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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62336 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62336)
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-Project Gutenberg's Master Rockafellar's Voyage, by William Clark Russell
-
-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: Master Rockafellar's Voyage
-
-Author: William Clark Russell
-
-Illustrator: Gordon Browne
-
-Release Date: June 7, 2020 [EBook #62336]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MASTER ROCKAFELLAR'S VOYAGE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-MASTER ROCKAFELLAR’S VOYAGE
-
-BY THE SAME AUTHOR
-
- MY DANISH SWEETHEART
- HIS ISLAND PRINCESS
- ABANDONED
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: “BE PLEASED TO GET IN AND GO AWAY.”
-
-_See page 175._]
-
-
-
-
- MASTER ROCKAFELLAR’S
- VOYAGE
-
- BY
- W. CLARK RUSSELL
- AUTHOR OF “MY DANISH SWEETHEART,” ETC., ETC.
-
- WITH 27 ILLUSTRATIONS BY GORDON BROWNE
-
- FIFTH EDITION
-
- METHUEN & CO. LTD.
- 36 ESSEX STREET W.C.
- LONDON
-
- _First Published_ _October_ _1890_
- _Second Edition_ _November_ _1894_
- _Third Edition_ _August_ _1906_
- _Fourth Edition_ _November_ _1910_
- _Fifth Edition_ _1913_
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- HE BEGS TO GO TO SEA 1
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- HIS FIRST DAY ON BOARD SHIP 17
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- HE SAILS FROM GRAVESEND 30
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- HE GOES ALOFT 45
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- HE SIGHTS A SHIP 59
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- HE IS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING 74
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- HE HEARS A BELL 88
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- HE SEES THE EQUATOR 103
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- HE SEES AN ICEBERG 209
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- HE SIGHTS A WRECK 227
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- HE SEES A STRANGE LIGHT 243
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- HE ARRIVES HOME 259
-
-
-
-
-MASTER ROCKAFELLAR’S VOYAGE
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-_HE BEGS TO GO TO SEA._
-
-
-My name is Thomas Rockafellar; father and mother always called me Tommy,
-and by that name was I known until I grew too old to be called by
-anything more familiar than Tom. I have seen people look at one another,
-and smile, perhaps, when they have heard the name Rockafellar mentioned
-as that of a family; but I here beg leave to state that the Rockafellars
-are an exceedingly ancient race, who, if they do not claim to have
-arrived in this country with William the Conqueror, can excuse themselves
-for not having landed with that chieftain by being able to prove that
-they had been many years established when the keels of the Norman galleys
-grounded on the Hastings shore.
-
-[Illustration: EBENEZER ROCKAFELLAR.]
-
-Amongst my ancestors were several sailors, who had served the king or
-queen of their times in the navy of the state. A portrait of Ebenezer
-Rockafellar, who was a rear-admiral in the early years of George the
-Second’s reign, hung in the dining-room at home, and represented a face
-like that of the man in the moon when the planet rises very crimson out
-of the sea on a hot summer’s evening. He had a tail on his back and a
-great copper speaking-trumpet under his arm and his forefinger, on which
-was a huge ring, rested upon a globe of the world. The artist had painted
-in a picture of a thunderstorm happening through a window, with the
-glimpse of a rough sea, and an old-fashioned ship like a castle tumbling
-about in it resembling a toy Noah’s ark tossing on the strong ripples of
-a pond.
-
-It might have been my looking at this red-faced ancestor of mine, and
-admiring his speaking-trumpet, and the noble colour of weather which
-stained his face that first put it into my head to go to sea. I cannot
-say. Who can tell where little boys get their notions from? I would stand
-before that picture, and in my small way dream about the ocean, about
-sharks, tropic islands full of cocoa-nut trees, and monkeys, and parrots
-gorgeous as shapes of burnished gold; and I would dream also, all in my
-small way, of flying-fish like little lengths of pearl flashing out of
-the dark-blue brine on wings of gossamer, and elephants and ivory tusks,
-and of black men in turbans and robes glittering with jewels, like the
-dark velvet sky on a midsummer night; and so on, and so on, until there
-arose in me a passion to go to sea, and behold with my own little eyes
-the wonders of the world.
-
-Father and mother tried hard to conquer my desire; and then, when they
-found I would still be a sailor, they pretended to consent, secretly
-meaning to weary me out, or to give me a good long chance of changing my
-views by delaying to take any steps to humour my wishes. At last, finding
-my mind to be wonderfully resolved, my father talked to my mother gravely
-about my disposition for the sea—told her that when a boy exhibited a
-strong inclination for a walk, no matter of what nature if honest, he
-should not be baulked—that I might have the makings of another Captain
-Cook in me, or at all events of a Vancouver, and end my days as a great
-man.
-
-“Besides, my dear,” said he, “one voyage at least cannot harm him; it
-will fill his mind with new experiences, it will also test his sincerity;
-it will act as the strongest possible persuasion one way or the other.
-It will be cheaper too than a year of schooling, and more useful, I
-don’t doubt. So, my dear, let us make up our minds to send him into the
-Merchant Service for one voyage.”
-
-However, it was some time before my mother consented. She would not very
-strongly have objected to the Royal Navy, she said, but she considered
-the Merchant Service too vulgar for a Rockafellar.
-
-“Vulgar, my dear!” cried my father; “why, do you forget that your own
-Uncle Martin was in the service of the Honourable East India Company?”
-
-“Ah but,” she answered, “Uncle Martin was always a perfect gentleman, and
-even had he been a common sailor on board a barge, he would have carried
-himself with as much dignity and been as fully appreciated by people
-capable of distinguishing as if he had been an Admiral of the Blues.”
-
-[Illustration: “MY FATHER TALKED TO MY MOTHER.”]
-
-“Of the Blue, I think it is,” said my father.
-
-“The Red is cock of the walk,” said I, who had been listening to this
-conversation with much interest.
-
-Well, it ended, after many talks, in my mother agreeing with my father
-that one voyage could do me no harm, and that if I returned as eager for
-the sea life as I now was, it might prove as good a calling for me as any
-other vocation that could be named. So after making certain inquiries,
-my father one day took me to London with him, to call upon a shipowner
-who lived close by Fenchurch Street. He had five vessels, three of them
-large ships, of which two had formerly been Indiamen, and the others were
-barques. They were all regular traders to Australia: that is to say, to
-the different ports of that colony, and one or more of them were always
-to be found in the East India Docks discharging the wool with which they
-returned home full of, or taking in merchandise for the outward passage.
-
-The shipowner, Mr. Duncan, was a large, fat, cheerful man, “with a very
-knowing eye, and supposed to be already worth, my dear, about a million
-and a half,” as I afterwards heard my father tell my mother. We passed
-through an office full of clerks into a little back room, where we were
-received by Mr. Duncan, who seemed delighted to make our acquaintance.
-He patted me on the head, said that he was always fond of boys whose
-hair curled, declared that he could not remember ever having set eyes on
-a more likely sailorly-looking lad, promised me that I should become the
-captain of a ship if I worked hard, and then he and my father went to
-business.
-
-The terms were a premium of sixty guineas for the first voyage, together
-with ten guineas for what was called mess-money; “and with regard to
-pocket money,” said Mr. Duncan, “I should say if you give the captain
-enough to enable him to put half-a-crown a week into the lad’s pocket
-whilst he’s in harbour the boy will have more than he needs for simple
-enjoyment, and too little,” said he, closing one eye, “for what Jack
-calls larks.”
-
-The name of the ship was the _Lady Violet_, and Mr. Duncan told us that
-she was commanded by Captain Tempest, who, notwithstanding his stormy
-name, was a gentleman-like person of a mild disposition, one of the best
-navigators out of the Port of London, and beloved by all who sailed with
-him.
-
-“There is no flogging now, I think, sir, at sea?” said my father.
-
-“Oh dear no,” cried Mr. Duncan, smiling all over his immense crimson
-face: “a barbarous practice, sir, very happily suppressed ages ago.”
-
-“How are boys punished,” asked my father, “at sea when they deserve it?”
-
-“Why, sir,” answered Mr. Duncan, “the captain usually sends for them to
-his cabin, and lectures them paternally and tenderly. His admonitions
-rarely fail, but if there be great perversity, then possibly a little
-extra duty of a trifling kind is given to them. But there is very little
-naughtiness amongst boys at sea, sir! very little naughtiness indeed.
-Perhaps I should add, in _my_ ships, where no bad language is allowed,
-where sobriety is strictly encouraged, and where even smoking is regarded
-as objectionable, though of course,” added Mr. Duncan, drawing a deep
-breath that sounded like a sigh, “we do not prohibit it.”
-
-A good deal more to this effect passed between my father and Mr. Duncan,
-and then certain arrangements having been made, we took our leave.
-
-The ship was to sail in three weeks; she lay in the East India Docks, and
-as she would not be hauling out of the gates until the afternoon, there
-was no need for me to present myself on board sooner than the morning of
-the day of her sailing.
-
-My outfit was procured at a well-known marine establishment in Leadenhall
-Street. I very well recollect the pride with which I tried on a blue
-cloth jacket, embellished with brass buttons, and surveyed my appearance
-in a large pier-glass. I had never before been dressed in brass buttons,
-and felt, now that I was thus decorated, that I was a man indeed. Also
-the glittering badge of a sort of wreath of gold, embracing a gorgeous
-little flag on the cap which the outfitter placed on my head, enchanted
-me. Indeed, I could not but think that the privilege of wearing so
-beautiful a decoration would be cheaply earned by years of exposure and
-hardship, not to mention shipwreck, and even famine and thirst in an open
-boat.
-
-“It seems to me,” said my father to the outfitter, “to judge by your
-list, that it is the practice of young gentlemen when they first go to
-sea to take a great number of shirts and fine duck trousers with them.”
-
-“They need all their fathers allow them, sir,” said the outfitter, with a
-bow.
-
-“Is it,” asked my father, “that they must always appear very clean?”
-
-“No, sir,” answered the outfitter. “I regret to say that it is the habit
-of most young gentlemen when first they go to sea to swap their trousers
-and shirts with the baker for what is termed ‘soft-tack.’”
-
-“What is soft-tack?” said I.
-
-“Bread, the likes of which we eat ashore,” answered the outfitter.
-
-“Don’t they get the same at sea?” said I.
-
-“No, young gentleman,” answered the outfitter; “there’s nothing but
-biscuit eaten at sea by sailors, and it’s sometimes rather wormy. When it
-is so, soft-tack grows into a delicacy, compared with which midshipmen’s
-trousers and shirts count for nothing.”
-
-“I’d rather have a biscuit any day,” said I, “than a slice of bread.”
-
-I thought the smile the outfitter bestowed upon me a rather singular one.
-My father looked pleased, and said to the outfitter, “Master Rockafellar
-will keep his clothes, I know.”
-
-“Not a doubt of it, sir,” responded the outfitter, and forthwith
-proceeded to show us the oilskins, sou’wester, sea-boots, bars of marine
-soap, clasp-knife, and the other articles which were to form the contents
-of the brand-new white-wood sea-chest, with grummets for handles, and
-with a little shelf for “curios,” and upon the lid of which my name,
-THOMAS ROCKAFELLAR, was to be painted in strong, large black letters.
-
-I will pass over my parting with my mother and sisters and little
-brother. My uniform came down a week before I sailed, and my wearing of
-the clothes greatly helped to sustain my spirits, whilst they made me
-feel that I was a sailor, and must not betray any sort of weakness that
-might seem girlish. I tried hard not to cry as my mother strained me to
-her heart, and I said good-bye with dry eyes; but I broke down when I was
-in the railway carriage as the engine whistled, and the familiar scene of
-the station slipped away. My father, who was accompanying me to the ship,
-put his hand upon mine, and said something in a low voice, that was, I
-think, a prayer to God that He would protect and bless and guard his boy,
-and then turned his face to the window, and when presently I peeped at
-him, I saw that he had been weeping too.
-
-Ah, dear little friends! let us always love our father and mother, and be
-grateful to them. They suffer much for us when we are young, and when we
-are incapable of understanding their anxieties and griefs. Later on in
-life we find it all out ourselves, and it is as sweet as a blessing sent
-to us by them from heaven if we can remember that we were always good,
-and loving, and tender to them when we were little ones, and when they
-were alive to be made happy by our behaviour.
-
-When I look back from the hour of my trotting into the docks at my
-father’s side, down to the time when I felt the ship heaving and plunging
-under me upon the snappish curl of the Channel waters, all that happened
-takes so misty a character that it is like peering at objects through a
-fog. Everything, of course, was new to me, and all was startling in its
-way, confusing my little brains; and it was a sort of Wonderland also.
-
-The docks were full of business, and movement and hurry; huge cranes
-were swiftly swinging out tons’ weight of cargo from the holds of ships
-to the snorting accompaniment of steam machinery; dockyard labourers
-were chorussing on the decks of the vessels, or bawling to one another
-on the quayside; the earth trembled to the passage of heavy waggons; and
-the ear was distracted by the shrill whistling and roaring puffing of
-locomotives. There were fellows aloft on the ships, dismantling them of
-their spars, and rigging, or bending sails, and sending up masts, and
-crossing-yards, and reeving gear for a fresh voyage.
-
-It was a brilliant October morning, with a keen shrill wind that made
-even the dirty Thames water of the docks tremble into a diamond-bright
-flashing, and in this wind you seemed to taste the aromas of many
-countries—coffee, and spices, and fragrant produce, the mere flavour of
-which in the atmosphere sent the fancy roaming into hot and shining lands.
-
-The _Lady Violet_ still lay alongside the quay. I recollect thinking her
-an immense ship as we approached. Aloft she looked as heavy and massive
-as a man-of-war, with her large tops, her canvas rolled up on the yards,
-and all her sea-gear—a bewildering complication of ropes—in its place.
-She had a broad white band along her sides, upon which were painted black
-squares to imitate portholes. She was an old-fashioned ship, as I know
-now—though then I saw but little difference between her and the rest of
-them that lay about. Her stern was square and very handsomely gilt;
-there were large windows in it, and the sunlight flashing in them made
-the long white letters of her name stare out as though they were formed
-of silver. She had a handsome flag flying at the mainmast head, exactly
-like the one that I wore in the badge on my cap. The red ensign floated
-gaily at her peak, and at the fore-royalmast head the Blue Peter—signal
-for sailing—was rippling against the light azure of the sky.
-
-My father seemed as much confused as I was by the bustle and novelty. He
-grasped my hand, and we stepped over a broad gangway bridge on to the
-ship’s deck. Here was confusion indeed! all sorts of ropes’ ends knocking
-about, men on deck shouting to men in the hold, pigs grunting, babies
-crying, cocks crowing, and hens cackling; steerage passengers bound out
-as emigrants wandering dejectedly about; unshorn, melancholy men in
-slouched hats, pale-faced women with hollow cheeks stained by recent
-tears, cowering under the break of the poop, and gazing forlornly around
-them; and drunken sailors on the forecastle bawling out coarse joking
-farewells to friends ashore. We went up a ladder that conducted us to the
-upper-deck or poop, and I noticed that along the rails on either side
-were stowed a great number of bales of compressed hay as fodder for the
-sheep, which were bleating somewhere forward, and for a cow that was now
-and then giving vent to a sullen roar, as though she were vexed at being
-imprisoned in a great box.
-
-There were several midshipmen on the poop running about. They glanced
-at me out of the corner of their eyes as they passed. I could not but
-envy them, for they seemed quite at home, whilst here was I, trembling
-nervously by the side of my papa, staring up at the masts, and wondering
-if ever I should be made to creep up those great heights, and if so,
-what was to become of me when I had reached the top? There was no need,
-indeed, to glance at my buttons to know that I was a “first voyager.”
-My wandering eyes and open mouth were assurance as strong as though I
-had been labelled “greenhorn.” My father, stepping up to one of the
-midshipmen, asked if the captain was on board.
-
-“I don’t think he is,” said the youngster.
-
-“This is my son,” said my father, “who has come to join the _Lady
-Violet_. Are there any formalities to go through—any book to be signed by
-him—we are rather at a loss?”
-
-All too young as I was to be an observer, I could yet see a spirit of
-laughing mischief flash into the lad’s brown handsome face, and I have no
-doubt that he would have told me to go forward and seek for the cook and
-report myself, or have started me on some other fool’s errand of a like
-sort, but for a sunburnt man in a blue-cloth coat coming up to us, and
-asking my father what he wanted; on which the midshipman slunk away and
-joined two other midshipmen, who, on his speaking to them, began to shake
-with laughter.
-
-“No, there is nothing to be done, sir,” said the weather-stained man
-in answer to my father’s question. “I suppose your chest is aboard?”
-he exclaimed, looking at me. “Better go below and see that your kit’s
-arrived. We shall be warping out in a few minutes.”
-
-“Are you one of the officers, sir,” asked my father.
-
-“I am the second mate, sir, and my name is Jones,” answered the other.
-
-My father was about to put some further questions to him, but just then
-Mr. Jones, bawling out “Right you are!” to some one who had called to him
-from some part of the ship or the shore, rushed away.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-_HIS FIRST DAY ON BOARD SHIP._
-
-
-“Well, Tommy,” said my father, “as the ship will soon be leaving I
-had better be off, as I do not want to go to Australia with you. God
-bless thee, my son. Be a good lad; do not forget your prayers; remember
-to write to us as often as you can send a letter”—and here his voice
-breaking, he ceased and stooped to kiss me; but I drew away. I did not
-like to be kissed by my father in the presence of the little bunch of
-midshipmen who were viewing us from near the wheel. I feared they would
-regard it as an unmanly act, and sneer at me afterwards as being girlish.
-
-My father, with a sad smile, squeezed my hand and left me. Little boys
-are often very sensitive on points of what they consider manliness. They
-will laugh at this weakness when they grow older, but I think it is wise
-to humour them. I afterwards heard—but I did not then know—that my
-father when he stepped ashore walked straight to the building that was
-then called the Brunswick Hotel, and posting himself at a window where I
-could not see him, sat watching me with the tears in his eyes, until the
-ship had hauled through the lock gates and I was no longer visible.
-
-No one who has stood on board a large sailing ship for the first time,
-and witnessed the proceeding of getting her under way, will wonder at the
-confusion my mind was in as the _Lady Violet_ hauled out into the river,
-and at my inability therefore to recollect all that passed, I took very
-little heed of my father’s leaving the vessel. I stood lost in amazement,
-staring about me like a fool, my mouth wide open. I remember noticing the
-pier heads gliding past the ship as we warped out stern first; people
-standing on the quayside shouting to us, waving hats and handkerchiefs,
-some of them weeping; whilst our passengers in groups along the line
-of bulwarks responded to these farewells with kissing of hands, broken
-cries of “God bless you!” “Good-bye!” and the like. I remember the sharp
-shouts of the mate on the forecastle repeating the pilot’s orders, the
-half-tipsy chorusing of seamen heaving at the capstan, the figure of a
-fellow at the helm revolving the spokes, first one way, then another, the
-manœuvring of a little snorting tug to receive the line for the hawser
-by which our great ship was to be towed down the river. Nobody took any
-notice of me. I stood at the head of one of the poop ladders leaning
-against the rail, wondering at the swiftness with which the people on the
-pier heads, who continued to gesticulate towards us, were diminished into
-dwarf-like proportions.
-
-Four or five midshipmen hung about the poop, but they seemed too
-busy with their thoughts, now that we were in the actual throes of
-leave-taking, and had started in earnest upon our long voyage, to favour
-me with their glances and grins.
-
-The river was full of life—of barges and wherries, of dark-winged
-colliers, swarming along under full breasts of sail; of Thames steamers
-cutting through the sparkling grey waters with knife-like stems; of ships
-in tow like ourselves, bound up or down; of huge majestic metal fabrics,
-gliding to their homes in the docks after days of thunderous passage
-through the great oceans, or floating regally past us on the way to the
-distant west or far more distant east.
-
-I know not how long I had thus stood staring, when a big,
-broad-shouldered young fellow, with a face like a prize-fighter’s, yet
-of a kindly expression, stepped up to me, and said, in a gruff, deep-sea
-note—
-
-“Well, youngster, and who are you?”
-
-“I am Master Rockafellar, sir,” I answered.
-
-“That’s our livery you’ve got on,” said he; “you’re one of the
-midshipmen, I suppose?”
-
-“Yes, sir,” said I; “and are you a midshipman, please?”
-
-“No,” he answered; “I’m third mate. What’s your name, again?”
-
-“Master Rockafellar,” said I.
-
-“Ha!” he exclaimed; “the right sort of name to go to sea with. Every
-‘wave,’ as one’s grandmother calls it, would speak of itself as a
-‘rock-a-fellow.’” He burst into a mighty laugh, and then said kindly,
-“Well, well; I’ve heard of even queerer names than ‘Rockafellar.’ Been
-below yet?”
-
-“No, sir,” said I.
-
-“Haven’t you seen your bedroom?”
-
-“No, sir,” I answered again.
-
-“Well, take my advice,” said he, “and jump below at once, and secure
-a bunk, and see that your chest is all right—I suppose you’ve brought
-one—or some of those ’tween-deck passengers down there will be borrowing
-your mattress and forgetting to return it, and rigging themselves out in
-your clothes.”
-
-“My chest is locked, sir,” said I.
-
-“And what of that?” he roared. “D’ye think there never was a handspike
-aboard a ship since the days of Nelson? Jump below, jump below, I tell
-ye!”
-
-“Please, sir, which is the way?” said I, trembling.
-
-“Go down those steps,” said he, pointing to the poop ladder, “and just
-over against the cuddy front there’s a black hole. Drop down it, for
-_that’s_ the way.”
-
-I at once stepped on to the main-deck, and saw a square aperture, which I
-was afterwards informed was called the “booby hatch.” There was a little
-crowd of third-class passengers standing round it, looking very wretched
-and melancholy, two or three of the women holding babies, who cried
-incessantly.
-
-I looked into the hatch; it seemed very dark beneath, and a close, most
-unpleasant, but quite indescribable smell rose up through it—a sort of
-atmosphere of onions, yellow soap, fumes of lamp-oil, the whole tinctured
-with a peculiar flavour of shipboard. A short flight of perpendicular
-steps fell to the bottom. I was too manly to ask my way of the women; so,
-perceiving a sailor coiling away a rope upon a pin near the main-shrouds,
-I went up to him, and said, “I want my bedroom; d’ye know where it is?”
-
-He turned his eyes slowly on me, took a somewhat sneering survey of my
-buttons, spat a mouthful of tobacco-juice into a scupper-hole, and then
-said, whilst he proceeded with his work, “Better ask the capt’n.”
-
-The sailor was too grumpy and surly a man for a little boy like me to
-address a second time; so I made my way to the hatch, and put my leg
-over into it, concluding that I should find somebody to tell me where my
-bedroom was when I had descended. The ladder was perpendicular, and I was
-very slow in stepping down it.
-
-[Illustration: “HE TURNED HIS EYES SLOWLY UPON ME.”]
-
-“Now then!” bawled a powerful voice: “up or down; one ways or t’other.
-There ain’t too much light here; and who’s bin and made _you_ think
-you’re made o’ sheet glass?”
-
-This remark, I found, was uttered by a seafaring man, one of the sailors
-of the ship, I afterwards came to know, who had been told off to help
-our handful of emigrants to secure their boxes. I think he was slightly
-in liquor; at all events, I grew sensible of a distinct taste of
-rum-and-water on the air as I jumped backwards on to the lower deck close
-beside him.
-
-“Where is my bedroom?” said I.
-
-“No bedrooms at sea, young ’un,” he answered. “What callin’s yourn? Are
-’ee a sailor man? My precious eyes! there’s buttons! See here, my lively:
-when the shanks of them buttons is worn off, I’ll give ye the value of a
-fardenswuth of silver spoons for the whole boiling of ’em.”
-
-“I promised my father not to sell my clothes,” I answered, with dignity.
-“Where’s my bedroom, I say?”
-
-“Why, _there_,” said he, pointing with a tar-stained stump of forefinger
-into the dusk. “Shut your eyes and walk straight, and your nose’ll steer
-ye the right course, I lay.”
-
-I spied a door to the right some little distance abaft the part of the
-deck that was pierced by the great mainmast, and making for it, entered,
-and found myself in a long narrow cabin fitted on either hand with a
-double row of bunks, or sleeping-shelves, and lighted by three little
-round portholes, called “scuttles.” Bright as the day was outside, in
-this cabin it was no better than twilight, and I hung for some moments in
-the doorway, scarcely able to distinguish objects.
-
-When presently I could fairly use my sight I took notice of a thin slip
-of a table, penetrated by stanchions, up or down which it could be made
-to travel as space happened to be wanted. At the aftermost extremity
-athwart this interior were two or three shelves containing tin dishes,
-pannikins, coarse black-handled knives and forks, jars of pickles, red
-tins of preserved potatoes, and other such commodities: the produce, as I
-afterwards heard, of the amount which each midshipman had to subscribe in
-a sum of ten guineas to what was called “the mess”—and a mess it was!
-
-Under these shelves stood a cask of flour, and another of exceedingly
-moist sugar, and an immense jar of vinegar. Here and there against the
-bulkhead partitions between the bunks hung a sou’wester or a coat of
-oilskin; whilst under the lower tier of bunks you caught a glimpse of the
-soles and heels of sea boots and shoes, with a thin canvas bag, perhaps,
-like a man’s leg. In most of the bunks lay a heap of rude bedding,
-roughly-made mattresses, and stout blankets.
-
-Immediately facing the door there was stretched, in one of the upper
-sleeping-shelves, a young red-faced youth. He was in his shirt and
-trousers, and was smoking a short sooty clay pipe. He eyed me out of a
-pair of little black eyes, which winked drowsily on either side of his
-immense nose, the polished point of which caught the ruddy glow of his
-pipe-bowl as he sucked at it, and shone over the edge of his bunk as
-though it were a glowworm. There was nobody else in the cabin but this
-youth.
-
-[Illustration: “‘IS THIS A BEDROOM?’ SAID I.”]
-
-“Is this a bedroom?” said I.
-
-He expelled several mouthfuls of smoke before answering, and then
-exclaimed, “Yeth.”
-
-“Am I to sleep here, do you know?” said I.
-
-“Can’t thay,” said he, lazily. “If you’re a midthipman, you do; if
-you aint, you’ll be kicked out.” Saying which, he closed his eyes, and
-refused to answer other questions, though, by his continuing to smoke, I
-knew he had not fallen asleep.
-
-I entered the cabin, and after peering a bit into the bunks, saw my
-bedding in one of the two sleeping-places which ran athwartships. At
-this point my memory grows misty again. I have some dim recollection
-of attempting to make my bed, of hunting about for the sheets—not then
-knowing that sailors do not use sheets at sea—of moodily getting into the
-bunk, and wishing that I was at home again; of stretching myself, after a
-little, and falling asleep; of being awakened by a hubbub of voices, and
-discovering that the berth was full of midshipmen—nine “young gentlemen”
-in all, including myself—who were sitting round the table, using the edge
-of their bunks for chairs, and drinking tea out of pannikins, and hacking
-at a lump of cold roast meat.
-
-This, I say, I recollect; also that I was invited by the third mate, who
-sat on a cask at the head of the table, to arise and join the others,
-and drink tea with them, which I did; that the handsome young fellow
-whom my father had spoken to on the poop began with a grave face to ask
-me questions intended to raise a laugh at my expense, and that he was
-abruptly silenced by the third mate (whose name was Cock), who said to
-him, “See here, my lad: this is your second voyage, and you are giving
-yourself airs on the strength of it. Now, what are your talents as a
-sailor? Could you put a ship about? Could you send a yard down? Could you
-take a star? D’ye know anything about stowing a hold? See here, my heart
-of oak!—until you’ve got some knowledge of your calling, don’t you go
-and try and make a fool of a lad who comes fresh to it. Everybody’s got
-to begin, and so I tell you; and if before six months of shipboard this
-young Master Rockafellar hasn’t more seamanship in any one of his fingers
-than you’ve got in all your body, though this _is_ your second year at
-sea, then you shall call me a Chinaman, without risk of earning a kick
-for the compliment.”
-
-The lad blushed to the roots of his hair, and looked subdued. He was a
-great powerful man was this third mate, and I seemed to feel with the
-instincts of a boy that no sort of bullying or mean sneaking tyranny was
-likely to be attempted so long as he made one of our company.
-
-The tea was very strong, and the bottom of my pannikin was full of black
-leaves. The liquor had a flavour of old twigs and stale molasses; the
-beef was so hard that I could scarcely make my teeth meet in it, yet it
-was fresh, and it was not long before the salt food upon which we had to
-live made me think yearningly of it as a delicacy—as something for even a
-bite of which I would have gladly “swapped” a shirt.
-
-All this while the ship was being towed down the river. I was still in
-the midshipman’s cabin when there was a great noise on deck—voices of men
-shouting, sounds of feet running hastily—and on looking through one of
-the portholes I saw the houses of a town just abreast, and noticed that
-they moved slowly, and yet more slowly, until they came to a dead halt.
-We had come to a mooring-buoy, for the night, off Gravesend; but one of
-the midshipmen told me that we should be underway again long before this
-side of the world was awake; by which he meant that the tug would take us
-in tow at daybreak.
-
-It was dark by this time. A boy who acted as our servant lighted a lamp
-that was shaped like a coffee-pot, with the end of the wick coming out of
-the spout. By this weak and fitful light the scene of the berth looked
-very strange to my young, inexperienced eyes. All the midshipmen were
-below, some smoking, some cutting up pipefuls from squares of black
-tobacco, jabbering loudly about the pleasures they had taken during
-three months ashore. The language was not of the choicest, and my young
-ears were frequently startled by terms and expressions which I had never
-before heard. The third mate sat with his legs over the edge of his bunk
-listening grimly.
-
-“Well, young gentlemen,” he presently roared out, “three of you are
-new to this ship this voyage, but there are six of you who sailed in
-her last year, and when those six went ashore they were a deal more
-gentlemanly and careful in their language than I now find ’em. Where,
-pray, did you pick up these fine words? Not in your homes, I’ll warrant.
-Now hearken to me, mates; you’re not going to make the better sailors for
-employing language which you wouldn’t tolerate in the mouth of any man,
-speaking in the presence of your mothers and sisters. You’re in my charge
-understand, and since you come to me as young gentlemen, young gentlemen
-you shall be; so stand by and mind your words!” saying which he looked
-at them one after the other, directing an emphatic nod at each of the
-lads as he stared. After this I heard no more bad words, and if I except
-a slip or two, I may truthfully say that when the voyage had fairly
-commenced, and the lads had come well under the influence of Mr. Cock,
-there never was afloat a better spoken body of youths than those which
-occupied the midshipmen’s berth aboard the _Lady Violet_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-_HE SAILS FROM GRAVESEND._
-
-
-The ship lay motionless as a rock on the smooth water off Gravesend;
-nevertheless, owing to the strong fumes of the tobacco, probably coupled
-with the close atmosphere of the berth, and its warm flavouring of lamp
-oil, water-proof clothes, pickled onions, and black tea, I felt somewhat
-sick and crept quietly out of the cabin, trusting that the fresh air
-on deck might revive me. Just outside our berth, in the open space of
-’tween-decks, which was entered from above by means of the booby-hatch,
-were the emigrants’ quarters. We carried about thirty of these poor
-people, and here they now were all of a jumble, using mine as well as the
-chests of the other midshipmen for seats and tables, the women talking
-vehemently, some of them still crying, here and there a man smoking in
-a sullen posture, others sitting over greasy packs of cards, whilst a
-few children played at hide-and-seek in and out of the sleeping-places,
-and amongst the emigrant’s bundles; three or four quite young babies
-meanwhile setting the whole picture to music with shrill, melancholy
-cries. A single lamp of the same pattern as ours illuminated this grimy
-grotesque scene.
-
-[Illustration: A SCENE IN THE EMIGRANTS’ QUARTERS.]
-
-I pushed my way on deck, but on my arrival found that it was raining
-hard, which accounted for the emigrants being crowded below. There was
-shelter to be had under the break of the poop, as the ledge of deck
-is called that overhangs the entrance to the cuddy; and there I stood
-awhile, gazing along the dark length of gleaming, streaming deck that
-was deserted, and listening to the complaining of the wind, amid the
-stirless shadow of the spars and rigging on high, or watching the damp
-and dusky winking of the lamps ashore, or of the lights of ships at
-anchor round about us. Ah! thought I, this is not so comfortable as being
-in my father’s snug parlour at home, with a sweet and airy bedroom all to
-myself to pass the night in, and a kind mother at the fresh and fragrant
-breakfast table next morning to help me to a plateful of eggs and bacon,
-and a cup of fine aromatic coffee and cream! Maybe I shed a tear or two;
-I was but a little boy fresh from home, and amidst a great strange scene,
-with the darkness and the sobbing of the rain and the deserted deck, and
-the cold noise of the running waters of the river washing along the
-ship’s side to bitterly increase the sense of loneliness in my childish
-heart.
-
-It was not long before I went below. Most of the midshipmen were turned
-in, that is to say, they were lying down in their clothes and shoes with
-nothing but their jackets removed. I thought I could not do better than
-follow their example and how wearied I was I could not have imagined till
-I put my head down upon the bolster at the end of my bunk, when I almost
-instantly fell asleep.
-
-Being a very green, raw, quite young hand, I could be of no use on deck
-for the present, and it was for this reason, I suppose, they let me sleep
-in the morning, for when I woke I was the only midshipman in the cabin.
-There was a queer noise of scraping overhead, sounds as of the flinging
-down of coils of rope, the noises of water being swooshed along the
-planks; and the sunlight that shone through the portholes was tremulous
-with the play of glittering, moving waters. I went on deck and found the
-ship in tow of the tug, with the land a long way past Gravesend gliding
-astern, and the river so wide that over the bows it looked like the
-ocean. There were jibs and staysails hoisted, and the ship appeared to
-be sailing along. It was a fresh, windy morning; there were great white
-clouds rolling from off the distant land over our mast-heads, and the
-dark brown smoke of the tug ahead fled in a wild scattering low down
-upon the waters. The decks were being “washed down” as it is called at
-sea; sailors on legs naked to the knees were scrubbing and pounding away
-with brushes, buckets of water were being emptied over the planks, and a
-sturdy mariner with a whistle round his neck and great whiskers standing
-out from his cheeks, went about amongst the seamen, directing them in
-a voice that sounded like a roll of thunder. He was the boatswain.
-I was not a little surprised to find the midshipmen with scrubbing
-brushes in their hands washing down the poop. I mounted the ladder and
-stood a moment looking on. One of them worked a pump just before the
-mizzen-mast, whilst another filled buckets at it, the third mate threw
-the water about, and the middies plied their brooms with the energy of a
-crossing-sweeper. The youth with a great nose who spoke with a lisp was
-polishing the brass-rail that ran athwartship in front of the poop. A
-man in a long coat and a tall rusty hat paced the deck alone. His face
-might have been carved out of a large piece of mottled soap. I afterwards
-found out that he was the pilot. There was another man standing near the
-wheel. He had a ginger-coloured beard that forked out from under his
-chin, pleasant dark-blue eyes and a copper-coloured face. It was not long
-before I discovered that he was Mr. Johnson, the chief officer. He came
-along in a pleasant way to where I stood staring.
-
-“How is it you’re not at work, youngster?” said he.
-
-“I’ve just woke up,” said I.
-
-“Look here,” said he, “if you don’t call me sir, I shall have to call
-_you_ sir, and I am sure it’s easier for you to say it than for me. Pull
-your boots and stockings off like a man, put them in that coil of rope
-there upon the hencoop, tuck your trousers up, lay hold of that scrubbing
-brush yonder and see what sort of job you’re going to make at whitening
-these decks.”
-
-In a minute I was scrubbing with the rest of them, and it made me feel as
-if I was on the Margate sands to be trotting about with bare feet, with
-the salt brine sparkling and flashing about my ankles.
-
-My memory at this point grows dim again, for I was rapidly approaching
-the unpleasant experience of sea-sickness. I recollect that I helped to
-dry the decks with a swab that was so heavy I could scarcely flourish
-it, and that I was shown by the third mate how to coil away a rope over
-a pin, also that I dragged with the others upon some gear which caused a
-staysail between the mainmast and the mizzen-mast to ascend; I then went
-below to breakfast, at which there was served up a dish of hissing brown
-steaks, each of them wide enough to have served as a garment for my young
-ribs. But by this time something of the weight of the wide sea beyond was
-in the river, the ship was faintly pitching, much too faintly perhaps to
-be taken notice of by anything but a delicate young stomach like mine.
-I felt that I was pale, and the sight of the heap of great brown steaks
-floating handsomely in grease, which took a caking of white, even as
-the eye watched, added not a little to the uncomfortable sensation that
-possessed me. The others plunged their knives and forks into the layers
-of meat and ate with avidity; but for my part I could only look on.
-
-“Take and turn in, my lad,” said the third mate kindly; “it’s bound to
-occupy you a day or two to get rid of your longshore swash, and then
-we’ll be having you jockeying the weather mizzen-topsail yard-arm, and
-bawling ‘haul out to leeward’ in a voice loud enough to be heard at
-Blackwall.”
-
-I was glad to take his advice, and was presently at my length in the
-bunk, too ill to speak, yet with a glimmering enough of mind in me to
-bitterly deplore that I had not heeded my mother’s counsel and remained
-at home.
-
-The wind hardened as the river widened, and much dismal creaking and
-groaning rose out of the hold and sides, the bulkheads, strong fastenings
-and freight of the lofty fabric as she went rolling stately in the wake
-of the tug that was thrashing through the hard green Channel ridges in
-a smother of foam. The wind was south-east, I heard some of our fellows
-say, with a lot of loose black scud flying along the marble face of
-the sky, and a gloomy thickness to windward, that was promise of tough
-weather, ere we should have settled the South Foreland well down upon the
-quarter. One of the lads said that if the wind headed us yet more, we
-should bring up in the Downs, and lie there till it blew a fair breeze,
-which might signify a fortnight’s waiting.
-
-“If so,” says he, “I shall put on a clean shirt and go straight ashore,
-then button my ears behind me, and never stop running till I get to
-London town; for twenty miles of salt water’s enough for me; and here
-we are bound away for six thousand leagues of it, with all the way back
-again on top!”
-
-In this fashion the lads would talk as they came below from the deck, and
-sick as I was I managed to heed enough of their conversation to pick up
-what was going forward. I cannot express how I envied their freedom from
-sea-sickness. Some were making their third voyage, others their second.
-I was the only “first-voyager” as they call it. It sometimes rained on
-deck, and the fellows would come below gleaming in oilskins, the sight
-of which made me feel pitifully girlish, insomuch that on three several
-occasions I made a desperate effort to get up and act my part of a sailor
-as they did theirs; but the oppression of nausea was too violent, and
-down I lay again, saving the third time when, contriving to feel my feet,
-the ship at the instant gave a lurch which sent me headlong into one of
-the fore and aft bunks where I lay half stunned, and so miserably sick
-that the third mate had to lift me in his arms to enable me to return to
-my own bed.
-
-Sea-nausea is at all times distressing, and I do not know that one is
-easier for suffering in a fine saloon, with looking-glasses and flowers
-and the electric-light, and the fresh breezes of heaven blowing through
-the open skylights to keep the place sweet. But if this _mal de mer_, as
-the French call it, is more unendurable in one interior than in another
-it must be so I think in a midshipmen’s berth—at least such a berth as
-ours was:—Twelve sleeping shelves and nine lads to sleep in them, with a
-huge giant of a third mate to fill the tenth; a sort of twilight draining
-in through the three scuttles, the immensely thick glass of which was
-often eclipsed by the roaring wash of a green sea sweeping along the
-sides; a lamp burning night and day, from whose untrimmed flame there
-arose to the ceiling of the cabin a pestilential coil of smoke.
-
-In these narrow gloomy quarters we lived and moved, and had our being.
-Here we ate our meals, here we slept, here we washed ourselves, here
-the youngsters smoked. Hardest part of all were the confusing noises
-made by the emigrants just outside our berth. Unlashed chests slided to
-and fro; children were incessantly falling down and squealing; many
-heart-disturbing lamentations arose from such of the poor wretches as
-lay sick and helpless in their dark bulkheaded compartments. They had to
-fetch their meals from the galley, and not yet having acquired the art of
-walking on a tumbling deck, those who had to bring the rations of beef
-or pork along, would repeatedly come with a run through the booby-hatch,
-and lie at the bottom of the ladder badly scalded in a little lake of
-pease-soup, or with the beef rolling away among the chests, whilst the
-air resounded with execrations, scarcely stifled by the complaining
-sounds of the ship’s fabric.
-
-The third mate was very kind to me; told me there was no hurry; I was
-welcome to lie in my bunk till I felt equal to coming on deck.
-
-“I was sick for a fortnight when I first went to sea,” I heard him say.
-“I was one of four apprentices. Those shipmates of mine were brutes, and
-the very first night we were out they hauled me from my hammock and ran
-me to the mizzen shrouds, up which they forced me to go, saying that
-the topgallant sail would be clewing up shortly, and I must be in the
-cross-trees in readiness to help furl it. A ratline carried away, and
-I fell through the rigging on to the deck. I broke no bones, but I lay
-senseless, which so terrified the young bullies that when I was taken
-to my hammock they never more offered to trouble me. I was ill for a
-fortnight, I say, and the memory of it makes me sorry for every youngster
-when he first comes to the life and is sea-sick.”
-
-However, on the morning of the third day from our quitting Gravesend,
-though I was still very ill, I could stand no longer the miseries of my
-confinement to the cabin. Since I was bound to suffer, I thought it was
-better to feel wretched in the open air than amid the smells and noise
-and gloom of the midshipmen’s berth.
-
-[Illustration: “I FELL THROUGH THE RIGGING.”]
-
-It was the forenoon watch, as the hours from eight to twelve are called.
-The fellows who had been on deck since four o’clock had come below at
-eight bells, and after breakfasting had turned in to smoke a pipe and
-then get some sleep. They were in the port or chief mate’s watch, to
-which division of the ship’s company I was supposed to belong, though I
-don’t remember how I came to know this. We were still in “soundings” as
-it is termed—that is to say, not yet out of the Channel, though we were a
-long way down it.
-
-On this morning there was a strong sea running on the bow, but not so
-much wind as the motion of the ship would have led one to suppose. The
-mids, when they came below, had told the others who were to relieve them
-that the vessel was under all plain sail saving the flying jib and fore
-and mizzen royals, and that the “old man” as they termed the captain,
-was driving her; that they had heard the mate say that he expected it
-would be an “all hands” job before four bells had gone—ten o’clock. I
-caught all this, scarce comprehending it, and lay drowsily and stupidly
-watching the lads get their breakfast and then vault into their bunks
-with all their clothes on—“all standing” as the sea saying is—ready to
-rush on deck to the first summons. The ship was lying over at a sharp
-angle, and there was a great roaring and seething along her sides of
-swollen waters smitten into yeast, and the cabin portholes came and went
-like the winking of eyes to the shrouding of the glass by the liftings
-and leapings of the green billows. Presently there were certain sounds on
-deck which unmistakably denoted that sail was being shortened.
-
-“It’s ‘in main royal’ now, I suppose,” said one of the middies, sleepily,
-“and about time too. What’s the hurry all this side of Sydney, New South
-Wales?”
-
-Presently more hoarse songs resounded on deck, along with the echo of
-tramping feet and of rigging dropped hastily from the hand.
-
-“Old man’th growing alarmed, I reckon!” exclaimed the lisping long-nosed
-midshipman, whose name was Kennet. “Oh, how I do with,” he cried,
-feigning to speak in a voice as though he wept, “that I had thtoptht at
-home to bottle vinegar for my poor deah mamma. Eh, Rockafellar? Better
-to bottle vinegar athore, my beauty, than to lie thick and hungry in a
-nathty cabin.”
-
-As he spoke, the third mate’s voice was to be heard ringing like the roar
-of a bull down through the booby-hatch—“All hands reef topsails! Up you
-come, all you young gentlemen bee-low there! Lively, now! before the ship
-falls overboard!”
-
-The youngsters sprang from their bunks, and were out of the cabin in a
-breath. Then it was that I made up my mind to linger no longer sea-sick
-in this dismal, straining cabin. I pulled on my shoes, plunged into my
-jacket, and, setting my cap firmly upon my head, went clawing my way to
-the steps of the hatch, up which I staggered, feeling exceedingly ill and
-weak, but determined now to push on even to perishing sooner than suffer
-in darkness and loneliness below.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-_HE GOES ALOFT._
-
-
-Talk of the confusion of hauling the ship out of dock! Here was uproar
-thrice confounded with a vengeance! The ship seemed to be almost on her
-beam ends; there was an ugly livid squall over the trucks and howling
-through the masts; they had put the helm up to ease off the weight
-of the first outfly, and the _Lady Violet_ was thrashing and foaming
-through it with the spume blowing in snow-storms over her forecastle;
-all three topsail yards were on the caps, and the huge sails—for we
-carried single topsails—were blowing out like giant bladders in the grip
-of their gear. The outer jib was slatting on the jibboom; the clewed-up
-main topgallant-sail was making its mast up there whip to and fro like
-the end of an angler’s rod; the immense mainsail was thundering at its
-clews and sides and slowly rose to the yard to the drag of the sailors,
-who were roaring out at the ropes which belonged to it; the captain,
-standing near the wheel, was shouting out orders to the mate; the mate
-was bellowing to the second mate, who was forward; the second mate was
-vociferating to the boatswain; in all directions gangs of sailors were
-delivering their working choruses at the top of their lungs. The wind
-shrieked, the rain hissed through it like volleys of small shot; the
-shaking of the loose canvas on high might have passed for the discharge
-of the batteries of a frigate; the foam flew over the ship; the water
-washed in angry sobs along the scuppers. Preserve us!
-
-To such a greenhorn as I was then, very young, very sick, with
-consternation and astonishment working in me like a passion, there was
-distraction and uproar enough here to have justified me in concluding
-that the end of all things was at hand.
-
-In a few moments I found myself on the poop where the midshipmen were
-hard at work with the reef tackle and other gear preparing the mizzen
-topsail for reefing, snugging the spanker, and so forth. Their station
-was aft, and their duty lay in attending to all the sails on the
-mizzen-mast under the charge of the third mate. He was swinging off upon
-a rope, when he caught sight of me.
-
-“Come along! come along!” he roared. “All the beef we can get is wanted
-here!”
-
-I went in a staggering run to where the group were pulling and laid hold
-of the rope.
-
-“Belay!” shouted the third mate, and sprang into the weather mizzen
-rigging, whither he was followed by the rest of the midshipmen. For a
-moment I hung in the wind, sending one thirsty, dizzy look aloft. “Well,
-now or never!” thought I; and with that I got on to the hencoop, swung
-myself into the rigging, and began the ascent.
-
-[Illustration: “I SEEMED TO BE PINNED TO THE RATLINES.”]
-
-The wind came so hard that I seemed to be pinned to the ratlines, and
-I felt as though all the breath were blown out of my body. I sent a
-yearning look up, and saw the third mate on the weather mizzen-top-sail
-yard-arm, striding the spar as though it were a horse, his muscular legs
-dangling between the dark heavens and the wool-white water. The lads were
-sliding out upon the foot-ropes, some to windward, some to leeward. I
-tried to make haste, but the sweep of the blast reduced my struggles to
-a mere crawling. It took me a full five minutes to reach to the height
-of the futtock shrouds—thin bars of iron which stretch at a sharp angle
-from the masts to the rim of the platform called “the top.” I took these
-irons in my little hands, but lacked the courage to swing myself by them
-over into the top. How on earth, then, was I to gain the yard upon which
-the midshipmen were working? Through the irons I spied a hole in the
-platform, and with great trouble and a deal of trembling I contrived to
-squeeze through it, and then I found myself on a sort of stage with the
-ship looking as if she were a mile below me, and the mizzen-royal yard as
-if it were two miles above me.
-
-The wind screamed frantically in my ears, yet not so loudly but that
-I could hear my small heart thumping in them. I clutched a rope, and
-stood staring wildly at the yard on which my shipmates were knotting the
-reef-points. I thought Mr. Cock a much more wonderful man than Blondin or
-any tight-rope walker that ever I had heard of, to be able to sit upon
-that rocking point of spar without tumbling off, and to be passing the
-earing as coolly as if he were tying his shoes.
-
-“Stop where you are!” he bawled to me; “we’ll endeavour to manage without
-you this once.”
-
-The sea looked five times bigger than ever I had before seen it. The
-worst of the squall was over, and past the edge of the flying gloom
-to windward there was a sort of faintness in the sky, with curls and
-wisps of scud blowing up it out of the hard green of the distant water
-that looked calm, so far away it was; and right out in the midst of
-the distant ocean, over which the dim light of the sky was breaking, I
-saw a ship, like a toy, vanishing and reappearing amongst the surges,
-flinging the foam away from her in bursts of steam-light cloud; and so
-little did she look with her three milk-white bands of topsails and
-marble-like round of foresail, that whilst my eye dwelt upon her, I could
-scarce persuade myself that she was real: rather, indeed, some craft
-of fairy-land, which a great strong fellow, such a man as Mr. Cock for
-instance, might be able to hold in the hollow of his hand.
-
-I was at no great height, yet the captain looked an insignificant little
-creature as he stood at the rail sending his gaze aloft; the man at the
-wheel resembled one of those dolls which you purchase as sailors for your
-model boat, and the decks of the ship from poop to forecastle showed
-like a long wet plank. It was wonderful to think so narrow a base should
-support the tall, wide-spreading fabric of mast, yard, and gear that was
-now somewhat nakedly shearing through the dusk of the squall, to the
-plunging and long floating rushes of the hull over whose side a sea would
-now and again fling a head of water that swept with the sparkle of a
-fountain clear into the milk-white race to leeward.
-
-“Two reefs, Mr. Cock!” bawled the mate from the foremost end of the poop.
-
-I watched the lads swinging in a row upon the foot-ropes, tossing up
-their heels as they brought the reef-points upon the yard, and wondered
-how long it would take me to learn their trick of working aloft, as
-coolly as though they toiled with the solid earth under them. All three
-topsails were being reefed at the same time. I could not see forward, but
-I could hear the voices of the men chorusing as they, lighted, the sails
-over. Evidently the captain expected dirty weather; and, to be sure, out
-abeam it looked ugly enough, with a kind of rusty light growing in the
-atmosphere that threw a malevolent complexion of storm upon the sky.
-
-Presently the last knot had been tied in the mizzen topsail, and the
-midshipmen were in the act of descending.
-
-“Jump aloft two of you and secure that t’gallants’l before it blows
-adrift!” roared the captain.
-
-A couple of the mids sprang into the topmast rigging, and in a few
-moments were giving battle to the sail, that, even as the captain called,
-began to flog upon the yard.
-
-Well, thought I, as I stood staring up at them, some day I dare say I
-shall be able to do that too; but I declare the possibility seemed mighty
-remote from me just then. Indeed, once again I was beginning to feel
-horribly sea-sick. The higher you mount above the hull of a ship, the
-wilder of course grows the rolling, and the mizzen-top in which I stood
-seemed to me to swing through the air a score of times more furiously
-than the decks below were swaying. It increased my nausea moreover to
-look up and see the two youngsters dizzily whirling under the dark sky,
-plunging and hauling at the thrashing sail, as though the hold they had
-with their boots was enough to save their lives if they fell backwards.
-
-But now the others were swarming into the top, and swinging themselves
-over into the lower rigging, and dancing down the shrouds till, taut as
-those huge ropes were, they leapt again.
-
-“Come along! come along!” bawled the third mate, as he plumped like a
-cannon ball alongside of me, and with a sinewy arm poised himself an
-instant before putting his foot on the futtock ratlines: “There’s nothing
-good enough to look at up here, to keep you staring open mouth as though
-you were a newly landed cod. Lay down smartly now, youngster, and tail on
-to the topsail halliards.”
-
-His prize-fighter’s face vanished over the rim of the top.
-
-“_Lay down!_” thought I, “what does he mean?” and I went nervously to the
-edge of the platform to ask him to explain himself, but saw that he was
-already on deck.
-
-“Mizzen-top there!” cried the captain, “Lay down, will you?”
-
-There can be no mistake about _that_, thought I. I am not deaf. Twice I
-had been told to _lay down_; and with that I stretched myself along on my
-back, taking care however to keep a hearty good hold of some ropes which
-passed through the top within reach of my grasp.
-
-“Mizzen-top there!” after a little came a roaring hail from the mate;
-“what are you about up there, sir? Do you mean to lay down or not?”
-
-On hearing this, I crept on my knees to the rim of the top, and looking
-over, cried out in the shrill voice of my childhood, “Please, sir, I _am_
-lying down.”
-
-The captain was staring up at me, but on hearing this, he turned his back
-with a shake of his figure.
-
-“Come down, Master Rockafellar,” sung out the mate in a voice full of
-laughter.
-
-When I heard this I crawled over to another edge of the top where I could
-see him, and piped out, “The captain said I was to _lay_ down, sir.”
-
-[Illustration: “‘PLEASE, SIR, I _AM_ LYING DOWN.’”]
-
-It was wonderful that my thin voice should have carried in such a wind,
-yet I was heard plainly enough. Then arose a shout of laughter from the
-midshipmen; the mate called something to Mr. Cock, who in a trice came
-bundling up the mizzen rigging, and flounded with a crimson face into the
-top.
-
-“Why you young guinea pig, why don’t you obey orders?” he bawled; “to
-_lay down_ at sea means to _come_ down, and you _know_ it too; I see it
-in your eye! Over with’ee, over with’ee.”
-
-His large nervous fist closed upon the collar of my jacket, and I found
-myself lifted over the rim at the top.
-
-“Catch hold of the futtock shrouds!” he roared, “those iron bars, d’ye
-hear?—quick, before I let you go!”
-
-I gripped at something, but whether it was iron or rope I was too
-horrified to know. He let go, and my legs swung out into the air. But
-green-horns cling too tightly to be in much danger on such occasions as
-this. A heave of the ship swung me in again, my toes struck something
-hard, and with the swiftness of a monkey I coiled my little shanks round
-it. Down I slid, breathless, and with the eyes half out of my head, and
-was not a little astonished and rejoiced to find my foot upon a ratline
-in the mizzen rigging, whence the descent was as easy as walking the deck.
-
-“That’s your lesson,” exclaimed the third mate as he jogged down the
-rigging past me. “You’ll never shirk the futtock shrouds again, will
-you?”
-
-But I had no breath with which to answer him. It was a rough lesson, but
-it did me good. It made me see that climbing and descending were no such
-terrifying processes as they looked. Possibly I might not have got so
-much confidence out of this adventure had I known that the third mate had
-only pretended to let go; that in reality he was maintaining his hold of
-my collar after my legs had swung out, though I was too much terrified to
-be sensible of this.
-
-I have always considered that the alarm of this little business cured me
-of sea-sickness. Whilst in the top, as I have told you, the nausea was
-over-poweringly strong upon me; but when I had come down I was no longer
-sensible of it, and from that moment, indeed, I never had a return of it.
-There can be no doubt that this distressing malady lies mainly in the
-nerves, and the fright I had received by being hung out over the top, so
-to speak, had acted upon me as an electric shock, healing and ending the
-prostrating complaint.
-
-It blew a gale of wind for three days. I don’t doubt I should have
-heard a deal about my adventure aloft from the midshipmen but for the
-weather. The wet on deck and the discomforts below were too much for the
-youngsters’ spirits, and until the sun shone forth again we were a very
-sulky lot. The ship was miserably uncomfortable. It rained incessantly,
-with such a continuous blowing of spray over us, that it was sometimes
-above one’s ankles on the main deck. There were tarpaulins over the
-hatchways, and the ’tween-decks were as dark as the hold. There had
-been no time yet for the passengers to grow seasoned to the sea life;
-most of those in the “cuddy,” as the saloon was then called, kept their
-cabins. Now and again one of them at long intervals crawled into the
-companion-hatch, where he exhibited a face white as a spectre’s.
-
-But the chief of the misery was amongst the emigrants. Boxes and chests
-were incessantly breaking loose, and menacing their lives as the poor
-creatures sat huddled in sea-sick groups under the booby-hatch, for the
-sake of the dim light that sifted down through it. There were times
-when the galley fire was washed out, and the emigrants had to content
-themselves with biscuit and molasses and cold water, and small doses of
-that nauseous food called “soup and boulli,” nick-named by the sailors
-_soap and bullion_. I have seen a little family of them squatting round
-a sea-chest belonging to one of us midshipmen, an old towel for a
-table-cloth, and on it a tin dish or two containing hard ship’s biscuit,
-a mess of soup and boulli, a lump of pork fat, probably two or three
-days’ old, along with other such cold and throttling fare as the ship’s
-third-class larder yielded; and while they were attempting to make a meal
-off this trough-like collection of victuals, I have seen the chest slip
-away from them, the food tumble on to the deck, and the whole family
-capsized on their backs.
-
-I do not know that the emigrant in these days is a person very carefully
-and hospitably looked after at sea; but in my time the treatment he met
-with on shipboard—that is to say, the utter indifference to his comfort
-exhibited by owners and captains—rendered him the most miserable wretch
-afloat.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-_HE SIGHTS A SHIP._
-
-
-These three days of storm brought me into a tolerably close acquaintance
-with some of the hardships of the sailor’s life. Our cabin did not leak,
-yet somehow or other the deck of it was always damp, with a noise as of
-the bubbling of water under the bunks. The scuttles were incessantly
-under water, and all the light we had was imparted by the dingy flare of
-our malodorous coffee-pot-shaped lamp.
-
-The food was perhaps the hardest part to my young stomach. Every
-midshipman’s father had been called upon to pay ten guineas mess money;
-yet I do not know that this ninety guineas obtained any stores for us,
-if it were not a cask or two of flour, a cask of sugar, a few dozens of
-pickles, and some cases of “preserved spuds,” as potatoes are called
-at sea. We were therefore thrown upon the ship’s stores, and fed as
-the sailors forward did. This I say was the hardest part to me, since,
-though my sickness had passed, my appetite had not recovered its old
-strength, and for a long time I was never hungry enough to eat with the
-least relish the greenish masses of salt pork, and the iron-hearted
-rounds and squares and cubes of salt horse, and the pans of lukewarm
-slush-flavoured water, at the bottom of which rolled a handful of peas,
-as digestible as musket-balls, and the dark-skinned puddings, compounded
-of the coarsest flour and the skimmings of the greasy water of the cook’s
-copper, which the lad who waited upon us would come staggering with from
-the galley, and place upon the narrow slip of table, scarce visible in
-our twilight.
-
-I believe I should have starved but for the biscuit, which was crisp and
-good, though Kennet, the long-nosed midshipman, endeavoured to cheer me
-by saying—
-
-“Thtoph a bit, Rockafellah—wait till we’re a fortnight out, and then
-ththand by! They’ll be broaching the regular provithionth then, and
-if there don’t go a thcore of wormth to every chap’th bithcuith I’m a
-lobthter.”
-
-The crying of children outside, the growling of men, and the shrill
-complaining of women combined with the crazy creaking and groaning of the
-fabric, so that it was very hard to get any sleep.
-
-It was on the night of the day of my adventure in the mizzen-top that
-I stood my first watch. It was eight o’clock in the evening, and the
-moment after the last of the chimes of the bell on deck had been swept
-away by the gale, the four midshipmen who were in the starboard, or
-second mate’s watch, came bundling below. Their oilskins were streaming
-wet, and they blew upon their fingers’-ends as they entered the berth.
-
-“Still raining, is it?” asked a fellow named Poole.
-
-“Ay, murderously,” was the answer; “but the wind’s quartering us, and
-you’ll be making sail, I allow, before we turn out.”
-
-“What’s been doing?”
-
-“Nothing. But talk of the Bay of Biscay! Why, the Straits of Magellan
-might be close aboard. That’s right, my sweet and lively hearty! On with
-your boots, my noble fellow! One, two, buckle my shoe; three, four, open
-the door; five, six, cut all your sticks!”
-
-And the youth who had thus spoken, and whose closing observations were
-levelled at me, thrust a short black length of clay pipe into the flame
-of the lamp, and sprang into his bed to refresh himself with a smoke
-before going to sleep.
-
-I got into my sea-boots, which were very new and creaked noisily, wrapped
-my body in an oiled coat, wedged a sou’wester securely upon my little
-head, and followed the others on deck. The night seemed very black
-after the lamplight, dim as _it_ was, in the cabin. It was the darker
-at that moment for a heavy squall of rain that was blowing with a note
-of shrieking in it over the bulwark rail, and splitting in shouts and
-whistlings through the masts and rigging. I clambered on to the poop,
-and stood holding on to the brass rail staring about me in a blind way,
-for there was a deal to daze a raw-head like me coming new to the scene,
-I assure you. The ship was tearing through the water under three-reefed
-topsails and foresail. She made a great swirling and roaring of white
-water all round her, and the snow of it put an illumination into the
-black air till you seemed able to see a mile away. There was a high sea
-running, but it had quartered us along with the wind, and the _Lady
-Violet_ sank and rose very nobly and easily upon the long black seething
-coils of brine which chased her thundering to her counter, and expiring
-there in foam.
