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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.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62329 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62329)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Mate of the Good Ship York, by William
-Clark Russell, Illustrated by W. H. Dunton
-
-
-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 Mate of the Good Ship York
- Or, The Ship's Adventure
-
-
-Author: William Clark Russell
-
-
-
-Release Date: June 5, 2020 [eBook #62329]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Martin Pettit and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustration.
- See 62329-h.htm or 62329-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/62329/62329-h/62329-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/62329/62329-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/mateofgoodshipyo00russiala
-
-
-
-
-
-THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK
-
-Or, The Ship's Adventure
-
-
-[Illustration: "HARDY FREQUENTLY TURNED TO LOOK AT THE _YORK_."
-
-(_See Page 261_)]
-
-
-THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK
-
-Or, The Ship's Adventure
-
-by
-
-W. CLARK RUSSELL
-
-Author of "The Wreck of the Grosvenor,"
-"Marooned," "A Marriage
-at Sea," "My Danish Sweetheart," etc.
-
-With a frontispiece by W. H. Dunton
-
-
-[Illustration: Logo]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Boston: L. C. Page &
-Company, Publishers
-
-Copyright, 1900
-by S. S. McCLure Company
-
-Copyright, 1902
-by L. C. Page & Company
-(Incorporated)
-
-All rights reserved
-
-Eighth Impression, April, 1907
-
-Colonial Press
-Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
-Boston, Mass., U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
-Contents
-
-CHAPTER PAGE
- I. JULIA ARMSTRONG 11
-
- II. BAX'S FARM 29
-
- III. THE EAST INDIA DOCK ROAD 48
-
- IV. THE "GLAMIS CASTLE" 66
-
- V. CAPTAIN LAYARD 83
-
- VI. THE SHIP'S LOOKOUT 101
-
- VII. THE FRENCH MATE 119
-
- VIII. LOST! 137
-
- IX. THE INDIAMAN'S BOAT 152
-
- X. THE CAPTAIN AND THE GIRL 170
-
- XI. THE CAPTAIN'S BIRTHDAY 187
-
- XII. JULIA CALLS "JOHNNY!" 206
-
- XIII. THEY MEET 219
-
- XIV. HARD WEATHER 239
-
- XV. ABOARD AGAIN 256
-
- XVI. PRACTICAL SEAMANSHIP 273
-
- XVII. THE BOAT-FULL 293
-
-XVIII. HAIL, COLUMBIA! 313
-
- XIX. THE CAMILLA OF THE SEA 333
-
-
-
-
-The Mate of the Good Ship York
-
-Or, the Ship's Adventure
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-JULIA ARMSTRONG
-
-
-A house with a wall, which would be blank but for a door and two
-steps, stands in a very pretty lane. The habitable aspect of the house
-is on the other side, and commands a wide prospect of sloping fields
-and river and green sweeps soaring into eminences thickly clothed
-with trees. A brass plate upon this lonely door bears the simple
-inscription, "Dr. Hardy."
-
-The lane runs down to a bridge, and the flowing river carries the eye
-along a scene of English beauty: the bending trees sip the water's
-surface; the bright meadow stretches from the bank, and is tender and
-gay with the tints and movement of cattle; lofty trees sentinel the
-lane, and in the early summer the notes of the thrush and the blackbird
-are clear and sweet.
-
-One autumn evening, at about seven o'clock, the door bearing Doctor
-Hardy's plate was pulled open, and a young fellow, with something
-nautical in his lurch and dress, stepped into the road, and began to
-fill his pipe. Immediately behind him appeared another figure--he was a
-thin, pale, gentlemanly-looking man, and his white hair was parted down
-the middle. He gazed with a great deal of kindness, not unmingled with
-the shadow of sorrow, at the young fellow who was filling his pipe, and
-said:
-
-"You have a pleasant evening for your walk."
-
-"I am sorry to leave this place," said the young man. "There is nothing
-like this to be met on the open ocean." And whilst he pulled out a
-matchbox his eyes went away to the green, evening-clad hills, which
-showed between the trees in a sweep of sky-line pure as the rim of a
-coloured lens; and now two or three of the stars which shine upon our
-country, and which we all know and love, were trembling in the dark
-blue of the coming shadow.
-
-The young man lighted his pipe with several hard sucks not wanting in
-emotion.
-
-"God bless you, father," said he. "I shall be turning up and finding
-all well within twelve months, I hope."
-
-"God bless you, my dear son, and I pray that he may continue to watch
-over you," said the white-haired old gentleman in a shaking voice.
-
-The young man started to walk with his face set toward the hill. Doctor
-Hardy stood in the doorway watching him until he had disappeared round
-the bend. He then stepped back and closed the door upon himself.
-
-It would not be dark for a little while, and even when the dusk came
-up over the hills a piece of moon would float up with it. The water
-flowing in the valley lay in short lines and sweet curves in a moist
-dim rose. A clock was striking; a wagon was rumbling in a weak note of
-thunder past some low-lying hedge that skirted a road. The young fellow
-stepped out leisurely with his pipe hanging at his teeth; he was going
-away to London and was walking to the station, and was without even
-a stick. He was square, robust, a nautical type of young man, clean
-shaven, of a cheerful cast of face, but with something singular in
-the expression of his eyes owing to the upper lids being mere streaks
-and scarcely visible, and the coloured matter black and brilliant, so
-that when he stared at you his look would have been fierce but for
-the qualifying expression of the rest of his face. He walked with a
-slight roll of the sea in his gait, and if you had noticed him at all
-you might have supposed him a sailor. Yet a man need not be a sailor
-to look like one. I have met nautical-looking men who would not be
-sailors for the value of the cargoes of twenty voyages. On the other
-hand, I have met sailors who, had they called themselves greengrocers'
-assistants or tailors' cutters, would have been believed.
-
-This young fellow, smoking his pipe and walking along through the
-fine autumn-gathering evening, was the only son of the white-haired
-gentleman who had just withdrawn into his house. He had been to sea
-since he was fourteen years of age, and his name was George Hardy, and
-he was now chief mate of the _York_, an Australian clipper, twelve
-hundred and fifty tons burthen, then lying in the East India Docks. He
-was going to join her, and why he was without baggage was because he
-had sent his chest aboard in advance.
-
-Formerly the railway station stood not very far distant from Doctor
-Hardy's house; but all about here was unimportant--it was more a
-district than a place. Hardy's patients, for instance, were scattered
-over miles, and, like the plums in a sailor's pudding, the houses were
-scarcely within hail of one another. The railway company, two years
-before this date, removed the station seven miles higher up the line,
-to the great consternation of the unfortunate man who had purchased
-the "Fox Railway Inn," then conveniently seated within a short walk
-of the station. Figure his horror when one morning he saw men with
-pickaxes uprooting the platform. The "Fox Inn" was left as desolate as
-Noah's Ark on Mount Ararat, and it needed three men to go through the
-bankruptcy court before matters began to look a little brighter for
-this unfortunate tavern.
-
-There was plenty of time, and Hardy did not walk very fast. He enjoyed
-the sweets of the country, all the aromas of the darkling land which
-came along in the faint, cold, evening air. When a sailor arrives from
-a long voyage he makes up his mind to button the flaps of his ears
-to his head, and to steer a straight course for the deepest inshore
-recess. He does not do so because he usually brings up at the nearest
-grog-shop on his arrival, or makes his way to the boarding-house where
-he was robbed and stripped when he was last in the place, and in a
-short time he is away at sea again with no clothes but what he stands
-up in, and no bed but the bundle of hay or straw which he flings, with
-curses deep as the sea and dark as the ship's hold, down the hatch
-under which he sleeps. But it is an illustration of his hatred of salt
-water that he should resolve to bury himself deep inshore when he lands.
-
-George Hardy did not belong to the class who live in boarding-houses
-and wear knives on their hips. He was the son of a gentleman, he was a
-man of taste and feeling which his seafaring life had heightened and
-enlarged; he had the eye of an artist and the spirit of a poet, and was
-too good for a calling that does not require these qualities.
-
-The road for about four miles was very lonely. One little cottage on
-the right stood in an orchard and grounds which sloped to a hedge
-almost three-quarters of a mile down. He met nobody; once or twice a
-squirrel ran across the pale dust; the birds had gone to bed, there was
-no song; the sun had sunk, and the evening had deepened into the first
-of the night.
-
-Suddenly, some distance ahead of him on the left, Hardy spied what was
-undoubtedly a human figure. It lay in a dry, shallow ditch with the
-upper part of its body a little raised, resting upon the bank under
-the hedge. As he approached he saw that it was a woman, and then that
-it was a girl in a straw hat with nothing near her in the shape of
-bag, bundle, or dog. She must be some wearied wayfarer who had seated
-herself and fallen asleep. But he did not believe this, either; on the
-contrary, when he was close to the figure he imagined it to be a corpse.
-
-He put his pipe in his pocket, and stood looking at her. There was
-light enough to see by, but not very distinctly. He stooped and peered,
-and then started and exclaimed:
-
-"By Jove, it's Julia Armstrong! What's come to her?"
-
-He looked up and down the road; not a soul was in sight. He felt her
-ungloved hands--they were cold. Her straw hat was tilted on her head,
-which rested not on the brim of her hat but on her hair, that was
-dressed in a mass behind and pillowed her. Her eyes were not closed,
-and if she was not dead she was in a swoon. He got beside her and
-lifted her head, all the while wondering what she was doing--dead or
-in a faint--in this ditch. He then pulled out a small flask of brandy
-diluted with water, and as her pure white teeth lay a little apart he
-managed to pour a dram into her mouth. He chafed her hands, and in a
-sort of way caressed her by holding her to him. He also put her hat
-straight, and wetting his handkerchief with a little brandy and water
-he damped her brow, now taking notice that she was not dead by sundry
-tokens of life of a most elusive and subtle character, whereof her
-breathing was not one, for he could not detect a stir of air on the
-back of his hand betwixt her lips, nor the faintest heave of her pretty
-breast.
-
-She was Julia Armstrong, and, strange to say, an old love of his--I
-mean, he had lost his heart to her a little time before he went to sea,
-when he was scarcely more than a schoolboy. Then he went to sea, and
-when he came home she had gone somewhere on a visit, and so of the next
-voyage; but when he returned from his fourth trip round the world he
-met her, and found the old beautiful charm again in her; but in a week
-she left to occupy some post as a governess thirty miles away, and when
-they met again it was here by this roadside.
-
-What had captivated the young fellow with this girl who lay unconscious
-in the fold of his arm? She had a pleasant, interesting face, beheld
-even through the death pallor that lay upon it; but she was not
-beautiful or even pretty. Her hair was abundant and fair, inclining, as
-you might even judge by that light, to auburn. But it was not her face
-nor hair, it was her figure that had excited admiration into passion
-in the young sailor. Her shape and involuntary poses were saucy and
-perfect beyond expression. She always carried her hat on one side of
-her head--"cock-billed," as the sailors call it; she had a trick of
-planting her hands on her hips; her limbs were beautifully shaped,
-and her short skirts exposed as much or little of them as her figure
-required. No dancer of exquisite art could have played her legs as this
-girl did, yet all her movements were involuntary and unconscious, and
-therein lay the sweetness, for had a hint of study been visible in her
-motions the whole maidenly and fairy-like illusion would have hardened
-into acting.
-
-Young Hardy had thought of the Vivandière, of the Fille-du-Regiment,
-when he looked at her. He could not have told you why. Was it the
-sauciness, that was not wanton, of the repose of her hands upon her
-hips? the unconsciously crossed leg when standing? the cock-billed hat,
-or tam-o'-shanter, that made you feel the need of music? the fixed gaze
-that was not staring but pensive? the sudden change of attitude that
-was like the cloud shadow upon a rose on which the sun had rested? What
-had all this to do with the Vivandière? But Hardy had got the word and
-the idea into his head, and when he thought of her at sea 'twas as
-though she was walking with a regiment with a little barrel of cordial
-waters upon her back.
-
-Again he looked up the road and then down the road; he could hear
-a cart in a lane that ran parallel, but nobody was visible. He was
-beginning to wonder what he was to do--whether he had the physical
-strength to carry this fine girl in his arms four miles, that is, to
-his father's house--when she sighed, stirred like an awakening sleeper,
-sighed again, and opened a pair of gray eyes full upon his face.
-
-"Do you know me?" he asked.
-
-"Where am I?" she answered, and with a sudden effort she raised her
-form out of his arm, but in a moment fell back again in sheer weakness.
-
-"Don't you remember your old friend George Hardy?" he said.
-
-She looked at him with that sort of intentness which you will sometimes
-see in a baby's eyes, and her lips drooped into a scarcely perceptible
-smile.
-
-"What am I doing here?" she asked, and she gazed round her, deeply
-puzzled.
-
-He gave her a little more brandy, which she certainly stood in need of,
-and looking at her without speaking, he waited until more mind came
-into her face; and now she made an effort to rise.
-
-"Keep still until you have come right to," said he. "I wish some old
-cart would come along to give us a lift to my father's."
-
-"Your father's?"
-
-"Doctor Hardy," he answered. "About an hour's walk away."
-
-"Yes, I know," she exclaimed. "If a cart came I would not go."
-
-"My dear Miss Armstrong, what are you doing here?" exclaimed young
-Hardy. "All alone in a dead faint in a ditch! Were you returning home?"
-And again he looked a little way up and down, thinking to see a handbag
-or a parcel, but her hands were as empty as his.
-
-"I'm going to London," she said. "What time is it?"
-
-"I'm going to London, too," said he; "but neither of us will catch the
-train we want. Do you mean to walk to London?"
-
-She shook her head, and put her hand in her pocket as though seeking
-her purse. What she sought was evidently there.
-
-Now her faculties had come together, but it was clear she must sit a
-little longer before attempting to rise; so they sat side by side with
-their feet in the dry ditch, and their backs against the hedge.
-
-"Why are you going to London?" he asked.
-
-"I'm leaving home for good," she answered.
-
-"Where's your luggage?"
-
-"I have none," she replied.
-
-"Are you running away from home?" he inquired, beginning to see a
-little into this matter.
-
-"I have no home, and I am leaving my father's house of my own accord,"
-she replied, animated by a little faint passion. "I could endure the
-life no longer--I am the wretchedest girl in the world. Oh, how his
-wife has treated me! _You_ once met her."
-
-She struggled with her heart, and some tears ran down her face.
-
-It is true that Hardy had met this stepmother--this second Mrs.
-Armstrong--and he had then gathered that the lady and Miss Julia
-did not lead the lives of angels in each other's company. In short,
-he had heard that Mrs. Armstrong, by her drink, by her language, and
-conduct in general, had made a very hell of Captain, or Commander,
-Armstrong's home for his daughter. The captain was retired, was poor,
-and Mrs. Armstrong had brought him a hundred a year, which was a
-godsend. He took life very easily, drank his whisky, smoked his pipe,
-and was welcome at several houses in the neighbourhood, where at one
-he would get billiards, at another a rubber, at a third a gossip in
-which he related his China experiences; and the whisky bottle always
-kept him company, though his kindest friend could never say that in all
-his time he had seen him drunk once. Doctor Hardy was on good terms
-with him, but spoke with strong dislike of Mrs. Armstrong, and of
-her treatment of her daughter, that was driving her into seeking and
-taking situations, some of a menial sort, and that threatened before
-long to break her heart or to send her to the bad, as 'tis called. But
-with domestic troubles of this sort people do not choose to concern
-themselves, except in exaggerating them in talk by scandalous hints and
-opinions.
-
-"I must wait for something to pass that will help me to carry you to
-my father's house," said Hardy, looking anxiously at the girl whom he
-could not fail to see was weak and exhausted.
-
-"I have already declined," she answered. "I will not return a single
-yard in that hateful direction. I shall feel stronger presently. Is
-there not another train later on?"
-
-"Not to London."
-
-"I must not miss this," she exclaimed, struggling to rise.
-
-"Look here," said he, keeping her down by gentle pressure of the hand,
-"I am going to London and we will go together, but we shall have to
-wait until to-morrow. Will not that suit? If you are in a desperate
-hurry you can leave early to-morrow. Do you know Bax's farm?"
-
-"Of course I do," she answered, turning her face up the road.
-
-"Bax shall give you a bedroom," said he, "since you refuse to return
-with me to my father. A good supper and a good night's rest are the
-doctoring you stand in need of. I find you in a dead faint in a ditch,
-and so you come under my care, and I am answerable for you. We are old
-friends."
-
-She faintly smiled and looked at him.
-
-"You will do exactly what I ask, and at Bax's farm we shall have
-leisure for a little talk."
-
-She bowed her head, and he saw that she cried again.
-
-They spied a man at the bottom of the hill coming up. The girl started,
-and said, "I am quite strong enough to stand and walk," and she stood
-up, one of the most beautiful figures amongst women, with a sweet
-ingenuous sauciness which was the flavouring grace of her happy hours,
-distinguishable still, even in this time of misery and illness. The man
-coming along was a common labourer, but she did not choose that any one
-should see her sitting in a ditch.
-
-They walked slowly up the road. She leaned upon his arm and
-occasionally stopped to rest, and their talk until they arrived at
-the farm was not much; indeed she said little more than that she had
-been making up her mind for some weeks to leave her father's house for
-ever and to sail to a colony, where she would be willing to accept the
-lowest menial office so long as she was independent, and received the
-respect that was due to her as a lady. She had left her home that day
-in the afternoon, meaning to walk to the station and take the train
-to London, whence she intended to write to her father to forward her
-clothes in the box which stood ready corded in her bedroom. When she
-had walked some distance--it might be five miles--a sudden faintness
-seized her, and she sat down under a hedge to rest. She then must have
-fainted, and knew no more until she returned to consciousness, and
-found herself resting against Hardy.
-
-This talk brought them to Bax's farm.
-
-It was not a farm, though it was called so. Bax sold milk and garden
-produce and eggs, and the countryside called his house a farm. It had
-two gables and a thatched roof, small latticed windows, and a door
-that opened direct into the sitting-room. In the summer the house was
-enchanting with its flowers and shrubbery and the climbing green stuff
-about it, and then the concert of the woods thrilled in the trees
-beyond, and the air was full of sweet smells.
-
-Bax was a man of about sixty, immensely stout behind and in front,
-with a face that seemed powdered with pale, scissors-shorn whisker,
-and small eyes which had drowned their lustre in beer. He stood in
-the doorway in his shirt-sleeves smoking a pipe, and was not at all
-surprised when the couple passed through the gate and approached the
-porch. He merely pulled out his pipe, and said:
-
-"Good evening, Mr. Hardy; good evening, Miss Armstrong. Come for a bit
-of a sit down? Will y' 'ave chairs here? or the sitting-room's at your
-sarvice."
-
-"How d'ye do, Mr. Bax?" said Hardy.
-
-"Good evening, Mr. Bax," said Miss Armstrong, in a faint voice.
-
-"Take us into your sitting-room," said Hardy; and they entered the door
-and were in the sitting-room at once--a cosy little room, hung with
-portraits of Bax and his dead wife and daughter, decorated with a small
-mantel-glass in fly-gauze, and hospitable with a round table on one leg
-and three claws, the top beautified by a knitted cover.
-
-Julia sank into a little armchair. Bax was beginning to gaze at her
-earnestly; he knew her perfectly well, knew her father also, who
-frequently looked in for a drink; also he knew Hardy perfectly well,
-likewise his father, who attended him when he was attacked by gout.
-
-"Mr. Bax," said Hardy, putting his cap down upon the table, "we have
-come to occupy your house this night."
-
-"Joost been married, have yer?" asked Bax, slipping his pipe into his
-waistcoat pocket.
-
-"No," answered Hardy, gravely; "Miss Armstrong is leaving her home for
-good. If you don't guess why, I'll tell you presently."
-
-Bax looked knowing; he looked more knowing an instant later when a fine
-Persian kitten ran up his back and curled its tail upon his shoulder,
-for then two pairs of eyes were fastened upon Hardy, the kitten, being
-no beer drinker, gazing more steadfastly than the other.
-
-"Have you a bedroom that you can place at Miss Armstrong's disposal?"
-
-"Is there no later train?" asked Julia.
-
-"We would not take it if there were," replied Hardy.
-
-Of course Bax, having lost his wife, must consult his daughter, and
-when he had opened a door and shouted a little for Mary Ann there
-arrived a woman who looked old enough to be Bax's mother. Her face
-seemed to be dredged by time; the _arcus senilis_ was more defined in
-her than in Bax; she looked seventy years old, and was but thirty-eight.
-
-She curtseyed to the visitors, and then, after pursing her lips and
-knitting her brow, she replied to her father that Miss Armstrong could
-have the spare room over the sitting-room.
-
-"Can I have a bedroom?" said Hardy.
-
-Bax mused, looking at his daughter, and then said, "Not unless you
-sleeps along with me."
-
-"With you?" laughed Hardy, looking at his stomach. "How much of you
-lies in bed all at once? That'll do for me," said he, and he jerked his
-head at a wide hair-sofa.
-
-The father, the kitten, and the daughter looked a little strangely at
-Hardy and Julia Armstrong, as though before proceeding they wanted to
-see things in a clearer light. Hardy understanding this, spoke out with
-the bluntness of a sailor.
-
-"Look here, Bax," said he, "I'm going to London to join my ship. I was
-bound away to-night, but on the road I fell in with this young lady,
-who lay in a swoon."
-
-"Oh, dear, poor thing!" groaned Miss Bax.
-
-"She came to, and I brought her here after learning that she was
-leaving her home for good on account of the barbarous behaviour of her
-stepmother--"
-
-"Oh, I know, I know," interrupted Miss Bax.
-
-"She was walking to catch the train I was bound by; she is not in a fit
-state to travel, Bax. _You_ can see that, ma'am; therefore she shall
-sup under this comfortable old roof, and take the rest she needs in the
-room you offer her. Her train leaves at ten in the morning, and we will
-take it."
-
-The kitten purred as it fretted Bax's cheek. Bax said, "It's all right,
-Mr. Hardy, and you shall be made comfortable. What 'ull you 'ave for
-supper?"
-
-What would be better than some cold ham and a dish of eggs and bacon,
-a dish of sausages in mashed potato, and the half of a beautiful apple
-tart, along with a jug of real cream? And for drink there was some
-first-class ale kept by Bax for Bax himself, for he held no license,
-and his dealings were secret, and if he took money it was a gift for a
-kindness.
-
-"Will you come up-stairs and see your room, Miss Armstrong, before I
-goes about and gets your supper for you?" exclaimed Miss Bax.
-
-"Have you got no baggage?" inquired old Bax, jerking the kitten on to
-the table.
-
-"It will follow me to London," said Miss Armstrong, and she rose and
-went up-stairs with Miss Bax.
-
-Hardy sat down upon the sofa, and Bax went to work to lay the cloth.
-There was plenty of room at that little table for two. Bax had been
-a gardener in a great family, and had often helped the coachman, the
-footman, and the butler to wait. He possessed some good old-fashioned
-table apparel, and before Miss Armstrong returned the room looked
-bright and hospitable with the light of an oil lamp reflected in
-cutlery, glass, and cruet-stand.
-
-Julia entered, and Bax walked out. She went and sat beside Hardy,
-and the lovely Persian kitten sprang into her lap. Her hair was as
-beautiful as her figure, and her gray eyes were full of heart and
-meaning. You could not have called her pretty, yet you were sensible of
-a charm in her face that had nothing to do with the shape of her nose
-or the character of her mouth.
-
-"Do you feel better?" said Hardy.
-
-"Much; I never thought to find myself stopping a night here. Of course,
-I have been the means of your losing your train?"
-
-"To-morrow will do just as well," he answered. "Where did you mean to
-sleep when you got to London to-night?"
-
-"I should have found a room," she answered.
-
-"Will they send on your luggage if you write for it?"
-
-"Father will," she replied. "Yes, he will do that, but he will not
-write to ask me to return. He does not care what becomes of me. He
-never cared what I did when I left his house to fill a situation."
-
-Her nostrils enlarged, her eyes looked angry. A little blood visited
-her pale cheek. Hardy's memory pictured her father: a middle-sized man
-with pale, weak eyes, a chuckling laugh like the gurgle of liquor,
-much reference to his ships and to naval things in general, a large
-Micawber-like indifference to his existing circumstances, and a quality
-of talkativeness about outside matters, such as the queen, the trouble
-at Pekin, the discovery of the North Pole, which would make you think
-that he did not know what home worries were.
-
-"Bax," said Hardy, "may covertly send along to let them know you are
-here."
-
-"What of that?" she exclaimed. "If they were to send twenty men they
-would have to drag me to move me. I would not set foot in that house
-again if my stepmother lay dead in the gutter opposite the door. It is
-my father's fault."
-
-She bit her lip, stroked the kitten, and said, "Oh, it is hard upon a
-girl to have a bad father--a weak, selfish, foolish father."
-
-Here Bax came again with a tumbler full of autumn flowers. He placed
-them in the middle of the table and went out, looking nowhere, as if
-he walked in his sleep; but whilst the door lay open they heard the
-spitting of the frying-pan.
-
-"What are you going to do when you get to London?" said Hardy.
-
-"I mean to find a situation on board a ship," she answered.
-
-"What situation do you expect to find?"
-
-"I shall try to get a post as stewardess, or as an attendant upon
-a sick person. I cannot pay my passage out even in the steerage,
-therefore I must work."
-
-"Now, Miss Armstrong," said Hardy, stroking the kitten's head on her
-lap, "it is impossible for me to be rude to you because I want to be,
-and mean to be, your friend." She looked at him swiftly, and her eyes
-drooped. "Do not misjudge any questions I may put to you. How much
-money have you got?"
-
-"Seven pounds, twelve shillings, and--" she drew out a little purse,
-opened it, counted some coppers, and added, "fourpence."
-
-"What is that money going to do for you in London?" said Hardy, after a
-pause of pity.
-
-"It will support me," she answered, "until I have obtained a situation
-on board a ship."
-
-"Situations for girls on board ships are very few," said he. "What part
-of the world do you want to sail for?"
-
-"Anywhere, anywhere," she replied. "But it must be to some place where
-I can get a living."
-
-"It would not do to sail for China," he exclaimed. "India doesn't
-provide much for people whose wants are yours. It must be the Great
-Pacific colonies. Aren't there agents and institutions which help young
-girls to get away across the sea? This we will inquire into when we
-arrive in London."
-
-She looked at him gratefully, and was about to speak, but was
-interrupted by Miss Bax, who staggered in with a tray load.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-BAX'S FARM
-
-
-George Hardy and Miss Julia Armstrong sat down to supper at the little
-round table; Bax lurked as if he would wait; Hardy said they could
-manage very well without him, and the pair fell to. The window was
-open, and all the rich, decaying perfumes of the autumn evening floated
-into the atmosphere, and sweetened it with the incense of the night.
-
-Hardy looked at his companion, and felt again the delight he used to
-take in the contemplation of her shape. The same old suggestion was in
-her--that of the Vivandière. But why? He could not have explained, and
-neither can I. Every movement was full of beauty and piquancy, and she
-wore her hair parted a little on one side.
-
-"Is your bedroom comfortable?" asked Hardy.
-
-"A sweet, old-fashioned little room," she said, "and the bed's a
-four-poster. It has curtain rings, and if I tremble in bed they will
-rattle, and I shall think it the death-tick, which I hate to hear. Will
-that sofa make a comfortable bed for you?"
-
-"You are asking a sailor that question," he answered. "I would be glad
-to carry it to sea with me, and sleep all around the world in it. Have
-you written a farewell letter to your father?"
-
-"No; I have left him as a spirit might, in utter silence. His wife
-will not let him trouble himself. When the time comes for locking up
-the bolt will be shot, and he will fill his pipe and fill his glass,
-and say to his wife that he is afraid there is some truth in the
-story that Mr. Gubbins was telling him about Miss Cornflower and the
-Congregational minister. That is the sort of interest he will take in
-my not turning up."
-
-She frowned, and put down her knife and fork, and seemed as if she did
-not mean to go on eating. Hardy poured out a glass of frothing ale. It
-was a fine sparkling ale, better than champagne, and looked an elegant
-drink, fit for red lips in the thin glass it brimmed with foam. She
-took it and drank.
-
-"It is hard for any girl to be in want," said Hardy; "but there is no
-distress to equal that of the lady who is in poverty. What, in God's
-name, can she do? She is not wanted in the kitchen, and if I were she I
-would rather sell matches than be a governess."
-
-"It is the well-to-do lady who makes it hard for the poor lady,"
-exclaimed the girl. "Two years ago I got a situation as nurse to attend
-an aged sick woman--she was eighty. She lived with a lady. You would
-think this person would have known how to treat the daughter of an
-officer in the navy, who was too poor to maintain her as a lady. Mr.
-Hardy, she used to call me Armstrong, as though I was her housemaid.
-I had my meals separate. When they went away for a change I was not
-good enough to sit in the carriage; they made me sit on the box, and
-the coachman, in the genial manner of the mews, asked me if I was the
-new maid, and if my name was Jemima. When we arrived the lady told
-me I must not sit with them if company came, as my presence might be
-objected to. I went to my bedroom, and kept in it till I was called
-out, and then returned to it."
-
-"It is time you cleared out," said Hardy. "The soft hearts seem to be
-found at sea nowadays; at all events, they are not so scarce there as
-fresh eggs," said he, helping himself. "Your intentions are to get
-abroad and seek a berth abroad. I should like to read the map of them.
-You have saved seven pounds odd, and you arrive in London at night, and
-you don't know where to go. Next day you ask your way--where? To the
-docks; but what docks? London, Millwall, East India, West India, and so
-on. You enter a forest without a compass. Now what are you going to do?"
-
-"I meant to go on board ship after ship," she answered, with spirit,
-"and ask anybody I saw if there was a berth for me on board."
-
-"Did you ever see a large full-rigged ship in all your life?" he
-inquired, smiling.
-
-"Never," she replied, emphatically.
-
-"Go to the docks, and you'll see hundreds, and there won't be one that
-wants you."
-
-"What is the name of your ship?" she asked.
-
-"The _York_."
-
-"Where is she going to?"
-
-"She is bound to Australia."
-
-"Is there no place for me in that ship?" she said. She looked at him
-piteously, though her natural grace of coquetry broke through all the
-same, with the planting of her hands upon her hips, and the way she
-side-dropped her head at him.
-
-"We carry no stewardess, no females, no passengers," he answered. "The
-captain is a stranger to me. No, my ship is of no use to you," he
-continued, after a pause. "You must call with me upon some shipping
-people. There may be a vacancy for a stewardess. But suppose the ship
-is sailing for India?"
-
-She gazed at him a little vacantly.
-
-"We shall find some means of getting abroad," he went on, running a
-note of cheerfulness into his voice, for he thought by the look in the
-girl's eyes that she was beginning to bend on signals of distress,
-which would be hoisted in a pearly downpour presently. "At all events,
-you can't be worse off than you are, and somebody says that when you
-are at the bottom of the wheel the next revolution must hoist you."
-
-They talked in this strain until they had supped, then Hardy, not
-seeing a bell, opened the door and shouted to Miss Bax to clear away.
-When the door was opened they could hear voices in the back room
-beyond, and a gush of Cavendish tobacco smoke came in. Some friends
-of Bax had called in a casual way by the back entrance, across the
-fields, which meant several drinks, clouds of tobacco, and all the
-gossip of the social sphere which Bax and his friends adorned. When
-Miss Bax had cleared the table she placed a bottle of whisky upon it at
-the request of Hardy, also cold water and glasses. She then said there
-was no hurry to go to bed. Father did not go to bed until eleven, and
-she left them with a smile as though they were a young married couple
-spending their honeymoon in Bax's farm, instead of one of them being an
-honest, generous-hearted young sailor intent on doing his dead best
-to rescue a young English lady from bitter privation, and perhaps from
-miserable disgrace; and the other of them being a broken-hearted girl
-hurrying from a home of tyranny and drink, a home of one base nature,
-and of one spiritless one (which is likewise a baseness), with a future
-as dark as the night that lay outside, in whose funeral tapestries her
-imagination alone could have beheld the stirrings of the life that was
-to give her content and liberty, in whose impenetrable depths she found
-no more than a minute gleam of light from Hardy's strange and chanceful
-encounter with her while she lay in a swoon deep as death.
-
-With her consent the sailor lighted a pipe. The girl sat in a chair
-opposite to him, her head a little on one side, hands on her hips, all
-in the old, fascinating, coquettish, incommunicable way. Outside the
-night lay in a thin gloom, and they saw the stars shining above the
-trees. The hush of the sleeping land was in the air. You heard nothing
-but the silver tinkling of a natural fall of water that ran down the
-hillside, and fell purely in a stone bowl for men, horses, and dogs to
-drink.
-
-"You are a plucky girl," said Hardy; "but I think you are attempting
-more than you understand. You talk, for instance, of going to the
-workhouse. You are the last girl in the world to go to the workhouse.
-Think of dying in a workhouse," he continued, whilst she watched him
-without smiling. "Creatures bend over your bed, and say, 'Isn't she
-gone yet?' That's the sympathy of the workhouse."
-
-"I want to get out of England, abroad, and be independent," said Julia.
-
-He looked at an old clock upon the mantelpiece. The hour was about
-eight. He asked her if she would have some whisky and water, and on
-her declining, he mixed a draught for himself, then went to the door
-and called to Bax, leaving the girl to wonder what he meant to do. The
-farmer arrived.
-
-"Bax," said the sailor, "you have given us a capital supper."
-
-"I'm much obliged to you, sir," answered Bax.
-
-"This is an excellent whisky," continued Hardy, "and I drink your
-health"--here he sipped--"and the health of your worthy daughter"--here
-he sipped again--"in your very hospitable gift."
-
-Bax grinned, and said, "We make no charge. You're my guests, and you're
-welcome."
-
-"Bax," said Hardy, "haven't you a spring cart?"
-
-"Yes," answered Bax.
-
-"Got a horse?"
-
-"Got a pretty little mare."
-
-"Will you drive me over to Captain Armstrong's as soon as possible to
-fetch this young lady's luggage?"
-
-Julia started in her chair, and said, "Don't trouble, Mr. Hardy. My
-father will send the box on to me when he gets my address in London."
-
-"How d'ye know he will?" inquired Hardy.
-
-"Ah!" murmured Bax.
-
-"Suppose the stepmother declines to let the box go?" said Hardy. "Now
-you'll want all the clothes you've got and can get, Miss Armstrong, if
-you mean to colonise. Bax, bear a hand, my lad; clap your mare to the
-cart, and report when you're ready."
-
-He spoke as if he was on the quarter-deck of a ship and making the
-sailors jump for their lives, and Bax went out, saying, "I'll not be
-ten minutes."
-
-"How good you are to me!" exclaimed Julia, gathering the side of her
-pocket-handkerchief unconsciously, and looking at him with eyes that
-seemed to tremble with emotion. "What should I have done had you not
-found me? I might have died under that hedge."
-
-"Let me see," said Hardy; "how far off from here does your father live?"
-
-She reflected and answered, "Quite six miles."
-
-"Well, we shall be back with your box before ten. Don't sit up; you
-want all the rest you can get. To-morrow will be full of business."
-
-"Oh!" cried Julia, "I hope there will be no trouble. Father may--He
-won't like you to know that I have run away. He may insist upon
-returning with you, or coming here."
-
-"If he is at home he may, and we'll give him a lift with pleasure."
-
-"I should refuse to meet him," cried the girl, standing up in a sudden
-passion of indignation. "He has seen me suffer and has looked on. If he
-comes here it is not for me, but for _that_," and she pointed to the
-bottle of whisky.
-
-"You shall have your box of clothes, anyhow," said Hardy, smoking
-coolly and looking at the girl; and three minutes after he had said
-this Miss Bax came in, and reported that "father and the cart was at
-the gate."
-
-"Don't let Miss Armstrong sit up," said Hardy. "Do those chaps back
-talk very loud?"
-
-"When they arguefy," answered Miss Bax. "They're wrangling over the
-age of the queen now."
-
-"Well, when Miss Armstrong goes to bed silence them," said Hardy, "for
-I want the lady to sleep well. We shall meet at breakfast," said he,
-turning to Julia and taking her hand.
-
-"I shall wait up for you. How could I sleep?" she replied.
-
-He smiled, but answered nothing, filled and relighted his pipe, and
-walked out.
-
-The drive was pleasant, down-hill. The road stretched before them like
-satin with the dust of it, and many spacious groups of trees lifted
-their motionless shapes against the sky-line of the tall land and the
-stars twinkling above it. Specks of light in houses reposed like glow
-worms in the deep shades of the valley and up the acclivities, but the
-river streamed in blackness, and the lamps of a small town past the
-railway station were lost behind the bend.
-
-Hardy stared at his father's house as they drove past, always in
-darkness on this side, but he knew there would be lights in the windows
-which overlooked the grounds that sank toward the river.
-
-The house Captain Armstrong lived in was two miles further on round
-the corner, and made one of about a dozen little villas and cottages,
-including a church and a public-house. It was a very small cottage,
-thatched; but its sun-bright windows, its handsome door and brass
-knocker--the taste, in short of the man who had built it in years gone
-by--made it very fit for the occupation of a gentleman. It was sunk
-deep in a broad piece of garden land, and the apple-trees, whose boughs
-were laden, scented the still night air refreshingly.
-
-"Here we be," said Bax, drawing up, and the sailor sprang off the cart,
-and walked down the path to the door with the brass knocker.
-
-He hammered briskly, and tugged at a metal knob which shivered a little
-bell into ecstasies of alarm. A small dog barked shrilly with terror
-and hate, and in a minute the door was opened by a servant, past whom
-the small dog fled, and tried to marry his teeth in Hardy's right boot.
-A kick rushed the little beast back into the passage, and Hardy said to
-the servant, "I have called for Miss Armstrong's trunk."
-
-"Oh, indeed," she said, looking behind her.
-
-"Yes, indeed," he exclaimed. "I'm in a hurry. I've six miles to go. Is
-Captain Armstrong in?"
-
-"No," was the answer, and as the servant spoke a door on the right of
-the passage was thrown open, and the figure of a stout woman stood
-between Hardy and the flame of the oil-float which illuminated the
-passage at the extremity.
-
-"Who is it? and what does he want?" said the stout figure, approaching
-by two or three paces.
-
-"I am Mr. Hardy, son of your husband's doctor," was the reply, "and I
-have called for Miss Armstrong's trunk. It stands ready corded in her
-bedroom, and I am in a hurry."
-
-"Where is Miss Armstrong going?" said the stout figure, who was indeed
-Mrs. Armstrong.
-
-"To the ends of the earth to escape _you_," he answered. "Bax," he
-roared, "fling your reins over the gate-post, and come and lend me a
-hand to ship the box in your cart."
-
-"The box shall not leave this house without Captain Armstrong's
-permission," said Mrs. Armstrong, who, poor as the light was, you
-could see carried a great deal of colour in her face of a streaky or
-venous nature; her eyes were small, and gazed with rapid winks as
-though they snapped at you as you snap the hammer of a revolver; her
-bust was immense; her black hair was smoothed like streaks of paint
-down her cheeks and round her ears, and she wore a cap with something
-in it that nodded, giving more significance to her words than they
-needed.
-
-"Where is Captain Armstrong?" said the sailor.
-
-"Out," was the reply.
-
-"He'll not care whether I take it or leave it." He could not bring
-himself to speak even civilly to her. "Whilst you fetch him we'll
-tranship it, and the captain can get in and argue the point whilst
-we drive away. Come along, Bax. Sally, show us the road to the young
-lady's bedroom."
-
-"Maria," exclaimed Mrs. Armstrong, cold and bitter, "go and knock on
-Constable Rogers's door, and tell him to come here at once."
-
-"Shall I fetch the master also?" said Maria, quivering in her figure in
-the hot anticipation of rushing out.
-
-"No, the walk is too long. I want you back, and the constable."
-
-The girl shot up the walk.
-
-"Bax," said Hardy, "come along. We'll easily find the room."
-
-Bax hung in the wind.
-
-"What's the constable a-going to say?" he muttered. "Won't it be
-breaking in if we enters without the missis's leave?"
-
-Hardy looked at him, and then stepped to the foot of the staircase.
-
-"You dare not go up-stairs, sir!" said Mrs. Armstrong, in a voice that
-trembled.
-
-Hardy mounted.
-
-"The constable shall lock you up," shrieked the enraged woman.
-
-"Coom down, coom down, Mr. Hardy," sang out Bax. "The constable'll make
-it right."
-
-Hardy pulled out a box of wax matches and struck one. The landing was
-in darkness, and he wanted to see. He guessed the girl's bedroom by
-intuition, opened the door, and saw the trunk--a small one--seized the
-handle, and dragged it to the head of the staircase. It was lighter
-than a sea chest, and with a heave he settled it on his shoulder, and
-went creaking down-stairs.
-
-"I defy you to take that box out of my house without my leave," yelled
-Mrs. Armstrong.
-
-Hardy seemed cool, but his spirits were in a blaze. He regarded the
-sending for a constable as an atrocious act of insolence, and he walked
-past the woman, not in the smallest degree caring whether he plunged
-the corner of the box into her head or not. She took care, however, to
-give him a wide berth, and he passed through the house door, whilst
-the little dog barked furiously at a safe distance at the end of the
-passage.
-
-"Give me a hand with this," said he to Bax. "This is no business of the
-constable. The box belongs to a young lady who wants it, and I intend
-that she shall have it."
-
-"Mr. Hardy," answered Bax, "I'd rather not meddle with the box till the
-constable cooms; he'll be 'ere in a minute. He allus smokes his pipe by
-his fireside at this hour. If it should be the wrong box--"
-
-"It's the right box," exclaimed Hardy, standing with the trunk on his
-shoulder.
-
-"I'd rather wait for Rogers to make it all right," said Bax.
-
-Hardy sent a sea blessing at his head, and without another word walked
-rapidly to the cart, threw the box in, took the reins off the gate,
-sprang on to the seat, and drove off.
-
-"Stop, sir; stop, for God's sake!" shouted Bax, beginning to run. But
-he was too fat to run. He was blowing hard when he gained the road, and
-stood staring after his cart. Hardy whipped the mare into a gallop, and
-gained the farm in half the time that Bax would have taken to measure
-the ground. He drew up at the gate, secured the horse by the reins,
-and, shouldering the trunk, marched to the door, and was admitted by
-Miss Bax.
-
-"Where's father?" was her first cry.
-
-"I left him enjoying a yarn with Mrs. Armstrong," answered Hardy,
-thrusting with the trunk into the room, where Julia was still sitting
-just as he had left her. "There are your clothes, Miss Armstrong," said
-the sailor, lowering the box on to the floor.
-
-"Father's come to no 'urt, I hope?" said Miss Bax, addressing Miss
-Armstrong.
-
-Hardy related exactly the story of his repulse by the insolent
-stepmother, his bringing the box down-stairs alone, Bax's fear of the
-law, and so forth.
-
-"And now," said he, "as you've not gone to bed, Miss Armstrong, I'll
-sit down and keep you company, and smoke one more pipe, and wait for
-the constable."
-
-"Well, if father's all right," said Miss Bax, "he'll be here with the
-constable, and soon, I hope; but it's all up-hill, and his wind don't
-favour him. I've got help at the back, and will put the mare up," and
-thus speaking she passed out, and left the young couple alone.
-
-"So she actually sent for a constable!" exclaimed Julia, whilst Hardy
-filled his pipe, and looked at the grog bottle on the table. "Could you
-imagine a more horrible woman?"
-
-"Here are the goods anyhow," said Hardy, striking a match. "It's your
-box, of course--I mean, I've made no mistake, I hope."
-
-"Certainly it is my box," she exclaimed, slightly flushing and poising
-her hands on her hips, and dropping her head at him in a posture that
-brightened his eyes with delight, "and all I possess in this wide world
-is in it."
-
-"I would not like to be the constable if he touches it or is even
-insolent over it," said Hardy, stretching backwards his broad
-shoulders, with a glance at himself in the little fly-protected mirror.
-He then poured out some whisky and water, and sat down near Julia.
-
-"She did not express any astonishment at my leaving home?" said the
-girl.
-
-"The dog did most of the talk," he answered, "and made for my choicest
-corn," and he looked at his boot, which exhibited the indent of the
-beast's teeth. "How your father could have--"
-
-"Was she drunk?" asked Julia.
-
-"I dare say she was. Some people get drunk without showing it. Miss
-Armstrong, I am no longer surprised that you should run away."
-
-She smiled, but with mingled sadness and bitterness, and said, "If my
-father comes in with Bax and the constable, I shall walk out, and I beg
-you to give me your protection, Mr. Hardy, and to save me from seeing
-him."
-
-Hardy bowed, but made no answer. He was a man of careless thoughts and
-many heedless views in all sorts of directions, a sailor, in short,
-whose horizon was salt and limited, yet he could not help feeling
-shocked at the extravagance of fear and dislike which the half-pay
-captain had by bitter neglect and a Christless marriage excited in
-the breast of a girl who seemed a true-hearted, heroic young woman,
-beautiful of figure, and with a face of romantic interest.
-
-"Can the constable do anything if he comes?" she asked.
-
-"Oh, yes," answered the sailor, "he can walk out. In what law book is
-it written that a man may not possess his own? That is yours," said he,
-pointing to the trunk, "and if Constable Rogers touches it we'll have
-him before the magistrates, of whom, by the way, my father is one."
-
-He looked at her very thoughtfully, and she looked at him till her gray
-eyes drooped to her lap. The Persian kitten had left the room, and she
-had nothing to toy with but her handkerchief. Now, by the expression of
-Hardy's face, you could have said that he fastened his eyes upon her,
-not out of feeling, nor out of the sense of being alone with her, nor
-of the enjoyment of the spectacle of her matchless figure, but because
-he was maturing thoughts concerning her well-being. He had certainly a
-most honest face, and you tasted the manliness of his nature in each
-utterance and in every smile.
-
-"I want to talk to you," said he, "about our arrival in London. I
-must get you close to the docks. I'll put you in the way of making a
-few inquiries whilst I am busy on board my ship; meanwhile I shall be
-asking questions."
-
-"Oh, Mr. Hardy, what should I have done had I not met you?" she cried,
-in an irrepressible outburst of gratitude, and again he saw tears in
-her eyes, for she had lived hard and had fared hard for some years now,
-and kindness easily broke her down, as one long divorced from home will
-melt on her return to the sound of the music that her mother loved and
-sang to her.
-
-"Do you know London?" said the sailor.
-
-"I was never in London," she answered.
-
-"Have you ever seen a ship?"
-
-"I came home in a ship from India," she replied, "but I was too young
-to remember the vessel."
-
-"You will not like the East End of London," said Hardy. "I don't know
-why sailors should make the places they live in dirty, yet it is true
-that after leaving Whitechapel the closer you draw to the docks, the
-grimier life looks. Jack has spent his money, you see, and is going
-away tipsy and ragged, and what he leaves behind him is anything but
-sweet, and they serve him as though he were a Yahoo. Look at his
-lodging-house and his boarding-house, at the dens in which he revolves
-to the ghastly notes of a black fiddler, with objects fit only to be
-lectured upon, or for the show of a Barnum. Take his line of railway,
-the Blackwall line; the farmers wouldn't send their swine to market in
-the carriages, and so the sailor travels in them."
-
-"How long have you been at sea, Mr. Hardy?"
-
-"I went to sea when I was fourteen years old, and I am now twenty-six."
-
-"In twelve years you have become a mate?"
-
-"Chief mate," he said.
-
-"Oh," she exclaimed, "what would I give if you carried a stewardess,
-and your captain would consent to take me!"
-
-"I wish it could be contrived," said he, in his plain, straight way,
-"but owners never ship people they don't want. Even if I had influence,
-an objection would be raised that you were the only woman on board."
-
-"But I have read," she exclaimed, "that a captain takes his wife to
-sea, and she may be the only woman in the ship."
-
-"Ay, but she's the captain's wife," he answered, with a smile, "and if
-she were a shipload of females she couldn't be more."
-
-They then began to talk of London and the East End, of a convenient
-part to take a lodging in, how it was certain that she must obtain
-a berth somewhere or somehow before Hardy sailed; and whilst they
-conversed the door opened, and Bax entered, purple with exercise and
-beer.
-
-"Well," said he, breathing comfortably, as though he had refreshed
-himself before entering with rest and ale, "that was a fine trick of
-yourn, Mr. Hardy."
-
-"Never mind about that, Bax," exclaimed the young sailor, cutting him
-short in his peremptory quarter-deck way. "Where's the constable?"
-
-"He bain't cooming," answered Bax. "He knows the difference between
-climbing up a hill and climbing into bed."
-
-"Sit down, Bax, and take some whisky," said Hardy, both he and Julia
-laughing; and after waiting for the farmer to mingle some whisky and
-water and pull a chair, he said, "Tell us what passed, Bax."
-
-"Well," began Bax, "it was just after you'd trotted out of sight,
-with me hallering, being afraid of the law I was, when oop cooms the
-maid 'long with Constable Rogers. 'Oh, Mr. Rogers,' sings out Mrs.
-Armstrong, who was standin' in her door, 'the doctor's son's been 'ere
-in Farmer Bax's cart, and busted into this house, and gone off with my
-stepdarter's troonk agin my commands.' 'Where's your stepdarter?' said
-the constable, not speaking overcivil--blamed if I thinks he likes the
-woman, and he didn't love her the better for routing of him out. 'I
-don't know,' answered Mrs. Armstrong. 'Yes, you do,' says I. 'She's
-opp stopping in my house along with the gent as fetched her luggage.'
-'What do you want me to do?' says Rogers. 'Your duty,' answers Mrs.
-Armstrong, 'twixt a snap of her teeth that was like cocking a goon at
-him. 'What do constables usually do when they're called in to houses
-which have been busted into and goods taken, otherwise stolen, agin
-orders?' Here Bax laughed slowly, as though recollecting something
-in this passage of words which he could not communicate, but which,
-nevertheless, he could enjoy. 'But there was no busting in here
-that I can see,' says Rogers, looking at me; 'you knocked and rung,
-didn't you?' 'Why, yes, of course we did,' says I, 'and the gent
-spoke the lady as civil as though she had been a maid of hanner or
-the queen herself.' 'Oh, what a liar, what a beast you must be!' says
-Mrs. Armstrong, screaming like. 'He forces his way oop-stairs, Mr.
-Constable, and brings down the box on his shoulder, me standing at the
-foot of the steps, and telling him not to touch it.' 'Was he sent by
-the party as the box belongs to?' asks the constable. 'Certainly he
-was, Mr. Rogers,' says I. 'They're going away to-morrow by the early
-train, and she naturally wanted her box to take with her.' 'There's
-nothing for me 'ere to interfere with that I can see,' says Rogers,
-drawing himself up, and puttin' on the face of a judge delivering a
-vardick. 'The lady has a right to her own. Your door was knocked on
-civilly, and the gent she asked to bring it away did so, and there's
-northen for me to meddle with;' and with that, without saying good
-night, he turns his back, and walks into the road, me at his side, and
-she hallering arter him that he didn't do his duty, and she'd lodge a
-complaint agin him, and 'ave the place cleared of a stoopid old fool.
-'She's like my cat when he begins to talk to Springett's cat over the
-wall,' says Mr. Rogers. 'I wish the young lady well out of it, I do.
-Good-night, Mr. Bax.' So I sets off 'ome, and that's just what all
-'appened."
-
-Julia, though she had laughed and often smiled, now sat looking subdued
-with grief and disgrace. It was horrible to the feelings of a lady to
-possess such a stepmother as the wretch who owned the little dog that
-bit, and horrible also to hear her represented and dramatised in the
-language of Bax in the presence of the man who, as God had willed it,
-seemed the only friend she possessed in this wide world. Nevertheless,
-they continued talking until eleven o'clock, by which hour Bax had
-grown too maudlin for human companionship.
-
-Julia went to bed, and Bax rolled through the door to the back premises
-to send his daughter to the young sailor. All that he requested was a
-rug, a blanket, and a pillow, and then when the house was locked up,
-and Miss Bax had bid him goodnight, he turned down the lamp, snugged
-himself on the sofa, and lay listening to Miss Julia's restless pacing
-overhead. There was sleeplessness in her walk; but the delicate
-tramp of her tireless feet ceased at last. He thought of her in her
-loneliness, and pity moved his heart, and he vowed that he would see
-her in safety, buoyed by a full promise of independence in the future,
-before he left England.
-
-The window stood open a little way, and all night-sounds were clear.
-The stream babbled in the road, and its voice was like the syllabling
-of the perfumes stealing darkling down into the valley. He heard the
-distant hooting of owls like the crying of idiot boys, one seeking the
-other, and the thin thunder of the distant railway was a night-sound,
-together with the shuddering of the dry autumn leaves upon the boughs
-as though the trees shivered to the chill of the passing moan of air.
-And then Hardy fell asleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE EAST INDIA DOCK ROAD
-
-
-At about two o'clock on the following day a cab of the old type, with
-rattling windows, straw as though fresh from the tramp of swine, a
-wheezing cabman, encumbered with capes, shawls, and rugs, with nothing
-but a drunken nose glowing under the sallow brim of a rain-bronzed
-hat--this old cab, with a corded trunk hopping on top of it betwixt the
-iron fencing, drew up at a house in the East India Dock Road.
-
-Mr. Hardy, the gentleman whom we left asleep on the sofa in Bax's farm,
-got out, leaving Miss Julia Armstrong sitting in a cab, and knocked on
-the door, which was opened in a few moments by a little woman in the
-clothes of a widow, clean and neat in person, with a wistful eye which
-softened her face into a look of kindness.
-
-"Glad to see you, Mr. Hardy," she immediately said. "I got your letter,
-sir. Your room's quite ready."
-
-"Well, I can't say I'm glad to see _you_, Mrs. Brierley, because you
-know what seeing you means to me. Did your husband love the stowing
-job, and the hauling out through the gates, with a crowd of drunken
-Dagos on the fok'sle, and the dockmaster bursting blood-vessels in
-expostulations to the mud pilot?"
-
-She seemed to smile, but her attention was elsewhere. She had caught
-sight of Julia in the cab, and was dodging Mr. Hardy, who stood right
-in the way, to get a better sight of her.
-
-"I want a lodging for that young lady you are trying to see," said
-Hardy. "Now say at once that you have a very comfortable bedroom for
-her in this house."
-
-"You don't tell me that you are married, sir?" exclaimed Mrs. Brierley,
-putting this question just as she might put her eye to a keyhole before
-answering.
-
-"No, nor keeping company with her, as you people call it," he replied.
-"It is a romantic story, and you shall hear the whole of it, provided
-that you can accommodate her with a bedroom, otherwise--mum!"
-
-"Mr. Hardy," said the widow, with some earnestness, "you've long used
-this house. You knew my poor husband. My struggle has been to keep it
-a thoroughly respectable home for them who patronise me, and you'll
-not take it amiss, sir, I'm sure, if I ask you, is she a lady you can
-recommend on your honour as a sailor man?"
-
-"I swear, Mrs. Brierley," exclaimed Hardy, with great feeling, "that
-she is a pure, charming, heart-broken lady, the daughter of a naval
-officer, whose sword was once at the service of his country."
-
-"Then, sir, I have a very comfortable bedroom," answered the widow.
-"How long will she be wanting it for?"
-
-"She shall engage it by the week," he answered, and walked to the door
-of the cab. "Tumble down, my lad, off that perch of yours," he shouted
-to the cabman, who seemed to have fallen asleep, "and carry that trunk
-into the house."
-
-Both pavements were filled with people, walking the everlasting walk
-of the London streets. Numbers had the appearance of seamen, some of
-them lurched in liquor; there were numerous black and chocolate faces,
-here and there a turban; grimy women flitted past in old shawls and
-rakishly-perched bonnets; roistering young wenches flaunted past with
-feathers in their hats, with cheeks deeply coloured, with yellow brows
-adorned with jet-like love-locks; and chill as it was, children went by
-with naked feet, and the shuddering flesh of their backs showed through
-their rags, filthy-eyed, hatless, and all the glory they had trailed
-from their God had died out in the atmosphere of fog, which added bulk
-to the thunderous omnibus, and made the fleet hansom a shadow down the
-road.
-
-"The landlady," said Hardy, putting his head into the cab, "has a
-comfortable bedroom at your disposal. We cannot do better. She is
-a thoroughly respectable woman, the widow of a master-mariner, who
-commanded brigs, and so on."
-
-He opened the door, and Julia jumped out, and they went together into
-the narrow passage with the cabman and the trunk following them.
-
-The landlady, curtseying her greeting to Julia, admitted them into her
-own private room, which was, in short, the front parlour. The cabman
-was paid, and went away looking at the shillings in the palm of his
-hand. In a very short time it was settled that Julia was to have the
-use of this parlour for her meals, and there would be no extra charge.
-The only other lodgers in the house were a sea captain and his wife.
-
-The parlour was worth a pause and a look round. No apartment was
-ever more nautically equipped. The very clock was a dial fitted into
-the mainsail of a brass ship; the candlesticks on the mantelpiece
-represented mermaids; the walls were embellished with pictures of ships
-and those carvings which sailors delight in: ships on a wind, half
-their ghastly white canvas showing against the board, and the water
-very sloppy and fearfully blue; there were models of ships, and an old
-galleon in ivory stood under glass on a table in the window. A boy's
-heart would have beat high in this room. It was full of curiosities;
-artful carvings by whalemen, out of the bone or teeth of the mammoth of
-the sea; queer findings along shore under the Southern Cross, weapons
-of cannibals, heathenish jars, earthen vessels which had been the
-sepulchres of the remains of broiled whites.
-
-After a little talk Mrs. Brierley took Julia up-stairs to her bedroom.
-Hardy, who had often before viewed the curiosities, wandered again
-round the room, but his mind was musing over other things, and soon
-he came to a stand at the window. The lookout was gloomy and grimy;
-opposite were a tobacconist, a house in which a stevedore lived, two
-lodging-houses, a pastry-cook, and a public-house. There was a great
-deal of mud in the road, the sky hung down sallow and dingy, and so
-close that the crooked black smoke, working out of a hundred shapes of
-chimney-pots, seemed to pierce it and vanish. A change indeed from the
-autumn glories of the country which the couple were newly from, where
-the hillsides, still thick with the leaves of the summer, were gashed
-with the red fires of the coming ruining winter; where the clear pale
-blue sky sank with its faint splendour of sunshine to the sharp, dark,
-terrace-like heights, which in their red breaks and scars of autumn
-overlooked the valley and the sheltered houses, and the quiet breast of
-river floating under the arch of the reflected bridge.
-
-A man, thought Hardy, accepts a large obligation when he undertakes to
-look after a girl. But what a beautiful figure she has, and her face
-appeals to me. I cannot meet her eyes without feeling that I am in
-love with her. Shall I be able to get her a berth before I sail? If I
-cannot, ought I to leave her alone in London with about seven pounds
-ten in her pocket?
-
-His brow contracted, and he hissed a tune through his teeth whilst he
-pondered. That thoughtless devil, her father, he mused, never came near
-Bax's farm. What is it to him that his daughter has bolted from her
-brutal home, and gone away with a young fellow who, for all the beggar
-cares, may leave her behind him in London in shame and destitution?
-'Tis rather a tight corner, though. And he would have gone on
-meditating but for being interrupted by the entrance of Julia, followed
-in a respectful way by the widow.
-
-"It is a very nice bedroom," said Julia. "I shall be very comfortable
-whilst I am here."
-
-"I suppose you have told Mrs. Brierley all about it," exclaimed Hardy,
-whilst Julia seated herself, posturing her head with her unconscious,
-inimitable grace, as she glanced round the sights of the room, and
-resting her hands on her hips and crossing her feet, to the undoubted
-admiration of the widow, who had on her entrance admired her beautiful
-figure.
-
-"Yes, sir, yes," said the widow; "and I'm truly sorry for the young
-lady, but don't doubt she'll find a berth, and do well where she's
-going."
-
-"Miss Armstrong," said Hardy, "I'm not due at the docks until
-to-morrow, and then I shall put in for an afternoon off. This afternoon
-we shall spend without troubling ourselves about anything. We are
-human, and must eat, just as every night we must put ourselves away in
-a frame of iron or wooden pillars, covered with blankets and sheets,
-and sleep, or else we go mad and die. There is a decent eating-house
-not far from here; we will go there and dine. You'll have tea ready for
-us, Mrs. Brierley, by six; and if the evening hangs, which it will, we
-will look in at a music-hall and purchase a shilling's-worth of pure
-vulgarity, which to me, when perfectly unaffected, is more humourous
-and more artistically refined than much of the genteel comedy of the
-West End theatres."
-
-Julia laughed, and looked at the widow, who said, "I don't visit the
-halls myself. They've got one good singer at Whitechapel, I hear. He
-comes in dressed as a coster, and brings a donkey with him which he
-sings about, and they say it's so affecting that even strong sailors
-cry."
-
-"If he sang of the donkey's breakfast Jack would cry more," said Hardy,
-and saying he would return in a minute, went to his bedroom for a wash
-down and a brush up, leaving the widow explaining to Julia that the
-term _donkey's breakfast_ signified the bundle of straw which sailors
-who are reckless of their money ashore carry on board ship with them as
-a bed.
-
-Whilst he was going up-stairs a man dressed in blue serge, smoking
-a curly meerschaum pipe, came out of a bedroom and passed into an
-apartment that had been converted into a sitting-room. They glanced at
-each other, and Hardy went up another flight to his bedroom. Here he
-stayed a few minutes. His carpet-bag had arrived before him, and in it
-were a change of apparel, two or three shirts, brush and comb, and the
-like. The rest of his duds were in his sea-chest, which had been sent
-to the docks. He smartened himself up and looked a manly young fellow.
-The light of the sea was in his eye, and the freshness of its breath
-was in his cheery expression, and the colour of his cheek was warm with
-the sun-glow.
-
-"Are you ready?" said he to Julia; and they went out, attended to
-the door by the widow, who appeared to have taken a liking to Miss
-Armstrong; but no one with a woman's heart in her could have heard the
-girl's story without being moved.
-
-Hardy paused on the doorstep to say to Mrs. Brierley, "Is the man in
-blue serge, who smokes a meerschaum, the captain who's lodging with
-you?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"What ship does he command?"
-
-"The _Glamis Castle_."
-
-"I know her," exclaimed Hardy; "a fine Indiaman. What the deuce does a
-swell like him do in these lodgings? He should put up at a hotel."
-
-"His home's at Penge," answered the widow, "and two or three weeks
-before he sails he always comes and stops with me, and brings his wife.
-Aren't my lodgings good enough for the captain of an Indiaman?"
-
-"They are good enough for the owner of an Indiaman. They are good
-enough for a German prince," said Hardy, in his pleasantest manner.
-"Should I bring this lady here if they were not of the highest?" And
-nodding to her he stepped on to the pavement, and Julia walked by his
-side.
-
-He was free in his comments upon the nastiness of the East End of
-London, and by his abuse of the mud and the shops, and the quality of
-the passing folks, he implied an apology for introducing Miss Armstrong
-into such a neighbourhood.
-
-"It's sweeter to me than Bodley," she said, referring to the place
-she came from. "What is the good of fine houses and broad streets and
-handsome carriages to a girl who has no money, who has but one friend,
-from whom she must be shortly separated for ever, perhaps, and whose
-most ambitious dream _dare_ not go beyond finding a cabin as emigrant
-or stewardess aboard a ship, and the berth of a servant, or, which is
-worse, a nursery governess when she arrives?"
-
-They walked for awhile in silence; but the silence was in their mouths,
-not in the street. One of the music-murdering organs of those days
-was playing at the street corner they were approaching. Huge wagons
-were grinding thunder into the solid earth. There was a fight over the
-way--two Italians were going for each other. A crowd of dirty women
-were dancing round them, encouraging them by the stimulating plaudits
-of the stews. An optician, with a row of chronometers in his window,
-stood upon his doorstep howling, "Police!" They turned the corner,
-and the notes of the organ died away behind them, and after a little
-walking they arrived at an eating-house with big windows, and a sheet
-of paper stuck upon the glass with red wafers, telling what was to be
-eaten inside.
-
-Hardy and Julia walked in. It was a long room with tables, separated
-one from another by brass rails and baize curtains, and nettings for
-receiving headgear. About a dozen people were in it--some of them
-neighbouring tradesmen, some of them obviously captains and mates. With
-a few of the men were women, who were evidently wives or sweethearts;
-in fact, the prices charged kept the place sweet.
-
-Hardy and Miss Armstrong sat down side by side at an empty table. A
-waiter arrived, looking hard at the lady, and the sailor gave his
-orders. He guessed the girl was hungry; he knew that _he_ was, and
-if he could not have spent a sovereign when ten shillings would have
-handsomely sufficed, he would have been no true salt. It is worth
-saying here that all the money our friend had was about two hundred
-pounds, and he had come to London with twenty sovereigns in his pocket,
-and a chequebook. As he was an only child he would inherit his father's
-leavings; but what would they amount to? A country practitioner who
-dispensed his own physic, and was glad to get three-and-sixpence a
-visit! A country practitioner with thirteen hundred pounds in bad debts
-on his books, and a horse, gig, and boy to keep! Still, whatever the
-doctor left would be George Hardy's, who did not value the prospect
-beyond the worth of the furniture, and had begun to save a little on
-his own account, with some light dream of amassing enough to enable him
-to purchase shares in a ship, which he would command.
-
-He ordered a good dinner from the bill of fare, and asked the waiter
-if the champagne of the establishment was real wine or chemicals. The
-waiter named a good brand, and swore there was nothing in the market to
-equal it. It was nine shillings a bottle.
-
-"I never drink champagne," said Julia.
-
-"But I do," exclaimed Hardy. "Bear a hand, waiter. We've been fasting
-since eight this morning."
-
-The waiter sidled away.
-
-"Champagne is the best of all drinks for young ladies," said Hardy;
-"and it helps the spirits of chief mates who are bound away on long
-voyages. What shall we do when we've dined?"
-
-"I should like to see the docks," said the girl.
-
-"Not to-day," exclaimed Hardy, pursing his mouth into an expression of
-disgust. "Let us hug the land as long as we can; besides, it will be
-drawing on to four o'clock before we've dined, and the docks and the
-ships in it will be invisible."
-
-As he spoke these words the man whom he had caught a sight of in his
-lodgings smoking a meerschaum pipe came into the dining-rooms with a
-lady, whom you at once guessed was his wife. They looked right and
-left, and took a table exactly opposite that occupied by Hardy and
-Miss Armstrong. The man who had been represented by Mrs. Brierley as
-the commander of an East Indiaman, named the _Glamis Castle_, was
-short and square, with a strong, red beard, and shorn upper lip; his
-eyebrows were reddish and habitually knitted, as though from long years
-of steadfast staring into the eyes of the wind. His eyes were dark and
-sharp in their glances; his brow was square as his form, and delicately
-browned by the sun. The lady was a homely-looking woman, in a bonnet
-and velvet mantle. She began to pull off her gloves, and her companion,
-after bawling "Waiter," in a quarter-deck roar, gazed fixedly at Hardy,
-who gazed back.
-
-All the time the man was giving his orders to the waiter, with
-occasional references to the lady, he kept his eyes bent on Hardy, who
-muttered to Julia, "I believe I know that man." The moment he had done
-with the waiter he rose, and stepped over to Hardy.
-
-"Is your name George Hardy?" said he, with a slight glance at the girl.
-
-"Yes," answered Hardy, "and now that I've got the bearings of you, I
-don't need to ask if your name is James Smedley."
-
-They clasped hands.
-
-"Let me introduce you," said Hardy, "to Miss Julia Armstrong, daughter
-of Commander Armstrong, late of the Royal Navy. Captain Smedley, of the
-_Glamis Castle_, Miss Armstrong."
-
-"How did you know that?" asked Smedley, exchanging a bow with the girl,
-whose peculiar grace of form, whose charm of movement, whose face,
-romantic and pleading, with the gifts of nature and the passions of her
-heart, his swift eye was observing with pleasure and curiosity.
-
-"I am stopping in the house you're lodging in," answered Hardy, "and
-Mrs. Brierley told me who you were. Are you going to dine here?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Is that your wife?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Bring her across, Smedley, and we'll make a dinner party."
-
-Mrs. Smedley had been bobbing to catch a view of Miss Armstrong, and
-the bugles in her bonnet twinkled like fireflies as she swayed her head.
-
-"Miss Armstrong's story," continued Hardy, "is so moving that Mrs.
-Smedley will be grieved to the depths of her kindly heart when she
-hears it."
-
-Julia looked down, and Captain Smedley studied her for a few moments,
-then wheeled abruptly, and stepped over to his wife. After a brief
-confab they both came to Hardy's table, and Mrs. Smedley was introduced
-to Miss Armstrong and her companion.
-
-"Do you sail with your husband?" asked Julia.
-
-"No," answered Mrs. Smedley, who seemed struck by the girl. "The owners
-won't let the captains carry their wives with them."
-
-"A ship," said Julia, "should never be so safe as when a captain's wife
-is on board, because of course _her_ presence would make the commander
-doubly vigilant and anxious."
-
-"Haw, haw!" laughed Smedley.
-
-The fish which had been ordered was now placed upon the table, and
-on both sides they began to eat. The waiter uncorked the champagne,
-and Hardy told him to fill the glasses opposite. This was resisted by
-Mrs. Smedley, a homely woman, who declared that for her part she loved
-nothing better than bitter beer. Again her husband "Haw-haw'd," and
-said they would see Hardy's champagne through, and then he would order
-another bottle. He believed it was not usual in polite society to drink
-champagne with fish; but it was all one to him. Champagne went down the
-same way, whether its messmate was fish or flesh.
-
-"Are you leaving England?" inquired Mrs. Smedley, addressing Julia, at
-whom she continued to look hard, though not in the least rudely, as if
-she found a good deal in the girl that was infinitely beyond the range
-of her speculations.
-
-"I am endeavouring to leave it," answered Julia, looking at her with
-her head a little on one side.
-
-"May I tell them your story?" said Hardy, "for we shall want our
-friend's influence," he added, with a nod at his old shipmate.
-
-"Oh, yes, tell them," exclaimed Julia, a little passionately; "it will
-account for my being in the East India Dock Road," and her face relaxed
-as she looked at Mrs. Smedley, who smiled upon her in a motherly way.
-
-Hardy in his blunt, sailorly fashion began. He did not spare Captain
-Armstrong, neither did he spare Julia's stepmother. He warmed up, and
-put the girl's case in forcible terms. Asked what a young English lady
-was to do who was, to all intents and purposes, expelled from her
-father's roof by the brutality of a drunken stepmother, he related some
-of her experiences in nursing and in seeking independence in other
-ways, just as she had related them to him. He spoke of his finding her
-unconscious by the wayside, and how he was determined to take this
-poor, friendless young lady by the hand, and help her to the utmost
-stretch of his ability to find a home, a refuge across the seas.
-
-"Don't cry, my dear," said Mrs. Smedley. "I have known more cases than
-yours. It is very hard--and to be motherless--but you cannot allow your
-heart to be broken by a bad woman; and I think you are acting wisely in
-resolving to go abroad."
-
-Julia put her handkerchief into her lap, and closed her knife and fork.
-Hardy poured some champagne into her glass, and bade her drink.
-
-"What's the lady's idea of going abroad?" said Captain Smedley, whose
-face exhibited no more signs of feeling than had it been a rump steak.
-
-"She has no money, and wants to work her passage out as a stewardess,"
-replied Hardy.
-
-"And when she arrives?" said Captain Smedley.
-
-"She is bound to find something to do," answered Hardy. "The colonies
-are yearning for young English ladies."
-
-"Young English domestics, you mean," said Captain Smedley. "What is the
-good of ladies? What is the good of gentlemen in lands where labour,
-and labour only, is wanted?"
-
-"Why would not you go out as an emigrant, Miss Armstrong?" said Mrs.
-Smedley. "Of course," she added, "I presume you have Australia in your
-mind?"
-
-"I would go out as anything as long as I could get out," answered Julia.
-
-"Take my advice and don't talk of emigration," said Captain Smedley.
-"You will be miserably fed and miserably berthed. You will have a
-matron and a surgeon over you, and the discipline will make you wish
-yourself overboard. Your associates will be mean and dirty wretches,
-who would have qualified for transportation could they have made
-sure of the sentence. Your ship will be ill-found. They talk of the
-emigrants marrying on their arrival. Yes, but what is a young lady like
-you going to say to such suitors as offer? You wouldn't like to marry a
-convict? You wouldn't like to settle down with a hairdresser in a back
-street? Don't you go out in an emigrant ship, Miss Armstrong."
-
-"It is all very fine talking about _don't_," said Hardy, "but what we
-want is _do_. Miss Armstrong wishes to leave England for good. She
-pockets her pride, and is willing to work. She has no money, and I must
-secure her a berth somehow before I sail, because I am not going to
-leave her alone in London, where she's friendless; and friendlessness
-in London where all is opulence and misery, like the front and the
-back of the moon--one shining, one ice-cold as death, and black--is
-heart-breaking, and for many, Smedley, the invitation of the dark
-waters of the Thames has been welcome."
-
-"My God! you're just the same--always sky high," said Smedley; and he
-drank some champagne out of the bottle he had ordered. "When you were a
-midshipman under me you were talking like that, and you're talking it
-still."
-
-"Surely a man can put his hand in the tar-bucket without blacking his
-whole body," said Hardy, looking at Mrs. Smedley, whose face was in
-sympathy with his speech. "When I'm ashore I talk like a gentleman. One
-can't be always cussing and swearing; and oh! says you"--and his fine,
-dark keen eyes showed there was laughter in him--"Give me Jack Muck,
-nothing short of Jack Muck. Hitch up, turn your quid, pull your greasy
-forelock, mind that you're boozed. Oh, Lord! Smedley, ha'n't you had
-enough of it?"
-
-"Miss Armstrong," said Smedley, rolling his eyes slowly from Hardy to
-the girl, "why do you want to go to Australia? Why don't you go to
-India?"
-
-"India," muttered Hardy, "what's she going to do in India?"
-
-"No, but I tell you what," said Smedley, with emphasis, "such a young
-lady as that may do before she gets out there."
-
-Julia gazed at him inquiringly, and Mrs. Smedley turned her head to
-watch his face.
-
-"Don't you know, Miss Armstrong," continued Smedley, "that there is no
-marriage market in the world to equal an East Indiaman?"
-
-Julia flushed a little, but did not speak.
-
-"She takes out young people," went on the commander of the _Glamis
-Castle_, "called Griffins. They are young men with a glass in their
-eye and susceptible hearts behind their waistcoats. They also take out
-planters, merchants, gentlemen going to join houses--"
-
-"And ladies," interrupted Hardy. "Ladies in plenty."
-
-"You know nothing about it," said Captain Smedley. "A few ladies,
-most of them married. Now," he continued, "such a young lady as Miss
-Armstrong, no matter what position she fills on board, stands a
-first-rate chance of finding a husband before her arrival in India.
-Your emigrant ship is not going to provide any chance of the sort."
-
-"I do not think of marriage," said Julia, who after colouring had
-turned rather paler than usual, but she spoke calmly and even with
-sweetness, as though grateful for the interest these strangers were
-taking in her.
-
-"Oh," cried Captain Smedley, with warmth, "but you _must_ think of
-marriage. It is a condition of every woman's life. It is thought of
-from about the age of twelve until it happens, and nothing else is
-thought of. All the milliners and dressmakers contribute to the dream.
-It is the one idea in the darlings' heads, and of course it is a wrong
-one."
-
-"What will Miss Armstrong think of such stuff and nonsense?" said Mrs.
-Smedley.
-
-"What's a girl to do when she gets to India if she isn't married?"
-asked Hardy.
-
-"They want governesses and nursemaids, I dare say," replied the
-captain. "Let her call upon the missionary. I took out the Bishop of
-Calcutta last voyage. He's a dear old chap, and many a yarn we spun
-together. I'll venture to say that a letter of introduction to him from
-me will ensure this young lady a berth."
-
-Hardy, putting his elbow on the table, rested his cheek in the palm of
-his hand, and looked at Miss Armstrong musingly. Nobody spoke until
-Hardy started, and turning to Smedley, said, "Can you give her a berth
-on board your ship?"
-
-"I am thinking of it," was the answer.
-
-Julia looked almost startled, and exclaimed to Hardy, "We should be
-going different ways."
-
-Smedley and his wife exchanged glances.
-
-"I must see you safe on board bound to somewhere," answered Hardy,
-softly. "I am bound to Melbourne; afterward to a New Zealand port. Your
-ship will be bound to Calcutta. These places are different ways, and
-India is the same thing."
-
-She looked down upon the table in silence. The other three saw how it
-was with her, poor girl, and how impossible it was, and Hardy then felt
-_this_ with a sort of yearning of the heart that was as bad as sorrow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE "GLAMIS CASTLE"
-
-
-It was nearly half-past four when Hardy and the others rose from the
-dinner-table. Not that they had been eating all this time. They had
-prolonged their sitting over coffee and in talk, and there was no
-obligation to go so as to make way for others, because the hour was
-neither lunch nor dinner time, and scarce more than two or three tables
-were occupied.
-
-Nothing had been settled when they stood up and the ladies began to put
-on their gloves. It was dark: the dining-rooms were lighted up, and in
-the street the fog, though not dense, was wet as rain; the lamplighters
-were running along the curbstones, and in a chemist's shop a little way
-down the green and red waters in the big glass vases dully glimmered
-like the side-lights of a ship, heading a straight course for the
-dining-rooms.
-
-"This is just the sort of evening," said Smedley, "in which to visit a
-friend's grave at some churchyard hereabouts. On evenings of this sort
-drunken men fall into holes full of water near the docks. The spirit of
-the Isle of Dogs stalks abroad this evening; you can see him in the sky
-and taste him in the wind. What shall we do?"
-
-"I told Mrs. Brierley to get some tea ready by six," said Hardy. "This
-is not an evening to walk about in, and now I vote, Miss Armstrong,
-that we do not go to a music-hall to-night. I am for lying snug in
-harbour; are you?"
-
-"I did not care about the idea of the music-hall when you suggested
-it," she said.
-
-"They are vulgar places, unfit for ladies, particularly in these
-parts," exclaimed Mrs. Smedley.
-
-"The cleverest performances I've ever seen I've witnessed in
-music-halls," remarked the captain, "and I never want to hear better
-singing than I've heard at them. Sometimes a cad, who has no respect
-for his own sex, who has no respect for himself as a man, and not
-the faintest sense in the world of what is due to women, comes on
-in evening dress, a white shirt blazing with studs, and a tall hat,
-which he is perpetually shifting upon his head: and this fiend sings
-a song full of _double entendres_, and he sings in greasy notes with
-a lickerish eye; and, strangely enough, I have never yet seen any man
-rise from amongst the audience, climb over the orchestra, and kick the
-animal round and round the stage into the development of a fresh sort
-of music and another kind of words. Otherwise, if you want talent, go
-to the music-halls."
-
-"Shall we go to our lodgings and spend the evening there?" said Mrs.
-Smedley.
-
-"Yes, and drink tea with us," exclaimed Hardy; "and before bedtime,
-Smedley, we shall have settled the business of Miss Julia Armstrong."
-
-Captain Smedley gave his arm to his wife, and Hardy gave his arm
-to Miss Armstrong, and out they went, walking briskly so as not
-to get damp, and in a short time they arrived at Mrs. Brierley's
-lodging-house.
-
-The widow had not expected them home so soon, but she speedily lighted
-the gas in the romantically equipped parlour, which she had placed at
-the disposal of Hardy and Julia. The ladies went to their rooms to
-remove their outdoor clothes, and presently they were all seated in the
-widow's parlour of curiosities.
-
-"Where did old Brierley get all these things from?" said Captain
-Smedley, looking round him. "Did he reckon to start a museum before the
-notion of a lodging-house entered his head? Man and boy, I've followed
-the sea thirty years, and the only curiosity I've got in all that time
-was my wife."
-
-"I feel the compliment," exclaimed Mrs. Smedley.
-
-"A curiosity," continued the captain, "because she is all goodness,
-loyalty, and affection."
-
-And he got up and kissed her, and sitting again continued his eulogy,
-which was a sign that he had dined well and felt comfortable. The
-ladies did not object to tobacco, and the two sailors filled their
-pipes, Smedley observing that he smoked so many cigars at sea that he
-didn't give a curse even for a prime Havana, though at the high cost of
-seven for sixpence, when he was ashore.
-
-"Don't you think, Miss Armstrong," said he, "that I've put the case
-for the East Indies strongly enough to justify you in listening to my
-advice not to go out to the colonies as an emigrant?"
-
-"I am sure," observed Mrs. Smedley, "you stand a better chance of
-marrying in your own sphere. There are plenty of officers in India in
-want of wives, and I need not say--" She interrupted herself, but
-acted the compliment she intended by glancing significantly at the
-girl's charming figure, and letting her eye repose for a moment or two
-on her face and fine hair. "It will be quickly known that you are the
-daughter of a naval officer."
-
-"I do not think of marriage," said Julia, clasping her hands.
-
-"I like your idea, Smedley, of a letter to the Bishop of Calcutta,"
-exclaimed Hardy. "But how is Miss Armstrong to get out? Could you find
-her a berth aboard of you or in one of your ships?"
-
-"Well, it's like this with us," answered Smedley; "we have six ships,
-and every ship carries a stewardess. Three are away, and the others, I
-know, are provided with stewardesses. The practice is for a person who
-wants the position to call at the offices, and if her qualifications
-are all right her name is put down, and she awaits her chance. Miss
-Armstrong might have to wait a long time, and she doesn't want to do
-so."
-
-Julia shook her head slowly, and Mrs. Smedley said:
-
-"How can she wait, Jim? She has no money, and no friend when Mr. Hardy
-sails."
-
-"Are you anything of a nurse?" inquired the captain.
-
-"I have nursed old ladies, but not children," answered Julia. "But I
-have had some experience in the sick-room."
-
-There was a pause. Smedley filled his pipe thoughtfully.
-
-"Have _you_ a stewardess?" asked Hardy.
-
-"Yes," replied Smedley, "she has been in the ship four voyages."
-
-"What's the pay?" asked Hardy.
-
-"Four pounds a month."
-
-"Does she sign the ship's articles?"
-
-"All the same as if she were an A.B.," replied Smedley.
-
-There was another pause, during which the captain lighted his pipe.
-
-"I can promise nothing," said he, looking at his wife as though he
-was trying to gratify her instead of helping the girl; "but I'll see
-to-morrow if some berth as second or assistant stewardess can be
-contrived. I shall see Mrs. Lambert--that is the stewardess's name,
-and I don't doubt that I can get the office to recognise the need of
-assistance, as I understand we shall be a full ship with a good many
-children."
-
-"You are a real friend," exclaimed Hardy. "It is more than I dared
-expect from you," and he turned to witness the effect of the kindly
-captain's words upon the girl; but her expression was as one who
-gazes at a cheerless prospect. Observing that Hardy watched her, she
-exclaimed, in a low voice, "I can but thank you, Captain Smedley," and
-she bowed her head, leaving it bowed.
-
-There was not much more to be said upon the subject after this; indeed
-it was easily seen that the girl's heart was with Hardy, and as he was
-sailing for Australia she wanted to go there too, which perhaps was
-not idle in her, because it was impossible for her to realise that
-he could not marry her, even if he loved her, which she had no right
-to imagine, as he could not support her ashore, nor as a mate, nor
-even perhaps as a captain, take her to sea with him. But things are
-felt and understood which may not be expressed, and a little before
-Mrs. Brierley and the maid came in with the tea-tray and the cakes
-it was arranged that Hardy should accompany Miss Armstrong on board
-the _Glamis Castle_, which lay not far from the _York_, when Captain
-Smedley hoped to be able to tell her that he had managed to find a
-berth for her aboard his ship.
-
-"It will save a vast deal of anxiety and of time, and it will rescue
-you from the horrors of the emigrant ship," said Hardy to Julia, who
-smiled faintly and looked as though the least expression of sympathy
-would compel her into a passion of tears.
-
-Mrs. Brierley spread a liberal tea upon the table, but not much
-appetite attended it. The subject of the assistant stewardess was
-dropped, and Mrs. Smedley listened with attention, and Julia with
-fictitious interest, to the conversation that was almost entirely
-carried on by Hardy and his friend. They had been shipmates, as we have
-heard--Hardy as midshipman, Smedley as third mate, both occupying the
-midshipmen's quarters in days when Blackwall Liners used to sail with
-twelve or fourteen reefers in buttons and badges, who had sole charge
-of the mizzen-mast, the poop or quarter-deck, the quarter-boats and the
-gig. John Company's flag was then flying, but they had not served in
-that employ. They afterward came together, Smedley as chief mate and
-Hardy as third, in a vessel called the _Asia_, a ship with long skysail
-poles, a stem nearly as up and down as a cutter's, black as night, half
-the length of her aft sparkling with round ports. They talked of this
-ship and of her wonderful passages; how her captain would carry fore,
-main, and topgallant stu'nsails, and pass by ships which thought they
-were cracking on with a topgallantsail set over a single reefed topsail.
-
-Sailors who have been shipmates love this sort of memories, and it
-is like watching the coil of the sea--one blue ridge dissolving in
-the base of another, with the laughter and the thunder of heaving and
-racing brine--to hear them.
-
-Thus they passed the evening, with the help of a little whisky and
-plenty of tobacco, and Julia, sitting beside Mrs. Smedley, told her
-story over again, but fully, and Mrs. Smedley talked of her son, who
-was a young curate of whom she was very proud, not only because of his
-social importance, but because of his eloquence: she declared that
-he preached a better sermon, young as he was, than any minister of
-the gospel in the whole diocese, and the interest Julia took in this
-matter, though the poor girl was thinking all the time of Hardy and the
-East Indiaman, charmed Mrs. Smedley.
-
-The East India docks are among the oldest on the Thames. They embody
-many chapters of the maritime history of this country. They are of
-extraordinary interest to any one who knows the story of the ocean,
-and of the might and majesty of England as the Queen of the Sea. Their
-soup-coloured waters have reflected many different forms and types of
-ships, from the emblazoned, glazed, and castellated stern of the East
-Indiaman to the long, black, yellow-funnelled, three-masted steamer
-whose straight stem shears through it from Gravesend to New York in
-less time than it took the Indiaman to beat down Channel. The produce
-of many lands litters the quays and fills the sheds. The steam winch
-rattles, the giant arm of crane swings its tons, the stevedore shouts
-in the depths, and the mate yells at the hatchway. The tall masts rise
-into the air, lifting their topmost yards into the yellow obscurity
-up there; figures dangle on the foot ropes, or jockey the yard-arms.
-The house bunting of a score of firms makes a festival to the eye, and
-alongside is the barge, whose slender company do not pay the dues, and
-whose language is beyond the dreams of Houndsditch.
-
-It was Wednesday afternoon, about three o'clock, and the docks were
-full of the animation of the coming and going, and the loading and
-the discharging ships. The air trembled with hoarse voices, with the
-passage of locomotives and wagons, with the rattle of steam machinery,
-with the hissing of escaping vapour. It was the Isle of Dogs, and the
-afternoon was somewhat foggy. In one basin lay a number of fine ships,
-nearly all sailing ships, for there were very few funnels to be seen
-in those days, and along the edge of the wall of this basin two people
-were walking--Hardy and Julia Armstrong. They were two of a great many
-other persons, who were labourers, sailors, and so forth; and as they
-walked slowly, for the road was obstructed by goods and machinery as
-well as by toilers, lumpers, and loafers, Hardy, pointing to a ship
-lying on the other side of the basin, exclaimed:
-
-"That's the _York_."
-
-Julia stopped to look at her. She was not in trim to be seen to
-advantage; her sails were not bent, her running gear was not rove, but
-all saving her royal yards were aloft, and her model, though light
-and showing the green sheathing, was visible in such perfection of
-run, in such elegance of elliptic stern, in such swelling beauty and
-fining grace of schooner cut-water and flaring bow, as could be matched
-only by those lovely creations of the ship-builders' art, the Aberdeen
-clippers.
-
-"She is a beautiful vessel," exclaimed Julia. "I wish you commanded
-her."
-
-"So do I," answered Hardy, running a critical eye over the ship.
-
-"Do you like the captain?"
-
-"I know his name," answered Hardy, "but I've not yet met him. He
-replaced a gray-haired man who was a philanthropist, and held notions
-and opinions which are not appreciated by ship-owners. He was kind to
-his men, and owners cannot die worth millions if kindness to crews
-is tolerated. A sailor to his mind was a man and not a dog, which
-astonished the ship-owners, whose views are otherwise. If the food was
-bad he went on broaching till he came to something sweet, and this was
-an enormity. He would go into the fok'sle and attend upon a sick man,
-and help him so far as kindness and the medicine-chest could. His crew
-would have gone on sailing round the world with him for ever. Such men
-are not fit to command merchant sailors," he added, sarcastically, "and
-so he is discharged, and probably will not find another ship, and God
-knows what he will do, for at his age what _can_ he do?"
-
-They continued their walk until they arrived at the corner of the dock.
-A large full-rigged ship lay there. Her house flag was cream-white with
-a black cross in it; a delicate space of bunting that trembled under
-the golden ball of truck, for this vessel had short royal-mastheads,
-and when the yards were hoisted they sat like a frigate's under the
-eyes of the rigging.
-
-Hardy caused Julia to stop, whilst they yet commanded a view of the
-ship's stern and the whole length of the decks from the poop to the
-topgallant forecastle. She was undoubtedly a very beautiful ship,
-probably the handsomest at that time of them all in the London Docks.
-Her stern's embellishment would have done justice to the imagination of
-the Dutch shipwrights of the seventeenth century. Dull as the day was,
-this _Glamis Castle_, without sunlight to reflect, without the sparkle
-of water to kindle stars and to flash prisms, was lustrous as though
-self-luminous with window and gilt and gorgeous quarter-galleries, and
-upon the sloping ebony of her counter, before it glowed into the yellow
-metal of her brand-new sheathing, were the long white letters of her
-name and her port, and these letters you could read in the water that
-floated stagnant about her rudder and run. Her main-deck and waist
-were full of business; her quarter-deck winch rattled its pawls with
-the noise of a hearse trotted by tipsy men from the graveyard gate;
-the crane was sinking costly burdens into the wide, black yawn of the
-main-hatch; riggers were aloft; preparations for the long voyage round
-the Cape to Calcutta were being pushed forward, as the newspapers
-would say; but, saving the mate, with one foot upon the coaming of the
-main-hatch, watching the slow descent of cargo into the depths, and
-saving the figure of Captain Smedley, sitting on the fore-skylight of
-the poop with an end of cigar in his month, there was then no man upon
-that ship who would have a hand in the navigation of her, from the
-wide breast of river flowing beyond, to that other distant breast of
-river revolting with black corpses and their ships' companies of plumed
-scavengers.
-
-"There's Smedley!" exclaimed Hardy, and Julia looked at the captain
-sitting on the skylight. "If he ships you," he continued, "you will be
-sailing away in a noble craft," and he began to talk to himself: "What
-a hoist of maintopsail! How splendidly stayed her spars are! She'll
-show cloths enough to get knots from the waft of a sea-mew's wing!"
-
-They walked on till they came abreast of Smedley, and then Hardy hailed
-him.
-
-"Come aboard, I'm waiting for you," sang out Smedley, with a flourish
-of his fingers at the peak of his cap. Hardy took the girl's hand, and
-they crossed a short platform of planks stretched between the edge of
-the wall and the ship's bulwarks, and descending two or three steps
-gained the main-deck, whence they made their way to the poop by the
-port ladder. Before they ascended this ladder Hardy stopped Julia to
-look at and admire the cuddy front. It was a true Dutch picture of
-its kind. It resembled the front of a house with its door and three
-brass-protected, red-curtained windows of a side, and a projecting wing
-of cabin on either hand, so that the front was a pleasant recess with
-its roof of poop-deck over it. But the romance of this fancy of cuddy
-front--perished for ever to this and all future generations--lay in the
-carving that lavishly embellished it: a fantastic mixture of anchors
-and flags with masts in full sail peering between, and human figures
-with wings blowing horns. There was uniformity in all this variety,
-and the complicate picture in the dark colours of teak was fraught with
-meaning to the interpreting eye.
-
-The sailor and the girl went on to the poop, a fine stretch of plank,
-but not quite so white as it would be presently, when it had been
-tickled by the holystone, and when the ivory spaces of it would take
-the sun-shed impression of the rigging like rulings in indigo, clear of
-the velvet-violet shadow of the awning.
-
-"Well, here we are," exclaimed Captain Smedley, rising from the
-skylight and speaking with that bluntness which many admired in his
-speech, thinking it sailorly, just as people will inhale doubtful
-odours from an inner harbour and relish them as "ozone." "What do you
-think of the ship, Hardy?"
-
-But though he spoke to Hardy, he kept his eye on Miss Armstrong,
-and was undoubtedly admiring her, particularly her figure, and the
-fascinating cock of her head with its tilted hat.
-
-"She's the finest ship I ever saw," answered Hardy, with real
-enthusiasm. "What a marvellous stern! what a delightful cuddy front!"
-
-"Meant to astonish the natives," said Smedley. "They have settled the
-choice of more than one coloured nob, and left the other passenger
-ships nowhere."
-
-"Well, and what news, Smedley?" said Hardy.
-
-"Oh, I think it may be managed," answered Captain Smedley, sending his
-fragment of cigar overboard with a jerk of his arm. "My wife is below:
-let's go down to her."
-
-They descended into what was then called the cuddy by way of the
-companion steps, and this interior was worthy its wonderful front.
-Narrow slips of looking-glass upon the walls of it, and between each
-slip was a picture representing some Indian scene. The effect was
-brilliant and novel; determination to delight the Oriental eye was
-visible in the grotesque figuration of the three lamps hanging over the
-table. A Japanese artist, delirious with opium, might have imagined the
-extraordinary shapes which supported the globes. All was luxury and
-originality. Aft on either hand and athwart-ships were cabins, but the
-main accommodation was to be sought in the steerage, which was gained
-by a wide staircase, conducting through a hatchway in the fore end of
-the cuddy.
-
-Whilst Julia and Hardy were gazing about them Mrs. Smedley came out of
-the starboard cabin under the wheel.
-
-"I am trying to make my husband's cabin comfortable for him," said she,
-with her homely, motherly smile, after greetings had been exchanged.
-"I hope he will soon make his last voyage. Captain Franklin, a friend
-of ours, was seventeen years at sea in command, and in all that time
-he and his wife calculated that they had only spent one year and three
-months in each other's company. It is worse than being widowed."
-
-"Much worse," said Captain Smedley, "because you can't get married
-again. The beggar's always coming home."
-
-"Let us sit down," said Mrs. Smedley. "Miss Armstrong, come and sit
-beside me here. I am afraid we sha'n't be able to offer you any
-refreshments, but Jim when he came along said something about dining at
-the Brunswick Hotel."
-
-"Captain Smedley's full of original ideas," exclaimed Hardy as they
-seated themselves at the table. "What a different scene, Mrs. Smedley,
-this interior will submit a few weeks hence," he continued. "I see the
-gallant captain yonder at the head there, a row of ladies and gentlemen
-ranged down the table from either hand of him. The table smokes with
-good cheer, elaborately served; through a window yonder you see an ayah
-cuddling a baby and swaying to the heave of the ship. How the sails
-swell to the heavens through that skylight!" and here he cast his eyes
-aloft, and then looking at Miss Julia, he said, "And where will you be?"
-
-"Well, you may take it as good as settled," said Captain Smedley, "and
-let my wife get all the thanks," he added, not particularly referring
-to Julia in his speech.
-
-"You are very good," said Hardy, glancing at Julia, who was certainly
-not smiling. "How shall we consider it as good as settled?"
-
-"You've got to thank my wife, she's taken a great interest in the young
-lady," said Smedley.
-
-Julia meeting Mrs. Smedley's eyes gave her a grave bow, full of the
-unconscious coquetry of her natural postures.
-
-"It's settled in this way," continued Smedley. "I saw Mrs. Lambert this
-morning, and it is arranged that Miss Armstrong sails as her assistant.
-Old Perkins, one of the chiefs, who was at the office, said that he
-couldn't see the need; freights were low, and the ship was sailed
-without regard to expense." Here the captain winked at Hardy. "I told
-him the lady was a good nurse and accustomed to children, and that the
-stewardess needed help. So, Miss Armstrong, you will sign on, and you
-will have me for a captain. Do you like the idea?"
-
-"I thank you a thousand times for your kindness," answered Julia. "This
-is a beautiful ship, and I am sure you will see that I am not unhappy.
-But--but shall I find employment in Calcutta? Am I not almost sure of
-finding employment in Australia?" and she looked with a wistfulness
-that was almost love at Hardy.
-
-"You certainly will find employment in Australia, and most certainly
-a husband," said Smedley, who took the girl's hesitation very
-good-humouredly. "But I fear your employment will be menial, and the
-washing-tub, and the cooking range don't suit the likes of you."
-
-"It is very true," said Mrs. Smedley.
-
-Hardy listened with his eyes fixed on the deck. His heart had noted the
-girl's wistful look, and it was beating a little fast in some confusion
-of thought to his interpretation of her eyes.
-
-"A husband," continued Smedley, "will certainly be forthcoming, but
-like the range and the tub, he won't suit the likes of you, though
-stress of circumstances make you his wife. Now it's all tip-top
-gentility in India, with a real chance of a first-class sort, aboard my
-ship, this side of Calcutta."
-
-"Oh! it's marriage you are always thinking of, Captain Smedley," cried
-Julia, clasping her hands, and looking at him in her fascinating way.
-
-The captain glanced at his wife as if the conversation was growing
-personal.
-
-"Pray remember this, Miss Armstrong," said Mrs. Smedley, "if you are on
-the ship's articles you belong to the ship, and if you cannot obtain
-employment in the months during which the vessel will be lying in the
-Calcutta River, you can return in her, by which time Mr. Hardy may have
-arrived, and then you can try Australia."
-
-"That's a new idea, and a splendid one," said Hardy.
-
-Julia's face brightened. "_Will_ you let me return in her, captain?"
-she asked.
-
-"Certainly, if you don't run away, as is customary with many who sign
-the ship's articles," he answered. "But you don't go out to come back;
-a major-general may fall in love with you on your arrival, and then
-you'll be coming on board to ask for my blessing." He added with a
-little movement of impatience, "Is it settled?"
-
-"Yes, and we thank you again and again," exclaimed Hardy.
-
-"You'll sleep in the stewardess's cabin," said Captain Smedley. "Let's
-go below and have a look at it. By the way," he added, "I may as well
-say at once that your pay will be thirty shillings a month."
-
-Miss Armstrong blushed, and bowed, and smiled.
-
-"Not enough, when it's all taken up, for a new gown, Jim," said Mrs.
-Smedley. "Where's the cabin, lovey?"
-
-They all went down the broad steps, conducting to what was then called
-the steerage, in which the first-class cabin passengers were berthed,
-though in these days the word steerage is wholly associated with
-third-class people and German Jews, who quarrel over packs of greasy
-cards. The ship had plenty of beam, and the steerage was spacious
-for a vessel of her burden. The cabins ran well forward, and there
-was plenty of them. The central deck would be carpeted when the ship
-was ready for sea. Handsome bunks, washstands, chest of drawers, and
-other furniture, made every cabin resemble a snug little bedroom, and
-the port-holes were large, with plenty of room for the passage of the
-thrilling and soothing gush of blue breeze, when the flying-fish should
-be starting from the metalled fore-foot in flights of pearly light,
-and when the sun should hang in a roasting eye over the foretopgallant
-yard-arm. The stewardess's berth was small but cosy: two fore-and-aft
-bunks, the same conveniences as in the other cabins--and this was to be
-Julia's bedroom.
-
-She lingered a little looking around her, and the others paused to
-humour her.
-
-Then said Captain Smedley, "I am hungry. Let us go and get something to
-eat at the Brunswick Hotel."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-CAPTAIN LAYARD
-
-
-A little later than three weeks from the date on which our friends
-had dined together at the Brunswick Hotel, in the East India Docks, a
-fine, full-rigged ship was sailing slowly in rhythmic lifts and falls,
-as full of sweet grace as the cadence and movement of lovely music,
-through the dark blue evening waters of the Atlantic, about two hundred
-miles to the southward of the Chops, and the autumn glory of the fast
-westering sun clothed her.
-
-She was the well-known clipper ship _York_, bound to Melbourne and to
-another port, and she had followed, after four days, another beautiful
-vessel which we have inspected--I mean the _Glamis Castle_, bound, as
-the _York_ was bound, for the Cape parallels, where their liquid paths
-would diverge, one going away east for Cape Leeuwin, and the other
-shifting her helm for the Indian Ocean.
-
-The _York_ had made a noble passage down the Channel, driven by a
-black, salt, shrieking, easterly breeze that grew into half a gale,
-with soft, dark clouds smouldering as they flew. The Channel sea had
-the look of flint, and to each foaming _scend_ the ship drove in a
-curtsey of fury, as though to the thrust of some mighty hand. She
-stormed along under two topgallantsails and single reefs and swelling
-fore-course, and a swinging wing or two of jib and staysail until she
-was out of soundings in a passage that had the swiftness of steam,
-as steam then was; and then the strong breeze fined down, the wind
-shifted into the northwest, and behold this clipper of spacious pinions
-breaking the dark blue heave at her bows into scintillant lines like
-the meteor's thread of light, with every curve of cloth at the leaches,
-from head-earing to clew, of a faint pink with the light in the west.
-
-The officer of the watch stood on the weather-side of the quarter-deck
-with his eyes fixed upon a distant sail, close hauled and reaching
-westwards; but it was evident by the expression of his eyes that his
-attention was not with _her_. A single figure at the wheel grasped
-the spokes with an occasional movement, and sometimes a glance at the
-card of the compass, and sometimes a look at the canvas aloft, which,
-swelling out and sinking in, breathed like the breasts of human beings.
-The flush deck ran with a fair, white sweep into the "eyes," and you
-guessed by the neatness everywhere visible that the vessel owned a
-smart chief mate.
-
-The anchors had been stowed. It was the first dog-watch, and a few
-of the crew were idling on the forecastle. Presently up through the
-companionway, whose steps led into the cabin where the captain and the
-two mates lived, rose a little boy of about eight years of age, dressed
-as a navy sailor, and his bright gold curls shone to the setting sun
-past the round cap which was perched on the back of his head. He was a
-beautiful little boy of the purest English type; no arch Irish eye was
-ever of a darker blue than his. A drum--not a child's toy, but a real
-drum, though a small one--was slung by a lanyard round his neck, and he
-clutched the two sticks, whilst he looked at the officer of the watch
-with a smile of his red lips, disclosing a row of little milk-white
-teeth, and said:
-
-"Mr. Hardy, may I play my drum?"
-
-"Why, yes, Johnny, of course you may," answered Hardy, "and if you'll
-beat a smart tattoo the breeze will freshen, for we are wanting legs,
-Johnny."
-
-"May I go on the forecastle and beat it?" said Johnny. "The man who has
-the whistle will play it whilst I beat."
-
-"Hurrah for 'The Girl I Left Behind Me,'" said Hardy. "Go forward,
-little sonny, and beat the music out of the sails, and mind how you go."
-
-Just when the little boy was about to run along the decks an immense,
-magnificent Newfoundland dog sprang through the companion-hatch as
-though it had missed the little fellow below. The dog instantly saw
-the boy, and they sped forward together, the beautiful animal often
-bounding to the height of the boy's head in its delight in his company.
-The men on the forecastle all looked at them as they came, and those
-who walked stood still to watch them coming. The instant the dog was
-forward it swept its sagacious, beaming eyes, fuller of intelligence
-than many which look out of human faces, round the ocean line, and
-when it saw the sail to windward it set up a deep baying bark, a very
-organ note, grand in tone as the solemn stroke of a great bell, which,
-translated, as clearly signified, "Sail ho!" as the setting of the sun
-denotes the coming of night.
-
-"Where away, Sailor?" shouted Hardy from the quarter-deck, and the
-seamen laughed out, whilst the dog, after one glance aft, pointed his
-noble head in the direction of the ship, and lifting up his nose to
-heaven barked deeply twice, which was his English for _starboard_. The
-seamen laughed loudly again.
-
-Johnny beat a roll on the drum, and the sailors gathered round him, and
-others came springing up through the forescuttle, which is the name of
-the little hatch through which you drop into the forecastle or living
-room of the crew. The boy beat that drum marvellously well; he made it
-rattle as though a regiment marched behind him, and the sails on high
-rattled in echo as though several phantom drummers were stationed in
-various parts of the rigging.
-
-The dog lay down and watched the boy, and a few of the seamen, one
-after another, went up to it and stroked its head.
-
-"Where's the man that's got the whistle?" said Johnny, ceasing to beat.
-
-"Where's Dicky Andrews?" shouted a man, and another, going to the
-scuttle, cried down, "Below there! tumble up, Dicky, and bring your
-whistle with you; you're wanted on deck."
-
-In a few moments a young ordinary seaman rose through the hatch: he was
-slightly curved in the back without being humped, and carried the face
-of the hunchback, the corners of his mouth being puckered into a dry
-aspect of advanced years, such as may often be observed in people who
-are afflicted with spinal complaints. He was red-haired, and his little
-eyes were full of humour and as lively as laughter itself, and he wore
-the togs of the merchant Jack--dungaree for breeches, an old striped
-shirt, a dirty flannel jacket, and a cap without a peak.
-
-"All right, Master Johnny," said he, pulling a fife out of his pocket.
-"What shall it be, sir?"
-
-"What shall it be, my lads?" asked Johnny, looking round with his
-sweet, delightful smile and arch-blue eyes at the weather-stained faces
-of the men, one of whom was a negro, another a Dane, brown as coffee,
-two others Dagos, with frizzled hair and silver hoops in their ears;
-and these this boy of eight had called "My lads."
-
-"Give us 'The British Grenadiers,'" said a seaman.
-
-"A dog before a soldier," exclaimed the voice of an Irishman. "Give us
-'St. Patrick's Day in the Morning,' me dear."
-
-"Hurrah for 'St. Patrick's Day'!" shouted several voices; and Dicky,
-putting his fife to his lips, started the most inspiriting air that
-ever mortal genius composed. The drum rattled, the sticks throbbed in
-the little fists; Dicky began to caper as he played; nearly all the
-ship's company were assembled on the forecastle, and many began to
-leap about and spring with delight to the music; the dog rose, and in
-a stately way ran or waltzed amongst the caper-cutters. That fore-deck
-then was a wonderfully animated picture. The arch of the fore-course,
-sleepily swelling and sinking, yielded a good sight of the scene to the
-quarter-deck. The setting sun painted it into a canvas almost gorgeous
-with the streaks of purple fire in the tarry shrouds and backstays, and
-in the climbing lines of the well-greased masts; and in the flush on
-the breasts of the sails, and in the red stars it kindled in all that
-mirrored it.
-
-The fife and drum kept company superbly, and the fine Irish air seemed
-to thrill through the ship, and to echo up aloft like some new spring
-or spirit of life. The cocks in the coops abaft the galley chimed in
-with a constant defying crowing, about as melodious as the noise of a
-broken-winded barrel organ. The pigs under the long-boat grunted in
-sympathy with sounds which reminded them of the trough and the haystack
-and the near village.
-
-Whilst all this harmless sailors' pleasure was going forward on the
-ship's forecastle the captain of the vessel came out of the cabin, and
-when he stepped upon the deck he stood a moment with his hand resting
-upon the companion-hood, looking forward, and listening to the music.
-
-He was a man of about forty-five to fifty years of age, and his name
-was William Layard. He scarcely wore the appearance of a sailor. The
-lower portion of his face was hidden in hair, which was of a dark
-brown, streaked with gray, and his hair was long. His nose was a fine,
-well-bred aquiline, his brow square, his eyebrows shaggy, and his dark
-eyes burnt with brightness in the shadow cast by their eaves. He wore
-a soft black hat, which sat securely upon his head, and was clothed in
-a monkey-jacket and blue cloth trousers. No discerning eye but would
-have dwelt a little upon him in speculation. His face showed marks of
-breeding, but there was something else in him, too, that would have
-detained the gaze--a faint, an almost elusive, expression of triumph,
-of an inward exaltation, which was almost dissembled, and subtly
-revealed in the mouth that so delicately diffused it that only a keen
-eye would have witnessed it.
-
-Hardy was making the voyage with him for the first time, and though
-they had been together for some days, whilst they had frequently
-conversed in the docks, he did not understand him, he had not got in
-any way near to him. But, as a gentleman himself, he felt the presence
-of the gentleman in Captain Layard, and had picked up from his own
-lips that he had been educated at one of the great public schools,
-had begun the sea life in the Royal Navy as midshipman, but, for some
-reason, left unexplained, had quitted the white for the red flag, and
-had been in command five years, after serving, of course, as second
-and third mate, always trading to the Australian and New Zealand
-ports in ships like the _York_, which did not carry passengers. Hardy
-had also gathered that he was a widower, who had married a woman of
-good birth, the Honourable Miss ----, no need to name her, by whom
-he had the little boy Johnny, who was the darling of his heart, and
-who had regularly gone with him to sea, since his wife's death, in
-the last four voyages to the Pacific. Our friend Hardy had also made
-another discovery: that the captain, even before the start, showed a
-disposition to treat him as a companion rather than as a mate. This
-was so unusual in sea captains--it is still unusual--that Hardy's
-speculations as to Captain Layard's character were considerably
-sharpened by it.
-
-The drum and fife ceased on a sudden. The sailors stood about, hot and
-amused, and the dog with its tongue out looked eagerly from one face
-to another. The ship was still: there was no slopping fall of water
-alongside to disturb the calm respirations of the canvas; the captain,
-with his hand upon the companion-hood, continued to gaze forward,
-and Hardy, standing at the mizzen-rigging, watched him askant. Then,
-through the serenity of the breathing, sun-flushed air, all the way
-from forward, nearly the whole length of the ship, came the clear high
-note of little Johnny's voice:
-
-"Dicky, play 'Sally come up,'" and Dicky, rendered zealous by the
-captain's presence on deck, instantly put his fife to his lips. The
-drum rattled, the sails reëchoed the jolly air, the feet of the men
-began to shake, the dog raced and waltzed in stately measures as
-before, the whole forecastle was again in motion, and the ship, with
-her taut rigging vibrant with the shrilling of the fife and the roll
-of the drum, floated onwards over the long, languid undulations of the
-deep, which were scarlet westwards with the splendour of the dying day
-that was crumbling toward the sea line in masses of burning light.
-
-Captain Layard stepped across the deck to Mr. Hardy.
-
-"That boy plays the drum with a professional hand," said he. "He got
-the art himself, for nobody taught him. It is a good drum--good enough
-for soldiers to march to."
-
-"I never heard better drumming, sir," answered Hardy.
-
-"Where did Sailor learn to waltz?" said the captain, and he watched the
-dog. "How quickly Johnny has made friends with the crew."
-
-"Any crew of Englishmen would cherish and pet him, and perish for such
-a beautiful, manly little fellow," exclaimed Hardy, with enthusiasm and
-admiration in his voice.
-
-"He's always kept my crews contented," said Captain Layard, smiling.
-"Several men have sailed with me every voyage ever since I took Johnny
-to sea, learning that he was coming again."
-
-He looked at the sail to windward that leaned like a black feather in
-the crimson air, then glanced over the ship's side to judge her pace,
-and stood for some time near Hardy listening to the music and watching
-the men dancing. He said, with an abruptness that again surprised Hardy
-as it had before even startled him during the run down Channel:
-
-"Have you ever studied the nervous system?"
-
-"No, sir," answered Hardy.
-
-"A man is formed of two sides," continued the captain, "and each side
-has a nervous system of its own. They are independent, and strange
-things happen in consequence. I remember when I was chief mate of a
-ship called the _Tartar_ that I stood aft close to the man at the
-wheel, who exclaimed on a sudden, 'I don't know what's wrong with
-me, but there's two meanings a-going on in my head.' 'What's that?'
-I asked. 'This here side,' said he, lifting his right hand from the
-spoke, and putting it to his forehead, 'is a-talking one sense, which
-ain't sense, because t'other side's talking in a different way,' and
-here he touched his left brow, 'and all's confusion,' and then he began
-to mutter to himself. I thought he was ill, and calling another man
-to the relief, sent him forward and followed with some brandy, which
-put his head to rights. I spoke of this matter to a doctor when I got
-ashore, and he explained the dual system of nerves, and told me that
-overworked brains would occasionally chatter inconsequentially in each
-lobe."
-
-"How shall a man act when his brain comes to a misunderstanding in
-that fashion?" asked Hardy, gazing with critical interest at the
-captain's refined but singular face.
-
-"_I_ take brandy," replied Captain Layard, sending a glance aloft, then
-at the distant sail, then at his little son, who continued to beat in
-accompaniment to "Sally come up," whilst the sailors sprang about in
-glowing glee, and the scarlet in the west deepened into a rusty red.
-
-"Do you suffer from attacks of the kind, sir?" inquired Hardy.
-
-"To tell you the truth," responded the captain, with a peculiar smile,
-keeping his gaze fastened on the forecastle, "I had one just now.
-The left side grew importunate in nonsense; the right side was all
-right, and quite understood that things were wrong. The trouble was
-preceded by a curious beating of the heart in the ear. It sounded as
-though a wooden leg was hollowly tramping round the galleries of the
-brain--thump, thump, thump! It was like the noise of a wooden leg
-coming into a theatre when some actress of genius has stilled the house
-into breathlessness by her witchery."
-
-"This man is mad," thought Hardy. "He would never converse with me in
-this fashion if his head wasn't in two."
-
-The drum and fife ceased. Johnny, seeing his father, came running
-aft, and the Newfoundland trotted by his side. It was four bells,
-and the sun vanished as the metal chimes trembled away to sea; the
-breeze slightly freshened on a sudden, a sound of foam arose like the
-song of a full champagne glass held to the ear; delicate streaks of
-white flashed about the ocean breast in the twilight like some milky
-wings of sea birds; the ship strained a little aloft and hardened her
-breasts, and stars of the east shone upon the dark brow of the soaring
-night.
-
-The breeze blew with a little edge, but it was still the dog-watches,
-and the sailors, though abruptly deprived of the drum in which they
-delighted, started on another dance to Dicky's merry and excellent
-whistling.
-
-"Father, Sailor likes dancing," said Johnny.
-
-"All sailors like it," answered the captain, stooping to press his lips
-to the child's forehead. "Cut below now, my darling, you and the drum,
-and put it away and wait for me. I sha'n't be long, and then we'll go
-to supper."
-
-The boy, with the obedience of a man-of-war's man, saluted Hardy
-with a flourish of his little fist to his golden curls, ran to the
-companionway, and vanished, and the noble Newfoundland vanished with
-him.
-
-"There is no weather in the glass," said the captain. "If this breeze
-freshens we shall make up for lost time. You'll not spare her, Mr.
-Hardy."
-
-"No, sir."
-
-"Those are my orders to the second mate. I want to maintain the
-reputation of this ship; the freighters love her. I have no fancy for
-steam, but you can _time_ it, and so tacks and sheets are bound to go;
-but I'll make a bold fight for old tradition," he cried in a curious
-tone of enthusiasm, "and what we can't carry we'll drag."
-
-The second mate had come on deck at four bells, and was pacing to
-leeward in the deeper shade that dyed the atmosphere there when
-the freshening of the breeze heeled the ship. There was nothing
-particularly noticeable in this man, of whom a fair sight could be
-caught as he passed through the area of light diffused by the cabin
-lamp, which was burning in brilliance under the skylight. He was
-pale-faced and fat of cheek, very light eyes, lashes like white silk,
-yellow hair, and great ears which stood out in eager bearing as though
-they sought to catch everything which was said. He was dressed in blue
-serge and a cap, and this was his first voyage in the ship. So the
-captain and the two mates were sailing the _York_ for the first time in
-their lives.
-
-It was Hardy's watch below; he crossed to the second mate, gave him
-the course and so forth, and descended into the cabin. Little Johnny
-without his drum was sitting on a locker talking to Sailor, who was
-looking lovingly up into his face, and often the bright-haired little
-chap glanced at the cabin servant, who was preparing the table for
-supper. The _York_ had been built to carry cargo; she was not a
-passenger ship, though at a pinch accommodation might have been found
-for three or four persons, friends of the owners, say, or people
-to whom the next ship sailing with immediate despatch might be a
-supreme need. In this age they would probably equip such a vessel
-with a deck-house for the master and mates. Her cabin was small
-and comfortable, very plain, with a seawardly look that suggested
-sturdiness, a very different cabin from the luxurious interior of the
-_Glamis Castle_! A few berths stood aft, and these were occupied by the
-master and mates, and one was a pantry.
-
-Hardy stopped to speak to Johnny.
-
-"You play your drum splendidly," said he. "But what's the good of a
-drum if you're going to be a sailor, sonny?"
-
-"I'll play the drum when the bo'sun plays his whistle," answered
-Johnny, manfully. "And it will make the sailors quicker in running up
-aloft."
-
-"So it will," answered Hardy, laughing heartily, for the image
-submitted by the boy's words tickled his fancy--a bo'sun piping "All
-hands!" down the forescuttle, and the captain at the break of the poop
-beating thunder out of a drum to hurry the men to the reef-tackles!
-
-He lingered a little to talk to the boy, for it charmed him to look
-into the sweet handsome face with its arch eyes; 'twas as gladdening to
-his heart as the song of a bird or the scent of a nosegay, and somehow
-the child always put tender thoughts of Julia Armstrong into his head
-by the sheer charm of his smile. He caressed the Newfoundland whilst
-he talked to the little lad, and then went to his cabin to change his
-coat and brush his hair for supper, musing over much, but particularly
-over his last talk with the captain, who never before in the Channel
-or after had spoken so oddly or looked so strangely. "If the man _is_
-off his head," he thought, "my responsibilities will be enormous," for
-he perfectly understood the position that command confers upon the
-shipmaster; he was God Almighty aboard; mad or not mad, his orders must
-be obeyed; he could steer the ship to the devil and clap the mates in
-irons for interfering, and unless the crew mutinied--which few crews
-durst do, knowing how heavily the law presses upon seamen, even though
-they are able to justify their actions--they must go on obeying the
-master's commands, though the fires of hell should be visible right
-ahead past the horizon.
-
-Thus Hardy mused whilst he changed his coat and brushed his hair, and
-he also thought of Julia Armstrong, and wondered how she was faring,
-and what progress her ship had made.
-
-The _Glamis Castle_ had hauled out of dock five days before the _York_
-sailed. She had slept upon the silent stream of the Thames one night,
-and early next morning was taken in tow by a tug, which released her
-off Dungeness; then with the stateliness of a frigate she broke into
-a sunshine of canvas, and, if the wind had prospered her, she should
-be some five hundred miles ahead of the _York_. But it was sail, not
-steam, and short of the report of a passing ship, no man could have
-safely conjectured her situation. But one trick of seamanship Smedley
-possessed: he never admitted the existence of a foul wind; he never
-sweated his yards fore and aft; he was no lover of the bowline, nor of
-the shivering leach. It was always "full and bye" with him, though he
-was points off, and thus he made a fair breeze of every head-wind, for
-his slants to leeward of his course gave him two feet of sailing to
-the one he would have got out of a taut, shuddering luff, and he never
-looked over the quarter for leeway.
-
-At half-past six Hardy stepped out of his berth and found supper ready,
-and the captain sitting at the head of the table with little Johnny on
-his right. You will consider it early for supper, but at sea the last
-meal is always called supper, and after this they eat no more in the
-cabin. There was plenty, and it was good of its kind: ham, cold fowl,
-cold sausage, salt beef, biscuit, cheese, and salt butter. A decanter
-of rum glowed deep and rich within reach of the captain's arm. A large
-globe lamp sparkled brightly overhead, and the scene was a sea-picture
-of hospitality and comfort, sweetened into a tender human character
-by the presence of the boy who sat on the right hand of his father.
-Sailor, the great dog, lay beside the captain on the deck. He was too
-dignified to beg; too well trained to expect. He knew his time would
-come, and lay patient in the nobility of his shape.
-
-Hardy sat at the foot of the table. It was the custom in this ship for
-the captain and mate to eat together, and when the mate was done he
-relieved the deck till the second officer had finished. The captain
-gave the little boy a slice of cold chicken and a white biscuit, and
-filled his glass with water. The swing trays swayed softly as pendulums
-to the delicate heave of the evening waters, the bulkheads creaked,
-the rudder jarred as the swell rolled, and you could hear faintly the
-jump of the wheel chains to the sharp but swiftly arrested shear of the
-tiller.
-
-The captain with his cap off disclosed a lofty but receding brow,
-rounding with something of the curve of the egg-shell at the temples,
-and his long hair and the growth about his cheeks and chin made him
-look more like a poet than a salted skipper. Hardy had taken notice
-that he stared at the man he talked to, which is contrary to the notion
-that the insane have a wandering eye. But that Captain Layard was not
-absolutely right in his mind the young sailor was convinced, as he sat
-at the foot of the table cutting himself a plate of beef and ham.
-
-"Captain Pearson made poor passages on the whole, I've understood,"
-said Captain Layard, referring to the commander he had replaced. "He
-was a very cautious man, furled his royals every second dog-watch, and
-would snug his ship down to the first hint in the glass to save calling
-all hands."
-
-"I was told he was loved by his crew, sir," answered Hardy. "And he
-seems to have been the most humane commander that ever sailed out of
-the port of London."
-
-"Well, it is right that sailors should be treated as men," said Layard,
-staring at Hardy; "but most of them are fools, they are children, they
-don't or can't understand things." He put down his knife and fork,
-drew out a handkerchief and wiped the palms of his hands, then poured
-a wine-glass of rum into a tumbler, and filling the glass with water
-swallowed the ruddy draught.
-
-"Some more biscuit, father," said the child.
-
-An expression of tenderness, even like that which might spring from a
-mother's heart, softened the captain's singular and striking face as
-he looked at the boy whilst he gave him a biscuit. He stared again at
-Hardy.
-
-"Sailors," said he, "don't see things from a right point of view. There
-was a seaman who wanted a Blackwall cap to wear at the wheel. To make
-it he cut up his go-ashore breeches, and to trim and bind the edges he
-cut up a new Dungaree jumper. The cap cost him a pound, but he believed
-he had got it for nothing because he had made it himself."
-
-Whilst Hardy was laughing, for the captain told this story in a dry
-manner, and with a twinkle of eye that certainly did not hint at
-insanity, a voice was heard in the companionway:
-
-"There's a heavy fog rolled down upon us, sir, and it's as thick as
-cheese to the ship's sides."
-
-It was the voice of Mr. Candy, the second mate, and a moment after his
-step could be heard in the plank overhead as he walked to the bulwark
-rail.
-
-The captain sprang up and went on deck; Hardy continued to eat his
-supper, and talked to the little boy. It was his watch below, and
-he was too old a shell to quit the meal until all hands should be
-summoned, which a quiet fog, however dense, topped by a reassuring
-barometer, was not very likely to occasion.
-
-The fog, nevertheless, had rolled down quickly through the gloom of
-the early night on the gust of the black breeze, still nor'west. Black
-it was. Nothing was visible of the ship but a few spokes of light,
-like the arrested darting of meteoric fibres spiking from the glass on
-the skylight in a fiery arch. When the darkness of the night dyes the
-darkness of fog then the universal blackness is so deep that you might
-think the solid globe had vanished, and that you hung in the centre of
-space, death-dark and silent, moonless and starless, chaotic with dumb
-masses of the deep electric dye.
-
-This night the fancy would have been easily inspired by the hush upon
-the sea, for the sails floated stirless; there was not wind enough to
-brush the salt curve into the expiring hiss of foam, and the invisible
-swell so lightly swayed the eclipsed fabric that only now and again
-did you catch the sad note of the sea, sobbing along the bends, and
-hiddenly passing away into the short wake in sighs and tones of weeping.
-
-"Mr. Candy!" called the captain.
-
-"Sir!" came the answer out of the soft invisibility in which the
-bulwarks abreast were buried.
-
-They came together in the spokes of radiance about the skylight.
-
-"Clew up all three royals and furl them. Let go all three topgallant
-halliards; the sails may hang. Haul up the mainsail; brail in the
-mizzen, and down flying and outer jibs, topmast and topgallant
-staysails, but leave the sails unfurled. See that your side-lights
-are burning brightly, and bend your sharpest ear over the water for a
-noise. Was anything in sight before this smother rolled down?"
-
-"I saw nothing, sir. It was a bit thick before the fog came along, and
-then it came in a wall."
-
-The captain went to the side to look over and mark the ship's pace,
-and the second mate began to sing out. One watch sufficed. There was
-little to do but let go with the drag of the downhauls; and the clews
-of the great mainsail rose to the slings to the sound of a few ocean
-yelps and a "_Chiliman_" chorus. The men were not to be seen until they
-ran up against you. They felt for the ropes, and their footfalls were
-like the pattering of dead leaves on a pavement to a sudden air of
-wind, strangely threading with the shore-going sound the squeak of the
-sheave, the rasp of rope, and the soft scraping of parrel descending
-the greased topgallant heights. The side-lights were reported as
-burning bravely.
-
-The ship now had little more than steerage way, and the captain, after
-looking into the compass, and after repeating his instructions to the
-second mate to keep his best ear seawards and on either bow, said he
-would send the dog on deck, and returned to the cabin.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE SHIP'S LOOKOUT
-
-
-Captain Layard entered the cabin and called to the dog, which instantly
-sprang up.
-
-"Sailor, go on deck and keep a lookout," said he, and in a breath the
-Newfoundland rushed up the companion-steps and vanished.
-
-"He hasn't had his supper yet, father," exclaimed the little boy.
-
-"I will send it forward to him," answered the captain, seating himself
-in the chair he had vacated, and helping himself to a piece of chicken.
-
-Hardy had risen when Layard entered, but seeing the captain sit he
-resumed his place. His watch would come round at eight o'clock. There
-would be little time for sleep if he withdrew to his berth. He had
-supped well, had drunk a glass of grog, had enjoyed his chat with the
-little boy, whose charming face and sweet, ingenuous, yet manly prattle
-delighted him; he was comfortable, and the captain inspired no feeling
-of restraint nor sense of intrusion, so he sat on.
-
-"The fog is as thick as mud in a wine-glass," exclaimed Captain Layard.
-"Some go fast and some go slow through these smothers. The fast man
-holds that a ship is under more immediate control when travelling; I
-am a slow man when I can't see. In fact," he continued, with a look of
-exaltation, with a smile of profound self-complacency, "I claim to know
-my business. There is no man afloat who is going to teach me what to do
-when a thing is to be done, and done properly."
-
-"If all ships would heave to," said Hardy, witnessing the captain's
-mind in the expression which subtly interpreted it, "then it would be
-the right thing in a fog to stop your engines, or back your topsail.
-But it's the other fellow you can't see that makes the fear." He
-immediately added, "Your dog is extraordinarily sagacious, sir."
-
-"It amused me to train him," replied the captain, smoothing Johnny's
-little hand as it lay upon the table. "There is no fog-horn which
-equals the screams of an irritated sow. A sow once saved me from a
-collision by causing a dog, in an invisible ship close aboard on the
-starboard bow, to bark. That put the idea into my head. Sailor has the
-voice of a trombone, and he didn't need much training either; he is now
-perched between the knight-heads with more searching eyes and clearer
-ears than the whole ship's company could put together if they made
-their heads into one."
-
-Hardy laughed.
-
-"Don't forget Sailor's supper, father," said Johnny.
-
-"I'll not forget," answered the captain.
-
-As he spoke the words the man who waited on the cabin came down the
-steps.
-
-"Is it still very thick?" asked the captain.
-
-"Blinding, sir," was the answer.
-
-"Get the dog's supper, and take it to him on the fok'sle," said
-Captain Layard. "See that he has water; it may be an all-night job for
-him. Pearson was a very humane man," he went on, addressing Hardy. "I
-might guess that by the medicine-chest he's left me. I overhauled it
-before we sailed, and wondered at the quantity of sleeping and death
-stuffs it contained. I found out that in one of his passages home from
-Calcutta several men died of cholera, and he was at his wits' ends
-for drugs. Ships bound to India should always carry a surgeon; they
-would--they must, if there are passengers. But glauber salts are good
-things for Jack: 'tis an all-round physic, as good for smallpox as for
-indigestion." He laughed somewhat heartily, and continued, "Pearson's
-men might have died to a man, for his medicine-chest showed badly
-like the end of a long voyage. Fortunately half of them took it into
-their heads to live, and they got the ship home. After this Pearson
-never went to sea without plenty of drink for cholera. He's left some
-doctor's handbook on the diseases of sailors, and there's a volume on
-poisons full of pencil marks. His humanity was unwearying, but he got
-the sack all the same. Johnny, my darling, it's time for bed. Come
-along, my lamb."
-
-He took the boy by the hand, and they went into the captain's cabin,
-the child crying as his father opened the door, "Good night, Mr. Hardy."
-
-It was half-past seven; Hardy went into his berth to smoke a pipe
-before relieving the deck. The captain's cabin glowed with the soft
-illumination of an oil lamp screwed to a bulkhead, and swinging in its
-bracket to the heave. It was a fine large cabin, equipped with a table
-covered with green baize on which were writing materials, nautical
-instruments, and such things; a fore-and-aft bunk for the captain, and
-a brass cot at the foot of the bunk, safely secured to the deck, for
-Johnny. It was comfortable with a carpet, chairs, a short sofa, a chest
-of drawers, and washstand. Close beside Johnny's cot on the deck was
-the boy's drum.
-
-The captain began to undress the little fellow, who talked to him of
-Mr. Hardy; he said he wished Mr. Hardy could sleep with them. No mother
-ever used a tenderer hand in putting her child to bed than did this
-strange sea-captain, mad or not mad. His eyes were tender, twice he
-kissed the boy's fair brow; he seemed reluctant to make an end of this
-undressing, as though he loved to have his hands upon the child, to
-have his face close to him.
-
-"Now your prayers, Johnny," said he. And the boy knelt by his cot, and
-in words he had learnt from his father, prayed that his mother would
-look down and watch over them both, and that God would bless his father
-and himself.
-
-The captain stood by in devout posture, and whispered the words which
-the child uttered, then hoisted the little fellow into bed, covered him
-up, and kissed him.
-
-"Mayn't Mr. Hardy come and see me in bed?" said the child.
-
-"Ay," answered the captain, and he stepped to the door, and called the
-chief officer by name.
-
-Hardy instantly came out, leaving his pipe behind him.
-
-"Come and see my boy in bed," said the captain.
-
-Hardy, not knowing that this was due to the child and not to the
-father, was secretly astonished, for though he had always lived on very
-good terms with the captains he had sailed with, he had never met
-any commander who treated him just as though they occupied the same
-platform.
-
-He followed him into his cabin, and the boy with his bright hair on the
-pillow smiled a greeting.
-
-"It is a beautiful bed, Johnny," said the mate, stepping close to the
-cot, and looking at him with the affection which such a child as this
-will excite in a sailor's heart at sea, moved by thoughts of home and
-of the fair land he has left, of his own childhood perhaps, and visited
-by that mute sense of solitude, peril, and the holy and brooding
-presence of the Great Spirit, which is the impulse of the deep, and
-understood by those to whom the ocean, eternal and boundless in the
-constant recession of its horizon, is an interpretable face. He turned
-to the captain and exclaimed:
-
-"If your boy ever dreams, sir, it is of the angels who guard his bed."
-
-He kissed the little chap, and was going.
-
-"A moment, Mr. Hardy," exclaimed the captain, who did not seem to
-have caught or noticed what the mate said. "This is an example of old
-Pearson's forethought and humanity."
-
-He stepped, followed by Hardy, to a corner of the cabin, in which
-stood a small mahogany chest, and lifted the lid. This lid was
-furnished with scissors, syringes, and the like, and the contents of
-the chest consisted of a number of stoppered green bottles, as well as
-sticking-plaster, lint, and surgical instruments. The captain, pointing
-to the bottles as he spoke, said:
-
-"This is laudanum; this is labelled morphia; this is atropine for the
-ulcerated eye; this is chlorodyne. Here are drugs enough to start a
-man as a chemist. This is a book," said he, half lifting a thin volume
-from a pocket and letting it slip back, "that tells you how to make use
-of all this stuff; ay, even the right dose of Glauber's salt is given."
-
-"I hope there's no chance of Master Johnny handling those bottles,
-sir?" said the mate, who, though he gazed with curiosity at this
-revelation of the open lid, was not inattentive to the expression of
-the commander's face, which was one of superiority, as though he had
-appropriated and was triumphing in the merits of the kind foresight
-which were certainly not his but Pearson's.
-
-"You will never look into this chest, Johnny?" said Hardy.
-
-"His mother was the very soul of honour," exclaimed Captain Layard,
-"and that child cannot but be the spirit of truth and honesty itself."
-
-He shut the lid and added, "Where, I wonder, does the human soul come
-from? The father cannot give his, or a portion of his, to the child,
-nor can the mother, for that might involve the forfeiture of their
-title to immortality. The great poet must be right; the soul which
-informs a child, which spiritualises it in the womb and at its birth,
-must come from God, who is its Home. What a wonderful thought! What a
-revelation it has been to me! What an assurance and promise!"
-
-He stood gazing steadfastly at Hardy, who, saying, a little uneasily,
-"These are matters quite beyond me, sir," again made for the door,
-through which he passed in silence, the captain standing motionless,
-his hands clasped before him, and his eyes seeming to see something
-beyond the bulkhead, upon which he had fastened them.
-
-At eight o'clock Hardy's watch came round. He went on deck in a very
-thoughtful state, and the deep dye of that tremendous void of black
-vapour was very well qualified to darken his mood into the hue of the
-crow--a bird deemed portentous in ancient seafaring. He stood in the
-spokes of lamp-sheen about the skylight and called to Mr. Candy, who
-came upon him suddenly out of some part of the deck like a man walking
-through a glass in a dark room. He exchanged a few sentences with this
-second mate, but they wholly concerned the business of the ship. Candy
-was not a person to take into one's confidence; his silver-white lash
-shaded a pale eye that marked one of those souls which, as you cannot
-make up your mind about them, you resolve to distrust; otherwise Hardy,
-in defiance of all law of discipline, and even of sea-breeding, would,
-in the humour of anxiety that then possessed him, have been glad to
-hear Mr. Candy's opinion of the commander.
-
-The second mate went below to bed after reporting that he had visited
-the forecastle, and found the Newfoundland awake and vigilant, also
-that two hands paced the forward-deck as lookouts.
-
-The air of wind was still northwest; it breathed with just weight
-enough to steady the topsails and the foresail. As the ship leaned
-with the languid heave of the sea, the sails hanging from the yards on
-the caps, and the festooned clews of the invisible mainsail, flapped
-in strokes of the pinions of mammoth birds winging betwixt the masts.
-The lap of the brine against the bows, which were slowly breaking
-the hidden waters, saddened the blindness of the night with a note
-of supernatural pain and grief. The ship was moving slowly, and, as
-before, nothing of her was distinguishable but the dim lustre smoking
-in hurrying streams and wreaths of vapour about the skylight and about
-the binnacle-stand.
-
-It was damp, depressing, heart-subduing. The philosophy of the mariner,
-which is one of endurance, and of that species of submission which is
-attended with sea blessings and the profanities of the ocean-parlour,
-breaks down in the fog. Here is the helplessness, here is the sealed
-eye, the spiriting of groping anxiety, which is a sort of anguish. It
-is not his ship or himself that he fears; the emotions bred by fog are
-ahead or abeam, and it need not be steam, for a dirty little brig or
-schooner, with her half-dozen of a crew shouting their consternation
-under the foretopmast stay, has been known to smite and sink an ocean
-palace full of light, of superb machinery, of saloon tables glowing
-with fruit and plate, and populous with diners.
-
-The deck was not to be comfortably measured in a quarter-deck walk, in
-blackness so dense that if you swerved by so much as two degrees of
-angle of foot you thumped your breast against the bulwarks. Hardy laid
-hold of the wet weather vang on the quarter and fell into reflection,
-for loneliness breeds thought, and no man is more lonely than the
-officer of the watch on board a merchantman. His mind went again to
-Julia Armstrong, but it had found an unsettling fascination in Captain
-Layard, and it quickly returned to him. He could not doubt that he
-was a little mad; his ideas were strange, yet his speculations showed
-thought and culture. He was insane to one to whom he talked freely, but
-to his crew, to whom he would not and did not talk, he must be the
-commonplace "old man" of the quarter-deck, and in this way Hardy feared
-he might prove dangerous even to tragedy.
-
-The ship's bell was hung in the wake of the galley, and a little clock,
-illuminated by a bull's-eye lamp, was hung up under a penthouse on a
-timber erection just before it. A lookout man would walk to the clock
-to see the time, and at ten he struck "four bells," at which hour it
-was as black and thick as ever after its first coming; the light breeze
-blew, and the ship swayed softly through the void.
-
-Hardy made his way forward to see to the dog. He struck between two men
-who were walking the deck, and one muttered, "What cheer?"
-
-"By God, my lads," said Hardy, "you'll not find out what a wolf's had
-for dinner by squinting down his throat!"
-
-There was a faint haze about the forescuttle: it came up into the inky
-thickness from the forecastle lamp. It was a slight relief, and even a
-rest for the eye, but the shadow forward was deeper than it was aft,
-for up there in the void was the raven thundercloud of foresail and
-foretopsail, and further forward yet, like ebon waterspouts soaring
-from sea to topmast head, were the midnight dyes of the jib and
-staysail.
-
-Hardy found the night-lights burning brightly, and going toward the
-heel of the bowsprit he touched the Newfoundland lookout with his foot.
-He patted the invisible, shaggy head, and passed his arm around its
-neck, and pressed the creature's long wet jaw to his breast, a token of
-love and encouragement which the dog acknowledged by a grunt or two of
-happiness.
-
-"Keep a bright lookout, Sailor," said Hardy, patting the shaggy,
-invisible head again, and knowing there were two human lookouts
-somewhere about, he called, and they answered out of the black
-blankness to leeward. Well, he could not tell them to keep their eyes
-skinned, for the sight of man and even of dog lay dead upon that
-forecastle, but he directed them to listen with all their might, to go
-often to the head-rail and strain their ears, and they answered, "Ay,
-ay, sir."
-
-Very plainly on this forecastle did you hear the sulky sob of the sea
-like something large and timid, gasping to the rude shock of the stem.
-The ocean hissed a little here and there, but the light wind could not
-give life enough to the glance of the curl of sea to strike through it
-to the eye, even though one looked straight down over the rail.
-
-Hardy slowly made his way aft, and on approaching the binnacle
-discerned the captain standing in the faint sheen close to the helmsman.
-
-"I never remember a thicker fog," said the captain, and he asked
-questions about the lookout, the dog, and the side-lights. Then walking
-out of the binnacle haze he struck the bulwarks almost abreast, and
-Hardy followed and stood alongside.
-
-"Whenever I am in this sort of thing," said Captain Layard, "I think of
-the blind. It is terrible to wake of a bright morning to the eternal
-darkness of one's life. I should fear the presence of visions in that
-everlasting gloom. It would be haunted with phantoms, and as thick-set
-with wild, grotesque, horrible, brassy faces as the human eye when
-morphia closes the lid."
-
-"My father is, as you know, sir, a doctor," said Hardy, "and I've
-heard him speak of the blind. He declares they are less to be pitied
-than the stone deaf." The captain pshaw'd. "He would say," continued
-Hardy, "contrast the faces of the two afflictions. They both force the
-mind's eye more deeply inwards, but in the one there is the pain of
-attention ever strained and a baffled, helpless look, whilst the other
-is mild and restful as though it had found peace in its communes with
-God."
-
-"Your father may be a very clever man," said Captain Layard, "but I
-have no faith in doctors. I have never met a doctor who did me any
-good, and I have been ill in my time, believe me. They let my wife die."
-
-He paused as if in some passage of deep emotion. In this interval
-Hardy thought to himself what an extraordinary conversation for the
-quarter-deck of a ship, close upon midnight, in a dense fog!
-
-Some hanging fold of canvas flapped aloft. In a voice as changed as
-though he was acting, the captain exclaimed:
-
-"That's the speech of a sail that asks to be furled. The glass is high,
-and there's no foul weather anywhere. If the breeze freshens by ever so
-little, or if this light air draws ahead, call me, sir."
-
-There was positive refreshment in this plain speech of the sea to
-Hardy, who on replying to the captain found that he had gone, and in
-the steaming faintness hovering in the companion just caught a sight of
-his head disappearing.
-
-Eleven bells had been struck, and Hardy was beginning to think that
-it would be eight bells soon, which must signify shelter, freedom
-from the dwarfish drench of the vapour, as fine but as penetrating
-as rain in Lilliput, a warm blanket, half a pipe, and then oblivion
-for an off-shore spell of nearly four hours, when on a sudden the dog
-barked. The tones were deep and constant, and to the first roll of
-those organ notes the loose wet canvas beat the masts aloft in a sudden
-heave of the whole fabric, and an element of alarm and even of fearful
-expectation entered the black void and thickened it, and seemed to
-close it round about till the smoking colour of light on forecastle and
-quarter-deck dimmed into the preternatural faintness of the salt sea
-glow when it shudders a fathom deep under some smooth tropic surface.
-
-The dog continued to bark, and there was an importunate vehemence in
-his notes, a bounding pulse of urgency as though the noble creature
-with instincts superior to man's knew that a matter of life or death
-was concerned in his sentinel bugling. Voices sounded forward, you
-heard a hurry of feet; again the ship leaned, and the sails smote
-the masts with an alarum sound of metal; and to the accompaniment of
-this midnight concert, made ghastly by blackness, by the overwhelming
-blindness of fog and by the presence of danger, Hardy rushed forward,
-taking his chance of what might be in the road.
-
-"Jump for a port-fire, one of you," he shouted, sending his cry slap
-into a very web of seamen's growling voices, the owners of which were
-no more to be seen than the ship's keel. "What is it, Sailor?"
-
-And now he was alongside the dog, and with his hand on its head felt
-in the direction of the creature's muzzle, and found that it was
-delivering its notes straight away over the head-rail, about two points
-on the weather bow.
-
-"Wheel, there!" he roared. "Starboard your helm. Let her go off five
-points."
-
-"Starboard it is, sir," came back the answer.
-
-"See that sheen out to starboard there, sir?" rang out a voice which
-sounded clear through the barking of the dog.
-
-"Hush! Sailor. Down, sir. Hush, my beauty," cried Hardy, and the dog
-was instantly silent. "Hark! now."
-
-A sort of oozing of light, dimly scarlet, wild and weak and wet as some
-ghostly star of death hovering over a grave, was visible to windward,
-a trifle forward of the fore-rigging. "Hark!" cried Hardy, and sure
-enough amid the greasy slopping of water, falling lazily from the
-thrust of the ship's bow, they could hear a distant noise of shouting,
-of cries reëchoed as from one part of a deck to the other, with a
-deeper threading of some throat hoarse in a speaking-trumpet.
-
-"Is the mate forward?" sang out the voice of the ship's carpenter.
-
-"Fire one right away off," shouted Hardy, knowing what the fellow had
-got and meant.
-
-In a few heart-beats a stream of sun-bright fire was pouring like
-water from a hose over the bow, but its lightning illumination
-touched but a narrow stretch of the dark water. The foresail turned
-of a sickly yellow, and the staysail soared wan as the wing of the
-albatross in dying moonlight. All above and abaft, and then forward
-to the flying-jib boom end, yards and sailcloth lay steeped in the
-impenetrable smother, and within the area of the light the fog drove
-slowly in a very Milky Way of silver crystals. But the men could see
-one another, and helped by the light Hardy sped aft to be near the
-wheel, and there he found Captain Layard.
-
-"There's a ship off the starboard bow, sir," he exclaimed.
-
-"They'll never see that port fire," answered the commander. "They're
-burning flares, or we shouldn't see _her_. A foreigner, by the row.
-How's she heading?"
-
-That question was answered even as he asked it by the revelation of a
-ship. It had the suddenness of a magic-lantern picture flung swiftly.
-They saw at the range of a pistol a lurid shape, which they easily
-distinguished as a barque with painted ports, a tall poop, and a tall
-topgallant forecastle. She was burning flares upon her main-deck and
-waist, and the red flames, winding tongues of fire into feathers of
-soot-black smoke, jewelled the whole apparition with red-hot stars.
-They pierced through the fog like sunlit rubies from glass and brass,
-from wet plank and mast, and the grease of spars. She was so close that
-she shone out clearly, and made light enough for the people of the
-_York_ to see by. Her helm was hard up and she was slowly paying off,
-but her flying-jib boom must catch the mizzen-rigging of the Australian
-clipper. You heard the splintering of wood aloft, the crash of nearer
-timber, broken off carrot-like betwixt a lazy roll of both ships.
-
-The barque's decks were a sight for the gods. Figures of men could be
-seen rushing frantically here and there. They were all shouting; men on
-the poop were screeching orders, and nothing but the helm gave heed;
-men on the forecastle were roaring and flourishing their fists. The
-flames duplicated the shadows of the running figures; painted lines
-of the rigging upon the planks writhed between the water-ways, like
-serpents snaking their attenuated lengths overboard. Never did any sea
-light flash up a more startling, a wilder, a more ghastly tapestry.
-'Twas like a painting in flames and ruddy stars upon the black canvas
-of the fog, and the hull, with its lines of ports like the keys of
-a piano, reeled slowly off on the lift of the brine, yard-arm to
-yard-arm, the beating canvas of each red as the powder flag, and dying
-out up aloft like the reflection of a burning ship upon a cloud.
-
-It was all too breathless for action aboard the _York_. Before a brace
-could be let go, before an order could be yelled, the stranger's
-flying-jib boom was crackling and gone, and her topgallantmast,
-with its canvas, was plastering the topsail; and then it was almost
-channel to channel, and the barque's poop was abreast of the _York's_
-quarter-deck.
-
-"Great God!" cried Hardy.
-
-A figure standing near the stranger's mizzen-rigging fell, and another
-figure fled aft, but at that instant some back draught of breeze
-thickened the crystals of the fog smoking close to the stranger's
-taffrail with a dense feathering of the black stench from the flares;
-the burning picture vanished out astern, as though to the fall of a
-curtain of midnight hue, the sounds of shouting sank, and in the hush
-that fell upon the _York's_ deck, nothing was to be heard but the
-dreary lamentations of broken water under the bows, and the weeping
-noise of eddies under the counter.
-
-"A close shave!" said Captain Layard, fetching a deep breath. "She has
-not hurt us, I think."
-
-"I saw a man fall as if stabbed," said Hardy.
-
-"Back the topsail! I'll keep the ship hove to till we can see,"
-exclaimed the captain, whose attention, concentrated by the sudden
-blackness into which the ship had floated, was wholly in the
-manoeuvre he had commanded.
-
-The order was sung out, the sailors came groping their way aft to the
-main-braces, the yards were swung, and the ship was brought to a stand,
-lightly rolling her masts with a slap of hidden pinion, which made you
-think of some gigantic navy signal-man waving flags.
-
-"My noble dog has saved my ship," exclaimed the captain. "I am a
-remarkable man!" And, to use a Paddyism, Hardy could _hear_ in the
-skipper's speech the expression of exaltation which his face did
-undoubtedly wear. The skipper whistled, and in a few moments felt the
-snout of the fine black creature pressing lovingly against his thigh.
-
-"Come along below," said he, passing his hand caressingly along the
-invisible feathers of the dog's back, "till I dry you and see how you
-look, and we'll take a peep at Johnny." And he and the dog vanished.
-
-Just at that moment eight bells were struck. It was midnight, and the
-starboard watch must tend the ship till four. Whilst the last chimes
-were trembling into the damp, depressing, flapping sounds which clothed
-the obscured heights, the chief mate was hailed by a man whose voice
-proceeded from abreast of the gangway. Hardy stepped to the companion
-where the sheen lay, and exclaimed, "I am here." At the same moment
-Mr. Candy came out of the companion and joined him. Before one could
-address the other, three figures entered the space of faint saturated
-light.
-
-"Here's a man," said one of them, "that's jumped aboard us off the
-barque. He come up to me and asked to see the capt'n."
-
-"Which is the man?" said Hardy, straining his sight.
-
-One of them said, "I am, mister. I am French." And then in French he
-asked if Hardy spoke that tongue.
-
-"No," answered Hardy. "Come below into the cabin to the captain."
-
-And after a few words with Mr. Candy, who heard now for the first time
-that they had nearly been run into by a tall French barque, he went
-down the cabin steps, followed by the Frenchman.
-
-In this interior plenty of light was shining, and it was as noontide
-after the midnight of the deck. The captain was near the table drying
-the dog with a cloth, and talking to him, and praising him as though he
-were a man, and the creature's mild and benevolent eyes looked up into
-his face, and you read gratitude and affection in the noble brute.
-
-"Who's that?" said the captain, throwing the cloth down, and looking
-with a knitted brow at the Frenchman.
-
-"He will explain, sir," Hardy answered.
-
-"Softly," exclaimed the captain, "an angel lies asleep in that cabin,"
-and with a melodramatic flourish of his arm, he pointed to the door of
-his berth.
-
-The Frenchman looked at Hardy. He was a man of middle height, in a
-drill or thin canvas blouse, over which was buttoned at the throat a
-rough, old jacket, the sleeves hanging loose. He wore blue trousers
-patched with black, stuffed into half-boots bronzed by wear and brine.
-His black hair curled upon his shoulders, and he held a cap fashioned
-out of some sort of skin. His face was a ghastly yellow; his lips a
-vivid red; his nose long, lean, and humped, and the black pupils of his
-eyes sparkled in the flashes of the swinging lamp amid their whites,
-which, by the way, were crimson with drink or gout, or both. It was a
-face to peer at you, malevolently, from a time-darkened canvas, very
-picturesque, very romantic, but something that you would not like to
-think was treading behind you on a lonely road.
-
-"Who are you?" said the captain, putting his hand upon the head of the
-dog, in whose body a sort of rolling noise might have been heard, not
-quite a growl, but a note as of suspicion grumbling deep down below the
-throat.
-
-"You speak French, I hope, sar?" said the man.
-
-"And you speak English!" responded the captain, with a side look and
-a grin at Hardy. "It's no business of yours whether I speak French or
-not. Start your yarn."
-
-And the man, clearly understanding what was said, began.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE FRENCH MATE
-
-
-I have said that the man, clearly understanding the captain's meaning,
-began; but it was not a beginning, nor a middle, nor an end, that could
-be set down in black and white in that Frenchman's speech. It was most
-barbarous English, yet intelligible when helped along by the captain's
-and Hardy's questions. It must be given in plain words to be readable,
-and thus spoke that sinister-looking man:
-
-"My name is Pierre Renaud. I am chief mate of the barque that was just
-now nearly running into you. We are from Cape Town to Bordeaux. That
-dog threatens my throat."
-
-The man flashed the poniards of his eyes at the Newfoundland, who was
-like an organ with one key going, trembling in its shaggy and splendid
-bulk with a low, sulky, dangerous growling.
-
-"Down!" said the captain, and the animal stretched its fore legs. "What
-brings you aboard us?"
-
-"Fear," replied the man, with a slight shrug and a look of arching
-eyebrow at his questioner, and a roll of the eye over him, as though he
-saw something singular in his face and manner. "A man loves his life
-and will jump to save it. I thought we should crush our bows in and
-founder."
-
-"You did not stay to help your captain and encourage the men to
-preserve your ship," said Captain Layard, dabbing the dog's head to
-keep him quiet.
-
-"The captain fell dead in a fright," responded the Frenchman, with
-another shrug, "and I chose to save myself."
-
-"I saw a man fall," exclaimed Hardy. "Was that you that rushed along
-the poop?"
-
-"How can I answer you?" replied the Frenchman. "We were all rushing."
-
-"The captain fell dead!" said Captain Layard, in a musing way. "It's
-evident that French sea-captains die easily. When did you strike this
-fog?"
-
-"I cannot say precisely. Some hours since," was the reply. "When we
-heard the barking of a dog we knew that a ship was near, and we judged
-by the barking that she was approaching. We lighted fires upon the
-decks, and when the glare gave us a sight of you the sailors lost their
-senses, and ran about shouting and screeching. They were too mad to
-obey orders. The captain fell as I ran past him, his hands clasped upon
-his heart, and as he had all along complained of the weakness of that
-organ, I am certain he died of disease."
-
-"Your countrymen are not good sailors," said Captain Layard.
-
-The Frenchman grinned ghastly, and Sailor rumbled afresh with a
-stiffening of his level fore legs as though he must rise.
-
-"If I had been your captain," continued Layard, "I should have saved
-my flying-jib boom and topgallantmast, and my sailors would not have
-rushed about and torn their throats open with the shrieks of fear--that
-womanly spirit!"
-
-His smile was lofty, his self-complacency inexpressible, you guessed if
-there had been a mirror at hand he would have admired himself in it.
-
-His talk, but not his face, was past the Frenchman's comprehension.
-He rolled his eyes upon Hardy, then upon a decanter half-full of rum,
-standing upon a swinging tray, timing the pulse of the sea.
-
-"He asks for a drink, sir," said Hardy.
-
-"Give him a tot," replied Captain Layard, "then let the second mate
-tell the bo'sun to find him a hole to lie down in. I don't like his
-looks."
-
-He walked abruptly to his berth, followed by the dog, but before he
-entered he turned to the animal and exclaimed, "On deck, Sailor, and
-keep a lookout till the smother thins," and the Newfoundland sprang up
-the steps.
-
-The Frenchman, with a smile at Hardy, touched his brow. The mate,
-without noticing the fellow's gesture, took the decanter of rum from
-the swing tray and gave him a glass of grog. As he handed the tumbler
-to the man, he said:
-
-"Was your captain the man who stood near the mizzen-rigging?"
-
-The Frenchman took a long pull at the glass before answering, and then
-said, "Yes."
-
-"Do you think he fell dead, or was he struck down?" said Hardy, looking
-critically at the wild and dangerous face, whose eyes stared into the
-Englishman's vision with the fixity of a buried bayonet.
-
-"He fell dead," was the answer, and down went the remainder of the grog.
-
-"I believe I saw a man rush from him aft when he fell," said Hardy.
-
-An expression of anger deepened the ugly devil's look of malevolence,
-but he held his peace.
-
-"Your captain is dead and you are here," said Hardy. "Your second mate
-will take charge of the barque, I suppose?"
-
-"Our second mate was drowned a week after we left the Cape," answered
-the Frenchman.
-
-"What will the crew do?"
-
-"They will go to hell!"
-
-"Follow me," said Hardy, and they climbed the companion-steps.
-
-The wind was sleeping. It was now a dead calm, and the fog steeped in
-night was lifting into the sight--conquering blackness off an ocean
-that seemed to be boiling upon some furnace of earth miles deep. Damp
-draughts of air blew with the rolling of the ship, and the canvas beat
-out hollow notes like the blasts of guns heard underground. The chief
-mate called the name of Mr. Candy, who stepped out of the impenetrable
-profound of the quarter.
-
-"This man," said Hardy, talking in the skylight sheen, "is mate of the
-barque we were foul of just now. Take him forward to the bo'sun and
-find him a bed anywhere, and food if he needs it."
-
-"I don't need it," said the Frenchman.
-
-"Come along," said Mr. Candy, and they disappeared.
-
-Hardy paused to listen and peer. There was nothing to see, but he
-might have heard a sound of weeping all about, as though old ocean
-was mourning over its blindness. He then went to bed, but not to
-sleep right away. The Frenchman's insolent touching of his brow had
-accentuated his own deep suspicion of the captain's sanity, and very
-grave, though perplexed, reflection attended his thoughts of Layard,
-and the tragically perilous situation of the ship in charge of a
-lunatic so subtly mad that no one but his chief officer might have
-understanding enough to see how it was with him.
-
-At eight bells in the middle watch he was aroused by Mr. Candy, and
-was on deck in a minute or two, for he was a smart man all around; the
-first at the yard-arm in reefing when his duties had carried him there,
-the first to spring to the cry, no matter the command, swift in relief,
-and for ever on the alert whilst the responsibility of life, cargo,
-and fabric was his. The fog was still very thick, but a thin wind had
-sprung up out of the east, and the streaming of the waters was like the
-shaling of a summer tide upon shingle. The braces had been manned when
-this weak air came, and the yards swung to hold the maintopsail aback;
-the ship rolled gently under the arrest of her canvas, and there was
-nothing to see and nothing to do but let the fog soak into the spirits.
-
-"A spare bunk in the forecastle has been found for the French mate,"
-Candy had said. The fellow had grumbled, muttered that he had been
-an officer on board his own vessel, and deserved better usage. Candy
-said he was lucky to save his life, and to find a bed in a British
-forecastle. The Frenchman growled that he considered himself important
-enough to sleep in the cabin.
-
-"What did you say to that?" Hardy had asked.
-
-"I said, 'You be damned!'" Candy replied.
-
-Not until five bells, half-past six, in Hardy's watch did the fog show
-signs of breaking up. It thinned in places, and presently through the
-stretching ceiling of it the cold, pale dawn looked down upon the
-sea, and made it piebald with granite-coloured spaces. The breeze
-then freshened and the fog began to fly. Columns of it moved away
-stately like pillars of sand on the desert; it swept in Titan cobwebs
-between the masts; it sped like silken veils streaming from viewless
-fleeting spirits over the trucks. Wide vistas opened to windward;
-large blue eyes, soft with the moistness of their light, floated upon
-the trembling eastern brine. The sun darted a pale yellow lance, and
-as the captain put his head through the companion-hatch the scene of
-deep, saving a blankness in the west, opened around, and it was a
-shining morning with a bright sun and a blue sea and an azure sky and a
-pleasant breeze of wind.
-
-Scarcely had the captain's head shown when Hardy, looking seawards over
-the quarter, exclaimed:
-
-"There's the barque that fouled us last night, sir. She's got a wift at
-her mizzen-peak."
-
-She could be no other vessel than the barque; the morning light was
-strong and she lay within a mile, and you could see that she had lost
-her foretopgallantmast and jib-booms. Her maintopsail was aback; she
-had clearly hove to after losing her mate and splintering clear of the
-ship and the smother. Her backed topsail curved inwards like carved
-ivory, her ruddy sheathing flashed its wet length to the sun as the
-heave rolled her light, tall shape, with its slanting stare of black
-ports, upon the wide white line that girdled her.
-
-"Why is she flying that gamp?" said the captain, taking a telescope out
-of the companionway; but before he levelled it at the ship he sent a
-glance full of scrutiny aloft to gather if his vessel had been hurt in
-the night, which was distinctly professional and sane, and quite enough
-to have convinced the Jacks that the "old man" knew the time of day,
-even if they suspected that the compass of his mind was wrong by points.
-
-The gamp, as he termed the wift, consisted of the French flag stopped
-in the middle, that is, bound by a rope yarn into the appearance of a
-gamp umbrella. It tumbled at its block, and was a syllable of sea talk
-signifying "help!" The skipper whistled to his dog, which had kept a
-brave lookout throughout the night without relief, and which, seated on
-the heel of the starboard cathead, seemed to be listening with a grave
-countenance to the remarks of an ordinary seaman who was addressing
-him. The beautiful and dutiful creature came bounding aft and pawed his
-master to the shirt-front, rising nearly his height.
-
-"You had better lower a boat and go and see what that fellow wants,"
-said the captain, and he motioned the dog into the cabin and told it to
-wait there for breakfast.
-
-"They're lowering a boat, and mean to come aboard of us," exclaimed
-Hardy, whose eyes were on the barque.
-
-A boat dropped awkwardly from the vessel's tall side, and in a minute
-or two the gold of brandished oars sparkled upon the delicate
-feathering of the water. The men were washing down aboard the _York_.
-In those days they carried a head pump which they rigged, and the
-bright water was passed in buckets and sluiced over the planks, the
-boatswain standing by and giving the scrubbers heart by his inspiriting
-cries, roars, and oaths. It was a common scene of shipboard life, full
-of colour, movement, and business.
-
-Hardy looked along the decks for the French mate, but did not see him.
-
-The captain exclaimed, "We'll send the fellow aboard in his boat. A
-good riddance. How some faces damn the souls which animate them! You
-seldom err in judging of a man by his looks. The expression is formed
-by the character. But affliction may deceive you, I allow; a harelip,
-for example, or a cock-eye."
-
-"Shall I pass the word for the Frenchman, sir?" said Hardy.
-
-"Oh, yes! oh, yes, rout him out of it!" answered the captain, smiling
-with that air of superiority which would have convicted him in the eyes
-of a keeper.
-
-The word was passed, and the Frenchman, with the aspect of a pirate
-in a boy's book, rose through the scuttle as the boat came alongside.
-The man who had steered her scrambled into the mizzen-chains and
-sprang on to the quarter-deck with a salute of French courtesy. He was
-close-shaven and dark, habited in loose blue breeches and a jumper,
-and looked a good sailor spite his nationality, that was as marked in
-gesture and bearing as though branded on his brow.
-
-"Can I speak to the captain?" said he, looking from Hardy to the
-skipper. His broken English was good.
-
-"Glad you speak my tongue," said the captain. "What do you want?"
-
-"I have served in American ships and can speak English," answered
-the man. "I am brother of the captain of that barque. He was stabbed
-last night and is dead. Our second mate, too, is dead. The first mate
-is missing. I'll swear he killed my poor brother, and then drowned
-himself. We are without a navigator. What are we to do?"
-
-"You shall have a navigator," exclaimed Captain Layard, and he looked
-toward the forecastle, but the Frenchman had disappeared.
-
-The man bowed and said, "It was a cold-blooded assassination. They had
-been quarrelling all the voyage. The villain chose the right moment,
-and the sea is easier than the guillotine."
-
-"I saw your captain fall," said Hardy, "and the man that killed him is
-aboard us."
-
-The fellow started, and so did his eyeballs in their sockets as he
-flashed them eagerly and fiercely along the decks where the sailors
-were scrubbing, and the boatswain encouraging them with the pleasant
-promptings of the British forecastle: "Scrub it out of 'em, my lads.
-D'ye want to drown the ship, you sojer? Slap it along the lee-coaming
-and be damned to you, Dick! Ain't it as thick as yer eyebrows there?
-Hurry up, hurry up with them buckets. Are we a hexcavator with the
-steam turned off?"
-
-"A hand fetch that Frenchman out of the fok'sle and bring him aft,"
-shouted Hardy.
-
-"What do you mean to do with him?" asked the captain.
-
-"I will call the crew together and consider," answered the man with a
-hideously significant glance at the main yard-arm.
-
-"If you hang him," said the captain, "who'll navigate you?"
-
-The fellow folded his arms tightly upon his breast and sank his head,
-sending a level look of patient hate through his eyelashes toward the
-forecastle.
-
-"What's your rating aboard your ship?" inquired the captain.
-
-"Boatswain, sir," was the answer, and the man did not turn his head to
-say it.
-
-The dog at this moment came out of the cabin and stood with his fore
-feet on the plank at the coaming, staring at his master. He seemed
-to plead. The human spirit could not be more eloquent in the gaze;
-but the captain did not heed him, for just then the man who had been
-sent to fetch the Frenchman was coming aft, shoulder to shoulder with
-the Frenchman himself. The men forgot to scrub; the head pump ceased
-to gush; the boatswain left off conjuring and damning. All eyes were
-turned aft. The silence of a moment fell upon the ship, and nothing
-broke it but the low growling of the Newfoundland.
-
-The Frenchman, fresh from the forecastle, was ghastly pale; his walk
-was defiant; when abreast of the main-hatchway he came more quickly
-than his companion, who stopped. He walked up close to the boatswain of
-the barque and said, in his native tongue:
-
-"Well!"
-
-The other dropped his arms; his hands were clenched, his eyes charged
-with that deadly cold light of hate which is more dangerous and fearful
-than the flame of fury. He spoke slowly in French, and what he said was
-this:
-
-"You did not drown yourself, I see, after assassinating my brother."
-
-"You lie in your throat! I sprang to save my life. Your brother is a
-live man for me."
-
-"Liar, and villain, and execrable coward!"
-
-He stepped to the rail and said to the men, in French of course--but
-you shall be told what he said:
-
-"The assassin is in this ship. He pretends that he sprang for his life;
-he killed my brother, our navigator, and would have consigned us,
-helpless, to the desolation of the sea."
-
-He returned, and was followed by a howl of passion from the boat
-alongside.
-
-All in a minute, and just as the man was posting himself again in
-dramatic attitude close to the murderer, the huge Newfoundland, with
-an indescribable roar of rage, sprang with the whole weight of his
-body upon the French mate, and bore him to the deck with a thump of
-lead, like the fall of a twelve-pounder ball, and they thought that the
-brute's teeth had met in the wretch's throat. Hardy and the captain
-made a rush and dragged the animal off the fallen man, and the captain,
-grasping the creature by the coat of his neck, hauled him, growling
-fiercely, to the companion, and drove him below.
-
-The man rose; his nose was bleeding, and after he had run the length of
-his sleeve along it his face looked like a decapitated head placed on
-the upright body it had been struck from.
-
-"I want to swing my yards," said Captain Layard. "I've been hove to
-all night through you. Take that man away; I don't parley-vous myself,
-and don't follow your talk. He'll navigate you home; he looks a good
-navigator." And he smiled with some sense of superiority of meaning,
-which made his face fitter for comedy than for the tragedy of this
-passage.
-
-The French boatswain swept his hand with an infuriate motion toward the
-rail.
-
-"If I go with this man he will kill me," said the blood-stained French
-mate.
-
-"Not he. The ship wants a navigator," replied Captain Layard, with a
-cheerfulness supremely inconsequential.
-
-"If you do not come," said the French boatswain, in his native speech,
-"I will call the men up, and they will throw you into the boat."
-
-"Why can't you speak in English?" said Captain Layard. "He'll
-understand you, and we can follow your meaning."
-
-The French mate turned on his heel and was beginning to walk slowly
-forward. As a cat springs when started by a dog, so sprang the barque's
-boatswain upon his brother's murderer. With the strength of the fiends
-before they were cast out he rushed the bleeding scoundrel to the rail
-and yelled to his men. The French mate grasped the mizzen-shrouds and
-struggled and kicked in awful silence; but in less than a minute three
-stout sailors, out of the four who manned the boat's oars, swarmed up.
-Eight enraged hands then tore the French mate from the mizzen-rigging
-as the sweep of the hurricane uproots a tree. All in a heap,
-struggling, wrestling, groaning, they got him past the after-swifter,
-and to an order, shrieked through his teeth by the French boatswain,
-they hoisted him lengthwise to the rail, and dropped him into the boat.
-The French boatswain then made a sort of salaam bow to the captain and
-Hardy, and the whole four disappeared in the twinkling of an eye over
-the side amid shouts of laughter from the seamen who had been washing
-down the decks.
-
-"Get all sail upon her, Mr. Hardy," said Captain Layard; "but I shall
-keep my topsail to the mast for awhile until I see what they mean to do
-with that barque."
-
-The sailors dropped their buckets and scrubbing-brushes, and fell to
-howling at the halliards. Topgallant and royal-yards rose, the mainsail
-was left to swing with its clews aloft, and the _York_ was now a
-full-rigged ship, hove to, but clothed to her trucks, leaning with the
-swell as though by swaying she was knitting her frame together for the
-start.
-
-A ship when under sail on the ocean is alive; watch her closely and
-you will discover that she has human intelligence in her methods of
-helping, and at the same time influencing, the reason that governs
-the helm and incarnate walks the quarter-deck or bridge. It was about
-a quarter-past seven; the sailors resumed the business of washing
-down; the decks sparkled as the brine flashed along the planks, and
-the boatswain stimulated this sweetening process by the inspiriting
-language of the land of the slush-lamp. The captain stood right aft
-watching the receding figure of the barque's fat boat. The placid
-heave of the deep was crisped by the delicate crumbling foam curling
-from low, blue brows to the gentle gushing of the pleasant breeze,
-like some scene of swelling land enamelled with white flowers; the
-blankness to leeward had melted into azure, and it was all blueness and
-brightness, and you heard a song that was sweet with its summer note
-upon the harp-strings of the lofty spars.
-
-"What will they do with him?" said the captain, going to the companion
-and resting his hand upon it as though in a moment he would descend.
-
-"I am wondering, sir," answered Hardy, who stood near. "I should not
-like to be in the power of that bo'sun after I had killed his brother."
-
-"Death drugs revenge; I would not kill my enemy," said the captain,
-putting on one of those incommunicable looks which always alarmed Hardy
-with thoughts of the ship's safety. "I would keep my brother's murderer
-alive--at sea. There is the middle-watch and the ghastly face of the
-moon! Whispers aloft and God's eye in every star! The ghostly figure
-should walk the quarter-deck with the assassin, should enter his berth
-with him, and sit beside his bunk and watch him. That is the revenge
-that kills the soul--the very thought makes me sweat."
-
-His face changed into an expression of agitation, and with a sudden
-hurry he disappeared down the companion-steps.
-
-Hardy watched the French boat draw alongside the barque. He wondered
-that the captain should have left the deck at such a time; it was
-another illustration of his insanity, no doubt. "He has gone to see to
-little Johnny, perhaps," the mate thought, what had happened having
-faded in the chaotic muddle of his reason. Here was Captain Layard, who
-was determined to make a swift passage, keeping his ship hove to and
-going below to talk to his bright-haired boy, to help him dress maybe,
-and to muse in lopsided moralising over the medicine chest.
-
-He took the glass, and levelled it at the barque, and saw the boat
-slowly ascending in spasmodic jerks to the davits. A few men dragged
-at the falls, and upon the port quarter of the poop the rest of the
-ship's company apparently had assembled, and were clearly discussing
-the recapture of the mate with the heat and passion of the French when
-excited. They gesticulated, they surged and reeled, and Hardy again
-saw one or another of them fling his hand in the direction of the fore
-yard-arm.
-
-He could not see if the mate stood amongst them, and all forward was
-vacant deck, pulsating with the shadow of swinging sail. There was
-nothing else in sight all away round the girdle of the deep, though
-this was a frequented sea; and the two vessels, to a distant eye, might
-have seemed abandoned, so aimless was the look they got from the white
-cloths incurving to the masts.
-
-About ten minutes after the boat had been hoisted, Hardy, who continued
-to watch the barque through the glass, saw several men go forward, and
-shortly after a man got into the fore-rigging, and crawled aloft and
-gained the fore-yard. The powerful lenses brought the barque close, and
-Hardy easily saw, as he followed the man sliding to the yard-arm, that
-he carried a tail-block in his hand. He made this block fast to the
-extremity of the yard, and whilst he was doing this another man got
-into the fore-rigging holding a line, the end of which he gave to the
-fellow on the yard, who rove it through the block, and then came into
-the fore-rigging grasping the line, and both men descended to the deck.
-
-Hardy rushed to the companionway and shouted down the hatch, taking his
-chance of the skipper hearing him, "They are going to hang that mate
-who killed the captain!"
-
-A moment or two later up came Captain Layard.
-
-"What's that you sang out?" he cried. "What's wrong? I'm with Johnny."
-
-"Look for yourself, sir," answered Hardy, and he gave the glass to
-him. The captain pointed it. Mad or not mad, he knew what a yard-arm
-whip was, and what in this case it signified. He saw a crowd of men on
-the forecastle; he distinguished the figure of the mate, with his arms
-pinioned behind him, standing within a fathom of the rail rounding to
-the forecastle break. As he gazed he saw a man bandage the wretch's
-eyes with a red handkerchief. The same man next secured the end of the
-line to the man's neck, and the captain, with the telescope at his eye,
-began to mutter, and Hardy saw that his face had turned a greenish
-yellow, but he could not understand what he said, nor clearly perceive,
-as did the captain, all that was happening aboard that tragic barque,
-with its wift at the gaff-end beating the air like a human arm in agony.
-
-In the captain's glass the bulk of the forecastle crowd melted and
-could not be seen on the main-deck. One who was left--and the muttering
-captain thought that he was the boatswain--held a book and seemed to
-be reading from it. The two men kept the barque's victim pinned to
-the rail; the man who was reading closed his book and raised his arm
-straight up, looking toward the main-deck. The two men sprang back from
-the murderer, whose figure soared aloft, a ghastly shape of man flying
-wingless to the yard-arm.
-
-"O my God!" cried Hardy, who saw it, and the crew of the _York_,
-watching that picture of short shrift and flying form, groaned and
-cursed with British hatred of the sudden execution, made dastardly by
-numbers.
-
-They could see the man rushed to the nape of his neck to the yard-arm
-block, then fall, bringing up with a sudden belaying of that
-gallows-rope, and the hanging man began to swing like a pendulum of
-death midway betwixt the yard-arm and the feathering surface of the sea.
-
-"Suppose he didn't do it?" said Captain Layard, letting the telescope
-sink and turning his face slowly to Hardy, who thought, even in that
-moment of horror and astonishment, that the captain had spoken nothing
-saner since the voyage began. "Fill on your topsail," continued the
-captain, in a trembling voice, his face distorted by passions and
-fancies beyond the penetration of reason. "I wouldn't have Johnny
-see that sight; they'll keep him swinging till he has ticked out the
-minutes his soul has taken to arrive in hell. Fill on your topsail,
-sir. And what'll the beggars do? They'll wait for help to come along."
-
-The mate was walking a little way forward, and the captain, with his
-back upon the barque, stood muttering to himself. It was a pleasant
-breeze, and the ship took the weight of the sunlit gush of blue wind
-with a buoyant heel, and then she broke the waters at the bow. In two
-hours the barque was glimmering like the crest of a sea in the liquid
-ether far and far astern. Her topsail was still aback, and doubtless,
-as Captain Layard had said, she was waiting for the help that must soon
-come along.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-LOST!
-
-
-And now for another week of this ship's adventure. There is little to
-record. As she drove to the south and west the breeze freshened by
-strokes, and the foam, white as daylight, seethed with a leeward roll
-to the channels, whose plates flashed jewelled fountains from her side.
-
-It was noble sailing with a buckling stu'nsail boom, and every taut
-weather-shroud and backstay spirited the sea-whitening keel with
-sweet, clear songs of rejoicing. All the crew loved little Johnny, and
-the great Newfoundland, placid, stately, and benign, was ever at his
-side, courting the boy, with looks of love, to play. Always in this
-fine weather the sunny-haired lad, in the miniature clothes of the
-bluejacket, would of a dog-watch take his drum upon the forecastle, and
-roll out a good rattling accompaniment to the cheerful piping of the
-whistle. Then the sailors would dance whilst the ship's stem rent the
-water into sweat, and the bow-sea rolled away in glory, and the western
-heavens grew majestical with sunset.
-
-And all this time no man spoke a hint as to the captain's state of
-mind, because, as I have said, the sailor has no eyes for the human
-nature of the quarter-deck until it should become as visible and
-demonstrative as a windmill in a wind.
-
-This Captain Layard was _not_; his moods and motions were of too subtle
-a sort to be interpretable by the forecastle gaze, and all the strange
-unconscious discoveries of himself he limited to Hardy, scarcely ever
-speaking to the second mate unless to give him an order. But even when
-he talked to Hardy, no man could have sworn that he was madder than
-most dreamers are. It was only, as Hardy thought, that his talk was so
-cursedly inconsequential. He reminded him of a diver who if you look to
-port comes up to starboard, whose spot of emergence is always somewhere
-else.
-
-One day, at the end of the time just spoken of, the ship was stretching
-her length along a wide blue sea enriched with running knolls, shadowed
-by themselves into deepest violet, aflash with sudden meltings of foam
-which whitened the windward picture, and ran with smooth curves from
-the leeward yeast that rushed into the water from the side.
-
-The captain was below. It was about ten o'clock in the morning. There
-was now a sting in the light of the sun, as he floated upwards in an
-almost tropic glory, undimmed by the flight of little clouds which
-hinted at the Trade. Our friend the chief mate, Hardy, was walking up
-and down the weather-side of the quarter-deck. A sailor stood at the
-wheel trim for his trick; he was a British seaman, his easy floating
-figure and swift look to windward, aloft, and into the compass bowl put
-thoughts into one's head of the time when men like him wore pigtails
-down their backs and fired the fury of hell, as the Spaniard said to
-Nelson, into the gunports and sides of the audacious enemy.
