt="KING ALBICORE" />
- <div class="captionh">KING ALBICORE</div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">He</span> came from a race of giants. His ancestors
-had held sway over the great
-breadth of the Pacific for many centuries,
-and were the lords of the South Sea. When
-he first saw the light it was where the towering
-peaks of Juan Fernandez rose above the eastern
-sea, like the backs of huge marine monsters,
-from the deep ocean, topped by a heavy pall of
-vapor which rose densely for miles into the blue
-above and spread out like an enormous umbrella.
-Between the darkening under surface of the
-higher layers of white, reaching down to the
-green hills beneath, rectangular sections of steel-blue
-showed the semi-tropic rainfall. They were
-sharply outlined against the clear sky beyond,
-for off the land the sky was devoid of a single
-trade-cloud.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-All around was peaceful calm. The great
-Pacific, father of waters, was resting. Only the
-high-rolling swell from far away to the westward
-came majestically onward toward the shore, rising
-higher and higher as it met, deep down, the
-resistance of the outlying reefs, until it threw its
-crest far into the air, and, with a thunderous
-roar of welcome, rushed white and churning
-against the iron-hard cliffs, which received it
-silently and hurled it backward as if coldly repellent
-of its embrace.</p>
-
-<p>The sun had shone strongly for days upon the
-smooth, heaving swell, and out upon the sunken
-ledges where the albicore lingered; the rays filtered
-down to the solid rock. Here, sheltered by
-the reef beyond, the breakers did not disturb the
-ocean denizens. The deep-toned thunder of the
-fall on the outer barrier filled the air, but
-beneath the surface of the clear water all was
-quiet in the sunshine. The king was a young one
-of a large family. Scores of his brothers and sisters
-lay close to the bottom peering in and out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-among the forests of kelp, and enjoying the
-rays of the warm sun, for the albicore is essentially
-a surface fish. The heat and light were
-very pleasant to them, and they were growing
-strong and healthy.</p>
-
-<p>The older fish had come inshore some weeks
-before our hero was born, but food was plentiful
-about the island and they still lingered. They
-had spawned and had seen their young brought
-forth. Now their duty was done and they
-swarmed about the ledges or plunged playfully
-about the slues in the reef, chasing the smaller
-fish to shelter in pure wantonness. They lingered
-on when it was time for them to take to
-the great stretch of ocean to the westward and
-make room for others of the deep ocean tribes.
-Now the young were about in great numbers, and
-they seemed almost to crowd the waters in the
-sheltered coves. It was high time to go to sea
-again, and on the morrow the leaders of the
-school would start for the open ocean to the west,
-where the sun sank out of sight. Those who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-could follow might be safe, for the older fish were
-very strong, and their numbers would prevent
-any of the hanger-on crowd of sullen sharks from
-coming too near the flanks of the moving throng.</p>
-
-<p>A leader passed while our young one was
-watching the light. He was a great fish six feet
-in length, his sides shimmering like silver. His
-long, sinuous body apparently made no motion,
-save that it went ahead slowly and steadily, and
-his eyes sparkled like glistening crystals. His
-thin, tapering head seemed barely to disturb the
-medium about him as he went through it, and the
-only vibration of the light rays near him was
-caused by the huge mouth, which, although shut,
-showed heavy projecting lips and a half-concealed
-row of pointed teeth that rippled the water
-slightly as he slipped past. He was a long,
-powerful fellow, capable of great speed, and a
-stroke from those jaws of his meant death to
-anything in the sea of his size except the shark.
-Even the tough hide of this scavenger would not
-protect him from a frightful cut when the long,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
-muscular body was launched at him with the
-speed of an arrow. A dark shadow which had
-come near the edge of the broken water gradually
-drew away with the albicore’s approach, and the
-young one experienced a feeling of relief instinctively
-which he could not understand. He was
-a very sensitive young one, all nerves, and the
-uneasiness which possessed him when the large
-relative drew away caused him to make an effort
-to follow. But the great albicore took no notice
-of him, nor waited, but suddenly made a dart
-ahead, leaving only the vision of a silvery flash.</p>
-
-<p>Other large fellows came and went while the
-younger ones strayed about the shoal water and
-chased the herring spawn or whale-food, eating
-much and gaining strength hourly.</p>
-
-<p>High above the bare rocks a shaggy goat nibbled
-the grass of the hillside, and to the southward
-a chunky, dirty bark lay with her courses
-hauled up and her mainyards aback, while a
-dense smoke arose from her trying-out furnace.
-Alongside of her the carcass of a freshly killed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-whale rolled just awash in the swell, attracting
-countless thousands of whalebirds and loafing
-sharks.</p>
-
-<p>The young albicore grew very nervous as the
-sun sank behind the sea in the far west, dyeing
-the waves a deep crimson. He was remarkably
-sensitive for an ocean fish. Instinct told him
-that he would fare better away from that reef
-after the last full-grown albicore had gone.
-They had been going to sea all day by twos and
-threes, but had paid not the slightest attention to
-him or any of his younger mates. The longing
-for the open ocean came upon him and with it
-a nameless dread. He had no mother to guide
-him, no father to protect him. They had gone
-to sea with the rest and left him to shift for himself.
-But there was something in the deepening
-roar of the surf and the moaning of the sea
-among the sunken ledges that spoke of an all-pervading
-Power that would guide him onward
-to whatever life held in store. And yet with it
-all was that nameless fear and dread which made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-him alert to every vibration of the water. Darkness
-came suddenly, and some of his smaller companions
-began to seek shelter of the more shallow
-water within the coves and between the rocks.
-Their shimmering bodies grew less and less distinct
-until only the phosphorescent flare of the
-disturbed water when they moved gave notice of
-their presence. The semi-tropical night fell
-upon the peaceful ocean.</p>
-
-<p>All that night the great fish moved westward.
-In the morning, just before the sun rose, the last
-of the laggards had started off into deep water,
-leaving the high cliffs like a wall in the eastward,
-while the somber bank of vapor rose again from
-the land and cast a gloom over the outlying reef.</p>
-
-<p>While the young fish were waiting for the
-growing light to guide them in the wake of their
-forbears, there was a sudden commotion on the
-edge of the surf. Numerous plunges and
-splashes told of a horde of rapidly moving bodies
-advancing through the shoal water of the reef.
-The feeling of terror that had come over our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span>
-young one the day before now seemed to pervade
-the entire crowd that scurried here and there in
-the gloom. Everywhere there seemed to be a
-state of wild alarm. Bunches of the smaller
-fish tried to find shelter in deep, dark holes where
-the kelp weed formed mats and snaky tangles.
-Then, just as the first rays of the morning sun
-glistened upon the crest of a great roller, there
-was a sudden rush through the water all about,
-and dark forms came plunging onward with incredible
-speed.</p>
-
-<p>Our young one caught a glimpse of a great
-fish high in the air heading for him, and the next
-instant there were several huge gaping mouths
-between pairs of shining eyes rushing upon him
-from all sides. He saw his young comrades
-seized and swallowed, their frantic efforts to
-escape availing them not the least. Then with
-a wild terror, which spurred him to frantic action,
-he rushed seaward. A giant mouth made
-a snap at him as he went past. A huge form
-rose in the air and dropped upon him with jaws<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-gaping. He made a mad dodge and just missed
-the rows of teeth, while the stroke of the falling
-body almost stunned him. Then he recovered
-and tore for the outer breakers. The bonita
-had struck inshore, and lucky would be the small
-fish who could escape their rush.</p>
-
-<p>Away into the deepening blue of the ocean he
-sped headlong with all his energy. He looked
-neither to the right nor left, but held his way
-straight ahead with the terror of those fierce
-monsters vibrating through his whole being. On
-and on, without a thought of rest or slacking
-his speed, he pushed until the bright sunshine
-showed him a desolate waste of fathomless blue
-void around and beneath him, and a bluer void
-above, with the little lumpy trade-clouds swinging
-past overhead. He was heading almost due
-west, and as the day wore on and his terror gave
-place to fatigue, he slacked his speed enough to
-take a careful look about him. There was not
-a living thing in sight.</p>
-
-<p>Hunger soon came upon him and stirred him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
-to further action. He began searching the sea
-for food. Soon one of his former companions
-came up almost as exhausted as himself with the
-run for life, and together they swam slowly along
-just beneath the surface in the roll of the swell.</p>
-
-<p>As the day passed more of his youthful relatives
-hove in sight until by night six followers
-held their way in his wake. These were all who
-had gotten to sea. Few indeed had escaped.
-The day had marked the death of countless
-young fish, for the bonita spared nothing that
-came in their path.</p>
-
-<p>The seven albicore cruised in company, capturing
-what small surface fish accident cast in
-their way, but all the time they held a general
-course to the westward and northward to where
-the coral reefs rose from the bed of the equatorial
-ocean. Day after day they swam steadily on,
-the young albicore leading. Their silvery
-bodies grew apace and their backs took on a shifting
-blue color, so that looking down from above,
-it would have been hard to tell them from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-surrounding blue depths. Sometimes the ugly
-and noisy bos’n-birds would swoop down as
-though to strike them, but by sinking a few feet
-beneath the surface the albicore easily escaped.
-At night the seven swam beneath a tropic moon,
-and as they went their courage grew rapidly with
-their size. Unfortunately they approached an
-unknown peak lying below the surface of the
-great ocean. Here they were chased by a huge
-dolphin who haunted the vicinity. Three of
-their number fell prey to him before they could
-get away. A week or two later the remaining
-four fell in with a roaming pair of bonita. Two
-more went the way of the weak.</p>
-
-<p>The remaining pair of albicore now cruised
-onward together, our hero leading as before,
-until they came to Tahiti, in the South Sea.
-Long accustomed to danger now, they approached
-the shore warily, their tapering bodies
-scarcely disturbing the sea. The albicore had
-grown very fast, developing during these weeks
-of travel into powerful fish. The teeth of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-male leader began to show sharply beyond his
-lips. He was growing more and more muscular,
-and the long swim was hardening him. He was
-sturdy and shrewd, and the wild instinctive fear
-that had governed his younger actions now gave
-place to a feeling of confidence. His mate had
-also developed into a strong fish, and as they
-swam slowly in through the outer breakers of the
-barrier reef, their long, sinuous bodies armed
-with jaws and teeth which were not to be despised,
-smaller fish approached to welcome them. The
-albicore received them coldly, heading straight
-into the sheltered coves of coral, where they would
-rest from their long run. Here they stopped
-at last and set about making a new home.</p>
-
-<p>During the months that followed the albicore
-grew several feet longer. Our leader was now
-nearly six feet in length, with his long jaws
-armed with razor-like teeth, his tapering flanks
-with silvery scales covering muscles of great
-hardness and power. And with that power came
-a consciousness of his worth. His wild life and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-flight made him careful of the denizens of the
-coral banks. He grew cold and thoughtful
-until, as he reached his final development physically,
-he was a dignified and quiet fellow. The
-smaller sociable fish of the reef did not understand
-him. Theirs was a life of ease and comparative
-safety, and their thoughts seldom went
-beyond the boundaries of the outer barrier.
-They fussed among themselves and voted the
-great stranger and his companion surly company.
-The inquisitive little sunfish would
-sometimes take a peep in at the cove where the
-albicore usually lay in the sunshine on bright
-afternoons, but there was something in the great
-fish’s manner that the little reefer could not understand,
-and he set him down for a villain, keeping
-at a distance and looking askance always at
-those ragged teeth that peeped out from the
-long, sharp jaws. Even the mullet were warned,
-and gave the albicore a wide berth, while all the
-time he lay there with his thoughts far away
-where the peaks of Juan Fernandez rose from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
-the sea. He was indeed a stranger in a strange
-place. Finally he was left alone with his mate.</p>
-
-<p>The little sociable fish were heeded not at all
-by the albicore. He went to the reef daily and
-caught what small game he wished. His dignified
-movements were even watched by the great
-ground shark who lay daily under the shelter of
-the outer barrier, waiting to snap up any unwary
-traveler who might be unfortunate enough to be
-caught in the rolling surf and lose control of
-himself. Once only did the shark come in contact
-with the stranger. It was when the albicore
-had been rolled shoreward in the roaring
-surge. The lurking monster thought it a good
-chance to strike. He received a savage cut over
-the eye that left him somewhat bewildered and
-much more respectful of the powerful stranger’s
-rights in the vicinity.</p>
-
-<p>As the season changed and the trade-wind
-shifted to the eastward, bringing with it little
-watery clouds, the two albicore became more and
-more restless. The future king’s sensitive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-nature became more and more imbued with the
-feeling that he must return to the waters of his
-birth to take his place among those of his kind.
-He would be needed. The bonita would come
-again, and there might be no albicore leader
-to protect those who had escaped their last assault,
-and who would return to the beautiful
-peaks that rose from the sea of his birth. There
-was a feeling within him that he must be there
-for a purpose. He was something more than
-a mere cruising pirate of the reefs of the South
-Pacific. The petty life of little sociable fish was
-not for such as he. There was something for
-him to do before he died, and this feeling became
-stronger and stronger until one rainy morning
-he started out accompanied by his faithful mate.</p>
-
-<p>He was now at the fullness of his powers, a
-full-grown albicore of the southern ocean. All
-the inheritance of the race of giants from whom
-he had sprung was in his strong frame and lightning-like
-actions. He could dart so swiftly the
-eye could hardly follow his form, and by a slight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-swerve upwards he could spring high into the
-air above, leaving the sea ten feet or more below
-him, and then with head pointed gracefully
-downward, he would plunge into the blue depths,
-slipping his long, sinuous body so easily into the
-unresisting medium that there would be hardly
-a splash to mark his entrance. There were
-strength and grace in all his movements, and he
-was as bold as he was beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>The speed of the fastest ship was slow as compared
-with his tremendous pace, so although he
-took his time and spent several days hunting
-upon the surface of the sea, it was but a short
-run for him to Mas-a-fuera. It was a very different
-passage from the one made when as a little
-fellow he voyaged out.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_214" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 24.0625em;">
- <img src="images/i_219.jpg" width="385" height="589" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">FULL INTO THE CENTRE KING ALBICORE TORE HIS WAY.</div></div>
-
-<p>The high, grim cliffs of Mas-a-fuera rise a
-sheer thousand feet on the north side of the
-island, and the wind is usually southerly. This
-makes a ponderous lee, the only sea being the
-heave of the offshore swell. Many denizens of
-the deep ocean come in here to rest and search<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
-for food, and even the great cachalot, or sperm-whale,
-often takes a quiet cruise through the
-clear depths to enjoy the stillness, and incidentally
-look up a stray octopus or cuttle fish who
-might be ensconced within some ocean cavern in
-the cliffs.</p>
-
-<p>It was toward this sheltered lee-shore our albicore
-held his way. Above the heights the huge
-pall of vapor rose as in his younger days, standing
-out clearly against the void of blue, as
-sharply outlined as a heavy cumulus cloud.