-
-The other midshipmen hung about the quarter-deck, under the shelter of
-the break of the poop. Now and again they showed themselves, but at long
-intervals. The shadowy figure of the chief mate paced the weather-deck.
-Through the glass of the skylights I could see the people sitting in the
-cuddy below. Some played at chess or cards; others lolled in a sickly
-posture upon sofas; the captain, with his face burnished by weather,
-conversed with two ladies; a small chart lay before him, and he was
-explaining something to them, running his forefinger over the paper, and
-smiling into their puzzled faces. It was more like a fancy than a reality
-to witness that shining interior set in the black frame of the night—that
-handsome cuddy, with its soft carpets, its brilliant lamps, its gleaming
-swinging trays, its globes of gold fish, its ferns and richly-painted
-panels, in which the lustre of the oil flames rippled; the whole showing,
-as it were, like a picture flung by some magic-lantern upon an atmosphere
-of sooty blackness.
-
-I crept aft, and stood looking a little while at the man that steered.
-The light in the binnacle touched his face and figure, and threw him
-into relief. His sou’wester came low over his brow, and the rest of
-him, saving a knob of a nose and a pair of cheeks compounded of warts,
-freckles, and wrinkles, was formed of an oilskin coat, oiled leggings,
-and huge sea-boots. He grasped the wheel with hands of iron, often
-bending a reddish glittering eye upon the compass-card that swung in
-the bowl, and I watched him thrusting the spokes first a little way up
-and then a little way down, and wondered why he did not keep the wheel
-steady. But I did not like to speak to him, for what little of his face
-was visible looked very sour; and then, again, I was certain that he must
-be in a bad temper, through having to stand exposed to the lashing wet
-and strong cold wind of the night.
-
-I went to the taffrail, and looked down over the stern of the ship at
-the frothing cataract of water that boiled out from round about her
-rudder, and streamed away pale and paler yet into the darkness, where I
-could see the dim line of it rising and falling upon the black surges.
-It resembled a footpath passing over a hilly country. The ocean looked a
-dreadfully desolate immense surface in that darkness, wider than the sky,
-it seemed to me, for the reason of the fancy of prodigious measureless
-distance coming to one out of the obscurity that lay in ink upon it, with
-the fitful flashings of the heads of seas showing in the heart of the
-murkiness. I shuddered as I thought how cold a death drowning must be. I
-shuddered again at the imagination of being alone in an open boat upon
-the vast surface of weltering gloom. I recalled what I had read of the
-sufferings of shipwrecked people, of fire at sea, of leaks which gained
-upon the pumps and sunk the vessel deeper and deeper, of sudden fierce
-storms which tore the masts out of ships, and left them helpless as logs
-of wood to slowly drown.
-
-[Illustration: “‘WHAT D’YE SEE, MY LAD?’ SAID HE.”]
-
-Whilst my little brains were thus busy, my eye was taken by what appeared
-to be a sort of smudge far away astern in the windy shadow of the night.
-If I looked straight at it, it vanished, but on gazing a little away from
-it I could see it very clearly. I continued to peer for some time, and
-was quite sure that the blotch—whatever it might be—was hardening, so to
-speak, and enlarging. I turned my head to see if the mate observed it,
-but was sure he had not by his manner of walking the deck. I stepped up
-to him, and said:
-
-“If you please, sir, I think there’s something catching us up out there!”
-and I levelled my small arm at the ocean over the stern.
-
-“Why, what d’ye see, my lad?” said he, very kindly; “you must have
-gimblet-like eyes to be able to bore a hole into such a night as this.
-It’s Master Rockafellar, isn’t it?” stooping to get a sight of my face.
-“Overtaking us, do you say?”
-
-He walked right aft, I following him, and stood staring a moment or
-two, then with a start cried, “By George, the _Flying Dutchman_, I do
-believe! A big ship coming through the air it looks, and overhauling us
-as though she were a roll of smoke. Jump below, my lad, and fetch me my
-night-glass.”
-
-He told me where his cabin was, and where I should find the glass, and
-off I rushed, proud to be employed. His cabin window overlooked the
-quarter-deck, and against the bulkhead the four middies of our watch were
-grouped, smoking and yarning in the shelter there.
-
-“Why, what are you up to?” shouted one of them; “that’s the chief
-mate’s cabin. He’ll hang you up by the neck at that yard-arm, you young
-Rockafellar, if he catches you in his berth.”
-
-“He has sent me for his night-glass,” answered; “there is a big ship
-coming up astern.”
-
-“O-ho!” cried they, and emptying the bowls of their pipes, they fled like
-startled deer on to the poop.
-
-I found the glass—a binocular—and ran with all my might with it to the
-mate, who, as he took it from me, said, “That’s right. You’re a smart
-boy!” a piece of commendation which so inspirited me that, I believe, had
-he told me to go up to the main-royal-yard, I should have promptly and
-comfortably have made my way to that great height.
-
-The sight I had been the first to descry was, indeed, well worth
-watching. The speed of our own ship through the water, though she was
-under very small canvas, could not have been less than nine knots in the
-hour, yet the vessel astern grew upon us as though we were in tow of one
-of our own quarter-boats, and scarcely moving. She showed pale as the
-watery moon dimly glancing through a body of vapour.
-
-“She is dead in our wake,” the chief mate said, as though talking
-to himself. “Does she see us, I wonder? Heavens alive! what is she
-under—_skysails_ can it be? It’s enough to make one think oneself in a
-dream.”
-
-I saw him send a glance towards the companion-hatch, as though he had a
-mind to call the captain.
-
-[Illustration: “THE VESSEL ASTERN GREW UPON US.”]
-
-“Here, one of you,” he shouted to the midshipmen, who were grouped
-on the other side of the wheel, staring with all their eyes at the
-approaching ship, “whip that binnacle lamp out and show it.”
-
-Kennet sprang to the compass-stand, unshipped the light, vaulted on to
-the grating, and there stood holding, at the height of his arm, the
-will-o’-the-wisp spark of flame.
-
-The pursuing vessel was doubtless much closer to us when I first
-perceived her than I should have supposed by the pallid shadow she made
-on the troubled darkness of the waters. I think it must have been in
-less than half-an-hour’s time from the moment of my sighting her that
-she became a huge, easy-distinguishable shape in the heart of our wake.
-You saw sail upon sail towering upon her in pale spaces, which glimmered
-as though she reflected a strong starlight. By this time the news had
-reached the cuddy, and the captain had come on deck, together with most
-of the passengers, and we stood in a crowd, watching, and waiting, and
-wondering; for not yet had the tall and rushing phantom astern of us
-offered to shift her helm, and to my young eyes it seemed as though
-she was bound to steer right into us, cleaving us to amidships, like
-splitting a log with the blow of a hatchet.
-
-“What does he mean to do? There seems no look-out on board!” called the
-captain to the mate. “Show more lights, Mr. Johnson, and let it be done
-quickly.”
-
-The officer delivered some orders in a sharp, eager voice, and in a
-few minutes three or four sailors came running aft with large lanterns
-swinging in their hands.
-
-“She has the cut of a Yankee,” I heard the captain say to the mate; “her
-high bows and crowd of canvas forward screen us from her quarter-deck.
-Great thunder! is she in a madman’s hands? She will be into us, sir. Fire
-a rocket!”
-
-These signals were kept somewhere below. A midshipman shot away like an
-arrow, and returned, and then up soared the thing, the fire of it hissing
-as it sped javelin-like into the flying thickness on high, where it burst
-like a flash of lightning, flinging a green radiance far and wide, and
-sailing in a ball of flame slowly over our mizzen-mast-head on to the
-lee-bow.
-
-Almost simultaneously with the detonation it made, like the blast of a
-blunderbuss, we saw the head of the vessel astern falling off. As she
-rose foaming to the head of a sea, her flying jibboom went majestically
-rounding away to leeward of us, opening out the fabric behind into a ship
-of some fifteen hundred tons, with high black sides and cotton-white
-canvas of the Yankee swelling from the water-ways to the trucks. A sort
-of groan of astonishment and admiration, mingled with a deep note of the
-fear that had been excited, arose from amongst the crowd of us. Indeed,
-but for her putting her helm over, her long bowsprit and tapering
-jibbooms must have been spearing our rigging in another five minutes, and
-her sharp clipper stem grinding into our counter.
-
-A voice hailed us from her; our captain sprang on to the grating abaft
-the wheel, and roared back, “What d’ye say?” But no response was made to
-this. She swept past to leeward, within a musket-shot. You could hear the
-thunder of the wind in her canvas, and the roaring of the water crushed
-into yeast at her stem. It was like hearkening to the beating of surf on
-a stormy night on the sea-coast. She showed no light of any kind, not a
-spot of brightness on her deck or in her side to relieve the deep dye
-of blackness her hull made upon the obscurity. In a few minutes she had
-forged ahead, and a little later she had melted out upon the gloom over
-the port bow.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-_HE IS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING._
-
-
-This was an incident to kill the tediousness of my first watch on deck
-very pleasantly. It was seeing life at sea too, tasting the excitement of
-it, and when eight bells sounded, and I went below, I began in good truth
-to feel myself something of a sailor.
-
-But it was “watch and watch,” with us on board that ship, as in all
-other ships of those days, though what the practice is now in this age
-of steamboats I will not undertake to say. By “watch and watch,” I mean
-that one division of the crew went below for four hours, whilst the other
-division kept the deck. Those below then came up again for another four
-hours’ duty, and so on till the dog watches came round, when each watch
-had two hours of duty only, the object of the change being to vary the
-time of the four hours’ watches; so that, for example, if one division
-had to keep the middle watch, say on a Monday the dog watches contrived
-that that spell of duty would next night fall to the lot of the other
-division.
-
-What “watch and watch” signified I never could have imagined till four
-o’clock in the morning was struck on the ship’s bell, and the midshipmen
-who had been on deck since midnight came in their headlong way below to
-rout us up.
-
-“Eight bells! eight bells, my honeys!” they roared. “Out you come, and up
-you go! It rains beautifully, and is still as black as thunder all round.”
-
-I was in a dead sleep, and could scarcely open my eyes. By way of helping
-me to wake up, one of the lads who had just descended threw his streaming
-sou’-wester at my face.
-
-“Who’d be a sailor?” yawned the long midshipman named Poole. “This is a
-part of the life that they know nothing about ashore.”
-
-“Oh, what would I give for my feather bed at home!” groaned another
-youngster, drowsily thrusting his arms into a damp jacket.
-
-“Lively now, or I’ll feather bed ye!” shouted Mr. Cock from his corner
-bunk. “A sailor who talks of a feather bed should be tarred first before
-the down’s applied. My precious limbs! Was it out of such whinings as
-this that Trafalgar’s victory was manufactured?”
-
-But there was no magic in the thoughts of Nelson to inspirit one at such
-a moment as this. For my part, my sympathies were wholly with the lad
-who yearned for a feather bed, and though I had promised my father not
-to swap my clothes, I would have gladly given half my outfit for the
-privilege of turning in again. Oh the misery of the cold and wet of the
-deck, going to it as I did with lids of lead, and trembling in oilskins,
-from the comfort and warmth of the blankets! I shall give up the sea,
-I thought as I climbed the poop ladder with chattering teeth: I have
-already had enough of it. I would go on shore at once if I could. What is
-there in brass buttons to render this sort of thing tolerable?
-
-There were no signs of daybreak till about six o’clock, and then down
-away in the east there stole out upon the gloom a faint, most melancholy
-grey light, against which the ridge horizon washed in a tumbling line
-of ink. How am I to express the cheerless aspect of the ship in the
-illumination of this dull and dismal dawn? Her reefed canvas was dark
-with wet, her slack gear was blown into semi-circles by the gale, her
-scuppers sobbed with wet, and the water floated from side to side of her
-deck with her rolling. But all the same, the planks had to be washed
-down, the hencoops cleansed, and the poop made tidy; so as soon as light
-enough came to see by, the pump was rigged, buckets got along, and there
-we were scrubbing for our lives, with smoke from the newly-kindled galley
-fire breaking from the chimney, the boatswain on the main-deck pointing
-his hose, and bawling to the sailors to scrub with a will, the wide-awake
-pigs under the long-boat grunting for their breakfast, the cow lowing
-gloomily at catching sight of the butcher’s mate, and the ship all the
-while rushing before the strong gale, with the chasing seas breaking in
-foam to the height of the main-brace bumpkins, and a grim and yellow
-salt in a tight sou’-wester swinging off upon the wheel, and mumbling
-upon a quid that stood high in his cheek, as though he were muttering
-sea-blessings to himself on the ocean life in general, and on the _Lady
-Violet_ in particular.
-
-Well, when the gale broke we had fine weather, and nothing noticeable
-happened for some days. The passengers got the better of their
-sea-sickness, and came on deck, and the ship looked hospitable and
-homely, with ladies reading or knitting, or walking the decks aft, and
-with the poor women of the steerage forward sitting in the sun, with
-coloured handkerchiefs tied round their heads, their children romping
-about their feet, and the men belonging to their company lounging against
-the bulwarks, pipes between their teeth, their hats slouched, and their
-arms folded.
-
-We were sliding towards the warm parallels, and Mr. Cock told me to keep
-a bright look-out for flying fish, as we should be seeing them spark out
-of the blue water alongside before long, “like silver paper-cutters,
-Master Rockafellar,” said he, “on the gauze wings of the dragon-fly.” By
-this time I was able to crawl aloft without a beating heart and trembling
-body. I could shin over the mizzen-top as lightly and easily as the rest
-of them, and had been once on to the mizzen-royal-yard, the highest yard
-on the mizzen-mast, to watch Kennet roll the sail up, that I might know
-how to furl it for myself another time.
-
-In fact, I had now climbed the rigging often enough to enjoy being aloft.
-I would think as I poised myself upon a foot-rope, and overhung the yard
-it belonged to, that nothing nearer to the sensation of flying could
-be imagined. I swung between heaven and sea. The soft cream-coloured
-clouds looked to be rolling close over my head. Far away down was the
-narrow white deck of the ship, with sail upon sail swelling in curves
-of snow-white softness betwixt where I was perched, and the ivory-like
-planks deep down below. The blue ocean swept away into boundless
-distance, and the world of waters looked as huge as though the sight of
-them was a dream.
-
-At last came a day that was to be marked by an incident of terror. The
-captain and mates had taken the sun at noon; the sailors had eaten
-their dinner, and the port-watch, the one that I belonged to, was on
-deck, to remain there till four. Two of the midshipmen were on the
-cross-jack-yard at work on some job there, the third was below, and I,
-the fourth of them, hung about the break of the poop in readiness to run
-on an errand, and to jump to any order given me.
-
-It was a fine warm day, the wind right aft, and the ship was buzzing
-along with studding sails out on both sides. The tiffin bell had just
-sounded; there was nobody on the poop but the chief mate, myself, and
-the man at the wheel. Through the skylight I could see the passengers
-assembling at the luncheon table. Presently noticing that Mr. Johnson,
-the chief officer, was staring with unusual steadfastness at the horizon
-over the stern, I sent a look in that direction, and observed that there
-was a large black cloud sailing up the sky, exactly on a line with the
-course we were making. I never had before, and have never since, seen
-a body of vapour with so ugly a look. Its hinder part was tufted into
-the true aspect of thunder; its brow was a pale sulphur colour, which
-darkened into a swollen curve of livid belly; its wild extraordinary
-shape too made you think of it as of some leviathan flying beast, a
-mighty dragon, such as one reads about, or some huge and horrible
-creation descending from another world. The black shadow it threw upon
-the sea contrasted oddly with the flashing blue that was streaming
-merrily with us along the path of the wind.
-
-However, it is a saying with Jack that you need never fear a squall that
-you can see through. The blue sky showed clear and bright past the tail
-of the cloud on the sea-line, as the mass of black vapour soared. The
-mate turned to pace the deck, just sending a careless glance over the
-stern now and again. It was easy to guess that he saw nothing to trouble
-him there; no order was given, and the ship continued to sail pleasantly
-on the wings of her far overhanging canvas before the warm and gushing
-wind.
-
-Gradually the cloud overtook us, and then it overhung the vessel like an
-immense black canopy, plunging us and a great space of sea into gloom,
-and all around, beyond the confines of its murky dye, was shining summer
-weather. But the cloud, instead of blowing ahead, lingered over us as
-though its stooping bosom was arrested by our mast-heads, or the whole
-electric body of it attracted by our tall fabric. No rain fell, no
-squally gust of wind swept from it through the regular breathing of the
-breeze astern. The mate crossed over to where I was standing, and looked
-over the rail into the main-chains.
-
-“Ha!” he cried, “jump down there, Master Rockafellar,” pointing to the
-platform called the channel, which in those days served to spread the
-rigging, “and cast that lightning conductor adrift.”
-
-[Illustration: “I FELT MYSELF SWEPT BACKWARDS.”]
-
-Now, this lightning conductor was of copper wire; the point of it rose
-above the main truck, and the length of it was led down the main-royal
-back-stay to the water’s edge. But the bottom end of it, instead of
-trailing in the water, was coiled up and “stopped,” as it is called, to
-one of the lanyards of the shrouds. In other words, it was tied to a part
-of the rigging by rope-yarns.
-
-I stood a moment feeling for my knife, which I then remembered I had left
-in my bunk. The mate seeing that I was at a loss, and understanding by my
-gestures what my want was, cried to a young ordinary seaman, who was on
-the main-deck, to jump into the chains and cut the lightning conductor
-adrift, and drop the end overboard. He was a fine young fellow—an
-Irishman, I remember, named Barry. His sheath-knife was on his hip, and
-he whipped the blade from its leather case, as he bounded on to the
-topgallant-rail, and dropped over the side into the main chains.
-
-He had got his hand on the coil of wire, and was in the act of passing
-his knife through the rope-yarns, when a great spurt of flame fell in a
-dazzling flash down the rigging. The whole ship seem to reel out of the
-shadow that was upon her in a blaze of crimson glory. In the same breath
-there was a single blast of thunder, one dead enormous shock, that seemed
-to bring the vessel to a stand, and thrill through every plank in her,
-as though she had grounded. I was standing close to the rail at the
-moment; the flame rushed close past me; the air was scorching hot with
-it; but, for the beat of a pulse only, so far as I was concerned, for I
-felt myself swept backwards, as though lifted off my feet, and fell at
-full length upon my back. I immediately sprang to my legs, almost out
-of my mind with bewilderment and terror, but in no wise hurt. The mate,
-grasping the rail with one hand, was shading his eyes with the other.
-The captain, followed by all the passengers, came rushing up out of the
-cuddy, whilst such of the crew as were below tumbled headlong from the
-forecastle to see what had become of the ship.
-
-“What is it? What is it?” shouted the skipper, as he ran towards us.
-
-The mate turned his face, but continued to keep his eyes covered. “God
-forgive me!” he exclaimed; “I believe I am struck blind.”
-
-In a moment the captain saw how it was, and the ship’s doctor, without a
-word, passed his arm through the mate’s, and led the poor fellow below.
-
-“How did this happen, Master Rockafellar?” exclaimed the captain.
-
-I quickly told him that the mate had gone to the side to see if the
-lightning conductor was all right, and had called to one of the ordinary
-seamen to jump into the chains to clear it.
-
-He stepped to the rail to look over and all the passengers went with
-him, shouldering one another to obtain a view. The sailor stood upright,
-with one hand yet upon the coil of wire. His right hand, from which the
-knife had fallen, was outstretched, but as we looked we could see it
-slowly, very slowly, sinking to his side, as the handle of a pump will
-fall from a horizontal position. I could not see his face; it was turned
-seawards.
-
-[Illustration: “THE KNIFE HAD FALLEN.”]
-
-“Are you all right down there, my lad?” sang out the captain.
-
-The young fellow neither answered nor moved.
-
-“He has been stunned!” exclaimed one of the passengers.
-
-“Oh, but wouldn’t he have fallen overboard if that were so?” cried
-another.
-
-The captain shouted to some seamen, who were overhanging the bulwarks in
-the waist:
-
-“Aft here, a couple of you, and help Barry inboard.”
-
-It was at that moment the ship slightly rolled to port, and the figure
-of Barry plunged into the sea, falling limberly in the most lifelike
-manner. He struck the water, and lay afloat, and then, as he went astern,
-I caught a glimpse of his face. It was the colour of chocolate, most
-horrible to view, with nothing of his eyes showing but the whites, and
-his lips distended in a dreadful grin, exhibiting his teeth and gums
-as though his mouth had been torn away. One of the ladies fainted. A
-shriek arose from many of them. The third mate sprang aft, and I saw him
-standing erect on the taffrail poising a lifebuoy; but even whilst he
-flourished the thing the body sank.
-
-Never for an instant was it doubted by any of us that he had been struck
-dead, and that he was a corpse when he fell from the chains. It was a
-fate I myself had escaped by the very skin of my teeth only! But for
-my having left my knife below, I should at once have dropped over the
-side on being ordered to do so by the mate, and there have been killed
-by the flash that had slain the unhappy young sailor man! Yet nothing
-was made of my escape. The captain merely said, “Lucky for you, Master
-Rockafellar, that you weren’t in Barry’s place;” whilst the midshipmen
-hardly referred to the matter, except to say that the mate had no right
-to put a man to the job of handling a lightning conductor with an
-electric storm hanging over the mast-heads.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-_HE HEARS A BELL._
-
-
-There is no sentiment at sea, and if you come off with your life no
-matter how narrowly, that is enough for _you_. You are not expected to
-speak of the close shave, unless with a grin of indifference. Let your
-shipmates believe that you view it seriously, and they will set you
-down for a swab, a lady sailor, a longshoreman. This arises from an
-overstrained sense of manliness; yet it is true, nevertheless, that no
-genuine seaman will ever care to make anything of an accident, though
-no more than an inch of space or a single moment of time stand between
-him and a horrible end. However, that night, when I was in my bunk, and
-my messmates asleep, I got upon my knees in my bed, and, with tears and
-sobs, thanked my Heavenly Father for His preservation of me. I was very
-heavy when I first laid me down, but I kept myself awake that I might
-lift up my young heart in gratitude, and pray for a continuance of God’s
-mercy; and when I put my head again on the bolster, there was just such a
-sense of peace and happiness in me as would have come had my mother stood
-by my bedside and kissed me.
-
-For four days the mate was off duty, and it was feared that he would
-lose his sight, but to the general satisfaction of all hands—for he was
-an excellent seaman, a kind-hearted man, and popular fore and aft—he
-made his appearance on deck on the morning of the fifth day with a shade
-over his eyes, and by the end of the week his old power of vision was
-perfectly restored to him.
-
-We took the trade wind, and swept down the broad Atlantic Ocean, making
-run after run in the twenty-four hours that was almost equal to steam, as
-steam then went. I was now as nimble aloft as need be, knew all the ropes
-of the ship, had learnt to make most of the principal knots, could polish
-a length of brass-work with the best of them, and, in other ways, was
-winning recognition as being of some use aft, small as I was. Mr. Cock
-was very kind to me, he showed me how to use the sextant, and took much
-trouble in explaining points of navigation.
-
-Once during a quiet middle watch—that is, from midnight until four in
-the morning—I was standing near the wheel, looking at the compass, and
-thinking how like a live thing it was, as sentient as though it were
-informed by a human spirit, marvellously and beautifully faithful as a
-finger pointing the way to the mariner over the trackless breast of the
-deep. I was standing, I say, with my little head full of fancies coming
-into it out of the luminous circle of card, when Mr. Johnson, coming up,
-asked me if I would like to steer.
-
-“Ay, sir,” I answered, “I should, very much.”
-
-“You’re but a little one for that big wheel,” said he, and I could see
-him smiling by the starlight, “but the helm don’t kick, and you’re here
-to learn. Give him hold of the spokes, Hunt,” said he, addressing the
-man, “and show him what to do;” and so saying, he fell to patrolling the
-deck afresh, softly whistling, as if for more wind.
-
-The breeze was abeam, a pleasant air that held the sails motionless, and
-we were quietly going along at about four and a half knots. I grasped the
-wheel, and the man stood behind me.
-
-[Illustration: “I GRASPED THE WHEEL.”]
-
-“Now, young gen’man,” said he, “you see that there mark? We calls that
-the _lubber’s point_. It’s on a line with the ship’s head, and when you
-know your course, you’ve got to keep the p’int of it dead on end with
-that there mark, if so be as she don’t break off, or if so be as there
-ain’t no sea on. But if her head swings, then you’ve got to hit what’s
-called the mean of the oscillations of the card. Can you tell how her
-head is now?”
-
-“Sou’, sou’-west,” I answered.
-
-“You look again,” said he.
-
-“South by west, three-quarters west,” said I after a prolonged squint at
-the compass.
-
-“Right!” said he; “now you keep her to _that_.”
-
-She needed no steering, however. At long intervals a very small movement
-of the helm sufficed; but my enjoyment was very great. I was not yet
-fourteen, but had I been forty I could not have felt more fully a man. I
-cannot express how great was the sense of importance which possessed me
-when I considered that the big ship, with her costly freight and the many
-souls who were sleeping under my feet, was being directed by my young
-hands through the great enveloping shadow of the night. At first I could
-scarcely realize my power, and asked permission of the somewhat hoarse
-salt who leaned upon the grating behind me to move the wheel, that I
-might make sure that the ship would respond to the helm in _my_ hands.
-
-“Well,” he answered, “I dunno that half a p’int off ’ll sinnify for a
-minute. Try her if you like, my lad.”
-
-So I put my small weight upon the spokes, and brought the wheel over,
-till the sailor in muffled accents (that the mate might not hear) cried
-“So!” Great was my delight on observing the card to swing.
-
-“There, young gen’men,” exclaimed my companion, “she’s a willing old
-mare, ye see. Now bring her to her course again.”
-
-I thrust the spokes over the other way, intently staring at the card.
-
-“Stead-_dee_!” came a hoarse whisper from behind me: “meet her, my lad,
-or she’ll be a p’int too high afore you know where you are.”
-
-But he had to show me what he meant by slightly reversing the helm, as
-the ship came back to her course. I was highly delighted, and should
-have been glad to steer for the remainder of the night. However, the
-mate broke into my enjoyment by ordering me to trim the binnacle lamp;
-but always afterwards I was on the look-out for an opportunity to take
-the wheel, my experiences creeping cautiously from light airs into smart
-breezes, until it came to my being as well qualified as any man on board,
-having regard to my strength, of course, to stand a “trick.”
-
-This reference to my first standing at the wheel of the _Lady Violet_
-recalls to my mind another incident of the middle watch a week or two
-later on. We were nearing the equator, and had already penetrated that
-glassy belt of baffling airs and sneaking cats-paws extending a degree or
-two on either hand the Line, and universally spoken of by sailors as the
-“Doldrums.” I turned out at midnight and went on deck. The sky was very
-full of large rich trembling stars, yet they seemed to diffuse no light,
-saving one planet in the south under which there lay in the black breast
-of the deep a little icy gleam of wake, or reflection; otherwise the
-ocean stretched as black as thunder to its horizon. There was a gentle
-wind blowing off the quarter, just enough to give us steerage way, with
-a long light swell from the westwards, upon which the ship rolled as
-regularly as the tick of a clock, her topsail sometimes coming in to the
-mast with a clap that made one think a gun had been fired up aloft.
-
-It was a very hot night; now and again there was a delicate winking of
-violet lightning in the far north-east. It was about twenty minutes after
-midnight, and I was walking up and down the poop to leeward with Kennet,
-hearing him tell of a donkey race that he once rode in, when he suddenly
-came to a stand holding his breath as it were, and then exclaimed in a
-mysterious voice, “I thay, Rockafellar, what’th that?”
-
-“What do you mean?” I asked; “anything to see or listen to?”
-
-“To liththen to,” he said.
-
-I strained my ear.
-
-“There!” he cried.
-
-“A bell,” I explained. “There must be a ship near us. The sound is off
-abeam here,” and we stepped to the lee rail on the port side of the
-vessel.
-
-The chimes of a bell tolling very slowly, as though for a funeral,
-could be heard with curious distinctness, so delicate a vehicle for the
-transmission of sound is smooth water.
-
-“Therth a bell ringing out to port here, thir,” called out Kennet to the
-mate.
-
-Mr. Johnson crossed over to our side, and listened.
-
-“Yes, a bell sure enough,” said he presently, after peering earnestly
-into the gloom in the direction of the noise, “but I see nothing of a
-shadow to resemble a ship. Do you, young gentlemen? Your eyes should be
-keener than mine.”
-
-We stared our hardest, and answered, “Nothing, sir.”
-
-“Fetch my binocular glass, Rockafellar.”
-
-He searched the sea narrowly through it, but there was no distinguishable
-smudge of any sort.
-
-Black as the ocean was, there were stars hanging low over the horizon,
-and had there been a ship within five miles of us, the eclipse of those
-stars by her sails would have revealed her. But the tolling assured us
-that the bell could not be half-a-mile distant. It swung in long floating
-chimes across the water, and I cannot express the quality of mystery and
-awe which the strange noise put into the darkness of the night. It made
-one think of a church ashore, and a graveyard with its mouldering stones
-glimmering to the starlight.
-
-“Fo’k’sle there!” shouted Mr. Johnson, “do you hear the sound of a bell
-off the sea?”
-
-“Ay, ay, sir,” came a growling answer out of the deep gloom of the fore
-part of the ship.
-
-“Can you make out anything like a sail?”
-
-There was a pause, and then came the reply, “No, sir; there’s nothing in
-sight.”
-
-“This beats all my going a-fishing,” said the mate, going to the rail to
-listen again.
-
-The watch on deck uncoiled themselves from the secret nooks in which
-they had been dozing, and went to the bulwarks, which they overhung
-listening, and then broke into exclamations as the ghostly tolling met
-their ears. Some of the fellows who were off duty, disturbed by the noise
-on deck, came out of the forecastle; then the captain arrived through the
-companion-hatch, and was presently followed by some passengers, so that
-it seemed as if the bell had woke the whole ship up; for here were we
-with a tolerably crowded deck, and the hour one o’clock in the morning.
-
-The growing clearness of the chimes showed that we were approaching the
-bell. The helm was shifted, so as to head the vessel in the direction of
-the sound, but very shortly after this had been done the wind failed,
-and a clock-calm fell; the long light swell rolled in folds of polished
-ebony, and we lay without an inch of way upon us.
-
-The chiming of the bell, that did not now seem two cables’ length away
-from us ahead, broke with startling clearness through the dull flapping
-of the canvas as the _Lady Violet_ swayed. Yet there was nothing to be
-seen. Maybe there were now some eighty pairs of eyes staring from poop,
-main-deck, and forecastle, but there was nothing between us and the
-stars of the horizon. What could it be? I remember that my own little
-heart beat fast when Kennet, in a voice of awe, said that he reckoned it
-was some spirit of the sea ringing the ship’s funeral bell, and that he
-wouldn’t be surprised if by this time to-morrow night we were all dead
-men. You could hear a murmur of superstitious whispers and talk rolling
-along the line of sailors and steerage passengers at the rail. The
-captain poop-poohed, and I heard him say—
-
-“Pshaw, gentlemen, there are no _Flying Dutchmen_ in this age. It is a
-bell, I grant, and where the noise comes from I don’t know, but there is
-nothing in a little conundrum of this kind to alarm us.”
-
-But all the same, even to my youthful ears, the secret superstitious
-dismay and wonder which were upon him sounded so clear in his voice that
-one did not want to see his face to know how he felt. All night long the
-bell continued to toll just off the bow, and not a sigh of wind was to be
-felt, so dead was the calm that had come down. Never a man or a boy of
-us all turned in. I went on to the forecastle with others, and followed
-Kennet on to the flying jibboom, at the extremity of which long spar we
-were nearer to the object that produced the noise than any person who
-remained inboard was, but there was nothing to be seen, though I stared
-into the quarter whence the chimes were issuing in a regular tolling,
-rhythmic as the heave of the swell, until my eyes reeled in my head.
-
-The puzzle was not to be solved till daybreak, and then, when the swift
-tropic dawn had brightened out the sea from line to line, a cry half of
-laughter, half of indignation, seemed to break from all hands, as though
-they could now scorn themselves for the emotions of the night. In fact,
-within a quarter of a mile ahead of us there rose and fell upon the
-swell, that was still polished as quicksilver, a small wooden frame of
-an elliptical form, supported on a somewhat broad platform, portions of
-the planking of which were split, as though it had at one time formed a
-solid body which had been wrenched and mutilated by a blow of the sea.
-Under the frame, amidships of it, dangled a large ship’s bell, the tongue
-of which, vibrating regularly as the heave of the sea swayed the whole
-fabric, struck the metal sides, and produced the dismal and melancholy
-tolling which had kept us awake and filled us with consternation
-throughout the night! Little wonder that the keenest eyes amongst us
-should not have perceived it; even by daylight, and at a short distance
-from us, it showed but as a very little object—so small indeed, that had
-it passed us within a biscuit-toss in the darkness, it must have slipped
-by unperceived.
-
-It was no doubt a part of a wreck, and had probably belonged to some
-foreign ship. We could afford to laugh at our fears now, and certainly we
-deserved the relief of a little merriment, for our superstitious alarm
-throughout the long hours of the darkness had been very considerable.
-
-[Illustration: “UNDER THE FRAME ... DANGLED A LARGE SHIP’S BELL.”]
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-_HE SEES THE EQUATOR._
-
-
-We crossed the equator a little before noon on a Tuesday. Though I had
-learnt at school all about the imaginary line that girdles the earth,
-yet I was stupid enough to believe what Kennet and the others told me:
-namely, that if I ascended to the foretop with a telescope, and pointed
-it steadily over the starboard cat-head, I should obtain a good view of
-the equator. No more was necessary than to ascertain at what hour the
-ship was likely to cross the line, so as to save the anxiety of looking
-for the circle when it might still be some distance below the edge of the
-sea. On the morning of this Tuesday Kennet arrived on the poop with a
-telescope in his hand, and said—
-
-“Poole and I are going into the foretop to view the equator. It should be
-in sight now from that height, for I heard the chief mate tell Mrs. Moore
-that if this air held we should be crossing it about half-past eleven.
-Will you come along with us, Rockafellar?”
-
-“Yes,” said I; “I should like to see the equator. It will be something to
-talk about when I get home.”
-
-We went forward and got into the fore-shrouds on the lee-side, that our
-going aloft might not be noticed from the poop. When we were in the top,
-Poole steadied the glass against the topmast rigging, and instantly cried
-out “Beautiful!”
-
-“Is it in sight?” I exclaimed eagerly.
-
-“Oh, lovely! oh, divine!” he said in a voice of rapture, with his eye
-glued to the glass. “Kennet, my dear, come and take a look.”
-
-He held the glass, and Kennet peered.
-
-“Ha!” shouted the long-nosed youth, drinking in a deep breath: “a noble
-picture, by George! I wonder if the captain would let ’uth go athore upon
-it? Wouldn’t a ride on a camel be jolly along that ththrait road.”
-
-They were as grave as a pair of judges, saving the rapture which they
-endeavoured to express with their countenances.
-
-“I say, Poole, let’s have a look!” said I, thirsting with curiosity.
-
-“Make way for him, Kennet,” cried Poole.
-
-I put my eye to the telescope, which the midshipman continued to hold
-steady against the rigging, and sure enough, just a little way over the
-horizon, was the equator, a thin, very well-defined line, showing against
-the light azure of the sky like a delicate ruling in ink.
-
-“Thee it?” cried Kennet.
-
-“Yes,” said I, eagerly staring; “but it’s up in the air, Poole.”
-
-“Refraction, man, refraction,” he answered; “it always shows like that.”
-
-I sent a glance with my naked eye, and then peered again through the
-telescope.
-
-“When shall we be able to see it without a glass?” I asked.
-
-[Illustration: “I PUT MY EYE TO THE TELESCOPE.”]
-
-“That’ll depend upon the thtate of the weather,” answered Kennet.
-
-“But do we sail _under_ it?”
-
-“Oh, hang it, Rockafellar!” cried Poole, “you’re not at school now,
-little boy! Who’s to answer such questions? Let’s down on deck, or the
-mate’ll be singing out.”
-
-As I descended the shrouds I saw some sailors at work in the waist,
-grinning very hard.
-
-“Seen it, sir?” bawled one of them.
-
-“Yes,” said I.
-
-“No chance, I hope,” he sung out, “of its fouling our mast-heads, is
-there, sir? Otherwise it’ll sweep every spar overboard.”
-
-“No, it looks to be too high up in the air to hurt us,” I answered, and
-trudged aft, followed by a half-smothered chorus of laughter.
-
-The mate stood at the head of the poop ladder.
-
-“Where have you been, sir?” he exclaimed.
-
-“Up in the foretop, sir,” I answered.
-
-“And what job carried you there, young gentleman?”
-
-“I have been viewing the equator, sir,” I responded.
-
-“Who showed it to you?” said he, with a twinkling eye.
-
-“Mr. Kennet and Mr. Poole, sir,” said I.
-
-He beckoned, with a solemn motion of his forefinger, to Kennet, who
-approached.
-
-“Have you the equator handy about you, young gentleman,” he inquired.
-
-Kennet coloured up, and said he had left it in his telescope.
-
-“Bring it here, sir,” said the mate, “and let Mr. Poole attend, that we
-may have the benefit of his learning.”
-
-The midshipman disappeared, and shortly after returned, with the glass
-under his arm and Poole at his heels.
-
-“Now then, young gentlemen,” said the mate, “be good enough to show
-Master Rockafellar the equator from the poop point of view.”
-
-Poole looked very sheepish; Kennet hung his long nose over one of the
-middle lenses, which he unscrewed.
-
-“Now, let’s have a good geographical explanation, if you please, Mr.
-Poole,” said the mate.
-
-“There’s the line, Rockafellar,” said Poole, taking the lens, and
-pointing to a hair stretched across it, secured by a drop of gum at
-either extremity.
-
-It was now my turn to colour up. I had been handsomely gulled, and the
-worst of it was the sailors forward knew it.
-
-“Never mind, Master Rockafellar,” said the mate kindly; “older birds than
-you have been caught by that kind of chaff. You can take the equator
-below, Mr. Kennet,” and, smothering a laugh between his teeth, he walked
-aft.
-
-I was afterwards told that this was a very ancient trick; but, old as it
-was, a joke at my expense was made out of it, fore and aft; since for
-many days it never came to my passing two or more of the sailors but that
-one would sing out—
-
-“Bill, seen the line?”
-
-“No, Jack; where is it?”
-
-“In Rockafellar’s eye, bully!”
-
-However, to my great satisfaction, in due course this piece of humour
-grew stale, and was dropped.
-
-I had read, when at home, a good deal about the customs practised by
-sailors on crossing the equator, and was not a little disappointed to
-find that the crew went on with their work as unconcernedly as though the
-Line were a thousand miles distant. I had been haunted by visions of a
-fine theatrical show, and had secretly longed for the hour that was to
-exhibit Neptune with a crown on his head, and a beard of oakum on his
-chin, attended by his wife, his physician, and the several courtiers who
-made up his train of state. I had followed, with boyish eagerness, the
-accounts of the ceremony in the works of Marryat and in other novels, and
-was much dejected on being told by Mr. Cock that this sort of skylarking
-was out of date.
-
-“And well for you, young gentleman, maybe,” said he, “that it is so;
-for you’re a green hand, do you see, and it was always upon the like of
-you that the forecastle tomfoolery was poured out thickest. How would
-you relish, think you, being lathered with a mixture of tar and slush
-and filth; next, having your cheeks scraped with jagged bits of iron
-cask-hoops till they bled; then plunged backwards into water enough to
-drown you, and left to scramble out like a half-dead rat, amidst roars
-of laughter from the unfeeling Jack? No, no; I’m as fond as any man of
-honest skylarking, but there was always too much of Old Nick in the
-temper of the shaving and ducking custom to please my humour: and it’s
-a very good job, I think, that the mouldy bit of barbarity was long ago
-flung overboard.”
-
-The ship was often brought to a stand by calms during our passage of the
-equator, and these intervals were very monotonous and hard to bear.
-
-The midshipmen’s berth was so insufferably hot that during my watch below
-I was unable to remain in it, and would come on deck and hang about under
-the break of the poop where the side-wings of the saloon, or cuddy, made
-a recess, and where one was kept cool by the fanning of light draughts of
-air sent circling betwixt the rails by the swaying of the folds of the
-hauled-up main-course.
-
-It was at this time that an old gentleman named Catesby—a passenger—who
-had lived in Australia for many years, related to some of us lads an
-extraordinary experience that had befallen him during a voyage he made
-to India when a young man. The old East-Indiaman was then afloat; pirates
-were also abundant; there was no steam then to be met with at sea, and
-the excitement and romance of the ocean were at their height. The old
-gentleman had known a relative of mine, and took a fancy to me, and would
-frequently bring a handful of almonds and raisins or some sweet biscuits
-from his pockets—purloinings from the dessert on the cuddy table—and slip
-the delicacies into my hand with a merry manner of cautiously looking
-around him as though he was afraid of the captain seeing him. I remember
-that he delightfully killed several long hot hours one day by telling
-two or three of us lads the story of his early adventure. I see him now
-with a cigar drooping between his lips as he went on reciting, and recall
-the stare of admiration and expectation we fixed upon his face as he
-proceeded.
-
-The name which he said he always gave to his story when he told it to his
-friends was:
-
- “LA MULETTE.”
-
- All day long there had been a pleasant breeze blowing from
- abeam; but as the sun sank into the west the wind fined into
- light, delicate curls of shadow upon the sea that, at the hour
- of sundown when the great luminary hung poised like a vast
- target of flaming brass upon the ocean-line, turned into a
- surface of molten gold through which there ran a light, wide,
- long-drawn heave of swell, regular as a respiration, rhythmic
- as the sway of a cradle to the song of a mother.
-
- The ship was an Indiaman named the _Ruby_; the time long ago,
- as human life runs, in this century nevertheless, when the old
- traditional conditions of the sea-life were yet current—the
- roundabout Indian voyage by way of the Cape—the slaver sneaking
- across the parching parallels of the Middle Passage—the
- piccaroon in the waters of the Antilles dodging the fiery
- sloop whose adamantine grin of cannons was rendered horribly
- significant to the eye of the greasy pirate by the cross of
- crimson under whose meteoric folds the broadside thundered.
-
- I was a passenger aboard the _Ruby_, making the voyage to India
- for my pleasure. The fact was, being a man of independent
- means, I was without any sort of business to detain me at home.
- Your continental excursion was but a twopenny business to me.
- Here was this huge ball of earth to be circumnavigated whilst
- one was young, with spirits rendered water-proof by health.
- Time enough, I thought, to amble about Europe when Australia
- began to look a long way off. So this was my third voyage. One
- I had made to Sydney and Melbourne, and a second to China; and
- now I was bound to Bombay with some kind of notion beyond of
- striking into Persia, thence to Arabia, and so home by way of
- the classic shores of the Mediterranean.
-
- Well, it happened this 18th of June to be the captain’s
- birthday. His name was Bow; he would be fifty-three years old
- that day he told us, and as he had used the sea since the age
- of thirteen he was to be taken as a man who knew his business.
- And a better sailor there never was, and never also was there
- a person who looked less like a sailor. If ever you have seen
- a print of Charles Lamb you have had an excellent likeness of
- Captain Bow before you—a pale, spare creature of a somewhat
- Hebraic cast of countenance, with a brow undarkened by any
- stains of weather. His memory went far back; he had served as
- mate in John Company’s ships, had known Commodore Dance who
- beat Linois and spoke of him as a perfect gentleman; deplored
- the gradual decay of the British sailor, and would talk with
- a wistful gleam in his eye of the grand and generous policy
- of the Leadenhall Street Directors in allowing to their
- captains as much cubic capacity in the ships they commanded for
- their own private use and emolument as would furnish out the
- dimensions of a considerable smack.
-
- It was his birthday and long ago all of us passengers had made
- up our minds to celebrate the occasion by a supper, a dance
- on deck, and by obtaining permission for Jack forward to have
- a ball on condition that we should be allowed to ply him with
- drink enough to keep his heels nimble and no more. We were in
- the Indian Ocean climbing north, somewhere upon the longitude
- of Amsterdam Island, so formidable was the easting made in the
- fine old times. The latitude, I think, was about 12° south, and
- desperately hot it was, though the sun hung well in the north.
- Spite of awnings and wet swabs the planks of the deck seemed
- to tingle like burning tin through the thin soles of your
- boots. If you put your nose into an open skylight the air that
- rose drove you back with a sense of suffocation, so heavily
- was the fiery stagnation of it loaded with smells of food and
- of the cabin interior, though there never was a sweeter and
- breezier cuddy, with its big windows and windsail-heels when
- the thermometer gave the place the least chance. But when the
- sun was nearly setting, some sailors quietly came aft and fell
- to work to make a ball-room of the poop. They took the bunting
- out of the signal locker and stretched it along the ridge-ropes
- betwixt the awning and the rail until it was like standing
- inside a huge Chinese lantern for colour. They hung the ship’s
- lamps along in rows, roused up the piano from its moorings in
- the cuddy, embellished the tops of the hencoops with red baize,
- and in fifty directions not worth the trouble of indicating,
- so decorated and glorified the after-end of the ship that when
- the lamps came to be lighted with streaks of pearl-coloured
- moonshine glittering upon the deck betwixt the interstices of
- the signal flags, and movement enough in the tranquil lift of
- the great fabric to the swell to fill the eye with alternations
- of swaying shadow and gleam, this ball-room of almond-white
- plank and canvas ceiling of milky softness and walls of radiant
- banners was more like some fairy sea-vision than a reality,
- especially with the glimpse you caught of the vast silent ocean
- solitude outside with its sky of hovering stars and a stillness
- as of a dead world in the atmosphere—such a contrast, by
- heaven! to the revelry within the shipboard pavilion, when once
- the music had struck up and the forms of women in white gowns
- fluffing up about them like soapsuds were swimming round the
- decks in the embrace of their partners, that a kind of shudder
- would come into you with the mere thinking of the difference
- between the two things.
-
- The music was good; there was a steerage passenger, a lady,
- who played the piano incomparably well; then there was a
- cuddy passenger who blew upon the flute very finely indeed.
- A military officer returning to India after a long spell of
- sick-leave at home had as light, delicate and accomplished
- a hand on the fiddle as any of the best of the first violins
- which I have heard in the crackest of orchestras. When the
- committee of passengers had been talking about and arranging
- for this band the chief officer told them that if they thought
- there would not be instruments enough there was a man forward,
- a fellow named Ratt, who played the fiddle exquisitely, and,
- if we wished it, he would make one of the instrumentalists.
- We consented, and for several days previous to this night
- you might have heard Ratt rehearsing in the ’tween decks,
- scraping in a way that made the military gentleman returning
- from sick-leave look somewhat grave. He spoke of Ratt with a
- foreboding eye, and what he feared happened. The man could
- indeed play, but he had no sense of _time_. All went wrong with
- the first dance-air that was struck up. The tune he made was
- right enough; but it was always darting ahead and bewildering
- the others and finally the band came to a stop, though Ratt
- continued to play several bars, whilst the military gentleman
- in great temper was shouting to him to go away. I should have
- felt sorry for the poor fellow had he not been saucy, for he
- had dressed himself with extraordinary care, greased every
- separate hair upon his head as though it had been a rope-yarn
- and had arrived aft with a sailor’s expectation of seeing
- plenty of fun and getting plenty of drink. It ended in the
- chief mate grasping him by the collar and tumbling him down the
- poop ladder. I afterwards heard that he went forward and in a
- towering passion threw his fiddle overboard, swearing that he
- would never play upon anything again but the Jew’s harp and
- then only for hogs to dance to; there was no longer any taste
- left amongst human beings, he said, for good music.
-
- The merriment aft was scarcely affected by this instant’s
- failure. The moment Jack had been tumbled off the poop the
- instrumentalists began afresh and the decks were once more
- filled with sliding and revolving couples. I had slightly
- sprained my ankle that morning by kicking against a coil of
- rope and was unable to dance; but this was no deprivation to me
- on a burning hot night, with no place for the draughts out of
- the fanning canvas to come through, and the smell of blistered
- paint rising in a lukewarm breathing off the sides of the ship
- as though the sun still stood over the main-truck. So squatting
- myself on a hencoop I sat gazing at the merry, moving, radiant
- picture and listening to the music and to the laughter of the
- girls which came back from the canvas roof of the poop in
- echoes soft and clear as the notes of the flute.
-
- There were thirty-two cabin passengers in all, and we had a
- poopful, as you will suppose. There were more than a dozen
- girls, dark and fair, most of them pretty enough. There
- were a few young married ladies too and a little mob of
- dignified mammas. The men were of the old-fashioned mixture,
- a few military officers, a sprinkling of Civil Service young
- gentlemen, fierce old men with white whiskers and gleaming
- eyes, with peppercorns for livers and with a capacity of
- putting on the tender aspects of Bengal tigers when anything
- went wrong—merchants, judges, planters—I can scarce remember
- now what they were. There were lanterns enough to make a bright
- light, and some of them being of coloured glass threw bars of
- ruby and of emerald against the yellow radiance of the clear
- flame and the ivory streaks of moonlight. Far aft was the wheel
- with the brass upon it reflecting the lustre till it glowed
- out against the blackness over the stern like a circle of dull
- fire upon the liquid obscurity. Grasping the spokes of it was
- the figure of a seaman, smartly apparelled in flowing duck and
- a grass hat on “nine hairs”; his shape, dim in the distance,
- floated up and down against a bright star or two; but there was
- little need for him to keep his eye on the course. The calm was
- dead as dead could be. Half-an-hour since the ship’s head was
- north-west and now it was west, and the swell was under the bow
- with a strange melancholy sob of water breaking into the pauses
- betwixt the music and sounding like the sigh of a weeping
- giant somewhere in the blackness over the side.
-
- And black the water was spite of the air being brimful of the
- soft silver of the moonlight. On either hand the planet’s
- wake the ocean ran in ebony to the indigo of the night sky;
- but you only needed to steal to the break of the poop clear
- of the awning to mark how gloriously the luminary was limning
- the ship as if she had no other magic for the deep that night.
- Every sail was a square of pearl, every shroud and back-stay,
- every brace and halliard a rope of silver wire, the yards of
- ivory, with hundreds of stars of delicate splendour sparkling
- and flashing in the dew along the rails. The Jacks had rigged
- up lanterns forward and were cutting capers on the forecastle
- and in the waist to some queer music that was coming out
- of the darkness upon the booms. It was strange enough to
- see their whiskered faces revolving in the weak, illusive
- light, to witness apparitions of knobs and warts and wrinkles
- storm-darkened to the hue of the shell of a walnut showing
- out for an instant to the glare of a lantern. There was great
- laughter that way and a jovial growling of voices. I believe
- the sailors had got, with the captain’s leave, some of the
- women of the steerage passengers to dance with, and their
- happiness was very great; for give Jack a fiddle, and a girl
- to twirl to the sawing of it, and a drink of rum and water to
- fill up the short measures of his breathing-times, and he will
- ask for no other paradise ashore or afloat.
-
- Much was made of old Captain Bow. He looked as if he had taken
- all day to dress himself, so skewered was he in a garb of the
- old school; tail-coat, a frill, a collar half way the height of
- the back of his head, buff waistcoat, tight pantaloons; shoes
- like pumps, and a heavy ground-tackle of seals dangling from
- the rim of his vest.
-
- “Captain shows nobly to-night, sir,” said the chief mate to me.
-
- “Ay!” said I, “little enough of the salt in _him_ you’d think.”
-
- “He dances well enough for an old shellback,” said the mate.
- “A man needs a ship for a dancing-master to teach him how to
- spread his toes as the Captain does.”
-
- “Aren’t you dancing?” I asked.
-
- “No, it’s my watch on deck. I’ve got the ship to look after.
- But it’s little watching she wants. Oh, blow, my sweet breeze,
- blow!” he whispered, with a pensive cock of his eye at the sea
- through a space between the flags. “It isn’t to be the only
- birthday aboard us, I allow, Mr. Catesby. If the cockroaches
- below aren’t celebrating some festival of their own, then are
- we manned with marines, sir. Phew! the Hooghley of a dead night
- with bodies foul of the cable and the gangway ladder is a joke
- to this. What’s become of the wind? What’s become of the wind?”
- and he stole away to the wheel softly whistling between his
- teeth.
-
- It was too sultry to eat; the very drink you got was so warm
- that you swallowed it only for thirst, and put down the glass
- with a sort of loathing. When I took a peep through the after
- skylight and saw the tables laid out for supper for the special
- birthday feast that was to be eaten, my tongue did cleave to
- the roof of my mouth, and I felt as if I should never be able
- to eat another blessed morsel of food this side the grave.
- Every dish looked exhausted with perspiration; the hams were
- melting, the fowls shone like varnish, much that had come solid
- to the table was now fluid. However I was one of the committee
- and it would not do for me to be absent, so when the bell rang
- to announce supper and the music stopped, I stepped up to the
- wife of a colonel and, giving her my arm, fell in with the
- procession and entered the cabin.
-
- It is a picture I need but close my eyes to vividly witness
- anew. There were two tables, one athwartships well aft, and the
- other running pretty nearly down the whole length of the cabin.
- The interior was lighted with elegant silver lamps, and along
- the length of the ceiling there was a beautiful embellishment
- of ferns, goldfish in globes, and so forth. On either hand went
- a range of berths, the bulkheads richly inlaid, the panels
- hand-painted, and there was many another little touch full
- of grace and taste. Far aft, at the centre of the athwartship
- table—his quaint, old-fashioned figure showing like a cameo
- upon the dull ground of the bulkhead behind him—sat the
- captain, talking to right and left, with a dry, kind smile
- lying wrinkled upon his face like the meshes of a South African
- spider’s web. On either side of him went a row of passengers,
- down to the foot of the table that was over against the cuddy
- front. The ladies’ dresses were handsome; we were an assemblage
- of rich folks for the most part, and had thoroughly overhauled
- our wardrobes that we might do fitting honour to this very
- interesting occasion. Jewels sparkled in white ears, and upon
- white wrists and fingers. We were not lacking in turbans and
- feathers, in thick gold chains, immense brooches bearing
- the heads of the living or of the departed. There was much
- popping of champagne corks, much rushing about of stewards,
- much laughter, and a busy undertone of talk. The memory of the
- picture dwells in me with an odd pertinacity. I had shared
- in more than one festive scene on board ship in my time, but
- in none do I recall the significance which the framework of
- vast ocean solitude outside, of the deep mystery of the wide
- moonlit shadow, and the oppressive peace of the tropical night,
- communicated to this one. It might have been the number of
- the folks assembled; their gay, and in many instances, even
- splendid attire, the essentially shore-going qualities of the
- merry-making, clearly defining themselves in the heart of the
- deep—like the sight of a house in a flood. In fact the scene
- completely dominated all shipboard habits, and the thoughts
- which grew out of them. It made every heave of the fabric upon
- the weak, black, invisible swell a sort of wonder as though
- some novel element were introduced; the familiar creak of a
- bulkhead, the faint jar of the rudder upon its post caused one
- to start as one would to such things ashore.
-
- “You are refusing everything the stewards offer you, Mr.
- Catesby,” said the colonel’s lady by my side. “You are in love.”
-
- “I am in a fever, madam,” I replied: “the tropics usually
- affect me as a profound passion. In fact I feel as if I could
- drown myself.”
-
- “Why make a voyage to India, then, Mr. Catesby? Is there not
- the North-West Passage left to explore, with the great Arctic
- Circle to keep ye cool?”
-
- “Madam,” said I, “I perceive your husband in the act of rising
- to make a speech.”
-
- A short, fiery-faced Irishman, with whiskers like silver wires
- projecting cat-like from his cheeks, stood up to propose the
- captain’s health. Glasses were filled, and the little colonel
- blazed away. When he had made an end (old Bow steadfastly
- watching him all the while with a smile of mingled incredulity
- and delight), the skipper’s health was drunk with cheers and
- to the song of “He’s a jolly good fellow,” the air of which
- was caught up by the ship’s company forward, and re-echoed to
- the cuddy with hurricane lungs from the forecastle. Then old
- Bow rose straight and unbending in his tightly-buttoned coat
- on to his thin shanks; but at that moment there was a movement
- of a little group of the stewards at my end of the table; the
- colonel’s lady by my side was whispering with animation to
- what was in those days called a “griffin,” a handsome young
- fellow seated on her left; and being half dead with heat, and
- in no temper to listen to old Bow, whose preliminary coughs and
- slow gaze around the table threatened a very heavy bestowal
- of tediousness, I slipped off my chair, sneaked through the
- jumble of stewards, and in a moment was ascending the poop
- ladder, breathing with delight the night atmosphere of the sea,
- that tasted cold as a draught of mountain water after the hot,
- food-flavoured air of the cuddy.
-
- Forward the sailors had come to a stand, and were talking,
- smoking, drinking, and eating by the will-of-the-wisp glare of
- the few lanterns which hung that way. There was nobody aft,
- saving the helmsman and the second officer, who had turned out
- to relieve the chief mate that he might join the supper party.
- He lay over the rail abreast of the wheel, and I could hear
- him quietly singing. The lanterns burnt brightly; against the
- brilliant atmospheric haze of moonshine to larboard—_larboard_
- was then the word—the bunting which walled the poop glistened
- like oiled paper. The monotonous voice of old Bow was still
- returning thanks; again and again his deep sea notes were
- broken by loud cheers. The life below, the speechifying and the
- huzzaing there, the brightness of the light, the frequent chink
- of glasses, put a wild sort of mocking look into the emptiness
- of this deck with its lanterns swaying to the roll of the ship,
- and the motionless figure of the steersman showing unreal, like
- some image of the fancy, down at the end of the vessel, through
- the vista of bunting and kaleidoscopic light and white awning
- framing a star-studded square of dark ether over the taffrail.
-
- Yet I still wanted air. The poop was smothered up with flags
- and canvas; the cross-jack was furled, spanker brailed up,
- and the mainsail hung from its yard in festoons to the grip
- of its gear. There was no wing of canvas therefore near the
- deck to fan a draught along, and so it came into my head to
- jump aloft and see what sort of coolness of dew and dusk were
- to be had in the maintop. I got on to the rail and laid hold
- of the main shrouds, and leisurely travelled up the ratlines.
- Methought it was as good as climbing a hill for the change of
- temperature the ascent gave me. The iron of the futtock shrouds
- went through and through me in a delicious chill, and with the
- smallest possible effort I swung myself over the rim of the
- top and stood upon the platform, rapturously drinking in the
- gushings of air which came in little gusts to my face out of
- the pendulum beat of the great maintopsail against the mast to
- the tender swing of the tall fabric.
-
- If ever you need to know what a deep sense of loneliness is
- like, go aloft in a dead calm when the shadow of the night
- lies heavy upon the breathless ocean, and from the altitude of
- top, cross-tree or yard, look down and around you! The spirit
- of life is always strong in the breeze or in the gale of wind.
- There are voices in the rigging: there is the organ note of the
- billow flung foaming from the ship’s side; there is a tingling
- vitality in the long floating rushes of the fabric bursting
- through one head of yeast into another. All this is company,
- along with the spirit shapes of the loose scud flying wild, or
- the sociable procession of large, slow clouds. But up aloft
- in such a clock-calm as lay upon the deep that night you are
- _alone_! and the lonelier for the distant sounds which rise
- from the decks—the dim laugh, the faint call, liker to the
- memories of such thing than the reality.
-
- The body of the ship lay thin and long far beneath me like a
- black plank, pallid aft with the spread of awning, with an
- oblong haze of light in the main hatch where the grating was
- lifted, and dots of weak flame from the lanterns forward,
- resembling bulbous corposants hovering about the forecastle
- rail. The ship’s hull, by the broad raining of the moonshine,
- was complexioned to the aspect of the leaf of the silver
- tree when lighted by the stars. Yet as she slightly rolled,
- breaking the black water from her side into ripples, you saw
- the phosphor starting and winking in the ebony profound there,
- like the reflection of sheet-lightning. Exquisitely lulling
- was the tender pinion-like flapping of the light, moonlit
- canvas, soaring spire-fashion in ivory spaces high above my
- head, with the pattering of dew falling from the cloths as they
- swayed. A sound of thin cheering from the cuddy floated to me;
- presently a fiddle struck up somewhere forwards, and a manly
- voice began _Tom Bowline_. Now, thought I, if they would only
- strip the poop of its awning, that I might see them dancing by
- the lantern light when supper was over, and they had fallen to
- caper-cutting afresh! What a scene of pigmy revelry _then_!