-
-There was music on that quarter-deck, for Johnny, who was admiral of
-that ship, the captain being very much under him, had sent for the
-whistle, and the sailor had come at once, bringing his music with him.
-He was seated upon the skylight, and was piping that cheerful song, "A
-Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea," all over the ship to the delight of the
-watch on deck, who worked the nimbler for it; and Johnny made martial
-music of that sea-song with his drum.
-
-The ship rushed along with festive lifts and falls and triumphant
-choruses in her weather-rigging as the swing of the sea brought her
-masts to windward, and all was beauty and sunlight, and white phantoms
-of little sailing clouds, and swelling canvas yearning to the azure
-recess at which the ship, like some goddess of the sea, was pointing
-with her spear of jibboom.
-
-Presently the boy grew tired; the piper went forward, and as the
-captain's servant came along Johnny gave him his drum and sticks to
-carry below. The great Newfoundland was lying at its length beside the
-skylight, and Johnny sat upon him, and lifting his ear talked into
-it, and the dog grunted in affectionate reply. But little boys soon
-tire of anything save sweets, and Johnny joined Hardy, and they walked
-together. The lad had a very inquisitive mind, and was constantly
-wanting to know. He began to question Hardy about the ship. What is the
-good of that little sail right on top up there? Why didn't they give
-each mast one great sail? Wouldn't that save trouble? Couldn't they let
-it down, and tie it up, as they did that middle sail there, when the
-weather grew nasty? Wouldn't Hardy be glad to get home? How old was
-he? Was he glad to be so old? Wouldn't he rather be eight? After much
-interrogative conversation of this sort he felt tired, and strayed from
-Hardy's side and walked about the quarter-deck, looking around him as
-though he wished to pick up something which he could throw at the sea.
-
-Going right aft, abaft the man at the wheel, his arch, sweet, wondering
-eyes were taken by the sight of some Mother Carey's chickens; also the
-splendid, dazzling stream of wake that was rushing off in snake-like
-undulations attracted him. A stretch of ash-white grating protected the
-wheel-chains and the relieving gear. It stood a little way under the
-taffrail and was not very high above the deck, and the tiller worked
-under it.
-
-Unnoticed by Hardy, Johnny got upon this grating to watch the
-sea-birds, also to obtain a view of the place where that giddy,
-boiling, meteoric river of foam began. A sea-bird is a thing of beauty,
-which is a joy to a little boy upon whom the shades of the prison-house
-have not yet begun to close; and the dazzle of spinning foam hurling
-seawards is also a beauty and a wonder and a miracle, as are many other
-things in this pleasant world of flowers and valleys and streams;
-for I have seen a little child pick a daisy and view it with greater
-transport than could even be felt by a beautiful young woman bending
-with beaming eyes over the bracelet of diamonds with which her lover
-has just clasped her wrist.
-
-Johnny fell upon his knees and crawled upon the grating to the
-taffrail, the flat surface of which he kneeled upon, peering over and
-down betwixt the gig and the taffrail to see the place where the white
-water began under the counter. The poor little fellow overbalanced
-himself, and Hardy, whose eye was upon him in that instant, saw him
-vanish.
-
-"O my God!" he shrieked. "Man overboard!" he shouted. "Hard down! hard
-down!"
-
-And whilst the wheel went grinding up to windward, and whilst the sails
-aloft were beginning to thunder to the weather sweep of the rushing
-bows, Hardy, tearing off his coat and waistcoat and shoes, leaped from
-the quarter into the boiling yeast and struck out.
-
-Scarcely had he shot overboard when the great dog Sailor, springing
-up with a swift movement of his head around, leapt like a darting
-flame on to the rail from which Hardy had plunged, and jumped. There
-was plenty of foam in the sea, and it was almost blinding Hardy, who
-swam strongly; but it did not blind the dog, who saw the mate but not
-the child, and made for him. A sea swept Hardy to its summit, and he
-perceived the child some three or four cables' length distant; a head
-of foam rolled over that sun-bright speck and it disappeared, and as
-Hardy sank into the trough the dog, that stemmed the brine like some
-swiftly-urged boat, caught him by the collar and forced him round in
-the direction of the ship, whose main-yards were now aback and one of
-whose lee quarter boats was rapidly descending, with the captain on the
-grating, waving his arms in frantic and heart-subduing pantomime.
-
-"Sailor!" roared Hardy, struggling with his whole force to round the
-noble creature's head in the direction where he had seen the bright
-point vanish. "O God! doggie, dear doggie! Johnny is overboard, and
-drowning! Go for him, Sailor! go for him, Sailor!"
-
-And buoyed by the magnificent swimmer whose teeth were in his collar,
-he stiffened his breast and pointed. But the Newfoundland, who had
-not seen Johnny fall, had leapt to save the life of Hardy, and with
-bitter, blighting despair in his heart the gallant young fellow felt
-the beautiful animal at his side urging him irresistibly up one slope
-and down another in the direction of the ship, with its dreadful figure
-of human anguish gesticulating and shouting on the grating.
-
-The hearts that bent the blades rowed with love of the boy and a
-maddening passion to save him. They came to Hardy first and dragged him
-and the dog over the gunwale, and a man standing up in the stern-sheets
-steered the boat for the place where the little fellow had last been
-seen from the deck of the ship. But they rowed in vain. Sodden with
-brine, and half blinded by the tears of a manly sailor's heart, the
-mate strained his vision over the running seas, and knew, O God! and
-knew that Johnny had sunk for ever.
-
-"Oh, what a pity!" said one of the men.
-
-"The dog could have saved him," exclaimed another.
-
-"No, he was gone before the dog could have reached the place," said
-Hardy, and he sank upon a thwart and covered his face.
-
-The Newfoundland laid his massive jaws upon his knee in caress and in
-encouragement, knowing he was saved, and loving him as those majestic
-creatures love the life they have torn from the grasp of death. The
-men, with the lifted blades of their oars sparkling in the sun, gazed
-silently around, but Johnny was gone. The tall seas seethed, and the
-boat fell away with their melting heads and rose buoyant to the height
-of the next slant, but Johnny was gone, and after they had lingered
-half an hour the men, to the command of Hardy, turned the boat's head
-toward the ship, and rowed away from that sun-lighted scene of ocean
-grave which already the hand of viewless love had strewn with flowers
-and garlands of foam.
-
-Captain Layard was standing with tightly folded arms beside the
-skylight when Hardy arrived on board, and approached him, shuddering
-with grief and with the exhaustion that attends even a brief spell
-of battling with the rolling seas of the ocean. The unhappy father's
-face was utterly unintelligible in expression. And still a critical
-eye, with good capacity for subtle penetration, would in this time of
-sudden and awful bereavement have witnessed in that poor man's face the
-dangerous condition of his soul.
-
-The men who were hoisting the boat pulled with askant looks full of
-respect and rough sympathy, and the boat rose in silence, so touched
-were the sailors' hearts by this sudden loss of the bright-haired
-little darling of the ship. The Newfoundland, shaking a shower from his
-coat, came to the captain, seemed to know that grief was in him, and
-looked up at him.
-
-"Where is my little Johnny?" said the captain to Hardy, in a firm,
-sharp tone.
-
-Hardy could not answer him.
-
-"There is no good in telling me that he's not on board this ship," said
-the captain, letting fall his arms and swaying in a strange way with
-the leeward and weather rolls of the arrested vessel. "Where is he
-hidden?"
-
-He stepped to the companion and shouted down, "Johnny, Johnny, my
-darling! Come up with your drum! The men want music! Come up with your
-drum, my Johnny!"
-
-The sailors belayed the falls of the boat and secured her, and slowly
-walked forward, never a one of them speaking. The captain went
-below, calling "Johnny." Mr. Candy came up to Hardy. Both he and the
-watch below had rushed on deck to that dreadful cry at sea of "Man
-overboard!" and to that sudden change you feel in a ship when the yards
-of the main are swung aback. All the concern that a man with white
-eyelashes and pale hair and a skin like a cut of roasted veal can look
-was in Candy's face as he said:
-
-"This blow has turned the captain's head, sir."
-
-"I cannot speak to you," Hardy answered.
-
-"Let me fetch you some brandy, sir," said the second mate. Hardy raised
-his arm. Candy walked to the quarter and stood staring at the sea where
-the child had sunk. The Newfoundland dog was growing uneasy. You saw by
-the creature's motion of head and by other signs that he knew something
-was wrong. Twice he growled low and walked round the skylight smelling
-the planks, then coming to the companionway he listened and sprang down
-the steps.
-
-Hardy stood waiting for the captain. It was not for him to order the
-topsail-yard to be swung until the captain spoke. All the seamen were
-forward standing in groups waiting for the command, and the boatswain,
-in the face of the general grief, could find nothing for them to do
-until the quarter-deck started them.
-
-It filled Hardy with anguish, though he was only a mate in the British
-Merchant Service, the one unrecognised condition of our national life,
-spite of the pleading of its heroic traditions and the claims of its
-English seamen of to-day, upon the admiration of their country, to
-think of the poor, desolate, brain-afflicted father below, seeking in
-his madness his beloved little boy. He knew that this man had tenderly
-loved the mother of that child and mourned her loss with a sailor's
-heart, and that the bright and spirited lad, whom God had summoned,
-had been his constant companion since his wife's death, the light of
-his life, the flower whose fragrance had sweetened the loneliness of
-command.
-
-He stood waiting, soaked to the flesh. Suddenly the captain appeared.
-
-"Johnny is not below," he said. "He's somewhere in the ship. When did
-you see him last, Mr. Hardy?"
-
-And still Hardy could not answer him. The Newfoundland had followed his
-master, and the whole frame and benign eyes of the noble creature, to
-whom and to whose like man denies a soul, yielded preternatural token
-of loss and disquiet that was human in eloquence.
-
-The captain did not seem to heed Hardy's silence and manner. He looked
-with great eagerness and a certain wildness along the decks, and
-then putting his hand to the side of his mouth, with his face turned
-forward, where the men stood watching him, he shouted in an imperious
-voice as though he would frighten an answer from the concealed child:
-
-"Johnny!--It is strange," said he, in a low voice, turning and looking
-at Hardy, "Is he aloft?" And he turned his eyes up and scrutinised the
-rigging, the tops, the crosstrees, the yards, stepping to the rail so
-as to obtain a view past the leaches of the canvas.
-
-"Shall I order those yards to be swung, sir, and way got upon the
-ship?" said Hardy, speaking with difficulty.
-
-"I want Johnny," was the captain's answer, and he walked slowly
-forward, looking to right and left of him, as though the little lad
-must be in hiding somewhere, flat beside a forward coaming or behind a
-hencoop, or under the long-boat, for his figure had been small, and he
-could have concealed himself within the flakes of the halliards coiled
-down upon a pin.
-
-The men drew back, scattered in a kind of dissolving way, gazed with
-sheepish looks of sympathy, one rugged man with damp eyes, for he too
-had lost a son beloved with the rough love of a heart unhardened by
-salt and toil.
-
-"Has any man among you," said the captain, bringing his head out of the
-galley door--for the child had been a frequent guest of the cooks of
-the ships he had sailed in: they would make him jam tarts and little
-cakes, and his prattle to the fellows was as cheering to them as the
-song of a canary--"has any man among you," he said, "seen my little
-boy?"
-
-"I don't think you'll find him forward, sir," answered the boatswain.
-"Jim, jump below and see if he's in the fok'sle."
-
-The sailors exchanged looks which seemed to suggest that they thought
-it kind and wise in the boatswain to humour the captain, whose mind, to
-them, appeared a little shaken and made uncertain by the shock of his
-loss.
-
-"No, I'll trust no man's eyes but mine," exclaimed the captain, with
-a lofty expression of face, and, going to the scuttle, which is the
-little hatch through which the seamen drop into their parlour, he put
-his legs over and descended.
-
-One man only was in this forecastle. He was the young seaman who had
-played the whistle whilst Johnny beat the drum. He started up at the
-sight of the captain, amazed by a visit that was unparalleled in his
-experience or recollection of forecastle story. His face showed marks
-of unaffected distress, and indeed this rude but sympathetic heart had
-been seated for some minutes prior to the captain's entrance, with
-bowed head resting in his wart-toughened palms, thinking of the child
-and his sudden death.
-
-It was a strange, gloomy interior. The swing of the lamp kept the
-shadows on the wing, and oilskins and coats swayed upon the ship's wall
-to the solemn plunge of the bows, and you heard the roar of the smitten
-and recoiling surge in a low thunder, like the sound of a railway
-train striking through the soil into a vault. Some bunks went curving
-into the gloom past the light which fell through the hatch, and a few
-hammocks stretched their pale, bale-like lengths under the upper deck.
-Here, too, were sea-chests--a few only--and odds and ends of sea-boots,
-and the raffle of the sailor's ocean home.
-
-"Where's my son? Is he down here?" exclaimed the captain, haggard, and
-with something dreadful in his looks in that light, uttering the words
-as peremptorily as ever he delivered an order on the quarter-deck.
-
-The young fellow gazed aghast at him in silence.
-
-The captain, who did not seem to heed whether he was answered or not,
-went to the bunks and examined them one by one, knelt and looked under
-them, felt the sagged canvas of the hammocks. Oh, it was pitiful!
-
-"He's not here," he exclaimed, turning to the young sailor. "Have you
-got your whistle handy? Pull it out and pipe. The music will bring him
-with his drum."
-
-The young man went to his bunk and took the whistle from the head of
-it. His face was full of awe and wonder; it was a bit of psychology, a
-trick or two above all _his_ art of seamanship.
-
-"What shall I play, sir?" he asked, in a shaking voice, with a glance
-up through the scuttle at the men gathered near and listening.
-
-"What's his favourite tune?" said the captain.
-
-The young fellow reflected, and answered, "'Sally come up,' sir. It
-runs well with the drum."
-
-"Play it," said the captain.
-
-The young fellow put the whistle to his lips and blew. The contrast
-between the merry air, shrilling in the forecastle and out through the
-hatch into the bright wind, and the captain's half-triumphant face of
-expectancy would have melted a heart of steel. The poor man stepped
-under the little hatch and shouted up, "On deck there!"
-
-"Sir," answered the boatswain, showing himself.
-
-"Can this whistle be heard aft?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"Watch a bit, and report if he's coming."
-
-The young seaman, who was nearly heartbroken with his obligation of
-playing, continued to pipe, and you beheld a vision of dancing sailors,
-and swelling canvas reverberating the rattle of the drum.
-
-The captain waited under the hatch, his poor face charged with ardent
-expectation. He might have overheard a gruff voice say, "It oughtn't to
-be allowed to go on. He'd get all right if he'd go to his cabin, where
-it 'ud come to him." But he paid no heed.
-
-Suddenly the whistling ceased, and the young fellow, flinging his
-whistle into his bunk, cried, "It's choking me, sir."
-
-The captain looked at him, and saying, "Where is Johnny?" climbed
-through the hatch and, without a word to the sailors, walked slowly aft.
-
-The whole ship seemed to tremble throughout her frame with every lift
-and fall, as though like something alive she was now startled by this
-strange delay, and the foretopmast studdingsail curved with the weight
-of the wind from its boom, and no doubt, in the language of sailcloth,
-cursed the maintopsail for stopping its eager drag.
-
-Hardy stood beside the second mate, to leeward, on the quarter-deck,
-and watched the captain coming aft. The great dog in a leap gained his
-master's side and marched with him, looking with beautiful sagacity up
-into the poor man's face. The captain walked with his eyes fixed upon
-the sky, just over the sea-line astern, but if speculation were in his
-gaze it was not interpretable; he saw, or seemed to see, something
-beyond the blue haze of distance, and thus he watched it, without
-speaking to the two mates, or turning his eyes upon them, until he
-came to the companion-hatch, down whose steps he went, followed by the
-dog.
-
-Noon was near and an observation must be taken. Hardy, whose clothes
-were plastered by water upon him, said to Candy:
-
-"We must get an observation and swing the yards. This blow has thrown
-his mind off its balance, and he might not thank us later if we should
-go on as though he were responsible."
-
-"I agree with you, sir," said Candy.
-
-Hardy called to the boatswain, who came quickly.
-
-"You know the law of the sea as well as I do," said the mate, "and I
-don't want you and the men to believe that I have taken charge of the
-ship even for five minutes because I mean to get way upon her."
-
-"She wants it," said the boatswain, looking forward along the ship as
-though she were a horse.
-
-"I must get an observation," continued Hardy, "and you and the men will
-judge that the captain would wish me to do what he himself would do if
-his terrible loss had left him capable of doing anything."
-
-"It don't need reasoning about, sir," said the boatswain.
-
-"Hands lay aft and swing the maintopsail-yard!" shouted Hardy. "Lee
-mainbrace! Mr. Candy, will you step below for your sextant? Kindly
-bring mine."
-
-Candy went below. The men came running aft. But the shadow of death
-was upon the ship, bright, boundless, and streaming with the life of
-the wind as were heaven and ocean, and the sailors dragged the great
-yards round in silence. The ship heeled over a little more to the full
-swell of her canvas, and as Hardy took his sextant from Candy she was
-bursting the blue surge into white glory, and the leeward foam was
-passing fast and faster.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE INDIAMAN'S BOAT
-
-
-The seas were breaking fast and fierce from the bows, and the wake
-flashed into the windy distance in a fan-shaped splendour as of
-sunshine, and hands were aloft furling the fore and mizzen royals, and
-some fore-and-aft canvas was rattling hanks and lacing on their stays
-to the drag of down-hauls; the ship was sonorous with the music of the
-sea, and by looking over the weather side you could have seen the green
-sheathing sweating with foam, storming through the dazzling smother
-like a wounded dolphin whose blood is sweet to dolphins; yet this was
-but a fragment of the magnificent picture of foaming seas and flying
-cloud, with the lofty swelling ship shearing through the heart of the
-day in a thunder-storm of prisms and of spray, lovely as the heights of
-heaven when some stars are green and some shine like the rose.
-
-Hardy came on deck. He stood and looked about him, refreshed by a
-shift of clothes and by a nip of grog. He had worked out his sights,
-and before mounting the steps had stood a minute at the captain's door
-listening; he heard the poor man's voice, and judged by its solemn
-imploring note that he was praying, but the noise of the sailors above
-made him hurry, and though it was his watch below he felt that he was
-in command, and that the safety of the ship was in his hands.
-
-Any seaman will understand this mate's critical and difficult
-situation. A captain is not to be lightly deposed; drunken captains
-and--unless they grow frantic--mad captains must be obeyed or endured
-or it is mutiny, with heavy penalties awaiting the arrival of the ship;
-and the mate of a merchantman may, though by conscientious act, lose
-power of earning bread for himself and his home unless as a foremast
-hand, for the law is hard, and the shipowner harder still.
-
-"You had better take the mainsail off her, Mr. Candy, and furl the
-main-royal," said Hardy. "She has more than she wants."
-
-The stu'nsail was in and so was the boom, and Hardy gave other
-directions, but they need not be repeated because minuteness is
-tedious, and the language of the sea cryptic to millions. When Sheridan
-was asked how the poetaster described the phoenix, he answered, "Just
-as a poulterer would!" The poulterer is not good in art, and the beak,
-talons, and all are merits when left out.
-
-It was about a quarter to one, and the cabin dinner would be coming aft
-soon. The cook was busy in his galley, and black smoke was smothering
-the bulwarks abreast from the chimney. Hardy paced the deck watching
-the seamen at work, Candy superintended the business. There was plenty
-for the mate to think of. The grief planted in his kind heart, by
-recollection of his hopeless effort to rescue the poor drowned child,
-was overwhelmed by thoughts of the captain, his undoubted madness, the
-state of the ship; and then his mind on a sudden went away to Julia
-Armstrong; he wondered what would be her fortune, if luck would attend
-her in India, if her love for him--he would not pretend aught else to
-himself--would hold her unwilling to remain, that she might return in
-the vessel and meet him once more. "In which case," he declared to
-himself, "I will marry her and chance it."
-
-The ship was rushing onward like a shooting star, and the wind clothed
-the sails with the thunder of its power; but she was comfortable and
-dry. The bright bursts were flung clear of her by the rush of the
-breeze, and she took the seas with that perfect grace of leap and
-curtsey which sails alone do give.
-
-As Hardy walked, the cabin servant came up to him and reported dinner
-on the table.
-
-"Have you told the captain?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"Is he at table?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-Hardy went below. The captain was in his accustomed place cutting at a
-big meat pie; his brow was knitted, and with the whole strength of his
-soul he seemed intent upon this job of cutting the pie. His long hair
-and the hair upon his cheeks and chin accentuated the expression of his
-pale face, which was one of wildness and of grief so subtle that it
-might scarcely be known as grief by the heart that ached with it; but
-when he raised his eyes, Hardy saw a darkness upon his vision as though
-the shadow of death was on his eyelids.
-
-"Will you have some of this pie?" said he, quite sanely.
-
-"Thank you, sir," answered Hardy.
-
-"We'll shift for ourselves," said the captain, turning to the
-attendant. "Bring whatever else there is in a quarter of an hour."
-
-The man left the cabin. The captain, with knife and fork poised,
-without serving Hardy viewed him intently during a short passage of
-silence, and then said:
-
-"Johnny has strayed away from this ship and he's left his drum
-behind him, but," he added, smiling with his heart-moving smile of
-superiority, "I shall find him."
-
-He loaded a plate and thrust it at the length of his arm toward Hardy,
-who took it.
-
-"Are not you eating, sir?" said Hardy.
-
-"How's the ship?" was the answer.
-
-Hardy reported the sail she was under. The question, the all-important
-question, whether sights had been taken, was not asked. The captain
-took a piece of meat out of the pie and gave it to the Newfoundland,
-who sat beside him on the deck.
-
-"I don't like rich clergymen," he said, abruptly. "The man who steers
-his ship to the glowing gates of heaven should be rich in heart and
-love. The precious freight is that; let him despise the devil's cargo.
-I once said to a wealthy parson, 'Take up your cross and follow me.
-D'ye remember it, sir? but you and the like of you give your cross to
-the coachman and get inside.'"
-
-He spoke this in a voice of thunder, and his face was grotesque. Hardy
-was eating with difficulty. The chatter of the afflicted brain is a
-pain to the hearer, for the sane strokes make the inconsequential talk
-as ghastly as the lifelike motions of the electrified corpse.
-
-From time to time the dog got up and moved about the cabin sniffing. He
-was missing Johnny. He would come to Hardy's side and turn his gentle,
-affectionate eyes up at the mate's face in such dumb inquiry as would
-be holy if it were human; then he would go to the captain and do the
-like. The poor man played with some meat out of the pie, but did not
-eat. He had been educated at a great public school and his speech and
-voice had the culture of breeding, and the lapses and diversions of
-the talk that he addressed to Hardy made his language more pitiful
-than shocking. He as often spoke wisely as insanely, but Hardy saw,
-even whilst he sat, that the loss of his boy had confirmed in him his
-lamentable prepossession. He was mad, but in such fashion that unless
-he acted visibly the madman's part the crew would fail to see it.
-
-The attendant came down with more food for the cabin, and this
-the captain did not touch. Presently he abruptly rose and entered
-his berth, reappeared with his cap on, and slowly stepped up the
-companion-ladder.
-
-It was Hardy's hope that the poor fellow might give such orders as
-would induce the men to suspect him mad, although he felt they would
-believe he was only temporarily deranged by the bitter loss which had
-left him heart-broken; and yet some heedless or absurd order, some
-unintelligible shifting of the course, for example, some needless
-setting or reduction of canvas, must act like a surgical operation and
-quicken their scent, which would help him to come to a decision as to
-the right thing to be done; and whilst he went on munching his dinner
-he found himself repeatedly glancing at the telltale compass and
-listening for the captain's voice. But the ship sped steadily straight
-forward, and the captain remained silent though his tread was audible.
-
-A little while before the mate had finished his dinner Mr. Candy came
-below. This was unusual: in the ordinary movement of discipline he
-should have waited to be relieved by Hardy.
-
-"The captain told me to go and get my dinner, sir," said the second
-mate.
-
-"All right," said Hardy.
-
-Mr. Candy sat down and began to help himself. Hardy had no particular
-fondness for this man: he was the son of a pilot, and one of those
-people who add nothing to the dignity of a service which in its day, in
-point of breeding, in all art of seamanship, in structure of vessel,
-was as good as the Royal Navy. Witness, for example, the men and ships
-of John Company; for if no line-of-battle ships flew the flag of that
-company, and the flags of the owners of fleets of stately craft, ships
-of commerce had been and were still then afloat as lordly in build, as
-gracious and commanding in star-searching heights, as the finest of the
-frigates of Britannia. But Candy was second mate of the ship, and to
-that degree was important.
-
-"Captain Layard is very down," said Hardy. "It's a cruel bad job. I
-loved the little boy, and the dog that loved him too wouldn't let me
-save his life."
-
-"It was plucky of you, sir, to jump overboard," said the second mate.
-"All the time the captain walks he looks to port and starboard, hunting
-like with his eyes over the sea for the little drummer. Strange he
-can't satisfy himself that the younker is drowned, dead and gone."
-
-He was feeding heartily, and spoke in the intervals of chewing.
-
-"This shock," said Hardy, who saw that the man was not to be talked to
-confidentially, "may have a little weakened the poor father's mind for
-a time. We'll assume it so for the common preservation; therefore, in
-your watch on deck should he give orders which might prove him thinking
-more of Johnny than the ship, call me at once."
-
-"Ay, ay, sir!"
-
-This said, Hardy went to his berth to smoke a pipe and get some rest,
-for he could not know what lay before him, and sleep is precious at sea.
-
-At four o'clock Candy aroused him. The captain, he learnt, had been
-below an hour. Nothing worth reporting had happened during Candy's
-watch. Hardy went on deck, and did not see the captain throughout
-the first dog-watch. The breeze was slightly scanting; the main-tack
-was boarded and the main-royal loosed and set. Hardy, like a good
-many other chief mates, was always for carrying on whenever he was in
-charge, and the breeze blew and the girls of the port he was bound
-to always hauled with a will at his tow-rope. Besides, there was the
-night's detention to be made good, and the clipper was making it good
-as she sheared through the coils of the sea, boiling in dim rose to the
-westering light. It was like a field of hurdles to a favourite, and she
-swept them with a bounding keel, slinging rainbows as she went, and the
-surge sang in thunder to the melodies of the rigging.
-
-Hardy's whole thoughts concerned the captain. He quite remembered
-that in the cabin of the stricken father stood a medicine-chest full
-of deadly poisons. Would he take his life? Full often the demon of
-madness goes on beckoning to the ghastly Feature till it springs. But
-what could the mate do? It was not within his right to remove the
-chest. If he durst act in any way he would lock up the captain at once,
-but he had the talk and opinions of a crew of seamen to consider,
-and if the captain should be revisited by the same degree of sanity
-that had enabled him to navigate the vessel to this point, how would
-Hardy stand, supposing--and supposition here involved a very possible
-contingency--that the captain, to preserve his own position, should
-charge him with the ugliest breach of discipline a merchant officer
-could be guilty of?
-
-He did not meet the captain again till the supper hour. The ship was
-then under all plain sail. The west was glowing like a furnace, and
-the ocean was calming to the softening of the breeze. The captain came
-from his berth into the cabin as Hardy stood beside the table. The meal
-was ready, and they sat down. There was a curious look of satisfaction
-in the captain's face. The acute eye of Hardy easily saw that some
-soothing delusion was in possession of the man. He asked two or three
-questions about the ship, and quite sanely said:
-
-"What did you make the latitude and longitude to be at noon?"
-
-Hardy answered the question.
-
-The captain began to eat hungrily, and all the time his face gave token
-of an inward content, lifting indeed into the pleasure of assured
-expectation; but somehow there were visible in this lunatic web of
-emotion threads of cunning clearly perceptible to Hardy, who, perhaps,
-as the son of a doctor whose professional experiences he had often
-listened to, was able to see a little deeper than the vision of a plain
-seaman could penetrate.
-
-"There is no doubt, Mr. Hardy," suddenly said the captain, "that I
-shall be able to find Johnny."
-
-"I hope so, sir," answered Hardy, gravely.
-
-"I have no doubt," exclaimed the captain with a sparkle of triumphant
-cunning lighting up his eyes. "I must be patient and wait, for I've got
-to hear where he is."
-
-Hardy was silent.
-
-"It may come to me in a dream," continued the poor man, "or it may
-be revealed to me in a whisper. I believe with Milton that the air
-is thronged with millions of spiritual beings. I have in my watches,
-when a mate, heard whispers in the dark! I believe in God the Father
-Almighty"--and he recited the Apostles' Creed whilst he stroked the
-head of his dog, who sat at his side. "It is a glorious confession,
-Mr. Hardy. What should make a man more religious than the sea life?
-They think us a breed of blasphemers, but to whom is the glory and the
-majesty and the power of the Supreme unfolded if not to the sailor? We
-behold the birth of the day, and witness the sublimity of the Spirit
-in the glittering temples of the east, from which the sun springs, to
-reveal the marvel of the ocean and the heavens to the sight of man; and
-we witness the death of the day, gorgeous and kingly in its departure,
-over which the angels spread a funeral pall sparkling with the diamonds
-of the night."
-
-He pressed his hands to his brow and sighed with that long tremor in
-which the broken heart often vents itself.
-
-The night passed quietly. The breeze yet slackened and was blowing a
-gentle wind at midnight. There was a moon somewhere in the sky, and
-her light fell upon the dark waters, and the sight of the small seas,
-curling in frosted silver through the radiance, was as beautiful as
-the picture of the ship stemming softly, her canvas stirless as carven
-shields of marble.
-
-The captain came and went throughout the night, and no man aboard
-saving Hardy would have dreamt of holding him mad and irresponsible.
-Candy, when his watch was up, had nothing to report but this: that the
-skipper would walk the deck fast, abruptly halting at the weather-rail
-to stare at the ocean in pauses running into minutes, then crossing to
-the lee-rail to stare again in passages of dumb scrutiny. What more
-conceivable than that the afflicted man should be full of the memory of
-his lost child, and that he should break off in his walk to meditate
-upon the mighty grave in whose heart his little one was sleeping?
-
-Candy thought thus, and so did the helmsman, who would find the men he
-talked to about it of his own mind when he was relieved at the wheel
-and went forward.
-
-And so the night passed into the sad light of dawn, which brightened
-into the glory of a morning full of sunshine. The breeze had shifted
-three points, and the ship was sailing slowly with the yards square and
-the weather-clew of the mainsail up.
-
-Now was to happen the strangest incident in this ship's adventure.
-It was Nelson who said that nothing is impossible or improbable in
-sea-affairs. There is no invention of man that can top the grim, the
-grotesque, the beautiful, the sublime, or the touching facts which the
-great mystery of liquid surface yields to human experience.
-
-A seaman, who was sitting astride of the starboard foretopsail
-yard-arm, busy with marline-spike on some job that the lift needed,
-hailed the deck.
-
-"Where away?" shouted Hardy from the quarter-deck.
-
-"Right ahead, sir," answered the man, who looked a toy sailor, his
-white breeches trembling, and the round of his back sharp-lined against
-the blue.
-
-Hardy fetched the glass, and going to the mizzen-rigging pointed it. He
-caught it instantly. It was a boat, how far off it was impossible to
-say, for distance, when a small object grows visible, is very difficult
-to measure with the eye at sea, but she was plain to the naked sight
-of the man on the yard-arm; the telescope brought her close, and Hardy
-counted five figures in her, one of whom was standing on the foremost
-thwart waving something,--a shirt or a piece of canvas. Her mast was
-stepped, but the sail was down, and she lay waiting, vanishing and
-reappearing as the shallow hollows ran sucking under her.
-
-When Hardy dropped the glass he found the captain by his side.
-
-"What is in sight?" he exclaimed, speaking with something of
-breathlessness, as though his heart was tightened.
-
-"A ship's boat, sir, with five people in her," answered Hardy.
-
-"I shall find him," exclaimed the captain, and the old look of
-superiority to all human intelligence, and the pathetic sparkle of
-cunning with which the diseased brain will often illuminate the eye,
-were perceptible to Hardy. "Give me the glass, sir."
-
-The captain levelled it and was a long time in looking, and all the
-time he looked he breathed slow and deep like a man in heavy slumber.
-
-"Stand by to back the foretopsail," he exclaimed. "Let a hand be ready
-with a line and others to help them aboard, for twice I have fallen in
-with people so weakened by distress and famine and thirst--O God, that
-awful part of it--that we have lifted them like babies over the side."
-
-Presently the boat was close under the bow; the foretopsail was aback,
-and the ship, heaving slowly without way, was alongside the little
-fabric.
-
-Her people were four men and a woman. The men were seamen, apparelled
-in such clothes as the merchant sailor went clad in. They staggered a
-little as they stood up, and one in the bow reeled as he caught the
-end of the line. The woman was sitting in the stern-sheets. She wore a
-straw hat, the shadow of whose brim darkened her face as a veil might.
-She was clothed in a black jacket, and the material of her dress was
-dark. Her head was a little sunk, as though she was too weary to hold
-it erect.
-
-The captain, overlaying the rail, stared with bright devouring eyes
-into the boat. He did not seem to heed the people in her; he was
-looking for something else.
-
-"Are you able to help the lady aboard?" shouted Hardy.
-
-"No, sir," answered the man who had caught the line; "we've been adrift
-two days."
-
-His weak voice proclaimed the truth of his words. At the sound of
-Hardy's cry the woman in the stern-sheets lifted her head, and the
-shadow of the brim of her hat slipped off her face. Hardy instantly
-recognised her.
-
-"Great God!" he exclaimed.
-
-He was struck motionless by astonishment, but his faculties rallied in
-a breath; in a minute he had sprung into the main chains, and a jump
-carried him into the boat.
-
-"O Mr. Hardy!" shrieked the girl, and she tried to rise to clasp him,
-but her exhaustion was too great and she could only sob.
-
-"On deck there!" shouted Hardy, who was usurping all the privileges
-of the captain in that moment of tumultuous sensations. "Send down a
-chair and bear a hand." And whilst this well-understood order was being
-executed--it meant simply a tail-block at the main yard-arm and a line
-rove through the block with a cabin-chair secured to the end of it--and
-whilst the four nearly spent sailors of the boat were being helped by
-the men in the ship, Hardy was talking to Julia.
-
-"What a meeting! What has happened to your ship?"
-
-Her lips were pale and a little cracked, her eyes were languid, and dim
-with tears, a shadow as of hollowness lay upon each cheek. She spoke
-with difficulty.
-
-"The _Glamis Castle_ was burnt two days ago in the night. We have been
-drifting about since then without food or water. Oh, thank God for
-this! thank God for this--and to meet _you_!"
-
-"Bear a hand, my lads, bear a hand," shouted Hardy, whilst the captain
-with his head showing above the rail stood staring into the boat. The
-mate would not tax her with speech; she might be dying! Some alert
-seamen were in that clipper, and to the instincts and humanity of a
-British sailor no form of distress appeals more vehemently than the
-open boat in which they see no breaker, than the open boat in which men
-and women may be dying of thirst. Swiftly, as though the crew of the
-_York_ were the disciplined and gallant hearts of the battle-ship, a
-chair, well secured, sank from the yard-arm and was seized by Hardy. He
-lifted the girl on to it, took a turn round her with a piece of line
-which had come down with it, and she soared from his nimble, skilful
-hands, and vanished from his sight behind the bulwarks. He gained the
-deck in a few instants, and was at the girl's side before the sailors
-could liberate her from the chair.
-
-"She is a dear friend of mine," said he, loudly, that the men might
-understand that more was in this thrilling passage than humanity only.
-And passing his arm round her waist to support her he helped her to
-walk aft.
-
-The captain's face looked dark with disappointment, and as Hardy drew
-close to him he heard him mutter, "They have not brought him, they have
-not brought him!"
-
-"I will take this lady below, sir," said Hardy, speaking rapidly. "Her
-ship has been burnt. They have been without food and water for two or
-three days," and he passed on with the girl to the companion-hatch,
-whilst the captain stood dumbly following them with his eyes, with the
-noble Newfoundland standing beside him.
-
-In silence the two descended the cabin ladder, and with the tenderness
-of a lover, which in such men as Hardy has the sweetness of a woman's
-love, he placed her upon a locker and poured out a little water. She
-drank with the passion of thirst, and asked for more with her eyes, but
-Hardy knew better and gave her a biscuit, which would lightly soothe
-the craving of the hunger that is often felt after thirst is assuaged.
-She bit a little piece of biscuit, and said:
-
-"Won't you give me a little more water?"
-
-"Very soon. Eat that biscuit."
-
-He stepped to the pantry where some brandy was kept, and poured a
-tablespoonful in a wine-glass, and this filled up with water he gave
-her after she had eaten the biscuit. The stimulant helped her, and even
-as he stood watching her with his heart beating fast with this wonder,
-this miracle, of almost unparalleled meeting, he witnessed symptoms of
-a reviving spirit, of a reanimated body in her face.
-
-At this moment Captain Layard came down the companion-steps
-and approached them with an eager, strained expression. His
-eyes, alight with mania--for madness has its expectations and
-disappointments--rested with a searching gaze upon the girl.
-
-"Have you seen him?" he asked.
-
-"No, sir," answered Hardy, quickly trying to catch Julia's eye, but she
-was staring with alarm at the captain, as you would, or I, under such
-conditions of inexplicable confrontment. "She is a dear friend of mine
-and is ill with the sufferings of an open boat, but her presence in
-this ship may mean more than we can dream of now."
-
-The captain's face changed, his eyes took a fresh illumination with his
-smile.
-
-"See to her, Mr. Hardy, see to her, and I'll start the ship afresh."
-
-He left the cabin.
-
-"May I have another biscuit?" said Julia.
-
-Hardy handed one and smiled, for he saw again the sweet unconscious
-cock of her head, not the less fascinating to him because her eyes were
-dim, her cheeks a little hollow, her lips pale.
-
-"Was that the captain?" she asked.
-
-"Yes," he answered.
-
-"What was he asking? Is he right in his mind?"
-
-"His only son, a little boy, a beautiful bright-haired little boy, fell
-overboard and was drowned, and--But we will talk about the captain and
-your adventures when you are stronger."
-
-He mused a moment or two, and then added, "You will take the rest you
-need in my cabin, and a berth shall be made ready for you. A good long
-sleep will restore you. So come."
-
-He put his arm through hers and caused her to rise, and indeed she
-still needed the support he gave her. He took her to his cabin, and
-as she walked she looked about her with growing animation, which is a
-cheering sign, and once she exclaimed, "Thank God, I am safe! Thank
-God, I have met you! But how wonderful--oh, how wonderful!"
-
-She sat on his sea-chest whilst he smoothed and prepared the bunk. It
-was a little cabin; the bunk was under a port-hole, and plenty of light
-came flashing in off the trembling, feathering sea. You might hear the
-tramp of feet overhead, and the thump of coils of rope flung off their
-pins. There were none of the garnishings which often make pathetic
-such interiors as this; when a young officer hangs up the picture of
-his wife with their first baby on her knee, neither of them to be
-kissed and clasped for months and months, even if God be merciful to
-the poor fellow and his ship; no rack full of pipes, no odds and ends
-of curios--in short, nothing ornamented the wall of Hardy's sea-bedroom
-but a long chart of the English Channel, which it was his custom to
-study when he lay in his bunk smoking, to get absolutely by heart the
-lights which gem the coast of our island, and the verdure-crowned
-terraces over the way.
-
-When the bunk was prepared he removed her hat and gave her a
-hair-brush, and took down a little square of mirror and held it up
-before her. He greatly admired the beauty and the abundance of her
-hair, which was parted on one side.
-
-"Nothing so refreshes one as to brush one's hair," said he.
-
-"How ill I look," she exclaimed. "How could you have recognised me so
-instantly?" and she lifted her eyes, full of caress, to his face.
-
-"Will you be strong enough to get into that bunk unhelped?" he asked.
-
-It was a low-seated bunk, and she looked at it and answered, "Yes."
-
-"Then I will leave you," said he, and he walked out hurriedly, and shut
-the door behind him.
-
-He went on deck to see how the captain was dealing with his ship and
-found the vessel sailing along, with her yards properly swung and
-everything right. The boat from which the people had been received
-was visible at the tail of the ship's wake. The captain had sent her
-adrift, which was sane or not in him, just as you think proper. The
-sailors were coiling down and otherwise busy; the four men had been
-taken into the forecastle, where they were eating and drinking and
-yarning to a few of the watch below about the burning of the Indiaman
-_Glamis Castle_. The moment Captain Layard saw Hardy he called him.
-
-"Who is the lady?" he asked.
-
-"Miss Julia Armstrong, the daughter of a retired commander in the Royal
-Navy," was the reply.
-
-"Where have you lodged her?"
-
-"In my cabin for the present, sir, till I receive your orders to get
-another one ready for her."
-
-"Oh, yes, have that done--have that done," the captain said in a
-smooth, perfectly sane voice. "Do you know what she was aboard the
-ship?"
-
-Now Hardy was like the squire in Dickens's exquisite sketch--"he
-would not tell a lie for no man!" At the same time he did not wish
-Captain Layard should know that Miss Armstrong had shipped as a second
-stewardess, so he replied she was going to Calcutta with a letter of
-introduction to the bishop of that place. Her father was poor, and the
-girl wanted to find something to do in India.
-
-But the captain was dreaming. One with eyes for such faces as his
-could easily see that he was thinking of something else, or did not
-understand. He continued to look in silence for a little while at
-Hardy, and then the baleful sparkle suddenly brightened his stare, he
-folded his arms and said, with an expression of triumphant hope and
-conviction:
-
-"She is fresh from the sea and knows where Johnny is, and she shall
-help me to find him!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE CAPTAIN AND THE GIRL
-
-
-It was six o'clock on the same day in which Julia Armstrong had
-been delivered from that horrible sea tragedy, the open boat, by
-the miraculous apparition of the _York_, of all the ships which the
-horizons of the deep were then girdling! The chief mate knocked upon
-the door of his cabin where the girl lay, and believing he heard her
-say "Come in," entered, and found her asleep.
-
-The reddening sunshine was away to starboard, but the heavens southeast
-were glowing, and the girl slept, visible to the eye as the circle of
-blue port-hole up which and down which you saw the clear-cut line of
-the horizon sliding like a piece of clockwork. He stood looking at
-her, for there was love for this girl in the man's heart, and this
-encounter was so wonderful that he witnessed the hand of God in it, and
-a sentiment of religion sanctified his emotion; otherwise, with the
-sailor's respect for the repose of those who sleep--for the seamen's
-best blessing upon you is, _Lord grant you a good night's rest,
-sir!_--he would have softly stepped out and left her.
-
-And this he would have soon done, but as he looked she all at once
-opened her gray eyes full upon him, stared a few moments till
-intelligence came to her, then started, smiled, and sat up in the bunk.
-
-"I've awaked you, I'm afraid," said Hardy.
-
-"I'm glad you have. I have slept sweetly and I feel well," she
-answered. "Strange that I have not dreamt at all, for I have passed
-through a nightmare since the burning of the ship. How marvellous to
-see you standing there!"
-
-"Could you eat a piece of cold fowl and drink some wine?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You shall sup here, for I want to hear your story. If you are in the
-cabin, and the captain comes--"
-
-He put his head out of the door and hailed the cabin servant, who was
-polishing glasses in the pantry. He told him what to get and bring,
-and he then caused the girl to get out of her bunk, and cushioned his
-sea-chest with his bunk pillow as a seat for her. He smiled as he saw
-her fall into the incomparable posture (as he thought it): the head a
-little on one side, the hands on the hips, the feet crossed, the whole
-figure beautiful now that her jacket was removed, though her dark blue
-blouse imperfectly suggested the faultless grace of her breast. Sleep
-had faintly tinged her cheek whereon the shadow of suffering had lain;
-her eyes had brightened, her lips had reddened, and all the romance
-of her face, which was not beautiful nor even pretty, but alluring,
-nevertheless, was expressed once more in the flattering evening light,
-which suffused with a liquid softness the atmosphere of that little
-cabin.
-
-Until the man knocked at the door with the tray of food and wine, they
-talked chiefly of home, of the dry ditch and Bax's farm, of the East
-India Dock road and of Captain Smedley, whose escape and probable
-safety the girl had mentioned early in this talk. And then whilst she
-supped--an early supper, but on the ocean it is the last meal--she told
-him the story of a memorable fire at sea.
-
-There had been many such fires, and they nearly all read like one. It
-begins by some rascally sailor broaching a rum cask; or it is a naked
-candle in the hand of a fool looking for a brand in the lazarette; or
-it is a pipeful of glowing tobacco amongst wool; the capsizal of a
-lamp; or it is caused by something which the ocean sucks down to her
-ooze and buries there, one secret more. But however it be, the end is
-nearly always the same. It was so in this case; the fire took such a
-hold there was no dealing with it; a score may have perished. The girl
-saw the bowsprit and jib-booms black with figures of men who had been
-cut off by the amidship furnace. Numbers--for she was a full ship with
-many children, and besides passengers she was carrying hard upon a
-hundred soldiers in her 'tween-decks--numbers, I say, got away in the
-boats, and amongst them, the last to leave, was the captain; she did
-not doubt that. She fell overboard in her terror, and in her recoil
-right aft from the smoke and its burning stars, and afterwards found
-herself in a boat in the company of five men, one of whom, groaning
-heavily with internal injury, died in the night and was dropped over
-the boat's side.
-
-She had more to tell him about this shipwreck, but that fire concerns
-my story only in so far as it brings this girl again on to the stage by
-one of those dramatic and startling methods adopted by the ocean, whose
-moods are many.
-
-"If your captain is a madman," she said, "what is to happen to this
-ship?"
-
-He put his finger to his lips in a gesture of caution and reticence.
-
-"We may whisper it to each other," said he, in a low voice, "but the
-crew have no knowledge of it, or they may attribute any strangeness in
-his manner to the loss of his child, and think it passing. They all
-loved the poor little fellow, and so did I."
-
-And he told her how the boy used to beat his drum in accompaniment to
-the sailor's whistle, and related the story of his falling overboard
-and the efforts to save him, and the captain's frantic dumb-show and
-sudden exhibition of insanity, so that he believed his child was merely
-missing, and that something would happen to tell him where he might be
-found.
-
-"How sad!" said the girl. "It would have broken my heart to see it. And
-does he still think that he will find his little boy?"
-
-"I'm afraid it's his conviction, the subtle delusion of the diseased
-brain," Hardy answered; "but in other matters with him it's like
-writing on sand; next tide all's gone. Do not tell him you were a
-stewardess. Converse with him as though he were perfectly sane. He is a
-gentleman and an educated man. Humour his sorrowful fancy, for it can
-hurt no one, and it keeps the poor fellow's heart up."
-
-"I suppose you are really in charge of the ship?" she said.
-
-"I am watching her navigation," he answered, "but I tell you I am at a
-dead loss because he is the supreme law-giver of the vessel, and what
-he orders must be done or it is mutiny. His orders may be dangerous to
-my judgment, but not to the men's, who take the course as it's given;
-and I dare not go amongst them and speak the truth. He might get better
-and hear of it, and it would be in his power to ruin me."
-
-She sank her head thoughtfully, understanding him. The door was rapped.
-
-"Hullo," cried Hardy.
-
-It was the cabin servant who had come to tell Hardy that the captain
-wished to see the lady.
-
-"Where is he?" inquired the mate.
-
-"On deck, sir. He'll come below when I report her ready to receive him."
-
-"Report her ready," said Hardy, and he and the girl went into the cabin.
-
-She seated herself on a cushioned locker, and he stood beside her.
-
-"That's your berth," said he, pointing to a door.
-
-Gratitude and love were in the smile she gave him. The red western
-blaze was on the skylight, and reposed on her hair like gold-dust.
-It was Hardy's watch below--he was therefore at liberty to be in the
-cabin. He caught sight of Candy staring through the skylight, but the
-pale-eyed man walked off in a minute, and then the captain came down.
-
-He bowed with the courtesy of breeding to the girl. Tradition has
-scored so heavily against the merchant shipmaster by virtue of
-romantic invention, which largely consists of lies, that I dare say
-it is impossible for a landsman to believe that the commander of a
-merchant-ship could be anything but a rough, grog-seamed, hoarse-voiced
-salt, without grammar for his log-book. The lie stands as everlasting
-as the pyramids, and for my part it may go on standing, but it is a
-lie all the same, and it is my pleasure to paint the truth.
-
-As the girl returned the bow she saw the great Newfoundland in the
-captain's wake, and cried out with a sudden passion of admiration,
-"Oh, what a magnificent creature!" The dog made friends with her in an
-instant, and by twenty canine tokens expressed delight in the caress of
-her hand. No doubt the beautiful and faithful creature appreciated the
-sweetening and civilising influence of the lady in that cabin.
-
-The captain began by putting several sane questions, and she
-remembered that she was not to tell him that she had shipped as an
-under-stewardess in the _Glamis Castle_. He knew the vessel, and
-listened with a degree of attention, that excited Hardy's surprise,
-to her narrative of the fire. He seemed to take a fancy to her, to be
-pleased by her presence, and said he hoped she would be comfortable
-on board his ship. In the midst of his rational talk he slapped his
-forehead and kept his hand pressed to it, and his face changed; a look
-of grief that made him almost haggard was visible when he dropped his
-hand and gazed at the girl.
-
-"I miss my son--my little son," he exclaimed, "and I am waiting for
-something"--he added, in a broken voice--"to tell me where I can find
-him. His drum is by his bed--come and look at it."
-
-Awed by the sudden confrontment of hopeless human grief, the girl rose
-and followed him, with a glance at Hardy as for courage. The heave of
-the deck was gentle; she was stronger, and stepped without difficulty.
-The captain entered his cabin and closed the door upon them both,
-which frightened her, for she easily now saw how it was with his poor
-brain, and no one in the company of a madman can ever dare swear that
-in the next minute he will continue harmless.
-
-"That is his drum," said the captain. "That is the little bed he slept
-in."
-
-Hardy outside stood close at the door, listening and prepared.
-
-"He is my only child," continued the captain, compelling by his own
-gaze the girl's attention to a little coat and a little cap, and other
-garments of the boy which were hanging upon the bulkhead. "His mother
-is dead, and she was my first and my only love. I miss him of a night,
-and want him. He has been my constant companion in several voyages, and
-the life of the captain of a ship at sea is lonely, and I miss him.
-It was my delight to dress him and to listen to his talk. Oh, he is
-a clever boy! He can ask questions which the greatest mind could not
-answer."
-
-He sat down on a chair by the table on which were instruments of
-navigation, a few books, pen and ink, and the like, and folding his
-arms and bowing his head he sobbed dryly without concealment of
-features, and the piteous face, bearded, the half-closed eyes, the long
-hair under the cap which he had not removed, made the girl feel sick
-and faint, as though to some oppressive stroke of personal grief.
-
-She rallied, for she was a young woman of great spirit, as I have a
-right to hold, and remembering what Hardy had said, she exclaimed,
-softly:
-
-"You will find him, Captain Layard."
-
-At this he looked up at her, started to his feet, and his face was
-eager and impassioned with emotion not communicable, for who can
-expound the workings of the diseased mind?
-
-"Tell me," he cried, and she saw what Hardy had also seen--the baleful
-sparkle of mania in his eyes, "you're fresh from the sea, and God may
-have sent you to me. Tell me!"
-
-She could not speak. Her consolatory phrase had exhausted imagination,
-and her heart refused its sanction to the mate's humane idea, that it
-was good to keep up the poor fellow's spirits.
-
-"Tell me!" he repeated, and he advanced a step and his eyes devoured
-her face.
-
-"God will comfort you and help you," she replied, not knowing what to
-say.
-
-He sighed, and turning his head fastened his eyes upon the little bed,
-then looked at her again, this time with his painful expression of
-superiority, the air of a man whose soul is exalted by contemplation
-of something of heavenly importance divulged to him and to him only,
-and wearing this face, he opened the door and she passed out, which was
-lucky for Hardy, because had the captain gone first he would have found
-the mate standing close and listening.
-
-The captain remained in his cabin. The others stood by the table, and
-the western light, rich and red as a deep-bosomed rose, flowed down
-upon them through the open skylight.
-
-"Poor man! Poor man!" the girl exclaimed. "I fear that what I've said
-will create a delusion; he will think I know where his child is."
-
-"His moods are like the dog-vane," said Hardy. "I could not hear what
-passed."
-
-She told him. He frowned with the puzzle of his mind.
-
-"You can judge now for yourself," said he. "Is it right that a man like
-this should command a ship whose safety became doubly precious to me
-this morning?"
-
-She smiled gently, but gravity quickly returned; she could not but
-reflect his face of worry and uncertainty. The great dog was lying at
-his master's door, and all was silent in the captain's cabin. This, in
-the pause, made her say:
-
-"He may commit suicide."
-
-"Not whilst he believes his son is alive and to be found," answered
-Hardy.
-
-He walked to the door of her berth, opened it, and she saw that it was
-as comfortably equipped as the ship would allow.
-
-"You shall have a hair-brush and whatever else I possess to give you,"
-said he. "But how about clothes? I can't dress you."
-
-"I am saved," she answered, "and that is enough to think of at present."
-
-This was a spirited answer for a girl who was talking to the man she
-loved, for would not any girl, addressing the man of her heart, grow
-pensive to the thought that she had but one gown to wear in the whole
-world?
-
-He felt a certain sense of independency owing to the captain's state,
-and considered that he was entitled to act beyond his rights as a mate.
-By which I mean that it could not much concern him if the captain came
-out and found him talking to the girl, and generally acting as though
-he were a passenger instead of an officer of the ship.
-
-"Come on deck," said he, "the air will refresh you."
-
-And they went up the companion-steps, whilst the Newfoundland continued
-to sentinel the captain's door.
-
-A glorious evening sky, in the west like a city on fire, clouds with
-brows glowing into scarlet as they sailed into the splendour abeam,
-the ship leaning with the breeze, and the white spume twinkling on the
-eastern blue in a trembling heaven-full of the lights of foam. Two sail
-were in sight, fairy gleams upon the lens-like edge on the port bow.
-
-"Oh," cried the girl, with a swift look along the deck, "after an open
-boat! and one man groaning and then lying dead in her!"
-
-They walked slowly to and fro to leeward, leaving Mr. Candy, who ogled
-them betwixt his white eyelashes, to pace the weather quarter-deck
-in the loneliness of command. The sailors had immediately seen how
-things stood. Nothing that happens at sea astonishes a sailor, unless
-it is the expected, which is often a real surprise, so full of
-disappointments, of leeway, head winds, misreckoning is the life. Here
-was the chief mate who had fallen in with a girl whom he knew.
-
-"They might have kept company ashore," says Bill to Jim. "She was bound
-one way and he another. Ain't that sailor fashion?"
-
-"Ain't she got a figure?" says Jim to Bill. "Wouldn't I like to put my
-arm round her waist if Dick and the little 'un was playing. It's damned
-hard on us sailor men that no female society's allowed aboard a ship."
-
-"There's the figurehead if it's female," says Bill. "I've known a
-man so 'ard up that of a dog-watch, when there was plenty o' light,
-he'd slide down the dolphin-striker just to talk to the woman on the
-stem-head. He'd say it was the next best thing."
-
-Perhaps it was, for some figureheads in those days were a little
-gorgeous. I have seen ladies under the bowsprit with long black hair
-and swelling bosoms, bright with golden stars. Their blush was deep,
-their lips scarlet, their smile alluring, they were always curtseying,
-and the sea in its loving humours flung snow-white nosegays at them.
-
-But the shadow of the boy's death was still upon the ship, and so far
-the captain had treated his men _as_ men, and they were sorry for
-him. You may take it that a man is no sailor who ill-treats a sailor,
-and despite tradition and the presence of the sea-lawyer, your ship's
-company, if they are British, will serve you honestly if their food is
-fit even for sailors, and if they are numerous enough to do the work
-of one man and half a man added per head, as against the one-man work
-which the shore exacts without expecting more.
-
-As Hardy and the girl walked the deck, whilst the ship sailed along
-stately in the beautiful light of that evening, they talked again of
-home and then of the country to which they were voyaging. The sail upon
-the port bow leaned like tiny jets of red flame, and no star of heaven
-could have filled the liquid distance with more grace.
-
-"It was certainly your destiny to make for Australia," said Hardy, "and
-I now say what I thought from the beginning, that your chances lie
-there. But we had to find you a berth."
-
-"Captain Smedley was very kind to me," she answered. "He would
-sometimes invite me into his cabin and talk to me as pleasantly as
-though he had known me all his life. He gave me an introduction to the
-Bishop of Calcutta, and begged him to do everything that could be done
-for a girl placed as I am. I believe he talked to the passengers about
-me, for some were extremely good-natured and sympathetic, and would
-apologise for troubling me if I waited upon them."
-
-"Any griffs aboard?" asked Hardy.
-
-"Some young officers," she answered, with a half smile upon her lips,
-and looking down upon the deck, "but I kept as much to myself as I
-could."
-
-"You'll find plenty of opportunities in Australia," said Hardy. "There
-are rich squatters in that country, and you can be driving about
-Melbourne and entertaining and doing what you pleased whilst he was a
-thousand miles off counting his sheep."
-
-"Suppose all the rich squatters kept themselves a thousand miles
-distant whilst I was in Melbourne, could I return in this ship?"
-
-She asked this question placidly, but her expression showed that she
-did not appreciate this reference to the squatters.
-
-"You want position and you'll get it."
-
-"Could I return in this ship?"
-
-"We'll see," he answered, smiling at her. "A dinner and champagne to
-the head of the firm of agents might help us, and nature did not intend
-that you should ever plead in vain."
-
-As he said this the captain came on deck, followed by Sailor. The
-Newfoundland, with the critical eye of an old salt, took a view of
-the horizon, and in a minute rushed forward on to the forecastle and
-reported two ships in sight on the port bow by a number of barks,
-which made the men, who were lounging about the knight-heads, laugh
-heartily. On seeing the captain, the mate touched his cap and walked
-right aft on the lee-side, where with folded arms he seemed to watch
-the sea, though he kept the captain and Julia in the corner of his eye.
-
-The poor man approached the girl, who received him with a smile.
-
-"Has Mr. Hardy looked after you?" he said, kindly and gently.
-
-"Oh, yes, Captain Layard, I am very happy and comfortable, and thank
-you over and over again for your goodness. I believe I should have died
-by this time in that open boat, and I owe my life to you and this noble
-ship."
-
-"I am very dull and lonely," he said in a musing way, clearly
-inattentive to her words. "Those ships yonder break the continuity
-of this everlasting circle, but they'll vanish shortly, and the full
-desolation of the night will encompass us. It is the night that I
-fear--it is the night that I fear!" he continued, almost whispering,
-and gazing at her as a man looks at another whose pity and help his
-heart is yearning for. "I miss him! If I dream of him I shall go mad to
-find it a dream. But you know where he is."
-
-She hoped to divert his thoughts, and said: "I do not find the sea
-desolate, Captain Layard. On fine nights I could stand for hours
-looking at the stars; and is desolation on the sea when the sun is
-shining? If I were a man I would be a sailor, for, although it has
-nearly destroyed me, I have learnt to love the ocean."
-
-She looked toward Hardy. The dog, having barked his report of two
-sail in sight, came trotting aft, and stood beside his master. The
-captain looked at him a little while in silence, his brow contracted in
-meditation.
-
-"Which is real?" he asked, placing his foot upon the dog's shadow,
-"this or this?" and he put his hand upon the dog.
-
-Julia, who found a necessity to humour him, answered:
-
-"Some great thinker has written, 'Shadows we are, and shadows we
-pursue.'"
-
-"How long grows one's shadow in the dying sun!" said Captain Layard,
-turning his face--filled with the yearning of grief and charged
-with that subtle expression of madness for which no words are to be
-found--toward the burning sky; "and soon we are nothing but shadows. Do
-you believe in God?" He looked at her suddenly with an extraordinary
-gaze of passionate anxiety.
-
-"Oh, yes, Captain Layard," replied the girl. "I believe in him now if
-ever I did, and I have thanked him."
-
-His face put on its triumphant look, but he was interrupted in the
-irrelevant sentiments he was about to deliver by the approach of the
-boatswain.
-
-Julia crossed the deck to Hardy, glad to escape the pain of such talk.
-
-"What is it?" said the captain.
-
-"The men we picked up," answered the boatswain, "have asked me to come
-aft to say they're willing to serve as seamen aboard this ship."
-
-"You are a full company," replied the captain, quickly. "I can't afford
-to pay and keep more sailors."
-
-"They're likely men, sir," said the boatswain, speaking in a softened
-note of respectful compassion.
-
-"They'll expect their wages."
-
-The boatswain answered he thought that was likely.
-
-"No," said the captain, "we'll transship them, and send them home."
-
-He rounded on his heel, and sat upon the skylight, and gazed at the
-dying lights in the west. What could be more sane than this man's
-answers to the boatswain? Hardy had overheard them, and perplexity
-was deepened in him. Who was going to convince the sailors that their
-captain was mad unless he talked to them as he did to him and Julia?
-And the captain sat looking at the dimming glory, and did not seem to
-remember that he had been conversing with the girl, or to know that she
-had left him.
-
-It was fine weather throughout that night, and the moon shone, and
-the heaven of stars swarmed in sparkling hosts toward the grave of
-the sun until the pallor of the dawn, like the face of the risen
-Christ, put out those fires of the dark; the ship, bathed in the
-ice-white radiance, stole phantom-like over the boundless cemetery
-of the drowned, the perished sailors whose tombstones were in every
-breaking surge. All had been quiet aboard that stealing ship, clad to
-her trucks in the raiment of her day. The captain would pass a long
-time in his cabin, then appear on deck, and walk it for a little space
-self-engrossed; and it seemed to Hardy when his watch came round, and
-when the captain showed himself, that the man's isolation and silence
-expressed, perhaps, a still dim but growing perception of the fate of
-his little boy, in which case the delusion would leave him, and his
-mind recover at least the strength it possessed when they made sail in
-the English Channel.
-
-When the sun rose the ocean rolled in mackerel-tinted mounds, and the
-ship swayed as she floated onwards at about five knots. Stu'nsails had
-been set by order of the captain when he came on deck at dawn, and,
-whitening the air on high, the swelling cloths carried the sight to the
-heavens, which arched in a miracle of motionless feathers of cloud,
-a glorious canopy of delicate plumes, in sweet keeping with the airy
-graces of the queenly fabric which proudly bowed upon its mighty throne.
-
-A sail was in sight on the starboard bow, and in two hours she would
-be abreast. The Newfoundland, coming on deck with the captain when the
-light broke, instantly barked its report of her, and now, a little
-after eight, Hardy was viewing her through the ship's telescope; for
-the sane instructions which had reached him were, that the four men
-were to be transferred to the first ship which would receive them.
-
-The four men were on the forecastle watching the coming vessel; they
-were good specimens of the English seaman of those days, sturdy and
-whiskered, bronzed in face and bowed in back, with that steady air
-which made you know that, like most British sailors, they were to
-be trusted beyond all breeds of foreign mariners in the hour of sea
-peril, when the ship was grinding out her heart upon the rocks, when
-the belching hatches were blackening the air into a storm cloud, when
-the blow of the stranger's bows had riven the side into a gulf, when
-the yawn of the started butt was burdening the hold with tons of
-ship-drowning brine.
-
-When the ships were abreast, the stranger proved American, bound for
-the River Thames. The beautiful flag of her great country shook its
-barred folds at the peak, and you thought of Bishop's Berkeley's
-prophetic line, "Westward the course of empire takes its way." Her
-yellow sheathing flashed in artillery spoutings as she rolled from the
-sun, her canvas with cotton was as white as milk, she was a wonder of
-sea architecture, the creation of a people whose sires had launched
-that exquisite structure, the Baltimore clipper.
-
-Captain Layard was now on deck, and Hardy must discover that in matters
-of routine he was not going to work with the diseased half of his head.
-He hailed the American captain, and they exchanged the information they
-asked.
-
-"What ship is that? Where are you from, and where are you bound to?"
-
-And the American wanted to know the Greenwich time by the chronometers
-in Captain Layard's cabin.
-
-Then was shouted across in words as sane as ever sounded from a
-quarter-deck the news of the recovery of four men from an open boat,
-and would the American captain carry them home? Of course he would, and
-within half an hour from the beginning of this rencounter the two ships
-had started on their separate courses with colours dipping in cordial
-good-byes--the seaman's hand-shake. And these were cousins.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE CAPTAIN'S BIRTHDAY
-
-
-Now in this business of transferring the four men Hardy noticed that
-the captain made no reference to Miss Armstrong. Another captain would
-have asked her if she wished to go home: perhaps, indeed, would have
-sent her home without asking her. Was it because Captain Layard knew
-she had no home? Hardy hoped it might be that, but suspected it was
-not so. This ship wanted no stewardess; the girl was one more to feed,
-and owners do not love liberality in their captains. In short, the
-mate came to the conclusion that the captain's benevolence in keeping
-the girl and giving her a passage to Australia for nothing was due to
-hallucination, and the thought was uneasiness itself both for Julia's
-sake and the ship's.
-
-It was the day following the transshipment of the men that he found an
-opportunity during the captain's absence to take a turn with the girl
-and talk to her. The sun was shining a little hotly, and the clouds
-were sailing fast. Each round of swell, as it came under-running the
-ship out of the northeast, was ridged and wrinkled with arches of foam,
-and the day was alive with the music in the rigging, with the speckled
-wings of sea-birds in the wake, and the smoke-like shadow of vapour
-floating through the sunshine on the water.
-
-After the couple had talked a little, Hardy said:
-
-"How does the captain treat you?"
-
-"Very kindly," she answered.
-
-"I keep an eye upon him," he said, "but it will not do to seem to hang
-near when he is talking to you. He might round and become fierce, for
-from madness you may expect anything. What is his talk about?"
-
-"Chiefly his lost child."
-
-A seaman who was in the main-rigging putting a fresh seizing to a
-ratline looked at the girl, and thought deep in himself, Oh, lovey,
-what a figure! But what that whiskered heart admired most was the
-coquettish cock of her head, the grace of one hand upon her hip, the
-charm of her motions as she walked, her posture when she turned aft
-or forward on the return that was like a pause in some sweet dancer's
-movements. Yes, Jack can keep a bright lookout when a girl heaves in
-sight, but the mighty Charles Dickens is right in holding that Jack's
-Nan is often the unloveliest of the fair.
-
-"Does he go on thinking that you know where his child is?" said Hardy.
-
-"Yes. It is a fixed delusion, though I cannot humour it--it is too
-sad--in spite of your wish."
-
-"The oddest part to me," said Hardy, "is the reason he shows in his
-professional work. He doesn't confound things; the sail he talks of is
-the sail it is; he still knows the ropes. The flicker of the leach of a
-topgallantsail will set him wanting a small pull on the leebrace."
-
-"How does he manage with the navigation?" asked the girl.
-
-"He works it out as I do. He finds the ship's position to a second.
-This may be the effect of habit, but is not custom beaten into rags
-by insanity, like the head of an old drum? It's not so in this case,
-and the crew mayn't find him out till the pilot boards us, and guess
-nothing until they hear that the doctors have locked him up."
-
-"Then what does his madness signify?" said the girl. "He'll be as good
-as the sanest if we arrive safely."
-
-"Ah, but it's the getting there! It's the what may happen to-morrow, or
-to-morrow, or to-morrow, and that is going to make my hair gray, Miss
-Armstrong."
-
-"Call me Julia," she said, looking at him with a sudden light in her
-eyes.
-
-"Why should I take that liberty?" he replied, smiling.
-
-"Because I should love it," she answered.
-
-"I'll not call you Julia before him," he exclaimed, with a note of
-fondness which brought a charming expression into her face, as the
-kisses of a shower freshen the perfume of the rose. "It must be a stiff
-Miss Armstrong or I am no mate," and then they fell to talking a little
-nonsense.
-
-A day came, and it was the fifth day dating from the drowning of the
-little drummer, and it was a Friday, in all tradition a black day for
-the sailor; and nobody, I think, has taken notice that it was Friday
-when Nelson, full of instinctive assurance that he would never return
-alive, kissed his sleeping child and started to join his ship for
-Trafalgar.
-
-The captain, Miss Armstrong, and Mr. Hardy sat at breakfast. The ship
-had made good way; not many parallels lay between her and the northern
-verge of the tropics. The sun poured his light in fire, and the
-flying-fish sparkled under the bows.
-
-The sailors had noticed nothing in the captain to set them growling
-suspicion into one another's ears with askant looks aft. If Mr. Candy,
-who lived close to the skipper, had taken any sort of altitude of the
-poor man's mind, he kept his observation secret; or it might be that he
-believed the captain was a little upset by the loss of his child, and
-he had not the penetrating sagacity of Hardy.
-
-The wind had fallen light, and the motions of the ship were as easy as
-a swimmer's. Hardy had noticed in the captain's face when they met that
-morning an expression of lofty triumph, of sublimated self-complacency
-such as a man deranged by conquest and acclamation might wear as he
-passes slowly through the huzzaing crowds. He seemed self-crowned, and
-might have reminded a better student than Hardy of one of Nat Lee's
-heaven-defying stage-kings.
-
-"To-day is Friday," said the captain, addressing Miss Armstrong, "and
-what day do you think it is?"
-
-Julia thought awhile, for she fancied he meant something in the almanac.
-
-"I don't know, captain," she answered.
-
-"It is my birthday," said the captain, "and Johnny is waiting somewhere
-to kiss me."
-
-Hardy was about to deliver with all the respect of a mate a sentence of
-congratulation, but the closing words of the captain silenced him.
-
-"I wish you many happy returns of the day," said Julia.
-
-"You might like to know how old I am," said the captain, with an
-indescribable look at the girl, "but every man should respect the
-secret of his birth. Until we come to sixty we like to be thought much
-younger, and when we come to eighty we tell lies that our friends
-may think us ninety. I have good reason to congratulate myself upon
-my birthday. I cannot believe that the Red Ensign ever floated over
-a better seaman than I, a man who is both a gentleman and a sailor,
-and it has been my privilege," he continued, talking as though he was
-making an after-dinner speech, "to have dignified by my behaviour and
-breeding a service that in public opinion is in want of dignity."
-
-Hardy burst into a laugh; he could not help it, but he instantly
-apologised by saying that the captain's words made him think of the
-first skipper he sailed with, betwixt whose legs, as he stood, you
-could have fitted an oval picture, and whose face for beauty might have
-been picked out of the harness cask.
-
-The captain with a slight frown cast his eyes upon the mate, and said,
-"Johnny shall be a sailor. His mother would have desired him to serve
-the queen at sea, but he shall perpetuate _me_ under the flag I serve."
-
-This was followed by a short silence; the others found nothing to say.
-It was perhaps one of the saddest illustrations of madness on record,
-and it set the listeners' hearts pining to do something that was denied
-to their sympathy and distress.
-
-"The men shall have a holiday," said the captain, who was scarcely
-eating. "It is my birthday, and they shall drink my health at eight
-bells. You will drink my health, Mr. Hardy, and you, Miss Armstrong?"
-
-They answered that they would drink his health with the greatest
-pleasure.
-
-"You and Mr. Candy in rum, Mr. Hardy; you'll drink with the men, for I
-like the officers of my ship to be associated with the crew on festive
-occasions."
-
-"I will gladly drink with the men, sir," responded Hardy.
-
-"Rum is not a fit drink for young ladies," continued the captain,
-with a faint smile, "and you, Miss Armstrong, will drink my health in
-claret--a wine which shall not hurt you, because 'tis light and old and
-nourishing."
-
-Julia bowed. Hardy was wondering what the men would think, but if
-they thought this unusual deviation from sea routine odd, they would
-certainly like it and hope for more. It was an exhibition of insane
-generosity, of lunatic kindness, and the mate could see nothing else in
-it.
-
-In obedience to the captain's instructions he went on deck, sending
-Candy below to his breakfast, and called the boatswain aft.
-
-"It's the captain's orders," said he, "that the men shall knock off
-work all day."
-
-The boatswain stared. "All day, sir?" he said.
-
-"It's his birthday," answered Hardy. "And all hands will drink his
-health in good Jamaica rum at eight bells, served out on the capstan
-head."
-
-Innumerable wrinkles overran the boatswain's face as grin after grin
-rippled about his gale-hardened skin. He looked as if he would like to
-say that here was a traverse that beat all his going a-fishing. But
-the immense pleasure that beamed in his expression was full assurance
-of the reception the crew would give the news.
-
-He walked slowly forward, and the men wondered at his deep and constant
-grin. "One of the mate's stories, I reckon," thought Bill, and Jim also
-thought that some joke of the mate had started the boatswain on that
-smile. When he reached the forecastle the boatswain put his silver
-whistle to his lips and blew the shrill music of "All hands!" and a
-hundred little birds of the groves and woods seemed to be perched in
-song upon the yards and rigging.
-
-The fellows who were below came tumbling up, startled by that call in
-fine weather. In a very little time the whole of the crew had gathered
-round their forecastle leader, who, after clearing his throat and
-gazing about him with his profound smile, said:
-
-"Lads, it's the capt'n's birthday, and it's to be a holiday for you all
-right away through, with liquor at noon to drink his health in."
-
-Sailors are usually so badly treated by all variety of shipowners'
-sullen deafness to their grievances, that when on rare occasions,
-sometimes originating in madness, they are well treated, their
-astonishment is a phenomenon of emotion. It seems unnatural, they
-think. A beautiful mermaid with a gilded tail and flowing hair of
-bronze, with her white revealed charms made entrancing by the soft
-blue of the water, could not amaze them more than a skipper's kindness
-taking the form of Layard's.
-
-A brief spell of silence fell upon them as they looked at one another
-and at the boatswain.
-
-"Ain't yer coddin' us?" said a man.
-
-"Fill your pipes, and go a-courting," answered the boatswain. "I'm for
-taking advantage of it when it comes, which ain't ever too soon or
-often."
-
-This convinced the crew, who delivered a loud cheer, and then began to
-talk and scatter, all of them feeling a bit aimless, for it wasn't like
-going ashore.
-
-Hardy, who was keeping the deck whilst Candy breakfasted, watched the
-proceedings on the forecastle, and wondered if this stroke of the
-captain was going to give them any idea of the truth. But why should
-it? If they suspected, through this act of kindness, that the boy's
-loss had shifted the "old man's" ballast, they would only hope that a
-long time would pass before his mental cargo was trimmed afresh. But
-in truth they did not know that their captain was insane, and even
-Candy, who was below sitting at the table and listening to the skipper
-conversing with Miss Armstrong, would not have kissed the Book upon it.
-
-Presently Mr. Candy came on deck, but Hardy, whose watch below it was,
-thought he would stay a little and talk to Miss Armstrong, and observe
-the captain if he should appear. Very soon after Mr. Candy arrived
-Julia rose lightly through the companion-hatch. She was now looking
-quite well, better indeed than she looked when Hardy first met her.
-Again he found himself admiring her faultless figure and the pose of
-her head, enchanting through its unconsciousness.
-
-"Where is the captain?" he asked her.
-
-"I left him at the table," she replied. "He was not in the cabin when I
-came out of my berth."
-
-"I hope it won't end in his destroying himself," exclaimed Hardy.
-"There is a great deal of goodness and humanity in the poor fellow's
-heart, and it's dreadful to see a man struggling to conquer his brain's
-disease. Who can tell what passes in the minds of such people? But what
-am I to do? He is Prime Minister aboard this ship, and those are the
-people," said he, nodding toward the crew, "who must turn him out."
-
-"Have you told them they are to have a holiday?" she asked.
-
-"Don't they look like it?" he replied.
-
-"How'll they spend it?" she inquired.
-
-"In loafing and smoking and sleeping. If the captain's liberal with his
-grog-- Well, the drummer's gone out of their heads--'tis the way of the
-sea: a bubble over the side, a broken pipe in a vacant bunk, and the
-ship sails on. They may dance and sing songs; and I hope they will,
-for God knows the captain is depressing enough, and I like to see the
-hornpipe danced."
-
-Meanwhile where was Captain Layard? He was in his cabin seated close
-to the medicine-chest, which stood open, and reading a thin volume all
-about poisons, and the quantities to be administered when given for
-sickness. His great dog lay beside him. He read with a knitted brow,
-and sometimes sank the volume to lift with his right hand some bottle
-of poison out of its little square place. He would look at it and then
-refer to the book.
-
-In this singular study, fearful with the menace of the light in his
-eyes, tragically portentous with the lifting look of triumph and the
-insane smile, he spent about half an hour, and then closing the lid of
-the medicine-chest, he stood up and looked at the drum, and softly
-wrung his hands with a heart-moving expression, whose appeal lay in
-the soul's perception seeking to pierce in vain the torturing and
-bewildering veil of disease; for it is not the immortal soul of man
-which is mad in madness, and this belief is God-sent; the soil buries
-and resolves to ashes the mania that destroys, and the purified soul is
-liberated to await the judgment of God--its Home.
-
-After a few minutes he stepped into the cabin and called the attendant,
-who was handling crockery and glasses in the pantry. The fellow stepped
-out.
-
-"Jump below into the lazarette," said the captain, "and draw a bucket
-of rum. I want plenty. This is my birthday, and all hands will drink my
-health."
-
-The man was not at all astonished; he had got the news from the
-forecastle. He was a sort of steward, and knew the ropes in the
-lazarette. The little hatch was just abaft the captain's chair, and
-was opened by an iron ring. The man accepted the captain's orders
-literally, disappeared, and returned with a clean, big bucket.
-
-The lazarette is an after-hold, a compartment of a ship in which in
-those times all sorts of commodities used to be stowed, chiefly edible,
-and for cabin use. The man lifted the hatch-cover--the hatch was no
-more than a man-hole--and by help of the light, which shone down upon a
-cask that was almost immediately under, pumped the bucket nearly full.
-
-The captain went to the hatch and looked down, and exclaimed:
-
-"Hand it up; I'll help you." He received the bucket and placed it on
-the deck, and the man sprang through the hatch and replaced the cover.
-
-"Take it into my cabin," said the captain, "and bring it on deck when I
-send you for it."
-
-And this was done, and the man went on deck whilst the captain entered
-his berth and closed the door.
-
-"I have drawed enough to swim ye," said the cabin-attendant to Bill.
-
-"'Tain't like being in port, though," answered Bill, whilst Jim and
-several others like him grinned at the news of the grog. "When I takes
-a drop, I'm for dancin', and where are the gurls?"
-
-"Ah!" echoed Jim in a sigh born of lobscouse and the livid fat of
-diseased pork.
-
-Finding that the captain did not make his appearance, Hardy kept
-the deck with Julia. Again they talked of the old home, the drunken
-stepmother, the withering indifference of the retired Commander R. N.
-to the loneliness and helplessness of his child, and to her prospects
-in life.
-
-Hardy spoke of it with heat, and the girl's face was often hot with the
-passion of memory.
-
-"What should I have done without you?" she said once and again,
-and still again. "But if I cannot find employment in Australia, I
-must return in this ship," and she looked at him with the eyes of a
-sweetheart.
-
-"If anything happens to Captain Layard," said he, "no doubt I shall get
-command."
-
-Now, "If anything should happen" is the roundabout of "If he should
-die," and people modestly thus speak of death as though it was
-anything, as though it was not the _only_ thing that is real, to be
-expected without fear of disappointment.
-
-"I believe he will grow quite mad long before we arrive at Melbourne,"
-said Julia; "but even taking him as he is, would the agents trust him?"
-
-"You want to come home in this ship, Julia?" said Hardy.
-
-"You are the only friend I have in the world," she answered; and thus
-they cooed without billing, for Jack was in strength forward, and the
-second mate walked the deck to windward, and a sailor stood at the
-wheel.
-
-About a quarter before noon, but not till then, the captain emerged
-with his sextant. If he had come up with a face of madness, the sextant
-he held would have clothed him with all the sanity he needed in the
-sailors' opinion. But his face showed no distinctive marks of the
-condition of his mind, the expression was even calm; he seemed as one
-who was about to realise the consuming hope of his life; the shadow of
-the coming event subdued him. The crew were on deck gathered forward
-in all variety of sprawling posture, smoking and talking, with teeth
-sharpened by the hard and bitter fare of the sea. Also seven bells
-having been struck some time since, they knew that noon and a bumper of
-old Jamaica were at hand, and every eye was directed aft.
-
-Hardy disappeared and returned with his sextant, and Candy fetched his,
-and the three men fell to screwing down the sun till its lower limb was
-like a wheel upon the ocean line. The captain never spoke, and Julia
-studying his face noticed the subdued look and the calmness, and felt
-a little despairful, for, poor heart, she was in love, and wanted the
-captain to go raving mad that Hardy might get command and marry her at
-Melbourne, and bring her home. O God, what joy for a heart so long
-joyless! A home, a protector, a husband, on whose breast she could lean
-with her lips at his ear in softest murmurings of wifely confidence.
-
-"Eight bells! Make it the bell eight!" and the four double chimes rang
-gladly along the decks and up aloft.
-
-"Pass the word for the cabin servant," said the captain, speaking and
-looking as collectedly as the sanest of skippers might show in that
-first command of tacking, "Ready about!"
-
-The man came aft in a hurry, impelled by the thirsty yearning of the
-forecastle mob, and in a couple or three minutes he was standing at
-the capstan just abaft the mast with a bucket on the "head," and a
-tot measure in his hand. The captain stood close to the man, and the
-crew gathered around. The Newfoundland stood at his master's side. Now
-was to be seen the most glowing canvas in the panorama which unfolds
-this ship's adventure. The picture was alive with its crowd of faces
-of seamen watching the lips of their commander, alive with the colour
-and diversity of their apparel, with the silent breathing of the white
-breast soaring to the height of the fiery streak of bunting, which
-trembled in a dog-vane from the main-royal truck. The sea was soft in
-caress and note, and Julia thought of the wayside fountain to which
-_she_ as well as Hardy had listened in the night, when, in the pause,
-she heard the fall of the shower under the bow.
-
-"My lads," began the captain, and Hardy watched him with strained
-attention, believing that the crew would see it, "this is my birthday,
-and I am departing from the custom of the sea in making a general
-holiday of it."
-
-He grew pale and paler as he spoke, but his voice did not falter, and
-no change was visible in his expression save that a light as of secret
-exultation brightened his eye and accentuated his pallor.
-
-"I have always tried to make a good master to my men, and to treat them
-like men and sailors, and not as dogs which other captains seem to find
-them."
-
-This was attended by a growl of appreciation.
-
-"So, my lads," continued the captain, "as this is my birthday, one and
-all of you, the mates, and the lady last, but not least, shall drink my
-health, and the health of the little boy who has left his drum behind
-him."
-
-"May God bless you and him!" said one of the men, for this proved to be
-one of those touches of nature which made all those rough hearts akin.
-
-"Now serve out--serve out, and handsomely!"
-
-The boatswain drank first. And again and again and again the measure
-was filled until all hands of the sailors, saving the man at the wheel,
-had swallowed the fiery draught, many with a smack and a smile of
-relish. Then the wheel was relieved, and another bumper was swallowed
-with a "Many 'appy returns of the day, sir."
-
-"Drink," said the captain to the attendant, and the man drained a full
-dose.
-
-"Sweeten the measure for the two mates," said the captain.
-
-This was quickly done. And then Hardy drank and then Candy, for both
-had the throats of the sea, which seem lined with brass when 'tis ten
-per cent. above proof. "Your health, sir"--and--"your health, sir," and
-the mates took it down.
-
-"Now, Miss Armstrong, you will drink my health," said the captain, and
-with the gallantry of an old beau he took her by the hand and led her
-into the cabin. She glanced at Hardy with a smile before she vanished.
-
-The men scattered as they went forward to get their dinner. The captain
-took a wine-glass from a rack, and a bottle from a locker, and filled
-the glass with red wine.
-
-"Drink to me and to the boy I am seeking, and then tell me where he
-is," he exclaimed as he extended the glass. She took it, and said with
-forced cheerfulness to humour him:
-
-"Your health, Captain Layard, and many happy returns of this day, and
-my heart's gratitude to you for your kindness to me. And God will some
-day show you where your child is."
-
-She drank half the contents of the glass. His eyes sparkled, and his
-face was grotesque with the workings of his dreadful exultation.
-
-"Oh, you must drain it--you must drain it, Miss Armstrong, or it'll be
-bad luck and no pledge."
-
-She drank the glass empty, and put it down upon the table. He gazed at
-her with extraordinary intentness as though he listened to hear her
-words, then swiftly entered his cabin, closed and bolted the door, and
-pulling out a loaded revolver from under the pillow in his bunk, seated
-himself, and with the weapon upon his knee in his grasp sat hearkening,
-with his eyes fastened upon the door.
-
-The time slowly passed and still he continued to sit, grasping the
-pistol upon his knee, with his eyes of madness fixed upon the door.
-His face was now revolting with its look of burning expectation and
-triumph. Suddenly a stream of sunshine moved slowly, like a spoke of a
-softly revolving wheel, over the carpeted deck of the captain's cabin,
-and any one might have known by the motions of the ship that she was
-not under command. You heard faint, vague sounds of trampling above, a
-dim noise as of a sick crowd poisoned by vapour and feebly struggling
-to escape, and in the midst of it the captain's door was struck: the
-blow was languid and repeated three or four times only, and no noise
-attended it.
-
-The madman sprang from his chair and stood erect with the revolver half
-raised from his side, and his eyes sparkled in his face that was dark
-with murderous intent. Thus he stood whilst the spoke of light through
-the port-hole moved gradually round the cabin until it vanished, by
-which time all was silent without. The unhappy man resumed his seat
-and former posture, and thus it went for half an hour at least; then,
-always grasping his murderous weapon, he walked like one in the chamber
-of death, carefully opened the door, and peered out.
-
-The first sight he witnessed was the figure of the chief mate, Hardy,
-stretched at its length and on its side within a pace or two of the
-threshold, and upon the locker on the port side of the table, a
-cushioned locker as comfortable as a couch, lay the form of Julia
-Armstrong; her right arm hung down, and she lay as apparently dead as
-Hardy. The captain stepped across the body of the mate and looked with
-devouring, sparkling eyes at the girl, while he seemed to listen for
-sounds above. Nothing was to be heard save the inner grumbling of the
-ship as she swayed helpless in arrest. Now and again the wheel chains
-clanked to the blow of the sea upon the rudder.
-
-The captain went to the girl's side and looked at her: her face was
-placid, pale, ghastly, and her lips a bright red. Thus exactly did
-Hardy's face show, and any one experienced in the symptoms of poisoning
-by laudanum or morphia would have known that these two people had been
-heavily drugged, even perhaps unto death.
-
-It was the birthday of a madman in search of his drowned child, and
-they had drunk his health and the little drummer's. His face took on an
-air of hurry and bustle, and, always gripping his revolver, he stepped
-nimbly to the companion-steps and mounted them. He raised his head
-just above the companion-hood and looked; he saw that the man who had
-stood at the wheel was lying motionless beside it. Almost abreast of
-the companion was the curved form of Candy, who seemed to have been
-doubled up and then reeled into lifelessness. A few prostrate forms
-were to be seen forward, in the waist and about the forescuttle. They
-lay lifeless in the sleep or death of the drugged draught in which they
-had pledged their captain. In the forecastle lay the rest, some on the
-deck, some in their bunks, and every face showed as Hardy's and the
-girl's, placid, pale, and ghastly, and the lips a bright red. All the
-symptoms had been expended, the first pleasurable mental excitement,
-then the weariness, the headache, the intolerable weight of limb, the
-spinning and sickening giddiness, the drowsiness, the stupor, and now
-insensibility or death.
-
-The captain rose in the hatch to his full height and stepped on to
-the deck, followed by the dog, which went to Candy and smelt him, and
-then with a low, uneasy growl went to the figure beside the wheel and
-sniffed at it. With a dreadful smile of hope and rejoicing the captain
-thrust the pistol into a side pocket and, going to the wheel, put the
-helm hard a-starboard, and secured it by several turns of the end of
-the mainbrace.
-
-This done, always preserving his horrible expression of lofty
-exaltation, he took the breaker out of the bow of the port
-quarter-boat, filled it from the scuttle-butt, and replaced it. God
-knows how he was directed in what he did; the instincts of habit and
-knowledge must have governed him. It is certain that he made his
-preparations for departure with the sanity of a healthy brain. His dog
-closely followed him, and seemed afraid. He then went below into the
-pantry and returned with his arms full of food, which he placed in the
-stern-sheets along with a tumbler which he pulled out of his pocket. He
-moved rapidly and his lips often worked, and he'd flash his gaze along
-the decks at that memorable, tragical picture of ship with lifeless
-figures upon the planks, with all her white canvas curving inwards,
-stirless in the stream of the breeze. She seemed to have been drugged
-too, and rolled with a kind of stagger upon the soft folds of the swell.
-
-He went below again, the dog at his heels, and, entering his cabin,
-took a dog-collar and chain out of a locker and secured the noble
-animal to a leg of the table, which was cleated and immovable. When he
-had done this he pressed his lips to the dog's head and sobbed dryly
-and sighed, for the light in his eyes was too hot a fire for tears. The
-dog whined and wagged its tail, and looked a hundred questions with its
-gentle eyes.
-
-"I shall bring him back, I shall bring him back, Sailor!" the captain
-muttered to the Newfoundland.
-
-And all this time Hardy lay close beside the dog as dead to the eye as
-any corpse under the ground.
-
-The captain went to the side of the girl and picked her up off the
-cushioned locker with the ease of a man lifting a child. With her
-motionless form in his arms he gained the deck and laid her in the
-boat, passing her under the after-thwart, so that her head lay low in
-the stern-sheets. He sprang for a colour in the flag-locker and placed
-the bunting that was ready rolled under her head. She never sighed, she
-never stirred. Not paler nor calmer could her face have shown on the
-pillow of death.
-
-Now the boat was to be lowered, and he went to work thus: he cast
-adrift the gripes which had held the boat steady betwixt the davits,
-and then he slackened the falls at the bow, belaying the tackle, and
-then he slackened the falls at the stern, belaying the tackle; and
-so by degrees the boat sank in irregular jerks to the surface of the
-water. He sprang on to the bow tackle and descended with the nimbleness
-of a monkey, with wonderful swiftness unhooked the blocks, and the boat
-was free. Next he stepped the mast upon which the sail lay furled, then
-the rudder; then shoved clear and hoisted the small square of lug, and
-in a few minutes he was blowing away gently into the boundless blue
-distance, looking all about him with a proud but ghastly smile for a
-sight of his missing boy, whilst the girl lay like the dead in the
-bottom of the boat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-JULIA CALLS "JOHNNY!"
-
-
-It was about half-past two o'clock in the afternoon and the sun shone
-hotly. The breeze was a pleasant wind for that boat, and the captain
-put her dead before it and blew onwards into the boundless distance,
-squarely seated at the amidship helm, with the white and placid face of
-the drugged girl at his feet.
-
-He would often look at her with a passionate eagerness, and then
-direct his brilliant eyes over the sea, and his countenance was now
-shocking with its expression of real madness, charged with the ghastly
-illumination of his one maniacal belief, that the girl, who was fresh
-from the sea when he missed his boy, knew where he was and would take
-him to the child, and then they would return to the ship, and once more
-the drum would rattle and the whistle awaken the birds in the rigging.
-
-Never before in all human tradition of ocean life had fate painted
-upon the bosom of the deep a picture more wonderful by virtue of its
-secret and tragic meaning. There would be nothing in the mere scene of
-a beautiful clipper ship under all plain sail, her canvas hollowing
-inwards visibly, to all intents and purposes derelict; there would be
-nothing in the spectacle of a little open boat borne onwards by the
-humming heart of its swelling square of canvas, steered by a lonely
-figure, the other being hidden. It might be to a distant eye the flight
-of a single survivor from a floating pest-house. But it was the story
-of the thing which makes it so extraordinary that I who am writing
-pause with astonishment, dismayed also by the lack of the exquisite
-cunning I need to submit the truth.
-
-The girl had been drugged with morphia, but in what dose, and in what
-doses the men, it is impossible to conjecture. The madman reading the
-book of directions may have understood it, but insanity had rendered
-memory useless when it came to his mixing the poison with the liquor
-and the wine. But she was not dead; he would have found that out if he
-had bared her breast and put his ear to the white softness. But would
-she die in that sleep which was as death? for I believe it is the
-heart's action that fails in such cases, and at any moment her soul
-might return to God.
-
-But he! poor unhappy wretch, if he understood what his mad but most
-moving love for his child had impelled him to do, his perception would
-not be as ours. His heart burned with desire that she should awake and
-tell him in which direction he should steer, for already the ship was a
-toy astern, three spires of ice-like radiance dipping to the eye on the
-brows of the blue swell as the boat rose and sank, jewelling the water
-with two foam-threaded lines of little yeasty bubbles.
-
-Would she ever awaken? How long would she continue in sleep? To some
-a dose of morphia professionally prescribed will yield a long night's
-rest not wholly unrefreshing, though the drug is obnoxious to the
-brain, which in time it murders. Therefore she might sleep into the
-early hours of the night.
-
-But these were not _his_ speculations. His mind was intent on one
-object, and he held the boat straight before the wind, waiting for her
-to look at him and rise, and point to the spot where his boy was.
-
-It passed into about an hour before sunset.
-
-From time to time the captain had laid his hand gently upon the girl's
-brow, believing she would open her eyes and speak to him. He was like
-a child whose grave or tragic act was beyond his mind's capacity to
-understand. He was painfully haggard, and sweat drops were on his
-forehead and cheeks, but the dreadful fire was always in his eyes. And
-once he stared fixedly over the port bow of the boat as though his poor
-brain had shaped the vision of his child: he stared as though he beheld
-the phantom, and when it vanished out of the perfidious cell which had
-created it he sighed and frowned.
-
-He took no heed of sensation; thirst and hunger may have been his, but
-he never left the helm to drink or eat. At the hour I have named the
-westering sun was beginning to empurple the east, and he was steering
-toward the point where the evening star would rise. More than half the
-moon was hanging in a broken shape of dim pearl over the boat's bows.
-All at once the captain's ceaseless stare at the ocean brought his eyes
-to an object almost directly ahead. He was a sailor, and his afflicted
-reason could not deceive him. Right ahead and within half an hour's
-sail--so low seated was the gunwale of that boat--lay a small vessel,
-partly dismasted and deep sunk. She was painted black. Her lower masts
-were white, and both foresail and mainsail were hanging, but the
-trysail was stowed.
-
-"He will be there! he will be there!" cried the captain in a voice that
-swept like a shriek from his lips, and as the words left him the girl,
-with a long, strange sigh, opened her eyes full upon the wild nightmare
-face that was on a line with her head, for he had sprung to his feet.
-
-"He is there!" he shouted again.
-
-Then looking down he saw her watching him, and had he been sane would
-have witnessed the awakening reason in her darkening into horror. She
-tried to sit up, but her body was heavy as lead.
-
-"Oh, what is this? Where am I?" she asked, more in a mutter than in
-clear speech.
-
-"He is there!" he cried, pointing with a frantic gesture, "and you
-have known it throughout your sleep. Look!" He stooped, put his hands
-under her arms and lifted her out of the bottom of the boat into the
-stern-sheets, against whose back-board she sank.
-
-Now morphia gives you but sleep if it does not kill you, and reason
-with many is immediately active when slumber is ended; but the
-captain's face alone would have sufficed to stimulate the most sluggish
-consciousness into clear perception, and without understanding the
-reason of it she grasped her situation.
-
-She was alone in a boat with the mad captain of the _York_, and there
-was nothing in sight save the everlasting circle of the sea girdling a
-small broken vessel toward which the boat was running, for the captain
-had his hand upon the yoke, and the little fabric was dead before it
-once again.
-
-Despair laid the ice-cold hand of death upon the poor girl's heart.
-What could she do? What would _he_ do?
-
-As the sun slowly floated down the slope he was glorifying, the moon
-brightened her broken face. Julia's lips were dry; her tongue had the
-rasp of a cat's upon the roof of her mouth.
-
-"Is there water here?" she asked.
-
-"Oh, yes. You shall have water. Put your hand upon this. What sha'n't
-you have who have helped me to find him!"
-
-She extended her hand and held the yoke steady, and he went into the
-bows with the glass and filled it from the breaker, all as sensibly as
-though he was right in mind; but he stood two or three moments to look
-at the vessel they were nearing and talk to her.
-
-She drank with the thirst of fever, and then perfect realisation
-possessing her, a little impulse of hope quickened the beat of her
-heart, for she thought to herself, made cool by hope, "There are people
-in that ship, and I shall be saved."
-
-The vessel was a small brig, floating on a cargo of timber. She showed
-a tolerable height of side, and judging from her condition she had
-started a butt, and the inrush had overmastered the pump, and as her
-davits were empty her people had no doubt got away in the boats. She
-made a churchyard picture for forlornness, with the broken moon hanging
-over her, though daylight still throbbed in folds of cloud in the deep
-west.
-
-Julia saw with a fainting heart that the brig was deserted, and she
-turned her eyes up to God and asked what should she do?
-
-The captain stood in silence, with one hand backward upon the yoke, his
-head inclined forward with intent, searching stare.
-
-"He may be in that brig," at last he said. "What moved then? No, 'twas
-the swing of the forebrace. And if he is not in that vessel," he
-continued, in a voice of cunning, "you who know where he is will tell
-me where to steer."
-
-She brought the whole of her wits together in her resolution to live,
-and remembered that she had given some order to this man's insanity
-by her system of answering his talk. She exclaimed with all the
-tranquillity she could summon:
-
-"If he is not in that vessel, Captain Layard, you will let me rest in
-her for the night, because if you keep me sitting in this open boat
-I shall be worn out, or I might die--I am not strong--and how, then,
-could I help you to find little Johnny?"
-
-"Right! You are right," he answered, swiftly; "you shall rest in that
-brig if he is not there; but if he is there," changing his voice into a
-note of triumph, he added, "we must rejoin the ship, because I want the
-men to see him. And I am dying for his company at night, and for the
-sound of his drum."
-
-As he spoke these words the boat was alongside the abandoned timberman,
-and with the dexterity of a sailor--for in all professional work he
-was as sane as the sanest--he put the helm down, sprang to let go the
-halliards of the lug, and secured the boat by passing her painter
-through a channel plate.
-
-This brig had old-fashioned channels, which were platforms secured
-to the ship's side so as to give a wide spread to the shrouds and
-backstays. The boat sat close beside the main-channel. With the
-resolution of one who works for life the girl seized the lanyards of
-the dead-eyes, and with the ease which her graceful figure would have
-promised gained the platform of channel, and a minute later the deck.
-
-With aberration disciplined by professional habit the captain went to
-work, his intentions being perfectly sane, save that he discovered an
-extraordinary anxiety and eagerness to get on board the brig. He knew
-that he and the girl were to pass the night in the vessel, and so, with
-the quick motions of madness and with the strength which madness often
-confers, he got the breaker of water into the main-channel, then placed
-beside it the stock of provisions he had stowed away aft, and called to
-Julia:
-
-"Do you see him?"
-
-"Come on deck, and we will look," she answered, for now that she stood
-on a solid deck her nerve had returned.
-
-"Steady this breaker on the rail," he called.
-
-He handed it on to the rail, and she held it. He then threw the
-provisions on to the deck, leapt inboard, and placed the breaker
-betwixt a couple of loose planks. The moon was shining brightly, and
-its light rippled in lines of lustrous pearl. The heave of the sea was
-slow and solemn, the wind was soft and weak, and the west was still
-scored with streaks of crimson; but night was at hand, and some stars
-were trembling in the east.
-
-She was one of those little brigs which are among the quaintest of
-the marine objects of the port or harbour. Her forward-deck from the
-main-hatchway was heaped with timber cleverly stowed, with room for
-a little caboose and a narrow alley to it from the hatch. Some of the
-running rigging lay loose about the decks, and this gave her a look of
-confusion. Otherwise, from the appearance of her deck cargo, it was
-clear that she had not been hurt by weather. A deck-house nearly filled
-the quarter-deck; there was just room on either hand for a man to walk.
-
-The captain stood silent for a minute staring about him. He then
-muttered:
-
-"Nothing moves; I see nothing alive. He may be there. Come, for it will
-be you to see him first."
-
-He went to the door of the deck-house, and Julia followed. Two windows
-stood on either side the door, and four windows ran down either wall.
-But when they entered the moon made so faint a light through the door
-and the windows that it was difficult to see. Yet distinctive features
-of the interior were visible: a table, three or four chairs, and a
-bulkhead abaft, which might screen from the living-room two holes for
-the skipper and his mate to sleep in.
-
-"Call him," whispered the captain, as though he stood in a dead-house.
-
-"Johnny!" cried the girl, "come to father if you are here, Johnny!"
-
-She had a wonderful spirit to say this. She felt the horrible mockery
-of it and the recoil of its ghastly derisiveness upon her heart, but
-she knew that Hardy could not be far off, and would seek her. The
-passion of life was strong in her, and she judged that her only chance
-lay in inspiriting the poor man's dreadful conviction that she could
-help him to find his son.
-
-"Call him again," said the captain, and again she called.
-
-He advanced a step, and she saw him in the faint suffusion straining
-in a posture of desperate gaze, of desperate hearkening, as though his
-teeth were set and the sweat of blood was on his brow, and the palms of
-his hands were bloody with the penetration of the finger-nails.
-
-At that moment she heard a single stroke of a bell. She started with
-a cry, with instant rejoicing, for she believed there were men in the
-vessel.
-
-"What was that?" said the captain.
-
-"A bell!" she exclaimed.
-
-"O God! it may be Johnny!" he shouted, and he rushed through the open
-door.
-
-She quickly followed; she was not a superstitious fool, she was a girl
-at sea, and, as a girl might, she supposed that if a bell were struck
-upon a ship's deck it was by a man.
-
-A small bell was hung betwixt the foremast and the foremost end of the
-galley or caboose, and immediately under it lay, bottom up, secured
-to the deck, a small tub of a boat. It was easy to understand why the
-bell should have tolled. It had been struck by some bight of buntline
-or clewline in the sway of the brig as she heeled to the fold, and the
-sharp return of the bell jerked the tongue against the metal side in a
-single stroke.
-
-But the captain was too mad to understand this, and Julia was a girl at
-sea without eyes for bights of running gear. She was startled, nay, a
-sudden horror of superstition visited her when following the captain.
-She stood near the bell and saw no signs of human creature. She cast
-looks of fear all about; one, even one, man would protect her against
-the horrible yokedom of this passage. The planks had the sheen of satin
-in the moonlight, and the power of the satellite sufficed to fling dark
-shadows upon the decks, and these shadows moved as the brig rolled. But
-she saw no man; and what ghostly hand then had struck that bell? For
-the night might go before the swing of the bight of gear should, by
-adjustment of the rolling of the vessel, exactly hit the bell again and
-make it ring.
-
-The captain began to call, "Johnny, Johnny, where are you? Come out of
-your hiding-place, little sonny. Here's father waiting for you."
-
-He breathed deep, listening and gazing about him; but no other reply
-reached his ear than the sob of water under the bow, the moan of night
-wind in the rigging, the sullen slap of canvas against the mast.
-
-"Do you see him?" the captain asked, and the eyes of madness sparkled
-in the moonshine as he turned his gaze upon the girl.
-
-She answered, huskily, "No, I do not see him. Who struck that bell?"
-
-"He did," said the captain. "O God! O everlasting Father! Why does he
-hide himself from me?"
-
-He clasped his hands and raised them and looked up, and in that posture
-he muttered as though he prayed, and all the while Julia was staring
-about her, faint with fear, and with the sight of that imploring figure
-of afflicted manhood; for who had struck the bell? And did the dead
-come to life again in phantoms? And was the spirit of Johnny invisibly
-present?
-
-Poor Julia!
-
-"He may come out of his hiding-place if we go aft," said the captain in
-his voice of cunning. "Stop!"
-
-He stepped to the little caboose and entered it.
-
-"Not here, not here," he groaned as he came out, "but we must have
-patience. We will sit and wait. We'll sit and watch the deck, and at
-any moment you may see his little figure coming along."
-
-Weak with fear and superstition, and the horror of her ghastly
-situation, she followed the miserable man to the deck-house. He entered
-and brought out two chairs, which he placed in front of the door,
-and they sat down. It was certain that the man believed the child to
-be in this abandoned vessel, and this was assurance to Julia that he
-would not compel her to enter the boat and sail away in search of the
-boy. The thought inspired some faint hope; she knew that this was no
-unfrequented tract of ocean, and that even if Hardy did not seek her,
-any hour next day might bring along some ship which she could signal to
-by flourishing her handkerchief. But Hardy! She began to think whilst
-her dreadful companion sat beside her staring along the moonlighted
-deck, and waiting for his boy to come. She fully understood that she
-had been drugged; her thoughts went to the medicine-chest; had the
-captain poisoned Hardy and the rest of the crew that he might steal
-her from the ship? This puzzled her, for if the crew had been drugged
-they might have been drugged to death by the irresponsible hand of this
-madman, and Hardy would be lost to her for ever, and his ship would not
-come to rescue her.
-
-These were her thoughts "too deep for tears," but it was fortunate
-that she had slept soundly and well in the boat, for now, though
-wearied in bone and faint at heart, she was as sleepless as the poor,
-tireless creature beside her. She could not have endured to enter the
-deck-house and rest there; she needed the companionship of the moon
-and the stars, and the visible surface of the deep blackening out from
-either hand the wake of the luminary to its limitless recesses. The
-whisper of the wind in the rigging was companionship, but the movements
-of the shadows upon the whitened planks were a perpetual fear, for who
-had struck the bell? and was the vessel haunted? Her throat was parched
-and she asked for water.
-
-"Certainly; oh, yes. He is long in coming, but when he comes we'll
-rejoin the ship," the captain said as he rose, and quite sanely he went
-to the breaker, filled the tumbler, and returned with a glassful and a
-biscuit.
-
-There was the courtesy of good breeding in the poor fellow as he handed
-her the glass, for the soul that is never mad will shine through
-disease, and Captain Layard, who was born a gentleman, proved a
-gentleman even when insane. She drank gratefully and ate the biscuit.
-
-He took the glass from her and filled it for himself, but did not eat.
-Then he returned to his chair, and that dreadful watch on deck again
-began. Often he would say:
-
-"Do you see him? Why should he keep in hiding?"
-
-And sometimes he would quit his seat and go to the rail, and look into
-the sea over the side.
-
-The water swarmed with fire this night; the chilly sea-glow started in
-fibres, in clouds like luminous smoke, in coils like revolving eels,
-and it is conceivable that the crazed eye which was bent upon these
-lights should fashion them into phantasms, into grotesque shapes, into
-the crowd of brassy faces which the sealed but waking vision beholds
-when the brain is drugged. He would spend twenty minutes in searching
-the waters, and then cross to the other side and spend a quarter of
-an hour in a like hunt. Always when he returned to his chair he would
-mutter to himself, "Why doesn't he come?" And once he started up with
-a frantic cry which was frightful with inarticulateness; he dashed his
-hand to his forehead and held it there, with his left arm stiffened out
-and the fingers curled with the agony of his mind.
-
-At that moment the bell was again struck, and now it was Julia who
-shrieked. She started up and bent her head forward, thinking to see the
-figure that had struck the bell. The captain broke into a wild laugh.
-
-"I see him! I see him!" he cried. "O Johnny, I'm your father!" and
-he started into a run with his arms outstretched, as if to seize the
-phantom he beheld.
-
-He ran past the bell, and crying, "I am coming, Johnny, I am coming!"
-climbed on to the top of the deck load, and in a strange croaking
-voice, as though it proceeded from some huge sea-bird sailing overhead,
-he exclaimed:
-
-"There you are at last, my Johnny! Father is coming to you!" and sprang
-overboard.
-
-Julia fell upon the deck and lay lifeless in a swoon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THEY MEET
-
-
-It was moonlight on the sea, and the full-rigged ship _York_ lay with
-her canvas aback, silently heaving upon the swell. But by the eye of
-a sailor a certain moisture would have been visible in the silver
-suffusion, and he might hardly have needed to look at the glass to
-guess that this calm scene of ocean night would in a few hours show a
-changed face. The time was shortly after ten.
-
-The lamp in the cabin was unlighted, but the moon shone upon the
-skylight, and the darkness was whitened by it, and all features of the
-interior were visible. Hardy lay stretched upon the cabin deck, and
-within an arm's reach of him rested the great Newfoundland dog, secured
-by a chain to the leg of the table. The picture was wonderful for its
-human stillness: you heard no tramp of foot, no call of voice. The
-very sails slept against the masts, and nothing was audible but the
-complaint of a bulkhead or some strong fastening as the ship sluggishly
-took the run of the fold.
-
-All of a sudden Hardy opened his eyes, and having opened them he
-kept them open, staring with just that look of bewilderment and
-astonishment which had been in Julia's dawning gaze. He tried to raise
-his head and thought it was a cannon-ball, but the dog had noticed the
-motion, and instantly alert with joy barked in deep-throated notes,
-with endless wagging of the tail.
-
-This tremendous noise close in his ear was as galvanism to the dead
-frog. Hardy sat up and looked at the dog and then looked round him,
-and feeling all the sensations of a man drugged with liquor, believed,
-without being able to remember, that he had fallen down drunk. This
-is the sensation of the man who is fortunate enough to awake from the
-stupefaction of laudanum.
-
-"Good God! What is this?" Hardy muttered, and he squeezed his brow with
-his hands as you would wring a swab to drain the wet out of it:
-
-Then slowly memory began to operate, whilst the dog was straining to
-reach him and caress him. "My God!" he thought after a passage of
-reflection, "the madman poisoned us when we drank his health!" And then
-it all came to him. He rose to his feet, but his legs trembled and he
-could hardly stand. "Where is Julia?" and next, "Where is the captain?"
-
-The dog began to bark with something of fury, and Hardy with trembling
-hands removed the collar from the brute's neck. The noble animal
-sprang upon Hardy in affectionate caress and nearly felled him with
-its weight, then dashed into the captain's cabin, the door of which
-swung ajar, and Hardy followed. He could hardly see, it was so dark
-here, and he felt the captain's bunk and wandered round on staggering
-legs, feeling. His throat was as hot as the bowl of a lighted pipe,
-and it felt the hotter when he heard the dog in the cabin lapping
-at some water in the dish that was meant for its use. He went to the
-swing-tray, where there was water, and drank a full draught, which
-greatly helped him both in wits and body, then entered Julia's cabin
-and felt the bunk and found she was not there. "What has he done?" he
-thought, and with heavy limbs he made his way on deck.
-
-The light was brilliant enough after the cabin gloom, and he could see
-clearly. He stood in the hatch, holding by the companion-hood.
-
-Abreast of him lay, in convulsed posture, the figure of the second
-mate, Candy. He turned his head and saw the shape of a man lying
-prostrate beside the wheel. He took note by the aid of the moon that
-the wheel was lashed, then his eyes travelled to a pair of empty
-davits, and he staggered to them and looked down. He could trace the
-black lines of the falls, and saw the blocks as the ship swayed,
-kindling fire in the dark water.
-
-He was a sailor, and at once understood it all. A groan escaped his
-lips whilst he thought, "He has gone away in the boat with Julia
-to seek his son. How am I to recover her?" And the horror of her
-situation--alone in an open boat with a madman--penetrated his heart,
-and seemed to petrify him. He could just distinguish two or three dark
-figures overhanging the forecastle rail, and a couple of sailors lay
-motionless upon the deck a little way abaft the galley.
-
-The dog had bounded up out of the cabin, and was wandering around
-sniffing at one silent figure and another: no doubt he was in quest of
-his master. Then it occurred to Hardy to remember that the grog had
-been served out at noon. Suppose he had got away at two.
-
-What sort of breeze was then blowing?
-
-He reflected and remembered.
-
-He would sail dead away and right before it, for he had no destination,
-and was sure to shape the crow's course. "Grant her four miles an hour,
-and this is ten o'clock," he thought, pulling out his watch and holding
-it to the moon. "The boat may have covered thirty miles of sea. They
-may have been fallen in with and rescued, for Julia would shriek her
-story, and the captain might believe that Johnny was aboard. But how
-shall I know? How shall I know? I must take it that the boat is still
-afloat, and Julia must be saved."
-
-He considered the direction of the wind, and made up his mind to the
-course that must be steered; but now as to the crew. He went to Candy
-and, kneeling, shook him, put his hand to his face, put his ear to his
-mouth, and easily saw that he was dead. The discovery thrilled through
-him like the cut of a sword on the shoulder. He walked to the figure
-beside the wheel, and in a little while could not doubt that the man,
-too, was dead. It was not because he was a doctor's son that he needed
-to be informed of the action of a heavy dose of laudanum, or some
-poisonous drug of that sort, upon the movements of a weak heart. But
-there were live men forward, and with sluggish motions of his limbs he
-went that way.
-
-He stooped over the two figures abaft the galley, and detected life in
-them. He then stepped on to the forecastle, and the first man he spoke
-to was the boatswain, who was resting his head in his arm upon the
-rail. He now saw there were three others near him, and two were sitting
-on the coamings of the forescuttle.
-
-"The captain was mad and has drugged us," said Hardy. "He has taken the
-lady with him, and I want to give chase. Where are the rest of the men?"
-
-"As the Lord is God," answered the boatswain, "don't my precious head
-know it's been drugged. Talk o' Shanghaing! But I never knowed it from
-the hand of a skipper nor worse than this."
-
-"I want to trim sail, and make a start to rescue the lady," said Hardy.
-
-"You'll not get the men to move if there was twenty ladies to be
-rescooed," responded the boatswain, who spoke as if he was drunk.
-
-"I ha'n't got strength to lift a sprat to my mouth if I was starving,"
-said one of the men, who leaned with folded arms as though at any
-moment the three of them would sink exhausted to the deck.
-
-It drove Hardy crazy with a consuming desire to start in chase to see
-their helplessness and to feel his own. But what was he to do! Here
-were four men, and two sitting on the coamings of the scuttle, and two
-alive, though prostrate, near the galley--eight men, and more perhaps
-below in the forecastle.
-
-So he went to the hatch and asked the two men how they felt. They
-answered with curses, swearing they'd have hove the captain overboard
-before he should ha' poisoned them.
-
-"He was mad," said Hardy. "I knew it, and wondered you didn't see it
-and ask me to act. He has poisoned me and stolen my sweetheart away to
-her destruction, but we'll chase the beggar the moment we are able."
-
-They growled out something and he looked down the scuttle. A sailor
-had lighted the slush lamp; some man, perhaps, who was less ill than
-the others on recovery, or who had the best sense then about. Hardy
-descended and stood under the hatch, looking round him. I would not
-like to say how many men were here, because I do not know what the
-owner of the ship chose to think her complement. Hardy might have
-counted eight or ten men, in bunks, hammocks, or seated on their
-sea-chests. The faces he saw were ghastly, as though this ocean-parlour
-were plague-stricken. He went from one to another to see if all were
-alive, and they all proved so. The swing of the flame flung shadows
-like contortions on the visible faces. It was hot down here, and Hardy
-felt sick with the drug, whose effects were not yet expended. Some
-breathed deep: the human respiration threaded the subdued moan of water.
-
-"What's been done to us?" said a man sitting on a chest.
-
-"We've all been drugged by a lunatic who's carried off my sweetheart,"
-answered Hardy. "There's to be a shift of weather, and the ship's under
-all plain sail and aback, and the helm lashed. Any of you here able to
-come on deck and swing the yards and take the wheel?"
-
-The devil a one! So Hardy climbed with leaden limbs through the square
-hole and walked slowly aft, and sat down on the skylight.
-
-The Newfoundland came out of a shadow and lay at his feet. A fair
-light, with power of painting jetty strokes that slided upon the
-pale planks, flowed from the moon. But the broken orb was hazy, and
-the mate's eyes saw the darkness of wind gathering in vapour in the
-west or thereabouts. So the breeze that had been steady all day was
-to harden sooner or later out of its quarter, and the ship under all
-plain sail lay aback to it. But Hardy felt too weak to move the wheel,
-even if by so doing he could have helped the ship; nor, though she
-could have swung to fill her breasts with canvas, which would have
-been impossible, he'd have let her lie as she was because, with the
-yards trimmed as they stood, he couldn't have shaped a course for the
-direction which he believed the madman had taken.
-
-He sat and thought and waited. It was miserable to see the dead figure
-of Candy lying there, and miserable when he turned his head to see the
-dead figure of the sailor beside the wheel. What an unparalleled act!
-How deep and cunning beyond all credibility, and yet as true as the
-misty radiance floating in shimmering folds upon the dark and silent
-heave! His brain was every minute clearing, and he realised more
-intently as the time slipped by that, if yonder shadow meant heavy
-weather, the girl was lost, unless a passing ship had picked them up;
-but how would Hardy know?
-
-In about half an hour one of the figures at the forecastle rail came
-slowly aft. He stopped and bent over the two forms lying abaft the
-galley. Hardy heard him speak to them, and he could just catch the
-murmur of their replies. They had therefore come to, and no doubt would
-be sitting up and moving about shortly.
-
-The figure that had left the forecastle rail came along, and Hardy saw
-it was the boatswain. The man went to the body of Candy, and looking
-round said, in a hollow voice:
-
-"Is he dead?"
-
-"Ay, stone dead; and so is yonder," replied Hardy.
-
-"What took him to do it?" asked the boatswain, coming to Hardy's side.
-
-"Why does a madman tear up his clothes?" replied Hardy. "How are those
-fellows in the waist there?"
-
-"They're reviving," answered the boatswain. "He must ha' put plenty in.
-Dommed if ever I was treated like this before by the capt'n of a ship.
-Tell you what, sir, there's weather comin' along," and he cast the eye
-of an experienced sailor up aloft at the canvas and then at the moon,
-at which he shook his head.
-
-Yes, her broken face had taken a glutinous reddish look as though she
-was a smear of pink currant jam, and her light was gone out of the
-sea. There was no more wind, but it was thickening westwards, and you
-might look for a slap of squall any moment, the shriek of the shot of
-the storm gun sweeping betwixt shroud and mast, and the ship lay aback
-under all plain sail, and there was no longer light of moonshine on her
-canvas.
-
-"Just see if we can't get men enough to brace these yards square," said
-Hardy. "We can let go and clew up and wait till the men are strong
-enough to stow the canvas; but if we lie like this something may come
-to whip the masts out of her."
-
-But it was a full half-hour before hands enough could be collected, and
-they all seemed as though freshly awakened from the crimp's debauch;
-their knees shook, their heads lolled, they lifted their arms as though
-they were operated upon by slow machinery. Yet the business, in a
-fashion, was contrived. They clewed up the royals and topgallantsails,
-they hauled up the mainsail, they let go some jib and staysail
-halliards, and they brailed the mizzen to the mast. The least dead
-of the poor fellows took the helm, and the ship with her head to the
-eastward, with much flap of canvas aloft, bowed slowly over the black
-run of swell. Her pace was very slow because the wind was light, and
-all the canvas she showed to it were two topsails and her forecourse.
-
-This was as Hardy desired, because the moon was slowly vanishing like
-a dimming stain of bloody ooze, and it promised a black night. If he
-had held the ship moving under all her wings she would have passed the
-boat if she had not run her down, for it was his conviction, heaven
-inspired, that the madman had blown away straight before it, and how
-prophetically right he was in that we all know, and yet for some hours
-it remained very quiet, though black as the inside of a coal sack.
-Again this was as Hardy could have prayed for, as this raven serenity
-promised security to the boat, and if it lasted till daybreak she might
-be in sight.
-
-The mate and another man placed the two bodies on the quarter-deck side
-by side under the bulwarks, clear of the gear, and hid them under a
-tarpaulin. It would not have been proper nor decent to have buried them
-out of hand, for though Hardy had no doubt that they were dead, he yet
-felt that time should be given to prove it; and so the two figures lay
-motionless under the tarpaulin.
-
-The stars and moon went out and it blew very faint with a deepening
-of the blackness overhead, so that you looked for lightning. About
-three o'clock some of the men had come out of the forecastle, and by
-Hardy's commands the galley fire was lighted and strong coffee brewed.
-This wonderfully refreshed the men, and Hardy then asked them if they
-thought they were strong enough to go aloft and furl the lighter
-canvas, as he could not tell at what moment heavy weather might set
-in. The poor fellows managed it somehow, but were long over it. Then
-as many as were equal furled the mainsail, at which hour it was hard
-upon daybreak. In the blackness of those small hours it was impossible
-to guess the character of the sky, and in which direction the soot of
-it was trending. But all of a sudden the wind freshened with a long,
-melancholy wail, as though 'twas the spirit of the night that was
-dying, the troubled water ran in fitful flashes, and the ship broke the
-brine into white foam about her. The mate talked with the boatswain
-beside the quarter-deck skylight: they were both almost recovered, and
-you could hear reviving life in voices about the deck.
-
-"I have no doubt," said Hardy, "that the captain blew away straight
-from the ship's side, because you see he had no destination in his
-mind."
-
-"Not onlikely," answered the boatswain.
-
-"Suppose I'm right," continued Hardy, "then I reckon we're not abreast
-of her yet; but if I pass the boat before the light comes and it proves
-thick, as I fancy you'll find it, we shall miss her for good, and I
-want my sweetheart badly."
-
-"That's quite natural," said the boatswain. "We're walkin' now and the
-breeze freshens, and if you think you are right, sir, in steering as
-we go, then what d'ye say to hauling up the foresail and lowering the
-maintopsail-yard on the cap, and manning the reef-tackles?"
-
-"Get it done," said Hardy.
-
-It was easily done, for it was not a furling job. A bit of sea was
-beginning to run; it smacked the ship under the counter, and flooded
-the wake with light. Hardy walked up and down the deck, mad with desire
-for daybreak. He was steering by a theory of a madman's action, and
-he might be wrong, and if he was wrong--but even if he was right, how
-would the boat fare in the sea that was now running with a madman at
-the yoke, and the full sail and tearing sheet gripped by the hand of
-madness?
-
-These were considerations scarce endurable to the man, and for ever he
-was sending searching glances ahead for the ghastly hue of the dawn.
-The day broke at last, and it was a day of gloom and mist and a narrow
-horizon; the sky was a dome of apparently motionless vapour, and each
-surge ere it broke arched in an edge of flint, and the whole surface
-was an olive-green decorated by lines of foam.
-
-As yet there was no great weight in the wind, but the sailor's eyes
-saw that more was to be expected. Hardy went to his cabin for a glass
-of his own. He slung it over his shoulder, and regaining the deck
-sprang aloft to the height of the mizzen-top, from which altitude,
-with the glass set firmly against the topmast-rigging, he searched the
-sea. As the lenses made the circuit there leapt into the field of the
-telescope the apparition of a little brig unmistakenly derelict, with
-loose canvas hollowing like a kite against the masts. He examined her
-intently, and then muttering, "They may be aboard that vessel. It is
-a chance. The madman may have taken refuge, or thought his son was
-there," he threw the strap of the telescope over his head, and noting
-the brig's bearing, descended.
-
-He walked rapidly aft to the compass, and found that the brig was in
-sight from the quarter-deck. She bore a little to the west of south.
-The Newfoundland, seeing Hardy looking, spied the brig and barked his
-report of a sail in sight.
-
-"Lads!" shouted Hardy, running a little way forward, "there is a
-brig on the quarter. We'll see if she can give us any news, although
-abandoned. Starboard mainbrace, starboard foretopsail-brace smartly as
-possible, my lads. Starboard your helm!"
-
-And slowly, for the helm was wearily worked and the braces were dragged
-by languid hands, the yards came round, and then the maintopsail
-was mastheaded, and the ship with the wind right abeam crushed the
-flint-like surge into froth, and forged ahead for the abandoned vessel.
-
-It was time to make for her if she was to be visited at all, for the
-horizon was narrowing and narrowing with the thickness of rain, and
-soon within the distance of a mile the brig would have vanished.
-Hardy's glass was full of powerful lenses--its magnifying power was
-double that of the ship's telescope; when he now put it to his eye he
-instantly saw a figure just this side of the brig's main-rigging waving
-something white.
-
-His heart brightened. He looked again. She was a woman, and alone! The
-boatswain was coming aft as Hardy looked forward.
-
-"There's a figure aboard that brig," he shouted. "It's a woman, and
-she's waving a handkerchief."
-
-"She'll be yourn," said the boatswain, and as surprise did not
-immediately follow perception, he added, "Well, I'm damned!"
-
-"Stand by to back the maintopsail!" roared Hardy, who was delirious
-with excitement. "Let some hands lay aft and clear away the starboard
-quarter-boat ready for lowering. I'd board her if twice this sea was
-running. I knew I was right. I knew he'd head straight away. I knew I'd
-find her by shaping the madman's course."
-
-"Suppose it isn't her?" said the boatswain.
-
-"To hell with your supposings!" yelled Hardy. "In any case it's a
-woman, and she must be taken off."
-
-The men came aft and got ready the boat and stood aft, prepared for the
-command to back the maintopsail. Again Hardy levelled the glass. The
-girl--for we know who it was--had ceased to flutter her handkerchief;
-but the wind, full of wet, bewildered the eye, and the mate would make
-no more of it than this: the figure was a woman.
-
-He headed the _York_ so as to heave to to windward of the brig, and
-a little while before the topsail-yard was backed Hardy had seen and
-mentally kissed the poor girl's face in the lens, and frantic with joy
-was waving his cap to her, whilst she, guessing who it would be that
-motioned thus, tossed her handkerchief again and again.
-
-The ship was brought to a stand, and Hardy shouted, "I am coming to
-fetch you."
-
-She waved her hand. There was an ugly bit of sea between for a boat,
-choppy, with deep sucking hollows, and plenty of spiteful foam to
-whiten over the low gunwales.
-
-"Who'll volunteer?" said Hardy. "Three will do."
-
-"Blast me," said one of them, "if I don't feel as I should be in the
-road in a boat."
-
-"_You_'re likely," said Hardy, pointing to another--"and you, and you.
-Three will do, and it shall be two pound a man, which God knows I
-wouldn't offer for a deed of duty, only you're lowered by the captain's
-drug."
-
-"Right y' are, sir," said Jim, who got in the boat and was followed by
-Tom and Joe.
-
-The mate sprang into the stern-sheets and shipped the rudder.
-
-"Lower away handsomely!" he shouted, "and drop the hauling part that we
-may overhaul the falls."
-
-Unfortunately the blocks were without patent clip hooks, and the moment
-the boat was water-borne the fore-bottom of her was nearly wrenched out
-by her fall into the hollow ere the languid bow oar could release the
-block. But it was done, and they got away.
-
-She nearly filled three times in her passage. The drag of the oars was
-not strong enough; they wanted the long and steady sweep of their old
-power to rescue the boat from the arch of foam astern. Yet they managed
-to get alongside, and with the swift leap of the sailor Hardy gained
-the main-chains, and in a minute was standing on the main-deck, with
-Julia sobbing in his arms.
-
-"Where is the captain?" were almost the first words Hardy addressed to
-her.
-
-"He drowned himself," she answered, speaking sobbingly with tumult
-of passion. "He made me sit there beside him"--she pointed to the
-deck-house front--"and watch for the coming of the boy. The bell was
-struck--it was strangely struck. He thought it was his child, and he
-ran forward and climbed upon those pieces of timber as though his
-little son was beckoning, and then he cried out he was coming and
-sprang overboard, and I fainted. Oh, since I returned to consciousness
-what a time it has been! And yet--and yet I felt you were near and
-would come."
-
-As she spoke the wind howled with a sudden note of raving in the
-rigging, and deep as the brig was her loose canvas was inswept till
-it depressed her by a couple of strakes, and you might have thought
-she was settling, and with this sudden blast came on a heavy squall of
-rain, which thickened the air till the ship that was on the quarter
-loomed a surging and streaming phantom. At the same moment cries were
-heard over the side. Hardy rushed to the rail, and what did he see?
-
-The boat was stove and full! One man had disappeared, and the two
-others were floating a fathom or two beyond her locked in each other's
-embrace.
-
-Hardy sprang to the brig's quarter, crying, "O God! O my God!" as he
-ran.
-
-He slipped some bights of running gear off a pin, and yelling "Look out
-for the end of this line!" he hove.
-
-One could not swim, and clung to the other who could, and there was
-no virtue in a rope's end though flung by an angel of God to save
-them. For one moment the line was close; the desperate heave of the
-half-drowned fabric dragged it fathoms out of reach. The pitiless seas
-broke over them, and with agony of mind, and a heart almost in halves,
-Hardy saw them vanish.
-
-The girl stood beside him with uplifted arms, frozen by horror into the
-marble rigidity of a statue. It was going to blow a gale. The black
-scowl of the sky had the menace of storm in its fixity. No yellow
-curl of scud, no faintness here or there relieved that grim, austere,
-down-look. The day might have been closing, so dusky it was with the
-flying sheets of rain and the white haze torn out of the foaming brow
-by the rending hand of the wind. The seas swung fast and fierce, and
-serpentine pillars of white water leapt on high from the brig's side,
-and fled in shrieking clouds of sparkles to leeward.
-
-"We shall lose the ship," said Hardy, with the coolness of desperation.
-"We could not launch that boat," and he pointed to the small, chubby
-fabric that lay stowed near the foremast; "and if we could she would
-not live a minute. What became of your boat?"
-
-"I looked for her," she answered, "and saw her floating yonder in the
-moonlight. The captain fastened her rope to something and it slipped."
-
-"Come out of the wet," said he. "We can do no good here. They'll keep
-the ship hove to, and the weather may clear by noon."
-
-They entered the deck-house, and Hardy began to explore it, and in
-the two little cabins aft he found all the information he required
-about this abandoned brig. The log-book was dated down to two days
-earlier, and the entries were by a hand that spelt in the speech of
-Newcastle-on-Tyne. She was the _Betsy_, of Sunderland. The sea began to
-flow into her on a sudden to some gape or yarn of butt-end; you can't
-tell how it is until you dry-dock them. She would have gone down in
-an hour, despite her pump, but for the timber on which she floated.
-By the entries it was clear the crew had stuck to her for two days.
-Hardy then guessed that, growing weary of waiting for a ship, they
-had gone away in the boat. In one cabin he found a telescope and an
-old-fashioned quadrant, some wearing apparel, and a tall hat such as an
-old skipper might wear, bronzed by weather, and instantly suggesting to
-an active imagination a round, purple face, streaks of white whisker, a
-chocolate-coloured shawl round the throat, and a nose of the colour of
-a bottle of rum in the sun.
-
-The old fagot was beginning to tumble about, the water foamed on the
-deck, and the launch of the surge at the staggering bow would strike a
-whole sheet of spume over the forestay, and then it fell in cataractal
-thunder. Hardy shut the deck-house door. He was something more than
-uneasy. Their alarming situation drove all thought of the wonder of it
-out of his head. If it came on harder and a heavy sea ran, would this
-old sieve hold together? would the deck-house cling to the deck? What
-would they do aboard the _York_? Candy was dead and she was without a
-navigator. The boatswain was a good practical seaman, and in him lay
-Hardy's hope. The boatswain was not the man to abandon the mate and the
-girl if he could help it. But suppose the ship was blown away so that
-when the weather cleared the brig was not in sight, what would, or
-rather, what _could_, the boatswain do? He had not the navigator's art,
-and might not therefore know how to pick the brig up. Their condition
-was frightful; the lazarette was awash; he could not seek food in
-flooded timber. He sat down beside the girl.
-
-"I cannot realise that you are with me," she said.
-
-Her dress was damp, and raindrops sparkled upon her face and hair. He
-drew out his handkerchief, which lay dry in his pocket, and softly
-passed it over her face and hair. She was loving him with her eyes.
-Never did human passion make the eyes of a woman more beautiful.
-
-"You must be starving," he said.
-
-"No, the captain brought some food and water."
-
-"Tell me where it is," he cried, starting to his feet.
-
-She told him where the breaker was and the glass, and the parcel of
-provisions. He rushed out. The contents of the breaker could not be
-hurt by the flying brine and rain; and mercifully the provisions had
-been so placed that the breaker and the planks between which the
-captain had placed them kept them dry.
-
-Hardy ran into the deck-house with the food, put the glass in his
-pocket, and returned again with the breaker, from which only two or
-three drinks had been drawn.
-
-"Thank God for this!" said he, and he felt almost happy.
-
-She had but little knowledge of the sea, and could not interpret
-their condition to the full of its tragic significance. Her heart
-was almost joyous because her sweetheart was at her side; though
-death was hovering over that reeling fabric, its shadow was not upon
-her spirit. She was rescued by the man she loved from the horrors of
-loneliness on the wide sea, from imaginations which had been excited in
-her by those two mysterious strokes on the bell, and by her horrible
-association with a madman. The brig reeled and groaned to the sweep
-of the strong wind in the canvas, which was like to stream from the
-yards in hairs of cloth if the weather hardened. Again and again Hardy
-left the girl's side to step on deck and see how it was. The sky was
-a yellowish thickness down to within a mile, out of which the flying
-comber flashed, and the scene was a giddy pantomime of racing seas.
-This old bucket of brig was taking it gallantly over her bows. Hardy
-went forward to see if the only boat survived, and found her sitting
-secure, seized to eye-bolts, and ready for turning over and launching
-by tackles when the weather permitted.
-
-This comforted him, and he stepped into the little caboose which some
-lee sea might hurl into the scuppers at any moment. Here, to his great
-delight, in a drawer he found some twenty or thirty ship's biscuits,
-a bottle half-full of rum, and a large piece of boiled pork on a tin
-dish; he also found a black-handled knife and fork on a shelf where
-stood a row of china plates, one of which he took down.
-
-With this booty, half pocketed and half in arms, he returned to the
-deck-house, at whose door the girl had stood waiting for him, and spite
-of the flying brine, and the sickly reel of the half-foundered brig,
-and the thunder of the wind aloft, and their own dreadful situation,
-the vision of Bax's farm rose before his mind's eye as he saw her
-standing in that door in the old incomparable posture, the straw hat
-slightly cocked, the head a little on one side, the left hand on the
-hip.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-HARD WEATHER
-
-
-Hardy carefully put away the good things he had discovered, and then
-made a pork sandwich with biscuits, and poured out a little rum which
-he mingled with water, and they both made a meal.
-
-Had she been alone she would have been dying of fear; her lover was
-with her, and the sea had no terrors. They talked as they ate.
-
-"I foresaw heavy weather," said he, "but not the loss of three men.
-We shall lose the ship, I fear; there are no signs of the weather
-clearing. My God! how this beast wallows! Why, you'd think the sun had
-burst out!"
-
-For just then the air was whitened by a great sheet of water.
-
-"If the boat forward is carried away--" He checked himself, and then
-continued, "If we lose the _York_ we shall be picked up by something
-else. These old north-countrymen are born to live."
-
-"I am seeing life on the ocean," said Julia, smiling at him.
-
-"Why, it has come as thick as cockroaches," he answered. "When you get
-home you shall write your story, and the critics who take shipping on
-a summer day from Putney to Henley will exclaim as one man, 'What a
-lie!'"
-
-"Who rang the bell?" said Julia. "That question will worry me whilst I
-live."
-
-A sea struck the deck-house and blinded the weather-windows. The sturdy
-structure quivered. Hardy waited until the water had roared away
-overboard, and then said:
-
-"A bell will strike of itself in a rolling ship. I have heard it. Or it
-was hit by a rope. Do you believe in ghosts, Julia?"
-
-"I don't want to."
-
-"The stroke was a sudden come-to in the reel of the brig, or a rope did
-it," said Hardy, and she tried to look as though she believed him.
-
-Thus they talked whilst they sat in the deck-house, for out of it they
-would have stood to be washed overboard. The seas poured in gray-green
-folds, and the foam rolled about the decks like the cream of the
-breaker on shelving sand. She was a stout bucket and strongly knit, and
-if all had been well with her she would have sported with this breeze.
-Her canvas was setting her to the eastwards broadside on, and Hardy
-was glad of it, because he guessed that the _York_ would remain hove
-to, and that her drift would not be much greater than the sag of this
-half-drowned Geordie.
-
-But though he looked abroad he never witnessed any signs of
-improvement, or even promise of improvement, in the weather. It was not
-blowing harder, however, which was a good thing, yet he guessed that
-even if the weight of the wind remained as it stood, then, should it
-blow all night, a fair daybreak would not reveal the _York_, in which
-case they were shipwrecked, and must either wait to be taken off, or
-trust to God's mercy to keep the boat in her place forward, that
-they might launch her, and seek the succour that would not come. The
-deck-house was often hit by the sea, but the blows were rarely hard,
-and there was more terror in the thunder of the stroke than in the
-possibility of the structure going.
-
-"I see a scuttle-butt out there," said he once during the course of the
-morning.
-
-"What's that?" she asked.
-
-"A cask for holding fresh water for the men to drink when on deck."
-
-He stepped out, got under the rail, and crept to the scuttle-butt with
-the foam about his feet. The dipper hung by a sling; he dropped it
-through the hole and brought it up full, and tasting it found it fairly
-sweet, sweet enough for human necessity. He added security to the cask
-by further lashings, and covered the hole to protect the water from
-the flying salt, then crept back through the foam to the side of his
-sweetheart, first sending the sight of a falcon piercing the rain-swept
-obscurity of the quarter in which he guessed the _York_ was lying hove
-to. But all was the confusion of the headlong surge, raging in frequent
-collision, the stormy stare of motionless vapour, the wink of the
-sea-flash within the veil of haze, and the universal groaning of old
-ocean when that grim Boatswain, the Gale, whitens her back with the
-thongs of his cat.
-
-About midday they made another meal off pork sandwiches, a godsend to
-the poor creatures. As the time went by and the weather held as before,
-the sense of shipwreck grew keener and keener in Hardy. Not so with the
-girl; compared to what might have been, this wallowing lump of brig,
-filled with timber, straining afloat, was paradise. But Hardy did not
-much relish the notion of having to take to that boat yonder. He could
-see that with the yard-arm tackle which he would find she was to be
-easily got on to her keel, and hoisted out of it by the little winch
-just before the mainmast.
-
-It might prove a job, for his shipmate was a girl; yet much harder
-jobs, girl or no girl, were to be got through at sea. But until the
-weather calmed he could not think of the boat, and if the weather
-did calm and left the brig afloat, which was very probable, and he
-managed to launch the boat, then, bethinking him of Julia and himself
-in that small squab fabric, his heart grew cold; because next to the
-raft the open boat in mid-ocean is the greatest desperation of the
-sailor. Nearly every chapter of its romance is a tragedy. One dies and
-is buried, one goes mad and springs overboard to drink of the crystal
-fountain which is gushing in the sweet valley just there. Another is
-hollow-eyed with famine, and the gaunt cheeks work with the movement of
-the jaw upon the piece of lead or the die of boot-leather, which helps
-the saliva. Hardy knew it all, had tasted some of it, and he could not
-think of Julia and that little open boat and the flawless horizon, more
-pitiless to the wrecked mariner than the cordon of soldiers to the
-famished city, without feeling his heart turn cold.
-
-And now happened something which I fear the reader will think more
-incredible than any other incident in this volume.
-
-After talking a little while together, these two people rose from their
-chairs and knelt down in prayer. Hardy believed in God and in the
-mercy of God, and so did Julia, and he asked God in the simple language
-of the plain English seaman's heart to protect them and be with them,
-and he thanked him for the mercy he had already vouchsafed; and depend
-upon it no British sailor will consider this an unnatural act on the
-part of Hardy, because always the proudest heart of oak in the hour of
-triumph, the most depressed heart of oak in the hour of trial, has been
-accustomed to look up to God and thank or beseech him, for it is he who
-shares the loneliness of the seaman on the wide, wide sea.
-
-But let me assure the reader, also, that lovers do not make love in
-shipwreck as they do under the awning of the passenger liner, or in the
-bower of roses ashore. Death is too near to allow passion to expend
-itself in the form made familiar by the novel. Their talk often went to
-Captain Layard and the amazing cunning he had exhibited in inventing
-the trap they had all fallen into.
-
-"I believe," said Hardy, "only two are dead on board. He had a book to
-give them the doses, and his brain was clearly equal to understanding
-what it said. But would the rum absorb all the poison? Would not one
-man get more than his whack? A few grains more would have done for us
-all. The beggar took care not to drink himself, and none of us thought
-of asking him to."
-
-"How did you feel when you awoke?" she asked.
-
-"Much as you did, I expect," he answered.
-
-But talking was not very easy in this interior. The water, sheeting
-against the deck-house, seethed through speech and confounded it. There
-was the thunder of the fallen sea forward, and the incommunicable
-maledictions of a sodden brig in the trough filled the gale with
-bewilderment as it flew. Every fabric afloat has a voice of her own,
-and like her sailors, she knows how to swear when injured.
-
-In the course of the afternoon Hardy stepped into the after-berths, but
-found nothing to reward his search. The papers of an old timberman are
-uninteresting; the letters of an auld wife of Sunderland to her Geordie
-are sacred, and saving three or four clay pipes and some tobacco, for
-which Hardy was grateful, there was little to be seen worth mentioning.
-If this gale slackened into moderate weather the girl should sleep
-in one of these berths; if not, near the door in the interior on the
-best sort of bed he could contrive, because, as he meant to keep
-watch and watch himself throughout the night, she would be close by
-to rescue if some thunderous surge should discharge the deck-house
-from its obligation of sticking. He had searched for candles and had
-found none; a few boxes of matches were in a sort of desk fixed to the
-bulkhead near the bunk. So he came out of the captain's berth with an
-old mattress, and then he brought some wearing apparel, a heavy coat
-with big horn buttons, and a pair of north-country breeches, which, if
-seized to a stay for fresh air, might fill up and stand out like the
-half of a Dutchman in a jump.
-
-"What's all that for?" said Julia.
-
-He explained, and she loved him, and thought how good he was.
-
-Yes, there are even worse conditions of life to a girl than being
-shipwrecked with a sailor who is a gentleman, and if the gentleman
-informs the spirit of a sailor, its impulse is never greater than when
-it responds to the appeal of a girl's helplessness.
-
-He cut up a little tobacco and smoked a pipe. It seemed to bring
-him within hail of civilisation, and Julia enjoyed the smell of the
-tobacco-smoke immensely, and said it made her think of her father.
-
-"How would he relish this picture?" said he, referring to their
-situation.
-
-"He would not like to be here, that is all he would think. Will this
-brig keep together, do you fancy?"
-
-"Oh, yes, and I'll tell you what--the gale doesn't harden, which is a
-good sign. There was plenty of weather in the moon last night, but in
-these parts it is not often long-lived."
-
-"Is not a tremendous sea running?" she asked.
-
-"Yes, from the Ramsgate or Margate Sands point of view. You must go
-to about fifty-eight south, right off the Horn, and get amongst the
-ice to know what a tremendous sea is like. They come like the cliffs
-of Dover at you, and the deck is up and down, whilst the keel sweeps
-up the acclivity. It is splendid and frightful. I was hove to for a
-fortnight down there; we couldn't drive clear of the ice, and we had
-about four hours of daylight to see by. All the devils in hell raved in
-our rigging as we sat upright a breathless instant on the amazing peak
-we had climbed. No, Julia, this is not a tremendous sea, and the brig
-will hang together and outweather twenty such."
-
-The vessel, however, was acting as though she considered it a
-tremendous sea. Had she been dismasted or a steamer her behaviour could
-not have been worse. Her sails a little steadied her, but her rollings
-and motions and plungings and heavings were sickening and insufferable,
-because she was nearly full of water. She had no buoyancy and the seas
-made a rock of her, and often sprang in green sheets right over her--a
-wet and yelling game of leap-frog.
-
-Late in the afternoon, when it was almost dark, one of these seas
-filled the caboose and swept it to leeward, where it lay stranded. The
-outcry of hurled ironmongery, of crashing china, of skipping knives and
-forks, pot, kettles, and pans, along with the noise of the splintering
-caboose, was enough to make Hardy think that the brig was scattering
-under their feet. The girl grasped his hand when that sea came and the
-galley went; she thought it was all over with them. Hardy kept his
-thoughts to himself: his real anxiety was in the boat, which might be
-washed overboard or dashed into staves, and in the deck-house, which
-was their only shelter.
-
-Happily the old bucket had taken up her position on her own account,
-and it was chiefly the bows and amidships which got the drenches; it
-was seldom that the deck-house was struck by a sea whose weight was a
-menace.
-
-"It is miserable to be without light at sea," said Hardy, "on a black
-night in heavy weather. But there is no lamp here and none in the
-berths, and if there was where should I find oil? We must face it
-through, Julia, and you must sleep."
-
-"I have had more sleep than I want," replied Julia. "I shall not mind
-the darkness if the bell isn't struck."
-
-"It may be struck by a rope, by nothing else. If a ghost, how could
-an essence grasp substance? How could something you could walk through
-lift a knife or try and pull down a lamp-post?"
-
-"I sha'n't like it if I hear it," she replied. "Oh, how dreadful to
-think of him washing about under us! Wretched man! You should have seen
-the unearthly expression of his face whilst he sat staring forward,
-waiting for the little drummer to appear."
-
-"The great poet is true," said Hardy, who had fingered a few volumes in
-his day, albeit he was a sailor in the Merchant Service of England.
-
-
- "'For shapes which come not at an earthly call
- Will not depart when mortal voices bid;
- Lords of the visionary eye whose lid,
- Once raised, remains aghast and will not fall.'"
-
-
-"Those words are true of that poor dead man," said Julia. "Aghast! you
-should have seen him when he turned up his eyes to God and prayed."
-
-The afternoon closed into early evening, and it was as black as a
-wolf's throat at the hour of sundown. Through the windows you could see
-the light of the foam, sudden pallid glares, rushes of dim phosphoric
-gleams which merely made the darkness visible. The brig was a drunken
-vision, and the yells of her rigging might be likened to the screams of
-a tipsy slut who is being thrashed by her man in a thunder-storm.
-
-The two sweethearts ate some biscuit, and Julia held a lighted match
-whilst Hardy mixed some rum and water for them both. They drank out of
-the same glass, and neither of them apologised. Then Hardy felt and
-wound up his watch, for he wanted time, though he couldn't see it then
-except by striking a match. They sat together and I dare say he put
-his arm round her waist, and possibly she supported her head upon his
-shoulder after removing her hat.
-
-It was a ticklish sitting-ground and they sometimes slided, which was a
-very good reason why Hardy should hold her by the waist, and why Julia
-should cling lovingly with her head. And in this posture they entered
-the night and passed perhaps a couple of hours, so that when Hardy
-struck a match he found the time nine.
-
-He made for the mattress, felt and found it, and the north-country
-apparel which was to form the bedclothes. He then lurched back to
-Julia, who did not want to lie down, but he was her lord in resolution
-and her love consented.
-
-Always groping, for despite the sea-flash it was inside here of
-a midnight blackness, he pillowed her head with a garment of
-north-country measurement, and then carefully covering her to the neck
-with the skipper's coat, he pressed his lips to the brow of the girl
-who was to be his wife, and who was therefore sacred to him, and bade
-her sleep and leave him to watch and nod and watch.
-
-And now all that followed was sickening, sloppy, howling, reeling,
-foaming hours of darkness, with nothing in them but the drunken vision
-of brig, and the noisy rage of her straining heart. But at half-past
-three o'clock by Hardy's watch the weather was undoubtedly moderating;
-by five it was blowing a little fresh; by six it was daylight and the
-wind northeast, a pleasant breeze, and the green sea rolled in foamless
-swells, cutting the wake of the sun, which shone brightly out of every
-blue lagoon 'twixt the clouds.
-
-The girl was up and sitting at the table. She had slept a little, but
-that little was sound and good. Hardy brought the telescope out of the
-berth: it was a poor glass, but you could see more through it than with
-the naked eye. The brig was rolling ponderously on the swell, whose
-heave was sometimes too sudden for her, and she would stagger with a
-scream of white water from her side. Her canvas was blowing out, and
-the sodden old cask may have had some way on her.
-
-Hardy stepped out and looked for the _York_. Had he looked for St.
-Paul's Cathedral he could not have seen less of it. The ship was not in
-sight and he fetched a deep breath, for either her crew had abandoned
-him and Julia to what sailors would know might prove a terrible death,
-or the ship's drift had been faster than he had allowed for.
-
-"She's not in sight," he shouted to Julia, then sprang into the
-main-shrouds, put his telescope over the rim of the top, and got into
-the top.
-
-She was not in sight from the top and he crawled as high as the
-cross-trees, and she was not in sight from that elevation. Nothing was
-in sight but the horizon, which wound eel-like to the flashing clasp of
-the sun upon it.
-
-He regained the deck and put the telescope down and sat beside Julia.
-
-"What shall we do?" she said, when he had given her the news.
-
-"We will breakfast," he answered.
-
-And forthwith he made biscuit sandwiches of the pork, of which there
-still remained a good lump, a godsend. There was nothing much to elate
-him in the sight of the boat still safely lashed to the deck; he feared
-the open boat in mid-ocean with few provisions, little water, and an
-everlasting menace of weather, for blow it will if it does not blow
-now, and what sort of a time would they have had afloat in that boat
-last night?
-
-Julia dredged her lover's face with her eyes but could not make out
-what was passing in his mind, because he himself did not know what was
-passing there.
-
-"We must husband our stores," said he, "and wait for something to sight
-us."
-
-Saying which he rose and stepped up a little ladder on to the top of
-the deck-house, directed by sailorly instincts to what he wanted, and
-there it was securely lashed to the iron stanchions of the low rail--a
-flag-locker. He opened it and took out the Red Ensign and carried it
-right aft, and bent it union down to the peak signal-halliards and
-hoisted it half-mast high, a signal of deep distress and death. Its
-rippling noise was pleasant, but the look of it was ghastly with its
-dumb appeal to a pitiless sea.
-
-Julia stood beside him and sank her clear gaze far into the recesses of
-the ocean, and saw the sea line working and nothing more.
-
-"Let's go and see if the galley has betrayed any secrets of food," said
-he.
-
-The sluggish roll of the brig was no hindrance to feet accustomed to
-the bounding deck. They found the galley murdered; it was split and
-shivered, but the coppers to the stroke of the sea that slung them
-had spewed out a big lump of beef and a bolster of duff--the sailors'
-pudding--composed of dark flour and slush with here and there a
-currant, but not always. Hardy pounced upon the food as the adjutant
-lights upon the floating Hindoo.
-
-"They left their dinner behind them," he said. "Good God! what a noble
-haul. Here is enough for a week with care."
-
-"Is it cooked?"
-
-He answered this question by pulling out his knife and cutting off a
-piece of the meat. Another half-hour would have cooked it, but it was
-eatable to human necessity.
-
-He stowed this provender away in the deck-house and filled the breaker
-from the scuttle-butt, then went with Julia to look at the bell.
-
-"You did not hear it last night," he said.
-
-"No," she answered.
-
-"It shall not trouble you again," said he, and he unhooked it, and
-threw it down.
-
-"But who struck it?" she asked.
-
-"He'll not strike it again," he answered.
-
-He peeped through the forescuttle and saw nothing but the gleam of
-black water washing below.
-
-"The rats don't like this sort of thing," said he. "Can you pull upon a
-rope, Julia?"
-
-"I am as strong as you," she answered.
-
-He smiled with a glance at her beautiful figure, and said:
-
-"Turn to, then, and lend me a hand to shorten sail."
-
-Between them they manned the necessary buntlines and clewlines, and
-Julia dragged as handsomely as her sweetheart.
-
-"Give us a song, George, for time," she said, and he started
-"Chillyman," which sea-air Julia had caught from hearing it on board
-the _Glamis Castle_, and her voice threaded his like the notes of a
-flute.
-
-
- "Randy dandy, heigh-ho!
- Chillyman!
- Pull for a shilling, heigh-ho!
- Chillyman!"[1]
-
-
-In fact, you may put any words you like to these sea-tunes, and the
-sailors will pull the better if you damn the eyes of the quarter-deck
-in rhyme.
-
-Hardy next thoroughly overhauled the brig, so far as perception of
-her condition was possible. He could not see why she should not hold
-together through twenty such gales as roared over her last night. He
-stood with Julia looking at their only boat, beside which there lay,
-as though placed by some angel of mercy, a watch-tackle. The sight
-of that watch-tackle sank him into contemplation, and Julia gazed at
-him whilst he thought. How weary were the motions of the brig upon
-that sulky sweep of swell! Yet the fine figure of the girl swayed to
-it with the graceful ease of a figurehead curtseying at the bow. She
-was shipwrecked, she was in a dreadful situation of peril, this time
-to-morrow she might be floating in the sea a corpse, and yet never
-on board the Indiaman, on board the _York_, or at home had she felt
-happier. She was loving him passionately and he was always with her,
-and she could not but be happy.
-
-Presently he said:
-
-"I will tell you how it can be done when it needs to be done. She is a
-small boat and not heavy, and you and I will cant her on to her bilge
-with handspikes, then I'll hook that watch-tackle to a strop round the
-foremost thwart and take the hauling part to the winch, and rouse her
-along to abreast of the gangway. That gangway there unships, and we
-sit low upon the sea, and we'll tumble the boat through the gangway
-overboard, smack-fashion. If she proves too heavy we'll rig out a
-spar"--here he cast his eyes round--"with the watch-tackle made fast
-to her, and the winch will do the rest. Yes, that is my scheme if it
-should come to it. Meanwhile let us be patient and keep a lookout for
-ships."
-
-But the imprisonment on board this abandoned hull of Mr. George Hardy
-and Miss Julia Armstrong was to continue until the dawn of three days,
-counting from Hardy's time of finding the girl. All this while it
-was very fine weather, and of a night they would sit on top of the
-deck-house whilst Hardy smoked and Julia prattled. They watched the sea
-lights which glittered upon the black breast of the ocean; they watched
-the flight of the meteor. They talked of the stars, which nowhere
-wheel in so much splendour as over the sea, and of the great Spirit
-who controls their flight. Morally they were the least shipwrecked of
-people. They were happy in each other's company; if either one had been
-alone it might have proved madness to him or to her, but the voice of
-love, the presence of love even in the gloom of calamity, made a light
-of their own which was as inspiriting as the hope that springs eternal.
-It was not strange that no ships ever showed a white rag of canvas,
-a coil of sooty smoke upon the horizon in any point of the compass,
-because the brig sat low and her "dip" would be small, and a ship may
-be within the compass of a boat-race and yet not be seen. Hardy often
-went aloft and searched the waters; he did not lose heart, because
-he felt sure that something must heave in sight sooner or later, and
-meanwhile with great care the food they had would last them a week or
-perhaps longer, and there was fresh water for a fortnight or perhaps
-longer; for I am telling you what I have heard, and like the tramp in
-Dickens's sketch, my squire "would not tell a lie for no man."
-
-Hardy was also sure that the brig would hold together, and being of the
-careless nature of the sailor, though provident, willing, and sober,
-he would not allow his spirits to be depressed, and he had eyes enough
-in his head to see that Julia regarded their perilous condition as
-something in the way of an outing--to be enjoyed. She was a fine girl
-and we are never weary of admiring her. I have told you that she was
-not pretty, but her face, what with the cock of her head, the hand on
-the hip, the speaking appeal of her eyes, carried such a character of
-romance that it not only interested you at once, when she looked at you
-full and fastened her eyes upon yours with her slight smile, it made
-you even think her pretty, and certainly the truest beauty of a woman's
-face comes into it from her mind.
-
-Then broke the dawn of the third day, and Hardy, who had been sleeping
-since three, awoke and stepped out of the deck-house, and with the
-brig's telescope in hand climbed the few steps and searched the sea. It
-was again a fine morning; the heavens were lofty with their freckling
-of stationary small cloud; the wind was a light breeze a little to the
-north of east; and the sea, which streamed in thin lifts, sparkled to
-the caress of a hand that could make it roar when it thought fit.
-
-Suddenly into the lenses of the glass there entered a full-rigged ship,
-showing nothing but three single-reefed topsails and a foresail and the
-trembling line of her hull a little above the horizon. "A full-rigged
-ship under that sail in this weather!" thought Hardy. "By heaven, it
-must be the _York_, and if so she is abandoned!"
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] Sailors' word for "cheerly men."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-ABOARD AGAIN
-
-
-The sun was floating over the horizon, and the pink of his glory was
-melting into the flash of silver, as the wake of the _York_ streamed
-in a short white gleam upon the sea. The light breeze was still to
-the north of east, and thither it had hung for hours past. Hardy and
-Julia stood at the brig's rail watching the ship that was distinct and
-lifting in the ocean's recess.
-
-"Is it possible that she's the _York_?" said Julia.
-
-He answered with the telescope at his eye:
-
-"Don't I know her! She's under single reefs. Her spanker is furled, and
-her head sails keep her off, as though she were under control. Perhaps
-she is, but I don't think so. She would head directly for us if she had
-anything alive on board, because I can hold the line of her rail in
-this glass, and if I can see her, she can see me."
-
-"What will you do?"
-
-"I will wait a little longer and see if she is manned. If her crew have
-deserted her, I will launch that boat, and board her before she drifts
-out of sight."
-
-"Will you be able to catch her?"
-
-"Catch her! Can you row?"
-
-"Try me," she answered, with the proud look a girl will put on when she
-feels she is of importance.
-
-"She is drifting at about two, and we will make that boat buzz three,
-and perhaps more. But if she is manned, she will come alongside, and
-our getting aboard will be easy. But she is not manned, I am sure,"
-said Hardy. "Pipe to breakfast, Julia."
-
-This time they made beef sandwiches of biscuit, and they were swallowed
-without the accompanying forecastle growl. Indeed, considering it
-was meant for sailors' use, the beef was not very bad, and as it was
-pickled to the heart, a little cooking had gone a long way to make it
-almost food for the human stomach. The bottle of rum was half full
-and they drank a little of the liquor, largely diluted with water. To
-refresh himself Hardy went to the head, where he knew he would find a
-pump which stood clear of the deck load. He picked up a bucket, carried
-it to the pump and filled it with sparkling brine, and purified his
-face with the cold salt-sweetness of the water and wrung his hands in
-it, and felt that his beard was growing, for shipwreck does not stop
-the growth of hair, as we see when a haggard crew steps ashore out of a
-life-boat.
-
-And all the time he kept his eyes fastened on the _York_, as he knew
-her to be. When he went aft he found Julia sitting on a chair on
-top of the deck-house. He mounted the steps and sat beside her with
-the telescope, for he had made up his mind to wait a little before
-launching the boat.
-
-"What makes you know that she's the _York_?" she asked.
-
-"Twenty points, and you must have served two years before the mast to
-understand them if I explained. She is the _York_, my love, and with
-God's eye watching us we shall be aboard her and safe before sunset."
-
-"Hurrah!" cried Julia, and she picked up his hand and kissed it.
-
-It was a thing to be settled in about an hour, and in that hour Hardy
-discovered that she was not under control by her coming to windward and
-her falling off; and when she came to windward she hung so long that
-Hardy thought it time to turn to. And now began a process of which the
-description shall not weary you.
-
-First he unshipped the gangway and fetched some capstan bars for
-rollers; he then passed his knife through the boat's lashings, took
-the watch-tackle and secured it to a fore-shroud abreast of the boat,
-overhauled the tackle to hook the block on the boat's gunwale, then
-he and Julia clapped on to the hauling part of the tackle and easily
-roused the little wagon on to her bilge. She was not very much heavier
-than a smack's boat; her oars were lashed under the thwarts, and her
-rudder had been on a thwart and now lay in her. They tried to run her
-along the deck, but though they started her the toil must prove too
-great for the girl who would be plying an oar shortly. So he carried
-the block of the watch-tackle as far forward as its length would allow
-him and made a strop with a piece of gear round the thwart, to which he
-hooked the other block, bent a line on to the hauling part and carried
-it to the winch, giving Julia the job of hauling the slack in as he
-wound.
-
-He wound lustily, for he was fighting for life and time and he was a
-very strong man, and had entirely rid himself of all the evil effects
-of the drug, as the girl had. So they brought the boat abreast of the
-gangway; he had muscle enough to lift her bow whilst Julia placed a
-skid, in the shape of a capstan bar, under her forefoot; he made other
-skids of the capstan bars, and laying hold of her gunwales on either
-side, the two brave hearts, with the boat's nose pointing to the sea,
-ran the fabric, secured by a painter hitched to a main shroud, clean
-through the gangway, and she fell with a squash, and floated like an
-empty bottle with never a drop of water in her.
-
-This done, Hardy, who was making haste, for the _York_ was keeping a
-rap-full and forging into the stream of sunshine, though always coming
-for the brig, seized a line, and watching his chance sprang into the
-boat, secured the line to her after-thwart, leapt aboard, and brought
-the boat broadside to the gangway.
-
-The roll of the brig was very sullen and slow, and the swell of the sea
-sometimes hove the boat flush with the brig's waterway.
-
-"You must jump into her, Julia," said Hardy, "and for God's sake don't
-go overboard. To provide against that, see here."
-
-He took an end of main-royal-halliards and hitched it round her waist,
-and overhauled some slack which he grasped.
-
-"Pull up your clothes," said he, "and free your legs and aim for the
-bottom of the boat, and jump when I sing out."
-
-The little squab structure came floating up, and Hardy brought her in
-by a tug of the after-rope as she was coming.
-
-"Jump!" he shouted.
-
-And that girl, whose heart was of British oak, holding her clothes to
-her knees, sprang, and in a few breaths was sitting on a thwart and
-liberating herself from the rope, whilst she smiled up at her lover.
-
-"Now, Julia," said he, "I am going to send you down the provisions and
-water. Stand by to receive them, but keep seated."
-
-He handed the telescope to her, then fetched the breaker, which she
-received as it lay in that instant of heaving swell on the rim of the
-gunwale, and she rolled it to the thwart, then to the stern-sheets,
-taking the glass from Hardy at the next heave. He made one parcel of
-the provisions and hove them into the boat, then casting the painter
-adrift he jumped into the boat, let go the remaining line that held
-her, cut loose the oars, shipped the thole-pins, leaving the rudder
-unshipped, and made Julia the bow oar.
-
-Could she row? Very well indeed; but the oars were a little heavy and
-she did not attempt to feather; in fact, she rowed like a smacksman,
-lifting the blade with its streaming glory of water on high, but the
-dip and thrust of it was that of a stout schoolboy, and between them
-they made the boat buzz, Hardy, with larger power of oar, keeping her
-straight for the _York_.
-
-"Don't tire yourself," said he; "rest when you like. She'll not outrun
-us."
-
-"What a wonderful thing to happen!" said Julia, whose face was
-whitening with the ardour of her toil.
-
-She looked at nothing but her oar, and was certainly not going to be
-tired this side the _York_.
-
-"At sea, where all is wonderful, nothing is wonderful," said Hardy.
-"Any sailor would easily see how this has come about. But don't waste
-your breath in talking: let us row."
-
-It was a strange and curious picture: a man and a girl in a little
-open boat, pulling away for a ship that was rounding into the wind as
-though she knew they were approaching, whilst astern receded the figure
-of the brig, a melancholy sight, despite the gun-flashes of sunshine
-which burst from her side at every roll; her hanging canvas flapped a
-mournful farewell to the rowers, who took no heed of the poor thing's
-tender and, for a north-countryman, graceful salutation of good-bye.
-But, then, she had been a stage of maniacal horrors, of death, of
-the lonely little ghost that struck the bell, of shipwreck with its
-stalking shadows of famine, thirst, and the calenture that invites you
-to die.
-
-Hardy frequently turned to look at the _York_ so as to keep a true
-course, and this time saw that she was involved in the wind, and was
-waiting for him to come aboard to tell her what to do. They had four
-miles to measure, and as they pulled with the spirit of shipwreck in
-their pulse they were within hail of her in an hour.
-
-No man showed himself; she was abandoned. But suddenly on the
-forecastle rail appeared the fore-paws and magnificent head of a great
-Newfoundland dog. He barked deep and long.
-
-"Poor Sailor," said Hardy; "I had forgotten him."
-
-"How inhuman to leave him," said Julia, panting.
-
-"A few more strokes, sweetheart," shouted Hardy, "and we are free. What
-a noble girl you are! What a good wife you will make a sailor!"
-
-"I will make you a good wife, never fear," she answered, joyous in
-despite distress of breath.
-
-The ship's head was slowly paying off as the boat's stem struck the
-side. Hardy secured the painter and jumped into the mizzen-chains.
-
-"Hold out your hands," he exclaimed, "and jump when the boat lifts,"
-and to the lift and to his fearless, muscular haul she sprang, and was
-alongside of him.
-
-He grasped her by the arm, passed her round the rigging, and helped her
-over the bulwark rail. The dog was barking in fury of joy. When they
-gained the deck he sprang upon the girl in love and delight and nearly
-knocked her down.
-
-"Get him some water and biscuit whilst I look about me," said Hardy.
-
-He had long ago known by the help of the telescope that the ship
-was abandoned because two pairs of davits were empty, and with the
-perception of a sailor he understood that the crew had transferred
-themselves to another ship in one boat, whereas if they had abandoned
-the ship on their own account, which was improbable, they would have
-gone away in three companies, and the davits would have been like
-gibbets, since the after-boat had been used by the captain when he
-stole the girl.
-
-The wheel was not lashed, and was constantly playing in swift
-revolution to starboard and port and back again. Hardy judged that the
-dog had been left by the men because the faithful creature would not
-quit the ship which had been his master's home, and the men, who would
-have had very little time, did not choose that their flesh should be
-torn by using violence. Yet it was cruel of them to leave him, for they
-would know that the noble creature would soon need water and food, and
-perish as lamentably as a famine-stricken sailor on a raft.
-
-He saw that the figures of Mr. Candy and the man at the wheel, which
-had been concealed by a tarpaulin, were gone; they had of course been
-buried. Julia looked after the dog, that was lapping water thankfully
-as she filled a bowl from the galley with fresh water out of the
-scuttle-butt. Hardy slowly went forward, carefully gazing about him.
-
-No man lay dead on the deck; he dropped into the forecastle and found
-it empty of human life, so that the captain's birthday had killed but
-two men, which was surely wonderful, for he had commanded a power that
-could have murdered a thousand.
-
-Why was not this fine ship taken possession of by the people who had
-received her crew? I will tell you at once, for the story came out on
-the men's arrival. Her drift had been swifter, with the helping hand of
-the surge, than Hardy could have imagined or allowed for, and in the
-morning of the gale she was close aboard a French brig that was hove to
-sitting deep in the sea. They hailed her and were answered. They stated
-they were without a navigator and they didn't know what to do. The
-French captain spoke English, and said he would receive them if they
-came aboard in their own boat and land them at Marseilles, the port
-he was bound to. The weather was then moderating, and after calling a
-council the boatswain, giving the mate and the girl up as lost, swiftly
-decided, with the heedlessness of seamen, to abandon the _York_, and
-with great difficulty the sailors gained the deck of the brig, leaving
-their clothes behind them. Very shortly afterward the French captain
-braced his yards round and shaped a course for Marseilles, leaving
-nothing alive on board the _York_ but the dog.
-
-This is the true story of the ship's adventure, and whoever questions
-it is no sailor.
-
-Hardy left the forecastle and stood awhile on deck near the hatch,
-gazing aloft. In this moment he was fired by a resolution which would
-have inspired no other heart than that of a true British sailor. He
-determined that he and the girl and the dog should save this fine
-ship without help, and carry her to England, and entitle them to a
-reward which should prove a living to them whilst they endured. His
-face, which was as manly as Tom Bowline's, was irradiated by the glory
-of this resolution as he gazed aloft, smiling. It was possible--and
-being possible it was to be done. But it needed doing by two hearts
-of oak and the dog as a lookout, and great anxiety would accompany
-the discharge of this splendid duty, much sleeplessness and ceaseless
-urging of the spirit. But the eye of God would dwell lovingly upon
-their toil and peril; he felt that and raised his cap to the thought,
-and he said to himself, in the language of Nelson, "When we cannot do
-all we wish, we must do as well as we can!"
-
-He walked aft and joined the girl.
-
-"Julia," he said, "I have formed the resolution of my life, and if I
-can fulfil it we shall be rich, though that will not make us happy."
-
-"What is it?" she asked, looking a little frightened, with her head
-slightly drooped to the shoulder, and her left hand, white as foam,
-reposing like a coronet upon the Newfoundland's head. Indeed, what
-with the mad captain, drugs, and ghosts she was in such a condition of
-mind that she was easily alarmed by any divergence from the commonplace.
-
-"This is a valuable ship," he answered. "I know her cargo, for I helped
-to stow it. She has a beautiful hull, and is perfectly sound aloft.
-In addition to her cargo she carries a little treasure of jewelry
-consigned to Melbourne--Colonials love jewelry. I dare say it is worth
-ten thousand pounds. It is in a safe in the captain's cabin. I should
-say that the value of this ship and cargo is between sixty thousand and
-seventy thousand pounds, perhaps more. Julia, you and I and the dog
-will carry her home. We shall be richly rewarded by the owners and the
-underwriters--in fact, it is a matter of salvage to be assessed if my
-terms are disputed."
-
-She grasped him by both hands, her eyes were on fire, her cheeks were
-burning, the spirit of delight and resolution filled her romantic face
-with the light of conquest and realisation.
-
-"Is it to be done?" she said.
-
-"It is done," he answered. "We don't talk of failure. But let us make
-ourselves comfortable whilst the weather is fine."
-
-"How heavenly!" she sighed. "You will teach me to steer, George."
-
-"I will teach you everything that is proper for a young woman to know,"
-he answered.
-
-He took her to his heart and pressed his lips to hers, which was like
-signing articles: that lip pressure was the seal of their agreement
-to serve each other loyally, and to eat the food on board without
-growling.
-
-The first thing they did was to go below. Here was the cabin just as
-they had left it; there was the chair in which Captain Layard had sat
-and talked metaphysics, yonder was the locker on which the drugged
-girl had slept, and they stood on the deck where Hardy had lifted his
-cannon-ball of a head, whilst his bewildered soul groped slowly into
-his brains. They went into the captain's cabin and saw the drum and the
-drumsticks and the little bedstead.
-
-"What a fantasy of the sea!" said Hardy. "It is beyond me. It is like
-a vision, sensible to perception and unreal to it. Will our story be
-credited?"
-
-"Who cares?" answered the girl. "Is that the safe, George?"
-
-"Yes, and I'll look for the key by and by. The jewelry's there."
-
-The safe was small and secured on a massive timber shelf, but though
-small it was large enough to contain the Koh-i-noor, and to hold buried
-the wealth and jewels of a rajah.
-
-Hardy cast a keen look around him, saw that the table held the
-necessary machinery of navigation, carefully wound up the chronometers,
-which had not stopped, then went into his own cabin whilst the girl
-entered hers. When they presently met they sought for food and found
-plenty in the pantry; here were ham and tongue, palatable stuff in
-tins, white biscuits, and pots of jam.
-
-They sat down and ate, and the Newfoundland sat beside them, triumphant
-in this familiar company of man and woman, and Julia, who loved him,
-saw that he made a good breakfast.
-
-"How are we to manage it, George?" she asked.
-
-"It will require some scheming," he answered, "but we must not accept
-help, because if we do our salvage share will shrink out of all
-proportion to our merits. Can you steer in the least?"
-
-"I can steer a boat, but not a ship," Julia answered.
-
-"I will teach you; you will get the art in a very few lessons."
-
-"One lesson will do if I have the strength."
-
-"Oh," he answered, with a loving glance at her, "you are one of those
-English girls whose shapes of beauty are wire-rigged. Wire is stronger
-than hemp, though it looks delicate. What your strength can't do I have
-arms for."
-
-"So you have," she replied; "you are the manliest sailor that ever was."
-
-"Let us change the subject," he replied, with a little colour of
-pleasure in his face, for a compliment from your sweetheart is next to
-a kiss. "We are fortunate in finding the ship under very easy sail.
-We'll get some more fore-and-aft canvas upon her, for it is easily
-hauled down, but I shall leave the square canvas that is furled to rest
-as it is. I'll bring her to her course at noon when I find out where we
-are. You will light the galley fire, as we shall want a hot drink. But
-we need little cooking, for if we boil a good lump of beef, that, with
-the food in the pantry, will last you and me and the dog five hundred
-miles of sea."
-
-"Are we near England?"
-
-"Not very, I think, but I shall know presently exactly how near we are."
-
-"How shall we get rest, George? We must sleep or die, or worse, go
-mad."
-
-"Aye," he answered, thoughtfully; "you see things rightly, but we must
-not make sleep a difficulty."
-
-"The rest seems quite easy," she said, joyously; "and I shall learn to
-steer in one lesson."
-
-They left the table and went on deck, followed by the dog, who growled
-softly and often in a sort of undertalk with himself. There is a great
-nature in a Newfoundland, and you often wonder whilst you look into his
-soft, affectionate eyes what his thoughts are.
-
-It was a glowing scene of forenoon ocean. The ripple ran with the
-laughter of the summer in its voice. The endless procession of humps
-of swell, as though old ocean was perpetually shrugging his shoulders
-over spiteful memories, brought the flaming banners of the sun out of
-the east, and swept them westwards in knightly array of fiery plume
-and foam-crested summit. Four miles off wallowed the poor little brig,
-tearfully flapping her pocket-handkerchief to the naked horizon, and by
-mute and pathetic gesture coaxing nothing into being to help her. Many
-soft, white clouds floated westwards, and Hardy noticed that the glass
-was high and those clouds meant nothing but vapour.
-
-What a noble ship to be in charge of, to virtually be the owner of,
-to rescue from the toils of the sea, to witness in security in some
-harbour of England, flying high the commercial flag of the Empire
-in token of British supremacy, even in the hour of peril, when the
-Foreigner would consider all was lost!
-
-"It is not yet twelve o'clock," said Hardy, "and we will light the
-galley fire."
-
-They walked forward and entered the sea kitchen. Plenty of chopped
-wood lay stacked. The ship's cook had been a man of foresight, and
-anticipated labour by putting an axe into the ordinary seaman's hand;
-also near the wood stood two buckets of coal and a little heap on
-the deck. There was plenty of coal in the fore-peak for a voyage
-to Australia. Hardy had matches, which are curiosities at sea in a
-forecastle, for you light your pipe at the galley fire with rope
-yarns or shavings, and the slush lamp is kindled by the binnacle or
-side-light. But aft there are usually matches, because the cabin is the
-home of elegance, refinement, and luxury, and the captain must have
-matches, for he cannot light his cigar at the sailors' fire. Hardy
-first explored the coppers; they were empty. He filled them from the
-scuttle-butt; why should he use salt water when there was plenty of
-fresh at hand? Fresh water would cleanse the mahogany beef of something
-of its brine, and perhaps soften it into complacent recognition of
-human digestion.
-
-Then the fire was lighted; he could not find the key of the harness
-cask, so he fetched a weapon from the carpenter's chest, and the
-staples yielded to his blow with the shriek of lacerated wood. There
-was plenty of beef and pork in the cask, buried in the horrible crystal
-in which lurks the demon of scurvy; he turned the pieces over, and
-selecting the fattest and least ill-looking lump, dropped it into the
-copper for boiling when the water should begin.
-
-This work, easily recited, cost time. Before he touched a brace or put
-the ship to her course he must find out where she was. The last entries
-in the log-book were in his handwriting, and they related the story of
-the captain's birthday, how he kept it, and his disappearance with a
-young lady passenger named Julia Armstrong. The latitude was then--N.
-and the longitude--W. But the drifting ship had measured miles, and her
-captain must know where he was. This he would find out in about an hour.
-
-The sow under the long-boat was dead. To get rid of it before the
-carcass stank he stropped it and clapped the watch-tackle on it, and
-together they hauled the little mountain of what might have proved
-tooth-alluring crackling and white fresh fat, always sweet at sea,
-through the open gangway overboard. It fell without a prayer, and the
-fish that nosed it that day dined well.
-
-Some of the poultry in the hen-coops were dead; a few lived, and craved
-with fluttering red pennons for drink and grain. Of course Hardy
-knew "the ropes" of this ship and could lay his hand on anything he
-wanted. He filled the little troughs with fresh water, and no one but
-a beholder could have figured the profound gratitude with which the
-varying row of bills was lifted to heaven. He helped them to grain,
-and they filled their crops with all ardency of pecking. He cleared
-the hen-coop of its plumed corpses, and so they sweetened the ship
-forthwith.