-There was no mistaking the place. He felt like
-a sailor who had made a long voyage and had
-sighted the home port at last.</p>
-
-<p>As he went shoreward, followed by his mate,
-he noticed many silvery flashes in the water between
-him and the land. Drawing nearer he
-saw that these were caused by countless albicore.
-Soon he was amid a throng of his fellows numbering
-thousands, all making their way toward
-the sheltered sea in the lee of the island. With
-the spirit and instinct born in him and developed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-by his roaming life, he at once took the lead of
-this vast school and led them slowly in to the submerged
-rocks which would shelter them during
-their stay. Great numbers of females, heavy
-with spawn, straggled from the flanks of the
-column, but he swam around them, forcing them
-all into an almost solid phalanx of moving fish.
-The memory of the bonita was still fresh
-within him. He would take no chances with
-these helpless kindred. They seemed to recognize
-his leadership without question, and followed
-quietly wherever he led the way. Now and
-then some frisky younger member of the horde
-would make a sudden start to sheer away, but
-with a rush our leader was upon him, and he was
-forced back again. As they drew near the island
-a school of porpoises made a dash among them.
-These fellows drove the more timid in frantic
-throngs until our leader came plunging to the
-rescue followed by a few of the largest and boldest
-of the school. In a few minutes the warm-blooded
-animals had received some severe strokes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-from the razor-like teeth and they went plunging
-seaward. Then the mass of albicore went in
-and took possession of the rocks, the smaller fish
-fleeing before them.</p>
-
-<p>Here at last our hero was in the waters he
-loved. Game was plentiful and the schools of
-the albicore led by him along the sunken rocks
-found it easy to keep supplied. His great size,
-greater than even the largest of that vast host,
-made his leadership unquestioned. Everything
-stood clear of his rush except the sullen sharks,
-and even they took care not to precipitate trouble
-by hanging too closely about the rear of his
-foraging parties as they went their way along
-the shore.</p>
-
-<p>During the whole season the albicore hung
-about the reefs of Mas-a-fuera and Juan Fernandez
-Island. The young had come forth and
-the sheltered places inside the outer breakers were
-teeming with them. Our leader had driven to
-sea all other fish who were at all antagonistic to
-them, and peaceful tranquillity reigned. Once<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-or twice a growing fellow, who had reached six
-feet or more in length, wanted to try conclusions
-with the leader, but he soon had enough after
-encountering the sharp teeth, and took his place
-among the followers. He was their king. A
-king by election and superiority, he led them
-steadily until the season waned, and the time for
-the bonita to strike inshore came at hand.</p>
-
-<p>As this time drew near the feeling of unrest began
-to show itself among the school. Stragglers
-began to leave the reef and seek the open ocean
-with the instinctive longing for that safety
-which exists there. Our king watched them go
-by pairs and sometimes dozens, but he made no
-attempt to stop them. There would be enough
-to look out for without them, and they could well
-be spared.</p>
-
-<p>Finally the time came for the general movement.
-He had marshaled the great host of albicore
-from the adjacent reefs, and together in one
-vast throng they left for open ocean, going to
-the northward to avoid the enemy who would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-attack from the south and west. The bonita
-were not as large or as heavy as themselves individually,
-but they were the strongest creatures
-of their size in the ocean, and their countless
-numbers made them absolutely fearless. They
-would attack anything that stood in their path,
-and their great vitality and quickness made them
-the most dreaded of all the foraging bands of
-sea-wolves which roamed the South Sea.</p>
-
-<p>The solid phalanx of albicore started offshore
-at sunrise, the king in the van and the younger
-and more helpless bringing up in the rear of the
-column; but as before many of the young had
-been overlooked as they loitered among the sheltered
-places in the rocks.</p>
-
-<p>The head of the moving mass was a full mile
-from shore before the end of the crowd had begun
-to leave, and as the sun shone upon the calm
-ocean, its rays struck glancing along the flanks
-of thousands of moving bodies, making the water
-seem like shimmering silver as the light flashed
-from the bright scales. There was no wind at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-all, and far away to the westward our leader
-thought he saw a peculiar disturbance of the sea
-surface. He took a leap into the air to get a
-better view and was followed by many of his
-companions, who usually imitated his example in
-all his movements. As he rose in the sunshine
-his glistening armor reflected the light and made
-him visible for miles. What he had seen upon
-the western skyline was enough. As far as the
-eye could reach the ocean had spurted white at
-his plunge, for the bonita had seen him, and with
-a front of several miles in extent they were plunging
-toward the band of albicore, tearing the
-calm surface to foam with their rush. It was as
-though some mighty explosion had taken place
-and spurted the sea upward in little jets along
-the front of a sunken reef, for the bonita acted
-almost in unison in spite of their vast numbers.
-They were now in full charge.</p>
-
-<p>When two rapidly moving bodies, of almost
-equal weight, meet, the one having the swifter
-movement will prevail. King Albicore understood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-this principle instinctively, and instantly
-darted forward. His followers joined him, and
-away they rushed straight for the line of breaking
-water which drew nearer and nearer as the
-moments flew by. The rear of the column,
-finding the head leaving at speed, closed up the
-gap and came onward until soon the entire mass
-of albicore were driving headlong to the westward
-as fast as they could go.</p>
-
-<p>It was a magnificent sight to watch those
-charging columns. A million bonita charging a
-hundred thousand albicore. Nowhere on land
-could such vast hosts of large living creatures
-marshal. The sea was ruffled and foamed for
-miles with the disturbance of the fleeting bodies,
-and from above the bos’n-birds could watch the
-long line of pointed heads making the ocean
-darken with a huge shadow as the hordes
-rushed onward.</p>
-
-<p>A mile, then a half—a quarter, and still the
-ruffling lines of ocean surface seemed to draw
-nearer with undiminished speed. There was a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-seeming instant of quiet. A space of apparently
-unruffled water. And then they met.</p>
-
-<p>Like an eruption from some subterranean crater
-the sea sprung upward. The long lines of
-pointed heads struck together. Bodies flung
-high in the air. Tails, heads, quivering sides
-streaming from ugly gashes, were thrown into
-the sunlight, and then upon the quiet of the
-morning there broke a deep, dull, moaning roar
-of immense volume.</p>
-
-<p>Full into the center of the great army the
-king albicore tore his way. Bonita snapped
-and flashed upon all sides, their vigorous bodies
-fairly quivering with the rapidity of their movements,
-but with his jaws cutting like a pair of
-flying shears, he held his way while his sturdy
-followers entered behind him and forced the gap.
-Into this, like a wedge, pressed the body of the
-column, cutting and fighting with incredible
-fury. Comrades fell out by the hundred,
-chopped and torn by the bonita who surged in
-upon the flanks, but the great mass of albicore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-tore its way through, killing everything in its
-path.</p>
-
-<p>Away they went straight ahead. The bonita
-fell away sullenly from the solid ranks, and in
-half an hour the last albicore had gone through
-the gap in close column, leaving the sea and its
-scavengers to wipe out the marks of their passage.
-There was no changing front to that
-horde. The course was straight ahead. It was
-certain death to be left behind.</p>
-
-<p>The bonita held their way toward the reefs of
-Mas-a-fuera and were soon out of sight in the
-East.</p>
-
-<p>But King Albicore, what of him?</p>
-
-<p>With flanks cut and ripped almost to ribbons
-he stuck at the head of the column. No sheering
-this way or that. The feeling had come upon
-him that he had done his duty. He had fulfilled
-his mission. He, the king, had led his comrades
-to victory, and he must pay the great debt
-which falls to all sons of nature. Silently and
-steadily he went along, his instinct telling him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-his time had come. But with it there were no
-regrets.</p>
-
-<p>He had done all he could for his kind, and
-like a king he would die.</p>
-
-<p>The bright sunshine would fade and the blue
-water would disappear forever. They would
-forget him, and another leader would take his
-place. But he knew he had done his duty and
-knew he had done it well, and the great throng
-would live to be thankful for his prowess.</p>
-
-<p>The sunlight seemed to be fading and darkness
-appeared to be coming upon the ocean, yet
-he knew it was not quite midday. He turned to
-take one look at the mighty host he had brought
-to sea. They were still following him faithfully.</p>
-
-<p>Then the light went out. He turned upon his
-side and sank downward through the blue depths,
-while the albicore held their way to the coral reefs
-of the South Sea.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="THE_NIBBLERS" title="The Nibblers">THE NIBBLERS</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_227" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.375em;">
- <img src="images/i_231.jpg" width="358" height="586" alt="THE NIBBLERS" />
- <div class="captionh"><i>The NIBBLERS</i></div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> “Nibblers” received their name
-from Mr. Keon, second officer of the
-steamship <i>Spitfire</i> of the Great American
-Fruit Company’s line running to the tropics
-for bananas. The family, commonly speaking,
-were simply ship’s rats, but Mr. Keon was of a
-romantic and discerning turn of mind, and after
-making their acquaintance he christened them
-comprehensively.</p>
-
-<p>To Mr. Keon they were much more than ordinary
-rats. He knew the whole family intimately
-from old Mrs. Nibbler, the mother, down to little
-Tiny, the smallest and most timid youngster of
-the lot, and to be known by the second officer
-was a privilege not granted to all who came
-aboard the fruit ship. He was a man who possessed
-an enormous fund of material from which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-he could draw without effort for sea stories, and,
-according to many authorities, consequently
-possessed a large amount of “gray matter” in
-his head. Whether this came outside in the form
-of hair, or remained inside in the form of brains,
-it is not necessary to inquire. He told the
-story of “The Nibblers,” sitting one night on
-the edge of the forward hatch with the full
-tropic moon behind him and the soft wind of the
-Florida Stream blowing the smoke from his pipe
-away to leeward, and enough of it was remembered
-to get his name down as that of a very remarkable
-man.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see,” said he, after we had been watching
-the antics of a huge rat who was scampering
-around the edge of the hatchway, “that feller
-has got as much sense as you have. It’s ole
-Toby, one o’ the old fellers what’s been aboard
-this vessel since she carried her first cargo. He’s
-a most uncommon old rat, an’ that’s a fact. He’s
-as happy an ole raskil as ever haunted a ship’s
-bilge, an’ he aint afeared o’ much. I seen him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-chase a cat clean into the galley door onct, and
-he would ha’ got her but fer the fool ‘doctor’
-heavin’ a pan at him. See how quick he kin
-jump. Just look at them whiskers, hey?</p>
-
-<p>“I remember when I first seen him, away back
-in the eighties, when Captain Jackson took command.
-He ware a young feller then an’ the captain’s
-wife used to come o’ evenings an’ sit on the
-bridge jest over this forrad hatch. She ware a
-fine-lookin’ gal, an’ that’s a fact, a heap finer-lookin’
-than the ole man. He warn’t nothin’
-much fer looks anyway, a little chap with a
-squint an’ grizzled whiskers fer all the world like
-ole Toby’s there, but he ware a terrier fer
-handlin’ canvas in the ole days. I seen him onct—but
-no matter, that aint got nothin’ to do with
-what I’m goin’ to tell ye.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see, the gal was mighty pretty. I don’t
-know as I ever seen a woman as good-lookin’. She
-had golden hair, an’ eyes as soft an’ blue——”</p>
-
-<p>“Go on with the yarn,” interrupted the
-bos’n; “we’ll let the girl go.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-Keon smoked on in silence after this as though
-he had taken offense, but we soon saw by the look
-of his eyes that he was far away from that fore
-hatch.</p>
-
-<p>“The second mate used to sit right here,” he
-went on at last, “an’ she would look over the
-bridge rail on fine evenings an’ watch the Nibblers
-goin’ an’ comin’ around this hole. Rats
-is like all other animals, includin’ humans, in
-respects to selections, an’ the way these fellows
-would fight an’ scrap fer each other was somethin’
-funny to see. The biggest an’ strongest
-rat would knock the other out an’ take up with
-one o’ the young an’ frivolous females, jest like
-it occurs in story books. He was the hero, big
-an’ strong an’ fine-lookin’, an’ o’ course the gal
-rat would care fer him like females care fer all
-heroes. He was supposed to have all the fine
-qualities o’ rat in his make-up, jest like a hero
-has, an’ the way he would go a-scamperin’ around
-after some little feller who wasn’t strong enough
-to stand to him was funny to see. The captain’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-wife used to come to the rail an’ look down an’
-watch them fer hours, an’ laugh an’ laugh when
-some fellow like big Toby there would put the
-rest out the way, an’ the second mate he would sit
-there close by durin’ the dog-watch, an’ watch,
-too, but he warn’t always lookin’ at the rats.
-Then when he had to go on the bridge he had to
-meet that queer little captain who waren’t no
-bigger’n a good-sized mouse. He didn’t reach
-much more’n up to the second mate’s shoulder.
-Sometimes the young woman looked hard at the
-two when they were together, an’ the skipper
-would get nervous, fer he thought a lot o’ her—an’
-so did the second mate. The men forrads used
-to notice a thing or two, an’ they called the skipper
-‘Squeak Jackson,’ he was so little an’ small
-in his voice. But he kept his temper an’ never
-let on as to what he thought o’ his size, fer he
-had been a good one.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see, rats don’t have no consciences.