- What a vision of Lilliputian enjoyment!
-
- I seated myself Lascar-fashion and lighted a cigar. Could I
- have distinguished the figure of a midshipman below I should
- have hailed him, and sent down the end of a line for a draught
- of seltzer and brandy. But the repose up here, the dewy
- coolness, the royal solitude of the still, majestic night, with
- sentinel stars drowsily winking along the sea-line, and the
- white planet of the moon sailing northwards into the west amid
- the wide eclipse of its own soft silver glory, were all that my
- fevered being could pray for.
-
- It is as likely as not that after a little I was nodding
- somewhat drowsily. I recollect that my cigar went out, and
- that on sucking at it and finding it out I would not be at
- the trouble of lighting it again. I say I might have been
- half-asleep sitting, still Lascar-fashion, with my back against
- the head of the lower-mast, when on a sudden, something—soft,
- indeed, but amazingly heavy—struck me full on the face and
- chest, and fell upon my knees where it lay like a small
- feather-bed. But for my back being supported, I must have been
- stretched at full length and, for all I know, knocked clean
- overboard, or, worse still, hurled headlong to the deck.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- I was so confounded by the shock and the blow that for some
- moments I sat goggling the object, that lay as lead upon my
- knees, like a fool. I then threw it from me, and stood up. It
- fell where a slant of moonshine lay clear upon the side of the
- top, and I perceived that it was a big sea-bird, as large as a
- noddy, white as snow saving the margin of its wings, which were
- of a velvet black. It had a long, curved beak, and I gathered
- from the look of one of its pinions, which overlaid the
- body as though broken, that its width of wing must have come
- proportionately very near to that of the albatross. I could see
- by the moonshine that the eyes were closing by the slow drawing
- down of a white skin. The creature did not stir. I stood
- staring at it full five minutes, gripping the topmast rigging
- to provide against its rolling me out of the top should it rise
- suddenly and strike out with its wings, but there was no stir
- of life in it. It was then that I caught sight of something
- which seemed to glitter in the thick down upon its breast like
- a dewdrop on thistledown. It was a little square case of white
- metal, apparently a tobacco-box, secured to the bird’s neck.
- By this time the passengers had come up from supper, and were
- dancing again on the poop. I could see nothing for the awning,
- but the music was audible enough, and I could also catch the
- sliding sounds of feet travelling over the hard planks, and the
- gay laughter of hearts warmed by several toasts. The Jacks were
- also at work forward. An occasional note of tipsy merriment, I
- would think, rose up from that part of the ship; but there was
- no lack of earnestness in the toe and heeling there; the slap
- of the sailors’ feet upon the decks sounded like the clapping
- of hands; and I could just catch a glimpse of the figure of the
- fiddler in the obscurity which overlaid the booms quivering and
- swaying as he sawed, as though the noise he made was driving
- him crazy.
-
- I seized the big bird by the legs and found its weight by
- no means so considerable as I should have supposed from the
- blow it dealt me. So, tightly binding its webbed feet with my
- pocket-handkerchief, that they might serve me as a handle,
- I dropped with this strange, dead sea-messenger through the
- wide square of the lubber’s hole into the main shrouds, and
- leisurely descended. The chief mate stood at the head of the
- starboard poop ladder as I reached the rail.
-
- “Hillo!” he called out, “good sport there, Mr. Catesby. What
- star have you been shooting over pray? And what _is_ it, may I
- ask? _turkey?_”
-
- A shout of this sort was enough to bring everybody running
- to look. The music ceased, the dancing abruptly stopped. In
- a moment I was surrounded by a crowd of ladies and gentlemen
- shoving and exclaiming as they gathered about the skylight upon
- which I had laid the big sea-fowl.
-
- “What is it, Mr. Catesby? My stars! a handsome bird surely,”
- exclaimed Captain Bow.
-
- “Oh, Captain,” cried a young lady, “is the beautiful creature
- dead really?”
-
- “See!” shouted a military man, “the creature’s breast is
- decorated with a crucifix. No, damme, it’s a trick of the
- light. What is it, though?”
-
- “A silver pouncebox, I declare,” exclaimed a tall, stout lady,
- with a knowing nod of the feather in her head.
-
- “A sailor’s nickel tobacco-box more like, ma’am,” observed the
- mate, “with some castaway’s writing inside, or that bird’s a
- crocodile.”
-
- “Let’s have the story of the thing, Mr. Catesby,” said the
- captain.
-
- I briefly stated that I had ascended to the maintop to breathe
- the cool air up there and that whilst I was nodding the bird
- had dashed against me and fallen dead across my knees.
-
- “Oh, how dreadful!” “Oh how interesting!” “Oh, I wonder the
- fright didn’t make you faint, Mr. Catesby!” and so on, and so
- on from the young ladies.
-
- “Shall I cast the seizing of the box adrift, sir?” said the
- mate.
-
- “Ay,” responded the captain.
-
- The officer with his knife severed the laniard of sennit and
- made to lift the lid of the box. But this proved a long job,
- inexpressibly vexatious to the thirsty expectations of the
- onlookers owing to the lid fitting so tightly as to resist, as
- though soldered, the blade of the knife. When opened at last,
- there was disclosed, sure enough, inside, a piece of paper
- folded, apparently a leaf from a logbook.
-
- “Bring a lantern, some one,” roared the mate.
-
- Some one held a light close to the officer, who exclaimed,
- after opening the sheet and gazing at it a little, “Any lady or
- gentleman here understand Spanish?”
-
- “I do,” exclaimed the handsome young “griffin” who had sat next
- to the colonel’s lady at table.
-
- “Will you kindly translate this then?” said the mate, handing
- him the letter.
-
- “It’s French,” said the young fellow; “no matter; I can read
- French.”
-
- He ran his eye over the page, coughed, and read aloud as
- follows:—
-
- “_La Mulette_, June 12th, 18—. This brig was dismasted in a
- hurricane ten days since. Three of us survive. At the time
- of our destruction our latitude was 8° south, and longitude
- 81° 10’ east. Should this missive fall into the hands of any
- master or mate of a ship he is implored in the name of God and
- of the Holy Virgin to search for and to succour us. He will be
- richly——”
-
- “Last words illegible,” said the young fellow, holding the
- paper close to his nose.
-
- “Humph!” exclaimed Captain Bow. He hummed over the latitude and
- longitude, and addressing the mate said, “The wreck should not
- be far off, Mr. Pike.”
-
- “Oh, captain, _will_ you search for the poor, poor creatures?”
- cried one of the younger of the married ladies.
-
- “Twelfth of June the date is, hey?” said the captain, “and this
- is the eighteenth. In six days the deluge, madam—at sea. Well,
- we shall keep a bright look-out, I promise you. D’ye want to
- keep the bird, Mr. Catesby?”
-
- “No,” said I, “the box will suffice as a memorial.”
-
- “Then, Mr. Pike, let it be hove overboard,” said the captain.
-
- “Strike up ‘_Tom Bowline_’ for its interment,” cried the little
- Irish Colonel, “‘_Faithful below he did his duty_’ you know.
- Nearly knocked poor Catesby overboard, though. What is it, a
- Booby?”
-
- “How _can_ ye be so rude, Desmond?” said his wife.
-
- “’Tis the bird I mane, my love,” he answered.
-
- The girls would not let it be hove overboard for a good bit.
- They hung over the snow-white creature caressing its delicate
- down and strong feathers with fingers whose jewels glittered
- upon the plumage like raindrops in moonlight. However ere long
- the music started anew. The people that still hovered about the
- bird drew off, and the mate sneaking the noble creature to the
- side quietly let it fall.
-
- Well, next day, I promise you, this incident of the bird gave
- us plenty to talk about. In fact it even swamped the memory of
- the dance and the supper, and again and again you would see
- one or another of the ladies sending a wistful glance round
- the sea-line, in search of the dismasted brig—as often looking
- astern as ahead, whilst one or two of the young fellows amongst
- us crept very gingerly aloft, holding on as they went as though
- they would squeeze all the tar out of the shrouds, just to
- make sure that there was nothing in sight. However, there was
- a professional look-out kept forward. I heard the captain give
- directions to the officer of the watch to send a man on to
- the fore-royal yard from time to time to report if there was
- anything in view; but as to altering his course with the chance
- of picking up the Frenchman, _that_ was not to be expected in
- old Bow, whose business was to get to Bombay as fast as the
- wind would blow him along; and indeed, seeing that the _Ruby_
- had already been hard upon four months from the river Thames,
- you will suppose that, concerned as we might all feel about the
- fate of _La Mulette_, the softest-hearted amongst us would have
- been loth to lose even a day in a search that was tolerably
- certain to prove fruitless—as the mate proved to a group of us
- whilst he stood pointing out our situation and the supposed
- position of the brig upon a chart of the Indian Ocean lying
- open upon the skylight.
-
- We got no wind till daybreak of the morning following
- the dance, and then a pleasant air came along out of
- south-south-east, which enabled the _Ruby_ to expand her
- stunsails and she went floating over the long sapphire swells
- of the fervid ocean under an overhanging cloud of cloths which
- whitened the water to starboard of her, till it looked like
- a sheet of quicksilver draining there. This breeze held and
- shoved the ponderous bows of the Indiaman through it at the
- rate of some four or five miles in the hour. So we jogged
- along, till it came to the fourth day from the date of my
- adventure in the maintop. The fiery breeze had by this time
- crept round to off the starboard bow, and the ship was sailing
- along with her yards as fore and aft as they would lie. It was
- a little before the hour of noon. The captain and mates were
- ogling the sun through their sextants on either hand the poop,
- for the luminary hung pretty nearly over the royal truck with
- a wake of flaming gold under him broadening to our cutwater,
- so that the _Ruby_ looked to be stemming some burning river of
- glory flowing through a strange province of dark blue land.
-
- Suddenly high aloft from off the maintop-gallant-yard—whose arm
- was jockeyed by the figure of a sailor doing something with the
- clew of the royal—came a clear, distant cry of “Sail ho!” and I
- saw the man levelling his marline-spike at an object visible to
- him a little to the right of the flying-jibboom end.
-
- “Aloft there!” bawled the mate, putting his hand to the side of
- his mouth, “how does she show, my lad?”
-
- “’Tis something black, sir,” cried the man, making a binocular
- glass of his fists. “’Tis well to the starboard of the dazzle
- upon the water. It is too blinding that way to make sure.”
-
- “Something black!” shouted the little colonel, whose Christian
- name was Desmond, “_La Mulette_, Captain Bow, without doubt.
- Anybody feel inclined to bet?”
-
- Some wagering followed, whilst I stepped below for a telescope
- of my own, and then went forward and got into the fore-rigging,
- with the glass slung over my shoulders. There was no need to
- ascend above the top. I levelled the telescope when I gained
- that platform, and instantly saw the object with a handbreadth
- of the gleam of the blue sea past her, showing that she was
- well this side of the horizon from the elevation of the
- foremast, and that she would be visible from the poop in a
- little while. There was but a very light swell on; the spires
- of the _Ruby_ floated steadily through the blue atmosphere. I
- had no difficulty in commanding the object therefore, and the
- powerful lenses of my telescope brought her close. It was a
- wreck, a sheer hulk indeed, and without a shadow of a doubt _La
- Mulette_. Her masts were gone, though a fragment of bowsprit
- remained. Whole lengths of her bulwark were apparently crushed
- flat to the covering-board; nevertheless, the hulk preserved
- a sort of rakish aspect, a piratical sheer of long, low side.
- “Let her prove what she will,” thought I, “I am a Dutchman if
- yonder craft hasn’t carried a bitter and poisonous sting in her
- head and tail in her time.”
-
- They had “made” eight bells on the poop, and the mellow chimes
- were sounding upon the quarter-deck, and echoing in the silent
- squares of canvas, as I descended the rigging and made my way
- aft. I told Captain Bow that the craft ahead was a hulk, and
- without doubt _La Mulette_; on hearing which the passengers
- went in a rush to the side and stood staring as though the
- object was close aboard, some of them pointing and swearing
- they could see her, though at the rate at which we were shoving
- through it she was a fair hour and a half yet behind the
- horizon from the altitude of the poop.
-
- However, when I came up from tiffin some little while before
- two o’clock, the hulk lay bare upon the sea over the starboard
- cat-head, with a light like the flash of a gun breaking from
- her wet black side to the languid roll of her sunwards, and a
- crowd of steerage-passengers and sailors forward staring at
- her. At any time a wreck at sea, washing about in the heart of
- some great ocean solitude, will appeal with solemn significance
- to the eye of one sailing past it. What dreadful tragedy has
- she been the little theatre of? you wonder. You speculate upon
- the human anguish she memorializes, upon the dark and scaring
- horrors her shape _may_ entomb. But it is a sight to appeal
- with added force to people who have been at sea for many long
- weeks, without so much as the glimpse of a sail for days at a
- time to break the enormous monotony of the ocean, or to furnish
- a fugitive human interest to the ever-receding sea-line—that
- most mocking of all earthly limitations.
-
- “Anybody see any signs of life aboard of her?” asked Captain
- Bow. “My sight is not what it was.”
-
- There were many sharp young eyes amongst us, and some powerful
- glasses; but there was nothing living to be seen. She looked
- to have been a vessel of about two hundred and fifty tons. Her
- copper sheathing rose to the bends, and was fresh and bright.
- She had apparently been pierced for ten guns, but this could
- be only conjecture, seeing that her bulwarks had been torn to
- pieces by the fall of her spars. There was a length of topmast,
- or what-not, riding by its gear alongside of her, with a raffle
- of canvas and running rigging littering the fore-part. Her
- wheel stood and her rudder seemed sound. She was flush-decked,
- but all erections such as caboose, companion, and so forth were
- gone. Yet she sat with something of buoyancy on the water, and
- her rolling was without the stupefaction you notice in hulls
- gradually filling. As her stern lifted, the words, _La Mulette,
- Havre_, rose in long, white letters upon the counter, with a
- sort of ghastliness in the blank stare of them by contrast with
- the delicate blue of the sea. Old Bow hailed her loudly; then
- the mate roared to her with the voice of a bull, but to no
- purpose. I said to the second mate, who stood alongside of me
- at the rail—
-
- “Yonder to be sure is the ship from which the sea-bird brought
- the letter the other night. There were three living men aboard
- her a few days ago. Are they below, think you?”
-
- “Been taken off, sir, I expect,” he answered. “Or dead of
- hunger, or thirst, and lying corpses in the cabin. Or maybe
- they drowned themselves. Mr. Pike’s hail was something to bring
- a dying man out of his bunk to see what made it. No, sir,
- yonder’s an abandoned craft or a coffin anyway.”
-
- Some ladies standing near overheard this, and at once went to
- work to induce the captain to bring the _Ruby_ to a stand,
- and send a boat. I listened to them entreating him; he shook
- his head good-naturedly, with a glance into the north-western
- quarter of the sea. “Oh, but, dear captain,” the ladies
- reasoned, “after that letter, you know, as though you were
- appointed by Providence to receive it—surely, surely, you will
- not sail away from that wreck without making quite sure there
- is nobody on board her! Only conceive that the three poor
- creatures may be dying in the cabin, that they may have heard
- your cry and Mr. Pike’s, that they may be able even to _see_
- this ship through a porthole, and yet be too weak to crawl on
- deck to show themselves!” What followed was lost to me by the
- second mate beginning to talk:—
-
- “She’ll have been a French privateer,” he said to me. “What
- a superb run, sir! Something in her heyday not to be easily
- shaken of a merchantman’s skirts. Of course she’ll have thrown
- all her guns overboard in the hurricane. Does the capt’n
- mean to overhaul her, I wonder,” he continued, throwing a
- look aloft. “He’ll have to bear a hand and make up his mind
- or we shall be losing her anon in yonder thickness. Mark the
- depression in the ocean line nor’-west, sir. D’ye notice the
- swell gathers weight too, and there’s a dustiness in the face
- of the sky that way that’s better than a hint that the Bay of
- Bengal is not so many leagues distant ahead as it was a month
- ago.”
-
- He was rattling on in this fashion, more like one thinking
- aloud than talking to a companion, when there was a sudden
- clapping of hands among the ladies who surrounded the captain,
- and at the same moment I heard him tell the mate to swing the
- topsail to the mast and get one of the starboard quarter-boats
- manned. All was then bustle for a few minutes, the mate
- bawling, the sailors singing out at the ropes, men manœuvring
- with the boats’ gripes and falls. I went up to the captain.
-
- “Who has charge of the boat?” said I.
-
- “Second mate,” he answered.
-
- “May I accompany him, captain?”
-
- “Certainly, Mr. Catesby. I will only ask you, should you board
- her, to look alive. The weather shows a rather suspicious front
- down there,” indicating with a nod of his head the quarter to
- which the second mate had called my attention. “But, bless my
- heart! there’ll be nothing to see, nothing worth sending for.
- It is only to please the ladies, you know.”
-
- I sprang into the boat as she swang at the davits.
-
- It was a trip, a treat, a pleasant break for me; besides, my
- being the first to receive the letter gave me a kind of title
- as it were to the adventure.
-
- “There’s room for others,” said the second mate standing erect
- in the stern sheets with a wistful glance at a knot of pretty
- faces at the rail.
-
- There was no response from male or female. “Lower away now
- lively, lads,” cried the mate. Down sank the boat, the blocks
- were dexterously unhooked, out flashed the oars and away we
- went.
-
- I couldn’t have guessed what weight there was in this ocean
- swell till I felt the volume of it from the low seat of the
- ship’s quarter-boat. The _Ruby_ looked to be rolling on it as
- heavily again as she seemed to have been when I was on her
- deck, and the beat of her canvas against the mast rang in
- volleys through the air like the explosion of batteries up
- there. The wreck came and went as we sank and soared, and I
- caught the second mate eying her somewhat anxiously as though
- theorizing to himself upon the safest dodge to board her.
- She was farther off than I should have deemed possible, so
- deceptive is distance at sea, and though the five seamen pulled
- cheerily, the job of measuring the interval between the two
- craft, what with the voluminous heave of the swell running at
- us, and what with the roasting sunshine that lay like a sense
- of paralysis in one’s back bone, proved very tedious to my
- impatience to come at the hulk and explore her. As we swept
- round under her stern, supposing that her starboard side would
- be clear of wreckage, I glanced at the _Ruby_ and saw that they
- were clewing up her royals, and hauling down her flying jib
- with hands on the cross-jack-yard rolling the sail up. There
- were spars and a litter of trailing gear on either side the
- hulk; every roll was a spiteful snapping at the ropes with a
- drag of the floating sticks which sometimes made the water foam.
-
- “We must board her astern,” said the mate “and stand by for a
- handsome dip of the counter.”
-
- Our approach was very cautious; indeed it was necessary to
- manœuvre very gingerly indeed. We got on to the quarter, and
- watching his chance the bow oarsman cleverly sprang through
- the crushed rail as the deck buoyantly swang down to the heave
- of the boat, carrying the end of the painter with him; the
- mate followed, and I after a tolerably long interval, wanting
- perhaps the nerve and certainly the practised limbs of the
- sailors. In truth I may as well say here that I should have
- stuck to the boat and waited for the mate’s report but for
- the dislike of being laughed at when I returned. I very well
- knew I should not be spared, least of all by those amongst the
- passengers who would have forfeited fifty pounds rather than
- quitted the ship.
-
- The hull had a desperately wrecked look inboards with the
- mess of ropes, staves, jagged ends, crushed rails, rents
- manifesting the fury of the hurricane. I swept a glance along
- in expectation of beholding a dead body, or, if you will, some
- scarcely living though yet breathing man; but nothing of the
- kind was to be seen. The mate hung his head over the companion
- hatch from which the cover had been clean razed and peered
- down, then shouted and listened. But no other sound followed
- than the long moan and huge washing sob of the swell brimming
- to the wash-streak with a dim sort of choking, gurgling noise
- as of water streaming from side to side in the hold.
-
- “Hardly worth while exploring those moist bowels, I think,
- sir,” said the mate.
-
- “Oh, yes,” said I, “if we don’t take a peep under deck what
- will there be to tell? This is a quest of the ladies’ making,
- remember, and it must be a complete thing or ‘stand by’ as you
- sailors say.”
-
- “Right you are, sir,” said he, “and so here goes,” and with
- that he put his foot upon the companion ladder and dropped into
- the cabin.
-
- I followed at his heels, and both of us came to a stand at the
- bottom of the steps whilst we stared round. There was plenty of
- light to see by streaming down through the skylight aperture
- and the hatch. The cabin was a plain, snuff-coloured room with
- a few sleeping berths running forward, a rough table somewhat
- hacked and cut about as if with the slicing of tobacco, a row
- of lockers on either hand, a stand of firearms right aft and
- some twenty cutlasses curiously stowed in a sort of brackets
- under the ceiling or upper deck. Hot as it was above, the
- cabin struck chill as though it were an old well. Indeed you
- saw that it had been soused over and over again by the seas
- which had swept the vessel, and there was a briny, seaweedy
- flavour in the atmosphere of it that made you think of a cave
- deep down in a sea-fronting cliff. We looked into the sleeping
- berths going forward to where a moveable bulkhead stopped the
- road. It was not easy to walk; the increasing weight of the
- swell was defined by the heavy though comparatively buoyant
- rolling of the hull. The deck went in slopes like the roof of
- a house from side to side with now and again an ugly jerk that
- more than once came near to throwing me when a sudden yawn
- forced the dismasted fabric into a swift recovery.
-
- “There’s nobody aft here, anyway,” said the mate; “no use
- troubling ourselves to look for her papers, I think, sir.”
-
- “No; but this is only one end of the ship,” I answered. “There
- may be a discovery to make forward. Can’t we unship that
- bulkhead there, and so get into the ’tween-decks?”
-
- We laid hold of the frame, and after peering a bit, for this
- part of the cabin lay in gloom, we found that it stood in
- grooves, and without much trouble we slided it open, and the
- interior to as far as a bulkhead that walled off a bit of
- forecastle lay clear before us in the daylight shining through
- the main-hatch. Here were a number of hammocks dangling from
- the deck, and some score or more of seamen’s chests and bags
- in heaps, some of them split open, with quantities of rough
- wearing apparel scattered about, in so much that I never
- could have imagined a scene of wilder disorder, nor one more
- suggestive of hurry and panical consternation and delirious
- headlong behaviour.
-
- “Nobody here, sir,” said the mate.
-
- “No,” I answered; “I suppose her people left her in their
- boats, and that one of the wretches who were forced to remain
- behind wrote the letter we received the other night.”
-
- “At sea,” said the mate, “there is no imagining how matters
- come about. I allow that the three men have been taken off
- by some passing vessel. Anyway, we’ve done our bit, and the
- capt’n, I expect, ’ll be waiting for us. Thunder! how she
- rolls,” he cried, as a very heavy lurch sent us both reeling
- towards the side of the craft.
-
- “Hark!” cried I, “we are hailed from the deck.”
-
- “Below there!” shouted a voice in the companion hatch. “They’ve
- fired a gun aboard the Indiaman, sir, and have run the ensign
- up half-mast high. The weather looks mighty queer, sir.”
-
- “Ha!” cried the mate; “come along, Mr. Catesby.”
-
- We walked cautiously and with difficulty aft, gained the
- companion ladder and ascended. My instant glance went to
- the _Ruby_. She had furled her mainsail and fore and mizzen
- topgallant-sails, hauled down her lighter staysails and big
- standing jib, and as I glanced at her a gun winked in a
- quarter-deck port, and the small thunder of it rolled sulkily
- up against the wind. In fact, whilst we were below, the breeze
- had chopped clean round and the _Ruby_ was to leeward of the
- wreck, with a very heavy swell rolling along its former course,
- the wind dead the other way, beginning to whiten the ridges on
- each huge round-backed fold, and a white thickness—a flying
- squall of vapour it looked to me, with a seething and creaming
- line of water along the base of it as though it was something
- solid that was coming along—sweeping within half-a-mile of
- the wreck right down upon us. The mate sent a look at it and
- uttered a cry.
-
- “Haul the boat alongside,” he shouted to the fellows in her.
- “Handsomely now, lads. Stand by to jump into her,” he cried to
- the seaman who had been the first to spring on board the wreck
- with the end of the line.
-
- They brought the boat humming and buzzing to the counter;
- the sailor standing on the taffrail plumped into her like a
- cannon-shot; ’twas wonderful he didn’t scuttle her. The mate
- whipping the painter off the pin or whatever it was that it
- had been belayed to, held it by a turn whilst he bawled to
- me to watch my chance and jump. But the wreck lying dead in
- the trough was rolling in a quite frenzied way, like a see-saw
- desperately worked. Her movements, combined with the soaring
- and falling of the boat, were absolutely confounding. I would
- gather myself together for a spring and then, before I could
- make it, the boat was sliding as it might seem to me twenty or
- thirty feet deep and away.
-
- “Jump, for God’s sake, sir!” cried the mate.
-
- “I don’t mean to break my neck,” I answered, irritable with the
- nervous flurry that had come to me with a sudden abominable
- sense of incapacity and helplessness.
-
- As I spoke the words, sweep! came the white smother off the sea
- over us with a spiteful yell of wind of a weight that smote
- the cheek a blow which might have forced the strongest to turn
- his back. The hissing, and seething, and crackling of the
- spume of the first of the squall was all about us in a breath,
- and, in the beat of a heart, the _Ruby_, and the ocean all her
- way vanished in the wild and terrifying eclipse of the thick,
- silvery, howling, steam-like mist.
-
- “By ——, I have done it _now_!” cried the mate.
-
- The end of the painter had been dragged from his hand or he had
- let it fall! And the wind catching the boat blew her over the
- swell like the shadow of a cloud. The seamen threw their oars
- over and headed for us, their faces pale as those of madmen.
-
- “They’ll never stem this weather,” cried the mate; “follow me,
- Mr. Catesby, or we are dead men.”
-
- He tore off his coat, kicked off his boots and went overboard
- without another word.
-
- _Follow him!_ To the bottom, indeed! but nowhere else, for I
- could not swim a stroke. But that was not quite it. Had I had
- my senses I might have grasped the first piece of wreckage I
- could put my hand upon and gone after him with it to paddle
- and hold on to till I was picked up. But all this business
- coming upon us so suddenly, along with the sudden blinding of
- me by the vapour, the distracting yelling of the wind and the
- sickening bewilderment caused by the wreck’s violent rolling,
- seemed to have driven my wits clean out of my head. The boat
- was scarcely more than a smudge in the thickness, vanishing and
- showing as she swept up and rushed down the liquid acclivities,
- held with her bow towards the hulk by the desperately-plied
- oars of the rowers. The mate was borne down rapidly towards
- her. I could just see three of the sailors leaning over the
- side to drag him out of the water; the next instant the little
- fabric had vanished in the thickness, helplessly and with
- horrible rapidity blown out of sight the moment the men ceased
- rowing to rescue their officer.
-
- I do not know how long all this may have occupied; a few
- minutes maybe sufficed for the whole of the tragic passage. I
- stood staring and staring, incredulous of the truth of what had
- befallen me, and then with an inexpressible sickness of heart I
- flung myself down upon the deck under the lee of a little space
- of bulwark, too dizzy and weak with the horror that possessed
- me to maintain my footing on that wildly swaying platform.
-
- I had met in my travels with but one specimen of such weather
- as this; it was off the Cape of Good Hope to the westward; the
- ship was under topmast and topgallant studding sails, when,
- without an interval of so much as twenty seconds of calm, she
- was taken right aback by a wind that came with the temper of
- half a gale in it, whilst as if by magic a fog, white and dense
- as wool, was boiling and shrieking all about her.
-
- For some time my consternation was so heavy that I sat
- mechanically staring into that part of the thickness where the
- boat had disappeared, without giving the least heed to the sea
- or to the wreck. It was _then_ blowing in earnest, the ocean
- still densely shrouded with flying vapour, and an ugly bit of a
- sea racing over the swell that rolled its volumes to windward.
- A smart shock and fall of water on to the forecastle startled
- me into sudden perception of a real and imminent danger. The
- fore-scuttle was closed, but the main and companion hatchways
- yawned open to the weather; there were no bulwarks worth
- talking of to increase the wreck’s height of side, and to
- hinder the free tumbling of the surge on to the decks, so if
- the wind increased and the sea grew heavier, the hulk must
- inevitably fill and go down like a thunderbolt!
-
- It would be idle to try to express the thoughts which filled
- me. I was like one stunned: now casting an eye at the sea to
- observe if the billows were increasing, now with a heart of
- lead watching the water frothing upon the deck, as the hull
- heaved from one side to the other; then straining my sight
- with a mad passion of eagerness into the vapour that shut off
- all view of the ocean to within a cable’s length of me. There
- was nothing to be done. Even could I have met with tarpaulins,
- there was no sailor’s skill in me to spread and secure them
- over the open hatches. However, when an hour had passed in this
- way, I took notice of a small failure of the wind, though there
- was no lightening of the impenetrable mist. The folds of the
- swell had diminished, and the sea was running steadily; the
- hull with her broadside dead in the trough, rose and fell with
- regularity, and though at long intervals the surge struck her
- bow, and blew in crystals over the head, or tumbled in scores
- of bucketfuls upon the deck, nothing more than spray wetted the
- after-part of her.
-
- It was now six o’clock in the evening. In two hours’ time the
- night would have come down, and if the weather did not clear,
- the blackness would be that of the tomb. What would the _Ruby_
- do? Remain hove-to and wait for moonlight or for daybreak to
- seek for me? A fragment of comfort I found in remembering that
- the wreck’s position would be known to Captain Bow and his
- mates, so that their search for me, if they searched at all,
- ought not to prove fruitless; though to be sure much would
- depend upon the drift of the hulk. Presently, fearing that
- there might be no water or provisions on board, I was seized
- with a sudden thirst, bred by the mere apprehension that I
- might come to want a drink. There was still light enough to
- enable me to search the interior, and now I suppose something
- of my manhood must have returned to me, for I made up my mind
- to waste no moment of the precious remaining time of day in
- imaginations of horror and of death and in dreams of desperate
- despondency. I went on my hands and knees to the hatch, lest
- if I stood up I should be knocked down by the abrupt rolling
- of the craft, and entered the cabin. On deck all was naked and
- sea-swept from the taffrail to the “eyes,” and if there were
- aught of drink or of food to be had it must be sought below. I
- recollected that one of the forward berths or cabins, which the
- second mate and I had looked into, had shown in the gloom as a
- sort of pantry; that is to say, in peering over my companion’s
- shoulders, I had caught a glimpse of crockery on shelves, the
- outlines of jars and so forth. But the inspection had been very
- swift, scarce more than a glance. I made for this cabin now,
- very well remembering that it was the last of a row of three
- or four on the starboard side. I opened the door, and secured
- it by its hook to the bulkhead that I might see, and after
- rummaging a little I found a cask of ship’s bread, a small cask
- (like a harness cask) a quarter full of raw pickled pork, a
- jar of vinegar, two large jars of red wine, and best of all,
- a small barrel about half full of fresh water, slung against
- the bulkhead, with a little wooden tap fixed in it, for the
- convenience as I supposed of drawing for cabin use. There were
- other articles of food, such as flour, pickles, dried fruit,
- and so on; the catalogue would be tedious, nor does my memory
- carry it.
-
- I poured some wine into a tin pannikin, and found it a very
- palatable, sound claret. I mixed me a draught with cold
- water, and ate a biscuit with a little slice of some kind of
- salt sausage, of which there lay a lump in a dish, and found
- myself extraordinarily refreshed. I cannot tell you indeed
- how comforted I was by this discovery of provisions and fresh
- water, for now I guessed that if the weather did not drown the
- wreck, I might be able to support life on board of her until
- the _Ruby_ took me off, which I counted upon happening that
- night if the moon shone, or most certainly next morning at
- latest. My heart however sank afresh when I regained the deck.
- The sudden change from the life, the cheerfulness, the security
- of the Indiaman, to _this_—“Oh, my God! my God!” I remember
- exclaiming as I sank down under the lee of the fragment of
- bulwark, with a wild look around into the thickness and along
- the spray-darkened planks of the heaving and groaning derelict.
- The loneliness of it! no sounds save the dismal crying of
- the wind sweeping on high through the atmosphere, and the
- ceaseless seething and hissing of the dark-green frothing seas
- swiftly chasing one another out of sight past the wall of
- vapour that circled the wreck, with the blank and blinding mist
- itself to tighten as with a sensible ligature into unbearable
- concentration the dreadful sense of solitude in my soul.
-
- Slowly the wind softened down, very gradually the seas sank,
- and their worrying note of snarling melted into a gentler tone
- of fountain-like creaming. But the vapour still filled the air,
- and so thick did it hang that, though by my watch I knew it to
- be the hour of sundown, I was unable to detect the least tinge
- of hectic anywhere, no faintest revelation of the fiery scarlet
- light which I knew must be suffusing the clear heavens down
- to the easternmost confines above this maddening blindness of
- mist.
-
- Then came the blackness of the night. So unspeakably deep a
- dye it was that you would have thought every luminary above
- had been extinguished, and that the earth hung motionless in
- the sunless opacity of chaos out of which it had been called
- into being. The hours passed. I held my seat on the deck with
- my back against a bulwark stanchion. It was a warm night with
- a character as of the heat of steam owing to the moisture
- that loaded and thickened the atmosphere. Sometimes I dozed,
- repeatedly starting from a snatch of uneasy slumber to open
- my eyes with ever-recurring horror and astonishment upon the
- blackness. Gleams of the sea-fire shot out fitfully at times
- from the sides of the wreck, and there was nothing else for the
- sight to rest upon. At midnight it was blowing a small breeze
- of wind and the sea running gently—at midnight I mean as I
- could best reckon; but the darkness remained unchanged, and I
- might know that the fog was still thick about me by no dimmest
- spectre of moon or star showing.
-
- I then slept, and soundly too, for two or three hours, and when
- I awoke it was daylight, the sea clear to the horizon, the sky
- a soft liquid blue with masses of white vaporous cloud hanging
- under it like giant bursts of steam, and the sun shining
- with a sort of misty splendour some degree or two above the
- sea-line. There was a pleasant air blowing out of the north,
- with power to wrinkle the water and no more. My limbs were so
- cramped that for a long while I was incapable of rising; when
- at last my legs had recovered their power I stood erect and
- swept the ocean with my eyes. But the light blue surface went
- in undulations naked to the bend of the heavens on all sides.
- I looked and looked again, but to no purpose. I strained my
- sight till an intolerable torment in my eyeballs forced me to
- close my lids. There was nothing in view. I very well remember
- falling on my knees and grovelling upon the deck in the anguish
- of my spirit. I had so surely counted on daylight exhibiting
- the _Ruby_ somewhere within the circle which enclosed me that
- the disappointment which came out of the bald vacancy of the
- ocean struck me down like a blow from a hammer. Presently I
- lifted up my head and regained my feet, and feeling thirsty
- moved with a tread of lead to the yawning hatch, sending the
- most passionate, yearning glances seaward as I walked, and
- halting again and again to the vision of some imagination of
- break in the continuity of the gleaming girdle—some delicate
- shoulder of remote cloud, some imaginary speck which dissolved
- upon the blue air whilst my gaze was on it.
-
- I mixed some wine and water, and made a light repast off
- biscuit and a piece of Dutch cheese that was on the shelf. I
- then thought I would look into the cabins for a chair to sit
- upon on deck, for a mattress to lie upon, for something also
- that might make me a little awning, and pushed open the door
- of the berth immediately facing the pantry, as I may call
- it. The wreck was rolling very lightly, and her decks were
- now as easy to step as the Indiaman’s. This berth contained
- a bunk and bedding, a sailor’s chest, some clothes hanging
- against the bulkhead, but nothing to serve my turn. The next
- was similarly furnished, saving that here I took notice that a
- small quantity of wearing apparel lay about as though scattered
- in a hurry, and that the lid of a great box, painted a dark
- green with the letter D in white upon it, had been split open
- as though the contents were to be rifled, or as though the lock
- had resisted and there had been no time to coax it save by a
- chopper. I passed into a third cabin. This had some comfort of
- equipment in the shape of shelves and a chest of drawers, and
- had doubtless been the commander’s. There was a very handsome
- telescope on brackets, a few books, a quadrant, a large silver
- timepiece, a small compass and one or two other matters of a
- like sort upon a little table fitted by hinges in a corner;
- there were three chests in a row with a litter of boots and
- shoes, a soft hat or two, a large handsome cloak costly with
- fur, and so forth, strewed about the deck.
-
- I was looking with wonder at these articles when my eye
- was taken by something bright near the smallest of the
- three chests. I picked it up; it was an English sovereign.
- Others lay about as though a handful had been clutched and
- dropped—here being the same manifestations of terrified hurry
- as, it seemed to me, I witnessed in the other cabins. The lid
- of the small chest was split in halves, and the chopper that
- had seemingly been wielded rested against the side of the
- box. A massive padlock was still in the staples. I lifted the
- half of the lid and was greatly astonished by the sight of
- a quantity of gold pieces lying in divisions of a tray that
- fitted the upper part of the chest. Each division contained
- coins of various nations. They were all gold pieces—English,
- Portuguese, Brazilian and coins of the United States. I prised
- open the padlocked part of the lid and seized the tray to lift
- it that I might observe what lay underneath. But the weight of
- gold in it was so great that I had to exert my utmost strength
- to raise one end of the tray on to the edge of the box; which
- done, I was able to slide it along till the bottom of the box
- was revealed.
-
- The sight of the gold had filled me with expectations of
- beholding some amazing treasure under the tray. What I there
- saw was a heap of rough, brick-shaped stuff of a dull, rusty,
- reddish tint. I grasped a lump, and though I had never seen
- gold in that form before, I was satisfied by the extraordinary
- weight of the piece I held that all those coarse, rough,
- dull-coloured bricks were of the most precious of metals. I
- slided the tray back to its place and let fall the two halves
- of the lid with another look around me for any article that
- might be useful to me on deck. The excitement kindled by the
- spectacle of the gold rapidly died away. I dully mused on it,
- so to speak, whilst my eye roamed, languidly speculating about
- it, with a strange indifference in my thoughts, concluding
- that it represented the privateersman’s sorted plunder; that
- in all likelihood when the rush had been made to the boats one
- or more had split open this chest to fill their pockets, but
- had been obliged to fly for their lives ere they could find
- time for more than a scrambling clutch at the tray. But it was
- the contents no doubt of this chest—if indeed this chest held
- all the treasure of the buccaneer—that was indicated by the
- writer of the letter in the concluding line of it, the closing
- words of which had been found illegible by the young fellow who
- translated the missive.
-
- I put the telescope under my arm and passed into the cabin,
- and found a small chair near the arms rack, and near it upon
- the deck lay a great cotton umbrella, grimy and wet with the
- saturation of the cabin. I took it up thankfully and carried it
- with the chair up the steps. There was a great plenty of ropes’
- ends knocking bout. I cut a piece and unlaid the strands, and
- securing the umbrella to a stanchion, sat down on the chair
- under it; and indeed without some such shelter the deck would
- have been insupportable, for low as the sun still was in the
- east, his fires were already roasting, and I well knew what
- sort of temperature was to be expected as he floated higher,
- leaving my form with a small blotch of southern shadow only
- yoked to it.
-
- I passed the morning in sweeping the horizon with the
- telescope. It was a noble glass—a piece of plunder, with an
- inscription that represented it as a gift from the officers of
- a vessel to her commander; I forget the names, but recollect
- they were English. The placidity of the day dreadfully
- disheartened me. There was but little weight in the languid
- air to heave the _Ruby_ or any other vessel into view. The sea
- under the sun was like brand new tin for the dazzle of it, and
- as the morning advanced the heavy, vaporous clouds of daybreak
- melted out into curls and wisps like to the crescent moon, with
- a clear sky rising a pale blue from the horizon to overhead to
- where it swam into the brassy glory which flooded the central
- heavens. Weary of sitting, and exhausted by looking, I put down
- the glass and went to the main hatch with the idea of making
- out what water there was in the hold. The pumps were gone and
- the wells of them sank like black shafts into the deck. But
- whatever there was of water in the hulk lay so low that I
- could not catch so much as a gleam of it. There was some light
- cargo in the hold—light as I reckoned by the sit of the wreck
- upon the water; chiefly white wooden cases, with here and there
- canvas bales; but whatever might have been the commodities
- there was not much of them, at least amidships, down into which
- I stood peering.
-
- I then walked on to the forecastle and lifted the hatch-cover.
- This interior looked to have been used by the people of _La
- Mulette_ as a sort of sail-locker. The bulkhead extended but a
- very short distance abaft the hatch, and the deck was stowed
- with rolls of sails, coils of spare rigging, hawsers, tackle
- and so forth. I put my head into the aperture and took a long
- and careful survey of the interior, for the mate and I had not
- explored this part of the brig, and it was possible, I thought,
- I might find the bodies of the three survivors here. But there
- was nothing whatever to be witnessed in that way; so I closed
- the hatch again and went aft.
-
- The day passed, the light breeze lingered, but it brought
- nothing into sight. I would think as I sent my glance along the
- naked, sea-swept, desolate deck, gaunt and skeleton-like, with
- its ragged exhibition of splintered plank and crushed bulwark,
- that had there been a mast left in the hull I might from the
- summit of it be able to see the _Ruby_, whose topmast cloths
- lay sunk behind the horizon to the eyes which I levelled from
- the low side of the wreck. “Oh!” I would cry aloud, “if I could
- but be sure that she was near me though hidden!” Maddening as
- the expectation might have been which the sight of her afar
- would have raised in me, yet the mere having her in view,
- no matter how dim, deceptive a speck she proved, would have
- taken a deal of the bitterness, the heart-subduing feeling of
- hopelessness out of the wild and awful sense of desolation that
- possessed me.
-
- The sun sank; with the telescope trembling in my hands I
- made a slow, painful circle of the ocean whilst the western
- magnificence lay upon it, and then let fall the glass and fell
- into the chair, and with bowed head and tightly-folded arms,
- and eyes closed to mitigate by the shadowing of the lids the
- anguish of the fires which despair had kindled in them—for
- my heart was parched, no relief of tears came to me—I waited
- for the darkness of a second night to settle down upon the
- wreck. But on this day the gloom fell with the brilliance of
- stars, and some time after eight the moon rose, a moist, purple
- shield, at whose coming the light draught of wind died out
- and the ocean flattened into a breathless, polished surface.
- When presently the moon had soared and whitened, the sea
- looked as wide again as it was to the showering of her light,
- brimming the atmosphere with a delicate silver haze; indeed
- there went a shadowing round about its confines to the shaft
- of moonlight on the water that made it seem hollow where the
- wreck lay, and it was like floating in the vastness of the
- firmament that bent over it to glance over the side of the hull
- and see the mirror-like breast studded with reflections of the
- larger stars, and to follow the shadow of the deep, curled at
- the extremities as it seemed, to the tropic astral dust that
- twinkled there like dew trembling to the breath of a summer
- night wind.
-
- I had brought up some blankets from below and these I made
- a kind of mattress of under the shelter of the umbrella. It
- was about ten o’clock, I think, when I threw myself down
- upon them. A pleasant breeze was then blowing directly along
- the wake of moonlight, and the water was rippling like the
- murmurs of a brook against the sides of the pale, silent,
- gently-rolling hull. I lay awake for a long time listening
- to this cool, refreshing, tinkling sound of running ripples,
- with a mind somewhat weakened by my distress. Indeed, many
- thoughts wearing a complexion of delirium passed through my
- head with several phantasies which must have frightened me as
- a menace of madness had my wits been equal to the significance
- of them. For example, I can recall seeing, as I believed, the
- _Ruby_ floating up towards the wreck out of the western gloom,
- luminous as a snow-clad iceberg, with the soft splendour of
- the moonshine on her canvas; I recollect this, I say, and that
- I laughed quietly at the thought of her approach, as though
- I would ridicule myself for the fears which had been upon me
- throughout the day; then of jumping up in a sudden transport
- and passion of delight; when the vision instantly vanished;
- whereupon a violent fit of trembling seized me, and I sank down
- again upon the blankets groaning. But the agitation did not
- linger; some fresh deception of the brain would occur and win
- my attention to it.
-
- This went on till I fell asleep. Meanwhile the breeze continued
- to blow steadily, and the rippling of water along the bends was
- like the sound of the falling of large raindrops.
-
- I awoke, and turning my head towards the fore-part of the
- wreck, I spied the figure of a man erect and motionless on the
- forecastle. The moon was low in the west; I might guess by
- her position that daybreak was not far off. By her red light
- I saw the man. I sat erect and swept a glance round; there
- was no ship near me, no smudge upon the gloom to indicate a
- vessel at a distance. Father of heaven! I thought, what _is_
- it? Could yonder shadowy form be one of the three sailors who
- had been left on the wreck? Surely I had closely searched the
- hull; there was nothing living aboard of her but myself. The
- sweat-drops broke from my brow as I sat motionless with my
- eyes fixed upon the figure that showed with an inexpressible
- ghostliness of outline in the waning moonlight. On a sudden
- there arose another figure alongside of him, seemingly out of
- the hard planks of the deck; then a third; and there the three
- of them stood apparently gazing intently aft at me, but without
- a stir in their frames, that I could witness. Three of them!
-
- I rose to my feet and essayed to speak, but could deliver no
- more than a whisper. I tried again, and this time my voice
- sounded.
-
- “In the name of God, who, and what are you?”
-
- “Ha!” cried one of them. He said something to his companions,
- in words which were unintelligible to me, then approached,
- followed by the others, all three of them moving slowly, with a
- wavering gait, as though giddy.
-
- “Som drink for Christu’s sake!” said the man who had called Ha!
- pointing his finger at his mouth, and speaking in a tone that
- made one think of his throat as something rough, like a file.
- By this time it was clear to me they were no ghosts. I imagined
- them negroes, so dark their faces looked in the dim west rays
- and failing starlight. Whence they had sprung, in what manner
- they had arrived, I could not imagine; but it was not for me to
- stand speculating about them in the face of the husky appeal
- for drink.
-
- There was a parcel of candles in the pantry—as I term it. I
- had a flint and steel in my pocket, and followed by the men, I
- led the way below, bidding them stand awhile till I obtained
- a light; and after groping and feeling about with my hands,
- I found the paper of candles, lighted one, and then called
- to the men. They arrived. I pointed to the jars, saying in
- English, there was wine in them; and then to the slung cask
- of water, and then to the food on the shelves. They instantly
- grasped each one of them a pannikin, and mixed a full draught
- and swallowed it, with a strange trembling sigh of relief and
- delight. They then fell upon the biscuit and sausage, eating
- like famished wolves, both fists full, and cramming their
- mouths. They were not very much more distinguishable by the
- feeble light of the candle than on deck; however, I was able
- to see they were not blacks. The man who had addressed me
- was of a deep Chinese yellow, with lineaments of an African
- pattern, a wide flat nose, huge lips, eyes like little shells
- of polished ebony glued on porcelain. His hair was the negro’s,
- a black wiry wool. He wore a short moustache, the fibres like
- the teeth of a comb, and there was a tuft of black wool upon
- his chin. Small gold earrings, a greasy old Scotch cap, a
- shirt like a dungaree jumper, and loose trousers thrust into a
- pair of half Wellingtons, completed the attire of the ugliest,
- most villainous-looking creature I had ever set eyes on. His
- companions were long-haired, chocolate-browed Portuguese, or
- Spaniards—_Dagos_ as the sailors call them; I noticed a small
- gold crucifix sparkling upon the mossy breast of one of them.
- Their feet were naked, indeed their attire consisted of no more
- than a pair of duck or canvas breeches, and an open shirt,
- and a cap. They continued to feed heartily, and several times
- helped themselves to the wine, though before doing so, the
- yellow-faced man would regularly point to the jar with a nod,
- as though asking leave.
-
- “You Englis, sah?” he exclaimed, when he had made an end of
- eating. I said yes. “How long you been hear, sah?”
-
- I told him. He understood me perfectly though I spoke at
- length, relating in fact my adventure. I then inquired who he
- and his companions were, and his story was to the following
- effect: That he was the boatswain, and the other two, able
- seamen, of a Portuguese ship called the _Mary Joseph_, bound
- to Singapore or to some Malay port. The vessel had been set
- on fire by one of the crew, an Englishman, who was skulking
- drunkenly below after broaching a cask of rum. They had three
- boats which they had hoisted out; most of the people got away
- in the long boat, six men were in the second boat, he and his
- two comrades got into the jolly-boat. They had with them four
- bottles of water, and a small bag of ship’s bread, and nothing
- more. They parted company with the other boats in the night,
- and had been four days adrift, sailing northwards by the sun
- as they reckoned, under a bit of a lug, and keeping an eager
- look-out though they sighted nothing; until a little before
- sundown that evening, they spied the speck of this wreck, and
- made for it, but so scant was the wind, and so weak their
- arms that it had taken them nearly all night to measure the
- distance, which would be a few miles only. They got their boat
- under the bow—she was lying there now, he said—and stepped
- on board one after the other. This explained to me their
- apparition. Of course I had not seen the boat or heard her as
- she approached, and to me, lying aft, the three men rising over
- the bows looked as though, like ghostly essences, they had
- shaped themselves on the forecastle out through the solid plank.
-
- I addressed the others, but the yellow man told me that their
- language was a jargon of base Portuguese, of which I should be
- able to understand no more than here and there a word, even
- though I had been bred and educated in Lisbon.
-
- “We mosh see to dah boat,” he exclaimed, and spoke to his
- mates, apparently to that effect.
-
- I extinguished the candle, and followed them on deck. It was
- closer upon daybreak than I had supposed. Already the grey was
- in the east, like a light filtering through ash-coloured silk,
- with the sea-line black as a sweep of India ink against it
- and the moon a lumpish, distorted mass of faint dingy crimson,
- dying out in a sort of mistiness westwards, like the snuff of a
- rushlight in its own smoke. Even whilst the three fellows were
- manœuvring with the boat over the bow, the tropic day filled
- the heavens in a bound, and it was broad morning all at once,
- with a segment of sun levelling a long line of trembling silver
- from the horizon down to mid-ocean. My first glance was for the
- _Ruby_, but the sea lay bare in every quarter. The fellows came
- dragging their boat aft; I looked over and saw that the fabric
- was of a canoe-pattern, with a queer upcurled bow, and a stern
- as square as the amid-ship section of the boat; four thwarts,
- short oars with oval-shaped blades, and a small mast with a
- square of lugsail lying with its yard in the bottom of the boat
-
- The yellow man pointing to her exclaimed in a hoarse, throaty,
- African guttural, “It is good ve keep hor. Dis wreck hov no
- ’atch; she sink, and vidout hor,” nodding at the boat again,
- “were ve be?”
-
- I said yes, by all means let us secure the boat. He exclaimed
- that for the present she would lie safely astern, and with that
- they took a turn with the line that held her and she rested
- quietly on the sea clear of the quarter.
-
- Forthwith the three fellows began to explore the hull. The
- yellow man or boatswain, as I must henceforth call him, said
- no more to me than this as he pointed to the yawning hatches:
- “You are gen’elman,” with an ugly smile intended no doubt for
- a stroke of courtesy as he ran his eye over me: “ve are common
- sailor. Ve vill see to stop dem hole. More fresh vataire to
- drink ve need. Possib more bee-low. Also tobacco.” And thus
- saying he cried out to the others in their own dialect, and the
- three of them went to the main hatchway and disappeared down it.
-
- I lifted the telescope and ran it over the sea, then sighed
- as with a breaking heart I laid the glass down again upon the
- deck. A strong sense of dismay filled me whilst I sat musing
- upon the men who were now coolly rummaging the vessel below.
- The rascality which lay in every line of the ugly yellow
- ruffian’s face, coupled with the stealthy, glittering glances,
- the greasy, snaky hair, the dark piratic countenances of the
- others might well have accounted for the apprehension, the
- actual consternation indeed which fell upon me whilst I thought
- of them. But that was not all. The recollection of the gold
- rushed upon me as a memory that had clean gone out of my mind,
- but that had suddenly flashed back upon me to communicate a
- sinister significance to the presence of the three Portuguese
- seamen. I can clearly understand now that my brain, as I had
- said, had been weakened by the honor of my situation, and
- by the long madness of expectation which had held it on fire
- whilst I searched the sea and waited for the _Ruby_ to appear.
- So that, instead of accepting these three foreign sailors as
- a kind of godsend with whose assistance I might be enabled to
- doctor up the wreck so as to fit her to float until help came,
- not to speak of them as companions in misery, human creatures
- to talk to, beings whose society would extinguish out of this
- dreadful situation the intolerable element of solitude—I say
- instead of viewing these men thus, as might have happened,
- I believe, had I been my old self, a profound fear of and
- aversion from them seized me, and such was the state of my
- nerves at that time, I call to mind that I looked at the boat
- which hung astern with a sort of hurry in me to leap into her,
- cast her adrift, and sail away.
-
- With an effort I mastered my agitation, constantly directing
- glances at the sea with a frequent prayer upon my lip that if
- not the _Ruby_, then at least some ship to rescue me would
- heave into view before sundown that night.
-
- The men were a long while below. I stepped softly to the
- companion hatch, and bent my ear down it that I might know if
- they had made their way through the ’tween decks bulkhead into
- the cabin. The chink of money was very distinct, but that was
- all. Presently, however, I heard them talking in low voices,
- but their tongue was Hebrew to me, and I went back to my chair,
- looking yet again around the sea-line. I think they had been
- at least an hour below when they arrived on deck, emerging
- through the main hatch. They then walked forward without taking
- any notice of me, and disappeared through the fore-scuttle,
- whence, after a while, they arose bearing amongst them several
- tarpaulins which they had come across. I took it that there
- was a carpenter’s chest down there, for the yellow boatswain
- flourished a hammer in one hand, and a box of what proved to
- be round-headed nails in the other. They carefully secured
- the hatch with a couple of these tarpaulins, then came to
- the quarter-deck, and similarly roofed the skylight and the
- companion hatch, saving that they left free a corner flap to
- admit of our passage up and down.
-
- “Dis is sailor vork,” said the boatswain, giving me a nod,
- whilst his face shone like a yellow sou’-wester in a squall
- of wet with the sweat that flooded his repulsive visage. “Dah
- vataire keep out now, sah.”
-
- “It is well done,” said I, softening my voice to disguise the
- emotion of disgust and aversion which possessed me at sight of
- the ugly, treacherous, askant sort of stare he fastened upon me
- whilst he spoke. “Have you breakfasted?”
-
- He came close to me before answering; the other two meanwhile
- remaining at the hatch and looking towards me.
-
- “Ay,” he then said, “dere ish plenty biscuit, plenty vataire,
- plenty beef,” indicating with a grimy thumb a portion of the
- hold that lay under the cabin floor. “Dere ish plenty gold
- too,” he added in a hoarse, theatrical sort of whisper, with a
- sudden gleam of his little horrible eyes which to my fancy was
- as much like the blue flash off some keen and polished blade of
- poniard as anything I can figure to liken it to.
-
- “Yes,” said I carelessly, “plenty I believe. But I must break
- my own fast now. We shall need fresh water before the day’s
- out, and, praised be the saints, there is plenty of it, you
- say.”
-
- With that I went to the hatch, turned the flap of the tarpaulin
- and descended, eyed narrowly by the two fellows who stood
- beside it, and as I gained the interior I heard them say
- something to the boatswain, who responded with an off-hand
- sort of _ya_, _ya_! as though he would quiet a misgiving in
- them. I made a hurried meal of some wine, biscuit and cheese,
- and noticing as I passed on my way to the cabin again that
- the door of the berth in which the chest of gold stood was
- shut, I tried the handle and found it locked. The key was
- withdrawn. Smothering a curse upon the hour that had brought
- these creatures to the wreck, I lighted a cigar (of which I
- had a leather case half-full in my pocket), more for the easy
- look of it than for any need I felt for tobacco just then, and
- went in a lounge to the shelter of my umbrella. The boatswain
- was examining the telescope when I arrived. He instantly put
- it down on perceiving me and went forward to where his mates
- were. They peered first over one side, pointing and talking,
- and arguing with amazing volubility and with astonishing
- contortions; they then crossed to the other side, and looked
- over and fell into the same kind of hot, eager talk and
- gesticulations. It was easy to guess that they spoke about the
- spars which floated, held by their gear, against the wreck.
- After a bit they came to an agreement, disappeared in the
- forecastle and returned with tackles and coils of rope. One
- of them went over the side, and after a while there they were
- hauling upon purchases and slowly bringing the spar out of
- water, the boatswain talking and bawling with furious energy
- the whole while. I went forward to help them, and the yellow
- ruffian nodded when I seized hold of the rope they were pulling
- at, and cried with a hoarse roar of laughter, “Yash, yash. Ve
- make a mast, ve make a yart, and ve put up sail, and ve steer
- to our own countree and be reech men.”
-
- Dagos as they were, they had some trick of seamanship amongst
- them. There was stump enough left of the foremast to secure the
- heel of a spar to, and by four o’clock that afternoon, with a
- break of but a single half-hour for a meal and a smoke (they
- had found plenty of pipes and tobacco in the seamen’s chests
- between decks), they had rigged up and stayed a jury-mast and
- crossed it with a yard manufactured from a boom of the wreckage
- to larboard; which, light as the breeze was, yet furnished them
- with spread of sail enough to give the sheer-hulk steerage way.
-
- I had lent them a hand and done my landsman’s best, and had
- gone aft to rest myself and to sweep the sea with the telescope
- for the hundredth time that day. The three men were below
- getting some supper. The hull was stirring through the water
- at a snail’s pace to a weak, hot wind blowing right over her
- taffrail out of the south-east. The helm was amidships, and
- her short length of oil-smooth wake showed her going straight
- without steering. I could distinctly hear the men conversing
- in the cabin. I reckoned because they knew their lingo was
- unintelligible to me that they talked out. There was a fiery
- eagerness in the tones they sometimes delivered themselves in,
- but earnestly as I listened I could catch no meaning but that
- of their imprecations, which readily enough took my ear owing
- to a certain resemblance between them and Spanish and Italian
- oaths. A short interval of silence followed. All three then
- came on deck, one of them carrying a jar and another a canvas
- bag. I instantly observed that every man of them had girded
- a cutlass to his side. They seemed to avoid my gaze as they
- walked to the pin to which the line that connected the boat was
- belayed, and hauled her alongside. I threw away my cigar and
- stood up. The first idea that occurred to me was, they were
- going to victual the boat, sway the chest of gold into her and
- sail away from me; and I cannot express with what devotion I
- prayed to my Maker that this might prove so. I looked from one
- to the other of them. Once I caught a side-long glance from the
- boatswain; otherwise they went to this business as though I
- were not present, talking in rough, hurried whispers, with an
- occasional exclamation from the yellow ruffian, that was like
- saying, “Make haste!” When the boat was alongside one of them
- dropped into her, and received the jar and bag from the other.
- He then returned, and the moment he was inboards the boatswain,
- rounding upon me, drew his cutlass and pointed to the boat.
-
- “Be pleashed to get in and go away!” he exclaimed.
-
- “Go away!” I echoed, too much thunderstruck by the villain’s
- order to feel or witness the horror of the fate designed for
- me. “What have I done that you should——?”
-
- He interrupted me with a roar. “Go quick!” he cried, lifting
- his weapon as though to strike, “or I kill you!”
-
- The hands of the others groped at the hilts of their cutlasses;
- all three eyed me now, and there was murder in every man’s
- look. Without a word I stepped to the side, and sprang into
- the boat. One of them threw the line off the pin into the sea.
- “Hoise your sail and steer that way, or we shoot!” bellowed the
- yellow ruffian, waving his cutlass towards the sea astern. God
- knows there were small arms enough in the cabin to enable them
- to fulfil _that_ threat. I grasped the halliards, mast-headed
- the little lug, and throwing an oar over the stern, sculled
- the boat’s head round, and in a minute was slipping away from
- the hull, at the stern of which the three men stood watching
- me, the blade in the boatswain’s hand shining to the sun like
- a wand of fire as he continued to point with it into the
- south-east.
-
- Here now was I adrift in the mighty heart of the Indian Ocean
- in a small boat like a canoe, so shaped that she was little
- likely to lie close to the wind; hundreds of leagues from the
- nearest point of land, and in a part of the deep navigated
- in those days at long intervals only—I mean by the Dutch and
- English traders to the east; for the smaller vessels kept a
- much more westerly longitude than where I was, after rounding
- the Cape; often striking through the Mozambique or so climbing
- as to keep Mauritius aboard. Never was human being in a more
- wildly-desperate situation. I did not for an instant doubt
- that this was the beginning of the end, that if I was not
- capsized and drowned out of hand by some growing sea, I was
- to perish (unless I took my own life) of hunger and thirst.