-
-It was about time that Hardy fetched his sextant: the soaring sun
-excited his impatience; he desired that the ship should be sending
-his sweetheart and himself home, and the ceaseless waving of those
-pocket-handkerchiefs just over the horizon teased him with their
-impertinence, and as a token of distress when the morning was fair and
-their hearts high and hopeful. His reckoning found the ship's position
-within a mile or two of her place when he had left her to succour his
-darling.
-
-"I have it now," said he, "and we must trim sail for home."
-
-"Oh, how beautiful!" cried Julia, and the dog barked in recognition of
-the girl's triumphant note.
-
-The ship was on the port tack and must be wore to the north. Hardy
-put the helm hard up and secured it, then let go the fore, main, and
-mizzen-braces, and the yards, as the ship obeyed her rudder, swung a
-little of themselves. With the starboard-braces let go Hardy and Julia
-did not find it difficult to swing the yards. The wind would be almost
-abeam when the ship was homeward bound, and there were the winch and
-the capstan to brace the yards well forward if the wind drew ahead.
-
-"Sing out, George!" cried Julia. And they brought the fore and
-foretopsail-yard, with fore-tack and sheet all gone, round, to their
-chanty of "Chillyman."
-
-
- "Randy dandy, heigho!
- Chillyman!
- Pull for a shilling, heigho!
- Chillyman!
- Young and willing, heigho!
- Sweet and killing ole bo',
- Dandy, heigho!
- Chillyman!"
-
-
-The Newfoundland looked on and grumbled because he had no hands.
-They got the main and the mizzen-yards round to the same song with
-some laughter, because Hardy put a few words of sweetness into his
-invention as he sang, and the girl's voice was rich with appreciation
-as the flute of her lips swept the carol of her delight into his manly
-tones.
-
-Then they saw to the fore-tack and sheet and to the jib-sheets, and
-the ship floated away steadily round in graceful salutations to the
-dejected handkerchiefs on the quarter. Hardy cast the wheel adrift and
-told the girl to hold it whilst he steadied the yards by hauling as
-taut as his pair of hands could the weather-braces of the fore and main
-and the lee-braces of the mizzen.
-
-This done he stood beside Julia to teach her how to steer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-PRACTICAL SEAMANSHIP
-
-
-He is a lucky sailor to whom is granted the opportunity of teaching a
-girl with a romantic face and a beautiful figure the art of steering a
-full-rigged ship. Though the sailor is often in the company of ladies
-at sea, he is kept very severely forward, whilst the ladies are kept
-very severely aft; and if they formed a seraglio imprisoned on soft
-couches and fanned by eunuchs, behind walls ten feet thick, Jack at sea
-could not know less of the ladies at sea.
-
-Hardy's job was therefore a delightful one, and the more delightful
-because the ship was now homeward bound, and the morning was fair and
-the sea courteous and graceful in caress.
-
-"Do you see that black mark on the white under the glass?"
-
-"Yes," answered the girl.
-
-"It is called the lubber's mark: it is the business of the helmsman
-to keep a point of the compass aiming at it; that point is the ship's
-course. Do you observe that the point that is levelled at the lubber's
-mark is north-by-east?"
-
-"If you call it so I shall remember it," answered the girl.
-
-"The lubber's point," Hardy continued, "represents an imaginary line
-ruled straight from the stern into the very eyes of the ship, where the
-bowsprit and jib-booms point the road. If, then, I tell you to keep
-that point called north-by-east pointing as steadily as the swing of
-the ship's head will permit to the lubber's mark, then I am asking you
-to steer the ship in the direction I wish her to go."
-
-She frowned a little in contemplation at the compass card, and said, "I
-believe I understand you."
-
-"I will teach you to box the compass presently," Hardy went on. "You
-will easily get the names, and will not be at a loss if I should say
-the course is northeast or nor'-nor'east, and so on. And now see here:
-the action of a ship's wheel exactly reverses the action of a boat's
-tiller. Look under that grating; that is the tiller, and when you
-revolve the wheel the chains which drag the tiller sweep the rudder
-on one side or the other, so that when I tell you to put your helm
-a-starboard you revolve your wheel to the left, which will bring the
-rudder over to the left; and when I say port your helm you revolve your
-wheel to the right, which carries your rudder over to the right. If you
-steered by the tiller, then to the order of starboard your helm, you
-would put your tiller to the right. Do you understand?"
-
-The machinery of the compass, the wheel, the tiller, and its chains
-girdling the barrel, was all before her, and she would have been a
-blockhead if she had not grasped the simple matter speedily--but you,
-madam, who are a lady and read this, may be puzzled; possibly you are
-not, but if you are I do not wonder.
-
-"Now," he said, "I want the ship to be off her course: mark what I do;
-she shall be a little to leeward of her course."
-
-He put the helm by a few spokes over, and the binnacle card revolved
-two points from its course as the ship's head rounded away with the
-wind.
-
-"Now," said Hardy, "I bring her again to her course: observe what I do:
-we call this putting the helm down."
-
-He brought her to her course and arrested her at it, and the girl
-cried, eagerly, "Yes, yes, I see. Let me hold the wheel, George."
-
-She grasped the spokes, a swelling, beautiful, conquering figure, a
-delight to the eye, a triumph of British girlhood, one of those women
-who are the mothers of the gallant and glorious sons that man the
-signal-halliards of our country.
-
-"Now bring the ship to windward of her course," said Hardy.
-
-"I do not understand you," she answered, reproachfully.
-
-"Make that bowsprit yonder point _there_," he exclaimed, and he
-indicated with outstretched hand a part of the horizon to windward of
-the bow.
-
-"Why didn't you speak more plainly? I can do it."
-
-She revolved the wheel by three or four spokes, and hailed with eyes of
-transport and conquest the response of the compass card.
-
-"Do you understand?" said Hardy.
-
-"My dear," she answered, "I can steer your ship perfectly."
-
-"Not yet," he said, "but you are not far off."
-
-Thus proceeded this pleasant tuition, and for half an hour Hardy
-stood beside the wheel teaching his sweetheart how to steer. The
-Newfoundland sat alongside of them and seemed to listen, for his loving
-eyes were often on Hardy's face whilst he spoke. He tried the girl
-again and again, and at the end of half an hour she was expressing
-keen appreciation of his delightful lecture by dutiful movement of the
-wheel. But, indeed, the ship did not need much steering that fine day.
-Had the helm been lashed it is probable that, braced as the yards lay,
-and pulling in steadfast accord as the sails were, the ship would have
-made a tranquil passage of an hour with no other check to the dull
-kicks of the rudder than a rope's end.
-
-He left the girl to steer whilst he tautened here and there a brace
-with the watch-tackle; then entered the galley, saw to the fire, the
-coppers, and their contents. He was accepting an enormous obligation;
-could he discharge it? He felt the heart of a dozen men in his pulse,
-and he knew that if God did not smite her with sickness the spirit of
-his heroic girl would make her the match of any man, able-bodied or
-ordinary; so, though the _York_ might be undermanned, her crew of a man
-and a girl, with a dog for a lookout, would carry her home.
-
-The weather was so fine that he did not mean to make a job of
-seamanship. He did not intend to keep a lookout for ships unless it
-was to escape collision, because no ship that hove in sight, however
-willing, should be allowed to help him. The _York_ was to be his own
-and the girl's fortune, and, much as he respected the sailor, no man
-afloat would be permitted to share in this estate.
-
-He stood a minute on the forecastle to admire the beautiful fabric,
-and to pity the powerlessness which held imprisoned the cloths whose
-lustrous spaces would have climbed to the trucks in bright breasts
-yearning for home. Afar trembled the pocket-handkerchiefs of the sodden
-brig. The naked vision could no longer distinguish their appeal. She
-broke the continuity of the girdle, that was all, and she hovered on
-the skirts of the deep like a gibbet beheld afar. Hardy went right aft
-to the wheel; it was in the afternoon, and the speed of the ship was
-about four miles an hour.
-
-"We will make ourselves happy," said he. "This is yachting, and if you
-strain the imagination of your eyes you shall see close aboard the
-white terraces of the Isle of Wight."
-
-She laughed and answered, "We shall be off that island some day."
-
-"No fear," he replied. "Don't suppose I mean to sail her up channel.
-Plymouth is our port, and as we sha'n't be able to let go the anchor,
-I'll seize a blue shirt to the fore-lift and that 'ull bring a
-man-o'-war's boat alongside."
-
-"Why?" she asked.
-
-"Because it is the merchant seaman's signal that he wants to join the
-white ensign, and the naval officer is always greedy for men."
-
-But this was spoken many years ago. The signal of the blue shirt has
-been hauled down and buried with many other customs under the thin
-white wake of the metal battleship.
-
-"Why do you want a naval boat; would not any other boat do?" asked
-Julia.
-
-"No; the Royal Navy claims no salvage and gets none. Any other boat
-would make a claim for assistance, and I mean that our cake shall be
-whole."
-
-He brought two chairs out of the cabin, gave one to Julia and took one
-himself, with his hand on a spoke. Their faithful friend the dog lay in
-the westering sun beside them; and now they talked of what they should
-do in the night, and came to terms about the discipline of the crew
-whilst the ship kept the sea.
-
-"I shall be on deck as much as I can," said he. "I must sleep on deck;
-I do not choose to lie without shelter during my watch below. I'll
-bring a hen-coop aft, thoroughly cleanse it, and put a mattress into it
-after knocking away the rails. That's a good idea!"
-
-"Excellent!" she exclaimed; "and clear out another hen-coop for me.
-How romantic to sleep in a hen-coop!" and she laughed softly, looking
-lovingly at him.
-
-"If I should crow in my sleep whilst you're at the wheel you'll know
-that I am being hen-pecked."
-
-"Can't we put Sailor to some use?" she asked.
-
-The animal lifted his head to the sound of his name, and all was
-intelligence in his soft, pathetic eyes.
-
-"You shall sleep on a mattress at the foot of the companion-steps,
-where you will be sheltered. I have an idea. Are you strong enough
-to bring your mattress out of your berth and place it on deck with a
-pillow?"
-
-"Chaw!" she answered, with a shrug. "I have lifted an old woman out of
-bed. What do you want me to do?"
-
-"Spread your mattress on the port side of the steps, get a pillow, and
-stretch yourself upon it, and sing out when you're ready."
-
-She instantly rose and descended; the dog was about to follow her.
-
-"Lie down, Sailor!" and the dog obeyed.
-
-In a few moments the clear voice sounded, "On deck there!"
-
-"Hallo!"
-
-"All ready, George."
-
-"Shut your eyes and seem asleep. Sailor!" The dog immediately stood up
-with an inquiring look, ears slightly lifted. "Fetch her, Sailor! fetch
-her!"
-
-The dog trembled, and looked with a sort of passion about him.
-
-"Fetch her, Sailor! fetch her!" shouted Hardy, pointing down the hatch.
-
-The noble creature sprang down the steps. In a moment Julia began to
-scream.
-
-"Oh!" he heard her say; "he is tearing my dress, George."
-
-"Come up with him; it is all right," he bellowed. And up came the girl
-with her skirt in the mouth of the dog, who tried to get in front of
-her to drag her as though they were both in the sea and awash; but she
-filled the way and the Newfoundland could not jam past her.
-
-The dog held on till she was seated; he had not torn her dress, and the
-sweethearts fell into a fit of immoderate laughter, whilst the dog by
-pantomime of tail and motion exhibited every mark of satisfaction.
-
-"What a wonderful animal!" said Julia.
-
-"That breed is cleverer than we are," answered Hardy, "and as humane as
-angels. He understood me; it was like bidding him jump overboard after
-you."
-
-"But what is your object, George?"
-
-"I might want you, and if you are in a sound sleep and a breeze is
-blowing in low thunder over the companion-way, I might yelp myself into
-the disease of laryngitis without awakening you. The dog rests beside
-me and is at hand to call you."
-
-"You are very clever, George. The more I see of you the cleverer you
-become. Dear old Sailor! must he lie beside you on deck unsheltered?"
-
-"I shall lash an empty cask to the grating; there is plenty of
-sailcloth forward, and he shall have a kennel. Take the wheel, Julia;
-there is something to be done before the night falls. The breeze
-freshens too; hurrah, see how straight the white race flies astern of
-her! Under such canvas too! Keep her steady and don't be afraid."
-
-"Afraid!" she answered with a glance at him, which made him feel as if
-he was married.
-
-He walked forward, laughing, trusting his girl as though she had been
-an able seaman. A great deal of confusion followed when he caught a few
-hens out of one coop and thrust them into the other. Such heartrending
-screams of despair, and two cocks and five or six hens in the other
-coop strained their throats in clamorous sympathy, and you could have
-sworn that the whole crowd of them, cocks and all, had just laid
-eggs. When the hen-coop was clear he passed his knife through the
-lashings, fetched an axe, swept the bars out of their fixings to the
-accompaniment of the orchestra in the other hen-coop, drew a bucket of
-water, and with a scrubbing brush thoroughly cleansed the dirty thing,
-which had the width of a trunk, though much longer.
-
-He found it was heavy to drag, being a somewhat solid structure, so
-he called the Newfoundland to him and harnessed him to the coop by the
-watch-tackle. The dog tugged with the vigour of a man, Hardy shoved,
-and the hen-coop rushed along the deck right aft, whilst Julia with
-tears of laughter in her eyes kept the speeding ship to her course as
-though she had done nothing but steer ever since she could stand. But
-there was more yet to be done, and the sun was setting. He took the
-cooked meat out of the coppers and placed the steaming mass on a dish
-until it should grow cold.
-
-Suddenly his ear was taken by a strange noise of hissing over the
-side; it was something more than the sheeting of the ship through the
-soft whiteness she made. It was like a continuous snarl threading the
-blowing off of steam.
-
-He looked over the rail and saw the boat they had come aboard in from
-the brig rushing with comet-like velocity close alongside, like a
-little child swept to her home by the enraged mother that had lost her.
-
-He debated a minute, and then said to himself, "She is of no use,
-neither she, nor the fresh water, nor the grub that is in her."
-
-He was making his way into the channels to cast the painter adrift.
-
-"Where are you going?" shrieked Julia at the wheel. He explained.
-
-"If I see you in the water behind me I shall jump after you," she
-cried, with a look of alarm and real anxiety.
-
-"Can't I drop into a ship's chains without going overboard?" he
-answered, and disappeared, and a short scream at the wheel attended his
-going.
-
-The boat was easily released, and to the great joy of Julia the manly
-face of her sailor was once more visible. They both watched the boat as
-she receded.
-
-"She'll be fallen in with," said Hardy, "and some skipper will log
-her and make a fearful mystery of her. Every tragic possibility of
-shipwreck is in her. She is the issue of fire, collision, the leak, the
-meteor-cloven craft--"
-
-"What do you mean?" interrupted Julia.
-
-"The ship's off her course," said Hardy. "That's quite right. Three
-spokes did it. Now look how fair the compass course points to the
-lubber's mark."
-
-"What's a meteor-cloven ship?" she asked.
-
-"I never heard of a big ship having been sunk by a meteor," he
-answered; "but I have been told of a great stone dropping out of the
-sky with the meteoric flash of a fallen star plump through the hatchway
-of a schooner and down through her: the sailors took to the pumps and
-then to the boats. That's what I mean."
-
-And now he must prepare a bed for himself and the dog. He could not
-find an empty barrel, but just against the windlass the cook or the
-cabin servant had placed for firewood perhaps, or for other reasons, a
-big empty case, which might have contained wine or commodities of some
-sort. This placed on its side would do, and as it was too heavy for him
-to carry, and too rough for him to shove, he harnessed the Newfoundland
-to it as to the coop, and Sailor, helped by Hardy, ran the case close
-against the wheel.
-
-"The ship is sailing very fast," said Julia.
-
-"A little over five knots, perhaps," answered Hardy. "We wants legs, my
-love. Blow, blow, my sweet breeze." And he sang to himself whilst he
-got the box on to its side and secured it to the grating.
-
-"Now for your bed, Sailor, and then we'll go to supper."
-
-He reflected, and remembered that there was straw in the fore-peak for
-the use of the old sow that had been and was gone--recollect that he
-had been mate of this ship, and knew exactly where to look for what he
-wanted. He dropped into the fore-peak, which was like descending into
-a hell of smells and the mutter of troubled water, and reappeared with
-his arms full of straw, transforming Julia's wistful face into beaming
-pleasure, for his briefest disappearance struck a sort of horror to her
-heart.
-
-Thus was the Newfoundland housed, and before making up his own bed in
-the hen-coop the sweethearts went to supper.
-
-The girl had been standing some time at the wheel. It was proper she
-should be relieved, so Hardy grasped the spokes whilst Julia went
-below, followed by the dog, to fetch something to eat. She arrived
-with wine, biscuits, jam, and tinned meats. You will remember that she
-had been an under-stewardess, and was used to waiting upon people. But
-that was not all: she had nursed old ladies, had for a very lean wage
-indeed washed, dressed, and walked out with children; in fact, she long
-afterward told Hardy that, always having emigration in her mind, she
-had worked at a laundry for some weeks. In point of service, therefore,
-she was well equipped for life, and Hardy saw in her the helpful woman,
-the wise and devoted wife, beautiful in figure and, now that she was
-happy, most engaging in face.
-
-The three of the ship's company ate their supper, and two of them
-talked and watched the sunset. The further north you go the greater is
-the glory of the sun's departure; yet yonder was a magnificent scene of
-golden pavilions hung with tapestries of deep blue ether; the flight
-of the eastern cloud was like incense pouring from the evening star,
-unrisen or invisible: the vapour fled on the wings of the wind to
-enrich the light in the west by duplication of scarlet splendour, and
-the ship blew steadily along controlled by the hand of Hardy, who was
-sometimes fed by Julia.
-
-All about was the soft, sweet noise of creaming seas; the brig astern
-had vanished into airy nothing, and the _York_ sailed a kingdom of her
-own.
-
-"Will there be a moon?" asked Julia.
-
-"Between nine and ten," he answered. "A slice of moon. We can do
-without her. There is light in starshine, and we can do without that
-also. I must light the binnacle lamp and get the side-lights over. I
-thank God that this wind promises steadiness. Yet it may shift, and
-then I shall want the dog to awake you whilst I see what a single pair
-of arms can do with the braces."
-
-"Do you think I shall not hear you if you shout?" said she.
-
-"I'll not chance it," he answered.
-
-"Do you believe we shall carry this ship home?" she asked.
-
-"I'll not hope, for hoping is bragging, but we'll try, Julia. A man
-cannot add a cubit to his mother's gift of stature by standing on
-stilts; but we'll try, Julia."
-
-"Who can do more?" she asked.
-
-"Hold this wheel while I light the lamps."
-
-He set about this job and speedily despatched it, knowing exactly where
-to lay his hands upon everything he wanted, then brought his mattress
-up along with the rug and jammed it into his hen-coop, and lay down. It
-was rather a tight fit with the mattress, but it gave him the length he
-wanted, and if he did not start in his sleep he need not knock his head
-against the ceiling. He carefully secured the hen-coop to belaying pins.
-
-"That'll provide," said he, "against being taken aback."
-
-He then went below and lighted the cabin lamp, and saw to Julia's bed
-by readjustment of the mattress clear of the draughts circling down the
-companionway. He fetched covering for her, and it was for her to make
-herself comfortable when the time came.
-
-By this hour it was dark; there was no light upon the deep save the
-musket-like wink of the sea flash. But the stars swarmed in brilliant
-processions betwixt the clouds over the mastheads, and their subtle
-light was in the air, and you saw things dimly. The Newfoundland was
-asleep in his kennel beside the wheel. Julia, who had come aboard with
-nothing on but the clothes she stood in, fetched the captain's cloak
-from the captain's cabin. It was a long coat with a warm cape, and I
-call it a cloak because it wasn't a great-coat. It clothed her to her
-little feet, and she sat as warm in it as in the embrace of eiderdown.
-
-"How shall we manage to keep watch?" she asked.
-
-"I shall keep the deck till twelve," he answered; "I have a watch, and
-there is the binnacle light which from time to time will want trimming.
-Sailor will call you at twelve--see now his use? And I'll trim the
-lights, and lie close beside you there for a couple of hours, for I can
-do with very little sleep, and the more sleep you can get the better,
-because you will keep strong and will be able to steer in the day
-whilst I take an off-shore spell in my coop."
-
-"If I felt I could sleep, I would go and lie down at once," she
-answered; "but I love to sit and talk with you. What time is it,
-George?"
-
-"Nearly half-past eight," he answered, putting his watch to the
-binnacle.
-
-"Grant me till nine, I may then be sleepy. But I feel as if that sleep
-of drug was going to suffice me a year."
-
-"Oh, my heart, am not I rejoiced that you should be with me!" he
-exclaimed, in a soft and melodious note of love. "Think if that madman
-had missed the brig and sailed on!"
-
-She shuddered and answered, "I dare not think." Then after a pause she
-said, "Suppose a steamer came in sight, wouldn't she tow us home?"
-
-"I wouldn't give her the chance."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"She would demand salvage, and get it."
-
-"It is shameful," she exclaimed, "that a ship should be paid for
-helping a ship in distress."
-
-"The shipowner knows no shame," answered Hardy, "and neither does his
-dumb confederate, the underwriter. One builds a jerry ship to sink,
-and the other pins a policy on to the villain's back that he may sleep
-whether his ship goes down or not."
-
-It was strange to look along the decks and witness no figure of man. No
-shape of seaman was on the forecastle to extinguish a thousand stars as
-the jib-booms rose pointing to the sky; no shadow of man stirred in the
-waist or the main-deck. The mighty loneliness of the deep was in this
-ship from the wheel to where the forecastle rails clasped hands above
-the figure-head. But sentience was in her and she knew it, and nobly
-confessed the spirit of control by the glad, direct and cleaving shear
-of her stem.
-
-Happy is the sailor who can sit beside his sweetheart on board ship on
-a fine night and discourse of love and other matters without dread of
-the eye of the master-mariner. This couple talked of the safe arrival
-of the ship. They would buy a little cottage; they would not go to sea
-any more. It is always a cottage well inshore that is the sailor's
-dream. It was our glorious Nelson's for many years; witness his letters
-to his wife, whom he loved before the traitress wound her brilliant
-coils round the hero's heart, and numbed the loyalty of its pulse to
-one who had cherished him in sickness and was his dearest one when the
-shadow of his life was yet short in the sun of his glory.
-
-The dust of the shooting star glittered on high; the steady voice
-of the night wind filled the shrouds with the melodies of invisible
-spirits; the white wake gleamed astern like the dusty highway which is
-the road to home; the softly plunging bows awoke the minstrelsy of the
-surge. It was night upon the Atlantic, and no twinkle of side-lamp was
-to be seen upon the sea line.
-
-At nine by Hardy's watch, Julia kissed her sweetheart's lips and held
-him by the hand a little.
-
-"Good night, good night," she said; "I will say a prayer before I
-sleep."
-
-"Never forget that," answered Hardy. "Be sure it is He that hath made
-us and not we ourselves. Pray to him and bless him and thank him, and
-his love will be with us."
-
-Is this the common talk of the sea? Do Smollett and Marryat make their
-heroes converse like this? Thrust your hands into your ribs, ye ribald
-crew, and laugh with godless merriment at this presentment of a sailor
-who was a gentleman, who feared God, to whom the helplessness of his
-companion was no appeal to the heart that loved her, respected her, and
-desired that she should be true to herself and to him.
-
-He was alone at the wheel, and now she was gone to rest and the dog was
-asleep he was alone in the ship, but he could keep a lookout as well as
-the dog, and the dog would not be called upon to serve until the girl
-was alone at the wheel whilst her lover slept.
-
-Many thoughts were this fine young sailor's; he was full of hope
-and courage, and often bent his mind to shrewd contemplation of
-contingency--the shift of the breeze, the head wind, the gale, and
-other gay humours and tragic scowls of the life. But the winch was
-four men, and the watch-tackle a little company of hands, and he did
-not despair. Sometimes he meditated on the port he should make; if it
-came to the worst, then, when in the English Channel, he would shape a
-course for Ramsgate Harbour and run her on the mud, and no man must be
-suffered to board her, for the money of the safety of the ship was to
-be his and hers, and that was the settled resolution of his soul.
-
-When twelve o'clock came round he did not wish to sleep; he would have
-chosen rather that Julia should have slumbered until dawn. But the
-refreshment of rest was an imperious demand with which he must comply
-for his own and for the sake of the girl, the safety of their noble
-companion, the safety of the ship and her cargo. He thought he would
-try Julia by calling, and he shouted four or five times, but, as he
-had foreseen, the sweep of the wind broke his voice to pieces in the
-companionway, and her ears were blocked with sleep.
-
-The dog started up and came to his side at the outcry of the
-man. "Fetch her, Sailor! fetch her!" he cried, pointing to the
-companion-hatch.
-
-The Newfoundland barked and seemed to wonder.
-
-"Fetch her, Sailor! fetch her!" he roared again, still pointing.
-
-This time the dog understood. He sprang to the ladder and vanished,
-and a moment later Julia's cries were piercing. But it was merely the
-noise of terror such as would be excited in a girl awakened from a
-sound sleep by the resolute drag of a dog's teeth. She understood the
-thing in a minute, patted the dog, who was dragging her by her skirt to
-the ladder, snatched up her hat and the captain's cloak, and arrived
-on deck with the dog, whose tail timed the wag of the stars over the
-mastheads.
-
-"Have you slept?" he asked.
-
-"Too well," she answered. "I screamed because Sailor broke in upon a
-nightmare and fitted it."
-
-"Will you be able to hold the wheel?"
-
-"I'll try. What is the time?"
-
-"After midnight--nearly one bell," he answered.
-
-She stood at the wheel, and her firm grasp was full of promise of
-control.
-
-"Is that the course?" she inquired, looking into the compass.
-
-"Yes, and keep her to it as best you can by the starshine whilst I trim
-the lamp."
-
-"What is our pace, dear?"
-
-"Six and a half at least," he answered.
-
-He made haste to trim the lamp and saw to the side-lights, and his
-spirits were high and his hope more exalted yet when he saw how well
-the girl steered. A big ship for a girl to control! And all the sweet
-archness of her incomparable posture was unconsciously expressed to
-her lover as he flashed the light over her before adjusting it for the
-illumination of the card.
-
-"Now for a little supper," said he, "then I shall lie down."
-
-He fetched some food and wine, and ate himself whilst he helped Julia
-to eat; the dog was remembered; and all the while he kept his eyes
-fixed in critical attention upon the girl's handling of the wheel.
-
-"Sailor, go forward and keep a lookout, sir," he exclaimed, and this
-was an order which, as you know, the dog understood, and was accustomed
-to obey. He had supped and was thankful, and, faithful to his duty as
-Tom Bowline, the brave Newfoundland trotted forward to the forecastle,
-and took up a position of lookout betwixt the knight-heads.
-
-"Here is my watch, Julia," said Hardy. "Call me at half-past two--but
-sooner, at the instant of need, if your arm should weary or the breeze
-shift and drive you off your course. I am a sailor and used to keeping
-my ears open in sleep. I am close beside you there, and your first cry
-will bring me out like a cork to the drag of a corkscrew."
-
-"I will call you at half-past two," she answered. "She is as easy to
-steer as a boat. Look how steady the course swings at the mark there!"
-
-He paused and gazed round him. The white cloud was speeding swiftly
-across the stars, and the ship hummed with the wind as the thrill of
-its ebon lines of gear, of shroud and stay and back-stay, shook its
-transport into the plank. The glass was steady--he had seen to that
-when he went below for the midnight supper; and there was no sign of
-worse, or changeful, or other weather within or on the verge of the
-mighty liquid sweep, whose heart was the ship, carrying onwards always
-the illimitable girdle on which she floated, the central figure of the
-night.
-
-Hardy got into the hen-coop--a tight fit; but in it he was well
-sheltered, for the coop was under the lee of the weather-bulwark. He
-drew an old coat he had brought up over him, pillowed his head on the
-rolled-up flag he had thrown into the hen-coop, and in a minute was
-asleep.
-
-A sailor's sleep is sound, and sacred as the slumber of death to his
-messmates and shipmates as they mutter softly round about him and
-tread the upper plank with airy feet that all shall be hushed in the
-forecastle--hushed unless it be the crying of the wind or the sullen
-thunder of the bow-sea, or the cries of the watch on high furling or
-reefing to the trumpet commands of the quarter-deck. Nothing in all
-ocean romance is comparable to this picture of a full-rigged ship in
-command of a girl who is alone at the wheel whilst her lover sleeps,
-whilst a dog on the forecastle-head watches the ocean line with
-faithful eye for the sparkle of light, for the dim sheen of canvas, for
-the stream of smoke spangled with the stars of the furnace, that shall
-make him bark in barks as truthful of indication as the strokes of the
-tongue upon the ship's bell.
-
-The wind held a sweet, true breeze as Hardy had foreseen, whilst that
-brave little heart kept the ship's course steady to the lubber's point.
-She was not tired, sleep had refreshed her; standing was no trial;
-she was warmly draped, and felt a sort of glory in this occupation of
-sea-throne, which enabled her to do her duty and to hold her sweetheart
-in tranquil and most necessary repose. She was quick in intelligence,
-and the sea was small and its weight was of the summer; and she found
-a woman's delight in her power of governing, for the ship answered to
-her white hand with a courtier-like grace; she felt to be queen of the
-lordly fabric, and her spell at the wheel was a triumph of British
-girlhood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE BOAT-FULL
-
-
-It was hard upon half-past two in the morning. The breeze had been
-blowing steadily throughout, and the white pace of the ship was
-more than six knots in the hour. Julia put her hand into her pocket
-and pulled out Hardy's watch and saw what o'clock it was; the stars
-flashed over the mastheads with each floating reel of the buoyant,
-girl-controlled fabric; the silver dust of the speeding star vanishing
-in a length of fainting light scored the deep midnight blue between
-the clouds; the voice of the ocean rejoicing in the swinging dance of
-the breeze filled the air with sounds of the cataract, the foam of the
-waterfall, the wrangle of the freshet with the sea.
-
-Suddenly, far forward past the shadowy arch of the fore-course, you
-heard the deep bay of a great dog. A ship was in sight!
-
-"O God!" cried Julia at the wheel, interpreting the deep-noted thunder
-of the great creature, "What am I to do?"
-
-But such a bark as Sailor could deliver was not to sound unheeded
-in the sleeping ear of a seaman. Hardy started, rolled out of his
-hen-coop, and was by Julia's side in a few pulses.
-
-"I see her," he shouted, and seizing the wheel he put it hard a-port.
-
-Then on the port bow loomed an ashen apparition with one red light,
-like the hideous stare of a drunkard, visible in the stagger of the
-bows. It was a full-rigged ship, clothed to her trucks with white
-canvas, about a mile and a half distant. She was standing to the
-southward and westward, and the red eye of the _York_ was upon her;
-there would have been no collision, but Sailor's voice was timely.
-Hardy brought the ship to her course again, and the stranger was on the
-bow, sliding like a churchyard phantom over the glimmering tombstones
-of the deep.
-
-"She is an American," said Hardy.
-
-"How do you know?" asked Julia.
-
-"She is clothed in cotton, that is why I know. What a noble lookout is
-Sailor. Didn't you see her?"
-
-"I see her now, but not before now," she answered.
-
-"Brave dog," cried Hardy.
-
-He called to him and the Newfoundland came rushing aft, with many
-tokens visible in the starshine of the emotion of satisfaction which
-good dogs feel when they have done their duty.
-
-"You are wearied out, Julia," said Hardy. "Do you feel as stiff with
-standing as a shroud of wire-rigging?"
-
-"It is half-past two," answered the girl. "Here is your watch, George.
-Lie down, dearest, and I will stand here for another hour; I am not
-tired."
-
-"Hold the wheel whilst I trim this light," was his answer. When this
-was done he said, "Now to bed, my lass."
-
-She heard command in his voice, and answered, "I should love to lie in
-your hen-coop."
-
-"Take off your hat and get into it. 'Tis snug enough. Pull the jacket
-over you, and sleep--sleep--sleep; and then you will be able to thank
-Mary Queen who sent the sleep that slid into your soul. But first go
-below and get a little wine and food."
-
-She was as obedient as a good sailor, refreshed herself in the cabin
-where the lamp was burning, and returned with a glass of rum and water
-and a biscuit.
-
-"And my pipe," said he. And he told her where to find the pipe and the
-tobacco.
-
-Before she got into the hen-coop he said to her:
-
-"I wish I could teach the dog to steer; but that is impossible. But I
-tell you what--when those yards need trimming I shall want some one to
-hold on to the slack, and by all that's good Sailor shall do it."
-
-"Why doesn't God enable such a creature as this to speak as we do?"
-said Julia. "It has the mind--why should it lack the voice, when even
-the filthiest cannibal may use his tongue?"
-
-"Get you to bed, Julia."
-
-She crept into the hen-coop, wrapped her clothes about her legs, pulled
-the sailor's coat over her, and lay watching her lover.
-
-Hardy stood at the wheel with a pipe in his mouth, and the dog slept
-in his kennel alongside. It was not for long that Julia was allowed to
-sleep. When it was a quarter before four, when the darkness that grows
-deeper before the dawn dwelt like a sable vapour upon the face of the
-sea, when the flash of the star was fast in its westward sweep, and the
-red scar of moon looked dully down like a piece of broken glass thick
-stained, through which the crimson splendour above drains and oozes,
-the wind shifted suddenly three points; 'twas then almost abeam.
-
-He called to the girl. Her awakening found her astounded by her
-situation. Was she in a coffin? He called again, and the saint-like
-voice of love brought her from her sepulchre of hen-coop with an eager
-cry of, "I am wide awake. What is it?"
-
-"The wind has shifted, Julia. Do you know what I mean?"
-
-"The wind has changed."
-
-"Yes, you are awake. Take hold of this wheel."
-
-She grasped the spokes. The dog would be of no use then; all Hardy
-could do was to slacken away the weather-braces and haul taut the
-lee-braces as well as a single pair of British arms could. He clapped
-on the watch-tackle here and there, and made the best job possible
-under the circumstances; but he was bothered by the want of somebody
-to hold on to the slack. However, by belaying the watch-tackle and
-then belaying the brace he in a one-man fashion managed it, and when
-he returned to the wheel the ship slipped to her course again with her
-shortened canvas rap-full, and a wake like a mill-race.
-
-"Hurrah!" cried Hardy, with a slap of his thigh; "storm along, old
-Stormy! Whilst she creaks she holds! I'll teach that dog this morning
-to pull a rope. He has teeth and sense and some sailors have neither,
-because their teeth are worn out by chewing salt junk, and the crimp
-drugs their brains till the skull is like a rotten nut, full of dust."
-
-"It is my turn at the wheel," said Julia.
-
-"Just you go and turn in," he answered. "Here's the skipper and
-there's the bed. I shall take an off-shore spell sometime to-day. Rest
-till breakfast-time, and then you shall light the galley fire, and boil
-some coffee."
-
-She crept into the hen-coop after holding the binnacle lamp to his
-pipe, and the ship moved in the glimmering shadow through the hour of
-darkness with slightly restless yards at every solemn plunge, for, like
-the figure of a beautiful woman, she was the fairer in grace and the
-easier in carriage when moulded by the fingers of art.
-
-Sunrise is beautiful at sea on a fine morning; the sky ripples with
-silver and rose, and the sea uplifts its fountain note of rejoicing
-as that great imperial mystery of the heavens, the sun, floats off
-the verge of the deep. The dawn found Hardy at the wheel and the girl
-asleep in the hen-coop. He did not curiously seek for a ship in sight,
-for he did not stand in need of help, and would reject it if offered. A
-sail was twinkling like a peak of iceberg right abeam to starboard, and
-Hardy looked at her, and thought of twenty other things. The breeze had
-slackened slightly; it was still a pleasant summer breast of sea, and
-the ship's speed was four. All plain sail might have given her seven,
-and the wings of the stunsail from topgallant yard-arm to swinging-boom
-end might have helped her into eight. No matter! She was homeward
-bound, and there was no growler in her ship's company if it was not the
-dog.
-
-When Julia came out of her strange little bedroom she arose like
-Arethusa in Shelley's poem: rosy and fire-eyed, sweet with the
-refreshment of slumber, and sweeter perhaps to a man's eye because she
-was unadorned. She pressed her lips to her sweetheart's cheek.
-
-"Let me take the wheel," said she, "while you rest."
-
-"Can you light a fire?" he answered.
-
-She looked at him with reproachful wonder.
-
-"What cannot I do? What has not poverty made me do?"
-
-"Will you light the galley fire?" said he, "and fill a kettle out of
-that scuttle-butt, boil some water, and give us a hot drink of coffee?
-Poor old Crummie is dead and gone, but her spirit survives in tins, and
-I believe there is some preserved milk in the cabin."
-
-She did not waste much time in lighting the galley fire. Everything was
-at hand. Whilst the kettle was boiling she fetched food from the cabin,
-and on top of the dog's kennel made some little display of tablecloth,
-cup and saucer, and knife and fork. This disturbed Sailor, who at once
-beheld the distant sail and saluted it.
-
-"You shall be even more useful than that," said Hardy to the dog. "This
-morning I will look for the key of the safe and judge of the value of
-the contents."
-
-"It is pleasanter than yachting," exclaimed Julia.
-
-"We have to cross the Bay," replied Hardy. "It may come on hard from
-the east'ard and blow us to Boston."
-
-"Is it always rough in the Bay of Biscay?" said the girl.
-
-"I have swept up and down it often in my life," replied Hardy, "and
-five times out of ten we were becalmed on it, and thankful for
-catspaws. The thunder of the Bay continues to roar loud in the song,
-and alarms the man in the street who talks of taking shipping south.
-Let him be hove to off the Horn in fifty-eight degrees south. Suppose
-you see if the kettle boils."
-
-They made an excellent breakfast and so did the dog. Hardy ate and
-held the wheel, the ship, as though in love with her people, almost
-steered herself. There would come a change; the God-given mood of the
-sea is sweet, it is the weather that breaks her heart. As a drunken
-husband seizes his pale and pretty wife by the hair, and flogs her
-into shrieks and madness, so does the weather serve the ocean. It is
-good for the fish who breathe thereby, but bad for the passenger at
-whose white, overhanging face the invisible eye of the fish is uplifted
-languishingly.
-
-"Now, Julia," said Hardy, "hold the wheel whilst I teach the dog a
-lesson in practical seamanship."
-
-He stepped to the mizzen-royal halliards and called to the dog, which
-followed. He cast the rope off the pin, but kept one turn under the
-pin, and said to the dog:
-
-"Seize it and pull!" holding out the slack.
-
-The dog with much wagging of tail, as though he reckoned that Hardy
-meant some caper-cutting, seized the rope with his teeth. It was now
-a job. He wanted the dog to pull at the rope, so that when he swigged
-off at the halliards the dog by dragging would keep the slack taut as
-though strained by human hands. The intelligence of the Newfoundland
-is proverbial and marvellous, but it took Hardy all an hour to make
-the noble creature see what it was expected to do. He then did it, and
-Julia, whose laugh had been constant throughout the procedure, let go
-the wheel to clap her hands, whilst Hardy with purple face swigged off
-upon the halliards, and the dog, with forward slanting legs, strained
-the slack. All three then rested: Hardy steered sitting, for, as I have
-told you, a little movement of the spokes sufficed.
-
-After smoking a pipe whilst Julia looked to the galley fire--not with
-a view to cooking, there was plenty to eat--the sailor yielded the
-wheel to his sweetheart, and went below into the captain's cabin to
-explore the contents of the safe. First of all, he was to find the
-key; this proved a hunt, running into ten minutes; then of course he
-found the bunch of keys exactly where he looked last and should have
-looked at first--in the captain's desk. The key of the safe was one of
-a few on a ring. When he opened the safe he found several large metal
-boxes like cash-boxes. All these boxes were to be fitted by the keys
-on the ring. The first was flush with magnificent jewelry--bracelets,
-earrings, rings; and the flash of the diamond was like the sparkle
-of the sea under the sun. The second metal box was filled with gold
-chains of all sorts of pattern, some massive, some delicate as twine,
-of very beautiful workmanship. In the third box were watches and seals,
-all gold, of splendid manufacture, for in those days the watch was
-handsome, the mechanism exquisite as the chronometer of to-day, and the
-gold case was heavy. The fourth and last box contained curiosities,
-such as a Jew dealer with a yellow grin of awe would steal out of some
-mysterious hiding-place and show you with something of breathlessness
-and a frequent glance to right and left, and sometimes over his
-shoulder.
-
-How am I to describe these things? A discoloured Nelson tall as a
-thumb, commanding the combined fleets in a cocked hat, on a large seal
-on which was graved Trafalgar. A little Napoleon in dull ivory on a
-massive gold seal with indistinguishable initials. Very old rings,
-very old gold spoons--but this is not an auctioneer's catalogue. Hardy
-locked everything up.
-
-"Julia's and mine," said he, laughing softly; by which he meant the
-value of the salvage of the precious fal-lals.
-
-He restored the ring of keys to the desk at which he glanced with a
-reverential eye, for he saw a little packet of letters in faded ink,
-and he knew that there too lay in a little circular box small curls of
-the hair of the dead--the wife and the little drummer. The captain had
-shown them to him, and the hair was the boy's when two years old. Hardy
-looked at the drum, at the little bed, at the medicine-chest, at the
-little clothes hanging at the bulkhead, and stepped out with a sigh,
-thinking in a sort of blind way about the mercy of God, the sufferings
-of madness, and the death of little children.
-
-"Have you found any jewels?" asked Julia, as she stood at the wheel.
-
-"More than you could wear, my dear," he answered, "if you were as
-many-limbed and many-headed as an Indian god."
-
-"Are they worth much?"
-
-"I am not a pawnbroker," he answered; "besides, I have been looking at
-the little drum and it has drummed the jewelry out of my head."
-
-"For whom were the jewels intended?"
-
-"There is always a market for trash of that sort in the Colonies," he
-replied.
-
-"Why don't you lie down and get some sleep?" she exclaimed.
-
-"I shall keep awake," he answered, "until I have shot the sun, and then
-perhaps I may sleep for an hour, weather permitting."
-
-As he spoke these words he was looking at the sea right abeam, and held
-up his hand in a gesture of wonder, which arrested something that Julia
-was about to say.
-
-"Good God!" cried Hardy. "What's going on there?"
-
-It was about a mile and a half off, and just in that place the sea was
-working in a sort of convulsion, coil upon coil of dark blue brine
-wound round and round like mighty sea snakes, whose sport was as deadly
-as the pursuit of the harpooned dolphin. These amazing throes of brine
-upon which the sun was sweetly shining, and from which and to which the
-summer breast of ocean breathed in the rejoicing of the early morning,
-in a minute or two grew savage with snaps and leaps of foam, with
-prong-like upheavals of water, with crested shootings, and the area
-whitened to the hue of a star, and the volcanic fury began. The ship
-trembled. You heard no thunder of explosion; the roar of the fire under
-the ooze was dumb when it penetrated the spacious hall of the sea; but
-the raging torment was visible in a sudden mighty upheaval of foaming
-water, smokeless but glorious with its cloud of spray.
-
-A miracle! From up from deepest soundings had been forked the figure
-of a drowned fabric, and as a ball plays poised on the feathering
-of a fountain so floated the form of a small vessel with two lower
-masts standing, crowning the summit of that fire-expelled, pyramidal,
-and towering volume of foam. Such sights have been witnessed at sea,
-for the ocean is the arena of the sublime wonder, the heart-thrilling
-miracle; it is the mirror of God, and unlike the land its breast
-reflects his lights. The lovers gazed, the dog gazed; the ship seemed
-to dwell under her curves of canvas as though she paused to look.
-
-"How marvellous!" cried Julia.
-
-Hardy rushed for the glass. He caught the poised object before it
-vanished. It was a little ship of old shape, high in stern, sloping
-thence to curved head-boards, two masts like stone columns, richly
-encrusted with marine growth, and lustrous as the inner shell of the
-oyster; the hull was of a blackish green and looked black in the glass
-in contrast with the white fury upon whose apex it rolled and swayed
-and tumbled. Then it was gone! It vanished in a cannon volley of water.
-The sea thereabouts ran boiling, but in a few minutes the curl of the
-breeze-blown surge had triumphed over the milky softness, and had the
-spectacle been the launch of a dead man in a sailor's shroud you could
-not have seen less of it.
-
-"Was ever such a sight beheld before?" said Julia, with tremulous
-breath and enlarged nostrils.
-
-"'Those who go down to the sea in ships,'" answered Hardy. "Has not
-that observation been made once or twice before? I believe I have been
-forced to read it a thousand times, for every newspaper and every book
-that relates to the sea quotes this Scriptural sentence, and I am weary
-of it."
-
-"I have heard of islands being thrown up," said Julia.
-
-"A great deal is thrown up at sea," replied Hardy. "Steady the wheel,
-my heart, whilst I ogle the sun."
-
-It will be admitted that this brace of sweethearts had not been
-very fortunate. To be burnt out, open-boated, drugged, kidnapped,
-shipwrecked on a derelict with a madman, are experiences of a rather
-emphatic sort. Hardy's share had been the share of a man, and bar
-the drug he could have gone through twenty fold worse and emerged a
-sunburnt, smiling sailor.
-
-Fate for a little while was now to mask its grim features with a
-pleasant leer, and for the next two days of the ship's adventure the
-weather was calm, the sea smooth enough for a little yacht, the heavens
-bright with a little shading here and there of cloud, and all went well
-with the crew. On the morning of the third day Hardy came out of his
-coop like a snail from its shell, only a little faster. Julia was at
-the wheel, and the dog on the forecastle keeping a lookout.
-
-"We are in luck," said Hardy, gazing around him. "Fancy only requiring
-to trim sail five times in two days."
-
-"How far off is the abandoned brig, do you think?" asked the girl.
-
-"All five hundred miles of salt water, Julia, and a salt mile is longer
-than a highway mile."
-
-They were used to the ship and the ways and methods they had adopted.
-Thanks to the blessed weather, they had by alternation secured the rest
-that nature demanded. There was plenty to eat and they ate heartily.
-The dog was as useful as a midshipman; he understood the meaning of
-the word slack, and held on to it when required as though his teeth
-were in the sleeve of a drowning man. There was coal in the fore-peak,
-and Hardy had made the necessary descent, and the stock in the galley
-was always plentiful.
-
-This morning they went about their work as usual. Hardy steered.
-Julia lighted the galley fire, and the dog came aft to sit beside the
-wheel and wait for breakfast. How did Hardy look? How did Julia look?
-Very well indeed, I can assure you. When on board the abandoned brig
-the sailor's beard grew, and he had returned somewhat bristling to
-the _York_. But in this ship were his razor, lathering brush, and a
-square of glass to make faces in. He was therefore now a clean-shaven
-man, and I don't believe there is any girl living who would not have
-fallen in love with him. He had choice of clothes, too, which put him
-to windward of his sweetheart. But the eye of love should never be
-affected by apparel, and when Julia clothed herself for warmth and the
-night in the madman's cloak she was still an incomparable figure and
-of romantic face. Clothes have very little to do with health; you may
-sometimes peep at the goddess through a rent in the coat, and I have
-met her in country lanes and crossing meadows in the picturesque garb
-of the scarecrow with such cheeks of scarlet, such eyes of light, such
-teeth of ivory as might prove the envy and the despair of her ladyship
-travelling, like the suds of a washerwoman's tub, in carriage and pair
-to a princely festival.
-
-In fact, Julia was sparkling to the caressing hand of this new life.
-The health of the sea was hers, the love of the sailor was hers,
-content and hope were hers. Do not these things wait upon appetite and
-help digestion? Do not they irradiate slumber with entrancing visions?
-If the girl soiled her hands by lighting the galley fire, she knew
-where to find the head pump and the galley clout or a towel from aft to
-dry her fingers.
-
-Whilst they were eating their breakfast this morning the dog sprang
-on the grating abaft the wheel and barked its lookout to the sea to
-windward, about two points before the beam.
-
-"Hold this wheel, Julia!" exclaimed Hardy.
-
-He sprang for the telescope and levelled it, and the light sweep of
-the ship's summer lurch darted a boat with a lugsail into the lens.
-He viewed her intently in silence, which Julia did not dare to break
-into by heedless, girlish cries of "What is it?" like the distracting
-marginal notes of the lady's pencil in the tearful, the hysteric, and
-the religious novel. How far distant that boat was off I do not know,
-but she lay very clean and clear in the powerful tubes which Hardy was
-bringing to bear upon her. Her sail was like a square of satin; the
-fabric was painted black; as she rose to the fold you saw the delicate
-gush of foam at the bow. Hardy counted eight men in her, and one figure
-that was in the bows continuously waved some streaming thing white in
-his hands.
-
-"My God!" cried Hardy, letting fall the glass to his side. "What a
-misfortune!"
-
-"What is it?" asked Julia.
-
-"A boat-full of shipwrecked men," he replied, and his face grew grim as
-he said it. "They may be dying of thirst and famine, and they must not
-come aboard."
-
-"Oh, George!" exclaimed Julia, grasping the thing in an instant.
-
-"If they came aboard," he continued, speaking swiftly and even
-fiercely, "they may seize the ship; in any case their salvage claim
-would wreck our hopes. Put the helm up. By God, they shall not board
-us!"
-
-He sprang to the wheel, and the ship sloped away to leeward from her
-course, and the bearings of the boat were then abaft the beam. Julia
-picked up the glass, and with an easy hand directed it.
-
-"She is sailing as fast as we," she exclaimed.
-
-"No!" answered Hardy, in a rage.
-
-"Must they be left to perish?" she cried.
-
-It was an awful problem for fate to submit to a sailor's mind. The very
-thought of thirst, of famine, of suffering incarnate in the miserable
-figures of men in an open boat at sea makes faint the heart of the
-seaman, and sooner would he expire than not fly to help. But how stood
-this ghastly conundrum with Hardy? First, who were the men? They might
-be foreigners--Greeks, Italians, Portuguese, Spaniards. They had knives
-on their hips, and their hearts would redden with the spirit of murder
-when, being on board, they understood that the flag was the Red Flag
-of England, and that nothing stood between them and the ship and a
-fair-haired English girl, of incomparable figure, but one man, whose
-heart beat within the reach of their shortest blade! No! They must be
-helped but not received. And how was it to be done? And meanwhile grew
-this fear--if the wind slackened, if a calm fell, they would gain the
-ship with their oars. Hardy was without a revolver. Captain Layard
-had taken away his; how could he resist--how could one man resist the
-desperate clamber of eight men infuriate with thirst, famine, and
-deadlier passions yet if they were foreigners?
-
-He pondered deeply, grasping the wheel; the dog upon the grating
-watched the boat, a lustrous spot to the naked eye, and Julia gazed in
-silence at her sweetheart.
-
-"Come and hold the wheel," said he.
-
-Still in silence witnessing distress but resolution in his face, she
-seized the spokes, and he went to work to help that open boat. There
-were, as you know, two boats in the davits, and a gig, called the
-captain's gig, hung by davits over the stern. Rushing to the foremost
-boat, Hardy seized the empty breaker out of its bows and ran with it to
-the scuttle-butt, and, swiftly as he could, filled it. He then replaced
-the breaker in the boat's bows. He next sped down the companion-ladder,
-filled a tin basket with bottles of beer and two bottles of rum,
-returned on deck with this basket, and placed it in the boat. He then
-fetched some tinned food, a quantity of ship's biscuit and an uncooked
-ham, which would be good eating to starving men. They were eight, and
-he made calculations for a week's supply with care. He threw a pannikin
-into the boat. He breathed hard and fast, and his face was coloured
-with blood, and the sweat drained from his hair to his eyebrows; for he
-was mad to succour and mad to escape, and all the while he worked he
-never spoke a word to the girl.
-
-It would have been an impossible task but for the steady flow of the
-sea, and the gentle yielding of the ship to the caressing sway of
-the fold. But it fell out as it was, and Hardy did it whilst Julia
-steered, and the ship blew softly onwards, whilst the white spot abaft
-the beam, watched by the dog, gleamed like a meteor whose foam would
-be a little disc when near. He freed the boat of its gripes by his
-knife, a sharp blade, then, just as Layard had before him, he lowered
-the boat by easing away first the bow, then the after falls, until
-she was water-borne, when, with a sailor's activity, he passed his
-knife through the tackles, and the ropes fell into the boat. She was
-liberated! and whilst he filled his lungs, distressed in breath, so
-ardent and energetic had been his toil, the boat was astern, then in
-the ship's wake, and Julia could see her by looking over the taffrail.
-
-"They'll come up with it," said Hardy, going to the girl's side, "and
-their overhauling her will widen our distance."
-
-"It was the only way to feed them," Julia answered.
-
-"One way. Have they fresh water enough? Eight men! We may want that
-other breaker," said he with a side nod at the remaining quarter-boat.
-"They'll be fallen in with--perhaps before sundown."
-
-He picked up the glass and again scrutinised the boat. She leapt
-into the lens within a quarter of a mile. The man in the bows stood
-upright, but he was no longer flourishing his wift. They were heading
-almost into the ship's wake, and were certain to see the quarter-boat
-and understand what she meant. Along the rail the heads of the men
-were fixed like cannon-balls. Supposing they were Englishmen. What
-would they think? Hardy ground his teeth and twice beat the air with a
-clenched fist. But supposing they were Dagos. Supposing--he could not
-have acted otherwise. Life, love, and hope were the inspiration of his
-resolution, and I say he could not have acted otherwise.
-
-It was then, happily for him and his sweetheart, that the sea to
-windward darkened a little to a pleasant freshening of breeze. The
-breasts aloft swelled to the larger breath, but so scantily clothed was
-the _York_, it was absolutely certain that if the breeze scanted the
-boat would overhaul the ship, and once those eight men got alongside
-the rest might prove--Good night!
-
-Again Hardy looked at the boat through the telescope, and he cried out
-with the tubes at his eye:
-
-"It's all right, Julia; they're heading dead for the quarter-boat.
-Whether they understand or not, it's all right."
-
-He grasped the wheel and brought the ship to her course and this
-greased her heels somewhat, for the yards were trimmed for the course
-he was steering and the sails drew bravely. Julia kept the glass to her
-eye.
-
-"They have lowered their sail," she cried. "They are very near the
-boat."
-
-It was all blank to the naked eye, and Hardy searched in vain for that
-star whose rise might have proved the malignant star of death and
-dishonour to them both. Again the lovers shifted places. Julia held
-the wheel whilst Hardy directed the glass at the boat. He watched the
-minute manoeuvres. It was a little field of Lilliputians, but every
-figure was as clean cut in the lens as the pygmies to the downward
-gazing eyes of Gulliver. The two boats came and went behind and upon
-the summer swell of the sea, but not so as to baffle the marine vision.
-The naked mast rolled and the men showed plain. Thirst and famine
-were in their motions, and Hardy sighed and gasped as he watched.
-He saw the infuriate gesture that brought the bottle to the mouth,
-the impassioned posture as the cracked lips drained the pannikin. He
-witnessed avidity, coloured into horror by human need in the passage of
-the clenched biscuit or piece of meat to the mouth. It nearly broke his
-heart to leave them. If ever a man was inspired by the compassion, the
-instincts, and the loyalty of a sailor, it was Hardy. Yet he thanked
-God with all his heart that they had plenty, that the weather promised
-fair, that they had another and a good boat, and that in this highway
-of the sailing ship human help was certain if calamitous destiny were
-not first. Hardy's eyes were moist as the telescope slowly sank from
-his arm; for let them be Dagos, let them be Dutchmen, call those men by
-any name you will, they were shipwrecked sailors upon a lonely sea, and
-their appeal to the Red Flag of England would have been irresistible
-but for the helpless condition of the _York_. Julia saw emotion in
-her lover's face, and caressed him with her eyes as though she would
-soothe him with her love, and never did she honour him more, nor felt a
-fuller flow of dumb and inward gratitude to the Father of all for this
-lifelong gift of sympathy, help, and devotion.
-
-"We shall run them out of reach of the glass," said Hardy.
-
-"I can scarcely see them as it is," she answered.
-
-"What is their story?" he went on. "It will be told because they will
-be saved. Yonder is one of the teachings of the sea. You pass a piece
-of wreck; it is encrusted with the jewelry of the ocean; it is girdled
-by a silver belt of fish. To one man it is a piece of wreckage; to
-another man it is a memorial, lofty, sublime, and awful as a cathedral,
-of fire, of explosion, of the beam-ended fabric with lashed figures in
-the shrouds, sunk to the foam, and blackening it with emergence like
-the iron shape dangling at the finger of a gibbet upon a wintry moor
-that foams with snow."
-
-"Do all sailors talk in this language?" said Julia.
-
-"Any man who can make himself understood speaks well. I do not love
-irony."
-
-Julia smiled archly.
-
-"You do not love irony," she said. "Did you ever love another before
-you loved me?"
-
-"A man who uses the sea is shy amongst women," he answered. "We are
-accustomed when we see a green eye in thick weather winking off our
-port bow to sing these lines:
-
-
- "'There's not so much for you to do,
- For green to port keeps clear of you.'
-
-
-I was never yet in a collision--I mean ashore."
-
-This pleased her, and she said she would go and look to the galley fire
-if Hardy would kindly hold the wheel.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-HAIL, COLUMBIA!
-
-
-Luck was still to attend the ship's company of the _York_--luck in
-the shape of weather. The wind took two days to change its mood, then
-shifted off the port bow, where Hardy's metaphoric red eye was winking.
-
-The man, the dog, the watch-tackle, and the winch were equal to the
-sudden confrontment of air, which happened at daybreak when the man and
-the dog could see, and when the girl at the wheel could see.
-
-Of course sail was not trimmed as though the _York_ had been a frigate,
-as though you had fifty men for a rope, when the master-mariner
-considers himself lucky if he gets twenty-five men for a full-rigged
-ship. Trimming sail took time; but it was done. And the dog stuck like
-glue to the slack. No need to dwell upon the discipline; it was now
-as before, and likely to continue whilst health and strength endured.
-The sweethearts used the hen-coop alternately, and it yielded them all
-necessary refreshment of slumber; the dog kept a lookout whilst the
-girl steered, and still the ship's course was a crow's flight for the
-Chops, with some hurdles of parallels before her indeed; but her march
-though slow was conquering, and the lovers' spirits were as high as
-the dog-vane that shook its piece of bunting at the main-royal masthead.
-
-When Hardy had trimmed sail this morning he sat beside the girl to rest
-a little. The wind was to the westward of north, the sky that way was
-pale, but the sun to starboard burnt bright, and lofty ridges of cloud,
-very delicate, like the memory of the ripple on the sands of the coast,
-moved stealthily northwest, which signified sundry currents of air of
-no moment, if below all gushes the favouring breeze.
-
-"We'll breakfast in a few minutes," said Hardy. "I feel as if I have
-been swimming ten miles."
-
-"We are in luck, George," answered Julia.
-
-"What is the luck of the sailor?" said he. "I have heard of one
-lucky sailor. He went to a sale and bought a feather-bed. Jack in a
-feather-bed! He turned in and his starboard bunion was worried by
-something hard. He ripped the cover and found a bag containing one
-hundred and forty-two Queen Anne guineas. He started a public-house and
-died worth eight thousand pounds."
-
-"He was a sailor and deserved it," said Julia. "Why do sailors hate
-soldiers?"
-
-"The historian must answer that. There is a reason, and it is true. You
-see, my dear, a sailor will spend his last half-crown upon his girl,
-and a soldier will borrow the last half-crown from _his_ girl."
-
-"Do soldiers hate sailors?" asked Julia, laughing.
-
-"They only meet at sea," answered Hardy, "and the motion of a ship will
-neutralise prejudice in the man who can't stand it."
-
-In due course the galley fire was lighted, coffee was boiled, and the
-ship's company broke their fast. The breeze hung steady, the glass
-spoke hopefully, and Hardy found, after taking sights, that home was
-nearer by some hundred miles than it had been yesterday. It was nine
-o'clock on the evening of this day. The lights of heaven winked sparely
-through an atmosphere that nevertheless was unthickened by mist. The
-fresh wind of the noon had slackened much, and the sound of the fall of
-the sea off the bow was sloppy, as though the cook was emptying buckets
-of stuff over the side, and indeed the noise was in keeping with the
-sort of smoking, greasy face of the sea, which rolled in knolls of
-soft, black oil speedily out of sight, so general and closing was the
-dusk.
-
-Julia stood at the wheel, and the dog as usual was on the forecastle
-head keeping a lookout. The girl could distinctly hear her lover
-snoring in his hen-coop. The magic of the ear of love runs melody into
-the snore of the sweetheart; to the burdened marital organ the snore is
-not the voice of the heavenly chorister. Shakespeare wonders whether we
-dream in our sleep of death; Julia might have wondered if we snored.
-The binnacle lamp burnt brightly, so did the side-lights. The girl had
-been sleeping whilst Hardy steered, and now stood fresh and firm at the
-wheel, a very shadow of British girl, snug in the madman's cloak; but
-the faint stars knew that her figure was beautiful.
-
-Suddenly the dog began to bark; its deep note rolled aft in low
-thunder. Julia, with her heart slightly fluttering, strained her eyes
-to port and then to starboard, believing that the dog was reporting
-the side-light or white masthead light of a ship or steamer. But the
-dog continued to bark, and in the midst of it, before it awoke Hardy,
-before she could call to Hardy, a smell, an overpowering stench, fumes
-as overwhelming as any that could rise from the shallow tombs of
-thousands of plague-stricken wretches--this subduing and distracting
-presence was in the air.
-
-"George! George!" shrieked the girl. But she could not again speak,
-for the filth of the breeze compelled her right hand to her mouth and
-nostrils, and the brave heart steadied the spoke with her left hand
-only.
-
-In a minute Hardy was beside her. "Phew!" said he, and spat. This was
-his comment.
-
-The dog continued to bark. Its note had that quality of alarm which
-makes the sailors spring as for life or death to the affrighting shout
-of a single man upon the forecastle.
-
-"What in hell--" But it might have been the devil himself who stopped
-Hardy's mouth then, for even as he spoke the ship struck something
-soft, and slided away from it points off her course, so blubbery was
-the thing, proper for the "ways" of a launch.
-
-"It's up the spout this time," said Hardy. "Jump to the side, Julia;
-report what you see. There you go, to starboard--to windward, to
-windward!"
-
-He held the wheel, and the girl shrieked, "I can't see for the smell."
-
-"Hold your nose and skin your eyes, and tell me what you see."
-
-"A great deal of fire, and a black mass in the midst of it lined with
-foam, and oh, what a horrible smell!"
-
-She came staggering to her lover's side in revolt of sickened senses.
-
-"A dead whale," said Hardy, whose nose was not entirely fastidious.
-
-"Hold the wheel, dear," and he sprang to the quarter and saw the thing;
-that is, he saw the shadow, it loomed so that it might have been a
-little island. The fire of the sea played about it as the reflected
-lightning of the hidden storm winks and flashes in the soft indigo of
-the ocean recess. The sea caressed this floating dunghill with those
-same white, cruel fingers with which it casts the mutilated corpse
-ashore.
-
-"The air sweetens," said Hardy, returning to the wheel. "Go below for a
-nip of brandy, and bring me one, dear."
-
-And he brought the ship to her course. He did not greatly like the look
-of the weather. For perhaps an hour and a half he had been sleeping;
-this was a good "turn in" for a sailor-man who signs articles to work
-for the shipowner for twenty-four hours in the day, a brutal and
-inhuman tax upon suffering men, in no other walk of life to be heard
-of. Anyhow he could not leave the ship in Julia's charge with those
-dimly winking stars growing sparer yet, with increasing moisture on the
-wing of the wind like the early breath of a wet squall.
-
-"I don't expect the wind to shift," said he, "but it's bound to come on
-harder presently. Get you into that hen-coop and rest your limbs if not
-your brain. I expect I shall be wanting you before midnight."
-
-She obeyed him as though she had been a sailor or a dog, and dissolved
-into the black void of the hen-coop. You could not see the faintest
-glimmer of her face, nor the dimmest outline of her shape. The
-Newfoundland had come aft and berthed itself. The animal knew that
-when Hardy was at the wheel it was its watch below.
-
-Now the ship was under such small canvas that her cloths were not more
-than she could stand up with if it blew half a gale from abeam or abaft
-the beam. Those were the days of single topsails, and in all three
-topsails a single reef had been tied by the survivors of the crew in
-the heavy night before they left for the Frenchman. It would then come
-perhaps to a drag upon a staysail down-haul and to letting go the outer
-jib-halliards, leaving the unfurled sail to convulse itself into bulbs
-and bellies of canvas upon the jibboom. Certainly Hardy single-handed
-could not lay out upon the jibboom and furl a big jib: he did not mean
-to try.
-
-As he expected, the wind freshened, but without the shift of a quarter
-of a point. The ship raced nobly through the gloom: she blew white
-steam from the nostrils of her bows; the white water to leeward widened
-with her pace and flashed with the emerald and diamond of the sea glow
-into the long, the streaming, the joyous homeward-bound wake. There was
-no more dead leviathan in the air; it was full of the salt sweetness of
-Swinburne's rushing sea verse. But the stars were gone; there was no
-light upon the sea but the light of its foam. The ship was plunging,
-the seas raced her in black curls, and burst with a pallor of dawn from
-her side, and onward she swept, bowing and rolling to the music of the
-bagpipes in her rigging, controlled by a single hand--a fearless and a
-valiant hand--the hand of a British sailor.
-
-However, he made up his mind to "crack on" in a sort of way, and the
-meaning of "cracking on" at sea is the carrying in bad weather of more
-canvas than the judicious would approve. I have known an old skipper
-to furl his fore and mizzen-royal and stow his flying jib every second
-dog-watch in dead calm or catspaw. The ladies reckoned him a safe man,
-and he made the voyage from the Thames to Sydney Bay in four months.
-Hardy had the instincts of a mate, and was always for carrying on; but
-he had not much confidence in staysail and jib-sheets, and at half-past
-eleven, seven bells of the first watch, somewhat benumbed with his grip
-of the spokes, he resolved to shorten canvas, and shouted to his girl.
-She came out of the coop like a figure from a clock.
-
-"Is it a storm?" said she in his ear.
-
-"Let's thank God," he answered, "like the sailor in the song, that
-there are no chimney-pots in the air. I wonder if I can trust you with
-this wheel? It doesn't kick very much, and I sha'n't be long."
-
-"You don't want to turn in, then?"
-
-"Love ye, no," he answered. "Get a good hold of these spokes, and I'll
-stand by."
-
-He watched her, conceiving that if the ship was off her course now
-and again it would not signify a brass farthing. The wheel-chains are
-a good purchase upon the tiller, and Julia's arms were strong and
-determined with the labour she had been put to, whether ashore or at
-sea. Young women cannot pull ropes on board ship, or lift old ladies
-out of bed on dry land, without adding strength to the muscles of their
-arms and determination to the clutch of their fingers.
-
-Hardy stood close beside Julia ready for that kick of the helm which,
-whilst he had stood at the wheel, had on three or four occasions
-started him out of a mood of musing. Twice came the kick--the blow of
-the surge against the rudder, but the girl held on and the ship swept
-on, and with every freshening of the black roar aloft the words of the
-Yankee poet came into Hardy's head:
-
-
- "Then suddenly there burst a yell
- That would have shock'd and stagger'd hell."
-
-
-"You'll do," said Hardy.
-
-He called the dog and they went forward. There is no good in talking
-of jiggers, down-hauls, sheets, halliards, winches, and such things
-to landsmen. Enough, then, if it be said that by first letting go and
-then by hauling down, Hardy, helped by the dog and the jigger--which is
-another word for the watch-tackle--succeeded in easing the ship of two
-or three pinions of staysails and jib. The jigger manned the down-haul
-stoutly, and the dog stuck like glue to all slack he was asked to
-concern himself with. The sails were left to flap and slat and thunder.
-What could Hardy do? If the canvas went to pieces they must carry the
-ship home without it; if it held, there were the dog, the jigger, and
-the man to rehoist it. A mate's ear does not love the noise of slatting
-canvas, and Hardy as he stood in the bows guessed with something of
-helpless disgust that the jib-boom was buckling a bit. The foretopmast
-staysail and the inner jib were roaring like a thunder-storm, and
-a living gale swept out of the iron curve of the bolt-rope of the
-fore-course.
-
-It was white water often to the figure-head, the midnight magnificence
-and wrath of foam, the stormy bellowing of the recoiling and shattered
-sea. Heavenly Father! to think of this rushing, shadowy structure, this
-clipper fabric, whose stern was out of sight in darkness from the bows,
-controlled by a girl!
-
-Hardy ran aft to take the wheel, and the dutiful dog trotted beside
-him. How did that night pass? In simple alternations of coop and wheel.
-
-It was not to be a long night; the business of the half-gale did not
-begin until eight bells of the first watch, and it was nearly two
-bells before Hardy had made an end with his staysails and jib. It was
-not perhaps in those days so extremely necessary as it is in these
-to keep a bright lookout for ships' lights, simply because the steam
-vessel was comparatively few, and the sailing ship was not greatly
-accustomed to interpret her presence by the red and green wink. The
-flourish of the lamp hastily plucked out of the binnacle was deemed as
-good a flare as an empty flaming tar-barrel, and, indeed, it sometimes
-sufficed. Collision in the days of timber was not collision in the days
-of steel. Colliding ships ground away each other's channels amidst
-the benedictions of the forecastle and the poop, and the spluttering
-expostulations of crackling spars on high. Now 'tis touch and sink,
-so ingenious and preserving is the water-tight bulkhead, so grand
-in assurance of the salvation of precious life is the keel-up boat,
-secured beyond all release of knife or tool to the skid. Everything is
-riveted, and everything goes, and it takes half a dozen gunboats to
-sink a wooden wreck maliciously floating in the track of the supreme
-expression of the modern shipwright's art.
-
-The break of day found Hardy at the wheel. But he had slept since he
-was last heard of, and Julia had stood her trick, kick or no kick,
-whilst Sailor kept watch on the forecastle head. The wind had greatly
-fallen, the sea had greatly fallen, and the complexion of fine weather
-was in the dawn. With the rising of the sun the weather promised beauty
-and splendour: blue seas far as the eye could reach breaking in foam,
-masses of sailing cloud in the sky like vast puffs of vapour from the
-funnel of a locomotive; and right astern, a film of pearl in the windy
-blue, hung a sail.
-
-It was not seen for some time by Hardy, nor by the dog that slumbered
-in its kennel; but when Julia came out of her coop to the summons of
-the sun, she instantly saw the sail and called and pointed; and whilst
-she held the wheel the dog sprang on to the taffrail and barked, and
-Hardy fetched the glass.
-
-A cloud of canvas coming up astern hand over hand. Topsails,
-topgallantsails, royals, and skysails; the wind fresh off the beam; a
-topgallant-stunsail yearning from its boom end: the beautiful vision, a
-leaning light with the blue sea in foam betwixt it and the _York_, and
-beyond, the immeasurable heavens sloping past the working rim of the
-deep.
-
-"A Yankee," said Hardy, putting down the glass. "Skysails--why not
-moonsails, and angels' footstools? D'ye know that you can sometimes
-stop a ship by cracking on? I've hove the log and found her doing ten:
-thought to get more out of her; set royals and topmast-stunsails: hove
-the log and found her doing nine. Why? Because a ship isn't built to
-sail on her side."
-
-The galley fire was lighted; coffee was boiled; the sun shone brightly,
-and the ship astern was coming up fast. Whilst Julia held the wheel,
-Hardy mastheaded the red flag of our country at the gaff end, and there
-it streamed, meteoric, as in the song.
-
-"It is like being in the Docks to see it," cried Julia.
-
-"It is like feeling that there are no bally Dutchmen in the world!"
-answered Hardy.
-
-They breakfasted in a manner afore-described, and often watched the
-ship astern. She was a black spot under a white cloud.
-
-"Undoubtedly a Yankee," said Hardy, with his mouth full of white
-biscuit. "She'll wonder at us, and what will she do?"
-
-"They must not help us," said Julia.
-
-"Fancy her sailors sparkling with the jewels in the safe, fancy her
-skipper and mates singing out orders with heavy gold chains round
-their necks, and diamond earrings in their Yankee lobes! I do love the
-Yankee captain; he stands at the break of the poop and watches his mate
-kicking a man's brains out of his skull, and he yells out, 'Heave him
-over the side whilst he's breathing.' It is all sweetness and light
-aboard the Yankeeman. Some of these days the great Republic will awaken
-to recognition of the claims of her merchant sailors. The immortal Dana
-did his best, which was noble and lasting. But oh, the crimes, the
-cruelties, the murders which make the Yankee ship of trade a bitterer
-hell for men than the hell of the monk's invention!"
-
-But a stern chase is a long chase, albeit you are under single-reef
-topsails and fore-course only, whilst t'other heaps your wake with
-skysails and stunsails. It was half-past nine before the ship astern
-was on the _York's_ quarter; a black barque with an almost straight
-stem, taking the seas under her swelling heights with the springs and
-leaps of a deer chased by the hound.
-
-Her colour, if it flew, was invisible as yet, but her nationality was
-as certain as a goatee. Jonathan was at the helm and Jonathan was at
-the prow, and Hardy easily guessed that the condition of the _York_
-flying the flag of a rich relation was puzzling the intelligence of the
-gentleman whose legs are represented as clothed with the bunting of
-Stripes and Stars. Yes, Jonathan was puzzled, and like Paul Pry meant
-to intrude, whilst hoping that he didn't.
-
-On a sudden she clewed up skysails, royals, and topgallantsails,
-boom-ended her studdingsails, and came surging with little more than
-the speed of the _York_ on to the clipper's quarter within easy hail.
-A man stood on the rail holding on by the mizzen-rigging. No flag
-flew at the gaff end, but the word Yankee was writ in letters as big
-as the barque herself. The figure grasped an old-fashioned weapon for
-the conveyance of sound--a speaking-trumpet; he put it to his lips,
-and whilst a small crowd of men on the barque's forecastle, attired
-in dungaree and vary-coloured headgear, gazed at the _York_ with the
-steadfast stare of sheep at a barking dog in a field, the man with the
-trumpet delivered his mind thus:
-
-"Ho, the ship ahoy! What ship are you?"
-
-Hardy, with one hand to his mouth, Julia meanwhile steering, roared
-back:
-
-"The _York_, of London; bound to London."
-
-This was all he said. He did not inquire the barque's name; it
-was no business of his to know it. But she was forging ahead, and
-the name under the counter in long white letters grew visible:
-_Columbia_--Boston.
-
-"Where's your crew?" shouted the man with the trumpet.
-
-"On deck," was the answer.
-
-A man standing by the figure on the rail took the speaking-trumpet and
-replaced it by a telescope, which the figure levelled at Julia.
-
-"He's admiring you," said Hardy.
-
-"I dare say the crew on that forecastle are laughing," she exclaimed.
-
-"Sailors are too well fed to laugh easily," replied Hardy. "Oily men,
-fat men, rich men, seldom laugh."
-
-All between the two speeding vessels was the rush of the white surge,
-and the ships seemed to salute each other like acquaintances as they
-bowed in stately rolls and sang the song of the shrouds one to the
-other, for it is all singing at sea--singing or singing out.
-
-Suddenly when the barque had drawn on to the weather-bow of the _York_
-she was luffed up into the wind, and the weather-half of her loftier
-canvas was aback.
-
-"They mean to visit us," said Hardy.
-
-"Not to stay, I hope," said Julia, anxiously.
-
-In a few moments some figures broke from the barque's forecastle crowd
-and ran aft, and a white boat of a whaling pattern, sharpened stem and
-stern, sank from its davits with six men in her, and the man who had
-given the telescope to the figure on the rail steered the boat.
-
-Hardy put his helm down and shook the wind out of his small canvas, and
-presently the boat was hooked on alongside, and an American sailor--a
-chief mate--clambered over the rail on to the deck of the _York_.
-
-It is bad taste to imitate accents, or oddities of phrase, or nasal
-deliverances. This Yankee mate then shall speak as our first cousin
-does.
-
-"Do you mean to say," said he, touching his cap as he approached Hardy
-and Julia, "that you and this lady"--he bowed to her--"are your ship's
-company?"
-
-"No," answered Hardy. "We have that dog: he is worth ten foreigners,
-and we have a watch-tackle and a winch."
-
-"And you are carrying this ship to London alone?"
-
-"Ay."
-
-The Yankee mate looked a little stupefied, glanced along the deck, then
-up at the Red Ensign, then at the girl who stood beneath it.
-
-"Where are you from?" he asked.
-
-"See here," said Hardy; "I intend to spin my own yarn when I get
-ashore, and I do not mean that it shall either be diminished or
-exaggerated by report. This lady and I propose to carry this ship home
-alone, and that flag flies in vain if we fail."
-
-"Well, I am surprised," said the mate of the barque. "It must be very
-uncomfortable. Your outer jib is slatting, and your staysails want
-stowing. Can we help you?"
-
-"I am very much obliged," replied Hardy, "but before you call your men
-aboard this lady will kindly bring from the cabin a bottle of grog and
-glasses, that we may drink to the good voyage of the _Columbia_ and to
-the increasing greatness of your magnificent country."
-
-"I am willing," answered the mate, and as Julia disappeared he
-exclaimed, "Is she your wife, sir?"
-
-"No; she is my sweetheart; she is the daughter of a retired commander
-in our Royal Navy, and if God suffers us to reach home she will be my
-wife."
-
-"She is a very fine young woman," said the mate.
-
-"She has a splendid spirit," answered Hardy, "and she is a very fine
-young woman as you say."
-
-Julia knew the ways of the under-stewardess, and was quickly on deck
-again with a tray of glasses, cold water, and a bottle of brandy. She
-mixed the spirits, each man saying "when," and took a little drop
-herself, just enough to be sincere with in her good wishes. The Yankee
-mate did not seem to greatly trouble himself that the figure on the
-barque--undoubtedly the skipper--should keep the telescope bearing upon
-them. With one hand on the spoke Hardy, with the other hand, held aloft
-the glass of grog, and said:
-
-"Here's to your beautiful barque, and to the noble country from which
-she hails!"
-
-He drank and so did Julia, and the mate before drinking said:
-
-"Here's to the Red Flag of Old England, and to the fine girls who steer
-ships under it!"
-
-Julia laughed merrily, and thought the mate better looking now than she
-had at first believed. He was a little sallow, a little long-faced, and
-on the whole what the Americans call slab-sided; but he had the eyes
-of an honest man and the looks of a good sailor, and if his name were
-inscribed on the dome of St. Paul's nothing better could be said of it.
-
-"My captain will be getting impatient," said the mate. "He'll wonder
-that you don't take assistance."
-
-"If your men will hoist that canvas for me," answered Hardy, "I shall
-ask no more help."
-
-"What a beautiful dog is that!" said the Yankee mate, hanging in the
-wind, so much did he relish this novel rencounter and brief association
-in mid-Atlantic with a young lady of incomparable figure. "I would be
-the happiest man in America if I owned that dog."
-
-"All America would not purchase him," answered Hardy; "his name
-is Sailor, and he has the spirit of Nelson. He helps me and the
-watch-tackle to brace up, keeps a lookout like a madman in search of
-the philosopher's stone, never gets drunk, and always says his prayers
-before he turns in. Will you have another drop of brandy?"
-
-"No more, sir, I thank you."
-
-Saying which the mate went to the side and hailed the boat. Hardy kept
-the _York_ in the wind and the barque was already in the wind, and
-neither vessel therefore had any way to speak of. The boat, well fended
-off, slobbered alongside, chucked and dived, spat and hissed like a
-kitten sporting with its mother. To the cry of the mate four men sprang
-into the chains, and were on deck with the activity of Britons boarding
-a Frenchman. Fine-looking fellows they were, three of them Englishmen
-who had been forced by Great Britain's love of foreign labour to earn
-their bread under the Stripes and Stars. They stared about them with
-sheepish grins because a woman was hard by. Had the girl been a British
-skipper their smileless faces would have grown as long as wet hammocks.
-
-"Fill a drink for them, Julia," said Hardy.
-
-Another glass was fetched, four glasses brimmed, and with a "Well,
-here's luck, sir," down went the doses through throats to which the
-aroma of cognac was as strange a bliss as heaven to a newly arrived
-soul.
-
-"Shall we make more sail for you?" said the mate.
-
-"Not a cloth, thank ye," answered Hardy at the wheel.
-
-So the mate and the men went forward and hoisted the outer jib and
-scientifically belayed the sheet, then lay aft, and did likewise with
-the staysails, hauled taut the braces, and generally made things
-snugger than they had found them. The dog went with them and watched
-their conduct with admiration.
-
-"Well," said the mate, approaching Hardy with an outstretched hand, "we
-have done all you wish us to do, and I am sorry you won't let us do
-more. We will report you."
-
-"I hope you won't," answered Hardy; "the owners will send out a tug in
-search of us, and then it's good night to my salvage."
-
-"I twig," responded the mate, with a grave smile. "Yes, it shall be
-made apparent to the Old Man," meaning his captain, for at sea the
-captain would be called Old Man by the sailors if he were a beardless
-youth of twenty-two.
-
-He shook hands with Hardy, and their grasp was cordial. He shook hands
-with Julia, and admired her and praised her with a look. Then the five
-tumbled over the side like rats from a sinking ship, gained the boat,
-and went away with a smoking stem to the barque. Julia stepped to the
-rail to watch, and when the men saw her they cheered; three times they
-cheered, and the mate in the stern-sheets lifted his cap and cheered
-whilst Julia flourished her hand. There is much good-fellowship at
-sea, and English-speaking sailors are as brothers when they meet.
-
-"Those men do not look as though they were starved and kicked," said
-Julia, returning to Hardy.
-
-"If every ship kicked and starved her sailors there would be no ships
-afloat," replied Hardy. "All the same, there is much starvation and
-kicking at sea."
-
-"How beautiful that ship looks!" said Julia; "I never saw a vessel's
-canvas shine so brightly. How delicate are the shadows at the edges! A
-sailing ship owes its life to the wind, and all the spirit of the sea
-is in her. Steamers are full of coals and ashes, they blacken the air
-with disgusting smoke, their life is compulsion, they are driven by a
-wheel or a screw. The sailing ship floats on wings like the sea-bird."
-
-"All is compulsion," exclaimed Hardy, watching the keen-ended boat as
-she foamed sweeping with a lightning flash of wet oars to the sun, to
-the mother she belonged to; "compulsion hurled the universe into being,
-and everything is driven by it. I do not like to be compelled to be
-born or to die. I do not like to be compelled to carry a hump or to
-grow bald or hideous with age. But I am compelled into these enormities
-and there's no getting away from it. You must hold this wheel whilst I
-dip our flag when they get their boat to the tackles."
-
-This did not take long to happen. The sweethearts watched the white
-boat rising out of the water, and when the little fabric was hanging at
-its davits the American flag soared heavenward, streaming to the gaff
-end.
-
-"Hold the wheel," said Hardy, and Julia grasped the spokes.
-
-He sprang to the signal-halliards and lowered the flag, just as you
-pull off your hat when you say good-bye. The American colour sank in
-graceful beauty and soared again, and again sank the Red Ensign to be
-again gaff-ended, and thrice did these two vessels salute each other
-and then belayed their halliards, leaving their banners flying.
-
-A faint cheer came from the American vessel, and Hardy sprang into
-the mizzen-rigging and flourished his cap. Then the Yankee fell off
-and filled a rap-full; her wake throbbed in pulses of foam under her
-counter, fountain-bursts of sparkling stars of brine flashed off her
-bows, every stitch of canvas was mastheaded, and away she went with
-yearning stunsail, a leaning vision of transcendent beauty--a spirit
-now, for she hath long since departed from the waters which she walked,
-and remains but a memory to the old.
-
-Hardy went to the wheel, put his helm a little up, and the _York_
-started again for home under steady curves of canvas.
-
-For two days after this the ship's company of three had their hands
-full. It came on to blow a strong breeze right ahead: they managed
-to brace up, and went staggering away to the west and north. It was
-impossible for so slender a company to put the ship about; neither
-could Hardy wear her, for who was to square and then brace round the
-yards to the hard-over helm? Every wind then must be a fair wind for
-that ship; she must splutter through it as best she could, and all that
-the two brave hearts could pray for was that it should never blow so
-hard as to dismast them or burst the canvas into rags.
-
-Julia was now a practised as well as a fearless helmswoman, and
-Hardy was able to get the sleep he needed; she too enjoyed plenty of
-intervals. In those two days it did not blow fiercer than a two-reef
-breeze, and Hardy eased the ship by keeping her a little away. For it
-mattered nothing to him or Julia if the passage home extended into
-months so long as they got home at last.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-THE CAMILLA OF THE SEA
-
-
-Within ten weeks of the date of the sailing of the clipper ship _York_
-from the River Thames the vessel was about two hundred miles to the
-westward of the coast of Portugal. It was a leaden day. The ocean was
-breathing deeply after a long conflict with the gale. The swell ran in
-sullen masses, lifting with the lazy sickness of oil, but the breeze
-was light and scarcely creased the moving knolls, and the shadow of
-cloud hung like tapestry in a darkened chamber, low down in ragged
-skirts upon the winding line of the sea.
-
-The ship looked wrecked aloft. All her spars were standing indeed, but
-her mizzentopsail hung in rags, and the bolt ropes made a skeleton of
-the fabric aft. The foresail was split in halves, and with each weary
-roll gaped like a cut in an india-rubber ball when pressed. Rags of the
-outer jib fluttered from lacing or hanks. The maintopgallantsail had
-been blown loose and had gone to pieces, and was shaking from the yard
-in lengths like Irish pennants in the rigging. The ship was rolling
-drearily, and the channels would often slap white thunder out of the
-sulky brow of the swell, and she groaned greatly throughout her length
-and made some dim sound of lamentation aloft.
-
-Hardy stood alone at the wheel. He was fresh from a long and desperate
-fight with the sea, and you read the character of the struggle in his
-face. His beard was a week old: in the hollows under his eyes lay a
-little whiteness, the encrustation of salt; this gave him the ghastly
-look of the life-boat man who steps ashore after standing two nights
-and a day by a stranded ship with frozen figures in her shrouds. His
-hair was a little long, and this gave a something of wildness to his
-aspect. His looks were haggard, his eyes wanting in their usual lustre,
-his lips were pale; he looked worn. For ten days he and Julia had been
-fighting a gale of wind. In ten days they had managed to obtain but two
-or three hours sleep in a day of twenty-four hours. But happily for
-them it never blew so hard but that they could keep their course shaped
-for the English Channel. It never blew so hard that a ship well manned
-would have needed to heave to. It came in roaring weight upon the
-quarter, and one midnight the mizzentopsail burst in a blast of cannon,
-and shortly after the maintopgallantsail was blown into shreds out of
-the gaskets, and next morning, in the screaming fury of a bleaching
-squall, the outer jib flew into pennons from the stay, and the veil
-of the fore-course was rent asunder. But the reefed maintopsail, the
-foretopmast-staysail, and the inner jib were as faithful to their duty
-as Tom Bowline in the song, and the ship rushed on in foam to the
-figurehead, whitening acres of the sea abaft her, passing a brig hove
-to in the haze; passed by a ship that would not stay to speak; passed
-by a Fruiter schooner from the Western Islands, whose spring over the
-surge was the glance of the albatross, whose envanishment in the haze
-ahead, into which the _York_ was for ever rushing, was the extinction
-of a meteor in a cloud.
-
-And now the gale was gone the sea would shortly smooth its panting
-breast; it was the early forenoon. Hardy called the dog, but he did not
-exert the powerful voice that was familiar to Julia.
-
-The Newfoundland came out of its kennel and looked up in affectionate
-expectation at the sailor.
-
-"Go below and bring her up!" said Hardy, pointing, and the dog
-perfectly understanding disappeared down the companionway.
-
-His hands were almost raw with grasping the spokes. His arms were
-almost lifeless with their long resistance to the mulish tug of the
-wheel-chains in response to the kick of the rudder. His feet ached with
-standing, knots seemed to have been tied in the muscles of his legs;
-but in the gauntness of his looks was visible the spirit of a noble
-heart, and there was no better or more fearless sailor in the world
-than that grim, unshorn figure that stood alone at the helm of that
-reeling ship.
-
-You will think it strange that a man, a woman, and a dog should have
-brought a big, full-rigged ship in safety down to the present hour
-through some thunderous Atlantic parallels. Yet this ship's adventure
-is not so strange to me as the mysterious good fortune of the
-ocean-tramp of to-day that washes through the Bay of Biscay without her
-funnel, and quietly discharges her cargo without any one feeling one
-penny the worse. Take, for instance, the second mate of an ocean-tramp.
-He walks the bridge; there are three foreign seamen in his watch, one
-of whom steers the ship, whilst the other two paint her. By secret
-compulsion, well understood by the owner and the captain of the ship,
-the second mate quits the bridge and helps the two sailors to paint
-the ship. Who looks after the ship whilst the person in charge of her
-paints? The ship herself.
-
-Or the same second mate may be on the bridge in the first watch; the
-foreign sailor at the wheel has been labouring almost continuously at
-deck-work through the greater portion of the day. The second mate for
-convenience has set the ship's course by a star. Suddenly he finds
-the star sliding slowly abeam. He rushes to the wheel and beholds the
-helmsman standing erect, and asleep. The second mate shakes the fellow
-furiously, and shouts, "Hard a-starboard!" and the sleepy foreigner,
-who scarcely understands the commands of the helm in English, tries to
-port by every spoke until he is stopped by the second mate's boot.
-
-Is not the voyage of our every-day ocean-tramp more wonderful in the
-unrevealed conditions of the life of the staggering tank than this
-story of a full-rigged ship worked by an English seaman, an English
-girl, a Newfoundland dog, a watch-tackle, and a winch? I served for
-eight years at sea as a sailor, and I venture to say that the tramp is
-far more wonderful than this ship.
-
-Sailor knew his business, and in a few minutes Julia arrived on deck.
-She looked ill and worn. Her straw hat was beginning to show like the
-end of a long voyage; her dress would have made an ill figure of her in
-Piccadilly. But you saw all that was necessary of spirit and resolution
-in her eyes.
-
-"Julia," said Hardy, "the pumps suck with me. I feel worn out. I can't
-stand at this wheel any longer, and there would be no good in your
-attempting to hold it. I'll secure the helm, and the ship must take her
-chance. It'll be a dead calm before long, and we have come to a moment
-when a great deal must be left to fortune. Look yonder!"
-
-He pointed on the quarter where streaks of fine weather were expanding
-and lifting, lines and spaces of silver blue irradiating the ragged
-gloom of the firmament which was moving ponderously and slowly
-northwest.
-
-"You will find it cold," continued Hardy. "Go and wrap yourself up in
-the captain's cloak whilst I secure the wheel."
-
-Before he had secured the helm the girl returned apparelled as
-commanded, for to her his word was law. He then sank down in a chair
-near the wheel with his chin upon his breast, and the girl went forward
-to boil a kettle of water.
-
-She remained forward until some hot coffee was ready, and when she came
-aft with it she found her sweetheart sound asleep. It is not love that
-disturbs the sleeping sailor. It is love that watches and shields the
-repose of love, as the guardian angel the slumber of the baby. Julia
-looked at Hardy. How gaunt and hollow! How grim and bristly with the
-week's growth! Yet how peaceful in sleep, how manly in look, how dear
-to her; oh, how dear to her by loyal devotion, by beautiful honour, by
-self-respect, by his fear and his love of God!
-
-She sat on the deck beside him and drank a little coffee, and the dog
-lay at her feet. The helm was paralysed by the rope which secured the
-wheel, and the ship was slowly knocked by the head into the hollow of
-the swell; the topsail was aback, and the ship lay rolling quietly on
-the quieting folds with streamers of canvas swaying from the yard and
-from the stay.
-
-Julia continued to sit by her sleeping lover's side for more than half
-an hour, leaving him once only to see to the galley fire. When again
-she arose to attend to the fire the dog stood up and shook himself
-and sprang upon the taffrail to take a look around, and before Julia
-had stepped ten paces the noble animal was sounding in deep tones his
-report of a ship in sight.
-
-The noise awoke Hardy, who started and stood up, and Julia stayed where
-she was to look at the sea.
-
-Nearly right abeam, in the midst of the lifting bright weather
-whose suffusion of radiance was over the mastheads, was visible the
-feathering of a steamer's smoke.
-
-"It is something coming our way," said Hardy to Julia, and he took the
-glass, and pointed it.
-
-His hands trembled, and he steadied the tubes by grasping the vang of
-the gaff with them. After a long look--Julia was at his side--he said:
-
-"She rises fast. By her square yards I take her to be a man-of-war. If
-she is British she will be the help I have sometimes prayed for."
-
-He put down the glass, bent on the Red Ensign Jack down, and ran it
-aloft.
-
-"I will get you some hot coffee," said Julia. "Do you feel rested a
-little?"
-
-"I am good for an eight hours' spell," he replied, but he did not look
-so.
-
-She went forward, and he watched the approaching steamer, and the
-dog watched her also. When the girl returned with a pannikin of hot
-coffee Hardy had more news to give her. He first drank, then lighted a
-pipe, and he told her that the ship abeam, whose paddle-wheels had by
-this time slapped her hull into clear view, was undoubtedly a British
-man-of-war, and to judge by her course she was either from the Cape de
-Verde or direct from Rio, or some port on the eastern coast of South
-America.
-
-"How do you know she is British?" asked Julia.
-
-"By every token of yards squared by lifts and braces, by white bunt,
-and something white at the gaff end."
-
-"Can you distinguish her flag?"
-
-"It is a speck of light, but I know what it means."
-
-"Will you accept help from her?" inquired Julia.
-
-"Of course I will," he answered. "The Admiralty do not claim salvage,
-or they so hedge about the claim as to make the claimant's case
-prohibitory."
-
-"How will she help us?" said the girl.
-
-"Either by towing or sending men. But I doubt if she will tow,"
-answered Hardy. "She may not have enough coal. She may be in a hurry to
-get home. The sailor is always in a hurry--God help him--and often when
-he gets home he finds the canary dead in the cage."
-
-"We have no canary to greet us with its corpse," said Julia.
-
-She picked up the glass, and inspected the approaching vessel. And so
-the time was whiled away until the steamer was close on the _York's_
-quarter, her paddle-wheels ceased to revolve, and now all about her
-could easily be understood without the glass.
-
-She was one of that class of naval steamers which still survive (in
-aspect at least), at the date of the composition of this story, in
-the Royal Yacht, familiar in the Solent. She had a square stern,
-embellished with gilded mouldings and sparkling with windows. She had
-yellow paddle-boxes, a tall black hull with a few square gunports of
-a side. She was a barque, though they tried to make her look like a
-ship by fixing square yards without canvas on her mizzenmast and fidded
-topmast, which was a brigantine's mainmast with its crosstrees. For a
-full-rigged ship must have fidded topmast and fidded topgallantmast and
-royalmast, and if she has not these you may call her what you like but
-she is not a ship.
-
-The steamer was H.M.S. _Magicienne_, bound from Rio to Devonport,
-having halted at the Cape de Verde for coal. She was full of men, as
-the Navy ship usually is. Here and there she was spotted by the red
-coat of a marine. She sparkled to the risen fine weather, and the sea
-was now blue to both the ships, though northwest it breathed in leaden
-shadow. She dipped her visible wheel in foam. The colour of her country
-trembled in handkerchief-size at her gaff end, and her pennon streamed
-in a line of silk. An officer stood upon the paddle-box and hailed the
-_York_. Hardy thought he could answer, and tried to do so, but found
-that his voice would not carry. Indeed he had been overburdened, and
-every function was bowed and humped.
-
-To make himself understood he shook his head and pointed to his mouth,
-and flew the signal of "No voice" by pantomime. The trill of a whistle
-could be heard. In a few moments--moments are minutes, minutes are
-hours on board the ship of war with hundreds of a crew, as compared
-with the moments, minutes, and hours aboard a ship of trade with
-thirty of a crew--a boat-full of men with something glittering in the
-stern-sheets sank to the water at the steamer's side, and, as though
-but one oar was wielded at either gunwale, the boat came with flashful
-iteration of feathered blade, a pulse of sparkling locomotion each side
-of her, and the something that glittered astern beside the coxswain
-enlarged swiftly into the proportions of a midshipman twenty years old.
-
-He gained the deck with the scrambling bounds of a kangaroo as he
-sprang from the rail saluting the ship with some convulsion of thumb
-near the bottom button of his waistcoat. His freckled face was well
-bred; his looks had the ardency of the youthful British sailor. You
-felt that here was a young man, perhaps an honourable, perhaps a lord,
-who at the call of duty would do his "bit," and do it well.
-
-He stared hard at the girl whilst he walked slap up to Hardy.
-
-"What's the matter with this ship?" said he, and his accost made Hardy
-feel as though he were a north-country Geordie skipper with an auld
-wife in the companion-hatch darning his stockings.
-
-"I am stumpended with work," said Hardy, "and must sit, or I shall
-fall." And he sat down.
-
-"You look like the end of a long voyage," said the midshipman.
-
-"And you look as if the roast beef of Old England smokes in the
-gunroom," answered Hardy.
-
-"So help me God, then," cried the midshipman with heat, "nothing has
-fed us since Rio but salt horse. Where's your crew?" and he looked at
-the girl without greatly admiring her, for Julia was very draggled and
-broken about the hat, and dejected about the hair and white and worn,
-and she knew she was all this with a girl's distress.
-
-"The crew are before you," replied Hardy, languidly pointing at the dog.
-
-"What do you want?" said the midshipman, directing his eyes aloft.
-
-"The help of the nation represented by your ship of state," answered
-Hardy.
-
-The midshipman, who was a gentleman, perceived that the grim, unshorn,
-labour-wearied man on the chair was a gentleman, whatever might be his
-rating aboard a merchantman, and his manner changed.
-
-"You are in a very odd situation," said he. "What a magnificent dog!
-What is your story, that I may return and report it to the captain?"
-
-It took Hardy ten minutes to relate the ship's adventure, and the
-midshipman listened to it with parted lips, just as his face would
-overhang a thrilling novel which is true with all those touches that
-make the world akin.
-
-"Well," said he when Hardy had finished, "I always thought going into
-the Navy was going to sea, but that's the real flag of adventure," he
-added, with a glance at the inverted ensign. "You want help and deserve
-it, and I'll go to the ship, and report."
-
-He touched his cap with a look of pitying admiration at Julia. It was
-not the admiration of a man for a pretty face, but for the heart of a
-lioness.
-
-The boat left the _York_ and Hardy continued to sit, and Julia stood
-beside him. It was fine weather above the fore-royal truck, and the
-gloom was thinning in the northwest. Where the brightness had broken
-the sea was darkening its blue; a breeze was coming up that way, and it
-would prove a homeward bound breeze to the _York_, with a sparkling sun
-to dry her and to cheer her.
-
-"I do not think that midshipman greatly respects the Merchant Service,"
-said Julia.
-
-"Midshipmen occasionally condescend to us," answered Hardy, "but the
-majority of naval officers have good sense, and wherever there is good
-sense our flag is respected, because the naval officer has read history
-and sometimes contributes to it."
-
-The girl looked at the steamer and the boat that was foaming to her to
-its dazzling line of oars.
-
-"It is a fine service!" said Hardy, taking the steamer in from
-streaming pennon to the dip of the red-tongued wheel. "I might just as
-easily have been there as here. One is the butterfly rich with the wing
-of the peacock tail; the other is the plain white butterfly"--he looked
-afloat--"that blows like a piece of paper about the summer garden. But
-deprive them of their wings and you'll find their bodies very much
-alike."
-
-"What are they going to do?" said Julia.
-
-"We shall soon find out," answered Hardy. "British men-of-war are not
-accustomed to keep people long waiting to find out."
-
-Though the ships lay at a fair seaworthy distance from each other, men
-and matters were visible to the naked eye aboard either.
-
-Hardy saw the midshipman conversing with the commander on the bridge.
-He did not choose to level a glass, it might be deemed impertinent,
-but he saw the commander lift a binocular to his eyes in evident
-wonder; certainly the gallant officer had never heard a stranger story
-of the sea. Officialism could not neutralise curiosity, and the man,
-the girl, and the dog being within easy reach of the sight helped by
-the magnifying lens, the commander watched whilst the midshipman talked.
-
-What was to happen was to be speedily understood. The pipe shrilled and
-trilled, kits and hammocks were flung into the cutter, and in a few
-minutes the large boat containing twenty-one men and a warrant officer
-came alongside. Twelve men climbed out of her into the ship, first
-throwing up to a few who had preceded them their sea wardrobes and
-bedding. They were followed by the warrant officer--the man-o'-war's
-boatswain. His ruddy face flamed betwixt two red whiskers; his small,
-sharp blue eyes shot a bayonet glance in twenty directions in two
-seconds. He and his men had come to stay, and the cutter laboured to
-her sea mother to the stroke of five oars controlled by a helmsman.
-
-"I'm the bo'sun of her Majesty's ship _Magicienne_," said the flaming
-seaman, coming up to Hardy with a salute. "My orders are to help you to
-carry this ship home."
-
-"It is very good of your captain," said Hardy, deeply moved, and
-smiling with an expression that accentuated the weariness of his soul,
-and that also emphasised the manly nature of his character, which
-instantly won the recognition of the boatswain because he was a sailor
-in the presence of a sailor.
-
-"Do I understand your discipline? I give my orders through you. Your
-men would not accept my command."
-
-"Quite right, sir," answered the boatswain, cheerfully, "and if you
-will turn me to at once I will turn them men to immediately after. But
-I beg you won't overtire yourself, sir. And the lady has helped you!
-And that's a beautiful dog of yourn. A small ship's company, sir; and,
-begging your pardon, you and the lady both look as if a good night's
-rest would do you good."
-
-"What is your name?" said Hardy.
-
-"Harper, sir."
-
-"Mr. Harper, will you kindly see that the men make themselves
-comfortable in the forecastle? You will then bend fresh sails and make
-all sail. I will show you where everything you want is to be found."
-
-He sat as he spoke, and the boatswain, touching his cap, went amongst
-his men and executed Hardy's orders.
-
-The two lovers watched the steamer. A man-o'-war, even when she carries
-paddle-boxes, is always a gracious object. Yonder ship's rails were
-embellished with a snow-white line of hammocks, and snow-white lines of
-furled canvas brightened the yards with a gleaming streak of sunshine.
-The full philosophy of spit and polish was to be found in that steamer.
-It spoke in the flash of brass; it lurked in the gleam of glass; it was
-visible in many colours in paint work. Every rope was hauled taut; the
-yards were unerringly square. The boat rose without a song, the wheels
-revolved, the foam of a harpooned whale fell in dazzling masses from
-under the sponsons, and the splendour of the yeast under the square
-counter flamed like the rising day-star in the windows of the stern.
-
-Hardy staggered to the signal halliards; his motions were seen--he
-could not salute with the distress signal. With somewhat shaking hands,
-therefore, he unbent and rebent the Red Ensign and hoisted it and
-dipped, and the courtesy found its response in the graceful sinking and
-heavenward soaring of the White Flag of our country.
-
-Before the sailors came out of the forecastle, the queen's ship was
-on a line with the _York's_ port cathead, merrily slapping her way to
-England.
-
-Mr. Harper came aft. His salute was respectful, his manner sympathetic.
-
-"If you will tell me where the spare sails are kept, sir, I will see to
-everything, that you and the lady may go below and take the rest you
-stand in need of."
-
-Hardy told him all that was necessary, thanking him also, whilst Julia
-looked at the fifteen men that were gathered forward and admired their
-well-fed appearance, trim attire, manly shapes, and the whiskers of
-those who wore them. The discipline of a ship of state was in their
-postures, different from the longshore, lounging attitude of Jack Muck
-when waiting, and yet some of the best of those men had been Jack Mucks
-in their day; one had even been mate of a ship, and the look he sent
-aloft was charged with recognition of familiar conditions.
-
-"Well, Mr. Harper," said Hardy, "I will leave the ship to you. There
-are plenty of provisions and there is plenty of fresh water, and there
-is rum for you to serve out as you think proper."
-
-Saying this, he took Julia by the arm, conducted her to the companion,
-and followed her into the cabin.
-
-And now occurred another extraordinary incident in this ship's
-adventure. It had indeed once occurred visibly before, but it will not
-be credited in this age of the religious novel. When Hardy was in the
-cabin he put his cap upon the table, and going to a cushioned locker
-knelt beside it. Julia immediately approached him and likewise knelt,
-shoulders touching. When they had thanked God--and it was meet that
-they should thank him for their very merciful deliverance--they ate
-some food, drank some wine, and went to their cabins.
-
-The sleep of the wearied mariner is profound, and the sleep of the
-toil-worn girl at sea is likewise profound. Hardy was the first to
-awake. Through the little port-hole or scuttle in the ship's side
-he witnessed the scarlet of the dying afternoon; he also observed
-the creaming curl of the breaking sea streaming swiftly past. In the
-plank with his feet he felt the buoyancy of sea-borne motion, the
-floating lift, the floating reel of a fabric winging over the deep. He
-shaved himself, and emerged a clean, a manly though a pallid sailor,
-still something gaunt but with eyes brightened by sleep, and with an
-expression gallant with hope and with victory.
-
-He looked round for Julia. She was still in her cabin, and he would not
-awaken her. At the foot of the companion-steps lay the Newfoundland;
-Hardy knelt beside the noble creature and put his cheek to the wet
-muzzle, and the dog groaned in pleasure and gratitude. Then they went
-on deck together.
-
-It was a strange, new, surprising sight to Hardy and perhaps to the
-dog: a British man-of-war's man stood at the wheel of the ship; up
-and down the quarter-deck stumped the stout figure of Mr. Harper in
-all pomp of commanding strut. It was the first dog-watch, and some of
-the sailors were walking about the forecastle smoking pipes, and some
-of them, also smoking pipes, lurked about the galley door. A fresh
-breeze was sweeping down upon the quarter. The ship was under full
-sail from main-royal to flying jib, from mizzen-royal to spanker.
-The weather-clew of the mainsail was up, and--what was that yonder,
-right ahead? By heaven! the _Magicienne_ slapping along at ten and
-pouring incense of soot to the very extremity of the visible universe,
-and the _York_ was doing twelve and overhauling her with foam to the
-figurehead, with derisive laughter aloft, with all graceful scorn of
-the wind-swept structure in every leap, that brought closer yet to the
-eye the laborious ploughing of the paddles.
-
-Hardy and Mr. Harper touched their caps to each other.
-
-"This is business, sir," said the boatswain, "and this ship is going to
-point a moral to that there steamer!"
-
-Hardy sent a critical gaze aloft. Everything was set to a hair and
-rounded firm as a boiler full of steam. Everything was doing the work
-of a boiler and more than the work of a boiler, as witness yonder
-sky-blackening fabric, like panting Time, toiling to elude the Camilla
-of the sea.
-
-"Your captain has sent me some good men," said Hardy. "It did not take
-you long, I reckon, to bend new canvas."
-
-The boatswain smiled loftily betwixt his red whiskers.
-
-"It isn't all New Navy yet, sir," he answered; "but it's coming."
-
-He sighed like a risen porpoise.
-
-"There'll be no call for sailors when it's to be nothing but that,
-with pole-masts and so built"--he was pointing as he spoke to the
-steamer--"that a dock-master might fitly sing out to the skipper, Which
-end of you is coming in?"
-
-He suddenly drew himself up as though on drill, and Julia stepped out
-of the companion-hatch. Sleep had touched her cheeks with a delicate
-bloom. She had refreshed herself with soap and water; her abundant hair
-was gracefully dressed; with the cunning fingers of a woman she had
-somehow, I do not know how, effaced in effect at least from her attire
-the soiling and creasing influence of hard weather upon the single
-robe. She had managed to warp her hat to its old bearings, and it sat
-cocked in its old coquettish pride upon her head. Her gaze was full of
-rapture as she looked at the ship, the straining sweep of white water
-over the side, the easy, manly figure of the man at the wheel, the
-_Magicienne_, which if this breeze lasted the ship must presently shift
-her helm to pass.
-
-"What do you think of this?" said Hardy to her.
-
-"Is it a dream, Mr. Harper?" said the girl. "Shall Mr. Hardy and I
-awaken to find ourselves on board an abandoned wreck?"
-
-"Call it a dream, mum," answered the boatswain, "and when you awake it
-will be England!"
-
-
-This story of the ship's adventure is told. Because what you wish and
-expect is bound to happen when safety and home are to be reached and
-realised by a noble, well-found clipper ship in charge of two sailors
-of the manliest character, and manned by fifteen splendid examples of
-the man-of-war's men of the Navy of that age.
-
-The merciful eye of God was upon this ship, for certainly the strength
-of our courageous couple had been expended in a long strife with the
-gale, and the dog, and the watch-tackle, and the winch without human
-help would have been of no use. Hardy would have been forced to take
-the first assistance that offered. It came to him in the triumphant
-spirit which informs the whole of this couple's adventures. Our
-sailor yearned for an estate for himself and for the girl that was to
-be his wife. He richly deserved the reward he desired. Had any ship
-but a man-of-war assisted him to get home the salvage claimed would
-have diminished his proportion to a sum which at the present rate of
-interest would not have yielded him the value of the pension of the
-retired naval bluejacket. The British man-of-war demands no salvage,
-and this is but just, because her very existence depends upon the
-safety of the British merchantman. If you extinguish the Merchant
-Service, you extinguish the need for a Navy and you extinguish the
-nation herself, because we are surrounded by the ocean, we are fed by
-the merchant sailor, and the bluejacket is paid to protect him whilst
-he brings us the daily bread for which we pray every Sunday in church,
-and sometimes more often than every Sunday.
-
-I have never heard of a single instance in which the Admiralty have
-claimed salvage for services rendered to a British merchantman.
-Possibly they may have sent in a claim for the value of stores
-expended in the salvage services. In the case of a successful
-salvage it has sometimes happened that the owners of the ship have
-by permission of the Admiralty presented a service of plate for the
-officers' mess, or they have made personal gifts to the officers and
-a dinner or supper ashore to the crew. Thus it will be gathered that
-Hardy reaped the harvest he had sown and held in view; and having said
-this no more need be asked, for the hand that has penned these lines
-has no cunning as a reporter of the Marriage Service.
-
-
-
-
-+-------------------------------------------------+
-|Transcriber's note: |
-| |
-|Obvious typographic errors have been corrected. |
-| |
-+-------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK***
-
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-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Mate of the Good Ship York, by William
-Clark Russell, Illustrated by W. H. Dunton</h1>
-<p>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 <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.</p>
-<p>Title: The Mate of the Good Ship York</p>
-<p> Or, The Ship's Adventure</p>
-<p>Author: William Clark Russell</p>
-<p>Release Date: June 5, 2020 [eBook #62329]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by Martin Pettit<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/mateofgoodshipyo00russiala">
- https://archive.org/details/mateofgoodshipyo00russiala</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="center"><a name="cover.jpg" id="cover.jpg"></a><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover" /></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="bold2">THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK</p>
-
-<p class="bold">OR, THE SHIP'S ADVENTURE</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="center"><img src="images/i004.jpg" alt="HARDY FREQUENTLY TURNED TO LOOK AT THE YORK" /></div>
-
-<p class="bold">"HARDY FREQUENTLY TURNED TO LOOK AT THE <i>YORK</i>." (<i>See <a href="#Page_261">Page 261</a></i>)</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="center"><img src="images/title.jpg" alt="Title Page" /></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1>THE MATE OF THE<br /> GOOD SHIP YORK</h1>
-
-<p class="bold">Or, The Ship's Adventure</p>
-
-<p class="bold space-above">By</p>
-
-<p class="bold2">W. Clark Russell</p>
-
-<p class="bold">Author of "The Wreck of the Gros-<br />venor,"
-"Marooned," "A Marriage<br />at Sea," "My Danish Sweetheart," etc.</p>
-
-<p class="bold">With a frontispiece by</p>
-
-<p class="bold2"><span class="smcap">W. H. Dunton</span></p>
-
-<div class="center space-above"><img src="images/logo.jpg" alt="logo" /></div>
-
-<p class="bold2 space-above"><i>Boston</i>: L. C. PAGE &amp;<br />COMPANY, <i>Publishers</i></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Copyright, 1900</i><br />
-<span class="smcap">By S. S. McClure Company</span><br />
-&mdash;&mdash;<br /><i>Copyright, 1902</i><br />
-<span class="smcap">By L. C. Page &amp; Company</span><br />
-<span class="smaller">(INCORPORATED)</span><br />&mdash;&mdash;<br /><i>All rights reserved</i></p>
-
-<p class="center space-above">Eighth Impression, April, 1907</p>
-
-<p class="center space-above">Colonial Press<br />
-Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds &amp; Co.<br />
-Boston, Mass., U. S. A.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>Contents</h2>
-
-<table summary="CONTENTS">
- <tr>
- <td colspan="2" class="left"><span class="smaller">CHAPTER</span></td>
- <td><span class="smaller">PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>I.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">Julia Armstrong</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_11">11</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>II.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">Bax's Farm</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_29">29</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>III.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">The East India Dock Road</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_48">48</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>IV.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">The "Glamis Castle"</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_66">66</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>V.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">Captain Layard</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_83">83</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>VI.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">The Ship's Lookout</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>VII.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">The French Mate</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>VIII.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">Lost!</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_137">137</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>IX.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">The Indiaman's Boat</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_152">152</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>X.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">The Captain and the Girl</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_170">170</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XI.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">The Captain's Birthday</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_187">187</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XII.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">Julia Calls "Johnny!"</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_206">206</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XIII.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">They Meet</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_219">219</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XIV.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">Hard Weather</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_239">239</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XV.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">Aboard Again</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XVI.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">Practical Seamanship</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_273">273</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XVII.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">The Boat-Full</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_293">293</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XVIII.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">Hail, Columbia!</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_313">313</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>XIX.&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
- <td class="left"><span class="smcap">The Camilla of the Sea</span></td>
- <td><a href="#Page_333">333</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="bold2">The Mate of the Good Ship York</p>
-
-<p class="bold">Or, the Ship's Adventure</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER I.</span> <span class="smaller">JULIA ARMSTRONG</span></h2>
-
-<p>A house with a wall, which would be blank but for a door and two
-steps, stands in a very pretty lane. The habitable aspect of the house
-is on the other side, and commands a wide prospect of sloping fields
-and river and green sweeps soaring into eminences thickly clothed
-with trees. A brass plate upon this lonely door bears the simple
-inscription, "Dr. Hardy."</p>
-
-<p>The lane runs down to a bridge, and the flowing river carries the
-eye along a scene of English beauty: the bending trees sip the water's
-surface; the bright meadow stretches from the bank, and is tender and
-gay with the tints and movement of cattle; lofty trees sentinel the
-lane, and in the early summer the notes of the thrush and the blackbird
-are clear and sweet.</p>
-
-<p>One autumn evening, at about seven o'clock, the door bearing
-Doctor Hardy's plate was pulled open, and a young fellow, with
-something nautical in his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> lurch and dress, stepped into the road,
-and began to fill his pipe. Immediately behind him appeared another
-figure&mdash;he was a thin, pale, gentlemanly-looking man, and his
-white hair was parted down the middle. He gazed with a great deal of
-kindness, not unmingled with the shadow of sorrow, at the young fellow
-who was filling his pipe, and said:</p>
-
-<p>"You have a pleasant evening for your walk."</p>
-
-<p>"I am sorry to leave this place," said the young man. "There is
-nothing like this to be met on the open ocean." And whilst he pulled
-out a matchbox his eyes went away to the green, evening-clad hills,
-which showed between the trees in a sweep of sky-line pure as the rim
-of a coloured lens; and now two or three of the stars which shine upon
-our country, and which we all know and love, were trembling in the dark
-blue of the coming shadow.</p>
-
-<p>The young man lighted his pipe with several hard sucks not wanting
-in emotion.</p>
-
-<p>"God bless you, father," said he. "I shall be turning up and finding
-all well within twelve months, I hope."</p>
-
-<p>"God bless you, my dear son, and I pray that he may continue to
-watch over you," said the white-haired old gentleman in a shaking
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>The young man started to walk with his face set toward the hill.
-Doctor Hardy stood in the doorway watching him until he had disappeared
-round the bend. He then stepped back and closed the door upon
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>It would not be dark for a little while, and even when the dusk came
-up over the hills a piece of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> moon would float up with it. The water
-flowing in the valley lay in short lines and sweet curves in a moist
-dim rose. A clock was striking; a wagon was rumbling in a weak note of
-thunder past some low-lying hedge that skirted a road. The young fellow
-stepped out leisurely with his pipe hanging at his teeth; he was going
-away to London and was walking to the station, and was without even
-a stick. He was square, robust, a nautical type of young man, clean
-shaven, of a cheerful cast of face, but with something singular in
-the expression of his eyes owing to the upper lids being mere streaks
-and scarcely visible, and the coloured matter black and brilliant, so
-that when he stared at you his look would have been fierce but for
-the qualifying expression of the rest of his face. He walked with a
-slight roll of the sea in his gait, and if you had noticed him at all
-you might have supposed him a sailor. Yet a man need not be a sailor
-to look like one. I have met nautical-looking men who would not be
-sailors for the value of the cargoes of twenty voyages. On the other
-hand, I have met sailors who, had they called themselves greengrocers'
-assistants or tailors' cutters, would have been believed.</p>
-
-<p>This young fellow, smoking his pipe and walking along through the
-fine autumn-gathering evening, was the only son of the white-haired
-gentleman who had just withdrawn into his house. He had been to sea
-since he was fourteen years of age, and his name was George Hardy, and
-he was now chief mate of the <i>York</i>, an Australian clipper, twelve
-hundred and fifty tons burthen, then lying in the East India Docks. He
-was going to join her, and why he was without baggage was because he
-had sent his chest aboard in advance.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p> <p>Formerly the
-railway station stood not very far distant from Doctor Hardy's house;
-but all about here was unimportant&mdash;it was more a district than
-a place. Hardy's patients, for instance, were scattered over miles,
-and, like the plums in a sailor's pudding, the houses were scarcely
-within hail of one another. The railway company, two years before this
-date, removed the station seven miles higher up the line, to the great
-consternation of the unfortunate man who had purchased the "Fox Railway
-Inn," then conveniently seated within a short walk of the station.
-Figure his horror when one morning he saw men with pickaxes uprooting
-the platform. The "Fox Inn" was left as desolate as Noah's Ark on Mount
-Ararat, and it needed three men to go through the bankruptcy court
-before matters began to look a little brighter for this unfortunate
-tavern.</p>
-
-<p>There was plenty of time, and Hardy did not walk very fast. He
-enjoyed the sweets of the country, all the aromas of the darkling land
-which came along in the faint, cold, evening air. When a sailor arrives
-from a long voyage he makes up his mind to button the flaps of his ears
-to his head, and to steer a straight course for the deepest inshore
-recess. He does not do so because he usually brings up at the nearest
-grog-shop on his arrival, or makes his way to the boarding-house
-where he was robbed and stripped when he was last in the place, and
-in a short time he is away at sea again with no clothes but what he
-stands up in, and no bed but the bundle of hay or straw which he
-flings, with curses deep as the sea and dark as the ship's hold, down
-the hatch under which he sleeps. But it is an illustration of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>
-his hatred of salt water that he should resolve to bury himself deep
-inshore when he lands.</p>
-
-<p>George Hardy did not belong to the class who live in boarding-houses
-and wear knives on their hips. He was the son of a gentleman, he was a
-man of taste and feeling which his seafaring life had heightened and
-enlarged; he had the eye of an artist and the spirit of a poet, and was
-too good for a calling that does not require these qualities.</p>
-
-<p>The road for about four miles was very lonely. One little cottage
-on the right stood in an orchard and grounds which sloped to a hedge
-almost three-quarters of a mile down. He met nobody; once or twice a
-squirrel ran across the pale dust; the birds had gone to bed, there was
-no song; the sun had sunk, and the evening had deepened into the first
-of the night.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, some distance ahead of him on the left, Hardy spied what
-was undoubtedly a human figure. It lay in a dry, shallow ditch with the
-upper part of its body a little raised, resting upon the bank under
-the hedge. As he approached he saw that it was a woman, and then that
-it was a girl in a straw hat with nothing near her in the shape of
-bag, bundle, or dog. She must be some wearied wayfarer who had seated
-herself and fallen asleep. But he did not believe this, either; on
-the contrary, when he was close to the figure he imagined it to be a
-corpse.</p>
-
-<p>He put his pipe in his pocket, and stood looking at her. There was
-light enough to see by, but not very distinctly. He stooped and peered,
-and then started and exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>"By Jove, it's Julia Armstrong! What's come to her?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span></p>
-<p>He looked up and down the road; not a soul was in sight. He felt her
-ungloved hands&mdash;they were cold. Her straw hat was tilted on her
-head, which rested not on the brim of her hat but on her hair, that was
-dressed in a mass behind and pillowed her. Her eyes were not closed,
-and if she was not dead she was in a swoon. He got beside her and
-lifted her head, all the while wondering what she was doing&mdash;dead
-or in a faint&mdash;in this ditch. He then pulled out a small flask of
-brandy diluted with water, and as her pure white teeth lay a little
-apart he managed to pour a dram into her mouth. He chafed her hands,
-and in a sort of way caressed her by holding her to him. He also put
-her hat straight, and wetting his handkerchief with a little brandy and
-water he damped her brow, now taking notice that she was not dead by
-sundry tokens of life of a most elusive and subtle character, whereof
-her breathing was not one, for he could not detect a stir of air on the
-back of his hand betwixt her lips, nor the faintest heave of her pretty
-breast.</p>
-
-<p>She was Julia Armstrong, and, strange to say, an old love of
-his&mdash;I mean, he had lost his heart to her a little time before
-he went to sea, when he was scarcely more than a schoolboy. Then he
-went to sea, and when he came home she had gone somewhere on a visit,
-and so of the next voyage; but when he returned from his fourth trip
-round the world he met her, and found the old beautiful charm again in
-her; but in a week she left to occupy some post as a governess thirty
-miles away, and when they met again it was here by this roadside.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span></p> <p>What had captivated the young fellow with this
-girl who lay unconscious in the fold of his arm? She had a pleasant,
-interesting face, beheld even through the death pallor that lay upon
-it; but she was not beautiful or even pretty. Her hair was abundant
-and fair, inclining, as you might even judge by that light, to auburn.
-But it was not her face nor hair, it was her figure that had excited
-admiration into passion in the young sailor. Her shape and involuntary
-poses were saucy and perfect beyond expression. She always carried her
-hat on one side of her head&mdash;"cock-billed," as the sailors call
-it; she had a trick of planting her hands on her hips; her limbs were
-beautifully shaped, and her short skirts exposed as much or little
-of them as her figure required. No dancer of exquisite art could
-have played her legs as this girl did, yet all her movements were
-involuntary and unconscious, and therein lay the sweetness, for had
-a hint of study been visible in her motions the whole maidenly and
-fairy-like illusion would have hardened into acting.</p>
-
-<p>Young Hardy had thought of the Vivandière, of the Fille-du-Regiment,
-when he looked at her. He could not have told you why. Was it the
-sauciness, that was not wanton, of the repose of her hands upon her
-hips? the unconsciously crossed leg when standing? the cock-billed hat,
-or tam-o'-shanter, that made you feel the need of music? the fixed gaze
-that was not staring but pensive? the sudden change of attitude that
-was like the cloud shadow upon a rose on which the sun had rested? What
-had all this to do with the Vivandière? But Hardy had got the word and
-the idea into his head, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> when he thought of her at sea 'twas as
-though she was walking with a regiment with a little barrel of cordial
-waters upon her back.</p>
-
-<p>Again he looked up the road and then down the road; he could hear
-a cart in a lane that ran parallel, but nobody was visible. He was
-beginning to wonder what he was to do&mdash;whether he had the physical
-strength to carry this fine girl in his arms four miles, that is, to
-his father's house&mdash;when she sighed, stirred like an awakening
-sleeper, sighed again, and opened a pair of gray eyes full upon his
-face.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know me?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Where am I?" she answered, and with a sudden effort she raised
-her form out of his arm, but in a moment fell back again in sheer
-weakness.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't you remember your old friend George Hardy?" he said.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him with that sort of intentness which you will
-sometimes see in a baby's eyes, and her lips drooped into a scarcely
-perceptible smile.</p>
-
-<p>"What am I doing here?" she asked, and she gazed round her, deeply
-puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>He gave her a little more brandy, which she certainly stood in need
-of, and looking at her without speaking, he waited until more mind came
-into her face; and now she made an effort to rise.</p>
-
-<p>"Keep still until you have come right to," said he. "I wish some old
-cart would come along to give us a lift to my father's."</p>
-
-<p>"Your father's?"</p>
-
-<p>"Doctor Hardy," he answered. "About an hour's walk away."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I know," she exclaimed. "If a cart came I would not go."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p> <p>"My dear Miss Armstrong, what are you doing
-here?" exclaimed young Hardy. "All alone in a dead faint in a ditch!
-Were you returning home?" And again he looked a little way up and down,
-thinking to see a handbag or a parcel, but her hands were as empty as
-his.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm going to London," she said. "What time is it?"</p>
-
-<p>"I'm going to London, too," said he; "but neither of us will catch
-the train we want. Do you mean to walk to London?"</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head, and put her hand in her pocket as though seeking
-her purse. What she sought was evidently there.</p>
-
-<p>Now her faculties had come together, but it was clear she must sit a
-little longer before attempting to rise; so they sat side by side with
-their feet in the dry ditch, and their backs against the hedge.</p>
-
-<p>"Why are you going to London?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm leaving home for good," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>"Where's your luggage?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have none," she replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you running away from home?" he inquired, beginning to see a
-little into this matter.</p>
-
-<p>"I have no home, and I am leaving my father's house of my own
-accord," she replied, animated by a little faint passion. "I could
-endure the life no longer&mdash;I am the wretchedest girl in the world.
-Oh, how his wife has treated me! <i>You</i> once met her."</p>
-
-<p>She struggled with her heart, and some tears ran down her face.</p>
-
-<p>It is true that Hardy had met this stepmother&mdash;this second Mrs.
-Armstrong&mdash;and he had then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> gathered that the lady and Miss Julia
-did not lead the lives of angels in each other's company. In short,
-he had heard that Mrs. Armstrong, by her drink, by her language, and
-conduct in general, had made a very hell of Captain, or Commander,
-Armstrong's home for his daughter. The captain was retired, was poor,
-and Mrs. Armstrong had brought him a hundred a year, which was a
-godsend. He took life very easily, drank his whisky, smoked his pipe,
-and was welcome at several houses in the neighbourhood, where at one
-he would get billiards, at another a rubber, at a third a gossip in
-which he related his China experiences; and the whisky bottle always
-kept him company, though his kindest friend could never say that in all
-his time he had seen him drunk once. Doctor Hardy was on good terms
-with him, but spoke with strong dislike of Mrs. Armstrong, and of
-her treatment of her daughter, that was driving her into seeking and
-taking situations, some of a menial sort, and that threatened before
-long to break her heart or to send her to the bad, as 'tis called. But
-with domestic troubles of this sort people do not choose to concern
-themselves, except in exaggerating them in talk by scandalous hints and
-opinions.</p>
-
-<p>"I must wait for something to pass that will help me to carry you to
-my father's house," said Hardy, looking anxiously at the girl whom he
-could not fail to see was weak and exhausted.</p>
-
-<p>"I have already declined," she answered. "I will not return a single
-yard in that hateful direction. I shall feel stronger presently. Is
-there not another train later on?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not to London."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p> <p>"I must not miss this," she
-exclaimed, struggling to rise.</p>
-
-<p>"Look here," said he, keeping her down by gentle pressure of the
-hand, "I am going to London and we will go together, but we shall have
-to wait until to-morrow. Will not that suit? If you are in a desperate
-hurry you can leave early to-morrow. Do you know Bax's farm?"</p>
-
-<p>"Of course I do," she answered, turning her face up the road.</p>
-
-<p>"Bax shall give you a bedroom," said he, "since you refuse to return
-with me to my father. A good supper and a good night's rest are the
-doctoring you stand in need of. I find you in a dead faint in a ditch,
-and so you come under my care, and I am answerable for you. We are old
-friends."</p>
-
-<p>She faintly smiled and looked at him.</p>
-
-<p>"You will do exactly what I ask, and at Bax's farm we shall have
-leisure for a little talk."</p>
-
-<p>She bowed her head, and he saw that she cried again.</p>
-
-<p>They spied a man at the bottom of the hill coming up. The girl
-started, and said, "I am quite strong enough to stand and walk," and
-she stood up, one of the most beautiful figures amongst women, with a
-sweet ingenuous sauciness which was the flavouring grace of her happy
-hours, distinguishable still, even in this time of misery and illness.
-The man coming along was a common labourer, but she did not choose that
-any one should see her sitting in a ditch.</p>
-
-<p>They walked slowly up the road. She leaned upon his arm and
-occasionally stopped to rest, and their talk until they arrived
-at the farm was not much;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> indeed she said little more than that
-she had been making up her mind for some weeks to leave her father's
-house for ever and to sail to a colony, where she would be willing to
-accept the lowest menial office so long as she was independent, and
-received the respect that was due to her as a lady. She had left her
-home that day in the afternoon, meaning to walk to the station and take
-the train to London, whence she intended to write to her father to
-forward her clothes in the box which stood ready corded in her bedroom.
-When she had walked some distance&mdash;it might be five miles&mdash;a
-sudden faintness seized her, and she sat down under a hedge to rest.
-She then must have fainted, and knew no more until she returned to
-consciousness, and found herself resting against Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>This talk brought them to Bax's farm.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a farm, though it was called so. Bax sold milk and garden
-produce and eggs, and the countryside called his house a farm. It had
-two gables and a thatched roof, small latticed windows, and a door
-that opened direct into the sitting-room. In the summer the house was
-enchanting with its flowers and shrubbery and the climbing green stuff
-about it, and then the concert of the woods thrilled in the trees
-beyond, and the air was full of sweet smells.</p>
-
-<p>Bax was a man of about sixty, immensely stout behind and in front,
-with a face that seemed powdered with pale, scissors-shorn whisker,
-and small eyes which had drowned their lustre in beer. He stood in
-the doorway in his shirt-sleeves smoking a pipe, and was not at all
-surprised when the couple passed through the gate and approached
-the porch. He merely pulled out his pipe, and said:</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p>
-<p>"Good evening, Mr. Hardy; good evening, Miss Armstrong. Come for a
-bit of a sit down? Will y' 'ave chairs here? or the sitting-room's at
-your sarvice."</p>
-
-<p>"How d'ye do, Mr. Bax?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Good evening, Mr. Bax," said Miss Armstrong, in a faint voice.</p>
-
-<p>"Take us into your sitting-room," said Hardy; and they entered the
-door and were in the sitting-room at once&mdash;a cosy little room,
-hung with portraits of Bax and his dead wife and daughter, decorated
-with a small mantel-glass in fly-gauze, and hospitable with a round
-table on one leg and three claws, the top beautified by a knitted
-cover.</p>
-
-<p>Julia sank into a little armchair. Bax was beginning to gaze at
-her earnestly; he knew her perfectly well, knew her father also, who
-frequently looked in for a drink; also he knew Hardy perfectly well,
-likewise his father, who attended him when he was attacked by gout.</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Bax," said Hardy, putting his cap down upon the table, "we have
-come to occupy your house this night."</p>
-
-<p>"Joost been married, have yer?" asked Bax, slipping his pipe into
-his waistcoat pocket.</p>
-
-<p>"No," answered Hardy, gravely; "Miss Armstrong is leaving her home
-for good. If you don't guess why, I'll tell you presently."</p>
-
-<p>Bax looked knowing; he looked more knowing an instant later when
-a fine Persian kitten ran up his back and curled its tail upon his
-shoulder, for then two pairs of eyes were fastened upon Hardy, the
-kitten, being no beer drinker, gazing more steadfastly than the
-other.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p> <p>"Have you a bedroom that you can place at Miss
-Armstrong's disposal?"</p>
-
-<p>"Is there no later train?" asked Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"We would not take it if there were," replied Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>Of course Bax, having lost his wife, must consult his daughter,
-and when he had opened a door and shouted a little for Mary Ann
-there arrived a woman who looked old enough to be Bax's mother. Her
-face seemed to be dredged by time; the <i>arcus senilis</i> was more
-defined in her than in Bax; she looked seventy years old, and was but
-thirty-eight.</p>
-
-<p>She curtseyed to the visitors, and then, after pursing her lips and
-knitting her brow, she replied to her father that Miss Armstrong could
-have the spare room over the sitting-room.</p>
-
-<p>"Can I have a bedroom?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>Bax mused, looking at his daughter, and then said, "Not unless you
-sleeps along with me."</p>
-
-<p>"With you?" laughed Hardy, looking at his stomach. "How much of you
-lies in bed all at once? That'll do for me," said he, and he jerked his
-head at a wide hair-sofa.</p>
-
-<p>The father, the kitten, and the daughter looked a little strangely
-at Hardy and Julia Armstrong, as though before proceeding they wanted
-to see things in a clearer light. Hardy understanding this, spoke out
-with the bluntness of a sailor.</p>
-
-<p>"Look here, Bax," said he, "I'm going to London to join my ship.
-I was bound away to-night, but on the road I fell in with this young
-lady, who lay in a swoon."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, dear, poor thing!" groaned Miss Bax.</p>
-
-<p>"She came to, and I brought her here after <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>learning that she was
-leaving her home for good on account of the barbarous behaviour of her
-stepmother&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I know, I know," interrupted Miss Bax.</p>
-
-<p>"She was walking to catch the train I was bound by; she is not in
-a fit state to travel, Bax. <i>You</i> can see that, ma'am; therefore she
-shall sup under this comfortable old roof, and take the rest she needs
-in the room you offer her. Her train leaves at ten in the morning, and
-we will take it."</p>
-
-<p>The kitten purred as it fretted Bax's cheek. Bax said, "It's all
-right, Mr. Hardy, and you shall be made comfortable. What 'ull you 'ave
-for supper?"</p>
-
-<p>What would be better than some cold ham and a dish of eggs and
-bacon, a dish of sausages in mashed potato, and the half of a beautiful
-apple tart, along with a jug of real cream? And for drink there was
-some first-class ale kept by Bax for Bax himself, for he held no
-license, and his dealings were secret, and if he took money it was a
-gift for a kindness.</p>
-
-<p>"Will you come up-stairs and see your room, Miss Armstrong, before I
-goes about and gets your supper for you?" exclaimed Miss Bax.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you got no baggage?" inquired old Bax, jerking the kitten on
-to the table.</p>
-
-<p>"It will follow me to London," said Miss Armstrong, and she rose and
-went up-stairs with Miss Bax.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy sat down upon the sofa, and Bax went to work to lay the cloth.
-There was plenty of room at that little table for two. Bax had been
-a gardener in a great family, and had often helped the coachman, the
-footman, and the butler to wait. He possessed some good old-fashioned
-table apparel, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> before Miss Armstrong returned the room
-looked bright and hospitable with the light of an oil lamp reflected in
-cutlery, glass, and cruet-stand.</p>
-
-<p>Julia entered, and Bax walked out. She went and sat beside Hardy,
-and the lovely Persian kitten sprang into her lap. Her hair was as
-beautiful as her figure, and her gray eyes were full of heart and
-meaning. You could not have called her pretty, yet you were sensible of
-a charm in her face that had nothing to do with the shape of her nose
-or the character of her mouth.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel better?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Much; I never thought to find myself stopping a night here. Of
-course, I have been the means of your losing your train?"</p>
-
-<p>"To-morrow will do just as well," he answered. "Where did you mean
-to sleep when you got to London to-night?"</p>
-
-<p>"I should have found a room," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>"Will they send on your luggage if you write for it?"</p>
-
-<p>"Father will," she replied. "Yes, he will do that, but he will not
-write to ask me to return. He does not care what becomes of me. He
-never cared what I did when I left his house to fill a situation."</p>
-
-<p>Her nostrils enlarged, her eyes looked angry. A little blood visited
-her pale cheek. Hardy's memory pictured her father: a middle-sized man
-with pale, weak eyes, a chuckling laugh like the gurgle of liquor,
-much reference to his ships and to naval things in general, a large
-Micawber-like indifference to his existing circumstances, and a quality
-of talkativeness about outside matters, such as the queen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> the
-trouble at Pekin, the discovery of the North Pole, which would make you
-think that he did not know what home worries were.</p>
-
-<p>"Bax," said Hardy, "may covertly send along to let them know you are
-here."</p>
-
-<p>"What of that?" she exclaimed. "If they were to send twenty men they
-would have to drag me to move me. I would not set foot in that house
-again if my stepmother lay dead in the gutter opposite the door. It is
-my father's fault."</p>
-
-<p>She bit her lip, stroked the kitten, and said, "Oh, it is hard upon
-a girl to have a bad father&mdash;a weak, selfish, foolish father."</p>
-
-<p>Here Bax came again with a tumbler full of autumn flowers. He placed
-them in the middle of the table and went out, looking nowhere, as if
-he walked in his sleep; but whilst the door lay open they heard the
-spitting of the frying-pan.</p>
-
-<p>"What are you going to do when you get to London?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"I mean to find a situation on board a ship," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>"What situation do you expect to find?"</p>
-
-<p>"I shall try to get a post as stewardess, or as an attendant upon
-a sick person. I cannot pay my passage out even in the steerage,
-therefore I must work."</p>
-
-<p>"Now, Miss Armstrong," said Hardy, stroking the kitten's head on
-her lap, "it is impossible for me to be rude to you because I want to
-be, and mean to be, your friend." She looked at him swiftly, and her
-eyes drooped. "Do not misjudge any questions I may put to you. How much
-money have you got?"</p>
-
-<p>"Seven pounds, twelve shillings, and&mdash;" she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
-drew out a little purse, opened it, counted some coppers, and added,
-"fourpence."</p>
-
-<p>"What is that money going to do for you in London?" said Hardy,
-after a pause of pity.</p>
-
-<p>"It will support me," she answered, "until I have obtained a
-situation on board a ship."</p>
-
-<p>"Situations for girls on board ships are very few," said he. "What
-part of the world do you want to sail for?"</p>
-
-<p>"Anywhere, anywhere," she replied. "But it must be to some place
-where I can get a living."</p>
-
-<p>"It would not do to sail for China," he exclaimed. "India doesn't
-provide much for people whose wants are yours. It must be the Great
-Pacific colonies. Aren't there agents and institutions which help young
-girls to get away across the sea? This we will inquire into when we
-arrive in London."</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him gratefully, and was about to speak, but was
-interrupted by Miss Bax, who staggered in with a tray load.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER II.</span> <span class="smaller">BAX'S FARM</span></h2>
-
-<p>George Hardy and Miss Julia Armstrong sat down to supper at the
-little round table; Bax lurked as if he would wait; Hardy said they
-could manage very well without him, and the pair fell to. The window
-was open, and all the rich, decaying perfumes of the autumn evening
-floated into the atmosphere, and sweetened it with the incense of the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy looked at his companion, and felt again the delight he used to
-take in the contemplation of her shape. The same old suggestion was in
-her&mdash;that of the Vivandière. But why? He could not have explained,
-and neither can I. Every movement was full of beauty and piquancy, and
-she wore her hair parted a little on one side.</p>
-
-<p>"Is your bedroom comfortable?" asked Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"A sweet, old-fashioned little room," she said, "and the bed's a
-four-poster. It has curtain rings, and if I tremble in bed they will
-rattle, and I shall think it the death-tick, which I hate to hear. Will
-that sofa make a comfortable bed for you?"</p>
-
-<p>"You are asking a sailor that question," he answered. "I would be
-glad to carry it to sea with me, and sleep all around the world in
-it. Have you written a farewell letter to your father?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span></p>
-<p>"No; I have left him as a spirit might, in utter silence. His wife
-will not let him trouble himself. When the time comes for locking up
-the bolt will be shot, and he will fill his pipe and fill his glass,
-and say to his wife that he is afraid there is some truth in the
-story that Mr. Gubbins was telling him about Miss Cornflower and the
-Congregational minister. That is the sort of interest he will take in
-my not turning up."</p>
-
-<p>She frowned, and put down her knife and fork, and seemed as if she
-did not mean to go on eating. Hardy poured out a glass of frothing
-ale. It was a fine sparkling ale, better than champagne, and looked an
-elegant drink, fit for red lips in the thin glass it brimmed with foam.
-She took it and drank.</p>
-
-<p>"It is hard for any girl to be in want," said Hardy; "but there is
-no distress to equal that of the lady who is in poverty. What, in God's
-name, can she do? She is not wanted in the kitchen, and if I were she I
-would rather sell matches than be a governess."</p>
-
-<p>"It is the well-to-do lady who makes it hard for the poor lady,"
-exclaimed the girl. "Two years ago I got a situation as nurse to attend
-an aged sick woman&mdash;she was eighty. She lived with a lady. You
-would think this person would have known how to treat the daughter of
-an officer in the navy, who was too poor to maintain her as a lady. Mr.
-Hardy, she used to call me Armstrong, as though I was her housemaid.
-I had my meals separate. When they went away for a change I was not
-good enough to sit in the carriage; they made me sit on the box,
-and the coachman, in the genial manner of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> the mews, asked me if I
-was the new maid, and if my name was Jemima. When we arrived the lady
-told me I must not sit with them if company came, as my presence might
-be objected to. I went to my bedroom, and kept in it till I was called
-out, and then returned to it."</p>
-
-<p>"It is time you cleared out," said Hardy. "The soft hearts seem to
-be found at sea nowadays; at all events, they are not so scarce there
-as fresh eggs," said he, helping himself. "Your intentions are to get
-abroad and seek a berth abroad. I should like to read the map of them.
-You have saved seven pounds odd, and you arrive in London at night, and
-you don't know where to go. Next day you ask your way&mdash;where? To
-the docks; but what docks? London, Millwall, East India, West India,
-and so on. You enter a forest without a compass. Now what are you going
-to do?"</p>
-
-<p>"I meant to go on board ship after ship," she answered, with spirit,
-"and ask anybody I saw if there was a berth for me on board."</p>
-
-<p>"Did you ever see a large full-rigged ship in all your life?" he
-inquired, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>"Never," she replied, emphatically.</p>
-
-<p>"Go to the docks, and you'll see hundreds, and there won't be one
-that wants you."</p>
-
-<p>"What is the name of your ship?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"The <i>York</i>."</p>
-
-<p>"Where is she going to?"</p>
-
-<p>"She is bound to Australia."</p>
-
-<p>"Is there no place for me in that ship?" she said. She looked at
-him piteously, though her natural grace of coquetry broke through all
-the same, with the planting of her hands upon her hips, and the way
-she side-dropped her head at him.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p> <p>"We carry no
-stewardess, no females, no passengers," he answered. "The captain is a
-stranger to me. No, my ship is of no use to you," he continued, after
-a pause. "You must call with me upon some shipping people. There may
-be a vacancy for a stewardess. But suppose the ship is sailing for
-India?"</p>
-
-<p>She gazed at him a little vacantly.</p>
-
-<p>"We shall find some means of getting abroad," he went on, running
-a note of cheerfulness into his voice, for he thought by the look in
-the girl's eyes that she was beginning to bend on signals of distress,
-which would be hoisted in a pearly downpour presently. "At all events,
-you can't be worse off than you are, and somebody says that when you
-are at the bottom of the wheel the next revolution must hoist you."</p>
-
-<p>They talked in this strain until they had supped, then Hardy, not
-seeing a bell, opened the door and shouted to Miss Bax to clear away.
-When the door was opened they could hear voices in the back room
-beyond, and a gush of Cavendish tobacco smoke came in. Some friends of
-Bax had called in a casual way by the back entrance, across the fields,
-which meant several drinks, clouds of tobacco, and all the gossip of
-the social sphere which Bax and his friends adorned. When Miss Bax had
-cleared the table she placed a bottle of whisky upon it at the request
-of Hardy, also cold water and glasses. She then said there was no hurry
-to go to bed. Father did not go to bed until eleven, and she left them
-with a smile as though they were a young married couple spending their
-honeymoon in Bax's farm, instead of one of them being an honest,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
-generous-hearted young sailor intent on doing his dead best to rescue
-a young English lady from bitter privation, and perhaps from miserable
-disgrace; and the other of them being a broken-hearted girl hurrying
-from a home of tyranny and drink, a home of one base nature, and of
-one spiritless one (which is likewise a baseness), with a future as
-dark as the night that lay outside, in whose funeral tapestries her
-imagination alone could have beheld the stirrings of the life that was
-to give her content and liberty, in whose impenetrable depths she found
-no more than a minute gleam of light from Hardy's strange and chanceful
-encounter with her while she lay in a swoon deep as death.</p>
-
-<p>With her consent the sailor lighted a pipe. The girl sat in a chair
-opposite to him, her head a little on one side, hands on her hips, all
-in the old, fascinating, coquettish, incommunicable way. Outside the
-night lay in a thin gloom, and they saw the stars shining above the
-trees. The hush of the sleeping land was in the air. You heard nothing
-but the silver tinkling of a natural fall of water that ran down the
-hillside, and fell purely in a stone bowl for men, horses, and dogs to
-drink.</p>
-
-<p>"You are a plucky girl," said Hardy; "but I think you are attempting
-more than you understand. You talk, for instance, of going to the
-workhouse. You are the last girl in the world to go to the workhouse.
-Think of dying in a workhouse," he continued, whilst she watched him
-without smiling. "Creatures bend over your bed, and say, 'Isn't she
-gone yet?' That's the sympathy of the workhouse."</p>
-
-<p>"I want to get out of England, abroad, and be independent," said
-Julia.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span></p> <p>He looked at an old clock upon the mantelpiece.
-The hour was about eight. He asked her if she would have some whisky
-and water, and on her declining, he mixed a draught for himself, then
-went to the door and called to Bax, leaving the girl to wonder what he
-meant to do. The farmer arrived.</p>
-
-<p>"Bax," said the sailor, "you have given us a capital supper."</p>
-
-<p>"I'm much obliged to you, sir," answered Bax.</p>
-
-<p>"This is an excellent whisky," continued Hardy, "and I drink your
-health"&mdash;here he sipped&mdash;"and the health of your worthy
-daughter"&mdash;here he sipped again&mdash;"in your very hospitable
-gift."</p>
-
-<p>Bax grinned, and said, "We make no charge. You're my guests, and
-you're welcome."</p>
-
-<p>"Bax," said Hardy, "haven't you a spring cart?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," answered Bax.</p>
-
-<p>"Got a horse?"</p>
-
-<p>"Got a pretty little mare."</p>
-
-<p>"Will you drive me over to Captain Armstrong's as soon as possible
-to fetch this young lady's luggage?"</p>
-
-<p>Julia started in her chair, and said, "Don't trouble, Mr. Hardy.
-My father will send the box on to me when he gets my address in
-London."</p>
-
-<p>"How d'ye know he will?" inquired Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" murmured Bax.</p>
-
-<p>"Suppose the stepmother declines to let the box go?" said Hardy.
-"Now you'll want all the clothes you've got and can get, Miss
-Armstrong, if you mean to colonise. Bax, bear a hand, my lad; clap your
-mare to the cart, and report when you're ready."</p>
-
-<p>He spoke as if he was on the quarter-deck of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> a
-ship and making the sailors jump for their lives, and Bax went out,
-saying, "I'll not be ten minutes."</p>
-
-<p>"How good you are to me!" exclaimed Julia, gathering the side of her
-pocket-handkerchief unconsciously, and looking at him with eyes that
-seemed to tremble with emotion. "What should I have done had you not
-found me? I might have died under that hedge."</p>
-
-<p>"Let me see," said Hardy; "how far off from here does your father
-live?"</p>
-
-<p>She reflected and answered, "Quite six miles."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, we shall be back with your box before ten. Don't sit up; you
-want all the rest you can get. To-morrow will be full of business."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" cried Julia, "I hope there will be no trouble. Father
-may&mdash;He won't like you to know that I have run away. He may insist
-upon returning with you, or coming here."</p>
-
-<p>"If he is at home he may, and we'll give him a lift with
-pleasure."</p>
-
-<p>"I should refuse to meet him," cried the girl, standing up in a
-sudden passion of indignation. "He has seen me suffer and has looked
-on. If he comes here it is not for me, but for <i>that</i>," and she pointed
-to the bottle of whisky.</p>
-
-<p>"You shall have your box of clothes, anyhow," said Hardy, smoking
-coolly and looking at the girl; and three minutes after he had said
-this Miss Bax came in, and reported that "father and the cart was at
-the gate."</p>
-
-<p>"Don't let Miss Armstrong sit up," said Hardy. "Do those chaps back
-talk very loud?"</p>
-
-<p>"When they arguefy," answered Miss Bax.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> "They're wrangling over
-the age of the queen now."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, when Miss Armstrong goes to bed silence them," said Hardy,
-"for I want the lady to sleep well. We shall meet at breakfast," said
-he, turning to Julia and taking her hand.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall wait up for you. How could I sleep?" she replied.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled, but answered nothing, filled and relighted his pipe, and
-walked out.</p>
-
-<p>The drive was pleasant, down-hill. The road stretched before them
-like satin with the dust of it, and many spacious groups of trees
-lifted their motionless shapes against the sky-line of the tall
-land and the stars twinkling above it. Specks of light in houses
-reposed like glow worms in the deep shades of the valley and up the
-acclivities, but the river streamed in blackness, and the lamps of a
-small town past the railway station were lost behind the bend.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy stared at his father's house as they drove past, always in
-darkness on this side, but he knew there would be lights in the windows
-which overlooked the grounds that sank toward the river.</p>
-
-<p>The house Captain Armstrong lived in was two miles further on round
-the corner, and made one of about a dozen little villas and cottages,
-including a church and a public-house. It was a very small cottage,
-thatched; but its sun-bright windows, its handsome door and brass
-knocker&mdash;the taste, in short of the man who had built it in years
-gone by&mdash;made it very fit for the occupation of a gentleman. It
-was sunk deep in a broad piece of garden land, and the apple-trees,
-whose boughs were laden, scented the still night air refreshingly.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span></p> <p>"Here we be," said Bax, drawing up, and the
-sailor sprang off the cart, and walked down the path to the door with
-the brass knocker.</p>
-
-<p>He hammered briskly, and tugged at a metal knob which shivered a
-little bell into ecstasies of alarm. A small dog barked shrilly with
-terror and hate, and in a minute the door was opened by a servant, past
-whom the small dog fled, and tried to marry his teeth in Hardy's right
-boot. A kick rushed the little beast back into the passage, and Hardy
-said to the servant, "I have called for Miss Armstrong's trunk."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, indeed," she said, looking behind her.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, indeed," he exclaimed. "I'm in a hurry. I've six miles to go.
-Is Captain Armstrong in?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," was the answer, and as the servant spoke a door on the right
-of the passage was thrown open, and the figure of a stout woman stood
-between Hardy and the flame of the oil-float which illuminated the
-passage at the extremity.</p>
-
-<p>"Who is it? and what does he want?" said the stout figure,
-approaching by two or three paces.</p>
-
-<p>"I am Mr. Hardy, son of your husband's doctor," was the reply, "and
-I have called for Miss Armstrong's trunk. It stands ready corded in her
-bedroom, and I am in a hurry."</p>
-
-<p>"Where is Miss Armstrong going?" said the stout figure, who was
-indeed Mrs. Armstrong.</p>
-
-<p>"To the ends of the earth to escape <i>you</i>," he answered. "Bax," he
-roared, "fling your reins over the gate-post, and come and lend me a
-hand to ship the box in your cart."</p>
-
-<p>"The box shall not leave this house without Captain Armstrong's
-permission," said Mrs. Armstrong,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> who, poor as the
-light was, you could see carried a great deal of colour in her face
-of a streaky or venous nature; her eyes were small, and gazed with
-rapid winks as though they snapped at you as you snap the hammer of
-a revolver; her bust was immense; her black hair was smoothed like
-streaks of paint down her cheeks and round her ears, and she wore a cap
-with something in it that nodded, giving more significance to her words
-than they needed.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is Captain Armstrong?" said the sailor.</p>
-
-<p>"Out," was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>"He'll not care whether I take it or leave it." He could not bring
-himself to speak even civilly to her. "Whilst you fetch him we'll
-tranship it, and the captain can get in and argue the point whilst
-we drive away. Come along, Bax. Sally, show us the road to the young
-lady's bedroom."</p>
-
-<p>"Maria," exclaimed Mrs. Armstrong, cold and bitter, "go and knock on
-Constable Rogers's door, and tell him to come here at once."</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I fetch the master also?" said Maria, quivering in her figure
-in the hot anticipation of rushing out.</p>
-
-<p>"No, the walk is too long. I want you back, and the constable."</p>
-
-<p>The girl shot up the walk.</p>
-
-<p>"Bax," said Hardy, "come along. We'll easily find the room."</p>
-
-<p>Bax hung in the wind.</p>
-
-<p>"What's the constable a-going to say?" he muttered. "Won't it be
-breaking in if we enters without the missis's leave?"</p>
-
-<p>Hardy looked at him, and then stepped to the foot of the
-staircase.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span></p> <p>"You dare not go up-stairs,
-sir!" said Mrs. Armstrong, in a voice that trembled.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy mounted.</p>
-
-<p>"The constable shall lock you up," shrieked the enraged woman.</p>
-
-<p>"Coom down, coom down, Mr. Hardy," sang out Bax. "The constable'll
-make it right."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy pulled out a box of wax matches and struck one. The landing
-was in darkness, and he wanted to see. He guessed the girl's bedroom
-by intuition, opened the door, and saw the trunk&mdash;a small
-one&mdash;seized the handle, and dragged it to the head of the
-staircase. It was lighter than a sea chest, and with a heave he settled
-it on his shoulder, and went creaking down-stairs.</p>
-
-<p>"I defy you to take that box out of my house without my leave,"
-yelled Mrs. Armstrong.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy seemed cool, but his spirits were in a blaze. He regarded the
-sending for a constable as an atrocious act of insolence, and he walked
-past the woman, not in the smallest degree caring whether he plunged
-the corner of the box into her head or not. She took care, however, to
-give him a wide berth, and he passed through the house door, whilst
-the little dog barked furiously at a safe distance at the end of the
-passage.</p>
-
-<p>"Give me a hand with this," said he to Bax. "This is no business
-of the constable. The box belongs to a young lady who wants it, and I
-intend that she shall have it."</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Hardy," answered Bax, "I'd rather not meddle with the box
-till the constable cooms; he'll be 'ere in a minute. He allus
-smokes his pipe by his fireside at this hour. If it should be the
-wrong box&mdash;"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p> <p>"It's the right box," exclaimed
-Hardy, standing with the trunk on his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>"I'd rather wait for Rogers to make it all right," said Bax.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy sent a sea blessing at his head, and without another word
-walked rapidly to the cart, threw the box in, took the reins off the
-gate, sprang on to the seat, and drove off.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop, sir; stop, for God's sake!" shouted Bax, beginning to run.
-But he was too fat to run. He was blowing hard when he gained the
-road, and stood staring after his cart. Hardy whipped the mare into a
-gallop, and gained the farm in half the time that Bax would have taken
-to measure the ground. He drew up at the gate, secured the horse by
-the reins, and, shouldering the trunk, marched to the door, and was
-admitted by Miss Bax.</p>
-
-<p>"Where's father?" was her first cry.</p>
-
-<p>"I left him enjoying a yarn with Mrs. Armstrong," answered Hardy,
-thrusting with the trunk into the room, where Julia was still sitting
-just as he had left her. "There are your clothes, Miss Armstrong," said
-the sailor, lowering the box on to the floor.</p>
-
-<p>"Father's come to no 'urt, I hope?" said Miss Bax, addressing Miss
-Armstrong.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy related exactly the story of his repulse by the insolent
-stepmother, his bringing the box down-stairs alone, Bax's fear of the
-law, and so forth.</p>
-
-<p>"And now," said he, "as you've not gone to bed, Miss Armstrong,
-I'll sit down and keep you company, and smoke one more pipe, and wait
-for the constable."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p> <p>"Well, if father's all right,"
-said Miss Bax, "he'll be here with the constable, and soon, I hope; but
-it's all up-hill, and his wind don't favour him. I've got help at the
-back, and will put the mare up," and thus speaking she passed out, and
-left the young couple alone.</p>
-
-<p>"So she actually sent for a constable!" exclaimed Julia, whilst
-Hardy filled his pipe, and looked at the grog bottle on the table.
-"Could you imagine a more horrible woman?"</p>
-
-<p>"Here are the goods anyhow," said Hardy, striking a match. "It's
-your box, of course&mdash;I mean, I've made no mistake, I hope."</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly it is my box," she exclaimed, slightly flushing and
-poising her hands on her hips, and dropping her head at him in a
-posture that brightened his eyes with delight, "and all I possess in
-this wide world is in it."</p>
-
-<p>"I would not like to be the constable if he touches it or is
-even insolent over it," said Hardy, stretching backwards his broad
-shoulders, with a glance at himself in the little fly-protected mirror.
-He then poured out some whisky and water, and sat down near Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"She did not express any astonishment at my leaving home?" said the
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>"The dog did most of the talk," he answered, "and made for my
-choicest corn," and he looked at his boot, which exhibited the indent
-of the beast's teeth. "How your father could have&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Was she drunk?" asked Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"I dare say she was. Some people get drunk without showing it. Miss
-Armstrong, I am no longer surprised that you should run away."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p> <p>She smiled, but with mingled sadness and
-bitterness, and said, "If my father comes in with Bax and the
-constable, I shall walk out, and I beg you to give me your protection,
-Mr. Hardy, and to save me from seeing him."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy bowed, but made no answer. He was a man of careless thoughts
-and many heedless views in all sorts of directions, a sailor, in short,
-whose horizon was salt and limited, yet he could not help feeling
-shocked at the extravagance of fear and dislike which the half-pay
-captain had by bitter neglect and a Christless marriage excited in
-the breast of a girl who seemed a true-hearted, heroic young woman,
-beautiful of figure, and with a face of romantic interest.</p>
-
-<p>"Can the constable do anything if he comes?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes," answered the sailor, "he can walk out. In what law book
-is it written that a man may not possess his own? That is yours," said
-he, pointing to the trunk, "and if Constable Rogers touches it we'll
-have him before the magistrates, of whom, by the way, my father is
-one."</p>
-
-<p>He looked at her very thoughtfully, and she looked at him till
-her gray eyes drooped to her lap. The Persian kitten had left the
-room, and she had nothing to toy with but her handkerchief. Now, by
-the expression of Hardy's face, you could have said that he fastened
-his eyes upon her, not out of feeling, nor out of the sense of
-being alone with her, nor of the enjoyment of the spectacle of her
-matchless figure, but because he was maturing thoughts concerning
-her well-being. He had certainly a most honest face, and you tasted
-the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>manliness of his nature in each utterance and in every
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>"I want to talk to you," said he, "about our arrival in London. I
-must get you close to the docks. I'll put you in the way of making a
-few inquiries whilst I am busy on board my ship; meanwhile I shall be
-asking questions."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, Mr. Hardy, what should I have done had I not met you?" she
-cried, in an irrepressible outburst of gratitude, and again he saw
-tears in her eyes, for she had lived hard and had fared hard for some
-years now, and kindness easily broke her down, as one long divorced
-from home will melt on her return to the sound of the music that her
-mother loved and sang to her.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know London?" said the sailor.</p>
-
-<p>"I was never in London," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you ever seen a ship?"</p>
-
-<p>"I came home in a ship from India," she replied, "but I was too
-young to remember the vessel."</p>
-
-<p>"You will not like the East End of London," said Hardy. "I don't
-know why sailors should make the places they live in dirty, yet it is
-true that after leaving Whitechapel the closer you draw to the docks,
-the grimier life looks. Jack has spent his money, you see, and is
-going away tipsy and ragged, and what he leaves behind him is anything
-but sweet, and they serve him as though he were a Yahoo. Look at his
-lodging-house and his boarding-house, at the dens in which he revolves
-to the ghastly notes of a black fiddler, with objects fit only to be
-lectured upon, or for the show of a Barnum. Take his line of railway,
-the Blackwall<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> line; the farmers wouldn't send their swine to market in
-the carriages, and so the sailor travels in them."</p>
-
-<p>"How long have you been at sea, Mr. Hardy?"</p>
-
-<p>"I went to sea when I was fourteen years old, and I am now
-twenty-six."</p>
-
-<p>"In twelve years you have become a mate?"</p>
-
-<p>"Chief mate," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," she exclaimed, "what would I give if you carried a stewardess,
-and your captain would consent to take me!"</p>
-
-<p>"I wish it could be contrived," said he, in his plain, straight way,
-"but owners never ship people they don't want. Even if I had influence,
-an objection would be raised that you were the only woman on board."</p>
-
-<p>"But I have read," she exclaimed, "that a captain takes his wife to
-sea, and she may be the only woman in the ship."</p>
-
-<p>"Ay, but she's the captain's wife," he answered, with a smile, "and
-if she were a shipload of females she couldn't be more."</p>
-
-<p>They then began to talk of London and the East End, of a convenient
-part to take a lodging in, how it was certain that she must obtain
-a berth somewhere or somehow before Hardy sailed; and whilst they
-conversed the door opened, and Bax entered, purple with exercise and
-beer.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," said he, breathing comfortably, as though he had refreshed
-himself before entering with rest and ale, "that was a fine trick of
-yourn, Mr. Hardy."</p>
-
-<p>"Never mind about that, Bax," exclaimed the young sailor,
-cutting him short in his peremptory quarter-deck way. "Where's
-the constable?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span></p> <p>"He bain't cooming," answered
-Bax. "He knows the difference between climbing up a hill and climbing
-into bed."</p>
-
-<p>"Sit down, Bax, and take some whisky," said Hardy, both he and Julia
-laughing; and after waiting for the farmer to mingle some whisky and
-water and pull a chair, he said, "Tell us what passed, Bax."</p>
-
-<p>"Well," began Bax, "it was just after you'd trotted out of sight,
-with me hallering, being afraid of the law I was, when oop cooms the
-maid 'long with Constable Rogers. 'Oh, Mr. Rogers,' sings out Mrs.
-Armstrong, who was standin' in her door, 'the doctor's son's been 'ere
-in Farmer Bax's cart, and busted into this house, and gone off with my
-stepdarter's troonk agin my commands.' 'Where's your stepdarter?' said
-the constable, not speaking overcivil&mdash;blamed if I thinks he likes
-the woman, and he didn't love her the better for routing of him out.
-'I don't know,' answered Mrs. Armstrong. 'Yes, you do,' says I. 'She's
-opp stopping in my house along with the gent as fetched her luggage.'
-'What do you want me to do?' says Rogers. 'Your duty,' answers Mrs.
-Armstrong, 'twixt a snap of her teeth that was like cocking a goon at
-him. 'What do constables usually do when they're called in to houses
-which have been busted into and goods taken, otherwise stolen, agin
-orders?' Here Bax laughed slowly, as though recollecting something
-in this passage of words which he could not communicate, but which,
-nevertheless, he could enjoy. 'But there was no busting in here that
-I can see,' says Rogers, looking at me; 'you knocked and rung, didn't
-you?' 'Why, yes, of course we did,' says I,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> 'and the gent spoke
-the lady as civil as though she had been a maid of hanner or the
-queen herself.' 'Oh, what a liar, what a beast you must be!' says
-Mrs. Armstrong, screaming like. 'He forces his way oop-stairs, Mr.
-Constable, and brings down the box on his shoulder, me standing at the
-foot of the steps, and telling him not to touch it.' 'Was he sent by
-the party as the box belongs to?' asks the constable. 'Certainly he
-was, Mr. Rogers,' says I. 'They're going away to-morrow by the early
-train, and she naturally wanted her box to take with her.' 'There's
-nothing for me 'ere to interfere with that I can see,' says Rogers,
-drawing himself up, and puttin' on the face of a judge delivering a
-vardick. 'The lady has a right to her own. Your door was knocked on
-civilly, and the gent she asked to bring it away did so, and there's
-northen for me to meddle with;' and with that, without saying good
-night, he turns his back, and walks into the road, me at his side, and
-she hallering arter him that he didn't do his duty, and she'd lodge a
-complaint agin him, and 'ave the place cleared of a stoopid old fool.
-'She's like my cat when he begins to talk to Springett's cat over the
-wall,' says Mr. Rogers. 'I wish the young lady well out of it, I do.
-Good-night, Mr. Bax.' So I sets off 'ome, and that's just what all
-'appened."</p>
-
-<p>Julia, though she had laughed and often smiled, now sat looking
-subdued with grief and disgrace. It was horrible to the feelings
-of a lady to possess such a stepmother as the wretch who owned the
-little dog that bit, and horrible also to hear her represented and
-dramatised in the language of Bax in the presence of the man who,
-as God had willed it, seemed the only friend she possessed in this
-wide world.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> Nevertheless, they continued talking until eleven
-o'clock, by which hour Bax had grown too maudlin for human
-companionship.</p>
-
-<p>Julia went to bed, and Bax rolled through the door to the back
-premises to send his daughter to the young sailor. All that he
-requested was a rug, a blanket, and a pillow, and then when the house
-was locked up, and Miss Bax had bid him goodnight, he turned down the
-lamp, snugged himself on the sofa, and lay listening to Miss Julia's
-restless pacing overhead. There was sleeplessness in her walk; but the
-delicate tramp of her tireless feet ceased at last. He thought of her
-in her loneliness, and pity moved his heart, and he vowed that he would
-see her in safety, buoyed by a full promise of independence in the
-future, before he left England.</p>
-
-<p>The window stood open a little way, and all night-sounds were clear.
-The stream babbled in the road, and its voice was like the syllabling
-of the perfumes stealing darkling down into the valley. He heard the
-distant hooting of owls like the crying of idiot boys, one seeking the
-other, and the thin thunder of the distant railway was a night-sound,
-together with the shuddering of the dry autumn leaves upon the boughs
-as though the trees shivered to the chill of the passing moan of air.
-And then Hardy fell asleep.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER III.</span> <span class="smaller">THE EAST INDIA DOCK ROAD</span></h2>
-
-<p>At about two o'clock on the following day a cab of the old type,
-with rattling windows, straw as though fresh from the tramp of swine, a
-wheezing cabman, encumbered with capes, shawls, and rugs, with nothing
-but a drunken nose glowing under the sallow brim of a rain-bronzed
-hat&mdash;this old cab, with a corded trunk hopping on top of it
-betwixt the iron fencing, drew up at a house in the East India Dock
-Road.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Hardy, the gentleman whom we left asleep on the sofa in Bax's
-farm, got out, leaving Miss Julia Armstrong sitting in a cab, and
-knocked on the door, which was opened in a few moments by a little
-woman in the clothes of a widow, clean and neat in person, with a
-wistful eye which softened her face into a look of kindness.</p>
-
-<p>"Glad to see you, Mr. Hardy," she immediately said. "I got your
-letter, sir. Your room's quite ready."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I can't say I'm glad to see <i>you</i>, Mrs. Brierley, because you
-know what seeing you means to me. Did your husband love the stowing
-job, and the hauling out through the gates, with a crowd of drunken
-Dagos on the fok'sle, and the dockmaster<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> bursting blood-vessels
-in expostulations to the mud pilot?"</p>
-
-<p>She seemed to smile, but her attention was elsewhere. She had caught
-sight of Julia in the cab, and was dodging Mr. Hardy, who stood right
-in the way, to get a better sight of her.</p>
-
-<p>"I want a lodging for that young lady you are trying to see," said
-Hardy. "Now say at once that you have a very comfortable bedroom for
-her in this house."</p>
-
-<p>"You don't tell me that you are married, sir?" exclaimed Mrs.
-Brierley, putting this question just as she might put her eye to a
-keyhole before answering.</p>
-
-<p>"No, nor keeping company with her, as you people call it," he
-replied. "It is a romantic story, and you shall hear the whole
-of it, provided that you can accommodate her with a bedroom,
-otherwise&mdash;mum!"</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Hardy," said the widow, with some earnestness, "you've long
-used this house. You knew my poor husband. My struggle has been to keep
-it a thoroughly respectable home for them who patronise me, and you'll
-not take it amiss, sir, I'm sure, if I ask you, is she a lady you can
-recommend on your honour as a sailor man?"</p>
-
-<p>"I swear, Mrs. Brierley," exclaimed Hardy, with great feeling, "that
-she is a pure, charming, heart-broken lady, the daughter of a naval
-officer, whose sword was once at the service of his country."</p>
-
-<p>"Then, sir, I have a very comfortable bedroom," answered the widow.
-"How long will she be wanting it for?"</p>
-
-<p>"She shall engage it by the week," he answered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> and
-walked to the door of the cab. "Tumble down, my lad, off that perch of
-yours," he shouted to the cabman, who seemed to have fallen asleep,
-"and carry that trunk into the house."</p>
-
-<p>Both pavements were filled with people, walking the everlasting walk
-of the London streets. Numbers had the appearance of seamen, some of
-them lurched in liquor; there were numerous black and chocolate faces,
-here and there a turban; grimy women flitted past in old shawls and
-rakishly-perched bonnets; roistering young wenches flaunted past with
-feathers in their hats, with cheeks deeply coloured, with yellow brows
-adorned with jet-like love-locks; and chill as it was, children went by
-with naked feet, and the shuddering flesh of their backs showed through
-their rags, filthy-eyed, hatless, and all the glory they had trailed
-from their God had died out in the atmosphere of fog, which added bulk
-to the thunderous omnibus, and made the fleet hansom a shadow down the
-road.</p>
-
-<p>"The landlady," said Hardy, putting his head into the cab, "has
-a comfortable bedroom at your disposal. We cannot do better. She is
-a thoroughly respectable woman, the widow of a master-mariner, who
-commanded brigs, and so on."</p>
-
-<p>He opened the door, and Julia jumped out, and they went together
-into the narrow passage with the cabman and the trunk following
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The landlady, curtseying her greeting to Julia, admitted them into
-her own private room, which was, in short, the front parlour. The
-cabman was paid, and went away looking at the shillings in the palm of
-his hand. In a very short time it was settled that Julia was to have
-the use of this parlour for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> her meals, and there would be no extra
-charge. The only other lodgers in the house were a sea captain and his
-wife.</p>
-
-<p>The parlour was worth a pause and a look round. No apartment was
-ever more nautically equipped. The very clock was a dial fitted into
-the mainsail of a brass ship; the candlesticks on the mantelpiece
-represented mermaids; the walls were embellished with pictures of ships
-and those carvings which sailors delight in: ships on a wind, half
-their ghastly white canvas showing against the board, and the water
-very sloppy and fearfully blue; there were models of ships, and an old
-galleon in ivory stood under glass on a table in the window. A boy's
-heart would have beat high in this room. It was full of curiosities;
-artful carvings by whalemen, out of the bone or teeth of the mammoth of
-the sea; queer findings along shore under the Southern Cross, weapons
-of cannibals, heathenish jars, earthen vessels which had been the
-sepulchres of the remains of broiled whites.</p>
-
-<p>After a little talk Mrs. Brierley took Julia up-stairs to her
-bedroom. Hardy, who had often before viewed the curiosities, wandered
-again round the room, but his mind was musing over other things, and
-soon he came to a stand at the window. The lookout was gloomy and
-grimy; opposite were a tobacconist, a house in which a stevedore lived,
-two lodging-houses, a pastry-cook, and a public-house. There was a
-great deal of mud in the road, the sky hung down sallow and dingy,
-and so close that the crooked black smoke, working out of a hundred
-shapes of chimney-pots, seemed to pierce it and vanish. A change
-indeed from the autumn glories<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> of the country which the couple were
-newly from, where the hillsides, still thick with the leaves of the
-summer, were gashed with the red fires of the coming ruining winter;
-where the clear pale blue sky sank with its faint splendour of sunshine
-to the sharp, dark, terrace-like heights, which in their red breaks
-and scars of autumn overlooked the valley and the sheltered houses,
-and the quiet breast of river floating under the arch of the reflected
-bridge.</p>
-
-<p>A man, thought Hardy, accepts a large obligation when he undertakes
-to look after a girl. But what a beautiful figure she has, and her
-face appeals to me. I cannot meet her eyes without feeling that I am
-in love with her. Shall I be able to get her a berth before I sail? If
-I cannot, ought I to leave her alone in London with about seven pounds
-ten in her pocket?</p>
-
-<p>His brow contracted, and he hissed a tune through his teeth whilst
-he pondered. That thoughtless devil, her father, he mused, never
-came near Bax's farm. What is it to him that his daughter has bolted
-from her brutal home, and gone away with a young fellow who, for all
-the beggar cares, may leave her behind him in London in shame and
-destitution? 'Tis rather a tight corner, though. And he would have
-gone on meditating but for being interrupted by the entrance of Julia,
-followed in a respectful way by the widow.</p>
-
-<p>"It is a very nice bedroom," said Julia. "I shall be very
-comfortable whilst I am here."</p>
-
-<p>"I suppose you have told Mrs. Brierley all about it," exclaimed
-Hardy, whilst Julia seated herself, posturing her head with her
-unconscious, inimitable grace, as she glanced round the sights
-of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span> room, and resting her hands on her hips and crossing her
-feet, to the undoubted admiration of the widow, who had on her entrance
-admired her beautiful figure.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir, yes," said the widow; "and I'm truly sorry for the young
-lady, but don't doubt she'll find a berth, and do well where she's
-going."</p>
-
-<p>"Miss Armstrong," said Hardy, "I'm not due at the docks until
-to-morrow, and then I shall put in for an afternoon off. This afternoon
-we shall spend without troubling ourselves about anything. We are
-human, and must eat, just as every night we must put ourselves away in
-a frame of iron or wooden pillars, covered with blankets and sheets,
-and sleep, or else we go mad and die. There is a decent eating-house
-not far from here; we will go there and dine. You'll have tea ready for
-us, Mrs. Brierley, by six; and if the evening hangs, which it will, we
-will look in at a music-hall and purchase a shilling's-worth of pure
-vulgarity, which to me, when perfectly unaffected, is more humourous
-and more artistically refined than much of the genteel comedy of the
-West End theatres."</p>
-
-<p>Julia laughed, and looked at the widow, who said, "I don't visit
-the halls myself. They've got one good singer at Whitechapel, I hear.
-He comes in dressed as a coster, and brings a donkey with him which he
-sings about, and they say it's so affecting that even strong sailors
-cry."</p>
-
-<p>"If he sang of the donkey's breakfast Jack would cry more," said
-Hardy, and saying he would return in a minute, went to his bedroom for
-a wash down and a brush up, leaving the widow explaining to Julia that
-the term <i>donkey's breakfast</i> signified the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span> bundle of straw which
-sailors who are reckless of their money ashore carry on board ship with
-them as a bed.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst he was going up-stairs a man dressed in blue serge, smoking
-a curly meerschaum pipe, came out of a bedroom and passed into an
-apartment that had been converted into a sitting-room. They glanced at
-each other, and Hardy went up another flight to his bedroom. Here he
-stayed a few minutes. His carpet-bag had arrived before him, and in it
-were a change of apparel, two or three shirts, brush and comb, and the
-like. The rest of his duds were in his sea-chest, which had been sent
-to the docks. He smartened himself up and looked a manly young fellow.
-The light of the sea was in his eye, and the freshness of its breath
-was in his cheery expression, and the colour of his cheek was warm with
-the sun-glow.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you ready?" said he to Julia; and they went out, attended to
-the door by the widow, who appeared to have taken a liking to Miss
-Armstrong; but no one with a woman's heart in her could have heard the
-girl's story without being moved.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy paused on the doorstep to say to Mrs. Brierley, "Is the man
-in blue serge, who smokes a meerschaum, the captain who's lodging with
-you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"What ship does he command?"</p>
-
-<p>"The <i>Glamis Castle</i>."</p>
-
-<p>"I know her," exclaimed Hardy; "a fine Indiaman. What the deuce does
-a swell like him do in these lodgings? He should put up at a hotel."</p>
-
-<p>"His home's at Penge," answered the widow,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> "and two or three weeks
-before he sails he always comes and stops with me, and brings his wife.