-That’s where they differs with humans. Fools
-don’t have none to speak on, but sometimes there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-comes a time to most men when they wonders
-what about the little feller what gets licked. It’s
-all right in stories o’ love, and no one bothers at
-the time about the weaklin’ who can’t hold his
-own, but really when it comes down to hard fact
-without all the romance o’ women in it, there’s
-somethin’ sorrowful about the poor feller who
-can’t hold his way agin the stronger one. He
-aint done nothin’ wrong in bein’ weak, an’ he
-was born that way, so why blame him fer it?
-Sometimes it seems as if the world was wrong,
-always goin’ sides with the fine, handsome hero
-o’ the affair who can drive off the weaklin’ an’
-rescue the female. What about the feller who
-was born weak an’ small, aint he got no feelin’s?
-But nobody cares a rap fer him. It’s nature.
-It shows humans are mostly animals, an’ as fer
-me I sometimes feel I lost somethin’ by not bein’
-born a rat.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see, the <i>Spitfire</i> was in the banana trade
-then. Bananas are the devil to carry if they get
-ripe on you, and get switchin’ around below. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-seen the banana slush four feet deep in the lower
-hold, an’ ye know banana juice is about as acid
-as anythin’ goin’, an’ it cuts iron into holes an’
-pits quicker’n you can tell o’ it. Ye got to be
-mighty careful cleanin’ a banana ship’s bilge if
-you don’t want her to get pitted, an’ her bottom
-like a piece o’ blottin’ paper soft enough to poke
-yer foot through with a kick. It takes a man
-who knows how to take care o’ a banana ship to
-keep her up!</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know how rats come to be in ships,
-but they come by the hundreds. Mebbe they
-come in the fruit, or stores. Anyways, there
-they be, an’ there’s no way to git rid o’
-them.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye see, there has to be a ceiling of wood in
-an iron ship to keep the fruit off’n the plates, an’
-it’s in atween this that the little critters git.
-They aint no more like a shore rat than you are.
-They are all sailors, every one o’ them, an’ they
-stan’ their watches same as you an’ me. You
-see these fellers running around here now, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-there’s a lot more below that won’t come on deck
-until I go below. Toby there is in my watch,
-an’ I feed him. Them that aint in my watch
-won’t come out till the bell strikes, an’ then they
-peep up, an’ if they see the mate out they come
-on deck an’ look fer the grub some fellers in his
-watch fetches up now an’ then.</p>
-
-<p>“But what I was tellin’ was this. We took
-aboard a lot o’ fresh ones down to Montego Bay,
-an’ among ’em was that old fat female rat ye
-see there sittin’ on the edge o’ the coamin’. She’s
-the mother o’ half a hundred now, but when she
-first come aboard she was a young an’ frisky rat
-as ever you see. She’d been aboard a week or
-two afore I noticed her, but on the way south
-again, one night when we struck into the warm
-water, I noticed her come on deck with a lot
-more. It was just such a night as this an’ the
-little skipper an’ his wife were on the bridge a-lookin’
-down at the black hole o’ the fore hatch.
-Soon the gal made out the rats a-runnin’ an’
-jumpin’ around the opening an’ the second mate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-sat there waitin’ fer the bells to strike afore he
-went on watch.</p>
-
-<p>“That ole rat was skippin’ away from a whole
-crowd o’ young rats what was a-followin’ her
-around, an’ that big Toby there he was gettin’
-sort o’ interested. He was a young rat then,
-ye see, an’ he looked on sort o’ solemn like fer
-a while an’ let ’em skip around, but I seen that
-he wasn’t goin’ to stand still long. Suddenly
-he gave a squeak. Then the frolickin’ stopped
-sudden like an’ Toby come forrads.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, you may not believe it, but he went
-straight up to that handsome young female an’
-said ‘How d’ye do’ as plain as ye please. I don’t
-mean to say he spoke, but that was his action,
-an’ no mistakin’, fer the pair stood nose to nose
-fer the space o’ half a minute. Then they went
-off together to another part o’ the deck, an’ ye
-ought to seen how them other young rats took it.
-It was comical an’ that’s a fact. He had done
-the polite to that female rat an’ was gettin’ along
-handsome’ an’ the gal above was laughin’ at it,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-while the skipper walked athwartships an’ took
-no notice.</p>
-
-<p>“Toby hadn’t been more’n two minutes with
-his fair one when up comes a sassy-lookin’ rat,
-about as big as a kitten. He was lookin’ fer
-trouble, that rat, fer he jest walked right up an’
-lit into Toby without waitin’ fer further orders.
-Sink me, if that weren’t a scrap. Ye never
-would think them little critters would take on so.
-A pair o’ bulldogs warn’t in it with them rats,
-an’ the rest all crowded around, comin’ up
-slowly, an’ lookin’ to see which one would do fer
-the other.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, the second mate sat still lookin’
-on, an’ the gal was lookin’ down from above over
-the bridge rail. The night was bright enough
-fer to see things pretty well on deck, an’ the gal’s
-eyes showed interest. It was the same old story,
-the choosin’ o’ the hero, only they was rats, an’
-there wasn’t no doubt that we wanted the best
-one to win: him that was the biggest an’ strongest
-an’ best-lookin’.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-“It’s been a long time ago now, but ye would
-think that ole rat would still have the marks o’
-that fight on him, an’ mebbe he has. They
-grabbed at each other with them long teeth, an’
-I tell you they made the fur fly fer a few minutes.
-The sassy big rat made a pass an’ grabbed Toby
-by the leg, an’ sech a squealin’ ye never heard.
-But that female rat sat quiet, an’ jest kept
-lookin’ on, waitin’ fer the finish. Toby saw he
-was in a bad fix. He was gettin’ the worst o’ the
-fight, fer that rat had him fast enough by the
-hind leg. It was up an’ down an’ all over the
-deck forrads, the old fellow squealin’ an’ bitin’,
-an’ that sassy-lookin’ rat jest holdin’ on fer further
-orders. It looked blue fer Toby an’ he seen
-somethin’ must be done sudden if he wanted that
-fine female rat fer a side pardner down in the
-bilge. He stopped his squealin’ an’ was quiet
-fer a minute, thinkin’ an’ tryin’ to plan out some
-kind o’ game fer to git away an’ get his grip on
-that sassy rat that was slowly sawin’ his leg off.
-All to onct he give a jerk. Then he bent his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-body double an’ rolled on his back like a ball.
-That brought his enemy up alongside him an’
-the next minute he was fast to him amidships,
-gettin’ a good grip o’ the feller’s
-belly.</p>
-
-<p>“I tell you he must have pinched right hard.
-That sassy-lookin’ rat couldn’t stand the bite, an’
-let go the leg grip he had, squealin’ an’ twistin’
-to get away. But no sirree. Old Toby had him
-fer sure this time, an’ he jest settled right down
-to business, shakin’ an’ pullin’, fer there aint
-nothin’ a rat kin stand less than a good shakin’.
-Pretty soon the feller began to give up an’ try
-to get away, squealin’ a different sort o’ squeal
-from the sassy squeal he began with.</p>
-
-<p>“Then Toby goes fer him harder than ever,
-but jest as he was tryin’ to get a new hold, the
-fellow up an’ bolts fer the open hatchway, an’
-the fight was over. Then all hands scrambled
-below, an’ Toby walks right up to the fine female
-rat what was waitin’ fer him an’ they goes off together.
-Then the gal on the bridge laughs right<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-out an’ says ‘Bully boy,’ an’ the second mate
-looks up an’ sees the look in her eyes, an’—well,
-I dunno, after that they used to come together
-somehow until the skipper speaks up one day an’
-asks the second mate his business.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Ye seem to have too much to do,’ says he
-one evenin’ to the second mate, ‘an’ if I was you
-I’d keep more by meself, or mebbe I’ll take ye
-in hand a bit.’</p>
-
-<p>“That second mate was thinkin’ o’ them rats,
-an’ speaks up: ‘You kin try yer hand when we
-gets in port. I’m an officer here an’ can’t get no
-show, but on the beach I’ll take yer skin or I’m
-a soger,’ says he.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ so the captain was too proud to take
-advantage o’ his position, an’ waits until the
-vessel was in at Port Antonio. Then he steps
-ashore an’ tells the second mate to follow him an’
-take a lickin’.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, sir, there aint no use tellin’ how that
-fight come off. It took three hours to put that
-dinky little skipper temporarily to sleep, an’ the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-fellers what seen the scrap tells a thing or
-two about it,—but they was only niggers an’
-didn’t count. Anyways, the second mate was as
-well pounded as a beefsteak, but he was a hero,
-an’ that’s a fact. He was a pretty good sort o’
-man, an’ some says he was fairly good-lookin’.
-Anyways, he was way ahead in looks o’ that
-dinky little skipper, an’ the gal, I believe,
-thought so too. Yessir, it ware the same ole
-story o’ choosin’ the hero over again, jest like
-it takes place in story books—only a bit different,
-fer the gal was already married in this case,
-an’ sech doin’s never is printed except in papers.
-But that second mate, he ware the hero jest the
-same.</p>
-
-<p>“When the <i>Spitfire</i> went to sea again there
-was a mighty quiet sort o’ skipper aboard, an’
-a second mate who was a-lookin’ out fer squalls.
-There was evidently goin’ to be a change aboard
-at the end of the passage. But all the time that
-gal she jest kept to herself, an’ by the look o’
-her eyes she ware tellin’ the second mate plainer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-’n mud that he ware the man fer her. The dinky
-little skipper could see it too.</p>
-
-<p>“The night she went to sea the second mate
-was sittin’ on the edge o’ the hatchway here as
-usual when it come on eight bells, an’ he seen all
-that new load o’ rats a-gettin’ ashore fast. It
-aint no good sign to see rats gettin’ out o’ a ship.
-They generally leave afore she goes down, an’
-when the second mate seen them a-goin’ ashore
-he was fer followin’ them. Then he thinks o’
-that gal again an’ stays, fer you may not believe
-it, but ole Toby, there, an’ his mate wouldn’t go
-ashore. They stays on deck at the last minute
-when the second officer was gettin’ ready to clear
-an’ when he seen it he says he’d stay too. It sort
-o’ put him in mind o’ hisself.</p>
-
-<p>“It began to come on to blow the day after
-we passed Cape Maysi. Ye know how it is in
-the windward passage, so it didn’t bother us
-much. But along about dark the glass began to
-drop sudden like, until it got down about three
-marks below where it ought to stayed. The air<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
-was warm an’ sultry comin’ hot from the s’uthard.
-The haze what comes with the hurricane
-was raisin’ plain in sight, an’ the dinky little
-skipper puts her head to the east’ard to clear the
-center, fer it ware jest in our wake.</p>
-
-<p>“I seen it blow before, but sink me if ever it
-blew anywhere’s like that. The sea ware jest
-a roarin’ hill leapin’ up with a cross heave in it,
-an’ the air was like a solid wall when it struck.
-No, sir, ye couldn’t stand on the bridge. It
-would have picked ye up bodily an’ hove ye overboard.
-The roar ware deafenin’, an’ we hove
-her to on the starboard tack to work clear, an’
-jest then, by some luck or other, she waded right
-into the center o’ that whirl where the seas ware
-jest standin’ right up on end.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye can’t do nothin’ with a ship caught in
-the center of one o’ them circular storms. It
-blows in sech squalls that there aint no way a
-tellin’ which way it’s comin’, only it comes with
-sech a mighty weight that no ship kin stan’ to
-it. An’ the sea falls down on ye from anywhere<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-at all till the decks are under tons o’ water,
-an’ everythin’ gone to the devil stove up.</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Spitfire</i> ware knocked over in one o’ the
-rushes o’ hot wind that ripped the funnel out o’
-her. Then an almighty sea broke right amidships
-an’ tore the side o’ the house away an’
-flooded the engine room. It ware lookin’ kind
-o’ bad fer us, an’ when the engineer come on deck
-half drowned, an’ said the engine ware done fer
-an’ the water a-comin’ in about two feet at a
-jump, we made up our minds the ole ship ware
-done fer, an’ the best thing ware to get clear as
-soon as we could.</p>
-
-<p>“But no small boat could have lived in that
-sea a minute. There wasn’t anything to do but
-wait until the gale wore down, which it did after
-about three hours of the heaviest blowin’ I ever
-seen. Then she eased up an’ the ole ship was
-jest decks out in a sea what would make yer hair
-white to look at.</p>
-
-<p>“We made a lee o’ the side an’ lowered down
-the boats before daybreak, that dinky little skipper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
-jest a-standin’ an’ lookin’ on an’ never a-sayin’
-a word.</p>
-
-<p>“The first officer he takes the first boat what
-swings clear, an’ then the gal she looks down at
-the second mate. He puts her in the next boat
-an’ they lower it down an’ they scramble to get in,
-fer the ship is wallowin’ in that nasty sea an’ feels
-dead. Some fool fumbles the tackle an’ nearly
-capsized the craft, but the second mate he grabs
-the line in time to save it an’ she goes clear. The
-men rush to find places, an’ then the second mate
-stan’s there alone with that dinky little skipper,
-who hasn’t spoken or moved from the chart-house
-door.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s all mighty plain. The fellers from below,
-white with scare an’ tremblin’ as they grab
-the ship’s sides. Some pushes the others an’ then
-they curse and swear to kill each other when
-there aint enough breath in them to speak out
-loud.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Be ye a-goin’ in that boat, sir?’ says the
-second mate to his captain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-“‘Go an’ be d——d,’ says the dinky little
-skipper.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ the second officer jumps in an’ the
-painter is cast off. Then the little skipper stan’s
-out an’ watches them slowly go away—watches
-them drawin’ off further an’ further, an’ his
-eyes is on the gal in the boat, an’ his hands is
-folded on his breast. That’s the last they sees
-o’ him as he stands there with the risin’ sun a-shinin’
-on him an’ the blue sea washin’ nigh up
-to the ole hooker’s deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Fer seven days an’ nights the fellers in that
-boat has a time with it. Then there comes a
-ship bound in an’ takes ’em aboard, an’ in a few
-days they finds themselves in New York, the
-second mate an’ the gal hardly speakin’.</p>
-
-<p>“When they comes ashore the first man the gal
-sees is that dinky little skipper a-waitin’ there on
-the dock, jest as natural an’ chipper as if he
-wasn’t the ugliest skipper ever in a decent ship.