- Yet the rage and terror which were upon me when I looked over
- my shoulder at the receding wreck passed away, with the help
- of God to be sure, ere the figures of the miscreants who had
- served me thus had been blended by distance out of their shapes
- into the body and hues of the hull. I thought to myself it is
- an escape, at all events. I _may_ perish here; yet is there
- hope; but had I stayed _yonder_ I was doomed: the sight of the
- gold had made them thirsty for my life. In my sleep, ay, or
- even waking, they would have hacked me to pieces and flung me
- overboard to the sharks here.
-
- In this consideration, I say, I seemed to find a source of
- comfort. If I died as I now was, it would be God’s act, whereas
- had I remained in the wreck I must have been brutally butchered
- by the wretches whom the devil had despatched to me in the
- darkness of the morning that was gone. Nevertheless I was at a
- loss to comprehend their motive in thus using me. First of all
- by sending me away in their boat, they had robbed themselves
- of their only chance of escape should the wreck founder.
- Then again, I was a man, with a serviceable pair of hands
- belonging to me, and how necessary willing help was to persons
- circumstanced as they were, they could easily have gathered
- from the labours of the day. Besides, they would be able to
- judge of my condition by my attire, and how could they be sure
- that I should demand the treasure or put in my claim for a
- share of it? But I need not weary you with my speculations.
-
- The sun sank when there was a space of about a league betwixt
- my boat and the wreck, and the darkness came in a stride out of
- the east. The wind was weak and hot, and there was a crackling
- noise of ripples round about the boat as she lay with scarce
- any way upon her, lightly but briskly bobbing upon the tropic
- ocean dimples. When the darkness came I let fall my sail,
- intending later on, when the wreck should have got well away
- towards the horizon, to head north; for methought the further
- I drew towards the equator out of these seas the better would
- be my chance of being rescued. The stars were very plentiful,
- rich, and brilliant that night. I gave God thanks for their
- company, and for the stillness and peace upon the ocean, and I
- prayed to Him to watch over and to succour me. When the moon
- rose I stood up and looked around, but saw nothing of the
- wreck; on which I hoisted my sail afresh and headed the boat
- north, as I conjectured by the position of the moon. There was
- a deal of fire in the sea, and I would again and again direct
- my eyes at the fitful flashing over the side with a dread in me
- of witnessing the outline of a shark.
-
- The moon had risen about two hours, when I spied the gleam
- of water in the bottom of the boat. I was greatly startled,
- believing that she was leaking. Certainly there had been no
- water when I first entered her, nor down to this minute had I
- noticed the light or heard the noise of it in her. There was a
- little pewter mug in the stern sheets, a relic of the ship from
- which the Portuguese had come. I fell to bailing with it, and
- presently emptied the boat. No more water entered, for which at
- first I was deeply thankful; but after a little I got musing
- upon how it could have penetrated, seeing that no more came;
- and then a dreadful suspicion entering my mind, I looked for
- the jar which the Portuguese had handed into the boat, and saw
- it lying on its bilge in the bows. I picked it up and shook it;
- it was empty! It had been corked by a piece of canvas which
- still remained in the bung, but on the jar capsizing through
- the jerking of the boat, the water had easily drained out, and
- it was this precious fluid which I had been feverishly baling
- and casting overboard!
-
- Maddened as I was by this discovery, I had yet sense enough
- remaining to sop my handkerchief in the little puddle that
- still damped the bottom of the boat, and to wring the moisture
- into the pewter measure. But at the outside half a pint was the
- utmost I recovered, which done I sat me down, my face buried in
- my hands, with my eyes scorched as though they were seared by
- the burning tears that rose to them from my full and breaking
- heart.
-
- The night passed. Hour after hour I lay in a sort of
- stupefaction in the stern sheets, taking no notice of the
- weather, my eyes fixed upon the stars, a little space of which
- directly over my head I would crazily essay to number. Once I
- pressed the handkerchief to my parched lips, but found the damp
- of it brackish, and threw it from me. But I would not touch the
- precious drop of water I had preserved. Too bitterly well did
- I guess how the morrow’s sun would serve me, and the very soul
- within me seemed to recoil from the temptation to moisten my
- dry and burning tongue.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- The memory of the early hours of that morning, of daybreak,
- of the time that followed, is but that of a delirium. I took
- no heed of my navigation. The sheet of the sail was fast, and
- the boat travelled softly before the gentle breeze that sat in
- little curls upon the water. I recollect thinking in a stupid,
- half-numbed way, that the boat was pursuing the path of the
- wreck whose one sail would suffer her to travel only straight
- before the wind. But the pain of thirst, the anguish of my
- situation, the maddening heat of the sun, the cruel, eternal
- barrenness of the ocean; these things combined lay like death
- upon me. I was sensible only that I lived and suffered. There
- was biscuit in the canvas bag which had been put in the boat.
- I thought by munching a fragment to ease the anguish in my
- throat, but found I could not swallow. Ah, heavenly God! the
- deliriousness of the gaze which I fastened upon the clear,
- cool, blue water over the side, the horrible temptation to
- drink of it, to plunge, and soak, and drown in it the torment
- of the seething and creaming noises of its ripples against the
- burning sides of the boat, which sickened the atmosphere with
- their poisonous smell of hot paint!
-
- The night came—a second night. Some relief from the thirst
- which tortured me I had obtained by soaking my underclothes,
- and wearing the garments streaming. It was a night of wonderful
- oceanic beauty and tenderness: the moon, a glorious sphere
- of brilliancy, the wind sweet and cool with dew, and the sea
- sleeping to the quiet cradling of its swell. I had not closed
- my eyes for many a long weary hour, and nature could hold out
- no longer. It was a little before midnight I think that I fell
- asleep; the boat was then sailing quietly along, and steering
- herself, making a fair straight course of her progress—though
- to what quarter of the heavens she was carrying me I knew not,
- nor for a long while had thought of guessing. When I awoke the
- darkness was still upon the ocean, and the moon behind a body
- of high light cloud which she whitened and which concealed her,
- though her radiance yet lay in the atmosphere as a twilight.
- Right ahead of me, but at what distance I could not imagine,
- there floated a dark object upon the water. My glance had gone
- to her sleepily, but the instant it fell upon her I sprang to
- my feet, and bounded like a dart into the bow of the boat, and
- stood with my hands on the square of the canoe-shaped stem
- straining my sight into the gloom.
-
- She was a ship—no doubt of that; yet she puzzled me greatly.
- The light was so thin and deceptive that I could distinguish
- little more than the block of blackness she made upon the dark
- sea. Apparently she was lying with all sails furled, or else
- hauled up close to the yards. One moment I would think that she
- was without masts; then I imagined I could perceive a visionary
- fabric of spar and rope. But she was a ship! Help she would
- yield me—the succour of her deck, and, oh my God! one drink,
- but _one_ drink of water!
-
- I flung the oars over, and weak as I was fell to rowing with
- might and main. The boat buzzed through the ripples to the
- impulse of my thirst-maddened arms. The shadow ahead slowly
- loomed larger and closer, till all in a breath I saw by a
- sudden gleam of moonlight which sparkled through a rent in the
- cloud, that she was _La Mulette_!
-
- I dropped the oars, let fall the sail, and stood with my eyes
- fixed upon her, considering a little. Would the men murder me
- if I boarded her? Or would they not fill my empty jar for me on
- my beseeching them, on my pointing to my frothing lip as the
- yellow man had done, on my asking for water only, promising to
- depart at once? Why, it was better to be butchered by their
- cutlasses than to perish thus. I felt mad at the thought of a
- long sweet draught of wine and water out of a cold pannikin,
- and rendered utterly defiant, absolutely reckless by my
- sufferings, and by the dream and allurement of a drink of
- water, I fell to the oars again, and rowed the boat alongside
- the wreck.
-
- I now noticed for the first time that the mast and sail which
- the fellows had erected were gone. Indeed the mast lay over
- the side, and the sail floated black under it in the water. I
- listened; all was hushed as death in the motionless hulk. I
- secured the painter of the boat to the chain plate, sprang on
- to the deck and stood looking a minute. Close to the wheel lay
- the figure of a man. He was sound asleep as I might suppose,
- his head pillowed on his arm, and the other arm over his face
- in a posture of sheltering it. He was the only one of the three
- visible. Wildly reckless always and goaded with the agony of
- thirst I went straight to the hatch and dropped into the cabin.
- The blackness was that of a coal-mine, but I knew the way, and
- after a little groping found the pantry door and entered. With
- an eager hand I sought for a candle, found one and lighted it,
- and in a few minutes my thirst was assuaged and I was standing
- with clasped uplifted hands thanking God for the exquisite
- comfort of the draught. Yet I drank cautiously. My need made
- me believe that I could have drained a cask to its dregs, but
- I forced my dreadful craving to be satisfied with scarce more
- than a quarter of a pint. The drink relaxed the muscles of
- my throat and I was able to eat. Afterwards I drank a little
- again, and then I felt a new man.
-
- I stayed about twenty minutes in the pantry, in which time I
- heard no kind of noise saving a dim creak now and again from
- the hold of the wreck. Extinguishing the candle I entered the
- cabin and stood debating with myself on the course I should
- follow. Water I must have: should I fill a jar and carry
- it stealthily to the boat and be off and take my chance of
- managing the business unheard? Yes, I would do that, and if I
- aroused the sleepers, why, seeing that I was willing to go they
- might not refuse me a supply of drink....
-
- I was musing thus when there was the sound of a yawn on deck.
- At that moment I remembered the array of cutlasses that
- embellished the cabin ceiling. It was the noise the fellow
- made, the perception that one of the three at all events was
- awake with his mates somewhere at hand to swiftly alarm, which
- put the thought of those cutlasses into my head, or it is fifty
- to one if in the blackness of that interior I should have
- recollected them. I sprang upon the table and in a moment was
- gripping a blade. The very feel of it, the mere sense of being
- armed sent the blood rushing through my veins as though to
- some tonic of miraculous potency. “Now,” thought I, setting my
- teeth, “let the ruffians fall upon me if they will. If my life
- is to be taken it shall not be for the want of an English arm
- to defend it.”
-
- I jumped on to the deck, went stealthily to the foot of the
- steps and listened. The man yawned again, and I heard the
- tread of his foot as he moved, whence I suspected him to be
- the yellow boatswain, the others being unshod, though to be
- sure there were shoes enough in the ’tween decks for them had
- they a mind to help themselves. As I sent a look up through the
- lifted corner of tarpaulin over the hatch I spied the delicate,
- illusive grey of daybreak in the air, and so speedy was the
- coming of the dawn that it lay broad with the sun close under
- the rim of the horizon ere I could form a resolution whilst
- listening to make sure that he who was on deck continued alone.
- Then hearing him yawn again and no sound of the others reaching
- my ears, I mounted the steps and gained the deck.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- It was the Portuguese boatswain, as I had imagined. He was in
- the act of seating himself much in the same place where I had
- seen him sleeping when I boarded the vessel; but he instantly
- saw me as I arose, and remained motionless and rigid as though
- blasted by a flash of lightning. His jaw dropped, his hideous
- little eyes protruded bright with horror and fright from their
- sockets, and his yellow face changed into a sort of greenish
- tint like mottled soap or the countenance of a man in a fit.
- No doubt he supposed me a spectre, rising as I did in that way
- out of the cabin when the rogue would imagine me a hundred
- miles off, or floating a corpse in the water, and I dare say
- but for the paralysis of terror that had fixed his jaw some
- pious sentences would have dropped from him. For my part I hung
- in the wind undecided, at a loss to act. I sent a look over my
- shoulder to observe if the others were about, and the movement
- of my head seemed like the release of him from the constraint
- of my eye. He leapt into an erect posture and rushed to the
- side, saw the boat, uttered a cry for all the world resembling
- the rough, saw-like yell of the albatross stooping to some bait
- in the foaming eddies of a wake, in a bound came back to the
- binnacle, the body of which stood, though the compass, hood
- and glass were gone, and thrusting his hand into it pulled out
- a pistol which he levelled at me. The weapon flashed as I ran
- at him. Ere he had time to draw the cutlass which dangled at
- his hip, I had buried the blade, the large heavy hilt of which
- I grasped with both hands, deep in his neck, crushing clean
- through his right jaw; and even whilst he was in the act of
- falling I had lifted and brought the cutlass down upon him
- again, this time driving the edge of it so deep into his skull
- that the weight of him as he dropped dead dragged the weapon
- out of my hand, and it was a wrestle of some moments to free
- the blade.
-
- I swept round fully prepared for the confrontment of the
- others, who, I took it, if they were sleeping below, would rush
- up on deck on hearing the report of the pistol. My head was
- full of blood; I felt on fire from my throat to my feet. God
- knows why or how it was, for I should have imagined of myself
- that the taking of a human life would palsy my muscles with
- the horror of the thing to the weakness of a woman’s arm; and
- yet in the instant of my rounding, prepared for, panting for a
- sight of the other two, I seemed conscious of the strength of a
- dozen men in me.
-
- All was still. The sun had risen in splendour; the ocean was
- a running surface of glory under him, and the blue of the
- south had the dark tenderness of violet with the gushing into
- it of the hot and sparkling breeze which had sprung up in the
- north with the coming of the morn. Where were the others? My
- eyes reeled as they went from the corpse of the Portuguese
- to the pistol he had let drop. I picked it up; it was a rude
- weapon belonging to the armoury of _La Mulette_. I conjectured
- that the miscreant would not have thus armed himself without
- providing a stock of ammunition at hand, and on putting my arm
- into the binnacle stand I found, sure enough, a powder-horn
- and a parcel of pistol-bullets. I carefully loaded the weapon,
- narrowly seeing to the priming, all the while constantly
- glancing along the deck and listening. Then with the pistol in
- one hand and the cutlass in the other, I stepped below, furious
- and eager for a sight of the dead man’s mates.
-
- The lifted tarpaulin let the morning sunshine fall fair into
- the cabin, and now I saw that which had before been invisible
- to me; I mean a great blood-stain upon the deck, with a
- spattering of blood-drops and spots of more hideous suggestion
- yet, round about. A thin trail of blood went from the large
- stain upon the floor along through the passage betwixt the
- berths, and so to the main hatch. Ha! thought I, _this_
- signifies murder! I found nothing in the cabins. The door of
- the berth in which the chest of gold stood, was locked, but
- on putting my whole weight against it with knee and shoulder
- it flew open. The contents of the place were as I had before
- taken notice of; and there were no signs here of either dead or
- living men. I regained the deck, and walking forward observed a
- thin line of blood going from the coamings of the main hatch to
- the side. It was the continuation and termination of the trail
- below, and most unmistakably denoted the passage of a bleeding
- body borne through the hatch and cast overboard. I walked
- further forward yet, and on the forecastle witnessed another
- wide stain of blood. It looked fresher than the other—nay, it
- was not yet dry, and the heat went out of my body, and ice cold
- shudders swept through my limbs as I turned my back upon it,
- sick, dizzy, and trembling.
-
- Those horrible marks gave me the whole story as fully as though
- the dead brute aft had recited it to me at large ere I struck
- him down. He had murdered his mates one after the other to be
- alone with the gold. It had been murder cold and deliberate,
- I was sure. There were no signs of a struggle; there were no
- hints of any previous conflict in the person of the yellow
- Portuguese. It was as though he had crept behind the men one
- after another, and struck them down with a chopper. Indeed I
- was as sure of this as though I had witnessed the deed; and
- there was the chest of gold in the cabin to explain the reason
- of it. How he hoped to manage if he fell in with a ship (and I
- know not what other expectation of coming off with his life he
- could have formed) it is useless to conjecture. Some plausible
- tale no doubt he would have taken care to prepare, claiming the
- gold as his by law of treasure-trove.
-
- I let fall the weapons, and lay over a little strip of
- bulwark, panting for breath. My eyes were upon the water over
- the side, but a minute after on directing them at the sea-line,
- I spied the sails of a ship, a square of pearl glimmering
- in the blue distance, and slightly leaning from the hot and
- brilliant breeze gushing fair down upon her starboard beam.
- Scarce had my mind time to recognize the object as a ship, when
- it vanished; a reddish gloom boiled up mistlike all about me;
- the ocean to a mile away from the side of the wreck turned of
- the deep crimson of blood, spinning round like a teetotum; then
- followed blackness, and I remember no more....
-
- When consciousness returned I found myself lying in a bunk in
- a ship’s cabin. The place was familiar to me, and I recollect
- in a weak way trying to find out why it should be so. “Why,
- confound it all,” I muttered, “this is my cabin aboard the
- _Ruby_. God! what a dream it has been!”
-
- “Very glad your senses have returned to you, Mr. Catesby. It’s
- been a doocid long faint, sir,” exclaimed a familiar voice, and
- no less a person than the second mate of the _Ruby_ came to my
- bedside.
-
- A moment after the door opened, and the doctor of the ship
- entered. I was about to speak; he peremptorily motioned
- silence, felt my pulse and brow, nodding approvingly; then
- addressing the mate, thanked him for keeping watch and told
- him he could go. As my dawning intellects brightened, my
- eagerness to make sure of the reality of the adventure I had
- come through grew into a little fever. When I looked round the
- cabin and saw my clothes hanging upon the bulkhead, my books,
- the twenty odds and ends of the homely furniture of my berth,
- I could not but believe that I had fallen ill, been seized
- perhaps with a fever, and that the incidents of the wreck, the
- open boat, the murderous Portuguese, were a mere vision of my
- distempered brain. But for some hours the doctor had his way,
- would not suffer me to talk, with his own hand brought me broth
- and wine, and now, finding me strong enough, as I supposed, to
- support a conversation, went out and in a few minutes returned
- with Captain Bow.
-
- It was _then_ my suspicion that all that had happened to me
- was most horribly and fearfully real was confirmed. The boat
- that had left me aboard the wreck had been sighted sweeping
- down in the mist; twenty ropes’ ends had been hove at her from
- the _Ruby_, and in a few minutes her people were safe on the
- Indiaman’s deck. Sail was shortened to close-reefed topsails,
- but a black blowing night drew around, as you know, and when
- the dawn broke the wreck was nowhere visible. Light, baffling
- weather followed. Meanwhile Bow swore that he would not quit
- these waters till he had exhausted the inside of a week in
- search for me. At sunrise that morning the wreck was signalled
- from the foretopgallant yard of the _Ruby_. The ship was
- immediately headed for it, and in a couple of hours the hulk
- was close aboard. The chief officer was sent in charge of a
- boat, and I was found lying, dead as they thought, a fathom’s
- distance from a large stain of blood, whilst aft was the body
- of a half-caste with his head cut open. They left _him_ as he
- lay, but me they handed into the boat to carry on board, with
- the design of giving me a Christian burial, till the doctor,
- looking at me, asked if they wanted to add to the horrors
- of the wreck by drowning a living man, and ordered me to be
- conveyed at once to my bed.
-
- This was the captain’s story, and I then related mine. Both he
- and the doctor exchanged looks as I talked. It was tolerably
- evident to my mind that they only believed in about a quarter
- of what I told them.
-
- “But, Captain,” I cried, “on my solemn honour as a gentleman,
- as I am alive here to say it, there was gold to the value of
- many thousands of pounds in the chest.”
-
- “Yes, yes,” he answered with a glance of compassion at me. “I
- don’t doubt it, Mr. Catesby. So much the better for the mermen
- when it goes down to them; it will render the mermaids more
- placable, I don’t doubt.”
-
- “But, gracious mercy!” I cried, “it is only the sending of a
- boat, you know. Why, sir, there’s enough in that chest to yield
- a little fortune to every mother’s son of us aboard.”
-
- “Yes, yes,” said Captain Bow, with a faint smile of concern
- at the doctor, who kept his eyes with a knowing look in them
- fastened upon the deck. “But we took you off the wreck, my dear
- sir, a little before nine o’clock, and it is now after four,
- and as our speed has been a comfortable eight knots ever since,
- you may reckon the hulk at sixty miles’ distance astern. No,
- Mr. Catesby, we’re bound to Bombay this time in earnest, sir.
- No more hunting after wrecks this voyage.”
-
- But I got every man-jack of the passengers, with the whole
- ship’s company to boot, to credit my story up to the hilt
- before we had measured half the length of the Bay of Bengal,
- and such was the conviction I had inspired forwards at all
- events that the third mate one night told me it was reported
- that a number of the forecastle hands had made up their minds
- to charter, if possible, if not, then to run away with, a
- country wallah on the _Ruby’s_ arrival at Bombay, and sail the
- Indian Ocean till they fell in with the wreck—if she was still
- afloat.
-
-But now to resume the story of Master Rockafellar’s voyage: we caught
-the south-east trades much closer to the equator than they are used to
-blow, and bowled merrily down the South Atlantic, rounding the Cape of
-Good Hope at a distance of fifty leagues from it, and driving ahead, with
-a strong westerly gale over our stern, straight as an arrow for Cape
-Leeuwin. Though the _Lady Violet_ showed like a frigate upon the water,
-with a beam that made her look somewhat tub-like, and a round massive
-bow that would crush a sea as the head of a whale might, she sailed
-nobly, easily reeling off a full twelve knots when there was wind enough
-to drive her, looking up when on a bowline with erect spars and a wake
-without an inch of lee-way in it; and I have known her, even in regions
-of calms and cats-paws and baffling airs, to travel in some mysterious
-manner a hundred miles in twenty-four hours.
-
-She was a favourite ship among passengers, and almost as punctual in
-her dates as though she were a steamer; and this voyage, true to her
-old records, she sailed through the Sydney Heads one sparkling morning
-at about eight o’clock, making the time of her passage from the Thames
-exactly eighty-one days.
-
-I will pass swiftly over our stay at Sydney. I should need a deal of room
-to describe the glories of this rich Australian scene, of islands and
-blue water and shores, with white houses peeping out from amidst the
-fringe of the bush. We hauled in alongside the Circular Quay, and then
-followed much grimy work in the shape of discharging cargo, furbishing
-up the ship, attending to the rigging, and the like. Then the vessel was
-conveyed to the other side of the harbour to receive her freight of wool.
-I was ashore a good many times, yet cannot say that I saw much of Sydney.
-Many a long hour would I spend in the beautiful Botanical Gardens, gazing
-at the astonishing vegetation, and watching with admiration the songless
-birds of superb plumage which throng those acres of grace, beauty, and
-colour. Mr. Cock took me to the theatre. I was out rowing and sailing too
-very often; but the captain would not let me have much liberty. He said I
-was too young to be cruising about ashore alone, and indeed my half-crown
-a week did not help me very largely to partake of the diversions of
-Sydney. My chief pleasure lay in sitting in the main-chains, when there
-was nothing to do, and fishing. Many fish, wonderful in colour, did I
-haul up, and some of them were a very delicate food.
-
-The _Lady Violet_ was pretty deep with wool when we were towed out to
-sea. The passengers we had brought out were replaced by a new set—all
-of them colonials, intending a visit to the old home for purposes of
-pleasure or business. Three of our sailors had run away, and new men
-were taken in their place; otherwise the ship’s company remained as it
-had been.
-
-I remember going on the forecastle in the second dog-watch of the first
-day that we were out, and leaning over the head-rail and looking into
-the evening-shadowed distance, and saying to myself, “We are homeward
-bound!” Ah, the delight of those words to the sailor, be he old or young!
-It is the most inspiriting of all the sentiments in the songs Jack sings.
-It is a thought that seems to compensate for all past hardships, and to
-hearten a man to endure all that may be harsh and painful in the time
-that yet lies between him and his arrival home. My young heart beat high,
-I remember, and I found a wonderful delight, as I overlay the forecastle
-rail, in looking straight down under me, where the coppered fore-foot of
-the ship was sheering through the satin-like seas rolling to her bow,
-and in thinking that every fathom of white water, with its tinkling
-foam-bells and bubbles of yellow spume which ran past, shortened the
-distance between me and my dear old home by six feet!
-
-We were in the South Pacific now, making for the terrible Cape Horn,
-about whose enormous icebergs and leviathan seas and black snow-storms
-there was a deal said in our midshipmen’s berth; but it was still
-delicious weather; the indescribable sweetness and softness of the
-Pacific was in the temperature; the sun-touched billows chased us in
-lines of dark blue and flaming gold; sea-birds with breasts of snow,
-poised on long tremulous wings of ermine, hovered in our wake; and the
-albicore and the bonito merrily kept us company, as the _Lady Violet_
-went ambling through the caressing waters.
-
-[Illustration: “LISTENING TO THE YARNS HE SPUN.”]
-
-This was the pleasantest part of the voyage, so far as I was concerned.
-I made friends with one of the boatswain’s mates, and was much in the
-forecastle with him during my watches below. I can see myself now,
-sitting on his sea-chest, listening to the yarns he spun me about the
-voyages he had made and the countries he had visited, or learning from
-him how to lay up sennit, to wield a marline-spike, to use the palm and
-needle, and so on. A lamp fed by slush spluttered under a blackened beam
-just over us; a number of hammocks hung from the ceiling or upper deck,
-with here and there a weather-darkened face, well whiskered, overlying
-the edge of the canvas with a pipe in its mouth. A double tier of bunks
-went curving into the eyes of the ship where the hawse-pipes were, and
-where the gloom lay heavy. In one of these beds a man would lie with a
-book in his hand, laboriously reading, his lips moving like a child’s
-as his eyes spelt down the page. Squatting on a chest would be a grim
-unshaven salt, sourly stitching at a pair of breeches. Elsewhere
-you would see a fellow greasing his sea-boots, another munching at a
-sea-biscuit with his eyes fixed like an owl’s, a third cutting up a
-pipeful of tobacco from a black flat cake that made me think of toffee.
-Yet, despite the life and movement within, the forecastle was always very
-quiet. My boatswain’s mate would talk to me in hoarse whispers, and the
-other sailors rarely conversed above their breath. Sleep is naturally
-prized at sea. The opportunities for taking it are short, and must be
-made the most of. Hence, seamen are very careful that their mates, when
-turned in, should repose undisturbed that when their own turn comes round
-for a nap they may sleep in quiet.
-
-The dog-watches are the holiday hours at sea, and on a fine evening,
-whilst we were in the Pacific, I would repair to the forecastle and there
-sit, listening to and watching the men until the sun went down and the
-black shadow of night came along. They had a fiddle amongst them, and one
-of them played the concertina, and these instruments made music enough
-to set them a-dancing. I have laughed till the tears stood in my eyes
-to watch the brawny capering Jacks sliding about in a waltz, tenderly
-embracing one another as partners, capsizing over the flukes of the
-stowed anchors, and making a very pageant of the forecastle deck—with
-its rough details of capstan, catheads, scuttle and the like—by their
-swimming, floating, jovial figures, coloured of every hue with the
-clothes they wore. My friend the boatswain’s mate danced the hornpipe
-to perfection. He valued himself on this art, and was not always very
-forward in obliging us. When he suffered himself to be coaxed, the treat
-he gave us was a real one. He would dress himself so as to resemble a
-man-of-war’s man, and make his appearance with a straw hat on the back of
-his head-on “nine-hairs,” as sailors say—flowing trousers, pumps, an open
-shirt that disclosed his mossy breast, and take his stand on a part of
-the forecastle where the passengers aft could see him. The fiddler would
-then clamber on to the booms over the long-boat, and begin to saw away,
-and off would start the boatswain’s mate in a delightful shuffle—feet
-twinkling, legs vibrating, arms arched—a manly figure indeed! whilst the
-sailors noisily clapped their hands in huge relish of the show.
-
-We were drawing into colder weather, though Cape Horn was still a long
-way off, when there happened two incidents in the same morning, one
-of which—as you will suppose when I have related it—made a very deep
-impression on me.
-
-The ship was under all plain sail, by which is signified all the canvas
-a vessel carries saving her studding-sails. The breeze was moderate
-and off the bow, and there was very little sea; but through the bosom
-of the deep there ran, as regular as the beat of the pulse, a long
-swell, slipping its volumes into our quarter with weight enough in
-each broad-backed fold to keep the _Lady Violet_ curtseying until the
-forecastle of her looked as flat as a spoon on the slope of water ahead.
-I was at work with Kennet in one of the quarter-boats, clearing her out.
-The boat hung from a pair of irons, termed “davits,” over the side,
-and was steadied by flat mat-like lashings, called “gripes.” From over
-the gunwale of the boat we could obtain a clear view of the sea ahead,
-whereas, from the poop the horizon over the bows was concealed by the
-foresail and mainsail.
-
-Presently, pausing in my work to glance ahead, I caught sight of a body
-of foam about a couple of points on the bow, as we should say, though how
-far off it was I could not imagine. Figure the moon reflecting herself in
-water just as she shows in the heavens—that is to say, as a bright silver
-disk—and you will obtain a good idea of the appearance on which my eyes
-had fastened. It rose and fell upon the swell, by which one knew that it
-must be afloat, whatever it was.
-
-“See that, Kennet?” said I.
-
-He peered and cried, “Ha! doth it move?”
-
-We stared at it.
-
-“No,” said he, “it ith’nt moving. I thought it wath a whirlwind firtht. I
-thay tho’—what the doothe—tain’t a _windmill_, ith it?”
-
-I now saw, as he had seen, what resembled the vanes of a windmill
-revolving in the foam—a wet black arm that rose and fell out of the white
-seething like to the blades of a propeller rotating under the counter of
-a tall light steamer, amidst the boiling of the water churned up by the
-machine.
-
-“See that thrasher!” suddenly shouted the chief mate. “By George,
-gentlemen and ladies, a fight between a thrasher and a whale, as I live!
-A rare sight, truly!”
-
-And all the passengers who were on deck came rushing with him over to
-the side to look. As we approached, the spectacle grew in magnitude, and
-proved one of the wildest—I may say one of the most terrific—pictures
-which the imagination could body forth, even of the sea—that arena of
-wonders and of terrors. There was so much fury of foaming water, that
-it was hard to distinguish the gigantic combatants. Yet now and again
-I would catch a sight of a large space of the gleaming dark body of a
-leviathan whale, upon which the great arms of the thrasher were beating
-in blows, the echoes of which had something of a metallic twang in them
-that made you think of a giant blacksmith striking upon an enormous
-anvil. The boiling commotion covered a large space of water, and might
-easily have passed for the first fierce foamings of a waterspout.
-
-I watched, breathless with astonishment and awe, my eyes half out of my
-head. Here was something to talk about to my father and mother! But would
-they believe it? It was a sight I could scarcely credit, specially when
-Kennet told me that what I saw of the whale was only a little bit of him.
-
-“Will the thrasher kill him?” said I.
-
-“I expect tho,” he answered; “anyhow, of the two, I’d thooner not be the
-whale.”
-
-When the monster duellists had settled down upon our quarter, the long
-black arms suddenly vanished. The seething turmoil expired into smooth
-water, and the swell rolled flawless as before.
-
-“The whale’th killed,” said Kennet; “keep a bright look-out, Rockafellar,
-and you’ll thee his body rithe.”
-
-But though I stared long and earnestly, it was to no purpose; the body
-did _not_ rise: haply because the whale wasn’t dead.
-
-“Oh, but,” said Kennet, “a big chap like that ithn’t going to rithe up
-with a pop ath though he wath a little fith. When a whale gothe to work,
-no matter what hith buthineth ith, he’th bound to take hith time. Did you
-ever thee a fat man hurry himthelf. Courth not. Tho ith it with whaleth.”
-
-For a long time I continued to furtively glance at the sea, and then gave
-up looking, secretly pleasing myself with the idea that the whale was
-still alive, and not very much hurt; for it seemed to me very hard that
-any creature should meet with so dreadful an end as being flogged to
-death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-_HE SEES AN ICEBERG._
-
-
-When I had finished my work in the boat, I walked forward to toast my
-hands for a little at the galley-fire. The cook and I were good friends.
-Our esteem for each other had grown up through my giving him a portion of
-my allowance of rum, which acts of attention he repaid by presenting me,
-from time to time, with a hot roll or jam tart. For, though the owner of
-the _Lady Violet_ had told my father that his ships were sober vessels,
-yet with us it was the practice for the steward to serve out every day at
-noon, on the drum of the capstan on the quarter-deck, a gill, or tot, of
-rum to the whole ship’s company. We midshipmen, as being on the articles,
-were included, and, regularly with the rest, I presented myself for my
-“tot”; but the stuff was much too fiery for me; the flavour, moreover,
-I thought extremely disagreeable; so, instead of swallowing the dose, I
-preserved it in a bottle and gave it to the boatswain’s mate, and the
-cook, and to the man who washed my linen, and to one or two others.
-
-Well, having yarned a bit with the cook about the fight between the
-whale and the thrasher, whilst I warmed my fingers at his genial stove,
-I quitted the galley to go aft again. As I left the structure, the chief
-mate, standing at the break of the poop, sang out for some hands to clew
-up the main-royal and furl it. The mizzen-royal, I saw, was in process
-of being stowed by Poole, and there was a fellow dancing up the lower
-fore-shrouds on his way to furl the fore-royal. Some hands came tumbling
-past me; they let go the halliards and tailed on to the clew-lines, and a
-couple of sailors jumped on to the bulwarks to get into the rigging. One
-continued on his way aloft; the other halted with his feet still upon the
-bulwark-rail, and his left hand upon his heart.
-
-He was a short man, with a yellowish, coarse face, dingy and stained,
-the skin like an old blanket. He had a tuft of ginger-coloured beard
-under his chin, a rounded back that seemed hunched, and stunted bow
-legs. I looked at him as I came abreast on my way to the poop, struck by
-his lingering when he should have been running aloft—struck, also, by a
-quite indescribable expression in his face. His eyes were upturned like
-those of a sleeper when you part the lids. I was exactly opposite him
-when he fell. He tumbled inboards like a wooden figure; and his head
-struck my shoulder with such force that I was spun round and felled,
-half-senseless, to the deck.
-
-I recovered in a few moments, and sat upright; nobody took any notice
-of me. A crowd had gathered round the prostrate man, and presently two
-or three of the sailors lifted him up and carried him forwards. _He was
-stone dead!_ The doctor examined the body, and said it was disease of the
-heart that had killed him.
-
-I cannot express the effect this shock produced upon me. The mere seeing
-the poor fellow fall a corpse would have been painful and terrible to my
-young nerves; but to be struck by him—to carry about with me a shoulder
-aching from the blow of his head!—it was an incident that filled my
-boyish sleep with nightmares that lasted me for a long fortnight. Again
-and again I would start from my slumbers—from some horrible vision of the
-dead man clasping me—drawing me from my bed—struggling to carry me on
-deck to jump overboard with me! Had I found courage to speak out, my mind
-might have been soothed; but I did not dare whisper my thoughts for fear
-of being laughed at, and though the impression faded before long, yet,
-whilst it lasted I was the most nervous miserable creature, I do believe,
-that was ever afloat.
-
-The burial of this poor fellow gave me an opportunity of witnessing what
-I cannot but think the most impressive ceremony that is anywhere to be
-viewed. How solemn a thing is a funeral on shore we all know; but at
-sea those points and features which render the interment of the dead on
-land affecting and awful are immeasurably heightened by the vastness of
-the ocean, the mystery of its depths, the contrast between it and the
-littleness of the form committed to its great dark heart, and, above
-all, by the utter extinction of the body. Ashore there is a grave: you
-can point to the mound or to the stone; but at sea nothing but a bubble
-follows the plunge of the corpse: it is swallowed up in the immensity of
-the deep as the mounting lark dies out in the blue into which it soars.
-
-The dead sailor was stitched up in his hammock and a weight attached to
-his feet. The shrouded figure was placed upon a hatch grating, and the
-large ensign thrown over it, after which it was brought by four seamen
-to the gangway. The captain stood bare-headed close by, prayer-book in
-hand; the whole ship’s company gathered round, most of them having made
-some little difference in their attire for the occasion; the passengers
-collected at the break of the poop, the gentlemen with their caps in
-their hands, and the ladies looking down upon the quarter-deck with
-grave and earnest faces. A stillness fell upon the ship, and you heard
-nothing but the voice of the captain reading the Service, mingled with
-the hissing noise of the foam washing past, and the humming of the wind
-in the concavities of the canvas. At a signal one end of the grating was
-lifted, and the hammock flashed overboard. A shudder ran through me as I
-saw it go. Then, when the last words of the Service had been recited, the
-captain put on his hat and entered the cabin, the boatswain’s pipe rung
-out shrilly in dismissal of the men, and within a quarter of an hour the
-ship had regained her familiar appearance—the ladies walking on the poop,
-the captain briskly chatting with some passengers near the wheel, and the
-sailors of the watch at work on their several jobs about the deck and in
-the rigging.
-
-It was customary in my time to hold an auction of the effects of a dead
-sailor shortly after his burial. There was an odd mixture of humour
-and pathos in the scene. The poor fellow’s chest was brought on to the
-quarter-deck, and the mate at the capstan played the part of auctioneer.
-I stood under the break of the poop, looking on; and, young as I was,
-I seemed to have mind enough to appreciate the queer appearance the
-Jacks presented as they stood shouldering one another in bunches, with
-something of shyness in their manner, and with askant, half-sheepish, yet
-grinning glances directed at the ladies who stood on the poop, viewing
-the scene.
-
-There was not much of an auction, for the poor fellow had left very few
-clothes behind him. He had been one of those improvident sailors who will
-spend in a single night ashore the earnings for which they have laboured
-during a twelvemonth, and who are driven by poverty to ship again in a
-hurry, often rolling into the forecastle with nothing but a jumper and a
-pair of tarry breeches in their bags. The articles were held up for the
-crew to see; Mr. Johnson did not apparently relish the idea of handling
-them. The steward pulled a pair of trousers out of the chest, and
-expanded them between his raised hands.
-
-“What bid for these?” said the mate; “you all behold them. Observe
-that patch; the neatness of the stitching heightens the value of those
-trousers by at least five shillings more than they are intrinsically
-worth, if only as an object of art just to look at. How much shall I say?”
-
-One bid two shillings, another five, and the breeches were ultimately
-knocked down to the cook for ten—not a little to my astonishment, for it
-seemed to me that an offer of even threepence for them would have been
-excessive. The steward then flourished a worn shirt, for which a sailor
-with a hoarse voice offered three-and-sixpence. It was knocked down to
-him, and, had it been an extraordinary bargain, he could not have looked
-more pleased. Then a very rusty monkey-jacket was exposed, together with
-a belt and sheath-knife, a pair of shoes which certainly did not match,
-a greasy Scotch cap, and one or two other articles of a like nature.
-They all fetched high prices. The sailors seemed to regard the biddings
-as a joke; yet it was impossible that there should be much humour in the
-thing to those to whom these specimens of squalid raiment were knocked
-down, since the money was deducted from their pay. Nor could I gather of
-what use the clothes were likely to prove to the fellows who purchased
-them, there being superstitious fancies in every forecastle concerning
-dead men’s attire, so that very few sailors will ever be got to clothe
-themselves in a drowned ship-mate’s dress.
-
-But there is a deal of good nature in the recklessness of Jack’s
-character, and the bids made at these auctions are owing, not to the
-desire of the men to possess the articles, but to the feeling that the
-money they spend will be of help to the dead man’s relatives.
-
-The captain, in making the Horn this voyage, was running his ship on
-the Great Circle track; at all events, he was steering a very much more
-southerly course than was customary with vessels whose masters deemed
-a wide spread of longitude preferable to the risks of ice amongst the
-narrower meridians. It was not the harshest time of the year down off
-the South American headland; but even with Cape Horn in sight, the
-weather would have been bitterly and abominably cold. Judge, then, how
-it was with us when I tell you that the navigation of the _Lady Violet_
-carried her to within a league or two of sixty degrees south latitude.
-I had often heard of Cape Horn seas and skies, and here they were now
-with a vengeance—an horizon shrouded by a wall of grey mist to within a
-musket-shot of the ship; the shadows of black clouds whirling overhead
-and darkening the air yet with heavy snowfalls, which blew along in
-horizontal masses, thick as the contents of a feather-bed, or with
-volleys of hail big as plums, which rang upon the decks as though tons of
-bullets were being emptied out of the tops; seas of mountainous height
-of a dark olive-green, whose white and roaring heads seemed to brush
-the flying soot of the heavens as they came storming at us; the rigging
-glazed with ice; the running gear so frozen that the ropes crackled in
-our hands as wood spits in a fire; the decks full of water, with such a
-rolling and plunging of them besides that it was sometimes at the risk of
-your life that you let go the rope you swung by to obey an order—this was
-my experience of the Horn!
-
-And only a little bit of it, too. Spite of our oilskins, we were so
-repeatedly wet through that it came to our having no dry clothes to put
-on. I have known what it is to come down from aloft after reefing the
-mizzen topsail, and to shed tears, child as I was, with the agony of the
-cold in my hands. The cook could do nothing with the galley-fire, and
-there was no warm food to be had. Again and again would we of the watch
-on deck go below, and appease our hunger by a meal of mouldy biscuit,
-which I would endeavour to sweeten with a coating of salt butter and
-moist sugar, and with a pannikin of cold water, tasting already like the
-end of a voyage. The passengers remained in the cuddy. The every-day
-ship’s routine could not be carried on, and the sailors kept under cover,
-but always ready to rush out at the first summons. The decks therefore
-seemed deserted, and, but for the two hands at the wheel, and but for
-the mate of the watch, who crouched hugging himself under the lee of a
-square of canvas in the mizzen rigging, the ship might have been deemed
-abandoned—a craft speeding aimlessly before the gale with a company of
-souls dead below!
-
-Never shall I forget the impression produced upon me one night by the
-sight of the sea. I came on deck at twelve o’clock, and found the ship
-hove-to under a close-reefed main topsail and fore-topmast staysail.
-There was a curl of reddish moon in the northern sky, and over that
-shapeless blotch of light, as it looked to be, the loose scud was flying
-like rolls of brown smoke at hurricane speed. The roaring of the surges
-was almost deafening, and there is nothing in language to convey the
-astounding noise of the wind in the ice-glaced rigging—the shrieking, the
-shrilling, the whistling of it, as it split in fiendish howlings upon the
-ropes, and swept away under the foot of the bursting band of topsail,
-with a note of thunder like the noise of a train of empty waggons
-speeding along the metals in tow of a locomotive.
-
-I crept up the lee poop-ladder, but on gaining the deck was pinned to the
-rail for some minutes by the force of the wind. Then, finding I could
-do nothing with my legs, I fell upon my knees and crawled like a rat to
-windward; and, still crawling, I passed along under the shelter of the
-line of hencoops until I arrived at the mizzen rigging, where the mate
-stood protected by the piece of sailcoth fastened to the shrouds. He
-handed me the end of a rope, which I passed round my waist and belayed to
-a pin, and then I could stand up without fear of falling, otherwise the
-prodigious slope of the deck rendered the feet entirely helpless.
-
-I could now look about me. The first thing I saw, broad on the
-weather-bow, was a huge mass of faintness—a great blurr as it seemed of
-dim light—that seemed to blend with the flying gloom as you gazed, though
-if you withdrew your eye from it for a moment and then looked afresh, it
-showed, I may even say, it _shone_ out clearly. I shouted to Mr. Johnson
-to tell me what it was.
-
-“An iceberg,” he roared; for I can tell you it needed all the wind our
-lungs could hold to render ourselves audible to each other amid the
-fierce clamour of that Cape Horn night.
-
-It was the first ice that I had seen. Several bergs of magnitude had been
-passed during the week, but always when I was below, and, as the weather
-was continuously thick, they were out of sight promptly, long before
-eight bells called me to keep my watch.
-
-I stared, fascinated by the huge visionary spectral mass that lay, of the
-colour of faint starlight, out upon the bow. It came and went, for our
-ship was rolling furiously. Never could I have dreamt that the waves of
-the ocean raged to such a height as they were now running to. One moment
-the ship was on a level keel in the trough, in a valley deep down, with
-moving walls of water on either hand of her; for a breathless moment
-there was a lull, the gale seemed to have been spent, you heard nothing
-but the howl of it on high, and the savage hissing of boiling foam.
-
-But in a moment the vessel was sweeping up the huge liquid incline—up and
-yet up, with sickening rapidity, with spars sloping till the angle of
-the deck was like that of the roof of a house, with all her top hamper
-shrieking anew, as it soared into the full weight of the gale. Then would
-follow another instant’s pause, whilst she hung poised on the flickering
-peak of the sea that had hoisted her, when once more down she would slip,
-reeling to windward as she went, until the heart of the valley was again
-reached, with its terrifying interval of calm and its deafening uproar of
-storm above.
-
-I forgot the iceberg presently in watching the tremendous billows; and
-for a considerable time I swung in the bight of the rope that was round
-me, full of consternation. As I looked at the approaching seas it seemed
-impossible that the ship could ride to them; but she was a noble vessel,
-buoyant as an ocean bird, and she took every surge with a magnificent
-ease, falling away, as it were, from the first Titanic blow of it upon
-her bow, then rising, like a thing on wings and full of life, never
-shipping a drain of water save right forwards, where now and again
-you would see the spray blowing in a smoke of crystals right over the
-forecastle head.
-
-Her glorious behaviour after a while restored confidence to me, and then
-I looked at the iceberg again. I longed to ask Mr. Johnson questions
-about it, but talking, beyond now and again a brief shout, was out of the
-question. Such a night as this was the right sort of frame in which to
-view the picture of that dim, wild, gigantic berg. The distorted smudge
-of red moon, the sweeping shadows of vapour, the enormous seas, frothing,
-as it seemed, to the very sky, the darkness, the savage, warring noises
-of the tempest, all concurred to impart an inexpressible quality of awe
-and mystery and terror to that silent mass of paleness which loomed up
-out of the obscurity of the horizon each time our ship rose to the height
-of the sea.
-
-The gale abated before my watch was out, but we were still hove-to when
-I went below. At eight o’clock, when the midshipmen in the starboard
-watch came down to rout us out, they told us that the wind had shifted,
-that the captain had come up on deck at seven and ordered the yards to be
-squared and the reefed fore-topsail and foresail set, and that the ship
-was now running dead before it on a course well to the north of east,
-which looked as if the “old man” feared that he had made more southing
-than was good for him, and was now heading for a warmer part of the ocean
-whilst there was a wind to serve him.
-
-One did not need to be told that the vessel had the sea right astern of
-her. She was going along on a level keel, though pitching heavily, and
-the comparative evenness of her decks after the late fearful slope of
-them came with something of novelty to my strained and tired little legs.
-
-On passing through the booby-hatch, I found the ship almost hidden in a
-snowstorm. The fall had the density of a fog, and I do not exaggerate
-when I say that nothing was to be seen of the spars above the maintop,
-whilst the forecastle was an indistinguishable outline in the white
-smother blowing like steam along the decks. One of us midshipmen had to
-be on the poop within eyeshot of the mate. We took turn and turn about
-at this, Poole going first, and the others of us hanging together in the
-cuddy embrasure under the break of the deck, where there was some shelter
-to be obtained from the marrow-freezing, man-killing wind.
-
-When my turn came round, the weather, that had been tolerably clear
-for half-an-hour, grew as thick as “mud in a wine-glass” again with
-snow. From the poop-rail the two men who were keeping a look-out on the
-forecastle head were hardly to be seen. It was blowing half a gale of
-wind, but, being dead aft, much of its weight was taken out of it.
-
-Under reefed topsails and yawning foresail dark with saturation and
-iron-hard with frost, the ship drove before the blast, chased by huge
-seas which scared me to watch, as the summits rose in grey, freckled, and
-foaming hills high above the heads of the steersmen, who were clinging to
-the wheel with nervous, sinewy grip. The mate stood at the head of the
-weather-poop ladder; the captain, clothed in water-proof garments from
-head to foot, paced a bit of deck from the grating abaft the wheel to the
-mizzen-shrouds. Through the weeping skylight you caught a dim glimpse
-of the outlines of passengers cuddling themselves in the cabin. Heavens,
-how did I envy them! What would I have given for the liberty to exchange
-this freezing, snow-swept deck for the warmth of the glowing cuddy-stove
-and the luxury of the wine-scented atmosphere, the comfortable sofas, the
-piano, and the little library of books which the steward had charge of!
-
-“Well, Master Rockafellar,” said the chief mate, “pray, sir, what do you
-think of Cape Horn?”
-
-“I don’t like it, sir,” said I.
-
-“Isn’t it cold enough?” he asked.
-
-“I prefer the equator, sir,” I exclaimed.
-
-I could see by a laugh in his eye that he was about to deliver something
-mirthful; but all on a sudden he fell as grave as a mute, and began to
-sniff, as though scenting something in the air whilst he cast a look at
-the captain, who continued to patrol the after part of the deck with a
-careless step. He sniffed again.
-
-“I smell ice!” he exclaimed.
-
-I thought he might wish me to sniff too, which I did, somewhat
-ostentatiously, perhaps, that he might notice me; but as to smelling
-ice—why, ’twas all snow to me, with a coldness in it that went beyond
-ice, to my mind. The flakes were still rolling over us, dense as smoke,
-from the lead-coloured sky, and the ship’s bowsprit was nearly out of
-sight.
-
-Once more the mate sniffed up the air with wide nostrils, went to the
-rail and thrust his head over, with a long, probing look ahead, and then
-came back to where I was standing. He was about to speak, when, out from
-the whirling, wool-white thickness forward, came the loud and fearful cry:
-
-“_Ice right ahead, sir!_”
-
-“Ice right ahead, sir!” re-echoed the mate in a shriek, whipping round
-his face towards the captain.
-
-“I see it, sir! I see it!” cried the skipper. “Hard a starboard! hard a
-starboard! over with it for your lives, lads!”
-
-The spokes revolved like the driving-wheel of a locomotive in the hands
-of the two seamen, and the ship paid off with a slow, stately sweep
-of her head, as she swung upon the underrun of a huge Pacific sea,
-brimming to her counter, and roaring in thunder along the line of her
-water-ways—and just in time!
-
-For, out upon the starboard bow there leapt out of the snowstorm, in
-proportions as huge as those of the cathedral of St. Paul’s, a monster
-iceberg. It all happened in a minute, and what a minute was that! It was
-a prodigious crystalline mass, some of the sharp curves of it of a keen
-blue, the summits deep in snow, and the sides frightfully scored and
-gashed into ravines and gorges and caverns, whilst all about the sky-line
-of it, showing faintly in the whirling flakes, were forms of pinnacles
-and spires, of towers and minarets, columns like those of ruins, and
-wild and startling shapes like couchant beasts of colossal size, giant
-helmets, forts, turreted heads of castles, and I know not what besides.
-
-In the fair and streaming sunshine, that would have filled it with
-flaming jewels of light, and kindled all kinds of rich and shining
-colours, it would have glowed out upon the sea as a most glorious, most
-magnificent object; but now, with the shadow upon it of the storm-laden
-sky, and rendered wild beyond imagination by the gyrations of the clouds
-of snow all about it, it offered a most dreadful and terrifying picture
-as it swept past, with the noise of the great seas bursting at its base,
-smiting the ear like shocks of earthquake.
-
-We had escaped it by a miracle. Our ship’s head had been pointed for
-it as neatly as the muzzle of a musket at the object to be shot at. In
-another three minutes our bows would have been into it, and the ship have
-ground herself away from the bows aft, as you shut up the tubes of a
-telescope!
-
-Our captain seemed to take fright at this experience, and whilst the
-loom of the mighty mass was still visible on the lee quarter, orders
-were given for all hands to turn out and heave the ship to. Nor was way
-got upon her again till the weather cleared, and even then for several
-days our progress was exceedingly stealthy, the order of the time being
-that whenever it came on thick the ship was to be hove-to. It was weary,
-desperate work, and every hand on board the ship soon grew to yearn, with
-almost shipwrecked longings, for the blue skies and the trade-winds of
-the South Atlantic.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-_HE SIGHTS A WRECK._
-
-
-But at last came a day when the meridian of Staten Island was passed
-under our counter; and when eight bells had been made, the ship’s course
-was altered, and we were once more heading for the sun with a strong
-wind on the beam, the ocean working in long sapphire lines of creaming
-billows, the ship leaning down under a maintopgallant sail, with a single
-reef in the topsail under it, and the sailors going about their work with
-cheerful countenances; for this northward course made us all feel that we
-were really and truly homeward bound at last.
-
-It was thought that our passage would be a smart one, as good a run as
-any on record, for though, to be sure, we had been detained a bit off the
-Horn by the frequent heaving to of the ship, yet we had traversed the
-long stretch of the South Pacific very briskly, whilst for a long eight
-days now there blew a strong, steady beam wind that drove us through it
-at an average of two hundred and fifty miles in the twenty-four hours.
-With less weight in the breeze we should have done better still. We could
-never show more than a maintopgallant sail to it, and the high seas were
-by no means helpful to the heels of the ship. Yet Cape Horn was speedily
-a long way astern of us; the horrible weather of it was forgotten as pain
-is. Every night, stars which had become familiar to us were sinking in
-the south, and new constellations soaring out of the horizon over the
-bows. It was delightful to handle the ropes, and find them supple as coir
-instead of stiff as iron bars, to pick up the sails, and feel them soft
-again to the touch instead of that hardness of sheets of steel which they
-gathered to them in the frosty parallels. The sun shone with a warmth
-that was every day increasing in ardency; the dry decks sparkled crisply
-like the white firm sand of the sea-beach. The live-stock grew gay and
-hearty with the Atlantic temperature: the cocks crew cheerily, the hens
-cackled with vigour, the sheep bleated with voices which filled our
-salted, weather-toughened heads with visions of green meadows, of fields
-enamelled with daisies, of hedges full of nosegays, and of twinkling
-green branches melodious with birds.
-
-We slipped into the south-east trade wind, and bore away for the equator
-under fore-topmast studding-sail.
-
-[Illustration: “I ... SAT RIDING A-COCK-HORSE OF IT” (p. 231).]
-
-One moonlight night a fancy to view the ship from the bowsprit entered my
-mind. I went on to the forecastle and crawled out on to the jibboom, and
-there sat riding a-cock-horse of it, holding by the outer jib-stay. The
-moon shone brightly over the maintopsail yard-arm; all sail was on the
-ship, and she was leaning over from the fresh breeze like a yacht in a
-racing match. The moonlight made her decks resemble ivory, and stars of
-silver glory sparkled fitfully along them in the glass and brass work.
-The whole figure of the noble fabric seemed to be rushing at me; the foam
-poured like steam from her stem that was smoking and sheering through the
-ocean surge. Over my head soared the great jibs, like the wings of some
-mighty spirit. My heart leapt up in me to the rise and fall of the spar
-that I jockeyed. It was like sitting at one end of a leviathan see-saw,
-and every upheaval was as exhilarating as a flight through the air. Ah,
-thought I, as I leisurely made my way inboards, if sailoring were always
-as pleasant as _this_, I believe I should wish to continue at sea all my
-life.
-
-It was two days afterwards, at about half-past six in the morning watch,
-that a fellow in the foretop hailed the deck and reported a black object
-on the lee-bow which, he said, didn’t look like a ship, though it was a
-deal too big for a long-boat. I was staring wistfully in the direction
-the man had indicated. Mr. Johnson noticed this, and said, with a
-kind smile (I seemed to be a favourite of his, maybe because I was but
-a little chap to be at sea, otherwise I do not know what particularly
-entitled me to his kindness)—
-
-“Here, Rockafellar, take my glass into the foretop, and see what you can
-make of the object.”
-
-I was very proud of this commission, and not a little pleased to escape
-even for a short spell the grimy, prosaic business of scrubbing the poop.
-The telescope was a handsome instrument in a case, the strap of which I
-threw over my shoulder; and, slipping on a pair of shoes (for I never
-could endure the pressure of the ratlines against the soles of my naked
-feet), I got into the shrouds and arrived in the foretop.
-
-“Where is it?” said I to a man who stood peering seawards, with a hairy
-tar-stained hand protecting his eyes.
-
-He pointed.
-
-I levelled the glass, and in an instant beheld the black hull of a ship
-lying deep in the water, rolling heavily, yet very sluggishly. All three
-masts were gone, and a few splinters forking out between her knight-heads
-were all that remained of her bowsprit.
-
-The sailor asked leave to look, and putting his eye to the telescope,
-exclaimed—
-
-“_Here’s_ a bad job, I lay. She’s a settling down too. She’ll be out
-of sight under water afore we’re abreast, or I’m a Kanaka,” by which he
-meant a South Sea Islander.
-
-[Illustration: “HE POINTED.”]
-
-I made my way to the deck, and reported what I had seen to the chief
-mate. It was not twenty minutes after this when a loud cry arose from
-the forecastle, followed by a rush of men to the rail, to see what the
-fellow who had called out was pointing at. We of the poop, forgetting
-the ship’s discipline in the excitement raised by the shout and headlong
-hurry of men forward, ran to the side to look also, and we saw close
-against the lee-bow of the ship, fast sliding along past the side, the
-figure of a man in a lifebuoy. He was naked to the waist; his arms
-overhung the circle, but his form, leaning forward, had so tilted the
-buoy that his head lay under water. He rose and fell upon the seas, which
-sometimes threw him a little way out and then submerged him again, with
-his long hair streaming like grass at the bottom of a shallow running
-stream.
-
-The sailors along the waist and on the forecastle were looking aft, as
-though they expected that the mate would back the topsail yard and send
-a boat; but the man that had gone past was dead as dead can be: even my
-young eyes could have told _that_, though his head had been above water
-all the time.
-
-“It is a recent wreck, I expect, sir,” I heard Mr. Johnson say to the
-captain, who stepped on deck at that moment. “The poor fellow didn’t look
-to have been in the water long.”
-
-“There was no doubt he was a corpse?” inquired the captain, to whose
-sight the form of the drowned man was invisible, so rapidly had it veered
-astern into the troubled and concealing foam of our wake.
-
-“Oh yes, sir,” answered Mr. Johnson. “His face only lifted now and again.”
-
-At eight bells the wreck was in sight from the poop, but at a long
-distance. I went below to get some breakfast, and then returned, too much
-interested in the object that had hove into view to stay in the cabin,
-though I had been on deck since four o’clock, and had scarcely slept more
-than two hours during the middle watch.
-
-Our ship’s helm had been slightly shifted, so that we might pass the
-wreck close. As we advanced, fragments of the torn and mutilated fabric
-passed us; portions of yards, of broken masts with the attached gear
-snaking out from it, casks, hatch-covers, and so forth. It was easy to
-guess, by the look of these things, that they had been wrenched from the
-hull by a hurricane. I noticed a length of sail-cloth attached to a yard,
-with a knot in it so tied that I did not need to have been at sea many
-months to guess that nothing could have done it but some furious ocean
-blast.
-
-We all stood looking with eagerness towards the wreck—the ladies with
-opera-glasses to their eyes, the gentlemen with telescopes; the captain
-aft was constantly viewing her through his glass, and the second mate,
-who had charge of the deck, watched her through the shrouds of the main
-rigging with the intentness of a pirate whose eyes are upon a chase.
-
-The fact was, it was impossible to tell whether there might be human
-beings aboard of her, let alone the sort of pathetic interest one found
-in the sight of the lonely object rolling out yonder in a drowning way
-amidst the sparkling morning waters of the blue immensity of the deep.
-Only a little while ago, I thought to myself as I surveyed her, she was
-a noble ship; her white sails soared, she sat like a large summer cloud
-upon the water, the foam sparkled at her fore-foot; like ourselves, she
-might have been homeward bound—and now see her! Hearts which were lately
-beating in full life, are silent—stilled for ever in those cold depths
-upon whose surface she is heaving.
-
-There is no object in life, I think, that appeals more solemnly to
-the mind than a wreck fallen in with far out at sea. She is an image
-of death, and the thought of the eternity that follows upon death is
-symbolized by the secret green profound in whose depths she will shortly
-be swallowed up.
-
-The hull lay so deep in the water that the name under her counter was
-buried, and not to be read. A flash of light broke from her wet black
-side each time she rolled from the sun, and the brilliant glare was so
-much like the crimson gleam of a gun, that again and again I would catch
-myself listening for the noise of the explosion, as though forsooth there
-were people firing signals to us aboard her.
-
-“An eight hundred ton ship at least,” the captain told the ladies, “and
-a very fine model. Oh yes! She’s been hammered to pieces by a storm of
-wind. She has no boats, you see, so let us hope her people managed to get
-away in safety, and that they are by this time on board a ship.”
-
-“I daresay,” said a young fellow, one of the cuddy passengers, “that her
-hold is full of valuable goods. Pity we couldn’t take her in tow and
-carry her home with us. Why shouldn’t the cargo of such a vessel as that
-be worth—call it twenty thousand pounds if you will? There’s just money
-enough in that figure to make me tolerably comfortable for the rest of
-my life. Confounded nonsense to have a fortune under your nose, and be
-obliged to watch it sink!”
-
-“Well, Mr. Graham,” said the captain, laughing, “there’s the hulk, sir.
-If you have a mind to take charge of her, I’ll put you on board. Nothing
-venture nothing have, you know. That’s particularly the case at sea.”