-Aren't my lodgings good enough for the captain of an Indiaman?"</p>
-
-<p>"They are good enough for the owner of an Indiaman. They are good
-enough for a German prince," said Hardy, in his pleasantest manner.
-"Should I bring this lady here if they were not of the highest?" And
-nodding to her he stepped on to the pavement, and Julia walked by his
-side.</p>
-
-<p>He was free in his comments upon the nastiness of the East End of
-London, and by his abuse of the mud and the shops, and the quality of
-the passing folks, he implied an apology for introducing Miss Armstrong
-into such a neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>"It's sweeter to me than Bodley," she said, referring to the place
-she came from. "What is the good of fine houses and broad streets and
-handsome carriages to a girl who has no money, who has but one friend,
-from whom she must be shortly separated for ever, perhaps, and whose
-most ambitious dream <i>dare</i> not go beyond finding a cabin as emigrant
-or stewardess aboard a ship, and the berth of a servant, or, which is
-worse, a nursery governess when she arrives?"</p>
-
-<p>They walked for awhile in silence; but the silence was in their
-mouths, not in the street. One of the music-murdering organs of
-those days was playing at the street corner they were approaching.
-Huge wagons were grinding thunder into the solid earth. There was
-a fight over the way&mdash;two Italians were going for each other.
-A crowd of dirty women were dancing round them, encouraging them
-by the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>stimulating plaudits of the stews. An optician, with a
-row of chronometers in his window, stood upon his doorstep howling,
-"Police!" They turned the corner, and the notes of the organ died away
-behind them, and after a little walking they arrived at an eating-house
-with big windows, and a sheet of paper stuck upon the glass with red
-wafers, telling what was to be eaten inside.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy and Julia walked in. It was a long room with tables, separated
-one from another by brass rails and baize curtains, and nettings for
-receiving headgear. About a dozen people were in it&mdash;some of them
-neighbouring tradesmen, some of them obviously captains and mates. With
-a few of the men were women, who were evidently wives or sweethearts;
-in fact, the prices charged kept the place sweet.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy and Miss Armstrong sat down side by side at an empty table.
-A waiter arrived, looking hard at the lady, and the sailor gave his
-orders. He guessed the girl was hungry; he knew that <i>he</i> was, and
-if he could not have spent a sovereign when ten shillings would have
-handsomely sufficed, he would have been no true salt. It is worth
-saying here that all the money our friend had was about two hundred
-pounds, and he had come to London with twenty sovereigns in his pocket,
-and a chequebook. As he was an only child he would inherit his father's
-leavings; but what would they amount to? A country practitioner who
-dispensed his own physic, and was glad to get three-and-sixpence a
-visit! A country practitioner with thirteen hundred pounds in bad debts
-on his books, and a horse, gig, and boy to keep! Still, whatever the
-doctor left<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> would be George Hardy's, who did not value the prospect
-beyond the worth of the furniture, and had begun to save a little on
-his own account, with some light dream of amassing enough to enable him
-to purchase shares in a ship, which he would command.</p>
-
-<p>He ordered a good dinner from the bill of fare, and asked the waiter
-if the champagne of the establishment was real wine or chemicals. The
-waiter named a good brand, and swore there was nothing in the market to
-equal it. It was nine shillings a bottle.</p>
-
-<p>"I never drink champagne," said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"But I do," exclaimed Hardy. "Bear a hand, waiter. We've been
-fasting since eight this morning."</p>
-
-<p>The waiter sidled away.</p>
-
-<p>"Champagne is the best of all drinks for young ladies," said Hardy;
-"and it helps the spirits of chief mates who are bound away on long
-voyages. What shall we do when we've dined?"</p>
-
-<p>"I should like to see the docks," said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Not to-day," exclaimed Hardy, pursing his mouth into an expression
-of disgust. "Let us hug the land as long as we can; besides, it will be
-drawing on to four o'clock before we've dined, and the docks and the
-ships in it will be invisible."</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke these words the man whom he had caught a sight of in
-his lodgings smoking a meerschaum pipe came into the dining-rooms
-with a lady, whom you at once guessed was his wife. They looked right
-and left, and took a table exactly opposite that occupied by Hardy
-and Miss Armstrong. The man who had been represented by Mrs. Brierley
-as the commander of an East <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>Indiaman, named the <i>Glamis Castle</i>, was
-short and square, with a strong, red beard, and shorn upper lip; his
-eyebrows were reddish and habitually knitted, as though from long years
-of steadfast staring into the eyes of the wind. His eyes were dark and
-sharp in their glances; his brow was square as his form, and delicately
-browned by the sun. The lady was a homely-looking woman, in a bonnet
-and velvet mantle. She began to pull off her gloves, and her companion,
-after bawling "Waiter," in a quarter-deck roar, gazed fixedly at Hardy,
-who gazed back.</p>
-
-<p>All the time the man was giving his orders to the waiter, with
-occasional references to the lady, he kept his eyes bent on Hardy, who
-muttered to Julia, "I believe I know that man." The moment he had done
-with the waiter he rose, and stepped over to Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Is your name George Hardy?" said he, with a slight glance at the
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," answered Hardy, "and now that I've got the bearings of you, I
-don't need to ask if your name is James Smedley."</p>
-
-<p>They clasped hands.</p>
-
-<p>"Let me introduce you," said Hardy, "to Miss Julia Armstrong,
-daughter of Commander Armstrong, late of the Royal Navy. Captain
-Smedley, of the <i>Glamis Castle</i>, Miss Armstrong."</p>
-
-<p>"How did you know that?" asked Smedley, exchanging a bow with
-the girl, whose peculiar grace of form, whose charm of movement,
-whose face, romantic and pleading, with the gifts of nature and the
-passions of her heart, his swift eye was observing with pleasure and
-curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>"I am stopping in the house you're lodging in,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>
-answered Hardy, "and Mrs. Brierley told me who you were. Are you going
-to dine here?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"Is that your wife?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"Bring her across, Smedley, and we'll make a dinner party."</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Smedley had been bobbing to catch a view of Miss Armstrong,
-and the bugles in her bonnet twinkled like fireflies as she swayed her
-head.</p>
-
-<p>"Miss Armstrong's story," continued Hardy, "is so moving that Mrs.
-Smedley will be grieved to the depths of her kindly heart when she
-hears it."</p>
-
-<p>Julia looked down, and Captain Smedley studied her for a few
-moments, then wheeled abruptly, and stepped over to his wife. After
-a brief confab they both came to Hardy's table, and Mrs. Smedley was
-introduced to Miss Armstrong and her companion.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you sail with your husband?" asked Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"No," answered Mrs. Smedley, who seemed struck by the girl. "The
-owners won't let the captains carry their wives with them."</p>
-
-<p>"A ship," said Julia, "should never be so safe as when a captain's
-wife is on board, because of course <i>her</i> presence would make the
-commander doubly vigilant and anxious."</p>
-
-<p>"Haw, haw!" laughed Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>The fish which had been ordered was now placed upon the table, and
-on both sides they began to eat. The waiter uncorked the champagne,
-and Hardy told him to fill the glasses opposite. This was resisted by
-Mrs. Smedley, a homely woman, who declared that for her part she loved
-nothing better than bitter beer. Again her husband "Haw-haw'd," and
-said they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> would see Hardy's champagne through, and then he would
-order another bottle. He believed it was not usual in polite society to
-drink champagne with fish; but it was all one to him. Champagne went
-down the same way, whether its messmate was fish or flesh.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you leaving England?" inquired Mrs. Smedley, addressing Julia,
-at whom she continued to look hard, though not in the least rudely, as
-if she found a good deal in the girl that was infinitely beyond the
-range of her speculations.</p>
-
-<p>"I am endeavouring to leave it," answered Julia, looking at her with
-her head a little on one side.</p>
-
-<p>"May I tell them your story?" said Hardy, "for we shall want our
-friend's influence," he added, with a nod at his old shipmate.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes, tell them," exclaimed Julia, a little passionately;
-"it will account for my being in the East India Dock Road," and her
-face relaxed as she looked at Mrs. Smedley, who smiled upon her in a
-motherly way.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy in his blunt, sailorly fashion began. He did not spare
-Captain Armstrong, neither did he spare Julia's stepmother. He warmed
-up, and put the girl's case in forcible terms. Asked what a young
-English lady was to do who was, to all intents and purposes, expelled
-from her father's roof by the brutality of a drunken stepmother, he
-related some of her experiences in nursing and in seeking independence
-in other ways, just as she had related them to him. He spoke of his
-finding her unconscious by the wayside, and how he was determined to
-take this poor, friendless young lady by the hand, and help her to
-the utmost stretch of his ability to find a home, a refuge across the
-seas.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p> <p>"Don't cry, my dear," said Mrs. Smedley. "I
-have known more cases than yours. It is very hard&mdash;and to be
-motherless&mdash;but you cannot allow your heart to be broken by a bad
-woman; and I think you are acting wisely in resolving to go abroad."</p>
-
-<p>Julia put her handkerchief into her lap, and closed her knife
-and fork. Hardy poured some champagne into her glass, and bade her
-drink.</p>
-
-<p>"What's the lady's idea of going abroad?" said Captain Smedley,
-whose face exhibited no more signs of feeling than had it been a rump
-steak.</p>
-
-<p>"She has no money, and wants to work her passage out as a
-stewardess," replied Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"And when she arrives?" said Captain Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>"She is bound to find something to do," answered Hardy. "The
-colonies are yearning for young English ladies."</p>
-
-<p>"Young English domestics, you mean," said Captain Smedley. "What
-is the good of ladies? What is the good of gentlemen in lands where
-labour, and labour only, is wanted?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why would not you go out as an emigrant, Miss Armstrong?" said Mrs.
-Smedley. "Of course," she added, "I presume you have Australia in your
-mind?"</p>
-
-<p>"I would go out as anything as long as I could get out," answered
-Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"Take my advice and don't talk of emigration," said Captain Smedley.
-"You will be miserably fed and miserably berthed. You will have a
-matron and a surgeon over you, and the discipline will make you wish
-yourself overboard. Your associates will be mean and dirty wretches,
-who would have qualified for transportation could they have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span> made
-sure of the sentence. Your ship will be ill-found. They talk of the
-emigrants marrying on their arrival. Yes, but what is a young lady like
-you going to say to such suitors as offer? You wouldn't like to marry a
-convict? You wouldn't like to settle down with a hairdresser in a back
-street? Don't you go out in an emigrant ship, Miss Armstrong."</p>
-
-<p>"It is all very fine talking about <i>don't</i>," said Hardy, "but what
-we want is <i>do</i>. Miss Armstrong wishes to leave England for good. She
-pockets her pride, and is willing to work. She has no money, and I must
-secure her a berth somehow before I sail, because I am not going to
-leave her alone in London, where she's friendless; and friendlessness
-in London where all is opulence and misery, like the front and the
-back of the moon&mdash;one shining, one ice-cold as death, and
-black&mdash;is heart-breaking, and for many, Smedley, the invitation of
-the dark waters of the Thames has been welcome."</p>
-
-<p>"My God! you're just the same&mdash;always sky high," said Smedley;
-and he drank some champagne out of the bottle he had ordered. "When
-you were a midshipman under me you were talking like that, and you're
-talking it still."</p>
-
-<p>"Surely a man can put his hand in the tar-bucket without blacking
-his whole body," said Hardy, looking at Mrs. Smedley, whose face was in
-sympathy with his speech. "When I'm ashore I talk like a gentleman. One
-can't be always cussing and swearing; and oh! says you"&mdash;and his
-fine, dark keen eyes showed there was laughter in him&mdash;"Give me
-Jack Muck, nothing short of Jack Muck. Hitch up, turn your quid, pull
-your greasy forelock, mind that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> you're boozed. Oh, Lord! Smedley,
-ha'n't you had enough of it?"</p>
-
-<p>"Miss Armstrong," said Smedley, rolling his eyes slowly from Hardy
-to the girl, "why do you want to go to Australia? Why don't you go to
-India?"</p>
-
-<p>"India," muttered Hardy, "what's she going to do in India?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, but I tell you what," said Smedley, with emphasis, "such a
-young lady as that may do before she gets out there."</p>
-
-<p>Julia gazed at him inquiringly, and Mrs. Smedley turned her head to
-watch his face.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't you know, Miss Armstrong," continued Smedley, "that there is
-no marriage market in the world to equal an East Indiaman?"</p>
-
-<p>Julia flushed a little, but did not speak.</p>
-
-<p>"She takes out young people," went on the commander of the <i>Glamis
-Castle</i>, "called Griffins. They are young men with a glass in their
-eye and susceptible hearts behind their waistcoats. They also take out
-planters, merchants, gentlemen going to join houses&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"And ladies," interrupted Hardy. "Ladies in plenty."</p>
-
-<p>"You know nothing about it," said Captain Smedley. "A few ladies,
-most of them married. Now," he continued, "such a young lady as Miss
-Armstrong, no matter what position she fills on board, stands a
-first-rate chance of finding a husband before her arrival in India.
-Your emigrant ship is not going to provide any chance of the sort."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not think of marriage," said Julia, who after colouring had
-turned rather paler than usual,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> but she spoke calmly and even with
-sweetness, as though grateful for the interest these strangers were
-taking in her.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," cried Captain Smedley, with warmth, "but you <i>must</i> think of
-marriage. It is a condition of every woman's life. It is thought of
-from about the age of twelve until it happens, and nothing else is
-thought of. All the milliners and dressmakers contribute to the dream.
-It is the one idea in the darlings' heads, and of course it is a wrong
-one."</p>
-
-<p>"What will Miss Armstrong think of such stuff and nonsense?" said
-Mrs. Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>"What's a girl to do when she gets to India if she isn't married?"
-asked Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"They want governesses and nursemaids, I dare say," replied the
-captain. "Let her call upon the missionary. I took out the Bishop of
-Calcutta last voyage. He's a dear old chap, and many a yarn we spun
-together. I'll venture to say that a letter of introduction to him from
-me will ensure this young lady a berth."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy, putting his elbow on the table, rested his cheek in the palm
-of his hand, and looked at Miss Armstrong musingly. Nobody spoke until
-Hardy started, and turning to Smedley, said, "Can you give her a berth
-on board your ship?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am thinking of it," was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>Julia looked almost startled, and exclaimed to Hardy, "We should be
-going different ways."</p>
-
-<p>Smedley and his wife exchanged glances.</p>
-
-<p>"I must see you safe on board bound to somewhere," answered Hardy,
-softly. "I am bound to Melbourne; afterward to a New Zealand port.
-Your ship will be bound to Calcutta. These places are different
-ways, and India is the same thing."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p> <p>She looked down
-upon the table in silence. The other three saw how it was with her,
-poor girl, and how impossible it was, and Hardy then felt <i>this</i> with a
-sort of yearning of the heart that was as bad as sorrow.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER IV.</span> <span class="smaller">THE "GLAMIS CASTLE"</span></h2>
-
-<p>It was nearly half-past four when Hardy and the others rose from
-the dinner-table. Not that they had been eating all this time. They
-had prolonged their sitting over coffee and in talk, and there was no
-obligation to go so as to make way for others, because the hour was
-neither lunch nor dinner time, and scarce more than two or three tables
-were occupied.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing had been settled when they stood up and the ladies began
-to put on their gloves. It was dark: the dining-rooms were lighted
-up, and in the street the fog, though not dense, was wet as rain; the
-lamplighters were running along the curbstones, and in a chemist's shop
-a little way down the green and red waters in the big glass vases dully
-glimmered like the side-lights of a ship, heading a straight course for
-the dining-rooms.</p>
-
-<p>"This is just the sort of evening," said Smedley, "in which to visit
-a friend's grave at some churchyard hereabouts. On evenings of this
-sort drunken men fall into holes full of water near the docks. The
-spirit of the Isle of Dogs stalks abroad this evening; you can see him
-in the sky and taste him in the wind. What shall we do?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
-<p>"I told Mrs. Brierley to get some tea ready by six," said Hardy.
-"This is not an evening to walk about in, and now I vote, Miss
-Armstrong, that we do not go to a music-hall to-night. I am for lying
-snug in harbour; are you?"</p>
-
-<p>"I did not care about the idea of the music-hall when you suggested
-it," she said.</p>
-
-<p>"They are vulgar places, unfit for ladies, particularly in these
-parts," exclaimed Mrs. Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>"The cleverest performances I've ever seen I've witnessed in
-music-halls," remarked the captain, "and I never want to hear better
-singing than I've heard at them. Sometimes a cad, who has no respect
-for his own sex, who has no respect for himself as a man, and not
-the faintest sense in the world of what is due to women, comes on
-in evening dress, a white shirt blazing with studs, and a tall hat,
-which he is perpetually shifting upon his head: and this fiend sings
-a song full of <i>double entendres</i>, and he sings in greasy notes with
-a lickerish eye; and, strangely enough, I have never yet seen any man
-rise from amongst the audience, climb over the orchestra, and kick the
-animal round and round the stage into the development of a fresh sort
-of music and another kind of words. Otherwise, if you want talent, go
-to the music-halls."</p>
-
-<p>"Shall we go to our lodgings and spend the evening there?" said Mrs.
-Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and drink tea with us," exclaimed Hardy; "and before
-bedtime, Smedley, we shall have settled the business of Miss Julia
-Armstrong."</p>
-
-<p>Captain Smedley gave his arm to his wife, and Hardy gave his arm
-to Miss Armstrong, and out they went, walking briskly so as not to
-get damp,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> and in a short time they arrived at Mrs. Brierley's
-lodging-house.</p>
-
-<p>The widow had not expected them home so soon, but she speedily
-lighted the gas in the romantically equipped parlour, which she had
-placed at the disposal of Hardy and Julia. The ladies went to their
-rooms to remove their outdoor clothes, and presently they were all
-seated in the widow's parlour of curiosities.</p>
-
-<p>"Where did old Brierley get all these things from?" said Captain
-Smedley, looking round him. "Did he reckon to start a museum before the
-notion of a lodging-house entered his head? Man and boy, I've followed
-the sea thirty years, and the only curiosity I've got in all that time
-was my wife."</p>
-
-<p>"I feel the compliment," exclaimed Mrs. Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>"A curiosity," continued the captain, "because she is all goodness,
-loyalty, and affection."</p>
-
-<p>And he got up and kissed her, and sitting again continued his
-eulogy, which was a sign that he had dined well and felt comfortable.
-The ladies did not object to tobacco, and the two sailors filled their
-pipes, Smedley observing that he smoked so many cigars at sea that he
-didn't give a curse even for a prime Havana, though at the high cost of
-seven for sixpence, when he was ashore.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't you think, Miss Armstrong," said he, "that I've put the case
-for the East Indies strongly enough to justify you in listening to my
-advice not to go out to the colonies as an emigrant?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am sure," observed Mrs. Smedley, "you stand a better chance of
-marrying in your own sphere. There are plenty of officers in India
-in want of wives, and I need not say&mdash;" She interrupted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
-herself, but acted the compliment she intended by glancing
-significantly at the girl's charming figure, and letting her eye repose
-for a moment or two on her face and fine hair. "It will be quickly
-known that you are the daughter of a naval officer."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not think of marriage," said Julia, clasping her hands.</p>
-
-<p>"I like your idea, Smedley, of a letter to the Bishop of Calcutta,"
-exclaimed Hardy. "But how is Miss Armstrong to get out? Could you find
-her a berth aboard of you or in one of your ships?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, it's like this with us," answered Smedley; "we have six
-ships, and every ship carries a stewardess. Three are away, and the
-others, I know, are provided with stewardesses. The practice is for
-a person who wants the position to call at the offices, and if her
-qualifications are all right her name is put down, and she awaits her
-chance. Miss Armstrong might have to wait a long time, and she doesn't
-want to do so."</p>
-
-<p>Julia shook her head slowly, and Mrs. Smedley said:</p>
-
-<p>"How can she wait, Jim? She has no money, and no friend when Mr.
-Hardy sails."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you anything of a nurse?" inquired the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"I have nursed old ladies, but not children," answered Julia. "But I
-have had some experience in the sick-room."</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause. Smedley filled his pipe thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p>"Have <i>you</i> a stewardess?" asked Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," replied Smedley, "she has been in the ship four voyages."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p> <p>"What's the pay?" asked Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Four pounds a month."</p>
-
-<p>"Does she sign the ship's articles?"</p>
-
-<p>"All the same as if she were an A.B.," replied Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>There was another pause, during which the captain lighted his
-pipe.</p>
-
-<p>"I can promise nothing," said he, looking at his wife as though
-he was trying to gratify her instead of helping the girl; "but I'll
-see to-morrow if some berth as second or assistant stewardess can be
-contrived. I shall see Mrs. Lambert&mdash;that is the stewardess's
-name, and I don't doubt that I can get the office to recognise the need
-of assistance, as I understand we shall be a full ship with a good many
-children."</p>
-
-<p>"You are a real friend," exclaimed Hardy. "It is more than I dared
-expect from you," and he turned to witness the effect of the kindly
-captain's words upon the girl; but her expression was as one who
-gazes at a cheerless prospect. Observing that Hardy watched her, she
-exclaimed, in a low voice, "I can but thank you, Captain Smedley," and
-she bowed her head, leaving it bowed.</p>
-
-<p>There was not much more to be said upon the subject after this;
-indeed it was easily seen that the girl's heart was with Hardy, and as
-he was sailing for Australia she wanted to go there too, which perhaps
-was not idle in her, because it was impossible for her to realise that
-he could not marry her, even if he loved her, which she had no right to
-imagine, as he could not support her ashore, nor as a mate, nor even
-perhaps as a captain, take her to sea with him. But things are felt and
-understood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> which may not be expressed, and a little before Mrs.
-Brierley and the maid came in with the tea-tray and the cakes it was
-arranged that Hardy should accompany Miss Armstrong on board the
-<i>Glamis Castle</i>, which lay not far from the <i>York</i>, when Captain
-Smedley hoped to be able to tell her that he had managed to find a
-berth for her aboard his ship.</p>
-
-<p>"It will save a vast deal of anxiety and of time, and it will rescue
-you from the horrors of the emigrant ship," said Hardy to Julia, who
-smiled faintly and looked as though the least expression of sympathy
-would compel her into a passion of tears.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Brierley spread a liberal tea upon the table, but not much
-appetite attended it. The subject of the assistant stewardess was
-dropped, and Mrs. Smedley listened with attention, and Julia with
-fictitious interest, to the conversation that was almost entirely
-carried on by Hardy and his friend. They had been shipmates, as we have
-heard&mdash;Hardy as midshipman, Smedley as third mate, both occupying
-the midshipmen's quarters in days when Blackwall Liners used to sail
-with twelve or fourteen reefers in buttons and badges, who had sole
-charge of the mizzen-mast, the poop or quarter-deck, the quarter-boats
-and the gig. John Company's flag was then flying, but they had not
-served in that employ. They afterward came together, Smedley as
-chief mate and Hardy as third, in a vessel called the <i>Asia</i>, a ship
-with long skysail poles, a stem nearly as up and down as a cutter's,
-black as night, half the length of her aft sparkling with round
-ports. They talked of this ship and of her wonderful passages;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> how
-her captain would carry fore, main, and topgallant stu'nsails, and pass
-by ships which thought they were cracking on with a topgallantsail set
-over a single reefed topsail.</p>
-
-<p>Sailors who have been shipmates love this sort of memories, and it
-is like watching the coil of the sea&mdash;one blue ridge dissolving in
-the base of another, with the laughter and the thunder of heaving and
-racing brine&mdash;to hear them.</p>
-
-<p>Thus they passed the evening, with the help of a little whisky and
-plenty of tobacco, and Julia, sitting beside Mrs. Smedley, told her
-story over again, but fully, and Mrs. Smedley talked of her son, who
-was a young curate of whom she was very proud, not only because of his
-social importance, but because of his eloquence: she declared that
-he preached a better sermon, young as he was, than any minister of
-the gospel in the whole diocese, and the interest Julia took in this
-matter, though the poor girl was thinking all the time of Hardy and the
-East Indiaman, charmed Mrs. Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>The East India docks are among the oldest on the Thames. They embody
-many chapters of the maritime history of this country. They are of
-extraordinary interest to any one who knows the story of the ocean,
-and of the might and majesty of England as the Queen of the Sea. Their
-soup-coloured waters have reflected many different forms and types of
-ships, from the emblazoned, glazed, and castellated stern of the East
-Indiaman to the long, black, yellow-funnelled, three-masted steamer
-whose straight stem shears through it from Gravesend to New York in
-less time than it took the Indiaman to beat down Channel. The produce
-of many lands<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span> litters the quays and fills the sheds. The steam winch
-rattles, the giant arm of crane swings its tons, the stevedore shouts
-in the depths, and the mate yells at the hatchway. The tall masts rise
-into the air, lifting their topmost yards into the yellow obscurity
-up there; figures dangle on the foot ropes, or jockey the yard-arms.
-The house bunting of a score of firms makes a festival to the eye, and
-alongside is the barge, whose slender company do not pay the dues, and
-whose language is beyond the dreams of Houndsditch.</p>
-
-<p>It was Wednesday afternoon, about three o'clock, and the docks were
-full of the animation of the coming and going, and the loading and
-the discharging ships. The air trembled with hoarse voices, with the
-passage of locomotives and wagons, with the rattle of steam machinery,
-with the hissing of escaping vapour. It was the Isle of Dogs, and the
-afternoon was somewhat foggy. In one basin lay a number of fine ships,
-nearly all sailing ships, for there were very few funnels to be seen
-in those days, and along the edge of the wall of this basin two people
-were walking&mdash;Hardy and Julia Armstrong. They were two of a great
-many other persons, who were labourers, sailors, and so forth; and as
-they walked slowly, for the road was obstructed by goods and machinery
-as well as by toilers, lumpers, and loafers, Hardy, pointing to a ship
-lying on the other side of the basin, exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>"That's the <i>York</i>."</p>
-
-<p>Julia stopped to look at her. She was not in trim to be seen to
-advantage; her sails were not bent, her running gear was not rove,
-but all saving her royal yards were aloft, and her model, though
-light and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span> showing the green sheathing, was visible in such
-perfection of run, in such elegance of elliptic stern, in such swelling
-beauty and fining grace of schooner cut-water and flaring bow, as could
-be matched only by those lovely creations of the ship-builders' art,
-the Aberdeen clippers.</p>
-
-<p>"She is a beautiful vessel," exclaimed Julia. "I wish you commanded
-her."</p>
-
-<p>"So do I," answered Hardy, running a critical eye over the ship.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you like the captain?"</p>
-
-<p>"I know his name," answered Hardy, "but I've not yet met him. He
-replaced a gray-haired man who was a philanthropist, and held notions
-and opinions which are not appreciated by ship-owners. He was kind to
-his men, and owners cannot die worth millions if kindness to crews
-is tolerated. A sailor to his mind was a man and not a dog, which
-astonished the ship-owners, whose views are otherwise. If the food was
-bad he went on broaching till he came to something sweet, and this was
-an enormity. He would go into the fok'sle and attend upon a sick man,
-and help him so far as kindness and the medicine-chest could. His crew
-would have gone on sailing round the world with him for ever. Such men
-are not fit to command merchant sailors," he added, sarcastically, "and
-so he is discharged, and probably will not find another ship, and God
-knows what he will do, for at his age what <i>can</i> he do?"</p>
-
-<p>They continued their walk until they arrived at the corner of
-the dock. A large full-rigged ship lay there. Her house flag was
-cream-white with a black cross in it; a delicate space of bunting that
-trembled under the golden ball of truck, for this vessel had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
-short royal-mastheads, and when the yards were hoisted they sat like a
-frigate's under the eyes of the rigging.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy caused Julia to stop, whilst they yet commanded a view of
-the ship's stern and the whole length of the decks from the poop to
-the topgallant forecastle. She was undoubtedly a very beautiful ship,
-probably the handsomest at that time of them all in the London Docks.
-Her stern's embellishment would have done justice to the imagination of
-the Dutch shipwrights of the seventeenth century. Dull as the day was,
-this <i>Glamis Castle</i>, without sunlight to reflect, without the sparkle
-of water to kindle stars and to flash prisms, was lustrous as though
-self-luminous with window and gilt and gorgeous quarter-galleries, and
-upon the sloping ebony of her counter, before it glowed into the yellow
-metal of her brand-new sheathing, were the long white letters of her
-name and her port, and these letters you could read in the water that
-floated stagnant about her rudder and run. Her main-deck and waist
-were full of business; her quarter-deck winch rattled its pawls with
-the noise of a hearse trotted by tipsy men from the graveyard gate;
-the crane was sinking costly burdens into the wide, black yawn of the
-main-hatch; riggers were aloft; preparations for the long voyage round
-the Cape to Calcutta were being pushed forward, as the newspapers
-would say; but, saving the mate, with one foot upon the coaming of the
-main-hatch, watching the slow descent of cargo into the depths, and
-saving the figure of Captain Smedley, sitting on the fore-skylight of
-the poop with an end of cigar in his month, there was then no man upon
-that ship who would have a hand<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span> in the navigation of her, from the
-wide breast of river flowing beyond, to that other distant breast of
-river revolting with black corpses and their ships' companies of plumed
-scavengers.</p>
-
-<p>"There's Smedley!" exclaimed Hardy, and Julia looked at the captain
-sitting on the skylight. "If he ships you," he continued, "you will be
-sailing away in a noble craft," and he began to talk to himself: "What
-a hoist of maintopsail! How splendidly stayed her spars are! She'll
-show cloths enough to get knots from the waft of a sea-mew's wing!"</p>
-
-<p>They walked on till they came abreast of Smedley, and then Hardy
-hailed him.</p>
-
-<p>"Come aboard, I'm waiting for you," sang out Smedley, with a
-flourish of his fingers at the peak of his cap. Hardy took the girl's
-hand, and they crossed a short platform of planks stretched between
-the edge of the wall and the ship's bulwarks, and descending two
-or three steps gained the main-deck, whence they made their way to
-the poop by the port ladder. Before they ascended this ladder Hardy
-stopped Julia to look at and admire the cuddy front. It was a true
-Dutch picture of its kind. It resembled the front of a house with its
-door and three brass-protected, red-curtained windows of a side, and
-a projecting wing of cabin on either hand, so that the front was a
-pleasant recess with its roof of poop-deck over it. But the romance
-of this fancy of cuddy front&mdash;perished for ever to this and all
-future generations&mdash;lay in the carving that lavishly embellished
-it: a fantastic mixture of anchors and flags with masts in full sail
-peering between, and human figures with wings blowing horns.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> There
-was uniformity in all this variety, and the complicate picture in the
-dark colours of teak was fraught with meaning to the interpreting
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor and the girl went on to the poop, a fine stretch of
-plank, but not quite so white as it would be presently, when it had
-been tickled by the holystone, and when the ivory spaces of it would
-take the sun-shed impression of the rigging like rulings in indigo,
-clear of the velvet-violet shadow of the awning.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, here we are," exclaimed Captain Smedley, rising from the
-skylight and speaking with that bluntness which many admired in his
-speech, thinking it sailorly, just as people will inhale doubtful
-odours from an inner harbour and relish them as "ozone." "What do you
-think of the ship, Hardy?"</p>
-
-<p>But though he spoke to Hardy, he kept his eye on Miss Armstrong,
-and was undoubtedly admiring her, particularly her figure, and the
-fascinating cock of her head with its tilted hat.</p>
-
-<p>"She's the finest ship I ever saw," answered Hardy, with real
-enthusiasm. "What a marvellous stern! what a delightful cuddy
-front!"</p>
-
-<p>"Meant to astonish the natives," said Smedley. "They have settled
-the choice of more than one coloured nob, and left the other passenger
-ships nowhere."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, and what news, Smedley?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I think it may be managed," answered Captain Smedley, sending
-his fragment of cigar overboard with a jerk of his arm. "My wife is
-below: let's go down to her."</p>
-
-<p>They descended into what was then called the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
-cuddy by way of the companion steps, and this interior was worthy its
-wonderful front. Narrow slips of looking-glass upon the walls of it,
-and between each slip was a picture representing some Indian scene. The
-effect was brilliant and novel; determination to delight the Oriental
-eye was visible in the grotesque figuration of the three lamps hanging
-over the table. A Japanese artist, delirious with opium, might have
-imagined the extraordinary shapes which supported the globes. All was
-luxury and originality. Aft on either hand and athwart-ships were
-cabins, but the main accommodation was to be sought in the steerage,
-which was gained by a wide staircase, conducting through a hatchway in
-the fore end of the cuddy.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst Julia and Hardy were gazing about them Mrs. Smedley came out
-of the starboard cabin under the wheel.</p>
-
-<p>"I am trying to make my husband's cabin comfortable for him,"
-said she, with her homely, motherly smile, after greetings had been
-exchanged. "I hope he will soon make his last voyage. Captain Franklin,
-a friend of ours, was seventeen years at sea in command, and in all
-that time he and his wife calculated that they had only spent one
-year and three months in each other's company. It is worse than being
-widowed."</p>
-
-<p>"Much worse," said Captain Smedley, "because you can't get married
-again. The beggar's always coming home."</p>
-
-<p>"Let us sit down," said Mrs. Smedley. "Miss Armstrong, come and
-sit beside me here. I am afraid we sha'n't be able to offer you any
-refreshments, but Jim when he came along said something about dining at
-the Brunswick Hotel."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span></p> <p>"Captain Smedley's full of
-original ideas," exclaimed Hardy as they seated themselves at the
-table. "What a different scene, Mrs. Smedley, this interior will submit
-a few weeks hence," he continued. "I see the gallant captain yonder at
-the head there, a row of ladies and gentlemen ranged down the table
-from either hand of him. The table smokes with good cheer, elaborately
-served; through a window yonder you see an ayah cuddling a baby and
-swaying to the heave of the ship. How the sails swell to the heavens
-through that skylight!" and here he cast his eyes aloft, and then
-looking at Miss Julia, he said, "And where will you be?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, you may take it as good as settled," said Captain Smedley,
-"and let my wife get all the thanks," he added, not particularly
-referring to Julia in his speech.</p>
-
-<p>"You are very good," said Hardy, glancing at Julia, who was
-certainly not smiling. "How shall we consider it as good as
-settled?"</p>
-
-<p>"You've got to thank my wife, she's taken a great interest in the
-young lady," said Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>Julia meeting Mrs. Smedley's eyes gave her a grave bow, full of the
-unconscious coquetry of her natural postures.</p>
-
-<p>"It's settled in this way," continued Smedley. "I saw Mrs. Lambert
-this morning, and it is arranged that Miss Armstrong sails as her
-assistant. Old Perkins, one of the chiefs, who was at the office, said
-that he couldn't see the need; freights were low, and the ship was
-sailed without regard to expense." Here the captain winked at Hardy. "I
-told him the lady was a good nurse and accustomed to children,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> and
-that the stewardess needed help. So, Miss Armstrong, you will sign on,
-and you will have me for a captain. Do you like the idea?"</p>
-
-<p>"I thank you a thousand times for your kindness," answered Julia.
-"This is a beautiful ship, and I am sure you will see that I am not
-unhappy. But&mdash;but shall I find employment in Calcutta? Am I not
-almost sure of finding employment in Australia?" and she looked with a
-wistfulness that was almost love at Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"You certainly will find employment in Australia, and most certainly
-a husband," said Smedley, who took the girl's hesitation very
-good-humouredly. "But I fear your employment will be menial, and the
-washing-tub, and the cooking range don't suit the likes of you."</p>
-
-<p>"It is very true," said Mrs. Smedley.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy listened with his eyes fixed on the deck. His heart had noted
-the girl's wistful look, and it was beating a little fast in some
-confusion of thought to his interpretation of her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"A husband," continued Smedley, "will certainly be forthcoming, but
-like the range and the tub, he won't suit the likes of you, though
-stress of circumstances make you his wife. Now it's all tip-top
-gentility in India, with a real chance of a first-class sort, aboard my
-ship, this side of Calcutta."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! it's marriage you are always thinking of, Captain Smedley,"
-cried Julia, clasping her hands, and looking at him in her fascinating
-way.</p>
-
-<p>The captain glanced at his wife as if the conversation was growing
-personal.</p>
-
-<p>"Pray remember this, Miss Armstrong," said Mrs. Smedley, "if you
-are on the ship's articles you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> belong to the ship, and if you cannot
-obtain employment in the months during which the vessel will be lying
-in the Calcutta River, you can return in her, by which time Mr. Hardy
-may have arrived, and then you can try Australia."</p>
-
-<p>"That's a new idea, and a splendid one," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>Julia's face brightened. "<i>Will</i> you let me return in her, captain?"
-she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly, if you don't run away, as is customary with many who
-sign the ship's articles," he answered. "But you don't go out to come
-back; a major-general may fall in love with you on your arrival, and
-then you'll be coming on board to ask for my blessing." He added with a
-little movement of impatience, "Is it settled?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and we thank you again and again," exclaimed Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"You'll sleep in the stewardess's cabin," said Captain Smedley.
-"Let's go below and have a look at it. By the way," he added, "I may as
-well say at once that your pay will be thirty shillings a month."</p>
-
-<p>Miss Armstrong blushed, and bowed, and smiled.</p>
-
-<p>"Not enough, when it's all taken up, for a new gown, Jim," said Mrs.
-Smedley. "Where's the cabin, lovey?"</p>
-
-<p>They all went down the broad steps, conducting to what was then
-called the steerage, in which the first-class cabin passengers were
-berthed, though in these days the word steerage is wholly associated
-with third-class people and German Jews, who quarrel over packs
-of greasy cards. The ship had plenty of beam, and the steerage
-was spacious for a vessel<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> of her burden. The cabins ran well
-forward, and there was plenty of them. The central deck would be
-carpeted when the ship was ready for sea. Handsome bunks, washstands,
-chest of drawers, and other furniture, made every cabin resemble a snug
-little bedroom, and the port-holes were large, with plenty of room for
-the passage of the thrilling and soothing gush of blue breeze, when the
-flying-fish should be starting from the metalled fore-foot in flights
-of pearly light, and when the sun should hang in a roasting eye over
-the foretopgallant yard-arm. The stewardess's berth was small but
-cosy: two fore-and-aft bunks, the same conveniences as in the other
-cabins&mdash;and this was to be Julia's bedroom.</p>
-
-<p>She lingered a little looking around her, and the others paused to
-humour her.</p>
-
-<p>Then said Captain Smedley, "I am hungry. Let us go and get something
-to eat at the Brunswick Hotel."</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER V.</span> <span class="smaller">CAPTAIN LAYARD</span></h2>
-
-<p>A little later than three weeks from the date on which our friends
-had dined together at the Brunswick Hotel, in the East India Docks, a
-fine, full-rigged ship was sailing slowly in rhythmic lifts and falls,
-as full of sweet grace as the cadence and movement of lovely music,
-through the dark blue evening waters of the Atlantic, about two hundred
-miles to the southward of the Chops, and the autumn glory of the fast
-westering sun clothed her.</p>
-
-<p>She was the well-known clipper ship <i>York</i>, bound to Melbourne
-and to another port, and she had followed, after four days, another
-beautiful vessel which we have inspected&mdash;I mean the <i>Glamis
-Castle</i>, bound, as the <i>York</i> was bound, for the Cape parallels, where
-their liquid paths would diverge, one going away east for Cape Leeuwin,
-and the other shifting her helm for the Indian Ocean.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>York</i> had made a noble passage down the Channel, driven by a
-black, salt, shrieking, easterly breeze that grew into half a gale,
-with soft, dark clouds smouldering as they flew. The Channel sea had
-the look of flint, and to each foaming <i>scend</i> the ship drove in a
-curtsey of fury, as though to the thrust of some mighty hand. She
-stormed along<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> under two topgallantsails and single reefs and swelling
-fore-course, and a swinging wing or two of jib and staysail until she
-was out of soundings in a passage that had the swiftness of steam,
-as steam then was; and then the strong breeze fined down, the wind
-shifted into the northwest, and behold this clipper of spacious pinions
-breaking the dark blue heave at her bows into scintillant lines like
-the meteor's thread of light, with every curve of cloth at the leaches,
-from head-earing to clew, of a faint pink with the light in the
-west.</p>
-
-<p>The officer of the watch stood on the weather-side of the
-quarter-deck with his eyes fixed upon a distant sail, close hauled and
-reaching westwards; but it was evident by the expression of his eyes
-that his attention was not with <i>her</i>. A single figure at the wheel
-grasped the spokes with an occasional movement, and sometimes a glance
-at the card of the compass, and sometimes a look at the canvas aloft,
-which, swelling out and sinking in, breathed like the breasts of human
-beings. The flush deck ran with a fair, white sweep into the "eyes,"
-and you guessed by the neatness everywhere visible that the vessel
-owned a smart chief mate.</p>
-
-<p>The anchors had been stowed. It was the first dog-watch, and a
-few of the crew were idling on the forecastle. Presently up through
-the companionway, whose steps led into the cabin where the captain
-and the two mates lived, rose a little boy of about eight years of
-age, dressed as a navy sailor, and his bright gold curls shone to the
-setting sun past the round cap which was perched on the back of his
-head. He was a beautiful little boy of the purest English type; no arch
-Irish eye was ever of a darker<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> blue than his. A drum&mdash;not a
-child's toy, but a real drum, though a small one&mdash;was slung by
-a lanyard round his neck, and he clutched the two sticks, whilst he
-looked at the officer of the watch with a smile of his red lips,
-disclosing a row of little milk-white teeth, and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Hardy, may I play my drum?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why, yes, Johnny, of course you may," answered Hardy, "and if
-you'll beat a smart tattoo the breeze will freshen, for we are wanting
-legs, Johnny."</p>
-
-<p>"May I go on the forecastle and beat it?" said Johnny. "The man who
-has the whistle will play it whilst I beat."</p>
-
-<p>"Hurrah for 'The Girl I Left Behind Me,'" said Hardy. "Go forward,
-little sonny, and beat the music out of the sails, and mind how you
-go."</p>
-
-<p>Just when the little boy was about to run along the decks
-an immense, magnificent Newfoundland dog sprang through the
-companion-hatch as though it had missed the little fellow below.
-The dog instantly saw the boy, and they sped forward together, the
-beautiful animal often bounding to the height of the boy's head in its
-delight in his company. The men on the forecastle all looked at them
-as they came, and those who walked stood still to watch them coming.
-The instant the dog was forward it swept its sagacious, beaming eyes,
-fuller of intelligence than many which look out of human faces, round
-the ocean line, and when it saw the sail to windward it set up a deep
-baying bark, a very organ note, grand in tone as the solemn stroke
-of a great bell, which, translated, as clearly signified, "Sail ho!"
-as the setting of the sun denotes the coming of night.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
-<p>"Where away, Sailor?" shouted Hardy from the quarter-deck, and the
-seamen laughed out, whilst the dog, after one glance aft, pointed his
-noble head in the direction of the ship, and lifting up his nose to
-heaven barked deeply twice, which was his English for <i>starboard</i>. The
-seamen laughed loudly again.</p>
-
-<p>Johnny beat a roll on the drum, and the sailors gathered round him,
-and others came springing up through the forescuttle, which is the
-name of the little hatch through which you drop into the forecastle
-or living room of the crew. The boy beat that drum marvellously well;
-he made it rattle as though a regiment marched behind him, and the
-sails on high rattled in echo as though several phantom drummers were
-stationed in various parts of the rigging.</p>
-
-<p>The dog lay down and watched the boy, and a few of the seamen, one
-after another, went up to it and stroked its head.</p>
-
-<p>"Where's the man that's got the whistle?" said Johnny, ceasing to
-beat.</p>
-
-<p>"Where's Dicky Andrews?" shouted a man, and another, going to the
-scuttle, cried down, "Below there! tumble up, Dicky, and bring your
-whistle with you; you're wanted on deck."</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments a young ordinary seaman rose through the hatch:
-he was slightly curved in the back without being humped, and carried
-the face of the hunchback, the corners of his mouth being puckered
-into a dry aspect of advanced years, such as may often be observed in
-people who are afflicted with spinal complaints. He was red-haired,
-and his little eyes were full of humour and as lively as laughter
-itself, and he wore the togs of the merchant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> Jack&mdash;dungaree
-for breeches, an old striped shirt, a dirty flannel jacket, and a cap
-without a peak.</p>
-
-<p>"All right, Master Johnny," said he, pulling a fife out of his
-pocket. "What shall it be, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>"What shall it be, my lads?" asked Johnny, looking round with his
-sweet, delightful smile and arch-blue eyes at the weather-stained faces
-of the men, one of whom was a negro, another a Dane, brown as coffee,
-two others Dagos, with frizzled hair and silver hoops in their ears;
-and these this boy of eight had called "My lads."</p>
-
-<p>"Give us 'The British Grenadiers,'" said a seaman.</p>
-
-<p>"A dog before a soldier," exclaimed the voice of an Irishman. "Give
-us 'St. Patrick's Day in the Morning,' me dear."</p>
-
-<p>"Hurrah for 'St. Patrick's Day'!" shouted several voices; and Dicky,
-putting his fife to his lips, started the most inspiriting air that
-ever mortal genius composed. The drum rattled, the sticks throbbed in
-the little fists; Dicky began to caper as he played; nearly all the
-ship's company were assembled on the forecastle, and many began to
-leap about and spring with delight to the music; the dog rose, and in
-a stately way ran or waltzed amongst the caper-cutters. That fore-deck
-then was a wonderfully animated picture. The arch of the fore-course,
-sleepily swelling and sinking, yielded a good sight of the scene to the
-quarter-deck. The setting sun painted it into a canvas almost gorgeous
-with the streaks of purple fire in the tarry shrouds and backstays,
-and in the climbing lines of the well-greased masts; and in the flush
-on the breasts of the sails, and in the red stars it kindled in all
-that mirrored it.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p> <p>The fife and drum kept company
-superbly, and the fine Irish air seemed to thrill through the ship, and
-to echo up aloft like some new spring or spirit of life. The cocks in
-the coops abaft the galley chimed in with a constant defying crowing,
-about as melodious as the noise of a broken-winded barrel organ. The
-pigs under the long-boat grunted in sympathy with sounds which reminded
-them of the trough and the haystack and the near village.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst all this harmless sailors' pleasure was going forward on the
-ship's forecastle the captain of the vessel came out of the cabin,
-and when he stepped upon the deck he stood a moment with his hand
-resting upon the companion-hood, looking forward, and listening to the
-music.</p>
-
-<p>He was a man of about forty-five to fifty years of age, and his
-name was William Layard. He scarcely wore the appearance of a sailor.
-The lower portion of his face was hidden in hair, which was of a dark
-brown, streaked with gray, and his hair was long. His nose was a fine,
-well-bred aquiline, his brow square, his eyebrows shaggy, and his dark
-eyes burnt with brightness in the shadow cast by their eaves. He wore
-a soft black hat, which sat securely upon his head, and was clothed in
-a monkey-jacket and blue cloth trousers. No discerning eye but would
-have dwelt a little upon him in speculation. His face showed marks of
-breeding, but there was something else in him, too, that would have
-detained the gaze&mdash;a faint, an almost elusive, expression of
-triumph, of an inward exaltation, which was almost dissembled, and
-subtly revealed in the mouth that so delicately diffused it that only
-a keen eye would have witnessed it.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p> <p>Hardy was making
-the voyage with him for the first time, and though they had been
-together for some days, whilst they had frequently conversed in the
-docks, he did not understand him, he had not got in any way near to
-him. But, as a gentleman himself, he felt the presence of the gentleman
-in Captain Layard, and had picked up from his own lips that he had been
-educated at one of the great public schools, had begun the sea life in
-the Royal Navy as midshipman, but, for some reason, left unexplained,
-had quitted the white for the red flag, and had been in command five
-years, after serving, of course, as second and third mate, always
-trading to the Australian and New Zealand ports in ships like the
-<i>York</i>, which did not carry passengers. Hardy had also gathered that he
-was a widower, who had married a woman of good birth, the Honourable
-Miss &mdash;&mdash;, no need to name her, by whom he had the little boy
-Johnny, who was the darling of his heart, and who had regularly gone
-with him to sea, since his wife's death, in the last four voyages to
-the Pacific. Our friend Hardy had also made another discovery: that
-the captain, even before the start, showed a disposition to treat
-him as a companion rather than as a mate. This was so unusual in sea
-captains&mdash;it is still unusual&mdash;that Hardy's speculations as
-to Captain Layard's character were considerably sharpened by it.</p>
-
-<p>The drum and fife ceased on a sudden. The sailors stood about, hot
-and amused, and the dog with its tongue out looked eagerly from one
-face to another. The ship was still: there was no slopping fall of
-water alongside to disturb the calm respirations of the canvas; the
-captain, with his hand upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span> the companion-hood, continued to gaze
-forward, and Hardy, standing at the mizzen-rigging, watched him askant.
-Then, through the serenity of the breathing, sun-flushed air, all the
-way from forward, nearly the whole length of the ship, came the clear
-high note of little Johnny's voice:</p>
-
-<p>"Dicky, play 'Sally come up,'" and Dicky, rendered zealous by the
-captain's presence on deck, instantly put his fife to his lips. The
-drum rattled, the sails reëchoed the jolly air, the feet of the men
-began to shake, the dog raced and waltzed in stately measures as
-before, the whole forecastle was again in motion, and the ship, with
-her taut rigging vibrant with the shrilling of the fife and the roll
-of the drum, floated onwards over the long, languid undulations of the
-deep, which were scarlet westwards with the splendour of the dying day
-that was crumbling toward the sea line in masses of burning light.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Layard stepped across the deck to Mr. Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"That boy plays the drum with a professional hand," said he. "He got
-the art himself, for nobody taught him. It is a good drum&mdash;good
-enough for soldiers to march to."</p>
-
-<p>"I never heard better drumming, sir," answered Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Where did Sailor learn to waltz?" said the captain, and he watched
-the dog. "How quickly Johnny has made friends with the crew."</p>
-
-<p>"Any crew of Englishmen would cherish and pet him, and perish
-for such a beautiful, manly little fellow," exclaimed Hardy, with
-enthusiasm and admiration in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>"He's always kept my crews contented," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> Captain Layard, smiling.
-"Several men have sailed with me every voyage ever since I took Johnny
-to sea, learning that he was coming again."</p>
-
-<p>He looked at the sail to windward that leaned like a black feather
-in the crimson air, then glanced over the ship's side to judge her
-pace, and stood for some time near Hardy listening to the music and
-watching the men dancing. He said, with an abruptness that again
-surprised Hardy as it had before even startled him during the run down
-Channel:</p>
-
-<p>"Have you ever studied the nervous system?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir," answered Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"A man is formed of two sides," continued the captain, "and each
-side has a nervous system of its own. They are independent, and strange
-things happen in consequence. I remember when I was chief mate of a
-ship called the <i>Tartar</i> that I stood aft close to the man at the
-wheel, who exclaimed on a sudden, 'I don't know what's wrong with
-me, but there's two meanings a-going on in my head.' 'What's that?'
-I asked. 'This here side,' said he, lifting his right hand from the
-spoke, and putting it to his forehead, 'is a-talking one sense, which
-ain't sense, because t'other side's talking in a different way,' and
-here he touched his left brow, 'and all's confusion,' and then he began
-to mutter to himself. I thought he was ill, and calling another man
-to the relief, sent him forward and followed with some brandy, which
-put his head to rights. I spoke of this matter to a doctor when I got
-ashore, and he explained the dual system of nerves, and told me that
-overworked brains would occasionally chatter inconsequentially in each
-lobe."</p>
-
-<p>"How shall a man act when his brain comes to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span> a
-misunderstanding in that fashion?" asked Hardy, gazing with critical
-interest at the captain's refined but singular face.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>I</i> take brandy," replied Captain Layard, sending a glance aloft,
-then at the distant sail, then at his little son, who continued to beat
-in accompaniment to "Sally come up," whilst the sailors sprang about in
-glowing glee, and the scarlet in the west deepened into a rusty red.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you suffer from attacks of the kind, sir?" inquired Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"To tell you the truth," responded the captain, with a peculiar
-smile, keeping his gaze fastened on the forecastle, "I had one just
-now. The left side grew importunate in nonsense; the right side was all
-right, and quite understood that things were wrong. The trouble was
-preceded by a curious beating of the heart in the ear. It sounded as
-though a wooden leg was hollowly tramping round the galleries of the
-brain&mdash;thump, thump, thump! It was like the noise of a wooden leg
-coming into a theatre when some actress of genius has stilled the house
-into breathlessness by her witchery."</p>
-
-<p>"This man is mad," thought Hardy. "He would never converse with me
-in this fashion if his head wasn't in two."</p>
-
-<p>The drum and fife ceased. Johnny, seeing his father, came running
-aft, and the Newfoundland trotted by his side. It was four bells,
-and the sun vanished as the metal chimes trembled away to sea; the
-breeze slightly freshened on a sudden, a sound of foam arose like the
-song of a full champagne glass held to the ear; delicate streaks of
-white flashed about the ocean breast in the twilight like some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> milky
-wings of sea birds; the ship strained a little aloft and hardened her
-breasts, and stars of the east shone upon the dark brow of the soaring
-night.</p>
-
-<p>The breeze blew with a little edge, but it was still the
-dog-watches, and the sailors, though abruptly deprived of the drum in
-which they delighted, started on another dance to Dicky's merry and
-excellent whistling.</p>
-
-<p>"Father, Sailor likes dancing," said Johnny.</p>
-
-<p>"All sailors like it," answered the captain, stooping to press his
-lips to the child's forehead. "Cut below now, my darling, you and the
-drum, and put it away and wait for me. I sha'n't be long, and then
-we'll go to supper."</p>
-
-<p>The boy, with the obedience of a man-of-war's man, saluted Hardy
-with a flourish of his little fist to his golden curls, ran to the
-companionway, and vanished, and the noble Newfoundland vanished with
-him.</p>
-
-<p>"There is no weather in the glass," said the captain. "If this
-breeze freshens we shall make up for lost time. You'll not spare her,
-Mr. Hardy."</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"Those are my orders to the second mate. I want to maintain the
-reputation of this ship; the freighters love her. I have no fancy for
-steam, but you can <i>time</i> it, and so tacks and sheets are bound to go;
-but I'll make a bold fight for old tradition," he cried in a curious
-tone of enthusiasm, "and what we can't carry we'll drag."</p>
-
-<p>The second mate had come on deck at four bells, and was pacing
-to leeward in the deeper shade that dyed the atmosphere there
-when the freshening of the breeze heeled the ship. There was
-nothing <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>particularly noticeable in this man, of whom a fair sight
-could be caught as he passed through the area of light diffused by the
-cabin lamp, which was burning in brilliance under the skylight. He was
-pale-faced and fat of cheek, very light eyes, lashes like white silk,
-yellow hair, and great ears which stood out in eager bearing as though
-they sought to catch everything which was said. He was dressed in blue
-serge and a cap, and this was his first voyage in the ship. So the
-captain and the two mates were sailing the <i>York</i> for the first time in
-their lives.</p>
-
-<p>It was Hardy's watch below; he crossed to the second mate, gave
-him the course and so forth, and descended into the cabin. Little
-Johnny without his drum was sitting on a locker talking to Sailor, who
-was looking lovingly up into his face, and often the bright-haired
-little chap glanced at the cabin servant, who was preparing the table
-for supper. The <i>York</i> had been built to carry cargo; she was not a
-passenger ship, though at a pinch accommodation might have been found
-for three or four persons, friends of the owners, say, or people
-to whom the next ship sailing with immediate despatch might be a
-supreme need. In this age they would probably equip such a vessel
-with a deck-house for the master and mates. Her cabin was small
-and comfortable, very plain, with a seawardly look that suggested
-sturdiness, a very different cabin from the luxurious interior of the
-<i>Glamis Castle</i>! A few berths stood aft, and these were occupied by the
-master and mates, and one was a pantry.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy stopped to speak to Johnny.</p>
-
-<p>"You play your drum splendidly," said he. "But what's the good
-of a drum if you're going to be a sailor, sonny?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span></p>
-<p>"I'll play the drum when the bo'sun plays his whistle," answered
-Johnny, manfully. "And it will make the sailors quicker in running up
-aloft."</p>
-
-<p>"So it will," answered Hardy, laughing heartily, for the image
-submitted by the boy's words tickled his fancy&mdash;a bo'sun piping
-"All hands!" down the forescuttle, and the captain at the break
-of the poop beating thunder out of a drum to hurry the men to the
-reef-tackles!</p>
-
-<p>He lingered a little to talk to the boy, for it charmed him to look
-into the sweet handsome face with its arch eyes; 'twas as gladdening to
-his heart as the song of a bird or the scent of a nosegay, and somehow
-the child always put tender thoughts of Julia Armstrong into his head
-by the sheer charm of his smile. He caressed the Newfoundland whilst
-he talked to the little lad, and then went to his cabin to change his
-coat and brush his hair for supper, musing over much, but particularly
-over his last talk with the captain, who never before in the Channel
-or after had spoken so oddly or looked so strangely. "If the man <i>is</i>
-off his head," he thought, "my responsibilities will be enormous," for
-he perfectly understood the position that command confers upon the
-shipmaster; he was God Almighty aboard; mad or not mad, his orders must
-be obeyed; he could steer the ship to the devil and clap the mates
-in irons for interfering, and unless the crew mutinied&mdash;which
-few crews durst do, knowing how heavily the law presses upon seamen,
-even though they are able to justify their actions&mdash;they must go
-on obeying the master's commands, though the fires of hell should be
-visible right ahead past the horizon.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span></p> <p>Thus Hardy mused
-whilst he changed his coat and brushed his hair, and he also thought of
-Julia Armstrong, and wondered how she was faring, and what progress her
-ship had made.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Glamis Castle</i> had hauled out of dock five days before the
-<i>York</i> sailed. She had slept upon the silent stream of the Thames one
-night, and early next morning was taken in tow by a tug, which released
-her off Dungeness; then with the stateliness of a frigate she broke
-into a sunshine of canvas, and, if the wind had prospered her, she
-should be some five hundred miles ahead of the <i>York</i>. But it was sail,
-not steam, and short of the report of a passing ship, no man could have
-safely conjectured her situation. But one trick of seamanship Smedley
-possessed: he never admitted the existence of a foul wind; he never
-sweated his yards fore and aft; he was no lover of the bowline, nor of
-the shivering leach. It was always "full and bye" with him, though he
-was points off, and thus he made a fair breeze of every head-wind, for
-his slants to leeward of his course gave him two feet of sailing to
-the one he would have got out of a taut, shuddering luff, and he never
-looked over the quarter for leeway.</p>
-
-<p>At half-past six Hardy stepped out of his berth and found supper
-ready, and the captain sitting at the head of the table with little
-Johnny on his right. You will consider it early for supper, but at
-sea the last meal is always called supper, and after this they eat no
-more in the cabin. There was plenty, and it was good of its kind: ham,
-cold fowl, cold sausage, salt beef, biscuit, cheese, and salt butter.
-A decanter of rum glowed deep and rich within<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> reach of the captain's
-arm. A large globe lamp sparkled brightly overhead, and the scene was a
-sea-picture of hospitality and comfort, sweetened into a tender human
-character by the presence of the boy who sat on the right hand of his
-father. Sailor, the great dog, lay beside the captain on the deck. He
-was too dignified to beg; too well trained to expect. He knew his time
-would come, and lay patient in the nobility of his shape.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy sat at the foot of the table. It was the custom in this ship
-for the captain and mate to eat together, and when the mate was done
-he relieved the deck till the second officer had finished. The captain
-gave the little boy a slice of cold chicken and a white biscuit, and
-filled his glass with water. The swing trays swayed softly as pendulums
-to the delicate heave of the evening waters, the bulkheads creaked,
-the rudder jarred as the swell rolled, and you could hear faintly the
-jump of the wheel chains to the sharp but swiftly arrested shear of the
-tiller.</p>
-
-<p>The captain with his cap off disclosed a lofty but receding brow,
-rounding with something of the curve of the egg-shell at the temples,
-and his long hair and the growth about his cheeks and chin made him
-look more like a poet than a salted skipper. Hardy had taken notice
-that he stared at the man he talked to, which is contrary to the notion
-that the insane have a wandering eye. But that Captain Layard was not
-absolutely right in his mind the young sailor was convinced, as he sat
-at the foot of the table cutting himself a plate of beef and ham.</p>
-
-<p>"Captain Pearson made poor passages on the whole, I've understood,"
-said Captain Layard, referring to the commander he had replaced.
-"He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span> was a very cautious man, furled his royals every second
-dog-watch, and would snug his ship down to the first hint in the glass
-to save calling all hands."</p>
-
-<p>"I was told he was loved by his crew, sir," answered Hardy. "And he
-seems to have been the most humane commander that ever sailed out of
-the port of London."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, it is right that sailors should be treated as men," said
-Layard, staring at Hardy; "but most of them are fools, they are
-children, they don't or can't understand things." He put down his knife
-and fork, drew out a handkerchief and wiped the palms of his hands,
-then poured a wine-glass of rum into a tumbler, and filling the glass
-with water swallowed the ruddy draught.</p>
-
-<p>"Some more biscuit, father," said the child.</p>
-
-<p>An expression of tenderness, even like that which might spring from
-a mother's heart, softened the captain's singular and striking face as
-he looked at the boy whilst he gave him a biscuit. He stared again at
-Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Sailors," said he, "don't see things from a right point of view.
-There was a seaman who wanted a Blackwall cap to wear at the wheel.
-To make it he cut up his go-ashore breeches, and to trim and bind the
-edges he cut up a new Dungaree jumper. The cap cost him a pound, but he
-believed he had got it for nothing because he had made it himself."</p>
-
-<p>Whilst Hardy was laughing, for the captain told this story in a
-dry manner, and with a twinkle of eye that certainly did not hint at
-insanity, a voice was heard in the companionway:</p>
-
-<p>"There's a heavy fog rolled down upon us, sir, and it's as thick
-as cheese to the ship's sides."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p> <p>It was the voice
-of Mr. Candy, the second mate, and a moment after his step could be
-heard in the plank overhead as he walked to the bulwark rail.</p>
-
-<p>The captain sprang up and went on deck; Hardy continued to eat his
-supper, and talked to the little boy. It was his watch below, and
-he was too old a shell to quit the meal until all hands should be
-summoned, which a quiet fog, however dense, topped by a reassuring
-barometer, was not very likely to occasion.</p>
-
-<p>The fog, nevertheless, had rolled down quickly through the gloom of
-the early night on the gust of the black breeze, still nor'west. Black
-it was. Nothing was visible of the ship but a few spokes of light,
-like the arrested darting of meteoric fibres spiking from the glass on
-the skylight in a fiery arch. When the darkness of the night dyes the
-darkness of fog then the universal blackness is so deep that you might
-think the solid globe had vanished, and that you hung in the centre of
-space, death-dark and silent, moonless and starless, chaotic with dumb
-masses of the deep electric dye.</p>
-
-<p>This night the fancy would have been easily inspired by the hush
-upon the sea, for the sails floated stirless; there was not wind
-enough to brush the salt curve into the expiring hiss of foam, and the
-invisible swell so lightly swayed the eclipsed fabric that only now and
-again did you catch the sad note of the sea, sobbing along the bends,
-and hiddenly passing away into the short wake in sighs and tones of
-weeping.</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Candy!" called the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"Sir!" came the answer out of the soft invisibility in which the
-bulwarks abreast were buried.</p>
-
-<p>They came together in the spokes of radiance about the skylight.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p> <p>"Clew up all three royals and furl them. Let
-go all three topgallant halliards; the sails may hang. Haul up the
-mainsail; brail in the mizzen, and down flying and outer jibs, topmast
-and topgallant staysails, but leave the sails unfurled. See that your
-side-lights are burning brightly, and bend your sharpest ear over the
-water for a noise. Was anything in sight before this smother rolled
-down?"</p>
-
-<p>"I saw nothing, sir. It was a bit thick before the fog came along,
-and then it came in a wall."</p>
-
-<p>The captain went to the side to look over and mark the ship's pace,
-and the second mate began to sing out. One watch sufficed. There was
-little to do but let go with the drag of the downhauls; and the clews
-of the great mainsail rose to the slings to the sound of a few ocean
-yelps and a "<i>Chiliman</i>" chorus. The men were not to be seen until they
-ran up against you. They felt for the ropes, and their footfalls were
-like the pattering of dead leaves on a pavement to a sudden air of
-wind, strangely threading with the shore-going sound the squeak of the
-sheave, the rasp of rope, and the soft scraping of parrel descending
-the greased topgallant heights. The side-lights were reported as
-burning bravely.</p>
-
-<p>The ship now had little more than steerage way, and the captain,
-after looking into the compass, and after repeating his instructions to
-the second mate to keep his best ear seawards and on either bow, said
-he would send the dog on deck, and returned to the cabin.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER VI.</span> <span class="smaller">THE SHIP'S LOOKOUT</span></h2>
-
-<p>Captain Layard entered the cabin and called to the dog, which
-instantly sprang up.</p>
-
-<p>"Sailor, go on deck and keep a lookout," said he, and in a breath
-the Newfoundland rushed up the companion-steps and vanished.</p>
-
-<p>"He hasn't had his supper yet, father," exclaimed the little boy.</p>
-
-<p>"I will send it forward to him," answered the captain, seating
-himself in the chair he had vacated, and helping himself to a piece of
-chicken.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy had risen when Layard entered, but seeing the captain sit he
-resumed his place. His watch would come round at eight o'clock. There
-would be little time for sleep if he withdrew to his berth. He had
-supped well, had drunk a glass of grog, had enjoyed his chat with the
-little boy, whose charming face and sweet, ingenuous, yet manly prattle
-delighted him; he was comfortable, and the captain inspired no feeling
-of restraint nor sense of intrusion, so he sat on.</p>
-
-<p>"The fog is as thick as mud in a wine-glass," exclaimed Captain
-Layard. "Some go fast and some go slow through these smothers. The fast
-man holds that a ship is under more immediate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> control when
-travelling; I am a slow man when I can't see. In fact," he continued,
-with a look of exaltation, with a smile of profound self-complacency,
-"I claim to know my business. There is no man afloat who is going to
-teach me what to do when a thing is to be done, and done properly."</p>
-
-<p>"If all ships would heave to," said Hardy, witnessing the captain's
-mind in the expression which subtly interpreted it, "then it would be
-the right thing in a fog to stop your engines, or back your topsail.
-But it's the other fellow you can't see that makes the fear." He
-immediately added, "Your dog is extraordinarily sagacious, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"It amused me to train him," replied the captain, smoothing Johnny's
-little hand as it lay upon the table. "There is no fog-horn which
-equals the screams of an irritated sow. A sow once saved me from a
-collision by causing a dog, in an invisible ship close aboard on the
-starboard bow, to bark. That put the idea into my head. Sailor has the
-voice of a trombone, and he didn't need much training either; he is now
-perched between the knight-heads with more searching eyes and clearer
-ears than the whole ship's company could put together if they made
-their heads into one."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy laughed.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't forget Sailor's supper, father," said Johnny.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll not forget," answered the captain.</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke the words the man who waited on the cabin came down the
-steps.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it still very thick?" asked the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"Blinding, sir," was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>"Get the dog's supper, and take it to him on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
-fok'sle," said Captain Layard. "See that he has water; it may be an
-all-night job for him. Pearson was a very humane man," he went on,
-addressing Hardy. "I might guess that by the medicine-chest he's left
-me. I overhauled it before we sailed, and wondered at the quantity of
-sleeping and death stuffs it contained. I found out that in one of his
-passages home from Calcutta several men died of cholera, and he was
-at his wits' ends for drugs. Ships bound to India should always carry
-a surgeon; they would&mdash;they must, if there are passengers. But
-glauber salts are good things for Jack: 'tis an all-round physic, as
-good for smallpox as for indigestion." He laughed somewhat heartily,
-and continued, "Pearson's men might have died to a man, for his
-medicine-chest showed badly like the end of a long voyage. Fortunately
-half of them took it into their heads to live, and they got the ship
-home. After this Pearson never went to sea without plenty of drink for
-cholera. He's left some doctor's handbook on the diseases of sailors,
-and there's a volume on poisons full of pencil marks. His humanity was
-unwearying, but he got the sack all the same. Johnny, my darling, it's
-time for bed. Come along, my lamb."</p>
-
-<p>He took the boy by the hand, and they went into the captain's cabin,
-the child crying as his father opened the door, "Good night, Mr.
-Hardy."</p>
-
-<p>It was half-past seven; Hardy went into his berth to smoke a pipe
-before relieving the deck. The captain's cabin glowed with the soft
-illumination of an oil lamp screwed to a bulkhead, and swinging in its
-bracket to the heave. It was a fine large cabin, equipped with a table
-covered with green baize on which were writing materials, nautical
-instruments,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> and such things; a fore-and-aft bunk for the captain,
-and a brass cot at the foot of the bunk, safely secured to the deck,
-for Johnny. It was comfortable with a carpet, chairs, a short sofa, a
-chest of drawers, and washstand. Close beside Johnny's cot on the deck
-was the boy's drum.</p>
-
-<p>The captain began to undress the little fellow, who talked to him
-of Mr. Hardy; he said he wished Mr. Hardy could sleep with them. No
-mother ever used a tenderer hand in putting her child to bed than did
-this strange sea-captain, mad or not mad. His eyes were tender, twice
-he kissed the boy's fair brow; he seemed reluctant to make an end of
-this undressing, as though he loved to have his hands upon the child,
-to have his face close to him.</p>
-
-<p>"Now your prayers, Johnny," said he. And the boy knelt by his cot,
-and in words he had learnt from his father, prayed that his mother
-would look down and watch over them both, and that God would bless his
-father and himself.</p>
-
-<p>The captain stood by in devout posture, and whispered the words
-which the child uttered, then hoisted the little fellow into bed,
-covered him up, and kissed him.</p>
-
-<p>"Mayn't Mr. Hardy come and see me in bed?" said the child.</p>
-
-<p>"Ay," answered the captain, and he stepped to the door, and called
-the chief officer by name.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy instantly came out, leaving his pipe behind him.</p>
-
-<p>"Come and see my boy in bed," said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy, not knowing that this was due to the child and not to the
-father, was secretly astonished, for though he had always lived
-on very good terms with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span> the captains he had sailed with,
-he had never met any commander who treated him just as though they
-occupied the same platform.</p>
-
-<p>He followed him into his cabin, and the boy with his bright hair on
-the pillow smiled a greeting.</p>
-
-<p>"It is a beautiful bed, Johnny," said the mate, stepping close to
-the cot, and looking at him with the affection which such a child as
-this will excite in a sailor's heart at sea, moved by thoughts of
-home and of the fair land he has left, of his own childhood perhaps,
-and visited by that mute sense of solitude, peril, and the holy and
-brooding presence of the Great Spirit, which is the impulse of the
-deep, and understood by those to whom the ocean, eternal and boundless
-in the constant recession of its horizon, is an interpretable face. He
-turned to the captain and exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>"If your boy ever dreams, sir, it is of the angels who guard his
-bed."</p>
-
-<p>He kissed the little chap, and was going.</p>
-
-<p>"A moment, Mr. Hardy," exclaimed the captain, who did not seem to
-have caught or noticed what the mate said. "This is an example of old
-Pearson's forethought and humanity."</p>
-
-<p>He stepped, followed by Hardy, to a corner of the cabin, in which
-stood a small mahogany chest, and lifted the lid. This lid was
-furnished with scissors, syringes, and the like, and the contents of
-the chest consisted of a number of stoppered green bottles, as well as
-sticking-plaster, lint, and surgical instruments. The captain, pointing
-to the bottles as he spoke, said:</p>
-
-<p>"This is laudanum; this is labelled morphia; this is atropine
-for the ulcerated eye; this is chlorodyne.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span> Here are drugs enough
-to start a man as a chemist. This is a book," said he, half lifting a
-thin volume from a pocket and letting it slip back, "that tells you how
-to make use of all this stuff; ay, even the right dose of Glauber's
-salt is given."</p>
-
-<p>"I hope there's no chance of Master Johnny handling those bottles,
-sir?" said the mate, who, though he gazed with curiosity at this
-revelation of the open lid, was not inattentive to the expression of
-the commander's face, which was one of superiority, as though he had
-appropriated and was triumphing in the merits of the kind foresight
-which were certainly not his but Pearson's.</p>
-
-<p>"You will never look into this chest, Johnny?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"His mother was the very soul of honour," exclaimed Captain
-Layard, "and that child cannot but be the spirit of truth and honesty
-itself."</p>
-
-<p>He shut the lid and added, "Where, I wonder, does the human soul
-come from? The father cannot give his, or a portion of his, to the
-child, nor can the mother, for that might involve the forfeiture of
-their title to immortality. The great poet must be right; the soul
-which informs a child, which spiritualises it in the womb and at its
-birth, must come from God, who is its Home. What a wonderful thought!
-What a revelation it has been to me! What an assurance and promise!"</p>
-
-<p>He stood gazing steadfastly at Hardy, who, saying, a little
-uneasily, "These are matters quite beyond me, sir," again made for
-the door, through which he passed in silence, the captain standing
-motionless, his hands clasped before him, and his eyes seeming to see
-something beyond the bulkhead, upon which he had fastened them.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p> <p>At eight o'clock Hardy's watch came round. He
-went on deck in a very thoughtful state, and the deep dye of that
-tremendous void of black vapour was very well qualified to darken his
-mood into the hue of the crow&mdash;a bird deemed portentous in ancient
-seafaring. He stood in the spokes of lamp-sheen about the skylight and
-called to Mr. Candy, who came upon him suddenly out of some part of the
-deck like a man walking through a glass in a dark room. He exchanged
-a few sentences with this second mate, but they wholly concerned
-the business of the ship. Candy was not a person to take into one's
-confidence; his silver-white lash shaded a pale eye that marked one
-of those souls which, as you cannot make up your mind about them,
-you resolve to distrust; otherwise Hardy, in defiance of all law of
-discipline, and even of sea-breeding, would, in the humour of anxiety
-that then possessed him, have been glad to hear Mr. Candy's opinion of
-the commander.</p>
-
-<p>The second mate went below to bed after reporting that he had
-visited the forecastle, and found the Newfoundland awake and vigilant,
-also that two hands paced the forward-deck as lookouts.</p>
-
-<p>The air of wind was still northwest; it breathed with just weight
-enough to steady the topsails and the foresail. As the ship leaned
-with the languid heave of the sea, the sails hanging from the yards on
-the caps, and the festooned clews of the invisible mainsail, flapped
-in strokes of the pinions of mammoth birds winging betwixt the masts.
-The lap of the brine against the bows, which were slowly breaking
-the hidden waters, saddened the blindness of the night with a note
-of supernatural pain and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> grief. The ship was moving slowly,
-and, as before, nothing of her was distinguishable but the dim lustre
-smoking in hurrying streams and wreaths of vapour about the skylight
-and about the binnacle-stand.</p>
-
-<p>It was damp, depressing, heart-subduing. The philosophy of the
-mariner, which is one of endurance, and of that species of submission
-which is attended with sea blessings and the profanities of the
-ocean-parlour, breaks down in the fog. Here is the helplessness, here
-is the sealed eye, the spiriting of groping anxiety, which is a sort
-of anguish. It is not his ship or himself that he fears; the emotions
-bred by fog are ahead or abeam, and it need not be steam, for a dirty
-little brig or schooner, with her half-dozen of a crew shouting their
-consternation under the foretopmast stay, has been known to smite and
-sink an ocean palace full of light, of superb machinery, of saloon
-tables glowing with fruit and plate, and populous with diners.</p>
-
-<p>The deck was not to be comfortably measured in a quarter-deck walk,
-in blackness so dense that if you swerved by so much as two degrees of
-angle of foot you thumped your breast against the bulwarks. Hardy laid
-hold of the wet weather vang on the quarter and fell into reflection,
-for loneliness breeds thought, and no man is more lonely than the
-officer of the watch on board a merchantman. His mind went again to
-Julia Armstrong, but it had found an unsettling fascination in Captain
-Layard, and it quickly returned to him. He could not doubt that he
-was a little mad; his ideas were strange, yet his speculations showed
-thought and culture. He was insane to one to whom he talked freely,
-but to his crew, to whom he would not and did not talk, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
-must be the commonplace "old man" of the quarter-deck, and in this way
-Hardy feared he might prove dangerous even to tragedy.</p>
-
-<p>The ship's bell was hung in the wake of the galley, and a little
-clock, illuminated by a bull's-eye lamp, was hung up under a penthouse
-on a timber erection just before it. A lookout man would walk to the
-clock to see the time, and at ten he struck "four bells," at which hour
-it was as black and thick as ever after its first coming; the light
-breeze blew, and the ship swayed softly through the void.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy made his way forward to see to the dog. He struck between two
-men who were walking the deck, and one muttered, "What cheer?"</p>
-
-<p>"By God, my lads," said Hardy, "you'll not find out what a wolf's
-had for dinner by squinting down his throat!"</p>
-
-<p>There was a faint haze about the forescuttle: it came up into the
-inky thickness from the forecastle lamp. It was a slight relief, and
-even a rest for the eye, but the shadow forward was deeper than it was
-aft, for up there in the void was the raven thundercloud of foresail
-and foretopsail, and further forward yet, like ebon waterspouts soaring
-from sea to topmast head, were the midnight dyes of the jib and
-staysail.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy found the night-lights burning brightly, and going toward
-the heel of the bowsprit he touched the Newfoundland lookout with his
-foot. He patted the invisible, shaggy head, and passed his arm around
-its neck, and pressed the creature's long wet jaw to his breast, a
-token of love and encouragement which the dog acknowledged by a grunt
-or two of happiness.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p> <p>"Keep a bright lookout,
-Sailor," said Hardy, patting the shaggy, invisible head again, and
-knowing there were two human lookouts somewhere about, he called, and
-they answered out of the black blankness to leeward. Well, he could not
-tell them to keep their eyes skinned, for the sight of man and even of
-dog lay dead upon that forecastle, but he directed them to listen with
-all their might, to go often to the head-rail and strain their ears,
-and they answered, "Ay, ay, sir."</p>
-
-<p>Very plainly on this forecastle did you hear the sulky sob of the
-sea like something large and timid, gasping to the rude shock of the
-stem. The ocean hissed a little here and there, but the light wind
-could not give life enough to the glance of the curl of sea to strike
-through it to the eye, even though one looked straight down over the
-rail.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy slowly made his way aft, and on approaching the binnacle
-discerned the captain standing in the faint sheen close to the
-helmsman.</p>
-
-<p>"I never remember a thicker fog," said the captain, and he asked
-questions about the lookout, the dog, and the side-lights. Then walking
-out of the binnacle haze he struck the bulwarks almost abreast, and
-Hardy followed and stood alongside.</p>
-
-<p>"Whenever I am in this sort of thing," said Captain Layard, "I think
-of the blind. It is terrible to wake of a bright morning to the eternal
-darkness of one's life. I should fear the presence of visions in that
-everlasting gloom. It would be haunted with phantoms, and as thick-set
-with wild, grotesque, horrible, brassy faces as the human eye when
-morphia closes the lid."</p>
-
-<p>"My father is, as you know, sir, a doctor," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
-Hardy, "and I've heard him speak of the blind. He declares they are
-less to be pitied than the stone deaf." The captain pshaw'd. "He would
-say," continued Hardy, "contrast the faces of the two afflictions. They
-both force the mind's eye more deeply inwards, but in the one there
-is the pain of attention ever strained and a baffled, helpless look,
-whilst the other is mild and restful as though it had found peace in
-its communes with God."</p>
-
-<p>"Your father may be a very clever man," said Captain Layard, "but
-I have no faith in doctors. I have never met a doctor who did me any
-good, and I have been ill in my time, believe me. They let my wife
-die."</p>
-
-<p>He paused as if in some passage of deep emotion. In this interval
-Hardy thought to himself what an extraordinary conversation for the
-quarter-deck of a ship, close upon midnight, in a dense fog!</p>
-
-<p>Some hanging fold of canvas flapped aloft. In a voice as changed as
-though he was acting, the captain exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>"That's the speech of a sail that asks to be furled. The glass is
-high, and there's no foul weather anywhere. If the breeze freshens by
-ever so little, or if this light air draws ahead, call me, sir."</p>
-
-<p>There was positive refreshment in this plain speech of the sea to
-Hardy, who on replying to the captain found that he had gone, and in
-the steaming faintness hovering in the companion just caught a sight of
-his head disappearing.</p>
-
-<p>Eleven bells had been struck, and Hardy was beginning to think that
-it would be eight bells soon, which must signify shelter, freedom from
-the dwarfish drench of the vapour, as fine but as penetrating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
-as rain in Lilliput, a warm blanket, half a pipe, and then oblivion
-for an off-shore spell of nearly four hours, when on a sudden the dog
-barked. The tones were deep and constant, and to the first roll of
-those organ notes the loose wet canvas beat the masts aloft in a sudden
-heave of the whole fabric, and an element of alarm and even of fearful
-expectation entered the black void and thickened it, and seemed to
-close it round about till the smoking colour of light on forecastle
-and quarter-deck dimmed into the preternatural faintness of the salt
-sea glow when it shudders a fathom deep under some smooth tropic
-surface.</p>
-
-<p>The dog continued to bark, and there was an importunate vehemence
-in his notes, a bounding pulse of urgency as though the noble creature
-with instincts superior to man's knew that a matter of life or death
-was concerned in his sentinel bugling. Voices sounded forward, you
-heard a hurry of feet; again the ship leaned, and the sails smote
-the masts with an alarum sound of metal; and to the accompaniment of
-this midnight concert, made ghastly by blackness, by the overwhelming
-blindness of fog and by the presence of danger, Hardy rushed forward,
-taking his chance of what might be in the road.</p>
-
-<p>"Jump for a port-fire, one of you," he shouted, sending his cry slap
-into a very web of seamen's growling voices, the owners of which were
-no more to be seen than the ship's keel. "What is it, Sailor?"</p>
-
-<p>And now he was alongside the dog, and with his hand on its head
-felt in the direction of the creature's muzzle, and found that it was
-delivering its notes straight away over the head-rail, about two points
-on the weather bow.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p> <p>"Wheel, there!" he roared.
-"Starboard your helm. Let her go off five points."</p>
-
-<p>"Starboard it is, sir," came back the answer.</p>
-
-<p>"See that sheen out to starboard there, sir?" rang out a voice which
-sounded clear through the barking of the dog.</p>
-
-<p>"Hush! Sailor. Down, sir. Hush, my beauty," cried Hardy, and the dog
-was instantly silent. "Hark! now."</p>
-
-<p>A sort of oozing of light, dimly scarlet, wild and weak and wet
-as some ghostly star of death hovering over a grave, was visible to
-windward, a trifle forward of the fore-rigging. "Hark!" cried Hardy,
-and sure enough amid the greasy slopping of water, falling lazily
-from the thrust of the ship's bow, they could hear a distant noise of
-shouting, of cries reëchoed as from one part of a deck to the other,
-with a deeper threading of some throat hoarse in a speaking-trumpet.</p>
-
-<p>"Is the mate forward?" sang out the voice of the ship's
-carpenter.</p>
-
-<p>"Fire one right away off," shouted Hardy, knowing what the fellow
-had got and meant.</p>
-
-<p>In a few heart-beats a stream of sun-bright fire was pouring
-like water from a hose over the bow, but its lightning illumination
-touched but a narrow stretch of the dark water. The foresail turned
-of a sickly yellow, and the staysail soared wan as the wing of the
-albatross in dying moonlight. All above and abaft, and then forward
-to the flying-jib boom end, yards and sailcloth lay steeped in the
-impenetrable smother, and within the area of the light the fog
-drove slowly in a very Milky Way of silver crystals. But the men
-could see one another, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> helped by the light Hardy sped aft to
-be near the wheel, and there he found Captain Layard.</p>
-
-<p>"There's a ship off the starboard bow, sir," he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>"They'll never see that port fire," answered the commander. "They're
-burning flares, or we shouldn't see <i>her</i>. A foreigner, by the row.
-How's she heading?"</p>
-
-<p>That question was answered even as he asked it by the revelation of
-a ship. It had the suddenness of a magic-lantern picture flung swiftly.
-They saw at the range of a pistol a lurid shape, which they easily
-distinguished as a barque with painted ports, a tall poop, and a tall
-topgallant forecastle. She was burning flares upon her main-deck and
-waist, and the red flames, winding tongues of fire into feathers of
-soot-black smoke, jewelled the whole apparition with red-hot stars.
-They pierced through the fog like sunlit rubies from glass and brass,
-from wet plank and mast, and the grease of spars. She was so close that
-she shone out clearly, and made light enough for the people of the
-<i>York</i> to see by. Her helm was hard up and she was slowly paying off,
-but her flying-jib boom must catch the mizzen-rigging of the Australian
-clipper. You heard the splintering of wood aloft, the crash of nearer
-timber, broken off carrot-like betwixt a lazy roll of both ships.</p>
-
-<p>The barque's decks were a sight for the gods. Figures of men could
-be seen rushing frantically here and there. They were all shouting;
-men on the poop were screeching orders, and nothing but the helm
-gave heed; men on the forecastle were roaring and flourishing their
-fists. The flames duplicated<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> the shadows of the running figures;
-painted lines of the rigging upon the planks writhed between the
-water-ways, like serpents snaking their attenuated lengths overboard.
-Never did any sea light flash up a more startling, a wilder, a more
-ghastly tapestry. 'Twas like a painting in flames and ruddy stars upon
-the black canvas of the fog, and the hull, with its lines of ports
-like the keys of a piano, reeled slowly off on the lift of the brine,
-yard-arm to yard-arm, the beating canvas of each red as the powder
-flag, and dying out up aloft like the reflection of a burning ship upon
-a cloud.</p>
-
-<p>It was all too breathless for action aboard the <i>York</i>. Before a
-brace could be let go, before an order could be yelled, the stranger's
-flying-jib boom was crackling and gone, and her topgallantmast,
-with its canvas, was plastering the topsail; and then it was almost
-channel to channel, and the barque's poop was abreast of the <i>York's</i>
-quarter-deck.</p>
-
-<p>"Great God!" cried Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>A figure standing near the stranger's mizzen-rigging fell, and
-another figure fled aft, but at that instant some back draught
-of breeze thickened the crystals of the fog smoking close to the
-stranger's taffrail with a dense feathering of the black stench from
-the flares; the burning picture vanished out astern, as though to the
-fall of a curtain of midnight hue, the sounds of shouting sank, and in
-the hush that fell upon the <i>York's</i> deck, nothing was to be heard but
-the dreary lamentations of broken water under the bows, and the weeping
-noise of eddies under the counter.</p>
-
-<p>"A close shave!" said Captain Layard, fetching a deep breath.
-"She has not hurt us, I think."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span></p> <p>"I saw a man
-fall as if stabbed," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Back the topsail! I'll keep the ship hove to till we can see,"
-exclaimed the captain, whose attention, concentrated by the sudden
-blackness into which the ship had floated, was wholly in the
-man&oelig;uvre he had commanded.</p>
-
-<p>The order was sung out, the sailors came groping their way aft to
-the main-braces, the yards were swung, and the ship was brought to a
-stand, lightly rolling her masts with a slap of hidden pinion, which
-made you think of some gigantic navy signal-man waving flags.</p>
-
-<p>"My noble dog has saved my ship," exclaimed the captain. "I am a
-remarkable man!" And, to use a Paddyism, Hardy could <i>hear</i> in the
-skipper's speech the expression of exaltation which his face did
-undoubtedly wear. The skipper whistled, and in a few moments felt
-the snout of the fine black creature pressing lovingly against his
-thigh.</p>
-
-<p>"Come along below," said he, passing his hand caressingly along the
-invisible feathers of the dog's back, "till I dry you and see how you
-look, and we'll take a peep at Johnny." And he and the dog vanished.</p>
-
-<p>Just at that moment eight bells were struck. It was midnight, and
-the starboard watch must tend the ship till four. Whilst the last
-chimes were trembling into the damp, depressing, flapping sounds which
-clothed the obscured heights, the chief mate was hailed by a man whose
-voice proceeded from abreast of the gangway. Hardy stepped to the
-companion where the sheen lay, and exclaimed, "I am here." At the same
-moment Mr. Candy came out of the companion and joined him. Before<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
-one could address the other, three figures entered the space of faint
-saturated light.</p>
-
-<p>"Here's a man," said one of them, "that's jumped aboard us off the
-barque. He come up to me and asked to see the capt'n."</p>
-
-<p>"Which is the man?" said Hardy, straining his sight.</p>
-
-<p>One of them said, "I am, mister. I am French." And then in French he
-asked if Hardy spoke that tongue.</p>
-
-<p>"No," answered Hardy. "Come below into the cabin to the captain."</p>
-
-<p>And after a few words with Mr. Candy, who heard now for the first
-time that they had nearly been run into by a tall French barque, he
-went down the cabin steps, followed by the Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>In this interior plenty of light was shining, and it was as noontide
-after the midnight of the deck. The captain was near the table drying
-the dog with a cloth, and talking to him, and praising him as though he
-were a man, and the creature's mild and benevolent eyes looked up into
-his face, and you read gratitude and affection in the noble brute.</p>
-
-<p>"Who's that?" said the captain, throwing the cloth down, and looking
-with a knitted brow at the Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>"He will explain, sir," Hardy answered.</p>
-
-<p>"Softly," exclaimed the captain, "an angel lies asleep in that
-cabin," and with a melodramatic flourish of his arm, he pointed to the
-door of his berth.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman looked at Hardy. He was a man of middle height, in a
-drill or thin canvas blouse, over which was buttoned at the throat a
-rough, old<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> jacket, the sleeves hanging loose. He wore blue
-trousers patched with black, stuffed into half-boots bronzed by wear
-and brine. His black hair curled upon his shoulders, and he held a cap
-fashioned out of some sort of skin. His face was a ghastly yellow; his
-lips a vivid red; his nose long, lean, and humped, and the black pupils
-of his eyes sparkled in the flashes of the swinging lamp amid their
-whites, which, by the way, were crimson with drink or gout, or both. It
-was a face to peer at you, malevolently, from a time-darkened canvas,
-very picturesque, very romantic, but something that you would not like
-to think was treading behind you on a lonely road.</p>
-
-<p>"Who are you?" said the captain, putting his hand upon the head of
-the dog, in whose body a sort of rolling noise might have been heard,
-not quite a growl, but a note as of suspicion grumbling deep down below
-the throat.</p>
-
-<p>"You speak French, I hope, sar?" said the man.</p>
-
-<p>"And you speak English!" responded the captain, with a side look and
-a grin at Hardy. "It's no business of yours whether I speak French or
-not. Start your yarn."</p>
-
-<p>And the man, clearly understanding what was said, began.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER VII.</span> <span class="smaller">THE FRENCH MATE</span></h2>
-
-<p>I have said that the man, clearly understanding the captain's
-meaning, began; but it was not a beginning, nor a middle, nor an end,
-that could be set down in black and white in that Frenchman's speech.
-It was most barbarous English, yet intelligible when helped along by
-the captain's and Hardy's questions. It must be given in plain words to
-be readable, and thus spoke that sinister-looking man:</p>
-
-<p>"My name is Pierre Renaud. I am chief mate of the barque that was
-just now nearly running into you. We are from Cape Town to Bordeaux.
-That dog threatens my throat."</p>
-
-<p>The man flashed the poniards of his eyes at the Newfoundland, who
-was like an organ with one key going, trembling in its shaggy and
-splendid bulk with a low, sulky, dangerous growling.</p>
-
-<p>"Down!" said the captain, and the animal stretched its fore legs.
-"What brings you aboard us?"</p>
-
-<p>"Fear," replied the man, with a slight shrug and a look of arching
-eyebrow at his questioner, and a roll of the eye over him, as though he
-saw something singular in his face and manner. "A man loves his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
-life and will jump to save it. I thought we should crush our bows in
-and founder."</p>
-
-<p>"You did not stay to help your captain and encourage the men to
-preserve your ship," said Captain Layard, dabbing the dog's head to
-keep him quiet.</p>
-
-<p>"The captain fell dead in a fright," responded the Frenchman, with
-another shrug, "and I chose to save myself."</p>
-
-<p>"I saw a man fall," exclaimed Hardy. "Was that you that rushed along
-the poop?"</p>
-
-<p>"How can I answer you?" replied the Frenchman. "We were all
-rushing."</p>
-
-<p>"The captain fell dead!" said Captain Layard, in a musing way. "It's
-evident that French sea-captains die easily. When did you strike this
-fog?"</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot say precisely. Some hours since," was the reply. "When we
-heard the barking of a dog we knew that a ship was near, and we judged
-by the barking that she was approaching. We lighted fires upon the
-decks, and when the glare gave us a sight of you the sailors lost their
-senses, and ran about shouting and screeching. They were too mad to
-obey orders. The captain fell as I ran past him, his hands clasped upon
-his heart, and as he had all along complained of the weakness of that
-organ, I am certain he died of disease."</p>
-
-<p>"Your countrymen are not good sailors," said Captain Layard.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman grinned ghastly, and Sailor rumbled afresh with a
-stiffening of his level fore legs as though he must rise.</p>
-
-<p>"If I had been your captain," continued Layard, "I should have
-saved my flying-jib boom and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> topgallantmast, and my sailors would
-not have rushed about and torn their throats open with the shrieks of
-fear&mdash;that womanly spirit!"</p>
-
-<p>His smile was lofty, his self-complacency inexpressible, you guessed
-if there had been a mirror at hand he would have admired himself in
-it.</p>
-
-<p>His talk, but not his face, was past the Frenchman's comprehension.
-He rolled his eyes upon Hardy, then upon a decanter half-full of rum,
-standing upon a swinging tray, timing the pulse of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>"He asks for a drink, sir," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Give him a tot," replied Captain Layard, "then let the second mate
-tell the bo'sun to find him a hole to lie down in. I don't like his
-looks."</p>
-
-<p>He walked abruptly to his berth, followed by the dog, but before he
-entered he turned to the animal and exclaimed, "On deck, Sailor, and
-keep a lookout till the smother thins," and the Newfoundland sprang up
-the steps.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman, with a smile at Hardy, touched his brow. The mate,
-without noticing the fellow's gesture, took the decanter of rum from
-the swing tray and gave him a glass of grog. As he handed the tumbler
-to the man, he said:</p>
-
-<p>"Was your captain the man who stood near the mizzen-rigging?"</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman took a long pull at the glass before answering, and
-then said, "Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you think he fell dead, or was he struck down?" said Hardy,
-looking critically at the wild and dangerous face, whose eyes stared
-into the Englishman's vision with the fixity of a buried bayonet.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p> <p>"He fell dead," was the answer, and down went
-the remainder of the grog.</p>
-
-<p>"I believe I saw a man rush from him aft when he fell," said
-Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>An expression of anger deepened the ugly devil's look of
-malevolence, but he held his peace.</p>
-
-<p>"Your captain is dead and you are here," said Hardy. "Your second
-mate will take charge of the barque, I suppose?"</p>
-
-<p>"Our second mate was drowned a week after we left the Cape,"
-answered the Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>"What will the crew do?"</p>
-
-<p>"They will go to hell!"</p>
-
-<p>"Follow me," said Hardy, and they climbed the companion-steps.</p>
-
-<p>The wind was sleeping. It was now a dead calm, and the fog steeped
-in night was lifting into the sight&mdash;conquering blackness off
-an ocean that seemed to be boiling upon some furnace of earth miles
-deep. Damp draughts of air blew with the rolling of the ship, and the
-canvas beat out hollow notes like the blasts of guns heard underground.
-The chief mate called the name of Mr. Candy, who stepped out of the
-impenetrable profound of the quarter.</p>
-
-<p>"This man," said Hardy, talking in the skylight sheen, "is mate of
-the barque we were foul of just now. Take him forward to the bo'sun and
-find him a bed anywhere, and food if he needs it."</p>
-
-<p>"I don't need it," said the Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>"Come along," said Mr. Candy, and they disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy paused to listen and peer. There was nothing to see, but he
-might have heard a sound of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span> weeping all about, as though old
-ocean was mourning over its blindness. He then went to bed, but not
-to sleep right away. The Frenchman's insolent touching of his brow
-had accentuated his own deep suspicion of the captain's sanity, and
-very grave, though perplexed, reflection attended his thoughts of
-Layard, and the tragically perilous situation of the ship in charge of
-a lunatic so subtly mad that no one but his chief officer might have
-understanding enough to see how it was with him.</p>
-
-<p>At eight bells in the middle watch he was aroused by Mr. Candy, and
-was on deck in a minute or two, for he was a smart man all around; the
-first at the yard-arm in reefing when his duties had carried him there,
-the first to spring to the cry, no matter the command, swift in relief,
-and for ever on the alert whilst the responsibility of life, cargo,
-and fabric was his. The fog was still very thick, but a thin wind had
-sprung up out of the east, and the streaming of the waters was like
-the shaling of a summer tide upon shingle. The braces had been manned
-when this weak air came, and the yards swung to hold the maintopsail
-aback; the ship rolled gently under the arrest of her canvas, and there
-was nothing to see and nothing to do but let the fog soak into the
-spirits.</p>
-
-<p>"A spare bunk in the forecastle has been found for the French mate,"
-Candy had said. The fellow had grumbled, muttered that he had been
-an officer on board his own vessel, and deserved better usage. Candy
-said he was lucky to save his life, and to find a bed in a British
-forecastle. The Frenchman growled that he considered himself important
-enough to sleep in the cabin.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span></p> <p>"What did you
-say to that?" Hardy had asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I said, 'You be damned!'" Candy replied.</p>
-
-<p>Not until five bells, half-past six, in Hardy's watch did the fog
-show signs of breaking up. It thinned in places, and presently through
-the stretching ceiling of it the cold, pale dawn looked down upon the
-sea, and made it piebald with granite-coloured spaces. The breeze
-then freshened and the fog began to fly. Columns of it moved away
-stately like pillars of sand on the desert; it swept in Titan cobwebs
-between the masts; it sped like silken veils streaming from viewless
-fleeting spirits over the trucks. Wide vistas opened to windward;
-large blue eyes, soft with the moistness of their light, floated upon
-the trembling eastern brine. The sun darted a pale yellow lance, and
-as the captain put his head through the companion-hatch the scene of
-deep, saving a blankness in the west, opened around, and it was a
-shining morning with a bright sun and a blue sea and an azure sky and a
-pleasant breeze of wind.</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had the captain's head shown when Hardy, looking seawards
-over the quarter, exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>"There's the barque that fouled us last night, sir. She's got a wift
-at her mizzen-peak."</p>
-
-<p>She could be no other vessel than the barque; the morning light was
-strong and she lay within a mile, and you could see that she had lost
-her foretopgallantmast and jib-booms. Her maintopsail was aback; she
-had clearly hove to after losing her mate and splintering clear of the
-ship and the smother. Her backed topsail curved inwards like carved
-ivory, her ruddy sheathing flashed its wet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> length to the sun
-as the heave rolled her light, tall shape, with its slanting stare of
-black ports, upon the wide white line that girdled her.</p>
-
-<p>"Why is she flying that gamp?" said the captain, taking a telescope
-out of the companionway; but before he levelled it at the ship he sent
-a glance full of scrutiny aloft to gather if his vessel had been hurt
-in the night, which was distinctly professional and sane, and quite
-enough to have convinced the Jacks that the "old man" knew the time of
-day, even if they suspected that the compass of his mind was wrong by
-points.</p>
-
-<p>The gamp, as he termed the wift, consisted of the French flag
-stopped in the middle, that is, bound by a rope yarn into the
-appearance of a gamp umbrella. It tumbled at its block, and was a
-syllable of sea talk signifying "help!" The skipper whistled to his
-dog, which had kept a brave lookout throughout the night without
-relief, and which, seated on the heel of the starboard cathead, seemed
-to be listening with a grave countenance to the remarks of an ordinary
-seaman who was addressing him. The beautiful and dutiful creature came
-bounding aft and pawed his master to the shirt-front, rising nearly his
-height.</p>
-
-<p>"You had better lower a boat and go and see what that fellow wants,"
-said the captain, and he motioned the dog into the cabin and told it to
-wait there for breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>"They're lowering a boat, and mean to come aboard of us," exclaimed
-Hardy, whose eyes were on the barque.</p>
-
-<p>A boat dropped awkwardly from the vessel's tall side, and in
-a minute or two the gold of brandished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span> oars sparkled upon
-the delicate feathering of the water. The men were washing down aboard
-the <i>York</i>. In those days they carried a head pump which they rigged,
-and the bright water was passed in buckets and sluiced over the planks,
-the boatswain standing by and giving the scrubbers heart by his
-inspiriting cries, roars, and oaths. It was a common scene of shipboard
-life, full of colour, movement, and business.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy looked along the decks for the French mate, but did not see
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The captain exclaimed, "We'll send the fellow aboard in his boat. A
-good riddance. How some faces damn the souls which animate them! You
-seldom err in judging of a man by his looks. The expression is formed
-by the character. But affliction may deceive you, I allow; a harelip,
-for example, or a cock-eye."</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I pass the word for the Frenchman, sir?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes! oh, yes, rout him out of it!" answered the captain,
-smiling with that air of superiority which would have convicted him in
-the eyes of a keeper.</p>
-
-<p>The word was passed, and the Frenchman, with the aspect of a
-pirate in a boy's book, rose through the scuttle as the boat came
-alongside. The man who had steered her scrambled into the mizzen-chains
-and sprang on to the quarter-deck with a salute of French courtesy.
-He was close-shaven and dark, habited in loose blue breeches and a
-jumper, and looked a good sailor spite his nationality, that was as
-marked in gesture and bearing as though branded on his brow.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p> <p>"Can I speak to the captain?" said he, looking
-from Hardy to the skipper. His broken English was good.</p>
-
-<p>"Glad you speak my tongue," said the captain. "What do you want?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have served in American ships and can speak English," answered
-the man. "I am brother of the captain of that barque. He was stabbed
-last night and is dead. Our second mate, too, is dead. The first mate
-is missing. I'll swear he killed my poor brother, and then drowned
-himself. We are without a navigator. What are we to do?"</p>
-
-<p>"You shall have a navigator," exclaimed Captain Layard, and he
-looked toward the forecastle, but the Frenchman had disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>The man bowed and said, "It was a cold-blooded assassination. They
-had been quarrelling all the voyage. The villain chose the right
-moment, and the sea is easier than the guillotine."</p>
-
-<p>"I saw your captain fall," said Hardy, "and the man that killed him
-is aboard us."</p>
-
-<p>The fellow started, and so did his eyeballs in their sockets as he
-flashed them eagerly and fiercely along the decks where the sailors
-were scrubbing, and the boatswain encouraging them with the pleasant
-promptings of the British forecastle: "Scrub it out of 'em, my lads.
-D'ye want to drown the ship, you sojer? Slap it along the lee-coaming
-and be damned to you, Dick! Ain't it as thick as yer eyebrows there?
-Hurry up, hurry up with them buckets. Are we a hexcavator with the
-steam turned off?"</p>
-
-<p>"A hand fetch that Frenchman out of the fok'sle and bring him
-aft," shouted Hardy.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span></p> <p>"What do you mean to do with
-him?" asked the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"I will call the crew together and consider," answered the man with
-a hideously significant glance at the main yard-arm.</p>
-
-<p>"If you hang him," said the captain, "who'll navigate you?"</p>
-
-<p>The fellow folded his arms tightly upon his breast and sank his
-head, sending a level look of patient hate through his eyelashes toward
-the forecastle.</p>
-
-<p>"What's your rating aboard your ship?" inquired the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"Boatswain, sir," was the answer, and the man did not turn his head
-to say it.</p>
-
-<p>The dog at this moment came out of the cabin and stood with his fore
-feet on the plank at the coaming, staring at his master. He seemed
-to plead. The human spirit could not be more eloquent in the gaze;
-but the captain did not heed him, for just then the man who had been
-sent to fetch the Frenchman was coming aft, shoulder to shoulder with
-the Frenchman himself. The men forgot to scrub; the head pump ceased
-to gush; the boatswain left off conjuring and damning. All eyes were
-turned aft. The silence of a moment fell upon the ship, and nothing
-broke it but the low growling of the Newfoundland.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman, fresh from the forecastle, was ghastly pale; his
-walk was defiant; when abreast of the main-hatchway he came more
-quickly than his companion, who stopped. He walked up close to
-the boatswain of the barque and said, in his native tongue:</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span></p> <p>"Well!"</p>
-
-<p>The other dropped his arms; his hands were clenched, his eyes
-charged with that deadly cold light of hate which is more dangerous and
-fearful than the flame of fury. He spoke slowly in French, and what he
-said was this:</p>
-
-<p>"You did not drown yourself, I see, after assassinating my
-brother."</p>
-
-<p>"You lie in your throat! I sprang to save my life. Your brother is a
-live man for me."</p>
-
-<p>"Liar, and villain, and execrable coward!"</p>
-
-<p>He stepped to the rail and said to the men, in French of
-course&mdash;but you shall be told what he said:</p>
-
-<p>"The assassin is in this ship. He pretends that he sprang for his
-life; he killed my brother, our navigator, and would have consigned us,
-helpless, to the desolation of the sea."</p>
-
-<p>He returned, and was followed by a howl of passion from the boat
-alongside.</p>
-
-<p>All in a minute, and just as the man was posting himself again in
-dramatic attitude close to the murderer, the huge Newfoundland, with
-an indescribable roar of rage, sprang with the whole weight of his
-body upon the French mate, and bore him to the deck with a thump of
-lead, like the fall of a twelve-pounder ball, and they thought that the
-brute's teeth had met in the wretch's throat. Hardy and the captain
-made a rush and dragged the animal off the fallen man, and the captain,
-grasping the creature by the coat of his neck, hauled him, growling
-fiercely, to the companion, and drove him below.</p>
-
-<p>The man rose; his nose was bleeding, and after he had run the
-length of his sleeve along it his face<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span> looked like a
-decapitated head placed on the upright body it had been struck from.</p>
-
-<p>"I want to swing my yards," said Captain Layard. "I've been hove to
-all night through you. Take that man away; I don't parley-vous myself,
-and don't follow your talk. He'll navigate you home; he looks a good
-navigator." And he smiled with some sense of superiority of meaning,
-which made his face fitter for comedy than for the tragedy of this
-passage.</p>
-
-<p>The French boatswain swept his hand with an infuriate motion toward
-the rail.</p>
-
-<p>"If I go with this man he will kill me," said the blood-stained
-French mate.</p>
-
-<p>"Not he. The ship wants a navigator," replied Captain Layard, with a
-cheerfulness supremely inconsequential.</p>
-
-<p>"If you do not come," said the French boatswain, in his native
-speech, "I will call the men up, and they will throw you into the
-boat."</p>
-
-<p>"Why can't you speak in English?" said Captain Layard. "He'll
-understand you, and we can follow your meaning."</p>
-
-<p>The French mate turned on his heel and was beginning to walk slowly
-forward. As a cat springs when started by a dog, so sprang the barque's
-boatswain upon his brother's murderer. With the strength of the fiends
-before they were cast out he rushed the bleeding scoundrel to the rail
-and yelled to his men. The French mate grasped the mizzen-shrouds
-and struggled and kicked in awful silence; but in less than a minute
-three stout sailors, out of the four who manned the boat's oars,
-swarmed up. Eight enraged hands then tore the French mate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
-from the mizzen-rigging as the sweep of the hurricane uproots a tree.
-All in a heap, struggling, wrestling, groaning, they got him past the
-after-swifter, and to an order, shrieked through his teeth by the
-French boatswain, they hoisted him lengthwise to the rail, and dropped
-him into the boat. The French boatswain then made a sort of salaam
-bow to the captain and Hardy, and the whole four disappeared in the
-twinkling of an eye over the side amid shouts of laughter from the
-seamen who had been washing down the decks.</p>
-
-<p>"Get all sail upon her, Mr. Hardy," said Captain Layard; "but I
-shall keep my topsail to the mast for awhile until I see what they mean
-to do with that barque."</p>
-
-<p>The sailors dropped their buckets and scrubbing-brushes, and fell to
-howling at the halliards. Topgallant and royal-yards rose, the mainsail
-was left to swing with its clews aloft, and the <i>York</i> was now a
-full-rigged ship, hove to, but clothed to her trucks, leaning with the
-swell as though by swaying she was knitting her frame together for the
-start.</p>
-
-<p>A ship when under sail on the ocean is alive; watch her closely
-and you will discover that she has human intelligence in her methods
-of helping, and at the same time influencing, the reason that governs
-the helm and incarnate walks the quarter-deck or bridge. It was about
-a quarter-past seven; the sailors resumed the business of washing
-down; the decks sparkled as the brine flashed along the planks, and
-the boatswain stimulated this sweetening process by the inspiriting
-language of the land of the slush-lamp. The captain stood right aft
-watching the receding figure of the barque's fat boat. The placid<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
-heave of the deep was crisped by the delicate crumbling foam curling
-from low, blue brows to the gentle gushing of the pleasant breeze,
-like some scene of swelling land enamelled with white flowers; the
-blankness to leeward had melted into azure, and it was all blueness and
-brightness, and you heard a song that was sweet with its summer note
-upon the harp-strings of the lofty spars.</p>
-
-<p>"What will they do with him?" said the captain, going to the
-companion and resting his hand upon it as though in a moment he would
-descend.</p>
-
-<p>"I am wondering, sir," answered Hardy, who stood near. "I should
-not like to be in the power of that bo'sun after I had killed his
-brother."</p>
-
-<p>"Death drugs revenge; I would not kill my enemy," said the captain,
-putting on one of those incommunicable looks which always alarmed Hardy
-with thoughts of the ship's safety. "I would keep my brother's murderer
-alive&mdash;at sea. There is the middle-watch and the ghastly face
-of the moon! Whispers aloft and God's eye in every star! The ghostly
-figure should walk the quarter-deck with the assassin, should enter
-his berth with him, and sit beside his bunk and watch him. That is the
-revenge that kills the soul&mdash;the very thought makes me sweat."</p>
-
-<p>His face changed into an expression of agitation, and with a sudden
-hurry he disappeared down the companion-steps.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy watched the French boat draw alongside the barque. He wondered
-that the captain should have left the deck at such a time; it was
-another illustration of his insanity, no doubt. "He has gone to see to
-little Johnny, perhaps," the mate thought,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> what had happened
-having faded in the chaotic muddle of his reason. Here was Captain
-Layard, who was determined to make a swift passage, keeping his ship
-hove to and going below to talk to his bright-haired boy, to help him
-dress maybe, and to muse in lopsided moralising over the medicine
-chest.</p>
-
-<p>He took the glass, and levelled it at the barque, and saw the boat
-slowly ascending in spasmodic jerks to the davits. A few men dragged
-at the falls, and upon the port quarter of the poop the rest of the
-ship's company apparently had assembled, and were clearly discussing
-the recapture of the mate with the heat and passion of the French when
-excited. They gesticulated, they surged and reeled, and Hardy again
-saw one or another of them fling his hand in the direction of the fore
-yard-arm.</p>
-
-<p>He could not see if the mate stood amongst them, and all forward
-was vacant deck, pulsating with the shadow of swinging sail. There was
-nothing else in sight all away round the girdle of the deep, though
-this was a frequented sea; and the two vessels, to a distant eye, might
-have seemed abandoned, so aimless was the look they got from the white
-cloths incurving to the masts.</p>
-
-<p>About ten minutes after the boat had been hoisted, Hardy, who
-continued to watch the barque through the glass, saw several men
-go forward, and shortly after a man got into the fore-rigging, and
-crawled aloft and gained the fore-yard. The powerful lenses brought
-the barque close, and Hardy easily saw, as he followed the man sliding
-to the yard-arm, that he carried a tail-block in his hand. He made
-this block fast to the extremity of the yard, and whilst he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
-was doing this another man got into the fore-rigging holding a line,
-the end of which he gave to the fellow on the yard, who rove it through
-the block, and then came into the fore-rigging grasping the line, and
-both men descended to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy rushed to the companionway and shouted down the hatch, taking
-his chance of the skipper hearing him, "They are going to hang that
-mate who killed the captain!"</p>
-
-<p>A moment or two later up came Captain Layard.</p>
-
-<p>"What's that you sang out?" he cried. "What's wrong? I'm with
-Johnny."</p>
-
-<p>"Look for yourself, sir," answered Hardy, and he gave the glass to
-him. The captain pointed it. Mad or not mad, he knew what a yard-arm
-whip was, and what in this case it signified. He saw a crowd of men on
-the forecastle; he distinguished the figure of the mate, with his arms
-pinioned behind him, standing within a fathom of the rail rounding to
-the forecastle break. As he gazed he saw a man bandage the wretch's
-eyes with a red handkerchief. The same man next secured the end of the
-line to the man's neck, and the captain, with the telescope at his eye,
-began to mutter, and Hardy saw that his face had turned a greenish
-yellow, but he could not understand what he said, nor clearly perceive,
-as did the captain, all that was happening aboard that tragic barque,
-with its wift at the gaff-end beating the air like a human arm in
-agony.</p>
-
-<p>In the captain's glass the bulk of the forecastle crowd melted and
-could not be seen on the main-deck. One who was left&mdash;and the
-muttering captain thought that he was the boatswain&mdash;held a book
-and seemed to be reading from it. The two<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span> men kept the barque's
-victim pinned to the rail; the man who was reading closed his book and
-raised his arm straight up, looking toward the main-deck. The two men
-sprang back from the murderer, whose figure soared aloft, a ghastly
-shape of man flying wingless to the yard-arm.</p>
-
-<p>"O my God!" cried Hardy, who saw it, and the crew of the <i>York</i>,
-watching that picture of short shrift and flying form, groaned and
-cursed with British hatred of the sudden execution, made dastardly by
-numbers.</p>
-
-<p>They could see the man rushed to the nape of his neck to the
-yard-arm block, then fall, bringing up with a sudden belaying of that
-gallows-rope, and the hanging man began to swing like a pendulum of
-death midway betwixt the yard-arm and the feathering surface of the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>"Suppose he didn't do it?" said Captain Layard, letting the
-telescope sink and turning his face slowly to Hardy, who thought,
-even in that moment of horror and astonishment, that the captain had
-spoken nothing saner since the voyage began. "Fill on your topsail,"
-continued the captain, in a trembling voice, his face distorted by
-passions and fancies beyond the penetration of reason. "I wouldn't have
-Johnny see that sight; they'll keep him swinging till he has ticked
-out the minutes his soul has taken to arrive in hell. Fill on your
-topsail, sir. And what'll the beggars do? They'll wait for help to come
-along."</p>
-
-<p>The mate was walking a little way forward, and the captain, with his
-back upon the barque, stood muttering to himself. It was a pleasant
-breeze, and the ship took the weight of the sunlit gush of blue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
-wind with a buoyant heel, and then she broke the waters at the bow.
-In two hours the barque was glimmering like the crest of a sea in the
-liquid ether far and far astern. Her topsail was still aback, and
-doubtless, as Captain Layard had said, she was waiting for the help
-that must soon come along.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER VIII.</span> <span class="smaller">LOST!</span></h2>
-
-<p>And now for another week of this ship's adventure. There is little
-to record. As she drove to the south and west the breeze freshened
-by strokes, and the foam, white as daylight, seethed with a leeward
-roll to the channels, whose plates flashed jewelled fountains from her
-side.</p>
-
-<p>It was noble sailing with a buckling stu'nsail boom, and every
-taut weather-shroud and backstay spirited the sea-whitening keel with
-sweet, clear songs of rejoicing. All the crew loved little Johnny, and
-the great Newfoundland, placid, stately, and benign, was ever at his
-side, courting the boy, with looks of love, to play. Always in this
-fine weather the sunny-haired lad, in the miniature clothes of the
-bluejacket, would of a dog-watch take his drum upon the forecastle, and
-roll out a good rattling accompaniment to the cheerful piping of the
-whistle. Then the sailors would dance whilst the ship's stem rent the
-water into sweat, and the bow-sea rolled away in glory, and the western
-heavens grew majestical with sunset.</p>
-
-<p>And all this time no man spoke a hint as to the captain's state of
-mind, because, as I have said, the sailor has no eyes for the human
-nature of the quarter-deck until it should become as visible and
-demonstrative as a windmill in a wind.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p> <p>This Captain
-Layard was <i>not</i>; his moods and motions were of too subtle a sort to be
-interpretable by the forecastle gaze, and all the strange unconscious
-discoveries of himself he limited to Hardy, scarcely ever speaking to
-the second mate unless to give him an order. But even when he talked to
-Hardy, no man could have sworn that he was madder than most dreamers
-are. It was only, as Hardy thought, that his talk was so cursedly
-inconsequential. He reminded him of a diver who if you look to port
-comes up to starboard, whose spot of emergence is always somewhere
-else.</p>
-
-<p>One day, at the end of the time just spoken of, the ship was
-stretching her length along a wide blue sea enriched with running
-knolls, shadowed by themselves into deepest violet, aflash with sudden
-meltings of foam which whitened the windward picture, and ran with
-smooth curves from the leeward yeast that rushed into the water from
-the side.</p>
-
-<p>The captain was below. It was about ten o'clock in the morning.
-There was now a sting in the light of the sun, as he floated upwards in
-an almost tropic glory, undimmed by the flight of little clouds which
-hinted at the Trade. Our friend the chief mate, Hardy, was walking up
-and down the weather-side of the quarter-deck. A sailor stood at the
-wheel trim for his trick; he was a British seaman, his easy floating
-figure and swift look to windward, aloft, and into the compass bowl put
-thoughts into one's head of the time when men like him wore pigtails
-down their backs and fired the fury of hell, as the Spaniard said to
-Nelson, into the gunports and sides of the audacious enemy.</p>
-
-<p>There was music on that quarter-deck, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> Johnny, who was
-admiral of that ship, the captain being very much under him, had sent
-for the whistle, and the sailor had come at once, bringing his music
-with him. He was seated upon the skylight, and was piping that cheerful
-song, "A Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea," all over the ship to the delight
-of the watch on deck, who worked the nimbler for it; and Johnny made
-martial music of that sea-song with his drum.</p>
-
-<p>The ship rushed along with festive lifts and falls and triumphant
-choruses in her weather-rigging as the swing of the sea brought her
-masts to windward, and all was beauty and sunlight, and white phantoms
-of little sailing clouds, and swelling canvas yearning to the azure
-recess at which the ship, like some goddess of the sea, was pointing
-with her spear of jibboom.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the boy grew tired; the piper went forward, and as the
-captain's servant came along Johnny gave him his drum and sticks to
-carry below. The great Newfoundland was lying at its length beside the
-skylight, and Johnny sat upon him, and lifting his ear talked into
-it, and the dog grunted in affectionate reply. But little boys soon
-tire of anything save sweets, and Johnny joined Hardy, and they walked
-together. The lad had a very inquisitive mind, and was constantly
-wanting to know. He began to question Hardy about the ship. What is the
-good of that little sail right on top up there? Why didn't they give
-each mast one great sail? Wouldn't that save trouble? Couldn't they let
-it down, and tie it up, as they did that middle sail there, when the
-weather grew nasty? Wouldn't Hardy be glad to get home? How old was he?
-Was he glad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span> to be so old? Wouldn't he rather be eight? After much
-interrogative conversation of this sort he felt tired, and strayed from
-Hardy's side and walked about the quarter-deck, looking around him
-as though he wished to pick up something which he could throw at the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>Going right aft, abaft the man at the wheel, his arch, sweet,
-wondering eyes were taken by the sight of some Mother Carey's chickens;
-also the splendid, dazzling stream of wake that was rushing off in
-snake-like undulations attracted him. A stretch of ash-white grating
-protected the wheel-chains and the relieving gear. It stood a little
-way under the taffrail and was not very high above the deck, and the
-tiller worked under it.</p>
-
-<p>Unnoticed by Hardy, Johnny got upon this grating to watch the
-sea-birds, also to obtain a view of the place where that giddy,
-boiling, meteoric river of foam began. A sea-bird is a thing of beauty,
-which is a joy to a little boy upon whom the shades of the prison-house
-have not yet begun to close; and the dazzle of spinning foam hurling
-seawards is also a beauty and a wonder and a miracle, as are many other
-things in this pleasant world of flowers and valleys and streams;
-for I have seen a little child pick a daisy and view it with greater
-transport than could even be felt by a beautiful young woman bending
-with beaming eyes over the bracelet of diamonds with which her lover
-has just clasped her wrist.</p>
-
-<p>Johnny fell upon his knees and crawled upon the grating to the
-taffrail, the flat surface of which he kneeled upon, peering over
-and down betwixt the gig and the taffrail to see the place where the
-white<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span> water began under the counter. The poor little fellow
-overbalanced himself, and Hardy, whose eye was upon him in that
-instant, saw him vanish.</p>
-
-<p>"O my God!" he shrieked. "Man overboard!" he shouted. "Hard down!
-hard down!"</p>
-
-<p>And whilst the wheel went grinding up to windward, and whilst the
-sails aloft were beginning to thunder to the weather sweep of the
-rushing bows, Hardy, tearing off his coat and waistcoat and shoes,
-leaped from the quarter into the boiling yeast and struck out.</p>
-
-<p>Scarcely had he shot overboard when the great dog Sailor, springing
-up with a swift movement of his head around, leapt like a darting
-flame on to the rail from which Hardy had plunged, and jumped. There
-was plenty of foam in the sea, and it was almost blinding Hardy, who
-swam strongly; but it did not blind the dog, who saw the mate but not
-the child, and made for him. A sea swept Hardy to its summit, and he
-perceived the child some three or four cables' length distant; a head
-of foam rolled over that sun-bright speck and it disappeared, and as
-Hardy sank into the trough the dog, that stemmed the brine like some
-swiftly-urged boat, caught him by the collar and forced him round in
-the direction of the ship, whose main-yards were now aback and one of
-whose lee quarter boats was rapidly descending, with the captain on the
-grating, waving his arms in frantic and heart-subduing pantomime.</p>
-
-<p>"Sailor!" roared Hardy, struggling with his whole force to
-round the noble creature's head in the direction where he had seen
-the bright point vanish. "O God! doggie, dear doggie! Johnny is
-overboard, and drowning! Go for him, Sailor! go for him, Sailor!"</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span></p> <p>And buoyed by the magnificent swimmer whose
-teeth were in his collar, he stiffened his breast and pointed. But
-the Newfoundland, who had not seen Johnny fall, had leapt to save the
-life of Hardy, and with bitter, blighting despair in his heart the
-gallant young fellow felt the beautiful animal at his side urging him
-irresistibly up one slope and down another in the direction of the
-ship, with its dreadful figure of human anguish gesticulating and
-shouting on the grating.</p>
-
-<p>The hearts that bent the blades rowed with love of the boy and a
-maddening passion to save him. They came to Hardy first and dragged him
-and the dog over the gunwale, and a man standing up in the stern-sheets
-steered the boat for the place where the little fellow had last been
-seen from the deck of the ship. But they rowed in vain. Sodden with
-brine, and half blinded by the tears of a manly sailor's heart, the
-mate strained his vision over the running seas, and knew, O God! and
-knew that Johnny had sunk for ever.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, what a pity!" said one of the men.</p>
-
-<p>"The dog could have saved him," exclaimed another.</p>
-
-<p>"No, he was gone before the dog could have reached the place," said
-Hardy, and he sank upon a thwart and covered his face.</p>
-
-<p>The Newfoundland laid his massive jaws upon his knee in caress
-and in encouragement, knowing he was saved, and loving him as those
-majestic creatures love the life they have torn from the grasp of
-death. The men, with the lifted blades of their oars sparkling in the
-sun, gazed silently around, but Johnny was gone. The tall seas seethed,
-and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span> boat fell away with their melting heads and rose
-buoyant to the height of the next slant, but Johnny was gone, and after
-they had lingered half an hour the men, to the command of Hardy, turned
-the boat's head toward the ship, and rowed away from that sun-lighted
-scene of ocean grave which already the hand of viewless love had strewn
-with flowers and garlands of foam.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Layard was standing with tightly folded arms beside the
-skylight when Hardy arrived on board, and approached him, shuddering
-with grief and with the exhaustion that attends even a brief spell
-of battling with the rolling seas of the ocean. The unhappy father's
-face was utterly unintelligible in expression. And still a critical
-eye, with good capacity for subtle penetration, would in this time of
-sudden and awful bereavement have witnessed in that poor man's face the
-dangerous condition of his soul.</p>
-
-<p>The men who were hoisting the boat pulled with askant looks full of
-respect and rough sympathy, and the boat rose in silence, so touched
-were the sailors' hearts by this sudden loss of the bright-haired
-little darling of the ship. The Newfoundland, shaking a shower from his
-coat, came to the captain, seemed to know that grief was in him, and
-looked up at him.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is my little Johnny?" said the captain to Hardy, in a firm,
-sharp tone.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy could not answer him.</p>
-
-<p>"There is no good in telling me that he's not on board this ship,"
-said the captain, letting fall his arms and swaying in a strange way
-with the leeward and weather rolls of the arrested vessel. "Where
-is he hidden?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p> <p>He stepped to the companion
-and shouted down, "Johnny, Johnny, my darling! Come up with your drum!
-The men want music! Come up with your drum, my Johnny!"</p>
-
-<p>The sailors belayed the falls of the boat and secured her, and
-slowly walked forward, never a one of them speaking. The captain went
-below, calling "Johnny." Mr. Candy came up to Hardy. Both he and the
-watch below had rushed on deck to that dreadful cry at sea of "Man
-overboard!" and to that sudden change you feel in a ship when the yards
-of the main are swung aback. All the concern that a man with white
-eyelashes and pale hair and a skin like a cut of roasted veal can look
-was in Candy's face as he said:</p>
-
-<p>"This blow has turned the captain's head, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot speak to you," Hardy answered.</p>
-
-<p>"Let me fetch you some brandy, sir," said the second mate. Hardy
-raised his arm. Candy walked to the quarter and stood staring at the
-sea where the child had sunk. The Newfoundland dog was growing uneasy.
-You saw by the creature's motion of head and by other signs that he
-knew something was wrong. Twice he growled low and walked round the
-skylight smelling the planks, then coming to the companionway he
-listened and sprang down the steps.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy stood waiting for the captain. It was not for him to order the
-topsail-yard to be swung until the captain spoke. All the seamen were
-forward standing in groups waiting for the command, and the boatswain,
-in the face of the general grief, could find nothing for them to do
-until the quarter-deck started them.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span></p> <p>It filled
-Hardy with anguish, though he was only a mate in the British Merchant
-Service, the one unrecognised condition of our national life, spite of
-the pleading of its heroic traditions and the claims of its English
-seamen of to-day, upon the admiration of their country, to think of the
-poor, desolate, brain-afflicted father below, seeking in his madness
-his beloved little boy. He knew that this man had tenderly loved the
-mother of that child and mourned her loss with a sailor's heart, and
-that the bright and spirited lad, whom God had summoned, had been his
-constant companion since his wife's death, the light of his life, the
-flower whose fragrance had sweetened the loneliness of command.</p>
-
-<p>He stood waiting, soaked to the flesh. Suddenly the captain
-appeared.</p>
-
-<p>"Johnny is not below," he said. "He's somewhere in the ship. When
-did you see him last, Mr. Hardy?"</p>
-
-<p>And still Hardy could not answer him. The Newfoundland had followed
-his master, and the whole frame and benign eyes of the noble creature,
-to whom and to whose like man denies a soul, yielded preternatural
-token of loss and disquiet that was human in eloquence.</p>
-
-<p>The captain did not seem to heed Hardy's silence and manner. He
-looked with great eagerness and a certain wildness along the decks, and
-then putting his hand to the side of his mouth, with his face turned
-forward, where the men stood watching him, he shouted in an imperious
-voice as though he would frighten an answer from the concealed
-child:</p>
-
-<p>"Johnny!&mdash;It is strange," said he, in a low voice, turning
-and looking at Hardy, "Is he aloft?" And<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> he turned his eyes
-up and scrutinised the rigging, the tops, the crosstrees, the yards,
-stepping to the rail so as to obtain a view past the leaches of the
-canvas.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall I order those yards to be swung, sir, and way got upon the
-ship?" said Hardy, speaking with difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>"I want Johnny," was the captain's answer, and he walked slowly
-forward, looking to right and left of him, as though the little lad
-must be in hiding somewhere, flat beside a forward coaming or behind a
-hencoop, or under the long-boat, for his figure had been small, and he
-could have concealed himself within the flakes of the halliards coiled
-down upon a pin.</p>
-
-<p>The men drew back, scattered in a kind of dissolving way, gazed with
-sheepish looks of sympathy, one rugged man with damp eyes, for he too
-had lost a son beloved with the rough love of a heart unhardened by
-salt and toil.</p>
-
-<p>"Has any man among you," said the captain, bringing his head out of
-the galley door&mdash;for the child had been a frequent guest of the
-cooks of the ships he had sailed in: they would make him jam tarts and
-little cakes, and his prattle to the fellows was as cheering to them as
-the song of a canary&mdash;"has any man among you," he said, "seen my
-little boy?"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't think you'll find him forward, sir," answered the
-boatswain. "Jim, jump below and see if he's in the fok'sle."</p>
-
-<p>The sailors exchanged looks which seemed to suggest that they
-thought it kind and wise in the boatswain to humour the captain, whose
-mind, to them, appeared a little shaken and made uncertain by the
-shock of his loss.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span></p> <p>"No, I'll trust no man's eyes
-but mine," exclaimed the captain, with a lofty expression of face,
-and, going to the scuttle, which is the little hatch through which the
-seamen drop into their parlour, he put his legs over and descended.</p>
-
-<p>One man only was in this forecastle. He was the young seaman who had
-played the whistle whilst Johnny beat the drum. He started up at the
-sight of the captain, amazed by a visit that was unparalleled in his
-experience or recollection of forecastle story. His face showed marks
-of unaffected distress, and indeed this rude but sympathetic heart had
-been seated for some minutes prior to the captain's entrance, with
-bowed head resting in his wart-toughened palms, thinking of the child
-and his sudden death.</p>
-
-<p>It was a strange, gloomy interior. The swing of the lamp kept the
-shadows on the wing, and oilskins and coats swayed upon the ship's wall
-to the solemn plunge of the bows, and you heard the roar of the smitten
-and recoiling surge in a low thunder, like the sound of a railway
-train striking through the soil into a vault. Some bunks went curving
-into the gloom past the light which fell through the hatch, and a few
-hammocks stretched their pale, bale-like lengths under the upper deck.
-Here, too, were sea-chests&mdash;a few only&mdash;and odds and ends of
-sea-boots, and the raffle of the sailor's ocean home.</p>
-
-<p>"Where's my son? Is he down here?" exclaimed the captain,
-haggard, and with something dreadful in his looks in that light,
-uttering the words as peremptorily as ever he delivered an order on
-the quarter-deck.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span></p> <p>The young fellow gazed aghast
-at him in silence.</p>
-
-<p>The captain, who did not seem to heed whether he was answered
-or not, went to the bunks and examined them one by one, knelt and
-looked under them, felt the sagged canvas of the hammocks. Oh, it was
-pitiful!</p>
-
-<p>"He's not here," he exclaimed, turning to the young sailor. "Have
-you got your whistle handy? Pull it out and pipe. The music will bring
-him with his drum."</p>
-
-<p>The young man went to his bunk and took the whistle from the head of
-it. His face was full of awe and wonder; it was a bit of psychology, a
-trick or two above all <i>his</i> art of seamanship.</p>
-
-<p>"What shall I play, sir?" he asked, in a shaking voice, with
-a glance up through the scuttle at the men gathered near and
-listening.</p>
-
-<p>"What's his favourite tune?" said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>The young fellow reflected, and answered, "'Sally come up,' sir. It
-runs well with the drum."</p>
-
-<p>"Play it," said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>The young fellow put the whistle to his lips and blew. The contrast
-between the merry air, shrilling in the forecastle and out through the
-hatch into the bright wind, and the captain's half-triumphant face of
-expectancy would have melted a heart of steel. The poor man stepped
-under the little hatch and shouted up, "On deck there!"</p>
-
-<p>"Sir," answered the boatswain, showing himself.</p>
-
-<p>"Can this whistle be heard aft?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"Watch a bit, and report if he's coming."</p>
-
-<p>The young seaman, who was nearly heartbroken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
-with his obligation of playing, continued to pipe, and you beheld a
-vision of dancing sailors, and swelling canvas reverberating the rattle
-of the drum.</p>
-
-<p>The captain waited under the hatch, his poor face charged with
-ardent expectation. He might have overheard a gruff voice say, "It
-oughtn't to be allowed to go on. He'd get all right if he'd go to his
-cabin, where it 'ud come to him." But he paid no heed.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the whistling ceased, and the young fellow, flinging his
-whistle into his bunk, cried, "It's choking me, sir."</p>
-
-<p>The captain looked at him, and saying, "Where is Johnny?" climbed
-through the hatch and, without a word to the sailors, walked slowly
-aft.</p>
-
-<p>The whole ship seemed to tremble throughout her frame with every
-lift and fall, as though like something alive she was now startled by
-this strange delay, and the foretopmast studdingsail curved with the
-weight of the wind from its boom, and no doubt, in the language of
-sailcloth, cursed the maintopsail for stopping its eager drag.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy stood beside the second mate, to leeward, on the quarter-deck,
-and watched the captain coming aft. The great dog in a leap gained his
-master's side and marched with him, looking with beautiful sagacity
-up into the poor man's face. The captain walked with his eyes fixed
-upon the sky, just over the sea-line astern, but if speculation were
-in his gaze it was not interpretable; he saw, or seemed to see,
-something beyond the blue haze of distance, and thus he watched it,
-without speaking to the two mates, or turning his eyes upon them, until
-he came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> to the companion-hatch, down whose steps he went,
-followed by the dog.</p>
-
-<p>Noon was near and an observation must be taken. Hardy, whose clothes
-were plastered by water upon him, said to Candy:</p>
-
-<p>"We must get an observation and swing the yards. This blow has
-thrown his mind off its balance, and he might not thank us later if we
-should go on as though he were responsible."</p>
-
-<p>"I agree with you, sir," said Candy.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy called to the boatswain, who came quickly.</p>
-
-<p>"You know the law of the sea as well as I do," said the mate, "and I
-don't want you and the men to believe that I have taken charge of the
-ship even for five minutes because I mean to get way upon her."</p>
-
-<p>"She wants it," said the boatswain, looking forward along the ship
-as though she were a horse.</p>
-
-<p>"I must get an observation," continued Hardy, "and you and the men
-will judge that the captain would wish me to do what he himself would
-do if his terrible loss had left him capable of doing anything."</p>
-
-<p>"It don't need reasoning about, sir," said the boatswain.</p>
-
-<p>"Hands lay aft and swing the maintopsail-yard!" shouted Hardy. "Lee
-mainbrace! Mr. Candy, will you step below for your sextant? Kindly
-bring mine."</p>
-
-<p>Candy went below. The men came running aft. But the shadow of death
-was upon the ship, bright, boundless, and streaming with the life
-of the wind as were heaven and ocean, and the sailors dragged<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
-the great yards round in silence. The ship heeled over a little more to
-the full swell of her canvas, and as Hardy took his sextant from Candy
-she was bursting the blue surge into white glory, and the leeward foam
-was passing fast and faster.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER IX.</span> <span class="smaller">THE INDIAMAN'S BOAT</span></h2>
-
-<p>The seas were breaking fast and fierce from the bows, and the
-wake flashed into the windy distance in a fan-shaped splendour as of
-sunshine, and hands were aloft furling the fore and mizzen royals, and
-some fore-and-aft canvas was rattling hanks and lacing on their stays
-to the drag of down-hauls; the ship was sonorous with the music of the
-sea, and by looking over the weather side you could have seen the green
-sheathing sweating with foam, storming through the dazzling smother
-like a wounded dolphin whose blood is sweet to dolphins; yet this was
-but a fragment of the magnificent picture of foaming seas and flying
-cloud, with the lofty swelling ship shearing through the heart of the
-day in a thunder-storm of prisms and of spray, lovely as the heights of
-heaven when some stars are green and some shine like the rose.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy came on deck. He stood and looked about him, refreshed by a
-shift of clothes and by a nip of grog. He had worked out his sights,
-and before mounting the steps had stood a minute at the captain's door
-listening; he heard the poor man's voice, and judged by its solemn
-imploring note that he was praying, but the noise of the sailors
-above made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span> him hurry, and though it was his watch below he felt
-that he was in command, and that the safety of the ship was in his
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>Any seaman will understand this mate's critical and difficult
-situation. A captain is not to be lightly deposed; drunken captains
-and&mdash;unless they grow frantic&mdash;mad captains must be obeyed or
-endured or it is mutiny, with heavy penalties awaiting the arrival of
-the ship; and the mate of a merchantman may, though by conscientious
-act, lose power of earning bread for himself and his home unless as a
-foremast hand, for the law is hard, and the shipowner harder still.</p>
-
-<p>"You had better take the mainsail off her, Mr. Candy, and furl the
-main-royal," said Hardy. "She has more than she wants."</p>
-
-<p>The stu'nsail was in and so was the boom, and Hardy gave other
-directions, but they need not be repeated because minuteness is
-tedious, and the language of the sea cryptic to millions. When Sheridan
-was asked how the poetaster described the ph&oelig;nix, he answered, "Just
-as a poulterer would!" The poulterer is not good in art, and the beak,
-talons, and all are merits when left out.</p>
-
-<p>It was about a quarter to one, and the cabin dinner would be
-coming aft soon. The cook was busy in his galley, and black smoke was
-smothering the bulwarks abreast from the chimney. Hardy paced the
-deck watching the seamen at work, Candy superintended the business.
-There was plenty for the mate to think of. The grief planted in his
-kind heart, by recollection of his hopeless effort to rescue the
-poor drowned child, was overwhelmed by thoughts of the captain, his
-undoubted madness, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span> state of the ship; and then his
-mind on a sudden went away to Julia Armstrong; he wondered what would
-be her fortune, if luck would attend her in India, if her love for
-him&mdash;he would not pretend aught else to himself&mdash;would hold
-her unwilling to remain, that she might return in the vessel and meet
-him once more. "In which case," he declared to himself, "I will marry
-her and chance it."</p>
-
-<p>The ship was rushing onward like a shooting star, and the wind
-clothed the sails with the thunder of its power; but she was
-comfortable and dry. The bright bursts were flung clear of her by the
-rush of the breeze, and she took the seas with that perfect grace of
-leap and curtsey which sails alone do give.</p>
-
-<p>As Hardy walked, the cabin servant came up to him and reported
-dinner on the table.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you told the captain?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"Is he at table?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy went below. The captain was in his accustomed place cutting at
-a big meat pie; his brow was knitted, and with the whole strength of
-his soul he seemed intent upon this job of cutting the pie. His long
-hair and the hair upon his cheeks and chin accentuated the expression
-of his pale face, which was one of wildness and of grief so subtle that
-it might scarcely be known as grief by the heart that ached with it;
-but when he raised his eyes, Hardy saw a darkness upon his vision as
-though the shadow of death was on his eyelids.</p>
-
-<p>"Will you have some of this pie?" said he, quite sanely.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, sir," answered Hardy.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p> <p>"We'll shift
-for ourselves," said the captain, turning to the attendant. "Bring
-whatever else there is in a quarter of an hour."</p>
-
-<p>The man left the cabin. The captain, with knife and fork poised,
-without serving Hardy viewed him intently during a short passage of
-silence, and then said:</p>
-
-<p>"Johnny has strayed away from this ship and he's left his drum
-behind him, but," he added, smiling with his heart-moving smile of
-superiority, "I shall find him."</p>
-
-<p>He loaded a plate and thrust it at the length of his arm toward
-Hardy, who took it.</p>
-
-<p>"Are not you eating, sir?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"How's the ship?" was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy reported the sail she was under. The question, the
-all-important question, whether sights had been taken, was not asked.
-The captain took a piece of meat out of the pie and gave it to the
-Newfoundland, who sat beside him on the deck.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't like rich clergymen," he said, abruptly. "The man who
-steers his ship to the glowing gates of heaven should be rich in heart
-and love. The precious freight is that; let him despise the devil's
-cargo. I once said to a wealthy parson, 'Take up your cross and follow
-me. D'ye remember it, sir? but you and the like of you give your cross
-to the coachman and get inside.'"</p>
-
-<p>He spoke this in a voice of thunder, and his face was grotesque.
-Hardy was eating with difficulty. The chatter of the afflicted brain
-is a pain to the hearer, for the sane strokes make the inconsequential
-talk as ghastly as the lifelike motions of the electrified corpse.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p> <p>From time to time the dog got up and moved about
-the cabin sniffing. He was missing Johnny. He would come to Hardy's
-side and turn his gentle, affectionate eyes up at the mate's face in
-such dumb inquiry as would be holy if it were human; then he would go
-to the captain and do the like. The poor man played with some meat out
-of the pie, but did not eat. He had been educated at a great public
-school and his speech and voice had the culture of breeding, and the
-lapses and diversions of the talk that he addressed to Hardy made
-his language more pitiful than shocking. He as often spoke wisely as
-insanely, but Hardy saw, even whilst he sat, that the loss of his boy
-had confirmed in him his lamentable prepossession. He was mad, but in
-such fashion that unless he acted visibly the madman's part the crew
-would fail to see it.</p>
-
-<p>The attendant came down with more food for the cabin, and this
-the captain did not touch. Presently he abruptly rose and entered
-his berth, reappeared with his cap on, and slowly stepped up the
-companion-ladder.</p>
-
-<p>It was Hardy's hope that the poor fellow might give such orders as
-would induce the men to suspect him mad, although he felt they would
-believe he was only temporarily deranged by the bitter loss which had
-left him heart-broken; and yet some heedless or absurd order, some
-unintelligible shifting of the course, for example, some needless
-setting or reduction of canvas, must act like a surgical operation and
-quicken their scent, which would help him to come to a decision as to
-the right thing to be done; and whilst he went on munching his dinner
-he found himself repeatedly glancing at the telltale compass<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
-and listening for the captain's voice. But the ship sped steadily
-straight forward, and the captain remained silent though his tread was
-audible.</p>
-
-<p>A little while before the mate had finished his dinner Mr. Candy
-came below. This was unusual: in the ordinary movement of discipline he
-should have waited to be relieved by Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"The captain told me to go and get my dinner, sir," said the second
-mate.</p>
-
-<p>"All right," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Candy sat down and began to help himself. Hardy had no
-particular fondness for this man: he was the son of a pilot, and one
-of those people who add nothing to the dignity of a service which in
-its day, in point of breeding, in all art of seamanship, in structure
-of vessel, was as good as the Royal Navy. Witness, for example, the
-men and ships of John Company; for if no line-of-battle ships flew the
-flag of that company, and the flags of the owners of fleets of stately
-craft, ships of commerce had been and were still then afloat as lordly
-in build, as gracious and commanding in star-searching heights, as the
-finest of the frigates of Britannia. But Candy was second mate of the
-ship, and to that degree was important.</p>
-
-<p>"Captain Layard is very down," said Hardy. "It's a cruel bad job. I
-loved the little boy, and the dog that loved him too wouldn't let me
-save his life."</p>
-
-<p>"It was plucky of you, sir, to jump overboard," said the second
-mate. "All the time the captain walks he looks to port and starboard,
-hunting like with his eyes over the sea for the little drummer.
-Strange he can't satisfy himself that the younker is drowned,
-dead and gone."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span></p> <p>He was feeding heartily, and
-spoke in the intervals of chewing.</p>
-
-<p>"This shock," said Hardy, who saw that the man was not to be talked
-to confidentially, "may have a little weakened the poor father's mind
-for a time. We'll assume it so for the common preservation; therefore,
-in your watch on deck should he give orders which might prove him
-thinking more of Johnny than the ship, call me at once."</p>
-
-<p>"Ay, ay, sir!"</p>
-
-<p>This said, Hardy went to his berth to smoke a pipe and get some
-rest, for he could not know what lay before him, and sleep is precious
-at sea.</p>
-
-<p>At four o'clock Candy aroused him. The captain, he learnt, had been
-below an hour. Nothing worth reporting had happened during Candy's
-watch. Hardy went on deck, and did not see the captain throughout
-the first dog-watch. The breeze was slightly scanting; the main-tack
-was boarded and the main-royal loosed and set. Hardy, like a good
-many other chief mates, was always for carrying on whenever he was in
-charge, and the breeze blew and the girls of the port he was bound
-to always hauled with a will at his tow-rope. Besides, there was the
-night's detention to be made good, and the clipper was making it good
-as she sheared through the coils of the sea, boiling in dim rose to the
-westering light. It was like a field of hurdles to a favourite, and she
-swept them with a bounding keel, slinging rainbows as she went, and the
-surge sang in thunder to the melodies of the rigging.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy's whole thoughts concerned the captain. He quite remembered
-that in the cabin of the stricken father stood a medicine-chest full
-of deadly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span> poisons. Would he take his life? Full often the demon
-of madness goes on beckoning to the ghastly Feature till it springs.
-But what could the mate do? It was not within his right to remove the
-chest. If he durst act in any way he would lock up the captain at once,
-but he had the talk and opinions of a crew of seamen to consider, and
-if the captain should be revisited by the same degree of sanity that
-had enabled him to navigate the vessel to this point, how would Hardy
-stand, supposing&mdash;and supposition here involved a very possible
-contingency&mdash;that the captain, to preserve his own position,
-should charge him with the ugliest breach of discipline a merchant
-officer could be guilty of?</p>
-
-<p>He did not meet the captain again till the supper hour. The ship was
-then under all plain sail. The west was glowing like a furnace, and
-the ocean was calming to the softening of the breeze. The captain came
-from his berth into the cabin as Hardy stood beside the table. The meal
-was ready, and they sat down. There was a curious look of satisfaction
-in the captain's face. The acute eye of Hardy easily saw that some
-soothing delusion was in possession of the man. He asked two or three
-questions about the ship, and quite sanely said:</p>
-
-<p>"What did you make the latitude and longitude to be at noon?"</p>
-
-<p>Hardy answered the question.</p>
-
-<p>The captain began to eat hungrily, and all the time his face gave
-token of an inward content, lifting indeed into the pleasure of assured
-expectation; but somehow there were visible in this lunatic web of
-emotion threads of cunning clearly perceptible to Hardy, who, perhaps,
-as the son of a doctor whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span> professional experiences he had often
-listened to, was able to see a little deeper than the vision of a plain
-seaman could penetrate.</p>
-
-<p>"There is no doubt, Mr. Hardy," suddenly said the captain, "that I
-shall be able to find Johnny."</p>
-
-<p>"I hope so, sir," answered Hardy, gravely.</p>
-
-<p>"I have no doubt," exclaimed the captain with a sparkle of
-triumphant cunning lighting up his eyes. "I must be patient and wait,
-for I've got to hear where he is."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy was silent.</p>
-
-<p>"It may come to me in a dream," continued the poor man, "or it may
-be revealed to me in a whisper. I believe with Milton that the air
-is thronged with millions of spiritual beings. I have in my watches,
-when a mate, heard whispers in the dark! I believe in God the Father
-Almighty"&mdash;and he recited the Apostles' Creed whilst he stroked
-the head of his dog, who sat at his side. "It is a glorious confession,
-Mr. Hardy. What should make a man more religious than the sea life?
-They think us a breed of blasphemers, but to whom is the glory and the
-majesty and the power of the Supreme unfolded if not to the sailor? We
-behold the birth of the day, and witness the sublimity of the Spirit
-in the glittering temples of the east, from which the sun springs, to
-reveal the marvel of the ocean and the heavens to the sight of man; and
-we witness the death of the day, gorgeous and kingly in its departure,
-over which the angels spread a funeral pall sparkling with the diamonds
-of the night."</p>
-
-<p>He pressed his hands to his brow and sighed with that long
-tremor in which the broken heart often vents itself.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p> <p>The night passed quietly. The breeze yet
-slackened and was blowing a gentle wind at midnight. There was a moon
-somewhere in the sky, and her light fell upon the dark waters, and
-the sight of the small seas, curling in frosted silver through the
-radiance, was as beautiful as the picture of the ship stemming softly,
-her canvas stirless as carven shields of marble.</p>
-
-<p>The captain came and went throughout the night, and no man aboard
-saving Hardy would have dreamt of holding him mad and irresponsible.
-Candy, when his watch was up, had nothing to report but this: that the
-skipper would walk the deck fast, abruptly halting at the weather-rail
-to stare at the ocean in pauses running into minutes, then crossing to
-the lee-rail to stare again in passages of dumb scrutiny. What more
-conceivable than that the afflicted man should be full of the memory of
-his lost child, and that he should break off in his walk to meditate
-upon the mighty grave in whose heart his little one was sleeping?</p>
-
-<p>Candy thought thus, and so did the helmsman, who would find the men
-he talked to about it of his own mind when he was relieved at the wheel
-and went forward.</p>
-
-<p>And so the night passed into the sad light of dawn, which brightened
-into the glory of a morning full of sunshine. The breeze had shifted
-three points, and the ship was sailing slowly with the yards square and
-the weather-clew of the mainsail up.</p>
-
-<p>Now was to happen the strangest incident in this ship's adventure.
-It was Nelson who said that nothing is impossible or improbable in
-sea-affairs.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span> There is no invention of man that can top the grim, the
-grotesque, the beautiful, the sublime, or the touching facts which the
-great mystery of liquid surface yields to human experience.</p>
-
-<p>A seaman, who was sitting astride of the starboard foretopsail
-yard-arm, busy with marline-spike on some job that the lift needed,
-hailed the deck.</p>
-
-<p>"Where away?" shouted Hardy from the quarter-deck.</p>
-
-<p>"Right ahead, sir," answered the man, who looked a toy sailor, his
-white breeches trembling, and the round of his back sharp-lined against
-the blue.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy fetched the glass, and going to the mizzen-rigging pointed it.
-He caught it instantly. It was a boat, how far off it was impossible to
-say, for distance, when a small object grows visible, is very difficult
-to measure with the eye at sea, but she was plain to the naked sight
-of the man on the yard-arm; the telescope brought her close, and Hardy
-counted five figures in her, one of whom was standing on the foremost
-thwart waving something,&mdash;a shirt or a piece of canvas. Her mast
-was stepped, but the sail was down, and she lay waiting, vanishing and
-reappearing as the shallow hollows ran sucking under her.</p>
-
-<p>When Hardy dropped the glass he found the captain by his side.</p>
-
-<p>"What is in sight?" he exclaimed, speaking with something of
-breathlessness, as though his heart was tightened.</p>
-
-<p>"A ship's boat, sir, with five people in her," answered Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall find him," exclaimed the captain, and the old look of
-superiority to all human intelligence,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span> and the pathetic
-sparkle of cunning with which the diseased brain will often illuminate
-the eye, were perceptible to Hardy. "Give me the glass, sir."</p>
-
-<p>The captain levelled it and was a long time in looking, and all
-the time he looked he breathed slow and deep like a man in heavy
-slumber.</p>
-
-<p>"Stand by to back the foretopsail," he exclaimed. "Let a hand
-be ready with a line and others to help them aboard, for twice I
-have fallen in with people so weakened by distress and famine and
-thirst&mdash;O God, that awful part of it&mdash;that we have lifted
-them like babies over the side."</p>
-
-<p>Presently the boat was close under the bow; the foretopsail was
-aback, and the ship, heaving slowly without way, was alongside the
-little fabric.</p>
-
-<p>Her people were four men and a woman. The men were seamen,
-apparelled in such clothes as the merchant sailor went clad in. They
-staggered a little as they stood up, and one in the bow reeled as he
-caught the end of the line. The woman was sitting in the stern-sheets.
-She wore a straw hat, the shadow of whose brim darkened her face as a
-veil might. She was clothed in a black jacket, and the material of her
-dress was dark. Her head was a little sunk, as though she was too weary
-to hold it erect.</p>
-
-<p>The captain, overlaying the rail, stared with bright devouring
-eyes into the boat. He did not seem to heed the people in her; he was
-looking for something else.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you able to help the lady aboard?" shouted Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir," answered the man who had caught the line; "we've been
-adrift two days."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p> <p>His weak voice proclaimed
-the truth of his words. At the sound of Hardy's cry the woman in the
-stern-sheets lifted her head, and the shadow of the brim of her hat
-slipped off her face. Hardy instantly recognised her.</p>
-
-<p>"Great God!" he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>He was struck motionless by astonishment, but his faculties rallied
-in a breath; in a minute he had sprung into the main chains, and a jump
-carried him into the boat.</p>
-
-<p>"O Mr. Hardy!" shrieked the girl, and she tried to rise to clasp
-him, but her exhaustion was too great and she could only sob.</p>
-
-<p>"On deck there!" shouted Hardy, who was usurping all the privileges
-of the captain in that moment of tumultuous sensations. "Send down a
-chair and bear a hand." And whilst this well-understood order was being
-executed&mdash;it meant simply a tail-block at the main yard-arm and
-a line rove through the block with a cabin-chair secured to the end
-of it&mdash;and whilst the four nearly spent sailors of the boat were
-being helped by the men in the ship, Hardy was talking to Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"What a meeting! What has happened to your ship?"</p>
-
-<p>Her lips were pale and a little cracked, her eyes were languid, and
-dim with tears, a shadow as of hollowness lay upon each cheek. She
-spoke with difficulty.</p>
-
-<p>"The <i>Glamis Castle</i> was burnt two days ago in the night. We have
-been drifting about since then without food or water. Oh, thank God for
-this! thank God for this&mdash;and to meet <i>you</i>!"</p>
-
-<p>"Bear a hand, my lads, bear a hand," shouted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
-Hardy, whilst the captain with his head showing above the rail stood
-staring into the boat. The mate would not tax her with speech; she
-might be dying! Some alert seamen were in that clipper, and to the
-instincts and humanity of a British sailor no form of distress appeals
-more vehemently than the open boat in which they see no breaker, than
-the open boat in which men and women may be dying of thirst. Swiftly,
-as though the crew of the <i>York</i> were the disciplined and gallant
-hearts of the battle-ship, a chair, well secured, sank from the
-yard-arm and was seized by Hardy. He lifted the girl on to it, took
-a turn round her with a piece of line which had come down with it,
-and she soared from his nimble, skilful hands, and vanished from his
-sight behind the bulwarks. He gained the deck in a few instants, and
-was at the girl's side before the sailors could liberate her from the
-chair.</p>
-
-<p>"She is a dear friend of mine," said he, loudly, that the men might
-understand that more was in this thrilling passage than humanity only.
-And passing his arm round her waist to support her he helped her to
-walk aft.</p>
-
-<p>The captain's face looked dark with disappointment, and as Hardy
-drew close to him he heard him mutter, "They have not brought him, they
-have not brought him!"</p>
-
-<p>"I will take this lady below, sir," said Hardy, speaking rapidly.
-"Her ship has been burnt. They have been without food and water
-for two or three days," and he passed on with the girl to the
-companion-hatch, whilst the captain stood dumbly following them
-with his eyes, with the noble Newfoundland standing beside him.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p> <p>In silence the two descended the cabin ladder,
-and with the tenderness of a lover, which in such men as Hardy has the
-sweetness of a woman's love, he placed her upon a locker and poured out
-a little water. She drank with the passion of thirst, and asked for
-more with her eyes, but Hardy knew better and gave her a biscuit, which
-would lightly soothe the craving of the hunger that is often felt after
-thirst is assuaged. She bit a little piece of biscuit, and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Won't you give me a little more water?"</p>
-
-<p>"Very soon. Eat that biscuit."</p>
-
-<p>He stepped to the pantry where some brandy was kept, and poured a
-tablespoonful in a wine-glass, and this filled up with water he gave
-her after she had eaten the biscuit. The stimulant helped her, and even
-as he stood watching her with his heart beating fast with this wonder,
-this miracle, of almost unparalleled meeting, he witnessed symptoms of
-a reviving spirit, of a reanimated body in her face.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Captain Layard came down the companion-steps
-and approached them with an eager, strained expression. His eyes,
-alight with mania&mdash;for madness has its expectations and
-disappointments&mdash;rested with a searching gaze upon the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you seen him?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir," answered Hardy, quickly trying to catch Julia's eye, but
-she was staring with alarm at the captain, as you would, or I, under
-such conditions of inexplicable confrontment. "She is a dear friend of
-mine and is ill with the sufferings of an open boat, but her presence
-in this ship may mean more than we can dream of now."</p>
-
-<p>The captain's face changed, his eyes took a fresh illumination
-with his smile.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span></p> <p>"See to her, Mr. Hardy, see to
-her, and I'll start the ship afresh."</p>
-
-<p>He left the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>"May I have another biscuit?" said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy handed one and smiled, for he saw again the sweet unconscious
-cock of her head, not the less fascinating to him because her eyes were
-dim, her cheeks a little hollow, her lips pale.</p>
-
-<p>"Was that the captain?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>"What was he asking? Is he right in his mind?"</p>
-
-<p>"His only son, a little boy, a beautiful bright-haired little boy,
-fell overboard and was drowned, and&mdash;But we will talk about the
-captain and your adventures when you are stronger."</p>
-
-<p>He mused a moment or two, and then added, "You will take the rest
-you need in my cabin, and a berth shall be made ready for you. A good
-long sleep will restore you. So come."</p>
-
-<p>He put his arm through hers and caused her to rise, and indeed she
-still needed the support he gave her. He took her to his cabin, and
-as she walked she looked about her with growing animation, which is a
-cheering sign, and once she exclaimed, "Thank God, I am safe! Thank
-God, I have met you! But how wonderful&mdash;oh, how wonderful!"</p>
-
-<p>She sat on his sea-chest whilst he smoothed and prepared the bunk.
-It was a little cabin; the bunk was under a port-hole, and plenty of
-light came flashing in off the trembling, feathering sea. You might
-hear the tramp of feet overhead, and the thump of coils of rope flung
-off their pins. There were none of the garnishings which often make
-pathetic such interiors as this; when a young officer hangs up the
-picture of his wife with their first baby<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span> on her knee, neither
-of them to be kissed and clasped for months and months, even if God be
-merciful to the poor fellow and his ship; no rack full of pipes, no
-odds and ends of curios&mdash;in short, nothing ornamented the wall
-of Hardy's sea-bedroom but a long chart of the English Channel, which
-it was his custom to study when he lay in his bunk smoking, to get
-absolutely by heart the lights which gem the coast of our island, and
-the verdure-crowned terraces over the way.</p>
-
-<p>When the bunk was prepared he removed her hat and gave her a
-hair-brush, and took down a little square of mirror and held it up
-before her. He greatly admired the beauty and the abundance of her
-hair, which was parted on one side.</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing so refreshes one as to brush one's hair," said he.</p>
-
-<p>"How ill I look," she exclaimed. "How could you have recognised me
-so instantly?" and she lifted her eyes, full of caress, to his face.</p>
-
-<p>"Will you be strong enough to get into that bunk unhelped?" he
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>It was a low-seated bunk, and she looked at it and answered,
-"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"Then I will leave you," said he, and he walked out hurriedly, and
-shut the door behind him.</p>
-
-<p>He went on deck to see how the captain was dealing with his ship
-and found the vessel sailing along, with her yards properly swung and
-everything right. The boat from which the people had been received
-was visible at the tail of the ship's wake. The captain had sent
-her adrift, which was sane or not in him, just as you think proper.
-The sailors were coiling down and otherwise busy; the four men had
-been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span> taken into the forecastle, where they were eating and
-drinking and yarning to a few of the watch below about the burning of
-the Indiaman <i>Glamis Castle</i>. The moment Captain Layard saw Hardy he
-called him.</p>
-
-<p>"Who is the lady?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Miss Julia Armstrong, the daughter of a retired commander in the
-Royal Navy," was the reply.</p>
-
-<p>"Where have you lodged her?"</p>
-
-<p>"In my cabin for the present, sir, till I receive your orders to get
-another one ready for her."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes, have that done&mdash;have that done," the captain said in
-a smooth, perfectly sane voice. "Do you know what she was aboard the
-ship?"</p>
-
-<p>Now Hardy was like the squire in Dickens's exquisite
-sketch&mdash;"he would not tell a lie for no man!" At the same time he
-did not wish Captain Layard should know that Miss Armstrong had shipped
-as a second stewardess, so he replied she was going to Calcutta with
-a letter of introduction to the bishop of that place. Her father was
-poor, and the girl wanted to find something to do in India.</p>
-
-<p>But the captain was dreaming. One with eyes for such faces as his
-could easily see that he was thinking of something else, or did not
-understand. He continued to look in silence for a little while at
-Hardy, and then the baleful sparkle suddenly brightened his stare, he
-folded his arms and said, with an expression of triumphant hope and
-conviction:</p>
-
-<p>"She is fresh from the sea and knows where Johnny is, and she shall
-help me to find him!"</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER X.</span> <span class="smaller">THE CAPTAIN AND THE GIRL</span></h2>
-
-<p>It was six o'clock on the same day in which Julia Armstrong had
-been delivered from that horrible sea tragedy, the open boat, by
-the miraculous apparition of the <i>York</i>, of all the ships which the
-horizons of the deep were then girdling! The chief mate knocked upon
-the door of his cabin where the girl lay, and believing he heard her
-say "Come in," entered, and found her asleep.</p>
-
-<p>The reddening sunshine was away to starboard, but the heavens
-southeast were glowing, and the girl slept, visible to the eye as the
-circle of blue port-hole up which and down which you saw the clear-cut
-line of the horizon sliding like a piece of clockwork. He stood looking
-at her, for there was love for this girl in the man's heart, and this
-encounter was so wonderful that he witnessed the hand of God in it,
-and a sentiment of religion sanctified his emotion; otherwise, with
-the sailor's respect for the repose of those who sleep&mdash;for the
-seamen's best blessing upon you is, <i>Lord grant you a good night's
-rest, sir!</i>&mdash;he would have softly stepped out and left her.</p>
-
-<p>And this he would have soon done, but as he looked she all at
-once opened her gray eyes full upon him, stared a few moments
-till intelligence came to her, then started, smiled, and sat up
-in the bunk.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span></p> <p>"I've awaked you, I'm afraid,"
-said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm glad you have. I have slept sweetly and I feel well," she
-answered. "Strange that I have not dreamt at all, for I have passed
-through a nightmare since the burning of the ship. How marvellous to
-see you standing there!"</p>
-
-<p>"Could you eat a piece of cold fowl and drink some wine?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"You shall sup here, for I want to hear your story. If you are in
-the cabin, and the captain comes&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>He put his head out of the door and hailed the cabin servant, who
-was polishing glasses in the pantry. He told him what to get and bring,
-and he then caused the girl to get out of her bunk, and cushioned his
-sea-chest with his bunk pillow as a seat for her. He smiled as he saw
-her fall into the incomparable posture (as he thought it): the head a
-little on one side, the hands on the hips, the feet crossed, the whole
-figure beautiful now that her jacket was removed, though her dark blue
-blouse imperfectly suggested the faultless grace of her breast. Sleep
-had faintly tinged her cheek whereon the shadow of suffering had lain;
-her eyes had brightened, her lips had reddened, and all the romance
-of her face, which was not beautiful nor even pretty, but alluring,
-nevertheless, was expressed once more in the flattering evening light,
-which suffused with a liquid softness the atmosphere of that little
-cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Until the man knocked at the door with the tray of food and wine,
-they talked chiefly of home, of the dry ditch and Bax's farm, of the
-East India<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> Dock road and of Captain Smedley, whose escape and
-probable safety the girl had mentioned early in this talk. And then
-whilst she supped&mdash;an early supper, but on the ocean it is the
-last meal&mdash;she told him the story of a memorable fire at sea.</p>
-
-<p>There had been many such fires, and they nearly all read like
-one. It begins by some rascally sailor broaching a rum cask; or it
-is a naked candle in the hand of a fool looking for a brand in the
-lazarette; or it is a pipeful of glowing tobacco amongst wool; the
-capsizal of a lamp; or it is caused by something which the ocean
-sucks down to her ooze and buries there, one secret more. But however
-it be, the end is nearly always the same. It was so in this case;
-the fire took such a hold there was no dealing with it; a score
-may have perished. The girl saw the bowsprit and jib-booms black
-with figures of men who had been cut off by the amidship furnace.
-Numbers&mdash;for she was a full ship with many children, and besides
-passengers she was carrying hard upon a hundred soldiers in her
-'tween-decks&mdash;numbers, I say, got away in the boats, and amongst
-them, the last to leave, was the captain; she did not doubt that. She
-fell overboard in her terror, and in her recoil right aft from the
-smoke and its burning stars, and afterwards found herself in a boat in
-the company of five men, one of whom, groaning heavily with internal
-injury, died in the night and was dropped over the boat's side.</p>
-
-<p>She had more to tell him about this shipwreck, but that fire
-concerns my story only in so far as it brings this girl again on to
-the stage by one of those dramatic and startling methods adopted by
-the ocean, whose moods are many.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span></p> <p>"If your
-captain is a madman," she said, "what is to happen to this ship?"</p>
-
-<p>He put his finger to his lips in a gesture of caution and
-reticence.</p>
-
-<p>"We may whisper it to each other," said he, in a low voice, "but the
-crew have no knowledge of it, or they may attribute any strangeness in
-his manner to the loss of his child, and think it passing. They all
-loved the poor little fellow, and so did I."</p>
-
-<p>And he told her how the boy used to beat his drum in accompaniment
-to the sailor's whistle, and related the story of his falling overboard
-and the efforts to save him, and the captain's frantic dumb-show and
-sudden exhibition of insanity, so that he believed his child was merely
-missing, and that something would happen to tell him where he might be
-found.</p>
-
-<p>"How sad!" said the girl. "It would have broken my heart to see it.
-And does he still think that he will find his little boy?"</p>
-
-<p>"I'm afraid it's his conviction, the subtle delusion of the diseased
-brain," Hardy answered; "but in other matters with him it's like
-writing on sand; next tide all's gone. Do not tell him you were a
-stewardess. Converse with him as though he were perfectly sane. He is a
-gentleman and an educated man. Humour his sorrowful fancy, for it can
-hurt no one, and it keeps the poor fellow's heart up."</p>
-
-<p>"I suppose you are really in charge of the ship?" she said.</p>
-
-<p>"I am watching her navigation," he answered, "but I tell you I am
-at a dead loss because he is the supreme law-giver of the vessel,
-and what he orders must be done or it is mutiny. His orders<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
-may be dangerous to my judgment, but not to the men's, who take the
-course as it's given; and I dare not go amongst them and speak the
-truth. He might get better and hear of it, and it would be in his power
-to ruin me."</p>
-
-<p>She sank her head thoughtfully, understanding him. The door was
-rapped.</p>
-
-<p>"Hullo," cried Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>It was the cabin servant who had come to tell Hardy that the captain
-wished to see the lady.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is he?" inquired the mate.</p>
-
-<p>"On deck, sir. He'll come below when I report her ready to receive
-him."</p>
-
-<p>"Report her ready," said Hardy, and he and the girl went into the
-cabin.</p>
-
-<p>She seated herself on a cushioned locker, and he stood beside
-her.</p>
-
-<p>"That's your berth," said he, pointing to a door.</p>
-
-<p>Gratitude and love were in the smile she gave him. The red western
-blaze was on the skylight, and reposed on her hair like gold-dust. It
-was Hardy's watch below&mdash;he was therefore at liberty to be in
-the cabin. He caught sight of Candy staring through the skylight, but
-the pale-eyed man walked off in a minute, and then the captain came
-down.</p>
-
-<p>He bowed with the courtesy of breeding to the girl. Tradition
-has scored so heavily against the merchant shipmaster by virtue of
-romantic invention, which largely consists of lies, that I dare say
-it is impossible for a landsman to believe that the commander of a
-merchant-ship could be anything but a rough, grog-seamed, hoarse-voiced
-salt, without grammar for his log-book. The lie stands as everlasting
-as the pyramids, and for my part it may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span> go on standing, but
-it is a lie all the same, and it is my pleasure to paint the truth.</p>
-
-<p>As the girl returned the bow she saw the great Newfoundland in the
-captain's wake, and cried out with a sudden passion of admiration,
-"Oh, what a magnificent creature!" The dog made friends with her in an
-instant, and by twenty canine tokens expressed delight in the caress of
-her hand. No doubt the beautiful and faithful creature appreciated the
-sweetening and civilising influence of the lady in that cabin.</p>
-
-<p>The captain began by putting several sane questions, and she
-remembered that she was not to tell him that she had shipped as an
-under-stewardess in the <i>Glamis Castle</i>. He knew the vessel, and
-listened with a degree of attention, that excited Hardy's surprise,
-to her narrative of the fire. He seemed to take a fancy to her, to be
-pleased by her presence, and said he hoped she would be comfortable
-on board his ship. In the midst of his rational talk he slapped his
-forehead and kept his hand pressed to it, and his face changed; a look
-of grief that made him almost haggard was visible when he dropped his
-hand and gazed at the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"I miss my son&mdash;my little son," he exclaimed, "and I am waiting
-for something"&mdash;he added, in a broken voice&mdash;"to tell me
-where I can find him. His drum is by his bed&mdash;come and look at
-it."</p>
-
-<p>Awed by the sudden confrontment of hopeless human grief, the girl
-rose and followed him, with a glance at Hardy as for courage. The
-heave of the deck was gentle; she was stronger, and stepped without
-difficulty. The captain entered his cabin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> and closed the door
-upon them both, which frightened her, for she easily now saw how it was
-with his poor brain, and no one in the company of a madman can ever
-dare swear that in the next minute he will continue harmless.</p>
-
-<p>"That is his drum," said the captain. "That is the little bed he
-slept in."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy outside stood close at the door, listening and prepared.</p>
-
-<p>"He is my only child," continued the captain, compelling by his own
-gaze the girl's attention to a little coat and a little cap, and other
-garments of the boy which were hanging upon the bulkhead. "His mother
-is dead, and she was my first and my only love. I miss him of a night,
-and want him. He has been my constant companion in several voyages, and
-the life of the captain of a ship at sea is lonely, and I miss him.
-It was my delight to dress him and to listen to his talk. Oh, he is
-a clever boy! He can ask questions which the greatest mind could not
-answer."</p>
-
-<p>He sat down on a chair by the table on which were instruments
-of navigation, a few books, pen and ink, and the like, and folding
-his arms and bowing his head he sobbed dryly without concealment of
-features, and the piteous face, bearded, the half-closed eyes, the long
-hair under the cap which he had not removed, made the girl feel sick
-and faint, as though to some oppressive stroke of personal grief.</p>
-
-<p>She rallied, for she was a young woman of great spirit, as I have
-a right to hold, and remembering what Hardy had said, she exclaimed,
-softly:</p>
-
-<p>"You will find him, Captain Layard."</p> <p><span
-class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p> <p>At this he looked up at her, started to
-his feet, and his face was eager and impassioned with emotion not
-communicable, for who can expound the workings of the diseased mind?</p>
-
-<p>"Tell me," he cried, and she saw what Hardy had also seen&mdash;the
-baleful sparkle of mania in his eyes, "you're fresh from the sea, and
-God may have sent you to me. Tell me!"</p>
-
-<p>She could not speak. Her consolatory phrase had exhausted
-imagination, and her heart refused its sanction to the mate's humane
-idea, that it was good to keep up the poor fellow's spirits.</p>
-
-<p>"Tell me!" he repeated, and he advanced a step and his eyes devoured
-her face.</p>
-
-<p>"God will comfort you and help you," she replied, not knowing what
-to say.</p>
-
-<p>He sighed, and turning his head fastened his eyes upon the little
-bed, then looked at her again, this time with his painful expression of
-superiority, the air of a man whose soul is exalted by contemplation
-of something of heavenly importance divulged to him and to him only,
-and wearing this face, he opened the door and she passed out, which was
-lucky for Hardy, because had the captain gone first he would have found
-the mate standing close and listening.</p>
-
-<p>The captain remained in his cabin. The others stood by the table,
-and the western light, rich and red as a deep-bosomed rose, flowed down
-upon them through the open skylight.</p>
-
-<p>"Poor man! Poor man!" the girl exclaimed. "I fear that what I've
-said will create a delusion; he will think I know where his child
-is."</p>
-
-<p>"His moods are like the dog-vane," said Hardy. "I could not hear
-what passed."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p> <p>She told him. He frowned with
-the puzzle of his mind.</p>
-
-<p>"You can judge now for yourself," said he. "Is it right that a man
-like this should command a ship whose safety became doubly precious to
-me this morning?"</p>
-
-<p>She smiled gently, but gravity quickly returned; she could not but
-reflect his face of worry and uncertainty. The great dog was lying at
-his master's door, and all was silent in the captain's cabin. This, in
-the pause, made her say:</p>
-
-<p>"He may commit suicide."</p>
-
-<p>"Not whilst he believes his son is alive and to be found," answered
-Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>He walked to the door of her berth, opened it, and she saw that it
-was as comfortably equipped as the ship would allow.</p>
-
-<p>"You shall have a hair-brush and whatever else I possess to give
-you," said he. "But how about clothes? I can't dress you."</p>
-
-<p>"I am saved," she answered, "and that is enough to think of at
-present."</p>
-
-<p>This was a spirited answer for a girl who was talking to the man she
-loved, for would not any girl, addressing the man of her heart, grow
-pensive to the thought that she had but one gown to wear in the whole
-world?</p>
-
-<p>He felt a certain sense of independency owing to the captain's
-state, and considered that he was entitled to act beyond his
-rights as a mate. By which I mean that it could not much concern
-him if the captain came out and found him talking to the girl, and
-generally acting as though he were a passenger instead of an officer
-of the ship.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p> <p>"Come on deck," said he, "the
-air will refresh you."</p>
-
-<p>And they went up the companion-steps, whilst the Newfoundland
-continued to sentinel the captain's door.</p>
-
-<p>A glorious evening sky, in the west like a city on fire, clouds with
-brows glowing into scarlet as they sailed into the splendour abeam,
-the ship leaning with the breeze, and the white spume twinkling on the
-eastern blue in a trembling heaven-full of the lights of foam. Two sail
-were in sight, fairy gleams upon the lens-like edge on the port bow.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," cried the girl, with a swift look along the deck, "after an
-open boat! and one man groaning and then lying dead in her!"</p>
-
-<p>They walked slowly to and fro to leeward, leaving Mr. Candy,
-who ogled them betwixt his white eyelashes, to pace the weather
-quarter-deck in the loneliness of command. The sailors had immediately
-seen how things stood. Nothing that happens at sea astonishes a sailor,
-unless it is the expected, which is often a real surprise, so full of
-disappointments, of leeway, head winds, misreckoning is the life. Here
-was the chief mate who had fallen in with a girl whom he knew.</p>
-
-<p>"They might have kept company ashore," says Bill to Jim. "She was
-bound one way and he another. Ain't that sailor fashion?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ain't she got a figure?" says Jim to Bill. "Wouldn't I like to put
-my arm round her waist if Dick and the little 'un was playing. It's
-damned hard on us sailor men that no female society's allowed aboard a
-ship."</p>
-
-<p>"There's the figurehead if it's female," says Bill.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
-"I've known a man so 'ard up that of a dog-watch, when there was plenty
-o' light, he'd slide down the dolphin-striker just to talk to the woman
-on the stem-head. He'd say it was the next best thing."</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it was, for some figureheads in those days were a little
-gorgeous. I have seen ladies under the bowsprit with long black hair
-and swelling bosoms, bright with golden stars. Their blush was deep,
-their lips scarlet, their smile alluring, they were always curtseying,
-and the sea in its loving humours flung snow-white nosegays at them.</p>
-
-<p>But the shadow of the boy's death was still upon the ship, and so
-far the captain had treated his men <i>as</i> men, and they were sorry for
-him. You may take it that a man is no sailor who ill-treats a sailor,
-and despite tradition and the presence of the sea-lawyer, your ship's
-company, if they are British, will serve you honestly if their food is
-fit even for sailors, and if they are numerous enough to do the work
-of one man and half a man added per head, as against the one-man work
-which the shore exacts without expecting more.</p>
-
-<p>As Hardy and the girl walked the deck, whilst the ship sailed along
-stately in the beautiful light of that evening, they talked again of
-home and then of the country to which they were voyaging. The sail upon
-the port bow leaned like tiny jets of red flame, and no star of heaven
-could have filled the liquid distance with more grace.</p>
-
-<p>"It was certainly your destiny to make for Australia," said Hardy,
-"and I now say what I thought from the beginning, that your chances lie
-there. But we had to find you a berth."</p>
-
-<p>"Captain Smedley was very kind to me," she<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span> answered. "He would
-sometimes invite me into his cabin and talk to me as pleasantly as
-though he had known me all his life. He gave me an introduction to the
-Bishop of Calcutta, and begged him to do everything that could be done
-for a girl placed as I am. I believe he talked to the passengers about
-me, for some were extremely good-natured and sympathetic, and would
-apologise for troubling me if I waited upon them."</p>
-
-<p>"Any griffs aboard?" asked Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Some young officers," she answered, with a half smile upon her
-lips, and looking down upon the deck, "but I kept as much to myself as
-I could."</p>
-
-<p>"You'll find plenty of opportunities in Australia," said Hardy.