-An’ funniest of all she jest naturally goes an’
-flings herself at him like a dolphin at a bait,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
-landin’ right in his arms. Fer, ye see, that old
-hooker <i>Spitfire</i> warn’t so badly used up as the
-engineer thought, an’ when the sea went down
-she didn’t make no more water to speak of. The
-next mornin’ a vessel comes along an’ lends a
-hand to the dinky little feller aboard, an’ pretty
-soon the engine is a-goin’ an’ the ole ship is
-headin’ away on her course with one o’ the company’s
-ships alongside to see her through.
-There aint no salvage to pay, an’ all is taut as
-a gantline.”</p>
-
-<p>Here Mr. Keon stopped and knocked the ashes
-from his pipe. The great rat he called Toby
-scampered down the hatchway as the bells struck
-off, warning us that the first watch was at
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>“What became of the little captain?” asked
-the bos’n.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that little feller got the finest ship in the
-company’s fleet. He’s commodore now, ye see,”
-said the second mate, “an’ we got ‘Peepin’
-Shaw’ in his place.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
-“Did they discharge the officers that deserted?”
-asked a sailor.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Keon looked sorrowfully at him and rose
-from the hatchway. Then he stopped a moment
-and fumbled his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>“D’ye think second officers sech as me are
-plentiful abouts, hey?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>He was a powerfully built man and showed to
-some advantage in his working clothes of light
-duck.</p>
-
-<p>“Second mates sech as me aint to be picked
-up everywhere, ye might know, an’ this ship has
-never had but one since she was launched,” and
-he went on the bridge for his watch on deck.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="JOHNNY_SHARK" title="Johnny Shark">JOHNNY SHARK</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_251" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.75em;">
- <img src="images/i_255.jpg" width="364" height="594" alt="JOHNNY SHARK" />
- <div class="captionh">JOHNNY SHARK</div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> the middle of the South Atlantic Ocean,
-about six hundred miles to the eastward of
-Cape St. Roque, rises the peculiar peak
-called the St. Paul’s Rock. It is some sixty feet
-above the sea level, and is a ragged granite point.
-Within a cable’s length of it the bottom apparently
-falls out of the ocean, for it takes nearly
-three miles of piano wire with an enormous deep-sea
-lead attached to find the half-liquid ooze below.
-If the blue water were suddenly to subside
-the tiny point of the St. Paul’s would present a
-different appearance. It would then be the highest
-pinnacle of a most colossal mountain.</p>
-
-<p>It is on the edge of the calm belt, close to the
-equator, and the blue depths surrounding its
-huge flanks are seldom, if ever, disturbed by a
-storm. Only the steady trade swell rolling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>
-gently in upon its sides forms a white ring about
-it, and the dull roar of the southern ocean is but
-a low monotonous thunder that would hardly
-frighten the timid flying fish.</p>
-
-<p>Besides this there is nothing save the occasional
-snore of a sea breaking over a submerged
-peak to disturb the silence; for here desolation
-and loneliness reign supreme. It is as though a
-bit of the Great Silence of the ocean bed were
-raised up to be burned in the glare of the torrid
-sunshine, and fanned by the breath of the unending
-trade wind.</p>
-
-<p>But, if the peak is devoid of life, a look into
-the beautiful blue abyss alongside shows a different
-state. All kinds of shell-fish inhabit the
-hospitable caverns beneath, and fish can be seen
-darting here and there through the bunches of
-seaweed. The busy coral works steadfastly at
-his never-ending toil. The sea-crabs, star-fish,
-and their myriad brethren are all visible.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes a couple of albicore will dart past
-below the surface, or a flash of white reveal the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span>
-quick strike of a dolphin, followed instantly by
-a shower of glittering gems that break from the
-surface and scatter,—the flying fish that have
-escaped those rapid jaws.</p>
-
-<p>Then a huge dark shadow will rise slowly out
-of the blue invisibility below, and all the smaller
-fish will disappear. The shadow will take form,
-and will be that of an old shark lazily policing
-the rocks for pieces of the game that are deserted.
-He is a large brute, but in spite of his
-enormous fins and tail he is quite willing that
-others shall do his work of the chase for him.</p>
-
-<p>If there happens to be an injured fish near,
-the great tail will give one or two powerful
-strokes, and chop! Those jaws, armed with half
-a dozen rows of sawlike teeth, with the points of
-those above fitting into the spaces between those
-below, seldom have to strike twice.</p>
-
-<p>The first motion upon the part of the monster
-is a signal which produces a strange effect. No
-sooner has he bolted the game than from all
-around rise dark-brown and gray shadows.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span>
-These congregate about him, and he lazily swims
-away, leaving probably half a hundred of his relations
-to search the clear depths for what might
-be left.</p>
-
-<p>And such relatives! One has a head half a
-fathom wide, his eyes peering wickedly from the
-curving sides of his shovel-like nose. Another
-has stripes like those of the tiger on land, and is
-hardly less ugly in disposition. Let the old fellow
-who first tackled the game get a slit in his
-hide and the striped fellow see it. He will find
-his affectionate relative’s knowledge of the fact
-announced by a sudden chop. Then there will be
-a general mix-up, and if he is still active and
-strong enough he may live to dine upon the unsympathetic
-cousin. But more than likely the
-cousin will be re-enforced by a host of hungry
-comrades, whose ideas of fair play are somewhat
-biased by an uncontrollable appetite for anything
-nutritious. If this is the case he will apparently
-melt into that beautiful blue void about
-him, leaving but a slight stain which will soon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span>
-disappear. It was here in these abodes of the
-genus carcharodon that our hero was born.</p>
-
-<p>He was one of a school of six when he first saw
-the light, and his five brothers and sisters were so
-like him that the great mother shark could hardly
-tell them apart. When she opened her enormous
-mouth one day to receive them and give them
-shelter while a desperate sword-fish swung his
-weapon in her face, she made a miscount when
-shutting her jaws, and one belated little fellow
-was quickly swallowed by the insolent enemy.
-The mother made a dash and chopped off a
-piece of the sword-fish’s tail as he fled before her
-wrath, but he escaped in spite of this.</p>
-
-<p>During his babyhood Johnny Shark had many
-trials. There were the hideous little pilot fish to
-deal with. They were always following him
-around trying to rob him of his rights. Then
-his brothers also lacked in unselfishness, and he
-fought them, one and all, from the beginning,
-until his disposition became somewhat combative.</p>
-
-<p>During this period of his life his skin was of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span>
-most beautiful velvety gray, shading to white
-on his belly. His hard bony lips formed a sheath
-for his cutters, and they fitted in behind them
-as snug as a sword in a scabbard. They were
-very small, but the same shape as his mother’s
-triangles, and he could work them on their bases
-as though hinged in his jaws. He was but little
-more than a foot in length, and he kept close to
-his mother’s side, ready to shelter should a
-fierce albicore or any of the giant mackerel tribe
-take a notion that he would make a good meal.</p>
-
-<p>And yet he could venture deep in the shadow
-of the mountain defiles, where in some of the huge
-caverns gigantic, many-armed monsters, with
-huge beaks and eyes a foot in diameter, lay waiting,
-seizing whatever unfortunate fish happened
-within the sweep of their snaky tentacles. In
-fact all around him was an eternal war. Everything
-seemed to be fighting with everything else
-and only the luckiest and most powerful beings
-seemed to last many changes of the moon.</p>
-
-<p>As for his brothers and sisters they were like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
-himself, keeping close to his mother, and ready
-for a refuge within her huge jaws at the first
-sign of an approaching enemy.</p>
-
-<p>As he grew slowly he began to develop a wandering
-spirit. He would leave the protecting
-shadow of his mother when she would float lazily
-upon the surface, and explore the ragged fringe
-of foam to see what might be had in the way of
-diversion. Once a great bonita made a dash at
-him, but he saw him coming in time, and turning
-he chopped him savagely. The taste of
-blood seemed to invigorate him, for he hung
-fiercely upon his now fleeing enemy until he tore
-away, leaving a mouthful of himself in the
-tightly locked jaws. He was too lazy to follow
-up his victory. A fat porpoise chased his
-wounded assailant until he conquered him and
-made him his meal.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, he seldom cared for violent exercise,
-and could hardly understand the foolish savagery
-of some of the warmer-blooded denizens
-about him. When he fought he generally made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
-a sure thing of it. He would take no chances
-where a wound or exhaustion meant certain
-death. There were plenty of small rockfish
-that were too stupid to run when he approached,
-and he could always get enough of them without
-playing the game of death for the pleasure of it.</p>
-
-<p>Once a school of giants came to the Rocks, and
-he lay in the shadow of a crag wondering at their
-size. They were sperm whales, and their leader
-was an enormous old fellow whose fat sides were
-studded with barnacles. These seemed to
-trouble him, and he would roll slowly up to a
-peak near the surface where the sunlight filtered
-down through the blue, and rub his belly for
-hours at a time, scraping off thousands of the
-parasites. Then the stupid little fishes would
-dart out from their hiding places to catch them,
-and he would dash among them before they could
-get back again. While the monsters lay near the
-Rocks a very long and thin relative of Johnny’s
-mother paid them a visit. His tail was enormous,
-and it was evident he was fast. He seemed to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span>
-have some business with his parent, for soon
-afterwards she followed him off to sea where one
-of the whales lay sleeping with the water breaking
-gently over her back.</p>
-
-<p>When they were close to her they made a sudden
-dash, the lean shark leaping high in air and
-falling with a tremendous whack upon the sleeping
-victim, while his mother chopped her savagely
-in the sides. It was all so sudden he hardly
-had time to get away, for in an instant the sleeping
-whale awoke and tore the sea into foam with
-her flukes.</p>
-
-<p>His mother, however, heeded the outfly but
-little and held gamely on. The whale tried
-to turn and seize her in the long thin jaw that
-was studded with enormous teeth, but nothing
-could dislodge the grip of her triangles. And all
-the time the thin fellow in company would throw
-himself in the air and smash the whale terrific
-blows with his lean tail.</p>
-
-<p>The noise must have been an uproar, for in a
-very few minutes the great leader who had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
-rubbing his belly came plunging through the
-water towards them, leaving a great path of
-white foam to mark his course.</p>
-
-<p>Then the whale sounded, carrying his mother
-out of sight below. Instead of following, the
-thresher shark dodged the great bull leader and
-made off, leaving the mother shark to get away
-as best she could.</p>
-
-<p>She came up with the whale half a mile away,
-and then finding herself deserted she let go and
-started to make off. As she did so she encountered
-the big bull coming after her. She ducked
-from his bite, but he smote her such a blow with
-his flukes as she dodged past that she was hardly
-able to escape.</p>
-
-<p>The next day she grew weaker, and a sword-fish,
-seeing her, gave her a final taste of his
-weapon, and began to chop her up. Instead of
-driving him away, several other sharks, that now
-appeared, openly joined him in accomplishing
-her destruction, and soon she disappeared entirely.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span>
-With no protection save his own teeth, the
-little shark now went his way among the peaks.
-Deep down in the blue abyss he would sink until
-the terrible pressure would force him up again
-to the world of sunlight. Sometimes he would
-stay for hours a mile or more down in caverns
-and caves of the mountain side, guided alone by
-the sense of smell and that delicate sense of feeling
-peculiar to his kind. Each and every motion
-of the sea caused a vibration that instinct
-explained. Once a huge arm reached out from a
-hiding place and circled him within its embrace,
-but before it could draw him in he had chopped
-it in two, and leisurely ate what remained as he
-swam on.</p>
-
-<p>He was growing strong now, and his triangular
-teeth developed saw edges, making the most
-perfect cutting machines possible to devise. His
-skin was tough and coarse, a bony substance
-forming upon it that made it almost tooth-proof
-to ordinary fish.</p>
-
-<p>He developed a roving disposition, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span>
-vicinity of the great mountain became too well
-known. He started off to the westward where
-the sun seemed to sink in a deep golden-red
-ocean, and he cruised along near the surface, his
-dorsal fin and tip of tail just awash.</p>
-
-<p>Out upon the lonely ocean he quickened his
-movement. There was nothing, nothing but the
-never-ending sea ahead, with the soft murmur of
-the trade wind turning the glistening surface a
-darker blue, while from miles and miles away to
-windward came the low song of the South Sea.</p>
-
-<p>On and on he went until hunger made him look
-about for a victim. He was not particular as to
-who or what this creature might be, for his own
-powers produced an apathy of fear for all dangerous
-denizens of the deep. He was changing
-now, and no longer shunned a conflict with anything
-that formerly might have wounded his soft
-sides.</p>
-
-<p>One day a whale passed in his wake. The huge
-bulk of the creature might have appalled any
-fish, but he was hungry, and the fat blubber was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span>
-tempting. His own three fathoms of lean, hard
-flank seemed meager enough.</p>
-
-<p>With a quick movement he turned and made
-straight for the cachalot. The monster opened
-his mouth by dropping his long, thin under jaw,
-and made a chop at him, but he swerved and sank
-his triangles deep in the blubber of the animal’s
-neck, covering a good hundred pounds of him.</p>
-
-<p>The whale plunged wildly, lashing right and
-left with his powerful tail, finally throwing himself
-clear of the sea and falling again with a
-stupendous crash. But the shark held grimly
-on. Rolling over and over the animal tried to
-throw himself clear of that grip. The blubber
-was tearing out in a huge ribbon where the triangles
-had cut it clear, and the blood was showing
-upon the white fat. The sea was a surf upon
-a submerged reef. And all the time the shark
-jerked and wrenched, dodged and pulled until
-the huge mouthful came clear.</p>
-
-<p>Quickly the whale turned to chop with that
-long jaw studded with huge points of ivory.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
-Quicker still slewed the shark. The whale missed,
-and the shark again sank those terrible cutters
-deep in the hole already made in the animal’s
-neck. This time it was flesh that felt the bite,
-and the pain maddened the leviathan. With a
-bellow like a bull he started off, dragging the
-shark along with him as though he had been but
-a tiny pilot fish.</p>
-
-<p>On and on the great whale tore, while the
-shark hung helpless by his side. The whale was
-doing all the work, and all he had to do was to
-hold on. Gradually the pace eased a little, and
-finally stopped. Then down, straight down into
-the abyss below, plunged the leviathan.</p>
-
-<p>But even here the shark still held his grip.