-
-“Too late! too late!” growled out the bass voice of an old major who had
-been making the tour of the world for his health. “_See there!_” and he
-pointed a long, skinny, trembling forefinger at the wreck.
-
-She was sinking as he spoke! It was as wild a sight in its way as you
-could conceive; she put her bow under and lifted her stern, and made her
-last dive as though she were something living. She disappeared swiftly;
-indeed the ocean was rolling clear to the horizon before you could
-realise that the substantial object, which a moment or two before was
-floating firm to your sight, was gone.
-
-The young gentleman named Graham shuddered as he turned away.
-
-It was an hour after this that one of the midshipmen came into our berth,
-and said that a ship’s boat had been made out right ahead. Nothing living
-in her had as yet been distinguished.
-
-“The notion of course is,” said he, “that she belonged to the wreck that
-we passed this morning.”
-
-I was reading in my bunk, but on hearing this, I immediately hopped out
-and went on deck. There was more excitement now than before. A crowd of
-the passengers were staring from the poop, with knots of steerage folks
-and a huddle of the ship’s idlers on the forecastle, craning their necks
-under the bowsprit and past the jibs to get a view. Indeed, whilst the
-midshipmen had been telling us about this boat below, a glimpse had been
-caught of something moving over the low gunwale of her—some said it was
-a cap that had been waved; but whatever it was it had not shown again.
-However, everybody was now sure that there was something alive in the
-boat, and we all seemed to hold our breath whilst we waited. It was an
-ordinary ship’s quarter-boat painted white.
-
-“There again!” shouted somebody. “Did you see it? A man’s head it looked
-like.”
-
-“Ay,” said the second mate, who had his telescope bearing on the boat at
-the moment: “a head, and no mistake; but of what kind, though? More like
-a cocoa-nut, to my fancy, than a man’s nob.”
-
-“There he is! there’s the poor creature!” cried a lady in a sort of
-shriek, with an opera-glass at her eyes. “He’s standing up—he has fallen
-backwards—ah! he’s up again. But, oh dear me!—can it be a man?”
-
-“With a tail!” said the second mate, who continued to ogle the boat
-through his telescope. “Bless my heart!—why—why—captain, I believe it’s a
-great monkey!”
-
-In a few minutes the boat was under the bow, and a strange roar of
-mingled wonder and laughter came floating aft to us from the crowd on
-the forecastle. It was a monkey, as the second mate had said—a big ape,
-with strong white whiskers, which ringed the lower part of his face like
-wool. He had evidently been some crew’s pet; a small velvet cap with a
-yellow tassel, like a smoking cap, was secured to his head; he also wore
-a pair of large spectacles apparently cut out of thin white wood. His
-body was clothed in a short jacket of some faded reddish material, with
-a slit behind for the convenience of his tail, the end of which was raw,
-as though he had been lately breakfasting off it. His legs were cased in
-their native hair, which was long, something like a goat’s.
-
-[Illustration: “IT WAS A MONKEY.”]
-
-One could see that the poor beast was terribly weak. He would climb up on
-a thwart, then fall backwards, and, as his boat slipped past, he lay on
-his side looking up at us through his spectacles with the most woebegone,
-piteous, grinning face of appeal that ever monkey in this world assumed.
-
-There was a sudden explosion of laughter from amongst us; no man could
-help himself. Indeed, the first sight of the boat had put some fancies of
-horrors to be disclosed into our heads, and the change, from our notion
-of beholding dead or dying human beings, into this apparition of a huge
-monkey in a smoking cap and spectacles, was so violent and ridiculous a
-surprise that it proved too much for the gravest amongst the crowd aft.
-
-“Hands to the topsail braces!” bawled the captain; “lay the maintopsail
-to the mast. We must pick the poor brute up.”
-
-The _Lady Violet_ was brought to a stand. Five men in charge of the
-second mate sprang into a lee-quarter boat; the tackles were slacked
-away, and in a few minutes our boat was alongside the other, with two of
-the fellows handing out the monkey, that lay as quiet as a baby in their
-arms.
-
-Everybody crowded on to the main-deck to get a view of the poor beast
-when the boat had brought him alongside. He had the look of an old man;
-and though you saw that the unhappy animal was suffering, his grimaces
-were so ugly, the appeal of his bloodshot eyes through his spectacles so
-ludicrously human-like, that he made you laugh the louder at him somehow
-or other for the very pity that he excited in you.
-
-“Get him water and food, lads, some of you,” cried the second mate from
-the poop; “treat him as though he were mortal like yourselves. He’ll take
-all ye’ll give him and more than he ought to have; and we haven’t saved
-him to perish of a bust-up.”
-
-He was carried to the forecastle followed by a crowd of sailors and
-steerage people, and I lost sight of him, though I hung about, boy-like,
-for a bit, hoping they would bring him forth presently. However, it
-seemed that after the seamen had given him a drink of water and a couple
-of biscuits to eat, they took off his cap and spectacles and put him into
-a hammock with a blanket up to his throat, where he lay like a human
-being, rolling a languishing eye round upon those who looked at him,
-until he fell asleep.
-
-The name _Dolphin_, Boston, was painted in the stern-sheets of the
-boat in which the monkey was, and of course it was supposed, fore and
-aft, that that was the name of the wreck we had fallen in with. But I
-afterwards heard—when I had been home some months—that the hull we had
-seen founder was a large English barque called the _Elijah Gorman_,
-whilst the boat from which we had taken the monkey had belonged to the
-Yankee craft whose name was on her. How the boat happened to have been
-adrift, and how her sole occupant should have been a monkey, I never
-could get to hear, though my father made many inquiries, being much
-interested in my story of this little affair. The crew of the _Elijah
-Gorman_ had been taken off by a steamer bound to England from a South
-American port; so full particulars concerning her loss had been published
-in the newspapers some time before we arrived in the Thames.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-_HE SEES A STRANGE LIGHT._
-
-
-Well, the sailors made a great pet of this immense monkey, who proved a
-very inoffensive, gentle, well-tamed creature, abounding in such tricks
-as a rough forecastle would educate a monkey in. The Jacks tried him
-with a pipe of tobacco, and he was observed to take several whiffs with
-an air of great relish, though he put the pipe down long before the bowl
-was empty. Once, seeing a man shaving, he imitated the fellow to such
-perfection as to show that he had been taught to feign to handle a razor;
-whereupon the carpenter shaped a piece of wood to resemble a razor, with
-which the monkey, whenever he was asked, would shave himself, pretending
-to lather his beard, after, with his own hands, putting a little bit of
-canvas under his chin. The sailors also discovered that the creature
-could play the fiddle—that is to say, if you put two sticks in his hand
-and told him to fiddle, he would adjust one of them to his shoulder, and
-saw away with the other, making the most horrible faces the while, as
-though ravished by the exquisite sounds he was producing.
-
-Again and again would I stand watching him till the tears flowed from my
-eyes. The sailors called him Old Jacob, dimly conceiving that was a good
-name for anything with a white beard. But alas! the ocean had marked him
-for her own, and poor Old Jacob did not live to see land again. His death
-was very tragical, and the manner in which I was startled by it leaves
-the incident, to this moment, very clear in my memory.
-
-We had run out of the north-east trades, and were sweeping along over a
-high sea before a strong breeze of wind. We had met with a bothersome
-spell of baffling weather north of the equator, and the captain was now
-“cracking on,” as the term goes, to make up for lost time, carrying a
-main-royal, when, at an earlier season, he would have been satisfied with
-a furled topgallant sail, and through it the _Lady Violet_ was thundering
-with foam to the hawse-pipe, the weather-clew of her mainsail up, and the
-foretop-mast staysail and jibs flapping and banging in the air over the
-forecastle, where they were becalmed by the forecourse and topsail.
-
-[Illustration: “WOULD SHAVE HIMSELF.”]
-
-There was a sailor at work on the rigging low down on the fore-shrouds.
-I had been watching him for some minutes, observing the carelessness of
-his pose as he stood poised on a ratline, whilst I thought how utterly
-hopeless would be the look-out of a man who should fall overboard into
-the white smother roaring alongside; and I turned my back to walk aft,
-when I heard a loud cry of “Man overboard!”
-
-I looked; the fellow I had been watching had disappeared! I rushed to the
-side and saw poor Old Jacob skimming along astern! He had his spectacles
-and his cap on, and he was swimming like a man, striking out with vigour.
-He swept to the height of a sea, and his poor white-whiskered face most
-tragically comical with its spectacles stood out clear as a cameo for a
-breath, ere it vanished in the hollow. It then disappeared for good.
-
-I glanced forward again and perceived the man whom I thought had fallen
-into the sea climbing out of the forechains to the part of the rigging
-where he had been at work.
-
-The mate, coming forward, cried, “Who was it that sang out _man
-overboard_?”
-
-“I did, sir,” answered the sailor.
-
-“Step aft!” said the mate.
-
-The fellow dropped on to the deck and approached the officer.
-
-“What do you mean,” cried the mate in a passion, “by raising over a
-monkey such an alarm as _man overboard_?”
-
-“I thought it was a man, sir,” answered the sailor. “I had caught sight
-of him on the jibboom, and believed it was Bill Heenan.”
-
-“What!” shouted the mate, “with those spectacles on?”
-
-“I didn’t notice the spectacles, sir,” said the man; “I see a figure
-out on the jibboom, and whilst I was looking the jib-sheet chucked him
-overboard, and that’s why I sung out.”
-
-The mate stared hard at the man, but seemed to think he was telling the
-truth, on which he told him to go forward and get on with his work,
-biting his underlip to conceal an expression of laughter, as he walked
-towards the wheel.
-
-That evening, in the second dog-watch, there was a fight between the
-sailor, whose name was Jim Honeyball, and Bill Heenan. Bill had heard
-that Jim had mistaken him for Old Jacob, and had told the mate so; and
-thereupon challenged him to stand up like a man. There was a deal of
-pummeling, much rolling about, encouraging cheers from the sailors, and
-“language,” as it is called, on the part of the combatants; but neither
-was much hurt.
-
-Such was the end of the poor monkey; yet he seemed to have found a
-successor in Bill Heenan, for, to the end of the voyage, the Irishman was
-always called Old Jacob.
-
-We were talking in the midshipmen’s berth over the loss of the monkey,
-when Poole, the long midshipman, who was in my watch, spun us the
-following yarn:—“I made my first voyage,” said he, “in a ship called
-the _Sweepstakes_, to Madras, Calcutta, and Hong Kong. On our way home
-we brought up off Singapore for a day on some business of cargo, of
-which I forget the nature. I was standing at the gangway, my duty as
-midshipman being to keep the ship’s side clear of loafers, when I saw a
-large boat heading for us. She was like one of those surf-boats you see
-at Madras. There were five fellows rowing her, and one chap steered with
-a long oar. They were all darkies, naked to the waist. I was struck by
-the manner in which one of them, as the boat approached, looked over the
-shoulder at our ship. The others kept their eyes on their oars or gazed
-over the stern; but this chap stared continuously behind him as the boat
-advanced; by which I mean that he looked ahead, for of course a fellow
-rows with his back upon the bow of a boat. They came alongside, and I
-found that the men had a great number of monkeys to sell. I looked hard
-at the fellow whose chin had been upon his shoulder as he rowed, and
-was wondering what on earth sort of native he was, when, on a sudden, I
-caught sight of his tail! He was a huge ape, of the size of a man—at all
-events, of the size of his shipmates. He so much resembled the others
-at a little distance that there was nothing wonderful in my not having
-distinguished him quickly. He had pulled his oar with fine precision,
-keeping time like one of the University Eight, and there had been nothing
-odd about him at all, saving his manner of looking over his shoulder. The
-others held up monkeys to show us, and, I tell you, I burst into a roar
-of laughter when I saw this great ape pick up a bit of a marmozette and
-flourish it up at me as if he would have me buy. In a very little while
-the ship was full of monkeys. Almost every man amongst us bought one. I
-chose a pretty little creature that slept in the clews of my hammock all
-the way home; but he grew so tall and quarrelsome that my mother, when
-I was absent last year, gave him away to an old gentleman, who shortly
-afterwards, in the most mysterious manner, disappeared, together with the
-monkey.”
-
-“Where wath the mythtery?” asked Kennet.
-
-“Well,” said Poole, “the notion was that the monkey had eaten up the
-old gentleman, dressed himself up in his clothes, and gone to London to
-consult a solicitor, with a view of contesting the old man’s will, as
-being next of kin.”
-
-We were gradually now drawing near home. The English Channel was no
-longer so far off but that we could think of it as something within
-reach of us. All my clothes had shrunk upon me, whence I might know that
-I had grown much taller and broader than I was when I left England.
-My face was dark with weather, the palms of my hands hard as horn with
-pulling and hauling. I had the deep-sea rolling gait that is peculiar
-to sailors, and, indeed, I had been transformed during the months I had
-been away into as thorough a little “shellback” as was ever made of a
-boy by old ocean. I was wonderfully hearty besides—had the appetite of a
-wolf and the spirits of a young spaniel. I was equal to doing “my bit”
-on board ship, whatever might be the job I was set to. I could put as
-neat a bunt to the furl of the mizzen-royal as any lad aboard, knew how
-to send the yard down, how to pass an earing—though I was too small, and
-without sufficient strength, to jockey the yard-arm in reefing—was well
-acquainted with all the parts of the rigging, and the various uses of the
-complicated gear; could steer, make knots of twenty different kinds—in
-short, I had picked up a great deal of sea knowledge of a working sort;
-but I knew nothing of navigation beyond the art of bringing the sun down
-to the horizon through a sextant, and working out a simple proposition of
-latitude, for which I had to thank Mr. Cock; Captain Tempest taught me
-nothing.
-
-I was very eager to get home; I had never before been so long absent from
-my parents. I was pining, too, for comforts which when at home I had made
-nothing of, but which I would now think upon as the highest luxuries.
-How often when hacking with a black-handled knife at a piece of iron-hard
-salt junk and rapping the table with a biscuit to free the mouthful of
-any stray weevil which might be lurking in the honeycombed fragment—how
-often, I say, has the vision of my father’s table arisen before my eyes:
-the basin of soup at which I have known myself to sometimes impatiently
-turn up my nose; the fried sole or delicious morsel of salmon; the roast
-leg of mutton or sirloin of beef, with its attendant vegetables—things
-not to be dreamt of at sea—the jam tarts, the apple pies, the custards,
-not to mention the dessert! Oh, how often has the lump of cold salt fat
-pork or the mouthful of nauseous soup and bouilli come near to choking
-me with those thoughts of breakfast, dinner, and supper at home, which
-the odious nature of the food on our cabin table has excited in my hungry
-imagination!
-
-After we had crossed the parallels of the Horse Latitudes, as they are
-called, we met with some strange weather: thick skies with a look of
-smoke hanging about the horizon, sometimes the sun showing as a shapeless
-oozing, like a rotten orange, a dusky green swell rolling up out of two
-or three quarters at once, as it seemed, and shouldering one another into
-a jumble of liquid hills which strained the ship severely with rolling,
-making every tree-nail, bolt, and strong fastening cry aloud with a
-voice of its own, whilst the masts were so wrung that you would have
-expected them any minute to snap and fall away overboard.
-
-Some of our passengers whom the mountainous seas of the Horn had not in
-the least degree affected were now sea-sick; in fact, I heard of one lady
-as lying below dangerously ill with nausea. The men declared it made them
-feel squeamish to go aloft. I should have laughed at this in such salt
-toughened Jacks as they but for an experience of my own; for being sent
-to loose the mizzen topgallant sail, I was so oppressed with nausea on my
-arrival at the cross-trees, that it was as much as I could do to get upon
-the yard and cast the gaskets adrift. This was owing to the monstrous
-inequalities of the ship’s movements, to the swift jerks and staggering
-recoveries which seemed to displace one’s very stomach in one; added to
-which was the close oppressive temperature, a thickness of atmosphere
-that corresponded well with the pease-soup-like appearance of the ocean,
-and that seemed to be explained by the sulphur-coloured, smoky sort of
-sky that ringed the horizon.
-
-It was on this same day, or rather in the night of it, during the first
-watch, from eight o’clock to midnight, that a strange thing happened. It
-was very dark, so black indeed that though you stood shoulder to shoulder
-with a man you could see nothing of him. There was no wind, but a heavy
-swell was running on whose murky, invisible coils the ship was violently
-rolling. There was not a break of faintness, not the minutest spot of
-light in the sky, whose countenance, with a scowl of thunder upon it,
-seemed to press close to our wildly sheering mast-heads.
-
-There was something so subduing in the impenetrable gloom, something that
-lay with so heavy a weight upon the spirits, that the noisiest amongst us
-insensibly softened his voice to a whisper when he had occasion to speak.
-I particularly noticed this when some of the watch came aft to clew up
-the main topgallant sail and snug the main sail with its gear; there was
-no singing out at the ropes; instead of the hoarse peculiar songs sailors
-are wont to deliver when they drag, the men pulled silently as ghosts,
-and not a syllable fell from them that was audible to us when they were
-upon the yard rolling the sail up.
-
-[Illustration: “SUDDENLY SHONE OUT A LIGHT.”]
-
-I was holding on to a belaying pin to steady myself when there suddenly
-shone out a light upon the boom iron at the extremity of the main-yard.
-It was of a greenish hue, sickly somewhat, so as to make one think of
-a corpse-candle or a graveyard Jack-o’-lantern. It swayed as a bladder
-would or as a soap-bubble might ere it soars from the pipe out of which
-it is blown. It had some power of illuminating in spite of its wan
-complexion, for I observed that it threw a very feeble light upon the
-clew of the sail, and that, as the ship rolled the yard-arm on which it
-shone towards the sea, the huge, round, ebony black swell mirrored it in
-the shape of a dull star like a phosphoric jelly-fish.
-
-I had never seen such a sight before, nor indeed had I ever heard of the
-like of such a thing. I was standing close to Poole at the time, and he
-said to me—
-
-“What do you think it?”
-
-“Why, but what _is_ it?” I responded.
-
-“A spirit of the sea!” he exclaimed in a sepulchral voice; “the ghost of
-a dead sailor who has grown tired with flying and is resting himself on
-the yard-arm. The souls of dead seamen always carry lanterns with them to
-show them the road on dark nights after this pattern.”
-
-As he spoke the fiery exhalation disappeared.
-
-“Ha! he’s started again!” cried Poole. “He’ll meet with another ship
-presently and take another spell of rest.”
-
-“A very good explanation, Mr. Poole,” exclaimed the voice of the mate,
-“but not strictly scientific, sir.”
-
-He had been standing within earshot of us, yet was utterly
-indistinguishable in the blackness.
-
-“The light, Rockafellar,” continued the officer, “is what is called by
-sailors a corposant. It is supposed that the points of iron on board
-a ship kindle into a flame some quality of electricity in the air. I
-daresay it will show again in a minute. Yes, as I thought.... It is on
-the topsail yard-arm now.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-_HE ARRIVES HOME._
-
-
-He had scarcely uttered these words when a shock ran through the ship
-for all the world as though the heave of the swell had let her fall
-with violence upon some hard shoal. The decks trembled as though to an
-explosion. The tremor of the fabric seemed to enter into one’s very
-marrow, and it would be impossible to express the sense of dismay it
-excited, happening as it did on a black night, and in the middle of the
-wide ocean where we knew there could be no shoals for hundreds of leagues.
-
-The light at the yard-arm vanished; there was a noise of hurrying feet
-forwards, with a rumbling of exclamations uttered in agitation.
-
-“What was that?” was shouted from the companion-hatch in the captain’s
-familiar accents. “Mr. Johnson?”
-
-“Sir?”
-
-“What have we struck? Is there any ship near us?”
-
-“I don’t know, sir,” answered the mate; “it has been as black as thunder
-all through.”
-
-“Get a cast of the lead,” exclaimed the captain, but quietly, with no
-note of hurry in his voice; “send the carpenter aft to sound the pumps;
-get lanterns up to show a light over the side.”
-
-The blow felt as though the ship had struck some floating wreck. In a
-minute the vessel was wide awake. The shock had aroused the sleepers,
-who came tumbling up pell-mell out of cabin and forecastle. The decks,
-which before were of a death-like stillness, were now alive with sailors
-running about, with passengers full of excitement and fear, with lanterns
-briskly travelling from place to place, with one stationary one at the
-pumps, where the white-haired carpenter stood lowering his sounding-rod,
-with the deliberation of a Scotchman, down the well.
-
-There was nothing to be seen over the side, and there was no more water
-in the bottom of the ship than was always to be found there. The sea was
-sounded all around with the hand-lead, but, as will readily be supposed,
-no bottom was got.
-
-In the midst of this commotion the heavens seemed to be split open by
-a flash of lightning; the whole surface of the ocean shone out to its
-farthest confines to the crimson blaze, and then came, within three
-seconds of the terrific glare, a crash of thunder right overhead. The
-enormous explosion liberated the rain; down it came, a very Niagara
-Falls of water! In a trice it was up to a man’s knees in the main-deck,
-and every mother’s son of us was as a drowned rat, soaked through and
-through; the passengers rushing headlong to the hatches, and the sailors
-floundering about here and there to the hurried cries of the mate
-ordering sail to be shortened.
-
-There was no more lightning, but the rain continued to fall in a living
-sheet of water, which flashed the fire up out of the sea all about us.
-Indeed, the black atmosphere was extraordinarily full of electricity, and
-even through the blinding veil of the rain you could catch a sight of
-bluish sparks glittering about the ironwork, with the coming and going
-of nebulous lights upon the yard-arms and bowsprit. The ship was snugged
-down, but the furling of the wet and beating canvas was hard work. You
-could not see an inch before your face. I had to grope my way on to the
-mizzen topsail yard as a man might through a small tunnel in the bottom
-of a pyramid. The foot-ropes were as slippery as ice, and as my legs
-were very short my situation was one of real danger, not more due to the
-sickening rolling and strong beating of the heavy saturated canvas than
-to the circumstance of Poole being alongside of me—by which I mean that
-his long legs, like a pair of compasses, weighed down the foot-rope upon
-which we were standing into an angle down which I would slide, until
-my feet were off the line, and there was nothing to save me from going
-overboard but my grip of the jack-stay.
-
-All the while that we were working we expected the mass of impenetrable
-shadow that hung over our heads, dark as the midnight inkiness of a
-vault, to burst into a roaring gale of wind; yet all remained quiet; the
-rain ceased; saving the straining noises of the rolling ship there was
-nothing to be heard but the sobbing of water cascading off the decks
-overboard through the scupper holes. No more shocks were felt, though
-I fancy the nerves of us all continued on the strain in expectation of
-such another thump as that which had sent the people below running up in
-terror through the hatches.
-
-At midnight it was still a thick black calm, and the same high swell
-working that had been running throughout the watch. I was not a little
-rejoiced to hear the chimes of the bell, for I had been soaked by the
-downfall to the very marrow, yet durst not leave the deck for a minute
-to change my wet clothes for dry ones. We turned in dog-tired, and slept
-without a stir throughout the four hours; and when we were called again
-at four o’clock the stars were shining, the moon was setting in the
-west, a fresh breeze was blowing over our starboard quarter, and the
-_Lady Violet_ was once more driving through it on her way home under
-canvas that clothed her from truck to waterway.
-
-What it was that we had struck or that had struck us could only be a
-matter of conjecture. The captain was of opinion that the shock had been
-caused by a submarine earthquake—a volcanic explosion deep down. “It was
-the right sort of night,” he argued, “for disturbances of that kind; the
-water full of fire, and the atmosphere tingling with electricity.” On
-the other hand, Mr. Johnson had no doubt that the ship had received a
-blow from the rising of a whale under her keel. The creature had risen to
-spout, but had been frightened by the thump it had given itself and made
-off.
-
-It was a thing, as I had said, that one could only speculate upon. The
-ship was divided into two parties, one accepting the captain’s and the
-other the mate’s opinion. Which side I declared for I do not remember;
-but on recurring to the incident at this distance of time, I have no
-doubt whatever that the mate was in the right, for since those days I
-have been on board a ship where an earthquake has happened in the deep
-sea beneath her, and the sort of vibratory scraping sensation that
-accompanied the shock was entirely different from the dull lumpish thud
-that had made every heart in the _Lady Violet_ beat fast on that black
-night.
-
-As we approached the entrance to the English Channel ships grew numerous,
-and every hour yielded us a fresh canvas of ocean panorama. At daybreak
-one morning we spied a large ship right ahead, and by four o’clock in
-the afternoon had approached her close enough to read the name upon her
-stern; and great was our triumph when we discovered that she was the fine
-clipper ship _Owen Glendower_, that had left Sydney eight days before us.
-We passed her in the night, and the watch on deck let fly an ironical
-cheer at her, taking their chance of being heard, and at sunrise next
-morning nothing but her royal and topgallant sails were visible on the
-shining line of the horizon.
-
-[Illustration: “A FINE CUTTER CAME THRASHING THROUGH IT.”]
-
-It was rather thick weather in the Channel, and we saw no land till we
-made the South Foreland. A fine cutter came thrashing through it to
-alongside of us when off Dungeness, and a pilot climbed out of her over
-our side. With what profound interest, and joy, and admiration did my
-young eyes explore his purple visage, and survey his stout coat and the
-warm shawl round his neck! He had not been on board ten minutes when the
-sun shone forth, and the green and frothing waters of the Channel showed
-clear to the horizon. Then it was that the coast of our dear old home lay
-fair and beautiful upon our port beam and bow—white cliffs slopes of
-green sward, delicate as satin, groups of Liliputian houses, with windows
-sparkling, the chocolate-coloured canvas of smacks, the white wings of
-pleasure-yachts, the grimy cloths of round-bowed, black-hulled colliers,
-enriching the surface of the laughing seas betwixt us and the line of
-shingle upon which the surf was surging.
-
-Off the South Foreland a tug chased and cleverly hooked us by making a
-short cut to the North Foreland, where she intercepted us as we swept
-round in a large, majestic arch, with the red-hulled lightship stationed
-abreast of Ramsgate resting like a spot of colour against the yellow
-shelf of the Goodwin Sands, on our port quarter, and a busy scene of
-shipping opening under our bows as we headed for the River Thames. But
-the shift of helm brought the wind ahead, and by this time our captain
-and the skipper of the tug, having agreed upon the question of terms for
-towage, the order was given to clew up and furl; a line from the tug was
-hove to us, the end of a huge hawser attached to it and paid out over
-the bow, and presently the _Lady Violet_, in tow of the panting little
-steamer, was quietly gliding along for her home in the East India Docks,
-with her crew aloft sending down sails and unreeving gear.
-
-News of our being in the Channel had reached my father long before we had
-arrived in the river, and he was one of the first to step on board when
-we had been warped to our berth in the docks.
-
-I was below, polishing myself up to go ashore, when Kennet called through
-the hatch that my father was on the quarter-deck and waiting to see me.
-I rushed up, and in a moment was in his arms. I had no objection to his
-kissing me now; in fact, I may say that I kissed him. The overstrained
-sense of manliness in me was gone. I was a young sailor with a full
-heart, and there were tears both in my father’s and my own eyes as he
-drew away from me, after our first hug, to have a good look at me.
-
-“The picture of health!—gracious, how sunburnt—grown a whole foot, I do
-declare!—my goodness, Tommy, what shoulders!”
-
-This, and the like, was all he could say for some time. I asked after my
-mother, my sisters, my little brother. Thank God, they were all well, and
-eagerly awaiting my arrival at home.
-
-“I have ordered a jolly good dinner at the Brunswick Hotel,” said my
-father; “let us go and partake of it, my son. But first you will say
-good-bye to the officers and your shipmates.”
-
-[Illustration: “WERE SEATED AT A TABLE.”]
-
-The captain was not to be seen. Mr. Johnson shook me cordially by the
-hand and assured my father that I had the making of a sailor in me. All
-the midshipmen had hurried ashore with the exception of Kennet, who was
-below, sitting on a chest smoking his pipe when I descended to say
-farewell to such of the lads as I could find in the cabin. He pretended
-to weep as he squeezed my hand.
-
-I said, “Kennet, are you not going ashore?”
-
-“Yeth,” he said; “but I muth finith my pipe firtht.”
-
-“Kennet,” I said, “come and dine with my father and me. He has ordered a
-good dinner to be in readiness for us at the Brunswick Hotel.”
-
-He threw down the sooty clay pipe he had been smoking and jumped up.
-
-“Rockafellar,” he said, “I alwayth thaid you were a brick!”
-
-A little later, my father, Kennet, and myself were seated at a table,
-white with damask and sparkling with glass, in a window overlooking the
-Docks. Oh! the excellence of the roast beef! Oh! the sweetness of the
-cauliflower with its melted butter! Oh! the incomparable flavour of the
-mealy potatoes!
-
-“Ithth the change from thalt horthe, thir, that maketh it nithe,” said
-Kennet, with his mouth full.
-
-And so ended Master Rockafellar’s voyage. Would you like to know if I
-ever went to sea again? Well it is a question that need not signify just
-now. If this little yarn which I have been spinning has amused you, then,
-should you desire more by-and-by, I don’t doubt there is enough stuff
-stowed away in the locker of my memory to make plenty of “twisters,” as
-stories are called at sea. Meanwhile, boys and girls, I touch the peak of
-my midshipman’s cap to you in respectful farewell.
-
- UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, PRINTERS, WOKING AND LONDON.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Master Rockafellar's Voyage, by
-William Clark Russell
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-Project Gutenberg's Master Rockafellar's Voyage, by William Clark Russell
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
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-
-Title: Master Rockafellar's Voyage
-
-Author: William Clark Russell
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-Illustrator: Gordon Browne
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-Release Date: June 7, 2020 [EBook #62336]
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MASTER ROCKAFELLAR'S VOYAGE ***
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-</pre>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_i" id="Page_i">[i]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="500" height="750" alt="Cover image" />
-</div>
-
-<p class="center larger">MASTER ROCKAFELLAR’S VOYAGE</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_ii" id="Page_ii">[ii]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center larger">BY THE SAME AUTHOR</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 20em;">
-<ul>
-<li>MY DANISH SWEETHEART</li>
-<li>HIS ISLAND PRINCESS</li>
-<li>ABANDONED</li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">[iii]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus1.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“BE PLEASED TO GET IN AND GO AWAY.”</p>
-<p class="caption"><i><a href="#Page_175">See page 175.</a></i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">[iv]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_v" id="Page_v">[v]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage larger">MASTER ROCKAFELLAR’S<br />
-VOYAGE</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-W. CLARK RUSSELL<br />
-<span class="smaller">AUTHOR OF “MY DANISH SWEETHEART,” ETC., ETC.</span></p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">WITH 27 ILLUSTRATIONS BY GORDON BROWNE</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage smaller">FIFTH EDITION</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">METHUEN &amp; CO. LTD.<br />
-36 ESSEX STREET W.C.<br />
-LONDON</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vi" id="Page_vi">[vi]</a></span></p>
-
-<table summary="List of editions and their publication dates">
- <tr>
- <td><i>First Published</i></td>
- <td><i>October</i></td>
- <td class="right"><i>1890</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Second Edition</i></td>
- <td><i>November</i></td>
- <td class="right"><i>1894</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Third Edition</i></td>
- <td><i>August</i></td>
- <td class="right"><i>1906</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Fourth Edition</i></td>
- <td><i>November</i></td>
- <td class="right"><i>1910</i></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td><i>Fifth Edition</i></td>
- <td colspan="2" class="center"><i>1913</i></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[vii]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="tdpg smaller">PAGE</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER I.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE BEGS TO GO TO SEA</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER II.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HIS FIRST DAY ON BOARD SHIP</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">17</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER III.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE SAILS FROM GRAVESEND</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">30</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER IV.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE GOES ALOFT</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">45</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER V.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE SIGHTS A SHIP</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">59</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VI.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE IS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">74</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER VII.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE HEARS A BELL</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">88</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[viii]</a></span>CHAPTER VIII.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE SEES THE EQUATOR</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">103</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER IX.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE SEES AN ICEBERG</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">209</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER X.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE SIGHTS A WRECK</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">227</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XI.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE SEES A STRANGE LIGHT</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">243</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class="tdc" colspan="2">CHAPTER XII.</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td>HE ARRIVES HOME</td>
- <td class="tdpg"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">259</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1><span class="smcap">Master Rockafellar’s Voyage</span></h1>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE BEGS TO GO TO SEA.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>My name is Thomas Rockafellar; father and
-mother always called me Tommy, and by that
-name was I known until I grew too old to be
-called by anything more familiar than Tom. I
-have seen people look at one another, and smile,
-perhaps, when they have heard the name
-Rockafellar mentioned as that of a family; but
-I here beg leave to state that the Rockafellars
-are an exceedingly ancient race, who, if they do
-not claim to have arrived in this country with
-William the Conqueror, can excuse themselves for
-not having landed with that chieftain by being
-able to prove that they had been many years
-established when the keels of the Norman galleys
-grounded on the Hastings shore.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/illus2.jpg" width="300" height="350" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">EBENEZER ROCKAFELLAR.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Amongst my ancestors were several sailors,
-who had served the king or queen of their times
-in the navy of the state. A portrait of Ebenezer
-Rockafellar, who was a rear-admiral in the early
-years of George the Second’s reign, hung in the
-dining-room at home, and represented a face like
-that of the man in the moon when the planet
-rises very crimson out of the sea on a hot
-summer’s evening. He had a tail on his back
-and a great copper speaking-trumpet under his
-arm and his forefinger, on which was a huge ring,
-rested upon a globe of the world. The artist
-had painted in a picture of a thunderstorm happening
-through a window, with the glimpse of a
-rough sea, and an old-fashioned ship like a castle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-tumbling about in it resembling a toy Noah’s ark
-tossing on the strong ripples of a pond.</p>
-
-<p>It might have been my looking at this red-faced
-ancestor of mine, and admiring his speaking-trumpet,
-and the noble colour of weather which
-stained his face that first put it into my head to
-go to sea. I cannot say. Who can tell where
-little boys get their notions from? I would
-stand before that picture, and in my small way
-dream about the ocean, about sharks, tropic
-islands full of cocoa-nut trees, and monkeys, and
-parrots gorgeous as shapes of burnished gold;
-and I would dream also, all in my small way, of
-flying-fish like little lengths of pearl flashing out
-of the dark-blue brine on wings of gossamer, and
-elephants and ivory tusks, and of black men in
-turbans and robes glittering with jewels, like the
-dark velvet sky on a midsummer night; and so
-on, and so on, until there arose in me a passion to
-go to sea, and behold with my own little eyes the
-wonders of the world.</p>
-
-<p>Father and mother tried hard to conquer my
-desire; and then, when they found I would still
-be a sailor, they pretended to consent, secretly
-meaning to weary me out, or to give me a good
-long chance of changing my views by delaying to
-take any steps to humour my wishes. At last,
-finding my mind to be wonderfully resolved, my
-father talked to my mother gravely about my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-disposition for the sea—told her that when a boy
-exhibited a strong inclination for a walk, no
-matter of what nature if honest, he should not
-be baulked—that I might have the makings of
-another Captain Cook in me, or at all events of
-a Vancouver, and end my days as a great man.</p>
-
-<p>“Besides, my dear,” said he, “one voyage at
-least cannot harm him; it will fill his mind with
-new experiences, it will also test his sincerity; it
-will act as the strongest possible persuasion one
-way or the other. It will be cheaper too than a
-year of schooling, and more useful, I don’t doubt.
-So, my dear, let us make up our minds to send
-him into the Merchant Service for one voyage.”</p>
-
-<p>However, it was some time before my mother
-consented. She would not very strongly have
-objected to the Royal Navy, she said, but she
-considered the Merchant Service too vulgar for a
-Rockafellar.</p>
-
-<p>“Vulgar, my dear!” cried my father; “why,
-do you forget that your own Uncle Martin was
-in the service of the Honourable East India
-Company?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ah but,” she answered, “Uncle Martin was
-always a perfect gentleman, and even had he been
-a common sailor on board a barge, he would have
-carried himself with as much dignity and been as
-fully appreciated by people capable of distinguishing
-as if he had been an Admiral of the Blues.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus3.jpg" width="700" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“MY FATHER TALKED TO MY MOTHER.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Of the Blue, I think it is,” said my father.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“The Red is cock of the walk,” said I, who
-had been listening to this conversation with much
-interest.</p>
-
-<p>Well, it ended, after many talks, in my mother
-agreeing with my father that one voyage could do
-me no harm, and that if I returned as eager for the
-sea life as I now was, it might prove as good a
-calling for me as any other vocation that could be
-named. So after making certain inquiries, my
-father one day took me to London with him, to
-call upon a shipowner who lived close by
-Fenchurch Street. He had five vessels, three of
-them large ships, of which two had formerly been
-Indiamen, and the others were barques. They
-were all regular traders to Australia: that is to
-say, to the different ports of that colony, and one
-or more of them were always to be found in the
-East India Docks discharging the wool with which
-they returned home full of, or taking in merchandise
-for the outward passage.</p>
-
-<p>The shipowner, Mr. Duncan, was a large, fat,
-cheerful man, “with a very knowing eye, and
-supposed to be already worth, my dear, about a
-million and a half,” as I afterwards heard my
-father tell my mother. We passed through an
-office full of clerks into a little back room, where
-we were received by Mr. Duncan, who seemed
-delighted to make our acquaintance. He patted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-me on the head, said that he was always fond of
-boys whose hair curled, declared that he could not
-remember ever having set eyes on a more likely
-sailorly-looking lad, promised me that I should
-become the captain of a ship if I worked hard, and
-then he and my father went to business.</p>
-
-<p>The terms were a premium of sixty guineas for
-the first voyage, together with ten guineas for what
-was called mess-money; “and with regard to
-pocket money,” said Mr. Duncan, “I should say
-if you give the captain enough to enable him to
-put half-a-crown a week into the lad’s pocket whilst
-he’s in harbour the boy will have more than he
-needs for simple enjoyment, and too little,” said
-he, closing one eye, “for what Jack calls larks.”</p>
-
-<p>The name of the ship was the <i>Lady Violet</i>, and
-Mr. Duncan told us that she was commanded by
-Captain Tempest, who, notwithstanding his stormy
-name, was a gentleman-like person of a mild disposition,
-one of the best navigators out of the Port
-of London, and beloved by all who sailed with
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“There is no flogging now, I think, sir, at sea?”
-said my father.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh dear no,” cried Mr. Duncan, smiling all
-over his immense crimson face: “a barbarous
-practice, sir, very happily suppressed ages ago.”</p>
-
-<p>“How are boys punished,” asked my father, “at
-sea when they deserve it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Why, sir,” answered Mr. Duncan, “the captain
-usually sends for them to his cabin, and lectures
-them paternally and tenderly. His admonitions
-rarely fail, but if there be great perversity, then
-possibly a little extra duty of a trifling kind is
-given to them. But there is very little naughtiness
-amongst boys at sea, sir! very little naughtiness
-indeed. Perhaps I should add, in <em>my</em> ships,
-where no bad language is allowed, where sobriety
-is strictly encouraged, and where even smoking is
-regarded as objectionable, though of course,” added
-Mr. Duncan, drawing a deep breath that sounded
-like a sigh, “we do not prohibit it.”</p>
-
-<p>A good deal more to this effect passed between
-my father and Mr. Duncan, and then certain
-arrangements having been made, we took our leave.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was to sail in three weeks; she lay in
-the East India Docks, and as she would not be
-hauling out of the gates until the afternoon, there
-was no need for me to present myself on board
-sooner than the morning of the day of her sailing.</p>
-
-<p>My outfit was procured at a well-known marine
-establishment in Leadenhall Street. I very well
-recollect the pride with which I tried on a blue
-cloth jacket, embellished with brass buttons, and
-surveyed my appearance in a large pier-glass. I
-had never before been dressed in brass buttons, and
-felt, now that I was thus decorated, that I was a
-man indeed. Also the glittering badge of a sort<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>
-of wreath of gold, embracing a gorgeous little flag
-on the cap which the outfitter placed on my head,
-enchanted me. Indeed, I could not but think that
-the privilege of wearing so beautiful a decoration
-would be cheaply earned by years of exposure and
-hardship, not to mention shipwreck, and even
-famine and thirst in an open boat.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to me,” said my father to the outfitter,
-“to judge by your list, that it is the practice of
-young gentlemen when they first go to sea to take
-a great number of shirts and fine duck trousers
-with them.”</p>
-
-<p>“They need all their fathers allow them, sir,”
-said the outfitter, with a bow.</p>
-
-<p>“Is it,” asked my father, “that they must always
-appear very clean?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” answered the outfitter. “I regret to
-say that it is the habit of most young gentlemen
-when first they go to sea to swap their trousers
-and shirts with the baker for what is termed ‘soft-tack.’”</p>
-
-<p>“What is soft-tack?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Bread, the likes of which we eat ashore,”
-answered the outfitter.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t they get the same at sea?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“No, young gentleman,” answered the outfitter;
-“there’s nothing but biscuit eaten at sea by sailors,
-and it’s sometimes rather wormy. When it is so,
-soft-tack grows into a delicacy, compared with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-which midshipmen’s trousers and shirts count for
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’d rather have a biscuit any day,” said I, “than
-a slice of bread.”</p>
-
-<p>I thought the smile the outfitter bestowed upon
-me a rather singular one. My father looked
-pleased, and said to the outfitter, “Master Rockafellar
-will keep his clothes, I know.”</p>
-
-<p>“Not a doubt of it, sir,” responded the outfitter,
-and forthwith proceeded to show us the oilskins,
-sou’wester, sea-boots, bars of marine soap, clasp-knife,
-and the other articles which were to form
-the contents of the brand-new white-wood sea-chest,
-with grummets for handles, and with a little
-shelf for “curios,” and upon the lid of which my
-name, <span class="smcap">Thomas Rockafellar</span>, was to be painted
-in strong, large black letters.</p>
-
-<p>I will pass over my parting with my mother and
-sisters and little brother. My uniform came down
-a week before I sailed, and my wearing of the
-clothes greatly helped to sustain my spirits, whilst
-they made me feel that I was a sailor, and must
-not betray any sort of weakness that might seem
-girlish. I tried hard not to cry as my mother
-strained me to her heart, and I said good-bye with
-dry eyes; but I broke down when I was in the
-railway carriage as the engine whistled, and the
-familiar scene of the station slipped away. My
-father, who was accompanying me to the ship, put<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-his hand upon mine, and said something in a low
-voice, that was, I think, a prayer to God that He
-would protect and bless and guard his boy, and
-then turned his face to the window, and when
-presently I peeped at him, I saw that he had been
-weeping too.</p>
-
-<p>Ah, dear little friends! let us always love our
-father and mother, and be grateful to them. They
-suffer much for us when we are young, and when
-we are incapable of understanding their anxieties
-and griefs. Later on in life we find it all out ourselves,
-and it is as sweet as a blessing sent to us by
-them from heaven if we can remember that we were
-always good, and loving, and tender to them when
-we were little ones, and when they were alive to be
-made happy by our behaviour.</p>
-
-<p>When I look back from the hour of my trotting
-into the docks at my father’s side, down to the time
-when I felt the ship heaving and plunging under
-me upon the snappish curl of the Channel waters,
-all that happened takes so misty a character that
-it is like peering at objects through a fog. Everything,
-of course, was new to me, and all was startling
-in its way, confusing my little brains; and it
-was a sort of Wonderland also.</p>
-
-<p>The docks were full of business, and movement
-and hurry; huge cranes were swiftly swinging out
-tons’ weight of cargo from the holds of ships to
-the snorting accompaniment of steam machinery;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-dockyard labourers were chorussing on the decks
-of the vessels, or bawling to one another on the
-quayside; the earth trembled to the passage of
-heavy waggons; and the ear was distracted by the
-shrill whistling and roaring puffing of locomotives.
-There were fellows aloft on the ships, dismantling
-them of their spars, and rigging, or bending sails,
-and sending up masts, and crossing-yards, and
-reeving gear for a fresh voyage.</p>
-
-<p>It was a brilliant October morning, with a keen
-shrill wind that made even the dirty Thames water
-of the docks tremble into a diamond-bright flashing,
-and in this wind you seemed to taste the aromas of
-many countries—coffee, and spices, and fragrant
-produce, the mere flavour of which in the atmosphere
-sent the fancy roaming into hot and shining
-lands.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Lady Violet</i> still lay alongside the quay. I
-recollect thinking her an immense ship as we
-approached. Aloft she looked as heavy and
-massive as a man-of-war, with her large tops, her
-canvas rolled up on the yards, and all her sea-gear—a
-bewildering complication of ropes—in its place.
-She had a broad white band along her sides, upon
-which were painted black squares to imitate portholes.
-She was an old-fashioned ship, as I know
-now—though then I saw but little difference
-between her and the rest of them that lay about.
-Her stern was square and very handsomely gilt;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-there were large windows in it, and the sunlight
-flashing in them made the long white letters of her
-name stare out as though they were formed of
-silver. She had a handsome flag flying at the
-mainmast head, exactly like the one that I wore in
-the badge on my cap. The red ensign floated
-gaily at her peak, and at the fore-royalmast head
-the Blue Peter—signal for sailing—was rippling
-against the light azure of the sky.</p>
-
-<p>My father seemed as much confused as I was by
-the bustle and novelty. He grasped my hand, and
-we stepped over a broad gangway bridge on to the
-ship’s deck. Here was confusion indeed! all sorts
-of ropes’ ends knocking about, men on deck shouting
-to men in the hold, pigs grunting, babies
-crying, cocks crowing, and hens cackling; steerage
-passengers bound out as emigrants wandering
-dejectedly about; unshorn, melancholy men in
-slouched hats, pale-faced women with hollow
-cheeks stained by recent tears, cowering under the
-break of the poop, and gazing forlornly around
-them; and drunken sailors on the forecastle
-bawling out coarse joking farewells to friends
-ashore. We went up a ladder that conducted us
-to the upper-deck or poop, and I noticed that
-along the rails on either side were stowed a great
-number of bales of compressed hay as fodder for
-the sheep, which were bleating somewhere forward,
-and for a cow that was now and then giving vent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-to a sullen roar, as though she were vexed at being
-imprisoned in a great box.</p>
-
-<p>There were several midshipmen on the poop
-running about. They glanced at me out of the
-corner of their eyes as they passed. I could not
-but envy them, for they seemed quite at home,
-whilst here was I, trembling nervously by the side
-of my papa, staring up at the masts, and wondering
-if ever I should be made to creep up those
-great heights, and if so, what was to become of me
-when I had reached the top? There was no need,
-indeed, to glance at my buttons to know that I
-was a “first voyager.” My wandering eyes and
-open mouth were assurance as strong as though I
-had been labelled “greenhorn.” My father, stepping
-up to one of the midshipmen, asked if the
-captain was on board.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t think he is,” said the youngster.</p>
-
-<p>“This is my son,” said my father, “who has
-come to join the <i>Lady Violet</i>. Are there any
-formalities to go through—any book to be signed
-by him—we are rather at a loss?”</p>
-
-<p>All too young as I was to be an observer, I
-could yet see a spirit of laughing mischief flash into
-the lad’s brown handsome face, and I have no
-doubt that he would have told me to go forward
-and seek for the cook and report myself, or have
-started me on some other fool’s errand of a like
-sort, but for a sunburnt man in a blue-cloth coat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-coming up to us, and asking my father what he
-wanted; on which the midshipman slunk away
-and joined two other midshipmen, who, on his
-speaking to them, began to shake with laughter.</p>
-
-<p>“No, there is nothing to be done, sir,” said the
-weather-stained man in answer to my father’s
-question. “I suppose your chest is aboard?” he
-exclaimed, looking at me. “Better go below and
-see that your kit’s arrived. We shall be warping
-out in a few minutes.”</p>
-
-<p>“Are you one of the officers, sir,” asked my
-father.</p>
-
-<p>“I am the second mate, sir, and my name is
-Jones,” answered the other.</p>
-
-<p>My father was about to put some further questions
-to him, but just then Mr. Jones, bawling out
-“Right you are!” to some one who had called to
-him from some part of the ship or the shore,
-rushed away.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HIS FIRST DAY ON BOARD SHIP.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>“Well, Tommy,” said my father, “as the ship will
-soon be leaving I had better be off, as I do not
-want to go to Australia with you. God bless thee,
-my son. Be a good lad; do not forget your
-prayers; remember to write to us as often as you
-can send a letter”—and here his voice breaking,
-he ceased and stooped to kiss me; but I drew
-away. I did not like to be kissed by my father in
-the presence of the little bunch of midshipmen
-who were viewing us from near the wheel. I
-feared they would regard it as an unmanly act, and
-sneer at me afterwards as being girlish.</p>
-
-<p>My father, with a sad smile, squeezed my hand
-and left me. Little boys are often very sensitive
-on points of what they consider manliness. They
-will laugh at this weakness when they grow older,
-but I think it is wise to humour them. I afterwards
-heard—but I did not then know—that my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-father when he stepped ashore walked straight to
-the building that was then called the Brunswick
-Hotel, and posting himself at a window where I
-could not see him, sat watching me with the tears
-in his eyes, until the ship had hauled through the
-lock gates and I was no longer visible.</p>
-
-<p>No one who has stood on board a large sailing
-ship for the first time, and witnessed the proceeding
-of getting her under way, will wonder at the
-confusion my mind was in as the <i>Lady Violet</i>
-hauled out into the river, and at my inability therefore
-to recollect all that passed, I took very little
-heed of my father’s leaving the vessel. I stood lost
-in amazement, staring about me like a fool, my
-mouth wide open. I remember noticing the pier
-heads gliding past the ship as we warped out stern
-first; people standing on the quayside shouting to
-us, waving hats and handkerchiefs, some of them
-weeping; whilst our passengers in groups along the
-line of bulwarks responded to these farewells with
-kissing of hands, broken cries of “God bless you!”
-“Good-bye!” and the like. I remember the sharp
-shouts of the mate on the forecastle repeating the
-pilot’s orders, the half-tipsy chorusing of seamen
-heaving at the capstan, the figure of a fellow at the
-helm revolving the spokes, first one way, then
-another, the manœuvring of a little snorting tug to
-receive the line for the hawser by which our great
-ship was to be towed down the river. Nobody<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-took any notice of me. I stood at the head of one
-of the poop ladders leaning against the rail,
-wondering at the swiftness with which the people
-on the pier heads, who continued to gesticulate
-towards us, were diminished into dwarf-like proportions.</p>
-
-<p>Four or five midshipmen hung about the poop,
-but they seemed too busy with their thoughts,
-now that we were in the actual throes of leave-taking,
-and had started in earnest upon our long
-voyage, to favour me with their glances and
-grins.</p>
-
-<p>The river was full of life—of barges and wherries,
-of dark-winged colliers, swarming along under full
-breasts of sail; of Thames steamers cutting through
-the sparkling grey waters with knife-like stems; of
-ships in tow like ourselves, bound up or down; of
-huge majestic metal fabrics, gliding to their homes
-in the docks after days of thunderous passage
-through the great oceans, or floating regally past us
-on the way to the distant west or far more distant
-east.</p>
-
-<p>I know not how long I had thus stood staring,
-when a big, broad-shouldered young fellow, with a
-face like a prize-fighter’s, yet of a kindly expression,
-stepped up to me, and said, in a gruff, deep-sea
-note—</p>
-
-<p>“Well, youngster, and who are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“I am Master Rockafellar, sir,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“That’s our livery you’ve got on,” said he; “you’re
-one of the midshipmen, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, sir,” said I; “and are you a midshipman,
-please?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” he answered; “I’m third mate. What’s
-your name, again?”</p>
-
-<p>“Master Rockafellar,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha!” he exclaimed; “the right sort of name
-to go to sea with. Every ‘wave,’ as one’s grandmother
-calls it, would speak of itself as a ‘rock-a-fellow.’”
-He burst into a mighty laugh, and then
-said kindly, “Well, well; I’ve heard of even
-queerer names than ‘Rockafellar.’ Been below
-yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t you seen your bedroom?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, sir,” I answered again.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, take my advice,” said he, “and jump
-below at once, and secure a bunk, and see that
-your chest is all right—I suppose you’ve brought
-one—or some of those ’tween-deck passengers
-down there will be borrowing your mattress and
-forgetting to return it, and rigging themselves out
-in your clothes.”</p>
-
-<p>“My chest is locked, sir,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“And what of that?” he roared. “D’ye think
-there never was a handspike aboard a ship since
-the days of Nelson? Jump below, jump below,
-I tell ye!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Please, sir, which is the way?” said I, trembling.</p>
-
-<p>“Go down those steps,” said he, pointing to the
-poop ladder, “and just over against the cuddy front
-there’s a black hole. Drop down it, for <em>that’s</em> the
-way.”</p>
-
-<p>I at once stepped on to the main-deck, and saw a
-square aperture, which I was afterwards informed
-was called the “booby hatch.” There was a little
-crowd of third-class passengers standing round it,
-looking very wretched and melancholy, two or three
-of the women holding babies, who cried incessantly.</p>
-
-<p>I looked into the hatch; it seemed very dark
-beneath, and a close, most unpleasant, but quite
-indescribable smell rose up through it—a sort of
-atmosphere of onions, yellow soap, fumes of lamp-oil,
-the whole tinctured with a peculiar flavour
-of shipboard. A short flight of perpendicular
-steps fell to the bottom. I was too manly to ask
-my way of the women; so, perceiving a sailor
-coiling away a rope upon a pin near the main-shrouds,
-I went up to him, and said, “I want my
-bedroom; d’ye know where it is?”</p>
-
-<p>He turned his eyes slowly on me, took a somewhat
-sneering survey of my buttons, spat a mouthful
-of tobacco-juice into a scupper-hole, and then
-said, whilst he proceeded with his work, “Better
-ask the capt’n.”</p>
-
-<p>The sailor was too grumpy and surly a man for
-a little boy like me to address a second time; so I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-made my way to the hatch, and put my leg over
-into it, concluding that I should find somebody to
-tell me where my bedroom was when I had
-descended. The ladder was perpendicular, and I
-was very slow in stepping down it.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/illus4.jpg" width="300" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“HE TURNED HIS EYES SLOWLY UPON ME.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Now then!” bawled a powerful voice: “up or
-down; one ways or t’other. There ain’t too much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-light here; and who’s bin and made <em>you</em> think
-you’re made o’ sheet glass?”</p>
-
-<p>This remark, I found, was uttered by a seafaring
-man, one of the sailors of the ship, I afterwards
-came to know, who had been told off to help our
-handful of emigrants to secure their boxes. I think
-he was slightly in liquor; at all events, I grew
-sensible of a distinct taste of rum-and-water on
-the air as I jumped backwards on to the lower
-deck close beside him.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is my bedroom?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“No bedrooms at sea, young ’un,” he answered.
-“What callin’s yourn? Are ’ee a sailor man? My
-precious eyes! there’s buttons! See here, my
-lively: when the shanks of them buttons is worn
-off, I’ll give ye the value of a fardenswuth of silver
-spoons for the whole boiling of ’em.”</p>
-
-<p>“I promised my father not to sell my clothes,”
-I answered, with dignity. “Where’s my bedroom,
-I say?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, <em>there</em>,” said he, pointing with a tar-stained
-stump of forefinger into the dusk. “Shut your
-eyes and walk straight, and your nose’ll steer ye
-the right course, I lay.”</p>
-
-<p>I spied a door to the right some little distance
-abaft the part of the deck that was pierced by the
-great mainmast, and making for it, entered, and
-found myself in a long narrow cabin fitted on either
-hand with a double row of bunks, or sleeping-shelves,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-and lighted by three little round portholes,
-called “scuttles.” Bright as the day was outside,
-in this cabin it was no better than twilight, and I
-hung for some moments in the doorway, scarcely
-able to distinguish objects.</p>
-
-<p>When presently I could fairly use my sight I
-took notice of a thin slip of a table, penetrated by
-stanchions, up or down which it could be made to
-travel as space happened to be wanted. At the
-aftermost extremity athwart this interior were two
-or three shelves containing tin dishes, pannikins,
-coarse black-handled knives and forks, jars of
-pickles, red tins of preserved potatoes, and other
-such commodities: the produce, as I afterwards
-heard, of the amount which each midshipman had
-to subscribe in a sum of ten guineas to what was
-called “the mess”—and a mess it was!</p>
-
-<p>Under these shelves stood a cask of flour, and
-another of exceedingly moist sugar, and an
-immense jar of vinegar. Here and there against
-the bulkhead partitions between the bunks hung a
-sou’wester or a coat of oilskin; whilst under the
-lower tier of bunks you caught a glimpse of the
-soles and heels of sea boots and shoes, with a thin
-canvas bag, perhaps, like a man’s leg. In most of
-the bunks lay a heap of rude bedding, roughly-made
-mattresses, and stout blankets.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately facing the door there was stretched,
-in one of the upper sleeping-shelves, a young red-faced<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-youth. He was in his shirt and trousers, and
-was smoking a short sooty clay pipe. He eyed me
-out of a pair of little black eyes, which winked
-drowsily on either side of his immense nose, the
-polished point
-of which
-caught the
-ruddy glow of his pipe-bowl
-as he sucked at it, and shone
-over the edge of his bunk as
-though it were a glowworm.
-There was nobody else in
-the cabin but this youth.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus5.jpg" width="500" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“‘IS THIS A BEDROOM?’ SAID I.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Is this a bedroom?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>He expelled several mouthfuls of smoke before
-answering, and then exclaimed, “Yeth.”</p>
-
-<p>“Am I to sleep here, do you know?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Can’t thay,” said he, lazily. “If you’re a midthipman,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-you do; if you aint, you’ll be kicked out.”
-Saying which, he closed his eyes, and refused to
-answer other questions, though, by his continuing
-to smoke, I knew he had not fallen asleep.</p>
-
-<p>I entered the cabin, and after peering a bit into
-the bunks, saw my bedding in one of the two sleeping-places
-which ran athwartships. At this point
-my memory grows misty again. I have some dim
-recollection of attempting to make my bed, of
-hunting about for the sheets—not then knowing
-that sailors do not use sheets at sea—of moodily
-getting into the bunk, and wishing that I was at
-home again; of stretching myself, after a little, and
-falling asleep; of being awakened by a hubbub of
-voices, and discovering that the berth was full of
-midshipmen—nine “young gentlemen” in all,
-including myself—who were sitting round the table,
-using the edge of their bunks for chairs, and drinking
-tea out of pannikins, and hacking at a lump of
-cold roast meat.</p>
-
-<p>This, I say, I recollect; also that I was invited
-by the third mate, who sat on a cask at the head of
-the table, to arise and join the others, and drink
-tea with them, which I did; that the handsome
-young fellow whom my father had spoken to on the
-poop began with a grave face to ask me questions
-intended to raise a laugh at my expense, and that he
-was abruptly silenced by the third mate (whose name
-was Cock), who said to him, “See here, my lad:<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-this is your second voyage, and you are giving
-yourself airs on the strength of it. Now, what are
-your talents as a sailor? Could you put a ship
-about? Could you send a yard down? Could
-you take a star? D’ye know anything about stowing
-a hold? See here, my heart of oak!—until
-you’ve got some knowledge of your calling, don’t
-you go and try and make a fool of a lad who comes
-fresh to it. Everybody’s got to begin, and so I tell
-you; and if before six months of shipboard this
-young Master Rockafellar hasn’t more seamanship
-in any one of his fingers than you’ve got in all
-your body, though this <em>is</em> your second year at sea,
-then you shall call me a Chinaman, without risk of
-earning a kick for the compliment.”</p>
-
-<p>The lad blushed to the roots of his hair, and
-looked subdued. He was a great powerful man
-was this third mate, and I seemed to feel with the
-instincts of a boy that no sort of bullying or mean
-sneaking tyranny was likely to be attempted so
-long as he made one of our company.</p>
-
-<p>The tea was very strong, and the bottom of my
-pannikin was full of black leaves. The liquor had
-a flavour of old twigs and stale molasses; the beef
-was so hard that I could scarcely make my teeth
-meet in it, yet it was fresh, and it was not long
-before the salt food upon which we had to live
-made me think yearningly of it as a delicacy—as
-something for even a bite of which I would have
-gladly “swapped” a shirt.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>All this while the ship was being towed down the
-river. I was still in the midshipman’s cabin when
-there was a great noise on deck—voices of men
-shouting, sounds of feet running hastily—and on
-looking through one of the portholes I saw the
-houses of a town just abreast, and noticed that they
-moved slowly, and yet more slowly, until they
-came to a dead halt. We had come to a mooring-buoy,
-for the night, off Gravesend; but one of the
-midshipmen told me that we should be underway
-again long before this side of the world was awake;
-by which he meant that the tug would take us in
-tow at daybreak.</p>
-
-<p>It was dark by this time. A boy who acted
-as our servant lighted a lamp that was shaped
-like a coffee-pot, with the end of the wick coming
-out of the spout. By this weak and fitful light the
-scene of the berth looked very strange to my
-young, inexperienced eyes. All the midshipmen
-were below, some smoking, some cutting up
-pipefuls from squares of black tobacco, jabbering
-loudly about the pleasures they had taken during
-three months ashore. The language was not of the
-choicest, and my young ears were frequently
-startled by terms and expressions which I had
-never before heard. The third mate sat with his
-legs over the edge of his bunk listening grimly.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, young gentlemen,” he presently roared
-out, “three of you are new to this ship this voyage,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-but there are six of you who sailed in her last year,
-and when those six went ashore they were a deal
-more gentlemanly and careful in their language
-than I now find ’em. Where, pray, did you pick
-up these fine words? Not in your homes, I’ll
-warrant. Now hearken to me, mates; you’re not
-going to make the better sailors for employing
-language which you wouldn’t tolerate in the mouth
-of any man, speaking in the presence of your
-mothers and sisters. You’re in my charge understand,
-and since you come to me as young gentlemen,
-young gentlemen you shall be; so stand by
-and mind your words!” saying which he looked at
-them one after the other, directing an emphatic
-nod at each of the lads as he stared. After this I
-heard no more bad words, and if I except a slip or
-two, I may truthfully say that when the voyage had
-fairly commenced, and the lads had come well
-under the influence of Mr. Cock, there never was
-afloat a better spoken body of youths than those
-which occupied the midshipmen’s berth aboard the
-<i>Lady Violet</i>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE SAILS FROM GRAVESEND.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>The ship lay motionless as a rock on the smooth
-water off Gravesend; nevertheless, owing to the
-strong fumes of the tobacco, probably coupled with
-the close atmosphere of the berth, and its warm
-flavouring of lamp oil, water-proof clothes, pickled
-onions, and black tea, I felt somewhat sick and
-crept quietly out of the cabin, trusting that the
-fresh air on deck might revive me. Just outside
-our berth, in the open space of ’tween-decks, which
-was entered from above by means of the booby-hatch,
-were the emigrants’ quarters. We carried
-about thirty of these poor people, and here they
-now were all of a jumble, using mine as well as the
-chests of the other midshipmen for seats and tables,
-the women talking vehemently, some of them still
-crying, here and there a man smoking in a sullen
-posture, others sitting over greasy packs of cards,
-whilst a few children played at hide-and-seek in
-and out of the sleeping-places, and amongst the
-emigrant’s bundles; three or four quite young
-babies meanwhile setting the whole picture to
-music with shrill, melancholy cries. A single
-lamp of the same pattern as ours illuminated this
-grimy grotesque scene.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus6.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">A SCENE IN THE EMIGRANTS’ QUARTERS.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I pushed my way on deck, but on my arrival
-found that it was raining hard, which accounted
-for the emigrants being crowded below. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-was shelter to be had under the break of the poop,
-as the ledge of deck is called that overhangs the
-entrance to the cuddy; and there I stood awhile,
-gazing along the dark length of gleaming, streaming
-deck that was deserted, and listening to the
-complaining of the wind, amid the stirless shadow
-of the spars and rigging on high, or watching the
-damp and dusky winking of the lamps ashore, or of
-the lights of ships at anchor round about us. Ah!