-"There are rich squatters in that country, and you can be driving about
-Melbourne and entertaining and doing what you pleased whilst he was a
-thousand miles off counting his sheep."</p>
-
-<p>"Suppose all the rich squatters kept themselves a thousand miles
-distant whilst I was in Melbourne, could I return in this ship?"</p>
-
-<p>She asked this question placidly, but her expression showed that she
-did not appreciate this reference to the squatters.</p>
-
-<p>"You want position and you'll get it."</p>
-
-<p>"Could I return in this ship?"</p>
-
-<p>"We'll see," he answered, smiling at her. "A dinner and champagne to
-the head of the firm of agents might help us, and nature did not intend
-that you should ever plead in vain."</p>
-
-<p>As he said this the captain came on deck, followed by Sailor.
-The Newfoundland, with the critical eye of an old salt, took a view
-of the horizon, and in a minute rushed forward on to the forecastle
-and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>reported two ships in sight on the port bow by a number
-of barks, which made the men, who were lounging about the knight-heads,
-laugh heartily. On seeing the captain, the mate touched his cap and
-walked right aft on the lee-side, where with folded arms he seemed to
-watch the sea, though he kept the captain and Julia in the corner of
-his eye.</p>
-
-<p>The poor man approached the girl, who received him with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Has Mr. Hardy looked after you?" he said, kindly and gently.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes, Captain Layard, I am very happy and comfortable, and thank
-you over and over again for your goodness. I believe I should have died
-by this time in that open boat, and I owe my life to you and this noble
-ship."</p>
-
-<p>"I am very dull and lonely," he said in a musing way, clearly
-inattentive to her words. "Those ships yonder break the continuity
-of this everlasting circle, but they'll vanish shortly, and the full
-desolation of the night will encompass us. It is the night that
-I fear&mdash;it is the night that I fear!" he continued, almost
-whispering, and gazing at her as a man looks at another whose pity and
-help his heart is yearning for. "I miss him! If I dream of him I shall
-go mad to find it a dream. But you know where he is."</p>
-
-<p>She hoped to divert his thoughts, and said: "I do not find the
-sea desolate, Captain Layard. On fine nights I could stand for
-hours looking at the stars; and is desolation on the sea when the
-sun is shining? If I were a man I would be a sailor, for, although
-it has nearly destroyed me, I have learnt to love the ocean."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p> <p>She looked toward Hardy. The dog, having barked
-his report of two sail in sight, came trotting aft, and stood beside
-his master. The captain looked at him a little while in silence, his
-brow contracted in meditation.</p>
-
-<p>"Which is real?" he asked, placing his foot upon the dog's shadow,
-"this or this?" and he put his hand upon the dog.</p>
-
-<p>Julia, who found a necessity to humour him, answered:</p>
-
-<p>"Some great thinker has written, 'Shadows we are, and shadows we
-pursue.'"</p>
-
-<p>"How long grows one's shadow in the dying sun!" said Captain Layard,
-turning his face&mdash;filled with the yearning of grief and charged
-with that subtle expression of madness for which no words are to be
-found&mdash;toward the burning sky; "and soon we are nothing but
-shadows. Do you believe in God?" He looked at her suddenly with an
-extraordinary gaze of passionate anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes, Captain Layard," replied the girl. "I believe in him now
-if ever I did, and I have thanked him."</p>
-
-<p>His face put on its triumphant look, but he was interrupted in the
-irrelevant sentiments he was about to deliver by the approach of the
-boatswain.</p>
-
-<p>Julia crossed the deck to Hardy, glad to escape the pain of such
-talk.</p>
-
-<p>"What is it?" said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"The men we picked up," answered the boatswain, "have asked me
-to come aft to say they're willing to serve as seamen aboard this
-ship."</p>
-
-<p>"You are a full company," replied the captain, quickly. "I can't
-afford to pay and keep more sailors."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p> <p>"They're
-likely men, sir," said the boatswain, speaking in a softened note of
-respectful compassion.</p>
-
-<p>"They'll expect their wages."</p>
-
-<p>The boatswain answered he thought that was likely.</p>
-
-<p>"No," said the captain, "we'll transship them, and send them
-home."</p>
-
-<p>He rounded on his heel, and sat upon the skylight, and gazed at
-the dying lights in the west. What could be more sane than this man's
-answers to the boatswain? Hardy had overheard them, and perplexity
-was deepened in him. Who was going to convince the sailors that their
-captain was mad unless he talked to them as he did to him and Julia?
-And the captain sat looking at the dimming glory, and did not seem to
-remember that he had been conversing with the girl, or to know that she
-had left him.</p>
-
-<p>It was fine weather throughout that night, and the moon shone,
-and the heaven of stars swarmed in sparkling hosts toward the grave
-of the sun until the pallor of the dawn, like the face of the risen
-Christ, put out those fires of the dark; the ship, bathed in the
-ice-white radiance, stole phantom-like over the boundless cemetery
-of the drowned, the perished sailors whose tombstones were in every
-breaking surge. All had been quiet aboard that stealing ship, clad to
-her trucks in the raiment of her day. The captain would pass a long
-time in his cabin, then appear on deck, and walk it for a little space
-self-engrossed; and it seemed to Hardy when his watch came round,
-and when the captain showed himself, that the man's isolation and
-silence <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>expressed, perhaps, a still dim but growing perception
-of the fate of his little boy, in which case the delusion would leave
-him, and his mind recover at least the strength it possessed when they
-made sail in the English Channel.</p>
-
-<p>When the sun rose the ocean rolled in mackerel-tinted mounds, and
-the ship swayed as she floated onwards at about five knots. Stu'nsails
-had been set by order of the captain when he came on deck at dawn,
-and, whitening the air on high, the swelling cloths carried the sight
-to the heavens, which arched in a miracle of motionless feathers of
-cloud, a glorious canopy of delicate plumes, in sweet keeping with the
-airy graces of the queenly fabric which proudly bowed upon its mighty
-throne.</p>
-
-<p>A sail was in sight on the starboard bow, and in two hours she would
-be abreast. The Newfoundland, coming on deck with the captain when the
-light broke, instantly barked its report of her, and now, a little
-after eight, Hardy was viewing her through the ship's telescope; for
-the sane instructions which had reached him were, that the four men
-were to be transferred to the first ship which would receive them.</p>
-
-<p>The four men were on the forecastle watching the coming vessel;
-they were good specimens of the English seaman of those days, sturdy
-and whiskered, bronzed in face and bowed in back, with that steady air
-which made you know that, like most British sailors, they were to be
-trusted beyond all breeds of foreign mariners in the hour of sea peril,
-when the ship was grinding out her heart upon the rocks, when the
-belching hatches were blackening the air into a storm cloud, when the
-blow of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span> stranger's bows had riven the side into a gulf, when
-the yawn of the started butt was burdening the hold with tons of
-ship-drowning brine.</p>
-
-<p>When the ships were abreast, the stranger proved American, bound
-for the River Thames. The beautiful flag of her great country shook
-its barred folds at the peak, and you thought of Bishop's Berkeley's
-prophetic line, "Westward the course of empire takes its way." Her
-yellow sheathing flashed in artillery spoutings as she rolled from the
-sun, her canvas with cotton was as white as milk, she was a wonder of
-sea architecture, the creation of a people whose sires had launched
-that exquisite structure, the Baltimore clipper.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Layard was now on deck, and Hardy must discover that in
-matters of routine he was not going to work with the diseased half
-of his head. He hailed the American captain, and they exchanged the
-information they asked.</p>
-
-<p>"What ship is that? Where are you from, and where are you bound
-to?"</p>
-
-<p>And the American wanted to know the Greenwich time by the
-chronometers in Captain Layard's cabin.</p>
-
-<p>Then was shouted across in words as sane as ever sounded from a
-quarter-deck the news of the recovery of four men from an open boat,
-and would the American captain carry them home? Of course he would, and
-within half an hour from the beginning of this rencounter the two ships
-had started on their separate courses with colours dipping in cordial
-good-byes&mdash;the seaman's hand-shake. And these were cousins.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER XI.</span> <span class="smaller">THE CAPTAIN'S BIRTHDAY</span></h2>
-
-<p>Now in this business of transferring the four men Hardy noticed that
-the captain made no reference to Miss Armstrong. Another captain would
-have asked her if she wished to go home: perhaps, indeed, would have
-sent her home without asking her. Was it because Captain Layard knew
-she had no home? Hardy hoped it might be that, but suspected it was
-not so. This ship wanted no stewardess; the girl was one more to feed,
-and owners do not love liberality in their captains. In short, the
-mate came to the conclusion that the captain's benevolence in keeping
-the girl and giving her a passage to Australia for nothing was due to
-hallucination, and the thought was uneasiness itself both for Julia's
-sake and the ship's.</p>
-
-<p>It was the day following the transshipment of the men that he found
-an opportunity during the captain's absence to take a turn with the
-girl and talk to her. The sun was shining a little hotly, and the
-clouds were sailing fast. Each round of swell, as it came under-running
-the ship out of the northeast, was ridged and wrinkled with arches of
-foam, and the day was alive with the music in the rigging, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
-the speckled wings of sea-birds in the wake, and the smoke-like shadow
-of vapour floating through the sunshine on the water.</p>
-
-<p>After the couple had talked a little, Hardy said:</p>
-
-<p>"How does the captain treat you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Very kindly," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>"I keep an eye upon him," he said, "but it will not do to seem to
-hang near when he is talking to you. He might round and become fierce,
-for from madness you may expect anything. What is his talk about?"</p>
-
-<p>"Chiefly his lost child."</p>
-
-<p>A seaman who was in the main-rigging putting a fresh seizing to a
-ratline looked at the girl, and thought deep in himself, Oh, lovey,
-what a figure! But what that whiskered heart admired most was the
-coquettish cock of her head, the grace of one hand upon her hip, the
-charm of her motions as she walked, her posture when she turned aft
-or forward on the return that was like a pause in some sweet dancer's
-movements. Yes, Jack can keep a bright lookout when a girl heaves in
-sight, but the mighty Charles Dickens is right in holding that Jack's
-Nan is often the unloveliest of the fair.</p>
-
-<p>"Does he go on thinking that you know where his child is?" said
-Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. It is a fixed delusion, though I cannot humour it&mdash;it is
-too sad&mdash;in spite of your wish."</p>
-
-<p>"The oddest part to me," said Hardy, "is the reason he shows in his
-professional work. He doesn't confound things; the sail he talks of is
-the sail it is; he still knows the ropes. The flicker of the leach of a
-topgallantsail will set him wanting a small pull on the leebrace."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p> <p>"How does he manage with the navigation?" asked
-the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"He works it out as I do. He finds the ship's position to a second.
-This may be the effect of habit, but is not custom beaten into rags
-by insanity, like the head of an old drum? It's not so in this case,
-and the crew mayn't find him out till the pilot boards us, and guess
-nothing until they hear that the doctors have locked him up."</p>
-
-<p>"Then what does his madness signify?" said the girl. "He'll be as
-good as the sanest if we arrive safely."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, but it's the getting there! It's the what may happen to-morrow,
-or to-morrow, or to-morrow, and that is going to make my hair gray,
-Miss Armstrong."</p>
-
-<p>"Call me Julia," she said, looking at him with a sudden light in her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Why should I take that liberty?" he replied, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>"Because I should love it," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll not call you Julia before him," he exclaimed, with a note of
-fondness which brought a charming expression into her face, as the
-kisses of a shower freshen the perfume of the rose. "It must be a stiff
-Miss Armstrong or I am no mate," and then they fell to talking a little
-nonsense.</p>
-
-<p>A day came, and it was the fifth day dating from the drowning of
-the little drummer, and it was a Friday, in all tradition a black
-day for the sailor; and nobody, I think, has taken notice that it
-was Friday when Nelson, full of instinctive assurance that he would
-never return alive, kissed his sleeping child and started to join his
-ship for Trafalgar.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span></p> <p>The captain, Miss Armstrong,
-and Mr. Hardy sat at breakfast. The ship had made good way; not many
-parallels lay between her and the northern verge of the tropics. The
-sun poured his light in fire, and the flying-fish sparkled under the
-bows.</p>
-
-<p>The sailors had noticed nothing in the captain to set them growling
-suspicion into one another's ears with askant looks aft. If Mr. Candy,
-who lived close to the skipper, had taken any sort of altitude of the
-poor man's mind, he kept his observation secret; or it might be that he
-believed the captain was a little upset by the loss of his child, and
-he had not the penetrating sagacity of Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>The wind had fallen light, and the motions of the ship were as
-easy as a swimmer's. Hardy had noticed in the captain's face when
-they met that morning an expression of lofty triumph, of sublimated
-self-complacency such as a man deranged by conquest and acclamation
-might wear as he passes slowly through the huzzaing crowds. He seemed
-self-crowned, and might have reminded a better student than Hardy of
-one of Nat Lee's heaven-defying stage-kings.</p>
-
-<p>"To-day is Friday," said the captain, addressing Miss Armstrong,
-"and what day do you think it is?"</p>
-
-<p>Julia thought awhile, for she fancied he meant something in the
-almanac.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know, captain," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>"It is my birthday," said the captain, "and Johnny is waiting
-somewhere to kiss me."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy was about to deliver with all the respect of a mate a sentence
-of congratulation, but the closing words of the captain silenced
-him.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p> <p>"I wish you many happy returns of the day," said
-Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"You might like to know how old I am," said the captain, with an
-indescribable look at the girl, "but every man should respect the
-secret of his birth. Until we come to sixty we like to be thought much
-younger, and when we come to eighty we tell lies that our friends
-may think us ninety. I have good reason to congratulate myself upon
-my birthday. I cannot believe that the Red Ensign ever floated over
-a better seaman than I, a man who is both a gentleman and a sailor,
-and it has been my privilege," he continued, talking as though he was
-making an after-dinner speech, "to have dignified by my behaviour and
-breeding a service that in public opinion is in want of dignity."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy burst into a laugh; he could not help it, but he instantly
-apologised by saying that the captain's words made him think of the
-first skipper he sailed with, betwixt whose legs, as he stood, you
-could have fitted an oval picture, and whose face for beauty might have
-been picked out of the harness cask.</p>
-
-<p>The captain with a slight frown cast his eyes upon the mate, and
-said, "Johnny shall be a sailor. His mother would have desired him to
-serve the queen at sea, but he shall perpetuate <i>me</i> under the flag I
-serve."</p>
-
-<p>This was followed by a short silence; the others found nothing to
-say. It was perhaps one of the saddest illustrations of madness on
-record, and it set the listeners' hearts pining to do something that
-was denied to their sympathy and distress.</p>
-
-<p>"The men shall have a holiday," said the captain,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
-who was scarcely eating. "It is my birthday, and they shall drink my
-health at eight bells. You will drink my health, Mr. Hardy, and you,
-Miss Armstrong?"</p>
-
-<p>They answered that they would drink his health with the greatest
-pleasure.</p>
-
-<p>"You and Mr. Candy in rum, Mr. Hardy; you'll drink with the men,
-for I like the officers of my ship to be associated with the crew on
-festive occasions."</p>
-
-<p>"I will gladly drink with the men, sir," responded Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Rum is not a fit drink for young ladies," continued the captain,
-with a faint smile, "and you, Miss Armstrong, will drink my health in
-claret&mdash;a wine which shall not hurt you, because 'tis light and
-old and nourishing."</p>
-
-<p>Julia bowed. Hardy was wondering what the men would think, but if
-they thought this unusual deviation from sea routine odd, they would
-certainly like it and hope for more. It was an exhibition of insane
-generosity, of lunatic kindness, and the mate could see nothing else in
-it.</p>
-
-<p>In obedience to the captain's instructions he went on deck, sending
-Candy below to his breakfast, and called the boatswain aft.</p>
-
-<p>"It's the captain's orders," said he, "that the men shall knock off
-work all day."</p>
-
-<p>The boatswain stared. "All day, sir?" he said.</p>
-
-<p>"It's his birthday," answered Hardy. "And all hands will drink his
-health in good Jamaica rum at eight bells, served out on the capstan
-head."</p>
-
-<p>Innumerable wrinkles overran the boatswain's face as grin after grin
-rippled about his gale-hardened skin. He looked as if he would like to
-say that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span> here was a traverse that beat all his going a-fishing.
-But the immense pleasure that beamed in his expression was full
-assurance of the reception the crew would give the news.</p>
-
-<p>He walked slowly forward, and the men wondered at his deep and
-constant grin. "One of the mate's stories, I reckon," thought Bill, and
-Jim also thought that some joke of the mate had started the boatswain
-on that smile. When he reached the forecastle the boatswain put his
-silver whistle to his lips and blew the shrill music of "All hands!"
-and a hundred little birds of the groves and woods seemed to be perched
-in song upon the yards and rigging.</p>
-
-<p>The fellows who were below came tumbling up, startled by that call
-in fine weather. In a very little time the whole of the crew had
-gathered round their forecastle leader, who, after clearing his throat
-and gazing about him with his profound smile, said:</p>
-
-<p>"Lads, it's the capt'n's birthday, and it's to be a holiday for you
-all right away through, with liquor at noon to drink his health in."</p>
-
-<p>Sailors are usually so badly treated by all variety of shipowners'
-sullen deafness to their grievances, that when on rare occasions,
-sometimes originating in madness, they are well treated, their
-astonishment is a phenomenon of emotion. It seems unnatural, they
-think. A beautiful mermaid with a gilded tail and flowing hair of
-bronze, with her white revealed charms made entrancing by the soft
-blue of the water, could not amaze them more than a skipper's kindness
-taking the form of Layard's.</p>
-
-<p>A brief spell of silence fell upon them as they looked at one
-another and at the boatswain.</p>
-
-<p>"Ain't yer coddin' us?" said a man.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p> <p>"Fill your
-pipes, and go a-courting," answered the boatswain. "I'm for taking
-advantage of it when it comes, which ain't ever too soon or often."</p>
-
-<p>This convinced the crew, who delivered a loud cheer, and then began
-to talk and scatter, all of them feeling a bit aimless, for it wasn't
-like going ashore.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy, who was keeping the deck whilst Candy breakfasted, watched
-the proceedings on the forecastle, and wondered if this stroke of the
-captain was going to give them any idea of the truth. But why should
-it? If they suspected, through this act of kindness, that the boy's
-loss had shifted the "old man's" ballast, they would only hope that a
-long time would pass before his mental cargo was trimmed afresh. But
-in truth they did not know that their captain was insane, and even
-Candy, who was below sitting at the table and listening to the skipper
-conversing with Miss Armstrong, would not have kissed the Book upon
-it.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Mr. Candy came on deck, but Hardy, whose watch below it
-was, thought he would stay a little and talk to Miss Armstrong, and
-observe the captain if he should appear. Very soon after Mr. Candy
-arrived Julia rose lightly through the companion-hatch. She was now
-looking quite well, better indeed than she looked when Hardy first met
-her. Again he found himself admiring her faultless figure and the pose
-of her head, enchanting through its unconsciousness.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is the captain?" he asked her.</p>
-
-<p>"I left him at the table," she replied. "He was not in the cabin
-when I came out of my berth."</p>
-
-<p>"I hope it won't end in his destroying himself,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
-exclaimed Hardy. "There is a great deal of goodness and humanity in
-the poor fellow's heart, and it's dreadful to see a man struggling to
-conquer his brain's disease. Who can tell what passes in the minds of
-such people? But what am I to do? He is Prime Minister aboard this
-ship, and those are the people," said he, nodding toward the crew, "who
-must turn him out."</p>
-
-<p>"Have you told them they are to have a holiday?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't they look like it?" he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"How'll they spend it?" she inquired.</p>
-
-<p>"In loafing and smoking and sleeping. If the captain's liberal with
-his grog&mdash; Well, the drummer's gone out of their heads&mdash;'tis
-the way of the sea: a bubble over the side, a broken pipe in a vacant
-bunk, and the ship sails on. They may dance and sing songs; and I hope
-they will, for God knows the captain is depressing enough, and I like
-to see the hornpipe danced."</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile where was Captain Layard? He was in his cabin seated close
-to the medicine-chest, which stood open, and reading a thin volume all
-about poisons, and the quantities to be administered when given for
-sickness. His great dog lay beside him. He read with a knitted brow,
-and sometimes sank the volume to lift with his right hand some bottle
-of poison out of its little square place. He would look at it and then
-refer to the book.</p>
-
-<p>In this singular study, fearful with the menace of the light in
-his eyes, tragically portentous with the lifting look of triumph and
-the insane smile, he spent about half an hour, and then closing the
-lid of the medicine-chest, he stood up and looked at the drum,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>
-and softly wrung his hands with a heart-moving expression, whose appeal
-lay in the soul's perception seeking to pierce in vain the torturing
-and bewildering veil of disease; for it is not the immortal soul of man
-which is mad in madness, and this belief is God-sent; the soil buries
-and resolves to ashes the mania that destroys, and the purified soul is
-liberated to await the judgment of God&mdash;its Home.</p>
-
-<p>After a few minutes he stepped into the cabin and called the
-attendant, who was handling crockery and glasses in the pantry. The
-fellow stepped out.</p>
-
-<p>"Jump below into the lazarette," said the captain, "and draw a
-bucket of rum. I want plenty. This is my birthday, and all hands will
-drink my health."</p>
-
-<p>The man was not at all astonished; he had got the news from the
-forecastle. He was a sort of steward, and knew the ropes in the
-lazarette. The little hatch was just abaft the captain's chair, and
-was opened by an iron ring. The man accepted the captain's orders
-literally, disappeared, and returned with a clean, big bucket.</p>
-
-<p>The lazarette is an after-hold, a compartment of a ship in which in
-those times all sorts of commodities used to be stowed, chiefly edible,
-and for cabin use. The man lifted the hatch-cover&mdash;the hatch was
-no more than a man-hole&mdash;and by help of the light, which shone
-down upon a cask that was almost immediately under, pumped the bucket
-nearly full.</p>
-
-<p>The captain went to the hatch and looked down, and exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>"Hand it up; I'll help you." He received the bucket and placed
-it on the deck, and the man sprang through the hatch and replaced
-the cover.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p> <p>"Take it into my cabin," said
-the captain, "and bring it on deck when I send you for it."</p>
-
-<p>And this was done, and the man went on deck whilst the captain
-entered his berth and closed the door.</p>
-
-<p>"I have drawed enough to swim ye," said the cabin-attendant to
-Bill.</p>
-
-<p>"'Tain't like being in port, though," answered Bill, whilst Jim and
-several others like him grinned at the news of the grog. "When I takes
-a drop, I'm for dancin', and where are the gurls?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" echoed Jim in a sigh born of lobscouse and the livid fat of
-diseased pork.</p>
-
-<p>Finding that the captain did not make his appearance, Hardy kept
-the deck with Julia. Again they talked of the old home, the drunken
-stepmother, the withering indifference of the retired Commander R. N.
-to the loneliness and helplessness of his child, and to her prospects
-in life.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy spoke of it with heat, and the girl's face was often hot with
-the passion of memory.</p>
-
-<p>"What should I have done without you?" she said once and again,
-and still again. "But if I cannot find employment in Australia, I
-must return in this ship," and she looked at him with the eyes of a
-sweetheart.</p>
-
-<p>"If anything happens to Captain Layard," said he, "no doubt I shall
-get command."</p>
-
-<p>Now, "If anything should happen" is the roundabout of "If he
-should die," and people modestly thus speak of death as though it was
-anything, as though it was not the <i>only</i> thing that is real, to be
-expected without fear of disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>"I believe he will grow quite mad long before we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
-arrive at Melbourne," said Julia; "but even taking him as he is, would
-the agents trust him?"</p>
-
-<p>"You want to come home in this ship, Julia?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"You are the only friend I have in the world," she answered; and
-thus they cooed without billing, for Jack was in strength forward, and
-the second mate walked the deck to windward, and a sailor stood at the
-wheel.</p>
-
-<p>About a quarter before noon, but not till then, the captain emerged
-with his sextant. If he had come up with a face of madness, the sextant
-he held would have clothed him with all the sanity he needed in the
-sailors' opinion. But his face showed no distinctive marks of the
-condition of his mind, the expression was even calm; he seemed as one
-who was about to realise the consuming hope of his life; the shadow of
-the coming event subdued him. The crew were on deck gathered forward
-in all variety of sprawling posture, smoking and talking, with teeth
-sharpened by the hard and bitter fare of the sea. Also seven bells
-having been struck some time since, they knew that noon and a bumper of
-old Jamaica were at hand, and every eye was directed aft.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy disappeared and returned with his sextant, and Candy fetched
-his, and the three men fell to screwing down the sun till its lower
-limb was like a wheel upon the ocean line. The captain never spoke,
-and Julia studying his face noticed the subdued look and the calmness,
-and felt a little despairful, for, poor heart, she was in love, and
-wanted the captain to go raving mad that Hardy might get command and
-marry her at Melbourne, and bring her home. O God, what joy for a heart
-so long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span> joyless! A home, a protector, a husband, on whose
-breast she could lean with her lips at his ear in softest murmurings of
-wifely confidence.</p>
-
-<p>"Eight bells! Make it the bell eight!" and the four double chimes
-rang gladly along the decks and up aloft.</p>
-
-<p>"Pass the word for the cabin servant," said the captain, speaking
-and looking as collectedly as the sanest of skippers might show in that
-first command of tacking, "Ready about!"</p>
-
-<p>The man came aft in a hurry, impelled by the thirsty yearning of
-the forecastle mob, and in a couple or three minutes he was standing
-at the capstan just abaft the mast with a bucket on the "head," and a
-tot measure in his hand. The captain stood close to the man, and the
-crew gathered around. The Newfoundland stood at his master's side. Now
-was to be seen the most glowing canvas in the panorama which unfolds
-this ship's adventure. The picture was alive with its crowd of faces
-of seamen watching the lips of their commander, alive with the colour
-and diversity of their apparel, with the silent breathing of the white
-breast soaring to the height of the fiery streak of bunting, which
-trembled in a dog-vane from the main-royal truck. The sea was soft in
-caress and note, and Julia thought of the wayside fountain to which
-<i>she</i> as well as Hardy had listened in the night, when, in the pause,
-she heard the fall of the shower under the bow.</p>
-
-<p>"My lads," began the captain, and Hardy watched him with strained
-attention, believing that the crew would see it, "this is my birthday,
-and I am departing from the custom of the sea in making a general
-holiday of it."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span></p> <p>He grew pale and paler as he
-spoke, but his voice did not falter, and no change was visible in his
-expression save that a light as of secret exultation brightened his eye
-and accentuated his pallor.</p>
-
-<p>"I have always tried to make a good master to my men, and to treat
-them like men and sailors, and not as dogs which other captains seem to
-find them."</p>
-
-<p>This was attended by a growl of appreciation.</p>
-
-<p>"So, my lads," continued the captain, "as this is my birthday, one
-and all of you, the mates, and the lady last, but not least, shall
-drink my health, and the health of the little boy who has left his drum
-behind him."</p>
-
-<p>"May God bless you and him!" said one of the men, for this proved
-to be one of those touches of nature which made all those rough hearts
-akin.</p>
-
-<p>"Now serve out&mdash;serve out, and handsomely!"</p>
-
-<p>The boatswain drank first. And again and again and again the measure
-was filled until all hands of the sailors, saving the man at the wheel,
-had swallowed the fiery draught, many with a smack and a smile of
-relish. Then the wheel was relieved, and another bumper was swallowed
-with a "Many 'appy returns of the day, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"Drink," said the captain to the attendant, and the man drained a
-full dose.</p>
-
-<p>"Sweeten the measure for the two mates," said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>This was quickly done. And then Hardy drank and then Candy, for both
-had the throats of the sea, which seem lined with brass when 'tis ten
-per cent. above proof. "Your health, sir"&mdash;and&mdash;"your health,
-sir," and the mates took it down.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, Miss Armstrong, you will drink my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span> health," said the
-captain, and with the gallantry of an old beau he took her by the hand
-and led her into the cabin. She glanced at Hardy with a smile before
-she vanished.</p>
-
-<p>The men scattered as they went forward to get their dinner. The
-captain took a wine-glass from a rack, and a bottle from a locker, and
-filled the glass with red wine.</p>
-
-<p>"Drink to me and to the boy I am seeking, and then tell me where he
-is," he exclaimed as he extended the glass. She took it, and said with
-forced cheerfulness to humour him:</p>
-
-<p>"Your health, Captain Layard, and many happy returns of this day,
-and my heart's gratitude to you for your kindness to me. And God will
-some day show you where your child is."</p>
-
-<p>She drank half the contents of the glass. His eyes sparkled, and his
-face was grotesque with the workings of his dreadful exultation.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, you must drain it&mdash;you must drain it, Miss Armstrong, or
-it'll be bad luck and no pledge."</p>
-
-<p>She drank the glass empty, and put it down upon the table. He gazed
-at her with extraordinary intentness as though he listened to hear her
-words, then swiftly entered his cabin, closed and bolted the door, and
-pulling out a loaded revolver from under the pillow in his bunk, seated
-himself, and with the weapon upon his knee in his grasp sat hearkening,
-with his eyes fastened upon the door.</p>
-
-<p>The time slowly passed and still he continued to sit, grasping the
-pistol upon his knee, with his eyes of madness fixed upon the door.
-His face was now revolting with its look of burning expectation and
-triumph. Suddenly a stream of sunshine moved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span> slowly, like a spoke
-of a softly revolving wheel, over the carpeted deck of the captain's
-cabin, and any one might have known by the motions of the ship that
-she was not under command. You heard faint, vague sounds of trampling
-above, a dim noise as of a sick crowd poisoned by vapour and feebly
-struggling to escape, and in the midst of it the captain's door was
-struck: the blow was languid and repeated three or four times only, and
-no noise attended it.</p>
-
-<p>The madman sprang from his chair and stood erect with the revolver
-half raised from his side, and his eyes sparkled in his face that
-was dark with murderous intent. Thus he stood whilst the spoke of
-light through the port-hole moved gradually round the cabin until it
-vanished, by which time all was silent without. The unhappy man resumed
-his seat and former posture, and thus it went for half an hour at
-least; then, always grasping his murderous weapon, he walked like one
-in the chamber of death, carefully opened the door, and peered out.</p>
-
-<p>The first sight he witnessed was the figure of the chief mate,
-Hardy, stretched at its length and on its side within a pace or two
-of the threshold, and upon the locker on the port side of the table,
-a cushioned locker as comfortable as a couch, lay the form of Julia
-Armstrong; her right arm hung down, and she lay as apparently dead as
-Hardy. The captain stepped across the body of the mate and looked with
-devouring, sparkling eyes at the girl, while he seemed to listen for
-sounds above. Nothing was to be heard save the inner grumbling of the
-ship as she swayed helpless in arrest. Now and again the wheel chains
-clanked to the blow of the sea upon the rudder.</p>
-
-<p>The captain went to the girl's side and looked at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
-her: her face was placid, pale, ghastly, and her lips a bright red.
-Thus exactly did Hardy's face show, and any one experienced in the
-symptoms of poisoning by laudanum or morphia would have known that
-these two people had been heavily drugged, even perhaps unto death.</p>
-
-<p>It was the birthday of a madman in search of his drowned child,
-and they had drunk his health and the little drummer's. His face took
-on an air of hurry and bustle, and, always gripping his revolver, he
-stepped nimbly to the companion-steps and mounted them. He raised his
-head just above the companion-hood and looked; he saw that the man who
-had stood at the wheel was lying motionless beside it. Almost abreast
-of the companion was the curved form of Candy, who seemed to have been
-doubled up and then reeled into lifelessness. A few prostrate forms
-were to be seen forward, in the waist and about the forescuttle. They
-lay lifeless in the sleep or death of the drugged draught in which they
-had pledged their captain. In the forecastle lay the rest, some on the
-deck, some in their bunks, and every face showed as Hardy's and the
-girl's, placid, pale, and ghastly, and the lips a bright red. All the
-symptoms had been expended, the first pleasurable mental excitement,
-then the weariness, the headache, the intolerable weight of limb, the
-spinning and sickening giddiness, the drowsiness, the stupor, and now
-insensibility or death.</p>
-
-<p>The captain rose in the hatch to his full height and stepped on
-to the deck, followed by the dog, which went to Candy and smelt him,
-and then with a low, uneasy growl went to the figure beside the wheel
-and sniffed at it. With a dreadful smile of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span> hope and rejoicing
-the captain thrust the pistol into a side pocket and, going to the
-wheel, put the helm hard a-starboard, and secured it by several turns
-of the end of the mainbrace.</p>
-
-<p>This done, always preserving his horrible expression of lofty
-exaltation, he took the breaker out of the bow of the port
-quarter-boat, filled it from the scuttle-butt, and replaced it. God
-knows how he was directed in what he did; the instincts of habit and
-knowledge must have governed him. It is certain that he made his
-preparations for departure with the sanity of a healthy brain. His dog
-closely followed him, and seemed afraid. He then went below into the
-pantry and returned with his arms full of food, which he placed in the
-stern-sheets along with a tumbler which he pulled out of his pocket. He
-moved rapidly and his lips often worked, and he'd flash his gaze along
-the decks at that memorable, tragical picture of ship with lifeless
-figures upon the planks, with all her white canvas curving inwards,
-stirless in the stream of the breeze. She seemed to have been drugged
-too, and rolled with a kind of stagger upon the soft folds of the
-swell.</p>
-
-<p>He went below again, the dog at his heels, and, entering his cabin,
-took a dog-collar and chain out of a locker and secured the noble
-animal to a leg of the table, which was cleated and immovable. When he
-had done this he pressed his lips to the dog's head and sobbed dryly
-and sighed, for the light in his eyes was too hot a fire for tears. The
-dog whined and wagged its tail, and looked a hundred questions with its
-gentle eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall bring him back, I shall bring him back, Sailor!" the
-captain muttered to the Newfoundland.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span></p> <p>And all this
-time Hardy lay close beside the dog as dead to the eye as any corpse
-under the ground.</p>
-
-<p>The captain went to the side of the girl and picked her up off the
-cushioned locker with the ease of a man lifting a child. With her
-motionless form in his arms he gained the deck and laid her in the
-boat, passing her under the after-thwart, so that her head lay low in
-the stern-sheets. He sprang for a colour in the flag-locker and placed
-the bunting that was ready rolled under her head. She never sighed, she
-never stirred. Not paler nor calmer could her face have shown on the
-pillow of death.</p>
-
-<p>Now the boat was to be lowered, and he went to work thus: he cast
-adrift the gripes which had held the boat steady betwixt the davits,
-and then he slackened the falls at the bow, belaying the tackle, and
-then he slackened the falls at the stern, belaying the tackle; and
-so by degrees the boat sank in irregular jerks to the surface of the
-water. He sprang on to the bow tackle and descended with the nimbleness
-of a monkey, with wonderful swiftness unhooked the blocks, and the boat
-was free. Next he stepped the mast upon which the sail lay furled, then
-the rudder; then shoved clear and hoisted the small square of lug, and
-in a few minutes he was blowing away gently into the boundless blue
-distance, looking all about him with a proud but ghastly smile for a
-sight of his missing boy, whilst the girl lay like the dead in the
-bottom of the boat.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER XII.</span> <span class="smaller">JULIA CALLS "JOHNNY!"</span></h2>
-
-<p>It was about half-past two o'clock in the afternoon and the sun
-shone hotly. The breeze was a pleasant wind for that boat, and the
-captain put her dead before it and blew onwards into the boundless
-distance, squarely seated at the amidship helm, with the white and
-placid face of the drugged girl at his feet.</p>
-
-<p>He would often look at her with a passionate eagerness, and then
-direct his brilliant eyes over the sea, and his countenance was now
-shocking with its expression of real madness, charged with the ghastly
-illumination of his one maniacal belief, that the girl, who was fresh
-from the sea when he missed his boy, knew where he was and would take
-him to the child, and then they would return to the ship, and once
-more the drum would rattle and the whistle awaken the birds in the
-rigging.</p>
-
-<p>Never before in all human tradition of ocean life had fate painted
-upon the bosom of the deep a picture more wonderful by virtue of
-its secret and tragic meaning. There would be nothing in the mere
-scene of a beautiful clipper ship under all plain sail, her canvas
-hollowing inwards visibly, to all intents and purposes derelict; there
-would be nothing in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span> spectacle of a little open boat borne
-onwards by the humming heart of its swelling square of canvas, steered
-by a lonely figure, the other being hidden. It might be to a distant
-eye the flight of a single survivor from a floating pest-house. But it
-was the story of the thing which makes it so extraordinary that I who
-am writing pause with astonishment, dismayed also by the lack of the
-exquisite cunning I need to submit the truth.</p>
-
-<p>The girl had been drugged with morphia, but in what dose, and in
-what doses the men, it is impossible to conjecture. The madman reading
-the book of directions may have understood it, but insanity had
-rendered memory useless when it came to his mixing the poison with the
-liquor and the wine. But she was not dead; he would have found that out
-if he had bared her breast and put his ear to the white softness. But
-would she die in that sleep which was as death? for I believe it is the
-heart's action that fails in such cases, and at any moment her soul
-might return to God.</p>
-
-<p>But he! poor unhappy wretch, if he understood what his mad but most
-moving love for his child had impelled him to do, his perception would
-not be as ours. His heart burned with desire that she should awake and
-tell him in which direction he should steer, for already the ship was a
-toy astern, three spires of ice-like radiance dipping to the eye on the
-brows of the blue swell as the boat rose and sank, jewelling the water
-with two foam-threaded lines of little yeasty bubbles.</p>
-
-<p>Would she ever awaken? How long would she continue in sleep? To
-some a dose of morphia professionally prescribed will yield a long
-night's rest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span> not wholly unrefreshing, though the drug is obnoxious
-to the brain, which in time it murders. Therefore she might sleep into
-the early hours of the night.</p>
-
-<p>But these were not <i>his</i> speculations. His mind was intent on one
-object, and he held the boat straight before the wind, waiting for her
-to look at him and rise, and point to the spot where his boy was.</p>
-
-<p>It passed into about an hour before sunset.</p>
-
-<p>From time to time the captain had laid his hand gently upon the
-girl's brow, believing she would open her eyes and speak to him. He was
-like a child whose grave or tragic act was beyond his mind's capacity
-to understand. He was painfully haggard, and sweat drops were on his
-forehead and cheeks, but the dreadful fire was always in his eyes. And
-once he stared fixedly over the port bow of the boat as though his poor
-brain had shaped the vision of his child: he stared as though he beheld
-the phantom, and when it vanished out of the perfidious cell which had
-created it he sighed and frowned.</p>
-
-<p>He took no heed of sensation; thirst and hunger may have been
-his, but he never left the helm to drink or eat. At the hour I have
-named the westering sun was beginning to empurple the east, and he
-was steering toward the point where the evening star would rise. More
-than half the moon was hanging in a broken shape of dim pearl over
-the boat's bows. All at once the captain's ceaseless stare at the
-ocean brought his eyes to an object almost directly ahead. He was a
-sailor, and his afflicted reason could not deceive him. Right ahead
-and within half an hour's sail&mdash;so low seated was the gunwale of
-that boat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>&mdash;lay a small vessel, partly dismasted and deep
-sunk. She was painted black. Her lower masts were white, and both
-foresail and mainsail were hanging, but the trysail was stowed.</p>
-
-<p>"He will be there! he will be there!" cried the captain in a voice
-that swept like a shriek from his lips, and as the words left him the
-girl, with a long, strange sigh, opened her eyes full upon the wild
-nightmare face that was on a line with her head, for he had sprung to
-his feet.</p>
-
-<p>"He is there!" he shouted again.</p>
-
-<p>Then looking down he saw her watching him, and had he been sane
-would have witnessed the awakening reason in her darkening into horror.
-She tried to sit up, but her body was heavy as lead.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, what is this? Where am I?" she asked, more in a mutter than in
-clear speech.</p>
-
-<p>"He is there!" he cried, pointing with a frantic gesture, "and you
-have known it throughout your sleep. Look!" He stooped, put his hands
-under her arms and lifted her out of the bottom of the boat into the
-stern-sheets, against whose back-board she sank.</p>
-
-<p>Now morphia gives you but sleep if it does not kill you, and
-reason with many is immediately active when slumber is ended; but the
-captain's face alone would have sufficed to stimulate the most sluggish
-consciousness into clear perception, and without understanding the
-reason of it she grasped her situation.</p>
-
-<p>She was alone in a boat with the mad captain of the <i>York</i>, and
-there was nothing in sight save the everlasting circle of the sea
-girdling a small broken vessel toward which the boat was running,
-for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span> captain had his hand upon the yoke, and the little
-fabric was dead before it once again.</p>
-
-<p>Despair laid the ice-cold hand of death upon the poor girl's heart.
-What could she do? What would <i>he</i> do?</p>
-
-<p>As the sun slowly floated down the slope he was glorifying, the moon
-brightened her broken face. Julia's lips were dry; her tongue had the
-rasp of a cat's upon the roof of her mouth.</p>
-
-<p>"Is there water here?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes. You shall have water. Put your hand upon this. What
-sha'n't you have who have helped me to find him!"</p>
-
-<p>She extended her hand and held the yoke steady, and he went into the
-bows with the glass and filled it from the breaker, all as sensibly as
-though he was right in mind; but he stood two or three moments to look
-at the vessel they were nearing and talk to her.</p>
-
-<p>She drank with the thirst of fever, and then perfect realisation
-possessing her, a little impulse of hope quickened the beat of her
-heart, for she thought to herself, made cool by hope, "There are people
-in that ship, and I shall be saved."</p>
-
-<p>The vessel was a small brig, floating on a cargo of timber. She
-showed a tolerable height of side, and judging from her condition she
-had started a butt, and the inrush had overmastered the pump, and as
-her davits were empty her people had no doubt got away in the boats.
-She made a churchyard picture for forlornness, with the broken moon
-hanging over her, though daylight still throbbed in folds of cloud in
-the deep west.</p>
-
-<p>Julia saw with a fainting heart that the brig was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
-deserted, and she turned her eyes up to God and asked what should she
-do?</p>
-
-<p>The captain stood in silence, with one hand backward upon the yoke,
-his head inclined forward with intent, searching stare.</p>
-
-<p>"He may be in that brig," at last he said. "What moved then? No,
-'twas the swing of the forebrace. And if he is not in that vessel," he
-continued, in a voice of cunning, "you who know where he is will tell
-me where to steer."</p>
-
-<p>She brought the whole of her wits together in her resolution to
-live, and remembered that she had given some order to this man's
-insanity by her system of answering his talk. She exclaimed with all
-the tranquillity she could summon:</p>
-
-<p>"If he is not in that vessel, Captain Layard, you will let me rest
-in her for the night, because if you keep me sitting in this open boat
-I shall be worn out, or I might die&mdash;I am not strong&mdash;and
-how, then, could I help you to find little Johnny?"</p>
-
-<p>"Right! You are right," he answered, swiftly; "you shall rest in
-that brig if he is not there; but if he is there," changing his voice
-into a note of triumph, he added, "we must rejoin the ship, because I
-want the men to see him. And I am dying for his company at night, and
-for the sound of his drum."</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke these words the boat was alongside the abandoned
-timberman, and with the dexterity of a sailor&mdash;for in all
-professional work he was as sane as the sanest&mdash;he put the helm
-down, sprang to let go the halliards of the lug, and secured the boat
-by passing her painter through a channel plate.</p>
-
-<p>This brig had old-fashioned channels, which were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
-platforms secured to the ship's side so as to give a wide spread to the
-shrouds and backstays. The boat sat close beside the main-channel. With
-the resolution of one who works for life the girl seized the lanyards
-of the dead-eyes, and with the ease which her graceful figure would
-have promised gained the platform of channel, and a minute later the
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>With aberration disciplined by professional habit the captain went
-to work, his intentions being perfectly sane, save that he discovered
-an extraordinary anxiety and eagerness to get on board the brig. He
-knew that he and the girl were to pass the night in the vessel, and so,
-with the quick motions of madness and with the strength which madness
-often confers, he got the breaker of water into the main-channel, then
-placed beside it the stock of provisions he had stowed away aft, and
-called to Julia:</p>
-
-<p>"Do you see him?"</p>
-
-<p>"Come on deck, and we will look," she answered, for now that she
-stood on a solid deck her nerve had returned.</p>
-
-<p>"Steady this breaker on the rail," he called.</p>
-
-<p>He handed it on to the rail, and she held it. He then threw the
-provisions on to the deck, leapt inboard, and placed the breaker
-betwixt a couple of loose planks. The moon was shining brightly, and
-its light rippled in lines of lustrous pearl. The heave of the sea was
-slow and solemn, the wind was soft and weak, and the west was still
-scored with streaks of crimson; but night was at hand, and some stars
-were trembling in the east.</p>
-
-<p>She was one of those little brigs which are among the quaintest
-of the marine objects of the port or harbour. Her forward-deck from
-the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>main-hatchway was heaped with timber cleverly stowed,
-with room for a little caboose and a narrow alley to it from the hatch.
-Some of the running rigging lay loose about the decks, and this gave
-her a look of confusion. Otherwise, from the appearance of her deck
-cargo, it was clear that she had not been hurt by weather. A deck-house
-nearly filled the quarter-deck; there was just room on either hand for
-a man to walk.</p>
-
-<p>The captain stood silent for a minute staring about him. He then
-muttered:</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing moves; I see nothing alive. He may be there. Come, for it
-will be you to see him first."</p>
-
-<p>He went to the door of the deck-house, and Julia followed. Two
-windows stood on either side the door, and four windows ran down either
-wall. But when they entered the moon made so faint a light through the
-door and the windows that it was difficult to see. Yet distinctive
-features of the interior were visible: a table, three or four chairs,
-and a bulkhead abaft, which might screen from the living-room two holes
-for the skipper and his mate to sleep in.</p>
-
-<p>"Call him," whispered the captain, as though he stood in a
-dead-house.</p>
-
-<p>"Johnny!" cried the girl, "come to father if you are here,
-Johnny!"</p>
-
-<p>She had a wonderful spirit to say this. She felt the horrible
-mockery of it and the recoil of its ghastly derisiveness upon her
-heart, but she knew that Hardy could not be far off, and would seek
-her. The passion of life was strong in her, and she judged that her
-only chance lay in inspiriting the poor man's dreadful conviction that
-she could help him to find his son.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p> <p>"Call him
-again," said the captain, and again she called.</p>
-
-<p>He advanced a step, and she saw him in the faint suffusion straining
-in a posture of desperate gaze, of desperate hearkening, as though his
-teeth were set and the sweat of blood was on his brow, and the palms of
-his hands were bloody with the penetration of the finger-nails.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment she heard a single stroke of a bell. She started with
-a cry, with instant rejoicing, for she believed there were men in the
-vessel.</p>
-
-<p>"What was that?" said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>"A bell!" she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>"O God! it may be Johnny!" he shouted, and he rushed through the
-open door.</p>
-
-<p>She quickly followed; she was not a superstitious fool, she was a
-girl at sea, and, as a girl might, she supposed that if a bell were
-struck upon a ship's deck it was by a man.</p>
-
-<p>A small bell was hung betwixt the foremast and the foremost end of
-the galley or caboose, and immediately under it lay, bottom up, secured
-to the deck, a small tub of a boat. It was easy to understand why the
-bell should have tolled. It had been struck by some bight of buntline
-or clewline in the sway of the brig as she heeled to the fold, and the
-sharp return of the bell jerked the tongue against the metal side in a
-single stroke.</p>
-
-<p>But the captain was too mad to understand this, and Julia was a girl
-at sea without eyes for bights of running gear. She was startled, nay,
-a sudden horror of superstition visited her when following the captain.
-She stood near the bell and saw no signs of human creature. She cast
-looks of fear all about;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span> one, even one, man would protect her
-against the horrible yokedom of this passage. The planks had the sheen
-of satin in the moonlight, and the power of the satellite sufficed to
-fling dark shadows upon the decks, and these shadows moved as the brig
-rolled. But she saw no man; and what ghostly hand then had struck that
-bell? For the night might go before the swing of the bight of gear
-should, by adjustment of the rolling of the vessel, exactly hit the
-bell again and make it ring.</p>
-
-<p>The captain began to call, "Johnny, Johnny, where are you? Come out
-of your hiding-place, little sonny. Here's father waiting for you."</p>
-
-<p>He breathed deep, listening and gazing about him; but no other reply
-reached his ear than the sob of water under the bow, the moan of night
-wind in the rigging, the sullen slap of canvas against the mast.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you see him?" the captain asked, and the eyes of madness
-sparkled in the moonshine as he turned his gaze upon the girl.</p>
-
-<p>She answered, huskily, "No, I do not see him. Who struck that
-bell?"</p>
-
-<p>"He did," said the captain. "O God! O everlasting Father! Why does
-he hide himself from me?"</p>
-
-<p>He clasped his hands and raised them and looked up, and in that
-posture he muttered as though he prayed, and all the while Julia
-was staring about her, faint with fear, and with the sight of that
-imploring figure of afflicted manhood; for who had struck the bell?
-And did the dead come to life again in phantoms? And was the spirit
-of Johnny invisibly present?</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p> <p>Poor Julia!</p>
-
-<p>"He may come out of his hiding-place if we go aft," said the captain
-in his voice of cunning. "Stop!"</p>
-
-<p>He stepped to the little caboose and entered it.</p>
-
-<p>"Not here, not here," he groaned as he came out, "but we must have
-patience. We will sit and wait. We'll sit and watch the deck, and at
-any moment you may see his little figure coming along."</p>
-
-<p>Weak with fear and superstition, and the horror of her ghastly
-situation, she followed the miserable man to the deck-house. He entered
-and brought out two chairs, which he placed in front of the door,
-and they sat down. It was certain that the man believed the child to
-be in this abandoned vessel, and this was assurance to Julia that he
-would not compel her to enter the boat and sail away in search of the
-boy. The thought inspired some faint hope; she knew that this was no
-unfrequented tract of ocean, and that even if Hardy did not seek her,
-any hour next day might bring along some ship which she could signal to
-by flourishing her handkerchief. But Hardy! She began to think whilst
-her dreadful companion sat beside her staring along the moonlighted
-deck, and waiting for his boy to come. She fully understood that she
-had been drugged; her thoughts went to the medicine-chest; had the
-captain poisoned Hardy and the rest of the crew that he might steal
-her from the ship? This puzzled her, for if the crew had been drugged
-they might have been drugged to death by the irresponsible hand of this
-madman, and Hardy would be lost to her for ever, and his ship would not
-come to rescue her.</p>
-
-<p>These were her thoughts "too deep for tears," but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span> it
-was fortunate that she had slept soundly and well in the boat, for now,
-though wearied in bone and faint at heart, she was as sleepless as the
-poor, tireless creature beside her. She could not have endured to enter
-the deck-house and rest there; she needed the companionship of the moon
-and the stars, and the visible surface of the deep blackening out from
-either hand the wake of the luminary to its limitless recesses. The
-whisper of the wind in the rigging was companionship, but the movements
-of the shadows upon the whitened planks were a perpetual fear, for who
-had struck the bell? and was the vessel haunted? Her throat was parched
-and she asked for water.</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly; oh, yes. He is long in coming, but when he comes we'll
-rejoin the ship," the captain said as he rose, and quite sanely he went
-to the breaker, filled the tumbler, and returned with a glassful and a
-biscuit.</p>
-
-<p>There was the courtesy of good breeding in the poor fellow as
-he handed her the glass, for the soul that is never mad will shine
-through disease, and Captain Layard, who was born a gentleman, proved
-a gentleman even when insane. She drank gratefully and ate the
-biscuit.</p>
-
-<p>He took the glass from her and filled it for himself, but did not
-eat. Then he returned to his chair, and that dreadful watch on deck
-again began. Often he would say:</p>
-
-<p>"Do you see him? Why should he keep in hiding?"</p>
-
-<p>And sometimes he would quit his seat and go to the rail, and look
-into the sea over the side.</p>
-
-<p>The water swarmed with fire this night; the chilly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
-sea-glow started in fibres, in clouds like luminous smoke, in coils
-like revolving eels, and it is conceivable that the crazed eye which
-was bent upon these lights should fashion them into phantasms, into
-grotesque shapes, into the crowd of brassy faces which the sealed but
-waking vision beholds when the brain is drugged. He would spend twenty
-minutes in searching the waters, and then cross to the other side and
-spend a quarter of an hour in a like hunt. Always when he returned
-to his chair he would mutter to himself, "Why doesn't he come?"
-And once he started up with a frantic cry which was frightful with
-inarticulateness; he dashed his hand to his forehead and held it there,
-with his left arm stiffened out and the fingers curled with the agony
-of his mind.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the bell was again struck, and now it was Julia who
-shrieked. She started up and bent her head forward, thinking to see
-the figure that had struck the bell. The captain broke into a wild
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p>"I see him! I see him!" he cried. "O Johnny, I'm your father!" and
-he started into a run with his arms outstretched, as if to seize the
-phantom he beheld.</p>
-
-<p>He ran past the bell, and crying, "I am coming, Johnny, I am
-coming!" climbed on to the top of the deck load, and in a strange
-croaking voice, as though it proceeded from some huge sea-bird sailing
-overhead, he exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>"There you are at last, my Johnny! Father is coming to you!" and
-sprang overboard.</p>
-
-<p>Julia fell upon the deck and lay lifeless in a swoon.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER XIII.</span> <span class="smaller">THEY MEET</span></h2>
-
-<p>It was moonlight on the sea, and the full-rigged ship <i>York</i> lay
-with her canvas aback, silently heaving upon the swell. But by the eye
-of a sailor a certain moisture would have been visible in the silver
-suffusion, and he might hardly have needed to look at the glass to
-guess that this calm scene of ocean night would in a few hours show a
-changed face. The time was shortly after ten.</p>
-
-<p>The lamp in the cabin was unlighted, but the moon shone upon the
-skylight, and the darkness was whitened by it, and all features of the
-interior were visible. Hardy lay stretched upon the cabin deck, and
-within an arm's reach of him rested the great Newfoundland dog, secured
-by a chain to the leg of the table. The picture was wonderful for its
-human stillness: you heard no tramp of foot, no call of voice. The
-very sails slept against the masts, and nothing was audible but the
-complaint of a bulkhead or some strong fastening as the ship sluggishly
-took the run of the fold.</p>
-
-<p>All of a sudden Hardy opened his eyes, and having opened them
-he kept them open, staring with just that look of bewilderment
-and <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>astonishment which had been in Julia's dawning gaze.
-He tried to raise his head and thought it was a cannon-ball, but the
-dog had noticed the motion, and instantly alert with joy barked in
-deep-throated notes, with endless wagging of the tail.</p>
-
-<p>This tremendous noise close in his ear was as galvanism to the dead
-frog. Hardy sat up and looked at the dog and then looked round him,
-and feeling all the sensations of a man drugged with liquor, believed,
-without being able to remember, that he had fallen down drunk. This
-is the sensation of the man who is fortunate enough to awake from the
-stupefaction of laudanum.</p>
-
-<p>"Good God! What is this?" Hardy muttered, and he squeezed his brow
-with his hands as you would wring a swab to drain the wet out of it:</p>
-
-<p>Then slowly memory began to operate, whilst the dog was straining
-to reach him and caress him. "My God!" he thought after a passage of
-reflection, "the madman poisoned us when we drank his health!" And
-then it all came to him. He rose to his feet, but his legs trembled
-and he could hardly stand. "Where is Julia?" and next, "Where is the
-captain?"</p>
-
-<p>The dog began to bark with something of fury, and Hardy with
-trembling hands removed the collar from the brute's neck. The noble
-animal sprang upon Hardy in affectionate caress and nearly felled
-him with its weight, then dashed into the captain's cabin, the door
-of which swung ajar, and Hardy followed. He could hardly see, it
-was so dark here, and he felt the captain's bunk and wandered round
-on staggering legs, feeling. His throat was as hot as the bowl of
-a lighted pipe, and it felt the hotter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span> when he heard the dog
-in the cabin lapping at some water in the dish that was meant for its
-use. He went to the swing-tray, where there was water, and drank a full
-draught, which greatly helped him both in wits and body, then entered
-Julia's cabin and felt the bunk and found she was not there. "What has
-he done?" he thought, and with heavy limbs he made his way on deck.</p>
-
-<p>The light was brilliant enough after the cabin gloom, and he could
-see clearly. He stood in the hatch, holding by the companion-hood.</p>
-
-<p>Abreast of him lay, in convulsed posture, the figure of the second
-mate, Candy. He turned his head and saw the shape of a man lying
-prostrate beside the wheel. He took note by the aid of the moon that
-the wheel was lashed, then his eyes travelled to a pair of empty
-davits, and he staggered to them and looked down. He could trace the
-black lines of the falls, and saw the blocks as the ship swayed,
-kindling fire in the dark water.</p>
-
-<p>He was a sailor, and at once understood it all. A groan escaped
-his lips whilst he thought, "He has gone away in the boat with Julia
-to seek his son. How am I to recover her?" And the horror of her
-situation&mdash;alone in an open boat with a madman&mdash;penetrated
-his heart, and seemed to petrify him. He could just distinguish two or
-three dark figures overhanging the forecastle rail, and a couple of
-sailors lay motionless upon the deck a little way abaft the galley.</p>
-
-<p>The dog had bounded up out of the cabin, and was wandering around
-sniffing at one silent figure and another: no doubt he was in quest
-of his master. Then it occurred to Hardy to remember that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
-grog had been served out at noon. Suppose he had got away at two.</p>
-
-<p>What sort of breeze was then blowing?</p>
-
-<p>He reflected and remembered.</p>
-
-<p>He would sail dead away and right before it, for he had no
-destination, and was sure to shape the crow's course. "Grant her four
-miles an hour, and this is ten o'clock," he thought, pulling out his
-watch and holding it to the moon. "The boat may have covered thirty
-miles of sea. They may have been fallen in with and rescued, for Julia
-would shriek her story, and the captain might believe that Johnny was
-aboard. But how shall I know? How shall I know? I must take it that the
-boat is still afloat, and Julia must be saved."</p>
-
-<p>He considered the direction of the wind, and made up his mind to the
-course that must be steered; but now as to the crew. He went to Candy
-and, kneeling, shook him, put his hand to his face, put his ear to his
-mouth, and easily saw that he was dead. The discovery thrilled through
-him like the cut of a sword on the shoulder. He walked to the figure
-beside the wheel, and in a little while could not doubt that the man,
-too, was dead. It was not because he was a doctor's son that he needed
-to be informed of the action of a heavy dose of laudanum, or some
-poisonous drug of that sort, upon the movements of a weak heart. But
-there were live men forward, and with sluggish motions of his limbs he
-went that way.</p>
-
-<p>He stooped over the two figures abaft the galley, and detected life
-in them. He then stepped on to the forecastle, and the first man he
-spoke to was the boatswain, who was resting his head in his arm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
-upon the rail. He now saw there were three others near him, and two
-were sitting on the coamings of the forescuttle.</p>
-
-<p>"The captain was mad and has drugged us," said Hardy. "He has taken
-the lady with him, and I want to give chase. Where are the rest of the
-men?"</p>
-
-<p>"As the Lord is God," answered the boatswain, "don't my precious
-head know it's been drugged. Talk o' Shanghaing! But I never knowed it
-from the hand of a skipper nor worse than this."</p>
-
-<p>"I want to trim sail, and make a start to rescue the lady," said
-Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"You'll not get the men to move if there was twenty ladies to be
-rescooed," responded the boatswain, who spoke as if he was drunk.</p>
-
-<p>"I ha'n't got strength to lift a sprat to my mouth if I was
-starving," said one of the men, who leaned with folded arms as though
-at any moment the three of them would sink exhausted to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>It drove Hardy crazy with a consuming desire to start in chase to
-see their helplessness and to feel his own. But what was he to do! Here
-were four men, and two sitting on the coamings of the scuttle, and two
-alive, though prostrate, near the galley&mdash;eight men, and more
-perhaps below in the forecastle.</p>
-
-<p>So he went to the hatch and asked the two men how they felt. They
-answered with curses, swearing they'd have hove the captain overboard
-before he should ha' poisoned them.</p>
-
-<p>"He was mad," said Hardy. "I knew it, and wondered you didn't see
-it and ask me to act. He has poisoned me and stolen my sweetheart
-away to her destruction, but we'll chase the beggar the moment
-we are able."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></p> <p>They growled out something
-and he looked down the scuttle. A sailor had lighted the slush lamp;
-some man, perhaps, who was less ill than the others on recovery, or
-who had the best sense then about. Hardy descended and stood under the
-hatch, looking round him. I would not like to say how many men were
-here, because I do not know what the owner of the ship chose to think
-her complement. Hardy might have counted eight or ten men, in bunks,
-hammocks, or seated on their sea-chests. The faces he saw were ghastly,
-as though this ocean-parlour were plague-stricken. He went from one to
-another to see if all were alive, and they all proved so. The swing of
-the flame flung shadows like contortions on the visible faces. It was
-hot down here, and Hardy felt sick with the drug, whose effects were
-not yet expended. Some breathed deep: the human respiration threaded
-the subdued moan of water.</p>
-
-<p>"What's been done to us?" said a man sitting on a chest.</p>
-
-<p>"We've all been drugged by a lunatic who's carried off my
-sweetheart," answered Hardy. "There's to be a shift of weather, and the
-ship's under all plain sail and aback, and the helm lashed. Any of you
-here able to come on deck and swing the yards and take the wheel?"</p>
-
-<p>The devil a one! So Hardy climbed with leaden limbs through the
-square hole and walked slowly aft, and sat down on the skylight.</p>
-
-<p>The Newfoundland came out of a shadow and lay at his feet. A fair
-light, with power of painting jetty strokes that slided upon the
-pale planks, flowed from the moon. But the broken orb was hazy, and
-the mate's eyes saw the darkness of wind<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span> gathering in vapour
-in the west or thereabouts. So the breeze that had been steady all day
-was to harden sooner or later out of its quarter, and the ship under
-all plain sail lay aback to it. But Hardy felt too weak to move the
-wheel, even if by so doing he could have helped the ship; nor, though
-she could have swung to fill her breasts with canvas, which would have
-been impossible, he'd have let her lie as she was because, with the
-yards trimmed as they stood, he couldn't have shaped a course for the
-direction which he believed the madman had taken.</p>
-
-<p>He sat and thought and waited. It was miserable to see the dead
-figure of Candy lying there, and miserable when he turned his head
-to see the dead figure of the sailor beside the wheel. What an
-unparalleled act! How deep and cunning beyond all credibility, and yet
-as true as the misty radiance floating in shimmering folds upon the
-dark and silent heave! His brain was every minute clearing, and he
-realised more intently as the time slipped by that, if yonder shadow
-meant heavy weather, the girl was lost, unless a passing ship had
-picked them up; but how would Hardy know?</p>
-
-<p>In about half an hour one of the figures at the forecastle rail
-came slowly aft. He stopped and bent over the two forms lying abaft
-the galley. Hardy heard him speak to them, and he could just catch the
-murmur of their replies. They had therefore come to, and no doubt would
-be sitting up and moving about shortly.</p>
-
-<p>The figure that had left the forecastle rail came along, and Hardy
-saw it was the boatswain. The man went to the body of Candy, and
-looking round said, in a hollow voice:</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span></p> <p>"Is he
-dead?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ay, stone dead; and so is yonder," replied Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"What took him to do it?" asked the boatswain, coming to Hardy's
-side.</p>
-
-<p>"Why does a madman tear up his clothes?" replied Hardy. "How are
-those fellows in the waist there?"</p>
-
-<p>"They're reviving," answered the boatswain. "He must ha' put plenty
-in. Dommed if ever I was treated like this before by the capt'n of a
-ship. Tell you what, sir, there's weather comin' along," and he cast
-the eye of an experienced sailor up aloft at the canvas and then at the
-moon, at which he shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, her broken face had taken a glutinous reddish look as though
-she was a smear of pink currant jam, and her light was gone out of the
-sea. There was no more wind, but it was thickening westwards, and you
-might look for a slap of squall any moment, the shriek of the shot of
-the storm gun sweeping betwixt shroud and mast, and the ship lay aback
-under all plain sail, and there was no longer light of moonshine on her
-canvas.</p>
-
-<p>"Just see if we can't get men enough to brace these yards square,"
-said Hardy. "We can let go and clew up and wait till the men are strong
-enough to stow the canvas; but if we lie like this something may come
-to whip the masts out of her."</p>
-
-<p>But it was a full half-hour before hands enough could be collected,
-and they all seemed as though freshly awakened from the crimp's
-debauch; their knees shook, their heads lolled, they lifted their arms
-as though they were operated upon by slow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span> machinery. Yet the
-business, in a fashion, was contrived. They clewed up the royals and
-topgallantsails, they hauled up the mainsail, they let go some jib
-and staysail halliards, and they brailed the mizzen to the mast. The
-least dead of the poor fellows took the helm, and the ship with her
-head to the eastward, with much flap of canvas aloft, bowed slowly over
-the black run of swell. Her pace was very slow because the wind was
-light, and all the canvas she showed to it were two topsails and her
-forecourse.</p>
-
-<p>This was as Hardy desired, because the moon was slowly vanishing
-like a dimming stain of bloody ooze, and it promised a black night. If
-he had held the ship moving under all her wings she would have passed
-the boat if she had not run her down, for it was his conviction, heaven
-inspired, that the madman had blown away straight before it, and how
-prophetically right he was in that we all know, and yet for some hours
-it remained very quiet, though black as the inside of a coal sack.
-Again this was as Hardy could have prayed for, as this raven serenity
-promised security to the boat, and if it lasted till daybreak she might
-be in sight.</p>
-
-<p>The mate and another man placed the two bodies on the quarter-deck
-side by side under the bulwarks, clear of the gear, and hid them under
-a tarpaulin. It would not have been proper nor decent to have buried
-them out of hand, for though Hardy had no doubt that they were dead, he
-yet felt that time should be given to prove it; and so the two figures
-lay motionless under the tarpaulin.</p>
-
-<p>The stars and moon went out and it blew very faint with a deepening
-of the blackness overhead,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span> so that you looked for lightning.
-About three o'clock some of the men had come out of the forecastle,
-and by Hardy's commands the galley fire was lighted and strong coffee
-brewed. This wonderfully refreshed the men, and Hardy then asked them
-if they thought they were strong enough to go aloft and furl the
-lighter canvas, as he could not tell at what moment heavy weather
-might set in. The poor fellows managed it somehow, but were long over
-it. Then as many as were equal furled the mainsail, at which hour it
-was hard upon daybreak. In the blackness of those small hours it was
-impossible to guess the character of the sky, and in which direction
-the soot of it was trending. But all of a sudden the wind freshened
-with a long, melancholy wail, as though 'twas the spirit of the
-night that was dying, the troubled water ran in fitful flashes, and
-the ship broke the brine into white foam about her. The mate talked
-with the boatswain beside the quarter-deck skylight: they were both
-almost recovered, and you could hear reviving life in voices about the
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>"I have no doubt," said Hardy, "that the captain blew away straight
-from the ship's side, because you see he had no destination in his
-mind."</p>
-
-<p>"Not onlikely," answered the boatswain.</p>
-
-<p>"Suppose I'm right," continued Hardy, "then I reckon we're not
-abreast of her yet; but if I pass the boat before the light comes and
-it proves thick, as I fancy you'll find it, we shall miss her for good,
-and I want my sweetheart badly."</p>
-
-<p>"That's quite natural," said the boatswain. "We're walkin' now and
-the breeze freshens, and if you think you are right, sir, in steering
-as we go,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span> then what d'ye say to hauling up the foresail
-and lowering the maintopsail-yard on the cap, and manning the
-reef-tackles?"</p>
-
-<p>"Get it done," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>It was easily done, for it was not a furling job. A bit of sea was
-beginning to run; it smacked the ship under the counter, and flooded
-the wake with light. Hardy walked up and down the deck, mad with desire
-for daybreak. He was steering by a theory of a madman's action, and he
-might be wrong, and if he was wrong&mdash;but even if he was right, how
-would the boat fare in the sea that was now running with a madman at
-the yoke, and the full sail and tearing sheet gripped by the hand of
-madness?</p>
-
-<p>These were considerations scarce endurable to the man, and for ever
-he was sending searching glances ahead for the ghastly hue of the dawn.
-The day broke at last, and it was a day of gloom and mist and a narrow
-horizon; the sky was a dome of apparently motionless vapour, and each
-surge ere it broke arched in an edge of flint, and the whole surface
-was an olive-green decorated by lines of foam.</p>
-
-<p>As yet there was no great weight in the wind, but the sailor's
-eyes saw that more was to be expected. Hardy went to his cabin for
-a glass of his own. He slung it over his shoulder, and regaining
-the deck sprang aloft to the height of the mizzen-top, from which
-altitude, with the glass set firmly against the topmast-rigging, he
-searched the sea. As the lenses made the circuit there leapt into the
-field of the telescope the apparition of a little brig unmistakenly
-derelict, with loose canvas hollowing like a kite against the masts.
-He examined her intently, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span> then muttering, "They may be aboard
-that vessel. It is a chance. The madman may have taken refuge, or
-thought his son was there," he threw the strap of the telescope over
-his head, and noting the brig's bearing, descended.</p>
-
-<p>He walked rapidly aft to the compass, and found that the brig was in
-sight from the quarter-deck. She bore a little to the west of south.
-The Newfoundland, seeing Hardy looking, spied the brig and barked his
-report of a sail in sight.</p>
-
-<p>"Lads!" shouted Hardy, running a little way forward, "there is a
-brig on the quarter. We'll see if she can give us any news, although
-abandoned. Starboard mainbrace, starboard foretopsail-brace smartly as
-possible, my lads. Starboard your helm!"</p>
-
-<p>And slowly, for the helm was wearily worked and the braces
-were dragged by languid hands, the yards came round, and then the
-maintopsail was mastheaded, and the ship with the wind right abeam
-crushed the flint-like surge into froth, and forged ahead for the
-abandoned vessel.</p>
-
-<p>It was time to make for her if she was to be visited at all, for
-the horizon was narrowing and narrowing with the thickness of rain,
-and soon within the distance of a mile the brig would have vanished.
-Hardy's glass was full of powerful lenses&mdash;its magnifying power
-was double that of the ship's telescope; when he now put it to his eye
-he instantly saw a figure just this side of the brig's main-rigging
-waving something white.</p>
-
-<p>His heart brightened. He looked again. She was a woman, and
-alone! The boatswain was coming aft as Hardy looked forward.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span></p> <p>"There's a figure aboard that brig," he shouted.
-"It's a woman, and she's waving a handkerchief."</p>
-
-<p>"She'll be yourn," said the boatswain, and as surprise did not
-immediately follow perception, he added, "Well, I'm damned!"</p>
-
-<p>"Stand by to back the maintopsail!" roared Hardy, who was delirious
-with excitement. "Let some hands lay aft and clear away the starboard
-quarter-boat ready for lowering. I'd board her if twice this sea was
-running. I knew I was right. I knew he'd head straight away. I knew I'd
-find her by shaping the madman's course."</p>
-
-<p>"Suppose it isn't her?" said the boatswain.</p>
-
-<p>"To hell with your supposings!" yelled Hardy. "In any case it's a
-woman, and she must be taken off."</p>
-
-<p>The men came aft and got ready the boat and stood aft, prepared for
-the command to back the maintopsail. Again Hardy levelled the glass.
-The girl&mdash;for we know who it was&mdash;had ceased to flutter her
-handkerchief; but the wind, full of wet, bewildered the eye, and the
-mate would make no more of it than this: the figure was a woman.</p>
-
-<p>He headed the <i>York</i> so as to heave to to windward of the brig, and
-a little while before the topsail-yard was backed Hardy had seen and
-mentally kissed the poor girl's face in the lens, and frantic with joy
-was waving his cap to her, whilst she, guessing who it would be that
-motioned thus, tossed her handkerchief again and again.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was brought to a stand, and Hardy shouted, "I am coming to
-fetch you."</p>
-
-<p>She waved her hand. There was an ugly bit of sea between for a boat,
-choppy, with deep sucking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span> hollows, and plenty of spiteful foam
-to whiten over the low gunwales.</p>
-
-<p>"Who'll volunteer?" said Hardy. "Three will do."</p>
-
-<p>"Blast me," said one of them, "if I don't feel as I should be in the
-road in a boat."</p>
-
-<p>"<i>You</i>'re likely," said Hardy, pointing to another&mdash;"and you,
-and you. Three will do, and it shall be two pound a man, which God
-knows I wouldn't offer for a deed of duty, only you're lowered by the
-captain's drug."</p>
-
-<p>"Right y' are, sir," said Jim, who got in the boat and was followed
-by Tom and Joe.</p>
-
-<p>The mate sprang into the stern-sheets and shipped the rudder.</p>
-
-<p>"Lower away handsomely!" he shouted, "and drop the hauling part that
-we may overhaul the falls."</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately the blocks were without patent clip hooks, and the
-moment the boat was water-borne the fore-bottom of her was nearly
-wrenched out by her fall into the hollow ere the languid bow oar could
-release the block. But it was done, and they got away.</p>
-
-<p>She nearly filled three times in her passage. The drag of the oars
-was not strong enough; they wanted the long and steady sweep of their
-old power to rescue the boat from the arch of foam astern. Yet they
-managed to get alongside, and with the swift leap of the sailor Hardy
-gained the main-chains, and in a minute was standing on the main-deck,
-with Julia sobbing in his arms.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is the captain?" were almost the first words Hardy
-addressed to her.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p> <p>"He drowned himself," she
-answered, speaking sobbingly with tumult of passion. "He made me sit
-there beside him"&mdash;she pointed to the deck-house front&mdash;"and
-watch for the coming of the boy. The bell was struck&mdash;it was
-strangely struck. He thought it was his child, and he ran forward
-and climbed upon those pieces of timber as though his little son was
-beckoning, and then he cried out he was coming and sprang overboard,
-and I fainted. Oh, since I returned to consciousness what a time it has
-been! And yet&mdash;and yet I felt you were near and would come."</p>
-
-<p>As she spoke the wind howled with a sudden note of raving in the
-rigging, and deep as the brig was her loose canvas was inswept till
-it depressed her by a couple of strakes, and you might have thought
-she was settling, and with this sudden blast came on a heavy squall of
-rain, which thickened the air till the ship that was on the quarter
-loomed a surging and streaming phantom. At the same moment cries were
-heard over the side. Hardy rushed to the rail, and what did he see?</p>
-
-<p>The boat was stove and full! One man had disappeared, and the two
-others were floating a fathom or two beyond her locked in each other's
-embrace.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy sprang to the brig's quarter, crying, "O God! O my God!" as he
-ran.</p>
-
-<p>He slipped some bights of running gear off a pin, and yelling "Look
-out for the end of this line!" he hove.</p>
-
-<p>One could not swim, and clung to the other who could, and there
-was no virtue in a rope's end though flung by an angel of God to save
-them. For one moment the line was close; the desperate heave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span> of
-the half-drowned fabric dragged it fathoms out of reach. The pitiless
-seas broke over them, and with agony of mind, and a heart almost in
-halves, Hardy saw them vanish.</p>
-
-<p>The girl stood beside him with uplifted arms, frozen by horror into
-the marble rigidity of a statue. It was going to blow a gale. The black
-scowl of the sky had the menace of storm in its fixity. No yellow
-curl of scud, no faintness here or there relieved that grim, austere,
-down-look. The day might have been closing, so dusky it was with the
-flying sheets of rain and the white haze torn out of the foaming brow
-by the rending hand of the wind. The seas swung fast and fierce, and
-serpentine pillars of white water leapt on high from the brig's side,
-and fled in shrieking clouds of sparkles to leeward.</p>
-
-<p>"We shall lose the ship," said Hardy, with the coolness of
-desperation. "We could not launch that boat," and he pointed to the
-small, chubby fabric that lay stowed near the foremast; "and if we
-could she would not live a minute. What became of your boat?"</p>
-
-<p>"I looked for her," she answered, "and saw her floating yonder
-in the moonlight. The captain fastened her rope to something and it
-slipped."</p>
-
-<p>"Come out of the wet," said he. "We can do no good here. They'll
-keep the ship hove to, and the weather may clear by noon."</p>
-
-<p>They entered the deck-house, and Hardy began to explore it,
-and in the two little cabins aft he found all the information he
-required about this abandoned brig. The log-book was dated down to
-two days earlier, and the entries were by a hand that spelt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span> in
-the speech of Newcastle-on-Tyne. She was the <i>Betsy</i>, of Sunderland.
-The sea began to flow into her on a sudden to some gape or yarn of
-butt-end; you can't tell how it is until you dry-dock them. She would
-have gone down in an hour, despite her pump, but for the timber on
-which she floated. By the entries it was clear the crew had stuck to
-her for two days. Hardy then guessed that, growing weary of waiting
-for a ship, they had gone away in the boat. In one cabin he found a
-telescope and an old-fashioned quadrant, some wearing apparel, and a
-tall hat such as an old skipper might wear, bronzed by weather, and
-instantly suggesting to an active imagination a round, purple face,
-streaks of white whisker, a chocolate-coloured shawl round the throat,
-and a nose of the colour of a bottle of rum in the sun.</p>
-
-<p>The old fagot was beginning to tumble about, the water foamed on the
-deck, and the launch of the surge at the staggering bow would strike a
-whole sheet of spume over the forestay, and then it fell in cataractal
-thunder. Hardy shut the deck-house door. He was something more than
-uneasy. Their alarming situation drove all thought of the wonder of it
-out of his head. If it came on harder and a heavy sea ran, would this
-old sieve hold together? would the deck-house cling to the deck? What
-would they do aboard the <i>York</i>? Candy was dead and she was without a
-navigator. The boatswain was a good practical seaman, and in him lay
-Hardy's hope. The boatswain was not the man to abandon the mate and
-the girl if he could help it. But suppose the ship was blown away so
-that when the weather cleared the brig was not in sight, what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
-would, or rather, what <i>could</i>, the boatswain do? He had not the
-navigator's art, and might not therefore know how to pick the brig up.
-Their condition was frightful; the lazarette was awash; he could not
-seek food in flooded timber. He sat down beside the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot realise that you are with me," she said.</p>
-
-<p>Her dress was damp, and raindrops sparkled upon her face and hair.
-He drew out his handkerchief, which lay dry in his pocket, and softly
-passed it over her face and hair. She was loving him with her eyes.
-Never did human passion make the eyes of a woman more beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>"You must be starving," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"No, the captain brought some food and water."</p>
-
-<p>"Tell me where it is," he cried, starting to his feet.</p>
-
-<p>She told him where the breaker was and the glass, and the parcel
-of provisions. He rushed out. The contents of the breaker could not
-be hurt by the flying brine and rain; and mercifully the provisions
-had been so placed that the breaker and the planks between which the
-captain had placed them kept them dry.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy ran into the deck-house with the food, put the glass in his
-pocket, and returned again with the breaker, from which only two or
-three drinks had been drawn.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank God for this!" said he, and he felt almost happy.</p>
-
-<p>She had but little knowledge of the sea, and could not interpret
-their condition to the full of its tragic significance. Her heart
-was almost joyous because<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span> her sweetheart was at her side;
-though death was hovering over that reeling fabric, its shadow was not
-upon her spirit. She was rescued by the man she loved from the horrors
-of loneliness on the wide sea, from imaginations which had been excited
-in her by those two mysterious strokes on the bell, and by her horrible
-association with a madman. The brig reeled and groaned to the sweep
-of the strong wind in the canvas, which was like to stream from the
-yards in hairs of cloth if the weather hardened. Again and again Hardy
-left the girl's side to step on deck and see how it was. The sky was
-a yellowish thickness down to within a mile, out of which the flying
-comber flashed, and the scene was a giddy pantomime of racing seas.
-This old bucket of brig was taking it gallantly over her bows. Hardy
-went forward to see if the only boat survived, and found her sitting
-secure, seized to eye-bolts, and ready for turning over and launching
-by tackles when the weather permitted.</p>
-
-<p>This comforted him, and he stepped into the little caboose which
-some lee sea might hurl into the scuppers at any moment. Here, to
-his great delight, in a drawer he found some twenty or thirty ship's
-biscuits, a bottle half-full of rum, and a large piece of boiled pork
-on a tin dish; he also found a black-handled knife and fork on a shelf
-where stood a row of china plates, one of which he took down.</p>
-
-<p>With this booty, half pocketed and half in arms, he returned to
-the deck-house, at whose door the girl had stood waiting for him, and
-spite of the flying brine, and the sickly reel of the half-foundered
-brig, and the thunder of the wind aloft, and their own dreadful
-situation, the vision of Bax's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span> farm rose before his mind's eye as
-he saw her standing in that door in the old incomparable posture, the
-straw hat slightly cocked, the head a little on one side, the left hand
-on the hip.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER XIV.</span> <span class="smaller">HARD WEATHER</span></h2>
-
-<p>Hardy carefully put away the good things he had discovered, and then
-made a pork sandwich with biscuits, and poured out a little rum which
-he mingled with water, and they both made a meal.</p>
-
-<p>Had she been alone she would have been dying of fear; her lover was
-with her, and the sea had no terrors. They talked as they ate.</p>
-
-<p>"I foresaw heavy weather," said he, "but not the loss of three men.
-We shall lose the ship, I fear; there are no signs of the weather
-clearing. My God! how this beast wallows! Why, you'd think the sun had
-burst out!"</p>
-
-<p>For just then the air was whitened by a great sheet of water.</p>
-
-<p>"If the boat forward is carried away&mdash;" He checked himself,
-and then continued, "If we lose the <i>York</i> we shall be picked up by
-something else. These old north-countrymen are born to live."</p>
-
-<p>"I am seeing life on the ocean," said Julia, smiling at him.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, it has come as thick as cockroaches," he answered. "When
-you get home you shall write your story, and the critics who take
-shipping on a summer day from Putney to Henley will exclaim as one
-man, 'What a lie!'"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span></p> <p>"Who rang the bell?" said
-Julia. "That question will worry me whilst I live."</p>
-
-<p>A sea struck the deck-house and blinded the weather-windows. The
-sturdy structure quivered. Hardy waited until the water had roared away
-overboard, and then said:</p>
-
-<p>"A bell will strike of itself in a rolling ship. I have heard it. Or
-it was hit by a rope. Do you believe in ghosts, Julia?"</p>
-
-<p>"I don't want to."</p>
-
-<p>"The stroke was a sudden come-to in the reel of the brig, or a rope
-did it," said Hardy, and she tried to look as though she believed
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Thus they talked whilst they sat in the deck-house, for out of
-it they would have stood to be washed overboard. The seas poured in
-gray-green folds, and the foam rolled about the decks like the cream of
-the breaker on shelving sand. She was a stout bucket and strongly knit,
-and if all had been well with her she would have sported with this
-breeze. Her canvas was setting her to the eastwards broadside on, and
-Hardy was glad of it, because he guessed that the <i>York</i> would remain
-hove to, and that her drift would not be much greater than the sag of
-this half-drowned Geordie.</p>
-
-<p>But though he looked abroad he never witnessed any signs of
-improvement, or even promise of improvement, in the weather. It was not
-blowing harder, however, which was a good thing, yet he guessed that
-even if the weight of the wind remained as it stood, then, should it
-blow all night, a fair daybreak would not reveal the <i>York</i>, in which
-case they were shipwrecked, and must either wait to be taken off, or
-trust to God's mercy to keep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span> the boat in her place forward, that
-they might launch her, and seek the succour that would not come. The
-deck-house was often hit by the sea, but the blows were rarely hard,
-and there was more terror in the thunder of the stroke than in the
-possibility of the structure going.</p>
-
-<p>"I see a scuttle-butt out there," said he once during the course of
-the morning.</p>
-
-<p>"What's that?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"A cask for holding fresh water for the men to drink when on
-deck."</p>
-
-<p>He stepped out, got under the rail, and crept to the scuttle-butt
-with the foam about his feet. The dipper hung by a sling; he dropped
-it through the hole and brought it up full, and tasting it found it
-fairly sweet, sweet enough for human necessity. He added security to
-the cask by further lashings, and covered the hole to protect the water
-from the flying salt, then crept back through the foam to the side
-of his sweetheart, first sending the sight of a falcon piercing the
-rain-swept obscurity of the quarter in which he guessed the <i>York</i> was
-lying hove to. But all was the confusion of the headlong surge, raging
-in frequent collision, the stormy stare of motionless vapour, the wink
-of the sea-flash within the veil of haze, and the universal groaning of
-old ocean when that grim Boatswain, the Gale, whitens her back with the
-thongs of his cat.</p>
-
-<p>About midday they made another meal off pork sandwiches, a godsend
-to the poor creatures. As the time went by and the weather held as
-before, the sense of shipwreck grew keener and keener in Hardy. Not so
-with the girl; compared to what might have been, this wallowing lump of
-brig, filled<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> with timber, straining afloat, was paradise. But Hardy
-did not much relish the notion of having to take to that boat yonder.
-He could see that with the yard-arm tackle which he would find she was
-to be easily got on to her keel, and hoisted out of it by the little
-winch just before the mainmast.</p>
-
-<p>It might prove a job, for his shipmate was a girl; yet much harder
-jobs, girl or no girl, were to be got through at sea. But until the
-weather calmed he could not think of the boat, and if the weather
-did calm and left the brig afloat, which was very probable, and he
-managed to launch the boat, then, bethinking him of Julia and himself
-in that small squab fabric, his heart grew cold; because next to the
-raft the open boat in mid-ocean is the greatest desperation of the
-sailor. Nearly every chapter of its romance is a tragedy. One dies and
-is buried, one goes mad and springs overboard to drink of the crystal
-fountain which is gushing in the sweet valley just there. Another is
-hollow-eyed with famine, and the gaunt cheeks work with the movement of
-the jaw upon the piece of lead or the die of boot-leather, which helps
-the saliva. Hardy knew it all, had tasted some of it, and he could not
-think of Julia and that little open boat and the flawless horizon, more
-pitiless to the wrecked mariner than the cordon of soldiers to the
-famished city, without feeling his heart turn cold.</p>
-
-<p>And now happened something which I fear the reader will think more
-incredible than any other incident in this volume.</p>
-
-<p>After talking a little while together, these two people rose from
-their chairs and knelt down in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span> prayer. Hardy believed in God and
-in the mercy of God, and so did Julia, and he asked God in the simple
-language of the plain English seaman's heart to protect them and be
-with them, and he thanked him for the mercy he had already vouchsafed;
-and depend upon it no British sailor will consider this an unnatural
-act on the part of Hardy, because always the proudest heart of oak in
-the hour of triumph, the most depressed heart of oak in the hour of
-trial, has been accustomed to look up to God and thank or beseech him,
-for it is he who shares the loneliness of the seaman on the wide, wide
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>But let me assure the reader, also, that lovers do not make love in
-shipwreck as they do under the awning of the passenger liner, or in the
-bower of roses ashore. Death is too near to allow passion to expend
-itself in the form made familiar by the novel. Their talk often went to
-Captain Layard and the amazing cunning he had exhibited in inventing
-the trap they had all fallen into.</p>
-
-<p>"I believe," said Hardy, "only two are dead on board. He had a
-book to give them the doses, and his brain was clearly equal to
-understanding what it said. But would the rum absorb all the poison?
-Would not one man get more than his whack? A few grains more would have
-done for us all. The beggar took care not to drink himself, and none of
-us thought of asking him to."</p>
-
-<p>"How did you feel when you awoke?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Much as you did, I expect," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>But talking was not very easy in this interior. The water,
-sheeting against the deck-house, seethed through speech and
-confounded it. There was the thunder of the fallen sea forward, and
-the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>incommunicable maledictions of a sodden brig in the
-trough filled the gale with bewilderment as it flew. Every fabric
-afloat has a voice of her own, and like her sailors, she knows how to
-swear when injured.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of the afternoon Hardy stepped into the after-berths,
-but found nothing to reward his search. The papers of an old timberman
-are uninteresting; the letters of an auld wife of Sunderland to her
-Geordie are sacred, and saving three or four clay pipes and some
-tobacco, for which Hardy was grateful, there was little to be seen
-worth mentioning. If this gale slackened into moderate weather the
-girl should sleep in one of these berths; if not, near the door in the
-interior on the best sort of bed he could contrive, because, as he
-meant to keep watch and watch himself throughout the night, she would
-be close by to rescue if some thunderous surge should discharge the
-deck-house from its obligation of sticking. He had searched for candles
-and had found none; a few boxes of matches were in a sort of desk fixed
-to the bulkhead near the bunk. So he came out of the captain's berth
-with an old mattress, and then he brought some wearing apparel, a heavy
-coat with big horn buttons, and a pair of north-country breeches,
-which, if seized to a stay for fresh air, might fill up and stand out
-like the half of a Dutchman in a jump.</p>
-
-<p>"What's all that for?" said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>He explained, and she loved him, and thought how good he was.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, there are even worse conditions of life to a girl than being
-shipwrecked with a sailor who is a gentleman, and if the gentleman
-informs the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span> spirit of a sailor, its impulse is never greater than
-when it responds to the appeal of a girl's helplessness.</p>
-
-<p>He cut up a little tobacco and smoked a pipe. It seemed to bring
-him within hail of civilisation, and Julia enjoyed the smell of the
-tobacco-smoke immensely, and said it made her think of her father.</p>
-
-<p>"How would he relish this picture?" said he, referring to their
-situation.</p>
-
-<p>"He would not like to be here, that is all he would think. Will this
-brig keep together, do you fancy?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes, and I'll tell you what&mdash;the gale doesn't harden,
-which is a good sign. There was plenty of weather in the moon last
-night, but in these parts it is not often long-lived."</p>
-
-<p>"Is not a tremendous sea running?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, from the Ramsgate or Margate Sands point of view. You must go
-to about fifty-eight south, right off the Horn, and get amongst the
-ice to know what a tremendous sea is like. They come like the cliffs
-of Dover at you, and the deck is up and down, whilst the keel sweeps
-up the acclivity. It is splendid and frightful. I was hove to for a
-fortnight down there; we couldn't drive clear of the ice, and we had
-about four hours of daylight to see by. All the devils in hell raved in
-our rigging as we sat upright a breathless instant on the amazing peak
-we had climbed. No, Julia, this is not a tremendous sea, and the brig
-will hang together and outweather twenty such."</p>
-
-<p>The vessel, however, was acting as though she considered it a
-tremendous sea. Had she been dismasted or a steamer her behaviour could
-not have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> been worse. Her sails a little steadied her, but her
-rollings and motions and plungings and heavings were sickening and
-insufferable, because she was nearly full of water. She had no buoyancy
-and the seas made a rock of her, and often sprang in green sheets right
-over her&mdash;a wet and yelling game of leap-frog.</p>
-
-<p>Late in the afternoon, when it was almost dark, one of these seas
-filled the caboose and swept it to leeward, where it lay stranded. The
-outcry of hurled ironmongery, of crashing china, of skipping knives and
-forks, pot, kettles, and pans, along with the noise of the splintering
-caboose, was enough to make Hardy think that the brig was scattering
-under their feet. The girl grasped his hand when that sea came and the
-galley went; she thought it was all over with them. Hardy kept his
-thoughts to himself: his real anxiety was in the boat, which might be
-washed overboard or dashed into staves, and in the deck-house, which
-was their only shelter.</p>
-
-<p>Happily the old bucket had taken up her position on her own account,
-and it was chiefly the bows and amidships which got the drenches; it
-was seldom that the deck-house was struck by a sea whose weight was a
-menace.</p>
-
-<p>"It is miserable to be without light at sea," said Hardy, "on a
-black night in heavy weather. But there is no lamp here and none in
-the berths, and if there was where should I find oil? We must face it
-through, Julia, and you must sleep."</p>
-
-<p>"I have had more sleep than I want," replied Julia. "I shall not
-mind the darkness if the bell isn't struck."</p>
-
-<p>"It may be struck by a rope, by nothing else.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span> If
-a ghost, how could an essence grasp substance? How could something you
-could walk through lift a knife or try and pull down a lamp-post?"</p>
-
-<p>"I sha'n't like it if I hear it," she replied. "Oh, how dreadful to
-think of him washing about under us! Wretched man! You should have seen
-the unearthly expression of his face whilst he sat staring forward,
-waiting for the little drummer to appear."</p>
-
-<p>"The great poet is true," said Hardy, who had fingered a few
-volumes in his day, albeit he was a sailor in the Merchant Service of
-England.</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
- <span class="i0">"'For shapes which come not at an earthly call</span>
- <span class="i0">Will not depart when mortal voices bid;</span>
- <span class="i0">Lords of the visionary eye whose lid,</span>
- <span class="i0">Once raised, remains aghast and will not fall.'"</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>"Those words are true of that poor dead man," said Julia. "Aghast!
-you should have seen him when he turned up his eyes to God and
-prayed."</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon closed into early evening, and it was as black as a
-wolf's throat at the hour of sundown. Through the windows you could see
-the light of the foam, sudden pallid glares, rushes of dim phosphoric
-gleams which merely made the darkness visible. The brig was a drunken
-vision, and the yells of her rigging might be likened to the screams of
-a tipsy slut who is being thrashed by her man in a thunder-storm.</p>
-
-<p>The two sweethearts ate some biscuit, and Julia held a lighted
-match whilst Hardy mixed some rum and water for them both. They drank
-out of the same glass, and neither of them apologised. Then Hardy
-felt and wound up his watch, for he wanted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span> time, though he
-couldn't see it then except by striking a match. They sat together and
-I dare say he put his arm round her waist, and possibly she supported
-her head upon his shoulder after removing her hat.</p>
-
-<p>It was a ticklish sitting-ground and they sometimes slided, which
-was a very good reason why Hardy should hold her by the waist, and why
-Julia should cling lovingly with her head. And in this posture they
-entered the night and passed perhaps a couple of hours, so that when
-Hardy struck a match he found the time nine.</p>
-
-<p>He made for the mattress, felt and found it, and the north-country
-apparel which was to form the bedclothes. He then lurched back to
-Julia, who did not want to lie down, but he was her lord in resolution
-and her love consented.</p>
-
-<p>Always groping, for despite the sea-flash it was inside here
-of a midnight blackness, he pillowed her head with a garment of
-north-country measurement, and then carefully covering her to the neck
-with the skipper's coat, he pressed his lips to the brow of the girl
-who was to be his wife, and who was therefore sacred to him, and bade
-her sleep and leave him to watch and nod and watch.</p>
-
-<p>And now all that followed was sickening, sloppy, howling, reeling,
-foaming hours of darkness, with nothing in them but the drunken vision
-of brig, and the noisy rage of her straining heart. But at half-past
-three o'clock by Hardy's watch the weather was undoubtedly moderating;
-by five it was blowing a little fresh; by six it was daylight and
-the wind northeast, a pleasant breeze, and the green sea rolled in
-foamless swells, cutting the wake of the sun,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> which shone brightly
-out of every blue lagoon 'twixt the clouds.</p>
-
-<p>The girl was up and sitting at the table. She had slept a little,
-but that little was sound and good. Hardy brought the telescope out
-of the berth: it was a poor glass, but you could see more through it
-than with the naked eye. The brig was rolling ponderously on the swell,
-whose heave was sometimes too sudden for her, and she would stagger
-with a scream of white water from her side. Her canvas was blowing out,
-and the sodden old cask may have had some way on her.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy stepped out and looked for the <i>York</i>. Had he looked for St.
-Paul's Cathedral he could not have seen less of it. The ship was not in
-sight and he fetched a deep breath, for either her crew had abandoned
-him and Julia to what sailors would know might prove a terrible death,
-or the ship's drift had been faster than he had allowed for.</p>
-
-<p>"She's not in sight," he shouted to Julia, then sprang into the
-main-shrouds, put his telescope over the rim of the top, and got into
-the top.</p>
-
-<p>She was not in sight from the top and he crawled as high as the
-cross-trees, and she was not in sight from that elevation. Nothing was
-in sight but the horizon, which wound eel-like to the flashing clasp of
-the sun upon it.</p>
-
-<p>He regained the deck and put the telescope down and sat beside
-Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"What shall we do?" she said, when he had given her the news.</p>
-
-<p>"We will breakfast," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>And forthwith he made biscuit sandwiches of the pork, of which there
-still remained a good lump, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span> godsend. There was nothing much to
-elate him in the sight of the boat still safely lashed to the deck; he
-feared the open boat in mid-ocean with few provisions, little water,
-and an everlasting menace of weather, for blow it will if it does not
-blow now, and what sort of a time would they have had afloat in that
-boat last night?</p>
-
-<p>Julia dredged her lover's face with her eyes but could not make out
-what was passing in his mind, because he himself did not know what was
-passing there.</p>
-
-<p>"We must husband our stores," said he, "and wait for something to
-sight us."</p>
-
-<p>Saying which he rose and stepped up a little ladder on to the
-top of the deck-house, directed by sailorly instincts to what he
-wanted, and there it was securely lashed to the iron stanchions of
-the low rail&mdash;a flag-locker. He opened it and took out the Red
-Ensign and carried it right aft, and bent it union down to the peak
-signal-halliards and hoisted it half-mast high, a signal of deep
-distress and death. Its rippling noise was pleasant, but the look of it
-was ghastly with its dumb appeal to a pitiless sea.</p>
-
-<p>Julia stood beside him and sank her clear gaze far into the recesses
-of the ocean, and saw the sea line working and nothing more.</p>
-
-<p>"Let's go and see if the galley has betrayed any secrets of food,"
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>The sluggish roll of the brig was no hindrance to feet accustomed
-to the bounding deck. They found the galley murdered; it was split and
-shivered, but the coppers to the stroke of the sea that slung them had
-spewed out a big lump of beef and a bolster of duff&mdash;the sailors'
-pudding&mdash;composed of dark<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> flour and slush with here and there
-a currant, but not always. Hardy pounced upon the food as the adjutant
-lights upon the floating Hindoo.</p>
-
-<p>"They left their dinner behind them," he said. "Good God! what a
-noble haul. Here is enough for a week with care."</p>
-
-<p>"Is it cooked?"</p>
-
-<p>He answered this question by pulling out his knife and cutting off a
-piece of the meat. Another half-hour would have cooked it, but it was
-eatable to human necessity.</p>
-
-<p>He stowed this provender away in the deck-house and filled the
-breaker from the scuttle-butt, then went with Julia to look at the
-bell.</p>
-
-<p>"You did not hear it last night," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"No," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>"It shall not trouble you again," said he, and he unhooked it, and
-threw it down.</p>
-
-<p>"But who struck it?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"He'll not strike it again," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>He peeped through the forescuttle and saw nothing but the gleam of
-black water washing below.</p>
-
-<p>"The rats don't like this sort of thing," said he. "Can you pull
-upon a rope, Julia?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am as strong as you," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>He smiled with a glance at her beautiful figure, and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Turn to, then, and lend me a hand to shorten sail."</p>
-
-<p>Between them they manned the necessary buntlines and clewlines, and
-Julia dragged as handsomely as her sweetheart.</p>
-
-<p>"Give us a song, George, for time," she said, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span> he
-started "Chillyman," which sea-air Julia had caught from hearing it on
-board the <i>Glamis Castle</i>, and her voice threaded his like the notes of
-a flute.</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
- <span class="i0">"Randy dandy, heigh-ho!</span>
- <span class="i0">Chillyman!</span>
- <span class="i0">Pull for a shilling, heigh-ho!</span>
- <span class="i0">Chillyman!"<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a><br /></span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>In fact, you may put any words you like to these sea-tunes, and the
-sailors will pull the better if you damn the eyes of the quarter-deck
-in rhyme.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy next thoroughly overhauled the brig, so far as perception of
-her condition was possible. He could not see why she should not hold
-together through twenty such gales as roared over her last night. He
-stood with Julia looking at their only boat, beside which there lay,
-as though placed by some angel of mercy, a watch-tackle. The sight
-of that watch-tackle sank him into contemplation, and Julia gazed at
-him whilst he thought. How weary were the motions of the brig upon
-that sulky sweep of swell! Yet the fine figure of the girl swayed to
-it with the graceful ease of a figurehead curtseying at the bow. She
-was shipwrecked, she was in a dreadful situation of peril, this time
-to-morrow she might be floating in the sea a corpse, and yet never
-on board the Indiaman, on board the <i>York</i>, or at home had she felt
-happier. She was loving him passionately and he was always with her,
-and she could not but be happy.</p>
-
-<p>Presently he said:</p>
-
-<p>"I will tell you how it can be done when it needs<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>
-to be done. She is a small boat and not heavy, and you and I will cant
-her on to her bilge with handspikes, then I'll hook that watch-tackle
-to a strop round the foremost thwart and take the hauling part to the
-winch, and rouse her along to abreast of the gangway. That gangway
-there unships, and we sit low upon the sea, and we'll tumble the boat
-through the gangway overboard, smack-fashion. If she proves too heavy
-we'll rig out a spar"&mdash;here he cast his eyes round&mdash;"with the
-watch-tackle made fast to her, and the winch will do the rest. Yes,
-that is my scheme if it should come to it. Meanwhile let us be patient
-and keep a lookout for ships."</p>
-
-<p>But the imprisonment on board this abandoned hull of Mr. George
-Hardy and Miss Julia Armstrong was to continue until the dawn of three
-days, counting from Hardy's time of finding the girl. All this while
-it was very fine weather, and of a night they would sit on top of the
-deck-house whilst Hardy smoked and Julia prattled. They watched the sea
-lights which glittered upon the black breast of the ocean; they watched
-the flight of the meteor. They talked of the stars, which nowhere
-wheel in so much splendour as over the sea, and of the great Spirit
-who controls their flight. Morally they were the least shipwrecked of
-people. They were happy in each other's company; if either one had been
-alone it might have proved madness to him or to her, but the voice
-of love, the presence of love even in the gloom of calamity, made a
-light of their own which was as inspiriting as the hope that springs
-eternal. It was not strange that no ships ever showed a white rag of
-canvas, a coil of sooty smoke upon the horizon in any point of the
-compass, because the brig<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span> sat low and her "dip" would be
-small, and a ship may be within the compass of a boat-race and yet not
-be seen. Hardy often went aloft and searched the waters; he did not
-lose heart, because he felt sure that something must heave in sight
-sooner or later, and meanwhile with great care the food they had would
-last them a week or perhaps longer, and there was fresh water for a
-fortnight or perhaps longer; for I am telling you what I have heard,
-and like the tramp in Dickens's sketch, my squire "would not tell a lie
-for no man."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy was also sure that the brig would hold together, and being
-of the careless nature of the sailor, though provident, willing, and
-sober, he would not allow his spirits to be depressed, and he had eyes
-enough in his head to see that Julia regarded their perilous condition
-as something in the way of an outing&mdash;to be enjoyed. She was a
-fine girl and we are never weary of admiring her. I have told you that
-she was not pretty, but her face, what with the cock of her head,
-the hand on the hip, the speaking appeal of her eyes, carried such a
-character of romance that it not only interested you at once, when she
-looked at you full and fastened her eyes upon yours with her slight
-smile, it made you even think her pretty, and certainly the truest
-beauty of a woman's face comes into it from her mind.</p>
-
-<p>Then broke the dawn of the third day, and Hardy, who had been
-sleeping since three, awoke and stepped out of the deck-house,
-and with the brig's telescope in hand climbed the few steps and
-searched the sea. It was again a fine morning; the heavens were lofty
-with their freckling of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>stationary small cloud; the wind was a
-light breeze a little to the north of east; and the sea, which streamed
-in thin lifts, sparkled to the caress of a hand that could make it roar
-when it thought fit.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly into the lenses of the glass there entered a full-rigged
-ship, showing nothing but three single-reefed topsails and a foresail
-and the trembling line of her hull a little above the horizon. "A
-full-rigged ship under that sail in this weather!" thought Hardy. "By
-heaven, it must be the <i>York</i>, and if so she is abandoned!"</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTE:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a
-href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Sailors' word
-for "cheerly men."</p></div></div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER XV.</span> <span class="smaller">ABOARD AGAIN</span></h2>
-
-<p>The sun was floating over the horizon, and the pink of his glory was
-melting into the flash of silver, as the wake of the <i>York</i> streamed
-in a short white gleam upon the sea. The light breeze was still to
-the north of east, and thither it had hung for hours past. Hardy and
-Julia stood at the brig's rail watching the ship that was distinct and
-lifting in the ocean's recess.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it possible that she's the <i>York</i>?" said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>He answered with the telescope at his eye:</p>
-
-<p>"Don't I know her! She's under single reefs. Her spanker is furled,
-and her head sails keep her off, as though she were under control.
-Perhaps she is, but I don't think so. She would head directly for us
-if she had anything alive on board, because I can hold the line of her
-rail in this glass, and if I can see her, she can see me."</p>
-
-<p>"What will you do?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will wait a little longer and see if she is manned. If her crew
-have deserted her, I will launch that boat, and board her before she
-drifts out of sight."</p>
-
-<p>"Will you be able to catch her?"</p>
-
-<p>"Catch her! Can you row?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span></p> <p>"Try me," she
-answered, with the proud look a girl will put on when she feels she is
-of importance.</p>
-
-<p>"She is drifting at about two, and we will make that boat buzz
-three, and perhaps more. But if she is manned, she will come alongside,
-and our getting aboard will be easy. But she is not manned, I am sure,"
-said Hardy. "Pipe to breakfast, Julia."</p>
-
-<p>This time they made beef sandwiches of biscuit, and they were
-swallowed without the accompanying forecastle growl. Indeed,
-considering it was meant for sailors' use, the beef was not very bad,
-and as it was pickled to the heart, a little cooking had gone a long
-way to make it almost food for the human stomach. The bottle of rum
-was half full and they drank a little of the liquor, largely diluted
-with water. To refresh himself Hardy went to the head, where he knew he
-would find a pump which stood clear of the deck load. He picked up a
-bucket, carried it to the pump and filled it with sparkling brine, and
-purified his face with the cold salt-sweetness of the water and wrung
-his hands in it, and felt that his beard was growing, for shipwreck
-does not stop the growth of hair, as we see when a haggard crew steps
-ashore out of a life-boat.</p>
-
-<p>And all the time he kept his eyes fastened on the <i>York</i>, as he
-knew her to be. When he went aft he found Julia sitting on a chair on
-top of the deck-house. He mounted the steps and sat beside her with
-the telescope, for he had made up his mind to wait a little before
-launching the boat.</p>
-
-<p>"What makes you know that she's the <i>York</i>?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Twenty points, and you must have served two years before the mast
-to understand them if I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span> explained. She is the <i>York</i>, my
-love, and with God's eye watching us we shall be aboard her and safe
-before sunset."</p>
-
-<p>"Hurrah!" cried Julia, and she picked up his hand and kissed it.</p>
-
-<p>It was a thing to be settled in about an hour, and in that hour
-Hardy discovered that she was not under control by her coming to
-windward and her falling off; and when she came to windward she hung so
-long that Hardy thought it time to turn to. And now began a process of
-which the description shall not weary you.</p>
-
-<p>First he unshipped the gangway and fetched some capstan bars for
-rollers; he then passed his knife through the boat's lashings, took
-the watch-tackle and secured it to a fore-shroud abreast of the boat,
-overhauled the tackle to hook the block on the boat's gunwale, then
-he and Julia clapped on to the hauling part of the tackle and easily
-roused the little wagon on to her bilge. She was not very much heavier
-than a smack's boat; her oars were lashed under the thwarts, and her
-rudder had been on a thwart and now lay in her. They tried to run her
-along the deck, but though they started her the toil must prove too
-great for the girl who would be plying an oar shortly. So he carried
-the block of the watch-tackle as far forward as its length would allow
-him and made a strop with a piece of gear round the thwart, to which he
-hooked the other block, bent a line on to the hauling part and carried
-it to the winch, giving Julia the job of hauling the slack in as he
-wound.</p>
-
-<p>He wound lustily, for he was fighting for life and time and he
-was a very strong man, and had entirely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span> rid himself of all
-the evil effects of the drug, as the girl had. So they brought the
-boat abreast of the gangway; he had muscle enough to lift her bow
-whilst Julia placed a skid, in the shape of a capstan bar, under her
-forefoot; he made other skids of the capstan bars, and laying hold of
-her gunwales on either side, the two brave hearts, with the boat's nose
-pointing to the sea, ran the fabric, secured by a painter hitched to a
-main shroud, clean through the gangway, and she fell with a squash, and
-floated like an empty bottle with never a drop of water in her.</p>
-
-<p>This done, Hardy, who was making haste, for the <i>York</i> was keeping a
-rap-full and forging into the stream of sunshine, though always coming
-for the brig, seized a line, and watching his chance sprang into the
-boat, secured the line to her after-thwart, leapt aboard, and brought
-the boat broadside to the gangway.</p>
-
-<p>The roll of the brig was very sullen and slow, and the swell of the
-sea sometimes hove the boat flush with the brig's waterway.</p>
-
-<p>"You must jump into her, Julia," said Hardy, "and for God's sake
-don't go overboard. To provide against that, see here."</p>
-
-<p>He took an end of main-royal-halliards and hitched it round her
-waist, and overhauled some slack which he grasped.</p>
-
-<p>"Pull up your clothes," said he, "and free your legs and aim for the
-bottom of the boat, and jump when I sing out."</p>
-
-<p>The little squab structure came floating up, and Hardy brought her
-in by a tug of the after-rope as she was coming.</p>
-
-<p>"Jump!" he shouted.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span></p> <p>And that girl, whose heart was
-of British oak, holding her clothes to her knees, sprang, and in a few
-breaths was sitting on a thwart and liberating herself from the rope,
-whilst she smiled up at her lover.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, Julia," said he, "I am going to send you down the provisions
-and water. Stand by to receive them, but keep seated."</p>
-
-<p>He handed the telescope to her, then fetched the breaker, which she
-received as it lay in that instant of heaving swell on the rim of the
-gunwale, and she rolled it to the thwart, then to the stern-sheets,
-taking the glass from Hardy at the next heave. He made one parcel of
-the provisions and hove them into the boat, then casting the painter
-adrift he jumped into the boat, let go the remaining line that held
-her, cut loose the oars, shipped the thole-pins, leaving the rudder
-unshipped, and made Julia the bow oar.</p>
-
-<p>Could she row? Very well indeed; but the oars were a little
-heavy and she did not attempt to feather; in fact, she rowed like a
-smacksman, lifting the blade with its streaming glory of water on high,
-but the dip and thrust of it was that of a stout schoolboy, and between
-them they made the boat buzz, Hardy, with larger power of oar, keeping
-her straight for the <i>York</i>.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't tire yourself," said he; "rest when you like. She'll not
-outrun us."</p>
-
-<p>"What a wonderful thing to happen!" said Julia, whose face was
-whitening with the ardour of her toil.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at nothing but her oar, and was certainly not going
-to be tired this side the <i>York</i>.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span></p> <p>"At sea, where
-all is wonderful, nothing is wonderful," said Hardy. "Any sailor would
-easily see how this has come about. But don't waste your breath in
-talking: let us row."</p>
-
-<p>It was a strange and curious picture: a man and a girl in a little
-open boat, pulling away for a ship that was rounding into the wind as
-though she knew they were approaching, whilst astern receded the figure
-of the brig, a melancholy sight, despite the gun-flashes of sunshine
-which burst from her side at every roll; her hanging canvas flapped a
-mournful farewell to the rowers, who took no heed of the poor thing's
-tender and, for a north-countryman, graceful salutation of good-bye.
-But, then, she had been a stage of maniacal horrors, of death, of
-the lonely little ghost that struck the bell, of shipwreck with its
-stalking shadows of famine, thirst, and the calenture that invites you
-to die.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy frequently turned to look at the <i>York</i> so as to keep a true
-course, and this time saw that she was involved in the wind, and was
-waiting for him to come aboard to tell her what to do. They had four
-miles to measure, and as they pulled with the spirit of shipwreck in
-their pulse they were within hail of her in an hour.</p>
-
-<p>No man showed himself; she was abandoned. But suddenly on the
-forecastle rail appeared the fore-paws and magnificent head of a great
-Newfoundland dog. He barked deep and long.</p>
-
-<p>"Poor Sailor," said Hardy; "I had forgotten him."</p>
-
-<p>"How inhuman to leave him," said Julia, panting.</p>
-
-<p>"A few more strokes, sweetheart," shouted Hardy, "and we are
-free. What a noble girl<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span> you are! What a good wife you will
-make a sailor!"</p>
-
-<p>"I will make you a good wife, never fear," she answered, joyous in
-despite distress of breath.</p>
-
-<p>The ship's head was slowly paying off as the boat's stem struck the
-side. Hardy secured the painter and jumped into the mizzen-chains.</p>
-
-<p>"Hold out your hands," he exclaimed, "and jump when the boat lifts,"
-and to the lift and to his fearless, muscular haul she sprang, and was
-alongside of him.</p>
-
-<p>He grasped her by the arm, passed her round the rigging, and helped
-her over the bulwark rail. The dog was barking in fury of joy. When
-they gained the deck he sprang upon the girl in love and delight and
-nearly knocked her down.</p>
-
-<p>"Get him some water and biscuit whilst I look about me," said
-Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>He had long ago known by the help of the telescope that the ship
-was abandoned because two pairs of davits were empty, and with the
-perception of a sailor he understood that the crew had transferred
-themselves to another ship in one boat, whereas if they had abandoned
-the ship on their own account, which was improbable, they would have
-gone away in three companies, and the davits would have been like
-gibbets, since the after-boat had been used by the captain when he
-stole the girl.</p>
-
-<p>The wheel was not lashed, and was constantly playing in swift
-revolution to starboard and port and back again. Hardy judged that
-the dog had been left by the men because the faithful creature would
-not quit the ship which had been his master's home, and the men, who
-would have had very little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span> time, did not choose that their flesh
-should be torn by using violence. Yet it was cruel of them to leave
-him, for they would know that the noble creature would soon need water
-and food, and perish as lamentably as a famine-stricken sailor on a
-raft.</p>
-
-<p>He saw that the figures of Mr. Candy and the man at the wheel, which
-had been concealed by a tarpaulin, were gone; they had of course been
-buried. Julia looked after the dog, that was lapping water thankfully
-as she filled a bowl from the galley with fresh water out of the
-scuttle-butt. Hardy slowly went forward, carefully gazing about him.</p>
-
-<p>No man lay dead on the deck; he dropped into the forecastle and
-found it empty of human life, so that the captain's birthday had killed
-but two men, which was surely wonderful, for he had commanded a power
-that could have murdered a thousand.</p>
-
-<p>Why was not this fine ship taken possession of by the people who had
-received her crew? I will tell you at once, for the story came out on
-the men's arrival. Her drift had been swifter, with the helping hand of
-the surge, than Hardy could have imagined or allowed for, and in the
-morning of the gale she was close aboard a French brig that was hove to
-sitting deep in the sea. They hailed her and were answered. They stated
-they were without a navigator and they didn't know what to do. The
-French captain spoke English, and said he would receive them if they
-came aboard in their own boat and land them at Marseilles, the port
-he was bound to. The weather was then moderating, and after calling a
-council the boatswain, giving the mate and the girl up as lost, swiftly
-decided, with the heedlessness of seamen, to abandon the <i>York</i>, and
-with great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span> difficulty the sailors gained the deck of the brig,
-leaving their clothes behind them. Very shortly afterward the French
-captain braced his yards round and shaped a course for Marseilles,
-leaving nothing alive on board the <i>York</i> but the dog.</p>
-
-<p>This is the true story of the ship's adventure, and whoever
-questions it is no sailor.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy left the forecastle and stood awhile on deck near the hatch,
-gazing aloft. In this moment he was fired by a resolution which would
-have inspired no other heart than that of a true British sailor. He
-determined that he and the girl and the dog should save this fine ship
-without help, and carry her to England, and entitle them to a reward
-which should prove a living to them whilst they endured. His face,
-which was as manly as Tom Bowline's, was irradiated by the glory of
-this resolution as he gazed aloft, smiling. It was possible&mdash;and
-being possible it was to be done. But it needed doing by two hearts
-of oak and the dog as a lookout, and great anxiety would accompany
-the discharge of this splendid duty, much sleeplessness and ceaseless
-urging of the spirit. But the eye of God would dwell lovingly upon
-their toil and peril; he felt that and raised his cap to the thought,
-and he said to himself, in the language of Nelson, "When we cannot do
-all we wish, we must do as well as we can!"</p>
-
-<p>He walked aft and joined the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Julia," he said, "I have formed the resolution of my life, and if I
-can fulfil it we shall be rich, though that will not make us happy."</p>
-
-<p>"What is it?" she asked, looking a little frightened, with her
-head slightly drooped to the shoulder, and her left hand, white
-as foam, reposing like a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span> coronet upon the Newfoundland's head.
-Indeed, what with the mad captain, drugs, and ghosts she was in such a
-condition of mind that she was easily alarmed by any divergence from
-the commonplace.</p>
-
-<p>"This is a valuable ship," he answered. "I know her cargo, for I
-helped to stow it. She has a beautiful hull, and is perfectly sound
-aloft. In addition to her cargo she carries a little treasure of
-jewelry consigned to Melbourne&mdash;Colonials love jewelry. I dare
-say it is worth ten thousand pounds. It is in a safe in the captain's
-cabin. I should say that the value of this ship and cargo is between
-sixty thousand and seventy thousand pounds, perhaps more. Julia, you
-and I and the dog will carry her home. We shall be richly rewarded
-by the owners and the underwriters&mdash;in fact, it is a matter of
-salvage to be assessed if my terms are disputed."</p>
-
-<p>She grasped him by both hands, her eyes were on fire, her cheeks
-were burning, the spirit of delight and resolution filled her romantic
-face with the light of conquest and realisation.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it to be done?" she said.</p>
-
-<p>"It is done," he answered. "We don't talk of failure. But let us
-make ourselves comfortable whilst the weather is fine."</p>
-
-<p>"How heavenly!" she sighed. "You will teach me to steer, George."</p>
-
-<p>"I will teach you everything that is proper for a young woman to
-know," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>He took her to his heart and pressed his lips to hers, which
-was like signing articles: that lip pressure was the seal of their
-agreement to serve each other loyally, and to eat the food on board
-without growling.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p> <p>The first thing they did was
-to go below. Here was the cabin just as they had left it; there was the
-chair in which Captain Layard had sat and talked metaphysics, yonder
-was the locker on which the drugged girl had slept, and they stood
-on the deck where Hardy had lifted his cannon-ball of a head, whilst
-his bewildered soul groped slowly into his brains. They went into the
-captain's cabin and saw the drum and the drumsticks and the little
-bedstead.</p>
-
-<p>"What a fantasy of the sea!" said Hardy. "It is beyond me. It is
-like a vision, sensible to perception and unreal to it. Will our story
-be credited?"</p>
-
-<p>"Who cares?" answered the girl. "Is that the safe, George?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and I'll look for the key by and by. The jewelry's there."</p>
-
-<p>The safe was small and secured on a massive timber shelf, but though
-small it was large enough to contain the Koh-i-noor, and to hold buried
-the wealth and jewels of a rajah.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy cast a keen look around him, saw that the table held the
-necessary machinery of navigation, carefully wound up the chronometers,
-which had not stopped, then went into his own cabin whilst the girl
-entered hers. When they presently met they sought for food and found
-plenty in the pantry; here were ham and tongue, palatable stuff in
-tins, white biscuits, and pots of jam.</p>
-
-<p>They sat down and ate, and the Newfoundland sat beside them,
-triumphant in this familiar company of man and woman, and Julia, who
-loved him, saw that he made a good breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>"How are we to manage it, George?" she asked.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p> <p>"It will require some scheming," he answered,
-"but we must not accept help, because if we do our salvage share will
-shrink out of all proportion to our merits. Can you steer in the
-least?"</p>
-
-<p>"I can steer a boat, but not a ship," Julia answered.</p>
-
-<p>"I will teach you; you will get the art in a very few lessons."</p>
-
-<p>"One lesson will do if I have the strength."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," he answered, with a loving glance at her, "you are one of
-those English girls whose shapes of beauty are wire-rigged. Wire is
-stronger than hemp, though it looks delicate. What your strength can't
-do I have arms for."</p>
-
-<p>"So you have," she replied; "you are the manliest sailor that ever
-was."</p>
-
-<p>"Let us change the subject," he replied, with a little colour of
-pleasure in his face, for a compliment from your sweetheart is next to
-a kiss. "We are fortunate in finding the ship under very easy sail.
-We'll get some more fore-and-aft canvas upon her, for it is easily
-hauled down, but I shall leave the square canvas that is furled to rest
-as it is. I'll bring her to her course at noon when I find out where we
-are. You will light the galley fire, as we shall want a hot drink. But
-we need little cooking, for if we boil a good lump of beef, that, with
-the food in the pantry, will last you and me and the dog five hundred
-miles of sea."</p>
-
-<p>"Are we near England?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not very, I think, but I shall know presently exactly how near we
-are."</p>
-
-<p>"How shall we get rest, George? We must sleep or die, or
-worse, go mad."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span></p> <p>"Aye," he answered,
-thoughtfully; "you see things rightly, but we must not make sleep a
-difficulty."</p>
-
-<p>"The rest seems quite easy," she said, joyously; "and I shall learn
-to steer in one lesson."</p>
-
-<p>They left the table and went on deck, followed by the dog, who
-growled softly and often in a sort of undertalk with himself. There is
-a great nature in a Newfoundland, and you often wonder whilst you look
-into his soft, affectionate eyes what his thoughts are.</p>
-
-<p>It was a glowing scene of forenoon ocean. The ripple ran with the
-laughter of the summer in its voice. The endless procession of humps
-of swell, as though old ocean was perpetually shrugging his shoulders
-over spiteful memories, brought the flaming banners of the sun out of
-the east, and swept them westwards in knightly array of fiery plume
-and foam-crested summit. Four miles off wallowed the poor little brig,
-tearfully flapping her pocket-handkerchief to the naked horizon, and by
-mute and pathetic gesture coaxing nothing into being to help her. Many
-soft, white clouds floated westwards, and Hardy noticed that the glass
-was high and those clouds meant nothing but vapour.</p>
-
-<p>What a noble ship to be in charge of, to virtually be the owner
-of, to rescue from the toils of the sea, to witness in security in
-some harbour of England, flying high the commercial flag of the Empire
-in token of British supremacy, even in the hour of peril, when the
-Foreigner would consider all was lost!</p>
-
-<p>"It is not yet twelve o'clock," said Hardy, "and we will light
-the galley fire."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span></p> <p>They walked forward and
-entered the sea kitchen. Plenty of chopped wood lay stacked. The ship's
-cook had been a man of foresight, and anticipated labour by putting
-an axe into the ordinary seaman's hand; also near the wood stood two
-buckets of coal and a little heap on the deck. There was plenty of coal
-in the fore-peak for a voyage to Australia. Hardy had matches, which
-are curiosities at sea in a forecastle, for you light your pipe at the
-galley fire with rope yarns or shavings, and the slush lamp is kindled
-by the binnacle or side-light. But aft there are usually matches,
-because the cabin is the home of elegance, refinement, and luxury,
-and the captain must have matches, for he cannot light his cigar at
-the sailors' fire. Hardy first explored the coppers; they were empty.
-He filled them from the scuttle-butt; why should he use salt water
-when there was plenty of fresh at hand? Fresh water would cleanse the
-mahogany beef of something of its brine, and perhaps soften it into
-complacent recognition of human digestion.</p>
-
-<p>Then the fire was lighted; he could not find the key of the harness
-cask, so he fetched a weapon from the carpenter's chest, and the
-staples yielded to his blow with the shriek of lacerated wood. There
-was plenty of beef and pork in the cask, buried in the horrible crystal
-in which lurks the demon of scurvy; he turned the pieces over, and
-selecting the fattest and least ill-looking lump, dropped it into the
-copper for boiling when the water should begin.</p>
-
-<p>This work, easily recited, cost time. Before he touched a brace
-or put the ship to her course he must find out where she was. The
-last entries in the log-book were in his handwriting, and they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
-related the story of the captain's birthday, how he kept it, and his
-disappearance with a young lady passenger named Julia Armstrong. The
-latitude was then&mdash;N. and the longitude&mdash;W. But the drifting
-ship had measured miles, and her captain must know where he was. This
-he would find out in about an hour.</p>
-
-<p>The sow under the long-boat was dead. To get rid of it before the
-carcass stank he stropped it and clapped the watch-tackle on it, and
-together they hauled the little mountain of what might have proved
-tooth-alluring crackling and white fresh fat, always sweet at sea,
-through the open gangway overboard. It fell without a prayer, and the
-fish that nosed it that day dined well.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the poultry in the hen-coops were dead; a few lived, and
-craved with fluttering red pennons for drink and grain. Of course Hardy
-knew "the ropes" of this ship and could lay his hand on anything he
-wanted. He filled the little troughs with fresh water, and no one but
-a beholder could have figured the profound gratitude with which the
-varying row of bills was lifted to heaven. He helped them to grain,
-and they filled their crops with all ardency of pecking. He cleared
-the hen-coop of its plumed corpses, and so they sweetened the ship
-forthwith.</p>
-
-<p>It was about time that Hardy fetched his sextant: the soaring sun
-excited his impatience; he desired that the ship should be sending
-his sweetheart and himself home, and the ceaseless waving of those
-pocket-handkerchiefs just over the horizon teased him with their
-impertinence, and as a token of distress when the morning was fair and
-their hearts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span> high and hopeful. His reckoning found the ship's
-position within a mile or two of her place when he had left her to
-succour his darling.</p>
-
-<p>"I have it now," said he, "and we must trim sail for home."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, how beautiful!" cried Julia, and the dog barked in recognition
-of the girl's triumphant note.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was on the port tack and must be wore to the north. Hardy
-put the helm hard up and secured it, then let go the fore, main, and
-mizzen-braces, and the yards, as the ship obeyed her rudder, swung a
-little of themselves. With the starboard-braces let go Hardy and Julia
-did not find it difficult to swing the yards. The wind would be almost
-abeam when the ship was homeward bound, and there were the winch and
-the capstan to brace the yards well forward if the wind drew ahead.</p>
-
-<p>"Sing out, George!" cried Julia. And they brought the fore and
-foretopsail-yard, with fore-tack and sheet all gone, round, to their
-chanty of "Chillyman."</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
- <span class="i0">"Randy dandy, heigho!</span>
- <span class="i0">Chillyman!</span>
- <span class="i0">Pull for a shilling, heigho!</span>
- <span class="i0">Chillyman!</span>
- <span class="i0">Young and willing, heigho!</span>
- <span class="i0">Sweet and killing ole bo',</span>
- <span class="i0">Dandy, heigho!</span>
- <span class="i0">Chillyman!"</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The Newfoundland looked on and grumbled because he had no hands.
-They got the main and the mizzen-yards round to the same song with some
-laughter, because Hardy put a few words of <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span>sweetness into his
-invention as he sang, and the girl's voice was rich with appreciation
-as the flute of her lips swept the carol of her delight into his manly
-tones.</p>
-
-<p>Then they saw to the fore-tack and sheet and to the jib-sheets, and
-the ship floated away steadily round in graceful salutations to the
-dejected handkerchiefs on the quarter. Hardy cast the wheel adrift and
-told the girl to hold it whilst he steadied the yards by hauling as
-taut as his pair of hands could the weather-braces of the fore and main
-and the lee-braces of the mizzen.</p>
-
-<p>This done he stood beside Julia to teach her how to steer.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER XVI.</span> <span class="smaller">PRACTICAL SEAMANSHIP</span></h2>
-
-<p>He is a lucky sailor to whom is granted the opportunity of teaching
-a girl with a romantic face and a beautiful figure the art of steering
-a full-rigged ship. Though the sailor is often in the company of ladies
-at sea, he is kept very severely forward, whilst the ladies are kept
-very severely aft; and if they formed a seraglio imprisoned on soft
-couches and fanned by eunuchs, behind walls ten feet thick, Jack at sea
-could not know less of the ladies at sea.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy's job was therefore a delightful one, and the more delightful
-because the ship was now homeward bound, and the morning was fair and
-the sea courteous and graceful in caress.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you see that black mark on the white under the glass?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," answered the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"It is called the lubber's mark: it is the business of the helmsman
-to keep a point of the compass aiming at it; that point is the ship's
-course. Do you observe that the point that is levelled at the lubber's
-mark is north-by-east?"</p>
-
-<p>"If you call it so I shall remember it," answered the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"The lubber's point," Hardy continued, <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>"represents an
-imaginary line ruled straight from the stern into the very eyes of the
-ship, where the bowsprit and jib-booms point the road. If, then, I tell
-you to keep that point called north-by-east pointing as steadily as the
-swing of the ship's head will permit to the lubber's mark, then I am
-asking you to steer the ship in the direction I wish her to go."</p>
-
-<p>She frowned a little in contemplation at the compass card, and said,
-"I believe I understand you."</p>
-
-<p>"I will teach you to box the compass presently," Hardy went on.
-"You will easily get the names, and will not be at a loss if I should
-say the course is northeast or nor'-nor'east, and so on. And now see
-here: the action of a ship's wheel exactly reverses the action of a
-boat's tiller. Look under that grating; that is the tiller, and when
-you revolve the wheel the chains which drag the tiller sweep the rudder
-on one side or the other, so that when I tell you to put your helm
-a-starboard you revolve your wheel to the left, which will bring the
-rudder over to the left; and when I say port your helm you revolve your
-wheel to the right, which carries your rudder over to the right. If you
-steered by the tiller, then to the order of starboard your helm, you
-would put your tiller to the right. Do you understand?"</p>
-
-<p>The machinery of the compass, the wheel, the tiller, and its chains
-girdling the barrel, was all before her, and she would have been a
-blockhead if she had not grasped the simple matter speedily&mdash;but
-you, madam, who are a lady and read this, may be puzzled; possibly you
-are not, but if you are I do not wonder.</p>
-
-<p>"Now," he said, "I want the ship to be off her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
-course: mark what I do; she shall be a little to leeward of her
-course."</p>
-
-<p>He put the helm by a few spokes over, and the binnacle card revolved
-two points from its course as the ship's head rounded away with the
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>"Now," said Hardy, "I bring her again to her course: observe what I
-do: we call this putting the helm down."</p>
-
-<p>He brought her to her course and arrested her at it, and the girl
-cried, eagerly, "Yes, yes, I see. Let me hold the wheel, George."</p>
-
-<p>She grasped the spokes, a swelling, beautiful, conquering figure, a
-delight to the eye, a triumph of British girlhood, one of those women
-who are the mothers of the gallant and glorious sons that man the
-signal-halliards of our country.</p>
-
-<p>"Now bring the ship to windward of her course," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"I do not understand you," she answered, reproachfully.</p>
-
-<p>"Make that bowsprit yonder point <i>there</i>," he exclaimed, and he
-indicated with outstretched hand a part of the horizon to windward of
-the bow.</p>
-
-<p>"Why didn't you speak more plainly? I can do it."</p>
-
-<p>She revolved the wheel by three or four spokes, and hailed with eyes
-of transport and conquest the response of the compass card.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you understand?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"My dear," she answered, "I can steer your ship perfectly."</p>
-
-<p>"Not yet," he said, "but you are not far off."</p>
-
-<p>Thus proceeded this pleasant tuition, and for half an hour
-Hardy stood beside the wheel teaching his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span> sweetheart how to
-steer. The Newfoundland sat alongside of them and seemed to listen,
-for his loving eyes were often on Hardy's face whilst he spoke. He
-tried the girl again and again, and at the end of half an hour she
-was expressing keen appreciation of his delightful lecture by dutiful
-movement of the wheel. But, indeed, the ship did not need much steering
-that fine day. Had the helm been lashed it is probable that, braced as
-the yards lay, and pulling in steadfast accord as the sails were, the
-ship would have made a tranquil passage of an hour with no other check
-to the dull kicks of the rudder than a rope's end.</p>
-
-<p>He left the girl to steer whilst he tautened here and there a brace
-with the watch-tackle; then entered the galley, saw to the fire, the
-coppers, and their contents. He was accepting an enormous obligation;
-could he discharge it? He felt the heart of a dozen men in his pulse,
-and he knew that if God did not smite her with sickness the spirit of
-his heroic girl would make her the match of any man, able-bodied or
-ordinary; so, though the <i>York</i> might be undermanned, her crew of a man
-and a girl, with a dog for a lookout, would carry her home.</p>
-
-<p>The weather was so fine that he did not mean to make a job of
-seamanship. He did not intend to keep a lookout for ships unless it
-was to escape collision, because no ship that hove in sight, however
-willing, should be allowed to help him. The <i>York</i> was to be his own
-and the girl's fortune, and, much as he respected the sailor, no man
-afloat would be permitted to share in this estate.</p>
-
-<p>He stood a minute on the forecastle to admire the beautiful
-fabric, and to pity the powerlessness which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span> held imprisoned the
-cloths whose lustrous spaces would have climbed to the trucks in bright
-breasts yearning for home. Afar trembled the pocket-handkerchiefs of
-the sodden brig. The naked vision could no longer distinguish their
-appeal. She broke the continuity of the girdle, that was all, and she
-hovered on the skirts of the deep like a gibbet beheld afar. Hardy went
-right aft to the wheel; it was in the afternoon, and the speed of the
-ship was about four miles an hour.</p>
-
-<p>"We will make ourselves happy," said he. "This is yachting, and if
-you strain the imagination of your eyes you shall see close aboard the
-white terraces of the Isle of Wight."</p>
-
-<p>She laughed and answered, "We shall be off that island some day."</p>
-
-<p>"No fear," he replied. "Don't suppose I mean to sail her up
-channel. Plymouth is our port, and as we sha'n't be able to let go the
-anchor, I'll seize a blue shirt to the fore-lift and that 'ull bring a
-man-o'-war's boat alongside."</p>
-
-<p>"Why?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Because it is the merchant seaman's signal that he wants to join
-the white ensign, and the naval officer is always greedy for men."</p>
-
-<p>But this was spoken many years ago. The signal of the blue shirt
-has been hauled down and buried with many other customs under the thin
-white wake of the metal battleship.</p>
-
-<p>"Why do you want a naval boat; would not any other boat do?" asked
-Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"No; the Royal Navy claims no salvage and gets none. Any other
-boat would make a claim for assistance, and I mean that our cake
-shall be whole."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span></p> <p>He brought two chairs out of
-the cabin, gave one to Julia and took one himself, with his hand on a
-spoke. Their faithful friend the dog lay in the westering sun beside
-them; and now they talked of what they should do in the night, and came
-to terms about the discipline of the crew whilst the ship kept the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall be on deck as much as I can," said he. "I must sleep on
-deck; I do not choose to lie without shelter during my watch below.
-I'll bring a hen-coop aft, thoroughly cleanse it, and put a mattress
-into it after knocking away the rails. That's a good idea!"</p>
-
-<p>"Excellent!" she exclaimed; "and clear out another hen-coop for me.
-How romantic to sleep in a hen-coop!" and she laughed softly, looking
-lovingly at him.</p>
-
-<p>"If I should crow in my sleep whilst you're at the wheel you'll know
-that I am being hen-pecked."</p>
-
-<p>"Can't we put Sailor to some use?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>The animal lifted his head to the sound of his name, and all was
-intelligence in his soft, pathetic eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"You shall sleep on a mattress at the foot of the companion-steps,
-where you will be sheltered. I have an idea. Are you strong enough
-to bring your mattress out of your berth and place it on deck with a
-pillow?"</p>
-
-<p>"Chaw!" she answered, with a shrug. "I have lifted an old woman out
-of bed. What do you want me to do?"</p>
-
-<p>"Spread your mattress on the port side of the steps, get a pillow,
-and stretch yourself upon it, and sing out when you're ready."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span></p> <p>She instantly rose and descended; the dog was
-about to follow her.</p>
-
-<p>"Lie down, Sailor!" and the dog obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments the clear voice sounded, "On deck there!"</p>
-
-<p>"Hallo!"</p>
-
-<p>"All ready, George."</p>
-
-<p>"Shut your eyes and seem asleep. Sailor!" The dog immediately stood
-up with an inquiring look, ears slightly lifted. "Fetch her, Sailor!
-fetch her!"</p>
-
-<p>The dog trembled, and looked with a sort of passion about him.</p>
-
-<p>"Fetch her, Sailor! fetch her!" shouted Hardy, pointing down the
-hatch.</p>
-
-<p>The noble creature sprang down the steps. In a moment Julia began to
-scream.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he heard her say; "he is tearing my dress, George."</p>
-
-<p>"Come up with him; it is all right," he bellowed. And up came the
-girl with her skirt in the mouth of the dog, who tried to get in front
-of her to drag her as though they were both in the sea and awash; but
-she filled the way and the Newfoundland could not jam past her.</p>
-
-<p>The dog held on till she was seated; he had not torn her dress,
-and the sweethearts fell into a fit of immoderate laughter, whilst
-the dog by pantomime of tail and motion exhibited every mark of
-satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>"What a wonderful animal!" said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"That breed is cleverer than we are," answered Hardy, "and as
-humane as angels. He understood me; it was like bidding him jump
-overboard after you."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span></p> <p>"But what is your object,
-George?"</p>
-
-<p>"I might want you, and if you are in a sound sleep and a breeze is
-blowing in low thunder over the companion-way, I might yelp myself into
-the disease of laryngitis without awakening you. The dog rests beside
-me and is at hand to call you."</p>
-
-<p>"You are very clever, George. The more I see of you the cleverer
-you become. Dear old Sailor! must he lie beside you on deck
-unsheltered?"</p>
-
-<p>"I shall lash an empty cask to the grating; there is plenty of
-sailcloth forward, and he shall have a kennel. Take the wheel, Julia;
-there is something to be done before the night falls. The breeze
-freshens too; hurrah, see how straight the white race flies astern of
-her! Under such canvas too! Keep her steady and don't be afraid."</p>
-
-<p>"Afraid!" she answered with a glance at him, which made him feel as
-if he was married.</p>
-
-<p>He walked forward, laughing, trusting his girl as though she had
-been an able seaman. A great deal of confusion followed when he caught
-a few hens out of one coop and thrust them into the other. Such
-heartrending screams of despair, and two cocks and five or six hens in
-the other coop strained their throats in clamorous sympathy, and you
-could have sworn that the whole crowd of them, cocks and all, had just
-laid eggs. When the hen-coop was clear he passed his knife through the
-lashings, fetched an axe, swept the bars out of their fixings to the
-accompaniment of the orchestra in the other hen-coop, drew a bucket of
-water, and with a scrubbing brush thoroughly cleansed the dirty thing,
-which had the width of a trunk, though much longer.</p>
-
-<p>He found it was heavy to drag, being a somewhat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
-solid structure, so he called the Newfoundland to him and harnessed
-him to the coop by the watch-tackle. The dog tugged with the vigour
-of a man, Hardy shoved, and the hen-coop rushed along the deck right
-aft, whilst Julia with tears of laughter in her eyes kept the speeding
-ship to her course as though she had done nothing but steer ever since
-she could stand. But there was more yet to be done, and the sun was
-setting. He took the cooked meat out of the coppers and placed the
-steaming mass on a dish until it should grow cold.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly his ear was taken by a strange noise of hissing over the
-side; it was something more than the sheeting of the ship through the
-soft whiteness she made. It was like a continuous snarl threading the
-blowing off of steam.</p>
-
-<p>He looked over the rail and saw the boat they had come aboard in
-from the brig rushing with comet-like velocity close alongside, like
-a little child swept to her home by the enraged mother that had lost
-her.</p>
-
-<p>He debated a minute, and then said to himself, "She is of no use,
-neither she, nor the fresh water, nor the grub that is in her."</p>
-
-<p>He was making his way into the channels to cast the painter
-adrift.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you going?" shrieked Julia at the wheel. He explained.</p>
-
-<p>"If I see you in the water behind me I shall jump after you," she
-cried, with a look of alarm and real anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>"Can't I drop into a ship's chains without going overboard?"
-he answered, and disappeared, and a short scream at the wheel
-attended his going.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span></p> <p>The boat was easily released,
-and to the great joy of Julia the manly face of her sailor was once
-more visible. They both watched the boat as she receded.</p>
-
-<p>"She'll be fallen in with," said Hardy, "and some skipper will log
-her and make a fearful mystery of her. Every tragic possibility of
-shipwreck is in her. She is the issue of fire, collision, the leak, the
-meteor-cloven craft&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean?" interrupted Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"The ship's off her course," said Hardy. "That's quite right. Three
-spokes did it. Now look how fair the compass course points to the
-lubber's mark."</p>
-
-<p>"What's a meteor-cloven ship?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I never heard of a big ship having been sunk by a meteor," he
-answered; "but I have been told of a great stone dropping out of the
-sky with the meteoric flash of a fallen star plump through the hatchway
-of a schooner and down through her: the sailors took to the pumps and
-then to the boats. That's what I mean."</p>
-
-<p>And now he must prepare a bed for himself and the dog. He could not
-find an empty barrel, but just against the windlass the cook or the
-cabin servant had placed for firewood perhaps, or for other reasons, a
-big empty case, which might have contained wine or commodities of some
-sort. This placed on its side would do, and as it was too heavy for him
-to carry, and too rough for him to shove, he harnessed the Newfoundland
-to it as to the coop, and Sailor, helped by Hardy, ran the case close
-against the wheel.</p>
-
-<p>"The ship is sailing very fast," said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"A little over five knots, perhaps," answered Hardy. "We wants
-legs, my love. Blow, blow, my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span> sweet breeze." And he sang to himself
-whilst he got the box on to its side and secured it to the grating.</p>
-
-<p>"Now for your bed, Sailor, and then we'll go to supper."</p>
-
-<p>He reflected, and remembered that there was straw in the fore-peak
-for the use of the old sow that had been and was gone&mdash;recollect
-that he had been mate of this ship, and knew exactly where to look
-for what he wanted. He dropped into the fore-peak, which was like
-descending into a hell of smells and the mutter of troubled water, and
-reappeared with his arms full of straw, transforming Julia's wistful
-face into beaming pleasure, for his briefest disappearance struck a
-sort of horror to her heart.</p>
-
-<p>Thus was the Newfoundland housed, and before making up his own bed
-in the hen-coop the sweethearts went to supper.</p>
-
-<p>The girl had been standing some time at the wheel. It was proper
-she should be relieved, so Hardy grasped the spokes whilst Julia went
-below, followed by the dog, to fetch something to eat. She arrived
-with wine, biscuits, jam, and tinned meats. You will remember that she
-had been an under-stewardess, and was used to waiting upon people. But
-that was not all: she had nursed old ladies, had for a very lean wage
-indeed washed, dressed, and walked out with children; in fact, she long
-afterward told Hardy that, always having emigration in her mind, she
-had worked at a laundry for some weeks. In point of service, therefore,
-she was well equipped for life, and Hardy saw in her the helpful
-woman, the wise and devoted wife, beautiful in figure and, now that
-she was happy, most engaging in face.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></p> <p>The three
-of the ship's company ate their supper, and two of them talked and
-watched the sunset. The further north you go the greater is the glory
-of the sun's departure; yet yonder was a magnificent scene of golden
-pavilions hung with tapestries of deep blue ether; the flight of the
-eastern cloud was like incense pouring from the evening star, unrisen
-or invisible: the vapour fled on the wings of the wind to enrich the
-light in the west by duplication of scarlet splendour, and the ship
-blew steadily along controlled by the hand of Hardy, who was sometimes
-fed by Julia.</p>
-
-<p>All about was the soft, sweet noise of creaming seas; the brig
-astern had vanished into airy nothing, and the <i>York</i> sailed a kingdom
-of her own.</p>
-
-<p>"Will there be a moon?" asked Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"Between nine and ten," he answered. "A slice of moon. We can do
-without her. There is light in starshine, and we can do without that
-also. I must light the binnacle lamp and get the side-lights over. I
-thank God that this wind promises steadiness. Yet it may shift, and
-then I shall want the dog to awake you whilst I see what a single pair
-of arms can do with the braces."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you think I shall not hear you if you shout?" said she.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll not chance it," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you believe we shall carry this ship home?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll not hope, for hoping is bragging, but we'll try, Julia. A
-man cannot add a cubit to his mother's gift of stature by standing on
-stilts; but we'll try, Julia."</p>
-
-<p>"Who can do more?" she asked.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span></p> <p>"Hold this
-wheel while I light the lamps."</p>
-
-<p>He set about this job and speedily despatched it, knowing exactly
-where to lay his hands upon everything he wanted, then brought his
-mattress up along with the rug and jammed it into his hen-coop, and
-lay down. It was rather a tight fit with the mattress, but it gave him
-the length he wanted, and if he did not start in his sleep he need not
-knock his head against the ceiling. He carefully secured the hen-coop
-to belaying pins.</p>
-
-<p>"That'll provide," said he, "against being taken aback."</p>
-
-<p>He then went below and lighted the cabin lamp, and saw to Julia's
-bed by readjustment of the mattress clear of the draughts circling down
-the companionway. He fetched covering for her, and it was for her to
-make herself comfortable when the time came.</p>
-
-<p>By this hour it was dark; there was no light upon the deep save the
-musket-like wink of the sea flash. But the stars swarmed in brilliant
-processions betwixt the clouds over the mastheads, and their subtle
-light was in the air, and you saw things dimly. The Newfoundland was
-asleep in his kennel beside the wheel. Julia, who had come aboard
-with nothing on but the clothes she stood in, fetched the captain's
-cloak from the captain's cabin. It was a long coat with a warm cape,
-and I call it a cloak because it wasn't a great-coat. It clothed her
-to her little feet, and she sat as warm in it as in the embrace of
-eiderdown.</p>
-
-<p>"How shall we manage to keep watch?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall keep the deck till twelve," he answered;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
-"I have a watch, and there is the binnacle light which from time to
-time will want trimming. Sailor will call you at twelve&mdash;see now
-his use? And I'll trim the lights, and lie close beside you there for
-a couple of hours, for I can do with very little sleep, and the more
-sleep you can get the better, because you will keep strong and will
-be able to steer in the day whilst I take an off-shore spell in my
-coop."</p>
-
-<p>"If I felt I could sleep, I would go and lie down at once," she
-answered; "but I love to sit and talk with you. What time is it,
-George?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nearly half-past eight," he answered, putting his watch to the
-binnacle.</p>
-
-<p>"Grant me till nine, I may then be sleepy. But I feel as if that
-sleep of drug was going to suffice me a year."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, my heart, am not I rejoiced that you should be with me!" he
-exclaimed, in a soft and melodious note of love. "Think if that madman
-had missed the brig and sailed on!"</p>
-
-<p>She shuddered and answered, "I dare not think." Then after a pause
-she said, "Suppose a steamer came in sight, wouldn't she tow us
-home?"</p>
-
-<p>"I wouldn't give her the chance."</p>
-
-<p>"Why?"</p>
-
-<p>"She would demand salvage, and get it."</p>
-
-<p>"It is shameful," she exclaimed, "that a ship should be paid for
-helping a ship in distress."</p>
-
-<p>"The shipowner knows no shame," answered Hardy, "and neither does
-his dumb confederate, the underwriter. One builds a jerry ship to sink,
-and the other pins a policy on to the villain's back that he may sleep
-whether his ship goes down or not."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span></p> <p>It was strange
-to look along the decks and witness no figure of man. No shape of
-seaman was on the forecastle to extinguish a thousand stars as the
-jib-booms rose pointing to the sky; no shadow of man stirred in the
-waist or the main-deck. The mighty loneliness of the deep was in this
-ship from the wheel to where the forecastle rails clasped hands above
-the figure-head. But sentience was in her and she knew it, and nobly
-confessed the spirit of control by the glad, direct and cleaving shear
-of her stem.</p>
-
-<p>Happy is the sailor who can sit beside his sweetheart on board
-ship on a fine night and discourse of love and other matters without
-dread of the eye of the master-mariner. This couple talked of the safe
-arrival of the ship. They would buy a little cottage; they would not
-go to sea any more. It is always a cottage well inshore that is the
-sailor's dream. It was our glorious Nelson's for many years; witness
-his letters to his wife, whom he loved before the traitress wound her
-brilliant coils round the hero's heart, and numbed the loyalty of its
-pulse to one who had cherished him in sickness and was his dearest one
-when the shadow of his life was yet short in the sun of his glory.</p>
-
-<p>The dust of the shooting star glittered on high; the steady voice
-of the night wind filled the shrouds with the melodies of invisible
-spirits; the white wake gleamed astern like the dusty highway which is
-the road to home; the softly plunging bows awoke the minstrelsy of the
-surge. It was night upon the Atlantic, and no twinkle of side-lamp was
-to be seen upon the sea line.</p>
-
-<p>At nine by Hardy's watch, Julia kissed her sweetheart's lips and
-held him by the hand a little.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span></p> <p>"Good night,
-good night," she said; "I will say a prayer before I sleep."</p>
-
-<p>"Never forget that," answered Hardy. "Be sure it is He that hath
-made us and not we ourselves. Pray to him and bless him and thank him,
-and his love will be with us."</p>
-
-<p>Is this the common talk of the sea? Do Smollett and Marryat make
-their heroes converse like this? Thrust your hands into your ribs, ye
-ribald crew, and laugh with godless merriment at this presentment of a
-sailor who was a gentleman, who feared God, to whom the helplessness of
-his companion was no appeal to the heart that loved her, respected her,
-and desired that she should be true to herself and to him.</p>
-
-<p>He was alone at the wheel, and now she was gone to rest and the dog
-was asleep he was alone in the ship, but he could keep a lookout as
-well as the dog, and the dog would not be called upon to serve until
-the girl was alone at the wheel whilst her lover slept.</p>
-
-<p>Many thoughts were this fine young sailor's; he was full of hope
-and courage, and often bent his mind to shrewd contemplation of
-contingency&mdash;the shift of the breeze, the head wind, the gale,
-and other gay humours and tragic scowls of the life. But the winch
-was four men, and the watch-tackle a little company of hands, and he
-did not despair. Sometimes he meditated on the port he should make;
-if it came to the worst, then, when in the English Channel, he would
-shape a course for Ramsgate Harbour and run her on the mud, and no
-man must be suffered to board her, for the money of the safety<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span> of
-the ship was to be his and hers, and that was the settled resolution of
-his soul.</p>
-
-<p>When twelve o'clock came round he did not wish to sleep; he would
-have chosen rather that Julia should have slumbered until dawn. But the
-refreshment of rest was an imperious demand with which he must comply
-for his own and for the sake of the girl, the safety of their noble
-companion, the safety of the ship and her cargo. He thought he would
-try Julia by calling, and he shouted four or five times, but, as he
-had foreseen, the sweep of the wind broke his voice to pieces in the
-companionway, and her ears were blocked with sleep.</p>
-
-<p>The dog started up and came to his side at the outcry of the
-man. "Fetch her, Sailor! fetch her!" he cried, pointing to the
-companion-hatch.</p>
-
-<p>The Newfoundland barked and seemed to wonder.</p>
-
-<p>"Fetch her, Sailor! fetch her!" he roared again, still pointing.</p>
-
-<p>This time the dog understood. He sprang to the ladder and vanished,
-and a moment later Julia's cries were piercing. But it was merely the
-noise of terror such as would be excited in a girl awakened from a
-sound sleep by the resolute drag of a dog's teeth. She understood the
-thing in a minute, patted the dog, who was dragging her by her skirt to
-the ladder, snatched up her hat and the captain's cloak, and arrived
-on deck with the dog, whose tail timed the wag of the stars over the
-mastheads.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you slept?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Too well," she answered. "I screamed because Sailor broke in upon a
-nightmare and fitted it."</p>
-
-<p>"Will you be able to hold the wheel?"</p>
-
-<p>"I'll try. What is the time?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span></p> <p>"After
-midnight&mdash;nearly one bell," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>She stood at the wheel, and her firm grasp was full of promise of
-control.</p>
-
-<p>"Is that the course?" she inquired, looking into the compass.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and keep her to it as best you can by the starshine whilst I
-trim the lamp."</p>
-
-<p>"What is our pace, dear?"</p>
-
-<p>"Six and a half at least," he answered.</p>
-
-<p>He made haste to trim the lamp and saw to the side-lights, and his
-spirits were high and his hope more exalted yet when he saw how well
-the girl steered. A big ship for a girl to control! And all the sweet
-archness of her incomparable posture was unconsciously expressed to
-her lover as he flashed the light over her before adjusting it for the
-illumination of the card.</p>
-
-<p>"Now for a little supper," said he, "then I shall lie down."</p>
-
-<p>He fetched some food and wine, and ate himself whilst he helped
-Julia to eat; the dog was remembered; and all the while he kept his
-eyes fixed in critical attention upon the girl's handling of the
-wheel.</p>
-
-<p>"Sailor, go forward and keep a lookout, sir," he exclaimed, and this
-was an order which, as you know, the dog understood, and was accustomed
-to obey. He had supped and was thankful, and, faithful to his duty as
-Tom Bowline, the brave Newfoundland trotted forward to the forecastle,
-and took up a position of lookout betwixt the knight-heads.</p>
-
-<p>"Here is my watch, Julia," said Hardy. "Call me at half-past
-two&mdash;but sooner, at the instant of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span> need, if your arm
-should weary or the breeze shift and drive you off your course. I am a
-sailor and used to keeping my ears open in sleep. I am close beside you
-there, and your first cry will bring me out like a cork to the drag of
-a corkscrew."</p>
-
-<p>"I will call you at half-past two," she answered. "She is as easy
-to steer as a boat. Look how steady the course swings at the mark
-there!"</p>
-
-<p>He paused and gazed round him. The white cloud was speeding swiftly
-across the stars, and the ship hummed with the wind as the thrill of
-its ebon lines of gear, of shroud and stay and back-stay, shook its
-transport into the plank. The glass was steady&mdash;he had seen to
-that when he went below for the midnight supper; and there was no sign
-of worse, or changeful, or other weather within or on the verge of the
-mighty liquid sweep, whose heart was the ship, carrying onwards always
-the illimitable girdle on which she floated, the central figure of the
-night.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy got into the hen-coop&mdash;a tight fit; but in it he was well
-sheltered, for the coop was under the lee of the weather-bulwark. He
-drew an old coat he had brought up over him, pillowed his head on the
-rolled-up flag he had thrown into the hen-coop, and in a minute was
-asleep.</p>
-
-<p>A sailor's sleep is sound, and sacred as the slumber of death to
-his messmates and shipmates as they mutter softly round about him
-and tread the upper plank with airy feet that all shall be hushed
-in the forecastle&mdash;hushed unless it be the crying of the wind
-or the sullen thunder of the bow-sea, or the cries of the watch on
-high furling or reefing to the trumpet commands of the quarter-deck.
-Nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span> in all ocean romance is comparable to this picture of a
-full-rigged ship in command of a girl who is alone at the wheel whilst
-her lover sleeps, whilst a dog on the forecastle-head watches the ocean
-line with faithful eye for the sparkle of light, for the dim sheen of
-canvas, for the stream of smoke spangled with the stars of the furnace,
-that shall make him bark in barks as truthful of indication as the
-strokes of the tongue upon the ship's bell.</p>
-
-<p>The wind held a sweet, true breeze as Hardy had foreseen, whilst
-that brave little heart kept the ship's course steady to the lubber's
-point. She was not tired, sleep had refreshed her; standing was
-no trial; she was warmly draped, and felt a sort of glory in this
-occupation of sea-throne, which enabled her to do her duty and to hold
-her sweetheart in tranquil and most necessary repose. She was quick in
-intelligence, and the sea was small and its weight was of the summer;
-and she found a woman's delight in her power of governing, for the ship
-answered to her white hand with a courtier-like grace; she felt to be
-queen of the lordly fabric, and her spell at the wheel was a triumph of
-British girlhood.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER XVII.</span> <span class="smaller">THE BOAT-FULL</span></h2>
-
-<p>It was hard upon half-past two in the morning. The breeze had
-been blowing steadily throughout, and the white pace of the ship was
-more than six knots in the hour. Julia put her hand into her pocket
-and pulled out Hardy's watch and saw what o'clock it was; the stars
-flashed over the mastheads with each floating reel of the buoyant,
-girl-controlled fabric; the silver dust of the speeding star vanishing
-in a length of fainting light scored the deep midnight blue between
-the clouds; the voice of the ocean rejoicing in the swinging dance of
-the breeze filled the air with sounds of the cataract, the foam of the
-waterfall, the wrangle of the freshet with the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, far forward past the shadowy arch of the fore-course, you
-heard the deep bay of a great dog. A ship was in sight!</p>
-
-<p>"O God!" cried Julia at the wheel, interpreting the deep-noted
-thunder of the great creature, "What am I to do?"</p>
-
-<p>But such a bark as Sailor could deliver was not to sound unheeded
-in the sleeping ear of a seaman. Hardy started, rolled out of his
-hen-coop, and was by Julia's side in a few pulses.</p>
-
-<p>"I see her," he shouted, and seizing the wheel he put it
-hard a-port.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span></p> <p>Then on the port bow loomed
-an ashen apparition with one red light, like the hideous stare of a
-drunkard, visible in the stagger of the bows. It was a full-rigged
-ship, clothed to her trucks with white canvas, about a mile and a half
-distant. She was standing to the southward and westward, and the red
-eye of the <i>York</i> was upon her; there would have been no collision, but
-Sailor's voice was timely. Hardy brought the ship to her course again,
-and the stranger was on the bow, sliding like a churchyard phantom over
-the glimmering tombstones of the deep.</p>
-
-<p>"She is an American," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"How do you know?" asked Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"She is clothed in cotton, that is why I know. What a noble lookout
-is Sailor. Didn't you see her?"</p>
-
-<p>"I see her now, but not before now," she answered.</p>
-
-<p>"Brave dog," cried Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>He called to him and the Newfoundland came rushing aft, with many
-tokens visible in the starshine of the emotion of satisfaction which
-good dogs feel when they have done their duty.</p>
-
-<p>"You are wearied out, Julia," said Hardy. "Do you feel as stiff with
-standing as a shroud of wire-rigging?"</p>
-
-<p>"It is half-past two," answered the girl. "Here is your watch,
-George. Lie down, dearest, and I will stand here for another hour; I am
-not tired."</p>
-
-<p>"Hold the wheel whilst I trim this light," was his answer.
-When this was done he said, "Now to bed, my lass."</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span></p> <p>She heard command in his voice, and answered, "I
-should love to lie in your hen-coop."</p>
-
-<p>"Take off your hat and get into it. 'Tis snug enough. Pull the
-jacket over you, and sleep&mdash;sleep&mdash;sleep; and then you will
-be able to thank Mary Queen who sent the sleep that slid into your
-soul. But first go below and get a little wine and food."</p>
-
-<p>She was as obedient as a good sailor, refreshed herself in the cabin
-where the lamp was burning, and returned with a glass of rum and water
-and a biscuit.</p>
-
-<p>"And my pipe," said he. And he told her where to find the pipe and
-the tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>Before she got into the hen-coop he said to her:</p>
-
-<p>"I wish I could teach the dog to steer; but that is impossible. But
-I tell you what&mdash;when those yards need trimming I shall want some
-one to hold on to the slack, and by all that's good Sailor shall do
-it."</p>
-
-<p>"Why doesn't God enable such a creature as this to speak as we do?"
-said Julia. "It has the mind&mdash;why should it lack the voice, when
-even the filthiest cannibal may use his tongue?"</p>
-
-<p>"Get you to bed, Julia."</p>
-
-<p>She crept into the hen-coop, wrapped her clothes about her legs,
-pulled the sailor's coat over her, and lay watching her lover.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy stood at the wheel with a pipe in his mouth, and the dog slept
-in his kennel alongside. It was not for long that Julia was allowed to
-sleep. When it was a quarter before four, when the darkness that grows
-deeper before the dawn dwelt like a sable vapour upon the face of the
-sea, when the flash of the star was fast in its westward sweep, and the
-red scar of moon looked dully down like a piece of broken glass thick
-stained, through which the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>crimson splendour above drains and
-oozes, the wind shifted suddenly three points; 'twas then almost
-abeam.</p>
-
-<p>He called to the girl. Her awakening found her astounded by her
-situation. Was she in a coffin? He called again, and the saint-like
-voice of love brought her from her sepulchre of hen-coop with an eager
-cry of, "I am wide awake. What is it?"</p>
-
-<p>"The wind has shifted, Julia. Do you know what I mean?"</p>
-
-<p>"The wind has changed."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you are awake. Take hold of this wheel."</p>
-
-<p>She grasped the spokes. The dog would be of no use then; all Hardy
-could do was to slacken away the weather-braces and haul taut the
-lee-braces as well as a single pair of British arms could. He clapped
-on the watch-tackle here and there, and made the best job possible
-under the circumstances; but he was bothered by the want of somebody
-to hold on to the slack. However, by belaying the watch-tackle and
-then belaying the brace he in a one-man fashion managed it, and when
-he returned to the wheel the ship slipped to her course again with her
-shortened canvas rap-full, and a wake like a mill-race.</p>
-
-<p>"Hurrah!" cried Hardy, with a slap of his thigh; "storm along, old
-Stormy! Whilst she creaks she holds! I'll teach that dog this morning
-to pull a rope. He has teeth and sense and some sailors have neither,
-because their teeth are worn out by chewing salt junk, and the crimp
-drugs their brains till the skull is like a rotten nut, full of
-dust."</p>
-
-<p>"It is my turn at the wheel," said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"Just you go and turn in," he answered. "Here's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
-the skipper and there's the bed. I shall take an off-shore spell
-sometime to-day. Rest till breakfast-time, and then you shall light the
-galley fire, and boil some coffee."</p>
-
-<p>She crept into the hen-coop after holding the binnacle lamp to his
-pipe, and the ship moved in the glimmering shadow through the hour of
-darkness with slightly restless yards at every solemn plunge, for, like
-the figure of a beautiful woman, she was the fairer in grace and the
-easier in carriage when moulded by the fingers of art.</p>
-
-<p>Sunrise is beautiful at sea on a fine morning; the sky ripples with
-silver and rose, and the sea uplifts its fountain note of rejoicing
-as that great imperial mystery of the heavens, the sun, floats off
-the verge of the deep. The dawn found Hardy at the wheel and the girl
-asleep in the hen-coop. He did not curiously seek for a ship in sight,
-for he did not stand in need of help, and would reject it if offered. A
-sail was twinkling like a peak of iceberg right abeam to starboard, and
-Hardy looked at her, and thought of twenty other things. The breeze had
-slackened slightly; it was still a pleasant summer breast of sea, and
-the ship's speed was four. All plain sail might have given her seven,
-and the wings of the stunsail from topgallant yard-arm to swinging-boom
-end might have helped her into eight. No matter! She was homeward
-bound, and there was no growler in her ship's company if it was not the
-dog.</p>
-
-<p>When Julia came out of her strange little bedroom she arose like
-Arethusa in Shelley's poem: rosy and fire-eyed, sweet with the
-refreshment of slumber, and sweeter perhaps to a man's eye because
-she was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span> unadorned. She pressed her lips to her sweetheart's
-cheek.</p>
-
-<p>"Let me take the wheel," said she, "while you rest."</p>
-
-<p>"Can you light a fire?" he answered.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at him with reproachful wonder.</p>
-
-<p>"What cannot I do? What has not poverty made me do?"</p>
-
-<p>"Will you light the galley fire?" said he, "and fill a kettle out of
-that scuttle-butt, boil some water, and give us a hot drink of coffee?
-Poor old Crummie is dead and gone, but her spirit survives in tins, and
-I believe there is some preserved milk in the cabin."</p>
-
-<p>She did not waste much time in lighting the galley fire. Everything
-was at hand. Whilst the kettle was boiling she fetched food from the
-cabin, and on top of the dog's kennel made some little display of
-tablecloth, cup and saucer, and knife and fork. This disturbed Sailor,
-who at once beheld the distant sail and saluted it.</p>
-
-<p>"You shall be even more useful than that," said Hardy to the dog.
-"This morning I will look for the key of the safe and judge of the
-value of the contents."</p>
-
-<p>"It is pleasanter than yachting," exclaimed Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"We have to cross the Bay," replied Hardy. "It may come on hard from
-the east'ard and blow us to Boston."</p>
-
-<p>"Is it always rough in the Bay of Biscay?" said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"I have swept up and down it often in my life," replied Hardy,
-"and five times out of ten we were becalmed on it, and thankful for
-catspaws. The thunder of the Bay continues to roar loud in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
-song, and alarms the man in the street who talks of taking shipping
-south. Let him be hove to off the Horn in fifty-eight degrees south.
-Suppose you see if the kettle boils."</p>
-
-<p>They made an excellent breakfast and so did the dog. Hardy ate and
-held the wheel, the ship, as though in love with her people, almost
-steered herself. There would come a change; the God-given mood of the
-sea is sweet, it is the weather that breaks her heart. As a drunken
-husband seizes his pale and pretty wife by the hair, and flogs her
-into shrieks and madness, so does the weather serve the ocean. It is
-good for the fish who breathe thereby, but bad for the passenger at
-whose white, overhanging face the invisible eye of the fish is uplifted
-languishingly.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, Julia," said Hardy, "hold the wheel whilst I teach the dog a
-lesson in practical seamanship."</p>
-
-<p>He stepped to the mizzen-royal halliards and called to the dog,
-which followed. He cast the rope off the pin, but kept one turn under
-the pin, and said to the dog:</p>
-
-<p>"Seize it and pull!" holding out the slack.</p>
-
-<p>The dog with much wagging of tail, as though he reckoned that Hardy
-meant some caper-cutting, seized the rope with his teeth. It was now
-a job. He wanted the dog to pull at the rope, so that when he swigged
-off at the halliards the dog by dragging would keep the slack taut as
-though strained by human hands. The intelligence of the Newfoundland
-is proverbial and marvellous, but it took Hardy all an hour to make
-the noble creature see what it was expected to do. He then did it, and
-Julia, whose laugh had been constant throughout the procedure,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
-let go the wheel to clap her hands, whilst Hardy with purple face
-swigged off upon the halliards, and the dog, with forward slanting
-legs, strained the slack. All three then rested: Hardy steered sitting,
-for, as I have told you, a little movement of the spokes sufficed.</p>
-
-<p>After smoking a pipe whilst Julia looked to the galley
-fire&mdash;not with a view to cooking, there was plenty to
-eat&mdash;the sailor yielded the wheel to his sweetheart, and went
-below into the captain's cabin to explore the contents of the safe.
-First of all, he was to find the key; this proved a hunt, running into
-ten minutes; then of course he found the bunch of keys exactly where
-he looked last and should have looked at first&mdash;in the captain's
-desk. The key of the safe was one of a few on a ring. When he opened
-the safe he found several large metal boxes like cash-boxes. All
-these boxes were to be fitted by the keys on the ring. The first was
-flush with magnificent jewelry&mdash;bracelets, earrings, rings; and
-the flash of the diamond was like the sparkle of the sea under the
-sun. The second metal box was filled with gold chains of all sorts
-of pattern, some massive, some delicate as twine, of very beautiful
-workmanship. In the third box were watches and seals, all gold, of
-splendid manufacture, for in those days the watch was handsome, the
-mechanism exquisite as the chronometer of to-day, and the gold case was
-heavy. The fourth and last box contained curiosities, such as a Jew
-dealer with a yellow grin of awe would steal out of some mysterious
-hiding-place and show you with something of breathlessness and a
-frequent glance to right and left, and sometimes over his shoulder.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span></p> <p>How am I to describe these things? A discoloured
-Nelson tall as a thumb, commanding the combined fleets in a cocked hat,
-on a large seal on which was graved Trafalgar. A little Napoleon in
-dull ivory on a massive gold seal with indistinguishable initials. Very
-old rings, very old gold spoons&mdash;but this is not an auctioneer's
-catalogue. Hardy locked everything up.</p>
-
-<p>"Julia's and mine," said he, laughing softly; by which he meant the
-value of the salvage of the precious fal-lals.</p>
-
-<p>He restored the ring of keys to the desk at which he glanced with a
-reverential eye, for he saw a little packet of letters in faded ink,
-and he knew that there too lay in a little circular box small curls of
-the hair of the dead&mdash;the wife and the little drummer. The captain
-had shown them to him, and the hair was the boy's when two years old.
-Hardy looked at the drum, at the little bed, at the medicine-chest,
-at the little clothes hanging at the bulkhead, and stepped out with
-a sigh, thinking in a sort of blind way about the mercy of God, the
-sufferings of madness, and the death of little children.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you found any jewels?" asked Julia, as she stood at the
-wheel.</p>
-
-<p>"More than you could wear, my dear," he answered, "if you were as
-many-limbed and many-headed as an Indian god."</p>
-
-<p>"Are they worth much?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am not a pawnbroker," he answered; "besides, I have been looking
-at the little drum and it has drummed the jewelry out of my head."</p>
-
-<p>"For whom were the jewels intended?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span></p> <p>"There is always a market for trash of that sort
-in the Colonies," he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Why don't you lie down and get some sleep?" she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall keep awake," he answered, "until I have shot the sun, and
-then perhaps I may sleep for an hour, weather permitting."</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke these words he was looking at the sea right abeam, and
-held up his hand in a gesture of wonder, which arrested something that
-Julia was about to say.</p>
-
-<p>"Good God!" cried Hardy. "What's going on there?"</p>
-
-<p>It was about a mile and a half off, and just in that place the sea
-was working in a sort of convulsion, coil upon coil of dark blue brine
-wound round and round like mighty sea snakes, whose sport was as deadly
-as the pursuit of the harpooned dolphin. These amazing throes of brine
-upon which the sun was sweetly shining, and from which and to which the
-summer breast of ocean breathed in the rejoicing of the early morning,
-in a minute or two grew savage with snaps and leaps of foam, with
-prong-like upheavals of water, with crested shootings, and the area
-whitened to the hue of a star, and the volcanic fury began. The ship
-trembled. You heard no thunder of explosion; the roar of the fire under
-the ooze was dumb when it penetrated the spacious hall of the sea; but
-the raging torment was visible in a sudden mighty upheaval of foaming
-water, smokeless but glorious with its cloud of spray.</p>
-
-<p>A miracle! From up from deepest soundings had been forked the figure
-of a drowned fabric, and as a ball plays poised on the feathering of a
-fountain so<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span> floated the form of a small vessel with two lower
-masts standing, crowning the summit of that fire-expelled, pyramidal,
-and towering volume of foam. Such sights have been witnessed at sea,
-for the ocean is the arena of the sublime wonder, the heart-thrilling
-miracle; it is the mirror of God, and unlike the land its breast
-reflects his lights. The lovers gazed, the dog gazed; the ship seemed
-to dwell under her curves of canvas as though she paused to look.</p>
-
-<p>"How marvellous!" cried Julia.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy rushed for the glass. He caught the poised object before it
-vanished. It was a little ship of old shape, high in stern, sloping
-thence to curved head-boards, two masts like stone columns, richly
-encrusted with marine growth, and lustrous as the inner shell of the
-oyster; the hull was of a blackish green and looked black in the glass
-in contrast with the white fury upon whose apex it rolled and swayed
-and tumbled. Then it was gone! It vanished in a cannon volley of water.
-The sea thereabouts ran boiling, but in a few minutes the curl of the
-breeze-blown surge had triumphed over the milky softness, and had the
-spectacle been the launch of a dead man in a sailor's shroud you could
-not have seen less of it.</p>
-
-<p>"Was ever such a sight beheld before?" said Julia, with tremulous
-breath and enlarged nostrils.</p>
-
-<p>"'Those who go down to the sea in ships,'" answered Hardy. "Has
-not that observation been made once or twice before? I believe I have
-been forced to read it a thousand times, for every newspaper and every
-book that relates to the sea quotes this Scriptural sentence, and I
-am weary of it."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span></p> <p>"I have heard of islands being
-thrown up," said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"A great deal is thrown up at sea," replied Hardy. "Steady the
-wheel, my heart, whilst I ogle the sun."</p>
-
-<p>It will be admitted that this brace of sweethearts had not been
-very fortunate. To be burnt out, open-boated, drugged, kidnapped,
-shipwrecked on a derelict with a madman, are experiences of a rather
-emphatic sort. Hardy's share had been the share of a man, and bar
-the drug he could have gone through twenty fold worse and emerged a
-sunburnt, smiling sailor.</p>
-
-<p>Fate for a little while was now to mask its grim features with a
-pleasant leer, and for the next two days of the ship's adventure the
-weather was calm, the sea smooth enough for a little yacht, the heavens
-bright with a little shading here and there of cloud, and all went well
-with the crew. On the morning of the third day Hardy came out of his
-coop like a snail from its shell, only a little faster. Julia was at
-the wheel, and the dog on the forecastle keeping a lookout.</p>
-
-<p>"We are in luck," said Hardy, gazing around him. "Fancy only
-requiring to trim sail five times in two days."</p>
-
-<p>"How far off is the abandoned brig, do you think?" asked the
-girl.</p>
-
-<p>"All five hundred miles of salt water, Julia, and a salt mile is
-longer than a highway mile."</p>
-
-<p>They were used to the ship and the ways and methods they had
-adopted. Thanks to the blessed weather, they had by alternation secured
-the rest that nature demanded. There was plenty to eat and they
-ate heartily. The dog was as useful as a <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span>midshipman; he
-understood the meaning of the word slack, and held on to it when
-required as though his teeth were in the sleeve of a drowning man.
-There was coal in the fore-peak, and Hardy had made the necessary
-descent, and the stock in the galley was always plentiful.</p>
-
-<p>This morning they went about their work as usual. Hardy steered.
-Julia lighted the galley fire, and the dog came aft to sit beside the
-wheel and wait for breakfast. How did Hardy look? How did Julia look?
-Very well indeed, I can assure you. When on board the abandoned brig
-the sailor's beard grew, and he had returned somewhat bristling to
-the <i>York</i>. But in this ship were his razor, lathering brush, and a
-square of glass to make faces in. He was therefore now a clean-shaven
-man, and I don't believe there is any girl living who would not have
-fallen in love with him. He had choice of clothes, too, which put him
-to windward of his sweetheart. But the eye of love should never be
-affected by apparel, and when Julia clothed herself for warmth and the
-night in the madman's cloak she was still an incomparable figure and
-of romantic face. Clothes have very little to do with health; you may
-sometimes peep at the goddess through a rent in the coat, and I have
-met her in country lanes and crossing meadows in the picturesque garb
-of the scarecrow with such cheeks of scarlet, such eyes of light, such
-teeth of ivory as might prove the envy and the despair of her ladyship
-travelling, like the suds of a washerwoman's tub, in carriage and pair
-to a princely festival.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, Julia was sparkling to the caressing hand of this new
-life. The health of the sea was hers,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span> the love of the
-sailor was hers, content and hope were hers. Do not these things wait
-upon appetite and help digestion? Do not they irradiate slumber with
-entrancing visions? If the girl soiled her hands by lighting the galley
-fire, she knew where to find the head pump and the galley clout or a
-towel from aft to dry her fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst they were eating their breakfast this morning the dog sprang
-on the grating abaft the wheel and barked its lookout to the sea to
-windward, about two points before the beam.</p>
-
-<p>"Hold this wheel, Julia!" exclaimed Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>He sprang for the telescope and levelled it, and the light sweep of
-the ship's summer lurch darted a boat with a lugsail into the lens.