-The pressure became enormous in that cold
-blackness, but he could stand it as well as the
-monster.</p>
-
-<p>Then, after an hour of twisting and rolling,
-they came quickly to the surface again, the whale
-somewhat tired. Now was the shark’s chance.
-Letting go his hold he made a sudden fresh chop<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span>
-to tear the bite out, and he backed away with a
-huge piece of flesh. The whale turned as quickly
-as possible, but he was tired now, and the shark
-chopped him again and again, savagely tearing
-out great pieces of blubber and beef.</p>
-
-<p>The sea was dyed red, and the surging of
-flukes and threshing about brought several wandering
-sharks from the depth to see what it all
-meant. One of these, a huge killer, joined the
-fight against the whale, and soon he also chopped
-and tore the wound into a great hole. The fight
-now became general, as the strangers took a
-hand. The worried whale rolled and smote right
-and left, but our shark tore him deeper and
-deeper.</p>
-
-<p>One of the newcomers ventured across the
-whale’s head, and was promptly seized in the
-long thin jaw that swung up and cut him in
-halves. All except the first assailant left the
-whale to eat the unfortunate shark, and the two
-fighters were alone again for some minutes.</p>
-
-<p>The whale now became weaker, and except for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
-an occasional lunge lay quietly beating the sea
-with his flukes.</p>
-
-<p>The shark now began to bolt large pieces of
-him at his leisure, and the rest seeing him at
-work came sneaking back again. They formed a
-circle around the dying monster, and rushed in
-and chopped him whenever they dared. In a
-little while he began swimming slowly in a circle,
-and then finally stopped. He gave one final sidelong
-blow with his flukes that broke every bone
-in a shark’s body that happened in its way. Then
-he lay still and rolled upon his sides. He was
-dead. And now from the lonely depths where
-all was apparently a void, the scavengers came
-sneaking forth.</p>
-
-<p>Big sharks and little sharks, hammerhead
-and shovel-nose, all began to circle about the
-huge carcass, and watch for a place to chop a
-piece of blubber out. They crowded and jostled
-each other, and sometimes even fought for a
-place alongside. Above them the whale-birds
-screamed and squawked as they hovered and lit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
-for an instant to tear at the juicy covering of the
-carcass.</p>
-
-<p>Our fighter had by this time gorged himself
-with several hundred pounds of whale beef, and
-being tired from the exertion of the encounter,
-he swam slowly away.</p>
-
-<p>In the following weeks of cruising he found
-smaller game, but he now felt a contempt for all
-other creatures. He had vanquished the largest
-animal alive, and the feeling that he could conquer
-anything made him slow to tackle smaller
-fish.</p>
-
-<p>For months he cruised to the westward and
-skirted the shores of the continent, finding
-enough to eat around the river mouths. In one
-harbor where there was much offal he lived for
-several years, only going to sea for a draught of
-fresh salt water now and then. He grew steadily
-in size until he reached full twenty feet in
-length.</p>
-
-<p>His hide was now of a dull grayish-brown,
-shading to white on his belly. Upon it the little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
-hard lumps of bony substance thickened. His
-jaws were nearly three feet wide, and he now had
-six rows of triangles, the outside and largest
-being over an inch on a side clear of the gums.
-His eyes were large and bright, and his nose
-broad and sensitive.</p>
-
-<p>Several ugly little fish followed him around
-wherever he went. They had flat tops to their
-heads, and looked like black corrugated chunks
-of rubber with tails to them, the corrugated part
-of their heads being on top. With these slits
-they sucked strongly to the shark when he swam,
-making him tow them about without any exertion
-on their part. His hide, however, was too
-thick to mind a little thing like that, and he
-finally came to know each one so well by sight
-that he never made a chop at them. They were
-about the only living things he let pass him.</p>
-
-<p>As time passed he developed a taste for company.
-A desire to meet his kind came upon him,
-and he left the lazy life in the harbor and went
-to sea again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
-He traveled through the West Indies, and
-there one bright hot day on the reef he met a
-shark that appeared most friendly. It was a
-new feeling that came upon him at the meeting,
-a desire to live in the companionship of the
-stranger for a time. He even found himself letting
-her take the first choice of some barracuda
-he had killed, and from one thing leading to another
-he waxed very affectionate.</p>
-
-<p>They traveled together during a moon, and
-then they found a warm spot on the Bahama
-Bank where the hot stream flowed past beautiful
-coral hills that rose from the blue depths.</p>
-
-<p>Here they lingered for some time, his mate
-giving birth to five soft-skinned little sharks.
-He was not much interested in this and once made
-a chop at one of the youngsters, cutting him in
-half.</p>
-
-<p>For this his mate made a chop at him, and
-nearly cut off his side fin. Then, finding that
-everything was not as pleasant as it had seemed,
-he cruised away again to the southward.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
-One day he came to a queer thing floating
-upon the water. It was not unlike a whale as
-viewed from underneath, but every now and then
-a peculiar creature with arms and legs swaying
-wildly, dropped from it and went to the bottom.
-Then, staying but a moment to collect some shell-fish,
-it would rise again to the surface.</p>
-
-<p>This interested him, and he lay by watching.
-Then, the smell of these creatures being somewhat
-appetizing, he made a dash at one as he
-arose.</p>
-
-<p>He came to the surface with the man in his
-jaws, and he saw the whalelike object was full
-of similar animals. They shouted and made a
-great noise when they saw their fellow chopped
-in halves and carried away by him.</p>
-
-<p>Now the taste of this peculiar creature was
-very good—much better, in fact, than the fish
-he had been eating. For a long time after his
-meal he waited a few fathoms below the surface,
-hoping another would descend.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, he noticed a long line trailing away<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>
-from the floating thing above. He watched it
-and smelled it, and found there was something
-tied to the end. He was a little afraid that there
-was something wrong with that line and a sudden
-fear came upon him. He hesitated. Then
-his old careless spirit came back, and he nosed
-the bait, finding it some kind of flesh he had
-never tasted before. He pushed it about while
-the instinctive fear of the peculiar smell held
-him. Then he made a chop and bolted the lump.</p>
-
-<p>The line, however, would not cut. He chopped
-and chopped, again and again, backing away,
-but to no purpose.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the line became taut. A sharp pain
-struck him in the throat, and he knew he was fast
-to the line by some sharp thing in the flesh he
-had bolted.</p>
-
-<p>He became panic-stricken and fled away. But
-no sooner would he forge ahead a few fathoms
-than that line would draw so tight the pain was
-unbearable. He would be slowly and surely
-pulled back again.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
-This lasted for some minutes, and then his old
-spirit of apathy came upon him, and he allowed
-the line drag him where it chose, while he
-held it like a vice in his jaws.</p>
-
-<p>Soon he found himself at the surface, and the
-strange creatures like the one he had eaten made
-a great noise. There were several flashes like
-lightning, only not so bright, and with the noise
-like thunder he felt heavy blows upon his head.
-He made a desperate dash away, and tore the
-line slack for many fathoms, but the pain in
-his throat stopped him from going farther.
-Then he was lifted slowly back to the surface
-again.</p>
-
-<p>There he lay a huge, dark shadow under the
-clear water. He was growing faint and dizzy
-from the blows upon his head, and the last he
-saw of the bright sunlight was the blue water
-foaming about him, and a row of eyes looking
-over the edge of the floating thing.</p>
-
-<p>They passed a bowline over his tail and hitched
-the throat-halliard block to it. Then they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span>
-hoisted him tail first into the air, and cut the
-hook from his mouth. A diver cut off his tail
-and hung it on the jib-boom end for luck. Later
-they cut him adrift and he sank slowly down to
-the white coral below, lying there upon his side,
-a grisly sight. The shadow above disappeared,
-and then the scavengers of the reef came creeping
-up to do their work.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="A_TRAGEDY_OF_THE_SOUTH_ATLANTIC" title="A Tragedy of the South Atlantic">A TRAGEDY OF THE SOUTH ATLANTIC</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_277" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.5625em;">
- <img src="images/i_281.jpg" width="361" height="591" alt="A TRAGEDY OF THE SOUTH ATLANTIC" />
- <div class="captionh">A TRAGEDY OF THE SOUTH ATLANTIC</div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> whaling schooner <i>Erin</i> was a modern
-vessel. She had a little of the “old
-greaser” about her. She had been
-built and fitted out at New Bedford, Mass.,
-the mother-port of nearly all good whaling
-craft, and she was manned by men who had
-served their time in whaling ships. Her tonnage
-was not over three hundred, but she was so
-strongly put together that she looked somewhat
-heavier than she really was. Her bow was like
-that of a clipper, and her stern had the modern
-overhang of a cruising yacht, but her beam was
-great and her top-sides bulky, showing a tumble-home
-like that of the ancient frigates. Therefore,
-she was not considered fast. Her spars
-were short and stumpy, and she had no foreboom,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
-owing to chunky smokestack that arose from
-her main deck, over which the foresail passed.
-She was flushed fore and aft, save for a heavy-built
-superstructure over her engines, through
-which the smokestack protruded, and it was evident
-that she could stand a great amount of
-rough usage. Being built for southern whaling
-in the vicinity of Cape Horn, she needed all the
-strength that could be put into her, and Captain
-Jackson, her commander, always kept her down
-to a draught of fifteen feet, even when running
-light, to enable her to hold up to the tremendous
-rolling seas off the Cape. Forward, she carried
-a peculiar sort of cannon on her forecastle, which
-fired an exploding harpoon weighing a hundred
-pounds, heavy enough to put a quietus upon any
-ordinary member of the whale family. Her boats
-and other gear were of the usual type; but, as
-she was not to carry oil, either in bulk or casks,
-her deck was devoid of the ordinary furnace of
-the sperm-whaler, and her hold of the odor which
-comes from the usual mass of rancid blubber<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
-when packed for a long voyage from the Arctic
-Ocean, in vessels hunting the right whale. She
-was, in fact, a stanch, trim little vessel. Her
-crew of thirty men had been selected and shipped,
-and Captain Jackson cleared for his last cruise.</p>
-
-<p>When well off shore, the boiler was cooled and
-sails set, for there must be no waste of coal, and
-the <i>Erin</i> stood to the southward on her long run
-to the Falkland Islands, where she would begin
-her hunt for the giants of the southern ocean.</p>
-
-<p>The run south was made without any unusual
-experience. On the sixty-first day out she raised
-the huge mountains of Patagonia to the westward,
-and, shortening sail so as to drift not over
-four knots an hour, she hauled on the wind and
-stood through the “black water” between the
-Falk Islands and Staten Land.</p>
-
-<p>In December and January, the Antarctic summer
-months, the air is quite cold as far north
-as the fiftieth parallel. The “blow” of a
-whale stands out sharply against the sky as the
-warm air in the animal’s lungs turns into vapor,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
-giving the hunter a chance to see it at a distance
-of several miles. Objects seem to lift from off
-the horizon as in a mirage, only they are not inverted.</p>
-
-<p>Here, in the summer season, the great rorqual,
-or finback whale, disports himself in ease and
-security, for, until lately, he has had few known
-enemies, and has been unmolested by man. Dozens
-of these great creatures often follow a huge
-bull leader, and they jump and plunge about as
-lively as they would if their weight were reckoned
-in pounds instead of tons.</p>
-
-<p>The huge, timid creature who led a school
-under the shadow of Tierra del Fuego, that season,
-was a giant of his kind. One hundred feet
-of solid bulk was between the tips of his tremendous
-flukes and the end of his hideous head. A
-hundred tons of bone and sinew, covered with a
-coating of thin blubber, to keep out the cold of
-the icy seas.</p>
-
-<p>His head was ugly and flat-looking, and his
-mouth a hideous cavern, full of slabs of whalebone,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
-from which depended masses of horrible
-hair to act as a sieve for the whale-food poured
-down his gullet. His back slanted away to a
-place amidships, where a lumpy knob rose, as if
-he were a hunchback, and from there aft he
-sloped in long and sinuous lines to the spread of
-his tail or flukes, which were fully two fathoms
-across. The blades of the <i>Erin’s</i> wheel were not
-nearly so large or so powerful as the blades of
-bone and cartilage that drove him ahead through
-the yielding medium, or raised the tons of flesh
-and blood to a height that showed a full fathom
-or more of clear sky under his thin belly when
-he breached. He was a giant, a descendant
-from prehistoric ages when monsters of his kind
-were more common than they are to-day. It is
-doubtful if ever anything existed in flesh or blood
-of greater size.</p>
-
-<p>How old the giant was no one could learn. His
-age could hardly have been less than two centuries,
-for whales grow slowly. They are like
-other warm-blooded animals, and it takes many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
-years to build up a mass of a hundred tons of
-flesh fiber. He was known to Captain Jackson,
-who had seen him on former voyages, but as yet
-he had not made his acquaintance; for, in spite
-of the old whale’s size and age, he was very timid.