-thought I, this is not so comfortable as being in my
-father’s snug parlour at home, with a sweet and
-airy bedroom all to myself to pass the night in, and
-a kind mother at the fresh and fragrant breakfast
-table next morning to help me to a plateful of eggs
-and bacon, and a cup of fine aromatic coffee and
-cream! Maybe I shed a tear or two; I was but a
-little boy fresh from home, and amidst a great
-strange scene, with the darkness and the sobbing of
-the rain and the deserted deck, and the cold noise
-of the running waters of the river washing along<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-the ship’s side to bitterly increase the sense of
-loneliness in my childish heart.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long before I went below. Most
-of the midshipmen were turned in, that is to say,
-they were lying down in their clothes and shoes
-with nothing but their jackets removed. I thought
-I could not do better than follow their example
-and how wearied I was I could not have imagined
-till I put my head down upon the bolster at the
-end of my bunk, when I almost instantly fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>Being a very green, raw, quite young hand, I
-could be of no use on deck for the present, and it
-was for this reason, I suppose, they let me sleep in
-the morning, for when I woke I was the only midshipman
-in the cabin. There was a queer noise of
-scraping overhead, sounds as of the flinging down
-of coils of rope, the noises of water being swooshed
-along the planks; and the sunlight that shone
-through the portholes was tremulous with the play
-of glittering, moving waters. I went on deck and
-found the ship in tow of the tug, with the land a
-long way past Gravesend gliding astern, and the
-river so wide that over the bows it looked like the
-ocean. There were jibs and staysails hoisted, and
-the ship appeared to be sailing along. It was
-a fresh, windy morning; there were great white
-clouds rolling from off the distant land over our
-mast-heads, and the dark brown smoke of the tug
-ahead fled in a wild scattering low down upon the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-waters. The decks were being “washed down” as
-it is called at sea; sailors on legs naked to the
-knees were scrubbing and pounding away with
-brushes, buckets of water were being emptied over
-the planks, and a sturdy mariner with a whistle
-round his neck and great whiskers standing out
-from his cheeks, went about amongst the seamen,
-directing them in a voice that sounded like a roll of
-thunder. He was the boatswain. I was not a little
-surprised to find the midshipmen with scrubbing
-brushes in their hands washing down the poop. I
-mounted the ladder and stood a moment looking
-on. One of them worked a pump just before the
-mizzen-mast, whilst another filled buckets at it, the
-third mate threw the water about, and the middies
-plied their brooms with the energy of a crossing-sweeper.
-The youth with a great nose who spoke
-with a lisp was polishing the brass-rail that ran
-athwartship in front of the poop. A man in a long
-coat and a tall rusty hat paced the deck alone.
-His face might have been carved out of a large
-piece of mottled soap. I afterwards found out that
-he was the pilot. There was another man standing
-near the wheel. He had a ginger-coloured beard
-that forked out from under his chin, pleasant dark-blue
-eyes and a copper-coloured face. It was not
-long before I discovered that he was Mr. Johnson,
-the chief officer. He came along in a pleasant way
-to where I stood staring.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“How is it you’re not at work, youngster?” said
-he.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ve just woke up,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Look here,” said he, “if you don’t call me sir, I
-shall have to call <em>you</em> sir, and I am sure it’s easier
-for you to say it than for me. Pull your boots and
-stockings off like a man, put them in that coil of
-rope there upon the hencoop, tuck your trousers up,
-lay hold of that scrubbing brush yonder and see
-what sort of job you’re going to make at whitening
-these decks.”</p>
-
-<p>In a minute I was scrubbing with the rest of
-them, and it made me feel as if I was on the Margate
-sands to be trotting about with bare feet, with the
-salt brine sparkling and flashing about my ankles.</p>
-
-<p>My memory at this point grows dim again, for
-I was rapidly approaching the unpleasant experience
-of sea-sickness. I recollect that I helped
-to dry the decks with a swab that was so heavy I
-could scarcely flourish it, and that I was shown by
-the third mate how to coil away a rope over a pin,
-also that I dragged with the others upon some gear
-which caused a staysail between the mainmast and
-the mizzen-mast to ascend; I then went below to
-breakfast, at which there was served up a dish of
-hissing brown steaks, each of them wide enough to
-have served as a garment for my young ribs. But
-by this time something of the weight of the wide sea
-beyond was in the river, the ship was faintly pitching,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-much too faintly perhaps to be taken notice of
-by anything but a delicate young stomach like
-mine. I felt that I was pale, and the sight of the
-heap of great brown steaks floating handsomely in
-grease, which took a caking of white, even as the
-eye watched, added not a little to the uncomfortable
-sensation that possessed me. The others plunged
-their knives and forks into the layers of meat and
-ate with avidity; but for my part I could only look
-on.</p>
-
-<p>“Take and turn in, my lad,” said the third mate
-kindly; “it’s bound to occupy you a day or two to
-get rid of your longshore swash, and then we’ll be
-having you jockeying the weather mizzen-topsail
-yard-arm, and bawling ‘haul out to leeward’ in a
-voice loud enough to be heard at Blackwall.”</p>
-
-<p>I was glad to take his advice, and was presently
-at my length in the bunk, too ill to speak, yet with
-a glimmering enough of mind in me to bitterly
-deplore that I had not heeded my mother’s counsel
-and remained at home.</p>
-
-<p>The wind hardened as the river widened, and
-much dismal creaking and groaning rose out of the
-hold and sides, the bulkheads, strong fastenings and
-freight of the lofty fabric as she went rolling stately
-in the wake of the tug that was thrashing through
-the hard green Channel ridges in a smother of foam.
-The wind was south-east, I heard some of our
-fellows say, with a lot of loose black scud flying<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-along the marble face of the sky, and a gloomy
-thickness to windward, that was promise of tough
-weather, ere we should have settled the South
-Foreland well down upon the quarter. One of the
-lads said that if the wind headed us yet more, we
-should bring up in the Downs, and lie there till it
-blew a fair breeze, which might signify a fortnight’s
-waiting.</p>
-
-<p>“If so,” says he, “I shall put on a clean shirt and
-go straight ashore, then button my ears behind
-me, and never stop running till I get to London
-town; for twenty miles of salt water’s enough for
-me; and here we are bound away for six thousand
-leagues of it, with all the way back again on top!”</p>
-
-<p>In this fashion the lads would talk as they came
-below from the deck, and sick as I was I managed
-to heed enough of their conversation to pick up
-what was going forward. I cannot express how I
-envied their freedom from sea-sickness. Some were
-making their third voyage, others their second. I
-was the only “first-voyager” as they call it. It
-sometimes rained on deck, and the fellows would
-come below gleaming in oilskins, the sight of which
-made me feel pitifully girlish, insomuch that on
-three several occasions I made a desperate effort to
-get up and act my part of a sailor as they did
-theirs; but the oppression of nausea was too violent,
-and down I lay again, saving the third time when,
-contriving to feel my feet, the ship at the instant<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-gave a lurch which sent me headlong into one of
-the fore and aft bunks where I lay half stunned,
-and so miserably sick that the third mate had to
-lift me in his arms to enable me to return to my
-own bed.</p>
-
-<p>Sea-nausea is at all times distressing, and I do
-not know that one is easier for suffering in a fine
-saloon, with looking-glasses and flowers and the
-electric-light, and the fresh breezes of heaven
-blowing through the open skylights to keep the
-place sweet. But if this <i lang="fr">mal de mer</i>, as the French
-call it, is more unendurable in one interior than in
-another it must be so I think in a midshipmen’s
-berth—at least such a berth as ours was:—Twelve
-sleeping shelves and nine lads to sleep in them,
-with a huge giant of a third mate to fill the tenth;
-a sort of twilight draining in through the three
-scuttles, the immensely thick glass of which was
-often eclipsed by the roaring wash of a green sea
-sweeping along the sides; a lamp burning night
-and day, from whose untrimmed flame there arose
-to the ceiling of the cabin a pestilential coil of
-smoke.</p>
-
-<p>In these narrow gloomy quarters we lived and
-moved, and had our being. Here we ate our meals,
-here we slept, here we washed ourselves, here the
-youngsters smoked. Hardest part of all were the
-confusing noises made by the emigrants just outside
-our berth. Unlashed chests slided to and fro;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-children were incessantly falling down and squealing;
-many heart-disturbing lamentations arose
-from such of the poor wretches as lay sick and
-helpless in their dark bulkheaded compartments.
-They had to fetch their meals from the galley, and
-not yet having acquired the art of walking on a
-tumbling deck, those who had to bring the rations
-of beef or pork along, would repeatedly come with
-a run through the booby-hatch, and lie at the
-bottom of the ladder badly scalded in a little lake
-of pease-soup, or with the beef rolling away among
-the chests, whilst the air resounded with execrations,
-scarcely stifled by the complaining sounds of the
-ship’s fabric.</p>
-
-<p>The third mate was very kind to me; told me
-there was no hurry; I was welcome to lie in my
-bunk till I felt equal to coming on deck.</p>
-
-<p>“I was sick for a fortnight when I first went to
-sea,” I heard him say. “I was one of four apprentices.
-Those shipmates of mine were brutes, and
-the very first night we were out they hauled me
-from my hammock and ran me to the mizzen
-shrouds, up which they forced me to go, saying
-that the topgallant sail would be clewing up shortly,
-and I must be in the cross-trees in readiness to
-help furl it. A ratline carried away, and I fell
-through the rigging on to the deck. I broke no
-bones, but I lay senseless, which so terrified the
-young bullies that when I was taken to my hammock<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-they never more offered to trouble me. I
-was ill for a fortnight, I say, and the memory of it
-makes me sorry
-for every youngster
-when he first
-comes to the life
-and is sea-sick.”</p>
-
-<p>However, on
-the morning of
-the third day
-from our quitting
-Gravesend,
-though I was still
-very ill, I could
-stand no longer
-the miseries of
-my confinement
-to the cabin.
-Since I was
-bound to suffer,
-I thought it was
-better to feel
-wretched in the
-open air than
-amid the smells
-and noise and
-gloom of the
-midshipmen’s berth.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 250px;">
-<img src="images/illus7.jpg" width="250" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I FELL THROUGH THE RIGGING.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was the forenoon watch, as the hours from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-eight to twelve are called. The fellows who had
-been on deck since four o’clock had come below at
-eight bells, and after breakfasting had turned in to
-smoke a pipe and then get some sleep. They were
-in the port or chief mate’s watch, to which division
-of the ship’s company I was supposed to belong,
-though I don’t remember how I came to know this.
-We were still in “soundings” as it is termed—that
-is to say, not yet out of the Channel, though we
-were a long way down it.</p>
-
-<p>On this morning there was a strong sea running
-on the bow, but not so much wind as the motion of
-the ship would have led one to suppose. The mids,
-when they came below, had told the others who
-were to relieve them that the vessel was under all
-plain sail saving the flying jib and fore and mizzen
-royals, and that the “old man” as they termed the
-captain, was driving her; that they had heard the
-mate say that he expected it would be an “all
-hands” job before four bells had gone—ten o’clock.
-I caught all this, scarce comprehending it, and lay
-drowsily and stupidly watching the lads get their
-breakfast and then vault into their bunks with all
-their clothes on—“all standing” as the sea saying
-is—ready to rush on deck to the first summons.
-The ship was lying over at a sharp angle, and there
-was a great roaring and seething along her sides of
-swollen waters smitten into yeast, and the cabin
-portholes came and went like the winking of eyes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-to the shrouding of the glass by the liftings and
-leapings of the green billows. Presently there were
-certain sounds on deck which unmistakably denoted
-that sail was being shortened.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s ‘in main royal’ now, I suppose,” said one
-of the middies, sleepily, “and about time too.
-What’s the hurry all this side of Sydney, New
-South Wales?”</p>
-
-<p>Presently more hoarse songs resounded on deck,
-along with the echo of tramping feet and of rigging
-dropped hastily from the hand.</p>
-
-<p>“Old man’th growing alarmed, I reckon!”
-exclaimed the lisping long-nosed midshipman,
-whose name was Kennet. “Oh, how I do with,” he
-cried, feigning to speak in a voice as though he
-wept, “that I had thtoptht at home to bottle vinegar
-for my poor deah mamma. Eh, Rockafellar?
-Better to bottle vinegar athore, my beauty, than
-to lie thick and hungry in a nathty cabin.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke, the third mate’s voice was to be
-heard ringing like the roar of a bull down through
-the booby-hatch—“All hands reef topsails! Up
-you come, all you young gentlemen bee-low there!
-Lively, now! before the ship falls overboard!”</p>
-
-<p>The youngsters sprang from their bunks, and
-were out of the cabin in a breath. Then it was
-that I made up my mind to linger no longer sea-sick
-in this dismal, straining cabin. I pulled on my
-shoes, plunged into my jacket, and, setting my cap<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-firmly upon my head, went clawing my way to the
-steps of the hatch, up which I staggered, feeling
-exceedingly ill and weak, but determined now to
-push on even to perishing sooner than suffer in
-darkness and loneliness below.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE GOES ALOFT.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>Talk of the confusion of hauling the ship out of
-dock! Here was uproar thrice confounded with a
-vengeance! The ship seemed to be almost on her
-beam ends; there was an ugly livid squall over the
-trucks and howling through the masts; they had
-put the helm up to ease off the weight of the first
-outfly, and the <i>Lady Violet</i> was thrashing and
-foaming through it with the spume blowing in
-snow-storms over her forecastle; all three topsail
-yards were on the caps, and the huge sails—for we
-carried single topsails—were blowing out like giant
-bladders in the grip of their gear. The outer jib
-was slatting on the jibboom; the clewed-up main
-topgallant-sail was making its mast up there whip
-to and fro like the end of an angler’s rod; the
-immense mainsail was thundering at its clews and
-sides and slowly rose to the yard to the drag of the
-sailors, who were roaring out at the ropes which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-belonged to it; the captain, standing near the
-wheel, was shouting out orders to the mate; the
-mate was bellowing to the second mate, who was
-forward; the second mate was vociferating to the
-boatswain; in all directions gangs of sailors were
-delivering their working choruses at the top of
-their lungs. The wind shrieked, the rain hissed
-through it like volleys of small shot; the shaking
-of the loose canvas on high might have passed for
-the discharge of the batteries of a frigate; the foam
-flew over the ship; the water washed in angry sobs
-along the scuppers. Preserve us!</p>
-
-<p>To such a greenhorn as I was then, very young,
-very sick, with consternation and astonishment
-working in me like a passion, there was distraction
-and uproar enough here to have justified me in
-concluding that the end of all things was at hand.</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments I found myself on the poop
-where the midshipmen were hard at work with the
-reef tackle and other gear preparing the mizzen
-topsail for reefing, snugging the spanker, and so
-forth. Their station was aft, and their duty lay in
-attending to all the sails on the mizzen-mast under
-the charge of the third mate. He was swinging off
-upon a rope, when he caught sight of me.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along! come along!” he roared. “All
-the beef we can get is wanted here!”</p>
-
-<p>I went in a staggering run to where the group
-were pulling and laid hold of the rope.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Belay!” shouted the third mate, and sprang
-into the weather
-mizzen rigging,
-whither he was followed
-by the rest
-of the midshipmen.
-For a moment I
-hung in the wind,
-sending one thirsty,
-dizzy look aloft.
-“Well, now or
-never!” thought
-I; and with that I
-got on to the hencoop,
-swung myself
-into the rigging, and
-began the ascent.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 200px;">
-<img src="images/illus8.jpg" width="200" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I SEEMED TO BE PINNED TO THE RATLINES.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The wind came
-so hard that I
-seemed to be pinned
-to the ratlines, and
-I felt as though all
-the breath were
-blown out of my
-body. I sent a
-yearning look up,
-and saw the third
-mate on the
-weather mizzen-top-sail yard-arm, striding the spar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-as though it were a horse, his muscular legs
-dangling between the dark heavens and the wool-white
-water. The lads were sliding out upon the
-foot-ropes, some to windward, some to leeward. I
-tried to make haste, but the sweep of the blast
-reduced my struggles to a mere crawling. It took
-me a full five minutes to reach to the height of the
-futtock shrouds—thin bars of iron which stretch at
-a sharp angle from the masts to the rim of the
-platform called “the top.” I took these irons in
-my little hands, but lacked the courage to swing
-myself by them over into the top. How on earth,
-then, was I to gain the yard upon which the midshipmen
-were working? Through the irons I spied
-a hole in the platform, and with great trouble and
-a deal of trembling I contrived to squeeze through
-it, and then I found myself on a sort of stage with
-the ship looking as if she were a mile below me,
-and the mizzen-royal yard as if it were two miles
-above me.</p>
-
-<p>The wind screamed frantically in my ears, yet
-not so loudly but that I could hear my small heart
-thumping in them. I clutched a rope, and stood
-staring wildly at the yard on which my shipmates
-were knotting the reef-points. I thought Mr.
-Cock a much more wonderful man than Blondin or
-any tight-rope walker that ever I had heard of, to
-be able to sit upon that rocking point of spar without
-tumbling off, and to be passing the earing as
-coolly as if he were tying his shoes.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Stop where you are!” he bawled to me;
-“we’ll endeavour to manage without you this once.”</p>
-
-<p>The sea looked five times bigger than ever I had
-before seen it. The worst of the squall was over,
-and past the edge of the flying gloom to windward
-there was a sort of faintness in the sky, with curls
-and wisps of scud blowing up it out of the hard
-green of the distant water that looked calm, so far
-away it was; and right out in the midst of the
-distant ocean, over which the dim light of the sky
-was breaking, I saw a ship, like a toy, vanishing
-and reappearing amongst the surges, flinging the
-foam away from her in bursts of steam-light cloud;
-and so little did she look with her three milk-white
-bands of topsails and marble-like round of foresail,
-that whilst my eye dwelt upon her, I could scarce
-persuade myself that she was real: rather, indeed,
-some craft of fairy-land, which a great strong
-fellow, such a man as Mr. Cock for instance, might
-be able to hold in the hollow of his hand.</p>
-
-<p>I was at no great height, yet the captain looked
-an insignificant little creature as he stood at the
-rail sending his gaze aloft; the man at the wheel
-resembled one of those dolls which you purchase
-as sailors for your model boat, and the decks of
-the ship from poop to forecastle showed like a long
-wet plank. It was wonderful to think so narrow a
-base should support the tall, wide-spreading fabric
-of mast, yard, and gear that was now somewhat<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-nakedly shearing through the dusk of the squall, to
-the plunging and long floating rushes of the hull
-over whose side a sea would now and again fling a
-head of water that swept with the sparkle of a
-fountain clear into the milk-white race to leeward.</p>
-
-<p>“Two reefs, Mr. Cock!” bawled the mate from
-the foremost end of the poop.</p>
-
-<p>I watched the lads swinging in a row upon the
-foot-ropes, tossing up their heels as they brought
-the reef-points upon the yard, and wondered how
-long it would take me to learn their trick of working
-aloft, as coolly as though they toiled with the
-solid earth under them. All three topsails were
-being reefed at the same time. I could not see
-forward, but I could hear the voices of the men
-chorusing as they, lighted, the sails over. Evidently
-the captain expected dirty weather; and, to be
-sure, out abeam it looked ugly enough, with a kind
-of rusty light growing in the atmosphere that threw
-a malevolent complexion of storm upon the sky.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the last knot had been tied in the
-mizzen topsail, and the midshipmen were in the
-act of descending.</p>
-
-<p>“Jump aloft two of you and secure that t’gallants’l
-before it blows adrift!” roared the captain.</p>
-
-<p>A couple of the mids sprang into the topmast
-rigging, and in a few moments were giving battle
-to the sail, that, even as the captain called, began to
-flog upon the yard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Well, thought I, as I stood staring up at them,
-some day I dare say I shall be able to do that too;
-but I declare the possibility seemed mighty remote
-from me just then. Indeed, once again I was
-beginning to feel horribly sea-sick. The higher
-you mount above the hull of a ship, the wilder of
-course grows the rolling, and the mizzen-top in
-which I stood seemed to me to swing through the
-air a score of times more furiously than the decks
-below were swaying. It increased my nausea
-moreover to look up and see the two youngsters
-dizzily whirling under the dark sky, plunging and
-hauling at the thrashing sail, as though the hold
-they had with their boots was enough to save their
-lives if they fell backwards.</p>
-
-<p>But now the others were swarming into the top,
-and swinging themselves over into the lower rigging,
-and dancing down the shrouds till, taut as
-those huge ropes were, they leapt again.</p>
-
-<p>“Come along! come along!” bawled the third
-mate, as he plumped like a cannon ball alongside
-of me, and with a sinewy arm poised himself an
-instant before putting his foot on the futtock ratlines:
-“There’s nothing good enough to look at up
-here, to keep you staring open mouth as though
-you were a newly landed cod. Lay down smartly
-now, youngster, and tail on to the topsail halliards.”</p>
-
-<p>His prize-fighter’s face vanished over the rim of
-the top.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“<i>Lay down!</i>” thought I, “what does he mean?”
-and I went nervously to the edge of the platform to
-ask him to explain himself, but saw that he was
-already on deck.</p>
-
-<p>“Mizzen-top there!” cried the captain, “Lay
-down, will you?”</p>
-
-<p>There can be no mistake about <em>that</em>, thought I.
-I am not deaf. Twice I had been told to <i>lay down</i>;
-and with that I stretched myself along on my back,
-taking care however to keep a hearty good hold of
-some ropes which passed through the top within
-reach of my grasp.</p>
-
-<p>“Mizzen-top there!” after a little came a roaring
-hail from the mate; “what are you about up
-there, sir? Do you mean to lay down or not?”</p>
-
-<p>On hearing this, I crept on my knees to the rim
-of the top, and looking over, cried out in the shrill
-voice of my childhood, “Please, sir, I <em>am</em> lying
-down.”</p>
-
-<p>The captain was staring up at me, but on hearing
-this, he turned his back with a shake of his figure.</p>
-
-<p>“Come down, Master Rockafellar,” sung out the
-mate in a voice full of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>When I heard this I crawled over to another
-edge of the top where I could see him, and piped
-out, “The captain said I was to <em>lay</em> down, sir.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus9.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“‘PLEASE, SIR, I <em>AM</em> LYING DOWN.’”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was wonderful that my thin voice should have
-carried in such a wind, yet I was heard plainly
-enough. Then arose a shout of laughter from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-midshipmen; the mate called something to Mr.
-Cock, who in a trice came bundling up the mizzen
-rigging, and flounded with a crimson face into the
-top.</p>
-
-<p>“Why you young guinea pig, why don’t you obey
-orders?” he bawled; “to <i>lay down</i> at sea means to
-<em>come</em> down, and you <em>know</em> it too; I see it in your
-eye! Over with’ee, over with’ee.”</p>
-
-<p>His large nervous fist closed upon the collar of
-my jacket, and I found myself lifted over the rim
-at the top.</p>
-
-<p>“Catch hold of the futtock shrouds!” he roared,
-“those iron bars, d’ye hear?—quick, before I let
-you go!”</p>
-
-<p>I gripped at something, but whether it was iron
-or rope I was too horrified to know. He let go,
-and my legs swung out into the air. But green-horns
-cling too tightly to be in much danger on such
-occasions as this. A heave of the ship swung me
-in again, my toes struck something hard, and with
-the swiftness of a monkey I coiled my little shanks
-round it. Down I slid, breathless, and with the
-eyes half out of my head, and was not a little
-astonished and rejoiced to find my foot upon a ratline
-in the mizzen rigging, whence the descent was
-as easy as walking the deck.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s your lesson,” exclaimed the third mate
-as he jogged down the rigging past me. “You’ll
-never shirk the futtock shrouds again, will you?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But I had no breath with which to answer him.
-It was a rough lesson, but it did me good. It made
-me see that climbing and descending were no such
-terrifying processes as they looked. Possibly I
-might not have got so much confidence out of this
-adventure had I known that the third mate had
-only pretended to let go; that in reality he was
-maintaining his hold of my collar after my legs had
-swung out, though I was too much terrified to be
-sensible of this.</p>
-
-<p>I have always considered that the alarm of this
-little business cured me of sea-sickness. Whilst in
-the top, as I have told you, the nausea was over-poweringly
-strong upon me; but when I had come
-down I was no longer sensible of it, and from that
-moment, indeed, I never had a return of it. There
-can be no doubt that this distressing malady lies
-mainly in the nerves, and the fright I had received
-by being hung out over the top, so to speak, had
-acted upon me as an electric shock, healing and
-ending the prostrating complaint.</p>
-
-<p>It blew a gale of wind for three days. I don’t
-doubt I should have heard a deal about my adventure
-aloft from the midshipmen but for the weather.
-The wet on deck and the discomforts below were
-too much for the youngsters’ spirits, and until the
-sun shone forth again we were a very sulky lot.
-The ship was miserably uncomfortable. It rained
-incessantly, with such a continuous blowing of spray<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-over us, that it was sometimes above one’s ankles
-on the main deck. There were tarpaulins over the
-hatchways, and the ’tween-decks were as dark as
-the hold. There had been no time yet for the
-passengers to grow seasoned to the sea life; most
-of those in the “cuddy,” as the saloon was then
-called, kept their cabins. Now and again one of
-them at long intervals crawled into the companion-hatch,
-where he exhibited a face white as a spectre’s.</p>
-
-<p>But the chief of the misery was amongst the
-emigrants. Boxes and chests were incessantly
-breaking loose, and menacing their lives as the poor
-creatures sat huddled in sea-sick groups under the
-booby-hatch, for the sake of the dim light that
-sifted down through it. There were times when
-the galley fire was washed out, and the emigrants
-had to content themselves with biscuit and molasses
-and cold water, and small doses of that nauseous
-food called “soup and boulli,” nick-named by the
-sailors <i>soap and bullion</i>. I have seen a little family
-of them squatting round a sea-chest belonging to
-one of us midshipmen, an old towel for a table-cloth,
-and on it a tin dish or two containing hard
-ship’s biscuit, a mess of soup and boulli, a lump of
-pork fat, probably two or three days’ old, along with
-other such cold and throttling fare as the ship’s
-third-class larder yielded; and while they were
-attempting to make a meal off this trough-like
-collection of victuals, I have seen the chest slip<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-away from them, the food tumble on to the deck,
-and the whole family capsized on their backs.</p>
-
-<p>I do not know that the emigrant in these days is
-a person very carefully and hospitably looked after
-at sea; but in my time the treatment he met with
-on shipboard—that is to say, the utter indifference
-to his comfort exhibited by owners and captains—rendered
-him the most miserable wretch afloat.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE SIGHTS A SHIP.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>These three days of storm brought me into a
-tolerably close acquaintance with some of the hardships
-of the sailor’s life. Our cabin did not leak,
-yet somehow or other the deck of it was always
-damp, with a noise as of the bubbling of water
-under the bunks. The scuttles were incessantly
-under water, and all the light we had was imparted
-by the dingy flare of our malodorous coffee-pot-shaped
-lamp.</p>
-
-<p>The food was perhaps the hardest part to my
-young stomach. Every midshipman’s father had
-been called upon to pay ten guineas mess money;
-yet I do not know that this ninety guineas obtained
-any stores for us, if it were not a cask or two of
-flour, a cask of sugar, a few dozens of pickles, and
-some cases of “preserved spuds,” as potatoes are
-called at sea. We were therefore thrown upon the
-ship’s stores, and fed as the sailors forward did.
-This I say was the hardest part to me, since, though<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-my sickness had passed, my appetite had not
-recovered its old strength, and for a long time I
-was never hungry enough to eat with the least relish
-the greenish masses of salt pork, and the iron-hearted
-rounds and squares and cubes of salt horse,
-and the pans of lukewarm slush-flavoured water, at
-the bottom of which rolled a handful of peas, as
-digestible as musket-balls, and the dark-skinned
-puddings, compounded of the coarsest flour and the
-skimmings of the greasy water of the cook’s copper,
-which the lad who waited upon us would come
-staggering with from the galley, and place upon
-the narrow slip of table, scarce visible in our
-twilight.</p>
-
-<p>I believe I should have starved but for the
-biscuit, which was crisp and good, though Kennet,
-the long-nosed midshipman, endeavoured to cheer
-me by saying—</p>
-
-<p>“Thtoph a bit, Rockafellah—wait till we’re a
-fortnight out, and then ththand by! They’ll be
-broaching the regular provithionth then, and if there
-don’t go a thcore of wormth to every chap’th
-bithcuith I’m a lobthter.”</p>
-
-<p>The crying of children outside, the growling of
-men, and the shrill complaining of women combined
-with the crazy creaking and groaning of the fabric,
-so that it was very hard to get any sleep.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the night of the day of my adventure
-in the mizzen-top that I stood my first watch. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-was eight o’clock in the evening, and the moment
-after the last of the chimes of the bell on deck had
-been swept away by the gale, the four midshipmen
-who were in the starboard, or second mate’s watch,
-came bundling below. Their oilskins were streaming
-wet, and they blew upon their fingers’-ends as
-they entered the berth.</p>
-
-<p>“Still raining, is it?” asked a fellow named
-Poole.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, murderously,” was the answer; “but the
-wind’s quartering us, and you’ll be making sail, I
-allow, before we turn out.”</p>
-
-<p>“What’s been doing?”</p>
-
-<p>“Nothing. But talk of the Bay of Biscay!
-Why, the Straits of Magellan might be close
-aboard. That’s right, my sweet and lively hearty!
-On with your boots, my noble fellow! One, two,
-buckle my shoe; three, four, open the door; five,
-six, cut all your sticks!”</p>
-
-<p>And the youth who had thus spoken, and whose
-closing observations were levelled at me, thrust a
-short black length of clay pipe into the flame of the
-lamp, and sprang into his bed to refresh himself
-with a smoke before going to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>I got into my sea-boots, which were very new
-and creaked noisily, wrapped my body in an oiled
-coat, wedged a sou’wester securely upon my little
-head, and followed the others on deck. The night
-seemed very black after the lamplight, dim as <em>it</em><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-was, in the cabin. It was the darker at that
-moment for a heavy squall of rain that was blowing
-with a note of shrieking in it over the bulwark
-rail, and splitting in shouts and whistlings through
-the masts and rigging. I clambered on to the poop,
-and stood holding on to the brass rail staring about
-me in a blind way, for there was a deal to daze a
-raw-head like me coming new to the scene, I assure
-you. The ship was tearing through the water
-under three-reefed topsails and foresail. She made
-a great swirling and roaring of white water all
-round her, and the snow of it put an illumination
-into the black air till you seemed able to see
-a mile away. There was a high sea running, but it
-had quartered us along with the wind, and the <i>Lady
-Violet</i> sank and rose very nobly and easily upon
-the long black seething coils of brine which chased
-her thundering to her counter, and expiring there
-in foam.</p>
-
-<p>The other midshipmen hung about the quarter-deck,
-under the shelter of the break of the poop.
-Now and again they showed themselves, but at long
-intervals. The shadowy figure of the chief mate
-paced the weather-deck. Through the glass of the
-skylights I could see the people sitting in the cuddy
-below. Some played at chess or cards; others
-lolled in a sickly posture upon sofas; the captain,
-with his face burnished by weather, conversed with
-two ladies; a small chart lay before him, and he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-was explaining something to them, running his
-forefinger over the paper, and smiling into their
-puzzled faces. It was more like a fancy than a
-reality to witness that shining interior set in the
-black frame of the night—that handsome cuddy,
-with its soft carpets, its brilliant lamps, its gleaming
-swinging trays, its globes of gold fish, its ferns and
-richly-painted panels, in which the lustre of the oil
-flames rippled; the whole showing, as it were, like
-a picture flung by some magic-lantern upon an
-atmosphere of sooty blackness.</p>
-
-<p>I crept aft, and stood looking a little while at the
-man that steered. The light in the binnacle
-touched his face and figure, and threw him into
-relief. His sou’wester came low over his brow, and
-the rest of him, saving a knob of a nose and a pair
-of cheeks compounded of warts, freckles, and
-wrinkles, was formed of an oilskin coat, oiled
-leggings, and huge sea-boots. He grasped the
-wheel with hands of iron, often bending a reddish
-glittering eye upon the compass-card that swung in
-the bowl, and I watched him thrusting the spokes
-first a little way up and then a little way down, and
-wondered why he did not keep the wheel steady.
-But I did not like to speak to him, for what little
-of his face was visible looked very sour; and then,
-again, I was certain that he must be in a bad
-temper, through having to stand exposed to the
-lashing wet and strong cold wind of the night.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I went to the taffrail, and looked down over the
-stern of the ship at the frothing cataract of water
-that boiled out from round about her rudder, and
-streamed away pale and paler yet into the darkness,
-where I could see the dim line of it rising and falling
-upon the black surges. It resembled a footpath
-passing over a hilly country. The ocean looked a
-dreadfully desolate immense surface in that darkness,
-wider than the sky, it seemed to me, for the
-reason of the fancy of prodigious measureless
-distance coming to one out of the obscurity that
-lay in ink upon it, with the fitful flashings of the
-heads of seas showing in the heart of the murkiness.
-I shuddered as I thought how cold a death drowning
-must be. I shuddered again at the imagination
-of being alone in an open boat upon the vast
-surface of weltering gloom. I recalled what I had
-read of the sufferings of shipwrecked people, of fire
-at sea, of leaks which gained upon the pumps and
-sunk the vessel deeper and deeper, of sudden fierce
-storms which tore the masts out of ships, and left
-them helpless as logs of wood to slowly drown.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus10.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“‘WHAT D’YE SEE, MY LAD?’ SAID HE.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Whilst my little brains were thus busy, my eye
-was taken by what appeared to be a sort of smudge
-far away astern in the windy shadow of the night.
-If I looked straight at it, it vanished, but on gazing
-a little away from it I could see it very clearly. I
-continued to peer for some time, and was quite sure
-that the blotch—whatever it might be—was hardening,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-so to speak, and enlarging. I turned my
-head to see if the mate observed it, but was sure he
-had not by his manner of walking the deck. I
-stepped up to him, and said:</p>
-
-<p>“If you please, sir, I think there’s something
-catching us up out there!” and I levelled my small
-arm at the ocean over the stern.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, what d’ye see, my lad?” said he, very
-kindly; “you must have gimblet-like eyes to be
-able to bore a hole into such a night as this. It’s
-Master Rockafellar, isn’t it?” stooping to get a
-sight of my face. “Overtaking us, do you
-say?”</p>
-
-<p>He walked right aft, I following him, and stood
-staring a moment or two, then with a start cried,
-“By George, the <i>Flying Dutchman</i>, I do believe!
-A big ship coming through the air it looks, and
-overhauling us as though she were a roll of smoke.
-Jump below, my lad, and fetch me my night-glass.”</p>
-
-<p>He told me where his cabin was, and where I
-should find the glass, and off I rushed, proud to be
-employed. His cabin window overlooked the
-quarter-deck, and against the bulkhead the four
-middies of our watch were grouped, smoking and
-yarning in the shelter there.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, what are you up to?” shouted one of
-them; “that’s the chief mate’s cabin. He’ll hang
-you up by the neck at that yard-arm, you young
-Rockafellar, if he catches you in his berth.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“He has sent me for his night-glass,”
-answered; “there is a big ship coming up astern.”</p>
-
-<p>“O-ho!” cried they, and emptying the bowls of
-their pipes, they fled like startled deer on to the
-poop.</p>
-
-<p>I found the glass—a binocular—and ran with all
-my might with it to the mate, who, as he took it
-from me, said, “That’s right. You’re a smart boy!”
-a piece of commendation which so inspirited me
-that, I believe, had he told me to go up to the
-main-royal-yard, I should have promptly and comfortably
-have made my way to that great height.</p>
-
-<p>The sight I had been the first to descry was,
-indeed, well worth watching. The speed of our
-own ship through the water, though she was under
-very small canvas, could not have been less than
-nine knots in the hour, yet the vessel astern grew
-upon us as though we were in tow of one of our
-own quarter-boats, and scarcely moving. She
-showed pale as the watery moon dimly glancing
-through a body of vapour.</p>
-
-<p>“She is dead in our wake,” the chief mate said,
-as though talking to himself. “Does she see us, I
-wonder? Heavens alive! what is she under—<em>skysails</em>
-can it be? It’s enough to make one think
-oneself in a dream.”</p>
-
-<p>I saw him send a glance towards the companion-hatch,
-as though he had a mind to call the captain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus11.jpg" width="500" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“THE VESSEL ASTERN GREW UPON US.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Here, one of you,” he shouted to the midshipmen,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-who were grouped on the other side of the
-wheel, staring with all their eyes at the approaching
-ship, “whip that binnacle lamp out and show it.”</p>
-
-<p>Kennet sprang to the compass-stand, unshipped
-the light, vaulted on to the grating, and there stood
-holding, at the height of his arm, the will-o’-the-wisp
-spark of flame.</p>
-
-<p>The pursuing vessel was doubtless much closer
-to us when I first perceived her than I should have
-supposed by the pallid shadow she made on the
-troubled darkness of the waters. I think it must
-have been in less than half-an-hour’s time from the
-moment of my sighting her that she became a huge,
-easy-distinguishable shape in the heart of our wake.
-You saw sail upon sail towering upon her in pale
-spaces, which glimmered as though she reflected
-a strong starlight. By this time the news had
-reached the cuddy, and the captain had come on
-deck, together with most of the passengers, and
-we stood in a crowd, watching, and waiting, and
-wondering; for not yet had the tall and rushing
-phantom astern of us offered to shift her helm, and
-to my young eyes it seemed as though she was
-bound to steer right into us, cleaving us to amidships,
-like splitting a log with the blow of a hatchet.</p>
-
-<p>“What does he mean to do? There seems no
-look-out on board!” called the captain to the mate.
-“Show more lights, Mr. Johnson, and let it be done
-quickly.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The officer delivered some orders in a sharp,
-eager voice, and in a few minutes three or four
-sailors came running aft with large lanterns swinging
-in their hands.</p>
-
-<p>“She has the cut of a Yankee,” I heard the
-captain say to the mate; “her high bows and
-crowd of canvas forward screen us from her quarter-deck.
-Great thunder! is she in a madman’s hands?
-She will be into us, sir. Fire a rocket!”</p>
-
-<p>These signals were kept somewhere below. A
-midshipman shot away like an arrow, and returned,
-and then up soared the thing, the fire of it hissing
-as it sped javelin-like into the flying thickness on
-high, where it burst like a flash of lightning, flinging
-a green radiance far and wide, and sailing in a
-ball of flame slowly over our mizzen-mast-head on
-to the lee-bow.</p>
-
-<p>Almost simultaneously with the detonation it
-made, like the blast of a blunderbuss, we saw the
-head of the vessel astern falling off. As she rose
-foaming to the head of a sea, her flying jibboom
-went majestically rounding away to leeward of us,
-opening out the fabric behind into a ship of some
-fifteen hundred tons, with high black sides and
-cotton-white canvas of the Yankee swelling from
-the water-ways to the trucks. A sort of groan of
-astonishment and admiration, mingled with a deep
-note of the fear that had been excited, arose from
-amongst the crowd of us. Indeed, but for her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-putting her helm over, her long bowsprit and
-tapering jibbooms must have been spearing our
-rigging in another five minutes, and her sharp
-clipper stem grinding into our counter.</p>
-
-<p>A voice hailed us from her; our captain sprang
-on to the grating abaft the wheel, and roared back,
-“What d’ye say?” But no response was made to
-this. She swept past to leeward, within a musket-shot.
-You could hear the thunder of the wind in
-her canvas, and the roaring of the water crushed
-into yeast at her stem. It was like hearkening to
-the beating of surf on a stormy night on the sea-coast.
-She showed no light of any kind, not a
-spot of brightness on her deck or in her side to
-relieve the deep dye of blackness her hull made
-upon the obscurity. In a few minutes she had
-forged ahead, and a little later she had melted out
-upon the gloom over the port bow.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE IS STRUCK BY LIGHTNING.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>This was an incident to kill the tediousness of my
-first watch on deck very pleasantly. It was seeing
-life at sea too, tasting the excitement of it, and
-when eight bells sounded, and I went below, I
-began in good truth to feel myself something of
-a sailor.</p>
-
-<p>But it was “watch and watch,” with us on board
-that ship, as in all other ships of those days, though
-what the practice is now in this age of steamboats
-I will not undertake to say. By “watch and watch,”
-I mean that one division of the crew went below
-for four hours, whilst the other division kept the
-deck. Those below then came up again for another
-four hours’ duty, and so on till the dog watches
-came round, when each watch had two hours of
-duty only, the object of the change being to vary
-the time of the four hours’ watches; so that, for
-example, if one division had to keep the middle
-watch, say on a Monday the dog watches contrived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-that that spell of duty would next night fall to the
-lot of the other division.</p>
-
-<p>What “watch and watch” signified I never could
-have imagined till four o’clock in the morning was
-struck on the ship’s bell, and the midshipmen who
-had been on deck since midnight came in their
-headlong way below to rout us up.</p>
-
-<p>“Eight bells! eight bells, my honeys!” they
-roared. “Out you come, and up you go! It rains
-beautifully, and is still as black as thunder all
-round.”</p>
-
-<p>I was in a dead sleep, and could scarcely open
-my eyes. By way of helping me to wake up, one
-of the lads who had just descended threw his
-streaming sou’-wester at my face.</p>
-
-<p>“Who’d be a sailor?” yawned the long midshipman
-named Poole. “This is a part of the life that
-they know nothing about ashore.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, what would I give for my feather bed at
-home!” groaned another youngster, drowsily thrusting
-his arms into a damp jacket.</p>
-
-<p>“Lively now, or I’ll feather bed ye!” shouted
-Mr. Cock from his corner bunk. “A sailor who
-talks of a feather bed should be tarred first before
-the down’s applied. My precious limbs! Was it
-out of such whinings as this that Trafalgar’s victory
-was manufactured?”</p>
-
-<p>But there was no magic in the thoughts of Nelson
-to inspirit one at such a moment as this. For my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-part, my sympathies were wholly with the lad who
-yearned for a feather bed, and though I had promised
-my father not to swap my clothes, I would have
-gladly given half my outfit for the privilege of
-turning in again. Oh the misery of the cold and
-wet of the deck, going to it as I did with lids
-of lead, and trembling in oilskins, from the comfort
-and warmth of the blankets! I shall give up the
-sea, I thought as I climbed the poop ladder with
-chattering teeth: I have already had enough of it.
-I would go on shore at once if I could. What is
-there in brass buttons to render this sort of thing
-tolerable?</p>
-
-<p>There were no signs of daybreak till about six
-o’clock, and then down away in the east there stole
-out upon the gloom a faint, most melancholy grey
-light, against which the ridge horizon washed in a
-tumbling line of ink. How am I to express the
-cheerless aspect of the ship in the illumination of
-this dull and dismal dawn? Her reefed canvas
-was dark with wet, her slack gear was blown into
-semi-circles by the gale, her scuppers sobbed with
-wet, and the water floated from side to side of her
-deck with her rolling. But all the same, the planks
-had to be washed down, the hencoops cleansed,
-and the poop made tidy; so as soon as light enough
-came to see by, the pump was rigged, buckets got
-along, and there we were scrubbing for our lives,
-with smoke from the newly-kindled galley fire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-breaking from the chimney, the boatswain on the
-main-deck pointing his hose, and bawling to the
-sailors to scrub with a will, the wide-awake pigs
-under the long-boat grunting for their breakfast,
-the cow lowing gloomily at catching sight of the
-butcher’s mate, and the ship all the while rushing
-before the strong gale, with the chasing seas breaking
-in foam to the height of the main-brace bumpkins,
-and a grim and yellow salt in a tight sou’-wester
-swinging off upon the wheel, and mumbling
-upon a quid that stood high in his cheek, as though
-he were muttering sea-blessings to himself on the
-ocean life in general, and on the <i>Lady Violet</i> in
-particular.</p>
-
-<p>Well, when the gale broke we had fine weather,
-and nothing noticeable happened for some days.
-The passengers got the better of their sea-sickness,
-and came on deck, and the ship looked hospitable
-and homely, with ladies reading or knitting, or
-walking the decks aft, and with the poor women of
-the steerage forward sitting in the sun, with coloured
-handkerchiefs tied round their heads, their children
-romping about their feet, and the men belonging
-to their company lounging against the bulwarks,
-pipes between their teeth, their hats slouched, and
-their arms folded.</p>
-
-<p>We were sliding towards the warm parallels, and
-Mr. Cock told me to keep a bright look-out for
-flying fish, as we should be seeing them spark out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-of the blue water alongside before long, “like silver
-paper-cutters, Master Rockafellar,” said he, “on the
-gauze wings of the dragon-fly.” By this time I
-was able to crawl aloft without a beating heart and
-trembling body. I could shin over the mizzen-top
-as lightly and easily as the rest of them, and had
-been once on to the mizzen-royal-yard, the highest
-yard on the mizzen-mast, to watch Kennet roll the
-sail up, that I might know how to furl it for myself
-another time.</p>
-
-<p>In fact, I had now climbed the rigging often
-enough to enjoy being aloft. I would think as I
-poised myself upon a foot-rope, and overhung the
-yard it belonged to, that nothing nearer to the
-sensation of flying could be imagined. I swung
-between heaven and sea. The soft cream-coloured
-clouds looked to be rolling close over my head.
-Far away down was the narrow white deck of the
-ship, with sail upon sail swelling in curves of snow-white
-softness betwixt where I was perched, and
-the ivory-like planks deep down below. The blue
-ocean swept away into boundless distance, and the
-world of waters looked as huge as though the sight
-of them was a dream.</p>
-
-<p>At last came a day that was to be marked by an
-incident of terror. The captain and mates had
-taken the sun at noon; the sailors had eaten their
-dinner, and the port-watch, the one that I belonged
-to, was on deck, to remain there till four. Two of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-the midshipmen were on the cross-jack-yard at
-work on some job there, the third was below, and I,
-the fourth of them, hung about the break of the
-poop in readiness to run on an errand, and to jump
-to any order given me.</p>
-
-<p>It was a fine warm day, the wind right aft, and
-the ship was buzzing along with studding sails out
-on both sides. The tiffin bell had just sounded;
-there was nobody on the poop but the chief mate,
-myself, and the man at the wheel. Through the
-skylight I could see the passengers assembling at
-the luncheon table. Presently noticing that Mr.
-Johnson, the chief officer, was staring with unusual
-steadfastness at the horizon over the stern, I sent a
-look in that direction, and observed that there was
-a large black cloud sailing up the sky, exactly on
-a line with the course we were making. I never
-had before, and have never since, seen a body of
-vapour with so ugly a look. Its hinder part was
-tufted into the true aspect of thunder; its brow
-was a pale sulphur colour, which darkened into a
-swollen curve of livid belly; its wild extraordinary
-shape too made you think of it as of some leviathan
-flying beast, a mighty dragon, such as one reads
-about, or some huge and horrible creation descending
-from another world. The black shadow it
-threw upon the sea contrasted oddly with the flashing
-blue that was streaming merrily with us along
-the path of the wind.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>However, it is a saying with Jack that you need
-never fear a squall that you can see through. The
-blue sky showed clear and bright past the tail of
-the cloud on the sea-line, as the mass of black
-vapour soared. The mate turned to pace the deck,
-just sending a careless glance over the stern now
-and again. It was easy to guess that he saw
-nothing to trouble him there; no order was given,
-and the ship continued to sail pleasantly on the
-wings of her far overhanging canvas before the
-warm and gushing wind.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the cloud overtook us, and then it
-overhung the vessel like an immense black canopy,
-plunging us and a great space of sea into gloom,
-and all around, beyond the confines of its murky
-dye, was shining summer weather. But the cloud,
-instead of blowing ahead, lingered over us as
-though its stooping bosom was arrested by our
-mast-heads, or the whole electric body of it
-attracted by our tall fabric. No rain fell, no
-squally gust of wind swept from it through the
-regular breathing of the breeze astern. The mate
-crossed over to where I was standing, and looked
-over the rail into the main-chains.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha!” he cried, “jump down there, Master
-Rockafellar,” pointing to the platform called the
-channel, which in those days served to spread the
-rigging, “and cast that lightning conductor adrift.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus12.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I FELT MYSELF SWEPT BACKWARDS.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Now, this lightning conductor was of copper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-wire; the point of it rose above the main truck,
-and the length of it was led down the main-royal
-back-stay to the water’s edge. But the bottom
-end of it, instead of trailing in the water, was
-coiled up and “stopped,” as it is called, to one
-of the lanyards of the shrouds. In other words, it
-was tied to a part of the rigging by rope-yarns.</p>
-
-<p>I stood a moment feeling for my knife, which I
-then remembered I had left in my bunk. The
-mate seeing that I was at a loss, and understanding
-by my gestures what my want was, cried to a
-young ordinary seaman, who was on the main-deck,
-to jump into the chains and cut the lightning
-conductor adrift, and drop the end overboard. He
-was a fine young fellow—an Irishman, I remember,
-named Barry. His sheath-knife was on his hip,
-and he whipped the blade from its leather case, as
-he bounded on to the topgallant-rail, and dropped
-over the side into the main chains.</p>
-
-<p>He had got his hand on the coil of wire, and was in
-the act of passing his knife through the rope-yarns,
-when a great spurt of flame fell in a dazzling flash
-down the rigging. The whole ship seem to reel
-out of the shadow that was upon her in a blaze of
-crimson glory. In the same breath there was a
-single blast of thunder, one dead enormous shock,
-that seemed to bring the vessel to a stand, and
-thrill through every plank in her, as though she
-had grounded. I was standing close to the rail at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-the moment; the flame rushed close past me; the
-air was scorching hot with it; but, for the beat of a
-pulse only, so far as I was concerned, for I felt
-myself swept backwards, as though lifted off my
-feet, and fell at full length upon my back. I
-immediately sprang to my legs, almost out of my
-mind with bewilderment and terror, but in no wise
-hurt. The mate, grasping the rail with one hand,
-was shading his eyes with the other. The captain,
-followed by all the passengers, came rushing up out
-of the cuddy, whilst such of the crew as were below
-tumbled headlong from the forecastle to see what
-had become of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it? What is it?” shouted the
-skipper, as he ran towards us.</p>
-
-<p>The mate turned his face, but continued to keep
-his eyes covered. “God forgive me!” he exclaimed;
-“I believe I am struck blind.”</p>
-
-<p>In a moment the captain saw how it was, and
-the ship’s doctor, without a word, passed his
-arm through the mate’s, and led the poor fellow
-below.</p>
-
-<p>“How did this happen, Master Rockafellar?”
-exclaimed the captain.</p>
-
-<p>I quickly told him that the mate had gone to
-the side to see if the lightning conductor was all
-right, and had called to one of the ordinary seamen
-to jump into the chains to clear it.</p>
-
-<p>He stepped to the rail to look over and all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-the passengers went with him, shouldering one
-another to obtain
-a view.
-The sailor
-stood upright,
-with one hand
-yet upon the
-coil of wire.
-His right hand,
-from which the
-knife had
-fallen, was outstretched,
-but
-as we looked
-we could see it
-slowly, very
-slowly, sinking
-to his side, as
-the handle of
-a pump will
-fall from a horizontal
-position.
-I could not see
-his face; it was
-turned seawards.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 225px;">
-<img src="images/illus13.jpg" width="225" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“THE KNIFE HAD FALLEN.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“Are you all
-right down
-there, my lad?” sang out the captain.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The young fellow neither answered nor moved.</p>
-
-<p>“He has been stunned!” exclaimed one of the
-passengers.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but wouldn’t he have fallen overboard if
-that were so?” cried another.</p>
-
-<p>The captain shouted to some seamen, who were
-overhanging the bulwarks in the waist:</p>
-
-<p>“Aft here, a couple of you, and help Barry
-inboard.”</p>
-
-<p>It was at that moment the ship slightly rolled
-to port, and the figure of Barry plunged into the
-sea, falling limberly in the most lifelike manner.
-He struck the water, and lay afloat, and then, as
-he went astern, I caught a glimpse of his face.
-It was the colour of chocolate, most horrible to
-view, with nothing of his eyes showing but the
-whites, and his lips distended in a dreadful grin,
-exhibiting his teeth and gums as though his
-mouth had been torn away. One of the ladies
-fainted. A shriek arose from many of them.
-The third mate sprang aft, and I saw him
-standing erect on the taffrail poising a lifebuoy;
-but even whilst he flourished the thing the body
-sank.</p>
-
-<p>Never for an instant was it doubted by any of
-us that he had been struck dead, and that he was
-a corpse when he fell from the chains. It was
-a fate I myself had escaped by the very skin
-of my teeth only! But for my having left my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-knife below, I should at once have dropped over
-the side on being ordered to do so by the mate,
-and there have been killed by the flash that had
-slain the unhappy young sailor man! Yet
-nothing was made of my escape. The captain
-merely said, “Lucky for you, Master Rockafellar,
-that you weren’t in Barry’s place;” whilst the
-midshipmen hardly referred to the matter, except
-to say that the mate had no right to put a man
-to the job of handling a lightning conductor
-with an electric storm hanging over the mast-heads.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE HEARS A BELL.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>There is no sentiment at sea, and if you come
-off with your life no matter how narrowly, that
-is enough for <em>you</em>. You are not expected to
-speak of the close shave, unless with a grin of
-indifference. Let your shipmates believe that
-you view it seriously, and they will set you
-down for a swab, a lady sailor, a longshoreman.
-This arises from an overstrained sense of manliness;
-yet it is true, nevertheless, that no genuine
-seaman will ever care to make anything of an
-accident, though no more than an inch of space
-or a single moment of time stand between him
-and a horrible end. However, that night, when
-I was in my bunk, and my messmates asleep,
-I got upon my knees in my bed, and, with
-tears and sobs, thanked my Heavenly Father
-for His preservation of me. I was very heavy
-when I first laid me down, but I kept myself<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-awake that I might lift up my young heart in
-gratitude, and pray for a continuance of God’s
-mercy; and when I put my head again on the
-bolster, there was just such a sense of peace
-and happiness in me as would have come had
-my mother stood by my bedside and kissed me.</p>
-
-<p>For four days the mate was off duty, and it
-was feared that he would lose his sight, but to the
-general satisfaction of all hands—for he was an
-excellent seaman, a kind-hearted man, and popular
-fore and aft—he made his appearance on deck on
-the morning of the fifth day with a shade over
-his eyes, and by the end of the week his old
-power of vision was perfectly restored to him.</p>
-
-<p>We took the trade wind, and swept down the
-broad Atlantic Ocean, making run after run in
-the twenty-four hours that was almost equal to
-steam, as steam then went. I was now as nimble
-aloft as need be, knew all the ropes of the ship,
-had learnt to make most of the principal knots,
-could polish a length of brass-work with the best
-of them, and, in other ways, was winning recognition
-as being of some use aft, small as I was.
-Mr. Cock was very kind to me, he showed me
-how to use the sextant, and took much trouble in
-explaining points of navigation.</p>
-
-<p>Once during a quiet middle watch—that is,
-from midnight until four in the morning—I was
-standing near the wheel, looking at the compass,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-and thinking how like a live thing it was, as sentient
-as though it were informed by a human spirit,
-marvellously and beautifully faithful as a finger
-pointing the way to the mariner over the trackless
-breast of the deep. I was standing, I say,
-with my little head full of fancies coming into
-it out of the luminous circle of card, when Mr.
-Johnson, coming up, asked me if I would like to
-steer.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, sir,” I answered, “I should, very much.”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re but a little one for that big wheel,”
-said he, and I could see him smiling by the starlight,
-“but the helm don’t kick, and you’re here to
-learn. Give him hold of the spokes, Hunt,”
-said he, addressing the man, “and show him
-what to do;” and so saying, he fell to patrolling
-the deck afresh, softly whistling, as if for more
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>The breeze was abeam, a pleasant air that
-held the sails motionless, and we were quietly
-going along at about four and a half knots. I
-grasped the wheel, and the man stood behind
-me.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus14.jpg" width="500" height="550" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I GRASPED THE WHEEL.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Now, young gen’man,” said he, “you see
-that there mark? We calls that the <i>lubber’s
-point</i>. It’s on a line with the ship’s head, and
-when you know your course, you’ve got to keep
-the p’int of it dead on end with that there mark,
-if so be as she don’t break off, or if so be as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-there ain’t no sea on. But if her head swings,
-then you’ve got to hit what’s called the mean of
-the oscillations of the card. Can you tell how
-her head is now?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sou’, sou’-west,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p>“You look again,” said he.</p>
-
-<p>“South by west, three-quarters west,” said I
-after a prolonged squint at the compass.</p>
-
-<p>“Right!” said he; “now you keep her to
-<em>that</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>She needed no steering, however. At long
-intervals a very small movement of the helm
-sufficed; but my enjoyment was very great. I
-was not yet fourteen, but had I been forty I
-could not have felt more fully a man. I cannot
-express how great was the sense of importance
-which possessed me when I considered that the
-big ship, with her costly freight and the many
-souls who were sleeping under my feet, was
-being directed by my young hands through the
-great enveloping shadow of the night. At first
-I could scarcely realize my power, and asked
-permission of the somewhat hoarse salt who
-leaned upon the grating behind me to move the
-wheel, that I might make sure that the ship
-would respond to the helm in <em>my</em> hands.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” he answered, “I dunno that half a
-p’int off ’ll sinnify for a minute. Try her if you
-like, my lad.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>So I put my small weight upon the spokes,
-and brought the wheel over, till the sailor in
-muffled accents (that the mate might not hear)
-cried “So!” Great was my delight on observing
-the card to swing.</p>
-
-<p>“There, young gen’men,” exclaimed my companion,
-“she’s a willing old mare, ye see. Now
-bring her to her course again.”</p>
-
-<p>I thrust the spokes over the other way, intently
-staring at the card.</p>
-
-<p>“Stead-<em>dee</em>!” came a hoarse whisper from
-behind me: “meet her, my lad, or she’ll be a
-p’int too high afore you know where you are.”</p>
-
-<p>But he had to show me what he meant by
-slightly reversing the helm, as the ship came
-back to her course. I was highly delighted, and
-should have been glad to steer for the remainder
-of the night. However, the mate broke into my
-enjoyment by ordering me to trim the binnacle
-lamp; but always afterwards I was on the look-out
-for an opportunity to take the wheel, my
-experiences creeping cautiously from light airs
-into smart breezes, until it came to my being as
-well qualified as any man on board, having
-regard to my strength, of course, to stand a
-“trick.”</p>
-
-<p>This reference to my first standing at the
-wheel of the <i>Lady Violet</i> recalls to my mind
-another incident of the middle watch a week or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-two later on. We were nearing the equator, and
-had already penetrated that glassy belt of baffling
-airs and sneaking cats-paws extending a
-degree or two on either hand the Line, and
-universally spoken of by sailors as the “Doldrums.”