-He viewed her intently in silence, which Julia did not dare to break
-into by heedless, girlish cries of "What is it?" like the distracting
-marginal notes of the lady's pencil in the tearful, the hysteric, and
-the religious novel. How far distant that boat was off I do not know,
-but she lay very clean and clear in the powerful tubes which Hardy was
-bringing to bear upon her. Her sail was like a square of satin; the
-fabric was painted black; as she rose to the fold you saw the delicate
-gush of foam at the bow. Hardy counted eight men in her, and one figure
-that was in the bows continuously waved some streaming thing white in
-his hands.</p>
-
-<p>"My God!" cried Hardy, letting fall the glass to his side. "What a
-misfortune!"</p>
-
-<p>"What is it?" asked Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"A boat-full of shipwrecked men," he replied, and his face grew
-grim as he said it. "They may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span> be dying of thirst and famine, and
-they must not come aboard."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, George!" exclaimed Julia, grasping the thing in an instant.</p>
-
-<p>"If they came aboard," he continued, speaking swiftly and even
-fiercely, "they may seize the ship; in any case their salvage claim
-would wreck our hopes. Put the helm up. By God, they shall not board
-us!"</p>
-
-<p>He sprang to the wheel, and the ship sloped away to leeward from her
-course, and the bearings of the boat were then abaft the beam. Julia
-picked up the glass, and with an easy hand directed it.</p>
-
-<p>"She is sailing as fast as we," she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>"No!" answered Hardy, in a rage.</p>
-
-<p>"Must they be left to perish?" she cried.</p>
-
-<p>It was an awful problem for fate to submit to a sailor's mind.
-The very thought of thirst, of famine, of suffering incarnate in the
-miserable figures of men in an open boat at sea makes faint the heart
-of the seaman, and sooner would he expire than not fly to help. But
-how stood this ghastly conundrum with Hardy? First, who were the men?
-They might be foreigners&mdash;Greeks, Italians, Portuguese, Spaniards.
-They had knives on their hips, and their hearts would redden with the
-spirit of murder when, being on board, they understood that the flag
-was the Red Flag of England, and that nothing stood between them and
-the ship and a fair-haired English girl, of incomparable figure, but
-one man, whose heart beat within the reach of their shortest blade!
-No! They must be helped but not received. And how was it to be done?
-And meanwhile grew this fear&mdash;if the wind slackened, if a calm
-fell, they<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span> would gain the ship with their oars. Hardy was
-without a revolver. Captain Layard had taken away his; how could he
-resist&mdash;how could one man resist the desperate clamber of eight
-men infuriate with thirst, famine, and deadlier passions yet if they
-were foreigners?</p>
-
-<p>He pondered deeply, grasping the wheel; the dog upon the grating
-watched the boat, a lustrous spot to the naked eye, and Julia gazed in
-silence at her sweetheart.</p>
-
-<p>"Come and hold the wheel," said he.</p>
-
-<p>Still in silence witnessing distress but resolution in his face,
-she seized the spokes, and he went to work to help that open boat.
-There were, as you know, two boats in the davits, and a gig, called the
-captain's gig, hung by davits over the stern. Rushing to the foremost
-boat, Hardy seized the empty breaker out of its bows and ran with it to
-the scuttle-butt, and, swiftly as he could, filled it. He then replaced
-the breaker in the boat's bows. He next sped down the companion-ladder,
-filled a tin basket with bottles of beer and two bottles of rum,
-returned on deck with this basket, and placed it in the boat. He then
-fetched some tinned food, a quantity of ship's biscuit and an uncooked
-ham, which would be good eating to starving men. They were eight, and
-he made calculations for a week's supply with care. He threw a pannikin
-into the boat. He breathed hard and fast, and his face was coloured
-with blood, and the sweat drained from his hair to his eyebrows; for he
-was mad to succour and mad to escape, and all the while he worked he
-never spoke a word to the girl.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been an impossible task but for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
-steady flow of the sea, and the gentle yielding of the ship to the
-caressing sway of the fold. But it fell out as it was, and Hardy did
-it whilst Julia steered, and the ship blew softly onwards, whilst the
-white spot abaft the beam, watched by the dog, gleamed like a meteor
-whose foam would be a little disc when near. He freed the boat of its
-gripes by his knife, a sharp blade, then, just as Layard had before
-him, he lowered the boat by easing away first the bow, then the after
-falls, until she was water-borne, when, with a sailor's activity, he
-passed his knife through the tackles, and the ropes fell into the
-boat. She was liberated! and whilst he filled his lungs, distressed in
-breath, so ardent and energetic had been his toil, the boat was astern,
-then in the ship's wake, and Julia could see her by looking over the
-taffrail.</p>
-
-<p>"They'll come up with it," said Hardy, going to the girl's side,
-"and their overhauling her will widen our distance."</p>
-
-<p>"It was the only way to feed them," Julia answered.</p>
-
-<p>"One way. Have they fresh water enough? Eight men! We may want that
-other breaker," said he with a side nod at the remaining quarter-boat.
-"They'll be fallen in with&mdash;perhaps before sundown."</p>
-
-<p>He picked up the glass and again scrutinised the boat. She leapt
-into the lens within a quarter of a mile. The man in the bows stood
-upright, but he was no longer flourishing his wift. They were heading
-almost into the ship's wake, and were certain to see the quarter-boat
-and understand what she meant. Along the rail the heads of the men
-were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span> fixed like cannon-balls. Supposing they were
-Englishmen. What would they think? Hardy ground his teeth and twice
-beat the air with a clenched fist. But supposing they were Dagos.
-Supposing&mdash;he could not have acted otherwise. Life, love, and hope
-were the inspiration of his resolution, and I say he could not have
-acted otherwise.</p>
-
-<p>It was then, happily for him and his sweetheart, that the sea to
-windward darkened a little to a pleasant freshening of breeze. The
-breasts aloft swelled to the larger breath, but so scantily clothed was
-the <i>York</i>, it was absolutely certain that if the breeze scanted the
-boat would overhaul the ship, and once those eight men got alongside
-the rest might prove&mdash;Good night!</p>
-
-<p>Again Hardy looked at the boat through the telescope, and he cried
-out with the tubes at his eye:</p>
-
-<p>"It's all right, Julia; they're heading dead for the quarter-boat.
-Whether they understand or not, it's all right."</p>
-
-<p>He grasped the wheel and brought the ship to her course and this
-greased her heels somewhat, for the yards were trimmed for the course
-he was steering and the sails drew bravely. Julia kept the glass to her
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>"They have lowered their sail," she cried. "They are very near the
-boat."</p>
-
-<p>It was all blank to the naked eye, and Hardy searched in vain for
-that star whose rise might have proved the malignant star of death and
-dishonour to them both. Again the lovers shifted places. Julia held
-the wheel whilst Hardy directed the glass at the boat. He watched the
-minute man&oelig;uvres. It was a little field of Lilliputians, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
-every figure was as clean cut in the lens as the pygmies to the
-downward gazing eyes of Gulliver. The two boats came and went behind
-and upon the summer swell of the sea, but not so as to baffle the
-marine vision. The naked mast rolled and the men showed plain. Thirst
-and famine were in their motions, and Hardy sighed and gasped as he
-watched. He saw the infuriate gesture that brought the bottle to
-the mouth, the impassioned posture as the cracked lips drained the
-pannikin. He witnessed avidity, coloured into horror by human need in
-the passage of the clenched biscuit or piece of meat to the mouth. It
-nearly broke his heart to leave them. If ever a man was inspired by
-the compassion, the instincts, and the loyalty of a sailor, it was
-Hardy. Yet he thanked God with all his heart that they had plenty,
-that the weather promised fair, that they had another and a good boat,
-and that in this highway of the sailing ship human help was certain
-if calamitous destiny were not first. Hardy's eyes were moist as the
-telescope slowly sank from his arm; for let them be Dagos, let them be
-Dutchmen, call those men by any name you will, they were shipwrecked
-sailors upon a lonely sea, and their appeal to the Red Flag of England
-would have been irresistible but for the helpless condition of the
-<i>York</i>. Julia saw emotion in her lover's face, and caressed him with
-her eyes as though she would soothe him with her love, and never
-did she honour him more, nor felt a fuller flow of dumb and inward
-gratitude to the Father of all for this lifelong gift of sympathy,
-help, and devotion.</p>
-
-<p>"We shall run them out of reach of the glass," said Hardy.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span></p> <p>"I can scarcely see them as it is," she
-answered.</p>
-
-<p>"What is their story?" he went on. "It will be told because they
-will be saved. Yonder is one of the teachings of the sea. You pass
-a piece of wreck; it is encrusted with the jewelry of the ocean; it
-is girdled by a silver belt of fish. To one man it is a piece of
-wreckage; to another man it is a memorial, lofty, sublime, and awful
-as a cathedral, of fire, of explosion, of the beam-ended fabric with
-lashed figures in the shrouds, sunk to the foam, and blackening it with
-emergence like the iron shape dangling at the finger of a gibbet upon a
-wintry moor that foams with snow."</p>
-
-<p>"Do all sailors talk in this language?" said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"Any man who can make himself understood speaks well. I do not love
-irony."</p>
-
-<p>Julia smiled archly.</p>
-
-<p>"You do not love irony," she said. "Did you ever love another before
-you loved me?"</p>
-
-<p>"A man who uses the sea is shy amongst women," he answered. "We are
-accustomed when we see a green eye in thick weather winking off our
-port bow to sing these lines:</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> <span class="i0">"'There's not
-so much for you to do,<br /></span> <span class="i0">For green to port
-keeps clear of you.'<br /></span> </div></div>
-
-<p>I was never yet in a collision&mdash;I mean ashore."</p>
-
-<p>This pleased her, and she said she would go and look to the galley
-fire if Hardy would kindly hold the wheel.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER XVIII.</span> <span class="smaller">HAIL, COLUMBIA!</span></h2>
-
-<p>Luck was still to attend the ship's company of the <i>York</i>&mdash;luck
-in the shape of weather. The wind took two days to change its mood,
-then shifted off the port bow, where Hardy's metaphoric red eye was
-winking.</p>
-
-<p>The man, the dog, the watch-tackle, and the winch were equal to the
-sudden confrontment of air, which happened at daybreak when the man and
-the dog could see, and when the girl at the wheel could see.</p>
-
-<p>Of course sail was not trimmed as though the <i>York</i> had been
-a frigate, as though you had fifty men for a rope, when the
-master-mariner considers himself lucky if he gets twenty-five men for
-a full-rigged ship. Trimming sail took time; but it was done. And the
-dog stuck like glue to the slack. No need to dwell upon the discipline;
-it was now as before, and likely to continue whilst health and strength
-endured. The sweethearts used the hen-coop alternately, and it yielded
-them all necessary refreshment of slumber; the dog kept a lookout
-whilst the girl steered, and still the ship's course was a crow's
-flight for the Chops, with some hurdles of parallels before her indeed;
-but her march though slow was conquering, and the lovers' spirits
-were as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span> high as the dog-vane that shook its piece of bunting at
-the main-royal masthead.</p>
-
-<p>When Hardy had trimmed sail this morning he sat beside the girl to
-rest a little. The wind was to the westward of north, the sky that way
-was pale, but the sun to starboard burnt bright, and lofty ridges of
-cloud, very delicate, like the memory of the ripple on the sands of the
-coast, moved stealthily northwest, which signified sundry currents of
-air of no moment, if below all gushes the favouring breeze.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll breakfast in a few minutes," said Hardy. "I feel as if I have
-been swimming ten miles."</p>
-
-<p>"We are in luck, George," answered Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"What is the luck of the sailor?" said he. "I have heard of one
-lucky sailor. He went to a sale and bought a feather-bed. Jack in a
-feather-bed! He turned in and his starboard bunion was worried by
-something hard. He ripped the cover and found a bag containing one
-hundred and forty-two Queen Anne guineas. He started a public-house and
-died worth eight thousand pounds."</p>
-
-<p>"He was a sailor and deserved it," said Julia. "Why do sailors hate
-soldiers?"</p>
-
-<p>"The historian must answer that. There is a reason, and it is
-true. You see, my dear, a sailor will spend his last half-crown upon
-his girl, and a soldier will borrow the last half-crown from <i>his</i>
-girl."</p>
-
-<p>"Do soldiers hate sailors?" asked Julia, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>"They only meet at sea," answered Hardy, "and the motion of a ship
-will neutralise prejudice in the man who can't stand it."</p>
-
-<p>In due course the galley fire was lighted, coffee<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>
-was boiled, and the ship's company broke their fast. The breeze hung
-steady, the glass spoke hopefully, and Hardy found, after taking
-sights, that home was nearer by some hundred miles than it had been
-yesterday. It was nine o'clock on the evening of this day. The lights
-of heaven winked sparely through an atmosphere that nevertheless was
-unthickened by mist. The fresh wind of the noon had slackened much, and
-the sound of the fall of the sea off the bow was sloppy, as though the
-cook was emptying buckets of stuff over the side, and indeed the noise
-was in keeping with the sort of smoking, greasy face of the sea, which
-rolled in knolls of soft, black oil speedily out of sight, so general
-and closing was the dusk.</p>
-
-<p>Julia stood at the wheel, and the dog as usual was on the forecastle
-head keeping a lookout. The girl could distinctly hear her lover
-snoring in his hen-coop. The magic of the ear of love runs melody into
-the snore of the sweetheart; to the burdened marital organ the snore is
-not the voice of the heavenly chorister. Shakespeare wonders whether we
-dream in our sleep of death; Julia might have wondered if we snored.
-The binnacle lamp burnt brightly, so did the side-lights. The girl had
-been sleeping whilst Hardy steered, and now stood fresh and firm at the
-wheel, a very shadow of British girl, snug in the madman's cloak; but
-the faint stars knew that her figure was beautiful.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the dog began to bark; its deep note rolled aft in low
-thunder. Julia, with her heart slightly fluttering, strained her
-eyes to port and then to starboard, believing that the dog was
-reporting the side-light or white masthead light of a ship or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
-steamer. But the dog continued to bark, and in the midst of it,
-before it awoke Hardy, before she could call to Hardy, a smell, an
-overpowering stench, fumes as overwhelming as any that could rise from
-the shallow tombs of thousands of plague-stricken wretches&mdash;this
-subduing and distracting presence was in the air.</p>
-
-<p>"George! George!" shrieked the girl. But she could not again speak,
-for the filth of the breeze compelled her right hand to her mouth and
-nostrils, and the brave heart steadied the spoke with her left hand
-only.</p>
-
-<p>In a minute Hardy was beside her. "Phew!" said he, and spat. This
-was his comment.</p>
-
-<p>The dog continued to bark. Its note had that quality of alarm which
-makes the sailors spring as for life or death to the affrighting shout
-of a single man upon the forecastle.</p>
-
-<p>"What in hell&mdash;" But it might have been the devil himself
-who stopped Hardy's mouth then, for even as he spoke the ship struck
-something soft, and slided away from it points off her course, so
-blubbery was the thing, proper for the "ways" of a launch.</p>
-
-<p>"It's up the spout this time," said Hardy. "Jump to the side, Julia;
-report what you see. There you go, to starboard&mdash;to windward, to
-windward!"</p>
-
-<p>He held the wheel, and the girl shrieked, "I can't see for the
-smell."</p>
-
-<p>"Hold your nose and skin your eyes, and tell me what you see."</p>
-
-<p>"A great deal of fire, and a black mass in the midst of it lined
-with foam, and oh, what a horrible smell!"</p>
-
-<p>She came staggering to her lover's side in revolt of sickened
-senses.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span></p> <p>"A dead whale," said Hardy,
-whose nose was not entirely fastidious.</p>
-
-<p>"Hold the wheel, dear," and he sprang to the quarter and saw the
-thing; that is, he saw the shadow, it loomed so that it might have been
-a little island. The fire of the sea played about it as the reflected
-lightning of the hidden storm winks and flashes in the soft indigo of
-the ocean recess. The sea caressed this floating dunghill with those
-same white, cruel fingers with which it casts the mutilated corpse
-ashore.</p>
-
-<p>"The air sweetens," said Hardy, returning to the wheel. "Go below
-for a nip of brandy, and bring me one, dear."</p>
-
-<p>And he brought the ship to her course. He did not greatly like
-the look of the weather. For perhaps an hour and a half he had been
-sleeping; this was a good "turn in" for a sailor-man who signs articles
-to work for the shipowner for twenty-four hours in the day, a brutal
-and inhuman tax upon suffering men, in no other walk of life to be
-heard of. Anyhow he could not leave the ship in Julia's charge with
-those dimly winking stars growing sparer yet, with increasing moisture
-on the wing of the wind like the early breath of a wet squall.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't expect the wind to shift," said he, "but it's bound to come
-on harder presently. Get you into that hen-coop and rest your limbs if
-not your brain. I expect I shall be wanting you before midnight."</p>
-
-<p>She obeyed him as though she had been a sailor or a dog, and
-dissolved into the black void of the hen-coop. You could not see
-the faintest glimmer of her face, nor the dimmest outline of her
-shape. The Newfoundland had come aft and berthed itself. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span>
-animal knew that when Hardy was at the wheel it was its watch below.</p>
-
-<p>Now the ship was under such small canvas that her cloths were not
-more than she could stand up with if it blew half a gale from abeam
-or abaft the beam. Those were the days of single topsails, and in all
-three topsails a single reef had been tied by the survivors of the crew
-in the heavy night before they left for the Frenchman. It would then
-come perhaps to a drag upon a staysail down-haul and to letting go
-the outer jib-halliards, leaving the unfurled sail to convulse itself
-into bulbs and bellies of canvas upon the jibboom. Certainly Hardy
-single-handed could not lay out upon the jibboom and furl a big jib: he
-did not mean to try.</p>
-
-<p>As he expected, the wind freshened, but without the shift of a
-quarter of a point. The ship raced nobly through the gloom: she blew
-white steam from the nostrils of her bows; the white water to leeward
-widened with her pace and flashed with the emerald and diamond of the
-sea glow into the long, the streaming, the joyous homeward-bound wake.
-There was no more dead leviathan in the air; it was full of the salt
-sweetness of Swinburne's rushing sea verse. But the stars were gone;
-there was no light upon the sea but the light of its foam. The ship
-was plunging, the seas raced her in black curls, and burst with a
-pallor of dawn from her side, and onward she swept, bowing and rolling
-to the music of the bagpipes in her rigging, controlled by a single
-hand&mdash;a fearless and a valiant hand&mdash;the hand of a British
-sailor.</p>
-
-<p>However, he made up his mind to "crack on" in a sort of way, and the
-meaning of "cracking on" at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span> sea is the carrying in bad weather
-of more canvas than the judicious would approve. I have known an old
-skipper to furl his fore and mizzen-royal and stow his flying jib every
-second dog-watch in dead calm or catspaw. The ladies reckoned him a
-safe man, and he made the voyage from the Thames to Sydney Bay in four
-months. Hardy had the instincts of a mate, and was always for carrying
-on; but he had not much confidence in staysail and jib-sheets, and at
-half-past eleven, seven bells of the first watch, somewhat benumbed
-with his grip of the spokes, he resolved to shorten canvas, and shouted
-to his girl. She came out of the coop like a figure from a clock.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it a storm?" said she in his ear.</p>
-
-<p>"Let's thank God," he answered, "like the sailor in the song, that
-there are no chimney-pots in the air. I wonder if I can trust you with
-this wheel? It doesn't kick very much, and I sha'n't be long."</p>
-
-<p>"You don't want to turn in, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Love ye, no," he answered. "Get a good hold of these spokes, and
-I'll stand by."</p>
-
-<p>He watched her, conceiving that if the ship was off her course now
-and again it would not signify a brass farthing. The wheel-chains are
-a good purchase upon the tiller, and Julia's arms were strong and
-determined with the labour she had been put to, whether ashore or at
-sea. Young women cannot pull ropes on board ship, or lift old ladies
-out of bed on dry land, without adding strength to the muscles of their
-arms and determination to the clutch of their fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy stood close beside Julia ready for that kick of the helm
-which, whilst he had stood at the wheel,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span> had on three or
-four occasions started him out of a mood of musing. Twice came the
-kick&mdash;the blow of the surge against the rudder, but the girl held
-on and the ship swept on, and with every freshening of the black roar
-aloft the words of the Yankee poet came into Hardy's head:</p>
-
-<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
- <span class="i0">"Then suddenly there burst a yell</span>
- <span class="i0">That would have shock'd and stagger'd hell."</span>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>"You'll do," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>He called the dog and they went forward. There is no good in talking
-of jiggers, down-hauls, sheets, halliards, winches, and such things to
-landsmen. Enough, then, if it be said that by first letting go and then
-by hauling down, Hardy, helped by the dog and the jigger&mdash;which
-is another word for the watch-tackle&mdash;succeeded in easing the
-ship of two or three pinions of staysails and jib. The jigger manned
-the down-haul stoutly, and the dog stuck like glue to all slack he was
-asked to concern himself with. The sails were left to flap and slat
-and thunder. What could Hardy do? If the canvas went to pieces they
-must carry the ship home without it; if it held, there were the dog,
-the jigger, and the man to rehoist it. A mate's ear does not love the
-noise of slatting canvas, and Hardy as he stood in the bows guessed
-with something of helpless disgust that the jib-boom was buckling a
-bit. The foretopmast staysail and the inner jib were roaring like a
-thunder-storm, and a living gale swept out of the iron curve of the
-bolt-rope of the fore-course.</p>
-
-<p>It was white water often to the figure-head, the midnight
-magnificence and wrath of foam, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span> stormy bellowing of
-the recoiling and shattered sea. Heavenly Father! to think of this
-rushing, shadowy structure, this clipper fabric, whose stern was out of
-sight in darkness from the bows, controlled by a girl!</p>
-
-<p>Hardy ran aft to take the wheel, and the dutiful dog trotted beside
-him. How did that night pass? In simple alternations of coop and
-wheel.</p>
-
-<p>It was not to be a long night; the business of the half-gale did
-not begin until eight bells of the first watch, and it was nearly two
-bells before Hardy had made an end with his staysails and jib. It was
-not perhaps in those days so extremely necessary as it is in these
-to keep a bright lookout for ships' lights, simply because the steam
-vessel was comparatively few, and the sailing ship was not greatly
-accustomed to interpret her presence by the red and green wink. The
-flourish of the lamp hastily plucked out of the binnacle was deemed as
-good a flare as an empty flaming tar-barrel, and, indeed, it sometimes
-sufficed. Collision in the days of timber was not collision in the days
-of steel. Colliding ships ground away each other's channels amidst
-the benedictions of the forecastle and the poop, and the spluttering
-expostulations of crackling spars on high. Now 'tis touch and sink,
-so ingenious and preserving is the water-tight bulkhead, so grand
-in assurance of the salvation of precious life is the keel-up boat,
-secured beyond all release of knife or tool to the skid. Everything is
-riveted, and everything goes, and it takes half a dozen gunboats to
-sink a wooden wreck maliciously floating in the track of the supreme
-expression of the modern shipwright's art.</p>
-
-<p>The break of day found Hardy at the wheel.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span> But he had slept
-since he was last heard of, and Julia had stood her trick, kick or
-no kick, whilst Sailor kept watch on the forecastle head. The wind
-had greatly fallen, the sea had greatly fallen, and the complexion of
-fine weather was in the dawn. With the rising of the sun the weather
-promised beauty and splendour: blue seas far as the eye could reach
-breaking in foam, masses of sailing cloud in the sky like vast puffs
-of vapour from the funnel of a locomotive; and right astern, a film of
-pearl in the windy blue, hung a sail.</p>
-
-<p>It was not seen for some time by Hardy, nor by the dog that
-slumbered in its kennel; but when Julia came out of her coop to the
-summons of the sun, she instantly saw the sail and called and pointed;
-and whilst she held the wheel the dog sprang on to the taffrail and
-barked, and Hardy fetched the glass.</p>
-
-<p>A cloud of canvas coming up astern hand over hand. Topsails,
-topgallantsails, royals, and skysails; the wind fresh off the beam; a
-topgallant-stunsail yearning from its boom end: the beautiful vision, a
-leaning light with the blue sea in foam betwixt it and the <i>York</i>, and
-beyond, the immeasurable heavens sloping past the working rim of the
-deep.</p>
-
-<p>"A Yankee," said Hardy, putting down the glass. "Skysails&mdash;why
-not moonsails, and angels' footstools? D'ye know that you can sometimes
-stop a ship by cracking on? I've hove the log and found her doing ten:
-thought to get more out of her; set royals and topmast-stunsails: hove
-the log and found her doing nine. Why? Because a ship isn't built to
-sail on her side."</p>
-
-<p>The galley fire was lighted; coffee was boiled; the sun shone
-brightly, and the ship astern was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span> coming up fast.
-Whilst Julia held the wheel, Hardy mastheaded the red flag of our
-country at the gaff end, and there it streamed, meteoric, as in the
-song.</p>
-
-<p>"It is like being in the Docks to see it," cried Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"It is like feeling that there are no bally Dutchmen in the world!"
-answered Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>They breakfasted in a manner afore-described, and often watched the
-ship astern. She was a black spot under a white cloud.</p>
-
-<p>"Undoubtedly a Yankee," said Hardy, with his mouth full of white
-biscuit. "She'll wonder at us, and what will she do?"</p>
-
-<p>"They must not help us," said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"Fancy her sailors sparkling with the jewels in the safe, fancy
-her skipper and mates singing out orders with heavy gold chains round
-their necks, and diamond earrings in their Yankee lobes! I do love the
-Yankee captain; he stands at the break of the poop and watches his mate
-kicking a man's brains out of his skull, and he yells out, 'Heave him
-over the side whilst he's breathing.' It is all sweetness and light
-aboard the Yankeeman. Some of these days the great Republic will awaken
-to recognition of the claims of her merchant sailors. The immortal Dana
-did his best, which was noble and lasting. But oh, the crimes, the
-cruelties, the murders which make the Yankee ship of trade a bitterer
-hell for men than the hell of the monk's invention!"</p>
-
-<p>But a stern chase is a long chase, albeit you are under single-reef
-topsails and fore-course only, whilst t'other heaps your wake with
-skysails and stunsails. It was half-past nine before the ship
-astern was on the <i>York's</i> quarter; a black barque with an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
-almost straight stem, taking the seas under her swelling heights with
-the springs and leaps of a deer chased by the hound.</p>
-
-<p>Her colour, if it flew, was invisible as yet, but her nationality
-was as certain as a goatee. Jonathan was at the helm and Jonathan was
-at the prow, and Hardy easily guessed that the condition of the <i>York</i>
-flying the flag of a rich relation was puzzling the intelligence of the
-gentleman whose legs are represented as clothed with the bunting of
-Stripes and Stars. Yes, Jonathan was puzzled, and like Paul Pry meant
-to intrude, whilst hoping that he didn't.</p>
-
-<p>On a sudden she clewed up skysails, royals, and topgallantsails,
-boom-ended her studdingsails, and came surging with little more than
-the speed of the <i>York</i> on to the clipper's quarter within easy hail.
-A man stood on the rail holding on by the mizzen-rigging. No flag flew
-at the gaff end, but the word Yankee was writ in letters as big as the
-barque herself. The figure grasped an old-fashioned weapon for the
-conveyance of sound&mdash;a speaking-trumpet; he put it to his lips,
-and whilst a small crowd of men on the barque's forecastle, attired
-in dungaree and vary-coloured headgear, gazed at the <i>York</i> with the
-steadfast stare of sheep at a barking dog in a field, the man with the
-trumpet delivered his mind thus:</p>
-
-<p>"Ho, the ship ahoy! What ship are you?"</p>
-
-<p>Hardy, with one hand to his mouth, Julia meanwhile steering, roared
-back:</p>
-
-<p>"The <i>York</i>, of London; bound to London."</p>
-
-<p>This was all he said. He did not inquire the barque's name; it
-was no business of his to know it. But she was forging ahead, and
-the name under the counter in long white letters grew visible:
-<i>Columbia</i>&mdash;Boston.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span></p> <p>"Where's your
-crew?" shouted the man with the trumpet.</p>
-
-<p>"On deck," was the answer.</p>
-
-<p>A man standing by the figure on the rail took the speaking-trumpet
-and replaced it by a telescope, which the figure levelled at Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"He's admiring you," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"I dare say the crew on that forecastle are laughing," she
-exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>"Sailors are too well fed to laugh easily," replied Hardy. "Oily
-men, fat men, rich men, seldom laugh."</p>
-
-<p>All between the two speeding vessels was the rush of the white
-surge, and the ships seemed to salute each other like acquaintances as
-they bowed in stately rolls and sang the song of the shrouds one to the
-other, for it is all singing at sea&mdash;singing or singing out.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly when the barque had drawn on to the weather-bow of the
-<i>York</i> she was luffed up into the wind, and the weather-half of her
-loftier canvas was aback.</p>
-
-<p>"They mean to visit us," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Not to stay, I hope," said Julia, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments some figures broke from the barque's forecastle
-crowd and ran aft, and a white boat of a whaling pattern, sharpened
-stem and stern, sank from its davits with six men in her, and the man
-who had given the telescope to the figure on the rail steered the
-boat.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy put his helm down and shook the wind out of his small canvas,
-and presently the boat was hooked on alongside, and an American
-sailor&mdash;a chief mate&mdash;clambered over the rail on to the
-deck of the <i>York</i>.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span></p> <p>It is bad taste to imitate
-accents, or oddities of phrase, or nasal deliverances. This Yankee mate
-then shall speak as our first cousin does.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you mean to say," said he, touching his cap as he approached
-Hardy and Julia, "that you and this lady"&mdash;he bowed to
-her&mdash;"are your ship's company?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," answered Hardy. "We have that dog: he is worth ten foreigners,
-and we have a watch-tackle and a winch."</p>
-
-<p>"And you are carrying this ship to London alone?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ay."</p>
-
-<p>The Yankee mate looked a little stupefied, glanced along the deck,
-then up at the Red Ensign, then at the girl who stood beneath it.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you from?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"See here," said Hardy; "I intend to spin my own yarn when I get
-ashore, and I do not mean that it shall either be diminished or
-exaggerated by report. This lady and I propose to carry this ship home
-alone, and that flag flies in vain if we fail."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I am surprised," said the mate of the barque. "It must be
-very uncomfortable. Your outer jib is slatting, and your staysails want
-stowing. Can we help you?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am very much obliged," replied Hardy, "but before you call your
-men aboard this lady will kindly bring from the cabin a bottle of grog
-and glasses, that we may drink to the good voyage of the <i>Columbia</i> and
-to the increasing greatness of your magnificent country."</p>
-
-<p>"I am willing," answered the mate, and as Julia disappeared he
-exclaimed, "Is she your wife, sir?"</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span></p> <p>"No; she is
-my sweetheart; she is the daughter of a retired commander in our Royal
-Navy, and if God suffers us to reach home she will be my wife."</p>
-
-<p>"She is a very fine young woman," said the mate.</p>
-
-<p>"She has a splendid spirit," answered Hardy, "and she is a very fine
-young woman as you say."</p>
-
-<p>Julia knew the ways of the under-stewardess, and was quickly on
-deck again with a tray of glasses, cold water, and a bottle of brandy.
-She mixed the spirits, each man saying "when," and took a little drop
-herself, just enough to be sincere with in her good wishes. The Yankee
-mate did not seem to greatly trouble himself that the figure on the
-barque&mdash;undoubtedly the skipper&mdash;should keep the telescope
-bearing upon them. With one hand on the spoke Hardy, with the other
-hand, held aloft the glass of grog, and said:</p>
-
-<p>"Here's to your beautiful barque, and to the noble country from
-which she hails!"</p>
-
-<p>He drank and so did Julia, and the mate before drinking said:</p>
-
-<p>"Here's to the Red Flag of Old England, and to the fine girls who
-steer ships under it!"</p>
-
-<p>Julia laughed merrily, and thought the mate better looking now than
-she had at first believed. He was a little sallow, a little long-faced,
-and on the whole what the Americans call slab-sided; but he had the
-eyes of an honest man and the looks of a good sailor, and if his name
-were inscribed on the dome of St. Paul's nothing better could be said
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>"My captain will be getting impatient," said the mate. "He'll wonder
-that you don't take assistance."</p>
-
-<p>"If your men will hoist that canvas for me," answered Hardy,
-"I shall ask no more help."</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span></p> <p>"What a
-beautiful dog is that!" said the Yankee mate, hanging in the wind,
-so much did he relish this novel rencounter and brief association in
-mid-Atlantic with a young lady of incomparable figure. "I would be the
-happiest man in America if I owned that dog."</p>
-
-<p>"All America would not purchase him," answered Hardy; "his name
-is Sailor, and he has the spirit of Nelson. He helps me and the
-watch-tackle to brace up, keeps a lookout like a madman in search of
-the philosopher's stone, never gets drunk, and always says his prayers
-before he turns in. Will you have another drop of brandy?"</p>
-
-<p>"No more, sir, I thank you."</p>
-
-<p>Saying which the mate went to the side and hailed the boat. Hardy
-kept the <i>York</i> in the wind and the barque was already in the wind, and
-neither vessel therefore had any way to speak of. The boat, well fended
-off, slobbered alongside, chucked and dived, spat and hissed like a
-kitten sporting with its mother. To the cry of the mate four men sprang
-into the chains, and were on deck with the activity of Britons boarding
-a Frenchman. Fine-looking fellows they were, three of them Englishmen
-who had been forced by Great Britain's love of foreign labour to
-earn their bread under the Stripes and Stars. They stared about them
-with sheepish grins because a woman was hard by. Had the girl been a
-British skipper their smileless faces would have grown as long as wet
-hammocks.</p>
-
-<p>"Fill a drink for them, Julia," said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>Another glass was fetched, four glasses brimmed, and with a
-"Well, here's luck, sir," down went the doses through throats to
-which the aroma of cognac<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span> was as strange a bliss as heaven to a
-newly arrived soul.</p>
-
-<p>"Shall we make more sail for you?" said the mate.</p>
-
-<p>"Not a cloth, thank ye," answered Hardy at the wheel.</p>
-
-<p>So the mate and the men went forward and hoisted the outer jib
-and scientifically belayed the sheet, then lay aft, and did likewise
-with the staysails, hauled taut the braces, and generally made things
-snugger than they had found them. The dog went with them and watched
-their conduct with admiration.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," said the mate, approaching Hardy with an outstretched hand,
-"we have done all you wish us to do, and I am sorry you won't let us do
-more. We will report you."</p>
-
-<p>"I hope you won't," answered Hardy; "the owners will send out a tug
-in search of us, and then it's good night to my salvage."</p>
-
-<p>"I twig," responded the mate, with a grave smile. "Yes, it shall
-be made apparent to the Old Man," meaning his captain, for at sea the
-captain would be called Old Man by the sailors if he were a beardless
-youth of twenty-two.</p>
-
-<p>He shook hands with Hardy, and their grasp was cordial. He shook
-hands with Julia, and admired her and praised her with a look. Then
-the five tumbled over the side like rats from a sinking ship, gained
-the boat, and went away with a smoking stem to the barque. Julia
-stepped to the rail to watch, and when the men saw her they cheered;
-three times they cheered, and the mate in the stern-sheets lifted his
-cap and cheered whilst Julia<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span> flourished her hand. There is much
-good-fellowship at sea, and English-speaking sailors are as brothers
-when they meet.</p>
-
-<p>"Those men do not look as though they were starved and kicked," said
-Julia, returning to Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"If every ship kicked and starved her sailors there would be no
-ships afloat," replied Hardy. "All the same, there is much starvation
-and kicking at sea."</p>
-
-<p>"How beautiful that ship looks!" said Julia; "I never saw a vessel's
-canvas shine so brightly. How delicate are the shadows at the edges!
-A sailing ship owes its life to the wind, and all the spirit of the
-sea is in her. Steamers are full of coals and ashes, they blacken the
-air with disgusting smoke, their life is compulsion, they are driven
-by a wheel or a screw. The sailing ship floats on wings like the
-sea-bird."</p>
-
-<p>"All is compulsion," exclaimed Hardy, watching the keen-ended boat
-as she foamed sweeping with a lightning flash of wet oars to the sun,
-to the mother she belonged to; "compulsion hurled the universe into
-being, and everything is driven by it. I do not like to be compelled to
-be born or to die. I do not like to be compelled to carry a hump or to
-grow bald or hideous with age. But I am compelled into these enormities
-and there's no getting away from it. You must hold this wheel whilst I
-dip our flag when they get their boat to the tackles."</p>
-
-<p>This did not take long to happen. The sweethearts watched the white
-boat rising out of the water, and when the little fabric was hanging at
-its davits the American flag soared heavenward, streaming to the gaff
-end.</p>
-
-<p>"Hold the wheel," said Hardy, and Julia grasped the spokes.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span></p> <p>He sprang to the signal-halliards and lowered
-the flag, just as you pull off your hat when you say good-bye. The
-American colour sank in graceful beauty and soared again, and again
-sank the Red Ensign to be again gaff-ended, and thrice did these two
-vessels salute each other and then belayed their halliards, leaving
-their banners flying.</p>
-
-<p>A faint cheer came from the American vessel, and Hardy sprang into
-the mizzen-rigging and flourished his cap. Then the Yankee fell off
-and filled a rap-full; her wake throbbed in pulses of foam under her
-counter, fountain-bursts of sparkling stars of brine flashed off her
-bows, every stitch of canvas was mastheaded, and away she went with
-yearning stunsail, a leaning vision of transcendent beauty&mdash;a
-spirit now, for she hath long since departed from the waters which she
-walked, and remains but a memory to the old.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy went to the wheel, put his helm a little up, and the <i>York</i>
-started again for home under steady curves of canvas.</p>
-
-<p>For two days after this the ship's company of three had their hands
-full. It came on to blow a strong breeze right ahead: they managed
-to brace up, and went staggering away to the west and north. It was
-impossible for so slender a company to put the ship about; neither
-could Hardy wear her, for who was to square and then brace round the
-yards to the hard-over helm? Every wind then must be a fair wind for
-that ship; she must splutter through it as best she could, and all that
-the two brave hearts could pray for was that it should never blow so
-hard as to dismast them or burst the canvas into rags.</p>
-
-<p>Julia was now a practised as well as a fearless<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span>
-helmswoman, and Hardy was able to get the sleep he needed; she too
-enjoyed plenty of intervals. In those two days it did not blow fiercer
-than a two-reef breeze, and Hardy eased the ship by keeping her a
-little away. For it mattered nothing to him or Julia if the passage
-home extended into months so long as they got home at last.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2><span>CHAPTER XIX.</span> <span class="smaller">THE CAMILLA OF THE SEA</span></h2>
-
-<p>Within ten weeks of the date of the sailing of the clipper ship
-<i>York</i> from the River Thames the vessel was about two hundred miles to
-the westward of the coast of Portugal. It was a leaden day. The ocean
-was breathing deeply after a long conflict with the gale. The swell
-ran in sullen masses, lifting with the lazy sickness of oil, but the
-breeze was light and scarcely creased the moving knolls, and the shadow
-of cloud hung like tapestry in a darkened chamber, low down in ragged
-skirts upon the winding line of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The ship looked wrecked aloft. All her spars were standing
-indeed, but her mizzentopsail hung in rags, and the bolt ropes made
-a skeleton of the fabric aft. The foresail was split in halves, and
-with each weary roll gaped like a cut in an india-rubber ball when
-pressed. Rags of the outer jib fluttered from lacing or hanks. The
-maintopgallantsail had been blown loose and had gone to pieces, and was
-shaking from the yard in lengths like Irish pennants in the rigging.
-The ship was rolling drearily, and the channels would often slap white
-thunder out of the sulky brow of the swell, and she groaned greatly
-throughout her length and made some dim sound of lamentation aloft.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span></p> <p>Hardy stood alone at the wheel. He was fresh
-from a long and desperate fight with the sea, and you read the
-character of the struggle in his face. His beard was a week old: in
-the hollows under his eyes lay a little whiteness, the encrustation of
-salt; this gave him the ghastly look of the life-boat man who steps
-ashore after standing two nights and a day by a stranded ship with
-frozen figures in her shrouds. His hair was a little long, and this
-gave a something of wildness to his aspect. His looks were haggard,
-his eyes wanting in their usual lustre, his lips were pale; he looked
-worn. For ten days he and Julia had been fighting a gale of wind. In
-ten days they had managed to obtain but two or three hours sleep in a
-day of twenty-four hours. But happily for them it never blew so hard
-but that they could keep their course shaped for the English Channel.
-It never blew so hard that a ship well manned would have needed to
-heave to. It came in roaring weight upon the quarter, and one midnight
-the mizzentopsail burst in a blast of cannon, and shortly after the
-maintopgallantsail was blown into shreds out of the gaskets, and next
-morning, in the screaming fury of a bleaching squall, the outer jib
-flew into pennons from the stay, and the veil of the fore-course was
-rent asunder. But the reefed maintopsail, the foretopmast-staysail,
-and the inner jib were as faithful to their duty as Tom Bowline in
-the song, and the ship rushed on in foam to the figurehead, whitening
-acres of the sea abaft her, passing a brig hove to in the haze; passed
-by a ship that would not stay to speak; passed by a Fruiter schooner
-from the Western Islands, whose spring over the surge was the glance
-of the albatross, whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span> envanishment in the haze ahead, into
-which the <i>York</i> was for ever rushing, was the extinction of a meteor
-in a cloud.</p>
-
-<p>And now the gale was gone the sea would shortly smooth its panting
-breast; it was the early forenoon. Hardy called the dog, but he did not
-exert the powerful voice that was familiar to Julia.</p>
-
-<p>The Newfoundland came out of its kennel and looked up in
-affectionate expectation at the sailor.</p>
-
-<p>"Go below and bring her up!" said Hardy, pointing, and the dog
-perfectly understanding disappeared down the companionway.</p>
-
-<p>His hands were almost raw with grasping the spokes. His arms were
-almost lifeless with their long resistance to the mulish tug of the
-wheel-chains in response to the kick of the rudder. His feet ached with
-standing, knots seemed to have been tied in the muscles of his legs;
-but in the gauntness of his looks was visible the spirit of a noble
-heart, and there was no better or more fearless sailor in the world
-than that grim, unshorn figure that stood alone at the helm of that
-reeling ship.</p>
-
-<p>You will think it strange that a man, a woman, and a dog should
-have brought a big, full-rigged ship in safety down to the present
-hour through some thunderous Atlantic parallels. Yet this ship's
-adventure is not so strange to me as the mysterious good fortune
-of the ocean-tramp of to-day that washes through the Bay of Biscay
-without her funnel, and quietly discharges her cargo without any one
-feeling one penny the worse. Take, for instance, the second mate of an
-ocean-tramp. He walks the bridge; there are three foreign seamen in his
-watch, one of whom steers the ship, whilst<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span> the other two paint
-her. By secret compulsion, well understood by the owner and the captain
-of the ship, the second mate quits the bridge and helps the two sailors
-to paint the ship. Who looks after the ship whilst the person in charge
-of her paints? The ship herself.</p>
-
-<p>Or the same second mate may be on the bridge in the first watch;
-the foreign sailor at the wheel has been labouring almost continuously
-at deck-work through the greater portion of the day. The second mate
-for convenience has set the ship's course by a star. Suddenly he finds
-the star sliding slowly abeam. He rushes to the wheel and beholds the
-helmsman standing erect, and asleep. The second mate shakes the fellow
-furiously, and shouts, "Hard a-starboard!" and the sleepy foreigner,
-who scarcely understands the commands of the helm in English, tries to
-port by every spoke until he is stopped by the second mate's boot.</p>
-
-<p>Is not the voyage of our every-day ocean-tramp more wonderful in
-the unrevealed conditions of the life of the staggering tank than this
-story of a full-rigged ship worked by an English seaman, an English
-girl, a Newfoundland dog, a watch-tackle, and a winch? I served for
-eight years at sea as a sailor, and I venture to say that the tramp is
-far more wonderful than this ship.</p>
-
-<p>Sailor knew his business, and in a few minutes Julia arrived on
-deck. She looked ill and worn. Her straw hat was beginning to show
-like the end of a long voyage; her dress would have made an ill
-figure of her in Piccadilly. But you saw all that was necessary of
-spirit and resolution in her eyes.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span></p> <p>"Julia," said
-Hardy, "the pumps suck with me. I feel worn out. I can't stand at this
-wheel any longer, and there would be no good in your attempting to hold
-it. I'll secure the helm, and the ship must take her chance. It'll be a
-dead calm before long, and we have come to a moment when a great deal
-must be left to fortune. Look yonder!"</p>
-
-<p>He pointed on the quarter where streaks of fine weather were
-expanding and lifting, lines and spaces of silver blue irradiating the
-ragged gloom of the firmament which was moving ponderously and slowly
-northwest.</p>
-
-<p>"You will find it cold," continued Hardy. "Go and wrap yourself up
-in the captain's cloak whilst I secure the wheel."</p>
-
-<p>Before he had secured the helm the girl returned apparelled as
-commanded, for to her his word was law. He then sank down in a chair
-near the wheel with his chin upon his breast, and the girl went forward
-to boil a kettle of water.</p>
-
-<p>She remained forward until some hot coffee was ready, and when she
-came aft with it she found her sweetheart sound asleep. It is not
-love that disturbs the sleeping sailor. It is love that watches and
-shields the repose of love, as the guardian angel the slumber of the
-baby. Julia looked at Hardy. How gaunt and hollow! How grim and bristly
-with the week's growth! Yet how peaceful in sleep, how manly in look,
-how dear to her; oh, how dear to her by loyal devotion, by beautiful
-honour, by self-respect, by his fear and his love of God!</p>
-
-<p>She sat on the deck beside him and drank a little coffee, and
-the dog lay at her feet. The helm was paralysed by the rope which
-secured the wheel, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span> the ship was slowly knocked by the
-head into the hollow of the swell; the topsail was aback, and the ship
-lay rolling quietly on the quieting folds with streamers of canvas
-swaying from the yard and from the stay.</p>
-
-<p>Julia continued to sit by her sleeping lover's side for more than
-half an hour, leaving him once only to see to the galley fire. When
-again she arose to attend to the fire the dog stood up and shook
-himself and sprang upon the taffrail to take a look around, and before
-Julia had stepped ten paces the noble animal was sounding in deep tones
-his report of a ship in sight.</p>
-
-<p>The noise awoke Hardy, who started and stood up, and Julia stayed
-where she was to look at the sea.</p>
-
-<p>Nearly right abeam, in the midst of the lifting bright weather
-whose suffusion of radiance was over the mastheads, was visible the
-feathering of a steamer's smoke.</p>
-
-<p>"It is something coming our way," said Hardy to Julia, and he took
-the glass, and pointed it.</p>
-
-<p>His hands trembled, and he steadied the tubes by grasping the
-vang of the gaff with them. After a long look&mdash;Julia was at his
-side&mdash;he said:</p>
-
-<p>"She rises fast. By her square yards I take her to be a man-of-war.
-If she is British she will be the help I have sometimes prayed for."</p>
-
-<p>He put down the glass, bent on the Red Ensign Jack down, and ran it
-aloft.</p>
-
-<p>"I will get you some hot coffee," said Julia. "Do you feel rested a
-little?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am good for an eight hours' spell," he replied, but he did
-not look so.</p> <p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span></p> <p>She went forward, and he
-watched the approaching steamer, and the dog watched her also. When the
-girl returned with a pannikin of hot coffee Hardy had more news to give
-her. He first drank, then lighted a pipe, and he told her that the ship
-abeam, whose paddle-wheels had by this time slapped her hull into clear
-view, was undoubtedly a British man-of-war, and to judge by her course
-she was either from the Cape de Verde or direct from Rio, or some port
-on the eastern coast of South America.</p>
-
-<p>"How do you know she is British?" asked Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"By every token of yards squared by lifts and braces, by white bunt,
-and something white at the gaff end."</p>
-
-<p>"Can you distinguish her flag?"</p>
-
-<p>"It is a speck of light, but I know what it means."</p>
-
-<p>"Will you accept help from her?" inquired Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"Of course I will," he answered. "The Admiralty do not claim
-salvage, or they so hedge about the claim as to make the claimant's
-case prohibitory."</p>
-
-<p>"How will she help us?" said the girl.</p>
-
-<p>"Either by towing or sending men. But I doubt if she will tow,"
-answered Hardy. "She may not have enough coal. She may be in a hurry to
-get home. The sailor is always in a hurry&mdash;God help him&mdash;and
-often when he gets home he finds the canary dead in the cage."</p>
-
-<p>"We have no canary to greet us with its corpse," said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>She picked up the glass, and inspected the approaching vessel.
-And so the time was whiled away until the steamer was close on the
-<i>York's</i> quarter, her paddle-wheels ceased to revolve, and now
-all about her could easily be understood without the glass.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span></p> <p>She was one of that class of naval steamers
-which still survive (in aspect at least), at the date of the
-composition of this story, in the Royal Yacht, familiar in the Solent.
-She had a square stern, embellished with gilded mouldings and sparkling
-with windows. She had yellow paddle-boxes, a tall black hull with a
-few square gunports of a side. She was a barque, though they tried to
-make her look like a ship by fixing square yards without canvas on her
-mizzenmast and fidded topmast, which was a brigantine's mainmast with
-its crosstrees. For a full-rigged ship must have fidded topmast and
-fidded topgallantmast and royalmast, and if she has not these you may
-call her what you like but she is not a ship.</p>
-
-<p>The steamer was H.M.S. <i>Magicienne</i>, bound from Rio to Devonport,
-having halted at the Cape de Verde for coal. She was full of men, as
-the Navy ship usually is. Here and there she was spotted by the red
-coat of a marine. She sparkled to the risen fine weather, and the sea
-was now blue to both the ships, though northwest it breathed in leaden
-shadow. She dipped her visible wheel in foam. The colour of her country
-trembled in handkerchief-size at her gaff end, and her pennon streamed
-in a line of silk. An officer stood upon the paddle-box and hailed the
-<i>York</i>. Hardy thought he could answer, and tried to do so, but found
-that his voice would not carry. Indeed he had been overburdened, and
-every function was bowed and humped.</p>
-
-<p>To make himself understood he shook his head and pointed to
-his mouth, and flew the signal of "No voice" by pantomime. The
-trill of a whistle could be heard. In a few moments&mdash;moments
-are <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>minutes, minutes are hours on board the ship of war with
-hundreds of a crew, as compared with the moments, minutes, and hours
-aboard a ship of trade with thirty of a crew&mdash;a boat-full of men
-with something glittering in the stern-sheets sank to the water at
-the steamer's side, and, as though but one oar was wielded at either
-gunwale, the boat came with flashful iteration of feathered blade,
-a pulse of sparkling locomotion each side of her, and the something
-that glittered astern beside the coxswain enlarged swiftly into the
-proportions of a midshipman twenty years old.</p>
-
-<p>He gained the deck with the scrambling bounds of a kangaroo as he
-sprang from the rail saluting the ship with some convulsion of thumb
-near the bottom button of his waistcoat. His freckled face was well
-bred; his looks had the ardency of the youthful British sailor. You
-felt that here was a young man, perhaps an honourable, perhaps a lord,
-who at the call of duty would do his "bit," and do it well.</p>
-
-<p>He stared hard at the girl whilst he walked slap up to Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"What's the matter with this ship?" said he, and his accost made
-Hardy feel as though he were a north-country Geordie skipper with an
-auld wife in the companion-hatch darning his stockings.</p>
-
-<p>"I am stumpended with work," said Hardy, "and must sit, or I shall
-fall." And he sat down.</p>
-
-<p>"You look like the end of a long voyage," said the midshipman.</p>
-
-<p>"And you look as if the roast beef of Old England smokes in the
-gunroom," answered Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"So help me God, then," cried the midshipman<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
-with heat, "nothing has fed us since Rio but salt horse. Where's your
-crew?" and he looked at the girl without greatly admiring her, for
-Julia was very draggled and broken about the hat, and dejected about
-the hair and white and worn, and she knew she was all this with a
-girl's distress.</p>
-
-<p>"The crew are before you," replied Hardy, languidly pointing at the
-dog.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you want?" said the midshipman, directing his eyes
-aloft.</p>
-
-<p>"The help of the nation represented by your ship of state," answered
-Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>The midshipman, who was a gentleman, perceived that the grim,
-unshorn, labour-wearied man on the chair was a gentleman, whatever
-might be his rating aboard a merchantman, and his manner changed.</p>
-
-<p>"You are in a very odd situation," said he. "What a magnificent dog!
-What is your story, that I may return and report it to the captain?"</p>
-
-<p>It took Hardy ten minutes to relate the ship's adventure, and the
-midshipman listened to it with parted lips, just as his face would
-overhang a thrilling novel which is true with all those touches that
-make the world akin.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," said he when Hardy had finished, "I always thought going
-into the Navy was going to sea, but that's the real flag of adventure,"
-he added, with a glance at the inverted ensign. "You want help and
-deserve it, and I'll go to the ship, and report."</p>
-
-<p>He touched his cap with a look of pitying admiration at Julia. It
-was not the admiration of a man for a pretty face, but for the heart of
-a lioness.</p>
-
-<p>The boat left the <i>York</i> and Hardy continued to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>
-sit, and Julia stood beside him. It was fine weather above the
-fore-royal truck, and the gloom was thinning in the northwest. Where
-the brightness had broken the sea was darkening its blue; a breeze was
-coming up that way, and it would prove a homeward bound breeze to the
-<i>York</i>, with a sparkling sun to dry her and to cheer her.</p>
-
-<p>"I do not think that midshipman greatly respects the Merchant
-Service," said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"Midshipmen occasionally condescend to us," answered Hardy, "but the
-majority of naval officers have good sense, and wherever there is good
-sense our flag is respected, because the naval officer has read history
-and sometimes contributes to it."</p>
-
-<p>The girl looked at the steamer and the boat that was foaming to her
-to its dazzling line of oars.</p>
-
-<p>"It is a fine service!" said Hardy, taking the steamer in from
-streaming pennon to the dip of the red-tongued wheel. "I might just as
-easily have been there as here. One is the butterfly rich with the wing
-of the peacock tail; the other is the plain white butterfly"&mdash;he
-looked afloat&mdash;"that blows like a piece of paper about the summer
-garden. But deprive them of their wings and you'll find their bodies
-very much alike."</p>
-
-<p>"What are they going to do?" said Julia.</p>
-
-<p>"We shall soon find out," answered Hardy. "British men-of-war are
-not accustomed to keep people long waiting to find out."</p>
-
-<p>Though the ships lay at a fair seaworthy distance from each other,
-men and matters were visible to the naked eye aboard either.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy saw the midshipman conversing with the commander on the
-bridge. He did not choose to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span> level a glass, it might be deemed
-impertinent, but he saw the commander lift a binocular to his eyes
-in evident wonder; certainly the gallant officer had never heard a
-stranger story of the sea. Officialism could not neutralise curiosity,
-and the man, the girl, and the dog being within easy reach of the
-sight helped by the magnifying lens, the commander watched whilst the
-midshipman talked.</p>
-
-<p>What was to happen was to be speedily understood. The pipe shrilled
-and trilled, kits and hammocks were flung into the cutter, and in a
-few minutes the large boat containing twenty-one men and a warrant
-officer came alongside. Twelve men climbed out of her into the ship,
-first throwing up to a few who had preceded them their sea wardrobes
-and bedding. They were followed by the warrant officer&mdash;the
-man-o'-war's boatswain. His ruddy face flamed betwixt two red whiskers;
-his small, sharp blue eyes shot a bayonet glance in twenty directions
-in two seconds. He and his men had come to stay, and the cutter
-laboured to her sea mother to the stroke of five oars controlled by a
-helmsman.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm the bo'sun of her Majesty's ship <i>Magicienne</i>," said the
-flaming seaman, coming up to Hardy with a salute. "My orders are to
-help you to carry this ship home."</p>
-
-<p>"It is very good of your captain," said Hardy, deeply moved, and
-smiling with an expression that accentuated the weariness of his soul,
-and that also emphasised the manly nature of his character, which
-instantly won the recognition of the boatswain because he was a sailor
-in the presence of a sailor.</p>
-
-<p>"Do I understand your discipline? I give my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span> orders through you.
-Your men would not accept my command."</p>
-
-<p>"Quite right, sir," answered the boatswain, cheerfully, "and if you
-will turn me to at once I will turn them men to immediately after. But
-I beg you won't overtire yourself, sir. And the lady has helped you!
-And that's a beautiful dog of yourn. A small ship's company, sir; and,
-begging your pardon, you and the lady both look as if a good night's
-rest would do you good."</p>
-
-<p>"What is your name?" said Hardy.</p>
-
-<p>"Harper, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Harper, will you kindly see that the men make themselves
-comfortable in the forecastle? You will then bend fresh sails and make
-all sail. I will show you where everything you want is to be found."</p>
-
-<p>He sat as he spoke, and the boatswain, touching his cap, went
-amongst his men and executed Hardy's orders.</p>
-
-<p>The two lovers watched the steamer. A man-o'-war, even when she
-carries paddle-boxes, is always a gracious object. Yonder ship's rails
-were embellished with a snow-white line of hammocks, and snow-white
-lines of furled canvas brightened the yards with a gleaming streak of
-sunshine. The full philosophy of spit and polish was to be found in
-that steamer. It spoke in the flash of brass; it lurked in the gleam
-of glass; it was visible in many colours in paint work. Every rope was
-hauled taut; the yards were unerringly square. The boat rose without
-a song, the wheels revolved, the foam of a harpooned whale fell in
-dazzling masses from under the sponsons, and the splendour of the
-yeast under<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span> the square counter flamed like the rising day-star in
-the windows of the stern.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy staggered to the signal halliards; his motions were
-seen&mdash;he could not salute with the distress signal. With somewhat
-shaking hands, therefore, he unbent and rebent the Red Ensign and
-hoisted it and dipped, and the courtesy found its response in the
-graceful sinking and heavenward soaring of the White Flag of our
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Before the sailors came out of the forecastle, the queen's ship was
-on a line with the <i>York's</i> port cathead, merrily slapping her way to
-England.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Harper came aft. His salute was respectful, his manner
-sympathetic.</p>
-
-<p>"If you will tell me where the spare sails are kept, sir, I will see
-to everything, that you and the lady may go below and take the rest you
-stand in need of."</p>
-
-<p>Hardy told him all that was necessary, thanking him also, whilst
-Julia looked at the fifteen men that were gathered forward and admired
-their well-fed appearance, trim attire, manly shapes, and the whiskers
-of those who wore them. The discipline of a ship of state was in their
-postures, different from the longshore, lounging attitude of Jack Muck
-when waiting, and yet some of the best of those men had been Jack Mucks
-in their day; one had even been mate of a ship, and the look he sent
-aloft was charged with recognition of familiar conditions.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Mr. Harper," said Hardy, "I will leave the ship to you. There
-are plenty of provisions and there is plenty of fresh water, and there
-is rum for you to serve out as you think proper."</p>
-
-<p>Saying this, he took Julia by the arm, conducted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
-her to the companion, and followed her into the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>And now occurred another extraordinary incident in this ship's
-adventure. It had indeed once occurred visibly before, but it will
-not be credited in this age of the religious novel. When Hardy was
-in the cabin he put his cap upon the table, and going to a cushioned
-locker knelt beside it. Julia immediately approached him and likewise
-knelt, shoulders touching. When they had thanked God&mdash;and
-it was meet that they should thank him for their very merciful
-deliverance&mdash;they ate some food, drank some wine, and went to
-their cabins.</p>
-
-<p>The sleep of the wearied mariner is profound, and the sleep of
-the toil-worn girl at sea is likewise profound. Hardy was the first
-to awake. Through the little port-hole or scuttle in the ship's side
-he witnessed the scarlet of the dying afternoon; he also observed
-the creaming curl of the breaking sea streaming swiftly past. In the
-plank with his feet he felt the buoyancy of sea-borne motion, the
-floating lift, the floating reel of a fabric winging over the deep. He
-shaved himself, and emerged a clean, a manly though a pallid sailor,
-still something gaunt but with eyes brightened by sleep, and with an
-expression gallant with hope and with victory.</p>
-
-<p>He looked round for Julia. She was still in her cabin, and he
-would not awaken her. At the foot of the companion-steps lay the
-Newfoundland; Hardy knelt beside the noble creature and put his cheek
-to the wet muzzle, and the dog groaned in pleasure and gratitude. Then
-they went on deck together.</p>
-
-<p>It was a strange, new, surprising sight to Hardy and perhaps to the
-dog: a British man-of-war's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span> man stood at the wheel of the ship;
-up and down the quarter-deck stumped the stout figure of Mr. Harper in
-all pomp of commanding strut. It was the first dog-watch, and some of
-the sailors were walking about the forecastle smoking pipes, and some
-of them, also smoking pipes, lurked about the galley door. A fresh
-breeze was sweeping down upon the quarter. The ship was under full
-sail from main-royal to flying jib, from mizzen-royal to spanker. The
-weather-clew of the mainsail was up, and&mdash;what was that yonder,
-right ahead? By heaven! the <i>Magicienne</i> slapping along at ten and
-pouring incense of soot to the very extremity of the visible universe,
-and the <i>York</i> was doing twelve and overhauling her with foam to the
-figurehead, with derisive laughter aloft, with all graceful scorn of
-the wind-swept structure in every leap, that brought closer yet to the
-eye the laborious ploughing of the paddles.</p>
-
-<p>Hardy and Mr. Harper touched their caps to each other.</p>
-
-<p>"This is business, sir," said the boatswain, "and this ship is going
-to point a moral to that there steamer!"</p>
-
-<p>Hardy sent a critical gaze aloft. Everything was set to a hair and
-rounded firm as a boiler full of steam. Everything was doing the work
-of a boiler and more than the work of a boiler, as witness yonder
-sky-blackening fabric, like panting Time, toiling to elude the Camilla
-of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>"Your captain has sent me some good men," said Hardy. "It did not
-take you long, I reckon, to bend new canvas."</p>
-
-<p>The boatswain smiled loftily betwixt his red whiskers.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span></p> <p>"It isn't all New Navy yet, sir," he answered;
-"but it's coming."</p>
-
-<p>He sighed like a risen porpoise.</p>
-
-<p>"There'll be no call for sailors when it's to be nothing but that,
-with pole-masts and so built"&mdash;he was pointing as he spoke to the
-steamer&mdash;"that a dock-master might fitly sing out to the skipper,
-Which end of you is coming in?"</p>
-
-<p>He suddenly drew himself up as though on drill, and Julia stepped
-out of the companion-hatch. Sleep had touched her cheeks with a
-delicate bloom. She had refreshed herself with soap and water; her
-abundant hair was gracefully dressed; with the cunning fingers of a
-woman she had somehow, I do not know how, effaced in effect at least
-from her attire the soiling and creasing influence of hard weather upon
-the single robe. She had managed to warp her hat to its old bearings,
-and it sat cocked in its old coquettish pride upon her head. Her gaze
-was full of rapture as she looked at the ship, the straining sweep of
-white water over the side, the easy, manly figure of the man at the
-wheel, the <i>Magicienne</i>, which if this breeze lasted the ship must
-presently shift her helm to pass.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you think of this?" said Hardy to her.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it a dream, Mr. Harper?" said the girl. "Shall Mr. Hardy and I
-awaken to find ourselves on board an abandoned wreck?"</p>
-
-<p>"Call it a dream, mum," answered the boatswain, "and when you awake
-it will be England!"</p>
-
-<p class="space-above">This story of the ship's adventure is told. Because what you wish
-and expect is bound to happen when safety and home are to be reached
-and realised<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span> by a noble, well-found clipper ship in charge of two
-sailors of the manliest character, and manned by fifteen splendid
-examples of the man-of-war's men of the Navy of that age.</p>
-
-<p>The merciful eye of God was upon this ship, for certainly the
-strength of our courageous couple had been expended in a long strife
-with the gale, and the dog, and the watch-tackle, and the winch without
-human help would have been of no use. Hardy would have been forced
-to take the first assistance that offered. It came to him in the
-triumphant spirit which informs the whole of this couple's adventures.
-Our sailor yearned for an estate for himself and for the girl that
-was to be his wife. He richly deserved the reward he desired. Had any
-ship but a man-of-war assisted him to get home the salvage claimed
-would have diminished his proportion to a sum which at the present
-rate of interest would not have yielded him the value of the pension
-of the retired naval bluejacket. The British man-of-war demands no
-salvage, and this is but just, because her very existence depends upon
-the safety of the British merchantman. If you extinguish the Merchant
-Service, you extinguish the need for a Navy and you extinguish the
-nation herself, because we are surrounded by the ocean, we are fed by
-the merchant sailor, and the bluejacket is paid to protect him whilst
-he brings us the daily bread for which we pray every Sunday in church,
-and sometimes more often than every Sunday.</p>
-
-<p>I have never heard of a single instance in which the Admiralty
-have claimed salvage for services rendered to a British merchantman.
-Possibly they may have sent in a claim for the value of stores
-expended<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span> in the salvage services. In the case of a successful
-salvage it has sometimes happened that the owners of the ship have
-by permission of the Admiralty presented a service of plate for the
-officers' mess, or they have made personal gifts to the officers and
-a dinner or supper ashore to the crew. Thus it will be gathered that
-Hardy reaped the harvest he had sown and held in view; and having said
-this no more need be asked, for the hand that has penned these lines
-has no cunning as a reporter of the Marriage Service.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="mynote"><p class="center">Transcriber's Note:<br /><br />
-Obvious typographic errors have been corrected.<br /></p></div>
-
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK***</p>
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Mate of the Good Ship York, by William
-Clark Russell, Illustrated by W. H. Dunton
-
-
-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 Mate of the Good Ship York
- Or, The Ship's Adventure
-
-
-Author: William Clark Russell
-
-
-
-Release Date: June 5, 2020 [eBook #62329]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Martin Pettit and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustration.
- See 62329-h.htm or 62329-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/62329/62329-h/62329-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/62329/62329-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/mateofgoodshipyo00russiala
-
-
-
-
-
-THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK
-
-Or, The Ship's Adventure
-
-
-[Illustration: "HARDY FREQUENTLY TURNED TO LOOK AT THE _YORK_."
-
-(_See Page 261_)]
-
-
-THE MATE OF THE GOOD SHIP YORK
-
-Or, The Ship's Adventure
-
-by
-
-W. CLARK RUSSELL
-
-Author of "The Wreck of the Grosvenor,"
-"Marooned," "A Marriage
-at Sea," "My Danish Sweetheart," etc.
-
-With a frontispiece by W. H. Dunton
-
-
-[Illustration: Logo]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-Boston: L. C. Page &
-Company, Publishers
-
-Copyright, 1900
-by S. S. McCLure Company
-
-Copyright, 1902
-by L. C. Page & Company
-(Incorporated)
-
-All rights reserved
-
-Eighth Impression, April, 1907
-
-Colonial Press
-Electrotyped and Printed by C. H. Simonds & Co.
-Boston, Mass., U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
-Contents
-
-CHAPTER PAGE
- I. JULIA ARMSTRONG 11
-
- II. BAX'S FARM 29
-
- III. THE EAST INDIA DOCK ROAD 48
-
- IV. THE "GLAMIS CASTLE" 66
-
- V. CAPTAIN LAYARD 83
-
- VI. THE SHIP'S LOOKOUT 101
-
- VII. THE FRENCH MATE 119
-
- VIII. LOST! 137
-
- IX. THE INDIAMAN'S BOAT 152
-
- X. THE CAPTAIN AND THE GIRL 170
-
- XI. THE CAPTAIN'S BIRTHDAY 187
-
- XII. JULIA CALLS "JOHNNY!" 206
-
- XIII. THEY MEET 219
-
- XIV. HARD WEATHER 239
-
- XV. ABOARD AGAIN 256
-
- XVI. PRACTICAL SEAMANSHIP 273
-
- XVII. THE BOAT-FULL 293
-
-XVIII. HAIL, COLUMBIA! 313
-
- XIX. THE CAMILLA OF THE SEA 333
-
-
-
-
-The Mate of the Good Ship York
-
-Or, the Ship's Adventure
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-JULIA ARMSTRONG
-
-
-A house with a wall, which would be blank but for a door and two
-steps, stands in a very pretty lane. The habitable aspect of the house
-is on the other side, and commands a wide prospect of sloping fields
-and river and green sweeps soaring into eminences thickly clothed
-with trees. A brass plate upon this lonely door bears the simple
-inscription, "Dr. Hardy."
-
-The lane runs down to a bridge, and the flowing river carries the eye
-along a scene of English beauty: the bending trees sip the water's
-surface; the bright meadow stretches from the bank, and is tender and
-gay with the tints and movement of cattle; lofty trees sentinel the
-lane, and in the early summer the notes of the thrush and the blackbird
-are clear and sweet.
-
-One autumn evening, at about seven o'clock, the door bearing Doctor
-Hardy's plate was pulled open, and a young fellow, with something
-nautical in his lurch and dress, stepped into the road, and began to
-fill his pipe. Immediately behind him appeared another figure--he was a
-thin, pale, gentlemanly-looking man, and his white hair was parted down
-the middle. He gazed with a great deal of kindness, not unmingled with
-the shadow of sorrow, at the young fellow who was filling his pipe, and
-said:
-
-"You have a pleasant evening for your walk."
-
-"I am sorry to leave this place," said the young man. "There is nothing
-like this to be met on the open ocean." And whilst he pulled out a
-matchbox his eyes went away to the green, evening-clad hills, which
-showed between the trees in a sweep of sky-line pure as the rim of a
-coloured lens; and now two or three of the stars which shine upon our
-country, and which we all know and love, were trembling in the dark
-blue of the coming shadow.
-
-The young man lighted his pipe with several hard sucks not wanting in
-emotion.
-
-"God bless you, father," said he. "I shall be turning up and finding
-all well within twelve months, I hope."
-
-"God bless you, my dear son, and I pray that he may continue to watch
-over you," said the white-haired old gentleman in a shaking voice.
-
-The young man started to walk with his face set toward the hill. Doctor
-Hardy stood in the doorway watching him until he had disappeared round
-the bend. He then stepped back and closed the door upon himself.
-
-It would not be dark for a little while, and even when the dusk came
-up over the hills a piece of moon would float up with it. The water
-flowing in the valley lay in short lines and sweet curves in a moist
-dim rose. A clock was striking; a wagon was rumbling in a weak note of
-thunder past some low-lying hedge that skirted a road. The young fellow
-stepped out leisurely with his pipe hanging at his teeth; he was going
-away to London and was walking to the station, and was without even
-a stick. He was square, robust, a nautical type of young man, clean
-shaven, of a cheerful cast of face, but with something singular in
-the expression of his eyes owing to the upper lids being mere streaks
-and scarcely visible, and the coloured matter black and brilliant, so
-that when he stared at you his look would have been fierce but for
-the qualifying expression of the rest of his face. He walked with a
-slight roll of the sea in his gait, and if you had noticed him at all
-you might have supposed him a sailor. Yet a man need not be a sailor
-to look like one. I have met nautical-looking men who would not be
-sailors for the value of the cargoes of twenty voyages. On the other
-hand, I have met sailors who, had they called themselves greengrocers'
-assistants or tailors' cutters, would have been believed.
-
-This young fellow, smoking his pipe and walking along through the
-fine autumn-gathering evening, was the only son of the white-haired
-gentleman who had just withdrawn into his house. He had been to sea
-since he was fourteen years of age, and his name was George Hardy, and
-he was now chief mate of the _York_, an Australian clipper, twelve
-hundred and fifty tons burthen, then lying in the East India Docks. He
-was going to join her, and why he was without baggage was because he
-had sent his chest aboard in advance.
-
-Formerly the railway station stood not very far distant from Doctor
-Hardy's house; but all about here was unimportant--it was more a
-district than a place. Hardy's patients, for instance, were scattered
-over miles, and, like the plums in a sailor's pudding, the houses were
-scarcely within hail of one another. The railway company, two years
-before this date, removed the station seven miles higher up the line,
-to the great consternation of the unfortunate man who had purchased
-the "Fox Railway Inn," then conveniently seated within a short walk
-of the station. Figure his horror when one morning he saw men with
-pickaxes uprooting the platform. The "Fox Inn" was left as desolate as
-Noah's Ark on Mount Ararat, and it needed three men to go through the
-bankruptcy court before matters began to look a little brighter for
-this unfortunate tavern.
-
-There was plenty of time, and Hardy did not walk very fast. He enjoyed
-the sweets of the country, all the aromas of the darkling land which
-came along in the faint, cold, evening air. When a sailor arrives from
-a long voyage he makes up his mind to button the flaps of his ears
-to his head, and to steer a straight course for the deepest inshore
-recess. He does not do so because he usually brings up at the nearest
-grog-shop on his arrival, or makes his way to the boarding-house where
-he was robbed and stripped when he was last in the place, and in a
-short time he is away at sea again with no clothes but what he stands
-up in, and no bed but the bundle of hay or straw which he flings, with
-curses deep as the sea and dark as the ship's hold, down the hatch
-under which he sleeps. But it is an illustration of his hatred of salt
-water that he should resolve to bury himself deep inshore when he lands.
-
-George Hardy did not belong to the class who live in boarding-houses
-and wear knives on their hips. He was the son of a gentleman, he was a
-man of taste and feeling which his seafaring life had heightened and
-enlarged; he had the eye of an artist and the spirit of a poet, and was
-too good for a calling that does not require these qualities.
-
-The road for about four miles was very lonely. One little cottage on
-the right stood in an orchard and grounds which sloped to a hedge
-almost three-quarters of a mile down. He met nobody; once or twice a
-squirrel ran across the pale dust; the birds had gone to bed, there was
-no song; the sun had sunk, and the evening had deepened into the first
-of the night.
-
-Suddenly, some distance ahead of him on the left, Hardy spied what was
-undoubtedly a human figure. It lay in a dry, shallow ditch with the
-upper part of its body a little raised, resting upon the bank under
-the hedge. As he approached he saw that it was a woman, and then that
-it was a girl in a straw hat with nothing near her in the shape of
-bag, bundle, or dog. She must be some wearied wayfarer who had seated
-herself and fallen asleep. But he did not believe this, either; on the
-contrary, when he was close to the figure he imagined it to be a corpse.
-
-He put his pipe in his pocket, and stood looking at her. There was
-light enough to see by, but not very distinctly. He stooped and peered,
-and then started and exclaimed:
-
-"By Jove, it's Julia Armstrong! What's come to her?"
-
-He looked up and down the road; not a soul was in sight. He felt her
-ungloved hands--they were cold. Her straw hat was tilted on her head,
-which rested not on the brim of her hat but on her hair, that was
-dressed in a mass behind and pillowed her. Her eyes were not closed,
-and if she was not dead she was in a swoon. He got beside her and
-lifted her head, all the while wondering what she was doing--dead or
-in a faint--in this ditch. He then pulled out a small flask of brandy
-diluted with water, and as her pure white teeth lay a little apart he
-managed to pour a dram into her mouth. He chafed her hands, and in a
-sort of way caressed her by holding her to him. He also put her hat
-straight, and wetting his handkerchief with a little brandy and water
-he damped her brow, now taking notice that she was not dead by sundry
-tokens of life of a most elusive and subtle character, whereof her
-breathing was not one, for he could not detect a stir of air on the
-back of his hand betwixt her lips, nor the faintest heave of her pretty
-breast.
-
-She was Julia Armstrong, and, strange to say, an old love of his--I
-mean, he had lost his heart to her a little time before he went to sea,
-when he was scarcely more than a schoolboy. Then he went to sea, and
-when he came home she had gone somewhere on a visit, and so of the next
-voyage; but when he returned from his fourth trip round the world he
-met her, and found the old beautiful charm again in her; but in a week
-she left to occupy some post as a governess thirty miles away, and when
-they met again it was here by this roadside.
-
-What had captivated the young fellow with this girl who lay unconscious
-in the fold of his arm? She had a pleasant, interesting face, beheld
-even through the death pallor that lay upon it; but she was not
-beautiful or even pretty. Her hair was abundant and fair, inclining, as
-you might even judge by that light, to auburn. But it was not her face
-nor hair, it was her figure that had excited admiration into passion
-in the young sailor. Her shape and involuntary poses were saucy and
-perfect beyond expression. She always carried her hat on one side of
-her head--"cock-billed," as the sailors call it; she had a trick of
-planting her hands on her hips; her limbs were beautifully shaped,
-and her short skirts exposed as much or little of them as her figure
-required. No dancer of exquisite art could have played her legs as this
-girl did, yet all her movements were involuntary and unconscious, and
-therein lay the sweetness, for had a hint of study been visible in her
-motions the whole maidenly and fairy-like illusion would have hardened
-into acting.
-
-Young Hardy had thought of the Vivandiere, of the Fille-du-Regiment,
-when he looked at her. He could not have told you why. Was it the
-sauciness, that was not wanton, of the repose of her hands upon her
-hips? the unconsciously crossed leg when standing? the cock-billed hat,
-or tam-o'-shanter, that made you feel the need of music? the fixed gaze
-that was not staring but pensive? the sudden change of attitude that
-was like the cloud shadow upon a rose on which the sun had rested? What
-had all this to do with the Vivandiere? But Hardy had got the word and
-the idea into his head, and when he thought of her at sea 'twas as
-though she was walking with a regiment with a little barrel of cordial
-waters upon her back.
-
-Again he looked up the road and then down the road; he could hear
-a cart in a lane that ran parallel, but nobody was visible. He was
-beginning to wonder what he was to do--whether he had the physical
-strength to carry this fine girl in his arms four miles, that is, to
-his father's house--when she sighed, stirred like an awakening sleeper,
-sighed again, and opened a pair of gray eyes full upon his face.
-
-"Do you know me?" he asked.
-
-"Where am I?" she answered, and with a sudden effort she raised her
-form out of his arm, but in a moment fell back again in sheer weakness.
-
-"Don't you remember your old friend George Hardy?" he said.
-
-She looked at him with that sort of intentness which you will sometimes
-see in a baby's eyes, and her lips drooped into a scarcely perceptible
-smile.
-
-"What am I doing here?" she asked, and she gazed round her, deeply
-puzzled.
-
-He gave her a little more brandy, which she certainly stood in need of,
-and looking at her without speaking, he waited until more mind came
-into her face; and now she made an effort to rise.
-
-"Keep still until you have come right to," said he. "I wish some old
-cart would come along to give us a lift to my father's."
-
-"Your father's?"
-
-"Doctor Hardy," he answered. "About an hour's walk away."
-
-"Yes, I know," she exclaimed. "If a cart came I would not go."
-
-"My dear Miss Armstrong, what are you doing here?" exclaimed young
-Hardy. "All alone in a dead faint in a ditch! Were you returning home?"
-And again he looked a little way up and down, thinking to see a handbag
-or a parcel, but her hands were as empty as his.
-
-"I'm going to London," she said. "What time is it?"
-
-"I'm going to London, too," said he; "but neither of us will catch the
-train we want. Do you mean to walk to London?"
-
-She shook her head, and put her hand in her pocket as though seeking
-her purse. What she sought was evidently there.
-
-Now her faculties had come together, but it was clear she must sit a
-little longer before attempting to rise; so they sat side by side with
-their feet in the dry ditch, and their backs against the hedge.
-
-"Why are you going to London?" he asked.
-
-"I'm leaving home for good," she answered.
-
-"Where's your luggage?"
-
-"I have none," she replied.
-
-"Are you running away from home?" he inquired, beginning to see a
-little into this matter.
-
-"I have no home, and I am leaving my father's house of my own accord,"
-she replied, animated by a little faint passion. "I could endure the
-life no longer--I am the wretchedest girl in the world. Oh, how his
-wife has treated me! _You_ once met her."
-
-She struggled with her heart, and some tears ran down her face.
-
-It is true that Hardy had met this stepmother--this second Mrs.
-Armstrong--and he had then gathered that the lady and Miss Julia
-did not lead the lives of angels in each other's company. In short,
-he had heard that Mrs. Armstrong, by her drink, by her language, and
-conduct in general, had made a very hell of Captain, or Commander,
-Armstrong's home for his daughter. The captain was retired, was poor,
-and Mrs. Armstrong had brought him a hundred a year, which was a
-godsend. He took life very easily, drank his whisky, smoked his pipe,
-and was welcome at several houses in the neighbourhood, where at one
-he would get billiards, at another a rubber, at a third a gossip in
-which he related his China experiences; and the whisky bottle always
-kept him company, though his kindest friend could never say that in all
-his time he had seen him drunk once. Doctor Hardy was on good terms
-with him, but spoke with strong dislike of Mrs. Armstrong, and of
-her treatment of her daughter, that was driving her into seeking and
-taking situations, some of a menial sort, and that threatened before
-long to break her heart or to send her to the bad, as 'tis called. But
-with domestic troubles of this sort people do not choose to concern
-themselves, except in exaggerating them in talk by scandalous hints and
-opinions.
-
-"I must wait for something to pass that will help me to carry you to
-my father's house," said Hardy, looking anxiously at the girl whom he
-could not fail to see was weak and exhausted.
-
-"I have already declined," she answered. "I will not return a single
-yard in that hateful direction. I shall feel stronger presently. Is
-there not another train later on?"
-
-"Not to London."
-
-"I must not miss this," she exclaimed, struggling to rise.
-
-"Look here," said he, keeping her down by gentle pressure of the hand,
-"I am going to London and we will go together, but we shall have to
-wait until to-morrow. Will not that suit? If you are in a desperate
-hurry you can leave early to-morrow. Do you know Bax's farm?"
-
-"Of course I do," she answered, turning her face up the road.
-
-"Bax shall give you a bedroom," said he, "since you refuse to return
-with me to my father. A good supper and a good night's rest are the
-doctoring you stand in need of. I find you in a dead faint in a ditch,
-and so you come under my care, and I am answerable for you. We are old
-friends."
-
-She faintly smiled and looked at him.
-
-"You will do exactly what I ask, and at Bax's farm we shall have
-leisure for a little talk."
-
-She bowed her head, and he saw that she cried again.
-
-They spied a man at the bottom of the hill coming up. The girl started,
-and said, "I am quite strong enough to stand and walk," and she stood
-up, one of the most beautiful figures amongst women, with a sweet
-ingenuous sauciness which was the flavouring grace of her happy hours,
-distinguishable still, even in this time of misery and illness. The man
-coming along was a common labourer, but she did not choose that any one
-should see her sitting in a ditch.
-
-They walked slowly up the road. She leaned upon his arm and
-occasionally stopped to rest, and their talk until they arrived at
-the farm was not much; indeed she said little more than that she had
-been making up her mind for some weeks to leave her father's house for
-ever and to sail to a colony, where she would be willing to accept the
-lowest menial office so long as she was independent, and received the
-respect that was due to her as a lady. She had left her home that day
-in the afternoon, meaning to walk to the station and take the train
-to London, whence she intended to write to her father to forward her
-clothes in the box which stood ready corded in her bedroom. When she
-had walked some distance--it might be five miles--a sudden faintness
-seized her, and she sat down under a hedge to rest. She then must have
-fainted, and knew no more until she returned to consciousness, and
-found herself resting against Hardy.
-
-This talk brought them to Bax's farm.
-
-It was not a farm, though it was called so. Bax sold milk and garden
-produce and eggs, and the countryside called his house a farm. It had
-two gables and a thatched roof, small latticed windows, and a door
-that opened direct into the sitting-room. In the summer the house was
-enchanting with its flowers and shrubbery and the climbing green stuff
-about it, and then the concert of the woods thrilled in the trees
-beyond, and the air was full of sweet smells.
-
-Bax was a man of about sixty, immensely stout behind and in front,
-with a face that seemed powdered with pale, scissors-shorn whisker,
-and small eyes which had drowned their lustre in beer. He stood in
-the doorway in his shirt-sleeves smoking a pipe, and was not at all
-surprised when the couple passed through the gate and approached the
-porch. He merely pulled out his pipe, and said:
-
-"Good evening, Mr. Hardy; good evening, Miss Armstrong. Come for a bit
-of a sit down? Will y' 'ave chairs here? or the sitting-room's at your
-sarvice."
-
-"How d'ye do, Mr. Bax?" said Hardy.
-
-"Good evening, Mr. Bax," said Miss Armstrong, in a faint voice.
-
-"Take us into your sitting-room," said Hardy; and they entered the door
-and were in the sitting-room at once--a cosy little room, hung with
-portraits of Bax and his dead wife and daughter, decorated with a small
-mantel-glass in fly-gauze, and hospitable with a round table on one leg
-and three claws, the top beautified by a knitted cover.
-
-Julia sank into a little armchair. Bax was beginning to gaze at her
-earnestly; he knew her perfectly well, knew her father also, who
-frequently looked in for a drink; also he knew Hardy perfectly well,
-likewise his father, who attended him when he was attacked by gout.
-
-"Mr. Bax," said Hardy, putting his cap down upon the table, "we have
-come to occupy your house this night."
-
-"Joost been married, have yer?" asked Bax, slipping his pipe into his
-waistcoat pocket.
-
-"No," answered Hardy, gravely; "Miss Armstrong is leaving her home for
-good. If you don't guess why, I'll tell you presently."
-
-Bax looked knowing; he looked more knowing an instant later when a fine
-Persian kitten ran up his back and curled its tail upon his shoulder,
-for then two pairs of eyes were fastened upon Hardy, the kitten, being
-no beer drinker, gazing more steadfastly than the other.
-
-"Have you a bedroom that you can place at Miss Armstrong's disposal?"
-
-"Is there no later train?" asked Julia.
-
-"We would not take it if there were," replied Hardy.
-
-Of course Bax, having lost his wife, must consult his daughter, and
-when he had opened a door and shouted a little for Mary Ann there
-arrived a woman who looked old enough to be Bax's mother. Her face
-seemed to be dredged by time; the _arcus senilis_ was more defined in
-her than in Bax; she looked seventy years old, and was but thirty-eight.
-
-She curtseyed to the visitors, and then, after pursing her lips and
-knitting her brow, she replied to her father that Miss Armstrong could
-have the spare room over the sitting-room.
-
-"Can I have a bedroom?" said Hardy.
-
-Bax mused, looking at his daughter, and then said, "Not unless you
-sleeps along with me."
-
-"With you?" laughed Hardy, looking at his stomach. "How much of you
-lies in bed all at once? That'll do for me," said he, and he jerked his
-head at a wide hair-sofa.
-
-The father, the kitten, and the daughter looked a little strangely at
-Hardy and Julia Armstrong, as though before proceeding they wanted to
-see things in a clearer light. Hardy understanding this, spoke out with
-the bluntness of a sailor.
-
-"Look here, Bax," said he, "I'm going to London to join my ship. I was
-bound away to-night, but on the road I fell in with this young lady,
-who lay in a swoon."
-
-"Oh, dear, poor thing!" groaned Miss Bax.
-
-"She came to, and I brought her here after learning that she was
-leaving her home for good on account of the barbarous behaviour of her
-stepmother--"
-
-"Oh, I know, I know," interrupted Miss Bax.
-
-"She was walking to catch the train I was bound by; she is not in a fit
-state to travel, Bax. _You_ can see that, ma'am; therefore she shall
-sup under this comfortable old roof, and take the rest she needs in the
-room you offer her. Her train leaves at ten in the morning, and we will
-take it."
-
-The kitten purred as it fretted Bax's cheek. Bax said, "It's all right,
-Mr. Hardy, and you shall be made comfortable. What 'ull you 'ave for
-supper?"
-
-What would be better than some cold ham and a dish of eggs and bacon,
-a dish of sausages in mashed potato, and the half of a beautiful apple
-tart, along with a jug of real cream? And for drink there was some
-first-class ale kept by Bax for Bax himself, for he held no license,
-and his dealings were secret, and if he took money it was a gift for a
-kindness.
-
-"Will you come up-stairs and see your room, Miss Armstrong, before I
-goes about and gets your supper for you?" exclaimed Miss Bax.
-
-"Have you got no baggage?" inquired old Bax, jerking the kitten on to
-the table.
-
-"It will follow me to London," said Miss Armstrong, and she rose and
-went up-stairs with Miss Bax.
-
-Hardy sat down upon the sofa, and Bax went to work to lay the cloth.
-There was plenty of room at that little table for two. Bax had been
-a gardener in a great family, and had often helped the coachman, the
-footman, and the butler to wait. He possessed some good old-fashioned
-table apparel, and before Miss Armstrong returned the room looked
-bright and hospitable with the light of an oil lamp reflected in
-cutlery, glass, and cruet-stand.
-
-Julia entered, and Bax walked out. She went and sat beside Hardy,
-and the lovely Persian kitten sprang into her lap. Her hair was as
-beautiful as her figure, and her gray eyes were full of heart and
-meaning. You could not have called her pretty, yet you were sensible of
-a charm in her face that had nothing to do with the shape of her nose
-or the character of her mouth.
-
-"Do you feel better?" said Hardy.
-
-"Much; I never thought to find myself stopping a night here. Of course,
-I have been the means of your losing your train?"
-
-"To-morrow will do just as well," he answered. "Where did you mean to
-sleep when you got to London to-night?"
-
-"I should have found a room," she answered.
-
-"Will they send on your luggage if you write for it?"
-
-"Father will," she replied. "Yes, he will do that, but he will not
-write to ask me to return. He does not care what becomes of me. He
-never cared what I did when I left his house to fill a situation."
-
-Her nostrils enlarged, her eyes looked angry. A little blood visited
-her pale cheek. Hardy's memory pictured her father: a middle-sized man
-with pale, weak eyes, a chuckling laugh like the gurgle of liquor,
-much reference to his ships and to naval things in general, a large
-Micawber-like indifference to his existing circumstances, and a quality
-of talkativeness about outside matters, such as the queen, the trouble
-at Pekin, the discovery of the North Pole, which would make you think
-that he did not know what home worries were.
-
-"Bax," said Hardy, "may covertly send along to let them know you are
-here."
-
-"What of that?" she exclaimed. "If they were to send twenty men they
-would have to drag me to move me. I would not set foot in that house
-again if my stepmother lay dead in the gutter opposite the door. It is
-my father's fault."
-
-She bit her lip, stroked the kitten, and said, "Oh, it is hard upon a
-girl to have a bad father--a weak, selfish, foolish father."
-
-Here Bax came again with a tumbler full of autumn flowers. He placed
-them in the middle of the table and went out, looking nowhere, as if
-he walked in his sleep; but whilst the door lay open they heard the
-spitting of the frying-pan.
-
-"What are you going to do when you get to London?" said Hardy.
-
-"I mean to find a situation on board a ship," she answered.
-
-"What situation do you expect to find?"
-
-"I shall try to get a post as stewardess, or as an attendant upon
-a sick person. I cannot pay my passage out even in the steerage,
-therefore I must work."
-
-"Now, Miss Armstrong," said Hardy, stroking the kitten's head on her
-lap, "it is impossible for me to be rude to you because I want to be,
-and mean to be, your friend." She looked at him swiftly, and her eyes
-drooped. "Do not misjudge any questions I may put to you. How much
-money have you got?"
-
-"Seven pounds, twelve shillings, and--" she drew out a little purse,
-opened it, counted some coppers, and added, "fourpence."
-
-"What is that money going to do for you in London?" said Hardy, after a
-pause of pity.
-
-"It will support me," she answered, "until I have obtained a situation
-on board a ship."
-
-"Situations for girls on board ships are very few," said he. "What part
-of the world do you want to sail for?"
-
-"Anywhere, anywhere," she replied. "But it must be to some place where
-I can get a living."
-
-"It would not do to sail for China," he exclaimed. "India doesn't
-provide much for people whose wants are yours. It must be the Great
-Pacific colonies. Aren't there agents and institutions which help young
-girls to get away across the sea? This we will inquire into when we
-arrive in London."
-
-She looked at him gratefully, and was about to speak, but was
-interrupted by Miss Bax, who staggered in with a tray load.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-BAX'S FARM
-
-
-George Hardy and Miss Julia Armstrong sat down to supper at the little
-round table; Bax lurked as if he would wait; Hardy said they could
-manage very well without him, and the pair fell to. The window was
-open, and all the rich, decaying perfumes of the autumn evening floated
-into the atmosphere, and sweetened it with the incense of the night.
-
-Hardy looked at his companion, and felt again the delight he used to
-take in the contemplation of her shape. The same old suggestion was in
-her--that of the Vivandiere. But why? He could not have explained, and
-neither can I. Every movement was full of beauty and piquancy, and she
-wore her hair parted a little on one side.
-
-"Is your bedroom comfortable?" asked Hardy.
-
-"A sweet, old-fashioned little room," she said, "and the bed's a
-four-poster. It has curtain rings, and if I tremble in bed they will
-rattle, and I shall think it the death-tick, which I hate to hear. Will
-that sofa make a comfortable bed for you?"
-
-"You are asking a sailor that question," he answered. "I would be glad
-to carry it to sea with me, and sleep all around the world in it. Have
-you written a farewell letter to your father?"
-
-"No; I have left him as a spirit might, in utter silence. His wife
-will not let him trouble himself. When the time comes for locking up
-the bolt will be shot, and he will fill his pipe and fill his glass,
-and say to his wife that he is afraid there is some truth in the
-story that Mr. Gubbins was telling him about Miss Cornflower and the
-Congregational minister. That is the sort of interest he will take in
-my not turning up."
-
-She frowned, and put down her knife and fork, and seemed as if she did
-not mean to go on eating. Hardy poured out a glass of frothing ale. It
-was a fine sparkling ale, better than champagne, and looked an elegant
-drink, fit for red lips in the thin glass it brimmed with foam. She
-took it and drank.
-
-"It is hard for any girl to be in want," said Hardy; "but there is no
-distress to equal that of the lady who is in poverty. What, in God's
-name, can she do? She is not wanted in the kitchen, and if I were she I
-would rather sell matches than be a governess."
-
-"It is the well-to-do lady who makes it hard for the poor lady,"
-exclaimed the girl. "Two years ago I got a situation as nurse to attend
-an aged sick woman--she was eighty. She lived with a lady. You would
-think this person would have known how to treat the daughter of an
-officer in the navy, who was too poor to maintain her as a lady. Mr.
-Hardy, she used to call me Armstrong, as though I was her housemaid.
-I had my meals separate. When they went away for a change I was not
-good enough to sit in the carriage; they made me sit on the box, and
-the coachman, in the genial manner of the mews, asked me if I was the
-new maid, and if my name was Jemima. When we arrived the lady told
-me I must not sit with them if company came, as my presence might be
-objected to. I went to my bedroom, and kept in it till I was called
-out, and then returned to it."
-
-"It is time you cleared out," said Hardy. "The soft hearts seem to be
-found at sea nowadays; at all events, they are not so scarce there as
-fresh eggs," said he, helping himself. "Your intentions are to get
-abroad and seek a berth abroad. I should like to read the map of them.
-You have saved seven pounds odd, and you arrive in London at night, and
-you don't know where to go. Next day you ask your way--where? To the
-docks; but what docks? London, Millwall, East India, West India, and so
-on. You enter a forest without a compass. Now what are you going to do?"
-
-"I meant to go on board ship after ship," she answered, with spirit,
-"and ask anybody I saw if there was a berth for me on board."
-
-"Did you ever see a large full-rigged ship in all your life?" he
-inquired, smiling.
-
-"Never," she replied, emphatically.
-
-"Go to the docks, and you'll see hundreds, and there won't be one that
-wants you."
-
-"What is the name of your ship?" she asked.
-
-"The _York_."
-
-"Where is she going to?"
-
-"She is bound to Australia."
-
-"Is there no place for me in that ship?" she said. She looked at him
-piteously, though her natural grace of coquetry broke through all the
-same, with the planting of her hands upon her hips, and the way she
-side-dropped her head at him.
-
-"We carry no stewardess, no females, no passengers," he answered. "The
-captain is a stranger to me. No, my ship is of no use to you," he
-continued, after a pause. "You must call with me upon some shipping
-people. There may be a vacancy for a stewardess. But suppose the ship
-is sailing for India?"
-
-She gazed at him a little vacantly.
-
-"We shall find some means of getting abroad," he went on, running a
-note of cheerfulness into his voice, for he thought by the look in the
-girl's eyes that she was beginning to bend on signals of distress,
-which would be hoisted in a pearly downpour presently. "At all events,
-you can't be worse off than you are, and somebody says that when you
-are at the bottom of the wheel the next revolution must hoist you."
-
-They talked in this strain until they had supped, then Hardy, not
-seeing a bell, opened the door and shouted to Miss Bax to clear away.
-When the door was opened they could hear voices in the back room
-beyond, and a gush of Cavendish tobacco smoke came in. Some friends
-of Bax had called in a casual way by the back entrance, across the
-fields, which meant several drinks, clouds of tobacco, and all the
-gossip of the social sphere which Bax and his friends adorned. When
-Miss Bax had cleared the table she placed a bottle of whisky upon it at
-the request of Hardy, also cold water and glasses. She then said there
-was no hurry to go to bed. Father did not go to bed until eleven, and
-she left them with a smile as though they were a young married couple
-spending their honeymoon in Bax's farm, instead of one of them being an
-honest, generous-hearted young sailor intent on doing his dead best
-to rescue a young English lady from bitter privation, and perhaps from
-miserable disgrace; and the other of them being a broken-hearted girl
-hurrying from a home of tyranny and drink, a home of one base nature,
-and of one spiritless one (which is likewise a baseness), with a future
-as dark as the night that lay outside, in whose funeral tapestries her
-imagination alone could have beheld the stirrings of the life that was
-to give her content and liberty, in whose impenetrable depths she found
-no more than a minute gleam of light from Hardy's strange and chanceful
-encounter with her while she lay in a swoon deep as death.
-
-With her consent the sailor lighted a pipe. The girl sat in a chair
-opposite to him, her head a little on one side, hands on her hips, all
-in the old, fascinating, coquettish, incommunicable way. Outside the
-night lay in a thin gloom, and they saw the stars shining above the
-trees. The hush of the sleeping land was in the air. You heard nothing
-but the silver tinkling of a natural fall of water that ran down the
-hillside, and fell purely in a stone bowl for men, horses, and dogs to
-drink.
-
-"You are a plucky girl," said Hardy; "but I think you are attempting
-more than you understand. You talk, for instance, of going to the
-workhouse. You are the last girl in the world to go to the workhouse.
-Think of dying in a workhouse," he continued, whilst she watched him
-without smiling. "Creatures bend over your bed, and say, 'Isn't she
-gone yet?' That's the sympathy of the workhouse."
-
-"I want to get out of England, abroad, and be independent," said Julia.
-
-He looked at an old clock upon the mantelpiece. The hour was about
-eight. He asked her if she would have some whisky and water, and on
-her declining, he mixed a draught for himself, then went to the door
-and called to Bax, leaving the girl to wonder what he meant to do. The
-farmer arrived.
-
-"Bax," said the sailor, "you have given us a capital supper."
-
-"I'm much obliged to you, sir," answered Bax.
-
-"This is an excellent whisky," continued Hardy, "and I drink your
-health"--here he sipped--"and the health of your worthy daughter"--here
-he sipped again--"in your very hospitable gift."
-
-Bax grinned, and said, "We make no charge. You're my guests, and you're
-welcome."
-
-"Bax," said Hardy, "haven't you a spring cart?"
-
-"Yes," answered Bax.
-
-"Got a horse?"
-
-"Got a pretty little mare."
-
-"Will you drive me over to Captain Armstrong's as soon as possible to
-fetch this young lady's luggage?"
-
-Julia started in her chair, and said, "Don't trouble, Mr. Hardy. My
-father will send the box on to me when he gets my address in London."
-
-"How d'ye know he will?" inquired Hardy.
-
-"Ah!" murmured Bax.
-
-"Suppose the stepmother declines to let the box go?" said Hardy. "Now
-you'll want all the clothes you've got and can get, Miss Armstrong, if
-you mean to colonise. Bax, bear a hand, my lad; clap your mare to the
-cart, and report when you're ready."
-
-He spoke as if he was on the quarter-deck of a ship and making the
-sailors jump for their lives, and Bax went out, saying, "I'll not be
-ten minutes."
-
-"How good you are to me!" exclaimed Julia, gathering the side of her
-pocket-handkerchief unconsciously, and looking at him with eyes that
-seemed to tremble with emotion. "What should I have done had you not
-found me? I might have died under that hedge."
-
-"Let me see," said Hardy; "how far off from here does your father live?"
-
-She reflected and answered, "Quite six miles."
-
-"Well, we shall be back with your box before ten. Don't sit up; you
-want all the rest you can get. To-morrow will be full of business."
-
-"Oh!" cried Julia, "I hope there will be no trouble. Father may--He
-won't like you to know that I have run away. He may insist upon
-returning with you, or coming here."
-
-"If he is at home he may, and we'll give him a lift with pleasure."
-
-"I should refuse to meet him," cried the girl, standing up in a sudden
-passion of indignation. "He has seen me suffer and has looked on. If he
-comes here it is not for me, but for _that_," and she pointed to the
-bottle of whisky.
-
-"You shall have your box of clothes, anyhow," said Hardy, smoking
-coolly and looking at the girl; and three minutes after he had said
-this Miss Bax came in, and reported that "father and the cart was at
-the gate."
-
-"Don't let Miss Armstrong sit up," said Hardy. "Do those chaps back
-talk very loud?"
-
-"When they arguefy," answered Miss Bax. "They're wrangling over the
-age of the queen now."
-
-"Well, when Miss Armstrong goes to bed silence them," said Hardy, "for
-I want the lady to sleep well. We shall meet at breakfast," said he,
-turning to Julia and taking her hand.
-
-"I shall wait up for you. How could I sleep?" she replied.
-
-He smiled, but answered nothing, filled and relighted his pipe, and
-walked out.
-
-The drive was pleasant, down-hill. The road stretched before them like
-satin with the dust of it, and many spacious groups of trees lifted
-their motionless shapes against the sky-line of the tall land and the
-stars twinkling above it. Specks of light in houses reposed like glow
-worms in the deep shades of the valley and up the acclivities, but the
-river streamed in blackness, and the lamps of a small town past the
-railway station were lost behind the bend.
-
-Hardy stared at his father's house as they drove past, always in
-darkness on this side, but he knew there would be lights in the windows
-which overlooked the grounds that sank toward the river.
-
-The house Captain Armstrong lived in was two miles further on round
-the corner, and made one of about a dozen little villas and cottages,
-including a church and a public-house. It was a very small cottage,
-thatched; but its sun-bright windows, its handsome door and brass
-knocker--the taste, in short of the man who had built it in years gone
-by--made it very fit for the occupation of a gentleman. It was sunk
-deep in a broad piece of garden land, and the apple-trees, whose boughs
-were laden, scented the still night air refreshingly.
-
-"Here we be," said Bax, drawing up, and the sailor sprang off the cart,
-and walked down the path to the door with the brass knocker.
-
-He hammered briskly, and tugged at a metal knob which shivered a little
-bell into ecstasies of alarm. A small dog barked shrilly with terror
-and hate, and in a minute the door was opened by a servant, past whom
-the small dog fled, and tried to marry his teeth in Hardy's right boot.
-A kick rushed the little beast back into the passage, and Hardy said to
-the servant, "I have called for Miss Armstrong's trunk."
-
-"Oh, indeed," she said, looking behind her.
-
-"Yes, indeed," he exclaimed. "I'm in a hurry. I've six miles to go. Is
-Captain Armstrong in?"
-
-"No," was the answer, and as the servant spoke a door on the right of
-the passage was thrown open, and the figure of a stout woman stood
-between Hardy and the flame of the oil-float which illuminated the
-passage at the extremity.
-
-"Who is it? and what does he want?" said the stout figure, approaching
-by two or three paces.
-
-"I am Mr. Hardy, son of your husband's doctor," was the reply, "and I
-have called for Miss Armstrong's trunk. It stands ready corded in her
-bedroom, and I am in a hurry."
-
-"Where is Miss Armstrong going?" said the stout figure, who was indeed
-Mrs. Armstrong.
-
-"To the ends of the earth to escape _you_," he answered. "Bax," he
-roared, "fling your reins over the gate-post, and come and lend me a
-hand to ship the box in your cart."
-
-"The box shall not leave this house without Captain Armstrong's
-permission," said Mrs. Armstrong, who, poor as the light was, you
-could see carried a great deal of colour in her face of a streaky or
-venous nature; her eyes were small, and gazed with rapid winks as
-though they snapped at you as you snap the hammer of a revolver; her
-bust was immense; her black hair was smoothed like streaks of paint
-down her cheeks and round her ears, and she wore a cap with something
-in it that nodded, giving more significance to her words than they
-needed.
-
-"Where is Captain Armstrong?" said the sailor.
-
-"Out," was the reply.
-
-"He'll not care whether I take it or leave it." He could not bring
-himself to speak even civilly to her. "Whilst you fetch him we'll
-tranship it, and the captain can get in and argue the point whilst
-we drive away. Come along, Bax. Sally, show us the road to the young
-lady's bedroom."
-
-"Maria," exclaimed Mrs. Armstrong, cold and bitter, "go and knock on
-Constable Rogers's door, and tell him to come here at once."
-
-"Shall I fetch the master also?" said Maria, quivering in her figure in
-the hot anticipation of rushing out.
-
-"No, the walk is too long. I want you back, and the constable."
-
-The girl shot up the walk.
-
-"Bax," said Hardy, "come along. We'll easily find the room."
-
-Bax hung in the wind.
-
-"What's the constable a-going to say?" he muttered. "Won't it be
-breaking in if we enters without the missis's leave?"
-
-Hardy looked at him, and then stepped to the foot of the staircase.
-
-"You dare not go up-stairs, sir!" said Mrs. Armstrong, in a voice that
-trembled.
-
-Hardy mounted.
-
-"The constable shall lock you up," shrieked the enraged woman.
-
-"Coom down, coom down, Mr. Hardy," sang out Bax. "The constable'll make
-it right."
-
-Hardy pulled out a box of wax matches and struck one. The landing was
-in darkness, and he wanted to see. He guessed the girl's bedroom by
-intuition, opened the door, and saw the trunk--a small one--seized the
-handle, and dragged it to the head of the staircase. It was lighter
-than a sea chest, and with a heave he settled it on his shoulder, and
-went creaking down-stairs.
-
-"I defy you to take that box out of my house without my leave," yelled
-Mrs. Armstrong.
-
-Hardy seemed cool, but his spirits were in a blaze. He regarded the
-sending for a constable as an atrocious act of insolence, and he walked
-past the woman, not in the smallest degree caring whether he plunged
-the corner of the box into her head or not. She took care, however, to
-give him a wide berth, and he passed through the house door, whilst
-the little dog barked furiously at a safe distance at the end of the
-passage.
-
-"Give me a hand with this," said he to Bax. "This is no business of the
-constable. The box belongs to a young lady who wants it, and I intend
-that she shall have it."
-
-"Mr. Hardy," answered Bax, "I'd rather not meddle with the box till the
-constable cooms; he'll be 'ere in a minute. He allus smokes his pipe by
-his fireside at this hour. If it should be the wrong box--"
-
-"It's the right box," exclaimed Hardy, standing with the trunk on his
-shoulder.
-
-"I'd rather wait for Rogers to make it all right," said Bax.
-
-Hardy sent a sea blessing at his head, and without another word walked
-rapidly to the cart, threw the box in, took the reins off the gate,
-sprang on to the seat, and drove off.
-
-"Stop, sir; stop, for God's sake!" shouted Bax, beginning to run. But
-he was too fat to run. He was blowing hard when he gained the road, and
-stood staring after his cart. Hardy whipped the mare into a gallop, and
-gained the farm in half the time that Bax would have taken to measure
-the ground. He drew up at the gate, secured the horse by the reins,
-and, shouldering the trunk, marched to the door, and was admitted by
-Miss Bax.
-
-"Where's father?" was her first cry.
-
-"I left him enjoying a yarn with Mrs. Armstrong," answered Hardy,
-thrusting with the trunk into the room, where Julia was still sitting
-just as he had left her. "There are your clothes, Miss Armstrong," said
-the sailor, lowering the box on to the floor.
-
-"Father's come to no 'urt, I hope?" said Miss Bax, addressing Miss
-Armstrong.
-
-Hardy related exactly the story of his repulse by the insolent
-stepmother, his bringing the box down-stairs alone, Bax's fear of the
-law, and so forth.
-
-"And now," said he, "as you've not gone to bed, Miss Armstrong, I'll
-sit down and keep you company, and smoke one more pipe, and wait for
-the constable."
-
-"Well, if father's all right," said Miss Bax, "he'll be here with the
-constable, and soon, I hope; but it's all up-hill, and his wind don't
-favour him. I've got help at the back, and will put the mare up," and
-thus speaking she passed out, and left the young couple alone.
-
-"So she actually sent for a constable!" exclaimed Julia, whilst Hardy
-filled his pipe, and looked at the grog bottle on the table. "Could you
-imagine a more horrible woman?"
-
-"Here are the goods anyhow," said Hardy, striking a match. "It's your
-box, of course--I mean, I've made no mistake, I hope."
-
-"Certainly it is my box," she exclaimed, slightly flushing and poising
-her hands on her hips, and dropping her head at him in a posture that
-brightened his eyes with delight, "and all I possess in this wide world
-is in it."
-
-"I would not like to be the constable if he touches it or is even
-insolent over it," said Hardy, stretching backwards his broad
-shoulders, with a glance at himself in the little fly-protected mirror.
-He then poured out some whisky and water, and sat down near Julia.
-
-"She did not express any astonishment at my leaving home?" said the
-girl.
-
-"The dog did most of the talk," he answered, "and made for my choicest
-corn," and he looked at his boot, which exhibited the indent of the
-beast's teeth. "How your father could have--"
-
-"Was she drunk?" asked Julia.
-
-"I dare say she was. Some people get drunk without showing it. Miss
-Armstrong, I am no longer surprised that you should run away."
-
-She smiled, but with mingled sadness and bitterness, and said, "If my
-father comes in with Bax and the constable, I shall walk out, and I beg
-you to give me your protection, Mr. Hardy, and to save me from seeing
-him."
-
-Hardy bowed, but made no answer. He was a man of careless thoughts and
-many heedless views in all sorts of directions, a sailor, in short,
-whose horizon was salt and limited, yet he could not help feeling
-shocked at the extravagance of fear and dislike which the half-pay
-captain had by bitter neglect and a Christless marriage excited in
-the breast of a girl who seemed a true-hearted, heroic young woman,
-beautiful of figure, and with a face of romantic interest.
-
-"Can the constable do anything if he comes?" she asked.
-
-"Oh, yes," answered the sailor, "he can walk out. In what law book is
-it written that a man may not possess his own? That is yours," said he,
-pointing to the trunk, "and if Constable Rogers touches it we'll have
-him before the magistrates, of whom, by the way, my father is one."
-
-He looked at her very thoughtfully, and she looked at him till her gray
-eyes drooped to her lap. The Persian kitten had left the room, and she
-had nothing to toy with but her handkerchief. Now, by the expression of
-Hardy's face, you could have said that he fastened his eyes upon her,
-not out of feeling, nor out of the sense of being alone with her, nor
-of the enjoyment of the spectacle of her matchless figure, but because
-he was maturing thoughts concerning her well-being. He had certainly a
-most honest face, and you tasted the manliness of his nature in each
-utterance and in every smile.
-
-"I want to talk to you," said he, "about our arrival in London. I
-must get you close to the docks. I'll put you in the way of making a
-few inquiries whilst I am busy on board my ship; meanwhile I shall be
-asking questions."
-
-"Oh, Mr. Hardy, what should I have done had I not met you?" she cried,
-in an irrepressible outburst of gratitude, and again he saw tears in
-her eyes, for she had lived hard and had fared hard for some years now,
-and kindness easily broke her down, as one long divorced from home will
-melt on her return to the sound of the music that her mother loved and
-sang to her.
-
-"Do you know London?" said the sailor.
-
-"I was never in London," she answered.
-
-"Have you ever seen a ship?"
-
-"I came home in a ship from India," she replied, "but I was too young
-to remember the vessel."
-
-"You will not like the East End of London," said Hardy. "I don't know
-why sailors should make the places they live in dirty, yet it is true
-that after leaving Whitechapel the closer you draw to the docks, the
-grimier life looks. Jack has spent his money, you see, and is going
-away tipsy and ragged, and what he leaves behind him is anything but
-sweet, and they serve him as though he were a Yahoo. Look at his
-lodging-house and his boarding-house, at the dens in which he revolves
-to the ghastly notes of a black fiddler, with objects fit only to be
-lectured upon, or for the show of a Barnum. Take his line of railway,
-the Blackwall line; the farmers wouldn't send their swine to market in
-the carriages, and so the sailor travels in them."
-
-"How long have you been at sea, Mr. Hardy?"
-
-"I went to sea when I was fourteen years old, and I am now twenty-six."
-
-"In twelve years you have become a mate?"
-
-"Chief mate," he said.
-
-"Oh," she exclaimed, "what would I give if you carried a stewardess,
-and your captain would consent to take me!"
-
-"I wish it could be contrived," said he, in his plain, straight way,
-"but owners never ship people they don't want. Even if I had influence,
-an objection would be raised that you were the only woman on board."
-
-"But I have read," she exclaimed, "that a captain takes his wife to
-sea, and she may be the only woman in the ship."
-
-"Ay, but she's the captain's wife," he answered, with a smile, "and if
-she were a shipload of females she couldn't be more."
-
-They then began to talk of London and the East End, of a convenient
-part to take a lodging in, how it was certain that she must obtain
-a berth somewhere or somehow before Hardy sailed; and whilst they
-conversed the door opened, and Bax entered, purple with exercise and
-beer.
-
-"Well," said he, breathing comfortably, as though he had refreshed
-himself before entering with rest and ale, "that was a fine trick of
-yourn, Mr. Hardy."
-
-"Never mind about that, Bax," exclaimed the young sailor, cutting him
-short in his peremptory quarter-deck way. "Where's the constable?"
-
-"He bain't cooming," answered Bax. "He knows the difference between
-climbing up a hill and climbing into bed."
-
-"Sit down, Bax, and take some whisky," said Hardy, both he and Julia
-laughing; and after waiting for the farmer to mingle some whisky and
-water and pull a chair, he said, "Tell us what passed, Bax."
-
-"Well," began Bax, "it was just after you'd trotted out of sight,
-with me hallering, being afraid of the law I was, when oop cooms the
-maid 'long with Constable Rogers. 'Oh, Mr. Rogers,' sings out Mrs.
-Armstrong, who was standin' in her door, 'the doctor's son's been 'ere
-in Farmer Bax's cart, and busted into this house, and gone off with my
-stepdarter's troonk agin my commands.' 'Where's your stepdarter?' said
-the constable, not speaking overcivil--blamed if I thinks he likes the
-woman, and he didn't love her the better for routing of him out. 'I
-don't know,' answered Mrs. Armstrong. 'Yes, you do,' says I. 'She's
-opp stopping in my house along with the gent as fetched her luggage.'
-'What do you want me to do?' says Rogers. 'Your duty,' answers Mrs.
-Armstrong, 'twixt a snap of her teeth that was like cocking a goon at
-him. 'What do constables usually do when they're called in to houses
-which have been busted into and goods taken, otherwise stolen, agin
-orders?' Here Bax laughed slowly, as though recollecting something
-in this passage of words which he could not communicate, but which,
-nevertheless, he could enjoy. 'But there was no busting in here
-that I can see,' says Rogers, looking at me; 'you knocked and rung,
-didn't you?' 'Why, yes, of course we did,' says I, 'and the gent
-spoke the lady as civil as though she had been a maid of hanner or
-the queen herself.' 'Oh, what a liar, what a beast you must be!' says
-Mrs. Armstrong, screaming like. 'He forces his way oop-stairs, Mr.
-Constable, and brings down the box on his shoulder, me standing at the
-foot of the steps, and telling him not to touch it.' 'Was he sent by
-the party as the box belongs to?' asks the constable. 'Certainly he
-was, Mr. Rogers,' says I. 'They're going away to-morrow by the early
-train, and she naturally wanted her box to take with her.' 'There's
-nothing for me 'ere to interfere with that I can see,' says Rogers,
-drawing himself up, and puttin' on the face of a judge delivering a
-vardick. 'The lady has a right to her own. Your door was knocked on
-civilly, and the gent she asked to bring it away did so, and there's
-northen for me to meddle with;' and with that, without saying good
-night, he turns his back, and walks into the road, me at his side, and
-she hallering arter him that he didn't do his duty, and she'd lodge a
-complaint agin him, and 'ave the place cleared of a stoopid old fool.
-'She's like my cat when he begins to talk to Springett's cat over the
-wall,' says Mr. Rogers. 'I wish the young lady well out of it, I do.
-Good-night, Mr. Bax.' So I sets off 'ome, and that's just what all
-'appened."
-
-Julia, though she had laughed and often smiled, now sat looking subdued
-with grief and disgrace. It was horrible to the feelings of a lady to
-possess such a stepmother as the wretch who owned the little dog that
-bit, and horrible also to hear her represented and dramatised in the
-language of Bax in the presence of the man who, as God had willed it,
-seemed the only friend she possessed in this wide world. Nevertheless,
-they continued talking until eleven o'clock, by which hour Bax had
-grown too maudlin for human companionship.
-
-Julia went to bed, and Bax rolled through the door to the back premises
-to send his daughter to the young sailor. All that he requested was a
-rug, a blanket, and a pillow, and then when the house was locked up,
-and Miss Bax had bid him goodnight, he turned down the lamp, snugged
-himself on the sofa, and lay listening to Miss Julia's restless pacing
-overhead. There was sleeplessness in her walk; but the delicate
-tramp of her tireless feet ceased at last. He thought of her in her
-loneliness, and pity moved his heart, and he vowed that he would see
-her in safety, buoyed by a full promise of independence in the future,
-before he left England.
-
-The window stood open a little way, and all night-sounds were clear.
-The stream babbled in the road, and its voice was like the syllabling
-of the perfumes stealing darkling down into the valley. He heard the
-distant hooting of owls like the crying of idiot boys, one seeking the
-other, and the thin thunder of the distant railway was a night-sound,
-together with the shuddering of the dry autumn leaves upon the boughs
-as though the trees shivered to the chill of the passing moan of air.
-And then Hardy fell asleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE EAST INDIA DOCK ROAD
-
-
-At about two o'clock on the following day a cab of the old type, with
-rattling windows, straw as though fresh from the tramp of swine, a
-wheezing cabman, encumbered with capes, shawls, and rugs, with nothing
-but a drunken nose glowing under the sallow brim of a rain-bronzed
-hat--this old cab, with a corded trunk hopping on top of it betwixt the
-iron fencing, drew up at a house in the East India Dock Road.
-
-Mr. Hardy, the gentleman whom we left asleep on the sofa in Bax's farm,
-got out, leaving Miss Julia Armstrong sitting in a cab, and knocked on
-the door, which was opened in a few moments by a little woman in the
-clothes of a widow, clean and neat in person, with a wistful eye which
-softened her face into a look of kindness.
-
-"Glad to see you, Mr. Hardy," she immediately said. "I got your letter,
-sir. Your room's quite ready."
-
-"Well, I can't say I'm glad to see _you_, Mrs. Brierley, because you
-know what seeing you means to me. Did your husband love the stowing
-job, and the hauling out through the gates, with a crowd of drunken
-Dagos on the fok'sle, and the dockmaster bursting blood-vessels in
-expostulations to the mud pilot?"
-
-She seemed to smile, but her attention was elsewhere. She had caught
-sight of Julia in the cab, and was dodging Mr. Hardy, who stood right
-in the way, to get a better sight of her.
-
-"I want a lodging for that young lady you are trying to see," said
-Hardy. "Now say at once that you have a very comfortable bedroom for
-her in this house."
-
-"You don't tell me that you are married, sir?" exclaimed Mrs. Brierley,
-putting this question just as she might put her eye to a keyhole before
-answering.
-
-"No, nor keeping company with her, as you people call it," he replied.
-"It is a romantic story, and you shall hear the whole of it, provided
-that you can accommodate her with a bedroom, otherwise--mum!"
-
-"Mr. Hardy," said the widow, with some earnestness, "you've long used
-this house. You knew my poor husband. My struggle has been to keep it
-a thoroughly respectable home for them who patronise me, and you'll
-not take it amiss, sir, I'm sure, if I ask you, is she a lady you can
-recommend on your honour as a sailor man?"
-
-"I swear, Mrs. Brierley," exclaimed Hardy, with great feeling, "that
-she is a pure, charming, heart-broken lady, the daughter of a naval
-officer, whose sword was once at the service of his country."
-
-"Then, sir, I have a very comfortable bedroom," answered the widow.
-"How long will she be wanting it for?"
-
-"She shall engage it by the week," he answered, and walked to the door
-of the cab. "Tumble down, my lad, off that perch of yours," he shouted
-to the cabman, who seemed to have fallen asleep, "and carry that trunk
-into the house."
-
-Both pavements were filled with people, walking the everlasting walk
-of the London streets. Numbers had the appearance of seamen, some of
-them lurched in liquor; there were numerous black and chocolate faces,
-here and there a turban; grimy women flitted past in old shawls and
-rakishly-perched bonnets; roistering young wenches flaunted past with
-feathers in their hats, with cheeks deeply coloured, with yellow brows
-adorned with jet-like love-locks; and chill as it was, children went by
-with naked feet, and the shuddering flesh of their backs showed through
-their rags, filthy-eyed, hatless, and all the glory they had trailed
-from their God had died out in the atmosphere of fog, which added bulk
-to the thunderous omnibus, and made the fleet hansom a shadow down the
-road.
-
-"The landlady," said Hardy, putting his head into the cab, "has a
-comfortable bedroom at your disposal. We cannot do better. She is
-a thoroughly respectable woman, the widow of a master-mariner, who
-commanded brigs, and so on."
-
-He opened the door, and Julia jumped out, and they went together into
-the narrow passage with the cabman and the trunk following them.
-
-The landlady, curtseying her greeting to Julia, admitted them into her
-own private room, which was, in short, the front parlour. The cabman
-was paid, and went away looking at the shillings in the palm of his
-hand. In a very short time it was settled that Julia was to have the
-use of this parlour for her meals, and there would be no extra charge.
-The only other lodgers in the house were a sea captain and his wife.
-
-The parlour was worth a pause and a look round. No apartment was
-ever more nautically equipped. The very clock was a dial fitted into
-the mainsail of a brass ship; the candlesticks on the mantelpiece
-represented mermaids; the walls were embellished with pictures of ships
-and those carvings which sailors delight in: ships on a wind, half
-their ghastly white canvas showing against the board, and the water
-very sloppy and fearfully blue; there were models of ships, and an old
-galleon in ivory stood under glass on a table in the window. A boy's
-heart would have beat high in this room. It was full of curiosities;
-artful carvings by whalemen, out of the bone or teeth of the mammoth of
-the sea; queer findings along shore under the Southern Cross, weapons
-of cannibals, heathenish jars, earthen vessels which had been the
-sepulchres of the remains of broiled whites.
-
-After a little talk Mrs. Brierley took Julia up-stairs to her bedroom.
-Hardy, who had often before viewed the curiosities, wandered again
-round the room, but his mind was musing over other things, and soon
-he came to a stand at the window. The lookout was gloomy and grimy;
-opposite were a tobacconist, a house in which a stevedore lived, two
-lodging-houses, a pastry-cook, and a public-house. There was a great
-deal of mud in the road, the sky hung down sallow and dingy, and so
-close that the crooked black smoke, working out of a hundred shapes of
-chimney-pots, seemed to pierce it and vanish. A change indeed from the
-autumn glories of the country which the couple were newly from, where
-the hillsides, still thick with the leaves of the summer, were gashed
-with the red fires of the coming ruining winter; where the clear pale
-blue sky sank with its faint splendour of sunshine to the sharp, dark,
-terrace-like heights, which in their red breaks and scars of autumn
-overlooked the valley and the sheltered houses, and the quiet breast of
-river floating under the arch of the reflected bridge.
-
-A man, thought Hardy, accepts a large obligation when he undertakes to
-look after a girl. But what a beautiful figure she has, and her face
-appeals to me. I cannot meet her eyes without feeling that I am in
-love with her. Shall I be able to get her a berth before I sail? If I
-cannot, ought I to leave her alone in London with about seven pounds
-ten in her pocket?
-
-His brow contracted, and he hissed a tune through his teeth whilst he
-pondered. That thoughtless devil, her father, he mused, never came near
-Bax's farm. What is it to him that his daughter has bolted from her
-brutal home, and gone away with a young fellow who, for all the beggar
-cares, may leave her behind him in London in shame and destitution?
-'Tis rather a tight corner, though. And he would have gone on
-meditating but for being interrupted by the entrance of Julia, followed
-in a respectful way by the widow.
-
-"It is a very nice bedroom," said Julia. "I shall be very comfortable
-whilst I am here."
-
-"I suppose you have told Mrs. Brierley all about it," exclaimed Hardy,
-whilst Julia seated herself, posturing her head with her unconscious,
-inimitable grace, as she glanced round the sights of the room, and
-resting her hands on her hips and crossing her feet, to the undoubted
-admiration of the widow, who had on her entrance admired her beautiful
-figure.
-
-"Yes, sir, yes," said the widow; "and I'm truly sorry for the young
-lady, but don't doubt she'll find a berth, and do well where she's
-going."
-
-"Miss Armstrong," said Hardy, "I'm not due at the docks until
-to-morrow, and then I shall put in for an afternoon off. This afternoon
-we shall spend without troubling ourselves about anything. We are
-human, and must eat, just as every night we must put ourselves away in
-a frame of iron or wooden pillars, covered with blankets and sheets,
-and sleep, or else we go mad and die. There is a decent eating-house
-not far from here; we will go there and dine. You'll have tea ready for
-us, Mrs. Brierley, by six; and if the evening hangs, which it will, we
-will look in at a music-hall and purchase a shilling's-worth of pure
-vulgarity, which to me, when perfectly unaffected, is more humourous
-and more artistically refined than much of the genteel comedy of the
-West End theatres."
-
-Julia laughed, and looked at the widow, who said, "I don't visit the
-halls myself. They've got one good singer at Whitechapel, I hear. He
-comes in dressed as a coster, and brings a donkey with him which he
-sings about, and they say it's so affecting that even strong sailors
-cry."
-
-"If he sang of the donkey's breakfast Jack would cry more," said Hardy,
-and saying he would return in a minute, went to his bedroom for a wash
-down and a brush up, leaving the widow explaining to Julia that the
-term _donkey's breakfast_ signified the bundle of straw which sailors
-who are reckless of their money ashore carry on board ship with them as
-a bed.
-
-Whilst he was going up-stairs a man dressed in blue serge, smoking
-a curly meerschaum pipe, came out of a bedroom and passed into an
-apartment that had been converted into a sitting-room. They glanced at
-each other, and Hardy went up another flight to his bedroom. Here he
-stayed a few minutes. His carpet-bag had arrived before him, and in it
-were a change of apparel, two or three shirts, brush and comb, and the
-like. The rest of his duds were in his sea-chest, which had been sent
-to the docks. He smartened himself up and looked a manly young fellow.
-The light of the sea was in his eye, and the freshness of its breath
-was in his cheery expression, and the colour of his cheek was warm with
-the sun-glow.
-
-"Are you ready?" said he to Julia; and they went out, attended to
-the door by the widow, who appeared to have taken a liking to Miss
-Armstrong; but no one with a woman's heart in her could have heard the
-girl's story without being moved.
-
-Hardy paused on the doorstep to say to Mrs. Brierley, "Is the man in
-blue serge, who smokes a meerschaum, the captain who's lodging with
-you?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"What ship does he command?"
-
-"The _Glamis Castle_."
-
-"I know her," exclaimed Hardy; "a fine Indiaman. What the deuce does a
-swell like him do in these lodgings? He should put up at a hotel."
-
-"His home's at Penge," answered the widow, "and two or three weeks
-before he sails he always comes and stops with me, and brings his wife.
-Aren't my lodgings good enough for the captain of an Indiaman?"
-
-"They are good enough for the owner of an Indiaman. They are good
-enough for a German prince," said Hardy, in his pleasantest manner.
-"Should I bring this lady here if they were not of the highest?" And
-nodding to her he stepped on to the pavement, and Julia walked by his
-side.
-
-He was free in his comments upon the nastiness of the East End of
-London, and by his abuse of the mud and the shops, and the quality of
-the passing folks, he implied an apology for introducing Miss Armstrong
-into such a neighbourhood.
-
-"It's sweeter to me than Bodley," she said, referring to the place
-she came from. "What is the good of fine houses and broad streets and
-handsome carriages to a girl who has no money, who has but one friend,
-from whom she must be shortly separated for ever, perhaps, and whose
-most ambitious dream _dare_ not go beyond finding a cabin as emigrant
-or stewardess aboard a ship, and the berth of a servant, or, which is
-worse, a nursery governess when she arrives?"
-
-They walked for awhile in silence; but the silence was in their mouths,
-not in the street. One of the music-murdering organs of those days
-was playing at the street corner they were approaching. Huge wagons
-were grinding thunder into the solid earth. There was a fight over the
-way--two Italians were going for each other. A crowd of dirty women
-were dancing round them, encouraging them by the stimulating plaudits
-of the stews. An optician, with a row of chronometers in his window,
-stood upon his doorstep howling, "Police!" They turned the corner,
-and the notes of the organ died away behind them, and after a little
-walking they arrived at an eating-house with big windows, and a sheet
-of paper stuck upon the glass with red wafers, telling what was to be
-eaten inside.
-
-Hardy and Julia walked in. It was a long room with tables, separated
-one from another by brass rails and baize curtains, and nettings for
-receiving headgear. About a dozen people were in it--some of them
-neighbouring tradesmen, some of them obviously captains and mates. With
-a few of the men were women, who were evidently wives or sweethearts;
-in fact, the prices charged kept the place sweet.
-
-Hardy and Miss Armstrong sat down side by side at an empty table. A
-waiter arrived, looking hard at the lady, and the sailor gave his
-orders. He guessed the girl was hungry; he knew that _he_ was, and
-if he could not have spent a sovereign when ten shillings would have
-handsomely sufficed, he would have been no true salt. It is worth
-saying here that all the money our friend had was about two hundred
-pounds, and he had come to London with twenty sovereigns in his pocket,
-and a chequebook. As he was an only child he would inherit his father's
-leavings; but what would they amount to? A country practitioner who
-dispensed his own physic, and was glad to get three-and-sixpence a
-visit! A country practitioner with thirteen hundred pounds in bad debts
-on his books, and a horse, gig, and boy to keep! Still, whatever the
-doctor left would be George Hardy's, who did not value the prospect
-beyond the worth of the furniture, and had begun to save a little on
-his own account, with some light dream of amassing enough to enable him
-to purchase shares in a ship, which he would command.
-
-He ordered a good dinner from the bill of fare, and asked the waiter
-if the champagne of the establishment was real wine or chemicals. The
-waiter named a good brand, and swore there was nothing in the market to
-equal it. It was nine shillings a bottle.
-
-"I never drink champagne," said Julia.
-
-"But I do," exclaimed Hardy. "Bear a hand, waiter. We've been fasting
-since eight this morning."
-
-The waiter sidled away.
-
-"Champagne is the best of all drinks for young ladies," said Hardy;
-"and it helps the spirits of chief mates who are bound away on long
-voyages. What shall we do when we've dined?"
-
-"I should like to see the docks," said the girl.
-
-"Not to-day," exclaimed Hardy, pursing his mouth into an expression of
-disgust. "Let us hug the land as long as we can; besides, it will be
-drawing on to four o'clock before we've dined, and the docks and the
-ships in it will be invisible."
-
-As he spoke these words the man whom he had caught a sight of in his
-lodgings smoking a meerschaum pipe came into the dining-rooms with a
-lady, whom you at once guessed was his wife. They looked right and
-left, and took a table exactly opposite that occupied by Hardy and
-Miss Armstrong. The man who had been represented by Mrs. Brierley as
-the commander of an East Indiaman, named the _Glamis Castle_, was
-short and square, with a strong, red beard, and shorn upper lip; his
-eyebrows were reddish and habitually knitted, as though from long years
-of steadfast staring into the eyes of the wind. His eyes were dark and
-sharp in their glances; his brow was square as his form, and delicately
-browned by the sun. The lady was a homely-looking woman, in a bonnet
-and velvet mantle. She began to pull off her gloves, and her companion,
-after bawling "Waiter," in a quarter-deck roar, gazed fixedly at Hardy,
-who gazed back.
-
-All the time the man was giving his orders to the waiter, with
-occasional references to the lady, he kept his eyes bent on Hardy, who
-muttered to Julia, "I believe I know that man." The moment he had done
-with the waiter he rose, and stepped over to Hardy.
-
-"Is your name George Hardy?" said he, with a slight glance at the girl.
-
-"Yes," answered Hardy, "and now that I've got the bearings of you, I
-don't need to ask if your name is James Smedley."
-
-They clasped hands.
-
-"Let me introduce you," said Hardy, "to Miss Julia Armstrong, daughter
-of Commander Armstrong, late of the Royal Navy. Captain Smedley, of the
-_Glamis Castle_, Miss Armstrong."
-
-"How did you know that?" asked Smedley, exchanging a bow with the girl,
-whose peculiar grace of form, whose charm of movement, whose face,
-romantic and pleading, with the gifts of nature and the passions of her
-heart, his swift eye was observing with pleasure and curiosity.
-
-"I am stopping in the house you're lodging in," answered Hardy, "and
-Mrs. Brierley told me who you were. Are you going to dine here?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Is that your wife?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Bring her across, Smedley, and we'll make a dinner party."
-
-Mrs. Smedley had been bobbing to catch a view of Miss Armstrong, and
-the bugles in her bonnet twinkled like fireflies as she swayed her head.
-
-"Miss Armstrong's story," continued Hardy, "is so moving that Mrs.
-Smedley will be grieved to the depths of her kindly heart when she
-hears it."
-
-Julia looked down, and Captain Smedley studied her for a few moments,
-then wheeled abruptly, and stepped over to his wife. After a brief
-confab they both came to Hardy's table, and Mrs. Smedley was introduced
-to Miss Armstrong and her companion.
-
-"Do you sail with your husband?" asked Julia.
-
-"No," answered Mrs. Smedley, who seemed struck by the girl. "The owners
-won't let the captains carry their wives with them."
-
-"A ship," said Julia, "should never be so safe as when a captain's wife
-is on board, because of course _her_ presence would make the commander
-doubly vigilant and anxious."
-
-"Haw, haw!" laughed Smedley.
-
-The fish which had been ordered was now placed upon the table, and
-on both sides they began to eat. The waiter uncorked the champagne,
-and Hardy told him to fill the glasses opposite. This was resisted by
-Mrs. Smedley, a homely woman, who declared that for her part she loved
-nothing better than bitter beer. Again her husband "Haw-haw'd," and
-said they would see Hardy's champagne through, and then he would order
-another bottle. He believed it was not usual in polite society to drink
-champagne with fish; but it was all one to him. Champagne went down the
-same way, whether its messmate was fish or flesh.
-
-"Are you leaving England?" inquired Mrs. Smedley, addressing Julia, at
-whom she continued to look hard, though not in the least rudely, as if
-she found a good deal in the girl that was infinitely beyond the range
-of her speculations.
-
-"I am endeavouring to leave it," answered Julia, looking at her with
-her head a little on one side.
-
-"May I tell them your story?" said Hardy, "for we shall want our
-friend's influence," he added, with a nod at his old shipmate.
-
-"Oh, yes, tell them," exclaimed Julia, a little passionately; "it will
-account for my being in the East India Dock Road," and her face relaxed
-as she looked at Mrs. Smedley, who smiled upon her in a motherly way.
-
-Hardy in his blunt, sailorly fashion began. He did not spare Captain
-Armstrong, neither did he spare Julia's stepmother. He warmed up, and
-put the girl's case in forcible terms. Asked what a young English lady
-was to do who was, to all intents and purposes, expelled from her
-father's roof by the brutality of a drunken stepmother, he related some
-of her experiences in nursing and in seeking independence in other
-ways, just as she had related them to him. He spoke of his finding her
-unconscious by the wayside, and how he was determined to take this
-poor, friendless young lady by the hand, and help her to the utmost
-stretch of his ability to find a home, a refuge across the seas.
-
-"Don't cry, my dear," said Mrs. Smedley. "I have known more cases than
-yours. It is very hard--and to be motherless--but you cannot allow your
-heart to be broken by a bad woman; and I think you are acting wisely in
-resolving to go abroad."
-
-Julia put her handkerchief into her lap, and closed her knife and fork.
-Hardy poured some champagne into her glass, and bade her drink.
-
-"What's the lady's idea of going abroad?" said Captain Smedley, whose
-face exhibited no more signs of feeling than had it been a rump steak.
-
-"She has no money, and wants to work her passage out as a stewardess,"
-replied Hardy.
-
-"And when she arrives?" said Captain Smedley.
-
-"She is bound to find something to do," answered Hardy. "The colonies
-are yearning for young English ladies."
-
-"Young English domestics, you mean," said Captain Smedley. "What is the
-good of ladies? What is the good of gentlemen in lands where labour,
-and labour only, is wanted?"
-
-"Why would not you go out as an emigrant, Miss Armstrong?" said Mrs.
-Smedley. "Of course," she added, "I presume you have Australia in your
-mind?"
-
-"I would go out as anything as long as I could get out," answered Julia.
-
-"Take my advice and don't talk of emigration," said Captain Smedley.
-"You will be miserably fed and miserably berthed. You will have a
-matron and a surgeon over you, and the discipline will make you wish
-yourself overboard. Your associates will be mean and dirty wretches,
-who would have qualified for transportation could they have made
-sure of the sentence. Your ship will be ill-found. They talk of the
-emigrants marrying on their arrival. Yes, but what is a young lady like
-you going to say to such suitors as offer? You wouldn't like to marry a
-convict? You wouldn't like to settle down with a hairdresser in a back
-street? Don't you go out in an emigrant ship, Miss Armstrong."
-
-"It is all very fine talking about _don't_," said Hardy, "but what we
-want is _do_. Miss Armstrong wishes to leave England for good. She
-pockets her pride, and is willing to work. She has no money, and I must
-secure her a berth somehow before I sail, because I am not going to
-leave her alone in London, where she's friendless; and friendlessness
-in London where all is opulence and misery, like the front and the
-back of the moon--one shining, one ice-cold as death, and black--is
-heart-breaking, and for many, Smedley, the invitation of the dark
-waters of the Thames has been welcome."
-
-"My God! you're just the same--always sky high," said Smedley; and he
-drank some champagne out of the bottle he had ordered. "When you were a
-midshipman under me you were talking like that, and you're talking it
-still."
-
-"Surely a man can put his hand in the tar-bucket without blacking his
-whole body," said Hardy, looking at Mrs. Smedley, whose face was in
-sympathy with his speech. "When I'm ashore I talk like a gentleman. One
-can't be always cussing and swearing; and oh! says you"--and his fine,
-dark keen eyes showed there was laughter in him--"Give me Jack Muck,
-nothing short of Jack Muck. Hitch up, turn your quid, pull your greasy
-forelock, mind that you're boozed. Oh, Lord! Smedley, ha'n't you had
-enough of it?"
-
-"Miss Armstrong," said Smedley, rolling his eyes slowly from Hardy to
-the girl, "why do you want to go to Australia? Why don't you go to
-India?"
-
-"India," muttered Hardy, "what's she going to do in India?"
-
-"No, but I tell you what," said Smedley, with emphasis, "such a young
-lady as that may do before she gets out there."
-
-Julia gazed at him inquiringly, and Mrs. Smedley turned her head to
-watch his face.
-
-"Don't you know, Miss Armstrong," continued Smedley, "that there is no
-marriage market in the world to equal an East Indiaman?"
-
-Julia flushed a little, but did not speak.
-
-"She takes out young people," went on the commander of the _Glamis
-Castle_, "called Griffins. They are young men with a glass in their
-eye and susceptible hearts behind their waistcoats. They also take out
-planters, merchants, gentlemen going to join houses--"
-
-"And ladies," interrupted Hardy. "Ladies in plenty."
-
-"You know nothing about it," said Captain Smedley. "A few ladies,
-most of them married. Now," he continued, "such a young lady as Miss
-Armstrong, no matter what position she fills on board, stands a
-first-rate chance of finding a husband before her arrival in India.
-Your emigrant ship is not going to provide any chance of the sort."
-
-"I do not think of marriage," said Julia, who after colouring had
-turned rather paler than usual, but she spoke calmly and even with
-sweetness, as though grateful for the interest these strangers were
-taking in her.
-
-"Oh," cried Captain Smedley, with warmth, "but you _must_ think of
-marriage. It is a condition of every woman's life. It is thought of
-from about the age of twelve until it happens, and nothing else is
-thought of. All the milliners and dressmakers contribute to the dream.
-It is the one idea in the darlings' heads, and of course it is a wrong
-one."
-
-"What will Miss Armstrong think of such stuff and nonsense?" said Mrs.
-Smedley.
-
-"What's a girl to do when she gets to India if she isn't married?"
-asked Hardy.
-
-"They want governesses and nursemaids, I dare say," replied the
-captain. "Let her call upon the missionary. I took out the Bishop of
-Calcutta last voyage. He's a dear old chap, and many a yarn we spun
-together. I'll venture to say that a letter of introduction to him from
-me will ensure this young lady a berth."
-
-Hardy, putting his elbow on the table, rested his cheek in the palm of
-his hand, and looked at Miss Armstrong musingly. Nobody spoke until
-Hardy started, and turning to Smedley, said, "Can you give her a berth
-on board your ship?"
-
-"I am thinking of it," was the answer.
-
-Julia looked almost startled, and exclaimed to Hardy, "We should be
-going different ways."
-
-Smedley and his wife exchanged glances.
-
-"I must see you safe on board bound to somewhere," answered Hardy,
-softly. "I am bound to Melbourne; afterward to a New Zealand port. Your
-ship will be bound to Calcutta. These places are different ways, and
-India is the same thing."
-
-She looked down upon the table in silence. The other three saw how it
-was with her, poor girl, and how impossible it was, and Hardy then felt
-_this_ with a sort of yearning of the heart that was as bad as sorrow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE "GLAMIS CASTLE"
-
-
-It was nearly half-past four when Hardy and the others rose from the
-dinner-table. Not that they had been eating all this time. They had
-prolonged their sitting over coffee and in talk, and there was no
-obligation to go so as to make way for others, because the hour was
-neither lunch nor dinner time, and scarce more than two or three tables
-were occupied.
-
-Nothing had been settled when they stood up and the ladies began to put
-on their gloves. It was dark: the dining-rooms were lighted up, and in
-the street the fog, though not dense, was wet as rain; the lamplighters
-were running along the curbstones, and in a chemist's shop a little way
-down the green and red waters in the big glass vases dully glimmered
-like the side-lights of a ship, heading a straight course for the
-dining-rooms.
-
-"This is just the sort of evening," said Smedley, "in which to visit a
-friend's grave at some churchyard hereabouts. On evenings of this sort
-drunken men fall into holes full of water near the docks. The spirit of
-the Isle of Dogs stalks abroad this evening; you can see him in the sky
-and taste him in the wind. What shall we do?"
-
-"I told Mrs. Brierley to get some tea ready by six," said Hardy. "This
-is not an evening to walk about in, and now I vote, Miss Armstrong,
-that we do not go to a music-hall to-night. I am for lying snug in
-harbour; are you?"
-
-"I did not care about the idea of the music-hall when you suggested
-it," she said.
-
-"They are vulgar places, unfit for ladies, particularly in these
-parts," exclaimed Mrs. Smedley.
-
-"The cleverest performances I've ever seen I've witnessed in
-music-halls," remarked the captain, "and I never want to hear better
-singing than I've heard at them. Sometimes a cad, who has no respect
-for his own sex, who has no respect for himself as a man, and not
-the faintest sense in the world of what is due to women, comes on
-in evening dress, a white shirt blazing with studs, and a tall hat,
-which he is perpetually shifting upon his head: and this fiend sings
-a song full of _double entendres_, and he sings in greasy notes with
-a lickerish eye; and, strangely enough, I have never yet seen any man
-rise from amongst the audience, climb over the orchestra, and kick the
-animal round and round the stage into the development of a fresh sort
-of music and another kind of words. Otherwise, if you want talent, go
-to the music-halls."
-
-"Shall we go to our lodgings and spend the evening there?" said Mrs.
-Smedley.
-
-"Yes, and drink tea with us," exclaimed Hardy; "and before bedtime,
-Smedley, we shall have settled the business of Miss Julia Armstrong."
-
-Captain Smedley gave his arm to his wife, and Hardy gave his arm
-to Miss Armstrong, and out they went, walking briskly so as not
-to get damp, and in a short time they arrived at Mrs. Brierley's
-lodging-house.
-
-The widow had not expected them home so soon, but she speedily lighted
-the gas in the romantically equipped parlour, which she had placed at
-the disposal of Hardy and Julia. The ladies went to their rooms to
-remove their outdoor clothes, and presently they were all seated in the
-widow's parlour of curiosities.
-
-"Where did old Brierley get all these things from?" said Captain
-Smedley, looking round him. "Did he reckon to start a museum before the
-notion of a lodging-house entered his head? Man and boy, I've followed
-the sea thirty years, and the only curiosity I've got in all that time
-was my wife."
-
-"I feel the compliment," exclaimed Mrs. Smedley.
-
-"A curiosity," continued the captain, "because she is all goodness,
-loyalty, and affection."
-
-And he got up and kissed her, and sitting again continued his eulogy,
-which was a sign that he had dined well and felt comfortable. The
-ladies did not object to tobacco, and the two sailors filled their
-pipes, Smedley observing that he smoked so many cigars at sea that he
-didn't give a curse even for a prime Havana, though at the high cost of
-seven for sixpence, when he was ashore.
-
-"Don't you think, Miss Armstrong," said he, "that I've put the case
-for the East Indies strongly enough to justify you in listening to my
-advice not to go out to the colonies as an emigrant?"
-
-"I am sure," observed Mrs. Smedley, "you stand a better chance of
-marrying in your own sphere. There are plenty of officers in India in
-want of wives, and I need not say--" She interrupted herself, but
-acted the compliment she intended by glancing significantly at the
-girl's charming figure, and letting her eye repose for a moment or two
-on her face and fine hair. "It will be quickly known that you are the
-daughter of a naval officer."
-
-"I do not think of marriage," said Julia, clasping her hands.
-
-"I like your idea, Smedley, of a letter to the Bishop of Calcutta,"
-exclaimed Hardy. "But how is Miss Armstrong to get out? Could you find
-her a berth aboard of you or in one of your ships?"
-
-"Well, it's like this with us," answered Smedley; "we have six ships,
-and every ship carries a stewardess. Three are away, and the others, I
-know, are provided with stewardesses. The practice is for a person who
-wants the position to call at the offices, and if her qualifications
-are all right her name is put down, and she awaits her chance. Miss
-Armstrong might have to wait a long time, and she doesn't want to do
-so."
-
-Julia shook her head slowly, and Mrs. Smedley said:
-
-"How can she wait, Jim? She has no money, and no friend when Mr. Hardy
-sails."
-
-"Are you anything of a nurse?" inquired the captain.
-
-"I have nursed old ladies, but not children," answered Julia. "But I
-have had some experience in the sick-room."
-
-There was a pause. Smedley filled his pipe thoughtfully.
-
-"Have _you_ a stewardess?" asked Hardy.
-
-"Yes," replied Smedley, "she has been in the ship four voyages."
-
-"What's the pay?" asked Hardy.
-
-"Four pounds a month."
-
-"Does she sign the ship's articles?"
-
-"All the same as if she were an A.B.," replied Smedley.
-
-There was another pause, during which the captain lighted his pipe.
-
-"I can promise nothing," said he, looking at his wife as though he
-was trying to gratify her instead of helping the girl; "but I'll see
-to-morrow if some berth as second or assistant stewardess can be
-contrived. I shall see Mrs. Lambert--that is the stewardess's name,
-and I don't doubt that I can get the office to recognise the need of
-assistance, as I understand we shall be a full ship with a good many
-children."
-
-"You are a real friend," exclaimed Hardy. "It is more than I dared
-expect from you," and he turned to witness the effect of the kindly
-captain's words upon the girl; but her expression was as one who
-gazes at a cheerless prospect. Observing that Hardy watched her, she
-exclaimed, in a low voice, "I can but thank you, Captain Smedley," and
-she bowed her head, leaving it bowed.
-
-There was not much more to be said upon the subject after this; indeed
-it was easily seen that the girl's heart was with Hardy, and as he was
-sailing for Australia she wanted to go there too, which perhaps was
-not idle in her, because it was impossible for her to realise that
-he could not marry her, even if he loved her, which she had no right
-to imagine, as he could not support her ashore, nor as a mate, nor
-even perhaps as a captain, take her to sea with him. But things are
-felt and understood which may not be expressed, and a little before
-Mrs. Brierley and the maid came in with the tea-tray and the cakes
-it was arranged that Hardy should accompany Miss Armstrong on board
-the _Glamis Castle_, which lay not far from the _York_, when Captain
-Smedley hoped to be able to tell her that he had managed to find a
-berth for her aboard his ship.
-
-"It will save a vast deal of anxiety and of time, and it will rescue
-you from the horrors of the emigrant ship," said Hardy to Julia, who
-smiled faintly and looked as though the least expression of sympathy
-would compel her into a passion of tears.
-
-Mrs. Brierley spread a liberal tea upon the table, but not much
-appetite attended it. The subject of the assistant stewardess was
-dropped, and Mrs. Smedley listened with attention, and Julia with
-fictitious interest, to the conversation that was almost entirely
-carried on by Hardy and his friend. They had been shipmates, as we have
-heard--Hardy as midshipman, Smedley as third mate, both occupying the
-midshipmen's quarters in days when Blackwall Liners used to sail with
-twelve or fourteen reefers in buttons and badges, who had sole charge
-of the mizzen-mast, the poop or quarter-deck, the quarter-boats and the
-gig. John Company's flag was then flying, but they had not served in
-that employ. They afterward came together, Smedley as chief mate and
-Hardy as third, in a vessel called the _Asia_, a ship with long skysail
-poles, a stem nearly as up and down as a cutter's, black as night, half
-the length of her aft sparkling with round ports. They talked of this
-ship and of her wonderful passages; how her captain would carry fore,
-main, and topgallant stu'nsails, and pass by ships which thought they
-were cracking on with a topgallantsail set over a single reefed topsail.
-
-Sailors who have been shipmates love this sort of memories, and it
-is like watching the coil of the sea--one blue ridge dissolving in
-the base of another, with the laughter and the thunder of heaving and
-racing brine--to hear them.
-
-Thus they passed the evening, with the help of a little whisky and
-plenty of tobacco, and Julia, sitting beside Mrs. Smedley, told her
-story over again, but fully, and Mrs. Smedley talked of her son, who
-was a young curate of whom she was very proud, not only because of his
-social importance, but because of his eloquence: she declared that
-he preached a better sermon, young as he was, than any minister of
-the gospel in the whole diocese, and the interest Julia took in this
-matter, though the poor girl was thinking all the time of Hardy and the
-East Indiaman, charmed Mrs. Smedley.
-
-The East India docks are among the oldest on the Thames. They embody
-many chapters of the maritime history of this country. They are of
-extraordinary interest to any one who knows the story of the ocean,
-and of the might and majesty of England as the Queen of the Sea. Their
-soup-coloured waters have reflected many different forms and types of
-ships, from the emblazoned, glazed, and castellated stern of the East
-Indiaman to the long, black, yellow-funnelled, three-masted steamer
-whose straight stem shears through it from Gravesend to New York in
-less time than it took the Indiaman to beat down Channel. The produce
-of many lands litters the quays and fills the sheds. The steam winch
-rattles, the giant arm of crane swings its tons, the stevedore shouts
-in the depths, and the mate yells at the hatchway. The tall masts rise
-into the air, lifting their topmost yards into the yellow obscurity
-up there; figures dangle on the foot ropes, or jockey the yard-arms.
-The house bunting of a score of firms makes a festival to the eye, and
-alongside is the barge, whose slender company do not pay the dues, and
-whose language is beyond the dreams of Houndsditch.
-
-It was Wednesday afternoon, about three o'clock, and the docks were
-full of the animation of the coming and going, and the loading and
-the discharging ships. The air trembled with hoarse voices, with the
-passage of locomotives and wagons, with the rattle of steam machinery,
-with the hissing of escaping vapour. It was the Isle of Dogs, and the
-afternoon was somewhat foggy. In one basin lay a number of fine ships,
-nearly all sailing ships, for there were very few funnels to be seen
-in those days, and along the edge of the wall of this basin two people
-were walking--Hardy and Julia Armstrong. They were two of a great many
-other persons, who were labourers, sailors, and so forth; and as they
-walked slowly, for the road was obstructed by goods and machinery as
-well as by toilers, lumpers, and loafers, Hardy, pointing to a ship
-lying on the other side of the basin, exclaimed:
-
-"That's the _York_."
-
-Julia stopped to look at her. She was not in trim to be seen to
-advantage; her sails were not bent, her running gear was not rove, but
-all saving her royal yards were aloft, and her model, though light
-and showing the green sheathing, was visible in such perfection of
-run, in such elegance of elliptic stern, in such swelling beauty and
-fining grace of schooner cut-water and flaring bow, as could be matched
-only by those lovely creations of the ship-builders' art, the Aberdeen
-clippers.
-
-"She is a beautiful vessel," exclaimed Julia. "I wish you commanded
-her."
-
-"So do I," answered Hardy, running a critical eye over the ship.
-
-"Do you like the captain?"
-
-"I know his name," answered Hardy, "but I've not yet met him. He
-replaced a gray-haired man who was a philanthropist, and held notions
-and opinions which are not appreciated by ship-owners. He was kind to
-his men, and owners cannot die worth millions if kindness to crews
-is tolerated. A sailor to his mind was a man and not a dog, which
-astonished the ship-owners, whose views are otherwise. If the food was
-bad he went on broaching till he came to something sweet, and this was
-an enormity. He would go into the fok'sle and attend upon a sick man,
-and help him so far as kindness and the medicine-chest could. His crew
-would have gone on sailing round the world with him for ever. Such men
-are not fit to command merchant sailors," he added, sarcastically, "and
-so he is discharged, and probably will not find another ship, and God
-knows what he will do, for at his age what _can_ he do?"
-
-They continued their walk until they arrived at the corner of the dock.
-A large full-rigged ship lay there. Her house flag was cream-white with
-a black cross in it; a delicate space of bunting that trembled under
-the golden ball of truck, for this vessel had short royal-mastheads,
-and when the yards were hoisted they sat like a frigate's under the
-eyes of the rigging.
-
-Hardy caused Julia to stop, whilst they yet commanded a view of the
-ship's stern and the whole length of the decks from the poop to the
-topgallant forecastle. She was undoubtedly a very beautiful ship,
-probably the handsomest at that time of them all in the London Docks.
-Her stern's embellishment would have done justice to the imagination of
-the Dutch shipwrights of the seventeenth century. Dull as the day was,
-this _Glamis Castle_, without sunlight to reflect, without the sparkle
-of water to kindle stars and to flash prisms, was lustrous as though
-self-luminous with window and gilt and gorgeous quarter-galleries, and
-upon the sloping ebony of her counter, before it glowed into the yellow
-metal of her brand-new sheathing, were the long white letters of her
-name and her port, and these letters you could read in the water that
-floated stagnant about her rudder and run. Her main-deck and waist
-were full of business; her quarter-deck winch rattled its pawls with
-the noise of a hearse trotted by tipsy men from the graveyard gate;
-the crane was sinking costly burdens into the wide, black yawn of the
-main-hatch; riggers were aloft; preparations for the long voyage round
-the Cape to Calcutta were being pushed forward, as the newspapers
-would say; but, saving the mate, with one foot upon the coaming of the
-main-hatch, watching the slow descent of cargo into the depths, and
-saving the figure of Captain Smedley, sitting on the fore-skylight of
-the poop with an end of cigar in his month, there was then no man upon
-that ship who would have a hand in the navigation of her, from the
-wide breast of river flowing beyond, to that other distant breast of
-river revolting with black corpses and their ships' companies of plumed
-scavengers.
-
-"There's Smedley!" exclaimed Hardy, and Julia looked at the captain
-sitting on the skylight. "If he ships you," he continued, "you will be
-sailing away in a noble craft," and he began to talk to himself: "What
-a hoist of maintopsail! How splendidly stayed her spars are! She'll
-show cloths enough to get knots from the waft of a sea-mew's wing!"
-
-They walked on till they came abreast of Smedley, and then Hardy hailed
-him.
-
-"Come aboard, I'm waiting for you," sang out Smedley, with a flourish
-of his fingers at the peak of his cap. Hardy took the girl's hand, and
-they crossed a short platform of planks stretched between the edge of
-the wall and the ship's bulwarks, and descending two or three steps
-gained the main-deck, whence they made their way to the poop by the
-port ladder. Before they ascended this ladder Hardy stopped Julia to
-look at and admire the cuddy front. It was a true Dutch picture of
-its kind. It resembled the front of a house with its door and three
-brass-protected, red-curtained windows of a side, and a projecting wing
-of cabin on either hand, so that the front was a pleasant recess with
-its roof of poop-deck over it. But the romance of this fancy of cuddy
-front--perished for ever to this and all future generations--lay in the
-carving that lavishly embellished it: a fantastic mixture of anchors
-and flags with masts in full sail peering between, and human figures
-with wings blowing horns. There was uniformity in all this variety,
-and the complicate picture in the dark colours of teak was fraught with
-meaning to the interpreting eye.
-
-The sailor and the girl went on to the poop, a fine stretch of plank,
-but not quite so white as it would be presently, when it had been
-tickled by the holystone, and when the ivory spaces of it would take
-the sun-shed impression of the rigging like rulings in indigo, clear of
-the velvet-violet shadow of the awning.
-
-"Well, here we are," exclaimed Captain Smedley, rising from the
-skylight and speaking with that bluntness which many admired in his
-speech, thinking it sailorly, just as people will inhale doubtful
-odours from an inner harbour and relish them as "ozone." "What do you
-think of the ship, Hardy?"
-
-But though he spoke to Hardy, he kept his eye on Miss Armstrong,
-and was undoubtedly admiring her, particularly her figure, and the
-fascinating cock of her head with its tilted hat.
-
-"She's the finest ship I ever saw," answered Hardy, with real
-enthusiasm. "What a marvellous stern! what a delightful cuddy front!"
-
-"Meant to astonish the natives," said Smedley. "They have settled the
-choice of more than one coloured nob, and left the other passenger
-ships nowhere."
-
-"Well, and what news, Smedley?" said Hardy.
-
-"Oh, I think it may be managed," answered Captain Smedley, sending his
-fragment of cigar overboard with a jerk of his arm. "My wife is below:
-let's go down to her."
-
-They descended into what was then called the cuddy by way of the
-companion steps, and this interior was worthy its wonderful front.
-Narrow slips of looking-glass upon the walls of it, and between each
-slip was a picture representing some Indian scene. The effect was
-brilliant and novel; determination to delight the Oriental eye was
-visible in the grotesque figuration of the three lamps hanging over the
-table. A Japanese artist, delirious with opium, might have imagined the
-extraordinary shapes which supported the globes. All was luxury and
-originality. Aft on either hand and athwart-ships were cabins, but the
-main accommodation was to be sought in the steerage, which was gained
-by a wide staircase, conducting through a hatchway in the fore end of
-the cuddy.
-
-Whilst Julia and Hardy were gazing about them Mrs. Smedley came out of
-the starboard cabin under the wheel.
-
-"I am trying to make my husband's cabin comfortable for him," said she,
-with her homely, motherly smile, after greetings had been exchanged.
-"I hope he will soon make his last voyage. Captain Franklin, a friend
-of ours, was seventeen years at sea in command, and in all that time
-he and his wife calculated that they had only spent one year and three
-months in each other's company. It is worse than being widowed."
-
-"Much worse," said Captain Smedley, "because you can't get married
-again. The beggar's always coming home."
-
-"Let us sit down," said Mrs. Smedley. "Miss Armstrong, come and sit
-beside me here. I am afraid we sha'n't be able to offer you any
-refreshments, but Jim when he came along said something about dining at
-the Brunswick Hotel."
-
-"Captain Smedley's full of original ideas," exclaimed Hardy as they
-seated themselves at the table. "What a different scene, Mrs. Smedley,
-this interior will submit a few weeks hence," he continued. "I see the
-gallant captain yonder at the head there, a row of ladies and gentlemen
-ranged down the table from either hand of him. The table smokes with
-good cheer, elaborately served; through a window yonder you see an ayah
-cuddling a baby and swaying to the heave of the ship. How the sails
-swell to the heavens through that skylight!" and here he cast his eyes
-aloft, and then looking at Miss Julia, he said, "And where will you be?"
-
-"Well, you may take it as good as settled," said Captain Smedley, "and
-let my wife get all the thanks," he added, not particularly referring
-to Julia in his speech.
-
-"You are very good," said Hardy, glancing at Julia, who was certainly
-not smiling. "How shall we consider it as good as settled?"
-
-"You've got to thank my wife, she's taken a great interest in the young
-lady," said Smedley.
-
-Julia meeting Mrs. Smedley's eyes gave her a grave bow, full of the
-unconscious coquetry of her natural postures.
-
-"It's settled in this way," continued Smedley. "I saw Mrs. Lambert this
-morning, and it is arranged that Miss Armstrong sails as her assistant.
-Old Perkins, one of the chiefs, who was at the office, said that he
-couldn't see the need; freights were low, and the ship was sailed
-without regard to expense." Here the captain winked at Hardy. "I told
-him the lady was a good nurse and accustomed to children, and that the
-stewardess needed help. So, Miss Armstrong, you will sign on, and you
-will have me for a captain. Do you like the idea?"
-
-"I thank you a thousand times for your kindness," answered Julia. "This
-is a beautiful ship, and I am sure you will see that I am not unhappy.
-But--but shall I find employment in Calcutta? Am I not almost sure of
-finding employment in Australia?" and she looked with a wistfulness
-that was almost love at Hardy.
-
-"You certainly will find employment in Australia, and most certainly
-a husband," said Smedley, who took the girl's hesitation very
-good-humouredly. "But I fear your employment will be menial, and the
-washing-tub, and the cooking range don't suit the likes of you."
-
-"It is very true," said Mrs. Smedley.
-
-Hardy listened with his eyes fixed on the deck. His heart had noted the
-girl's wistful look, and it was beating a little fast in some confusion
-of thought to his interpretation of her eyes.
-
-"A husband," continued Smedley, "will certainly be forthcoming, but
-like the range and the tub, he won't suit the likes of you, though
-stress of circumstances make you his wife. Now it's all tip-top
-gentility in India, with a real chance of a first-class sort, aboard my
-ship, this side of Calcutta."
-
-"Oh! it's marriage you are always thinking of, Captain Smedley," cried
-Julia, clasping her hands, and looking at him in her fascinating way.
-
-The captain glanced at his wife as if the conversation was growing
-personal.
-
-"Pray remember this, Miss Armstrong," said Mrs. Smedley, "if you are on
-the ship's articles you belong to the ship, and if you cannot obtain
-employment in the months during which the vessel will be lying in the
-Calcutta River, you can return in her, by which time Mr. Hardy may have
-arrived, and then you can try Australia."
-
-"That's a new idea, and a splendid one," said Hardy.
-
-Julia's face brightened. "_Will_ you let me return in her, captain?"
-she asked.
-
-"Certainly, if you don't run away, as is customary with many who sign
-the ship's articles," he answered. "But you don't go out to come back;
-a major-general may fall in love with you on your arrival, and then
-you'll be coming on board to ask for my blessing." He added with a
-little movement of impatience, "Is it settled?"
-
-"Yes, and we thank you again and again," exclaimed Hardy.
-
-"You'll sleep in the stewardess's cabin," said Captain Smedley. "Let's
-go below and have a look at it. By the way," he added, "I may as well
-say at once that your pay will be thirty shillings a month."
-
-Miss Armstrong blushed, and bowed, and smiled.
-
-"Not enough, when it's all taken up, for a new gown, Jim," said Mrs.
-Smedley. "Where's the cabin, lovey?"
-
-They all went down the broad steps, conducting to what was then called
-the steerage, in which the first-class cabin passengers were berthed,
-though in these days the word steerage is wholly associated with
-third-class people and German Jews, who quarrel over packs of greasy
-cards. The ship had plenty of beam, and the steerage was spacious
-for a vessel of her burden. The cabins ran well forward, and there
-was plenty of them. The central deck would be carpeted when the ship
-was ready for sea. Handsome bunks, washstands, chest of drawers, and
-other furniture, made every cabin resemble a snug little bedroom, and
-the port-holes were large, with plenty of room for the passage of the
-thrilling and soothing gush of blue breeze, when the flying-fish should
-be starting from the metalled fore-foot in flights of pearly light,
-and when the sun should hang in a roasting eye over the foretopgallant
-yard-arm. The stewardess's berth was small but cosy: two fore-and-aft
-bunks, the same conveniences as in the other cabins--and this was to be
-Julia's bedroom.
-
-She lingered a little looking around her, and the others paused to
-humour her.
-
-Then said Captain Smedley, "I am hungry. Let us go and get something to
-eat at the Brunswick Hotel."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-CAPTAIN LAYARD
-
-
-A little later than three weeks from the date on which our friends
-had dined together at the Brunswick Hotel, in the East India Docks, a
-fine, full-rigged ship was sailing slowly in rhythmic lifts and falls,
-as full of sweet grace as the cadence and movement of lovely music,
-through the dark blue evening waters of the Atlantic, about two hundred
-miles to the southward of the Chops, and the autumn glory of the fast
-westering sun clothed her.
-
-She was the well-known clipper ship _York_, bound to Melbourne and to
-another port, and she had followed, after four days, another beautiful
-vessel which we have inspected--I mean the _Glamis Castle_, bound, as
-the _York_ was bound, for the Cape parallels, where their liquid paths
-would diverge, one going away east for Cape Leeuwin, and the other
-shifting her helm for the Indian Ocean.
-
-The _York_ had made a noble passage down the Channel, driven by a
-black, salt, shrieking, easterly breeze that grew into half a gale,
-with soft, dark clouds smouldering as they flew. The Channel sea had
-the look of flint, and to each foaming _scend_ the ship drove in a
-curtsey of fury, as though to the thrust of some mighty hand. She
-stormed along under two topgallantsails and single reefs and swelling
-fore-course, and a swinging wing or two of jib and staysail until she
-was out of soundings in a passage that had the swiftness of steam,
-as steam then was; and then the strong breeze fined down, the wind
-shifted into the northwest, and behold this clipper of spacious pinions
-breaking the dark blue heave at her bows into scintillant lines like
-the meteor's thread of light, with every curve of cloth at the leaches,
-from head-earing to clew, of a faint pink with the light in the west.
-
-The officer of the watch stood on the weather-side of the quarter-deck
-with his eyes fixed upon a distant sail, close hauled and reaching
-westwards; but it was evident by the expression of his eyes that his
-attention was not with _her_. A single figure at the wheel grasped
-the spokes with an occasional movement, and sometimes a glance at the
-card of the compass, and sometimes a look at the canvas aloft, which,
-swelling out and sinking in, breathed like the breasts of human beings.
-The flush deck ran with a fair, white sweep into the "eyes," and you
-guessed by the neatness everywhere visible that the vessel owned a
-smart chief mate.
-
-The anchors had been stowed. It was the first dog-watch, and a few
-of the crew were idling on the forecastle. Presently up through the
-companionway, whose steps led into the cabin where the captain and the
-two mates lived, rose a little boy of about eight years of age, dressed
-as a navy sailor, and his bright gold curls shone to the setting sun
-past the round cap which was perched on the back of his head. He was a
-beautiful little boy of the purest English type; no arch Irish eye was
-ever of a darker blue than his. A drum--not a child's toy, but a real
-drum, though a small one--was slung by a lanyard round his neck, and he
-clutched the two sticks, whilst he looked at the officer of the watch
-with a smile of his red lips, disclosing a row of little milk-white
-teeth, and said:
-
-"Mr. Hardy, may I play my drum?"
-
-"Why, yes, Johnny, of course you may," answered Hardy, "and if you'll
-beat a smart tattoo the breeze will freshen, for we are wanting legs,
-Johnny."
-
-"May I go on the forecastle and beat it?" said Johnny. "The man who has
-the whistle will play it whilst I beat."
-
-"Hurrah for 'The Girl I Left Behind Me,'" said Hardy. "Go forward,
-little sonny, and beat the music out of the sails, and mind how you go."
-
-Just when the little boy was about to run along the decks an immense,
-magnificent Newfoundland dog sprang through the companion-hatch as
-though it had missed the little fellow below. The dog instantly saw
-the boy, and they sped forward together, the beautiful animal often
-bounding to the height of the boy's head in its delight in his company.
-The men on the forecastle all looked at them as they came, and those
-who walked stood still to watch them coming. The instant the dog was
-forward it swept its sagacious, beaming eyes, fuller of intelligence
-than many which look out of human faces, round the ocean line, and
-when it saw the sail to windward it set up a deep baying bark, a very
-organ note, grand in tone as the solemn stroke of a great bell, which,
-translated, as clearly signified, "Sail ho!" as the setting of the sun
-denotes the coming of night.
-
-"Where away, Sailor?" shouted Hardy from the quarter-deck, and the
-seamen laughed out, whilst the dog, after one glance aft, pointed his
-noble head in the direction of the ship, and lifting up his nose to
-heaven barked deeply twice, which was his English for _starboard_. The
-seamen laughed loudly again.
-
-Johnny beat a roll on the drum, and the sailors gathered round him, and
-others came springing up through the forescuttle, which is the name of
-the little hatch through which you drop into the forecastle or living
-room of the crew. The boy beat that drum marvellously well; he made it
-rattle as though a regiment marched behind him, and the sails on high
-rattled in echo as though several phantom drummers were stationed in
-various parts of the rigging.
-
-The dog lay down and watched the boy, and a few of the seamen, one
-after another, went up to it and stroked its head.
-
-"Where's the man that's got the whistle?" said Johnny, ceasing to beat.
-
-"Where's Dicky Andrews?" shouted a man, and another, going to the
-scuttle, cried down, "Below there! tumble up, Dicky, and bring your
-whistle with you; you're wanted on deck."
-
-In a few moments a young ordinary seaman rose through the hatch: he was
-slightly curved in the back without being humped, and carried the face
-of the hunchback, the corners of his mouth being puckered into a dry
-aspect of advanced years, such as may often be observed in people who
-are afflicted with spinal complaints. He was red-haired, and his little
-eyes were full of humour and as lively as laughter itself, and he wore
-the togs of the merchant Jack--dungaree for breeches, an old striped
-shirt, a dirty flannel jacket, and a cap without a peak.
-
-"All right, Master Johnny," said he, pulling a fife out of his pocket.
-"What shall it be, sir?"
-
-"What shall it be, my lads?" asked Johnny, looking round with his
-sweet, delightful smile and arch-blue eyes at the weather-stained faces
-of the men, one of whom was a negro, another a Dane, brown as coffee,
-two others Dagos, with frizzled hair and silver hoops in their ears;
-and these this boy of eight had called "My lads."
-
-"Give us 'The British Grenadiers,'" said a seaman.
-
-"A dog before a soldier," exclaimed the voice of an Irishman. "Give us
-'St. Patrick's Day in the Morning,' me dear."
-
-"Hurrah for 'St. Patrick's Day'!" shouted several voices; and Dicky,
-putting his fife to his lips, started the most inspiriting air that
-ever mortal genius composed. The drum rattled, the sticks throbbed in
-the little fists; Dicky began to caper as he played; nearly all the
-ship's company were assembled on the forecastle, and many began to
-leap about and spring with delight to the music; the dog rose, and in
-a stately way ran or waltzed amongst the caper-cutters. That fore-deck
-then was a wonderfully animated picture. The arch of the fore-course,
-sleepily swelling and sinking, yielded a good sight of the scene to the
-quarter-deck. The setting sun painted it into a canvas almost gorgeous
-with the streaks of purple fire in the tarry shrouds and backstays, and
-in the climbing lines of the well-greased masts; and in the flush on
-the breasts of the sails, and in the red stars it kindled in all that
-mirrored it.
-
-The fife and drum kept company superbly, and the fine Irish air seemed
-to thrill through the ship, and to echo up aloft like some new spring
-or spirit of life. The cocks in the coops abaft the galley chimed in
-with a constant defying crowing, about as melodious as the noise of a
-broken-winded barrel organ. The pigs under the long-boat grunted in
-sympathy with sounds which reminded them of the trough and the haystack
-and the near village.
-
-Whilst all this harmless sailors' pleasure was going forward on the
-ship's forecastle the captain of the vessel came out of the cabin, and
-when he stepped upon the deck he stood a moment with his hand resting
-upon the companion-hood, looking forward, and listening to the music.
-
-He was a man of about forty-five to fifty years of age, and his name
-was William Layard. He scarcely wore the appearance of a sailor. The
-lower portion of his face was hidden in hair, which was of a dark
-brown, streaked with gray, and his hair was long. His nose was a fine,
-well-bred aquiline, his brow square, his eyebrows shaggy, and his dark
-eyes burnt with brightness in the shadow cast by their eaves. He wore
-a soft black hat, which sat securely upon his head, and was clothed in
-a monkey-jacket and blue cloth trousers. No discerning eye but would
-have dwelt a little upon him in speculation. His face showed marks of
-breeding, but there was something else in him, too, that would have
-detained the gaze--a faint, an almost elusive, expression of triumph,
-of an inward exaltation, which was almost dissembled, and subtly
-revealed in the mouth that so delicately diffused it that only a keen
-eye would have witnessed it.
-
-Hardy was making the voyage with him for the first time, and though
-they had been together for some days, whilst they had frequently
-conversed in the docks, he did not understand him, he had not got in
-any way near to him. But, as a gentleman himself, he felt the presence
-of the gentleman in Captain Layard, and had picked up from his own
-lips that he had been educated at one of the great public schools,
-had begun the sea life in the Royal Navy as midshipman, but, for some
-reason, left unexplained, had quitted the white for the red flag, and
-had been in command five years, after serving, of course, as second
-and third mate, always trading to the Australian and New Zealand
-ports in ships like the _York_, which did not carry passengers. Hardy
-had also gathered that he was a widower, who had married a woman of
-good birth, the Honourable Miss ----, no need to name her, by whom
-he had the little boy Johnny, who was the darling of his heart, and
-who had regularly gone with him to sea, since his wife's death, in
-the last four voyages to the Pacific. Our friend Hardy had also made
-another discovery: that the captain, even before the start, showed a
-disposition to treat him as a companion rather than as a mate. This
-was so unusual in sea captains--it is still unusual--that Hardy's
-speculations as to Captain Layard's character were considerably
-sharpened by it.
-
-The drum and fife ceased on a sudden. The sailors stood about, hot and
-amused, and the dog with its tongue out looked eagerly from one face
-to another. The ship was still: there was no slopping fall of water
-alongside to disturb the calm respirations of the canvas; the captain,
-with his hand upon the companion-hood, continued to gaze forward,
-and Hardy, standing at the mizzen-rigging, watched him askant. Then,
-through the serenity of the breathing, sun-flushed air, all the way
-from forward, nearly the whole length of the ship, came the clear high
-note of little Johnny's voice:
-
-"Dicky, play 'Sally come up,'" and Dicky, rendered zealous by the
-captain's presence on deck, instantly put his fife to his lips. The
-drum rattled, the sails reechoed the jolly air, the feet of the men
-began to shake, the dog raced and waltzed in stately measures as
-before, the whole forecastle was again in motion, and the ship, with
-her taut rigging vibrant with the shrilling of the fife and the roll
-of the drum, floated onwards over the long, languid undulations of the
-deep, which were scarlet westwards with the splendour of the dying day
-that was crumbling toward the sea line in masses of burning light.
-
-Captain Layard stepped across the deck to Mr. Hardy.
-
-"That boy plays the drum with a professional hand," said he. "He got
-the art himself, for nobody taught him. It is a good drum--good enough
-for soldiers to march to."
-
-"I never heard better drumming, sir," answered Hardy.