-He would rush from a pair of fierce “killers,”—the
-dreaded sharks who attack toothless whales,—and
-only his tremendous size and activity
-would prevent them from following him. Consequently,
-whenever Jackson lowered his small
-boats, with the intention of making him a visit,
-the old fellow would wait only long enough to
-allow the boats to approach within fifty fathoms
-of him. Then he would begin to edge away, and,
-before the whale-gun could be brought to bear,
-he would be in full flight to windward, his flock
-or school following in his wake. Many were the
-maledictions cast upon him by the whalemen,
-whose tired muscles bore witness to his speed,
-and, finally, he was left alone to roam at will in
-the “black water.” Where he went to, at the
-beginning of winter, it was impossible to tell,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
-but, at the first easterly blow, he would disappear,
-bound for other parts, leaving nothing
-behind but a crew of angry sailors, and taking
-with him the memory of an undisturbed old
-age.</p>
-
-<p>On that December morning, when Captain
-Jackson hauled on the wind and stood offshore,
-the sun shone brilliantly. The wind was light
-and from the southwest, and objects stood up
-plainly from the sea. The lookout at the masthead
-had just been relieved, when the time-worn
-cry of “blo-o-ow” reached the deck. Away to
-the southward rose the jets, looking almost as
-high as water spouts, as the warm vapor condensed
-in the cool air. It was a large school, or,
-more properly speaking, herd, for a finback is
-no more a fish than is a cow. Jackson came on
-deck and watched the blows, counting them over
-and over to get the exact number of his game.
-Whalebone at so much a ton was within easy distance,
-and it looked as if a few thousand dollars’
-worth of the substance would find its way<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
-below hatches by dinner time. The forward gun
-was overhauled and the line and harpoon cleared,
-the latter being charged with a heavy load of
-powder. The explosion would open the huge
-barbs of the harpoon and drive them deeper into
-the monster, expanding in his flesh, making it
-absolutely impossible to withdraw them by pulling
-on the line. They would not hunt him after
-the manner of the tame and harmless sperm
-whale, that can be killed with about as much ease
-as a cow in a pasture, in spite of all the sailors’
-yarns to the contrary.</p>
-
-<p>The whales paid no attention whatever to the
-schooner. They played a quiet, frolicsome
-game, breaching and sounding, and coming often
-to the surface to breathe. There were some
-young ones among them, and the huge leader,
-the giant bull, seemed to take a special pride in
-one whose antics were more pronounced than the
-rest. He would come near it and seem almost to
-touch it gently with his side flipper, and the little
-fellow would make a breach clear out of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span>
-water, apparently with pure joy at the notice
-bestowed. Then he would come alongside the big
-fellow and snuggle up to him in a most affectionate
-manner, and the giant would roll toward him
-and put out his great arm or flipper, as if to bestow
-a caress. He was a very affectionate old fellow,
-and, as the vessel drew nearer, his size and
-actions were remarked by the mate, who called
-the skipper’s attention to them. Just then the
-great whale breached, and the sun, striking
-fairly upon his dark side, showed several deep
-lines that looked like huge scars. His long, thin
-shape and hideous head were plainly outlined
-against the sky, and, as he struck, the sea resounded
-with the crash. He disappeared, and
-the little fellow breached and followed him.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s the big coward, the leader,” said
-Jackson. “You kin tell him by them cuts he has
-in his sides, an’ there aint nothin’ bigger afloat.
-He is an old one and wary. You wouldn’t think
-a whale with them scars on him would be scared
-at a little boat, hey? Them was cut a long time<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
-ago, mebbe, but they were done in a fight sech as
-ye’ve never seen.”</p>
-
-<p>“Mebbe he got licked?” suggested the mate.</p>
-
-<p>“He wouldn’t be here if he had,” said Jackson.
-“Howsomever, here he is, and it’s our business
-to get him and cut him up, if we kin.”</p>
-
-<p>To stop the leader of the whales was the object,
-for, if he was held, the rest would either
-scatter or await developments. In either case
-they would not get very far away, and could be
-reckoned with afterwards. The <i>Erin</i> was held
-pointed toward the spot where the whale was
-expected to rise, and the mate went forward and
-stood behind the gun with the harpoon loaded in
-it, and ready for a shot as soon as he should come
-within twenty fathoms. The old coward, however,
-had seen the approaching ship, and, with a
-peculiar movement of his flukes upon the water,
-he gave the signal for danger.</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere in that oily brain the memory of
-his past life was stored in a strangely simple but
-vivid manner. He remembered, although he was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
-unable to reason it all out like the human being
-who hunted him; but, a thousand moons before,
-he had gone forth in the ocean from his birthplace
-in the South Pacific, and had held his way
-proudly and with force. Fiercely he had fought
-for everything he took of the world’s belongings,
-and the joy of battle had run warm in his blood.
-It had surged through his great frame at the
-sight of a stranger, and he had striven and conquered
-all who had opposed him or refused to do
-his will. Many had died, for a sea fight is usually
-to the death, and the strangeness of the passion
-had gradually worked its way into the old
-mind, and he held aloof. The experience of a
-hundred years taught him something. The oily
-brain learned slowly. The instinct, or feeling,
-had gradually come upon him that to fight is a
-great waste of energy, for life was more pleasant
-in the companionship of his many wives and
-young ones, and continual strife was not the
-right thing. To avoid it, if possible, was the
-thought uppermost in his old head; so, when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
-saw the approaching schooner, he gave a warning
-stroke upon the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly all the whales sounded.</p>
-
-<p>But Captain Jackson was an old whaleman.
-He was after whales, and he had come thousands
-of miles to hunt them. The animals must come
-up again, soon, and to be near the spot where
-they would reappear would probably mean a capture.
-With a keen sense of reasoning, the bull
-knew that bodies that travel through the air must
-necessarily be retarded by the wind. Therefore,
-to windward he led the herd, and Jackson
-did not underestimate his cunning. With fires
-started under the boiler, the <i>Erin</i> held her way
-straight into the eye of the breeze, and the mate
-leaned over the forecastle rail, gun-lanyard in
-hand, peering into the clear depths for the dark
-shadow below that would show the presence of a
-rising monster. Jackson stood at the wheel with
-the signal pull in his hand, waiting to “shake her
-up” at the first sign of the game. The wheel
-turned slowly below, and the slight jar of machinery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
-vibrating the hull was the only sound
-save the stirred water abaft the rudder from
-the thrust of the screw, gurgling and murmuring
-in a soft undertone.</p>
-
-<p>The whalemen were gathered about the forecastle
-head, or stood near the boat falls, ready
-to lower away at a signal, and secure their victim.
-The sun shone strongly, and objects were visible
-at a great depth below the surface of the sea.
-Ten minutes passed, and Jackson was getting
-nervous. He had tried to gauge the rapidity of
-the old bull’s headway through the water, and
-had figured that he would come up somewhere
-in the vicinity of the vessel on her course. But
-not a sign of a whale had shown, and ten minutes
-had passed. They must be badly gallied, indeed,
-to stay under much longer. The old bull was
-cunning; but he, Jackson, knew a thing or two.
-It was pitting the old brain of an animal with
-a century or two of experience against that of
-an old man with keen intelligence. The skipper
-felt confident. He would take a long shot at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
-big fellow, and, once fast to him, whalebone
-would be plentiful for a few days. While the
-mate was leaning over the rail forward, looking
-down into the depths, he noticed a sudden darkening
-of the water just ahead of the vessel. He
-sprang to the cannon and stood ready to fire.
-The great shadow rose toward the surface, and
-the men saw instantly that it was a huge whale.
-Jackson was right, to a hair. The great bull
-was coming up under the jib-boom end. A man
-raised his hand aloft and gave a low cry, while
-the rest stood back from the gun to escape the
-shock of the heavy discharge and powder-blast.
-Jackson rushed to the rail and leaned over.</p>
-
-<p>But the great shadow did not materialize into
-anything more. It remained deep down beneath
-the surface, fully twenty feet below, and, as the
-schooner forged ahead, it drifted alongside, a
-few fathoms distant. The signal was made to
-stop the engines, and both the schooner and the
-whale lay quietly drifting, the animal deep down
-and perfectly safe from a shot.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
-“It’s the coward, all right,” said Jackson,
-coming to the mate’s side; “that big coward bull
-what won’t show up for nothin’. I never seen
-sech a scary whale. Look at him—sink me, jest
-look at him! Blamed if he didn’t wink at me.
-Will ye look at that eye?”</p>
-
-<p>The old whale was lying almost motionless,
-and his eye could be seen distinctly. He was
-watching the vessel carefully, and the rippling
-water from the bends actually did give him the
-appearance of opening and closing one eye as
-the waves of light flashed upon it. He seemed to
-be very much absorbed in profound contemplation
-of the ship. Perhaps he had not expected
-to find her so close aboard when he intended to
-breach for a breath of air. However, there was
-plenty of time. Breathing was something he
-was not obliged to indulge in more than once
-every half-hour or two, and he would not come
-up until he had put a little more distance between
-himself and the vessel. All hands were peering
-over the side at him when, suddenly, several<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
-blows sounded close aboard. All about, jets of
-spray and vapor shot skyward, and fully a dozen
-whales breached and then disappeared again.
-The mate rushed for the gun and Jackson
-sprang to the engine signal, while the second
-and third officers, “bos’n,” harpooners, and the
-rest, ran for their gear. When they looked over
-the side again the shadow of the giant had disappeared,
-and the sea was as quiet as a lake. In
-a few minutes a huge form breached about a
-quarter of a mile ahead—the bull had breathed,
-and was quietly going to windward. The animals
-were not badly gallied as the word is applied
-to thoroughly frightened whales. They had
-gone along at a steady, but not fast, gait, and
-had come up together as if at a signal. The
-schooner was not troubling them very much, and
-the sea was wide. There was room enough for
-all.</p>
-
-<p>The high, grim cliffs of Staten Land rose
-higher and higher as the morning wore on. The
-<i>Erin</i> was heading inshore, still pointing into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span>
-breeze, and now and then a great spurt of foam
-and a blow would show where the whales led the
-way straight ahead.</p>
-
-<p>“Of all the low-lived critters I ever see, that
-cowardly bull air the meanest,” said Jackson,
-after seven bells had struck; “but I’ll fix him, if
-I chase him clear to ’Frisco. I won’t mind burning
-a few tons o’ coal fer him. Put an extra
-charge of powder in behind that iron, and loose
-off at him when we come within thirty fathom.”</p>
-
-<p>“Looks like he’ll be a-climbing the mounting
-ahead thar in a minute,” said the mate, motioning
-toward the high and ragged hills which rose
-out of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>“We’ll strike ile in half an hour, or I’m a
-sojer,” said the skipper decisively. “You tend
-ter yer own, and don’t give no advice, an’, if
-there’s any climbin’ to be done, I’ll do it.”</p>
-
-<p>The animals still held along inshore, and it
-looked as if they would soon be in shallow water.
-The leadline was gotten out when the vessel came
-within half a mile of the rocks, and a sounding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>
-was taken. No bottom was found at fifty
-fathoms, and she was allowed to drift further in,
-her engines barely turning fast enough to give
-her steering way. The land was very near, and
-Jackson was nervous. The heavy snore of the
-swell upon the ledges sounded plainly over the
-sunlit sea, and every now and then a spurt of
-foam showed that, although the ocean was calm,
-there were heavy breakers falling upon the shore,
-caused by the lift of the offshore heave. That
-barren island was not an inviting coast, and to
-strike upon a sunken ledge would mean disaster.
-Jackson stood upon the poop, with his hand upon
-the signal, ready to reverse the engines and
-swing clear, when there seemed to be a slowing
-down in the movements of the game ahead. Then
-the water whitened about the ship, and the cause
-became evident. They were running through a
-great mass of whale-food, and the tiny gelatinous
-bodies were so thick that the color of the sea
-was changed by them. Jackson rang off the
-engine.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span>
-“We’ve got ’em now,” he said quietly, and
-watched the surface of the ocean.</p>
-
-<p>The big bull whale had run into the mass of
-food, and had slowed down a little to allow quantities
-of it to pour down his gullet. There was
-no unseemly haste in getting away from the pursuing
-stranger. He would suddenly slew to the
-southward, when he reached four or five fathoms
-of water, and then the pace could be increased
-until the following craft would be dropped behind.
-He was a cool-headed old bull, and there
-was no occasion for nervousness—all would have
-gone well with the whole herd, if it had not been
-for a willful young cow.</p>
-
-<p>As the <i>Erin</i> slowed down the whales ahead
-were swimming upon the surface, taking in the
-food in enormous quantities, apparently enjoying
-their dinner, and showing no interest in the
-vessel that held along, with her sinister purpose,
-in their wake. She barely rippled the water, as
-she went through it, and Mr. Collins, the mate,
-stood behind the gun on the forecastle, with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span>
-lanyard in his hand, ready to fire at any back
-that might break water within thirty fathoms.
-The rest crowded about the rail and waited, some
-standing by the line, ready to snub it as soon
-as a stricken animal should become weak enough
-to allow them.</p>
-
-<p>The young cow that lagged behind the rest
-was not very large, but she had a thousand
-pounds or more of good bone in her mouth, and
-she had breached dead in front of the vessel, with
-her tail toward it. The bull saw the distance
-gradually closing between his followers and the
-ship, and he gave again that peculiar stroke with
-his flukes which meant danger. All save the lagging
-whale instantly sounded. She was enjoying
-the food, and failed to regard the signal,
-and the <i>Erin</i>, going up astern, quietly approached
-her.</p>
-
-<p>On account of a whale’s peculiar development,
-it is difficult for it to see directly ahead or astern,
-and an object approaching exactly in line can
-do so quite often without being perceived until<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span>
-within close range. The schooner came drifting
-slowly down upon the animal, and was within
-thirty fathoms, when the big bull suddenly
-breached a short distance ahead, the little fellow
-who had been under his care being with him.
-Again he gave the sea a heavy blow with his
-flukes and disappeared, and nothing broke the
-smooth surface.</p>
-
-<p>But the young cow was obstinate. She enjoyed
-the food, and failed to note how close the
-ship had approached. Suddenly the mate
-straightened himself and looked along the cannon
-sights. There was a flash and a loud report,
-and the exploding harpoon was launched full at
-the broad back that lay drifting almost awash
-just ahead. The heavy missile went straight to
-its mark.</p>
-
-<p>“Stand by to haul line!” came the order,
-while the mate sprang forward and slipped another
-charge into the harpoon gun.</p>
-
-<p>The line whizzed out for a few fathoms before
-the men could snub it, but there was no need for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
-a second shot. The missile had done its work,
-and the stricken cow began the flurry that ends
-in death. Round and round she went in a circle,
-convulsively throwing herself clear of the sea
-and lashing the water into a lather with her
-flukes. Blood dyed the foam and her spiracles
-were crimson. Then she slowed down, and, with
-a few shudders of her great frame, lay motionless.</p>
-
-<p>The fluke chain was gotten out, and she was
-soon fast alongside. A man was sent aloft to
-watch, and the operation of removing the whalebone
-blades from the mouth began. While this
-was going on, the rest of the herd did not run
-away or get gallied. The big bull was seen approaching,
-after a time; and, for an hour, while
-the work of cutting in went on, he came up repeatedly
-at a short distance from the vessel.