-I turned out at midnight and went on
-deck. The sky was very full of large rich
-trembling stars, yet they seemed to diffuse no
-light, saving one planet in the south under which
-there lay in the black breast of the deep a little
-icy gleam of wake, or reflection; otherwise the
-ocean stretched as black as thunder to its
-horizon. There was a gentle wind blowing off
-the quarter, just enough to give us steerage way,
-with a long light swell from the westwards, upon
-which the ship rolled as regularly as the tick of
-a clock, her topsail sometimes coming in to the
-mast with a clap that made one think a gun
-had been fired up aloft.</p>
-
-<p>It was a very hot night; now and again there
-was a delicate winking of violet lightning in the
-far north-east. It was about twenty minutes
-after midnight, and I was walking up and down
-the poop to leeward with Kennet, hearing him
-tell of a donkey race that he once rode in, when
-he suddenly came to a stand holding his breath
-as it were, and then exclaimed in a mysterious
-voice, “I thay, Rockafellar, what’th that?”</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean?” I asked; “anything
-to see or listen to?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“To liththen to,” he said.</p>
-
-<p>I strained my ear.</p>
-
-<p>“There!” he cried.</p>
-
-<p>“A bell,” I explained. “There must be a
-ship near us. The sound is off abeam here,” and
-we stepped to the lee rail on the port side of the
-vessel.</p>
-
-<p>The chimes of a bell tolling very slowly, as
-though for a funeral, could be heard with curious
-distinctness, so delicate a vehicle for the transmission
-of sound is smooth water.</p>
-
-<p>“Therth a bell ringing out to port here, thir,”
-called out Kennet to the mate.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Johnson crossed over to our side, and
-listened.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, a bell sure enough,” said he presently,
-after peering earnestly into the gloom in the
-direction of the noise, “but I see nothing of a
-shadow to resemble a ship. Do you, young
-gentlemen? Your eyes should be keener than
-mine.”</p>
-
-<p>We stared our hardest, and answered, “Nothing,
-sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Fetch my binocular glass, Rockafellar.”</p>
-
-<p>He searched the sea narrowly through it, but
-there was no distinguishable smudge of any sort.</p>
-
-<p>Black as the ocean was, there were stars
-hanging low over the horizon, and had there
-been a ship within five miles of us, the eclipse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-of those stars by her sails would have revealed
-her. But the tolling assured us that the bell could
-not be half-a-mile distant. It swung in long
-floating chimes across the water, and I cannot
-express the quality of mystery and awe which
-the strange noise put into the darkness of the
-night. It made one think of a church ashore,
-and a graveyard with its mouldering stones
-glimmering to the starlight.</p>
-
-<p>“Fo’k’sle there!” shouted Mr. Johnson, “do
-you hear the sound of a bell off the sea?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay, ay, sir,” came a growling answer out of
-the deep gloom of the fore part of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you make out anything like a sail?”</p>
-
-<p>There was a pause, and then came the reply,
-“No, sir; there’s nothing in sight.”</p>
-
-<p>“This beats all my going a-fishing,” said the
-mate, going to the rail to listen again.</p>
-
-<p>The watch on deck uncoiled themselves from
-the secret nooks in which they had been dozing,
-and went to the bulwarks, which they overhung
-listening, and then broke into exclamations as
-the ghostly tolling met their ears. Some of
-the fellows who were off duty, disturbed by the
-noise on deck, came out of the forecastle; then
-the captain arrived through the companion-hatch,
-and was presently followed by some passengers,
-so that it seemed as if the bell had woke the
-whole ship up; for here were we with a tolerably<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-crowded deck, and the hour one o’clock in the
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>The growing clearness of the chimes showed
-that we were approaching the bell. The helm
-was shifted, so as to head the vessel in the
-direction of the sound, but very shortly after this
-had been done the wind failed, and a clock-calm
-fell; the long light swell rolled in folds of polished
-ebony, and we lay without an inch of way upon
-us.</p>
-
-<p>The chiming of the bell, that did not now seem
-two cables’ length away from us ahead, broke with
-startling clearness through the dull flapping of the
-canvas as the <i>Lady Violet</i> swayed. Yet there
-was nothing to be seen. Maybe there were now
-some eighty pairs of eyes staring from poop, main-deck,
-and forecastle, but there was nothing between
-us and the stars of the horizon. What
-could it be? I remember that my own little heart
-beat fast when Kennet, in a voice of awe, said
-that he reckoned it was some spirit of the sea
-ringing the ship’s funeral bell, and that he wouldn’t
-be surprised if by this time to-morrow night we
-were all dead men. You could hear a murmur of
-superstitious whispers and talk rolling along the
-line of sailors and steerage passengers at the rail.
-The captain poop-poohed, and I heard him say—</p>
-
-<p>“Pshaw, gentlemen, there are no <i>Flying Dutchmen</i>
-in this age. It is a bell, I grant, and where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-the noise comes from I don’t know, but there
-is nothing in a little conundrum of this kind to
-alarm us.”</p>
-
-<p>But all the same, even to my youthful ears, the
-secret superstitious dismay and wonder which were
-upon him sounded so clear in his voice that one
-did not want to see his face to know how he felt.
-All night long the bell continued to toll just off
-the bow, and not a sigh of wind was to be felt, so
-dead was the calm that had come down. Never
-a man or a boy of us all turned in. I went on to
-the forecastle with others, and followed Kennet on
-to the flying jibboom, at the extremity of which
-long spar we were nearer to the object that produced
-the noise than any person who remained
-inboard was, but there was nothing to be seen,
-though I stared into the quarter whence the
-chimes were issuing in a regular tolling, rhythmic
-as the heave of the swell, until my eyes reeled in
-my head.</p>
-
-<p>The puzzle was not to be solved till daybreak,
-and then, when the swift tropic dawn had brightened
-out the sea from line to line, a cry half of
-laughter, half of indignation, seemed to break from
-all hands, as though they could now scorn themselves
-for the emotions of the night. In fact,
-within a quarter of a mile ahead of us there rose
-and fell upon the swell, that was still polished
-as quicksilver, a small wooden frame of an elliptical<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-form, supported on a somewhat broad platform,
-portions of the planking of which were split,
-as though it had at one time formed a solid body
-which had been wrenched and mutilated by a blow
-of the sea. Under the frame, amidships of it,
-dangled a large ship’s bell, the tongue of which,
-vibrating regularly as the heave of the sea swayed
-the whole fabric, struck the metal sides, and produced
-the dismal and melancholy tolling which
-had kept us awake and filled us with consternation
-throughout the night! Little wonder that the
-keenest eyes amongst us should not have perceived
-it; even by daylight, and at a short distance
-from us, it showed but as a very little object—so
-small indeed, that had it passed us within a biscuit-toss
-in the darkness, it must have slipped by unperceived.</p>
-
-<p>It was no doubt a part of a wreck, and had
-probably belonged to some foreign ship. We
-could afford to laugh at our fears now, and certainly
-we deserved the relief of a little merriment,
-for our superstitious alarm throughout the
-long hours of the darkness had been very considerable.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus15.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“UNDER THE FRAME ... DANGLED A LARGE SHIP’S BELL.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE SEES THE EQUATOR.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>We crossed the equator a little before noon on
-a Tuesday. Though I had learnt at school all
-about the imaginary line that girdles the earth,
-yet I was stupid enough to believe what Kennet
-and the others told me: namely, that if I ascended
-to the foretop with a telescope, and
-pointed it steadily over the starboard cat-head, I
-should obtain a good view of the equator. No
-more was necessary than to ascertain at what hour
-the ship was likely to cross the line, so as to save
-the anxiety of looking for the circle when it might
-still be some distance below the edge of the sea.
-On the morning of this Tuesday Kennet arrived
-on the poop with a telescope in his hand, and said—</p>
-
-<p>“Poole and I are going into the foretop to
-view the equator. It should be in sight now from
-that height, for I heard the chief mate tell Mrs.
-Moore that if this air held we should be crossing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-it about half-past eleven. Will you come along
-with us, Rockafellar?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said I; “I should like to see the
-equator. It will be something to talk about when
-I get home.”</p>
-
-<p>We went forward and got into the fore-shrouds
-on the lee-side, that our going aloft might not
-be noticed from the poop. When we were in
-the top, Poole steadied the glass against the
-topmast rigging, and instantly cried out “Beautiful!”</p>
-
-<p>“Is it in sight?” I exclaimed eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, lovely! oh, divine!” he said in a voice of
-rapture, with his eye glued to the glass. “Kennet,
-my dear, come and take a look.”</p>
-
-<p>He held the glass, and Kennet peered.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha!” shouted the long-nosed youth, drinking
-in a deep breath: “a noble picture, by George!
-I wonder if the captain would let ’uth go athore
-upon it? Wouldn’t a ride on a camel be jolly
-along that ththrait road.”</p>
-
-<p>They were as grave as a pair of judges, saving
-the rapture which they endeavoured to express
-with their countenances.</p>
-
-<p>“I say, Poole, let’s have a look!” said I, thirsting
-with curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Make way for him, Kennet,” cried Poole.</p>
-
-<p>I put my eye to the telescope, which the midshipman
-continued to hold steady against the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-rigging, and sure enough, just a little way over
-the horizon, was the equator, a thin, very well-defined
-line, showing against the light azure of the
-sky like a delicate ruling in ink.</p>
-
-<p>“Thee it?”
-cried Kennet.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said I,
-eagerly staring;
-“but it’s up in the
-air, Poole.”</p>
-
-<p>“Refraction,
-man, refraction,”
-he answered; “it
-always shows like
-that.”</p>
-
-<p>I sent a glance
-with my naked
-eye, and then
-peered again
-through the telescope.</p>
-
-<p>“When shall
-we be able to see
-it without a
-glass?” I asked.</p>
-
-<div class="figleft" style="width: 225px;">
-<img src="images/illus16.jpg" width="225" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I PUT MY EYE TO THE TELESCOPE.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“That’ll depend upon the thtate of the weather,”
-answered Kennet.</p>
-
-<p>“But do we sail <em>under</em> it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, hang it, Rockafellar!” cried Poole, “you’re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-not at school now, little boy! Who’s to answer
-such questions? Let’s down on deck, or the mate’ll
-be singing out.”</p>
-
-<p>As I descended the shrouds I saw some sailors
-at work in the waist, grinning very hard.</p>
-
-<p>“Seen it, sir?” bawled one of them.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“No chance, I hope,” he sung out, “of its fouling
-our mast-heads, is there, sir? Otherwise it’ll sweep
-every spar overboard.”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it looks to be too high up in the air to hurt
-us,” I answered, and trudged aft, followed by a
-half-smothered chorus of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>The mate stood at the head of the poop ladder.</p>
-
-<p>“Where have you been, sir?” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“Up in the foretop, sir,” I answered.</p>
-
-<p>“And what job carried you there, young gentleman?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have been viewing the equator, sir,” I responded.</p>
-
-<p>“Who showed it to you?” said he, with a twinkling
-eye.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Kennet and Mr. Poole, sir,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>He beckoned, with a solemn motion of his forefinger,
-to Kennet, who approached.</p>
-
-<p>“Have you the equator handy about you, young
-gentleman,” he inquired.</p>
-
-<p>Kennet coloured up, and said he had left it in his
-telescope.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“Bring it here, sir,” said the mate, “and let Mr.
-Poole attend, that we may have the benefit of his
-learning.”</p>
-
-<p>The midshipman disappeared, and shortly after
-returned, with the glass under his arm and Poole
-at his heels.</p>
-
-<p>“Now then, young gentlemen,” said the mate,
-“be good enough to show Master Rockafellar the
-equator from the poop point of view.”</p>
-
-<p>Poole looked very sheepish; Kennet hung his
-long nose over one of the middle lenses, which he
-unscrewed.</p>
-
-<p>“Now, let’s have a good geographical explanation,
-if you please, Mr. Poole,” said the mate.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s the line, Rockafellar,” said Poole,
-taking the lens, and pointing to a hair stretched
-across it, secured by a drop of gum at either
-extremity.</p>
-
-<p>It was now my turn to colour up. I had been
-handsomely gulled, and the worst of it was the
-sailors forward knew it.</p>
-
-<p>“Never mind, Master Rockafellar,” said the mate
-kindly; “older birds than you have been caught
-by that kind of chaff. You can take the equator
-below, Mr. Kennet,” and, smothering a laugh between
-his teeth, he walked aft.</p>
-
-<p>I was afterwards told that this was a very
-ancient trick; but, old as it was, a joke at my
-expense was made out of it, fore and aft; since<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-for many days it never came to my passing two
-or more of the sailors but that one would sing
-out—</p>
-
-<p>“Bill, seen the line?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, Jack; where is it?”</p>
-
-<p>“In Rockafellar’s eye, bully!”</p>
-
-<p>However, to my great satisfaction, in due
-course this piece of humour grew stale, and was
-dropped.</p>
-
-<p>I had read, when at home, a good deal about
-the customs practised by sailors on crossing the
-equator, and was not a little disappointed to find
-that the crew went on with their work as unconcernedly
-as though the Line were a thousand
-miles distant. I had been haunted by visions of
-a fine theatrical show, and had secretly longed for
-the hour that was to exhibit Neptune with a
-crown on his head, and a beard of oakum on his
-chin, attended by his wife, his physician, and the
-several courtiers who made up his train of state.
-I had followed, with boyish eagerness, the accounts
-of the ceremony in the works of Marryat and in
-other novels, and was much dejected on being told
-by Mr. Cock that this sort of skylarking was out
-of date.</p>
-
-<p>“And well for you, young gentleman, maybe,”
-said he, “that it is so; for you’re a green hand, do
-you see, and it was always upon the like of you
-that the forecastle tomfoolery was poured out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-thickest. How would you relish, think you, being
-lathered with a mixture of tar and slush and filth;
-next, having your cheeks scraped with jagged bits
-of iron cask-hoops till they bled; then plunged
-backwards into water enough to drown you, and
-left to scramble out like a half-dead rat, amidst
-roars of laughter from the unfeeling Jack? No,
-no; I’m as fond as any man of honest skylarking,
-but there was always too much of Old Nick in the
-temper of the shaving and ducking custom to
-please my humour: and it’s a very good job, I
-think, that the mouldy bit of barbarity was long
-ago flung overboard.”</p>
-
-<p>The ship was often brought to a stand by
-calms during our passage of the equator, and
-these intervals were very monotonous and hard
-to bear.</p>
-
-<p>The midshipmen’s berth was so insufferably hot
-that during my watch below I was unable to
-remain in it, and would come on deck and hang
-about under the break of the poop where the side-wings
-of the saloon, or cuddy, made a recess, and
-where one was kept cool by the fanning of light
-draughts of air sent circling betwixt the rails by
-the swaying of the folds of the hauled-up main-course.</p>
-
-<p>It was at this time that an old gentleman named
-Catesby—a passenger—who had lived in Australia
-for many years, related to some of us lads an extraordinary<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-experience that had befallen him during a
-voyage he made to India when a young man. The
-old East-Indiaman was then afloat; pirates were
-also abundant; there was no steam then to be met
-with at sea, and the excitement and romance of the
-ocean were at their height. The old gentleman
-had known a relative of mine, and took a fancy
-to me, and would frequently bring a handful of
-almonds and raisins or some sweet biscuits from his
-pockets—purloinings from the dessert on the cuddy
-table—and slip the delicacies into my hand with
-a merry manner of cautiously looking around him
-as though he was afraid of the captain seeing him.
-I remember that he delightfully killed several long
-hot hours one day by telling two or three of us
-lads the story of his early adventure. I see him
-now with a cigar drooping between his lips as
-he went on reciting, and recall the stare of admiration
-and expectation we fixed upon his face
-as he proceeded.</p>
-
-<p>The name which he said he always gave to his
-story when he told it to his friends was:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquote">
-
-<p class="center">“LA MULETTE.”</p>
-
-<p>All day long there had been a pleasant breeze
-blowing from abeam; but as the sun sank into the
-west the wind fined into light, delicate curls of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-shadow upon the sea that, at the hour of sundown
-when the great luminary hung poised like a vast
-target of flaming brass upon the ocean-line, turned
-into a surface of molten gold through which there
-ran a light, wide, long-drawn heave of swell,
-regular as a respiration, rhythmic as the sway of
-a cradle to the song of a mother.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was an Indiaman named the <i>Ruby</i>;
-the time long ago, as human life runs, in this
-century nevertheless, when the old traditional
-conditions of the sea-life were yet current—the
-roundabout Indian voyage by way of the Cape—the
-slaver sneaking across the parching parallels of
-the Middle Passage—the piccaroon in the waters
-of the Antilles dodging the fiery sloop whose
-adamantine grin of cannons was rendered horribly
-significant to the eye of the greasy pirate by the
-cross of crimson under whose meteoric folds the
-broadside thundered.</p>
-
-<p>I was a passenger aboard the <i>Ruby</i>, making the
-voyage to India for my pleasure. The fact was,
-being a man of independent means, I was without
-any sort of business to detain me at home. Your
-continental excursion was but a twopenny business
-to me. Here was this huge ball of earth to be circumnavigated
-whilst one was young, with spirits
-rendered water-proof by health. Time enough, I
-thought, to amble about Europe when Australia
-began to look a long way off. So this was my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-third voyage. One I had made to Sydney and
-Melbourne, and a second to China; and now I was
-bound to Bombay with some kind of notion beyond
-of striking into Persia, thence to Arabia, and
-so home by way of the classic shores of the
-Mediterranean.</p>
-
-<p>Well, it happened this 18th of June to be the
-captain’s birthday. His name was Bow; he would
-be fifty-three years old that day he told us, and as
-he had used the sea since the age of thirteen he
-was to be taken as a man who knew his business.
-And a better sailor there never was, and never also
-was there a person who looked less like a sailor.
-If ever you have seen a print of Charles Lamb you
-have had an excellent likeness of Captain Bow
-before you—a pale, spare creature of a somewhat
-Hebraic cast of countenance, with a brow undarkened
-by any stains of weather. His memory
-went far back; he had served as mate in John
-Company’s ships, had known Commodore Dance
-who beat Linois and spoke of him as a perfect
-gentleman; deplored the gradual decay of the
-British sailor, and would talk with a wistful gleam
-in his eye of the grand and generous policy of the
-Leadenhall Street Directors in allowing to their
-captains as much cubic capacity in the ships they
-commanded for their own private use and emolument
-as would furnish out the dimensions of a
-considerable smack.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was his birthday and long ago all of us
-passengers had made up our minds to celebrate the
-occasion by a supper, a dance on deck, and by
-obtaining permission for Jack forward to have a
-ball on condition that we should be allowed to ply
-him with drink enough to keep his heels nimble
-and no more. We were in the Indian Ocean
-climbing north, somewhere upon the longitude of
-Amsterdam Island, so formidable was the easting
-made in the fine old times. The latitude, I think,
-was about 12° south, and desperately hot it was,
-though the sun hung well in the north. Spite of
-awnings and wet swabs the planks of the deck
-seemed to tingle like burning tin through the thin
-soles of your boots. If you put your nose into an
-open skylight the air that rose drove you back with a
-sense of suffocation, so heavily was the fiery stagnation
-of it loaded with smells of food and of the
-cabin interior, though there never was a sweeter
-and breezier cuddy, with its big windows and windsail-heels
-when the thermometer gave the place
-the least chance. But when the sun was nearly
-setting, some sailors quietly came aft and fell to
-work to make a ball-room of the poop. They took
-the bunting out of the signal locker and stretched
-it along the ridge-ropes betwixt the awning and
-the rail until it was like standing inside a huge
-Chinese lantern for colour. They hung the ship’s
-lamps along in rows, roused up the piano from its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-moorings in the cuddy, embellished the tops of the
-hencoops with red baize, and in fifty directions not
-worth the trouble of indicating, so decorated and
-glorified the after-end of the ship that when the
-lamps came to be lighted with streaks of pearl-coloured
-moonshine glittering upon the deck
-betwixt the interstices of the signal flags, and
-movement enough in the tranquil lift of the great
-fabric to the swell to fill the eye with alternations
-of swaying shadow and gleam, this ball-room of
-almond-white plank and canvas ceiling of milky
-softness and walls of radiant banners was more like
-some fairy sea-vision than a reality, especially with
-the glimpse you caught of the vast silent ocean
-solitude outside with its sky of hovering stars and
-a stillness as of a dead world in the atmosphere—such
-a contrast, by heaven! to the revelry within
-the shipboard pavilion, when once the music had
-struck up and the forms of women in white gowns
-fluffing up about them like soapsuds were swimming
-round the decks in the embrace of their
-partners, that a kind of shudder would come into
-you with the mere thinking of the difference
-between the two things.</p>
-
-<p>The music was good; there was a steerage
-passenger, a lady, who played the piano incomparably
-well; then there was a cuddy passenger who
-blew upon the flute very finely indeed. A military
-officer returning to India after a long spell of sick-leave<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-at home had as light, delicate and accomplished
-a hand on the fiddle as any of the best of
-the first violins which I have heard in the crackest
-of orchestras. When the committee of passengers
-had been talking about and arranging for this band
-the chief officer told them that if they thought
-there would not be instruments enough there was a
-man forward, a fellow named Ratt, who played the
-fiddle exquisitely, and, if we wished it, he would
-make one of the instrumentalists. We consented,
-and for several days previous to this night you
-might have heard Ratt rehearsing in the ’tween
-decks, scraping in a way that made the military
-gentleman returning from sick-leave look somewhat
-grave. He spoke of Ratt with a foreboding eye,
-and what he feared happened. The man could
-indeed play, but he had no sense of <em>time</em>. All
-went wrong with the first dance-air that was struck
-up. The tune he made was right enough; but it
-was always darting ahead and bewildering the
-others and finally the band came to a stop, though
-Ratt continued to play several bars, whilst the
-military gentleman in great temper was shouting
-to him to go away. I should have felt sorry for
-the poor fellow had he not been saucy, for he had
-dressed himself with extraordinary care, greased
-every separate hair upon his head as though it had
-been a rope-yarn and had arrived aft with a sailor’s
-expectation of seeing plenty of fun and getting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-plenty of drink. It ended in the chief mate
-grasping him by the collar and tumbling him down
-the poop ladder. I afterwards heard that he went
-forward and in a towering passion threw his fiddle
-overboard, swearing that he would never play upon
-anything again but the Jew’s harp and then only
-for hogs to dance to; there was no longer any
-taste left amongst human beings, he said, for good
-music.</p>
-
-<p>The merriment aft was scarcely affected by this
-instant’s failure. The moment Jack had been
-tumbled off the poop the instrumentalists began
-afresh and the decks were once more filled with
-sliding and revolving couples. I had slightly
-sprained my ankle that morning by kicking
-against a coil of rope and was unable to dance;
-but this was no deprivation to me on a burning
-hot night, with no place for the draughts out
-of the fanning canvas to come through, and the
-smell of blistered paint rising in a lukewarm
-breathing off the sides of the ship as though the
-sun still stood over the main-truck. So squatting
-myself on a hencoop I sat gazing at the merry,
-moving, radiant picture and listening to the music
-and to the laughter of the girls which came back
-from the canvas roof of the poop in echoes soft and
-clear as the notes of the flute.</p>
-
-<p>There were thirty-two cabin passengers in all,
-and we had a poopful, as you will suppose. There<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-were more than a dozen girls, dark and fair, most
-of them pretty enough. There were a few young
-married ladies too and a little mob of dignified
-mammas. The men were of the old-fashioned
-mixture, a few military officers, a sprinkling of
-Civil Service young gentlemen, fierce old men with
-white whiskers and gleaming eyes, with peppercorns
-for livers and with a capacity of putting on
-the tender aspects of Bengal tigers when anything
-went wrong—merchants, judges, planters—I can
-scarce remember now what they were. There
-were lanterns enough to make a bright light, and
-some of them being of coloured glass threw bars of
-ruby and of emerald against the yellow radiance of
-the clear flame and the ivory streaks of moonlight.
-Far aft was the wheel with the brass upon it
-reflecting the lustre till it glowed out against the
-blackness over the stern like a circle of dull fire
-upon the liquid obscurity. Grasping the spokes of
-it was the figure of a seaman, smartly apparelled in
-flowing duck and a grass hat on “nine hairs”; his
-shape, dim in the distance, floated up and down
-against a bright star or two; but there was little
-need for him to keep his eye on the course. The
-calm was dead as dead could be. Half-an-hour
-since the ship’s head was north-west and now it
-was west, and the swell was under the bow with a
-strange melancholy sob of water breaking into the
-pauses betwixt the music and sounding like the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-sigh of a weeping giant somewhere in the blackness
-over the side.</p>
-
-<p>And black the water was spite of the air being
-brimful of the soft silver of the moonlight. On
-either hand the planet’s wake the ocean ran in
-ebony to the indigo of the night sky; but you only
-needed to steal to the break of the poop clear of
-the awning to mark how gloriously the luminary
-was limning the ship as if she had no other magic
-for the deep that night. Every sail was a square of
-pearl, every shroud and back-stay, every brace and
-halliard a rope of silver wire, the yards of ivory,
-with hundreds of stars of delicate splendour
-sparkling and flashing in the dew along the rails.
-The Jacks had rigged up lanterns forward and
-were cutting capers on the forecastle and in the
-waist to some queer music that was coming out of
-the darkness upon the booms. It was strange
-enough to see their whiskered faces revolving in
-the weak, illusive light, to witness apparitions of
-knobs and warts and wrinkles storm-darkened to
-the hue of the shell of a walnut showing out for an
-instant to the glare of a lantern. There was great
-laughter that way and a jovial growling of voices.
-I believe the sailors had got, with the captain’s
-leave, some of the women of the steerage
-passengers to dance with, and their happiness was
-very great; for give Jack a fiddle, and a girl to
-twirl to the sawing of it, and a drink of rum and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-water to fill up the short measures of his breathing-times,
-and he will ask for no other paradise
-ashore or afloat.</p>
-
-<p>Much was made of old Captain Bow. He
-looked as if he had taken all day to dress himself,
-so skewered was he in a garb of the old school;
-tail-coat, a frill, a collar half way the height of the
-back of his head, buff waistcoat, tight pantaloons;
-shoes like pumps, and a heavy ground-tackle of
-seals dangling from the rim of his vest.</p>
-
-<p>“Captain shows nobly to-night, sir,” said the
-chief mate to me.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay!” said I, “little enough of the salt in <em>him</em>
-you’d think.”</p>
-
-<p>“He dances well enough for an old shellback,”
-said the mate. “A man needs a ship for a
-dancing-master to teach him how to spread his
-toes as the Captain does.”</p>
-
-<p>“Aren’t you dancing?” I asked.</p>
-
-<p>“No, it’s my watch on deck. I’ve got the ship
-to look after. But it’s little watching she wants.
-Oh, blow, my sweet breeze, blow!” he whispered,
-with a pensive cock of his eye at the sea through a
-space between the flags. “It isn’t to be the only
-birthday aboard us, I allow, Mr. Catesby. If the
-cockroaches below aren’t celebrating some festival
-of their own, then are we manned with marines,
-sir. Phew! the Hooghley of a dead night with
-bodies foul of the cable and the gangway ladder is<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>
-a joke to this. What’s become of the wind?
-What’s become of the wind?” and he stole away
-to the wheel softly whistling between his teeth.</p>
-
-<p>It was too sultry to eat; the very drink you got
-was so warm that you swallowed it only for thirst,
-and put down the glass with a sort of loathing.
-When I took a peep through the after skylight and
-saw the tables laid out for supper for the special
-birthday feast that was to be eaten, my tongue did
-cleave to the roof of my mouth, and I felt as if I
-should never be able to eat another blessed morsel
-of food this side the grave. Every dish looked
-exhausted with perspiration; the hams were
-melting, the fowls shone like varnish, much that
-had come solid to the table was now fluid. However
-I was one of the committee and it would not
-do for me to be absent, so when the bell rang to
-announce supper and the music stopped, I stepped
-up to the wife of a colonel and, giving her my arm,
-fell in with the procession and entered the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>It is a picture I need but close my eyes to
-vividly witness anew. There were two tables, one
-athwartships well aft, and the other running pretty
-nearly down the whole length of the cabin. The
-interior was lighted with elegant silver lamps, and
-along the length of the ceiling there was a beautiful
-embellishment of ferns, goldfish in globes, and so
-forth. On either hand went a range of berths, the
-bulkheads richly inlaid, the panels hand-painted,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-and there was many another little touch full of
-grace and taste. Far aft, at the centre of the athwartship
-table—his quaint, old-fashioned figure
-showing like a cameo upon the dull ground of the
-bulkhead behind him—sat the captain, talking to
-right and left, with a dry, kind smile lying wrinkled
-upon his face like the meshes of a South African
-spider’s web. On either side of him went a row
-of passengers, down to the foot of the table
-that was over against the cuddy front. The
-ladies’ dresses were handsome; we were an assemblage
-of rich folks for the most part, and had
-thoroughly overhauled our wardrobes that we
-might do fitting honour to this very interesting
-occasion. Jewels sparkled in white ears, and upon
-white wrists and fingers. We were not lacking
-in turbans and feathers, in thick gold chains,
-immense brooches bearing the heads of the living
-or of the departed. There was much popping of
-champagne corks, much rushing about of stewards,
-much laughter, and a busy undertone of talk. The
-memory of the picture dwells in me with an odd
-pertinacity. I had shared in more than one festive
-scene on board ship in my time, but in none do I
-recall the significance which the framework of vast
-ocean solitude outside, of the deep mystery of the
-wide moonlit shadow, and the oppressive peace of
-the tropical night, communicated to this one. It
-might have been the number of the folks assembled;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-their gay, and in many instances, even
-splendid attire, the essentially shore-going qualities
-of the merry-making, clearly defining themselves
-in the heart of the deep—like the sight of a house
-in a flood. In fact the scene completely dominated
-all shipboard habits, and the thoughts which grew
-out of them. It made every heave of the fabric
-upon the weak, black, invisible swell a sort of
-wonder as though some novel element were introduced;
-the familiar creak of a bulkhead, the faint
-jar of the rudder upon its post caused one to start
-as one would to such things ashore.</p>
-
-<p>“You are refusing everything the stewards offer
-you, Mr. Catesby,” said the colonel’s lady by my
-side. “You are in love.”</p>
-
-<p>“I am in a fever, madam,” I replied: “the
-tropics usually affect me as a profound passion.
-In fact I feel as if I could drown myself.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why make a voyage to India, then, Mr.
-Catesby? Is there not the North-West Passage
-left to explore, with the great Arctic Circle to keep
-ye cool?”</p>
-
-<p>“Madam,” said I, “I perceive your husband in
-the act of rising to make a speech.”</p>
-
-<p>A short, fiery-faced Irishman, with whiskers like
-silver wires projecting cat-like from his cheeks,
-stood up to propose the captain’s health. Glasses
-were filled, and the little colonel blazed away.
-When he had made an end (old Bow steadfastly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-watching him all the while with a smile of mingled
-incredulity and delight), the skipper’s health was
-drunk with cheers and to the song of “He’s a jolly
-good fellow,” the air of which was caught up by
-the ship’s company forward, and re-echoed to the
-cuddy with hurricane lungs from the forecastle.
-Then old Bow rose straight and unbending in his
-tightly-buttoned coat on to his thin shanks; but at
-that moment there was a movement of a little
-group of the stewards at my end of the table; the
-colonel’s lady by my side was whispering with
-animation to what was in those days called a
-“griffin,” a handsome young fellow seated on her
-left; and being half dead with heat, and in no
-temper to listen to old Bow, whose preliminary
-coughs and slow gaze around the table threatened
-a very heavy bestowal of tediousness, I slipped off
-my chair, sneaked through the jumble of stewards,
-and in a moment was ascending the poop ladder,
-breathing with delight the night atmosphere of the
-sea, that tasted cold as a draught of mountain
-water after the hot, food-flavoured air of the cuddy.</p>
-
-<p>Forward the sailors had come to a stand, and
-were talking, smoking, drinking, and eating by the
-will-of-the-wisp glare of the few lanterns which
-hung that way. There was nobody aft, saving the
-helmsman and the second officer, who had turned
-out to relieve the chief mate that he might join the
-supper party. He lay over the rail abreast of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-wheel, and I could hear him quietly singing. The
-lanterns burnt brightly; against the brilliant
-atmospheric haze of moonshine to larboard—<em>larboard</em>
-was then the word—the bunting which
-walled the poop glistened like oiled paper. The
-monotonous voice of old Bow was still returning
-thanks; again and again his deep sea notes
-were broken by loud cheers. The life below,
-the speechifying and the huzzaing there, the brightness
-of the light, the frequent chink of glasses, put
-a wild sort of mocking look into the emptiness of
-this deck with its lanterns swaying to the roll of the
-ship, and the motionless figure of the steersman
-showing unreal, like some image of the fancy, down
-at the end of the vessel, through the vista of
-bunting and kaleidoscopic light and white awning
-framing a star-studded square of dark ether over
-the taffrail.</p>
-
-<p>Yet I still wanted air. The poop was smothered
-up with flags and canvas; the cross-jack was furled,
-spanker brailed up, and the mainsail hung from its
-yard in festoons to the grip of its gear. There was
-no wing of canvas therefore near the deck to fan a
-draught along, and so it came into my head to
-jump aloft and see what sort of coolness of dew and
-dusk were to be had in the maintop. I got on to
-the rail and laid hold of the main shrouds, and
-leisurely travelled up the ratlines. Methought it
-was as good as climbing a hill for the change of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>
-temperature the ascent gave me. The iron of the
-futtock shrouds went through and through me in a
-delicious chill, and with the smallest possible effort
-I swung myself over the rim of the top and stood
-upon the platform, rapturously drinking in the
-gushings of air which came in little gusts to my
-face out of the pendulum beat of the great maintopsail
-against the mast to the tender swing of the
-tall fabric.</p>
-
-<p>If ever you need to know what a deep sense of
-loneliness is like, go aloft in a dead calm when the
-shadow of the night lies heavy upon the breathless
-ocean, and from the altitude of top, cross-tree or
-yard, look down and around you! The spirit of life
-is always strong in the breeze or in the gale of
-wind. There are voices in the rigging: there is
-the organ note of the billow flung foaming from the
-ship’s side; there is a tingling vitality in the long
-floating rushes of the fabric bursting through one
-head of yeast into another. All this is company,
-along with the spirit shapes of the loose scud flying
-wild, or the sociable procession of large, slow
-clouds. But up aloft in such a clock-calm as lay
-upon the deep that night you are <em>alone</em>! and the
-lonelier for the distant sounds which rise from the
-decks—the dim laugh, the faint call, liker to the
-memories of such thing than the reality.</p>
-
-<p>The body of the ship lay thin and long far
-beneath me like a black plank, pallid aft with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-spread of awning, with an oblong haze of light in
-the main hatch where the grating was lifted, and
-dots of weak flame from the lanterns forward,
-resembling bulbous corposants hovering about the
-forecastle rail. The ship’s hull, by the broad raining
-of the moonshine, was complexioned to the
-aspect of the leaf of the silver tree when lighted
-by the stars. Yet as she slightly rolled, breaking
-the black water from her side into ripples, you saw
-the phosphor starting and winking in the ebony
-profound there, like the reflection of sheet-lightning.
-Exquisitely lulling was the tender
-pinion-like flapping of the light, moonlit canvas,
-soaring spire-fashion in ivory spaces high above my
-head, with the pattering of dew falling from the
-cloths as they swayed. A sound of thin cheering
-from the cuddy floated to me; presently a fiddle
-struck up somewhere forwards, and a manly voice
-began <i>Tom Bowline</i>. Now, thought I, if they
-would only strip the poop of its awning, that I
-might see them dancing by the lantern light when
-supper was over, and they had fallen to caper-cutting
-afresh! What a scene of pigmy revelry
-<em>then</em>! What a vision of Lilliputian enjoyment!</p>
-
-<p>I seated myself Lascar-fashion and lighted a
-cigar. Could I have distinguished the figure of a
-midshipman below I should have hailed him, and
-sent down the end of a line for a draught of seltzer
-and brandy. But the repose up here, the dewy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-coolness, the royal solitude of the still, majestic
-night, with sentinel stars drowsily winking along
-the sea-line, and the white planet of the moon
-sailing northwards into the west amid the wide
-eclipse of its own soft silver glory, were all that my
-fevered being could pray for.</p>
-
-<p>It is as likely as not that after a little I was
-nodding somewhat drowsily. I recollect that my
-cigar went out, and that on sucking at it and finding
-it out I would not be at the trouble of lighting it
-again. I say I might have been half-asleep sitting,
-still Lascar-fashion, with my back against the head
-of the lower-mast, when on a sudden, something—soft,
-indeed, but amazingly heavy—struck me full
-on the face and chest, and fell upon my knees
-where it lay like a small feather-bed. But for my
-back being supported, I must have been stretched
-at full length and, for all I know, knocked clean
-overboard, or, worse still, hurled headlong to the
-deck.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
-<img src="images/illus17.jpg" width="400" height="300" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p>I was so confounded by the shock and the blow
-that for some moments I sat goggling the object,
-that lay as lead upon my knees, like a fool. I then
-threw it from me, and stood up. It fell where a
-slant of moonshine lay clear upon the side of the
-top, and I perceived that it was a big sea-bird, as
-large as a noddy, white as snow saving the margin
-of its wings, which were of a velvet black. It had
-a long, curved beak, and I gathered from the look<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-of one of its pinions, which overlaid the body as
-though broken, that its width of wing must have
-come proportionately very near to that of the
-albatross. I could see by the moonshine that the
-eyes were closing by the slow drawing down of a
-white skin. The creature did not stir. I stood
-staring at it full five minutes, gripping the topmast
-rigging to provide against its rolling me out of the
-top should it rise suddenly and strike out with its
-wings, but there was no stir of life in it. It was
-then that I caught sight of something which
-seemed to glitter in the thick down upon its breast
-like a dewdrop on thistledown. It was a little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-square case of white metal, apparently a tobacco-box,
-secured to the bird’s neck. By this time
-the passengers had come up from supper, and
-were dancing again on the poop. I could see
-nothing for the awning, but the music was audible
-enough, and I could also catch the sliding sounds
-of feet travelling over the hard planks, and the gay
-laughter of hearts warmed by several toasts. The
-Jacks were also at work forward. An occasional
-note of tipsy merriment, I would think, rose up
-from that part of the ship; but there was no lack
-of earnestness in the toe and heeling there; the
-slap of the sailors’ feet upon the decks sounded like
-the clapping of hands; and I could just catch a
-glimpse of the figure of the fiddler in the obscurity
-which overlaid the booms quivering and swaying
-as he sawed, as though the noise he made was
-driving him crazy.</p>
-
-<p>I seized the big bird by the legs and found its
-weight by no means so considerable as I should
-have supposed from the blow it dealt me. So,
-tightly binding its webbed feet with my pocket-handkerchief,
-that they might serve me as a handle,
-I dropped with this strange, dead sea-messenger
-through the wide square of the lubber’s hole into
-the main shrouds, and leisurely descended. The
-chief mate stood at the head of the starboard poop
-ladder as I reached the rail.</p>
-
-<p>“Hillo!” he called out, “good sport there, Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-Catesby. What star have you been shooting over
-pray? And what <em>is</em> it, may I ask? <em>turkey?</em>”</p>
-
-<p>A shout of this sort was enough to bring everybody
-running to look. The music ceased, the
-dancing abruptly stopped. In a moment I was
-surrounded by a crowd of ladies and gentlemen
-shoving and exclaiming as they gathered about
-the skylight upon which I had laid the big sea-fowl.</p>
-
-<p>“What is it, Mr. Catesby? My stars! a handsome
-bird surely,” exclaimed Captain Bow.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Captain,” cried a young lady, “is the
-beautiful creature dead really?”</p>
-
-<p>“See!” shouted a military man, “the creature’s
-breast is decorated with a crucifix. No, damme,
-it’s a trick of the light. What is it, though?”</p>
-
-<p>“A silver pouncebox, I declare,” exclaimed a
-tall, stout lady, with a knowing nod of the feather
-in her head.</p>
-
-<p>“A sailor’s nickel tobacco-box more like, ma’am,”
-observed the mate, “with some castaway’s writing
-inside, or that bird’s a crocodile.”</p>
-
-<p>“Let’s have the story of the thing, Mr. Catesby,”
-said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>I briefly stated that I had ascended to the
-maintop to breathe the cool air up there and that
-whilst I was nodding the bird had dashed against
-me and fallen dead across my knees.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, how dreadful!” “Oh how interesting!”<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-“Oh, I wonder the fright didn’t make you faint,
-Mr. Catesby!” and so on, and so on from the
-young ladies.</p>
-
-<p>“Shall I cast the seizing of the box adrift, sir?”
-said the mate.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” responded the captain.</p>
-
-<p>The officer with his knife severed the laniard of
-sennit and made to lift the lid of the box. But this
-proved a long job, inexpressibly vexatious to the
-thirsty expectations of the onlookers owing to the
-lid fitting so tightly as to resist, as though soldered,
-the blade of the knife. When opened at last, there
-was disclosed, sure enough, inside, a piece of paper
-folded, apparently a leaf from a logbook.</p>
-
-<p>“Bring a lantern, some one,” roared the mate.</p>
-
-<p>Some one held a light close to the officer, who
-exclaimed, after opening the sheet and gazing at it
-a little, “Any lady or gentleman here understand
-Spanish?”</p>
-
-<p>“I do,” exclaimed the handsome young “griffin”
-who had sat next to the colonel’s lady at table.</p>
-
-<p>“Will you kindly translate this then?” said the
-mate, handing him the letter.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s French,” said the young fellow; “no
-matter; I can read French.”</p>
-
-<p>He ran his eye over the page, coughed, and read
-aloud as follows:—</p>
-
-<p>“<i>La Mulette</i>, June 12th, 18—. This brig was
-dismasted in a hurricane ten days since. Three of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-us survive. At the time of our destruction our
-latitude was 8° south, and longitude 81° 10’ east.
-Should this missive fall into the hands of any
-master or mate of a ship he is implored in the name
-of God and of the Holy Virgin to search for and to
-succour us. He will be richly——”</p>
-
-<p>“Last words illegible,” said the young fellow,
-holding the paper close to his nose.</p>
-
-<p>“Humph!” exclaimed Captain Bow. He
-hummed over the latitude and longitude, and
-addressing the mate said, “The wreck should not
-be far off, Mr. Pike.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, captain, <em>will</em> you search for the poor, poor
-creatures?” cried one of the younger of the married
-ladies.</p>
-
-<p>“Twelfth of June the date is, hey?” said the
-captain, “and this is the eighteenth. In six days
-the deluge, madam—at sea. Well, we shall keep
-a bright look-out, I promise you. D’ye want to
-keep the bird, Mr. Catesby?”</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said I, “the box will suffice as a memorial.”</p>
-
-<p>“Then, Mr. Pike, let it be hove overboard,” said
-the captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Strike up ‘<i>Tom Bowline</i>’ for its interment,”
-cried the little Irish Colonel, “‘<i>Faithful below he
-did his duty</i>’ you know. Nearly knocked poor
-Catesby overboard, though. What is it, a Booby?”</p>
-
-<p>“How <em>can</em> ye be so rude, Desmond?” said his
-wife.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“’Tis the bird I mane, my love,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>The girls would not let it be hove overboard for
-a good bit. They hung over the snow-white
-creature caressing its delicate down and strong
-feathers with fingers whose jewels glittered upon
-the plumage like raindrops in moonlight. However
-ere long the music started anew. The people that
-still hovered about the bird drew off, and the
-mate sneaking the noble creature to the side quietly
-let it fall.</p>
-
-<p>Well, next day, I promise you, this incident of
-the bird gave us plenty to talk about. In fact it
-even swamped the memory of the dance and the
-supper, and again and again you would see one or
-another of the ladies sending a wistful glance round
-the sea-line, in search of the dismasted brig—as
-often looking astern as ahead, whilst one or two of
-the young fellows amongst us crept very gingerly
-aloft, holding on as they went as though they
-would squeeze all the tar out of the shrouds, just to
-make sure that there was nothing in sight. However,
-there was a professional look-out kept forward.
-I heard the captain give directions to the officer of
-the watch to send a man on to the fore-royal yard
-from time to time to report if there was anything
-in view; but as to altering his course with the
-chance of picking up the Frenchman, <em>that</em> was not
-to be expected in old Bow, whose business was to
-get to Bombay as fast as the wind would blow him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-along; and indeed, seeing that the <i>Ruby</i> had
-already been hard upon four months from the river
-Thames, you will suppose that, concerned as we
-might all feel about the fate of <i>La Mulette</i>, the
-softest-hearted amongst us would have been loth to
-lose even a day in a search that was tolerably
-certain to prove fruitless—as the mate proved to a
-group of us whilst he stood pointing out our
-situation and the supposed position of the brig
-upon a chart of the Indian Ocean lying open upon
-the skylight.</p>
-
-<p>We got no wind till daybreak of the morning
-following the dance, and then a pleasant air came
-along out of south-south-east, which enabled the
-<i>Ruby</i> to expand her stunsails and she went floating
-over the long sapphire swells of the fervid ocean
-under an overhanging cloud of cloths which
-whitened the water to starboard of her, till it looked
-like a sheet of quicksilver draining there. This
-breeze held and shoved the ponderous bows of the
-Indiaman through it at the rate of some four or five
-miles in the hour. So we jogged along, till it came
-to the fourth day from the date of my adventure
-in the maintop. The fiery breeze had by this time
-crept round to off the starboard bow, and the ship
-was sailing along with her yards as fore and aft as
-they would lie. It was a little before the hour of
-noon. The captain and mates were ogling the sun
-through their sextants on either hand the poop, for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-the luminary hung pretty nearly over the royal
-truck with a wake of flaming gold under him
-broadening to our cutwater, so that the <i>Ruby</i> looked
-to be stemming some burning river of glory flowing
-through a strange province of dark blue land.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly high aloft from off the maintop-gallant-yard—whose
-arm was jockeyed by the figure of a
-sailor doing something with the clew of the royal—came
-a clear, distant cry of “Sail ho!” and I saw
-the man levelling his marline-spike at an object
-visible to him a little to the right of the flying-jibboom
-end.</p>
-
-<p>“Aloft there!” bawled the mate, putting his
-hand to the side of his mouth, “how does she show,
-my lad?”</p>
-
-<p>“’Tis something black, sir,” cried the man, making
-a binocular glass of his fists. “’Tis well to the
-starboard of the dazzle upon the water. It is too
-blinding that way to make sure.”</p>
-
-<p>“Something black!” shouted the little colonel,
-whose Christian name was Desmond, “<i>La Mulette</i>,
-Captain Bow, without doubt. Anybody feel inclined
-to bet?”</p>
-
-<p>Some wagering followed, whilst I stepped below
-for a telescope of my own, and then went forward
-and got into the fore-rigging, with the glass slung
-over my shoulders. There was no need to ascend
-above the top. I levelled the telescope when I
-gained that platform, and instantly saw the object<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-with a handbreadth of the gleam of the blue sea
-past her, showing that she was well this side of the
-horizon from the elevation of the foremast, and
-that she would be visible from the poop in a little
-while. There was but a very light swell on; the
-spires of the <i>Ruby</i> floated steadily through the blue
-atmosphere. I had no difficulty in commanding
-the object therefore, and the powerful lenses of my
-telescope brought her close. It was a wreck, a
-sheer hulk indeed, and without a shadow of a doubt
-<i>La Mulette</i>. Her masts were gone, though a
-fragment of bowsprit remained. Whole lengths of
-her bulwark were apparently crushed flat to the
-covering-board; nevertheless, the hulk preserved a
-sort of rakish aspect, a piratical sheer of long, low
-side. “Let her prove what she will,” thought I,
-“I am a Dutchman if yonder craft hasn’t carried a
-bitter and poisonous sting in her head and tail in
-her time.”</p>
-
-<p>They had “made” eight bells on the poop, and
-the mellow chimes were sounding upon the quarter-deck,
-and echoing in the silent squares of canvas,
-as I descended the rigging and made my way aft.
-I told Captain Bow that the craft ahead was a hulk,
-and without doubt <i>La Mulette</i>; on hearing which
-the passengers went in a rush to the side and stood
-staring as though the object was close aboard, some
-of them pointing and swearing they could see her,
-though at the rate at which we were shoving through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-it she was a fair hour and a half yet behind the
-horizon from the altitude of the poop.</p>
-
-<p>However, when I came up from tiffin some little
-while before two o’clock, the hulk lay bare upon the
-sea over the starboard cat-head, with a light like the
-flash of a gun breaking from her wet black side to
-the languid roll of her sunwards, and a crowd of
-steerage-passengers and sailors forward staring at
-her. At any time a wreck at sea, washing about in
-the heart of some great ocean solitude, will appeal
-with solemn significance to the eye of one sailing
-past it. What dreadful tragedy has she been the
-little theatre of? you wonder. You speculate upon
-the human anguish she memorializes, upon the
-dark and scaring horrors her shape <em>may</em> entomb.
-But it is a sight to appeal with added force to people
-who have been at sea for many long weeks, without
-so much as the glimpse of a sail for days at a time
-to break the enormous monotony of the ocean, or
-to furnish a fugitive human interest to the ever-receding
-sea-line—that most mocking of all earthly
-limitations.</p>
-
-<p>“Anybody see any signs of life aboard of her?”
-asked Captain Bow. “My sight is not what it was.”</p>
-
-<p>There were many sharp young eyes amongst us,
-and some powerful glasses; but there was nothing
-living to be seen. She looked to have been a vessel
-of about two hundred and fifty tons. Her copper
-sheathing rose to the bends, and was fresh and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-bright. She had apparently been pierced for ten
-guns, but this could be only conjecture, seeing that
-her bulwarks had been torn to pieces by the fall of
-her spars. There was a length of topmast, or what-not,
-riding by its gear alongside of her, with a raffle
-of canvas and running rigging littering the fore-part.
-Her wheel stood and her rudder seemed sound.
-She was flush-decked, but all erections such as
-caboose, companion, and so forth were gone. Yet
-she sat with something of buoyancy on the water,
-and her rolling was without the stupefaction you
-notice in hulls gradually filling. As her stern lifted,
-the words, <i>La Mulette, Havre</i>, rose in long, white
-letters upon the counter, with a sort of ghastliness in
-the blank stare of them by contrast with the delicate
-blue of the sea. Old Bow hailed her loudly; then
-the mate roared to her with the voice of a bull, but
-to no purpose. I said to the second mate, who stood
-alongside of me at the rail—</p>
-
-<p>“Yonder to be sure is the ship from which the
-sea-bird brought the letter the other night. There
-were three living men aboard her a few days ago.
-Are they below, think you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Been taken off, sir, I expect,” he answered.
-“Or dead of hunger, or thirst, and lying corpses in
-the cabin. Or maybe they drowned themselves.
-Mr. Pike’s hail was something to bring a dying man
-out of his bunk to see what made it. No, sir,
-yonder’s an abandoned craft or a coffin anyway.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Some ladies standing near overheard this, and at
-once went to work to induce the captain to bring
-the <i>Ruby</i> to a stand, and send a boat. I listened
-to them entreating him; he shook his head good-naturedly,
-with a glance into the north-western
-quarter of the sea. “Oh, but, dear captain,” the
-ladies reasoned, “after that letter, you know, as
-though you were appointed by Providence to receive
-it—surely, surely, you will not sail away from that
-wreck without making quite sure there is nobody on
-board her! Only conceive that the three poor
-creatures may be dying in the cabin, that they may
-have heard your cry and Mr. Pike’s, that they may
-be able even to <em>see</em> this ship through a porthole, and
-yet be too weak to crawl on deck to show themselves!”
-What followed was lost to me by the
-second mate beginning to talk:—</p>
-
-<p>“She’ll have been a French privateer,” he said to
-me. “What a superb run, sir! Something in her
-heyday not to be easily shaken of a merchantman’s
-skirts. Of course she’ll have thrown all her guns
-overboard in the hurricane. Does the capt’n mean
-to overhaul her, I wonder,” he continued, throwing
-a look aloft. “He’ll have to bear a hand and make
-up his mind or we shall be losing her anon in
-yonder thickness. Mark the depression in the
-ocean line nor’-west, sir. D’ye notice the swell
-gathers weight too, and there’s a dustiness in the
-face of the sky that way that’s better than a hint<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-that the Bay of Bengal is not so many leagues
-distant ahead as it was a month ago.”</p>
-
-<p>He was rattling on in this fashion, more like one
-thinking aloud than talking to a companion, when
-there was a sudden clapping of hands among the
-ladies who surrounded the captain, and at the same
-moment I heard him tell the mate to swing the
-topsail to the mast and get one of the starboard
-quarter-boats manned. All was then bustle for a
-few minutes, the mate bawling, the sailors singing
-out at the ropes, men manœuvring with the boats’
-gripes and falls. I went up to the captain.</p>
-
-<p>“Who has charge of the boat?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Second mate,” he answered.</p>
-
-<p>“May I accompany him, captain?”</p>
-
-<p>“Certainly, Mr. Catesby. I will only ask
-you, should you board her, to look alive. The
-weather shows a rather suspicious front down there,”
-indicating with a nod of his head the quarter to
-which the second mate had called my attention.
-“But, bless my heart! there’ll be nothing to see,
-nothing worth sending for. It is only to please the
-ladies, you know.”</p>
-
-<p>I sprang into the boat as she swang at the davits.</p>
-
-<p>It was a trip, a treat, a pleasant break for me;
-besides, my being the first to receive the letter
-gave me a kind of title as it were to the adventure.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s room for others,” said the second mate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-standing erect in the stern sheets with a wistful
-glance at a knot of pretty faces at the rail.</p>
-
-<p>There was no response from male or female.
-“Lower away now lively, lads,” cried the mate.
-Down sank the boat, the blocks were dexterously
-unhooked, out flashed the oars and away we went.</p>
-
-<p>I couldn’t have guessed what weight there was in
-this ocean swell till I felt the volume of it from the
-low seat of the ship’s quarter-boat. The <i>Ruby</i>
-looked to be rolling on it as heavily again as she
-seemed to have been when I was on her deck, and
-the beat of her canvas against the mast rang in
-volleys through the air like the explosion of
-batteries up there. The wreck came and went as
-we sank and soared, and I caught the second mate
-eying her somewhat anxiously as though theorizing
-to himself upon the safest dodge to board her.
-She was farther off than I should have deemed
-possible, so deceptive is distance at sea, and though
-the five seamen pulled cheerily, the job of measuring
-the interval between the two craft, what with the
-voluminous heave of the swell running at us, and
-what with the roasting sunshine that lay like a
-sense of paralysis in one’s back bone, proved very
-tedious to my impatience to come at the hulk
-and explore her. As we swept round under her
-stern, supposing that her starboard side would be
-clear of wreckage, I glanced at the <i>Ruby</i> and saw
-that they were clewing up her royals, and hauling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-down her flying jib with hands on the cross-jack-yard
-rolling the sail up. There were spars and a
-litter of trailing gear on either side the hulk; every
-roll was a spiteful snapping at the ropes with a
-drag of the floating sticks which sometimes made
-the water foam.</p>
-
-<p>“We must board her astern,” said the mate
-“and stand by for a handsome dip of the counter.”</p>
-
-<p>Our approach was very cautious; indeed it was
-necessary to manœuvre very gingerly indeed. We
-got on to the quarter, and watching his chance the
-bow oarsman cleverly sprang through the crushed
-rail as the deck buoyantly swang down to the
-heave of the boat, carrying the end of the painter
-with him; the mate followed, and I after a tolerably
-long interval, wanting perhaps the nerve and
-certainly the practised limbs of the sailors. In
-truth I may as well say here that I should have
-stuck to the boat and waited for the mate’s report
-but for the dislike of being laughed at when I
-returned. I very well knew I should not be spared,
-least of all by those amongst the passengers who
-would have forfeited fifty pounds rather than
-quitted the ship.</p>
-
-<p>The hull had a desperately wrecked look inboards
-with the mess of ropes, staves, jagged ends, crushed
-rails, rents manifesting the fury of the hurricane.
-I swept a glance along in expectation of beholding
-a dead body, or, if you will, some scarcely living<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>
-though yet breathing man; but nothing of the kind
-was to be seen. The mate hung his head over the
-companion hatch from which the cover had been
-clean razed and peered down, then shouted and
-listened. But no other sound followed than the
-long moan and huge washing sob of the swell
-brimming to the wash-streak with a dim sort of
-choking, gurgling noise as of water streaming from
-side to side in the hold.</p>
-
-<p>“Hardly worth while exploring those moist
-bowels, I think, sir,” said the mate.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, yes,” said I, “if we don’t take a peep under
-deck what will there be to tell? This is a quest of
-the ladies’ making, remember, and it must be a
-complete thing or ‘stand by’ as you sailors say.”</p>
-
-<p>“Right you are, sir,” said he, “and so here goes,”
-and with that he put his foot upon the companion
-ladder and dropped into the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>I followed at his heels, and both of us came to a
-stand at the bottom of the steps whilst we stared
-round. There was plenty of light to see by
-streaming down through the skylight aperture and
-the hatch. The cabin was a plain, snuff-coloured
-room with a few sleeping berths running forward,
-a rough table somewhat hacked and cut about as
-if with the slicing of tobacco, a row of lockers on
-either hand, a stand of firearms right aft and some
-twenty cutlasses curiously stowed in a sort of
-brackets under the ceiling or upper deck. Hot as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-it was above, the cabin struck chill as though it
-were an old well. Indeed you saw that it had been
-soused over and over again by the seas which had
-swept the vessel, and there was a briny, seaweedy
-flavour in the atmosphere of it that made you think
-of a cave deep down in a sea-fronting cliff. We
-looked into the sleeping berths going forward to
-where a moveable bulkhead stopped the road. It
-was not easy to walk; the increasing weight of the
-swell was defined by the heavy though comparatively
-buoyant rolling of the hull. The deck
-went in slopes like the roof of a house from side to
-side with now and again an ugly jerk that more
-than once came near to throwing me when a
-sudden yawn forced the dismasted fabric into a
-swift recovery.</p>
-
-<p>“There’s nobody aft here, anyway,” said the
-mate; “no use troubling ourselves to look for her
-papers, I think, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“No; but this is only one end of the ship,” I answered.
-“There may be a discovery to make
-forward. Can’t we unship that bulkhead there,
-and so get into the ’tween-decks?”</p>
-
-<p>We laid hold of the frame, and after peering a
-bit, for this part of the cabin lay in gloom, we
-found that it stood in grooves, and without much
-trouble we slided it open, and the interior to as far
-as a bulkhead that walled off a bit of forecastle lay
-clear before us in the daylight shining through the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-main-hatch. Here were a number of hammocks
-dangling from the deck, and some score or more
-of seamen’s chests and bags in heaps, some of them
-split open, with quantities of rough wearing apparel
-scattered about, in so much that I never could have
-imagined a scene of wilder disorder, nor one more
-suggestive of hurry and panical consternation and
-delirious headlong behaviour.</p>
-
-<p>“Nobody here, sir,” said the mate.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” I answered; “I suppose her people left
-her in their boats, and that one of the wretches
-who were forced to remain behind wrote the letter
-we received the other night.”</p>
-
-<p>“At sea,” said the mate, “there is no imagining
-how matters come about. I allow that the three
-men have been taken off by some passing vessel.
-Anyway, we’ve done our bit, and the capt’n, I
-expect, ’ll be waiting for us. Thunder! how she
-rolls,” he cried, as a very heavy lurch sent us both
-reeling towards the side of the craft.</p>
-
-<p>“Hark!” cried I, “we are hailed from the
-deck.”</p>
-
-<p>“Below there!” shouted a voice in the companion
-hatch. “They’ve fired a gun aboard the
-Indiaman, sir, and have run the ensign up half-mast
-high. The weather looks mighty queer, sir.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha!” cried the mate; “come along, Mr.