-
-"Where did Sailor learn to waltz?" said the captain, and he watched the
-dog. "How quickly Johnny has made friends with the crew."
-
-"Any crew of Englishmen would cherish and pet him, and perish for such
-a beautiful, manly little fellow," exclaimed Hardy, with enthusiasm and
-admiration in his voice.
-
-"He's always kept my crews contented," said Captain Layard, smiling.
-"Several men have sailed with me every voyage ever since I took Johnny
-to sea, learning that he was coming again."
-
-He looked at the sail to windward that leaned like a black feather in
-the crimson air, then glanced over the ship's side to judge her pace,
-and stood for some time near Hardy listening to the music and watching
-the men dancing. He said, with an abruptness that again surprised Hardy
-as it had before even startled him during the run down Channel:
-
-"Have you ever studied the nervous system?"
-
-"No, sir," answered Hardy.
-
-"A man is formed of two sides," continued the captain, "and each side
-has a nervous system of its own. They are independent, and strange
-things happen in consequence. I remember when I was chief mate of a
-ship called the _Tartar_ that I stood aft close to the man at the
-wheel, who exclaimed on a sudden, 'I don't know what's wrong with
-me, but there's two meanings a-going on in my head.' 'What's that?'
-I asked. 'This here side,' said he, lifting his right hand from the
-spoke, and putting it to his forehead, 'is a-talking one sense, which
-ain't sense, because t'other side's talking in a different way,' and
-here he touched his left brow, 'and all's confusion,' and then he began
-to mutter to himself. I thought he was ill, and calling another man
-to the relief, sent him forward and followed with some brandy, which
-put his head to rights. I spoke of this matter to a doctor when I got
-ashore, and he explained the dual system of nerves, and told me that
-overworked brains would occasionally chatter inconsequentially in each
-lobe."
-
-"How shall a man act when his brain comes to a misunderstanding in
-that fashion?" asked Hardy, gazing with critical interest at the
-captain's refined but singular face.
-
-"_I_ take brandy," replied Captain Layard, sending a glance aloft, then
-at the distant sail, then at his little son, who continued to beat in
-accompaniment to "Sally come up," whilst the sailors sprang about in
-glowing glee, and the scarlet in the west deepened into a rusty red.
-
-"Do you suffer from attacks of the kind, sir?" inquired Hardy.
-
-"To tell you the truth," responded the captain, with a peculiar smile,
-keeping his gaze fastened on the forecastle, "I had one just now.
-The left side grew importunate in nonsense; the right side was all
-right, and quite understood that things were wrong. The trouble was
-preceded by a curious beating of the heart in the ear. It sounded as
-though a wooden leg was hollowly tramping round the galleries of the
-brain--thump, thump, thump! It was like the noise of a wooden leg
-coming into a theatre when some actress of genius has stilled the house
-into breathlessness by her witchery."
-
-"This man is mad," thought Hardy. "He would never converse with me in
-this fashion if his head wasn't in two."
-
-The drum and fife ceased. Johnny, seeing his father, came running
-aft, and the Newfoundland trotted by his side. It was four bells,
-and the sun vanished as the metal chimes trembled away to sea; the
-breeze slightly freshened on a sudden, a sound of foam arose like the
-song of a full champagne glass held to the ear; delicate streaks of
-white flashed about the ocean breast in the twilight like some milky
-wings of sea birds; the ship strained a little aloft and hardened her
-breasts, and stars of the east shone upon the dark brow of the soaring
-night.
-
-The breeze blew with a little edge, but it was still the dog-watches,
-and the sailors, though abruptly deprived of the drum in which they
-delighted, started on another dance to Dicky's merry and excellent
-whistling.
-
-"Father, Sailor likes dancing," said Johnny.
-
-"All sailors like it," answered the captain, stooping to press his lips
-to the child's forehead. "Cut below now, my darling, you and the drum,
-and put it away and wait for me. I sha'n't be long, and then we'll go
-to supper."
-
-The boy, with the obedience of a man-of-war's man, saluted Hardy
-with a flourish of his little fist to his golden curls, ran to the
-companionway, and vanished, and the noble Newfoundland vanished with
-him.
-
-"There is no weather in the glass," said the captain. "If this breeze
-freshens we shall make up for lost time. You'll not spare her, Mr.
-Hardy."
-
-"No, sir."
-
-"Those are my orders to the second mate. I want to maintain the
-reputation of this ship; the freighters love her. I have no fancy for
-steam, but you can _time_ it, and so tacks and sheets are bound to go;
-but I'll make a bold fight for old tradition," he cried in a curious
-tone of enthusiasm, "and what we can't carry we'll drag."
-
-The second mate had come on deck at four bells, and was pacing to
-leeward in the deeper shade that dyed the atmosphere there when
-the freshening of the breeze heeled the ship. There was nothing
-particularly noticeable in this man, of whom a fair sight could be
-caught as he passed through the area of light diffused by the cabin
-lamp, which was burning in brilliance under the skylight. He was
-pale-faced and fat of cheek, very light eyes, lashes like white silk,
-yellow hair, and great ears which stood out in eager bearing as though
-they sought to catch everything which was said. He was dressed in blue
-serge and a cap, and this was his first voyage in the ship. So the
-captain and the two mates were sailing the _York_ for the first time in
-their lives.
-
-It was Hardy's watch below; he crossed to the second mate, gave him
-the course and so forth, and descended into the cabin. Little Johnny
-without his drum was sitting on a locker talking to Sailor, who was
-looking lovingly up into his face, and often the bright-haired little
-chap glanced at the cabin servant, who was preparing the table for
-supper. The _York_ had been built to carry cargo; she was not a
-passenger ship, though at a pinch accommodation might have been found
-for three or four persons, friends of the owners, say, or people
-to whom the next ship sailing with immediate despatch might be a
-supreme need. In this age they would probably equip such a vessel
-with a deck-house for the master and mates. Her cabin was small
-and comfortable, very plain, with a seawardly look that suggested
-sturdiness, a very different cabin from the luxurious interior of the
-_Glamis Castle_! A few berths stood aft, and these were occupied by the
-master and mates, and one was a pantry.
-
-Hardy stopped to speak to Johnny.
-
-"You play your drum splendidly," said he. "But what's the good of a
-drum if you're going to be a sailor, sonny?"
-
-"I'll play the drum when the bo'sun plays his whistle," answered
-Johnny, manfully. "And it will make the sailors quicker in running up
-aloft."
-
-"So it will," answered Hardy, laughing heartily, for the image
-submitted by the boy's words tickled his fancy--a bo'sun piping "All
-hands!" down the forescuttle, and the captain at the break of the poop
-beating thunder out of a drum to hurry the men to the reef-tackles!
-
-He lingered a little to talk to the boy, for it charmed him to look
-into the sweet handsome face with its arch eyes; 'twas as gladdening to
-his heart as the song of a bird or the scent of a nosegay, and somehow
-the child always put tender thoughts of Julia Armstrong into his head
-by the sheer charm of his smile. He caressed the Newfoundland whilst
-he talked to the little lad, and then went to his cabin to change his
-coat and brush his hair for supper, musing over much, but particularly
-over his last talk with the captain, who never before in the Channel
-or after had spoken so oddly or looked so strangely. "If the man _is_
-off his head," he thought, "my responsibilities will be enormous," for
-he perfectly understood the position that command confers upon the
-shipmaster; he was God Almighty aboard; mad or not mad, his orders must
-be obeyed; he could steer the ship to the devil and clap the mates in
-irons for interfering, and unless the crew mutinied--which few crews
-durst do, knowing how heavily the law presses upon seamen, even though
-they are able to justify their actions--they must go on obeying the
-master's commands, though the fires of hell should be visible right
-ahead past the horizon.
-
-Thus Hardy mused whilst he changed his coat and brushed his hair, and
-he also thought of Julia Armstrong, and wondered how she was faring,
-and what progress her ship had made.
-
-The _Glamis Castle_ had hauled out of dock five days before the _York_
-sailed. She had slept upon the silent stream of the Thames one night,
-and early next morning was taken in tow by a tug, which released her
-off Dungeness; then with the stateliness of a frigate she broke into
-a sunshine of canvas, and, if the wind had prospered her, she should
-be some five hundred miles ahead of the _York_. But it was sail, not
-steam, and short of the report of a passing ship, no man could have
-safely conjectured her situation. But one trick of seamanship Smedley
-possessed: he never admitted the existence of a foul wind; he never
-sweated his yards fore and aft; he was no lover of the bowline, nor of
-the shivering leach. It was always "full and bye" with him, though he
-was points off, and thus he made a fair breeze of every head-wind, for
-his slants to leeward of his course gave him two feet of sailing to
-the one he would have got out of a taut, shuddering luff, and he never
-looked over the quarter for leeway.
-
-At half-past six Hardy stepped out of his berth and found supper ready,
-and the captain sitting at the head of the table with little Johnny on
-his right. You will consider it early for supper, but at sea the last
-meal is always called supper, and after this they eat no more in the
-cabin. There was plenty, and it was good of its kind: ham, cold fowl,
-cold sausage, salt beef, biscuit, cheese, and salt butter. A decanter
-of rum glowed deep and rich within reach of the captain's arm. A large
-globe lamp sparkled brightly overhead, and the scene was a sea-picture
-of hospitality and comfort, sweetened into a tender human character
-by the presence of the boy who sat on the right hand of his father.
-Sailor, the great dog, lay beside the captain on the deck. He was too
-dignified to beg; too well trained to expect. He knew his time would
-come, and lay patient in the nobility of his shape.
-
-Hardy sat at the foot of the table. It was the custom in this ship for
-the captain and mate to eat together, and when the mate was done he
-relieved the deck till the second officer had finished. The captain
-gave the little boy a slice of cold chicken and a white biscuit, and
-filled his glass with water. The swing trays swayed softly as pendulums
-to the delicate heave of the evening waters, the bulkheads creaked,
-the rudder jarred as the swell rolled, and you could hear faintly the
-jump of the wheel chains to the sharp but swiftly arrested shear of the
-tiller.
-
-The captain with his cap off disclosed a lofty but receding brow,
-rounding with something of the curve of the egg-shell at the temples,
-and his long hair and the growth about his cheeks and chin made him
-look more like a poet than a salted skipper. Hardy had taken notice
-that he stared at the man he talked to, which is contrary to the notion
-that the insane have a wandering eye. But that Captain Layard was not
-absolutely right in his mind the young sailor was convinced, as he sat
-at the foot of the table cutting himself a plate of beef and ham.
-
-"Captain Pearson made poor passages on the whole, I've understood,"
-said Captain Layard, referring to the commander he had replaced. "He
-was a very cautious man, furled his royals every second dog-watch, and
-would snug his ship down to the first hint in the glass to save calling
-all hands."
-
-"I was told he was loved by his crew, sir," answered Hardy. "And he
-seems to have been the most humane commander that ever sailed out of
-the port of London."
-
-"Well, it is right that sailors should be treated as men," said Layard,
-staring at Hardy; "but most of them are fools, they are children, they
-don't or can't understand things." He put down his knife and fork,
-drew out a handkerchief and wiped the palms of his hands, then poured
-a wine-glass of rum into a tumbler, and filling the glass with water
-swallowed the ruddy draught.
-
-"Some more biscuit, father," said the child.
-
-An expression of tenderness, even like that which might spring from a
-mother's heart, softened the captain's singular and striking face as
-he looked at the boy whilst he gave him a biscuit. He stared again at
-Hardy.
-
-"Sailors," said he, "don't see things from a right point of view. There
-was a seaman who wanted a Blackwall cap to wear at the wheel. To make
-it he cut up his go-ashore breeches, and to trim and bind the edges he
-cut up a new Dungaree jumper. The cap cost him a pound, but he believed
-he had got it for nothing because he had made it himself."
-
-Whilst Hardy was laughing, for the captain told this story in a dry
-manner, and with a twinkle of eye that certainly did not hint at
-insanity, a voice was heard in the companionway:
-
-"There's a heavy fog rolled down upon us, sir, and it's as thick as
-cheese to the ship's sides."
-
-It was the voice of Mr. Candy, the second mate, and a moment after his
-step could be heard in the plank overhead as he walked to the bulwark
-rail.
-
-The captain sprang up and went on deck; Hardy continued to eat his
-supper, and talked to the little boy. It was his watch below, and
-he was too old a shell to quit the meal until all hands should be
-summoned, which a quiet fog, however dense, topped by a reassuring
-barometer, was not very likely to occasion.
-
-The fog, nevertheless, had rolled down quickly through the gloom of
-the early night on the gust of the black breeze, still nor'west. Black
-it was. Nothing was visible of the ship but a few spokes of light,
-like the arrested darting of meteoric fibres spiking from the glass on
-the skylight in a fiery arch. When the darkness of the night dyes the
-darkness of fog then the universal blackness is so deep that you might
-think the solid globe had vanished, and that you hung in the centre of
-space, death-dark and silent, moonless and starless, chaotic with dumb
-masses of the deep electric dye.
-
-This night the fancy would have been easily inspired by the hush upon
-the sea, for the sails floated stirless; there was not wind enough to
-brush the salt curve into the expiring hiss of foam, and the invisible
-swell so lightly swayed the eclipsed fabric that only now and again
-did you catch the sad note of the sea, sobbing along the bends, and
-hiddenly passing away into the short wake in sighs and tones of weeping.
-
-"Mr. Candy!" called the captain.
-
-"Sir!" came the answer out of the soft invisibility in which the
-bulwarks abreast were buried.
-
-They came together in the spokes of radiance about the skylight.
-
-"Clew up all three royals and furl them. Let go all three topgallant
-halliards; the sails may hang. Haul up the mainsail; brail in the
-mizzen, and down flying and outer jibs, topmast and topgallant
-staysails, but leave the sails unfurled. See that your side-lights
-are burning brightly, and bend your sharpest ear over the water for a
-noise. Was anything in sight before this smother rolled down?"
-
-"I saw nothing, sir. It was a bit thick before the fog came along, and
-then it came in a wall."
-
-The captain went to the side to look over and mark the ship's pace,
-and the second mate began to sing out. One watch sufficed. There was
-little to do but let go with the drag of the downhauls; and the clews
-of the great mainsail rose to the slings to the sound of a few ocean
-yelps and a "_Chiliman_" chorus. The men were not to be seen until they
-ran up against you. They felt for the ropes, and their footfalls were
-like the pattering of dead leaves on a pavement to a sudden air of
-wind, strangely threading with the shore-going sound the squeak of the
-sheave, the rasp of rope, and the soft scraping of parrel descending
-the greased topgallant heights. The side-lights were reported as
-burning bravely.
-
-The ship now had little more than steerage way, and the captain, after
-looking into the compass, and after repeating his instructions to the
-second mate to keep his best ear seawards and on either bow, said he
-would send the dog on deck, and returned to the cabin.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE SHIP'S LOOKOUT
-
-
-Captain Layard entered the cabin and called to the dog, which instantly
-sprang up.
-
-"Sailor, go on deck and keep a lookout," said he, and in a breath the
-Newfoundland rushed up the companion-steps and vanished.
-
-"He hasn't had his supper yet, father," exclaimed the little boy.
-
-"I will send it forward to him," answered the captain, seating himself
-in the chair he had vacated, and helping himself to a piece of chicken.
-
-Hardy had risen when Layard entered, but seeing the captain sit he
-resumed his place. His watch would come round at eight o'clock. There
-would be little time for sleep if he withdrew to his berth. He had
-supped well, had drunk a glass of grog, had enjoyed his chat with the
-little boy, whose charming face and sweet, ingenuous, yet manly prattle
-delighted him; he was comfortable, and the captain inspired no feeling
-of restraint nor sense of intrusion, so he sat on.
-
-"The fog is as thick as mud in a wine-glass," exclaimed Captain Layard.
-"Some go fast and some go slow through these smothers. The fast man
-holds that a ship is under more immediate control when travelling; I
-am a slow man when I can't see. In fact," he continued, with a look of
-exaltation, with a smile of profound self-complacency, "I claim to know
-my business. There is no man afloat who is going to teach me what to do
-when a thing is to be done, and done properly."
-
-"If all ships would heave to," said Hardy, witnessing the captain's
-mind in the expression which subtly interpreted it, "then it would be
-the right thing in a fog to stop your engines, or back your topsail.
-But it's the other fellow you can't see that makes the fear." He
-immediately added, "Your dog is extraordinarily sagacious, sir."
-
-"It amused me to train him," replied the captain, smoothing Johnny's
-little hand as it lay upon the table. "There is no fog-horn which
-equals the screams of an irritated sow. A sow once saved me from a
-collision by causing a dog, in an invisible ship close aboard on the
-starboard bow, to bark. That put the idea into my head. Sailor has the
-voice of a trombone, and he didn't need much training either; he is now
-perched between the knight-heads with more searching eyes and clearer
-ears than the whole ship's company could put together if they made
-their heads into one."
-
-Hardy laughed.
-
-"Don't forget Sailor's supper, father," said Johnny.
-
-"I'll not forget," answered the captain.
-
-As he spoke the words the man who waited on the cabin came down the
-steps.
-
-"Is it still very thick?" asked the captain.
-
-"Blinding, sir," was the answer.
-
-"Get the dog's supper, and take it to him on the fok'sle," said
-Captain Layard. "See that he has water; it may be an all-night job for
-him. Pearson was a very humane man," he went on, addressing Hardy. "I
-might guess that by the medicine-chest he's left me. I overhauled it
-before we sailed, and wondered at the quantity of sleeping and death
-stuffs it contained. I found out that in one of his passages home from
-Calcutta several men died of cholera, and he was at his wits' ends
-for drugs. Ships bound to India should always carry a surgeon; they
-would--they must, if there are passengers. But glauber salts are good
-things for Jack: 'tis an all-round physic, as good for smallpox as for
-indigestion." He laughed somewhat heartily, and continued, "Pearson's
-men might have died to a man, for his medicine-chest showed badly
-like the end of a long voyage. Fortunately half of them took it into
-their heads to live, and they got the ship home. After this Pearson
-never went to sea without plenty of drink for cholera. He's left some
-doctor's handbook on the diseases of sailors, and there's a volume on
-poisons full of pencil marks. His humanity was unwearying, but he got
-the sack all the same. Johnny, my darling, it's time for bed. Come
-along, my lamb."
-
-He took the boy by the hand, and they went into the captain's cabin,
-the child crying as his father opened the door, "Good night, Mr. Hardy."
-
-It was half-past seven; Hardy went into his berth to smoke a pipe
-before relieving the deck. The captain's cabin glowed with the soft
-illumination of an oil lamp screwed to a bulkhead, and swinging in its
-bracket to the heave. It was a fine large cabin, equipped with a table
-covered with green baize on which were writing materials, nautical
-instruments, and such things; a fore-and-aft bunk for the captain, and
-a brass cot at the foot of the bunk, safely secured to the deck, for
-Johnny. It was comfortable with a carpet, chairs, a short sofa, a chest
-of drawers, and washstand. Close beside Johnny's cot on the deck was
-the boy's drum.
-
-The captain began to undress the little fellow, who talked to him of
-Mr. Hardy; he said he wished Mr. Hardy could sleep with them. No mother
-ever used a tenderer hand in putting her child to bed than did this
-strange sea-captain, mad or not mad. His eyes were tender, twice he
-kissed the boy's fair brow; he seemed reluctant to make an end of this
-undressing, as though he loved to have his hands upon the child, to
-have his face close to him.
-
-"Now your prayers, Johnny," said he. And the boy knelt by his cot, and
-in words he had learnt from his father, prayed that his mother would
-look down and watch over them both, and that God would bless his father
-and himself.
-
-The captain stood by in devout posture, and whispered the words which
-the child uttered, then hoisted the little fellow into bed, covered him
-up, and kissed him.
-
-"Mayn't Mr. Hardy come and see me in bed?" said the child.
-
-"Ay," answered the captain, and he stepped to the door, and called the
-chief officer by name.
-
-Hardy instantly came out, leaving his pipe behind him.
-
-"Come and see my boy in bed," said the captain.
-
-Hardy, not knowing that this was due to the child and not to the
-father, was secretly astonished, for though he had always lived on very
-good terms with the captains he had sailed with, he had never met
-any commander who treated him just as though they occupied the same
-platform.
-
-He followed him into his cabin, and the boy with his bright hair on the
-pillow smiled a greeting.
-
-"It is a beautiful bed, Johnny," said the mate, stepping close to the
-cot, and looking at him with the affection which such a child as this
-will excite in a sailor's heart at sea, moved by thoughts of home and
-of the fair land he has left, of his own childhood perhaps, and visited
-by that mute sense of solitude, peril, and the holy and brooding
-presence of the Great Spirit, which is the impulse of the deep, and
-understood by those to whom the ocean, eternal and boundless in the
-constant recession of its horizon, is an interpretable face. He turned
-to the captain and exclaimed:
-
-"If your boy ever dreams, sir, it is of the angels who guard his bed."
-
-He kissed the little chap, and was going.
-
-"A moment, Mr. Hardy," exclaimed the captain, who did not seem to
-have caught or noticed what the mate said. "This is an example of old
-Pearson's forethought and humanity."
-
-He stepped, followed by Hardy, to a corner of the cabin, in which
-stood a small mahogany chest, and lifted the lid. This lid was
-furnished with scissors, syringes, and the like, and the contents of
-the chest consisted of a number of stoppered green bottles, as well as
-sticking-plaster, lint, and surgical instruments. The captain, pointing
-to the bottles as he spoke, said:
-
-"This is laudanum; this is labelled morphia; this is atropine for the
-ulcerated eye; this is chlorodyne. Here are drugs enough to start a
-man as a chemist. This is a book," said he, half lifting a thin volume
-from a pocket and letting it slip back, "that tells you how to make use
-of all this stuff; ay, even the right dose of Glauber's salt is given."
-
-"I hope there's no chance of Master Johnny handling those bottles,
-sir?" said the mate, who, though he gazed with curiosity at this
-revelation of the open lid, was not inattentive to the expression of
-the commander's face, which was one of superiority, as though he had
-appropriated and was triumphing in the merits of the kind foresight
-which were certainly not his but Pearson's.
-
-"You will never look into this chest, Johnny?" said Hardy.
-
-"His mother was the very soul of honour," exclaimed Captain Layard,
-"and that child cannot but be the spirit of truth and honesty itself."
-
-He shut the lid and added, "Where, I wonder, does the human soul come
-from? The father cannot give his, or a portion of his, to the child,
-nor can the mother, for that might involve the forfeiture of their
-title to immortality. The great poet must be right; the soul which
-informs a child, which spiritualises it in the womb and at its birth,
-must come from God, who is its Home. What a wonderful thought! What a
-revelation it has been to me! What an assurance and promise!"
-
-He stood gazing steadfastly at Hardy, who, saying, a little uneasily,
-"These are matters quite beyond me, sir," again made for the door,
-through which he passed in silence, the captain standing motionless,
-his hands clasped before him, and his eyes seeming to see something
-beyond the bulkhead, upon which he had fastened them.
-
-At eight o'clock Hardy's watch came round. He went on deck in a very
-thoughtful state, and the deep dye of that tremendous void of black
-vapour was very well qualified to darken his mood into the hue of the
-crow--a bird deemed portentous in ancient seafaring. He stood in the
-spokes of lamp-sheen about the skylight and called to Mr. Candy, who
-came upon him suddenly out of some part of the deck like a man walking
-through a glass in a dark room. He exchanged a few sentences with this
-second mate, but they wholly concerned the business of the ship. Candy
-was not a person to take into one's confidence; his silver-white lash
-shaded a pale eye that marked one of those souls which, as you cannot
-make up your mind about them, you resolve to distrust; otherwise Hardy,
-in defiance of all law of discipline, and even of sea-breeding, would,
-in the humour of anxiety that then possessed him, have been glad to
-hear Mr. Candy's opinion of the commander.
-
-The second mate went below to bed after reporting that he had visited
-the forecastle, and found the Newfoundland awake and vigilant, also
-that two hands paced the forward-deck as lookouts.
-
-The air of wind was still northwest; it breathed with just weight
-enough to steady the topsails and the foresail. As the ship leaned
-with the languid heave of the sea, the sails hanging from the yards on
-the caps, and the festooned clews of the invisible mainsail, flapped
-in strokes of the pinions of mammoth birds winging betwixt the masts.
-The lap of the brine against the bows, which were slowly breaking
-the hidden waters, saddened the blindness of the night with a note
-of supernatural pain and grief. The ship was moving slowly, and, as
-before, nothing of her was distinguishable but the dim lustre smoking
-in hurrying streams and wreaths of vapour about the skylight and about
-the binnacle-stand.
-
-It was damp, depressing, heart-subduing. The philosophy of the mariner,
-which is one of endurance, and of that species of submission which is
-attended with sea blessings and the profanities of the ocean-parlour,
-breaks down in the fog. Here is the helplessness, here is the sealed
-eye, the spiriting of groping anxiety, which is a sort of anguish. It
-is not his ship or himself that he fears; the emotions bred by fog are
-ahead or abeam, and it need not be steam, for a dirty little brig or
-schooner, with her half-dozen of a crew shouting their consternation
-under the foretopmast stay, has been known to smite and sink an ocean
-palace full of light, of superb machinery, of saloon tables glowing
-with fruit and plate, and populous with diners.
-
-The deck was not to be comfortably measured in a quarter-deck walk, in
-blackness so dense that if you swerved by so much as two degrees of
-angle of foot you thumped your breast against the bulwarks. Hardy laid
-hold of the wet weather vang on the quarter and fell into reflection,
-for loneliness breeds thought, and no man is more lonely than the
-officer of the watch on board a merchantman. His mind went again to
-Julia Armstrong, but it had found an unsettling fascination in Captain
-Layard, and it quickly returned to him. He could not doubt that he
-was a little mad; his ideas were strange, yet his speculations showed
-thought and culture. He was insane to one to whom he talked freely, but
-to his crew, to whom he would not and did not talk, he must be the
-commonplace "old man" of the quarter-deck, and in this way Hardy feared
-he might prove dangerous even to tragedy.
-
-The ship's bell was hung in the wake of the galley, and a little clock,
-illuminated by a bull's-eye lamp, was hung up under a penthouse on a
-timber erection just before it. A lookout man would walk to the clock
-to see the time, and at ten he struck "four bells," at which hour it
-was as black and thick as ever after its first coming; the light breeze
-blew, and the ship swayed softly through the void.
-
-Hardy made his way forward to see to the dog. He struck between two men
-who were walking the deck, and one muttered, "What cheer?"
-
-"By God, my lads," said Hardy, "you'll not find out what a wolf's had
-for dinner by squinting down his throat!"
-
-There was a faint haze about the forescuttle: it came up into the inky
-thickness from the forecastle lamp. It was a slight relief, and even a
-rest for the eye, but the shadow forward was deeper than it was aft,
-for up there in the void was the raven thundercloud of foresail and
-foretopsail, and further forward yet, like ebon waterspouts soaring
-from sea to topmast head, were the midnight dyes of the jib and
-staysail.
-
-Hardy found the night-lights burning brightly, and going toward the
-heel of the bowsprit he touched the Newfoundland lookout with his foot.
-He patted the invisible, shaggy head, and passed his arm around its
-neck, and pressed the creature's long wet jaw to his breast, a token of
-love and encouragement which the dog acknowledged by a grunt or two of
-happiness.
-
-"Keep a bright lookout, Sailor," said Hardy, patting the shaggy,
-invisible head again, and knowing there were two human lookouts
-somewhere about, he called, and they answered out of the black
-blankness to leeward. Well, he could not tell them to keep their eyes
-skinned, for the sight of man and even of dog lay dead upon that
-forecastle, but he directed them to listen with all their might, to go
-often to the head-rail and strain their ears, and they answered, "Ay,
-ay, sir."
-
-Very plainly on this forecastle did you hear the sulky sob of the sea
-like something large and timid, gasping to the rude shock of the stem.
-The ocean hissed a little here and there, but the light wind could not
-give life enough to the glance of the curl of sea to strike through it
-to the eye, even though one looked straight down over the rail.
-
-Hardy slowly made his way aft, and on approaching the binnacle
-discerned the captain standing in the faint sheen close to the helmsman.
-
-"I never remember a thicker fog," said the captain, and he asked
-questions about the lookout, the dog, and the side-lights. Then walking
-out of the binnacle haze he struck the bulwarks almost abreast, and
-Hardy followed and stood alongside.
-
-"Whenever I am in this sort of thing," said Captain Layard, "I think of
-the blind. It is terrible to wake of a bright morning to the eternal
-darkness of one's life. I should fear the presence of visions in that
-everlasting gloom. It would be haunted with phantoms, and as thick-set
-with wild, grotesque, horrible, brassy faces as the human eye when
-morphia closes the lid."
-
-"My father is, as you know, sir, a doctor," said Hardy, "and I've
-heard him speak of the blind. He declares they are less to be pitied
-than the stone deaf." The captain pshaw'd. "He would say," continued
-Hardy, "contrast the faces of the two afflictions. They both force the
-mind's eye more deeply inwards, but in the one there is the pain of
-attention ever strained and a baffled, helpless look, whilst the other
-is mild and restful as though it had found peace in its communes with
-God."
-
-"Your father may be a very clever man," said Captain Layard, "but I
-have no faith in doctors. I have never met a doctor who did me any
-good, and I have been ill in my time, believe me. They let my wife die."
-
-He paused as if in some passage of deep emotion. In this interval
-Hardy thought to himself what an extraordinary conversation for the
-quarter-deck of a ship, close upon midnight, in a dense fog!
-
-Some hanging fold of canvas flapped aloft. In a voice as changed as
-though he was acting, the captain exclaimed:
-
-"That's the speech of a sail that asks to be furled. The glass is high,
-and there's no foul weather anywhere. If the breeze freshens by ever so
-little, or if this light air draws ahead, call me, sir."
-
-There was positive refreshment in this plain speech of the sea to
-Hardy, who on replying to the captain found that he had gone, and in
-the steaming faintness hovering in the companion just caught a sight of
-his head disappearing.
-
-Eleven bells had been struck, and Hardy was beginning to think that
-it would be eight bells soon, which must signify shelter, freedom
-from the dwarfish drench of the vapour, as fine but as penetrating
-as rain in Lilliput, a warm blanket, half a pipe, and then oblivion
-for an off-shore spell of nearly four hours, when on a sudden the dog
-barked. The tones were deep and constant, and to the first roll of
-those organ notes the loose wet canvas beat the masts aloft in a sudden
-heave of the whole fabric, and an element of alarm and even of fearful
-expectation entered the black void and thickened it, and seemed to
-close it round about till the smoking colour of light on forecastle and
-quarter-deck dimmed into the preternatural faintness of the salt sea
-glow when it shudders a fathom deep under some smooth tropic surface.
-
-The dog continued to bark, and there was an importunate vehemence in
-his notes, a bounding pulse of urgency as though the noble creature
-with instincts superior to man's knew that a matter of life or death
-was concerned in his sentinel bugling. Voices sounded forward, you
-heard a hurry of feet; again the ship leaned, and the sails smote
-the masts with an alarum sound of metal; and to the accompaniment of
-this midnight concert, made ghastly by blackness, by the overwhelming
-blindness of fog and by the presence of danger, Hardy rushed forward,
-taking his chance of what might be in the road.
-
-"Jump for a port-fire, one of you," he shouted, sending his cry slap
-into a very web of seamen's growling voices, the owners of which were
-no more to be seen than the ship's keel. "What is it, Sailor?"
-
-And now he was alongside the dog, and with his hand on its head felt
-in the direction of the creature's muzzle, and found that it was
-delivering its notes straight away over the head-rail, about two points
-on the weather bow.
-
-"Wheel, there!" he roared. "Starboard your helm. Let her go off five
-points."
-
-"Starboard it is, sir," came back the answer.
-
-"See that sheen out to starboard there, sir?" rang out a voice which
-sounded clear through the barking of the dog.
-
-"Hush! Sailor. Down, sir. Hush, my beauty," cried Hardy, and the dog
-was instantly silent. "Hark! now."
-
-A sort of oozing of light, dimly scarlet, wild and weak and wet as some
-ghostly star of death hovering over a grave, was visible to windward,
-a trifle forward of the fore-rigging. "Hark!" cried Hardy, and sure
-enough amid the greasy slopping of water, falling lazily from the
-thrust of the ship's bow, they could hear a distant noise of shouting,
-of cries reechoed as from one part of a deck to the other, with a
-deeper threading of some throat hoarse in a speaking-trumpet.
-
-"Is the mate forward?" sang out the voice of the ship's carpenter.
-
-"Fire one right away off," shouted Hardy, knowing what the fellow had
-got and meant.
-
-In a few heart-beats a stream of sun-bright fire was pouring like
-water from a hose over the bow, but its lightning illumination
-touched but a narrow stretch of the dark water. The foresail turned
-of a sickly yellow, and the staysail soared wan as the wing of the
-albatross in dying moonlight. All above and abaft, and then forward
-to the flying-jib boom end, yards and sailcloth lay steeped in the
-impenetrable smother, and within the area of the light the fog drove
-slowly in a very Milky Way of silver crystals. But the men could see
-one another, and helped by the light Hardy sped aft to be near the
-wheel, and there he found Captain Layard.
-
-"There's a ship off the starboard bow, sir," he exclaimed.
-
-"They'll never see that port fire," answered the commander. "They're
-burning flares, or we shouldn't see _her_. A foreigner, by the row.
-How's she heading?"
-
-That question was answered even as he asked it by the revelation of a
-ship. It had the suddenness of a magic-lantern picture flung swiftly.
-They saw at the range of a pistol a lurid shape, which they easily
-distinguished as a barque with painted ports, a tall poop, and a tall
-topgallant forecastle. She was burning flares upon her main-deck and
-waist, and the red flames, winding tongues of fire into feathers of
-soot-black smoke, jewelled the whole apparition with red-hot stars.
-They pierced through the fog like sunlit rubies from glass and brass,
-from wet plank and mast, and the grease of spars. She was so close that
-she shone out clearly, and made light enough for the people of the
-_York_ to see by. Her helm was hard up and she was slowly paying off,
-but her flying-jib boom must catch the mizzen-rigging of the Australian
-clipper. You heard the splintering of wood aloft, the crash of nearer
-timber, broken off carrot-like betwixt a lazy roll of both ships.
-
-The barque's decks were a sight for the gods. Figures of men could be
-seen rushing frantically here and there. They were all shouting; men on
-the poop were screeching orders, and nothing but the helm gave heed;
-men on the forecastle were roaring and flourishing their fists. The
-flames duplicated the shadows of the running figures; painted lines
-of the rigging upon the planks writhed between the water-ways, like
-serpents snaking their attenuated lengths overboard. Never did any sea
-light flash up a more startling, a wilder, a more ghastly tapestry.
-'Twas like a painting in flames and ruddy stars upon the black canvas
-of the fog, and the hull, with its lines of ports like the keys of
-a piano, reeled slowly off on the lift of the brine, yard-arm to
-yard-arm, the beating canvas of each red as the powder flag, and dying
-out up aloft like the reflection of a burning ship upon a cloud.
-
-It was all too breathless for action aboard the _York_. Before a brace
-could be let go, before an order could be yelled, the stranger's
-flying-jib boom was crackling and gone, and her topgallantmast,
-with its canvas, was plastering the topsail; and then it was almost
-channel to channel, and the barque's poop was abreast of the _York's_
-quarter-deck.
-
-"Great God!" cried Hardy.
-
-A figure standing near the stranger's mizzen-rigging fell, and another
-figure fled aft, but at that instant some back draught of breeze
-thickened the crystals of the fog smoking close to the stranger's
-taffrail with a dense feathering of the black stench from the flares;
-the burning picture vanished out astern, as though to the fall of a
-curtain of midnight hue, the sounds of shouting sank, and in the hush
-that fell upon the _York's_ deck, nothing was to be heard but the
-dreary lamentations of broken water under the bows, and the weeping
-noise of eddies under the counter.
-
-"A close shave!" said Captain Layard, fetching a deep breath. "She has
-not hurt us, I think."
-
-"I saw a man fall as if stabbed," said Hardy.
-
-"Back the topsail! I'll keep the ship hove to till we can see,"
-exclaimed the captain, whose attention, concentrated by the sudden
-blackness into which the ship had floated, was wholly in the
-manoeuvre he had commanded.
-
-The order was sung out, the sailors came groping their way aft to the
-main-braces, the yards were swung, and the ship was brought to a stand,
-lightly rolling her masts with a slap of hidden pinion, which made you
-think of some gigantic navy signal-man waving flags.
-
-"My noble dog has saved my ship," exclaimed the captain. "I am a
-remarkable man!" And, to use a Paddyism, Hardy could _hear_ in the
-skipper's speech the expression of exaltation which his face did
-undoubtedly wear. The skipper whistled, and in a few moments felt the
-snout of the fine black creature pressing lovingly against his thigh.
-
-"Come along below," said he, passing his hand caressingly along the
-invisible feathers of the dog's back, "till I dry you and see how you
-look, and we'll take a peep at Johnny." And he and the dog vanished.
-
-Just at that moment eight bells were struck. It was midnight, and the
-starboard watch must tend the ship till four. Whilst the last chimes
-were trembling into the damp, depressing, flapping sounds which clothed
-the obscured heights, the chief mate was hailed by a man whose voice
-proceeded from abreast of the gangway. Hardy stepped to the companion
-where the sheen lay, and exclaimed, "I am here." At the same moment
-Mr. Candy came out of the companion and joined him. Before one could
-address the other, three figures entered the space of faint saturated
-light.
-
-"Here's a man," said one of them, "that's jumped aboard us off the
-barque. He come up to me and asked to see the capt'n."
-
-"Which is the man?" said Hardy, straining his sight.
-
-One of them said, "I am, mister. I am French." And then in French he
-asked if Hardy spoke that tongue.
-
-"No," answered Hardy. "Come below into the cabin to the captain."
-
-And after a few words with Mr. Candy, who heard now for the first time
-that they had nearly been run into by a tall French barque, he went
-down the cabin steps, followed by the Frenchman.
-
-In this interior plenty of light was shining, and it was as noontide
-after the midnight of the deck. The captain was near the table drying
-the dog with a cloth, and talking to him, and praising him as though he
-were a man, and the creature's mild and benevolent eyes looked up into
-his face, and you read gratitude and affection in the noble brute.
-
-"Who's that?" said the captain, throwing the cloth down, and looking
-with a knitted brow at the Frenchman.
-
-"He will explain, sir," Hardy answered.
-
-"Softly," exclaimed the captain, "an angel lies asleep in that cabin,"
-and with a melodramatic flourish of his arm, he pointed to the door of
-his berth.
-
-The Frenchman looked at Hardy. He was a man of middle height, in a
-drill or thin canvas blouse, over which was buttoned at the throat a
-rough, old jacket, the sleeves hanging loose. He wore blue trousers
-patched with black, stuffed into half-boots bronzed by wear and brine.
-His black hair curled upon his shoulders, and he held a cap fashioned
-out of some sort of skin. His face was a ghastly yellow; his lips a
-vivid red; his nose long, lean, and humped, and the black pupils of his
-eyes sparkled in the flashes of the swinging lamp amid their whites,
-which, by the way, were crimson with drink or gout, or both. It was a
-face to peer at you, malevolently, from a time-darkened canvas, very
-picturesque, very romantic, but something that you would not like to
-think was treading behind you on a lonely road.
-
-"Who are you?" said the captain, putting his hand upon the head of the
-dog, in whose body a sort of rolling noise might have been heard, not
-quite a growl, but a note as of suspicion grumbling deep down below the
-throat.
-
-"You speak French, I hope, sar?" said the man.
-
-"And you speak English!" responded the captain, with a side look and
-a grin at Hardy. "It's no business of yours whether I speak French or
-not. Start your yarn."
-
-And the man, clearly understanding what was said, began.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-THE FRENCH MATE
-
-
-I have said that the man, clearly understanding the captain's meaning,
-began; but it was not a beginning, nor a middle, nor an end, that could
-be set down in black and white in that Frenchman's speech. It was most
-barbarous English, yet intelligible when helped along by the captain's
-and Hardy's questions. It must be given in plain words to be readable,
-and thus spoke that sinister-looking man:
-
-"My name is Pierre Renaud. I am chief mate of the barque that was just
-now nearly running into you. We are from Cape Town to Bordeaux. That
-dog threatens my throat."
-
-The man flashed the poniards of his eyes at the Newfoundland, who was
-like an organ with one key going, trembling in its shaggy and splendid
-bulk with a low, sulky, dangerous growling.
-
-"Down!" said the captain, and the animal stretched its fore legs. "What
-brings you aboard us?"
-
-"Fear," replied the man, with a slight shrug and a look of arching
-eyebrow at his questioner, and a roll of the eye over him, as though he
-saw something singular in his face and manner. "A man loves his life
-and will jump to save it. I thought we should crush our bows in and
-founder."
-
-"You did not stay to help your captain and encourage the men to
-preserve your ship," said Captain Layard, dabbing the dog's head to
-keep him quiet.
-
-"The captain fell dead in a fright," responded the Frenchman, with
-another shrug, "and I chose to save myself."
-
-"I saw a man fall," exclaimed Hardy. "Was that you that rushed along
-the poop?"
-
-"How can I answer you?" replied the Frenchman. "We were all rushing."
-
-"The captain fell dead!" said Captain Layard, in a musing way. "It's
-evident that French sea-captains die easily. When did you strike this
-fog?"
-
-"I cannot say precisely. Some hours since," was the reply. "When we
-heard the barking of a dog we knew that a ship was near, and we judged
-by the barking that she was approaching. We lighted fires upon the
-decks, and when the glare gave us a sight of you the sailors lost their
-senses, and ran about shouting and screeching. They were too mad to
-obey orders. The captain fell as I ran past him, his hands clasped upon
-his heart, and as he had all along complained of the weakness of that
-organ, I am certain he died of disease."
-
-"Your countrymen are not good sailors," said Captain Layard.
-
-The Frenchman grinned ghastly, and Sailor rumbled afresh with a
-stiffening of his level fore legs as though he must rise.
-
-"If I had been your captain," continued Layard, "I should have saved
-my flying-jib boom and topgallantmast, and my sailors would not have
-rushed about and torn their throats open with the shrieks of fear--that
-womanly spirit!"
-
-His smile was lofty, his self-complacency inexpressible, you guessed if
-there had been a mirror at hand he would have admired himself in it.
-
-His talk, but not his face, was past the Frenchman's comprehension.
-He rolled his eyes upon Hardy, then upon a decanter half-full of rum,
-standing upon a swinging tray, timing the pulse of the sea.
-
-"He asks for a drink, sir," said Hardy.
-
-"Give him a tot," replied Captain Layard, "then let the second mate
-tell the bo'sun to find him a hole to lie down in. I don't like his
-looks."
-
-He walked abruptly to his berth, followed by the dog, but before he
-entered he turned to the animal and exclaimed, "On deck, Sailor, and
-keep a lookout till the smother thins," and the Newfoundland sprang up
-the steps.
-
-The Frenchman, with a smile at Hardy, touched his brow. The mate,
-without noticing the fellow's gesture, took the decanter of rum from
-the swing tray and gave him a glass of grog. As he handed the tumbler
-to the man, he said:
-
-"Was your captain the man who stood near the mizzen-rigging?"
-
-The Frenchman took a long pull at the glass before answering, and then
-said, "Yes."
-
-"Do you think he fell dead, or was he struck down?" said Hardy, looking
-critically at the wild and dangerous face, whose eyes stared into the
-Englishman's vision with the fixity of a buried bayonet.
-
-"He fell dead," was the answer, and down went the remainder of the grog.
-
-"I believe I saw a man rush from him aft when he fell," said Hardy.
-
-An expression of anger deepened the ugly devil's look of malevolence,
-but he held his peace.
-
-"Your captain is dead and you are here," said Hardy. "Your second mate
-will take charge of the barque, I suppose?"
-
-"Our second mate was drowned a week after we left the Cape," answered
-the Frenchman.
-
-"What will the crew do?"
-
-"They will go to hell!"
-
-"Follow me," said Hardy, and they climbed the companion-steps.
-
-The wind was sleeping. It was now a dead calm, and the fog steeped in
-night was lifting into the sight--conquering blackness off an ocean
-that seemed to be boiling upon some furnace of earth miles deep. Damp
-draughts of air blew with the rolling of the ship, and the canvas beat
-out hollow notes like the blasts of guns heard underground. The chief
-mate called the name of Mr. Candy, who stepped out of the impenetrable
-profound of the quarter.
-
-"This man," said Hardy, talking in the skylight sheen, "is mate of the
-barque we were foul of just now. Take him forward to the bo'sun and
-find him a bed anywhere, and food if he needs it."
-
-"I don't need it," said the Frenchman.
-
-"Come along," said Mr. Candy, and they disappeared.
-
-Hardy paused to listen and peer. There was nothing to see, but he
-might have heard a sound of weeping all about, as though old ocean
-was mourning over its blindness. He then went to bed, but not to
-sleep right away. The Frenchman's insolent touching of his brow had
-accentuated his own deep suspicion of the captain's sanity, and very
-grave, though perplexed, reflection attended his thoughts of Layard,
-and the tragically perilous situation of the ship in charge of a
-lunatic so subtly mad that no one but his chief officer might have
-understanding enough to see how it was with him.
-
-At eight bells in the middle watch he was aroused by Mr. Candy, and
-was on deck in a minute or two, for he was a smart man all around; the
-first at the yard-arm in reefing when his duties had carried him there,
-the first to spring to the cry, no matter the command, swift in relief,
-and for ever on the alert whilst the responsibility of life, cargo,
-and fabric was his. The fog was still very thick, but a thin wind had
-sprung up out of the east, and the streaming of the waters was like the
-shaling of a summer tide upon shingle. The braces had been manned when
-this weak air came, and the yards swung to hold the maintopsail aback;
-the ship rolled gently under the arrest of her canvas, and there was
-nothing to see and nothing to do but let the fog soak into the spirits.
-
-"A spare bunk in the forecastle has been found for the French mate,"
-Candy had said. The fellow had grumbled, muttered that he had been
-an officer on board his own vessel, and deserved better usage. Candy
-said he was lucky to save his life, and to find a bed in a British
-forecastle. The Frenchman growled that he considered himself important
-enough to sleep in the cabin.
-
-"What did you say to that?" Hardy had asked.
-
-"I said, 'You be damned!'" Candy replied.
-
-Not until five bells, half-past six, in Hardy's watch did the fog show
-signs of breaking up. It thinned in places, and presently through the
-stretching ceiling of it the cold, pale dawn looked down upon the
-sea, and made it piebald with granite-coloured spaces. The breeze
-then freshened and the fog began to fly. Columns of it moved away
-stately like pillars of sand on the desert; it swept in Titan cobwebs
-between the masts; it sped like silken veils streaming from viewless
-fleeting spirits over the trucks. Wide vistas opened to windward;
-large blue eyes, soft with the moistness of their light, floated upon
-the trembling eastern brine. The sun darted a pale yellow lance, and
-as the captain put his head through the companion-hatch the scene of
-deep, saving a blankness in the west, opened around, and it was a
-shining morning with a bright sun and a blue sea and an azure sky and a
-pleasant breeze of wind.
-
-Scarcely had the captain's head shown when Hardy, looking seawards over
-the quarter, exclaimed:
-
-"There's the barque that fouled us last night, sir. She's got a wift at
-her mizzen-peak."
-
-She could be no other vessel than the barque; the morning light was
-strong and she lay within a mile, and you could see that she had lost
-her foretopgallantmast and jib-booms. Her maintopsail was aback; she
-had clearly hove to after losing her mate and splintering clear of the
-ship and the smother. Her backed topsail curved inwards like carved
-ivory, her ruddy sheathing flashed its wet length to the sun as the
-heave rolled her light, tall shape, with its slanting stare of black
-ports, upon the wide white line that girdled her.
-
-"Why is she flying that gamp?" said the captain, taking a telescope out
-of the companionway; but before he levelled it at the ship he sent a
-glance full of scrutiny aloft to gather if his vessel had been hurt in
-the night, which was distinctly professional and sane, and quite enough
-to have convinced the Jacks that the "old man" knew the time of day,
-even if they suspected that the compass of his mind was wrong by points.
-
-The gamp, as he termed the wift, consisted of the French flag stopped
-in the middle, that is, bound by a rope yarn into the appearance of a
-gamp umbrella. It tumbled at its block, and was a syllable of sea talk
-signifying "help!" The skipper whistled to his dog, which had kept a
-brave lookout throughout the night without relief, and which, seated on
-the heel of the starboard cathead, seemed to be listening with a grave
-countenance to the remarks of an ordinary seaman who was addressing
-him. The beautiful and dutiful creature came bounding aft and pawed his
-master to the shirt-front, rising nearly his height.
-
-"You had better lower a boat and go and see what that fellow wants,"
-said the captain, and he motioned the dog into the cabin and told it to
-wait there for breakfast.
-
-"They're lowering a boat, and mean to come aboard of us," exclaimed
-Hardy, whose eyes were on the barque.
-
-A boat dropped awkwardly from the vessel's tall side, and in a minute
-or two the gold of brandished oars sparkled upon the delicate
-feathering of the water. The men were washing down aboard the _York_.
-In those days they carried a head pump which they rigged, and the
-bright water was passed in buckets and sluiced over the planks, the
-boatswain standing by and giving the scrubbers heart by his inspiriting
-cries, roars, and oaths. It was a common scene of shipboard life, full
-of colour, movement, and business.
-
-Hardy looked along the decks for the French mate, but did not see him.
-
-The captain exclaimed, "We'll send the fellow aboard in his boat. A
-good riddance. How some faces damn the souls which animate them! You
-seldom err in judging of a man by his looks. The expression is formed
-by the character. But affliction may deceive you, I allow; a harelip,
-for example, or a cock-eye."
-
-"Shall I pass the word for the Frenchman, sir?" said Hardy.
-
-"Oh, yes! oh, yes, rout him out of it!" answered the captain, smiling
-with that air of superiority which would have convicted him in the eyes
-of a keeper.
-
-The word was passed, and the Frenchman, with the aspect of a pirate
-in a boy's book, rose through the scuttle as the boat came alongside.
-The man who had steered her scrambled into the mizzen-chains and
-sprang on to the quarter-deck with a salute of French courtesy. He was
-close-shaven and dark, habited in loose blue breeches and a jumper,
-and looked a good sailor spite his nationality, that was as marked in
-gesture and bearing as though branded on his brow.
-
-"Can I speak to the captain?" said he, looking from Hardy to the
-skipper. His broken English was good.
-
-"Glad you speak my tongue," said the captain. "What do you want?"
-
-"I have served in American ships and can speak English," answered
-the man. "I am brother of the captain of that barque. He was stabbed
-last night and is dead. Our second mate, too, is dead. The first mate
-is missing. I'll swear he killed my poor brother, and then drowned
-himself. We are without a navigator. What are we to do?"
-
-"You shall have a navigator," exclaimed Captain Layard, and he looked
-toward the forecastle, but the Frenchman had disappeared.
-
-The man bowed and said, "It was a cold-blooded assassination. They had
-been quarrelling all the voyage. The villain chose the right moment,
-and the sea is easier than the guillotine."
-
-"I saw your captain fall," said Hardy, "and the man that killed him is
-aboard us."
-
-The fellow started, and so did his eyeballs in their sockets as he
-flashed them eagerly and fiercely along the decks where the sailors
-were scrubbing, and the boatswain encouraging them with the pleasant
-promptings of the British forecastle: "Scrub it out of 'em, my lads.
-D'ye want to drown the ship, you sojer? Slap it along the lee-coaming
-and be damned to you, Dick! Ain't it as thick as yer eyebrows there?
-Hurry up, hurry up with them buckets. Are we a hexcavator with the
-steam turned off?"
-
-"A hand fetch that Frenchman out of the fok'sle and bring him aft,"
-shouted Hardy.
-
-"What do you mean to do with him?" asked the captain.
-
-"I will call the crew together and consider," answered the man with a
-hideously significant glance at the main yard-arm.
-
-"If you hang him," said the captain, "who'll navigate you?"
-
-The fellow folded his arms tightly upon his breast and sank his head,
-sending a level look of patient hate through his eyelashes toward the
-forecastle.
-
-"What's your rating aboard your ship?" inquired the captain.
-
-"Boatswain, sir," was the answer, and the man did not turn his head to
-say it.
-
-The dog at this moment came out of the cabin and stood with his fore
-feet on the plank at the coaming, staring at his master. He seemed
-to plead. The human spirit could not be more eloquent in the gaze;
-but the captain did not heed him, for just then the man who had been
-sent to fetch the Frenchman was coming aft, shoulder to shoulder with
-the Frenchman himself. The men forgot to scrub; the head pump ceased
-to gush; the boatswain left off conjuring and damning. All eyes were
-turned aft. The silence of a moment fell upon the ship, and nothing
-broke it but the low growling of the Newfoundland.
-
-The Frenchman, fresh from the forecastle, was ghastly pale; his walk
-was defiant; when abreast of the main-hatchway he came more quickly
-than his companion, who stopped. He walked up close to the boatswain of
-the barque and said, in his native tongue:
-
-"Well!"
-
-The other dropped his arms; his hands were clenched, his eyes charged
-with that deadly cold light of hate which is more dangerous and fearful
-than the flame of fury. He spoke slowly in French, and what he said was
-this:
-
-"You did not drown yourself, I see, after assassinating my brother."
-
-"You lie in your throat! I sprang to save my life. Your brother is a
-live man for me."
-
-"Liar, and villain, and execrable coward!"
-
-He stepped to the rail and said to the men, in French of course--but
-you shall be told what he said:
-
-"The assassin is in this ship. He pretends that he sprang for his life;
-he killed my brother, our navigator, and would have consigned us,
-helpless, to the desolation of the sea."
-
-He returned, and was followed by a howl of passion from the boat
-alongside.
-
-All in a minute, and just as the man was posting himself again in
-dramatic attitude close to the murderer, the huge Newfoundland, with
-an indescribable roar of rage, sprang with the whole weight of his
-body upon the French mate, and bore him to the deck with a thump of
-lead, like the fall of a twelve-pounder ball, and they thought that the
-brute's teeth had met in the wretch's throat. Hardy and the captain
-made a rush and dragged the animal off the fallen man, and the captain,
-grasping the creature by the coat of his neck, hauled him, growling
-fiercely, to the companion, and drove him below.
-
-The man rose; his nose was bleeding, and after he had run the length of
-his sleeve along it his face looked like a decapitated head placed on
-the upright body it had been struck from.
-
-"I want to swing my yards," said Captain Layard. "I've been hove to
-all night through you. Take that man away; I don't parley-vous myself,
-and don't follow your talk. He'll navigate you home; he looks a good
-navigator." And he smiled with some sense of superiority of meaning,
-which made his face fitter for comedy than for the tragedy of this
-passage.
-
-The French boatswain swept his hand with an infuriate motion toward the
-rail.
-
-"If I go with this man he will kill me," said the blood-stained French
-mate.
-
-"Not he. The ship wants a navigator," replied Captain Layard, with a
-cheerfulness supremely inconsequential.
-
-"If you do not come," said the French boatswain, in his native speech,
-"I will call the men up, and they will throw you into the boat."
-
-"Why can't you speak in English?" said Captain Layard. "He'll
-understand you, and we can follow your meaning."
-
-The French mate turned on his heel and was beginning to walk slowly
-forward. As a cat springs when started by a dog, so sprang the barque's
-boatswain upon his brother's murderer. With the strength of the fiends
-before they were cast out he rushed the bleeding scoundrel to the rail
-and yelled to his men. The French mate grasped the mizzen-shrouds and
-struggled and kicked in awful silence; but in less than a minute three
-stout sailors, out of the four who manned the boat's oars, swarmed up.
-Eight enraged hands then tore the French mate from the mizzen-rigging
-as the sweep of the hurricane uproots a tree. All in a heap,
-struggling, wrestling, groaning, they got him past the after-swifter,
-and to an order, shrieked through his teeth by the French boatswain,
-they hoisted him lengthwise to the rail, and dropped him into the boat.
-The French boatswain then made a sort of salaam bow to the captain and
-Hardy, and the whole four disappeared in the twinkling of an eye over
-the side amid shouts of laughter from the seamen who had been washing
-down the decks.
-
-"Get all sail upon her, Mr. Hardy," said Captain Layard; "but I shall
-keep my topsail to the mast for awhile until I see what they mean to do
-with that barque."
-
-The sailors dropped their buckets and scrubbing-brushes, and fell to
-howling at the halliards. Topgallant and royal-yards rose, the mainsail
-was left to swing with its clews aloft, and the _York_ was now a
-full-rigged ship, hove to, but clothed to her trucks, leaning with the
-swell as though by swaying she was knitting her frame together for the
-start.
-
-A ship when under sail on the ocean is alive; watch her closely and
-you will discover that she has human intelligence in her methods of
-helping, and at the same time influencing, the reason that governs
-the helm and incarnate walks the quarter-deck or bridge. It was about
-a quarter-past seven; the sailors resumed the business of washing
-down; the decks sparkled as the brine flashed along the planks, and
-the boatswain stimulated this sweetening process by the inspiriting
-language of the land of the slush-lamp. The captain stood right aft
-watching the receding figure of the barque's fat boat. The placid
-heave of the deep was crisped by the delicate crumbling foam curling
-from low, blue brows to the gentle gushing of the pleasant breeze,
-like some scene of swelling land enamelled with white flowers; the
-blankness to leeward had melted into azure, and it was all blueness and
-brightness, and you heard a song that was sweet with its summer note
-upon the harp-strings of the lofty spars.
-
-"What will they do with him?" said the captain, going to the companion
-and resting his hand upon it as though in a moment he would descend.
-
-"I am wondering, sir," answered Hardy, who stood near. "I should not
-like to be in the power of that bo'sun after I had killed his brother."
-
-"Death drugs revenge; I would not kill my enemy," said the captain,
-putting on one of those incommunicable looks which always alarmed Hardy
-with thoughts of the ship's safety. "I would keep my brother's murderer
-alive--at sea. There is the middle-watch and the ghastly face of the
-moon! Whispers aloft and God's eye in every star! The ghostly figure
-should walk the quarter-deck with the assassin, should enter his berth
-with him, and sit beside his bunk and watch him. That is the revenge
-that kills the soul--the very thought makes me sweat."
-
-His face changed into an expression of agitation, and with a sudden
-hurry he disappeared down the companion-steps.
-
-Hardy watched the French boat draw alongside the barque. He wondered
-that the captain should have left the deck at such a time; it was
-another illustration of his insanity, no doubt. "He has gone to see to
-little Johnny, perhaps," the mate thought, what had happened having
-faded in the chaotic muddle of his reason. Here was Captain Layard, who
-was determined to make a swift passage, keeping his ship hove to and
-going below to talk to his bright-haired boy, to help him dress maybe,
-and to muse in lopsided moralising over the medicine chest.
-
-He took the glass, and levelled it at the barque, and saw the boat
-slowly ascending in spasmodic jerks to the davits. A few men dragged
-at the falls, and upon the port quarter of the poop the rest of the
-ship's company apparently had assembled, and were clearly discussing
-the recapture of the mate with the heat and passion of the French when
-excited. They gesticulated, they surged and reeled, and Hardy again
-saw one or another of them fling his hand in the direction of the fore
-yard-arm.
-
-He could not see if the mate stood amongst them, and all forward was
-vacant deck, pulsating with the shadow of swinging sail. There was
-nothing else in sight all away round the girdle of the deep, though
-this was a frequented sea; and the two vessels, to a distant eye, might
-have seemed abandoned, so aimless was the look they got from the white
-cloths incurving to the masts.
-
-About ten minutes after the boat had been hoisted, Hardy, who continued
-to watch the barque through the glass, saw several men go forward, and
-shortly after a man got into the fore-rigging, and crawled aloft and
-gained the fore-yard. The powerful lenses brought the barque close, and
-Hardy easily saw, as he followed the man sliding to the yard-arm, that
-he carried a tail-block in his hand. He made this block fast to the
-extremity of the yard, and whilst he was doing this another man got
-into the fore-rigging holding a line, the end of which he gave to the
-fellow on the yard, who rove it through the block, and then came into
-the fore-rigging grasping the line, and both men descended to the deck.
-
-Hardy rushed to the companionway and shouted down the hatch, taking his
-chance of the skipper hearing him, "They are going to hang that mate
-who killed the captain!"
-
-A moment or two later up came Captain Layard.
-
-"What's that you sang out?" he cried. "What's wrong? I'm with Johnny."
-
-"Look for yourself, sir," answered Hardy, and he gave the glass to
-him. The captain pointed it. Mad or not mad, he knew what a yard-arm
-whip was, and what in this case it signified. He saw a crowd of men on
-the forecastle; he distinguished the figure of the mate, with his arms
-pinioned behind him, standing within a fathom of the rail rounding to
-the forecastle break. As he gazed he saw a man bandage the wretch's
-eyes with a red handkerchief. The same man next secured the end of the
-line to the man's neck, and the captain, with the telescope at his eye,
-began to mutter, and Hardy saw that his face had turned a greenish
-yellow, but he could not understand what he said, nor clearly perceive,
-as did the captain, all that was happening aboard that tragic barque,
-with its wift at the gaff-end beating the air like a human arm in agony.
-
-In the captain's glass the bulk of the forecastle crowd melted and
-could not be seen on the main-deck. One who was left--and the muttering
-captain thought that he was the boatswain--held a book and seemed to
-be reading from it. The two men kept the barque's victim pinned to
-the rail; the man who was reading closed his book and raised his arm
-straight up, looking toward the main-deck. The two men sprang back from
-the murderer, whose figure soared aloft, a ghastly shape of man flying
-wingless to the yard-arm.
-
-"O my God!" cried Hardy, who saw it, and the crew of the _York_,
-watching that picture of short shrift and flying form, groaned and
-cursed with British hatred of the sudden execution, made dastardly by
-numbers.
-
-They could see the man rushed to the nape of his neck to the yard-arm
-block, then fall, bringing up with a sudden belaying of that
-gallows-rope, and the hanging man began to swing like a pendulum of
-death midway betwixt the yard-arm and the feathering surface of the sea.
-
-"Suppose he didn't do it?" said Captain Layard, letting the telescope
-sink and turning his face slowly to Hardy, who thought, even in that
-moment of horror and astonishment, that the captain had spoken nothing
-saner since the voyage began. "Fill on your topsail," continued the
-captain, in a trembling voice, his face distorted by passions and
-fancies beyond the penetration of reason. "I wouldn't have Johnny
-see that sight; they'll keep him swinging till he has ticked out the
-minutes his soul has taken to arrive in hell. Fill on your topsail,
-sir. And what'll the beggars do? They'll wait for help to come along."
-
-The mate was walking a little way forward, and the captain, with his
-back upon the barque, stood muttering to himself. It was a pleasant
-breeze, and the ship took the weight of the sunlit gush of blue wind
-with a buoyant heel, and then she broke the waters at the bow. In two
-hours the barque was glimmering like the crest of a sea in the liquid
-ether far and far astern. Her topsail was still aback, and doubtless,
-as Captain Layard had said, she was waiting for the help that must soon
-come along.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-LOST!
-
-
-And now for another week of this ship's adventure. There is little to
-record. As she drove to the south and west the breeze freshened by
-strokes, and the foam, white as daylight, seethed with a leeward roll
-to the channels, whose plates flashed jewelled fountains from her side.
-
-It was noble sailing with a buckling stu'nsail boom, and every taut
-weather-shroud and backstay spirited the sea-whitening keel with
-sweet, clear songs of rejoicing. All the crew loved little Johnny, and
-the great Newfoundland, placid, stately, and benign, was ever at his
-side, courting the boy, with looks of love, to play. Always in this
-fine weather the sunny-haired lad, in the miniature clothes of the
-bluejacket, would of a dog-watch take his drum upon the forecastle, and
-roll out a good rattling accompaniment to the cheerful piping of the
-whistle. Then the sailors would dance whilst the ship's stem rent the
-water into sweat, and the bow-sea rolled away in glory, and the western
-heavens grew majestical with sunset.
-
-And all this time no man spoke a hint as to the captain's state of
-mind, because, as I have said, the sailor has no eyes for the human
-nature of the quarter-deck until it should become as visible and
-demonstrative as a windmill in a wind.
-
-This Captain Layard was _not_; his moods and motions were of too subtle
-a sort to be interpretable by the forecastle gaze, and all the strange
-unconscious discoveries of himself he limited to Hardy, scarcely ever
-speaking to the second mate unless to give him an order. But even when
-he talked to Hardy, no man could have sworn that he was madder than
-most dreamers are. It was only, as Hardy thought, that his talk was so
-cursedly inconsequential. He reminded him of a diver who if you look to
-port comes up to starboard, whose spot of emergence is always somewhere
-else.
-
-One day, at the end of the time just spoken of, the ship was stretching
-her length along a wide blue sea enriched with running knolls, shadowed
-by themselves into deepest violet, aflash with sudden meltings of foam
-which whitened the windward picture, and ran with smooth curves from
-the leeward yeast that rushed into the water from the side.
-
-The captain was below. It was about ten o'clock in the morning. There
-was now a sting in the light of the sun, as he floated upwards in an
-almost tropic glory, undimmed by the flight of little clouds which
-hinted at the Trade. Our friend the chief mate, Hardy, was walking up
-and down the weather-side of the quarter-deck. A sailor stood at the
-wheel trim for his trick; he was a British seaman, his easy floating
-figure and swift look to windward, aloft, and into the compass bowl put
-thoughts into one's head of the time when men like him wore pigtails
-down their backs and fired the fury of hell, as the Spaniard said to
-Nelson, into the gunports and sides of the audacious enemy.
-
-There was music on that quarter-deck, for Johnny, who was admiral of
-that ship, the captain being very much under him, had sent for the
-whistle, and the sailor had come at once, bringing his music with him.
-He was seated upon the skylight, and was piping that cheerful song, "A
-Wet Sheet and a Flowing Sea," all over the ship to the delight of the
-watch on deck, who worked the nimbler for it; and Johnny made martial
-music of that sea-song with his drum.
-
-The ship rushed along with festive lifts and falls and triumphant
-choruses in her weather-rigging as the swing of the sea brought her
-masts to windward, and all was beauty and sunlight, and white phantoms
-of little sailing clouds, and swelling canvas yearning to the azure
-recess at which the ship, like some goddess of the sea, was pointing
-with her spear of jibboom.
-
-Presently the boy grew tired; the piper went forward, and as the
-captain's servant came along Johnny gave him his drum and sticks to
-carry below. The great Newfoundland was lying at its length beside the
-skylight, and Johnny sat upon him, and lifting his ear talked into
-it, and the dog grunted in affectionate reply. But little boys soon
-tire of anything save sweets, and Johnny joined Hardy, and they walked
-together. The lad had a very inquisitive mind, and was constantly
-wanting to know. He began to question Hardy about the ship. What is the
-good of that little sail right on top up there? Why didn't they give
-each mast one great sail? Wouldn't that save trouble? Couldn't they let
-it down, and tie it up, as they did that middle sail there, when the
-weather grew nasty? Wouldn't Hardy be glad to get home? How old was
-he? Was he glad to be so old? Wouldn't he rather be eight? After much
-interrogative conversation of this sort he felt tired, and strayed from
-Hardy's side and walked about the quarter-deck, looking around him as
-though he wished to pick up something which he could throw at the sea.
-
-Going right aft, abaft the man at the wheel, his arch, sweet, wondering
-eyes were taken by the sight of some Mother Carey's chickens; also the
-splendid, dazzling stream of wake that was rushing off in snake-like
-undulations attracted him. A stretch of ash-white grating protected the
-wheel-chains and the relieving gear. It stood a little way under the
-taffrail and was not very high above the deck, and the tiller worked
-under it.
-
-Unnoticed by Hardy, Johnny got upon this grating to watch the
-sea-birds, also to obtain a view of the place where that giddy,
-boiling, meteoric river of foam began. A sea-bird is a thing of beauty,
-which is a joy to a little boy upon whom the shades of the prison-house
-have not yet begun to close; and the dazzle of spinning foam hurling
-seawards is also a beauty and a wonder and a miracle, as are many other
-things in this pleasant world of flowers and valleys and streams;
-for I have seen a little child pick a daisy and view it with greater
-transport than could even be felt by a beautiful young woman bending
-with beaming eyes over the bracelet of diamonds with which her lover
-has just clasped her wrist.
-
-Johnny fell upon his knees and crawled upon the grating to the
-taffrail, the flat surface of which he kneeled upon, peering over and
-down betwixt the gig and the taffrail to see the place where the white
-water began under the counter. The poor little fellow overbalanced
-himself, and Hardy, whose eye was upon him in that instant, saw him
-vanish.
-
-"O my God!" he shrieked. "Man overboard!" he shouted. "Hard down! hard
-down!"
-
-And whilst the wheel went grinding up to windward, and whilst the sails
-aloft were beginning to thunder to the weather sweep of the rushing
-bows, Hardy, tearing off his coat and waistcoat and shoes, leaped from
-the quarter into the boiling yeast and struck out.
-
-Scarcely had he shot overboard when the great dog Sailor, springing
-up with a swift movement of his head around, leapt like a darting
-flame on to the rail from which Hardy had plunged, and jumped. There
-was plenty of foam in the sea, and it was almost blinding Hardy, who
-swam strongly; but it did not blind the dog, who saw the mate but not
-the child, and made for him. A sea swept Hardy to its summit, and he
-perceived the child some three or four cables' length distant; a head
-of foam rolled over that sun-bright speck and it disappeared, and as
-Hardy sank into the trough the dog, that stemmed the brine like some
-swiftly-urged boat, caught him by the collar and forced him round in
-the direction of the ship, whose main-yards were now aback and one of
-whose lee quarter boats was rapidly descending, with the captain on the
-grating, waving his arms in frantic and heart-subduing pantomime.
-
-"Sailor!" roared Hardy, struggling with his whole force to round the
-noble creature's head in the direction where he had seen the bright
-point vanish. "O God! doggie, dear doggie! Johnny is overboard, and
-drowning! Go for him, Sailor! go for him, Sailor!"
-
-And buoyed by the magnificent swimmer whose teeth were in his collar,
-he stiffened his breast and pointed. But the Newfoundland, who had
-not seen Johnny fall, had leapt to save the life of Hardy, and with
-bitter, blighting despair in his heart the gallant young fellow felt
-the beautiful animal at his side urging him irresistibly up one slope
-and down another in the direction of the ship, with its dreadful figure
-of human anguish gesticulating and shouting on the grating.
-
-The hearts that bent the blades rowed with love of the boy and a
-maddening passion to save him. They came to Hardy first and dragged him
-and the dog over the gunwale, and a man standing up in the stern-sheets
-steered the boat for the place where the little fellow had last been
-seen from the deck of the ship. But they rowed in vain. Sodden with
-brine, and half blinded by the tears of a manly sailor's heart, the
-mate strained his vision over the running seas, and knew, O God! and
-knew that Johnny had sunk for ever.
-
-"Oh, what a pity!" said one of the men.
-
-"The dog could have saved him," exclaimed another.
-
-"No, he was gone before the dog could have reached the place," said
-Hardy, and he sank upon a thwart and covered his face.
-
-The Newfoundland laid his massive jaws upon his knee in caress and in
-encouragement, knowing he was saved, and loving him as those majestic
-creatures love the life they have torn from the grasp of death. The
-men, with the lifted blades of their oars sparkling in the sun, gazed
-silently around, but Johnny was gone. The tall seas seethed, and the
-boat fell away with their melting heads and rose buoyant to the height
-of the next slant, but Johnny was gone, and after they had lingered
-half an hour the men, to the command of Hardy, turned the boat's head
-toward the ship, and rowed away from that sun-lighted scene of ocean
-grave which already the hand of viewless love had strewn with flowers
-and garlands of foam.
-
-Captain Layard was standing with tightly folded arms beside the
-skylight when Hardy arrived on board, and approached him, shuddering
-with grief and with the exhaustion that attends even a brief spell
-of battling with the rolling seas of the ocean. The unhappy father's
-face was utterly unintelligible in expression. And still a critical
-eye, with good capacity for subtle penetration, would in this time of
-sudden and awful bereavement have witnessed in that poor man's face the
-dangerous condition of his soul.
-
-The men who were hoisting the boat pulled with askant looks full of
-respect and rough sympathy, and the boat rose in silence, so touched
-were the sailors' hearts by this sudden loss of the bright-haired
-little darling of the ship. The Newfoundland, shaking a shower from his
-coat, came to the captain, seemed to know that grief was in him, and
-looked up at him.
-
-"Where is my little Johnny?" said the captain to Hardy, in a firm,
-sharp tone.
-
-Hardy could not answer him.
-
-"There is no good in telling me that he's not on board this ship," said
-the captain, letting fall his arms and swaying in a strange way with
-the leeward and weather rolls of the arrested vessel. "Where is he
-hidden?"
-
-He stepped to the companion and shouted down, "Johnny, Johnny, my
-darling! Come up with your drum! The men want music! Come up with your
-drum, my Johnny!"
-
-The sailors belayed the falls of the boat and secured her, and slowly
-walked forward, never a one of them speaking. The captain went
-below, calling "Johnny." Mr. Candy came up to Hardy. Both he and the
-watch below had rushed on deck to that dreadful cry at sea of "Man
-overboard!" and to that sudden change you feel in a ship when the yards
-of the main are swung aback. All the concern that a man with white
-eyelashes and pale hair and a skin like a cut of roasted veal can look
-was in Candy's face as he said:
-
-"This blow has turned the captain's head, sir."
-
-"I cannot speak to you," Hardy answered.
-
-"Let me fetch you some brandy, sir," said the second mate. Hardy raised
-his arm. Candy walked to the quarter and stood staring at the sea where
-the child had sunk. The Newfoundland dog was growing uneasy. You saw by
-the creature's motion of head and by other signs that he knew something
-was wrong. Twice he growled low and walked round the skylight smelling
-the planks, then coming to the companionway he listened and sprang down
-the steps.
-
-Hardy stood waiting for the captain. It was not for him to order the
-topsail-yard to be swung until the captain spoke. All the seamen were
-forward standing in groups waiting for the command, and the boatswain,
-in the face of the general grief, could find nothing for them to do
-until the quarter-deck started them.
-
-It filled Hardy with anguish, though he was only a mate in the British
-Merchant Service, the one unrecognised condition of our national life,
-spite of the pleading of its heroic traditions and the claims of its
-English seamen of to-day, upon the admiration of their country, to
-think of the poor, desolate, brain-afflicted father below, seeking in
-his madness his beloved little boy. He knew that this man had tenderly
-loved the mother of that child and mourned her loss with a sailor's
-heart, and that the bright and spirited lad, whom God had summoned,
-had been his constant companion since his wife's death, the light of
-his life, the flower whose fragrance had sweetened the loneliness of
-command.
-
-He stood waiting, soaked to the flesh. Suddenly the captain appeared.
-
-"Johnny is not below," he said. "He's somewhere in the ship. When did
-you see him last, Mr. Hardy?"
-
-And still Hardy could not answer him. The Newfoundland had followed his
-master, and the whole frame and benign eyes of the noble creature, to
-whom and to whose like man denies a soul, yielded preternatural token
-of loss and disquiet that was human in eloquence.
-
-The captain did not seem to heed Hardy's silence and manner. He looked
-with great eagerness and a certain wildness along the decks, and
-then putting his hand to the side of his mouth, with his face turned
-forward, where the men stood watching him, he shouted in an imperious
-voice as though he would frighten an answer from the concealed child:
-
-"Johnny!--It is strange," said he, in a low voice, turning and looking
-at Hardy, "Is he aloft?" And he turned his eyes up and scrutinised the
-rigging, the tops, the crosstrees, the yards, stepping to the rail so
-as to obtain a view past the leaches of the canvas.
-
-"Shall I order those yards to be swung, sir, and way got upon the
-ship?" said Hardy, speaking with difficulty.
-
-"I want Johnny," was the captain's answer, and he walked slowly
-forward, looking to right and left of him, as though the little lad
-must be in hiding somewhere, flat beside a forward coaming or behind a
-hencoop, or under the long-boat, for his figure had been small, and he
-could have concealed himself within the flakes of the halliards coiled
-down upon a pin.
-
-The men drew back, scattered in a kind of dissolving way, gazed with
-sheepish looks of sympathy, one rugged man with damp eyes, for he too
-had lost a son beloved with the rough love of a heart unhardened by
-salt and toil.
-
-"Has any man among you," said the captain, bringing his head out of the
-galley door--for the child had been a frequent guest of the cooks of
-the ships he had sailed in: they would make him jam tarts and little
-cakes, and his prattle to the fellows was as cheering to them as the
-song of a canary--"has any man among you," he said, "seen my little
-boy?"
-
-"I don't think you'll find him forward, sir," answered the boatswain.
-"Jim, jump below and see if he's in the fok'sle."
-
-The sailors exchanged looks which seemed to suggest that they thought
-it kind and wise in the boatswain to humour the captain, whose mind, to
-them, appeared a little shaken and made uncertain by the shock of his
-loss.
-
-"No, I'll trust no man's eyes but mine," exclaimed the captain, with
-a lofty expression of face, and, going to the scuttle, which is the
-little hatch through which the seamen drop into their parlour, he put
-his legs over and descended.
-
-One man only was in this forecastle. He was the young seaman who had
-played the whistle whilst Johnny beat the drum. He started up at the
-sight of the captain, amazed by a visit that was unparalleled in his
-experience or recollection of forecastle story. His face showed marks
-of unaffected distress, and indeed this rude but sympathetic heart had
-been seated for some minutes prior to the captain's entrance, with
-bowed head resting in his wart-toughened palms, thinking of the child
-and his sudden death.
-
-It was a strange, gloomy interior. The swing of the lamp kept the
-shadows on the wing, and oilskins and coats swayed upon the ship's wall
-to the solemn plunge of the bows, and you heard the roar of the smitten
-and recoiling surge in a low thunder, like the sound of a railway
-train striking through the soil into a vault. Some bunks went curving
-into the gloom past the light which fell through the hatch, and a few
-hammocks stretched their pale, bale-like lengths under the upper deck.
-Here, too, were sea-chests--a few only--and odds and ends of sea-boots,
-and the raffle of the sailor's ocean home.
-
-"Where's my son? Is he down here?" exclaimed the captain, haggard, and
-with something dreadful in his looks in that light, uttering the words
-as peremptorily as ever he delivered an order on the quarter-deck.
-
-The young fellow gazed aghast at him in silence.
-
-The captain, who did not seem to heed whether he was answered or not,
-went to the bunks and examined them one by one, knelt and looked under
-them, felt the sagged canvas of the hammocks. Oh, it was pitiful!
-
-"He's not here," he exclaimed, turning to the young sailor. "Have you
-got your whistle handy? Pull it out and pipe. The music will bring him
-with his drum."
-
-The young man went to his bunk and took the whistle from the head of
-it. His face was full of awe and wonder; it was a bit of psychology, a
-trick or two above all _his_ art of seamanship.
-
-"What shall I play, sir?" he asked, in a shaking voice, with a glance
-up through the scuttle at the men gathered near and listening.
-
-"What's his favourite tune?" said the captain.
-
-The young fellow reflected, and answered, "'Sally come up,' sir. It
-runs well with the drum."
-
-"Play it," said the captain.
-
-The young fellow put the whistle to his lips and blew. The contrast
-between the merry air, shrilling in the forecastle and out through the
-hatch into the bright wind, and the captain's half-triumphant face of
-expectancy would have melted a heart of steel. The poor man stepped
-under the little hatch and shouted up, "On deck there!"
-
-"Sir," answered the boatswain, showing himself.
-
-"Can this whistle be heard aft?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"Watch a bit, and report if he's coming."
-
-The young seaman, who was nearly heartbroken with his obligation of
-playing, continued to pipe, and you beheld a vision of dancing sailors,
-and swelling canvas reverberating the rattle of the drum.
-
-The captain waited under the hatch, his poor face charged with ardent
-expectation. He might have overheard a gruff voice say, "It oughtn't to
-be allowed to go on. He'd get all right if he'd go to his cabin, where
-it 'ud come to him." But he paid no heed.
-
-Suddenly the whistling ceased, and the young fellow, flinging his
-whistle into his bunk, cried, "It's choking me, sir."
-
-The captain looked at him, and saying, "Where is Johnny?" climbed
-through the hatch and, without a word to the sailors, walked slowly aft.
-
-The whole ship seemed to tremble throughout her frame with every lift
-and fall, as though like something alive she was now startled by this
-strange delay, and the foretopmast studdingsail curved with the weight
-of the wind from its boom, and no doubt, in the language of sailcloth,
-cursed the maintopsail for stopping its eager drag.
-
-Hardy stood beside the second mate, to leeward, on the quarter-deck,
-and watched the captain coming aft. The great dog in a leap gained his
-master's side and marched with him, looking with beautiful sagacity up
-into the poor man's face. The captain walked with his eyes fixed upon
-the sky, just over the sea-line astern, but if speculation were in his
-gaze it was not interpretable; he saw, or seemed to see, something
-beyond the blue haze of distance, and thus he watched it, without
-speaking to the two mates, or turning his eyes upon them, until he
-came to the companion-hatch, down whose steps he went, followed by the
-dog.
-
-Noon was near and an observation must be taken. Hardy, whose clothes
-were plastered by water upon him, said to Candy:
-
-"We must get an observation and swing the yards. This blow has thrown
-his mind off its balance, and he might not thank us later if we should
-go on as though he were responsible."
-
-"I agree with you, sir," said Candy.
-
-Hardy called to the boatswain, who came quickly.
-
-"You know the law of the sea as well as I do," said the mate, "and I
-don't want you and the men to believe that I have taken charge of the
-ship even for five minutes because I mean to get way upon her."
-
-"She wants it," said the boatswain, looking forward along the ship as
-though she were a horse.
-
-"I must get an observation," continued Hardy, "and you and the men will
-judge that the captain would wish me to do what he himself would do if
-his terrible loss had left him capable of doing anything."
-
-"It don't need reasoning about, sir," said the boatswain.
-
-"Hands lay aft and swing the maintopsail-yard!" shouted Hardy. "Lee
-mainbrace! Mr. Candy, will you step below for your sextant? Kindly
-bring mine."
-
-Candy went below. The men came running aft. But the shadow of death
-was upon the ship, bright, boundless, and streaming with the life of
-the wind as were heaven and ocean, and the sailors dragged the great
-yards round in silence. The ship heeled over a little more to the full
-swell of her canvas, and as Hardy took his sextant from Candy she was
-bursting the blue surge into white glory, and the leeward foam was
-passing fast and faster.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-THE INDIAMAN'S BOAT
-
-
-The seas were breaking fast and fierce from the bows, and the wake
-flashed into the windy distance in a fan-shaped splendour as of
-sunshine, and hands were aloft furling the fore and mizzen royals, and
-some fore-and-aft canvas was rattling hanks and lacing on their stays
-to the drag of down-hauls; the ship was sonorous with the music of the
-sea, and by looking over the weather side you could have seen the green
-sheathing sweating with foam, storming through the dazzling smother
-like a wounded dolphin whose blood is sweet to dolphins; yet this was
-but a fragment of the magnificent picture of foaming seas and flying
-cloud, with the lofty swelling ship shearing through the heart of the
-day in a thunder-storm of prisms and of spray, lovely as the heights of
-heaven when some stars are green and some shine like the rose.
-
-Hardy came on deck. He stood and looked about him, refreshed by a
-shift of clothes and by a nip of grog. He had worked out his sights,
-and before mounting the steps had stood a minute at the captain's door
-listening; he heard the poor man's voice, and judged by its solemn
-imploring note that he was praying, but the noise of the sailors above
-made him hurry, and though it was his watch below he felt that he was
-in command, and that the safety of the ship was in his hands.
-
-Any seaman will understand this mate's critical and difficult
-situation. A captain is not to be lightly deposed; drunken captains
-and--unless they grow frantic--mad captains must be obeyed or endured
-or it is mutiny, with heavy penalties awaiting the arrival of the ship;
-and the mate of a merchantman may, though by conscientious act, lose
-power of earning bread for himself and his home unless as a foremast
-hand, for the law is hard, and the shipowner harder still.
-
-"You had better take the mainsail off her, Mr. Candy, and furl the
-main-royal," said Hardy. "She has more than she wants."
-
-The stu'nsail was in and so was the boom, and Hardy gave other
-directions, but they need not be repeated because minuteness is
-tedious, and the language of the sea cryptic to millions. When Sheridan
-was asked how the poetaster described the phoenix, he answered, "Just
-as a poulterer would!" The poulterer is not good in art, and the beak,
-talons, and all are merits when left out.
-
-It was about a quarter to one, and the cabin dinner would be coming aft
-soon. The cook was busy in his galley, and black smoke was smothering
-the bulwarks abreast from the chimney. Hardy paced the deck watching
-the seamen at work, Candy superintended the business. There was plenty
-for the mate to think of. The grief planted in his kind heart, by
-recollection of his hopeless effort to rescue the poor drowned child,
-was overwhelmed by thoughts of the captain, his undoubted madness, the
-state of the ship; and then his mind on a sudden went away to Julia
-Armstrong; he wondered what would be her fortune, if luck would attend
-her in India, if her love for him--he would not pretend aught else to
-himself--would hold her unwilling to remain, that she might return in
-the vessel and meet him once more. "In which case," he declared to
-himself, "I will marry her and chance it."
-
-The ship was rushing onward like a shooting star, and the wind clothed
-the sails with the thunder of its power; but she was comfortable and
-dry. The bright bursts were flung clear of her by the rush of the
-breeze, and she took the seas with that perfect grace of leap and
-curtsey which sails alone do give.
-
-As Hardy walked, the cabin servant came up to him and reported dinner
-on the table.
-
-"Have you told the captain?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"Is he at table?"
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-Hardy went below. The captain was in his accustomed place cutting at a
-big meat pie; his brow was knitted, and with the whole strength of his
-soul he seemed intent upon this job of cutting the pie. His long hair
-and the hair upon his cheeks and chin accentuated the expression of his
-pale face, which was one of wildness and of grief so subtle that it
-might scarcely be known as grief by the heart that ached with it; but
-when he raised his eyes, Hardy saw a darkness upon his vision as though
-the shadow of death was on his eyelids.
-
-"Will you have some of this pie?" said he, quite sanely.
-
-"Thank you, sir," answered Hardy.
-
-"We'll shift for ourselves," said the captain, turning to the
-attendant. "Bring whatever else there is in a quarter of an hour."
-
-The man left the cabin. The captain, with knife and fork poised,
-without serving Hardy viewed him intently during a short passage of
-silence, and then said:
-
-"Johnny has strayed away from this ship and he's left his drum
-behind him, but," he added, smiling with his heart-moving smile of
-superiority, "I shall find him."
-
-He loaded a plate and thrust it at the length of his arm toward Hardy,
-who took it.
-
-"Are not you eating, sir?" said Hardy.
-
-"How's the ship?" was the answer.
-
-Hardy reported the sail she was under. The question, the all-important
-question, whether sights had been taken, was not asked. The captain
-took a piece of meat out of the pie and gave it to the Newfoundland,
-who sat beside him on the deck.
-
-"I don't like rich clergymen," he said, abruptly. "The man who steers
-his ship to the glowing gates of heaven should be rich in heart and
-love. The precious freight is that; let him despise the devil's cargo.
-I once said to a wealthy parson, 'Take up your cross and follow me.
-D'ye remember it, sir? but you and the like of you give your cross to
-the coachman and get inside.'"
-
-He spoke this in a voice of thunder, and his face was grotesque. Hardy
-was eating with difficulty. The chatter of the afflicted brain is a
-pain to the hearer, for the sane strokes make the inconsequential talk
-as ghastly as the lifelike motions of the electrified corpse.
-
-From time to time the dog got up and moved about the cabin sniffing. He
-was missing Johnny. He would come to Hardy's side and turn his gentle,
-affectionate eyes up at the mate's face in such dumb inquiry as would
-be holy if it were human; then he would go to the captain and do the
-like. The poor man played with some meat out of the pie, but did not
-eat. He had been educated at a great public school and his speech and
-voice had the culture of breeding, and the lapses and diversions of
-the talk that he addressed to Hardy made his language more pitiful
-than shocking. He as often spoke wisely as insanely, but Hardy saw,
-even whilst he sat, that the loss of his boy had confirmed in him his
-lamentable prepossession. He was mad, but in such fashion that unless
-he acted visibly the madman's part the crew would fail to see it.
-
-The attendant came down with more food for the cabin, and this
-the captain did not touch. Presently he abruptly rose and entered
-his berth, reappeared with his cap on, and slowly stepped up the
-companion-ladder.
-
-It was Hardy's hope that the poor fellow might give such orders as
-would induce the men to suspect him mad, although he felt they would
-believe he was only temporarily deranged by the bitter loss which had
-left him heart-broken; and yet some heedless or absurd order, some
-unintelligible shifting of the course, for example, some needless
-setting or reduction of canvas, must act like a surgical operation and
-quicken their scent, which would help him to come to a decision as to
-the right thing to be done; and whilst he went on munching his dinner
-he found himself repeatedly glancing at the telltale compass and
-listening for the captain's voice. But the ship sped steadily straight
-forward, and the captain remained silent though his tread was audible.
-
-A little while before the mate had finished his dinner Mr. Candy came
-below. This was unusual: in the ordinary movement of discipline he
-should have waited to be relieved by Hardy.
-
-"The captain told me to go and get my dinner, sir," said the second
-mate.
-
-"All right," said Hardy.
-
-Mr. Candy sat down and began to help himself. Hardy had no particular
-fondness for this man: he was the son of a pilot, and one of those
-people who add nothing to the dignity of a service which in its day, in
-point of breeding, in all art of seamanship, in structure of vessel,
-was as good as the Royal Navy. Witness, for example, the men and ships
-of John Company; for if no line-of-battle ships flew the flag of that
-company, and the flags of the owners of fleets of stately craft, ships
-of commerce had been and were still then afloat as lordly in build, as
-gracious and commanding in star-searching heights, as the finest of the
-frigates of Britannia. But Candy was second mate of the ship, and to
-that degree was important.
-
-"Captain Layard is very down," said Hardy. "It's a cruel bad job. I
-loved the little boy, and the dog that loved him too wouldn't let me
-save his life."
-
-"It was plucky of you, sir, to jump overboard," said the second mate.
-"All the time the captain walks he looks to port and starboard, hunting
-like with his eyes over the sea for the little drummer. Strange he
-can't satisfy himself that the younker is drowned, dead and gone."
-
-He was feeding heartily, and spoke in the intervals of chewing.
-
-"This shock," said Hardy, who saw that the man was not to be talked to
-confidentially, "may have a little weakened the poor father's mind for
-a time. We'll assume it so for the common preservation; therefore, in
-your watch on deck should he give orders which might prove him thinking
-more of Johnny than the ship, call me at once."
-
-"Ay, ay, sir!"
-
-This said, Hardy went to his berth to smoke a pipe and get some rest,
-for he could not know what lay before him, and sleep is precious at sea.
-
-At four o'clock Candy aroused him. The captain, he learnt, had been
-below an hour. Nothing worth reporting had happened during Candy's
-watch. Hardy went on deck, and did not see the captain throughout
-the first dog-watch. The breeze was slightly scanting; the main-tack
-was boarded and the main-royal loosed and set. Hardy, like a good
-many other chief mates, was always for carrying on whenever he was in
-charge, and the breeze blew and the girls of the port he was bound
-to always hauled with a will at his tow-rope. Besides, there was the
-night's detention to be made good, and the clipper was making it good
-as she sheared through the coils of the sea, boiling in dim rose to the
-westering light. It was like a field of hurdles to a favourite, and she
-swept them with a bounding keel, slinging rainbows as she went, and the
-surge sang in thunder to the melodies of the rigging.
-
-Hardy's whole thoughts concerned the captain. He quite remembered
-that in the cabin of the stricken father stood a medicine-chest full
-of deadly poisons. Would he take his life? Full often the demon of
-madness goes on beckoning to the ghastly Feature till it springs. But
-what could the mate do? It was not within his right to remove the
-chest. If he durst act in any way he would lock up the captain at once,
-but he had the talk and opinions of a crew of seamen to consider,
-and if the captain should be revisited by the same degree of sanity
-that had enabled him to navigate the vessel to this point, how would
-Hardy stand, supposing--and supposition here involved a very possible
-contingency--that the captain, to preserve his own position, should
-charge him with the ugliest breach of discipline a merchant officer
-could be guilty of?
-
-He did not meet the captain again till the supper hour. The ship was
-then under all plain sail. The west was glowing like a furnace, and
-the ocean was calming to the softening of the breeze. The captain came
-from his berth into the cabin as Hardy stood beside the table. The meal
-was ready, and they sat down. There was a curious look of satisfaction
-in the captain's face. The acute eye of Hardy easily saw that some
-soothing delusion was in possession of the man. He asked two or three
-questions about the ship, and quite sanely said:
-
-"What did you make the latitude and longitude to be at noon?"
-
-Hardy answered the question.
-
-The captain began to eat hungrily, and all the time his face gave token
-of an inward content, lifting indeed into the pleasure of assured
-expectation; but somehow there were visible in this lunatic web of
-emotion threads of cunning clearly perceptible to Hardy, who, perhaps,
-as the son of a doctor whose professional experiences he had often
-listened to, was able to see a little deeper than the vision of a plain
-seaman could penetrate.
-
-"There is no doubt, Mr. Hardy," suddenly said the captain, "that I
-shall be able to find Johnny."
-
-"I hope so, sir," answered Hardy, gravely.
-
-"I have no doubt," exclaimed the captain with a sparkle of triumphant
-cunning lighting up his eyes. "I must be patient and wait, for I've got
-to hear where he is."
-
-Hardy was silent.
-
-"It may come to me in a dream," continued the poor man, "or it may
-be revealed to me in a whisper. I believe with Milton that the air
-is thronged with millions of spiritual beings. I have in my watches,
-when a mate, heard whispers in the dark! I believe in God the Father
-Almighty"--and he recited the Apostles' Creed whilst he stroked the
-head of his dog, who sat at his side. "It is a glorious confession,
-Mr. Hardy. What should make a man more religious than the sea life?
-They think us a breed of blasphemers, but to whom is the glory and the
-majesty and the power of the Supreme unfolded if not to the sailor? We
-behold the birth of the day, and witness the sublimity of the Spirit
-in the glittering temples of the east, from which the sun springs, to
-reveal the marvel of the ocean and the heavens to the sight of man; and
-we witness the death of the day, gorgeous and kingly in its departure,
-over which the angels spread a funeral pall sparkling with the diamonds
-of the night."
-
-He pressed his hands to his brow and sighed with that long tremor in
-which the broken heart often vents itself.
-
-The night passed quietly. The breeze yet slackened and was blowing a
-gentle wind at midnight. There was a moon somewhere in the sky, and
-her light fell upon the dark waters, and the sight of the small seas,
-curling in frosted silver through the radiance, was as beautiful as
-the picture of the ship stemming softly, her canvas stirless as carven
-shields of marble.
-
-The captain came and went throughout the night, and no man aboard
-saving Hardy would have dreamt of holding him mad and irresponsible.
-Candy, when his watch was up, had nothing to report but this: that the
-skipper would walk the deck fast, abruptly halting at the weather-rail
-to stare at the ocean in pauses running into minutes, then crossing to
-the lee-rail to stare again in passages of dumb scrutiny. What more
-conceivable than that the afflicted man should be full of the memory of
-his lost child, and that he should break off in his walk to meditate
-upon the mighty grave in whose heart his little one was sleeping?
-
-Candy thought thus, and so did the helmsman, who would find the men he
-talked to about it of his own mind when he was relieved at the wheel
-and went forward.
-
-And so the night passed into the sad light of dawn, which brightened
-into the glory of a morning full of sunshine. The breeze had shifted
-three points, and the ship was sailing slowly with the yards square and
-the weather-clew of the mainsail up.
-
-Now was to happen the strangest incident in this ship's adventure.
-It was Nelson who said that nothing is impossible or improbable in
-sea-affairs. There is no invention of man that can top the grim, the
-grotesque, the beautiful, the sublime, or the touching facts which the
-great mystery of liquid surface yields to human experience.
-
-A seaman, who was sitting astride of the starboard foretopsail
-yard-arm, busy with marline-spike on some job that the lift needed,
-hailed the deck.
-
-"Where away?" shouted Hardy from the quarter-deck.
-
-"Right ahead, sir," answered the man, who looked a toy sailor, his
-white breeches trembling, and the round of his back sharp-lined against
-the blue.
-
-Hardy fetched the glass, and going to the mizzen-rigging pointed it. He
-caught it instantly. It was a boat, how far off it was impossible to
-say, for distance, when a small object grows visible, is very difficult
-to measure with the eye at sea, but she was plain to the naked sight
-of the man on the yard-arm; the telescope brought her close, and Hardy
-counted five figures in her, one of whom was standing on the foremost
-thwart waving something,--a shirt or a piece of canvas. Her mast was
-stepped, but the sail was down, and she lay waiting, vanishing and
-reappearing as the shallow hollows ran sucking under her.
-
-When Hardy dropped the glass he found the captain by his side.
-
-"What is in sight?" he exclaimed, speaking with something of
-breathlessness, as though his heart was tightened.
-
-"A ship's boat, sir, with five people in her," answered Hardy.
-
-"I shall find him," exclaimed the captain, and the old look of
-superiority to all human intelligence, and the pathetic sparkle of
-cunning with which the diseased brain will often illuminate the eye,
-were perceptible to Hardy. "Give me the glass, sir."
-
-The captain levelled it and was a long time in looking, and all the
-time he looked he breathed slow and deep like a man in heavy slumber.
-
-"Stand by to back the foretopsail," he exclaimed. "Let a hand be ready
-with a line and others to help them aboard, for twice I have fallen in
-with people so weakened by distress and famine and thirst--O God, that
-awful part of it--that we have lifted them like babies over the side."
-
-Presently the boat was close under the bow; the foretopsail was aback,
-and the ship, heaving slowly without way, was alongside the little
-fabric.
-
-Her people were four men and a woman. The men were seamen, apparelled
-in such clothes as the merchant sailor went clad in. They staggered a
-little as they stood up, and one in the bow reeled as he caught the
-end of the line. The woman was sitting in the stern-sheets. She wore a
-straw hat, the shadow of whose brim darkened her face as a veil might.
-She was clothed in a black jacket, and the material of her dress was
-dark. Her head was a little sunk, as though she was too weary to hold
-it erect.
-
-The captain, overlaying the rail, stared with bright devouring eyes
-into the boat. He did not seem to heed the people in her; he was
-looking for something else.
-
-"Are you able to help the lady aboard?" shouted Hardy.
-
-"No, sir," answered the man who had caught the line; "we've been adrift
-two days."
-
-His weak voice proclaimed the truth of his words. At the sound of
-Hardy's cry the woman in the stern-sheets lifted her head, and the
-shadow of the brim of her hat slipped off her face. Hardy instantly
-recognised her.
-
-"Great God!" he exclaimed.
-
-He was struck motionless by astonishment, but his faculties rallied in
-a breath; in a minute he had sprung into the main chains, and a jump
-carried him into the boat.
-
-"O Mr. Hardy!" shrieked the girl, and she tried to rise to clasp him,
-but her exhaustion was too great and she could only sob.
-
-"On deck there!" shouted Hardy, who was usurping all the privileges
-of the captain in that moment of tumultuous sensations. "Send down a
-chair and bear a hand." And whilst this well-understood order was being
-executed--it meant simply a tail-block at the main yard-arm and a line
-rove through the block with a cabin-chair secured to the end of it--and
-whilst the four nearly spent sailors of the boat were being helped by
-the men in the ship, Hardy was talking to Julia.
-
-"What a meeting! What has happened to your ship?"
-
-Her lips were pale and a little cracked, her eyes were languid, and dim
-with tears, a shadow as of hollowness lay upon each cheek. She spoke
-with difficulty.
-
-"The _Glamis Castle_ was burnt two days ago in the night. We have been
-drifting about since then without food or water. Oh, thank God for
-this! thank God for this--and to meet _you_!"
-
-"Bear a hand, my lads, bear a hand," shouted Hardy, whilst the captain
-with his head showing above the rail stood staring into the boat. The
-mate would not tax her with speech; she might be dying! Some alert
-seamen were in that clipper, and to the instincts and humanity of a
-British sailor no form of distress appeals more vehemently than the
-open boat in which they see no breaker, than the open boat in which men
-and women may be dying of thirst. Swiftly, as though the crew of the
-_York_ were the disciplined and gallant hearts of the battle-ship, a
-chair, well secured, sank from the yard-arm and was seized by Hardy. He
-lifted the girl on to it, took a turn round her with a piece of line
-which had come down with it, and she soared from his nimble, skilful
-hands, and vanished from his sight behind the bulwarks. He gained the
-deck in a few instants, and was at the girl's side before the sailors
-could liberate her from the chair.
-
-"She is a dear friend of mine," said he, loudly, that the men might
-understand that more was in this thrilling passage than humanity only.
-And passing his arm round her waist to support her he helped her to
-walk aft.
-
-The captain's face looked dark with disappointment, and as Hardy drew
-close to him he heard him mutter, "They have not brought him, they have
-not brought him!"
-
-"I will take this lady below, sir," said Hardy, speaking rapidly. "Her
-ship has been burnt. They have been without food and water for two or
-three days," and he passed on with the girl to the companion-hatch,
-whilst the captain stood dumbly following them with his eyes, with the
-noble Newfoundland standing beside him.
-
-In silence the two descended the cabin ladder, and with the tenderness
-of a lover, which in such men as Hardy has the sweetness of a woman's
-love, he placed her upon a locker and poured out a little water. She
-drank with the passion of thirst, and asked for more with her eyes, but
-Hardy knew better and gave her a biscuit, which would lightly soothe
-the craving of the hunger that is often felt after thirst is assuaged.
-She bit a little piece of biscuit, and said:
-
-"Won't you give me a little more water?"
-
-"Very soon. Eat that biscuit."
-
-He stepped to the pantry where some brandy was kept, and poured a
-tablespoonful in a wine-glass, and this filled up with water he gave
-her after she had eaten the biscuit. The stimulant helped her, and even
-as he stood watching her with his heart beating fast with this wonder,
-this miracle, of almost unparalleled meeting, he witnessed symptoms of
-a reviving spirit, of a reanimated body in her face.
-
-At this moment Captain Layard came down the companion-steps
-and approached them with an eager, strained expression. His
-eyes, alight with mania--for madness has its expectations and
-disappointments--rested with a searching gaze upon the girl.
-
-"Have you seen him?" he asked.
-
-"No, sir," answered Hardy, quickly trying to catch Julia's eye, but she
-was staring with alarm at the captain, as you would, or I, under such
-conditions of inexplicable confrontment. "She is a dear friend of mine
-and is ill with the sufferings of an open boat, but her presence in
-this ship may mean more than we can dream of now."
-
-The captain's face changed, his eyes took a fresh illumination with his
-smile.
-
-"See to her, Mr. Hardy, see to her, and I'll start the ship afresh."
-
-He left the cabin.
-
-"May I have another biscuit?" said Julia.
-
-Hardy handed one and smiled, for he saw again the sweet unconscious
-cock of her head, not the less fascinating to him because her eyes were
-dim, her cheeks a little hollow, her lips pale.
-
-"Was that the captain?" she asked.
-
-"Yes," he answered.
-
-"What was he asking? Is he right in his mind?"
-
-"His only son, a little boy, a beautiful bright-haired little boy, fell
-overboard and was drowned, and--But we will talk about the captain and
-your adventures when you are stronger."
-
-He mused a moment or two, and then added, "You will take the rest you
-need in my cabin, and a berth shall be made ready for you. A good long
-sleep will restore you. So come."
-
-He put his arm through hers and caused her to rise, and indeed she
-still needed the support he gave her. He took her to his cabin, and
-as she walked she looked about her with growing animation, which is a
-cheering sign, and once she exclaimed, "Thank God, I am safe! Thank
-God, I have met you! But how wonderful--oh, how wonderful!"
-
-She sat on his sea-chest whilst he smoothed and prepared the bunk. It
-was a little cabin; the bunk was under a port-hole, and plenty of light
-came flashing in off the trembling, feathering sea. You might hear the
-tramp of feet overhead, and the thump of coils of rope flung off their
-pins. There were none of the garnishings which often make pathetic
-such interiors as this; when a young officer hangs up the picture of
-his wife with their first baby on her knee, neither of them to be
-kissed and clasped for months and months, even if God be merciful to
-the poor fellow and his ship; no rack full of pipes, no odds and ends
-of curios--in short, nothing ornamented the wall of Hardy's sea-bedroom
-but a long chart of the English Channel, which it was his custom to
-study when he lay in his bunk smoking, to get absolutely by heart the
-lights which gem the coast of our island, and the verdure-crowned
-terraces over the way.
-
-When the bunk was prepared he removed her hat and gave her a
-hair-brush, and took down a little square of mirror and held it up
-before her. He greatly admired the beauty and the abundance of her
-hair, which was parted on one side.
-
-"Nothing so refreshes one as to brush one's hair," said he.
-
-"How ill I look," she exclaimed. "How could you have recognised me so
-instantly?" and she lifted her eyes, full of caress, to his face.
-
-"Will you be strong enough to get into that bunk unhelped?" he asked.
-
-It was a low-seated bunk, and she looked at it and answered, "Yes."
-
-"Then I will leave you," said he, and he walked out hurriedly, and shut
-the door behind him.
-
-He went on deck to see how the captain was dealing with his ship and
-found the vessel sailing along, with her yards properly swung and
-everything right. The boat from which the people had been received
-was visible at the tail of the ship's wake. The captain had sent her
-adrift, which was sane or not in him, just as you think proper. The
-sailors were coiling down and otherwise busy; the four men had been
-taken into the forecastle, where they were eating and drinking and
-yarning to a few of the watch below about the burning of the Indiaman
-_Glamis Castle_. The moment Captain Layard saw Hardy he called him.
-
-"Who is the lady?" he asked.
-
-"Miss Julia Armstrong, the daughter of a retired commander in the Royal
-Navy," was the reply.
-
-"Where have you lodged her?"
-
-"In my cabin for the present, sir, till I receive your orders to get
-another one ready for her."
-
-"Oh, yes, have that done--have that done," the captain said in a
-smooth, perfectly sane voice. "Do you know what she was aboard the
-ship?"
-
-Now Hardy was like the squire in Dickens's exquisite sketch--"he
-would not tell a lie for no man!" At the same time he did not wish
-Captain Layard should know that Miss Armstrong had shipped as a second
-stewardess, so he replied she was going to Calcutta with a letter of
-introduction to the bishop of that place. Her father was poor, and the
-girl wanted to find something to do in India.
-
-But the captain was dreaming. One with eyes for such faces as his
-could easily see that he was thinking of something else, or did not
-understand. He continued to look in silence for a little while at
-Hardy, and then the baleful sparkle suddenly brightened his stare, he
-folded his arms and said, with an expression of triumphant hope and
-conviction:
-
-"She is fresh from the sea and knows where Johnny is, and she shall
-help me to find him!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-THE CAPTAIN AND THE GIRL
-
-
-It was six o'clock on the same day in which Julia Armstrong had
-been delivered from that horrible sea tragedy, the open boat, by
-the miraculous apparition of the _York_, of all the ships which the
-horizons of the deep were then girdling! The chief mate knocked upon
-the door of his cabin where the girl lay, and believing he heard her
-say "Come in," entered, and found her asleep.
-
-The reddening sunshine was away to starboard, but the heavens southeast
-were glowing, and the girl slept, visible to the eye as the circle of
-blue port-hole up which and down which you saw the clear-cut line of
-the horizon sliding like a piece of clockwork. He stood looking at
-her, for there was love for this girl in the man's heart, and this
-encounter was so wonderful that he witnessed the hand of God in it, and
-a sentiment of religion sanctified his emotion; otherwise, with the
-sailor's respect for the repose of those who sleep--for the seamen's
-best blessing upon you is, _Lord grant you a good night's rest,
-sir!_--he would have softly stepped out and left her.
-
-And this he would have soon done, but as he looked she all at once
-opened her gray eyes full upon him, stared a few moments till
-intelligence came to her, then started, smiled, and sat up in the bunk.
-
-"I've awaked you, I'm afraid," said Hardy.
-
-"I'm glad you have. I have slept sweetly and I feel well," she
-answered. "Strange that I have not dreamt at all, for I have passed
-through a nightmare since the burning of the ship. How marvellous to
-see you standing there!"
-
-"Could you eat a piece of cold fowl and drink some wine?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You shall sup here, for I want to hear your story. If you are in the
-cabin, and the captain comes--"
-
-He put his head out of the door and hailed the cabin servant, who was
-polishing glasses in the pantry. He told him what to get and bring,
-and he then caused the girl to get out of her bunk, and cushioned his
-sea-chest with his bunk pillow as a seat for her. He smiled as he saw
-her fall into the incomparable posture (as he thought it): the head a
-little on one side, the hands on the hips, the feet crossed, the whole
-figure beautiful now that her jacket was removed, though her dark blue
-blouse imperfectly suggested the faultless grace of her breast. Sleep
-had faintly tinged her cheek whereon the shadow of suffering had lain;
-her eyes had brightened, her lips had reddened, and all the romance
-of her face, which was not beautiful nor even pretty, but alluring,
-nevertheless, was expressed once more in the flattering evening light,
-which suffused with a liquid softness the atmosphere of that little
-cabin.
-
-Until the man knocked at the door with the tray of food and wine, they
-talked chiefly of home, of the dry ditch and Bax's farm, of the East
-India Dock road and of Captain Smedley, whose escape and probable
-safety the girl had mentioned early in this talk. And then whilst she
-supped--an early supper, but on the ocean it is the last meal--she told
-him the story of a memorable fire at sea.
-
-There had been many such fires, and they nearly all read like one. It
-begins by some rascally sailor broaching a rum cask; or it is a naked
-candle in the hand of a fool looking for a brand in the lazarette; or
-it is a pipeful of glowing tobacco amongst wool; the capsizal of a
-lamp; or it is caused by something which the ocean sucks down to her
-ooze and buries there, one secret more. But however it be, the end is
-nearly always the same. It was so in this case; the fire took such a
-hold there was no dealing with it; a score may have perished. The girl
-saw the bowsprit and jib-booms black with figures of men who had been
-cut off by the amidship furnace. Numbers--for she was a full ship with
-many children, and besides passengers she was carrying hard upon a
-hundred soldiers in her 'tween-decks--numbers, I say, got away in the
-boats, and amongst them, the last to leave, was the captain; she did
-not doubt that. She fell overboard in her terror, and in her recoil
-right aft from the smoke and its burning stars, and afterwards found
-herself in a boat in the company of five men, one of whom, groaning
-heavily with internal injury, died in the night and was dropped over
-the boat's side.
-
-She had more to tell him about this shipwreck, but that fire concerns
-my story only in so far as it brings this girl again on to the stage by
-one of those dramatic and startling methods adopted by the ocean, whose
-moods are many.
-
-"If your captain is a madman," she said, "what is to happen to this
-ship?"
-
-He put his finger to his lips in a gesture of caution and reticence.
-
-"We may whisper it to each other," said he, in a low voice, "but the
-crew have no knowledge of it, or they may attribute any strangeness in
-his manner to the loss of his child, and think it passing. They all
-loved the poor little fellow, and so did I."
-
-And he told her how the boy used to beat his drum in accompaniment to
-the sailor's whistle, and related the story of his falling overboard
-and the efforts to save him, and the captain's frantic dumb-show and
-sudden exhibition of insanity, so that he believed his child was merely
-missing, and that something would happen to tell him where he might be
-found.
-
-"How sad!" said the girl. "It would have broken my heart to see it. And
-does he still think that he will find his little boy?"
-
-"I'm afraid it's his conviction, the subtle delusion of the diseased
-brain," Hardy answered; "but in other matters with him it's like
-writing on sand; next tide all's gone. Do not tell him you were a
-stewardess. Converse with him as though he were perfectly sane. He is a
-gentleman and an educated man. Humour his sorrowful fancy, for it can
-hurt no one, and it keeps the poor fellow's heart up."
-
-"I suppose you are really in charge of the ship?" she said.
-
-"I am watching her navigation," he answered, "but I tell you I am at a
-dead loss because he is the supreme law-giver of the vessel, and what
-he orders must be done or it is mutiny. His orders may be dangerous to
-my judgment, but not to the men's, who take the course as it's given;
-and I dare not go amongst them and speak the truth. He might get better
-and hear of it, and it would be in his power to ruin me."
-
-She sank her head thoughtfully, understanding him. The door was rapped.
-
-"Hullo," cried Hardy.
-
-It was the cabin servant who had come to tell Hardy that the captain
-wished to see the lady.
-
-"Where is he?" inquired the mate.
-
-"On deck, sir. He'll come below when I report her ready to receive him."
-
-"Report her ready," said Hardy, and he and the girl went into the cabin.
-
-She seated herself on a cushioned locker, and he stood beside her.
-
-"That's your berth," said he, pointing to a door.
-
-Gratitude and love were in the smile she gave him. The red western
-blaze was on the skylight, and reposed on her hair like gold-dust.
-It was Hardy's watch below--he was therefore at liberty to be in the
-cabin. He caught sight of Candy staring through the skylight, but the
-pale-eyed man walked off in a minute, and then the captain came down.
-
-He bowed with the courtesy of breeding to the girl. Tradition has
-scored so heavily against the merchant shipmaster by virtue of
-romantic invention, which largely consists of lies, that I dare say
-it is impossible for a landsman to believe that the commander of a
-merchant-ship could be anything but a rough, grog-seamed, hoarse-voiced
-salt, without grammar for his log-book. The lie stands as everlasting
-as the pyramids, and for my part it may go on standing, but it is a
-lie all the same, and it is my pleasure to paint the truth.
-
-As the girl returned the bow she saw the great Newfoundland in the
-captain's wake, and cried out with a sudden passion of admiration,
-"Oh, what a magnificent creature!" The dog made friends with her in an
-instant, and by twenty canine tokens expressed delight in the caress of
-her hand. No doubt the beautiful and faithful creature appreciated the
-sweetening and civilising influence of the lady in that cabin.
-
-The captain began by putting several sane questions, and she
-remembered that she was not to tell him that she had shipped as an
-under-stewardess in the _Glamis Castle_. He knew the vessel, and
-listened with a degree of attention, that excited Hardy's surprise,
-to her narrative of the fire. He seemed to take a fancy to her, to be
-pleased by her presence, and said he hoped she would be comfortable
-on board his ship. In the midst of his rational talk he slapped his
-forehead and kept his hand pressed to it, and his face changed; a look
-of grief that made him almost haggard was visible when he dropped his
-hand and gazed at the girl.
-
-"I miss my son--my little son," he exclaimed, "and I am waiting for
-something"--he added, in a broken voice--"to tell me where I can find
-him. His drum is by his bed--come and look at it."
-
-Awed by the sudden confrontment of hopeless human grief, the girl rose
-and followed him, with a glance at Hardy as for courage. The heave of
-the deck was gentle; she was stronger, and stepped without difficulty.
-The captain entered his cabin and closed the door upon them both,
-which frightened her, for she easily now saw how it was with his poor
-brain, and no one in the company of a madman can ever dare swear that
-in the next minute he will continue harmless.
-
-"That is his drum," said the captain. "That is the little bed he slept
-in."
-
-Hardy outside stood close at the door, listening and prepared.
-
-"He is my only child," continued the captain, compelling by his own
-gaze the girl's attention to a little coat and a little cap, and other
-garments of the boy which were hanging upon the bulkhead. "His mother
-is dead, and she was my first and my only love. I miss him of a night,
-and want him. He has been my constant companion in several voyages, and
-the life of the captain of a ship at sea is lonely, and I miss him.
-It was my delight to dress him and to listen to his talk. Oh, he is
-a clever boy! He can ask questions which the greatest mind could not
-answer."
-
-He sat down on a chair by the table on which were instruments of
-navigation, a few books, pen and ink, and the like, and folding his
-arms and bowing his head he sobbed dryly without concealment of
-features, and the piteous face, bearded, the half-closed eyes, the long
-hair under the cap which he had not removed, made the girl feel sick
-and faint, as though to some oppressive stroke of personal grief.
-
-She rallied, for she was a young woman of great spirit, as I have a
-right to hold, and remembering what Hardy had said, she exclaimed,
-softly:
-
-"You will find him, Captain Layard."
-
-At this he looked up at her, started to his feet, and his face was
-eager and impassioned with emotion not communicable, for who can
-expound the workings of the diseased mind?
-
-"Tell me," he cried, and she saw what Hardy had also seen--the baleful
-sparkle of mania in his eyes, "you're fresh from the sea, and God may
-have sent you to me. Tell me!"
-
-She could not speak. Her consolatory phrase had exhausted imagination,
-and her heart refused its sanction to the mate's humane idea, that it
-was good to keep up the poor fellow's spirits.
-
-"Tell me!" he repeated, and he advanced a step and his eyes devoured
-her face.
-
-"God will comfort you and help you," she replied, not knowing what to
-say.
-
-He sighed, and turning his head fastened his eyes upon the little bed,
-then looked at her again, this time with his painful expression of
-superiority, the air of a man whose soul is exalted by contemplation
-of something of heavenly importance divulged to him and to him only,
-and wearing this face, he opened the door and she passed out, which was
-lucky for Hardy, because had the captain gone first he would have found
-the mate standing close and listening.
-
-The captain remained in his cabin. The others stood by the table, and
-the western light, rich and red as a deep-bosomed rose, flowed down
-upon them through the open skylight.
-
-"Poor man! Poor man!" the girl exclaimed. "I fear that what I've said
-will create a delusion; he will think I know where his child is."
-
-"His moods are like the dog-vane," said Hardy. "I could not hear what
-passed."
-
-She told him. He frowned with the puzzle of his mind.
-
-"You can judge now for yourself," said he. "Is it right that a man like
-this should command a ship whose safety became doubly precious to me
-this morning?"
-
-She smiled gently, but gravity quickly returned; she could not but
-reflect his face of worry and uncertainty. The great dog was lying at
-his master's door, and all was silent in the captain's cabin. This, in
-the pause, made her say:
-
-"He may commit suicide."
-
-"Not whilst he believes his son is alive and to be found," answered
-Hardy.
-
-He walked to the door of her berth, opened it, and she saw that it was
-as comfortably equipped as the ship would allow.
-
-"You shall have a hair-brush and whatever else I possess to give you,"
-said he. "But how about clothes? I can't dress you."
-
-"I am saved," she answered, "and that is enough to think of at present."
-
-This was a spirited answer for a girl who was talking to the man she
-loved, for would not any girl, addressing the man of her heart, grow
-pensive to the thought that she had but one gown to wear in the whole
-world?
-
-He felt a certain sense of independency owing to the captain's state,
-and considered that he was entitled to act beyond his rights as a mate.
-By which I mean that it could not much concern him if the captain came
-out and found him talking to the girl, and generally acting as though
-he were a passenger instead of an officer of the ship.
-
-"Come on deck," said he, "the air will refresh you."
-
-And they went up the companion-steps, whilst the Newfoundland continued
-to sentinel the captain's door.
-
-A glorious evening sky, in the west like a city on fire, clouds with
-brows glowing into scarlet as they sailed into the splendour abeam,
-the ship leaning with the breeze, and the white spume twinkling on the
-eastern blue in a trembling heaven-full of the lights of foam. Two sail
-were in sight, fairy gleams upon the lens-like edge on the port bow.
-
-"Oh," cried the girl, with a swift look along the deck, "after an open
-boat! and one man groaning and then lying dead in her!"
-
-They walked slowly to and fro to leeward, leaving Mr. Candy, who ogled
-them betwixt his white eyelashes, to pace the weather quarter-deck
-in the loneliness of command. The sailors had immediately seen how
-things stood. Nothing that happens at sea astonishes a sailor, unless
-it is the expected, which is often a real surprise, so full of
-disappointments, of leeway, head winds, misreckoning is the life. Here
-was the chief mate who had fallen in with a girl whom he knew.
-
-"They might have kept company ashore," says Bill to Jim. "She was bound
-one way and he another. Ain't that sailor fashion?"
-
-"Ain't she got a figure?" says Jim to Bill. "Wouldn't I like to put my
-arm round her waist if Dick and the little 'un was playing. It's damned
-hard on us sailor men that no female society's allowed aboard a ship."
-
-"There's the figurehead if it's female," says Bill. "I've known a
-man so 'ard up that of a dog-watch, when there was plenty o' light,
-he'd slide down the dolphin-striker just to talk to the woman on the
-stem-head. He'd say it was the next best thing."
-
-Perhaps it was, for some figureheads in those days were a little
-gorgeous. I have seen ladies under the bowsprit with long black hair
-and swelling bosoms, bright with golden stars. Their blush was deep,
-their lips scarlet, their smile alluring, they were always curtseying,
-and the sea in its loving humours flung snow-white nosegays at them.
-
-But the shadow of the boy's death was still upon the ship, and so far
-the captain had treated his men _as_ men, and they were sorry for
-him. You may take it that a man is no sailor who ill-treats a sailor,
-and despite tradition and the presence of the sea-lawyer, your ship's
-company, if they are British, will serve you honestly if their food is
-fit even for sailors, and if they are numerous enough to do the work
-of one man and half a man added per head, as against the one-man work
-which the shore exacts without expecting more.
-
-As Hardy and the girl walked the deck, whilst the ship sailed along
-stately in the beautiful light of that evening, they talked again of
-home and then of the country to which they were voyaging. The sail upon
-the port bow leaned like tiny jets of red flame, and no star of heaven
-could have filled the liquid distance with more grace.
-
-"It was certainly your destiny to make for Australia," said Hardy, "and
-I now say what I thought from the beginning, that your chances lie
-there. But we had to find you a berth."
-
-"Captain Smedley was very kind to me," she answered. "He would
-sometimes invite me into his cabin and talk to me as pleasantly as
-though he had known me all his life. He gave me an introduction to the
-Bishop of Calcutta, and begged him to do everything that could be done
-for a girl placed as I am. I believe he talked to the passengers about
-me, for some were extremely good-natured and sympathetic, and would
-apologise for troubling me if I waited upon them."
-
-"Any griffs aboard?" asked Hardy.
-
-"Some young officers," she answered, with a half smile upon her lips,
-and looking down upon the deck, "but I kept as much to myself as I
-could."
-
-"You'll find plenty of opportunities in Australia," said Hardy. "There
-are rich squatters in that country, and you can be driving about
-Melbourne and entertaining and doing what you pleased whilst he was a
-thousand miles off counting his sheep."
-
-"Suppose all the rich squatters kept themselves a thousand miles
-distant whilst I was in Melbourne, could I return in this ship?"
-
-She asked this question placidly, but her expression showed that she
-did not appreciate this reference to the squatters.
-
-"You want position and you'll get it."
-
-"Could I return in this ship?"
-
-"We'll see," he answered, smiling at her. "A dinner and champagne to
-the head of the firm of agents might help us, and nature did not intend
-that you should ever plead in vain."
-
-As he said this the captain came on deck, followed by Sailor. The
-Newfoundland, with the critical eye of an old salt, took a view of
-the horizon, and in a minute rushed forward on to the forecastle and
-reported two ships in sight on the port bow by a number of barks,
-which made the men, who were lounging about the knight-heads, laugh
-heartily. On seeing the captain, the mate touched his cap and walked
-right aft on the lee-side, where with folded arms he seemed to watch
-the sea, though he kept the captain and Julia in the corner of his eye.
-
-The poor man approached the girl, who received him with a smile.
-
-"Has Mr. Hardy looked after you?" he said, kindly and gently.
-
-"Oh, yes, Captain Layard, I am very happy and comfortable, and thank
-you over and over again for your goodness. I believe I should have died
-by this time in that open boat, and I owe my life to you and this noble
-ship."
-
-"I am very dull and lonely," he said in a musing way, clearly
-inattentive to her words. "Those ships yonder break the continuity
-of this everlasting circle, but they'll vanish shortly, and the full
-desolation of the night will encompass us. It is the night that I
-fear--it is the night that I fear!" he continued, almost whispering,
-and gazing at her as a man looks at another whose pity and help his
-heart is yearning for. "I miss him! If I dream of him I shall go mad to
-find it a dream. But you know where he is."
-
-She hoped to divert his thoughts, and said: "I do not find the sea
-desolate, Captain Layard. On fine nights I could stand for hours
-looking at the stars; and is desolation on the sea when the sun is
-shining? If I were a man I would be a sailor, for, although it has
-nearly destroyed me, I have learnt to love the ocean."
-
-She looked toward Hardy. The dog, having barked his report of two
-sail in sight, came trotting aft, and stood beside his master. The
-captain looked at him a little while in silence, his brow contracted in
-meditation.
-
-"Which is real?" he asked, placing his foot upon the dog's shadow,
-"this or this?" and he put his hand upon the dog.
-
-Julia, who found a necessity to humour him, answered:
-
-"Some great thinker has written, 'Shadows we are, and shadows we
-pursue.'"
-
-"How long grows one's shadow in the dying sun!" said Captain Layard,
-turning his face--filled with the yearning of grief and charged
-with that subtle expression of madness for which no words are to be
-found--toward the burning sky; "and soon we are nothing but shadows. Do
-you believe in God?" He looked at her suddenly with an extraordinary
-gaze of passionate anxiety.
-
-"Oh, yes, Captain Layard," replied the girl. "I believe in him now if
-ever I did, and I have thanked him."
-
-His face put on its triumphant look, but he was interrupted in the
-irrelevant sentiments he was about to deliver by the approach of the
-boatswain.
-
-Julia crossed the deck to Hardy, glad to escape the pain of such talk.
-
-"What is it?" said the captain.
-
-"The men we picked up," answered the boatswain, "have asked me to come
-aft to say they're willing to serve as seamen aboard this ship."
-
-"You are a full company," replied the captain, quickly. "I can't afford
-to pay and keep more sailors."
-
-"They're likely men, sir," said the boatswain, speaking in a softened
-note of respectful compassion.
-
-"They'll expect their wages."
-
-The boatswain answered he thought that was likely.
-
-"No," said the captain, "we'll transship them, and send them home."
-
-He rounded on his heel, and sat upon the skylight, and gazed at the
-dying lights in the west. What could be more sane than this man's
-answers to the boatswain? Hardy had overheard them, and perplexity
-was deepened in him. Who was going to convince the sailors that their
-captain was mad unless he talked to them as he did to him and Julia?
-And the captain sat looking at the dimming glory, and did not seem to
-remember that he had been conversing with the girl, or to know that she
-had left him.
-
-It was fine weather throughout that night, and the moon shone, and
-the heaven of stars swarmed in sparkling hosts toward the grave of
-the sun until the pallor of the dawn, like the face of the risen
-Christ, put out those fires of the dark; the ship, bathed in the
-ice-white radiance, stole phantom-like over the boundless cemetery
-of the drowned, the perished sailors whose tombstones were in every
-breaking surge. All had been quiet aboard that stealing ship, clad to
-her trucks in the raiment of her day. The captain would pass a long
-time in his cabin, then appear on deck, and walk it for a little space
-self-engrossed; and it seemed to Hardy when his watch came round, and
-when the captain showed himself, that the man's isolation and silence
-expressed, perhaps, a still dim but growing perception of the fate of
-his little boy, in which case the delusion would leave him, and his
-mind recover at least the strength it possessed when they made sail in
-the English Channel.
-
-When the sun rose the ocean rolled in mackerel-tinted mounds, and the
-ship swayed as she floated onwards at about five knots. Stu'nsails had
-been set by order of the captain when he came on deck at dawn, and,
-whitening the air on high, the swelling cloths carried the sight to the
-heavens, which arched in a miracle of motionless feathers of cloud,
-a glorious canopy of delicate plumes, in sweet keeping with the airy
-graces of the queenly fabric which proudly bowed upon its mighty throne.
-
-A sail was in sight on the starboard bow, and in two hours she would
-be abreast. The Newfoundland, coming on deck with the captain when the
-light broke, instantly barked its report of her, and now, a little
-after eight, Hardy was viewing her through the ship's telescope; for
-the sane instructions which had reached him were, that the four men
-were to be transferred to the first ship which would receive them.
-
-The four men were on the forecastle watching the coming vessel; they
-were good specimens of the English seaman of those days, sturdy and
-whiskered, bronzed in face and bowed in back, with that steady air
-which made you know that, like most British sailors, they were to
-be trusted beyond all breeds of foreign mariners in the hour of sea
-peril, when the ship was grinding out her heart upon the rocks, when
-the belching hatches were blackening the air into a storm cloud, when
-the blow of the stranger's bows had riven the side into a gulf, when
-the yawn of the started butt was burdening the hold with tons of
-ship-drowning brine.
-
-When the ships were abreast, the stranger proved American, bound for
-the River Thames. The beautiful flag of her great country shook its
-barred folds at the peak, and you thought of Bishop's Berkeley's
-prophetic line, "Westward the course of empire takes its way." Her
-yellow sheathing flashed in artillery spoutings as she rolled from the
-sun, her canvas with cotton was as white as milk, she was a wonder of
-sea architecture, the creation of a people whose sires had launched
-that exquisite structure, the Baltimore clipper.
-
-Captain Layard was now on deck, and Hardy must discover that in matters
-of routine he was not going to work with the diseased half of his head.
-He hailed the American captain, and they exchanged the information they
-asked.
-
-"What ship is that? Where are you from, and where are you bound to?"
-
-And the American wanted to know the Greenwich time by the chronometers
-in Captain Layard's cabin.
-
-Then was shouted across in words as sane as ever sounded from a
-quarter-deck the news of the recovery of four men from an open boat,
-and would the American captain carry them home? Of course he would, and
-within half an hour from the beginning of this rencounter the two ships
-had started on their separate courses with colours dipping in cordial
-good-byes--the seaman's hand-shake. And these were cousins.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-THE CAPTAIN'S BIRTHDAY
-
-
-Now in this business of transferring the four men Hardy noticed that
-the captain made no reference to Miss Armstrong. Another captain would
-have asked her if she wished to go home: perhaps, indeed, would have
-sent her home without asking her. Was it because Captain Layard knew
-she had no home? Hardy hoped it might be that, but suspected it was
-not so. This ship wanted no stewardess; the girl was one more to feed,
-and owners do not love liberality in their captains. In short, the
-mate came to the conclusion that the captain's benevolence in keeping
-the girl and giving her a passage to Australia for nothing was due to
-hallucination, and the thought was uneasiness itself both for Julia's
-sake and the ship's.
-
-It was the day following the transshipment of the men that he found an
-opportunity during the captain's absence to take a turn with the girl
-and talk to her. The sun was shining a little hotly, and the clouds
-were sailing fast. Each round of swell, as it came under-running the
-ship out of the northeast, was ridged and wrinkled with arches of foam,
-and the day was alive with the music in the rigging, with the speckled
-wings of sea-birds in the wake, and the smoke-like shadow of vapour
-floating through the sunshine on the water.
-
-After the couple had talked a little, Hardy said:
-
-"How does the captain treat you?"
-
-"Very kindly," she answered.
-
-"I keep an eye upon him," he said, "but it will not do to seem to hang
-near when he is talking to you. He might round and become fierce, for
-from madness you may expect anything. What is his talk about?"
-
-"Chiefly his lost child."
-
-A seaman who was in the main-rigging putting a fresh seizing to a
-ratline looked at the girl, and thought deep in himself, Oh, lovey,
-what a figure! But what that whiskered heart admired most was the
-coquettish cock of her head, the grace of one hand upon her hip, the
-charm of her motions as she walked, her posture when she turned aft
-or forward on the return that was like a pause in some sweet dancer's
-movements. Yes, Jack can keep a bright lookout when a girl heaves in
-sight, but the mighty Charles Dickens is right in holding that Jack's
-Nan is often the unloveliest of the fair.
-
-"Does he go on thinking that you know where his child is?" said Hardy.
-
-"Yes. It is a fixed delusion, though I cannot humour it--it is too
-sad--in spite of your wish."
-
-"The oddest part to me," said Hardy, "is the reason he shows in his
-professional work. He doesn't confound things; the sail he talks of is
-the sail it is; he still knows the ropes. The flicker of the leach of a
-topgallantsail will set him wanting a small pull on the leebrace."
-
-"How does he manage with the navigation?" asked the girl.
-
-"He works it out as I do. He finds the ship's position to a second.
-This may be the effect of habit, but is not custom beaten into rags
-by insanity, like the head of an old drum? It's not so in this case,
-and the crew mayn't find him out till the pilot boards us, and guess
-nothing until they hear that the doctors have locked him up."
-
-"Then what does his madness signify?" said the girl. "He'll be as good
-as the sanest if we arrive safely."
-
-"Ah, but it's the getting there! It's the what may happen to-morrow, or
-to-morrow, or to-morrow, and that is going to make my hair gray, Miss
-Armstrong."
-
-"Call me Julia," she said, looking at him with a sudden light in her
-eyes.
-
-"Why should I take that liberty?" he replied, smiling.
-
-"Because I should love it," she answered.
-
-"I'll not call you Julia before him," he exclaimed, with a note of
-fondness which brought a charming expression into her face, as the
-kisses of a shower freshen the perfume of the rose. "It must be a stiff
-Miss Armstrong or I am no mate," and then they fell to talking a little
-nonsense.
-
-A day came, and it was the fifth day dating from the drowning of the
-little drummer, and it was a Friday, in all tradition a black day for
-the sailor; and nobody, I think, has taken notice that it was Friday
-when Nelson, full of instinctive assurance that he would never return
-alive, kissed his sleeping child and started to join his ship for
-Trafalgar.
-
-The captain, Miss Armstrong, and Mr. Hardy sat at breakfast. The ship
-had made good way; not many parallels lay between her and the northern
-verge of the tropics. The sun poured his light in fire, and the
-flying-fish sparkled under the bows.
-
-The sailors had noticed nothing in the captain to set them growling
-suspicion into one another's ears with askant looks aft. If Mr. Candy,
-who lived close to the skipper, had taken any sort of altitude of the
-poor man's mind, he kept his observation secret; or it might be that he
-believed the captain was a little upset by the loss of his child, and
-he had not the penetrating sagacity of Hardy.
-
-The wind had fallen light, and the motions of the ship were as easy as
-a swimmer's. Hardy had noticed in the captain's face when they met that
-morning an expression of lofty triumph, of sublimated self-complacency
-such as a man deranged by conquest and acclamation might wear as he
-passes slowly through the huzzaing crowds. He seemed self-crowned, and
-might have reminded a better student than Hardy of one of Nat Lee's
-heaven-defying stage-kings.
-
-"To-day is Friday," said the captain, addressing Miss Armstrong, "and
-what day do you think it is?"
-
-Julia thought awhile, for she fancied he meant something in the almanac.
-
-"I don't know, captain," she answered.
-
-"It is my birthday," said the captain, "and Johnny is waiting somewhere
-to kiss me."
-
-Hardy was about to deliver with all the respect of a mate a sentence of
-congratulation, but the closing words of the captain silenced him.
-
-"I wish you many happy returns of the day," said Julia.
-
-"You might like to know how old I am," said the captain, with an
-indescribable look at the girl, "but every man should respect the
-secret of his birth. Until we come to sixty we like to be thought much
-younger, and when we come to eighty we tell lies that our friends
-may think us ninety. I have good reason to congratulate myself upon
-my birthday. I cannot believe that the Red Ensign ever floated over
-a better seaman than I, a man who is both a gentleman and a sailor,
-and it has been my privilege," he continued, talking as though he was
-making an after-dinner speech, "to have dignified by my behaviour and
-breeding a service that in public opinion is in want of dignity."
-
-Hardy burst into a laugh; he could not help it, but he instantly
-apologised by saying that the captain's words made him think of the
-first skipper he sailed with, betwixt whose legs, as he stood, you
-could have fitted an oval picture, and whose face for beauty might have
-been picked out of the harness cask.
-
-The captain with a slight frown cast his eyes upon the mate, and said,
-"Johnny shall be a sailor. His mother would have desired him to serve
-the queen at sea, but he shall perpetuate _me_ under the flag I serve."
-
-This was followed by a short silence; the others found nothing to say.
-It was perhaps one of the saddest illustrations of madness on record,
-and it set the listeners' hearts pining to do something that was denied
-to their sympathy and distress.
-
-"The men shall have a holiday," said the captain, who was scarcely
-eating. "It is my birthday, and they shall drink my health at eight
-bells. You will drink my health, Mr. Hardy, and you, Miss Armstrong?"
-
-They answered that they would drink his health with the greatest
-pleasure.
-
-"You and Mr. Candy in rum, Mr. Hardy; you'll drink with the men, for I
-like the officers of my ship to be associated with the crew on festive
-occasions."
-
-"I will gladly drink with the men, sir," responded Hardy.
-
-"Rum is not a fit drink for young ladies," continued the captain,
-with a faint smile, "and you, Miss Armstrong, will drink my health in
-claret--a wine which shall not hurt you, because 'tis light and old and
-nourishing."
-
-Julia bowed. Hardy was wondering what the men would think, but if
-they thought this unusual deviation from sea routine odd, they would
-certainly like it and hope for more. It was an exhibition of insane
-generosity, of lunatic kindness, and the mate could see nothing else in
-it.
-
-In obedience to the captain's instructions he went on deck, sending
-Candy below to his breakfast, and called the boatswain aft.
-
-"It's the captain's orders," said he, "that the men shall knock off
-work all day."
-
-The boatswain stared. "All day, sir?" he said.
-
-"It's his birthday," answered Hardy. "And all hands will drink his
-health in good Jamaica rum at eight bells, served out on the capstan
-head."
-
-Innumerable wrinkles overran the boatswain's face as grin after grin
-rippled about his gale-hardened skin. He looked as if he would like to
-say that here was a traverse that beat all his going a-fishing. But
-the immense pleasure that beamed in his expression was full assurance
-of the reception the crew would give the news.
-
-He walked slowly forward, and the men wondered at his deep and constant
-grin. "One of the mate's stories, I reckon," thought Bill, and Jim also
-thought that some joke of the mate had started the boatswain on that
-smile. When he reached the forecastle the boatswain put his silver
-whistle to his lips and blew the shrill music of "All hands!" and a
-hundred little birds of the groves and woods seemed to be perched in
-song upon the yards and rigging.
-
-The fellows who were below came tumbling up, startled by that call in
-fine weather. In a very little time the whole of the crew had gathered
-round their forecastle leader, who, after clearing his throat and
-gazing about him with his profound smile, said:
-
-"Lads, it's the capt'n's birthday, and it's to be a holiday for you all
-right away through, with liquor at noon to drink his health in."
-
-Sailors are usually so badly treated by all variety of shipowners'
-sullen deafness to their grievances, that when on rare occasions,
-sometimes originating in madness, they are well treated, their
-astonishment is a phenomenon of emotion. It seems unnatural, they
-think. A beautiful mermaid with a gilded tail and flowing hair of
-bronze, with her white revealed charms made entrancing by the soft
-blue of the water, could not amaze them more than a skipper's kindness
-taking the form of Layard's.
-
-A brief spell of silence fell upon them as they looked at one another
-and at the boatswain.
-
-"Ain't yer coddin' us?" said a man.
-
-"Fill your pipes, and go a-courting," answered the boatswain. "I'm for
-taking advantage of it when it comes, which ain't ever too soon or
-often."
-
-This convinced the crew, who delivered a loud cheer, and then began to
-talk and scatter, all of them feeling a bit aimless, for it wasn't like
-going ashore.
-
-Hardy, who was keeping the deck whilst Candy breakfasted, watched the
-proceedings on the forecastle, and wondered if this stroke of the
-captain was going to give them any idea of the truth. But why should
-it? If they suspected, through this act of kindness, that the boy's
-loss had shifted the "old man's" ballast, they would only hope that a
-long time would pass before his mental cargo was trimmed afresh. But
-in truth they did not know that their captain was insane, and even
-Candy, who was below sitting at the table and listening to the skipper
-conversing with Miss Armstrong, would not have kissed the Book upon it.
-
-Presently Mr. Candy came on deck, but Hardy, whose watch below it was,
-thought he would stay a little and talk to Miss Armstrong, and observe
-the captain if he should appear. Very soon after Mr. Candy arrived
-Julia rose lightly through the companion-hatch. She was now looking
-quite well, better indeed than she looked when Hardy first met her.
-Again he found himself admiring her faultless figure and the pose of
-her head, enchanting through its unconsciousness.
-
-"Where is the captain?" he asked her.
-
-"I left him at the table," she replied. "He was not in the cabin when I
-came out of my berth."
-
-"I hope it won't end in his destroying himself," exclaimed Hardy.
-"There is a great deal of goodness and humanity in the poor fellow's
-heart, and it's dreadful to see a man struggling to conquer his brain's
-disease. Who can tell what passes in the minds of such people? But what
-am I to do? He is Prime Minister aboard this ship, and those are the
-people," said he, nodding toward the crew, "who must turn him out."
-
-"Have you told them they are to have a holiday?" she asked.
-
-"Don't they look like it?" he replied.
-
-"How'll they spend it?" she inquired.
-
-"In loafing and smoking and sleeping. If the captain's liberal with his
-grog-- Well, the drummer's gone out of their heads--'tis the way of the
-sea: a bubble over the side, a broken pipe in a vacant bunk, and the
-ship sails on. They may dance and sing songs; and I hope they will,
-for God knows the captain is depressing enough, and I like to see the
-hornpipe danced."
-
-Meanwhile where was Captain Layard? He was in his cabin seated close
-to the medicine-chest, which stood open, and reading a thin volume all
-about poisons, and the quantities to be administered when given for
-sickness. His great dog lay beside him. He read with a knitted brow,
-and sometimes sank the volume to lift with his right hand some bottle
-of poison out of its little square place. He would look at it and then
-refer to the book.
-
-In this singular study, fearful with the menace of the light in his
-eyes, tragically portentous with the lifting look of triumph and the
-insane smile, he spent about half an hour, and then closing the lid of
-the medicine-chest, he stood up and looked at the drum, and softly
-wrung his hands with a heart-moving expression, whose appeal lay in
-the soul's perception seeking to pierce in vain the torturing and
-bewildering veil of disease; for it is not the immortal soul of man
-which is mad in madness, and this belief is God-sent; the soil buries
-and resolves to ashes the mania that destroys, and the purified soul is
-liberated to await the judgment of God--its Home.
-
-After a few minutes he stepped into the cabin and called the attendant,
-who was handling crockery and glasses in the pantry. The fellow stepped
-out.
-
-"Jump below into the lazarette," said the captain, "and draw a bucket
-of rum. I want plenty. This is my birthday, and all hands will drink my
-health."
-
-The man was not at all astonished; he had got the news from the
-forecastle. He was a sort of steward, and knew the ropes in the
-lazarette. The little hatch was just abaft the captain's chair, and
-was opened by an iron ring. The man accepted the captain's orders
-literally, disappeared, and returned with a clean, big bucket.
-
-The lazarette is an after-hold, a compartment of a ship in which in
-those times all sorts of commodities used to be stowed, chiefly edible,
-and for cabin use. The man lifted the hatch-cover--the hatch was no
-more than a man-hole--and by help of the light, which shone down upon a
-cask that was almost immediately under, pumped the bucket nearly full.
-
-The captain went to the hatch and looked down, and exclaimed:
-
-"Hand it up; I'll help you." He received the bucket and placed it on
-the deck, and the man sprang through the hatch and replaced the cover.
-
-"Take it into my cabin," said the captain, "and bring it on deck when I
-send you for it."
-
-And this was done, and the man went on deck whilst the captain entered
-his berth and closed the door.
-
-"I have drawed enough to swim ye," said the cabin-attendant to Bill.
-
-"'Tain't like being in port, though," answered Bill, whilst Jim and
-several others like him grinned at the news of the grog. "When I takes
-a drop, I'm for dancin', and where are the gurls?"
-
-"Ah!" echoed Jim in a sigh born of lobscouse and the livid fat of
-diseased pork.
-
-Finding that the captain did not make his appearance, Hardy kept
-the deck with Julia. Again they talked of the old home, the drunken
-stepmother, the withering indifference of the retired Commander R. N.
-to the loneliness and helplessness of his child, and to her prospects
-in life.
-
-Hardy spoke of it with heat, and the girl's face was often hot with the
-passion of memory.
-
-"What should I have done without you?" she said once and again,
-and still again. "But if I cannot find employment in Australia, I
-must return in this ship," and she looked at him with the eyes of a
-sweetheart.
-
-"If anything happens to Captain Layard," said he, "no doubt I shall get
-command."
-
-Now, "If anything should happen" is the roundabout of "If he should
-die," and people modestly thus speak of death as though it was
-anything, as though it was not the _only_ thing that is real, to be
-expected without fear of disappointment.
-
-"I believe he will grow quite mad long before we arrive at Melbourne,"
-said Julia; "but even taking him as he is, would the agents trust him?"
-
-"You want to come home in this ship, Julia?" said Hardy.
-
-"You are the only friend I have in the world," she answered; and thus
-they cooed without billing, for Jack was in strength forward, and the
-second mate walked the deck to windward, and a sailor stood at the
-wheel.
-
-About a quarter before noon, but not till then, the captain emerged
-with his sextant. If he had come up with a face of madness, the sextant
-he held would have clothed him with all the sanity he needed in the
-sailors' opinion. But his face showed no distinctive marks of the
-condition of his mind, the expression was even calm; he seemed as one
-who was about to realise the consuming hope of his life; the shadow of
-the coming event subdued him. The crew were on deck gathered forward
-in all variety of sprawling posture, smoking and talking, with teeth
-sharpened by the hard and bitter fare of the sea. Also seven bells
-having been struck some time since, they knew that noon and a bumper of
-old Jamaica were at hand, and every eye was directed aft.
-
-Hardy disappeared and returned with his sextant, and Candy fetched his,
-and the three men fell to screwing down the sun till its lower limb was
-like a wheel upon the ocean line. The captain never spoke, and Julia
-studying his face noticed the subdued look and the calmness, and felt
-a little despairful, for, poor heart, she was in love, and wanted the
-captain to go raving mad that Hardy might get command and marry her at
-Melbourne, and bring her home. O God, what joy for a heart so long
-joyless! A home, a protector, a husband, on whose breast she could lean
-with her lips at his ear in softest murmurings of wifely confidence.
-
-"Eight bells! Make it the bell eight!" and the four double chimes rang
-gladly along the decks and up aloft.
-
-"Pass the word for the cabin servant," said the captain, speaking and
-looking as collectedly as the sanest of skippers might show in that
-first command of tacking, "Ready about!"
-
-The man came aft in a hurry, impelled by the thirsty yearning of the
-forecastle mob, and in a couple or three minutes he was standing at
-the capstan just abaft the mast with a bucket on the "head," and a
-tot measure in his hand. The captain stood close to the man, and the
-crew gathered around. The Newfoundland stood at his master's side. Now
-was to be seen the most glowing canvas in the panorama which unfolds
-this ship's adventure. The picture was alive with its crowd of faces
-of seamen watching the lips of their commander, alive with the colour
-and diversity of their apparel, with the silent breathing of the white
-breast soaring to the height of the fiery streak of bunting, which
-trembled in a dog-vane from the main-royal truck. The sea was soft in
-caress and note, and Julia thought of the wayside fountain to which
-_she_ as well as Hardy had listened in the night, when, in the pause,
-she heard the fall of the shower under the bow.
-
-"My lads," began the captain, and Hardy watched him with strained
-attention, believing that the crew would see it, "this is my birthday,
-and I am departing from the custom of the sea in making a general
-holiday of it."
-
-He grew pale and paler as he spoke, but his voice did not falter, and
-no change was visible in his expression save that a light as of secret
-exultation brightened his eye and accentuated his pallor.
-
-"I have always tried to make a good master to my men, and to treat them
-like men and sailors, and not as dogs which other captains seem to find
-them."
-
-This was attended by a growl of appreciation.
-
-"So, my lads," continued the captain, "as this is my birthday, one and
-all of you, the mates, and the lady last, but not least, shall drink my
-health, and the health of the little boy who has left his drum behind
-him."
-
-"May God bless you and him!" said one of the men, for this proved to be
-one of those touches of nature which made all those rough hearts akin.
-
-"Now serve out--serve out, and handsomely!"
-
-The boatswain drank first. And again and again and again the measure
-was filled until all hands of the sailors, saving the man at the wheel,
-had swallowed the fiery draught, many with a smack and a smile of
-relish. Then the wheel was relieved, and another bumper was swallowed
-with a "Many 'appy returns of the day, sir."
-
-"Drink," said the captain to the attendant, and the man drained a full
-dose.
-
-"Sweeten the measure for the two mates," said the captain.
-
-This was quickly done. And then Hardy drank and then Candy, for both
-had the throats of the sea, which seem lined with brass when 'tis ten
-per cent. above proof. "Your health, sir"--and--"your health, sir," and
-the mates took it down.
-
-"Now, Miss Armstrong, you will drink my health," said the captain, and
-with the gallantry of an old beau he took her by the hand and led her
-into the cabin. She glanced at Hardy with a smile before she vanished.
-
-The men scattered as they went forward to get their dinner. The captain
-took a wine-glass from a rack, and a bottle from a locker, and filled
-the glass with red wine.
-
-"Drink to me and to the boy I am seeking, and then tell me where he
-is," he exclaimed as he extended the glass. She took it, and said with
-forced cheerfulness to humour him:
-
-"Your health, Captain Layard, and many happy returns of this day, and
-my heart's gratitude to you for your kindness to me. And God will some
-day show you where your child is."
-
-She drank half the contents of the glass. His eyes sparkled, and his
-face was grotesque with the workings of his dreadful exultation.
-
-"Oh, you must drain it--you must drain it, Miss Armstrong, or it'll be
-bad luck and no pledge."
-
-She drank the glass empty, and put it down upon the table. He gazed at
-her with extraordinary intentness as though he listened to hear her
-words, then swiftly entered his cabin, closed and bolted the door, and
-pulling out a loaded revolver from under the pillow in his bunk, seated
-himself, and with the weapon upon his knee in his grasp sat hearkening,
-with his eyes fastened upon the door.
-
-The time slowly passed and still he continued to sit, grasping the
-pistol upon his knee, with his eyes of madness fixed upon the door.
-His face was now revolting with its look of burning expectation and
-triumph. Suddenly a stream of sunshine moved slowly, like a spoke of a
-softly revolving wheel, over the carpeted deck of the captain's cabin,
-and any one might have known by the motions of the ship that she was
-not under command. You heard faint, vague sounds of trampling above, a
-dim noise as of a sick crowd poisoned by vapour and feebly struggling
-to escape, and in the midst of it the captain's door was struck: the
-blow was languid and repeated three or four times only, and no noise
-attended it.
-
-The madman sprang from his chair and stood erect with the revolver half
-raised from his side, and his eyes sparkled in his face that was dark
-with murderous intent. Thus he stood whilst the spoke of light through
-the port-hole moved gradually round the cabin until it vanished, by
-which time all was silent without. The unhappy man resumed his seat
-and former posture, and thus it went for half an hour at least; then,
-always grasping his murderous weapon, he walked like one in the chamber
-of death, carefully opened the door, and peered out.
-
-The first sight he witnessed was the figure of the chief mate, Hardy,
-stretched at its length and on its side within a pace or two of the
-threshold, and upon the locker on the port side of the table, a
-cushioned locker as comfortable as a couch, lay the form of Julia
-Armstrong; her right arm hung down, and she lay as apparently dead as
-Hardy. The captain stepped across the body of the mate and looked with
-devouring, sparkling eyes at the girl, while he seemed to listen for
-sounds above. Nothing was to be heard save the inner grumbling of the
-ship as she swayed helpless in arrest. Now and again the wheel chains
-clanked to the blow of the sea upon the rudder.
-
-The captain went to the girl's side and looked at her: her face was
-placid, pale, ghastly, and her lips a bright red. Thus exactly did
-Hardy's face show, and any one experienced in the symptoms of poisoning
-by laudanum or morphia would have known that these two people had been
-heavily drugged, even perhaps unto death.
-
-It was the birthday of a madman in search of his drowned child, and
-they had drunk his health and the little drummer's. His face took on an
-air of hurry and bustle, and, always gripping his revolver, he stepped
-nimbly to the companion-steps and mounted them. He raised his head
-just above the companion-hood and looked; he saw that the man who had
-stood at the wheel was lying motionless beside it. Almost abreast of
-the companion was the curved form of Candy, who seemed to have been
-doubled up and then reeled into lifelessness. A few prostrate forms
-were to be seen forward, in the waist and about the forescuttle. They
-lay lifeless in the sleep or death of the drugged draught in which they
-had pledged their captain. In the forecastle lay the rest, some on the
-deck, some in their bunks, and every face showed as Hardy's and the
-girl's, placid, pale, and ghastly, and the lips a bright red. All the
-symptoms had been expended, the first pleasurable mental excitement,
-then the weariness, the headache, the intolerable weight of limb, the
-spinning and sickening giddiness, the drowsiness, the stupor, and now
-insensibility or death.
-
-The captain rose in the hatch to his full height and stepped on to
-the deck, followed by the dog, which went to Candy and smelt him, and
-then with a low, uneasy growl went to the figure beside the wheel and
-sniffed at it. With a dreadful smile of hope and rejoicing the captain
-thrust the pistol into a side pocket and, going to the wheel, put the
-helm hard a-starboard, and secured it by several turns of the end of
-the mainbrace.
-
-This done, always preserving his horrible expression of lofty
-exaltation, he took the breaker out of the bow of the port
-quarter-boat, filled it from the scuttle-butt, and replaced it. God
-knows how he was directed in what he did; the instincts of habit and
-knowledge must have governed him. It is certain that he made his
-preparations for departure with the sanity of a healthy brain. His dog
-closely followed him, and seemed afraid. He then went below into the
-pantry and returned with his arms full of food, which he placed in the
-stern-sheets along with a tumbler which he pulled out of his pocket. He
-moved rapidly and his lips often worked, and he'd flash his gaze along
-the decks at that memorable, tragical picture of ship with lifeless
-figures upon the planks, with all her white canvas curving inwards,
-stirless in the stream of the breeze. She seemed to have been drugged
-too, and rolled with a kind of stagger upon the soft folds of the swell.
-
-He went below again, the dog at his heels, and, entering his cabin,
-took a dog-collar and chain out of a locker and secured the noble
-animal to a leg of the table, which was cleated and immovable. When he
-had done this he pressed his lips to the dog's head and sobbed dryly
-and sighed, for the light in his eyes was too hot a fire for tears. The
-dog whined and wagged its tail, and looked a hundred questions with its
-gentle eyes.
-
-"I shall bring him back, I shall bring him back, Sailor!" the captain
-muttered to the Newfoundland.
-
-And all this time Hardy lay close beside the dog as dead to the eye as
-any corpse under the ground.
-
-The captain went to the side of the girl and picked her up off the
-cushioned locker with the ease of a man lifting a child. With her
-motionless form in his arms he gained the deck and laid her in the
-boat, passing her under the after-thwart, so that her head lay low in
-the stern-sheets. He sprang for a colour in the flag-locker and placed
-the bunting that was ready rolled under her head. She never sighed, she
-never stirred. Not paler nor calmer could her face have shown on the
-pillow of death.
-
-Now the boat was to be lowered, and he went to work thus: he cast
-adrift the gripes which had held the boat steady betwixt the davits,
-and then he slackened the falls at the bow, belaying the tackle, and
-then he slackened the falls at the stern, belaying the tackle; and
-so by degrees the boat sank in irregular jerks to the surface of the
-water. He sprang on to the bow tackle and descended with the nimbleness
-of a monkey, with wonderful swiftness unhooked the blocks, and the boat
-was free. Next he stepped the mast upon which the sail lay furled, then
-the rudder; then shoved clear and hoisted the small square of lug, and
-in a few minutes he was blowing away gently into the boundless blue
-distance, looking all about him with a proud but ghastly smile for a
-sight of his missing boy, whilst the girl lay like the dead in the
-bottom of the boat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-JULIA CALLS "JOHNNY!"
-
-
-It was about half-past two o'clock in the afternoon and the sun shone
-hotly. The breeze was a pleasant wind for that boat, and the captain
-put her dead before it and blew onwards into the boundless distance,
-squarely seated at the amidship helm, with the white and placid face of
-the drugged girl at his feet.
-
-He would often look at her with a passionate eagerness, and then
-direct his brilliant eyes over the sea, and his countenance was now
-shocking with its expression of real madness, charged with the ghastly
-illumination of his one maniacal belief, that the girl, who was fresh
-from the sea when he missed his boy, knew where he was and would take
-him to the child, and then they would return to the ship, and once more
-the drum would rattle and the whistle awaken the birds in the rigging.
-
-Never before in all human tradition of ocean life had fate painted
-upon the bosom of the deep a picture more wonderful by virtue of its
-secret and tragic meaning. There would be nothing in the mere scene of
-a beautiful clipper ship under all plain sail, her canvas hollowing
-inwards visibly, to all intents and purposes derelict; there would be
-nothing in the spectacle of a little open boat borne onwards by the
-humming heart of its swelling square of canvas, steered by a lonely
-figure, the other being hidden. It might be to a distant eye the flight
-of a single survivor from a floating pest-house. But it was the story
-of the thing which makes it so extraordinary that I who am writing
-pause with astonishment, dismayed also by the lack of the exquisite
-cunning I need to submit the truth.
-
-The girl had been drugged with morphia, but in what dose, and in what
-doses the men, it is impossible to conjecture. The madman reading the
-book of directions may have understood it, but insanity had rendered
-memory useless when it came to his mixing the poison with the liquor
-and the wine. But she was not dead; he would have found that out if he
-had bared her breast and put his ear to the white softness. But would
-she die in that sleep which was as death? for I believe it is the
-heart's action that fails in such cases, and at any moment her soul
-might return to God.
-
-But he! poor unhappy wretch, if he understood what his mad but most
-moving love for his child had impelled him to do, his perception would
-not be as ours. His heart burned with desire that she should awake and
-tell him in which direction he should steer, for already the ship was a
-toy astern, three spires of ice-like radiance dipping to the eye on the
-brows of the blue swell as the boat rose and sank, jewelling the water
-with two foam-threaded lines of little yeasty bubbles.
-
-Would she ever awaken? How long would she continue in sleep? To some
-a dose of morphia professionally prescribed will yield a long night's
-rest not wholly unrefreshing, though the drug is obnoxious to the
-brain, which in time it murders. Therefore she might sleep into the
-early hours of the night.
-
-But these were not _his_ speculations. His mind was intent on one
-object, and he held the boat straight before the wind, waiting for her
-to look at him and rise, and point to the spot where his boy was.
-
-It passed into about an hour before sunset.
-
-From time to time the captain had laid his hand gently upon the girl's
-brow, believing she would open her eyes and speak to him. He was like
-a child whose grave or tragic act was beyond his mind's capacity to
-understand. He was painfully haggard, and sweat drops were on his
-forehead and cheeks, but the dreadful fire was always in his eyes. And
-once he stared fixedly over the port bow of the boat as though his poor
-brain had shaped the vision of his child: he stared as though he beheld
-the phantom, and when it vanished out of the perfidious cell which had
-created it he sighed and frowned.
-
-He took no heed of sensation; thirst and hunger may have been his, but
-he never left the helm to drink or eat. At the hour I have named the
-westering sun was beginning to empurple the east, and he was steering
-toward the point where the evening star would rise. More than half the
-moon was hanging in a broken shape of dim pearl over the boat's bows.
-All at once the captain's ceaseless stare at the ocean brought his eyes
-to an object almost directly ahead. He was a sailor, and his afflicted
-reason could not deceive him. Right ahead and within half an hour's
-sail--so low seated was the gunwale of that boat--lay a small vessel,
-partly dismasted and deep sunk. She was painted black. Her lower masts
-were white, and both foresail and mainsail were hanging, but the
-trysail was stowed.
-
-"He will be there! he will be there!" cried the captain in a voice that
-swept like a shriek from his lips, and as the words left him the girl,
-with a long, strange sigh, opened her eyes full upon the wild nightmare
-face that was on a line with her head, for he had sprung to his feet.
-
-"He is there!" he shouted again.
-
-Then looking down he saw her watching him, and had he been sane would
-have witnessed the awakening reason in her darkening into horror. She
-tried to sit up, but her body was heavy as lead.
-
-"Oh, what is this? Where am I?" she asked, more in a mutter than in
-clear speech.
-
-"He is there!" he cried, pointing with a frantic gesture, "and you
-have known it throughout your sleep. Look!" He stooped, put his hands
-under her arms and lifted her out of the bottom of the boat into the
-stern-sheets, against whose back-board she sank.
-
-Now morphia gives you but sleep if it does not kill you, and reason
-with many is immediately active when slumber is ended; but the
-captain's face alone would have sufficed to stimulate the most sluggish
-consciousness into clear perception, and without understanding the
-reason of it she grasped her situation.
-
-She was alone in a boat with the mad captain of the _York_, and there
-was nothing in sight save the everlasting circle of the sea girdling a
-small broken vessel toward which the boat was running, for the captain
-had his hand upon the yoke, and the little fabric was dead before it
-once again.
-
-Despair laid the ice-cold hand of death upon the poor girl's heart.
-What could she do? What would _he_ do?
-
-As the sun slowly floated down the slope he was glorifying, the moon
-brightened her broken face. Julia's lips were dry; her tongue had the
-rasp of a cat's upon the roof of her mouth.
-
-"Is there water here?" she asked.
-
-"Oh, yes. You shall have water. Put your hand upon this. What sha'n't
-you have who have helped me to find him!"
-
-She extended her hand and held the yoke steady, and he went into the
-bows with the glass and filled it from the breaker, all as sensibly as
-though he was right in mind; but he stood two or three moments to look
-at the vessel they were nearing and talk to her.
-
-She drank with the thirst of fever, and then perfect realisation
-possessing her, a little impulse of hope quickened the beat of her
-heart, for she thought to herself, made cool by hope, "There are people
-in that ship, and I shall be saved."
-
-The vessel was a small brig, floating on a cargo of timber. She showed
-a tolerable height of side, and judging from her condition she had
-started a butt, and the inrush had overmastered the pump, and as her
-davits were empty her people had no doubt got away in the boats. She
-made a churchyard picture for forlornness, with the broken moon hanging
-over her, though daylight still throbbed in folds of cloud in the deep
-west.
-
-Julia saw with a fainting heart that the brig was deserted, and she
-turned her eyes up to God and asked what should she do?
-
-The captain stood in silence, with one hand backward upon the yoke, his
-head inclined forward with intent, searching stare.
-
-"He may be in that brig," at last he said. "What moved then? No, 'twas
-the swing of the forebrace. And if he is not in that vessel," he
-continued, in a voice of cunning, "you who know where he is will tell
-me where to steer."
-
-She brought the whole of her wits together in her resolution to live,
-and remembered that she had given some order to this man's insanity
-by her system of answering his talk. She exclaimed with all the
-tranquillity she could summon:
-
-"If he is not in that vessel, Captain Layard, you will let me rest in
-her for the night, because if you keep me sitting in this open boat
-I shall be worn out, or I might die--I am not strong--and how, then,
-could I help you to find little Johnny?"
-
-"Right! You are right," he answered, swiftly; "you shall rest in that
-brig if he is not there; but if he is there," changing his voice into a
-note of triumph, he added, "we must rejoin the ship, because I want the
-men to see him. And I am dying for his company at night, and for the
-sound of his drum."
-
-As he spoke these words the boat was alongside the abandoned timberman,
-and with the dexterity of a sailor--for in all professional work he
-was as sane as the sanest--he put the helm down, sprang to let go the
-halliards of the lug, and secured the boat by passing her painter
-through a channel plate.
-
-This brig had old-fashioned channels, which were platforms secured
-to the ship's side so as to give a wide spread to the shrouds and
-backstays. The boat sat close beside the main-channel. With the
-resolution of one who works for life the girl seized the lanyards of
-the dead-eyes, and with the ease which her graceful figure would have
-promised gained the platform of channel, and a minute later the deck.
-
-With aberration disciplined by professional habit the captain went to
-work, his intentions being perfectly sane, save that he discovered an
-extraordinary anxiety and eagerness to get on board the brig. He knew
-that he and the girl were to pass the night in the vessel, and so, with
-the quick motions of madness and with the strength which madness often
-confers, he got the breaker of water into the main-channel, then placed
-beside it the stock of provisions he had stowed away aft, and called to
-Julia:
-
-"Do you see him?"
-
-"Come on deck, and we will look," she answered, for now that she stood
-on a solid deck her nerve had returned.
-
-"Steady this breaker on the rail," he called.
-
-He handed it on to the rail, and she held it. He then threw the
-provisions on to the deck, leapt inboard, and placed the breaker
-betwixt a couple of loose planks. The moon was shining brightly, and
-its light rippled in lines of lustrous pearl. The heave of the sea was
-slow and solemn, the wind was soft and weak, and the west was still
-scored with streaks of crimson; but night was at hand, and some stars
-were trembling in the east.
-
-She was one of those little brigs which are among the quaintest of
-the marine objects of the port or harbour. Her forward-deck from the
-main-hatchway was heaped with timber cleverly stowed, with room for
-a little caboose and a narrow alley to it from the hatch. Some of the
-running rigging lay loose about the decks, and this gave her a look of
-confusion. Otherwise, from the appearance of her deck cargo, it was
-clear that she had not been hurt by weather. A deck-house nearly filled
-the quarter-deck; there was just room on either hand for a man to walk.
-
-The captain stood silent for a minute staring about him. He then
-muttered:
-
-"Nothing moves; I see nothing alive. He may be there. Come, for it will
-be you to see him first."
-
-He went to the door of the deck-house, and Julia followed. Two windows
-stood on either side the door, and four windows ran down either wall.
-But when they entered the moon made so faint a light through the door
-and the windows that it was difficult to see. Yet distinctive features
-of the interior were visible: a table, three or four chairs, and a
-bulkhead abaft, which might screen from the living-room two holes for
-the skipper and his mate to sleep in.
-
-"Call him," whispered the captain, as though he stood in a dead-house.
-
-"Johnny!" cried the girl, "come to father if you are here, Johnny!"
-
-She had a wonderful spirit to say this. She felt the horrible mockery
-of it and the recoil of its ghastly derisiveness upon her heart, but
-she knew that Hardy could not be far off, and would seek her. The
-passion of life was strong in her, and she judged that her only chance
-lay in inspiriting the poor man's dreadful conviction that she could
-help him to find his son.
-
-"Call him again," said the captain, and again she called.
-
-He advanced a step, and she saw him in the faint suffusion straining
-in a posture of desperate gaze, of desperate hearkening, as though his
-teeth were set and the sweat of blood was on his brow, and the palms of
-his hands were bloody with the penetration of the finger-nails.
-
-At that moment she heard a single stroke of a bell. She started with
-a cry, with instant rejoicing, for she believed there were men in the
-vessel.
-
-"What was that?" said the captain.
-
-"A bell!" she exclaimed.
-
-"O God! it may be Johnny!" he shouted, and he rushed through the open
-door.
-
-She quickly followed; she was not a superstitious fool, she was a girl
-at sea, and, as a girl might, she supposed that if a bell were struck
-upon a ship's deck it was by a man.
-
-A small bell was hung betwixt the foremast and the foremost end of the
-galley or caboose, and immediately under it lay, bottom up, secured
-to the deck, a small tub of a boat. It was easy to understand why the
-bell should have tolled. It had been struck by some bight of buntline
-or clewline in the sway of the brig as she heeled to the fold, and the
-sharp return of the bell jerked the tongue against the metal side in a
-single stroke.
-
-But the captain was too mad to understand this, and Julia was a girl at
-sea without eyes for bights of running gear. She was startled, nay, a
-sudden horror of superstition visited her when following the captain.
-She stood near the bell and saw no signs of human creature. She cast
-looks of fear all about; one, even one, man would protect her against
-the horrible yokedom of this passage. The planks had the sheen of satin
-in the moonlight, and the power of the satellite sufficed to fling dark
-shadows upon the decks, and these shadows moved as the brig rolled. But
-she saw no man; and what ghostly hand then had struck that bell? For
-the night might go before the swing of the bight of gear should, by
-adjustment of the rolling of the vessel, exactly hit the bell again and
-make it ring.
-
-The captain began to call, "Johnny, Johnny, where are you? Come out of
-your hiding-place, little sonny. Here's father waiting for you."
-
-He breathed deep, listening and gazing about him; but no other reply
-reached his ear than the sob of water under the bow, the moan of night
-wind in the rigging, the sullen slap of canvas against the mast.
-
-"Do you see him?" the captain asked, and the eyes of madness sparkled
-in the moonshine as he turned his gaze upon the girl.
-
-She answered, huskily, "No, I do not see him. Who struck that bell?"
-
-"He did," said the captain. "O God! O everlasting Father! Why does he
-hide himself from me?"
-
-He clasped his hands and raised them and looked up, and in that posture
-he muttered as though he prayed, and all the while Julia was staring
-about her, faint with fear, and with the sight of that imploring figure
-of afflicted manhood; for who had struck the bell? And did the dead
-come to life again in phantoms? And was the spirit of Johnny invisibly
-present?
-
-Poor Julia!
-
-"He may come out of his hiding-place if we go aft," said the captain in
-his voice of cunning. "Stop!"
-
-He stepped to the little caboose and entered it.
-
-"Not here, not here," he groaned as he came out, "but we must have
-patience. We will sit and wait. We'll sit and watch the deck, and at
-any moment you may see his little figure coming along."
-
-Weak with fear and superstition, and the horror of her ghastly
-situation, she followed the miserable man to the deck-house. He entered
-and brought out two chairs, which he placed in front of the door,
-and they sat down. It was certain that the man believed the child to
-be in this abandoned vessel, and this was assurance to Julia that he
-would not compel her to enter the boat and sail away in search of the
-boy. The thought inspired some faint hope; she knew that this was no
-unfrequented tract of ocean, and that even if Hardy did not seek her,
-any hour next day might bring along some ship which she could signal to
-by flourishing her handkerchief. But Hardy! She began to think whilst
-her dreadful companion sat beside her staring along the moonlighted
-deck, and waiting for his boy to come. She fully understood that she
-had been drugged; her thoughts went to the medicine-chest; had the
-captain poisoned Hardy and the rest of the crew that he might steal
-her from the ship? This puzzled her, for if the crew had been drugged
-they might have been drugged to death by the irresponsible hand of this
-madman, and Hardy would be lost to her for ever, and his ship would not
-come to rescue her.
-
-These were her thoughts "too deep for tears," but it was fortunate
-that she had slept soundly and well in the boat, for now, though
-wearied in bone and faint at heart, she was as sleepless as the poor,
-tireless creature beside her. She could not have endured to enter the
-deck-house and rest there; she needed the companionship of the moon
-and the stars, and the visible surface of the deep blackening out from
-either hand the wake of the luminary to its limitless recesses. The
-whisper of the wind in the rigging was companionship, but the movements
-of the shadows upon the whitened planks were a perpetual fear, for who
-had struck the bell? and was the vessel haunted? Her throat was parched
-and she asked for water.
-
-"Certainly; oh, yes. He is long in coming, but when he comes we'll
-rejoin the ship," the captain said as he rose, and quite sanely he went
-to the breaker, filled the tumbler, and returned with a glassful and a
-biscuit.
-
-There was the courtesy of good breeding in the poor fellow as he handed
-her the glass, for the soul that is never mad will shine through
-disease, and Captain Layard, who was born a gentleman, proved a
-gentleman even when insane. She drank gratefully and ate the biscuit.
-
-He took the glass from her and filled it for himself, but did not eat.
-Then he returned to his chair, and that dreadful watch on deck again
-began. Often he would say:
-
-"Do you see him? Why should he keep in hiding?"
-
-And sometimes he would quit his seat and go to the rail, and look into
-the sea over the side.
-
-The water swarmed with fire this night; the chilly sea-glow started in
-fibres, in clouds like luminous smoke, in coils like revolving eels,
-and it is conceivable that the crazed eye which was bent upon these
-lights should fashion them into phantasms, into grotesque shapes, into
-the crowd of brassy faces which the sealed but waking vision beholds
-when the brain is drugged. He would spend twenty minutes in searching
-the waters, and then cross to the other side and spend a quarter of
-an hour in a like hunt. Always when he returned to his chair he would
-mutter to himself, "Why doesn't he come?" And once he started up with
-a frantic cry which was frightful with inarticulateness; he dashed his
-hand to his forehead and held it there, with his left arm stiffened out
-and the fingers curled with the agony of his mind.
-
-At that moment the bell was again struck, and now it was Julia who
-shrieked. She started up and bent her head forward, thinking to see the
-figure that had struck the bell. The captain broke into a wild laugh.
-
-"I see him! I see him!" he cried. "O Johnny, I'm your father!" and
-he started into a run with his arms outstretched, as if to seize the
-phantom he beheld.
-
-He ran past the bell, and crying, "I am coming, Johnny, I am coming!"
-climbed on to the top of the deck load, and in a strange croaking
-voice, as though it proceeded from some huge sea-bird sailing overhead,
-he exclaimed:
-
-"There you are at last, my Johnny! Father is coming to you!" and sprang
-overboard.
-
-Julia fell upon the deck and lay lifeless in a swoon.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-THEY MEET
-
-
-It was moonlight on the sea, and the full-rigged ship _York_ lay with
-her canvas aback, silently heaving upon the swell. But by the eye of
-a sailor a certain moisture would have been visible in the silver
-suffusion, and he might hardly have needed to look at the glass to
-guess that this calm scene of ocean night would in a few hours show a
-changed face. The time was shortly after ten.
-
-The lamp in the cabin was unlighted, but the moon shone upon the
-skylight, and the darkness was whitened by it, and all features of the
-interior were visible. Hardy lay stretched upon the cabin deck, and
-within an arm's reach of him rested the great Newfoundland dog, secured
-by a chain to the leg of the table. The picture was wonderful for its
-human stillness: you heard no tramp of foot, no call of voice. The
-very sails slept against the masts, and nothing was audible but the
-complaint of a bulkhead or some strong fastening as the ship sluggishly
-took the run of the fold.
-
-All of a sudden Hardy opened his eyes, and having opened them he
-kept them open, staring with just that look of bewilderment and
-astonishment which had been in Julia's dawning gaze. He tried to raise
-his head and thought it was a cannon-ball, but the dog had noticed the
-motion, and instantly alert with joy barked in deep-throated notes,
-with endless wagging of the tail.
-
-This tremendous noise close in his ear was as galvanism to the dead
-frog. Hardy sat up and looked at the dog and then looked round him,
-and feeling all the sensations of a man drugged with liquor, believed,
-without being able to remember, that he had fallen down drunk. This
-is the sensation of the man who is fortunate enough to awake from the
-stupefaction of laudanum.
-
-"Good God! What is this?" Hardy muttered, and he squeezed his brow with
-his hands as you would wring a swab to drain the wet out of it:
-
-Then slowly memory began to operate, whilst the dog was straining to
-reach him and caress him. "My God!" he thought after a passage of
-reflection, "the madman poisoned us when we drank his health!" And then
-it all came to him. He rose to his feet, but his legs trembled and he
-could hardly stand. "Where is Julia?" and next, "Where is the captain?"
-
-The dog began to bark with something of fury, and Hardy with trembling
-hands removed the collar from the brute's neck. The noble animal
-sprang upon Hardy in affectionate caress and nearly felled him with
-its weight, then dashed into the captain's cabin, the door of which
-swung ajar, and Hardy followed. He could hardly see, it was so dark
-here, and he felt the captain's bunk and wandered round on staggering
-legs, feeling. His throat was as hot as the bowl of a lighted pipe,
-and it felt the hotter when he heard the dog in the cabin lapping
-at some water in the dish that was meant for its use. He went to the
-swing-tray, where there was water, and drank a full draught, which
-greatly helped him both in wits and body, then entered Julia's cabin
-and felt the bunk and found she was not there. "What has he done?" he
-thought, and with heavy limbs he made his way on deck.