-The men thought little of this, as the whale-food
-was thick, but Jackson pondered at the strangeness
-of the old fellow’s behavior. He was an old
-whaleman, and knew that, at the death of one,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
-the rest of a school usually get badly gallied, and
-seldom wait for a second attack. A sperm whale
-will stand, but a finback, never; and, as the old
-bull rose again and again close aboard, he
-watched him furtively from the corner of his eye
-while superintending the work overside. In spite
-of the fact that the cow was fat, the blubber was
-not stripped. She was cast adrift early in the
-afternoon, having yielded a mass of prime
-bone, and her carcass floated astern, to be devoured
-by the countless sharks and birds that
-come, apparently by magic, from the void of sea
-and sky.</p>
-
-<p>It was late in the afternoon when the <i>Erin</i>
-started ahead again, and the mate took his place
-at the gun. No sooner had the carcass floated a
-half-mile distant than the old bull was seen to
-swim alongside of it. The schooner was turned
-slowly around and headed back again.</p>
-
-<p>The old bull had come up to the carcass and
-examined it. The cow was quite dead, and the
-fact that she had been killed by the stranger<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
-gradually became clear to him. Suspicion became
-conviction on his part, and he turned
-toward the rest of his charges and led the way
-straight out to sea. Away out toward the
-Falkland Islands he headed, and reluctantly the
-rest followed. The pace was increased to a
-rapid gait, and soon the pursuing vessel was
-under a full head of steam, plowing through
-the heavy swell at a great rate, in an effort to
-keep the flying herd in sight. The sun sank
-behind the ragged peaks to the westward, and
-the darkness soon put a stop to the chase.
-Jackson had secured one of the herd, but the
-others were gallied and were headed offshore,
-where they disappeared in the gathering darkness.
-Soon the engine was rung off and the vessel
-put under easy canvas for the night, while
-Jackson walked the poop and gave forcible expression
-to his opinion of the old coward who had
-so ignominiously run away.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_300" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37.5em;">
- <img src="images/i_307.jpg" width="600" height="357" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE LINE WAS WHIZZING OUT.</div></div>
-
-<p>Away into the vastness of the southern ocean
-the old fellow led his charges, always keeping the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
-little whale he had with him close aboard. He
-missed the mate who had been slain, but he knew
-that she had disregarded his warning. He had
-done all he could. Now he would take the rest
-far away to other feeding grounds, and the ocean
-would leave no trail to show the stranger whither
-he had gone. The young one near him needed
-protection, and he would keep him close until
-he was large enough to look out for himself. On
-the edge of Falkland Channel was plenty of food
-at that season of the year, and a few hundred
-miles would put the stranger safely out of sight.
-The old brain longed for rest and quiet. Strife
-was a useless thing, fit only for the young and
-unthinking, or those possessed with the killing
-spirit.</p>
-
-<p>The morning dawned, and, as the sun rose
-slanting from the southern ocean, the old bull
-took a look around. Nothing broke the even line
-of the horizon, and then, the feeling that the
-stranger had been left behind coming upon him,
-he slowed the tremendous pace. One hundred<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
-miles of trackless sea had been placed between
-him and the rocks of Staten Land.</p>
-
-<p>For many weeks the herd cruised to the northward
-of the Falkland Islands, the old bull still
-keeping the young whale under his protecting
-care. Finally there was born a pretty little baby
-whale with rounded lines, weighing, perhaps, a
-little more than half a ton. A pair of the fierce
-“killer” sharks soon scented the tender little
-fellow, and made a concerted rush, one day, to
-seize him before the older whales could prevent;
-but the bull smote one a blow with his flukes that
-crushed him as flat as if a house had fallen upon
-him, and the other took flight. He was a watchful
-old fellow, and had to keep on the lookout
-night and day, for the mother whale was weak,
-and would recover slowly.</p>
-
-<p>As the days passed the weather began to
-change. The zone of the “variables,” or that of
-the “roaring forties,” is not to be depended upon
-long for sunshine and pleasant breezes. One day
-it started in for a gale from the eastward, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
-the sea was white with rolling combers. The
-whale-food was driven south, and the animals
-were forced to follow. The sun shone only for
-a short time each day, being but a few degrees
-above the sea line, and the high-rolling sea made
-life upon the surface uncomfortable. The bull
-headed for the South Orkney Islands, and for
-days the little band of giants went along below
-the surface, only coming up every now and then
-to breathe.</p>
-
-<p>As they made their way southward, the wind
-grew less violent. The high black cliffs of the
-islands offered no shelter to vessels, but to the
-whales the lee of the land was comfortable, and
-the sea was swarming with food. There they
-would rest a while and take life easy, beyond the
-reach of the hurricanes from Cape Horn.</p>
-
-<p>The old bull guided the band among the
-sunken peaks, and for weeks they fattened under
-his care, when one bleak morning he came to the
-surface of the sea and noticed a black shape approaching.
-There was something strangely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span>
-familiar in the outlines, and, after watching it
-for some minutes, he remembered the schooner
-<i>Erin</i>.</p>
-
-<p>She was heading straight toward the whales,
-and was going slowly, as if in no particular
-hurry, and upon her forecastle was the same
-murderous gun which had slain the cow near Le
-Maire Strait.</p>
-
-<p>The young whale, who was in company,
-breached playfully into full view and sounded.
-The vessel did not change her course, but headed
-straight for the cow with the newborn calf, who
-was feeding a mile distant to the southward.</p>
-
-<p>The old bull instantly struck the water with
-his flukes and headed for her. The rest of the
-herd took notice of the warning, and sank from
-view; but, whether the cow failed to notice it, or
-her young one was disobedient, it was too late
-to find out. The schooner made a sudden spurt
-of speed, and, coming close to the mother, fired
-the harpoon into her before she fairly realized
-what was taking place.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span>
-The dull boom of the shot told the old whale
-what had happened, before he came up to look.
-When he arrived within a hundred fathoms, the
-mother was in her last agony, and her little
-baby was being towed along with her, being unable
-to realize its mother’s death, and still holding
-to her with all the tenderness of a child.</p>
-
-<p>The old bull lay watching events, and once
-tried to make the little fellow let go by giving
-the sea some tremendous slaps with his flukes;
-but he was too young to understand, and, while
-the bull watched, a boat was lowered and the
-sailors began their work of destruction. They
-rowed slowly toward the infant, and suddenly
-one rose in the bow and hurled a harpoon into his
-soft baby side. The little fellow gave a spring
-upward in his agony. A man quickly pulled
-him alongside the boat and another drove a
-lance through him.</p>
-
-<p>Jackson was standing upon the poop, looking
-on, and the mate was on the forecastle, loading
-the gun for another shot when an opportunity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span>
-should offer. The men in the waist were overhauling
-the fluke chain to make fast to the dead
-mother, while the man at the wheel held the
-spokes idly. The skipper turned toward him.</p>
-
-<p>“Seems to me that that’s the old cowardly
-bull we fell in with to th’ no’th’ard; aint it?” he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir; it looks like him fer sure,” answered
-the man; “jest see him, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>As they looked, the great whale lay watching
-the men in the boat. His old oily brain was
-working, and the rapid events of the last few
-minutes were gradually making an impression
-on his mind. He was wondering at the
-slaughter, and could hardly understand how it
-was done so quickly. The mother had been a
-favorite for many years, yet there she lay, suddenly
-dead before him. Would the strange craft
-follow him over the seas, and kill off the herd
-one by one, until all were gone? The boat approaching
-the young whale stirred his attention.
-He smote the sea savagely with his flukes to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span>
-warn him of the danger. Then the iron went
-home, and the little fellow was dead beside his
-mother. Something flashed suddenly through
-the old brain. The pent-up reserve of years
-seemed to give way within him, all thought of
-safety fell away, and the old feeling of the conqueror
-rose within his heart.</p>
-
-<p>“Good Lord, what’s a-comin’?” gasped Jackson.</p>
-
-<p>His remark was not addressed to anyone in
-particular, but was caused by a terrific commotion
-in the sea which caused the men to drop
-their gear and look out over the side to see what
-was taking place.</p>
-
-<p>The coward, the giant bull who had fled so
-often from them, was heading straight for the
-small boat and was tearing the southern ocean
-into foam with his flukes. Straight as a harpoon
-from the gun forward, he shot with tremendous
-speed, hurling his hundred tons of bone and
-sinew like a living avalanche upon the doomed
-craft.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span>
-“Starn all,” was the hoarse yell from the
-third officer, who stood upon the stern-sheets and
-swung madly upon the steering oar. Men
-strained their necks forward over the schooner’s
-rail to see. The unfortunate men at the oars of
-the whaleboat struggled wildly. An oar
-snapped. There was a wild cry, and some
-sprang up to dive over the side into the sea. At
-that instant the whale leaped high in the air,
-clearing the water fully two fathoms. Then he
-crashed down upon the boat, wiping all out in a
-tremendous smother of spray. He was close to
-the <i>Erin</i>, and the mate stood waiting. There
-was a loud report as Collins fired the exploding
-harpoon into him, taking him almost “on the
-fly,” as it were, and then as he disappeared
-beneath the surface there was a heavy jar that
-shook the <i>Erin</i> from stem to stern. She had been
-rammed.</p>
-
-<p>For an instant not a man aboard moved. Then
-Jackson, with a face as white as chalk, came forward
-and called below to the engineer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span>
-The line was whizzing out upon the forecastle
-head, showing that Collins had made the shot of
-his life. He had struck the whale, but just where
-he had no idea. He stood watching the line as
-it flaked away with the rapidity of lightning, but
-said no word to the men to have it snubbed. He
-had felt the heavy jar beneath the schooner’s
-keel, and knew what it meant as plainly as if he
-had seen the stroke.</p>
-
-<p>Two,—three,—four,—five hundred fathoms
-went whirling over the side, and silence still
-reigned aboard. The sea had smoothed again
-where the whaleboat had been a few moments before,
-but the only signs of her were a few floating
-splinters. Not a man ever appeared again.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the strain was broken.</p>
-
-<p>“Water comin’ in fast below, sir,” was the
-word passed on deck.</p>
-
-<p>Jackson walked aft as if in a dream. The
-mate left the gun, and the last fathom of the line
-flaked overboard unheeded. It brought up suddenly,
-taut as a bowstring, then snapped. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span>
-mate paid not the least attention to it, but went
-slowly aft.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall we provision the boats, sir?” he asked,
-as he approached the captain.</p>
-
-<p>Jackson stared at him. “D’ye know what it
-means?” asked the old whaleman huskily.</p>
-
-<p>The mate nodded. Half an hour later, four
-boats full of men were heading northward for the
-Falkland Islands, and the only thing that remained
-upon the spot where the <i>Erin</i> had floated
-a short time before was the carcass of a mother
-whale with her baby alongside, while above them
-the birds hovered and screamed as if to mark the
-grave of the lost ship.</p>
-
-<p>The next year a Scottish whaleman from the
-Falklands fell in with an old bull whale whose
-starboard side bore a tremendous wound, partly
-healed. He was so wary, however, that he was
-soon lost sight of, and the school that followed
-him gave no chance for a catch.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span></p>
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="IN_THE_WAKE_OF_THE_WEATHER-CLOTH" title="In the Wake of the Weather-Cloth">IN THE WAKE OF THE WEATHER-CLOTH</h2>
-</div>
-<div id="ip_313" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 22.375em;">
- <img src="images/i_319.jpg" width="358" height="574" alt="IN THE WAKE OF THE WEATHER-CLOTH" />
- <div class="captionh">IN THE WAKE OF THE WEATHER-CLOTH</div></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">We</span> had raised the great tower of the
-Hatteras lighthouse in the dim gray
-of the early morning. The huge
-spark flashed and faded as the lens swung slowly
-about its axis some fifteen miles to the south’ard
-of us. Objects now began to be more distinct,
-and our masthead could be made out against the
-leaden background above. Up there the fierce
-song of the gale roared dismally as the little
-vessel rose upon the giant Gulf sea, and swung
-her straining fabric to windward. Then, quartering
-the heave of the foam-crested hill, she
-would drop slowly down that dread incline and
-roll desperately to leeward as she started to meet
-the rushing hill to windward and above her.</p>
-
-<p>With a bit of the gaff hoisted, and leach and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
-luff lashed fast down, we were trying to forereach
-to the eastward and clear the death-trap
-under our lee—the fatal diamond of the Hatteras
-Shoals. Buck and I had been on deck all
-the day before, and all night, and we welcomed
-the growing light as only hard-pressed men at
-sea can welcome it. It meant a respite from the
-black hell about us, and the heavy snore of some
-giant comber would no longer make us catch
-our breath in the dread it might be the beginning
-of that white reach where no vessel that
-enters comes forth again.</p>
-
-<p>We could see we had many miles between us
-and the end—miles that meant many minutes
-which might be utilized in the fight for life. We
-were heading nearly east now, and the stanch
-little craft was making better than south, while
-the gale had swung up to nor’-nor’east. She
-was forereaching ahead, though going fast to
-leeward, and it looked as if we might claw off into
-the wild Gulf Stream, where in spite of the sea
-lay safety. To leeward lay certain death, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span>
-wild death of a lost ship in the white smother
-that rolled with the chaotic thunder of riven hills
-of water.</p>
-
-<p>Buck’s face was calm and white in the morning
-light, and his oilskins hung about him in
-dismal folds. White streaks of salt showed
-under his eyes, which were partly sheltered by his
-sou’wester, and the deep lines in his wet cheeks
-gave him a worn-out look. He must have been
-very tired, for as I came from behind the piece
-of canvas lashed on the weather quarter to serve
-as a weather-cloth, he left the wheel and dropped
-down behind the bulwarks.</p>
-
-<p>“Begins to look better,” I bawled, taking off
-the becket from the wheel spokes, which had been
-hove hard down all night. “She needs a bit of
-nursing,” and Buck nodded and grinned as he
-ducked from the flying drift.</p>
-
-<p>She was doing well now, and after trying to
-ease her a while I put the wheel back in the
-becket and bawled down the scuttle to our little
-black boy to get us some junk and ship’s bread.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span>
-Our other man, John, a Swede, had turned in
-dead beat out an hour before, and as we four
-were all hands, I thought it just as well to let
-him sleep as long as he could. As master, I
-would have to stay on deck anyway.</p>
-
-<p>Buck and I crouched in the lee of the bulwarks
-and tarpaulin, munching the junk and watching
-the little ship ride the sea. We could do nothing
-except let her head as close as we dared to the
-gale.</p>
-
-<p>As long as the canvas held all would be
-well. The close-reefed mainsail would have been
-blown away in the rush of that fierce blast, and
-it would have been folly to try to drive her into
-that appalling sea. If anything started we were
-lost men. She was only a twenty-ton vessel, but
-she had a good nine feet of keel under her, and
-could hold on grimly. We had used a sea anchor
-for twenty-four hours, but while it held her head
-to the sea it caused her to drift dead to leeward,
-so we had at last cut it adrift and put a bit of
-storm staysail on her to work ahead.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span>
-“I’m glad we didn’t run durin’ the night,”
-said Buck, “she wouldn’t ’a’ done it an’ gone
-clear—just look at that fellow!”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke a giant sea rose on the weather
-beam, a great mass of blue water capped with a
-white comber. The little vessel’s head dropped
-down the foam-streaked hollow until we were almost
-becalmed under the sea that followed. A
-dirty, dangerous sea to run in.</p>
-
-<p>“I thought you might have run when we saw
-how bad it was—an’ trust to luck to go clear.
-But fight on, says I, even when you know you’re
-losing. If you’d started to run you’d never been
-able to swing her up again if we’d had to—an’
-now we’ll go clear. She’ll stand it.”</p>
-
-<p>Buck was an American and John a Swede.
-The latter had hinted at running off before the
-storm when we found ourselves close in. Buck
-cursed him in my presence in true American
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>“Never give up a fight because you’re beat at
-the start,” says I. “It’s them that fights when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span>
-they have to, an’ because it’s right, that always
-win. We did seem dead beat last night, an’ when
-that light flashed out bright I was almost willing
-to say Amen. But I knew it ware wrong, an’
-we must fight it out. A man that fights to win
-is no sailor. It’s him that fights when he <em>knows</em>
-he will lose—an’ then maybe he won’t lose after
-all.”</p>
-
-<p>The sun showed a little through a break in
-the flying scud, and the water looked a beautiful
-blue, streaked with great patches of white.
-Buck was gazing hard to the southward and
-could make nothing out except the Hatteras
-Light. He was tired, and refused to move
-from a wash of foam along the deck where he
-sat.</p>
-
-<p>“You see,” he said, wiping the spray from
-his face, “a man can’t tell nothin’ in this world.
-There’s no use tryin’ to at sea—an’ the more
-you risk sometimes the more you win. It isn’t
-always judgment. There ware old man Richards.
-He knew the coast, but he trusted his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span>
-judgment too much—an’ I’m the bum ye see
-now. I don’t mean nothin’ agin your boat,
-Cap’n.</p>
-
-<p>“You remember Richards? Had the ole
-<i>Pocosin</i>. Used to run her from Nassau to
-Hunter’s P’int. ’Taint much of a run, even for
-that kind o’ hooker, but in the winter this Cape is
-hell, an’ that’s a fact. You kin almost jump
-from wrack to wrack from the Core Bank to
-Bodie’s Island. I’ve seen forty vessels, big an’
-small, on the beach here in one season—an’ we
-aint out o’ the business yet, either.”</p>
-
-<p>We were drifting down fast on the outer shoal,
-and I could see, or fancy I could see, the Ocracoke
-Lighthouse. The wind had increased a
-little with sunrise as usual in a northeaster, but
-it seemed to be working a bit more to the northward
-and getting colder.</p>
-
-<p>“It was just such a day as this. We hove the
-<i>Pocosin</i> up when she was almost in sight of the
-Capes and not ten hours’ run from Norfolk. But
-she ware ramming her nose into it harder and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span>
-harder, an’ there we was. We couldn’t get no
-farther.</p>
-
-<p>“It ware pretty bad when we started inshore,
-with the glass a-fallin’ an’ the sky like the inside
-of a lead pot. Then came the breeze and big
-northeast sea what stopped us.</p>
-
-<p>“We couldn’t push her through that sea. It
-was more’n common heavy, and even with the
-whole mainsail on her she wouldn’t do a thing
-but rear up on her hind legs an’ throw herself
-into it so she’d go out o’ sight to her foremast.
-Man, she ware an’ old boat, an’ if she’d kept the
-racket up she’d have split in two!</p>
-
-<p>“We could see Cape Henry light by dark, but
-it warn’t no use, so we wore around before it ware
-too late an’ got the foresail an’ jib stowed safe.
-Then we came to on the port tack, lowering down
-the mainsail and reefing it to balance the bit o’
-staysail forrads. ’Twas a piece o’ work takin’
-in that mainsail, an’ that’s the truth. You may
-search me if it didn’t fair blow the hair off yer
-head by this time. I don’t mind a bit o’ breeze,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span>
-Cap’n, but when I say it ware blowin’ then, it
-aint more’n half the truth. It ware fair howlin’.</p>
-
-<p>“We got the sail on the boom, and then that
-same boom took charge for twenty red-hot minutes
-while she threw it from port to starboard—an’
-all hands hangin’ onto the mainsheet tryin’ to
-get it in when it slacked with the throw.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Balance-reef her,’ says the old man, an’ we
-lashed her down, givin’ about ten feet o’ leach
-rope hoisted taut with the peak downhaul fast to
-windward. Then everything was made snug, an’
-with the bit o’ staysail hauled to the mast we
-hung on to see what would happen next.”</p>
-
-<p>Buck rose for a minute and gazed steadily to
-the southward as though he had seen something.
-Then he settled down again.</p>
-
-<p>“Me? I was mate, you know. I’d been with
-Richards over a year. He had his wife an’
-daughter aboard that trip—yessir—about as fine—she
-was about seventeen.”</p>
-
-<p>A sea struck the vessel while Buck was looking
-to leeward, but he paid no attention to it as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span>
-spray filled his collar. He seemed to be so deeply
-occupied in some object that I began to get a bit
-nervous, and reached for the glasses to try and
-pick out a new danger. But he evidently saw
-nothing, for he went on slowly after a bit.</p>
-
-<p>“There were six of us men and a little coon
-boy in the galley. It gave us three men in a
-watch, an’ that ware enough. I saw we were
-goin’ to the south’ard fast, the sea was northerly
-yet, but the wind was working fast to the eastward
-and we waren’t reaching off a little bit.
-She was heavy with lumber an’ goin’ sideways
-like a crab—not shoving her nose ahead like we
-are now. It was dead to leeward, and you know
-how that is to the north’ard of Core Bank or
-Lookout.</p>
-
-<p>“The old man had the wheel fast hard down
-and was standin’ there watchin’ her take them
-seas. It was growing dark an’ them fellers
-from the Gulf looked ugly. They just wiped
-her clean from end to end, roarin’ over her an’
-smotherin’ everything.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span>
-“‘We got to fight fer it to-night,’ said I.
-‘Better try the close-reefed mainsail before it’s
-too late. A bit o’ fore-reachin’ an’ we’ll clear.’</p>
-
-<p>“‘’Twon’t stand,’ says he, ‘’twon’t stand ten
-minutes in this breeze. Let her go. If she won’t
-go clear we’ll run her fer Ocracoke. It’s high
-water at eight-bells to-night.’</p>
-
-<p>“That may have been good judgment, but
-you know that entrance is a warm place at night
-in a roarin’ northeaster. I got a bit nervous an’
-spoke up again after an hour or two.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Better try her with the mainsail; we’ve got
-to fight her off,’ I said again.</p>
-
-<p>“‘’Taint no use,’ said he. ‘Let her go. A
-man never dies till his time comes.’</p>
-
-<p>“I’d heard that sayin’ before, but I never
-knew just how a feller could reckon on his time.
-Seemed to me somebody’s was comin’ along before
-daylight. Finally I kept on asking the
-old man an’ argufyin’—for there was the two
-women—an’ he gave in. Before twelve that
-night we had her under a single reef and shovin’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span>
-off for dear life. It ware blowin’ harder now, an’
-the first thing away went that staysail. Then
-we tried a bit o’ jib, but she gave a couple o’
-plunges and drove her head under a good
-fathom. When she lifted it up the jib ware
-gone.</p>
-
-<p>“There we ware with the old hooker a-broachin’
-to an’ no head sail on her. The seas
-ware comin’ over her like a cataract and the dull
-roar soundin’ louder an’ louder. There ware the
-two women <span class="locked">below——</span></p>
-
-<p>“Still the fight waren’t half over. Ther ware
-the new foresail to close reef. It would have
-held an hour or two. That would have driven
-us off far enough to have gone through the
-slue. But no. The old man had had enough.</p>
-
-<p>“‘Take in the mainsail,’ he bawled, and all
-hands wrastled for half an hour with that sail
-while all the time we were goin’ fast to the
-south’ard. ‘Close reef foresail,’ says he; ‘we’ll
-try an’ run her through.’ Then he took the
-lashin’s off the wheel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span>
-“There ware no use sayin’ nothin’ more. We
-ware hardly able to speak as it was. We put
-the peak o’ that foresail on her an’ the old man
-ran the wheel hard up. It ware near daybreak
-now, and she paid off an’ streaked away before
-it through a roarin’ white sea. Just as she
-struck her gait we saw the flash o’ the Hatteras
-Light.</p>
-
-<p>“The old man saw it. It ware bright enough
-for all hands. So bright my heart gave one big
-jump an’ then seemed to stop. There ware the
-two women below, the girl—we tore along into
-the night with six men an’ one little black boy
-holdin’ on to anything they could an’ lookin’
-out over the jib-boom end——”</p>
-
-<p>Buck was silent for a moment. Then he went
-on.</p>
-
-<p>“It had to come. I saw it first. Just a
-great white spout o’ foam in the blackness ahead.
-It ware the outer edge o’ the Diamond Shoal.”</p>
-
-<p>Buck’s voice died away in the roar about us
-and close as I was to him I could hear nothing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span>
-he said, though I saw his lips move. I went to
-the binnacle and peered into it. The lighthouse
-was drawing to the westward. The roar aloft
-was deepening as she swung herself to windward,
-but she was making good weather of it and holding
-on like grim death.</p>
-
-<p>“How did you get through?” I asked, ducking
-down again behind the shelter.</p>
-
-<p>“We didn’t. We didn’t get through. The
-<i>Pocosin’s</i> there yet—or what’s left of her. One
-more hour of fightin’ off under that reefed foresail
-an’ we’d have got to sea—we’d have gone
-clear. There waren’t nothin’ happened—just a
-smashing crash in the night. Man, ye couldn’t
-hear or see nothin’. Both masts gone with the
-first jolt, an’ up she broaches to a sea what
-was breakin’ clear out in seven fathoms. I tried
-to get aft—good God! I tried to get to the
-companion——”</p>
-
-<p>Buck was looking steadily to leeward and the
-drift was trickling out of his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>When he turned he smiled and his tired face<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span>
-looked years older as he wiped it with the cuff of
-his oilskin. The gale roared and snored overhead,
-but breaks in the flying scud told that the
-storm-center was working to the northward and
-the cold meant it would go to stay.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know but what’s that’s so about a
-feller not goin’ till his time comes, Cap’n. I
-came in the next day on a bit o’ the mainmast, a
-little more dead than alive, but I’m tellin’ you
-fairly, Cap’n, if it waren’t fer you an’ your little
-ship, I’d just as soon have gone to leeward this
-mornin’. A feller gets sort o’ lonesome at times—especially
-when he’s got no ties——”</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t you any?” I asked cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p>Buck looked slowly up and his eyes met mine.
-They rested there for a moment. His lips moved
-for a little, but I heard nothing he said. Then
-he let his gaze droop to the deck planks and
-bowed his head.</p>
-
-<p>A long time he sat there while I watched the
-lighthouse draw more and more to the westward.
-Suddenly he looked up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span>
-“She’s all clear now, sir, an’ if you say so
-I’ll go below an’ start a bit o’ fire.”</p>
-
-<p>“Go ahead, and tell Arthur to come here?” I
-said.</p>
-
-<p>I watched him as he staggered below. He
-was tired out, wet, and despondent. The fate
-of the <i>Pocosin</i> was too evident for me to ask
-questions. I respected him for not mentioning
-the girl again. It was evident what she had
-been to him. It was long ago, but the
-memory was fresh before him. He was passing
-near the grave of the one woman he had loved,
-and there was more than the salt drift in his eyes
-as he went down the companion. In a few
-minutes a stream of black smoke poured from the
-funnel in the deck and was whirled away to leeward.
-Soon the smell of frying bacon was swept
-aft, and I went below to a warm breakfast to be
-followed by a nap, while the plunging little
-vessel rode safely into the great Gulf sea. We
-had gone past the graveyard of the Diamond
-Shoals.</p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 id="Transcribers_Notes" title="Transcriber’s Notes" class="show">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation and spelling were made consistent when a predominant
-preference was found in this book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; occasional unbalanced
-quotation marks retained.</p>
-
-<p>Ambiguous hyphens at the ends of lines were retained; occurrences
-of inconsistent hyphenation have not been changed.</p>
-
-<p>Chapter names have been combined with the illustrations preceding
-the chapters.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Strife of the Sea, by T. Jenkins Hains
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