-
-The light was brilliant enough after the cabin gloom, and he could see
-clearly. He stood in the hatch, holding by the companion-hood.
-
-Abreast of him lay, in convulsed posture, the figure of the second
-mate, Candy. He turned his head and saw the shape of a man lying
-prostrate beside the wheel. He took note by the aid of the moon that
-the wheel was lashed, then his eyes travelled to a pair of empty
-davits, and he staggered to them and looked down. He could trace the
-black lines of the falls, and saw the blocks as the ship swayed,
-kindling fire in the dark water.
-
-He was a sailor, and at once understood it all. A groan escaped his
-lips whilst he thought, "He has gone away in the boat with Julia
-to seek his son. How am I to recover her?" And the horror of her
-situation--alone in an open boat with a madman--penetrated his heart,
-and seemed to petrify him. He could just distinguish two or three dark
-figures overhanging the forecastle rail, and a couple of sailors lay
-motionless upon the deck a little way abaft the galley.
-
-The dog had bounded up out of the cabin, and was wandering around
-sniffing at one silent figure and another: no doubt he was in quest of
-his master. Then it occurred to Hardy to remember that the grog had
-been served out at noon. Suppose he had got away at two.
-
-What sort of breeze was then blowing?
-
-He reflected and remembered.
-
-He would sail dead away and right before it, for he had no destination,
-and was sure to shape the crow's course. "Grant her four miles an hour,
-and this is ten o'clock," he thought, pulling out his watch and holding
-it to the moon. "The boat may have covered thirty miles of sea. They
-may have been fallen in with and rescued, for Julia would shriek her
-story, and the captain might believe that Johnny was aboard. But how
-shall I know? How shall I know? I must take it that the boat is still
-afloat, and Julia must be saved."
-
-He considered the direction of the wind, and made up his mind to the
-course that must be steered; but now as to the crew. He went to Candy
-and, kneeling, shook him, put his hand to his face, put his ear to his
-mouth, and easily saw that he was dead. The discovery thrilled through
-him like the cut of a sword on the shoulder. He walked to the figure
-beside the wheel, and in a little while could not doubt that the man,
-too, was dead. It was not because he was a doctor's son that he needed
-to be informed of the action of a heavy dose of laudanum, or some
-poisonous drug of that sort, upon the movements of a weak heart. But
-there were live men forward, and with sluggish motions of his limbs he
-went that way.
-
-He stooped over the two figures abaft the galley, and detected life in
-them. He then stepped on to the forecastle, and the first man he spoke
-to was the boatswain, who was resting his head in his arm upon the
-rail. He now saw there were three others near him, and two were sitting
-on the coamings of the forescuttle.
-
-"The captain was mad and has drugged us," said Hardy. "He has taken the
-lady with him, and I want to give chase. Where are the rest of the men?"
-
-"As the Lord is God," answered the boatswain, "don't my precious head
-know it's been drugged. Talk o' Shanghaing! But I never knowed it from
-the hand of a skipper nor worse than this."
-
-"I want to trim sail, and make a start to rescue the lady," said Hardy.
-
-"You'll not get the men to move if there was twenty ladies to be
-rescooed," responded the boatswain, who spoke as if he was drunk.
-
-"I ha'n't got strength to lift a sprat to my mouth if I was starving,"
-said one of the men, who leaned with folded arms as though at any
-moment the three of them would sink exhausted to the deck.
-
-It drove Hardy crazy with a consuming desire to start in chase to see
-their helplessness and to feel his own. But what was he to do! Here
-were four men, and two sitting on the coamings of the scuttle, and two
-alive, though prostrate, near the galley--eight men, and more perhaps
-below in the forecastle.
-
-So he went to the hatch and asked the two men how they felt. They
-answered with curses, swearing they'd have hove the captain overboard
-before he should ha' poisoned them.
-
-"He was mad," said Hardy. "I knew it, and wondered you didn't see it
-and ask me to act. He has poisoned me and stolen my sweetheart away to
-her destruction, but we'll chase the beggar the moment we are able."
-
-They growled out something and he looked down the scuttle. A sailor
-had lighted the slush lamp; some man, perhaps, who was less ill than
-the others on recovery, or who had the best sense then about. Hardy
-descended and stood under the hatch, looking round him. I would not
-like to say how many men were here, because I do not know what the
-owner of the ship chose to think her complement. Hardy might have
-counted eight or ten men, in bunks, hammocks, or seated on their
-sea-chests. The faces he saw were ghastly, as though this ocean-parlour
-were plague-stricken. He went from one to another to see if all were
-alive, and they all proved so. The swing of the flame flung shadows
-like contortions on the visible faces. It was hot down here, and Hardy
-felt sick with the drug, whose effects were not yet expended. Some
-breathed deep: the human respiration threaded the subdued moan of water.
-
-"What's been done to us?" said a man sitting on a chest.
-
-"We've all been drugged by a lunatic who's carried off my sweetheart,"
-answered Hardy. "There's to be a shift of weather, and the ship's under
-all plain sail and aback, and the helm lashed. Any of you here able to
-come on deck and swing the yards and take the wheel?"
-
-The devil a one! So Hardy climbed with leaden limbs through the square
-hole and walked slowly aft, and sat down on the skylight.
-
-The Newfoundland came out of a shadow and lay at his feet. A fair
-light, with power of painting jetty strokes that slided upon the
-pale planks, flowed from the moon. But the broken orb was hazy, and
-the mate's eyes saw the darkness of wind gathering in vapour in the
-west or thereabouts. So the breeze that had been steady all day was
-to harden sooner or later out of its quarter, and the ship under all
-plain sail lay aback to it. But Hardy felt too weak to move the wheel,
-even if by so doing he could have helped the ship; nor, though she
-could have swung to fill her breasts with canvas, which would have
-been impossible, he'd have let her lie as she was because, with the
-yards trimmed as they stood, he couldn't have shaped a course for the
-direction which he believed the madman had taken.
-
-He sat and thought and waited. It was miserable to see the dead figure
-of Candy lying there, and miserable when he turned his head to see the
-dead figure of the sailor beside the wheel. What an unparalleled act!
-How deep and cunning beyond all credibility, and yet as true as the
-misty radiance floating in shimmering folds upon the dark and silent
-heave! His brain was every minute clearing, and he realised more
-intently as the time slipped by that, if yonder shadow meant heavy
-weather, the girl was lost, unless a passing ship had picked them up;
-but how would Hardy know?
-
-In about half an hour one of the figures at the forecastle rail came
-slowly aft. He stopped and bent over the two forms lying abaft the
-galley. Hardy heard him speak to them, and he could just catch the
-murmur of their replies. They had therefore come to, and no doubt would
-be sitting up and moving about shortly.
-
-The figure that had left the forecastle rail came along, and Hardy saw
-it was the boatswain. The man went to the body of Candy, and looking
-round said, in a hollow voice:
-
-"Is he dead?"
-
-"Ay, stone dead; and so is yonder," replied Hardy.
-
-"What took him to do it?" asked the boatswain, coming to Hardy's side.
-
-"Why does a madman tear up his clothes?" replied Hardy. "How are those
-fellows in the waist there?"
-
-"They're reviving," answered the boatswain. "He must ha' put plenty in.
-Dommed if ever I was treated like this before by the capt'n of a ship.
-Tell you what, sir, there's weather comin' along," and he cast the eye
-of an experienced sailor up aloft at the canvas and then at the moon,
-at which he shook his head.
-
-Yes, her broken face had taken a glutinous reddish look as though she
-was a smear of pink currant jam, and her light was gone out of the
-sea. There was no more wind, but it was thickening westwards, and you
-might look for a slap of squall any moment, the shriek of the shot of
-the storm gun sweeping betwixt shroud and mast, and the ship lay aback
-under all plain sail, and there was no longer light of moonshine on her
-canvas.
-
-"Just see if we can't get men enough to brace these yards square," said
-Hardy. "We can let go and clew up and wait till the men are strong
-enough to stow the canvas; but if we lie like this something may come
-to whip the masts out of her."
-
-But it was a full half-hour before hands enough could be collected, and
-they all seemed as though freshly awakened from the crimp's debauch;
-their knees shook, their heads lolled, they lifted their arms as though
-they were operated upon by slow machinery. Yet the business, in a
-fashion, was contrived. They clewed up the royals and topgallantsails,
-they hauled up the mainsail, they let go some jib and staysail
-halliards, and they brailed the mizzen to the mast. The least dead
-of the poor fellows took the helm, and the ship with her head to the
-eastward, with much flap of canvas aloft, bowed slowly over the black
-run of swell. Her pace was very slow because the wind was light, and
-all the canvas she showed to it were two topsails and her forecourse.
-
-This was as Hardy desired, because the moon was slowly vanishing like
-a dimming stain of bloody ooze, and it promised a black night. If he
-had held the ship moving under all her wings she would have passed the
-boat if she had not run her down, for it was his conviction, heaven
-inspired, that the madman had blown away straight before it, and how
-prophetically right he was in that we all know, and yet for some hours
-it remained very quiet, though black as the inside of a coal sack.
-Again this was as Hardy could have prayed for, as this raven serenity
-promised security to the boat, and if it lasted till daybreak she might
-be in sight.
-
-The mate and another man placed the two bodies on the quarter-deck side
-by side under the bulwarks, clear of the gear, and hid them under a
-tarpaulin. It would not have been proper nor decent to have buried them
-out of hand, for though Hardy had no doubt that they were dead, he yet
-felt that time should be given to prove it; and so the two figures lay
-motionless under the tarpaulin.
-
-The stars and moon went out and it blew very faint with a deepening
-of the blackness overhead, so that you looked for lightning. About
-three o'clock some of the men had come out of the forecastle, and by
-Hardy's commands the galley fire was lighted and strong coffee brewed.
-This wonderfully refreshed the men, and Hardy then asked them if they
-thought they were strong enough to go aloft and furl the lighter
-canvas, as he could not tell at what moment heavy weather might set
-in. The poor fellows managed it somehow, but were long over it. Then
-as many as were equal furled the mainsail, at which hour it was hard
-upon daybreak. In the blackness of those small hours it was impossible
-to guess the character of the sky, and in which direction the soot of
-it was trending. But all of a sudden the wind freshened with a long,
-melancholy wail, as though 'twas the spirit of the night that was
-dying, the troubled water ran in fitful flashes, and the ship broke the
-brine into white foam about her. The mate talked with the boatswain
-beside the quarter-deck skylight: they were both almost recovered, and
-you could hear reviving life in voices about the deck.
-
-"I have no doubt," said Hardy, "that the captain blew away straight
-from the ship's side, because you see he had no destination in his
-mind."
-
-"Not onlikely," answered the boatswain.
-
-"Suppose I'm right," continued Hardy, "then I reckon we're not abreast
-of her yet; but if I pass the boat before the light comes and it proves
-thick, as I fancy you'll find it, we shall miss her for good, and I
-want my sweetheart badly."
-
-"That's quite natural," said the boatswain. "We're walkin' now and the
-breeze freshens, and if you think you are right, sir, in steering as
-we go, then what d'ye say to hauling up the foresail and lowering the
-maintopsail-yard on the cap, and manning the reef-tackles?"
-
-"Get it done," said Hardy.
-
-It was easily done, for it was not a furling job. A bit of sea was
-beginning to run; it smacked the ship under the counter, and flooded
-the wake with light. Hardy walked up and down the deck, mad with desire
-for daybreak. He was steering by a theory of a madman's action, and
-he might be wrong, and if he was wrong--but even if he was right, how
-would the boat fare in the sea that was now running with a madman at
-the yoke, and the full sail and tearing sheet gripped by the hand of
-madness?
-
-These were considerations scarce endurable to the man, and for ever he
-was sending searching glances ahead for the ghastly hue of the dawn.
-The day broke at last, and it was a day of gloom and mist and a narrow
-horizon; the sky was a dome of apparently motionless vapour, and each
-surge ere it broke arched in an edge of flint, and the whole surface
-was an olive-green decorated by lines of foam.
-
-As yet there was no great weight in the wind, but the sailor's eyes
-saw that more was to be expected. Hardy went to his cabin for a glass
-of his own. He slung it over his shoulder, and regaining the deck
-sprang aloft to the height of the mizzen-top, from which altitude,
-with the glass set firmly against the topmast-rigging, he searched the
-sea. As the lenses made the circuit there leapt into the field of the
-telescope the apparition of a little brig unmistakenly derelict, with
-loose canvas hollowing like a kite against the masts. He examined her
-intently, and then muttering, "They may be aboard that vessel. It is
-a chance. The madman may have taken refuge, or thought his son was
-there," he threw the strap of the telescope over his head, and noting
-the brig's bearing, descended.
-
-He walked rapidly aft to the compass, and found that the brig was in
-sight from the quarter-deck. She bore a little to the west of south.
-The Newfoundland, seeing Hardy looking, spied the brig and barked his
-report of a sail in sight.
-
-"Lads!" shouted Hardy, running a little way forward, "there is a
-brig on the quarter. We'll see if she can give us any news, although
-abandoned. Starboard mainbrace, starboard foretopsail-brace smartly as
-possible, my lads. Starboard your helm!"
-
-And slowly, for the helm was wearily worked and the braces were dragged
-by languid hands, the yards came round, and then the maintopsail
-was mastheaded, and the ship with the wind right abeam crushed the
-flint-like surge into froth, and forged ahead for the abandoned vessel.
-
-It was time to make for her if she was to be visited at all, for the
-horizon was narrowing and narrowing with the thickness of rain, and
-soon within the distance of a mile the brig would have vanished.
-Hardy's glass was full of powerful lenses--its magnifying power was
-double that of the ship's telescope; when he now put it to his eye he
-instantly saw a figure just this side of the brig's main-rigging waving
-something white.
-
-His heart brightened. He looked again. She was a woman, and alone! The
-boatswain was coming aft as Hardy looked forward.
-
-"There's a figure aboard that brig," he shouted. "It's a woman, and
-she's waving a handkerchief."
-
-"She'll be yourn," said the boatswain, and as surprise did not
-immediately follow perception, he added, "Well, I'm damned!"
-
-"Stand by to back the maintopsail!" roared Hardy, who was delirious
-with excitement. "Let some hands lay aft and clear away the starboard
-quarter-boat ready for lowering. I'd board her if twice this sea was
-running. I knew I was right. I knew he'd head straight away. I knew I'd
-find her by shaping the madman's course."
-
-"Suppose it isn't her?" said the boatswain.
-
-"To hell with your supposings!" yelled Hardy. "In any case it's a
-woman, and she must be taken off."
-
-The men came aft and got ready the boat and stood aft, prepared for the
-command to back the maintopsail. Again Hardy levelled the glass. The
-girl--for we know who it was--had ceased to flutter her handkerchief;
-but the wind, full of wet, bewildered the eye, and the mate would make
-no more of it than this: the figure was a woman.
-
-He headed the _York_ so as to heave to to windward of the brig, and
-a little while before the topsail-yard was backed Hardy had seen and
-mentally kissed the poor girl's face in the lens, and frantic with joy
-was waving his cap to her, whilst she, guessing who it would be that
-motioned thus, tossed her handkerchief again and again.
-
-The ship was brought to a stand, and Hardy shouted, "I am coming to
-fetch you."
-
-She waved her hand. There was an ugly bit of sea between for a boat,
-choppy, with deep sucking hollows, and plenty of spiteful foam to
-whiten over the low gunwales.
-
-"Who'll volunteer?" said Hardy. "Three will do."
-
-"Blast me," said one of them, "if I don't feel as I should be in the
-road in a boat."
-
-"_You_'re likely," said Hardy, pointing to another--"and you, and you.
-Three will do, and it shall be two pound a man, which God knows I
-wouldn't offer for a deed of duty, only you're lowered by the captain's
-drug."
-
-"Right y' are, sir," said Jim, who got in the boat and was followed by
-Tom and Joe.
-
-The mate sprang into the stern-sheets and shipped the rudder.
-
-"Lower away handsomely!" he shouted, "and drop the hauling part that we
-may overhaul the falls."
-
-Unfortunately the blocks were without patent clip hooks, and the moment
-the boat was water-borne the fore-bottom of her was nearly wrenched out
-by her fall into the hollow ere the languid bow oar could release the
-block. But it was done, and they got away.
-
-She nearly filled three times in her passage. The drag of the oars was
-not strong enough; they wanted the long and steady sweep of their old
-power to rescue the boat from the arch of foam astern. Yet they managed
-to get alongside, and with the swift leap of the sailor Hardy gained
-the main-chains, and in a minute was standing on the main-deck, with
-Julia sobbing in his arms.
-
-"Where is the captain?" were almost the first words Hardy addressed to
-her.
-
-"He drowned himself," she answered, speaking sobbingly with tumult
-of passion. "He made me sit there beside him"--she pointed to the
-deck-house front--"and watch for the coming of the boy. The bell was
-struck--it was strangely struck. He thought it was his child, and he
-ran forward and climbed upon those pieces of timber as though his
-little son was beckoning, and then he cried out he was coming and
-sprang overboard, and I fainted. Oh, since I returned to consciousness
-what a time it has been! And yet--and yet I felt you were near and
-would come."
-
-As she spoke the wind howled with a sudden note of raving in the
-rigging, and deep as the brig was her loose canvas was inswept till
-it depressed her by a couple of strakes, and you might have thought
-she was settling, and with this sudden blast came on a heavy squall of
-rain, which thickened the air till the ship that was on the quarter
-loomed a surging and streaming phantom. At the same moment cries were
-heard over the side. Hardy rushed to the rail, and what did he see?
-
-The boat was stove and full! One man had disappeared, and the two
-others were floating a fathom or two beyond her locked in each other's
-embrace.
-
-Hardy sprang to the brig's quarter, crying, "O God! O my God!" as he
-ran.
-
-He slipped some bights of running gear off a pin, and yelling "Look out
-for the end of this line!" he hove.
-
-One could not swim, and clung to the other who could, and there was
-no virtue in a rope's end though flung by an angel of God to save
-them. For one moment the line was close; the desperate heave of the
-half-drowned fabric dragged it fathoms out of reach. The pitiless seas
-broke over them, and with agony of mind, and a heart almost in halves,
-Hardy saw them vanish.
-
-The girl stood beside him with uplifted arms, frozen by horror into the
-marble rigidity of a statue. It was going to blow a gale. The black
-scowl of the sky had the menace of storm in its fixity. No yellow
-curl of scud, no faintness here or there relieved that grim, austere,
-down-look. The day might have been closing, so dusky it was with the
-flying sheets of rain and the white haze torn out of the foaming brow
-by the rending hand of the wind. The seas swung fast and fierce, and
-serpentine pillars of white water leapt on high from the brig's side,
-and fled in shrieking clouds of sparkles to leeward.
-
-"We shall lose the ship," said Hardy, with the coolness of desperation.
-"We could not launch that boat," and he pointed to the small, chubby
-fabric that lay stowed near the foremast; "and if we could she would
-not live a minute. What became of your boat?"
-
-"I looked for her," she answered, "and saw her floating yonder in the
-moonlight. The captain fastened her rope to something and it slipped."
-
-"Come out of the wet," said he. "We can do no good here. They'll keep
-the ship hove to, and the weather may clear by noon."
-
-They entered the deck-house, and Hardy began to explore it, and in
-the two little cabins aft he found all the information he required
-about this abandoned brig. The log-book was dated down to two days
-earlier, and the entries were by a hand that spelt in the speech of
-Newcastle-on-Tyne. She was the _Betsy_, of Sunderland. The sea began to
-flow into her on a sudden to some gape or yarn of butt-end; you can't
-tell how it is until you dry-dock them. She would have gone down in
-an hour, despite her pump, but for the timber on which she floated.
-By the entries it was clear the crew had stuck to her for two days.
-Hardy then guessed that, growing weary of waiting for a ship, they
-had gone away in the boat. In one cabin he found a telescope and an
-old-fashioned quadrant, some wearing apparel, and a tall hat such as an
-old skipper might wear, bronzed by weather, and instantly suggesting to
-an active imagination a round, purple face, streaks of white whisker, a
-chocolate-coloured shawl round the throat, and a nose of the colour of
-a bottle of rum in the sun.
-
-The old fagot was beginning to tumble about, the water foamed on the
-deck, and the launch of the surge at the staggering bow would strike a
-whole sheet of spume over the forestay, and then it fell in cataractal
-thunder. Hardy shut the deck-house door. He was something more than
-uneasy. Their alarming situation drove all thought of the wonder of it
-out of his head. If it came on harder and a heavy sea ran, would this
-old sieve hold together? would the deck-house cling to the deck? What
-would they do aboard the _York_? Candy was dead and she was without a
-navigator. The boatswain was a good practical seaman, and in him lay
-Hardy's hope. The boatswain was not the man to abandon the mate and the
-girl if he could help it. But suppose the ship was blown away so that
-when the weather cleared the brig was not in sight, what would, or
-rather, what _could_, the boatswain do? He had not the navigator's art,
-and might not therefore know how to pick the brig up. Their condition
-was frightful; the lazarette was awash; he could not seek food in
-flooded timber. He sat down beside the girl.
-
-"I cannot realise that you are with me," she said.
-
-Her dress was damp, and raindrops sparkled upon her face and hair. He
-drew out his handkerchief, which lay dry in his pocket, and softly
-passed it over her face and hair. She was loving him with her eyes.
-Never did human passion make the eyes of a woman more beautiful.
-
-"You must be starving," he said.
-
-"No, the captain brought some food and water."
-
-"Tell me where it is," he cried, starting to his feet.
-
-She told him where the breaker was and the glass, and the parcel of
-provisions. He rushed out. The contents of the breaker could not be
-hurt by the flying brine and rain; and mercifully the provisions had
-been so placed that the breaker and the planks between which the
-captain had placed them kept them dry.
-
-Hardy ran into the deck-house with the food, put the glass in his
-pocket, and returned again with the breaker, from which only two or
-three drinks had been drawn.
-
-"Thank God for this!" said he, and he felt almost happy.
-
-She had but little knowledge of the sea, and could not interpret
-their condition to the full of its tragic significance. Her heart
-was almost joyous because her sweetheart was at her side; though
-death was hovering over that reeling fabric, its shadow was not upon
-her spirit. She was rescued by the man she loved from the horrors of
-loneliness on the wide sea, from imaginations which had been excited in
-her by those two mysterious strokes on the bell, and by her horrible
-association with a madman. The brig reeled and groaned to the sweep
-of the strong wind in the canvas, which was like to stream from the
-yards in hairs of cloth if the weather hardened. Again and again Hardy
-left the girl's side to step on deck and see how it was. The sky was
-a yellowish thickness down to within a mile, out of which the flying
-comber flashed, and the scene was a giddy pantomime of racing seas.
-This old bucket of brig was taking it gallantly over her bows. Hardy
-went forward to see if the only boat survived, and found her sitting
-secure, seized to eye-bolts, and ready for turning over and launching
-by tackles when the weather permitted.
-
-This comforted him, and he stepped into the little caboose which some
-lee sea might hurl into the scuppers at any moment. Here, to his great
-delight, in a drawer he found some twenty or thirty ship's biscuits,
-a bottle half-full of rum, and a large piece of boiled pork on a tin
-dish; he also found a black-handled knife and fork on a shelf where
-stood a row of china plates, one of which he took down.
-
-With this booty, half pocketed and half in arms, he returned to the
-deck-house, at whose door the girl had stood waiting for him, and spite
-of the flying brine, and the sickly reel of the half-foundered brig,
-and the thunder of the wind aloft, and their own dreadful situation,
-the vision of Bax's farm rose before his mind's eye as he saw her
-standing in that door in the old incomparable posture, the straw hat
-slightly cocked, the head a little on one side, the left hand on the
-hip.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-HARD WEATHER
-
-
-Hardy carefully put away the good things he had discovered, and then
-made a pork sandwich with biscuits, and poured out a little rum which
-he mingled with water, and they both made a meal.
-
-Had she been alone she would have been dying of fear; her lover was
-with her, and the sea had no terrors. They talked as they ate.
-
-"I foresaw heavy weather," said he, "but not the loss of three men.
-We shall lose the ship, I fear; there are no signs of the weather
-clearing. My God! how this beast wallows! Why, you'd think the sun had
-burst out!"
-
-For just then the air was whitened by a great sheet of water.
-
-"If the boat forward is carried away--" He checked himself, and then
-continued, "If we lose the _York_ we shall be picked up by something
-else. These old north-countrymen are born to live."
-
-"I am seeing life on the ocean," said Julia, smiling at him.
-
-"Why, it has come as thick as cockroaches," he answered. "When you get
-home you shall write your story, and the critics who take shipping on
-a summer day from Putney to Henley will exclaim as one man, 'What a
-lie!'"
-
-"Who rang the bell?" said Julia. "That question will worry me whilst I
-live."
-
-A sea struck the deck-house and blinded the weather-windows. The sturdy
-structure quivered. Hardy waited until the water had roared away
-overboard, and then said:
-
-"A bell will strike of itself in a rolling ship. I have heard it. Or it
-was hit by a rope. Do you believe in ghosts, Julia?"
-
-"I don't want to."
-
-"The stroke was a sudden come-to in the reel of the brig, or a rope did
-it," said Hardy, and she tried to look as though she believed him.
-
-Thus they talked whilst they sat in the deck-house, for out of it they
-would have stood to be washed overboard. The seas poured in gray-green
-folds, and the foam rolled about the decks like the cream of the
-breaker on shelving sand. She was a stout bucket and strongly knit, and
-if all had been well with her she would have sported with this breeze.
-Her canvas was setting her to the eastwards broadside on, and Hardy
-was glad of it, because he guessed that the _York_ would remain hove
-to, and that her drift would not be much greater than the sag of this
-half-drowned Geordie.
-
-But though he looked abroad he never witnessed any signs of
-improvement, or even promise of improvement, in the weather. It was not
-blowing harder, however, which was a good thing, yet he guessed that
-even if the weight of the wind remained as it stood, then, should it
-blow all night, a fair daybreak would not reveal the _York_, in which
-case they were shipwrecked, and must either wait to be taken off, or
-trust to God's mercy to keep the boat in her place forward, that
-they might launch her, and seek the succour that would not come. The
-deck-house was often hit by the sea, but the blows were rarely hard,
-and there was more terror in the thunder of the stroke than in the
-possibility of the structure going.
-
-"I see a scuttle-butt out there," said he once during the course of the
-morning.
-
-"What's that?" she asked.
-
-"A cask for holding fresh water for the men to drink when on deck."
-
-He stepped out, got under the rail, and crept to the scuttle-butt with
-the foam about his feet. The dipper hung by a sling; he dropped it
-through the hole and brought it up full, and tasting it found it fairly
-sweet, sweet enough for human necessity. He added security to the cask
-by further lashings, and covered the hole to protect the water from
-the flying salt, then crept back through the foam to the side of his
-sweetheart, first sending the sight of a falcon piercing the rain-swept
-obscurity of the quarter in which he guessed the _York_ was lying hove
-to. But all was the confusion of the headlong surge, raging in frequent
-collision, the stormy stare of motionless vapour, the wink of the
-sea-flash within the veil of haze, and the universal groaning of old
-ocean when that grim Boatswain, the Gale, whitens her back with the
-thongs of his cat.
-
-About midday they made another meal off pork sandwiches, a godsend to
-the poor creatures. As the time went by and the weather held as before,
-the sense of shipwreck grew keener and keener in Hardy. Not so with the
-girl; compared to what might have been, this wallowing lump of brig,
-filled with timber, straining afloat, was paradise. But Hardy did not
-much relish the notion of having to take to that boat yonder. He could
-see that with the yard-arm tackle which he would find she was to be
-easily got on to her keel, and hoisted out of it by the little winch
-just before the mainmast.
-
-It might prove a job, for his shipmate was a girl; yet much harder
-jobs, girl or no girl, were to be got through at sea. But until the
-weather calmed he could not think of the boat, and if the weather
-did calm and left the brig afloat, which was very probable, and he
-managed to launch the boat, then, bethinking him of Julia and himself
-in that small squab fabric, his heart grew cold; because next to the
-raft the open boat in mid-ocean is the greatest desperation of the
-sailor. Nearly every chapter of its romance is a tragedy. One dies and
-is buried, one goes mad and springs overboard to drink of the crystal
-fountain which is gushing in the sweet valley just there. Another is
-hollow-eyed with famine, and the gaunt cheeks work with the movement of
-the jaw upon the piece of lead or the die of boot-leather, which helps
-the saliva. Hardy knew it all, had tasted some of it, and he could not
-think of Julia and that little open boat and the flawless horizon, more
-pitiless to the wrecked mariner than the cordon of soldiers to the
-famished city, without feeling his heart turn cold.
-
-And now happened something which I fear the reader will think more
-incredible than any other incident in this volume.
-
-After talking a little while together, these two people rose from their
-chairs and knelt down in prayer. Hardy believed in God and in the
-mercy of God, and so did Julia, and he asked God in the simple language
-of the plain English seaman's heart to protect them and be with them,
-and he thanked him for the mercy he had already vouchsafed; and depend
-upon it no British sailor will consider this an unnatural act on the
-part of Hardy, because always the proudest heart of oak in the hour of
-triumph, the most depressed heart of oak in the hour of trial, has been
-accustomed to look up to God and thank or beseech him, for it is he who
-shares the loneliness of the seaman on the wide, wide sea.
-
-But let me assure the reader, also, that lovers do not make love in
-shipwreck as they do under the awning of the passenger liner, or in the
-bower of roses ashore. Death is too near to allow passion to expend
-itself in the form made familiar by the novel. Their talk often went to
-Captain Layard and the amazing cunning he had exhibited in inventing
-the trap they had all fallen into.
-
-"I believe," said Hardy, "only two are dead on board. He had a book to
-give them the doses, and his brain was clearly equal to understanding
-what it said. But would the rum absorb all the poison? Would not one
-man get more than his whack? A few grains more would have done for us
-all. The beggar took care not to drink himself, and none of us thought
-of asking him to."
-
-"How did you feel when you awoke?" she asked.
-
-"Much as you did, I expect," he answered.
-
-But talking was not very easy in this interior. The water, sheeting
-against the deck-house, seethed through speech and confounded it. There
-was the thunder of the fallen sea forward, and the incommunicable
-maledictions of a sodden brig in the trough filled the gale with
-bewilderment as it flew. Every fabric afloat has a voice of her own,
-and like her sailors, she knows how to swear when injured.
-
-In the course of the afternoon Hardy stepped into the after-berths, but
-found nothing to reward his search. The papers of an old timberman are
-uninteresting; the letters of an auld wife of Sunderland to her Geordie
-are sacred, and saving three or four clay pipes and some tobacco, for
-which Hardy was grateful, there was little to be seen worth mentioning.
-If this gale slackened into moderate weather the girl should sleep
-in one of these berths; if not, near the door in the interior on the
-best sort of bed he could contrive, because, as he meant to keep
-watch and watch himself throughout the night, she would be close by
-to rescue if some thunderous surge should discharge the deck-house
-from its obligation of sticking. He had searched for candles and had
-found none; a few boxes of matches were in a sort of desk fixed to the
-bulkhead near the bunk. So he came out of the captain's berth with an
-old mattress, and then he brought some wearing apparel, a heavy coat
-with big horn buttons, and a pair of north-country breeches, which, if
-seized to a stay for fresh air, might fill up and stand out like the
-half of a Dutchman in a jump.
-
-"What's all that for?" said Julia.
-
-He explained, and she loved him, and thought how good he was.
-
-Yes, there are even worse conditions of life to a girl than being
-shipwrecked with a sailor who is a gentleman, and if the gentleman
-informs the spirit of a sailor, its impulse is never greater than when
-it responds to the appeal of a girl's helplessness.
-
-He cut up a little tobacco and smoked a pipe. It seemed to bring
-him within hail of civilisation, and Julia enjoyed the smell of the
-tobacco-smoke immensely, and said it made her think of her father.
-
-"How would he relish this picture?" said he, referring to their
-situation.
-
-"He would not like to be here, that is all he would think. Will this
-brig keep together, do you fancy?"
-
-"Oh, yes, and I'll tell you what--the gale doesn't harden, which is a
-good sign. There was plenty of weather in the moon last night, but in
-these parts it is not often long-lived."
-
-"Is not a tremendous sea running?" she asked.
-
-"Yes, from the Ramsgate or Margate Sands point of view. You must go
-to about fifty-eight south, right off the Horn, and get amongst the
-ice to know what a tremendous sea is like. They come like the cliffs
-of Dover at you, and the deck is up and down, whilst the keel sweeps
-up the acclivity. It is splendid and frightful. I was hove to for a
-fortnight down there; we couldn't drive clear of the ice, and we had
-about four hours of daylight to see by. All the devils in hell raved in
-our rigging as we sat upright a breathless instant on the amazing peak
-we had climbed. No, Julia, this is not a tremendous sea, and the brig
-will hang together and outweather twenty such."
-
-The vessel, however, was acting as though she considered it a
-tremendous sea. Had she been dismasted or a steamer her behaviour could
-not have been worse. Her sails a little steadied her, but her rollings
-and motions and plungings and heavings were sickening and insufferable,
-because she was nearly full of water. She had no buoyancy and the seas
-made a rock of her, and often sprang in green sheets right over her--a
-wet and yelling game of leap-frog.
-
-Late in the afternoon, when it was almost dark, one of these seas
-filled the caboose and swept it to leeward, where it lay stranded. The
-outcry of hurled ironmongery, of crashing china, of skipping knives and
-forks, pot, kettles, and pans, along with the noise of the splintering
-caboose, was enough to make Hardy think that the brig was scattering
-under their feet. The girl grasped his hand when that sea came and the
-galley went; she thought it was all over with them. Hardy kept his
-thoughts to himself: his real anxiety was in the boat, which might be
-washed overboard or dashed into staves, and in the deck-house, which
-was their only shelter.
-
-Happily the old bucket had taken up her position on her own account,
-and it was chiefly the bows and amidships which got the drenches; it
-was seldom that the deck-house was struck by a sea whose weight was a
-menace.
-
-"It is miserable to be without light at sea," said Hardy, "on a black
-night in heavy weather. But there is no lamp here and none in the
-berths, and if there was where should I find oil? We must face it
-through, Julia, and you must sleep."
-
-"I have had more sleep than I want," replied Julia. "I shall not mind
-the darkness if the bell isn't struck."
-
-"It may be struck by a rope, by nothing else. If a ghost, how could
-an essence grasp substance? How could something you could walk through
-lift a knife or try and pull down a lamp-post?"
-
-"I sha'n't like it if I hear it," she replied. "Oh, how dreadful to
-think of him washing about under us! Wretched man! You should have seen
-the unearthly expression of his face whilst he sat staring forward,
-waiting for the little drummer to appear."
-
-"The great poet is true," said Hardy, who had fingered a few volumes in
-his day, albeit he was a sailor in the Merchant Service of England.
-
-
- "'For shapes which come not at an earthly call
- Will not depart when mortal voices bid;
- Lords of the visionary eye whose lid,
- Once raised, remains aghast and will not fall.'"
-
-
-"Those words are true of that poor dead man," said Julia. "Aghast! you
-should have seen him when he turned up his eyes to God and prayed."
-
-The afternoon closed into early evening, and it was as black as a
-wolf's throat at the hour of sundown. Through the windows you could see
-the light of the foam, sudden pallid glares, rushes of dim phosphoric
-gleams which merely made the darkness visible. The brig was a drunken
-vision, and the yells of her rigging might be likened to the screams of
-a tipsy slut who is being thrashed by her man in a thunder-storm.
-
-The two sweethearts ate some biscuit, and Julia held a lighted match
-whilst Hardy mixed some rum and water for them both. They drank out of
-the same glass, and neither of them apologised. Then Hardy felt and
-wound up his watch, for he wanted time, though he couldn't see it then
-except by striking a match. They sat together and I dare say he put
-his arm round her waist, and possibly she supported her head upon his
-shoulder after removing her hat.
-
-It was a ticklish sitting-ground and they sometimes slided, which was a
-very good reason why Hardy should hold her by the waist, and why Julia
-should cling lovingly with her head. And in this posture they entered
-the night and passed perhaps a couple of hours, so that when Hardy
-struck a match he found the time nine.
-
-He made for the mattress, felt and found it, and the north-country
-apparel which was to form the bedclothes. He then lurched back to
-Julia, who did not want to lie down, but he was her lord in resolution
-and her love consented.
-
-Always groping, for despite the sea-flash it was inside here of
-a midnight blackness, he pillowed her head with a garment of
-north-country measurement, and then carefully covering her to the neck
-with the skipper's coat, he pressed his lips to the brow of the girl
-who was to be his wife, and who was therefore sacred to him, and bade
-her sleep and leave him to watch and nod and watch.
-
-And now all that followed was sickening, sloppy, howling, reeling,
-foaming hours of darkness, with nothing in them but the drunken vision
-of brig, and the noisy rage of her straining heart. But at half-past
-three o'clock by Hardy's watch the weather was undoubtedly moderating;
-by five it was blowing a little fresh; by six it was daylight and the
-wind northeast, a pleasant breeze, and the green sea rolled in foamless
-swells, cutting the wake of the sun, which shone brightly out of every
-blue lagoon 'twixt the clouds.
-
-The girl was up and sitting at the table. She had slept a little, but
-that little was sound and good. Hardy brought the telescope out of the
-berth: it was a poor glass, but you could see more through it than with
-the naked eye. The brig was rolling ponderously on the swell, whose
-heave was sometimes too sudden for her, and she would stagger with a
-scream of white water from her side. Her canvas was blowing out, and
-the sodden old cask may have had some way on her.
-
-Hardy stepped out and looked for the _York_. Had he looked for St.
-Paul's Cathedral he could not have seen less of it. The ship was not in
-sight and he fetched a deep breath, for either her crew had abandoned
-him and Julia to what sailors would know might prove a terrible death,
-or the ship's drift had been faster than he had allowed for.
-
-"She's not in sight," he shouted to Julia, then sprang into the
-main-shrouds, put his telescope over the rim of the top, and got into
-the top.
-
-She was not in sight from the top and he crawled as high as the
-cross-trees, and she was not in sight from that elevation. Nothing was
-in sight but the horizon, which wound eel-like to the flashing clasp of
-the sun upon it.
-
-He regained the deck and put the telescope down and sat beside Julia.
-
-"What shall we do?" she said, when he had given her the news.
-
-"We will breakfast," he answered.
-
-And forthwith he made biscuit sandwiches of the pork, of which there
-still remained a good lump, a godsend. There was nothing much to elate
-him in the sight of the boat still safely lashed to the deck; he feared
-the open boat in mid-ocean with few provisions, little water, and an
-everlasting menace of weather, for blow it will if it does not blow
-now, and what sort of a time would they have had afloat in that boat
-last night?
-
-Julia dredged her lover's face with her eyes but could not make out
-what was passing in his mind, because he himself did not know what was
-passing there.
-
-"We must husband our stores," said he, "and wait for something to sight
-us."
-
-Saying which he rose and stepped up a little ladder on to the top of
-the deck-house, directed by sailorly instincts to what he wanted, and
-there it was securely lashed to the iron stanchions of the low rail--a
-flag-locker. He opened it and took out the Red Ensign and carried it
-right aft, and bent it union down to the peak signal-halliards and
-hoisted it half-mast high, a signal of deep distress and death. Its
-rippling noise was pleasant, but the look of it was ghastly with its
-dumb appeal to a pitiless sea.
-
-Julia stood beside him and sank her clear gaze far into the recesses of
-the ocean, and saw the sea line working and nothing more.
-
-"Let's go and see if the galley has betrayed any secrets of food," said
-he.
-
-The sluggish roll of the brig was no hindrance to feet accustomed to
-the bounding deck. They found the galley murdered; it was split and
-shivered, but the coppers to the stroke of the sea that slung them
-had spewed out a big lump of beef and a bolster of duff--the sailors'
-pudding--composed of dark flour and slush with here and there a
-currant, but not always. Hardy pounced upon the food as the adjutant
-lights upon the floating Hindoo.
-
-"They left their dinner behind them," he said. "Good God! what a noble
-haul. Here is enough for a week with care."
-
-"Is it cooked?"
-
-He answered this question by pulling out his knife and cutting off a
-piece of the meat. Another half-hour would have cooked it, but it was
-eatable to human necessity.
-
-He stowed this provender away in the deck-house and filled the breaker
-from the scuttle-butt, then went with Julia to look at the bell.
-
-"You did not hear it last night," he said.
-
-"No," she answered.
-
-"It shall not trouble you again," said he, and he unhooked it, and
-threw it down.
-
-"But who struck it?" she asked.
-
-"He'll not strike it again," he answered.
-
-He peeped through the forescuttle and saw nothing but the gleam of
-black water washing below.
-
-"The rats don't like this sort of thing," said he. "Can you pull upon a
-rope, Julia?"
-
-"I am as strong as you," she answered.
-
-He smiled with a glance at her beautiful figure, and said:
-
-"Turn to, then, and lend me a hand to shorten sail."
-
-Between them they manned the necessary buntlines and clewlines, and
-Julia dragged as handsomely as her sweetheart.
-
-"Give us a song, George, for time," she said, and he started
-"Chillyman," which sea-air Julia had caught from hearing it on board
-the _Glamis Castle_, and her voice threaded his like the notes of a
-flute.
-
-
- "Randy dandy, heigh-ho!
- Chillyman!
- Pull for a shilling, heigh-ho!
- Chillyman!"[1]
-
-
-In fact, you may put any words you like to these sea-tunes, and the
-sailors will pull the better if you damn the eyes of the quarter-deck
-in rhyme.
-
-Hardy next thoroughly overhauled the brig, so far as perception of
-her condition was possible. He could not see why she should not hold
-together through twenty such gales as roared over her last night. He
-stood with Julia looking at their only boat, beside which there lay,
-as though placed by some angel of mercy, a watch-tackle. The sight
-of that watch-tackle sank him into contemplation, and Julia gazed at
-him whilst he thought. How weary were the motions of the brig upon
-that sulky sweep of swell! Yet the fine figure of the girl swayed to
-it with the graceful ease of a figurehead curtseying at the bow. She
-was shipwrecked, she was in a dreadful situation of peril, this time
-to-morrow she might be floating in the sea a corpse, and yet never
-on board the Indiaman, on board the _York_, or at home had she felt
-happier. She was loving him passionately and he was always with her,
-and she could not but be happy.
-
-Presently he said:
-
-"I will tell you how it can be done when it needs to be done. She is a
-small boat and not heavy, and you and I will cant her on to her bilge
-with handspikes, then I'll hook that watch-tackle to a strop round the
-foremost thwart and take the hauling part to the winch, and rouse her
-along to abreast of the gangway. That gangway there unships, and we
-sit low upon the sea, and we'll tumble the boat through the gangway
-overboard, smack-fashion. If she proves too heavy we'll rig out a
-spar"--here he cast his eyes round--"with the watch-tackle made fast
-to her, and the winch will do the rest. Yes, that is my scheme if it
-should come to it. Meanwhile let us be patient and keep a lookout for
-ships."
-
-But the imprisonment on board this abandoned hull of Mr. George Hardy
-and Miss Julia Armstrong was to continue until the dawn of three days,
-counting from Hardy's time of finding the girl. All this while it
-was very fine weather, and of a night they would sit on top of the
-deck-house whilst Hardy smoked and Julia prattled. They watched the sea
-lights which glittered upon the black breast of the ocean; they watched
-the flight of the meteor. They talked of the stars, which nowhere
-wheel in so much splendour as over the sea, and of the great Spirit
-who controls their flight. Morally they were the least shipwrecked of
-people. They were happy in each other's company; if either one had been
-alone it might have proved madness to him or to her, but the voice of
-love, the presence of love even in the gloom of calamity, made a light
-of their own which was as inspiriting as the hope that springs eternal.
-It was not strange that no ships ever showed a white rag of canvas,
-a coil of sooty smoke upon the horizon in any point of the compass,
-because the brig sat low and her "dip" would be small, and a ship may
-be within the compass of a boat-race and yet not be seen. Hardy often
-went aloft and searched the waters; he did not lose heart, because
-he felt sure that something must heave in sight sooner or later, and
-meanwhile with great care the food they had would last them a week or
-perhaps longer, and there was fresh water for a fortnight or perhaps
-longer; for I am telling you what I have heard, and like the tramp in
-Dickens's sketch, my squire "would not tell a lie for no man."
-
-Hardy was also sure that the brig would hold together, and being of the
-careless nature of the sailor, though provident, willing, and sober,
-he would not allow his spirits to be depressed, and he had eyes enough
-in his head to see that Julia regarded their perilous condition as
-something in the way of an outing--to be enjoyed. She was a fine girl
-and we are never weary of admiring her. I have told you that she was
-not pretty, but her face, what with the cock of her head, the hand on
-the hip, the speaking appeal of her eyes, carried such a character of
-romance that it not only interested you at once, when she looked at you
-full and fastened her eyes upon yours with her slight smile, it made
-you even think her pretty, and certainly the truest beauty of a woman's
-face comes into it from her mind.
-
-Then broke the dawn of the third day, and Hardy, who had been sleeping
-since three, awoke and stepped out of the deck-house, and with the
-brig's telescope in hand climbed the few steps and searched the sea. It
-was again a fine morning; the heavens were lofty with their freckling
-of stationary small cloud; the wind was a light breeze a little to the
-north of east; and the sea, which streamed in thin lifts, sparkled to
-the caress of a hand that could make it roar when it thought fit.
-
-Suddenly into the lenses of the glass there entered a full-rigged ship,
-showing nothing but three single-reefed topsails and a foresail and the
-trembling line of her hull a little above the horizon. "A full-rigged
-ship under that sail in this weather!" thought Hardy. "By heaven, it
-must be the _York_, and if so she is abandoned!"
-
-FOOTNOTE:
-
-[1] Sailors' word for "cheerly men."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-ABOARD AGAIN
-
-
-The sun was floating over the horizon, and the pink of his glory was
-melting into the flash of silver, as the wake of the _York_ streamed
-in a short white gleam upon the sea. The light breeze was still to
-the north of east, and thither it had hung for hours past. Hardy and
-Julia stood at the brig's rail watching the ship that was distinct and
-lifting in the ocean's recess.
-
-"Is it possible that she's the _York_?" said Julia.
-
-He answered with the telescope at his eye:
-
-"Don't I know her! She's under single reefs. Her spanker is furled, and
-her head sails keep her off, as though she were under control. Perhaps
-she is, but I don't think so. She would head directly for us if she had
-anything alive on board, because I can hold the line of her rail in
-this glass, and if I can see her, she can see me."
-
-"What will you do?"
-
-"I will wait a little longer and see if she is manned. If her crew have
-deserted her, I will launch that boat, and board her before she drifts
-out of sight."
-
-"Will you be able to catch her?"
-
-"Catch her! Can you row?"
-
-"Try me," she answered, with the proud look a girl will put on when she
-feels she is of importance.
-
-"She is drifting at about two, and we will make that boat buzz three,
-and perhaps more. But if she is manned, she will come alongside, and
-our getting aboard will be easy. But she is not manned, I am sure,"
-said Hardy. "Pipe to breakfast, Julia."
-
-This time they made beef sandwiches of biscuit, and they were swallowed
-without the accompanying forecastle growl. Indeed, considering it
-was meant for sailors' use, the beef was not very bad, and as it was
-pickled to the heart, a little cooking had gone a long way to make it
-almost food for the human stomach. The bottle of rum was half full
-and they drank a little of the liquor, largely diluted with water. To
-refresh himself Hardy went to the head, where he knew he would find a
-pump which stood clear of the deck load. He picked up a bucket, carried
-it to the pump and filled it with sparkling brine, and purified his
-face with the cold salt-sweetness of the water and wrung his hands in
-it, and felt that his beard was growing, for shipwreck does not stop
-the growth of hair, as we see when a haggard crew steps ashore out of a
-life-boat.
-
-And all the time he kept his eyes fastened on the _York_, as he knew
-her to be. When he went aft he found Julia sitting on a chair on
-top of the deck-house. He mounted the steps and sat beside her with
-the telescope, for he had made up his mind to wait a little before
-launching the boat.
-
-"What makes you know that she's the _York_?" she asked.
-
-"Twenty points, and you must have served two years before the mast to
-understand them if I explained. She is the _York_, my love, and with
-God's eye watching us we shall be aboard her and safe before sunset."
-
-"Hurrah!" cried Julia, and she picked up his hand and kissed it.
-
-It was a thing to be settled in about an hour, and in that hour Hardy
-discovered that she was not under control by her coming to windward and
-her falling off; and when she came to windward she hung so long that
-Hardy thought it time to turn to. And now began a process of which the
-description shall not weary you.
-
-First he unshipped the gangway and fetched some capstan bars for
-rollers; he then passed his knife through the boat's lashings, took
-the watch-tackle and secured it to a fore-shroud abreast of the boat,
-overhauled the tackle to hook the block on the boat's gunwale, then
-he and Julia clapped on to the hauling part of the tackle and easily
-roused the little wagon on to her bilge. She was not very much heavier
-than a smack's boat; her oars were lashed under the thwarts, and her
-rudder had been on a thwart and now lay in her. They tried to run her
-along the deck, but though they started her the toil must prove too
-great for the girl who would be plying an oar shortly. So he carried
-the block of the watch-tackle as far forward as its length would allow
-him and made a strop with a piece of gear round the thwart, to which he
-hooked the other block, bent a line on to the hauling part and carried
-it to the winch, giving Julia the job of hauling the slack in as he
-wound.
-
-He wound lustily, for he was fighting for life and time and he was a
-very strong man, and had entirely rid himself of all the evil effects
-of the drug, as the girl had. So they brought the boat abreast of the
-gangway; he had muscle enough to lift her bow whilst Julia placed a
-skid, in the shape of a capstan bar, under her forefoot; he made other
-skids of the capstan bars, and laying hold of her gunwales on either
-side, the two brave hearts, with the boat's nose pointing to the sea,
-ran the fabric, secured by a painter hitched to a main shroud, clean
-through the gangway, and she fell with a squash, and floated like an
-empty bottle with never a drop of water in her.
-
-This done, Hardy, who was making haste, for the _York_ was keeping a
-rap-full and forging into the stream of sunshine, though always coming
-for the brig, seized a line, and watching his chance sprang into the
-boat, secured the line to her after-thwart, leapt aboard, and brought
-the boat broadside to the gangway.
-
-The roll of the brig was very sullen and slow, and the swell of the sea
-sometimes hove the boat flush with the brig's waterway.
-
-"You must jump into her, Julia," said Hardy, "and for God's sake don't
-go overboard. To provide against that, see here."
-
-He took an end of main-royal-halliards and hitched it round her waist,
-and overhauled some slack which he grasped.
-
-"Pull up your clothes," said he, "and free your legs and aim for the
-bottom of the boat, and jump when I sing out."
-
-The little squab structure came floating up, and Hardy brought her in
-by a tug of the after-rope as she was coming.
-
-"Jump!" he shouted.
-
-And that girl, whose heart was of British oak, holding her clothes to
-her knees, sprang, and in a few breaths was sitting on a thwart and
-liberating herself from the rope, whilst she smiled up at her lover.
-
-"Now, Julia," said he, "I am going to send you down the provisions and
-water. Stand by to receive them, but keep seated."
-
-He handed the telescope to her, then fetched the breaker, which she
-received as it lay in that instant of heaving swell on the rim of the
-gunwale, and she rolled it to the thwart, then to the stern-sheets,
-taking the glass from Hardy at the next heave. He made one parcel of
-the provisions and hove them into the boat, then casting the painter
-adrift he jumped into the boat, let go the remaining line that held
-her, cut loose the oars, shipped the thole-pins, leaving the rudder
-unshipped, and made Julia the bow oar.
-
-Could she row? Very well indeed; but the oars were a little heavy and
-she did not attempt to feather; in fact, she rowed like a smacksman,
-lifting the blade with its streaming glory of water on high, but the
-dip and thrust of it was that of a stout schoolboy, and between them
-they made the boat buzz, Hardy, with larger power of oar, keeping her
-straight for the _York_.
-
-"Don't tire yourself," said he; "rest when you like. She'll not outrun
-us."
-
-"What a wonderful thing to happen!" said Julia, whose face was
-whitening with the ardour of her toil.
-
-She looked at nothing but her oar, and was certainly not going to be
-tired this side the _York_.
-
-"At sea, where all is wonderful, nothing is wonderful," said Hardy.
-"Any sailor would easily see how this has come about. But don't waste
-your breath in talking: let us row."
-
-It was a strange and curious picture: a man and a girl in a little
-open boat, pulling away for a ship that was rounding into the wind as
-though she knew they were approaching, whilst astern receded the figure
-of the brig, a melancholy sight, despite the gun-flashes of sunshine
-which burst from her side at every roll; her hanging canvas flapped a
-mournful farewell to the rowers, who took no heed of the poor thing's
-tender and, for a north-countryman, graceful salutation of good-bye.
-But, then, she had been a stage of maniacal horrors, of death, of
-the lonely little ghost that struck the bell, of shipwreck with its
-stalking shadows of famine, thirst, and the calenture that invites you
-to die.
-
-Hardy frequently turned to look at the _York_ so as to keep a true
-course, and this time saw that she was involved in the wind, and was
-waiting for him to come aboard to tell her what to do. They had four
-miles to measure, and as they pulled with the spirit of shipwreck in
-their pulse they were within hail of her in an hour.
-
-No man showed himself; she was abandoned. But suddenly on the
-forecastle rail appeared the fore-paws and magnificent head of a great
-Newfoundland dog. He barked deep and long.
-
-"Poor Sailor," said Hardy; "I had forgotten him."
-
-"How inhuman to leave him," said Julia, panting.
-
-"A few more strokes, sweetheart," shouted Hardy, "and we are free. What
-a noble girl you are! What a good wife you will make a sailor!"
-
-"I will make you a good wife, never fear," she answered, joyous in
-despite distress of breath.
-
-The ship's head was slowly paying off as the boat's stem struck the
-side. Hardy secured the painter and jumped into the mizzen-chains.
-
-"Hold out your hands," he exclaimed, "and jump when the boat lifts,"
-and to the lift and to his fearless, muscular haul she sprang, and was
-alongside of him.
-
-He grasped her by the arm, passed her round the rigging, and helped her
-over the bulwark rail. The dog was barking in fury of joy. When they
-gained the deck he sprang upon the girl in love and delight and nearly
-knocked her down.
-
-"Get him some water and biscuit whilst I look about me," said Hardy.
-
-He had long ago known by the help of the telescope that the ship
-was abandoned because two pairs of davits were empty, and with the
-perception of a sailor he understood that the crew had transferred
-themselves to another ship in one boat, whereas if they had abandoned
-the ship on their own account, which was improbable, they would have
-gone away in three companies, and the davits would have been like
-gibbets, since the after-boat had been used by the captain when he
-stole the girl.
-
-The wheel was not lashed, and was constantly playing in swift
-revolution to starboard and port and back again. Hardy judged that the
-dog had been left by the men because the faithful creature would not
-quit the ship which had been his master's home, and the men, who would
-have had very little time, did not choose that their flesh should be
-torn by using violence. Yet it was cruel of them to leave him, for they
-would know that the noble creature would soon need water and food, and
-perish as lamentably as a famine-stricken sailor on a raft.
-
-He saw that the figures of Mr. Candy and the man at the wheel, which
-had been concealed by a tarpaulin, were gone; they had of course been
-buried. Julia looked after the dog, that was lapping water thankfully
-as she filled a bowl from the galley with fresh water out of the
-scuttle-butt. Hardy slowly went forward, carefully gazing about him.
-
-No man lay dead on the deck; he dropped into the forecastle and found
-it empty of human life, so that the captain's birthday had killed but
-two men, which was surely wonderful, for he had commanded a power that
-could have murdered a thousand.
-
-Why was not this fine ship taken possession of by the people who had
-received her crew? I will tell you at once, for the story came out on
-the men's arrival. Her drift had been swifter, with the helping hand of
-the surge, than Hardy could have imagined or allowed for, and in the
-morning of the gale she was close aboard a French brig that was hove to
-sitting deep in the sea. They hailed her and were answered. They stated
-they were without a navigator and they didn't know what to do. The
-French captain spoke English, and said he would receive them if they
-came aboard in their own boat and land them at Marseilles, the port
-he was bound to. The weather was then moderating, and after calling a
-council the boatswain, giving the mate and the girl up as lost, swiftly
-decided, with the heedlessness of seamen, to abandon the _York_, and
-with great difficulty the sailors gained the deck of the brig, leaving
-their clothes behind them. Very shortly afterward the French captain
-braced his yards round and shaped a course for Marseilles, leaving
-nothing alive on board the _York_ but the dog.
-
-This is the true story of the ship's adventure, and whoever questions
-it is no sailor.
-
-Hardy left the forecastle and stood awhile on deck near the hatch,
-gazing aloft. In this moment he was fired by a resolution which would
-have inspired no other heart than that of a true British sailor. He
-determined that he and the girl and the dog should save this fine
-ship without help, and carry her to England, and entitle them to a
-reward which should prove a living to them whilst they endured. His
-face, which was as manly as Tom Bowline's, was irradiated by the glory
-of this resolution as he gazed aloft, smiling. It was possible--and
-being possible it was to be done. But it needed doing by two hearts
-of oak and the dog as a lookout, and great anxiety would accompany
-the discharge of this splendid duty, much sleeplessness and ceaseless
-urging of the spirit. But the eye of God would dwell lovingly upon
-their toil and peril; he felt that and raised his cap to the thought,
-and he said to himself, in the language of Nelson, "When we cannot do
-all we wish, we must do as well as we can!"
-
-He walked aft and joined the girl.
-
-"Julia," he said, "I have formed the resolution of my life, and if I
-can fulfil it we shall be rich, though that will not make us happy."
-
-"What is it?" she asked, looking a little frightened, with her head
-slightly drooped to the shoulder, and her left hand, white as foam,
-reposing like a coronet upon the Newfoundland's head. Indeed, what
-with the mad captain, drugs, and ghosts she was in such a condition of
-mind that she was easily alarmed by any divergence from the commonplace.
-
-"This is a valuable ship," he answered. "I know her cargo, for I helped
-to stow it. She has a beautiful hull, and is perfectly sound aloft.
-In addition to her cargo she carries a little treasure of jewelry
-consigned to Melbourne--Colonials love jewelry. I dare say it is worth
-ten thousand pounds. It is in a safe in the captain's cabin. I should
-say that the value of this ship and cargo is between sixty thousand and
-seventy thousand pounds, perhaps more. Julia, you and I and the dog
-will carry her home. We shall be richly rewarded by the owners and the
-underwriters--in fact, it is a matter of salvage to be assessed if my
-terms are disputed."
-
-She grasped him by both hands, her eyes were on fire, her cheeks were
-burning, the spirit of delight and resolution filled her romantic face
-with the light of conquest and realisation.
-
-"Is it to be done?" she said.
-
-"It is done," he answered. "We don't talk of failure. But let us make
-ourselves comfortable whilst the weather is fine."
-
-"How heavenly!" she sighed. "You will teach me to steer, George."
-
-"I will teach you everything that is proper for a young woman to know,"
-he answered.
-
-He took her to his heart and pressed his lips to hers, which was like
-signing articles: that lip pressure was the seal of their agreement
-to serve each other loyally, and to eat the food on board without
-growling.
-
-The first thing they did was to go below. Here was the cabin just as
-they had left it; there was the chair in which Captain Layard had sat
-and talked metaphysics, yonder was the locker on which the drugged
-girl had slept, and they stood on the deck where Hardy had lifted his
-cannon-ball of a head, whilst his bewildered soul groped slowly into
-his brains. They went into the captain's cabin and saw the drum and the
-drumsticks and the little bedstead.
-
-"What a fantasy of the sea!" said Hardy. "It is beyond me. It is like
-a vision, sensible to perception and unreal to it. Will our story be
-credited?"
-
-"Who cares?" answered the girl. "Is that the safe, George?"
-
-"Yes, and I'll look for the key by and by. The jewelry's there."
-
-The safe was small and secured on a massive timber shelf, but though
-small it was large enough to contain the Koh-i-noor, and to hold buried
-the wealth and jewels of a rajah.
-
-Hardy cast a keen look around him, saw that the table held the
-necessary machinery of navigation, carefully wound up the chronometers,
-which had not stopped, then went into his own cabin whilst the girl
-entered hers. When they presently met they sought for food and found
-plenty in the pantry; here were ham and tongue, palatable stuff in
-tins, white biscuits, and pots of jam.
-
-They sat down and ate, and the Newfoundland sat beside them, triumphant
-in this familiar company of man and woman, and Julia, who loved him,
-saw that he made a good breakfast.
-
-"How are we to manage it, George?" she asked.
-
-"It will require some scheming," he answered, "but we must not accept
-help, because if we do our salvage share will shrink out of all
-proportion to our merits. Can you steer in the least?"
-
-"I can steer a boat, but not a ship," Julia answered.
-
-"I will teach you; you will get the art in a very few lessons."
-
-"One lesson will do if I have the strength."
-
-"Oh," he answered, with a loving glance at her, "you are one of those
-English girls whose shapes of beauty are wire-rigged. Wire is stronger
-than hemp, though it looks delicate. What your strength can't do I have
-arms for."
-
-"So you have," she replied; "you are the manliest sailor that ever was."
-
-"Let us change the subject," he replied, with a little colour of
-pleasure in his face, for a compliment from your sweetheart is next to
-a kiss. "We are fortunate in finding the ship under very easy sail.
-We'll get some more fore-and-aft canvas upon her, for it is easily
-hauled down, but I shall leave the square canvas that is furled to rest
-as it is. I'll bring her to her course at noon when I find out where we
-are. You will light the galley fire, as we shall want a hot drink. But
-we need little cooking, for if we boil a good lump of beef, that, with
-the food in the pantry, will last you and me and the dog five hundred
-miles of sea."
-
-"Are we near England?"
-
-"Not very, I think, but I shall know presently exactly how near we are."
-
-"How shall we get rest, George? We must sleep or die, or worse, go
-mad."
-
-"Aye," he answered, thoughtfully; "you see things rightly, but we must
-not make sleep a difficulty."
-
-"The rest seems quite easy," she said, joyously; "and I shall learn to
-steer in one lesson."
-
-They left the table and went on deck, followed by the dog, who growled
-softly and often in a sort of undertalk with himself. There is a great
-nature in a Newfoundland, and you often wonder whilst you look into his
-soft, affectionate eyes what his thoughts are.
-
-It was a glowing scene of forenoon ocean. The ripple ran with the
-laughter of the summer in its voice. The endless procession of humps
-of swell, as though old ocean was perpetually shrugging his shoulders
-over spiteful memories, brought the flaming banners of the sun out of
-the east, and swept them westwards in knightly array of fiery plume
-and foam-crested summit. Four miles off wallowed the poor little brig,
-tearfully flapping her pocket-handkerchief to the naked horizon, and by
-mute and pathetic gesture coaxing nothing into being to help her. Many
-soft, white clouds floated westwards, and Hardy noticed that the glass
-was high and those clouds meant nothing but vapour.
-
-What a noble ship to be in charge of, to virtually be the owner of,
-to rescue from the toils of the sea, to witness in security in some
-harbour of England, flying high the commercial flag of the Empire
-in token of British supremacy, even in the hour of peril, when the
-Foreigner would consider all was lost!
-
-"It is not yet twelve o'clock," said Hardy, "and we will light the
-galley fire."
-
-They walked forward and entered the sea kitchen. Plenty of chopped
-wood lay stacked. The ship's cook had been a man of foresight, and
-anticipated labour by putting an axe into the ordinary seaman's hand;
-also near the wood stood two buckets of coal and a little heap on
-the deck. There was plenty of coal in the fore-peak for a voyage
-to Australia. Hardy had matches, which are curiosities at sea in a
-forecastle, for you light your pipe at the galley fire with rope
-yarns or shavings, and the slush lamp is kindled by the binnacle or
-side-light. But aft there are usually matches, because the cabin is the
-home of elegance, refinement, and luxury, and the captain must have
-matches, for he cannot light his cigar at the sailors' fire. Hardy
-first explored the coppers; they were empty. He filled them from the
-scuttle-butt; why should he use salt water when there was plenty of
-fresh at hand? Fresh water would cleanse the mahogany beef of something
-of its brine, and perhaps soften it into complacent recognition of
-human digestion.
-
-Then the fire was lighted; he could not find the key of the harness
-cask, so he fetched a weapon from the carpenter's chest, and the
-staples yielded to his blow with the shriek of lacerated wood. There
-was plenty of beef and pork in the cask, buried in the horrible crystal
-in which lurks the demon of scurvy; he turned the pieces over, and
-selecting the fattest and least ill-looking lump, dropped it into the
-copper for boiling when the water should begin.
-
-This work, easily recited, cost time. Before he touched a brace or put
-the ship to her course he must find out where she was. The last entries
-in the log-book were in his handwriting, and they related the story of
-the captain's birthday, how he kept it, and his disappearance with a
-young lady passenger named Julia Armstrong. The latitude was then--N.
-and the longitude--W. But the drifting ship had measured miles, and her
-captain must know where he was. This he would find out in about an hour.
-
-The sow under the long-boat was dead. To get rid of it before the
-carcass stank he stropped it and clapped the watch-tackle on it, and
-together they hauled the little mountain of what might have proved
-tooth-alluring crackling and white fresh fat, always sweet at sea,
-through the open gangway overboard. It fell without a prayer, and the
-fish that nosed it that day dined well.
-
-Some of the poultry in the hen-coops were dead; a few lived, and craved
-with fluttering red pennons for drink and grain. Of course Hardy
-knew "the ropes" of this ship and could lay his hand on anything he
-wanted. He filled the little troughs with fresh water, and no one but
-a beholder could have figured the profound gratitude with which the
-varying row of bills was lifted to heaven. He helped them to grain,
-and they filled their crops with all ardency of pecking. He cleared
-the hen-coop of its plumed corpses, and so they sweetened the ship
-forthwith.
-
-It was about time that Hardy fetched his sextant: the soaring sun
-excited his impatience; he desired that the ship should be sending
-his sweetheart and himself home, and the ceaseless waving of those
-pocket-handkerchiefs just over the horizon teased him with their
-impertinence, and as a token of distress when the morning was fair and
-their hearts high and hopeful. His reckoning found the ship's position
-within a mile or two of her place when he had left her to succour his
-darling.
-
-"I have it now," said he, "and we must trim sail for home."
-
-"Oh, how beautiful!" cried Julia, and the dog barked in recognition of
-the girl's triumphant note.
-
-The ship was on the port tack and must be wore to the north. Hardy
-put the helm hard up and secured it, then let go the fore, main, and
-mizzen-braces, and the yards, as the ship obeyed her rudder, swung a
-little of themselves. With the starboard-braces let go Hardy and Julia
-did not find it difficult to swing the yards. The wind would be almost
-abeam when the ship was homeward bound, and there were the winch and
-the capstan to brace the yards well forward if the wind drew ahead.
-
-"Sing out, George!" cried Julia. And they brought the fore and
-foretopsail-yard, with fore-tack and sheet all gone, round, to their
-chanty of "Chillyman."
-
-
- "Randy dandy, heigho!
- Chillyman!
- Pull for a shilling, heigho!
- Chillyman!
- Young and willing, heigho!
- Sweet and killing ole bo',
- Dandy, heigho!
- Chillyman!"
-
-
-The Newfoundland looked on and grumbled because he had no hands.
-They got the main and the mizzen-yards round to the same song with
-some laughter, because Hardy put a few words of sweetness into his
-invention as he sang, and the girl's voice was rich with appreciation
-as the flute of her lips swept the carol of her delight into his manly
-tones.
-
-Then they saw to the fore-tack and sheet and to the jib-sheets, and
-the ship floated away steadily round in graceful salutations to the
-dejected handkerchiefs on the quarter. Hardy cast the wheel adrift and
-told the girl to hold it whilst he steadied the yards by hauling as
-taut as his pair of hands could the weather-braces of the fore and main
-and the lee-braces of the mizzen.
-
-This done he stood beside Julia to teach her how to steer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-PRACTICAL SEAMANSHIP
-
-
-He is a lucky sailor to whom is granted the opportunity of teaching a
-girl with a romantic face and a beautiful figure the art of steering a
-full-rigged ship. Though the sailor is often in the company of ladies
-at sea, he is kept very severely forward, whilst the ladies are kept
-very severely aft; and if they formed a seraglio imprisoned on soft
-couches and fanned by eunuchs, behind walls ten feet thick, Jack at sea
-could not know less of the ladies at sea.
-
-Hardy's job was therefore a delightful one, and the more delightful
-because the ship was now homeward bound, and the morning was fair and
-the sea courteous and graceful in caress.
-
-"Do you see that black mark on the white under the glass?"
-
-"Yes," answered the girl.
-
-"It is called the lubber's mark: it is the business of the helmsman
-to keep a point of the compass aiming at it; that point is the ship's
-course. Do you observe that the point that is levelled at the lubber's
-mark is north-by-east?"
-
-"If you call it so I shall remember it," answered the girl.
-
-"The lubber's point," Hardy continued, "represents an imaginary line
-ruled straight from the stern into the very eyes of the ship, where the
-bowsprit and jib-booms point the road. If, then, I tell you to keep
-that point called north-by-east pointing as steadily as the swing of
-the ship's head will permit to the lubber's mark, then I am asking you
-to steer the ship in the direction I wish her to go."
-
-She frowned a little in contemplation at the compass card, and said, "I
-believe I understand you."
-
-"I will teach you to box the compass presently," Hardy went on. "You
-will easily get the names, and will not be at a loss if I should say
-the course is northeast or nor'-nor'east, and so on. And now see here:
-the action of a ship's wheel exactly reverses the action of a boat's
-tiller. Look under that grating; that is the tiller, and when you
-revolve the wheel the chains which drag the tiller sweep the rudder
-on one side or the other, so that when I tell you to put your helm
-a-starboard you revolve your wheel to the left, which will bring the
-rudder over to the left; and when I say port your helm you revolve your
-wheel to the right, which carries your rudder over to the right. If you
-steered by the tiller, then to the order of starboard your helm, you
-would put your tiller to the right. Do you understand?"
-
-The machinery of the compass, the wheel, the tiller, and its chains
-girdling the barrel, was all before her, and she would have been a
-blockhead if she had not grasped the simple matter speedily--but you,
-madam, who are a lady and read this, may be puzzled; possibly you are
-not, but if you are I do not wonder.
-
-"Now," he said, "I want the ship to be off her course: mark what I do;
-she shall be a little to leeward of her course."
-
-He put the helm by a few spokes over, and the binnacle card revolved
-two points from its course as the ship's head rounded away with the
-wind.
-
-"Now," said Hardy, "I bring her again to her course: observe what I do:
-we call this putting the helm down."
-
-He brought her to her course and arrested her at it, and the girl
-cried, eagerly, "Yes, yes, I see. Let me hold the wheel, George."
-
-She grasped the spokes, a swelling, beautiful, conquering figure, a
-delight to the eye, a triumph of British girlhood, one of those women
-who are the mothers of the gallant and glorious sons that man the
-signal-halliards of our country.
-
-"Now bring the ship to windward of her course," said Hardy.
-
-"I do not understand you," she answered, reproachfully.
-
-"Make that bowsprit yonder point _there_," he exclaimed, and he
-indicated with outstretched hand a part of the horizon to windward of
-the bow.
-
-"Why didn't you speak more plainly? I can do it."
-
-She revolved the wheel by three or four spokes, and hailed with eyes of
-transport and conquest the response of the compass card.
-
-"Do you understand?" said Hardy.
-
-"My dear," she answered, "I can steer your ship perfectly."
-
-"Not yet," he said, "but you are not far off."
-
-Thus proceeded this pleasant tuition, and for half an hour Hardy
-stood beside the wheel teaching his sweetheart how to steer. The
-Newfoundland sat alongside of them and seemed to listen, for his loving
-eyes were often on Hardy's face whilst he spoke. He tried the girl
-again and again, and at the end of half an hour she was expressing
-keen appreciation of his delightful lecture by dutiful movement of the
-wheel. But, indeed, the ship did not need much steering that fine day.
-Had the helm been lashed it is probable that, braced as the yards lay,
-and pulling in steadfast accord as the sails were, the ship would have
-made a tranquil passage of an hour with no other check to the dull
-kicks of the rudder than a rope's end.
-
-He left the girl to steer whilst he tautened here and there a brace
-with the watch-tackle; then entered the galley, saw to the fire, the
-coppers, and their contents. He was accepting an enormous obligation;
-could he discharge it? He felt the heart of a dozen men in his pulse,
-and he knew that if God did not smite her with sickness the spirit of
-his heroic girl would make her the match of any man, able-bodied or
-ordinary; so, though the _York_ might be undermanned, her crew of a man
-and a girl, with a dog for a lookout, would carry her home.
-
-The weather was so fine that he did not mean to make a job of
-seamanship. He did not intend to keep a lookout for ships unless it
-was to escape collision, because no ship that hove in sight, however
-willing, should be allowed to help him. The _York_ was to be his own
-and the girl's fortune, and, much as he respected the sailor, no man
-afloat would be permitted to share in this estate.
-
-He stood a minute on the forecastle to admire the beautiful fabric,
-and to pity the powerlessness which held imprisoned the cloths whose
-lustrous spaces would have climbed to the trucks in bright breasts
-yearning for home. Afar trembled the pocket-handkerchiefs of the sodden
-brig. The naked vision could no longer distinguish their appeal. She
-broke the continuity of the girdle, that was all, and she hovered on
-the skirts of the deep like a gibbet beheld afar. Hardy went right aft
-to the wheel; it was in the afternoon, and the speed of the ship was
-about four miles an hour.
-
-"We will make ourselves happy," said he. "This is yachting, and if you
-strain the imagination of your eyes you shall see close aboard the
-white terraces of the Isle of Wight."
-
-She laughed and answered, "We shall be off that island some day."
-
-"No fear," he replied. "Don't suppose I mean to sail her up channel.
-Plymouth is our port, and as we sha'n't be able to let go the anchor,
-I'll seize a blue shirt to the fore-lift and that 'ull bring a
-man-o'-war's boat alongside."
-
-"Why?" she asked.
-
-"Because it is the merchant seaman's signal that he wants to join the
-white ensign, and the naval officer is always greedy for men."
-
-But this was spoken many years ago. The signal of the blue shirt has
-been hauled down and buried with many other customs under the thin
-white wake of the metal battleship.
-
-"Why do you want a naval boat; would not any other boat do?" asked
-Julia.
-
-"No; the Royal Navy claims no salvage and gets none. Any other boat
-would make a claim for assistance, and I mean that our cake shall be
-whole."
-
-He brought two chairs out of the cabin, gave one to Julia and took one
-himself, with his hand on a spoke. Their faithful friend the dog lay in
-the westering sun beside them; and now they talked of what they should
-do in the night, and came to terms about the discipline of the crew
-whilst the ship kept the sea.
-
-"I shall be on deck as much as I can," said he. "I must sleep on deck;
-I do not choose to lie without shelter during my watch below. I'll
-bring a hen-coop aft, thoroughly cleanse it, and put a mattress into it
-after knocking away the rails. That's a good idea!"
-
-"Excellent!" she exclaimed; "and clear out another hen-coop for me.
-How romantic to sleep in a hen-coop!" and she laughed softly, looking
-lovingly at him.
-
-"If I should crow in my sleep whilst you're at the wheel you'll know
-that I am being hen-pecked."
-
-"Can't we put Sailor to some use?" she asked.
-
-The animal lifted his head to the sound of his name, and all was
-intelligence in his soft, pathetic eyes.
-
-"You shall sleep on a mattress at the foot of the companion-steps,
-where you will be sheltered. I have an idea. Are you strong enough
-to bring your mattress out of your berth and place it on deck with a
-pillow?"
-
-"Chaw!" she answered, with a shrug. "I have lifted an old woman out of
-bed. What do you want me to do?"
-
-"Spread your mattress on the port side of the steps, get a pillow, and
-stretch yourself upon it, and sing out when you're ready."
-
-She instantly rose and descended; the dog was about to follow her.
-
-"Lie down, Sailor!" and the dog obeyed.
-
-In a few moments the clear voice sounded, "On deck there!"
-
-"Hallo!"
-
-"All ready, George."
-
-"Shut your eyes and seem asleep. Sailor!" The dog immediately stood up
-with an inquiring look, ears slightly lifted. "Fetch her, Sailor! fetch
-her!"
-
-The dog trembled, and looked with a sort of passion about him.
-
-"Fetch her, Sailor! fetch her!" shouted Hardy, pointing down the hatch.
-
-The noble creature sprang down the steps. In a moment Julia began to
-scream.
-
-"Oh!" he heard her say; "he is tearing my dress, George."
-
-"Come up with him; it is all right," he bellowed. And up came the girl
-with her skirt in the mouth of the dog, who tried to get in front of
-her to drag her as though they were both in the sea and awash; but she
-filled the way and the Newfoundland could not jam past her.
-
-The dog held on till she was seated; he had not torn her dress, and the
-sweethearts fell into a fit of immoderate laughter, whilst the dog by
-pantomime of tail and motion exhibited every mark of satisfaction.
-
-"What a wonderful animal!" said Julia.
-
-"That breed is cleverer than we are," answered Hardy, "and as humane as
-angels. He understood me; it was like bidding him jump overboard after
-you."
-
-"But what is your object, George?"
-
-"I might want you, and if you are in a sound sleep and a breeze is
-blowing in low thunder over the companion-way, I might yelp myself into
-the disease of laryngitis without awakening you. The dog rests beside
-me and is at hand to call you."
-
-"You are very clever, George. The more I see of you the cleverer you
-become. Dear old Sailor! must he lie beside you on deck unsheltered?"
-
-"I shall lash an empty cask to the grating; there is plenty of
-sailcloth forward, and he shall have a kennel. Take the wheel, Julia;
-there is something to be done before the night falls. The breeze
-freshens too; hurrah, see how straight the white race flies astern of
-her! Under such canvas too! Keep her steady and don't be afraid."
-
-"Afraid!" she answered with a glance at him, which made him feel as if
-he was married.
-
-He walked forward, laughing, trusting his girl as though she had been
-an able seaman. A great deal of confusion followed when he caught a few
-hens out of one coop and thrust them into the other. Such heartrending
-screams of despair, and two cocks and five or six hens in the other
-coop strained their throats in clamorous sympathy, and you could have
-sworn that the whole crowd of them, cocks and all, had just laid
-eggs. When the hen-coop was clear he passed his knife through the
-lashings, fetched an axe, swept the bars out of their fixings to the
-accompaniment of the orchestra in the other hen-coop, drew a bucket of
-water, and with a scrubbing brush thoroughly cleansed the dirty thing,
-which had the width of a trunk, though much longer.
-
-He found it was heavy to drag, being a somewhat solid structure, so
-he called the Newfoundland to him and harnessed him to the coop by the
-watch-tackle. The dog tugged with the vigour of a man, Hardy shoved,
-and the hen-coop rushed along the deck right aft, whilst Julia with
-tears of laughter in her eyes kept the speeding ship to her course as
-though she had done nothing but steer ever since she could stand. But
-there was more yet to be done, and the sun was setting. He took the
-cooked meat out of the coppers and placed the steaming mass on a dish
-until it should grow cold.
-
-Suddenly his ear was taken by a strange noise of hissing over the
-side; it was something more than the sheeting of the ship through the
-soft whiteness she made. It was like a continuous snarl threading the
-blowing off of steam.
-
-He looked over the rail and saw the boat they had come aboard in from
-the brig rushing with comet-like velocity close alongside, like a
-little child swept to her home by the enraged mother that had lost her.
-
-He debated a minute, and then said to himself, "She is of no use,
-neither she, nor the fresh water, nor the grub that is in her."
-
-He was making his way into the channels to cast the painter adrift.
-
-"Where are you going?" shrieked Julia at the wheel. He explained.
-
-"If I see you in the water behind me I shall jump after you," she
-cried, with a look of alarm and real anxiety.
-
-"Can't I drop into a ship's chains without going overboard?" he
-answered, and disappeared, and a short scream at the wheel attended his
-going.
-
-The boat was easily released, and to the great joy of Julia the manly
-face of her sailor was once more visible. They both watched the boat as
-she receded.
-
-"She'll be fallen in with," said Hardy, "and some skipper will log
-her and make a fearful mystery of her. Every tragic possibility of
-shipwreck is in her. She is the issue of fire, collision, the leak, the
-meteor-cloven craft--"
-
-"What do you mean?" interrupted Julia.
-
-"The ship's off her course," said Hardy. "That's quite right. Three
-spokes did it. Now look how fair the compass course points to the
-lubber's mark."
-
-"What's a meteor-cloven ship?" she asked.
-
-"I never heard of a big ship having been sunk by a meteor," he
-answered; "but I have been told of a great stone dropping out of the
-sky with the meteoric flash of a fallen star plump through the hatchway
-of a schooner and down through her: the sailors took to the pumps and
-then to the boats. That's what I mean."
-
-And now he must prepare a bed for himself and the dog. He could not
-find an empty barrel, but just against the windlass the cook or the
-cabin servant had placed for firewood perhaps, or for other reasons, a
-big empty case, which might have contained wine or commodities of some
-sort. This placed on its side would do, and as it was too heavy for him
-to carry, and too rough for him to shove, he harnessed the Newfoundland
-to it as to the coop, and Sailor, helped by Hardy, ran the case close
-against the wheel.
-
-"The ship is sailing very fast," said Julia.
-
-"A little over five knots, perhaps," answered Hardy. "We wants legs, my
-love. Blow, blow, my sweet breeze." And he sang to himself whilst he
-got the box on to its side and secured it to the grating.
-
-"Now for your bed, Sailor, and then we'll go to supper."
-
-He reflected, and remembered that there was straw in the fore-peak for
-the use of the old sow that had been and was gone--recollect that he
-had been mate of this ship, and knew exactly where to look for what he
-wanted. He dropped into the fore-peak, which was like descending into
-a hell of smells and the mutter of troubled water, and reappeared with
-his arms full of straw, transforming Julia's wistful face into beaming
-pleasure, for his briefest disappearance struck a sort of horror to her
-heart.
-
-Thus was the Newfoundland housed, and before making up his own bed in
-the hen-coop the sweethearts went to supper.
-
-The girl had been standing some time at the wheel. It was proper she
-should be relieved, so Hardy grasped the spokes whilst Julia went
-below, followed by the dog, to fetch something to eat. She arrived
-with wine, biscuits, jam, and tinned meats. You will remember that she
-had been an under-stewardess, and was used to waiting upon people. But
-that was not all: she had nursed old ladies, had for a very lean wage
-indeed washed, dressed, and walked out with children; in fact, she long
-afterward told Hardy that, always having emigration in her mind, she
-had worked at a laundry for some weeks. In point of service, therefore,
-she was well equipped for life, and Hardy saw in her the helpful woman,
-the wise and devoted wife, beautiful in figure and, now that she was
-happy, most engaging in face.
-
-The three of the ship's company ate their supper, and two of them
-talked and watched the sunset. The further north you go the greater is
-the glory of the sun's departure; yet yonder was a magnificent scene of
-golden pavilions hung with tapestries of deep blue ether; the flight
-of the eastern cloud was like incense pouring from the evening star,
-unrisen or invisible: the vapour fled on the wings of the wind to
-enrich the light in the west by duplication of scarlet splendour, and
-the ship blew steadily along controlled by the hand of Hardy, who was
-sometimes fed by Julia.
-
-All about was the soft, sweet noise of creaming seas; the brig astern
-had vanished into airy nothing, and the _York_ sailed a kingdom of her
-own.
-
-"Will there be a moon?" asked Julia.
-
-"Between nine and ten," he answered. "A slice of moon. We can do
-without her. There is light in starshine, and we can do without that
-also. I must light the binnacle lamp and get the side-lights over. I
-thank God that this wind promises steadiness. Yet it may shift, and
-then I shall want the dog to awake you whilst I see what a single pair
-of arms can do with the braces."
-
-"Do you think I shall not hear you if you shout?" said she.
-
-"I'll not chance it," he answered.
-
-"Do you believe we shall carry this ship home?" she asked.
-
-"I'll not hope, for hoping is bragging, but we'll try, Julia. A man
-cannot add a cubit to his mother's gift of stature by standing on
-stilts; but we'll try, Julia."
-
-"Who can do more?" she asked.
-
-"Hold this wheel while I light the lamps."
-
-He set about this job and speedily despatched it, knowing exactly where
-to lay his hands upon everything he wanted, then brought his mattress
-up along with the rug and jammed it into his hen-coop, and lay down. It
-was rather a tight fit with the mattress, but it gave him the length he
-wanted, and if he did not start in his sleep he need not knock his head
-against the ceiling. He carefully secured the hen-coop to belaying pins.
-
-"That'll provide," said he, "against being taken aback."
-
-He then went below and lighted the cabin lamp, and saw to Julia's bed
-by readjustment of the mattress clear of the draughts circling down the
-companionway. He fetched covering for her, and it was for her to make
-herself comfortable when the time came.
-
-By this hour it was dark; there was no light upon the deep save the
-musket-like wink of the sea flash. But the stars swarmed in brilliant
-processions betwixt the clouds over the mastheads, and their subtle
-light was in the air, and you saw things dimly. The Newfoundland was
-asleep in his kennel beside the wheel. Julia, who had come aboard with
-nothing on but the clothes she stood in, fetched the captain's cloak
-from the captain's cabin. It was a long coat with a warm cape, and I
-call it a cloak because it wasn't a great-coat. It clothed her to her
-little feet, and she sat as warm in it as in the embrace of eiderdown.
-
-"How shall we manage to keep watch?" she asked.
-
-"I shall keep the deck till twelve," he answered; "I have a watch, and
-there is the binnacle light which from time to time will want trimming.
-Sailor will call you at twelve--see now his use? And I'll trim the
-lights, and lie close beside you there for a couple of hours, for I can
-do with very little sleep, and the more sleep you can get the better,
-because you will keep strong and will be able to steer in the day
-whilst I take an off-shore spell in my coop."
-
-"If I felt I could sleep, I would go and lie down at once," she
-answered; "but I love to sit and talk with you. What time is it,
-George?"
-
-"Nearly half-past eight," he answered, putting his watch to the
-binnacle.
-
-"Grant me till nine, I may then be sleepy. But I feel as if that sleep
-of drug was going to suffice me a year."
-
-"Oh, my heart, am not I rejoiced that you should be with me!" he
-exclaimed, in a soft and melodious note of love. "Think if that madman
-had missed the brig and sailed on!"
-
-She shuddered and answered, "I dare not think." Then after a pause she
-said, "Suppose a steamer came in sight, wouldn't she tow us home?"
-
-"I wouldn't give her the chance."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"She would demand salvage, and get it."
-
-"It is shameful," she exclaimed, "that a ship should be paid for
-helping a ship in distress."
-
-"The shipowner knows no shame," answered Hardy, "and neither does his
-dumb confederate, the underwriter. One builds a jerry ship to sink,
-and the other pins a policy on to the villain's back that he may sleep
-whether his ship goes down or not."
-
-It was strange to look along the decks and witness no figure of man. No
-shape of seaman was on the forecastle to extinguish a thousand stars as
-the jib-booms rose pointing to the sky; no shadow of man stirred in the
-waist or the main-deck. The mighty loneliness of the deep was in this
-ship from the wheel to where the forecastle rails clasped hands above
-the figure-head. But sentience was in her and she knew it, and nobly
-confessed the spirit of control by the glad, direct and cleaving shear
-of her stem.
-
-Happy is the sailor who can sit beside his sweetheart on board ship on
-a fine night and discourse of love and other matters without dread of
-the eye of the master-mariner. This couple talked of the safe arrival
-of the ship. They would buy a little cottage; they would not go to sea
-any more. It is always a cottage well inshore that is the sailor's
-dream. It was our glorious Nelson's for many years; witness his letters
-to his wife, whom he loved before the traitress wound her brilliant
-coils round the hero's heart, and numbed the loyalty of its pulse to
-one who had cherished him in sickness and was his dearest one when the
-shadow of his life was yet short in the sun of his glory.
-
-The dust of the shooting star glittered on high; the steady voice
-of the night wind filled the shrouds with the melodies of invisible
-spirits; the white wake gleamed astern like the dusty highway which is
-the road to home; the softly plunging bows awoke the minstrelsy of the
-surge. It was night upon the Atlantic, and no twinkle of side-lamp was
-to be seen upon the sea line.
-
-At nine by Hardy's watch, Julia kissed her sweetheart's lips and held
-him by the hand a little.
-
-"Good night, good night," she said; "I will say a prayer before I
-sleep."
-
-"Never forget that," answered Hardy. "Be sure it is He that hath made
-us and not we ourselves. Pray to him and bless him and thank him, and
-his love will be with us."
-
-Is this the common talk of the sea? Do Smollett and Marryat make their
-heroes converse like this? Thrust your hands into your ribs, ye ribald
-crew, and laugh with godless merriment at this presentment of a sailor
-who was a gentleman, who feared God, to whom the helplessness of his
-companion was no appeal to the heart that loved her, respected her, and
-desired that she should be true to herself and to him.
-
-He was alone at the wheel, and now she was gone to rest and the dog was
-asleep he was alone in the ship, but he could keep a lookout as well as
-the dog, and the dog would not be called upon to serve until the girl
-was alone at the wheel whilst her lover slept.
-
-Many thoughts were this fine young sailor's; he was full of hope
-and courage, and often bent his mind to shrewd contemplation of
-contingency--the shift of the breeze, the head wind, the gale, and
-other gay humours and tragic scowls of the life. But the winch was
-four men, and the watch-tackle a little company of hands, and he did
-not despair. Sometimes he meditated on the port he should make; if it
-came to the worst, then, when in the English Channel, he would shape a
-course for Ramsgate Harbour and run her on the mud, and no man must be
-suffered to board her, for the money of the safety of the ship was to
-be his and hers, and that was the settled resolution of his soul.
-
-When twelve o'clock came round he did not wish to sleep; he would have
-chosen rather that Julia should have slumbered until dawn. But the
-refreshment of rest was an imperious demand with which he must comply
-for his own and for the sake of the girl, the safety of their noble
-companion, the safety of the ship and her cargo. He thought he would
-try Julia by calling, and he shouted four or five times, but, as he
-had foreseen, the sweep of the wind broke his voice to pieces in the
-companionway, and her ears were blocked with sleep.
-
-The dog started up and came to his side at the outcry of the
-man. "Fetch her, Sailor! fetch her!" he cried, pointing to the
-companion-hatch.
-
-The Newfoundland barked and seemed to wonder.
-
-"Fetch her, Sailor! fetch her!" he roared again, still pointing.
-
-This time the dog understood. He sprang to the ladder and vanished,
-and a moment later Julia's cries were piercing. But it was merely the
-noise of terror such as would be excited in a girl awakened from a
-sound sleep by the resolute drag of a dog's teeth. She understood the
-thing in a minute, patted the dog, who was dragging her by her skirt to
-the ladder, snatched up her hat and the captain's cloak, and arrived
-on deck with the dog, whose tail timed the wag of the stars over the
-mastheads.
-
-"Have you slept?" he asked.
-
-"Too well," she answered. "I screamed because Sailor broke in upon a
-nightmare and fitted it."
-
-"Will you be able to hold the wheel?"
-
-"I'll try. What is the time?"
-
-"After midnight--nearly one bell," he answered.
-
-She stood at the wheel, and her firm grasp was full of promise of
-control.
-
-"Is that the course?" she inquired, looking into the compass.
-
-"Yes, and keep her to it as best you can by the starshine whilst I trim
-the lamp."
-
-"What is our pace, dear?"
-
-"Six and a half at least," he answered.
-
-He made haste to trim the lamp and saw to the side-lights, and his
-spirits were high and his hope more exalted yet when he saw how well
-the girl steered. A big ship for a girl to control! And all the sweet
-archness of her incomparable posture was unconsciously expressed to
-her lover as he flashed the light over her before adjusting it for the
-illumination of the card.
-
-"Now for a little supper," said he, "then I shall lie down."
-
-He fetched some food and wine, and ate himself whilst he helped Julia
-to eat; the dog was remembered; and all the while he kept his eyes
-fixed in critical attention upon the girl's handling of the wheel.
-
-"Sailor, go forward and keep a lookout, sir," he exclaimed, and this
-was an order which, as you know, the dog understood, and was accustomed
-to obey. He had supped and was thankful, and, faithful to his duty as
-Tom Bowline, the brave Newfoundland trotted forward to the forecastle,
-and took up a position of lookout betwixt the knight-heads.
-
-"Here is my watch, Julia," said Hardy. "Call me at half-past two--but
-sooner, at the instant of need, if your arm should weary or the breeze
-shift and drive you off your course. I am a sailor and used to keeping
-my ears open in sleep. I am close beside you there, and your first cry
-will bring me out like a cork to the drag of a corkscrew."
-
-"I will call you at half-past two," she answered. "She is as easy to
-steer as a boat. Look how steady the course swings at the mark there!"
-
-He paused and gazed round him. The white cloud was speeding swiftly
-across the stars, and the ship hummed with the wind as the thrill of
-its ebon lines of gear, of shroud and stay and back-stay, shook its
-transport into the plank. The glass was steady--he had seen to that
-when he went below for the midnight supper; and there was no sign of
-worse, or changeful, or other weather within or on the verge of the
-mighty liquid sweep, whose heart was the ship, carrying onwards always
-the illimitable girdle on which she floated, the central figure of the
-night.
-
-Hardy got into the hen-coop--a tight fit; but in it he was well
-sheltered, for the coop was under the lee of the weather-bulwark. He
-drew an old coat he had brought up over him, pillowed his head on the
-rolled-up flag he had thrown into the hen-coop, and in a minute was
-asleep.
-
-A sailor's sleep is sound, and sacred as the slumber of death to his
-messmates and shipmates as they mutter softly round about him and
-tread the upper plank with airy feet that all shall be hushed in the
-forecastle--hushed unless it be the crying of the wind or the sullen
-thunder of the bow-sea, or the cries of the watch on high furling or
-reefing to the trumpet commands of the quarter-deck. Nothing in all
-ocean romance is comparable to this picture of a full-rigged ship in
-command of a girl who is alone at the wheel whilst her lover sleeps,
-whilst a dog on the forecastle-head watches the ocean line with
-faithful eye for the sparkle of light, for the dim sheen of canvas, for
-the stream of smoke spangled with the stars of the furnace, that shall
-make him bark in barks as truthful of indication as the strokes of the
-tongue upon the ship's bell.
-
-The wind held a sweet, true breeze as Hardy had foreseen, whilst that
-brave little heart kept the ship's course steady to the lubber's point.
-She was not tired, sleep had refreshed her; standing was no trial;
-she was warmly draped, and felt a sort of glory in this occupation of
-sea-throne, which enabled her to do her duty and to hold her sweetheart
-in tranquil and most necessary repose. She was quick in intelligence,
-and the sea was small and its weight was of the summer; and she found
-a woman's delight in her power of governing, for the ship answered to
-her white hand with a courtier-like grace; she felt to be queen of the
-lordly fabric, and her spell at the wheel was a triumph of British
-girlhood.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE BOAT-FULL
-
-
-It was hard upon half-past two in the morning. The breeze had been
-blowing steadily throughout, and the white pace of the ship was
-more than six knots in the hour. Julia put her hand into her pocket
-and pulled out Hardy's watch and saw what o'clock it was; the stars
-flashed over the mastheads with each floating reel of the buoyant,
-girl-controlled fabric; the silver dust of the speeding star vanishing
-in a length of fainting light scored the deep midnight blue between
-the clouds; the voice of the ocean rejoicing in the swinging dance of
-the breeze filled the air with sounds of the cataract, the foam of the
-waterfall, the wrangle of the freshet with the sea.
-
-Suddenly, far forward past the shadowy arch of the fore-course, you
-heard the deep bay of a great dog. A ship was in sight!
-
-"O God!" cried Julia at the wheel, interpreting the deep-noted thunder
-of the great creature, "What am I to do?"
-
-But such a bark as Sailor could deliver was not to sound unheeded
-in the sleeping ear of a seaman. Hardy started, rolled out of his
-hen-coop, and was by Julia's side in a few pulses.
-
-"I see her," he shouted, and seizing the wheel he put it hard a-port.
-
-Then on the port bow loomed an ashen apparition with one red light,
-like the hideous stare of a drunkard, visible in the stagger of the
-bows. It was a full-rigged ship, clothed to her trucks with white
-canvas, about a mile and a half distant. She was standing to the
-southward and westward, and the red eye of the _York_ was upon her;
-there would have been no collision, but Sailor's voice was timely.
-Hardy brought the ship to her course again, and the stranger was on the
-bow, sliding like a churchyard phantom over the glimmering tombstones
-of the deep.
-
-"She is an American," said Hardy.
-
-"How do you know?" asked Julia.
-
-"She is clothed in cotton, that is why I know. What a noble lookout is
-Sailor. Didn't you see her?"
-
-"I see her now, but not before now," she answered.
-
-"Brave dog," cried Hardy.
-
-He called to him and the Newfoundland came rushing aft, with many
-tokens visible in the starshine of the emotion of satisfaction which
-good dogs feel when they have done their duty.
-
-"You are wearied out, Julia," said Hardy. "Do you feel as stiff with
-standing as a shroud of wire-rigging?"
-
-"It is half-past two," answered the girl. "Here is your watch, George.
-Lie down, dearest, and I will stand here for another hour; I am not
-tired."
-
-"Hold the wheel whilst I trim this light," was his answer. When this
-was done he said, "Now to bed, my lass."
-
-She heard command in his voice, and answered, "I should love to lie in
-your hen-coop."
-
-"Take off your hat and get into it. 'Tis snug enough. Pull the jacket
-over you, and sleep--sleep--sleep; and then you will be able to thank
-Mary Queen who sent the sleep that slid into your soul. But first go
-below and get a little wine and food."
-
-She was as obedient as a good sailor, refreshed herself in the cabin
-where the lamp was burning, and returned with a glass of rum and water
-and a biscuit.
-
-"And my pipe," said he. And he told her where to find the pipe and the
-tobacco.
-
-Before she got into the hen-coop he said to her:
-
-"I wish I could teach the dog to steer; but that is impossible. But I
-tell you what--when those yards need trimming I shall want some one to
-hold on to the slack, and by all that's good Sailor shall do it."
-
-"Why doesn't God enable such a creature as this to speak as we do?"
-said Julia. "It has the mind--why should it lack the voice, when even
-the filthiest cannibal may use his tongue?"
-
-"Get you to bed, Julia."
-
-She crept into the hen-coop, wrapped her clothes about her legs, pulled
-the sailor's coat over her, and lay watching her lover.
-
-Hardy stood at the wheel with a pipe in his mouth, and the dog slept
-in his kennel alongside. It was not for long that Julia was allowed to
-sleep. When it was a quarter before four, when the darkness that grows
-deeper before the dawn dwelt like a sable vapour upon the face of the
-sea, when the flash of the star was fast in its westward sweep, and the
-red scar of moon looked dully down like a piece of broken glass thick
-stained, through which the crimson splendour above drains and oozes,
-the wind shifted suddenly three points; 'twas then almost abeam.
-
-He called to the girl. Her awakening found her astounded by her
-situation. Was she in a coffin? He called again, and the saint-like
-voice of love brought her from her sepulchre of hen-coop with an eager
-cry of, "I am wide awake. What is it?"
-
-"The wind has shifted, Julia. Do you know what I mean?"
-
-"The wind has changed."
-
-"Yes, you are awake. Take hold of this wheel."
-
-She grasped the spokes. The dog would be of no use then; all Hardy
-could do was to slacken away the weather-braces and haul taut the
-lee-braces as well as a single pair of British arms could. He clapped
-on the watch-tackle here and there, and made the best job possible
-under the circumstances; but he was bothered by the want of somebody
-to hold on to the slack. However, by belaying the watch-tackle and
-then belaying the brace he in a one-man fashion managed it, and when
-he returned to the wheel the ship slipped to her course again with her
-shortened canvas rap-full, and a wake like a mill-race.
-
-"Hurrah!" cried Hardy, with a slap of his thigh; "storm along, old
-Stormy! Whilst she creaks she holds! I'll teach that dog this morning
-to pull a rope. He has teeth and sense and some sailors have neither,
-because their teeth are worn out by chewing salt junk, and the crimp
-drugs their brains till the skull is like a rotten nut, full of dust."
-
-"It is my turn at the wheel," said Julia.
-
-"Just you go and turn in," he answered. "Here's the skipper and
-there's the bed. I shall take an off-shore spell sometime to-day. Rest
-till breakfast-time, and then you shall light the galley fire, and boil
-some coffee."
-
-She crept into the hen-coop after holding the binnacle lamp to his
-pipe, and the ship moved in the glimmering shadow through the hour of
-darkness with slightly restless yards at every solemn plunge, for, like
-the figure of a beautiful woman, she was the fairer in grace and the
-easier in carriage when moulded by the fingers of art.
-
-Sunrise is beautiful at sea on a fine morning; the sky ripples with
-silver and rose, and the sea uplifts its fountain note of rejoicing
-as that great imperial mystery of the heavens, the sun, floats off
-the verge of the deep. The dawn found Hardy at the wheel and the girl
-asleep in the hen-coop. He did not curiously seek for a ship in sight,
-for he did not stand in need of help, and would reject it if offered. A
-sail was twinkling like a peak of iceberg right abeam to starboard, and
-Hardy looked at her, and thought of twenty other things. The breeze had
-slackened slightly; it was still a pleasant summer breast of sea, and
-the ship's speed was four. All plain sail might have given her seven,
-and the wings of the stunsail from topgallant yard-arm to swinging-boom
-end might have helped her into eight. No matter! She was homeward
-bound, and there was no growler in her ship's company if it was not the
-dog.
-
-When Julia came out of her strange little bedroom she arose like
-Arethusa in Shelley's poem: rosy and fire-eyed, sweet with the
-refreshment of slumber, and sweeter perhaps to a man's eye because she
-was unadorned. She pressed her lips to her sweetheart's cheek.
-
-"Let me take the wheel," said she, "while you rest."
-
-"Can you light a fire?" he answered.
-
-She looked at him with reproachful wonder.
-
-"What cannot I do? What has not poverty made me do?"
-
-"Will you light the galley fire?" said he, "and fill a kettle out of
-that scuttle-butt, boil some water, and give us a hot drink of coffee?
-Poor old Crummie is dead and gone, but her spirit survives in tins, and
-I believe there is some preserved milk in the cabin."
-
-She did not waste much time in lighting the galley fire. Everything was
-at hand. Whilst the kettle was boiling she fetched food from the cabin,
-and on top of the dog's kennel made some little display of tablecloth,
-cup and saucer, and knife and fork. This disturbed Sailor, who at once
-beheld the distant sail and saluted it.
-
-"You shall be even more useful than that," said Hardy to the dog. "This
-morning I will look for the key of the safe and judge of the value of
-the contents."
-
-"It is pleasanter than yachting," exclaimed Julia.
-
-"We have to cross the Bay," replied Hardy. "It may come on hard from
-the east'ard and blow us to Boston."
-
-"Is it always rough in the Bay of Biscay?" said the girl.
-
-"I have swept up and down it often in my life," replied Hardy, "and
-five times out of ten we were becalmed on it, and thankful for
-catspaws. The thunder of the Bay continues to roar loud in the song,
-and alarms the man in the street who talks of taking shipping south.
-Let him be hove to off the Horn in fifty-eight degrees south. Suppose
-you see if the kettle boils."
-
-They made an excellent breakfast and so did the dog. Hardy ate and
-held the wheel, the ship, as though in love with her people, almost
-steered herself. There would come a change; the God-given mood of the
-sea is sweet, it is the weather that breaks her heart. As a drunken
-husband seizes his pale and pretty wife by the hair, and flogs her
-into shrieks and madness, so does the weather serve the ocean. It is
-good for the fish who breathe thereby, but bad for the passenger at
-whose white, overhanging face the invisible eye of the fish is uplifted
-languishingly.
-
-"Now, Julia," said Hardy, "hold the wheel whilst I teach the dog a
-lesson in practical seamanship."
-
-He stepped to the mizzen-royal halliards and called to the dog, which
-followed. He cast the rope off the pin, but kept one turn under the
-pin, and said to the dog:
-
-"Seize it and pull!" holding out the slack.
-
-The dog with much wagging of tail, as though he reckoned that Hardy
-meant some caper-cutting, seized the rope with his teeth. It was now
-a job. He wanted the dog to pull at the rope, so that when he swigged
-off at the halliards the dog by dragging would keep the slack taut as
-though strained by human hands. The intelligence of the Newfoundland
-is proverbial and marvellous, but it took Hardy all an hour to make
-the noble creature see what it was expected to do. He then did it, and
-Julia, whose laugh had been constant throughout the procedure, let go
-the wheel to clap her hands, whilst Hardy with purple face swigged off
-upon the halliards, and the dog, with forward slanting legs, strained
-the slack. All three then rested: Hardy steered sitting, for, as I have
-told you, a little movement of the spokes sufficed.
-
-After smoking a pipe whilst Julia looked to the galley fire--not with
-a view to cooking, there was plenty to eat--the sailor yielded the
-wheel to his sweetheart, and went below into the captain's cabin to
-explore the contents of the safe. First of all, he was to find the
-key; this proved a hunt, running into ten minutes; then of course he
-found the bunch of keys exactly where he looked last and should have
-looked at first--in the captain's desk. The key of the safe was one of
-a few on a ring. When he opened the safe he found several large metal
-boxes like cash-boxes. All these boxes were to be fitted by the keys
-on the ring. The first was flush with magnificent jewelry--bracelets,
-earrings, rings; and the flash of the diamond was like the sparkle
-of the sea under the sun. The second metal box was filled with gold
-chains of all sorts of pattern, some massive, some delicate as twine,
-of very beautiful workmanship. In the third box were watches and seals,
-all gold, of splendid manufacture, for in those days the watch was
-handsome, the mechanism exquisite as the chronometer of to-day, and the
-gold case was heavy. The fourth and last box contained curiosities,
-such as a Jew dealer with a yellow grin of awe would steal out of some
-mysterious hiding-place and show you with something of breathlessness
-and a frequent glance to right and left, and sometimes over his
-shoulder.
-
-How am I to describe these things? A discoloured Nelson tall as a
-thumb, commanding the combined fleets in a cocked hat, on a large seal
-on which was graved Trafalgar. A little Napoleon in dull ivory on a
-massive gold seal with indistinguishable initials. Very old rings,
-very old gold spoons--but this is not an auctioneer's catalogue. Hardy
-locked everything up.
-
-"Julia's and mine," said he, laughing softly; by which he meant the
-value of the salvage of the precious fal-lals.
-
-He restored the ring of keys to the desk at which he glanced with a
-reverential eye, for he saw a little packet of letters in faded ink,
-and he knew that there too lay in a little circular box small curls of
-the hair of the dead--the wife and the little drummer. The captain had
-shown them to him, and the hair was the boy's when two years old. Hardy
-looked at the drum, at the little bed, at the medicine-chest, at the
-little clothes hanging at the bulkhead, and stepped out with a sigh,
-thinking in a sort of blind way about the mercy of God, the sufferings
-of madness, and the death of little children.
-
-"Have you found any jewels?" asked Julia, as she stood at the wheel.
-
-"More than you could wear, my dear," he answered, "if you were as
-many-limbed and many-headed as an Indian god."
-
-"Are they worth much?"
-
-"I am not a pawnbroker," he answered; "besides, I have been looking at
-the little drum and it has drummed the jewelry out of my head."
-
-"For whom were the jewels intended?"
-
-"There is always a market for trash of that sort in the Colonies," he
-replied.
-
-"Why don't you lie down and get some sleep?" she exclaimed.
-
-"I shall keep awake," he answered, "until I have shot the sun, and then
-perhaps I may sleep for an hour, weather permitting."
-
-As he spoke these words he was looking at the sea right abeam, and held
-up his hand in a gesture of wonder, which arrested something that Julia
-was about to say.
-
-"Good God!" cried Hardy. "What's going on there?"
-
-It was about a mile and a half off, and just in that place the sea was
-working in a sort of convulsion, coil upon coil of dark blue brine
-wound round and round like mighty sea snakes, whose sport was as deadly
-as the pursuit of the harpooned dolphin. These amazing throes of brine
-upon which the sun was sweetly shining, and from which and to which the
-summer breast of ocean breathed in the rejoicing of the early morning,
-in a minute or two grew savage with snaps and leaps of foam, with
-prong-like upheavals of water, with crested shootings, and the area
-whitened to the hue of a star, and the volcanic fury began. The ship
-trembled. You heard no thunder of explosion; the roar of the fire under
-the ooze was dumb when it penetrated the spacious hall of the sea; but
-the raging torment was visible in a sudden mighty upheaval of foaming
-water, smokeless but glorious with its cloud of spray.
-
-A miracle! From up from deepest soundings had been forked the figure
-of a drowned fabric, and as a ball plays poised on the feathering
-of a fountain so floated the form of a small vessel with two lower
-masts standing, crowning the summit of that fire-expelled, pyramidal,
-and towering volume of foam. Such sights have been witnessed at sea,
-for the ocean is the arena of the sublime wonder, the heart-thrilling
-miracle; it is the mirror of God, and unlike the land its breast
-reflects his lights. The lovers gazed, the dog gazed; the ship seemed
-to dwell under her curves of canvas as though she paused to look.
-
-"How marvellous!" cried Julia.
-
-Hardy rushed for the glass. He caught the poised object before it
-vanished. It was a little ship of old shape, high in stern, sloping
-thence to curved head-boards, two masts like stone columns, richly
-encrusted with marine growth, and lustrous as the inner shell of the
-oyster; the hull was of a blackish green and looked black in the glass
-in contrast with the white fury upon whose apex it rolled and swayed
-and tumbled. Then it was gone! It vanished in a cannon volley of water.
-The sea thereabouts ran boiling, but in a few minutes the curl of the
-breeze-blown surge had triumphed over the milky softness, and had the
-spectacle been the launch of a dead man in a sailor's shroud you could
-not have seen less of it.
-
-"Was ever such a sight beheld before?" said Julia, with tremulous
-breath and enlarged nostrils.
-
-"'Those who go down to the sea in ships,'" answered Hardy. "Has not
-that observation been made once or twice before? I believe I have been
-forced to read it a thousand times, for every newspaper and every book
-that relates to the sea quotes this Scriptural sentence, and I am weary
-of it."
-
-"I have heard of islands being thrown up," said Julia.
-
-"A great deal is thrown up at sea," replied Hardy. "Steady the wheel,
-my heart, whilst I ogle the sun."
-
-It will be admitted that this brace of sweethearts had not been
-very fortunate. To be burnt out, open-boated, drugged, kidnapped,
-shipwrecked on a derelict with a madman, are experiences of a rather
-emphatic sort. Hardy's share had been the share of a man, and bar
-the drug he could have gone through twenty fold worse and emerged a
-sunburnt, smiling sailor.
-
-Fate for a little while was now to mask its grim features with a
-pleasant leer, and for the next two days of the ship's adventure the
-weather was calm, the sea smooth enough for a little yacht, the heavens
-bright with a little shading here and there of cloud, and all went well
-with the crew. On the morning of the third day Hardy came out of his
-coop like a snail from its shell, only a little faster. Julia was at
-the wheel, and the dog on the forecastle keeping a lookout.
-
-"We are in luck," said Hardy, gazing around him. "Fancy only requiring
-to trim sail five times in two days."
-
-"How far off is the abandoned brig, do you think?" asked the girl.
-
-"All five hundred miles of salt water, Julia, and a salt mile is longer
-than a highway mile."
-
-They were used to the ship and the ways and methods they had adopted.
-Thanks to the blessed weather, they had by alternation secured the rest
-that nature demanded. There was plenty to eat and they ate heartily.
-The dog was as useful as a midshipman; he understood the meaning of
-the word slack, and held on to it when required as though his teeth
-were in the sleeve of a drowning man. There was coal in the fore-peak,
-and Hardy had made the necessary descent, and the stock in the galley
-was always plentiful.
-
-This morning they went about their work as usual. Hardy steered.
-Julia lighted the galley fire, and the dog came aft to sit beside the
-wheel and wait for breakfast. How did Hardy look? How did Julia look?
-Very well indeed, I can assure you. When on board the abandoned brig
-the sailor's beard grew, and he had returned somewhat bristling to
-the _York_. But in this ship were his razor, lathering brush, and a
-square of glass to make faces in. He was therefore now a clean-shaven
-man, and I don't believe there is any girl living who would not have
-fallen in love with him. He had choice of clothes, too, which put him
-to windward of his sweetheart. But the eye of love should never be
-affected by apparel, and when Julia clothed herself for warmth and the
-night in the madman's cloak she was still an incomparable figure and
-of romantic face. Clothes have very little to do with health; you may
-sometimes peep at the goddess through a rent in the coat, and I have
-met her in country lanes and crossing meadows in the picturesque garb
-of the scarecrow with such cheeks of scarlet, such eyes of light, such
-teeth of ivory as might prove the envy and the despair of her ladyship
-travelling, like the suds of a washerwoman's tub, in carriage and pair
-to a princely festival.
-
-In fact, Julia was sparkling to the caressing hand of this new life.
-The health of the sea was hers, the love of the sailor was hers,
-content and hope were hers. Do not these things wait upon appetite and
-help digestion? Do not they irradiate slumber with entrancing visions?
-If the girl soiled her hands by lighting the galley fire, she knew
-where to find the head pump and the galley clout or a towel from aft to
-dry her fingers.
-
-Whilst they were eating their breakfast this morning the dog sprang
-on the grating abaft the wheel and barked its lookout to the sea to
-windward, about two points before the beam.
-
-"Hold this wheel, Julia!" exclaimed Hardy.
-
-He sprang for the telescope and levelled it, and the light sweep of
-the ship's summer lurch darted a boat with a lugsail into the lens.
-He viewed her intently in silence, which Julia did not dare to break
-into by heedless, girlish cries of "What is it?" like the distracting
-marginal notes of the lady's pencil in the tearful, the hysteric, and
-the religious novel. How far distant that boat was off I do not know,
-but she lay very clean and clear in the powerful tubes which Hardy was
-bringing to bear upon her. Her sail was like a square of satin; the
-fabric was painted black; as she rose to the fold you saw the delicate
-gush of foam at the bow. Hardy counted eight men in her, and one figure
-that was in the bows continuously waved some streaming thing white in
-his hands.
-
-"My God!" cried Hardy, letting fall the glass to his side. "What a
-misfortune!"
-
-"What is it?" asked Julia.
-
-"A boat-full of shipwrecked men," he replied, and his face grew grim as
-he said it. "They may be dying of thirst and famine, and they must not
-come aboard."
-
-"Oh, George!" exclaimed Julia, grasping the thing in an instant.
-
-"If they came aboard," he continued, speaking swiftly and even
-fiercely, "they may seize the ship; in any case their salvage claim
-would wreck our hopes. Put the helm up. By God, they shall not board
-us!"
-
-He sprang to the wheel, and the ship sloped away to leeward from her
-course, and the bearings of the boat were then abaft the beam. Julia
-picked up the glass, and with an easy hand directed it.
-
-"She is sailing as fast as we," she exclaimed.
-
-"No!" answered Hardy, in a rage.
-
-"Must they be left to perish?" she cried.
-
-It was an awful problem for fate to submit to a sailor's mind. The very
-thought of thirst, of famine, of suffering incarnate in the miserable
-figures of men in an open boat at sea makes faint the heart of the
-seaman, and sooner would he expire than not fly to help. But how stood
-this ghastly conundrum with Hardy? First, who were the men? They might
-be foreigners--Greeks, Italians, Portuguese, Spaniards. They had knives
-on their hips, and their hearts would redden with the spirit of murder
-when, being on board, they understood that the flag was the Red Flag
-of England, and that nothing stood between them and the ship and a
-fair-haired English girl, of incomparable figure, but one man, whose
-heart beat within the reach of their shortest blade! No! They must be
-helped but not received. And how was it to be done? And meanwhile grew
-this fear--if the wind slackened, if a calm fell, they would gain the
-ship with their oars. Hardy was without a revolver. Captain Layard
-had taken away his; how could he resist--how could one man resist the
-desperate clamber of eight men infuriate with thirst, famine, and
-deadlier passions yet if they were foreigners?
-
-He pondered deeply, grasping the wheel; the dog upon the grating
-watched the boat, a lustrous spot to the naked eye, and Julia gazed in
-silence at her sweetheart.
-
-"Come and hold the wheel," said he.
-
-Still in silence witnessing distress but resolution in his face, she
-seized the spokes, and he went to work to help that open boat. There
-were, as you know, two boats in the davits, and a gig, called the
-captain's gig, hung by davits over the stern. Rushing to the foremost
-boat, Hardy seized the empty breaker out of its bows and ran with it to
-the scuttle-butt, and, swiftly as he could, filled it. He then replaced
-the breaker in the boat's bows. He next sped down the companion-ladder,
-filled a tin basket with bottles of beer and two bottles of rum,
-returned on deck with this basket, and placed it in the boat. He then
-fetched some tinned food, a quantity of ship's biscuit and an uncooked
-ham, which would be good eating to starving men. They were eight, and
-he made calculations for a week's supply with care. He threw a pannikin
-into the boat. He breathed hard and fast, and his face was coloured
-with blood, and the sweat drained from his hair to his eyebrows; for he
-was mad to succour and mad to escape, and all the while he worked he
-never spoke a word to the girl.
-
-It would have been an impossible task but for the steady flow of the
-sea, and the gentle yielding of the ship to the caressing sway of
-the fold. But it fell out as it was, and Hardy did it whilst Julia
-steered, and the ship blew softly onwards, whilst the white spot abaft
-the beam, watched by the dog, gleamed like a meteor whose foam would
-be a little disc when near. He freed the boat of its gripes by his
-knife, a sharp blade, then, just as Layard had before him, he lowered
-the boat by easing away first the bow, then the after falls, until
-she was water-borne, when, with a sailor's activity, he passed his
-knife through the tackles, and the ropes fell into the boat. She was
-liberated! and whilst he filled his lungs, distressed in breath, so
-ardent and energetic had been his toil, the boat was astern, then in
-the ship's wake, and Julia could see her by looking over the taffrail.
-
-"They'll come up with it," said Hardy, going to the girl's side, "and
-their overhauling her will widen our distance."
-
-"It was the only way to feed them," Julia answered.
-
-"One way. Have they fresh water enough? Eight men! We may want that
-other breaker," said he with a side nod at the remaining quarter-boat.
-"They'll be fallen in with--perhaps before sundown."
-
-He picked up the glass and again scrutinised the boat. She leapt
-into the lens within a quarter of a mile. The man in the bows stood
-upright, but he was no longer flourishing his wift. They were heading
-almost into the ship's wake, and were certain to see the quarter-boat
-and understand what she meant. Along the rail the heads of the men
-were fixed like cannon-balls. Supposing they were Englishmen. What
-would they think? Hardy ground his teeth and twice beat the air with a
-clenched fist. But supposing they were Dagos. Supposing--he could not
-have acted otherwise. Life, love, and hope were the inspiration of his
-resolution, and I say he could not have acted otherwise.
-
-It was then, happily for him and his sweetheart, that the sea to
-windward darkened a little to a pleasant freshening of breeze. The
-breasts aloft swelled to the larger breath, but so scantily clothed was
-the _York_, it was absolutely certain that if the breeze scanted the
-boat would overhaul the ship, and once those eight men got alongside
-the rest might prove--Good night!
-
-Again Hardy looked at the boat through the telescope, and he cried out
-with the tubes at his eye:
-
-"It's all right, Julia; they're heading dead for the quarter-boat.
-Whether they understand or not, it's all right."
-
-He grasped the wheel and brought the ship to her course and this
-greased her heels somewhat, for the yards were trimmed for the course
-he was steering and the sails drew bravely. Julia kept the glass to her
-eye.
-
-"They have lowered their sail," she cried. "They are very near the
-boat."
-
-It was all blank to the naked eye, and Hardy searched in vain for that
-star whose rise might have proved the malignant star of death and
-dishonour to them both. Again the lovers shifted places. Julia held
-the wheel whilst Hardy directed the glass at the boat. He watched the
-minute manoeuvres. It was a little field of Lilliputians, but every
-figure was as clean cut in the lens as the pygmies to the downward
-gazing eyes of Gulliver. The two boats came and went behind and upon
-the summer swell of the sea, but not so as to baffle the marine vision.
-The naked mast rolled and the men showed plain. Thirst and famine
-were in their motions, and Hardy sighed and gasped as he watched.
-He saw the infuriate gesture that brought the bottle to the mouth,
-the impassioned posture as the cracked lips drained the pannikin. He
-witnessed avidity, coloured into horror by human need in the passage of
-the clenched biscuit or piece of meat to the mouth. It nearly broke his
-heart to leave them. If ever a man was inspired by the compassion, the
-instincts, and the loyalty of a sailor, it was Hardy. Yet he thanked
-God with all his heart that they had plenty, that the weather promised
-fair, that they had another and a good boat, and that in this highway
-of the sailing ship human help was certain if calamitous destiny were
-not first. Hardy's eyes were moist as the telescope slowly sank from
-his arm; for let them be Dagos, let them be Dutchmen, call those men by
-any name you will, they were shipwrecked sailors upon a lonely sea, and
-their appeal to the Red Flag of England would have been irresistible
-but for the helpless condition of the _York_. Julia saw emotion in
-her lover's face, and caressed him with her eyes as though she would
-soothe him with her love, and never did she honour him more, nor felt a
-fuller flow of dumb and inward gratitude to the Father of all for this
-lifelong gift of sympathy, help, and devotion.
-
-"We shall run them out of reach of the glass," said Hardy.
-
-"I can scarcely see them as it is," she answered.
-
-"What is their story?" he went on. "It will be told because they will
-be saved. Yonder is one of the teachings of the sea. You pass a piece
-of wreck; it is encrusted with the jewelry of the ocean; it is girdled
-by a silver belt of fish. To one man it is a piece of wreckage; to
-another man it is a memorial, lofty, sublime, and awful as a cathedral,
-of fire, of explosion, of the beam-ended fabric with lashed figures in
-the shrouds, sunk to the foam, and blackening it with emergence like
-the iron shape dangling at the finger of a gibbet upon a wintry moor
-that foams with snow."
-
-"Do all sailors talk in this language?" said Julia.
-
-"Any man who can make himself understood speaks well. I do not love
-irony."
-
-Julia smiled archly.
-
-"You do not love irony," she said. "Did you ever love another before
-you loved me?"
-
-"A man who uses the sea is shy amongst women," he answered. "We are
-accustomed when we see a green eye in thick weather winking off our
-port bow to sing these lines:
-
-
- "'There's not so much for you to do,
- For green to port keeps clear of you.'
-
-
-I was never yet in a collision--I mean ashore."
-
-This pleased her, and she said she would go and look to the galley fire
-if Hardy would kindly hold the wheel.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-HAIL, COLUMBIA!
-
-
-Luck was still to attend the ship's company of the _York_--luck in
-the shape of weather. The wind took two days to change its mood, then
-shifted off the port bow, where Hardy's metaphoric red eye was winking.
-
-The man, the dog, the watch-tackle, and the winch were equal to the
-sudden confrontment of air, which happened at daybreak when the man and
-the dog could see, and when the girl at the wheel could see.
-
-Of course sail was not trimmed as though the _York_ had been a frigate,
-as though you had fifty men for a rope, when the master-mariner
-considers himself lucky if he gets twenty-five men for a full-rigged
-ship. Trimming sail took time; but it was done. And the dog stuck like
-glue to the slack. No need to dwell upon the discipline; it was now
-as before, and likely to continue whilst health and strength endured.
-The sweethearts used the hen-coop alternately, and it yielded them all
-necessary refreshment of slumber; the dog kept a lookout whilst the
-girl steered, and still the ship's course was a crow's flight for the
-Chops, with some hurdles of parallels before her indeed; but her march
-though slow was conquering, and the lovers' spirits were as high as
-the dog-vane that shook its piece of bunting at the main-royal masthead.
-
-When Hardy had trimmed sail this morning he sat beside the girl to rest
-a little. The wind was to the westward of north, the sky that way was
-pale, but the sun to starboard burnt bright, and lofty ridges of cloud,
-very delicate, like the memory of the ripple on the sands of the coast,
-moved stealthily northwest, which signified sundry currents of air of
-no moment, if below all gushes the favouring breeze.
-
-"We'll breakfast in a few minutes," said Hardy. "I feel as if I have
-been swimming ten miles."
-
-"We are in luck, George," answered Julia.
-
-"What is the luck of the sailor?" said he. "I have heard of one
-lucky sailor. He went to a sale and bought a feather-bed. Jack in a
-feather-bed! He turned in and his starboard bunion was worried by
-something hard. He ripped the cover and found a bag containing one
-hundred and forty-two Queen Anne guineas. He started a public-house and
-died worth eight thousand pounds."
-
-"He was a sailor and deserved it," said Julia. "Why do sailors hate
-soldiers?"
-
-"The historian must answer that. There is a reason, and it is true. You
-see, my dear, a sailor will spend his last half-crown upon his girl,
-and a soldier will borrow the last half-crown from _his_ girl."
-
-"Do soldiers hate sailors?" asked Julia, laughing.
-
-"They only meet at sea," answered Hardy, "and the motion of a ship will
-neutralise prejudice in the man who can't stand it."
-
-In due course the galley fire was lighted, coffee was boiled, and the
-ship's company broke their fast. The breeze hung steady, the glass
-spoke hopefully, and Hardy found, after taking sights, that home was
-nearer by some hundred miles than it had been yesterday. It was nine
-o'clock on the evening of this day. The lights of heaven winked sparely
-through an atmosphere that nevertheless was unthickened by mist. The
-fresh wind of the noon had slackened much, and the sound of the fall of
-the sea off the bow was sloppy, as though the cook was emptying buckets
-of stuff over the side, and indeed the noise was in keeping with the
-sort of smoking, greasy face of the sea, which rolled in knolls of
-soft, black oil speedily out of sight, so general and closing was the
-dusk.
-
-Julia stood at the wheel, and the dog as usual was on the forecastle
-head keeping a lookout. The girl could distinctly hear her lover
-snoring in his hen-coop. The magic of the ear of love runs melody into
-the snore of the sweetheart; to the burdened marital organ the snore is
-not the voice of the heavenly chorister. Shakespeare wonders whether we
-dream in our sleep of death; Julia might have wondered if we snored.
-The binnacle lamp burnt brightly, so did the side-lights. The girl had
-been sleeping whilst Hardy steered, and now stood fresh and firm at the
-wheel, a very shadow of British girl, snug in the madman's cloak; but
-the faint stars knew that her figure was beautiful.
-
-Suddenly the dog began to bark; its deep note rolled aft in low
-thunder. Julia, with her heart slightly fluttering, strained her eyes
-to port and then to starboard, believing that the dog was reporting
-the side-light or white masthead light of a ship or steamer. But the
-dog continued to bark, and in the midst of it, before it awoke Hardy,
-before she could call to Hardy, a smell, an overpowering stench, fumes
-as overwhelming as any that could rise from the shallow tombs of
-thousands of plague-stricken wretches--this subduing and distracting
-presence was in the air.
-
-"George! George!" shrieked the girl. But she could not again speak,
-for the filth of the breeze compelled her right hand to her mouth and
-nostrils, and the brave heart steadied the spoke with her left hand
-only.
-
-In a minute Hardy was beside her. "Phew!" said he, and spat. This was
-his comment.
-
-The dog continued to bark. Its note had that quality of alarm which
-makes the sailors spring as for life or death to the affrighting shout
-of a single man upon the forecastle.
-
-"What in hell--" But it might have been the devil himself who stopped
-Hardy's mouth then, for even as he spoke the ship struck something
-soft, and slided away from it points off her course, so blubbery was
-the thing, proper for the "ways" of a launch.
-
-"It's up the spout this time," said Hardy. "Jump to the side, Julia;
-report what you see. There you go, to starboard--to windward, to
-windward!"
-
-He held the wheel, and the girl shrieked, "I can't see for the smell."
-
-"Hold your nose and skin your eyes, and tell me what you see."
-
-"A great deal of fire, and a black mass in the midst of it lined with
-foam, and oh, what a horrible smell!"
-
-She came staggering to her lover's side in revolt of sickened senses.
-
-"A dead whale," said Hardy, whose nose was not entirely fastidious.
-
-"Hold the wheel, dear," and he sprang to the quarter and saw the thing;
-that is, he saw the shadow, it loomed so that it might have been a
-little island. The fire of the sea played about it as the reflected
-lightning of the hidden storm winks and flashes in the soft indigo of
-the ocean recess. The sea caressed this floating dunghill with those
-same white, cruel fingers with which it casts the mutilated corpse
-ashore.
-
-"The air sweetens," said Hardy, returning to the wheel. "Go below for a
-nip of brandy, and bring me one, dear."
-
-And he brought the ship to her course. He did not greatly like the look
-of the weather. For perhaps an hour and a half he had been sleeping;
-this was a good "turn in" for a sailor-man who signs articles to work
-for the shipowner for twenty-four hours in the day, a brutal and
-inhuman tax upon suffering men, in no other walk of life to be heard
-of. Anyhow he could not leave the ship in Julia's charge with those
-dimly winking stars growing sparer yet, with increasing moisture on the
-wing of the wind like the early breath of a wet squall.
-
-"I don't expect the wind to shift," said he, "but it's bound to come on
-harder presently. Get you into that hen-coop and rest your limbs if not
-your brain. I expect I shall be wanting you before midnight."
-
-She obeyed him as though she had been a sailor or a dog, and dissolved
-into the black void of the hen-coop. You could not see the faintest
-glimmer of her face, nor the dimmest outline of her shape. The
-Newfoundland had come aft and berthed itself. The animal knew that
-when Hardy was at the wheel it was its watch below.
-
-Now the ship was under such small canvas that her cloths were not more
-than she could stand up with if it blew half a gale from abeam or abaft
-the beam. Those were the days of single topsails, and in all three
-topsails a single reef had been tied by the survivors of the crew in
-the heavy night before they left for the Frenchman. It would then come
-perhaps to a drag upon a staysail down-haul and to letting go the outer
-jib-halliards, leaving the unfurled sail to convulse itself into bulbs
-and bellies of canvas upon the jibboom. Certainly Hardy single-handed
-could not lay out upon the jibboom and furl a big jib: he did not mean
-to try.
-
-As he expected, the wind freshened, but without the shift of a quarter
-of a point. The ship raced nobly through the gloom: she blew white
-steam from the nostrils of her bows; the white water to leeward widened
-with her pace and flashed with the emerald and diamond of the sea glow
-into the long, the streaming, the joyous homeward-bound wake. There was
-no more dead leviathan in the air; it was full of the salt sweetness of
-Swinburne's rushing sea verse. But the stars were gone; there was no
-light upon the sea but the light of its foam. The ship was plunging,
-the seas raced her in black curls, and burst with a pallor of dawn from
-her side, and onward she swept, bowing and rolling to the music of the
-bagpipes in her rigging, controlled by a single hand--a fearless and a
-valiant hand--the hand of a British sailor.
-
-However, he made up his mind to "crack on" in a sort of way, and the
-meaning of "cracking on" at sea is the carrying in bad weather of more
-canvas than the judicious would approve. I have known an old skipper
-to furl his fore and mizzen-royal and stow his flying jib every second
-dog-watch in dead calm or catspaw. The ladies reckoned him a safe man,
-and he made the voyage from the Thames to Sydney Bay in four months.
-Hardy had the instincts of a mate, and was always for carrying on; but
-he had not much confidence in staysail and jib-sheets, and at half-past
-eleven, seven bells of the first watch, somewhat benumbed with his grip
-of the spokes, he resolved to shorten canvas, and shouted to his girl.
-She came out of the coop like a figure from a clock.
-
-"Is it a storm?" said she in his ear.
-
-"Let's thank God," he answered, "like the sailor in the song, that
-there are no chimney-pots in the air. I wonder if I can trust you with
-this wheel? It doesn't kick very much, and I sha'n't be long."
-
-"You don't want to turn in, then?"
-
-"Love ye, no," he answered. "Get a good hold of these spokes, and I'll
-stand by."
-
-He watched her, conceiving that if the ship was off her course now
-and again it would not signify a brass farthing. The wheel-chains are
-a good purchase upon the tiller, and Julia's arms were strong and
-determined with the labour she had been put to, whether ashore or at
-sea. Young women cannot pull ropes on board ship, or lift old ladies
-out of bed on dry land, without adding strength to the muscles of their
-arms and determination to the clutch of their fingers.
-
-Hardy stood close beside Julia ready for that kick of the helm which,
-whilst he had stood at the wheel, had on three or four occasions
-started him out of a mood of musing. Twice came the kick--the blow of
-the surge against the rudder, but the girl held on and the ship swept
-on, and with every freshening of the black roar aloft the words of the
-Yankee poet came into Hardy's head:
-
-
- "Then suddenly there burst a yell
- That would have shock'd and stagger'd hell."
-
-
-"You'll do," said Hardy.
-
-He called the dog and they went forward. There is no good in talking
-of jiggers, down-hauls, sheets, halliards, winches, and such things
-to landsmen. Enough, then, if it be said that by first letting go and
-then by hauling down, Hardy, helped by the dog and the jigger--which is
-another word for the watch-tackle--succeeded in easing the ship of two
-or three pinions of staysails and jib. The jigger manned the down-haul
-stoutly, and the dog stuck like glue to all slack he was asked to
-concern himself with. The sails were left to flap and slat and thunder.
-What could Hardy do? If the canvas went to pieces they must carry the
-ship home without it; if it held, there were the dog, the jigger, and
-the man to rehoist it. A mate's ear does not love the noise of slatting
-canvas, and Hardy as he stood in the bows guessed with something of
-helpless disgust that the jib-boom was buckling a bit. The foretopmast
-staysail and the inner jib were roaring like a thunder-storm, and
-a living gale swept out of the iron curve of the bolt-rope of the
-fore-course.
-
-It was white water often to the figure-head, the midnight magnificence
-and wrath of foam, the stormy bellowing of the recoiling and shattered
-sea. Heavenly Father! to think of this rushing, shadowy structure, this
-clipper fabric, whose stern was out of sight in darkness from the bows,
-controlled by a girl!
-
-Hardy ran aft to take the wheel, and the dutiful dog trotted beside
-him. How did that night pass? In simple alternations of coop and wheel.
-
-It was not to be a long night; the business of the half-gale did not
-begin until eight bells of the first watch, and it was nearly two
-bells before Hardy had made an end with his staysails and jib. It was
-not perhaps in those days so extremely necessary as it is in these
-to keep a bright lookout for ships' lights, simply because the steam
-vessel was comparatively few, and the sailing ship was not greatly
-accustomed to interpret her presence by the red and green wink. The
-flourish of the lamp hastily plucked out of the binnacle was deemed as
-good a flare as an empty flaming tar-barrel, and, indeed, it sometimes
-sufficed. Collision in the days of timber was not collision in the days
-of steel. Colliding ships ground away each other's channels amidst
-the benedictions of the forecastle and the poop, and the spluttering
-expostulations of crackling spars on high. Now 'tis touch and sink,
-so ingenious and preserving is the water-tight bulkhead, so grand
-in assurance of the salvation of precious life is the keel-up boat,
-secured beyond all release of knife or tool to the skid. Everything is
-riveted, and everything goes, and it takes half a dozen gunboats to
-sink a wooden wreck maliciously floating in the track of the supreme
-expression of the modern shipwright's art.
-
-The break of day found Hardy at the wheel. But he had slept since he
-was last heard of, and Julia had stood her trick, kick or no kick,
-whilst Sailor kept watch on the forecastle head. The wind had greatly
-fallen, the sea had greatly fallen, and the complexion of fine weather
-was in the dawn. With the rising of the sun the weather promised beauty
-and splendour: blue seas far as the eye could reach breaking in foam,
-masses of sailing cloud in the sky like vast puffs of vapour from the
-funnel of a locomotive; and right astern, a film of pearl in the windy
-blue, hung a sail.
-
-It was not seen for some time by Hardy, nor by the dog that slumbered
-in its kennel; but when Julia came out of her coop to the summons of
-the sun, she instantly saw the sail and called and pointed; and whilst
-she held the wheel the dog sprang on to the taffrail and barked, and
-Hardy fetched the glass.
-
-A cloud of canvas coming up astern hand over hand. Topsails,
-topgallantsails, royals, and skysails; the wind fresh off the beam; a
-topgallant-stunsail yearning from its boom end: the beautiful vision, a
-leaning light with the blue sea in foam betwixt it and the _York_, and
-beyond, the immeasurable heavens sloping past the working rim of the
-deep.
-
-"A Yankee," said Hardy, putting down the glass. "Skysails--why not
-moonsails, and angels' footstools? D'ye know that you can sometimes
-stop a ship by cracking on? I've hove the log and found her doing ten:
-thought to get more out of her; set royals and topmast-stunsails: hove
-the log and found her doing nine. Why? Because a ship isn't built to
-sail on her side."
-
-The galley fire was lighted; coffee was boiled; the sun shone brightly,
-and the ship astern was coming up fast. Whilst Julia held the wheel,
-Hardy mastheaded the red flag of our country at the gaff end, and there
-it streamed, meteoric, as in the song.
-
-"It is like being in the Docks to see it," cried Julia.
-
-"It is like feeling that there are no bally Dutchmen in the world!"
-answered Hardy.
-
-They breakfasted in a manner afore-described, and often watched the
-ship astern. She was a black spot under a white cloud.
-
-"Undoubtedly a Yankee," said Hardy, with his mouth full of white
-biscuit. "She'll wonder at us, and what will she do?"
-
-"They must not help us," said Julia.
-
-"Fancy her sailors sparkling with the jewels in the safe, fancy her
-skipper and mates singing out orders with heavy gold chains round
-their necks, and diamond earrings in their Yankee lobes! I do love the
-Yankee captain; he stands at the break of the poop and watches his mate
-kicking a man's brains out of his skull, and he yells out, 'Heave him
-over the side whilst he's breathing.' It is all sweetness and light
-aboard the Yankeeman. Some of these days the great Republic will awaken
-to recognition of the claims of her merchant sailors. The immortal Dana
-did his best, which was noble and lasting. But oh, the crimes, the
-cruelties, the murders which make the Yankee ship of trade a bitterer
-hell for men than the hell of the monk's invention!"
-
-But a stern chase is a long chase, albeit you are under single-reef
-topsails and fore-course only, whilst t'other heaps your wake with
-skysails and stunsails. It was half-past nine before the ship astern
-was on the _York's_ quarter; a black barque with an almost straight
-stem, taking the seas under her swelling heights with the springs and
-leaps of a deer chased by the hound.
-
-Her colour, if it flew, was invisible as yet, but her nationality was
-as certain as a goatee. Jonathan was at the helm and Jonathan was at
-the prow, and Hardy easily guessed that the condition of the _York_
-flying the flag of a rich relation was puzzling the intelligence of the
-gentleman whose legs are represented as clothed with the bunting of
-Stripes and Stars. Yes, Jonathan was puzzled, and like Paul Pry meant
-to intrude, whilst hoping that he didn't.
-
-On a sudden she clewed up skysails, royals, and topgallantsails,
-boom-ended her studdingsails, and came surging with little more than
-the speed of the _York_ on to the clipper's quarter within easy hail.
-A man stood on the rail holding on by the mizzen-rigging. No flag
-flew at the gaff end, but the word Yankee was writ in letters as big
-as the barque herself. The figure grasped an old-fashioned weapon for
-the conveyance of sound--a speaking-trumpet; he put it to his lips,
-and whilst a small crowd of men on the barque's forecastle, attired
-in dungaree and vary-coloured headgear, gazed at the _York_ with the
-steadfast stare of sheep at a barking dog in a field, the man with the
-trumpet delivered his mind thus:
-
-"Ho, the ship ahoy! What ship are you?"
-
-Hardy, with one hand to his mouth, Julia meanwhile steering, roared
-back:
-
-"The _York_, of London; bound to London."
-
-This was all he said. He did not inquire the barque's name; it
-was no business of his to know it. But she was forging ahead, and
-the name under the counter in long white letters grew visible:
-_Columbia_--Boston.
-
-"Where's your crew?" shouted the man with the trumpet.
-
-"On deck," was the answer.
-
-A man standing by the figure on the rail took the speaking-trumpet and
-replaced it by a telescope, which the figure levelled at Julia.
-
-"He's admiring you," said Hardy.
-
-"I dare say the crew on that forecastle are laughing," she exclaimed.
-
-"Sailors are too well fed to laugh easily," replied Hardy. "Oily men,
-fat men, rich men, seldom laugh."
-
-All between the two speeding vessels was the rush of the white surge,
-and the ships seemed to salute each other like acquaintances as they
-bowed in stately rolls and sang the song of the shrouds one to the
-other, for it is all singing at sea--singing or singing out.
-
-Suddenly when the barque had drawn on to the weather-bow of the _York_
-she was luffed up into the wind, and the weather-half of her loftier
-canvas was aback.
-
-"They mean to visit us," said Hardy.
-
-"Not to stay, I hope," said Julia, anxiously.
-
-In a few moments some figures broke from the barque's forecastle crowd
-and ran aft, and a white boat of a whaling pattern, sharpened stem and
-stern, sank from its davits with six men in her, and the man who had
-given the telescope to the figure on the rail steered the boat.
-
-Hardy put his helm down and shook the wind out of his small canvas, and
-presently the boat was hooked on alongside, and an American sailor--a
-chief mate--clambered over the rail on to the deck of the _York_.
-
-It is bad taste to imitate accents, or oddities of phrase, or nasal
-deliverances. This Yankee mate then shall speak as our first cousin
-does.
-
-"Do you mean to say," said he, touching his cap as he approached Hardy
-and Julia, "that you and this lady"--he bowed to her--"are your ship's
-company?"
-
-"No," answered Hardy. "We have that dog: he is worth ten foreigners,
-and we have a watch-tackle and a winch."
-
-"And you are carrying this ship to London alone?"
-
-"Ay."
-
-The Yankee mate looked a little stupefied, glanced along the deck, then
-up at the Red Ensign, then at the girl who stood beneath it.
-
-"Where are you from?" he asked.
-
-"See here," said Hardy; "I intend to spin my own yarn when I get
-ashore, and I do not mean that it shall either be diminished or
-exaggerated by report. This lady and I propose to carry this ship home
-alone, and that flag flies in vain if we fail."
-
-"Well, I am surprised," said the mate of the barque. "It must be very
-uncomfortable. Your outer jib is slatting, and your staysails want
-stowing. Can we help you?"
-
-"I am very much obliged," replied Hardy, "but before you call your men
-aboard this lady will kindly bring from the cabin a bottle of grog and
-glasses, that we may drink to the good voyage of the _Columbia_ and to
-the increasing greatness of your magnificent country."
-
-"I am willing," answered the mate, and as Julia disappeared he
-exclaimed, "Is she your wife, sir?"
-
-"No; she is my sweetheart; she is the daughter of a retired commander
-in our Royal Navy, and if God suffers us to reach home she will be my
-wife."
-
-"She is a very fine young woman," said the mate.
-
-"She has a splendid spirit," answered Hardy, "and she is a very fine
-young woman as you say."
-
-Julia knew the ways of the under-stewardess, and was quickly on deck
-again with a tray of glasses, cold water, and a bottle of brandy. She
-mixed the spirits, each man saying "when," and took a little drop
-herself, just enough to be sincere with in her good wishes. The Yankee
-mate did not seem to greatly trouble himself that the figure on the
-barque--undoubtedly the skipper--should keep the telescope bearing upon
-them. With one hand on the spoke Hardy, with the other hand, held aloft
-the glass of grog, and said:
-
-"Here's to your beautiful barque, and to the noble country from which
-she hails!"
-
-He drank and so did Julia, and the mate before drinking said:
-
-"Here's to the Red Flag of Old England, and to the fine girls who steer
-ships under it!"
-
-Julia laughed merrily, and thought the mate better looking now than she
-had at first believed. He was a little sallow, a little long-faced, and
-on the whole what the Americans call slab-sided; but he had the eyes
-of an honest man and the looks of a good sailor, and if his name were
-inscribed on the dome of St. Paul's nothing better could be said of it.
-
-"My captain will be getting impatient," said the mate. "He'll wonder
-that you don't take assistance."
-
-"If your men will hoist that canvas for me," answered Hardy, "I shall
-ask no more help."
-
-"What a beautiful dog is that!" said the Yankee mate, hanging in the
-wind, so much did he relish this novel rencounter and brief association
-in mid-Atlantic with a young lady of incomparable figure. "I would be
-the happiest man in America if I owned that dog."
-
-"All America would not purchase him," answered Hardy; "his name
-is Sailor, and he has the spirit of Nelson. He helps me and the
-watch-tackle to brace up, keeps a lookout like a madman in search of
-the philosopher's stone, never gets drunk, and always says his prayers
-before he turns in. Will you have another drop of brandy?"
-
-"No more, sir, I thank you."
-
-Saying which the mate went to the side and hailed the boat. Hardy kept
-the _York_ in the wind and the barque was already in the wind, and
-neither vessel therefore had any way to speak of. The boat, well fended
-off, slobbered alongside, chucked and dived, spat and hissed like a
-kitten sporting with its mother. To the cry of the mate four men sprang
-into the chains, and were on deck with the activity of Britons boarding
-a Frenchman. Fine-looking fellows they were, three of them Englishmen
-who had been forced by Great Britain's love of foreign labour to earn
-their bread under the Stripes and Stars. They stared about them with
-sheepish grins because a woman was hard by. Had the girl been a British
-skipper their smileless faces would have grown as long as wet hammocks.
-
-"Fill a drink for them, Julia," said Hardy.
-
-Another glass was fetched, four glasses brimmed, and with a "Well,
-here's luck, sir," down went the doses through throats to which the
-aroma of cognac was as strange a bliss as heaven to a newly arrived
-soul.
-
-"Shall we make more sail for you?" said the mate.
-
-"Not a cloth, thank ye," answered Hardy at the wheel.
-
-So the mate and the men went forward and hoisted the outer jib and
-scientifically belayed the sheet, then lay aft, and did likewise with
-the staysails, hauled taut the braces, and generally made things
-snugger than they had found them. The dog went with them and watched
-their conduct with admiration.
-
-"Well," said the mate, approaching Hardy with an outstretched hand, "we
-have done all you wish us to do, and I am sorry you won't let us do
-more. We will report you."
-
-"I hope you won't," answered Hardy; "the owners will send out a tug in
-search of us, and then it's good night to my salvage."
-
-"I twig," responded the mate, with a grave smile. "Yes, it shall be
-made apparent to the Old Man," meaning his captain, for at sea the
-captain would be called Old Man by the sailors if he were a beardless
-youth of twenty-two.
-
-He shook hands with Hardy, and their grasp was cordial. He shook hands
-with Julia, and admired her and praised her with a look. Then the five
-tumbled over the side like rats from a sinking ship, gained the boat,
-and went away with a smoking stem to the barque. Julia stepped to the
-rail to watch, and when the men saw her they cheered; three times they
-cheered, and the mate in the stern-sheets lifted his cap and cheered
-whilst Julia flourished her hand. There is much good-fellowship at
-sea, and English-speaking sailors are as brothers when they meet.
-
-"Those men do not look as though they were starved and kicked," said
-Julia, returning to Hardy.
-
-"If every ship kicked and starved her sailors there would be no ships
-afloat," replied Hardy. "All the same, there is much starvation and
-kicking at sea."
-
-"How beautiful that ship looks!" said Julia; "I never saw a vessel's
-canvas shine so brightly. How delicate are the shadows at the edges! A
-sailing ship owes its life to the wind, and all the spirit of the sea
-is in her. Steamers are full of coals and ashes, they blacken the air
-with disgusting smoke, their life is compulsion, they are driven by a
-wheel or a screw. The sailing ship floats on wings like the sea-bird."
-
-"All is compulsion," exclaimed Hardy, watching the keen-ended boat as
-she foamed sweeping with a lightning flash of wet oars to the sun, to
-the mother she belonged to; "compulsion hurled the universe into being,
-and everything is driven by it. I do not like to be compelled to be
-born or to die. I do not like to be compelled to carry a hump or to
-grow bald or hideous with age. But I am compelled into these enormities
-and there's no getting away from it. You must hold this wheel whilst I
-dip our flag when they get their boat to the tackles."
-
-This did not take long to happen. The sweethearts watched the white
-boat rising out of the water, and when the little fabric was hanging at
-its davits the American flag soared heavenward, streaming to the gaff
-end.
-
-"Hold the wheel," said Hardy, and Julia grasped the spokes.
-
-He sprang to the signal-halliards and lowered the flag, just as you
-pull off your hat when you say good-bye. The American colour sank in
-graceful beauty and soared again, and again sank the Red Ensign to be
-again gaff-ended, and thrice did these two vessels salute each other
-and then belayed their halliards, leaving their banners flying.
-
-A faint cheer came from the American vessel, and Hardy sprang into
-the mizzen-rigging and flourished his cap. Then the Yankee fell off
-and filled a rap-full; her wake throbbed in pulses of foam under her
-counter, fountain-bursts of sparkling stars of brine flashed off her
-bows, every stitch of canvas was mastheaded, and away she went with
-yearning stunsail, a leaning vision of transcendent beauty--a spirit
-now, for she hath long since departed from the waters which she walked,
-and remains but a memory to the old.
-
-Hardy went to the wheel, put his helm a little up, and the _York_
-started again for home under steady curves of canvas.
-
-For two days after this the ship's company of three had their hands
-full. It came on to blow a strong breeze right ahead: they managed
-to brace up, and went staggering away to the west and north. It was
-impossible for so slender a company to put the ship about; neither
-could Hardy wear her, for who was to square and then brace round the
-yards to the hard-over helm? Every wind then must be a fair wind for
-that ship; she must splutter through it as best she could, and all that
-the two brave hearts could pray for was that it should never blow so
-hard as to dismast them or burst the canvas into rags.
-
-Julia was now a practised as well as a fearless helmswoman, and
-Hardy was able to get the sleep he needed; she too enjoyed plenty of
-intervals. In those two days it did not blow fiercer than a two-reef
-breeze, and Hardy eased the ship by keeping her a little away. For it
-mattered nothing to him or Julia if the passage home extended into
-months so long as they got home at last.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-THE CAMILLA OF THE SEA
-
-
-Within ten weeks of the date of the sailing of the clipper ship _York_
-from the River Thames the vessel was about two hundred miles to the
-westward of the coast of Portugal. It was a leaden day. The ocean was
-breathing deeply after a long conflict with the gale. The swell ran in
-sullen masses, lifting with the lazy sickness of oil, but the breeze
-was light and scarcely creased the moving knolls, and the shadow of
-cloud hung like tapestry in a darkened chamber, low down in ragged
-skirts upon the winding line of the sea.
-
-The ship looked wrecked aloft. All her spars were standing indeed, but
-her mizzentopsail hung in rags, and the bolt ropes made a skeleton of
-the fabric aft. The foresail was split in halves, and with each weary
-roll gaped like a cut in an india-rubber ball when pressed. Rags of the
-outer jib fluttered from lacing or hanks. The maintopgallantsail had
-been blown loose and had gone to pieces, and was shaking from the yard
-in lengths like Irish pennants in the rigging. The ship was rolling
-drearily, and the channels would often slap white thunder out of the
-sulky brow of the swell, and she groaned greatly throughout her length
-and made some dim sound of lamentation aloft.
-
-Hardy stood alone at the wheel. He was fresh from a long and desperate
-fight with the sea, and you read the character of the struggle in his
-face. His beard was a week old: in the hollows under his eyes lay a
-little whiteness, the encrustation of salt; this gave him the ghastly
-look of the life-boat man who steps ashore after standing two nights
-and a day by a stranded ship with frozen figures in her shrouds. His
-hair was a little long, and this gave a something of wildness to his
-aspect. His looks were haggard, his eyes wanting in their usual lustre,
-his lips were pale; he looked worn. For ten days he and Julia had been
-fighting a gale of wind. In ten days they had managed to obtain but two
-or three hours sleep in a day of twenty-four hours. But happily for
-them it never blew so hard but that they could keep their course shaped
-for the English Channel. It never blew so hard that a ship well manned
-would have needed to heave to. It came in roaring weight upon the
-quarter, and one midnight the mizzentopsail burst in a blast of cannon,
-and shortly after the maintopgallantsail was blown into shreds out of
-the gaskets, and next morning, in the screaming fury of a bleaching
-squall, the outer jib flew into pennons from the stay, and the veil
-of the fore-course was rent asunder. But the reefed maintopsail, the
-foretopmast-staysail, and the inner jib were as faithful to their duty
-as Tom Bowline in the song, and the ship rushed on in foam to the
-figurehead, whitening acres of the sea abaft her, passing a brig hove
-to in the haze; passed by a ship that would not stay to speak; passed
-by a Fruiter schooner from the Western Islands, whose spring over the
-surge was the glance of the albatross, whose envanishment in the haze
-ahead, into which the _York_ was for ever rushing, was the extinction
-of a meteor in a cloud.
-
-And now the gale was gone the sea would shortly smooth its panting
-breast; it was the early forenoon. Hardy called the dog, but he did not
-exert the powerful voice that was familiar to Julia.
-
-The Newfoundland came out of its kennel and looked up in affectionate
-expectation at the sailor.
-
-"Go below and bring her up!" said Hardy, pointing, and the dog
-perfectly understanding disappeared down the companionway.
-
-His hands were almost raw with grasping the spokes. His arms were
-almost lifeless with their long resistance to the mulish tug of the
-wheel-chains in response to the kick of the rudder. His feet ached with
-standing, knots seemed to have been tied in the muscles of his legs;
-but in the gauntness of his looks was visible the spirit of a noble
-heart, and there was no better or more fearless sailor in the world
-than that grim, unshorn figure that stood alone at the helm of that
-reeling ship.
-
-You will think it strange that a man, a woman, and a dog should have
-brought a big, full-rigged ship in safety down to the present hour
-through some thunderous Atlantic parallels. Yet this ship's adventure
-is not so strange to me as the mysterious good fortune of the
-ocean-tramp of to-day that washes through the Bay of Biscay without her
-funnel, and quietly discharges her cargo without any one feeling one
-penny the worse. Take, for instance, the second mate of an ocean-tramp.
-He walks the bridge; there are three foreign seamen in his watch, one
-of whom steers the ship, whilst the other two paint her. By secret
-compulsion, well understood by the owner and the captain of the ship,
-the second mate quits the bridge and helps the two sailors to paint
-the ship. Who looks after the ship whilst the person in charge of her
-paints? The ship herself.
-
-Or the same second mate may be on the bridge in the first watch; the
-foreign sailor at the wheel has been labouring almost continuously at
-deck-work through the greater portion of the day. The second mate for
-convenience has set the ship's course by a star. Suddenly he finds
-the star sliding slowly abeam. He rushes to the wheel and beholds the
-helmsman standing erect, and asleep. The second mate shakes the fellow
-furiously, and shouts, "Hard a-starboard!" and the sleepy foreigner,
-who scarcely understands the commands of the helm in English, tries to
-port by every spoke until he is stopped by the second mate's boot.
-
-Is not the voyage of our every-day ocean-tramp more wonderful in the
-unrevealed conditions of the life of the staggering tank than this
-story of a full-rigged ship worked by an English seaman, an English
-girl, a Newfoundland dog, a watch-tackle, and a winch? I served for
-eight years at sea as a sailor, and I venture to say that the tramp is
-far more wonderful than this ship.
-
-Sailor knew his business, and in a few minutes Julia arrived on deck.
-She looked ill and worn. Her straw hat was beginning to show like the
-end of a long voyage; her dress would have made an ill figure of her in
-Piccadilly. But you saw all that was necessary of spirit and resolution
-in her eyes.
-
-"Julia," said Hardy, "the pumps suck with me. I feel worn out. I can't
-stand at this wheel any longer, and there would be no good in your
-attempting to hold it. I'll secure the helm, and the ship must take her
-chance. It'll be a dead calm before long, and we have come to a moment
-when a great deal must be left to fortune. Look yonder!"
-
-He pointed on the quarter where streaks of fine weather were expanding
-and lifting, lines and spaces of silver blue irradiating the ragged
-gloom of the firmament which was moving ponderously and slowly
-northwest.
-
-"You will find it cold," continued Hardy. "Go and wrap yourself up in
-the captain's cloak whilst I secure the wheel."
-
-Before he had secured the helm the girl returned apparelled as
-commanded, for to her his word was law. He then sank down in a chair
-near the wheel with his chin upon his breast, and the girl went forward
-to boil a kettle of water.
-
-She remained forward until some hot coffee was ready, and when she came
-aft with it she found her sweetheart sound asleep. It is not love that
-disturbs the sleeping sailor. It is love that watches and shields the
-repose of love, as the guardian angel the slumber of the baby. Julia
-looked at Hardy. How gaunt and hollow! How grim and bristly with the
-week's growth! Yet how peaceful in sleep, how manly in look, how dear
-to her; oh, how dear to her by loyal devotion, by beautiful honour, by
-self-respect, by his fear and his love of God!
-
-She sat on the deck beside him and drank a little coffee, and the dog
-lay at her feet. The helm was paralysed by the rope which secured the
-wheel, and the ship was slowly knocked by the head into the hollow of
-the swell; the topsail was aback, and the ship lay rolling quietly on
-the quieting folds with streamers of canvas swaying from the yard and
-from the stay.
-
-Julia continued to sit by her sleeping lover's side for more than half
-an hour, leaving him once only to see to the galley fire. When again
-she arose to attend to the fire the dog stood up and shook himself
-and sprang upon the taffrail to take a look around, and before Julia
-had stepped ten paces the noble animal was sounding in deep tones his
-report of a ship in sight.
-
-The noise awoke Hardy, who started and stood up, and Julia stayed where
-she was to look at the sea.
-
-Nearly right abeam, in the midst of the lifting bright weather
-whose suffusion of radiance was over the mastheads, was visible the
-feathering of a steamer's smoke.
-
-"It is something coming our way," said Hardy to Julia, and he took the
-glass, and pointed it.
-
-His hands trembled, and he steadied the tubes by grasping the vang of
-the gaff with them. After a long look--Julia was at his side--he said:
-
-"She rises fast. By her square yards I take her to be a man-of-war. If
-she is British she will be the help I have sometimes prayed for."
-
-He put down the glass, bent on the Red Ensign Jack down, and ran it
-aloft.
-
-"I will get you some hot coffee," said Julia. "Do you feel rested a
-little?"
-
-"I am good for an eight hours' spell," he replied, but he did not look
-so.
-
-She went forward, and he watched the approaching steamer, and the
-dog watched her also. When the girl returned with a pannikin of hot
-coffee Hardy had more news to give her. He first drank, then lighted a
-pipe, and he told her that the ship abeam, whose paddle-wheels had by
-this time slapped her hull into clear view, was undoubtedly a British
-man-of-war, and to judge by her course she was either from the Cape de
-Verde or direct from Rio, or some port on the eastern coast of South
-America.
-
-"How do you know she is British?" asked Julia.
-
-"By every token of yards squared by lifts and braces, by white bunt,
-and something white at the gaff end."
-
-"Can you distinguish her flag?"
-
-"It is a speck of light, but I know what it means."
-
-"Will you accept help from her?" inquired Julia.
-
-"Of course I will," he answered. "The Admiralty do not claim salvage,
-or they so hedge about the claim as to make the claimant's case
-prohibitory."
-
-"How will she help us?" said the girl.
-
-"Either by towing or sending men. But I doubt if she will tow,"
-answered Hardy. "She may not have enough coal. She may be in a hurry to
-get home. The sailor is always in a hurry--God help him--and often when
-he gets home he finds the canary dead in the cage."
-
-"We have no canary to greet us with its corpse," said Julia.
-
-She picked up the glass, and inspected the approaching vessel. And so
-the time was whiled away until the steamer was close on the _York's_
-quarter, her paddle-wheels ceased to revolve, and now all about her
-could easily be understood without the glass.
-
-She was one of that class of naval steamers which still survive (in
-aspect at least), at the date of the composition of this story, in
-the Royal Yacht, familiar in the Solent. She had a square stern,
-embellished with gilded mouldings and sparkling with windows. She had
-yellow paddle-boxes, a tall black hull with a few square gunports of
-a side. She was a barque, though they tried to make her look like a
-ship by fixing square yards without canvas on her mizzenmast and fidded
-topmast, which was a brigantine's mainmast with its crosstrees. For a
-full-rigged ship must have fidded topmast and fidded topgallantmast and
-royalmast, and if she has not these you may call her what you like but
-she is not a ship.
-
-The steamer was H.M.S. _Magicienne_, bound from Rio to Devonport,
-having halted at the Cape de Verde for coal. She was full of men, as
-the Navy ship usually is. Here and there she was spotted by the red
-coat of a marine. She sparkled to the risen fine weather, and the sea
-was now blue to both the ships, though northwest it breathed in leaden
-shadow. She dipped her visible wheel in foam. The colour of her country
-trembled in handkerchief-size at her gaff end, and her pennon streamed
-in a line of silk. An officer stood upon the paddle-box and hailed the
-_York_. Hardy thought he could answer, and tried to do so, but found
-that his voice would not carry. Indeed he had been overburdened, and
-every function was bowed and humped.
-
-To make himself understood he shook his head and pointed to his mouth,
-and flew the signal of "No voice" by pantomime. The trill of a whistle
-could be heard. In a few moments--moments are minutes, minutes are
-hours on board the ship of war with hundreds of a crew, as compared
-with the moments, minutes, and hours aboard a ship of trade with
-thirty of a crew--a boat-full of men with something glittering in the
-stern-sheets sank to the water at the steamer's side, and, as though
-but one oar was wielded at either gunwale, the boat came with flashful
-iteration of feathered blade, a pulse of sparkling locomotion each side
-of her, and the something that glittered astern beside the coxswain
-enlarged swiftly into the proportions of a midshipman twenty years old.
-
-He gained the deck with the scrambling bounds of a kangaroo as he
-sprang from the rail saluting the ship with some convulsion of thumb
-near the bottom button of his waistcoat. His freckled face was well
-bred; his looks had the ardency of the youthful British sailor. You
-felt that here was a young man, perhaps an honourable, perhaps a lord,
-who at the call of duty would do his "bit," and do it well.
-
-He stared hard at the girl whilst he walked slap up to Hardy.
-
-"What's the matter with this ship?" said he, and his accost made Hardy
-feel as though he were a north-country Geordie skipper with an auld
-wife in the companion-hatch darning his stockings.
-
-"I am stumpended with work," said Hardy, "and must sit, or I shall
-fall." And he sat down.
-
-"You look like the end of a long voyage," said the midshipman.
-
-"And you look as if the roast beef of Old England smokes in the
-gunroom," answered Hardy.
-
-"So help me God, then," cried the midshipman with heat, "nothing has
-fed us since Rio but salt horse. Where's your crew?" and he looked at
-the girl without greatly admiring her, for Julia was very draggled and
-broken about the hat, and dejected about the hair and white and worn,
-and she knew she was all this with a girl's distress.
-
-"The crew are before you," replied Hardy, languidly pointing at the dog.
-
-"What do you want?" said the midshipman, directing his eyes aloft.
-
-"The help of the nation represented by your ship of state," answered
-Hardy.
-
-The midshipman, who was a gentleman, perceived that the grim, unshorn,
-labour-wearied man on the chair was a gentleman, whatever might be his
-rating aboard a merchantman, and his manner changed.
-
-"You are in a very odd situation," said he. "What a magnificent dog!
-What is your story, that I may return and report it to the captain?"
-
-It took Hardy ten minutes to relate the ship's adventure, and the
-midshipman listened to it with parted lips, just as his face would
-overhang a thrilling novel which is true with all those touches that
-make the world akin.
-
-"Well," said he when Hardy had finished, "I always thought going into
-the Navy was going to sea, but that's the real flag of adventure," he
-added, with a glance at the inverted ensign. "You want help and deserve
-it, and I'll go to the ship, and report."
-
-He touched his cap with a look of pitying admiration at Julia. It was
-not the admiration of a man for a pretty face, but for the heart of a
-lioness.
-
-The boat left the _York_ and Hardy continued to sit, and Julia stood
-beside him. It was fine weather above the fore-royal truck, and the
-gloom was thinning in the northwest. Where the brightness had broken
-the sea was darkening its blue; a breeze was coming up that way, and it
-would prove a homeward bound breeze to the _York_, with a sparkling sun
-to dry her and to cheer her.
-
-"I do not think that midshipman greatly respects the Merchant Service,"
-said Julia.
-
-"Midshipmen occasionally condescend to us," answered Hardy, "but the
-majority of naval officers have good sense, and wherever there is good
-sense our flag is respected, because the naval officer has read history
-and sometimes contributes to it."
-
-The girl looked at the steamer and the boat that was foaming to her to
-its dazzling line of oars.
-
-"It is a fine service!" said Hardy, taking the steamer in from
-streaming pennon to the dip of the red-tongued wheel. "I might just as
-easily have been there as here. One is the butterfly rich with the wing
-of the peacock tail; the other is the plain white butterfly"--he looked
-afloat--"that blows like a piece of paper about the summer garden. But
-deprive them of their wings and you'll find their bodies very much
-alike."
-
-"What are they going to do?" said Julia.
-
-"We shall soon find out," answered Hardy. "British men-of-war are not
-accustomed to keep people long waiting to find out."
-
-Though the ships lay at a fair seaworthy distance from each other, men
-and matters were visible to the naked eye aboard either.
-
-Hardy saw the midshipman conversing with the commander on the bridge.
-He did not choose to level a glass, it might be deemed impertinent,
-but he saw the commander lift a binocular to his eyes in evident
-wonder; certainly the gallant officer had never heard a stranger story
-of the sea. Officialism could not neutralise curiosity, and the man,
-the girl, and the dog being within easy reach of the sight helped by
-the magnifying lens, the commander watched whilst the midshipman talked.
-
-What was to happen was to be speedily understood. The pipe shrilled and
-trilled, kits and hammocks were flung into the cutter, and in a few
-minutes the large boat containing twenty-one men and a warrant officer
-came alongside. Twelve men climbed out of her into the ship, first
-throwing up to a few who had preceded them their sea wardrobes and
-bedding. They were followed by the warrant officer--the man-o'-war's
-boatswain. His ruddy face flamed betwixt two red whiskers; his small,
-sharp blue eyes shot a bayonet glance in twenty directions in two
-seconds. He and his men had come to stay, and the cutter laboured to
-her sea mother to the stroke of five oars controlled by a helmsman.
-
-"I'm the bo'sun of her Majesty's ship _Magicienne_," said the flaming
-seaman, coming up to Hardy with a salute. "My orders are to help you to
-carry this ship home."
-
-"It is very good of your captain," said Hardy, deeply moved, and
-smiling with an expression that accentuated the weariness of his soul,
-and that also emphasised the manly nature of his character, which
-instantly won the recognition of the boatswain because he was a sailor
-in the presence of a sailor.
-
-"Do I understand your discipline? I give my orders through you. Your
-men would not accept my command."
-
-"Quite right, sir," answered the boatswain, cheerfully, "and if you
-will turn me to at once I will turn them men to immediately after. But
-I beg you won't overtire yourself, sir. And the lady has helped you!
-And that's a beautiful dog of yourn. A small ship's company, sir; and,
-begging your pardon, you and the lady both look as if a good night's
-rest would do you good."
-
-"What is your name?" said Hardy.
-
-"Harper, sir."
-
-"Mr. Harper, will you kindly see that the men make themselves
-comfortable in the forecastle? You will then bend fresh sails and make
-all sail. I will show you where everything you want is to be found."
-
-He sat as he spoke, and the boatswain, touching his cap, went amongst
-his men and executed Hardy's orders.
-
-The two lovers watched the steamer. A man-o'-war, even when she carries
-paddle-boxes, is always a gracious object. Yonder ship's rails were
-embellished with a snow-white line of hammocks, and snow-white lines of
-furled canvas brightened the yards with a gleaming streak of sunshine.
-The full philosophy of spit and polish was to be found in that steamer.
-It spoke in the flash of brass; it lurked in the gleam of glass; it was
-visible in many colours in paint work. Every rope was hauled taut; the
-yards were unerringly square. The boat rose without a song, the wheels
-revolved, the foam of a harpooned whale fell in dazzling masses from
-under the sponsons, and the splendour of the yeast under the square
-counter flamed like the rising day-star in the windows of the stern.
-
-Hardy staggered to the signal halliards; his motions were seen--he
-could not salute with the distress signal. With somewhat shaking hands,
-therefore, he unbent and rebent the Red Ensign and hoisted it and
-dipped, and the courtesy found its response in the graceful sinking and
-heavenward soaring of the White Flag of our country.
-
-Before the sailors came out of the forecastle, the queen's ship was
-on a line with the _York's_ port cathead, merrily slapping her way to
-England.
-
-Mr. Harper came aft. His salute was respectful, his manner sympathetic.
-
-"If you will tell me where the spare sails are kept, sir, I will see to
-everything, that you and the lady may go below and take the rest you
-stand in need of."
-
-Hardy told him all that was necessary, thanking him also, whilst Julia
-looked at the fifteen men that were gathered forward and admired their
-well-fed appearance, trim attire, manly shapes, and the whiskers of
-those who wore them. The discipline of a ship of state was in their
-postures, different from the longshore, lounging attitude of Jack Muck
-when waiting, and yet some of the best of those men had been Jack Mucks
-in their day; one had even been mate of a ship, and the look he sent
-aloft was charged with recognition of familiar conditions.
-
-"Well, Mr. Harper," said Hardy, "I will leave the ship to you. There
-are plenty of provisions and there is plenty of fresh water, and there
-is rum for you to serve out as you think proper."
-
-Saying this, he took Julia by the arm, conducted her to the companion,
-and followed her into the cabin.
-
-And now occurred another extraordinary incident in this ship's
-adventure. It had indeed once occurred visibly before, but it will not
-be credited in this age of the religious novel. When Hardy was in the
-cabin he put his cap upon the table, and going to a cushioned locker
-knelt beside it. Julia immediately approached him and likewise knelt,
-shoulders touching. When they had thanked God--and it was meet that
-they should thank him for their very merciful deliverance--they ate
-some food, drank some wine, and went to their cabins.
-
-The sleep of the wearied mariner is profound, and the sleep of the
-toil-worn girl at sea is likewise profound. Hardy was the first to
-awake. Through the little port-hole or scuttle in the ship's side
-he witnessed the scarlet of the dying afternoon; he also observed
-the creaming curl of the breaking sea streaming swiftly past. In the
-plank with his feet he felt the buoyancy of sea-borne motion, the
-floating lift, the floating reel of a fabric winging over the deep. He
-shaved himself, and emerged a clean, a manly though a pallid sailor,
-still something gaunt but with eyes brightened by sleep, and with an
-expression gallant with hope and with victory.
-
-He looked round for Julia. She was still in her cabin, and he would not
-awaken her. At the foot of the companion-steps lay the Newfoundland;
-Hardy knelt beside the noble creature and put his cheek to the wet
-muzzle, and the dog groaned in pleasure and gratitude. Then they went
-on deck together.
-
-It was a strange, new, surprising sight to Hardy and perhaps to the
-dog: a British man-of-war's man stood at the wheel of the ship; up
-and down the quarter-deck stumped the stout figure of Mr. Harper in
-all pomp of commanding strut. It was the first dog-watch, and some of
-the sailors were walking about the forecastle smoking pipes, and some
-of them, also smoking pipes, lurked about the galley door. A fresh
-breeze was sweeping down upon the quarter. The ship was under full
-sail from main-royal to flying jib, from mizzen-royal to spanker.
-The weather-clew of the mainsail was up, and--what was that yonder,
-right ahead? By heaven! the _Magicienne_ slapping along at ten and
-pouring incense of soot to the very extremity of the visible universe,
-and the _York_ was doing twelve and overhauling her with foam to the
-figurehead, with derisive laughter aloft, with all graceful scorn of
-the wind-swept structure in every leap, that brought closer yet to the
-eye the laborious ploughing of the paddles.
-
-Hardy and Mr. Harper touched their caps to each other.
-
-"This is business, sir," said the boatswain, "and this ship is going to
-point a moral to that there steamer!"
-
-Hardy sent a critical gaze aloft. Everything was set to a hair and
-rounded firm as a boiler full of steam. Everything was doing the work
-of a boiler and more than the work of a boiler, as witness yonder
-sky-blackening fabric, like panting Time, toiling to elude the Camilla
-of the sea.
-
-"Your captain has sent me some good men," said Hardy. "It did not take
-you long, I reckon, to bend new canvas."
-
-The boatswain smiled loftily betwixt his red whiskers.
-
-"It isn't all New Navy yet, sir," he answered; "but it's coming."
-
-He sighed like a risen porpoise.
-
-"There'll be no call for sailors when it's to be nothing but that,
-with pole-masts and so built"--he was pointing as he spoke to the
-steamer--"that a dock-master might fitly sing out to the skipper, Which
-end of you is coming in?"
-
-He suddenly drew himself up as though on drill, and Julia stepped out
-of the companion-hatch. Sleep had touched her cheeks with a delicate
-bloom. She had refreshed herself with soap and water; her abundant hair
-was gracefully dressed; with the cunning fingers of a woman she had
-somehow, I do not know how, effaced in effect at least from her attire
-the soiling and creasing influence of hard weather upon the single
-robe. She had managed to warp her hat to its old bearings, and it sat
-cocked in its old coquettish pride upon her head. Her gaze was full of
-rapture as she looked at the ship, the straining sweep of white water
-over the side, the easy, manly figure of the man at the wheel, the
-_Magicienne_, which if this breeze lasted the ship must presently shift
-her helm to pass.
-
-"What do you think of this?" said Hardy to her.
-
-"Is it a dream, Mr. Harper?" said the girl. "Shall Mr. Hardy and I
-awaken to find ourselves on board an abandoned wreck?"
-
-"Call it a dream, mum," answered the boatswain, "and when you awake it
-will be England!"
-
-
-This story of the ship's adventure is told. Because what you wish and
-expect is bound to happen when safety and home are to be reached and
-realised by a noble, well-found clipper ship in charge of two sailors
-of the manliest character, and manned by fifteen splendid examples of
-the man-of-war's men of the Navy of that age.
-
-The merciful eye of God was upon this ship, for certainly the strength
-of our courageous couple had been expended in a long strife with the
-gale, and the dog, and the watch-tackle, and the winch without human
-help would have been of no use. Hardy would have been forced to take
-the first assistance that offered. It came to him in the triumphant
-spirit which informs the whole of this couple's adventures. Our
-sailor yearned for an estate for himself and for the girl that was to
-be his wife. He richly deserved the reward he desired. Had any ship
-but a man-of-war assisted him to get home the salvage claimed would
-have diminished his proportion to a sum which at the present rate of
-interest would not have yielded him the value of the pension of the
-retired naval bluejacket. The British man-of-war demands no salvage,
-and this is but just, because her very existence depends upon the
-safety of the British merchantman. If you extinguish the Merchant
-Service, you extinguish the need for a Navy and you extinguish the
-nation herself, because we are surrounded by the ocean, we are fed by
-the merchant sailor, and the bluejacket is paid to protect him whilst
-he brings us the daily bread for which we pray every Sunday in church,
-and sometimes more often than every Sunday.
-
-I have never heard of a single instance in which the Admiralty have
-claimed salvage for services rendered to a British merchantman.
-Possibly they may have sent in a claim for the value of stores
-expended in the salvage services. In the case of a successful
-salvage it has sometimes happened that the owners of the ship have
-by permission of the Admiralty presented a service of plate for the
-officers' mess, or they have made personal gifts to the officers and
-a dinner or supper ashore to the crew. Thus it will be gathered that
-Hardy reaped the harvest he had sown and held in view; and having said
-this no more need be asked, for the hand that has penned these lines
-has no cunning as a reporter of the Marriage Service.
-
-
-
-
-+-------------------------------------------------+
-|Transcriber's note: |
-| |
-|Obvious typographic errors have been corrected. |
-| |
-+-------------------------------------------------+
-
-
-
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