-Catesby.”</p>
-
-<p>We walked cautiously and with difficulty aft,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-gained the companion ladder and ascended. My
-instant glance went to the <i>Ruby</i>. She had furled
-her mainsail and fore and mizzen topgallant-sails,
-hauled down her lighter staysails and big standing
-jib, and as I glanced at her a gun winked in a
-quarter-deck port, and the small thunder of it rolled
-sulkily up against the wind. In fact, whilst we
-were below, the breeze had chopped clean round
-and the <i>Ruby</i> was to leeward of the wreck, with a
-very heavy swell rolling along its former course,
-the wind dead the other way, beginning to whiten
-the ridges on each huge round-backed fold, and a
-white thickness—a flying squall of vapour it looked
-to me, with a seething and creaming line of water
-along the base of it as though it was something
-solid that was coming along—sweeping within half-a-mile
-of the wreck right down upon us. The mate
-sent a look at it and uttered a cry.</p>
-
-<p>“Haul the boat alongside,” he shouted to the
-fellows in her. “Handsomely now, lads. Stand by
-to jump into her,” he cried to the seaman who had
-been the first to spring on board the wreck with the
-end of the line.</p>
-
-<p>They brought the boat humming and buzzing
-to the counter; the sailor standing on the taffrail
-plumped into her like a cannon-shot; ’twas
-wonderful he didn’t scuttle her. The mate whipping
-the painter off the pin or whatever it was that
-it had been belayed to, held it by a turn whilst he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-bawled to me to watch my chance and jump.
-But the wreck lying dead in the trough was rolling
-in a quite frenzied way, like a see-saw desperately
-worked. Her movements, combined with the
-soaring and falling of the boat, were absolutely
-confounding. I would gather myself together for
-a spring and then, before I could make it, the boat
-was sliding as it might seem to me twenty or thirty
-feet deep and away.</p>
-
-<p>“Jump, for God’s sake, sir!” cried the mate.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t mean to break my neck,” I answered,
-irritable with the nervous flurry that had come to
-me with a sudden abominable sense of incapacity
-and helplessness.</p>
-
-<p>As I spoke the words, sweep! came the white
-smother off the sea over us with a spiteful yell of
-wind of a weight that smote the cheek a blow
-which might have forced the strongest to turn his
-back. The hissing, and seething, and crackling of
-the spume of the first of the squall was all about us
-in a breath, and, in the beat of a heart, the <i>Ruby</i>,
-and the ocean all her way vanished in the wild and
-terrifying eclipse of the thick, silvery, howling,
-steam-like mist.</p>
-
-<p>“By ——, I have done it <em>now</em>!” cried the mate.</p>
-
-<p>The end of the painter had been dragged from
-his hand or he had let it fall! And the wind
-catching the boat blew her over the swell like the
-shadow of a cloud. The seamen threw their oars<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-over and headed for us, their faces pale as those of
-madmen.</p>
-
-<p>“They’ll never stem this weather,” cried the
-mate; “follow me, Mr. Catesby, or we are dead
-men.”</p>
-
-<p>He tore off his coat, kicked off his boots and
-went overboard without another word.</p>
-
-<p><em>Follow him!</em> To the bottom, indeed! but nowhere
-else, for I could not swim a stroke. But
-that was not quite it. Had I had my senses I
-might have grasped the first piece of wreckage I
-could put my hand upon and gone after him with it
-to paddle and hold on to till I was picked up. But
-all this business coming upon us so suddenly, along
-with the sudden blinding of me by the vapour, the
-distracting yelling of the wind and the sickening
-bewilderment caused by the wreck’s violent rolling,
-seemed to have driven my wits clean out of my
-head. The boat was scarcely more than a smudge
-in the thickness, vanishing and showing as she
-swept up and rushed down the liquid acclivities,
-held with her bow towards the hulk by the desperately-plied
-oars of the rowers. The mate was
-borne down rapidly towards her. I could just see
-three of the sailors leaning over the side to drag
-him out of the water; the next instant the little
-fabric had vanished in the thickness, helplessly and
-with horrible rapidity blown out of sight the moment
-the men ceased rowing to rescue their officer.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I do not know how long all this may have
-occupied; a few minutes maybe sufficed for the
-whole of the tragic passage. I stood staring and
-staring, incredulous of the truth of what had befallen
-me, and then with an inexpressible sickness
-of heart I flung myself down upon the deck under
-the lee of a little space of bulwark, too dizzy and
-weak with the horror that possessed me to maintain
-my footing on that wildly swaying platform.</p>
-
-<p>I had met in my travels with but one specimen
-of such weather as this; it was off the Cape of
-Good Hope to the westward; the ship was under
-topmast and topgallant studding sails, when, without
-an interval of so much as twenty seconds of
-calm, she was taken right aback by a wind that
-came with the temper of half a gale in it, whilst as
-if by magic a fog, white and dense as wool, was
-boiling and shrieking all about her.</p>
-
-<p>For some time my consternation was so heavy
-that I sat mechanically staring into that part of
-the thickness where the boat had disappeared,
-without giving the least heed to the sea or to the
-wreck. It was <em>then</em> blowing in earnest, the ocean
-still densely shrouded with flying vapour, and an
-ugly bit of a sea racing over the swell that rolled
-its volumes to windward. A smart shock and fall
-of water on to the forecastle startled me into
-sudden perception of a real and imminent danger.
-The fore-scuttle was closed, but the main and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-companion hatchways yawned open to the weather;
-there were no bulwarks worth talking of to increase
-the wreck’s height of side, and to hinder the free
-tumbling of the surge on to the decks, so if the
-wind increased and the sea grew heavier, the hulk
-must inevitably fill and go down like a thunderbolt!</p>
-
-<p>It would be idle to try to express the thoughts
-which filled me. I was like one stunned: now
-casting an eye at the sea to observe if the billows
-were increasing, now with a heart of lead watching
-the water frothing upon the deck, as the hull
-heaved from one side to the other; then straining
-my sight with a mad passion of eagerness into the
-vapour that shut off all view of the ocean to within
-a cable’s length of me. There was nothing to be
-done. Even could I have met with tarpaulins,
-there was no sailor’s skill in me to spread and
-secure them over the open hatches. However,
-when an hour had passed in this way, I took notice
-of a small failure of the wind, though there was no
-lightening of the impenetrable mist. The folds of
-the swell had diminished, and the sea was running
-steadily; the hull with her broadside dead in the
-trough, rose and fell with regularity, and though at
-long intervals the surge struck her bow, and blew in
-crystals over the head, or tumbled in scores of
-bucketfuls upon the deck, nothing more than spray
-wetted the after-part of her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was now six o’clock in the evening. In two
-hours’ time the night would have come down, and
-if the weather did not clear, the blackness would
-be that of the tomb. What would the <i>Ruby</i> do?
-Remain hove-to and wait for moonlight or for daybreak
-to seek for me? A fragment of comfort I
-found in remembering that the wreck’s position
-would be known to Captain Bow and his mates, so
-that their search for me, if they searched at all,
-ought not to prove fruitless; though to be sure
-much would depend upon the drift of the hulk.
-Presently, fearing that there might be no water or
-provisions on board, I was seized with a sudden
-thirst, bred by the mere apprehension that I might
-come to want a drink. There was still light enough
-to enable me to search the interior, and now I suppose
-something of my manhood must have returned
-to me, for I made up my mind to waste no moment
-of the precious remaining time of day in imaginations
-of horror and of death and in dreams of desperate
-despondency. I went on my hands and
-knees to the hatch, lest if I stood up I should be
-knocked down by the abrupt rolling of the craft,
-and entered the cabin. On deck all was naked
-and sea-swept from the taffrail to the “eyes,” and
-if there were aught of drink or of food to be had it
-must be sought below. I recollected that one of
-the forward berths or cabins, which the second mate
-and I had looked into, had shown in the gloom as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-a sort of pantry; that is to say, in peering over my
-companion’s shoulders, I had caught a glimpse of
-crockery on shelves, the outlines of jars and so
-forth. But the inspection had been very swift,
-scarce more than a glance. I made for this cabin
-now, very well remembering that it was the last of
-a row of three or four on the starboard side. I
-opened the door, and secured it by its hook to the
-bulkhead that I might see, and after rummaging
-a little I found a cask of ship’s bread, a small cask
-(like a harness cask) a quarter full of raw pickled
-pork, a jar of vinegar, two large jars of red wine,
-and best of all, a small barrel about half full of
-fresh water, slung against the bulkhead, with a little
-wooden tap fixed in it, for the convenience as I
-supposed of drawing for cabin use. There were
-other articles of food, such as flour, pickles, dried
-fruit, and so on; the catalogue would be tedious,
-nor does my memory carry it.</p>
-
-<p>I poured some wine into a tin pannikin, and
-found it a very palatable, sound claret. I mixed
-me a draught with cold water, and ate a biscuit
-with a little slice of some kind of salt sausage, of
-which there lay a lump in a dish, and found myself
-extraordinarily refreshed. I cannot tell you indeed
-how comforted I was by this discovery of provisions
-and fresh water, for now I guessed that if the
-weather did not drown the wreck, I might be
-able to support life on board of her until the <i>Ruby</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-took me off, which I counted upon happening that
-night if the moon shone, or most certainly next
-morning at latest. My heart however sank afresh
-when I regained the deck. The sudden change
-from the life, the cheerfulness, the security of the
-Indiaman, to <em>this</em>—“Oh, my God! my God!” I
-remember exclaiming as I sank down under the
-lee of the fragment of bulwark, with a wild look
-around into the thickness and along the spray-darkened
-planks of the heaving and groaning
-derelict. The loneliness of it! no sounds save
-the dismal crying of the wind sweeping on high
-through the atmosphere, and the ceaseless seething
-and hissing of the dark-green frothing seas swiftly
-chasing one another out of sight past the wall of
-vapour that circled the wreck, with the blank and
-blinding mist itself to tighten as with a sensible
-ligature into unbearable concentration the dreadful
-sense of solitude in my soul.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly the wind softened down, very gradually
-the seas sank, and their worrying note of snarling
-melted into a gentler tone of fountain-like creaming.
-But the vapour still filled the air, and so thick
-did it hang that, though by my watch I knew it to
-be the hour of sundown, I was unable to detect the
-least tinge of hectic anywhere, no faintest revelation
-of the fiery scarlet light which I knew must be
-suffusing the clear heavens down to the easternmost
-confines above this maddening blindness of mist.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then came the blackness of the night. So unspeakably
-deep a dye it was that you would have
-thought every luminary above had been extinguished,
-and that the earth hung motionless in the
-sunless opacity of chaos out of which it had been
-called into being. The hours passed. I held my
-seat on the deck with my back against a bulwark
-stanchion. It was a warm night with a character
-as of the heat of steam owing to the moisture that
-loaded and thickened the atmosphere. Sometimes
-I dozed, repeatedly starting from a snatch of uneasy
-slumber to open my eyes with ever-recurring
-horror and astonishment upon the blackness.
-Gleams of the sea-fire shot out fitfully at times
-from the sides of the wreck, and there was nothing
-else for the sight to rest upon. At midnight it
-was blowing a small breeze of wind and the sea
-running gently—at midnight I mean as I could
-best reckon; but the darkness remained unchanged,
-and I might know that the fog was still thick about
-me by no dimmest spectre of moon or star showing.</p>
-
-<p>I then slept, and soundly too, for two or three
-hours, and when I awoke it was daylight, the sea
-clear to the horizon, the sky a soft liquid blue with
-masses of white vaporous cloud hanging under it
-like giant bursts of steam, and the sun shining with
-a sort of misty splendour some degree or two above
-the sea-line. There was a pleasant air blowing out
-of the north, with power to wrinkle the water and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-no more. My limbs were so cramped that for a
-long while I was incapable of rising; when at last
-my legs had recovered their power I stood erect
-and swept the ocean with my eyes. But the light
-blue surface went in undulations naked to the bend
-of the heavens on all sides. I looked and looked
-again, but to no purpose. I strained my sight till
-an intolerable torment in my eyeballs forced me to
-close my lids. There was nothing in view. I very
-well remember falling on my knees and grovelling
-upon the deck in the anguish of my spirit. I had
-so surely counted on daylight exhibiting the <i>Ruby</i>
-somewhere within the circle which enclosed me
-that the disappointment which came out of the bald
-vacancy of the ocean struck me down like a blow
-from a hammer. Presently I lifted up my head
-and regained my feet, and feeling thirsty moved
-with a tread of lead to the yawning hatch, sending
-the most passionate, yearning glances seaward as I
-walked, and halting again and again to the vision
-of some imagination of break in the continuity of
-the gleaming girdle—some delicate shoulder of
-remote cloud, some imaginary speck which dissolved
-upon the blue air whilst my gaze was on it.</p>
-
-<p>I mixed some wine and water, and made a light
-repast off biscuit and a piece of Dutch cheese
-that was on the shelf. I then thought I would look
-into the cabins for a chair to sit upon on deck, for a
-mattress to lie upon, for something also that might<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-make me a little awning, and pushed open the door
-of the berth immediately facing the pantry, as I
-may call it. The wreck was rolling very lightly,
-and her decks were now as easy to step as the
-Indiaman’s. This berth contained a bunk and
-bedding, a sailor’s chest, some clothes hanging
-against the bulkhead, but nothing to serve my
-turn. The next was similarly furnished, saving
-that here I took notice that a small quantity of
-wearing apparel lay about as though scattered in a
-hurry, and that the lid of a great box, painted a
-dark green with the letter D in white upon it, had
-been split open as though the contents were to be
-rifled, or as though the lock had resisted and there
-had been no time to coax it save by a chopper. I
-passed into a third cabin. This had some comfort
-of equipment in the shape of shelves and a chest
-of drawers, and had doubtless been the commander’s.
-There was a very handsome telescope
-on brackets, a few books, a quadrant, a large silver
-timepiece, a small compass and one or two other
-matters of a like sort upon a little table fitted by
-hinges in a corner; there were three chests in a
-row with a litter of boots and shoes, a soft hat or
-two, a large handsome cloak costly with fur, and so
-forth, strewed about the deck.</p>
-
-<p>I was looking with wonder at these articles
-when my eye was taken by something bright near
-the smallest of the three chests. I picked it up; it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-was an English sovereign. Others lay about as
-though a handful had been clutched and dropped—here
-being the same manifestations of terrified
-hurry as, it seemed to me, I witnessed in the other
-cabins. The lid of the small chest was split in
-halves, and the chopper that had seemingly been
-wielded rested against the side of the box. A
-massive padlock was still in the staples. I lifted
-the half of the lid and was greatly astonished by
-the sight of a quantity of gold pieces lying in
-divisions of a tray that fitted the upper part of the
-chest. Each division contained coins of various
-nations. They were all gold pieces—English,
-Portuguese, Brazilian and coins of the United
-States. I prised open the padlocked part of the
-lid and seized the tray to lift it that I might
-observe what lay underneath. But the weight of
-gold in it was so great that I had to exert my
-utmost strength to raise one end of the tray on
-to the edge of the box; which done, I was able
-to slide it along till the bottom of the box was
-revealed.</p>
-
-<p>The sight of the gold had filled me with expectations
-of beholding some amazing treasure under the
-tray. What I there saw was a heap of rough, brick-shaped
-stuff of a dull, rusty, reddish tint. I grasped
-a lump, and though I had never seen gold in that
-form before, I was satisfied by the extraordinary
-weight of the piece I held that all those coarse,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-rough, dull-coloured bricks were of the most
-precious of metals. I slided the tray back to its
-place and let fall the two halves of the lid with
-another look around me for any article that might
-be useful to me on deck. The excitement kindled
-by the spectacle of the gold rapidly died away. I
-dully mused on it, so to speak, whilst my eye
-roamed, languidly speculating about it, with a
-strange indifference in my thoughts, concluding
-that it represented the privateersman’s sorted
-plunder; that in all likelihood when the rush had
-been made to the boats one or more had split open
-this chest to fill their pockets, but had been obliged
-to fly for their lives ere they could find time for
-more than a scrambling clutch at the tray. But it
-was the contents no doubt of this chest—if indeed
-this chest held all the treasure of the buccaneer—that
-was indicated by the writer of the letter in the
-concluding line of it, the closing words of which
-had been found illegible by the young fellow who
-translated the missive.</p>
-
-<p>I put the telescope under my arm and passed
-into the cabin, and found a small chair near the
-arms rack, and near it upon the deck lay a great
-cotton umbrella, grimy and wet with the saturation
-of the cabin. I took it up thankfully and
-carried it with the chair up the steps. There was
-a great plenty of ropes’ ends knocking bout. I
-cut a piece and unlaid the strands, and securing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-the umbrella to a stanchion, sat down on the chair
-under it; and indeed without some such shelter
-the deck would have been insupportable, for low
-as the sun still was in the east, his fires were
-already roasting, and I well knew what sort of
-temperature was to be expected as he floated
-higher, leaving my form with a small blotch of
-southern shadow only yoked to it.</p>
-
-<p>I passed the morning in sweeping the horizon
-with the telescope. It was a noble glass—a piece
-of plunder, with an inscription that represented
-it as a gift from the officers of a vessel to her commander;
-I forget the names, but recollect they
-were English. The placidity of the day dreadfully
-disheartened me. There was but little weight in
-the languid air to heave the <i>Ruby</i> or any other
-vessel into view. The sea under the sun was like
-brand new tin for the dazzle of it, and as the morning
-advanced the heavy, vaporous clouds of daybreak
-melted out into curls and wisps like to the
-crescent moon, with a clear sky rising a pale blue
-from the horizon to overhead to where it swam
-into the brassy glory which flooded the central
-heavens. Weary of sitting, and exhausted by looking,
-I put down the glass and went to the main
-hatch with the idea of making out what water
-there was in the hold. The pumps were gone and
-the wells of them sank like black shafts into the
-deck. But whatever there was of water in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-hulk lay so low that I could not catch so much as
-a gleam of it. There was some light cargo in the
-hold—light as I reckoned by the sit of the wreck
-upon the water; chiefly white wooden cases, with
-here and there canvas bales; but whatever might
-have been the commodities there was not much of
-them, at least amidships, down into which I stood
-peering.</p>
-
-<p>I then walked on to the forecastle and lifted the
-hatch-cover. This interior looked to have been
-used by the people of <i>La Mulette</i> as a sort of sail-locker.
-The bulkhead extended but a very short
-distance abaft the hatch, and the deck was stowed
-with rolls of sails, coils of spare rigging, hawsers,
-tackle and so forth. I put my head into the aperture
-and took a long and careful survey of the
-interior, for the mate and I had not explored this
-part of the brig, and it was possible, I thought, I
-might find the bodies of the three survivors here.
-But there was nothing whatever to be witnessed in
-that way; so I closed the hatch again and went aft.</p>
-
-<p>The day passed, the light breeze lingered, but it
-brought nothing into sight. I would think as I
-sent my glance along the naked, sea-swept, desolate
-deck, gaunt and skeleton-like, with its ragged exhibition
-of splintered plank and crushed bulwark,
-that had there been a mast left in the hull I might
-from the summit of it be able to see the <i>Ruby</i>,
-whose topmast cloths lay sunk behind the horizon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-to the eyes which I levelled from the low side of
-the wreck. “Oh!” I would cry aloud, “if I could
-but be sure that she was near me though hidden!”
-Maddening as the expectation might have been
-which the sight of her afar would have raised in
-me, yet the mere having her in view, no matter
-how dim, deceptive a speck she proved, would have
-taken a deal of the bitterness, the heart-subduing
-feeling of hopelessness out of the wild and awful
-sense of desolation that possessed me.</p>
-
-<p>The sun sank; with the telescope trembling in
-my hands I made a slow, painful circle of the ocean
-whilst the western magnificence lay upon it, and
-then let fall the glass and fell into the chair, and
-with bowed head and tightly-folded arms, and eyes
-closed to mitigate by the shadowing of the lids the
-anguish of the fires which despair had kindled in
-them—for my heart was parched, no relief of tears
-came to me—I waited for the darkness of a second
-night to settle down upon the wreck. But on this
-day the gloom fell with the brilliance of stars, and
-some time after eight the moon rose, a moist,
-purple shield, at whose coming the light draught of
-wind died out and the ocean flattened into a breathless,
-polished surface. When presently the moon
-had soared and whitened, the sea looked as wide
-again as it was to the showering of her light, brimming
-the atmosphere with a delicate silver haze;
-indeed there went a shadowing round about its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-confines to the shaft of moonlight on the water
-that made it seem hollow where the wreck lay,
-and it was like floating in the vastness of the
-firmament that bent over it to glance over the side
-of the hull and see the mirror-like breast studded
-with reflections of the larger stars, and to follow
-the shadow of the deep, curled at the extremities
-as it seemed, to the tropic astral dust that twinkled
-there like dew trembling to the breath of a summer
-night wind.</p>
-
-<p>I had brought up some blankets from below
-and these I made a kind of mattress of under
-the shelter of the umbrella. It was about ten
-o’clock, I think, when I threw myself down upon
-them. A pleasant breeze was then blowing directly
-along the wake of moonlight, and the water was
-rippling like the murmurs of a brook against
-the sides of the pale, silent, gently-rolling hull.
-I lay awake for a long time listening to this cool,
-refreshing, tinkling sound of running ripples,
-with a mind somewhat weakened by my distress.
-Indeed, many thoughts wearing a complexion of
-delirium passed through my head with several
-phantasies which must have frightened me as a
-menace of madness had my wits been equal to the
-significance of them. For example, I can recall
-seeing, as I believed, the <i>Ruby</i> floating up towards
-the wreck out of the western gloom, luminous as a
-snow-clad iceberg, with the soft splendour of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-moonshine on her canvas; I recollect this, I say,
-and that I laughed quietly at the thought of her
-approach, as though I would ridicule myself for the
-fears which had been upon me throughout the day;
-then of jumping up in a sudden transport and
-passion of delight; when the vision instantly
-vanished; whereupon a violent fit of trembling
-seized me, and I sank down again upon the blankets
-groaning. But the agitation did not linger; some
-fresh deception of the brain would occur and win
-my attention to it.</p>
-
-<p>This went on till I fell asleep. Meanwhile the
-breeze continued to blow steadily, and the rippling
-of water along the bends was like the sound of the
-falling of large raindrops.</p>
-
-<p>I awoke, and turning my head towards the fore-part
-of the wreck, I spied the figure of a man erect and
-motionless on the forecastle. The moon was low
-in the west; I might guess by her position that
-daybreak was not far off. By her red light I saw
-the man. I sat erect and swept a glance round;
-there was no ship near me, no smudge upon the
-gloom to indicate a vessel at a distance. Father of
-heaven! I thought, what <em>is</em> it? Could yonder
-shadowy form be one of the three sailors who had
-been left on the wreck? Surely I had closely
-searched the hull; there was nothing living aboard
-of her but myself. The sweat-drops broke from
-my brow as I sat motionless with my eyes fixed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-upon the figure that showed with an inexpressible
-ghostliness of outline in the waning moonlight.
-On a sudden there arose another figure alongside
-of him, seemingly out of the hard planks of the
-deck; then a third; and there the three of them
-stood apparently gazing intently aft at me, but
-without a stir in their frames, that I could witness.
-Three of them!</p>
-
-<p>I rose to my feet and essayed to speak, but
-could deliver no more than a whisper. I tried
-again, and this time my voice sounded.</p>
-
-<p>“In the name of God, who, and what are you?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ha!” cried one of them. He said something
-to his companions, in words which were unintelligible
-to me, then approached, followed by the
-others, all three of them moving slowly, with a
-wavering gait, as though giddy.</p>
-
-<p>“Som drink for Christu’s sake!” said the man
-who had called Ha! pointing his finger at his
-mouth, and speaking in a tone that made one think
-of his throat as something rough, like a file. By
-this time it was clear to me they were no ghosts.
-I imagined them negroes, so dark their faces looked
-in the dim west rays and failing starlight. Whence
-they had sprung, in what manner they had arrived,
-I could not imagine; but it was not for me to stand
-speculating about them in the face of the husky
-appeal for drink.</p>
-
-<p>There was a parcel of candles in the pantry—as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-I term it. I had a flint and steel in my pocket,
-and followed by the men, I led the way below,
-bidding them stand awhile till I obtained a light;
-and after groping and feeling about with my hands,
-I found the paper of candles, lighted one, and then
-called to the men. They arrived. I pointed to
-the jars, saying in English, there was wine in them;
-and then to the slung cask of water, and then to the
-food on the shelves. They instantly grasped each
-one of them a pannikin, and mixed a full draught
-and swallowed it, with a strange trembling sigh
-of relief and delight. They then fell upon the
-biscuit and sausage, eating like famished wolves,
-both fists full, and cramming their mouths. They
-were not very much more distinguishable by the
-feeble light of the candle than on deck; however,
-I was able to see they were not blacks. The man
-who had addressed me was of a deep Chinese
-yellow, with lineaments of an African pattern, a
-wide flat nose, huge lips, eyes like little shells of
-polished ebony glued on porcelain. His hair was
-the negro’s, a black wiry wool. He wore a short
-moustache, the fibres like the teeth of a comb, and
-there was a tuft of black wool upon his chin.
-Small gold earrings, a greasy old Scotch cap, a
-shirt like a dungaree jumper, and loose trousers
-thrust into a pair of half Wellingtons, completed
-the attire of the ugliest, most villainous-looking
-creature I had ever set eyes on. His companions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-were long-haired, chocolate-browed Portuguese, or
-Spaniards—<i>Dagos</i> as the sailors call them; I
-noticed a small gold crucifix sparkling upon the
-mossy breast of one of them. Their feet were
-naked, indeed their attire consisted of no more
-than a pair of duck or canvas breeches, and an open
-shirt, and a cap. They continued to feed heartily,
-and several times helped themselves to the wine,
-though before doing so, the yellow-faced man
-would regularly point to the jar with a nod, as
-though asking leave.</p>
-
-<p>“You Englis, sah?” he exclaimed, when he had
-made an end of eating. I said yes. “How long
-you been hear, sah?”</p>
-
-<p>I told him. He understood me perfectly though
-I spoke at length, relating in fact my adventure.
-I then inquired who he and his companions were,
-and his story was to the following effect: That he
-was the boatswain, and the other two, able seamen,
-of a Portuguese ship called the <i>Mary Joseph</i>, bound
-to Singapore or to some Malay port. The vessel
-had been set on fire by one of the crew, an Englishman,
-who was skulking drunkenly below after
-broaching a cask of rum. They had three boats
-which they had hoisted out; most of the people
-got away in the long boat, six men were in the
-second boat, he and his two comrades got into the
-jolly-boat. They had with them four bottles of
-water, and a small bag of ship’s bread, and nothing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-more. They parted company with the other boats
-in the night, and had been four days adrift, sailing
-northwards by the sun as they reckoned, under a
-bit of a lug, and keeping an eager look-out though
-they sighted nothing; until a little before sundown
-that evening, they spied the speck of this wreck,
-and made for it, but so scant was the wind, and so
-weak their arms that it had taken them nearly all
-night to measure the distance, which would be a few
-miles only. They got their boat under the bow—she
-was lying there now, he said—and stepped
-on board one after the other. This explained to
-me their apparition. Of course I had not seen the
-boat or heard her as she approached, and to me,
-lying aft, the three men rising over the bows looked
-as though, like ghostly essences, they had shaped
-themselves on the forecastle out through the solid
-plank.</p>
-
-<p>I addressed the others, but the yellow man told
-me that their language was a jargon of base
-Portuguese, of which I should be able to understand
-no more than here and there a word, even
-though I had been bred and educated in Lisbon.</p>
-
-<p>“We mosh see to dah boat,” he exclaimed, and
-spoke to his mates, apparently to that effect.</p>
-
-<p>I extinguished the candle, and followed them on
-deck. It was closer upon daybreak than I had
-supposed. Already the grey was in the east, like
-a light filtering through ash-coloured silk, with the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-sea-line black as a sweep of India ink against it
-and the moon a lumpish, distorted mass of faint
-dingy crimson, dying out in a sort of mistiness
-westwards, like the snuff of a rushlight in its own
-smoke. Even whilst the three fellows were manœuvring
-with the boat over the bow, the tropic day
-filled the heavens in a bound, and it was broad
-morning all at once, with a segment of sun levelling
-a long line of trembling silver from the horizon
-down to mid-ocean. My first glance was for the
-<i>Ruby</i>, but the sea lay bare in every quarter. The
-fellows came dragging their boat aft; I looked over
-and saw that the fabric was of a canoe-pattern, with
-a queer upcurled bow, and a stern as square as the
-amid-ship section of the boat; four thwarts, short
-oars with oval-shaped blades, and a small mast with
-a square of lugsail lying with its yard in the bottom
-of the boat</p>
-
-<p>The yellow man pointing to her exclaimed in a
-hoarse, throaty, African guttural, “It is good ve
-keep hor. Dis wreck hov no ’atch; she sink, and
-vidout hor,” nodding at the boat again, “were ve
-be?”</p>
-
-<p>I said yes, by all means let us secure the boat.
-He exclaimed that for the present she would lie
-safely astern, and with that they took a turn with
-the line that held her and she rested quietly on the
-sea clear of the quarter.</p>
-
-<p>Forthwith the three fellows began to explore the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-hull. The yellow man or boatswain, as I must
-henceforth call him, said no more to me than this
-as he pointed to the yawning hatches: “You are
-gen’elman,” with an ugly smile intended no doubt
-for a stroke of courtesy as he ran his eye over me:
-“ve are common sailor. Ve vill see to stop dem
-hole. More fresh vataire to drink ve need. Possib
-more bee-low. Also tobacco.” And thus saying
-he cried out to the others in their own dialect, and
-the three of them went to the main hatchway and
-disappeared down it.</p>
-
-<p>I lifted the telescope and ran it over the sea, then
-sighed as with a breaking heart I laid the glass
-down again upon the deck. A strong sense of
-dismay filled me whilst I sat musing upon the men
-who were now coolly rummaging the vessel below.
-The rascality which lay in every line of the ugly
-yellow ruffian’s face, coupled with the stealthy,
-glittering glances, the greasy, snaky hair, the dark
-piratic countenances of the others might well have
-accounted for the apprehension, the actual consternation
-indeed which fell upon me whilst I
-thought of them. But that was not all. The
-recollection of the gold rushed upon me as a
-memory that had clean gone out of my mind, but
-that had suddenly flashed back upon me to communicate
-a sinister significance to the presence of
-the three Portuguese seamen. I can clearly understand
-now that my brain, as I had said, had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-weakened by the honor of my situation, and by
-the long madness of expectation which had held it
-on fire whilst I searched the sea and waited for the
-<i>Ruby</i> to appear. So that, instead of accepting
-these three foreign sailors as a kind of godsend
-with whose assistance I might be enabled to doctor
-up the wreck so as to fit her to float until help
-came, not to speak of them as companions in
-misery, human creatures to talk to, beings whose
-society would extinguish out of this dreadful situation
-the intolerable element of solitude—I say
-instead of viewing these men thus, as might have
-happened, I believe, had I been my old self, a profound
-fear of and aversion from them seized me, and
-such was the state of my nerves at that time, I call
-to mind that I looked at the boat which hung astern
-with a sort of hurry in me to leap into her, cast her
-adrift, and sail away.</p>
-
-<p>With an effort I mastered my agitation, constantly
-directing glances at the sea with a frequent
-prayer upon my lip that if not the <i>Ruby</i>, then at
-least some ship to rescue me would heave into view
-before sundown that night.</p>
-
-<p>The men were a long while below. I stepped
-softly to the companion hatch, and bent my ear
-down it that I might know if they had made their
-way through the ’tween decks bulkhead into the
-cabin. The chink of money was very distinct, but
-that was all. Presently, however, I heard them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-talking in low voices, but their tongue was Hebrew
-to me, and I went back to my chair, looking yet
-again around the sea-line. I think they had been
-at least an hour below when they arrived on deck,
-emerging through the main hatch. They then
-walked forward without taking any notice of me,
-and disappeared through the fore-scuttle, whence,
-after a while, they arose bearing amongst them
-several tarpaulins which they had come across. I
-took it that there was a carpenter’s chest down
-there, for the yellow boatswain flourished a hammer
-in one hand, and a box of what proved to be round-headed
-nails in the other. They carefully secured
-the hatch with a couple of these tarpaulins, then
-came to the quarter-deck, and similarly roofed the
-skylight and the companion hatch, saving that they
-left free a corner flap to admit of our passage up
-and down.</p>
-
-<p>“Dis is sailor vork,” said the boatswain, giving
-me a nod, whilst his face shone like a yellow sou’-wester
-in a squall of wet with the sweat that flooded
-his repulsive visage. “Dah vataire keep out now,
-sah.”</p>
-
-<p>“It is well done,” said I, softening my voice to
-disguise the emotion of disgust and aversion which
-possessed me at sight of the ugly, treacherous,
-askant sort of stare he fastened upon me whilst he
-spoke. “Have you breakfasted?”</p>
-
-<p>He came close to me before answering; the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-other two meanwhile remaining at the hatch and
-looking towards me.</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” he then said, “dere ish plenty biscuit,
-plenty vataire, plenty beef,” indicating with a grimy
-thumb a portion of the hold that lay under the
-cabin floor. “Dere ish plenty gold too,” he added
-in a hoarse, theatrical sort of whisper, with a sudden
-gleam of his little horrible eyes which to my fancy
-was as much like the blue flash off some keen
-and polished blade of poniard as anything I can
-figure to liken it to.</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” said I carelessly, “plenty I believe. But
-I must break my own fast now. We shall need
-fresh water before the day’s out, and, praised be the
-saints, there is plenty of it, you say.”</p>
-
-<p>With that I went to the hatch, turned the flap of
-the tarpaulin and descended, eyed narrowly by the
-two fellows who stood beside it, and as I gained
-the interior I heard them say something to the
-boatswain, who responded with an off-hand sort of
-<i>ya</i>, <i>ya</i>! as though he would quiet a misgiving in
-them. I made a hurried meal of some wine, biscuit
-and cheese, and noticing as I passed on my way to
-the cabin again that the door of the berth in which
-the chest of gold stood was shut, I tried the handle
-and found it locked. The key was withdrawn.
-Smothering a curse upon the hour that had brought
-these creatures to the wreck, I lighted a cigar (of
-which I had a leather case half-full in my pocket),<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-more for the easy look of it than for any need I
-felt for tobacco just then, and went in a lounge to
-the shelter of my umbrella. The boatswain was
-examining the telescope when I arrived. He
-instantly put it down on perceiving me and went
-forward to where his mates were. They peered
-first over one side, pointing and talking, and arguing
-with amazing volubility and with astonishing
-contortions; they then crossed to the other side,
-and looked over and fell into the same kind of hot,
-eager talk and gesticulations. It was easy to guess
-that they spoke about the spars which floated, held
-by their gear, against the wreck. After a bit they
-came to an agreement, disappeared in the forecastle
-and returned with tackles and coils of rope. One of
-them went over the side, and after a while there
-they were hauling upon purchases and slowly
-bringing the spar out of water, the boatswain talking
-and bawling with furious energy the whole
-while. I went forward to help them, and the
-yellow ruffian nodded when I seized hold of the
-rope they were pulling at, and cried with a hoarse
-roar of laughter, “Yash, yash. Ve make a mast,
-ve make a yart, and ve put up sail, and ve steer to
-our own countree and be reech men.”</p>
-
-<p>Dagos as they were, they had some trick of
-seamanship amongst them. There was stump
-enough left of the foremast to secure the heel of a
-spar to, and by four o’clock that afternoon, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-break of but a single half-hour for a meal and a
-smoke (they had found plenty of pipes and
-tobacco in the seamen’s chests between decks),
-they had rigged up and stayed a jury-mast and
-crossed it with a yard manufactured from a boom
-of the wreckage to larboard; which, light as the
-breeze was, yet furnished them with spread of sail
-enough to give the sheer-hulk steerage way.</p>
-
-<p>I had lent them a hand and done my landsman’s
-best, and had gone aft to rest myself and
-to sweep the sea with the telescope for the
-hundredth time that day. The three men were
-below getting some supper. The hull was stirring
-through the water at a snail’s pace to a weak, hot
-wind blowing right over her taffrail out of the
-south-east. The helm was amidships, and her
-short length of oil-smooth wake showed her going
-straight without steering. I could distinctly hear
-the men conversing in the cabin. I reckoned
-because they knew their lingo was unintelligible to
-me that they talked out. There was a fiery eagerness
-in the tones they sometimes delivered themselves
-in, but earnestly as I listened I could catch
-no meaning but that of their imprecations, which
-readily enough took my ear owing to a certain
-resemblance between them and Spanish and
-Italian oaths. A short interval of silence followed.
-All three then came on deck, one of them
-carrying a jar and another a canvas bag. I instantly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-observed that every man of them had
-girded a cutlass to his side. They seemed to
-avoid my gaze as they walked to the pin to which
-the line that connected the boat was belayed, and
-hauled her alongside. I threw away my cigar and
-stood up. The first idea that occurred to me was,
-they were going to victual the boat, sway the chest
-of gold into her and sail away from me; and I
-cannot express with what devotion I prayed to my
-Maker that this might prove so. I looked from
-one to the other of them. Once I caught a side-long
-glance from the boatswain; otherwise they
-went to this business as though I were not present,
-talking in rough, hurried whispers, with an occasional
-exclamation from the yellow ruffian, that
-was like saying, “Make haste!” When the boat
-was alongside one of them dropped into her, and
-received the jar and bag from the other. He then
-returned, and the moment he was inboards the
-boatswain, rounding upon me, drew his cutlass and
-pointed to the boat.</p>
-
-<p>“Be pleashed to get in and go away!” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>“Go away!” I echoed, too much thunderstruck
-by the villain’s order to feel or witness the horror
-of the fate designed for me. “What have I done
-that you should——?”</p>
-
-<p>He interrupted me with a roar. “Go quick!”
-he cried, lifting his weapon as though to strike, “or
-I kill you!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The hands of the others groped at the hilts of
-their cutlasses; all three eyed me now, and there
-was murder in every man’s look. Without a word
-I stepped to the side, and sprang into the boat.
-One of them threw the line off the pin into the
-sea. “Hoise your sail and steer that way, or we
-shoot!” bellowed the yellow ruffian, waving his
-cutlass towards the sea astern. God knows there
-were small arms enough in the cabin to enable them
-to fulfil <em>that</em> threat. I grasped the halliards, mast-headed
-the little lug, and throwing an oar over the
-stern, sculled the boat’s head round, and in a
-minute was slipping away from the hull, at the
-stern of which the three men stood watching me,
-the blade in the boatswain’s hand shining to the
-sun like a wand of fire as he continued to point
-with it into the south-east.</p>
-
-<p>Here now was I adrift in the mighty heart of
-the Indian Ocean in a small boat like a canoe, so
-shaped that she was little likely to lie close to the
-wind; hundreds of leagues from the nearest point
-of land, and in a part of the deep navigated in
-those days at long intervals only—I mean by the
-Dutch and English traders to the east; for the
-smaller vessels kept a much more westerly longitude
-than where I was, after rounding the Cape;
-often striking through the Mozambique or so
-climbing as to keep Mauritius aboard. Never
-was human being in a more wildly-desperate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-situation. I did not for an instant doubt that this
-was the beginning of the end, that if I was not
-capsized and drowned out of hand by some
-growing sea, I was to perish (unless I took my
-own life) of hunger and thirst. Yet the rage and
-terror which were upon me when I looked over
-my shoulder at the receding wreck passed away,
-with the help of God to be sure, ere the figures of
-the miscreants who had served me thus had been
-blended by distance out of their shapes into the
-body and hues of the hull. I thought to myself
-it is an escape, at all events. I <em>may</em> perish here;
-yet is there hope; but had I stayed <em>yonder</em> I was
-doomed: the sight of the gold had made them
-thirsty for my life. In my sleep, ay, or even
-waking, they would have hacked me to pieces
-and flung me overboard to the sharks here.</p>
-
-<p>In this consideration, I say, I seemed to find a
-source of comfort. If I died as I now was, it
-would be God’s act, whereas had I remained in
-the wreck I must have been brutally butchered by
-the wretches whom the devil had despatched to
-me in the darkness of the morning that was gone.
-Nevertheless I was at a loss to comprehend their
-motive in thus using me. First of all by sending
-me away in their boat, they had robbed themselves
-of their only chance of escape should the wreck
-founder. Then again, I was a man, with a serviceable
-pair of hands belonging to me, and how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-necessary willing help was to persons circumstanced
-as they were, they could easily have
-gathered from the labours of the day. Besides, they
-would be able to judge of my condition by my attire,
-and how could they be sure that I should demand
-the treasure or put in my claim for a share of it?
-But I need not weary you with my speculations.</p>
-
-<p>The sun sank when there was a space of
-about a league betwixt my boat and the wreck,
-and the darkness came in a stride out of the
-east. The wind was weak and hot, and there
-was a crackling noise of ripples round about the
-boat as she lay with scarce any way upon her,
-lightly but briskly bobbing upon the tropic ocean
-dimples. When the darkness came I let fall my
-sail, intending later on, when the wreck should
-have got well away towards the horizon, to head
-north; for methought the further I drew towards
-the equator out of these seas the better would be
-my chance of being rescued. The stars were very
-plentiful, rich, and brilliant that night. I gave
-God thanks for their company, and for the stillness
-and peace upon the ocean, and I prayed to
-Him to watch over and to succour me. When
-the moon rose I stood up and looked around, but
-saw nothing of the wreck; on which I hoisted my
-sail afresh and headed the boat north, as I conjectured
-by the position of the moon. There was
-a deal of fire in the sea, and I would again and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-again direct my eyes at the fitful flashing over the
-side with a dread in me of witnessing the outline
-of a shark.</p>
-
-<p>The moon had risen about two hours, when I
-spied the gleam of water in the bottom of the
-boat. I was greatly startled, believing that she
-was leaking. Certainly there had been no water
-when I first entered her, nor down to this minute
-had I noticed the light or heard the noise of it
-in her. There was a little pewter mug in the
-stern sheets, a relic of the ship from which the
-Portuguese had come. I fell to bailing with it,
-and presently emptied the boat. No more water
-entered, for which at first I was deeply thankful;
-but after a little I got musing upon how it could
-have penetrated, seeing that no more came; and
-then a dreadful suspicion entering my mind, I
-looked for the jar which the Portuguese had
-handed into the boat, and saw it lying on its bilge
-in the bows. I picked it up and shook it; it was
-empty! It had been corked by a piece of canvas
-which still remained in the bung, but on the jar
-capsizing through the jerking of the boat, the
-water had easily drained out, and it was this
-precious fluid which I had been feverishly baling
-and casting overboard!</p>
-
-<p>Maddened as I was by this discovery, I had yet
-sense enough remaining to sop my handkerchief
-in the little puddle that still damped the bottom<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-of the boat, and to wring the moisture into the
-pewter measure. But at the outside half a pint
-was the utmost I recovered, which done I sat me
-down, my face buried in my hands, with my eyes
-scorched as though they were seared by the
-burning tears that rose to them from my full and
-breaking heart.</p>
-
-<p>The night passed. Hour after hour I lay in a
-sort of stupefaction in the stern sheets, taking no
-notice of the weather, my eyes fixed upon the
-stars, a little space of which directly over my head
-I would crazily essay to number. Once I pressed
-the handkerchief to my parched lips, but found
-the damp of it brackish, and threw it from me.
-But I would not touch the precious drop of water
-I had preserved. Too bitterly well did I guess
-how the morrow’s sun would serve me, and the
-very soul within me seemed to recoil from the
-temptation to moisten my dry and burning tongue.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
-<img src="images/illus18.jpg" width="550" height="700" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The memory of the early hours of that morning,
-of daybreak, of the time that followed, is but that
-of a delirium. I took no heed of my navigation.
-The sheet of the sail was fast, and the boat
-travelled softly before the gentle breeze that sat
-in little curls upon the water. I recollect thinking
-in a stupid, half-numbed way, that the boat was
-pursuing the path of the wreck whose one sail
-would suffer her to travel only straight before the
-wind. But the pain of thirst, the anguish of my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-situation, the maddening heat of the sun, the cruel,
-eternal barrenness of the ocean; these things
-combined lay like death upon me. I was sensible
-only that I lived and suffered. There was biscuit
-in the canvas bag which had been put in the
-boat. I thought by munching a fragment to ease
-the anguish in my throat, but found I could not
-swallow. Ah, heavenly God! the deliriousness of
-the gaze which I fastened upon the clear, cool,
-blue water over the side, the horrible temptation to
-drink of it, to plunge, and soak, and drown in it
-the torment of the seething and creaming noises
-of its ripples against the burning sides of the
-boat, which sickened the atmosphere with their
-poisonous smell of hot paint!</p>
-
-<p>The night came—a second night. Some relief
-from the thirst which tortured me I had obtained
-by soaking my underclothes, and wearing the
-garments streaming. It was a night of wonderful
-oceanic beauty and tenderness: the moon, a
-glorious sphere of brilliancy, the wind sweet and
-cool with dew, and the sea sleeping to the quiet
-cradling of its swell. I had not closed my eyes
-for many a long weary hour, and nature could
-hold out no longer. It was a little before midnight
-I think that I fell asleep; the boat was then
-sailing quietly along, and steering herself, making
-a fair straight course of her progress—though to
-what quarter of the heavens she was carrying me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-I knew not, nor for a long while had thought of
-guessing. When I awoke the darkness was still
-upon the ocean, and the moon behind a body of
-high light cloud which she whitened and which
-concealed her, though her radiance yet lay in the
-atmosphere as a twilight. Right ahead of me,
-but at what distance I could not imagine, there
-floated a dark object upon the water. My glance
-had gone to her sleepily, but the instant it fell
-upon her I sprang to my feet, and bounded like
-a dart into the bow of the boat, and stood with
-my hands on the square of the canoe-shaped stem
-straining my sight into the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>She was a ship—no doubt of that; yet she
-puzzled me greatly. The light was so thin and
-deceptive that I could distinguish little more than
-the block of blackness she made upon the dark
-sea. Apparently she was lying with all sails
-furled, or else hauled up close to the yards. One
-moment I would think that she was without masts;
-then I imagined I could perceive a visionary
-fabric of spar and rope. But she was a ship!
-Help she would yield me—the succour of her
-deck, and, oh my God! one drink, but <em>one</em> drink
-of water!</p>
-
-<p>I flung the oars over, and weak as I was fell to
-rowing with might and main. The boat buzzed
-through the ripples to the impulse of my thirst-maddened
-arms. The shadow ahead slowly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-loomed larger and closer, till all in a breath I
-saw by a sudden gleam of moonlight which
-sparkled through a rent in the cloud, that she
-was <i>La Mulette</i>!</p>
-
-<p>I dropped the oars, let fall the sail, and stood
-with my eyes fixed upon her, considering a little.
-Would the men murder me if I boarded her?
-Or would they not fill my empty jar for me on
-my beseeching them, on my pointing to my
-frothing lip as the yellow man had done, on my
-asking for water only, promising to depart at
-once? Why, it was better to be butchered by
-their cutlasses than to perish thus. I felt mad
-at the thought of a long sweet draught of wine
-and water out of a cold pannikin, and rendered
-utterly defiant, absolutely reckless by my sufferings,
-and by the dream and allurement of a drink of
-water, I fell to the oars again, and rowed the boat
-alongside the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>I now noticed for the first time that the mast
-and sail which the fellows had erected were gone.
-Indeed the mast lay over the side, and the sail
-floated black under it in the water. I listened;
-all was hushed as death in the motionless hulk. I
-secured the painter of the boat to the chain plate,
-sprang on to the deck and stood looking a minute.
-Close to the wheel lay the figure of a man. He
-was sound asleep as I might suppose, his head
-pillowed on his arm, and the other arm over his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-face in a posture of sheltering it. He was the
-only one of the three visible. Wildly reckless
-always and goaded with the agony of thirst I
-went straight to the hatch and dropped into the
-cabin. The blackness was that of a coal-mine,
-but I knew the way, and after a little groping
-found the pantry door and entered. With an
-eager hand I sought for a candle, found one and
-lighted it, and in a few minutes my thirst was
-assuaged and I was standing with clasped uplifted
-hands thanking God for the exquisite comfort of
-the draught. Yet I drank cautiously. My need
-made me believe that I could have drained a cask
-to its dregs, but I forced my dreadful craving to
-be satisfied with scarce more than a quarter of a
-pint. The drink relaxed the muscles of my throat
-and I was able to eat. Afterwards I drank a
-little again, and then I felt a new man.</p>
-
-<p>I stayed about twenty minutes in the pantry, in
-which time I heard no kind of noise saving a dim
-creak now and again from the hold of the wreck.
-Extinguishing the candle I entered the cabin and
-stood debating with myself on the course I should
-follow. Water I must have: should I fill a jar
-and carry it stealthily to the boat and be off and
-take my chance of managing the business unheard?
-Yes, I would do that, and if I aroused
-the sleepers, why, seeing that I was willing to go
-they might not refuse me a supply of drink....</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I was musing thus when there was the sound of
-a yawn on deck. At that moment I remembered
-the array of cutlasses that embellished the cabin
-ceiling. It was the noise the fellow made, the
-perception that one of the three at all events was
-awake with his mates somewhere at hand to
-swiftly alarm, which put the thought of those
-cutlasses into my head, or it is fifty to one if in
-the blackness of that interior I should have
-recollected them. I sprang upon the table and in
-a moment was gripping a blade. The very feel of
-it, the mere sense of being armed sent the blood
-rushing through my veins as though to some tonic
-of miraculous potency. “Now,” thought I, setting
-my teeth, “let the ruffians fall upon me if they
-will. If my life is to be taken it shall not be for
-the want of an English arm to defend it.”</p>
-
-<p>I jumped on to the deck, went stealthily to the
-foot of the steps and listened. The man yawned
-again, and I heard the tread of his foot as he
-moved, whence I suspected him to be the yellow
-boatswain, the others being unshod, though to be
-sure there were shoes enough in the ’tween decks
-for them had they a mind to help themselves. As
-I sent a look up through the lifted corner of
-tarpaulin over the hatch I spied the delicate,
-illusive grey of daybreak in the air, and so speedy
-was the coming of the dawn that it lay broad with
-the sun close under the rim of the horizon ere I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-could form a resolution whilst listening to make
-sure that he who was on deck continued alone.
-Then hearing him yawn again and no sound of the
-others reaching my ears, I mounted the steps and
-gained the deck.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus19.jpg" width="500" height="425" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<p>It was the Portuguese boatswain, as I had
-imagined. He was in the act of seating himself
-much in the same place where I had seen him
-sleeping when I boarded the vessel; but he instantly
-saw me as I arose, and remained motionless
-and rigid as though blasted by a flash of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-lightning. His jaw dropped, his hideous little
-eyes protruded bright with horror and fright from
-their sockets, and his yellow face changed into a
-sort of greenish tint like mottled soap or the
-countenance of a man in a fit. No doubt he
-supposed me a spectre, rising as I did in that way
-out of the cabin when the rogue would imagine me
-a hundred miles off, or floating a corpse in the
-water, and I dare say but for the paralysis of terror
-that had fixed his jaw some pious sentences would
-have dropped from him. For my part I hung in
-the wind undecided, at a loss to act. I sent a
-look over my shoulder to observe if the others
-were about, and the movement of my head seemed
-like the release of him from the constraint of my
-eye. He leapt into an erect posture and rushed
-to the side, saw the boat, uttered a cry for all
-the world resembling the rough, saw-like yell of
-the albatross stooping to some bait in the foaming
-eddies of a wake, in a bound came back to the
-binnacle, the body of which stood, though the
-compass, hood and glass were gone, and thrusting
-his hand into it pulled out a pistol which he
-levelled at me. The weapon flashed as I ran at
-him. Ere he had time to draw the cutlass which
-dangled at his hip, I had buried the blade, the
-large heavy hilt of which I grasped with both
-hands, deep in his neck, crushing clean through his
-right jaw; and even whilst he was in the act of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-falling I had lifted and brought the cutlass down
-upon him again, this time driving the edge of it
-so deep into his skull that the weight of him as
-he dropped dead dragged the weapon out of my
-hand, and it was a wrestle of some moments to
-free the blade.</p>
-
-<p>I swept round fully prepared for the confrontment
-of the others, who, I took it, if they were
-sleeping below, would rush up on deck on hearing
-the report of the pistol. My head was full of
-blood; I felt on fire from my throat to my feet.
-God knows why or how it was, for I should have
-imagined of myself that the taking of a human
-life would palsy my muscles with the horror of
-the thing to the weakness of a woman’s arm; and
-yet in the instant of my rounding, prepared for,
-panting for a sight of the other two, I seemed
-conscious of the strength of a dozen men in me.</p>
-
-<p>All was still. The sun had risen in splendour;
-the ocean was a running surface of glory under
-him, and the blue of the south had the dark
-tenderness of violet with the gushing into it of
-the hot and sparkling breeze which had sprung up
-in the north with the coming of the morn. Where
-were the others? My eyes reeled as they went
-from the corpse of the Portuguese to the pistol he
-had let drop. I picked it up; it was a rude
-weapon belonging to the armoury of <i>La Mulette</i>.
-I conjectured that the miscreant would not have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-thus armed himself without providing a stock of
-ammunition at hand, and on putting my arm into
-the binnacle stand I found, sure enough, a powder-horn
-and a parcel of pistol-bullets. I carefully
-loaded the weapon, narrowly seeing to the priming,
-all the while constantly glancing along the deck
-and listening. Then with the pistol in one hand
-and the cutlass in the other, I stepped below,
-furious and eager for a sight of the dead man’s
-mates.</p>
-
-<p>The lifted tarpaulin let the morning sunshine
-fall fair into the cabin, and now I saw that which
-had before been invisible to me; I mean a great
-blood-stain upon the deck, with a spattering of
-blood-drops and spots of more hideous suggestion
-yet, round about. A thin trail of blood went from
-the large stain upon the floor along through the
-passage betwixt the berths, and so to the main
-hatch. Ha! thought I, <em>this</em> signifies murder!
-I found nothing in the cabins. The door of the
-berth in which the chest of gold stood, was locked,
-but on putting my whole weight against it with
-knee and shoulder it flew open. The contents of
-the place were as I had before taken notice of;
-and there were no signs here of either dead or
-living men. I regained the deck, and walking
-forward observed a thin line of blood going from
-the coamings of the main hatch to the side.
-It was the continuation and termination of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-trail below, and most unmistakably denoted the
-passage of a bleeding body borne through the
-hatch and cast overboard. I walked further
-forward yet, and on the forecastle witnessed
-another wide stain of blood. It looked fresher
-than the other—nay, it was not yet dry, and the
-heat went out of my body, and ice cold shudders
-swept through my limbs as I turned my back upon
-it, sick, dizzy, and trembling.</p>
-
-<p>Those horrible marks gave me the whole story
-as fully as though the dead brute aft had recited
-it to me at large ere I struck him down. He had
-murdered his mates one after the other to be alone
-with the gold. It had been murder cold and
-deliberate, I was sure. There were no signs of a
-struggle; there were no hints of any previous
-conflict in the person of the yellow Portuguese.
-It was as though he had crept behind the men
-one after another, and struck them down with a
-chopper. Indeed I was as sure of this as though I
-had witnessed the deed; and there was the chest
-of gold in the cabin to explain the reason of it.
-How he hoped to manage if he fell in with a ship
-(and I know not what other expectation of coming
-off with his life he could have formed) it is useless
-to conjecture. Some plausible tale no doubt he
-would have taken care to prepare, claiming the
-gold as his by law of treasure-trove.</p>
-
-<p>I let fall the weapons, and lay over a little strip<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-of bulwark, panting for breath. My eyes were
-upon the water over the side, but a minute after
-on directing them at the sea-line, I spied the sails
-of a ship, a square of pearl glimmering in the blue
-distance, and slightly leaning from the hot and
-brilliant breeze gushing fair down upon her starboard
-beam. Scarce had my mind time to
-recognize the object as a ship, when it vanished;
-a reddish gloom boiled up mistlike all about me;
-the ocean to a mile away from the side of the
-wreck turned of the deep crimson of blood,
-spinning round like a teetotum; then followed
-blackness, and I remember no more....</p>
-
-<p>When consciousness returned I found myself
-lying in a bunk in a ship’s cabin. The place was
-familiar to me, and I recollect in a weak way
-trying to find out why it should be so. “Why,
-confound it all,” I muttered, “this is my cabin
-aboard the <i>Ruby</i>. God! what a dream it has
-been!”</p>
-
-<p>“Very glad your senses have returned to you,
-Mr. Catesby. It’s been a doocid long faint,
-sir,” exclaimed a familiar voice, and no less a
-person than the second mate of the <i>Ruby</i> came
-to my bedside.</p>
-
-<p>A moment after the door opened, and the
-doctor of the ship entered. I was about to speak;
-he peremptorily motioned silence, felt my pulse
-and brow, nodding approvingly; then addressing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-the mate, thanked him for keeping watch and told
-him he could go. As my dawning intellects
-brightened, my eagerness to make sure of the
-reality of the adventure I had come through grew
-into a little fever. When I looked round the
-cabin and saw my clothes hanging upon the bulkhead,
-my books, the twenty odds and ends of the
-homely furniture of my berth, I could not but
-believe that I had fallen ill, been seized perhaps
-with a fever, and that the incidents of the wreck,
-the open boat, the murderous Portuguese, were a
-mere vision of my distempered brain. But for
-some hours the doctor had his way, would not
-suffer me to talk, with his own hand brought
-me broth and wine, and now, finding me strong
-enough, as I supposed, to support a conversation,
-went out and in a few minutes returned with
-Captain Bow.</p>
-
-<p>It was <em>then</em> my suspicion that all that had
-happened to me was most horribly and fearfully
-real was confirmed. The boat that had left me
-aboard the wreck had been sighted sweeping down
-in the mist; twenty ropes’ ends had been hove at
-her from the <i>Ruby</i>, and in a few minutes her
-people were safe on the Indiaman’s deck. Sail
-was shortened to close-reefed topsails, but a black
-blowing night drew around, as you know, and
-when the dawn broke the wreck was nowhere
-visible. Light, baffling weather followed. Meanwhile<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-Bow swore that he would not quit these
-waters till he had exhausted the inside of a week in
-search for me. At sunrise that morning the wreck
-was signalled from the foretopgallant yard of the
-<i>Ruby</i>. The ship was immediately headed for it,
-and in a couple of hours the hulk was close aboard.
-The chief officer was sent in charge of a boat,
-and I was found lying, dead as they thought, a
-fathom’s distance from a large stain of blood,
-whilst aft was the body of a half-caste with his
-head cut open. They left <em>him</em> as he lay, but me
-they handed into the boat to carry on board, with
-the design of giving me a Christian burial, till the
-doctor, looking at me, asked if they wanted to add
-to the horrors of the wreck by drowning a living
-man, and ordered me to be conveyed at once to
-my bed.</p>
-
-<p>This was the captain’s story, and I then related
-mine. Both he and the doctor exchanged looks
-as I talked. It was tolerably evident to my mind
-that they only believed in about a quarter of what
-I told them.</p>
-
-<p>“But, Captain,” I cried, “on my solemn honour
-as a gentleman, as I am alive here to say it, there
-was gold to the value of many thousands of pounds
-in the chest.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes,” he answered with a glance of compassion
-at me. “I don’t doubt it, Mr. Catesby.
-So much the better for the mermen when it goes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-down to them; it will render the mermaids more
-placable, I don’t doubt.”</p>
-
-<p>“But, gracious mercy!” I cried, “it is only the
-sending of a boat, you know. Why, sir, there’s
-enough in that chest to yield a little fortune to
-every mother’s son of us aboard.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes, yes,” said Captain Bow, with a faint smile
-of concern at the doctor, who kept his eyes with a
-knowing look in them fastened upon the deck.
-“But we took you off the wreck, my dear sir, a
-little before nine o’clock, and it is now after four,
-and as our speed has been a comfortable eight
-knots ever since, you may reckon the hulk at
-sixty miles’ distance astern. No, Mr. Catesby,
-we’re bound to Bombay this time in earnest, sir.
-No more hunting after wrecks this voyage.”</p>
-
-<p>But I got every man-jack of the passengers,
-with the whole ship’s company to boot, to credit
-my story up to the hilt before we had measured
-half the length of the Bay of Bengal, and such
-was the conviction I had inspired forwards at all
-events that the third mate one night told me it
-was reported that a number of the forecastle hands
-had made up their minds to charter, if possible, if
-not, then to run away with, a country wallah on
-the <i>Ruby’s</i> arrival at Bombay, and sail the Indian
-Ocean till they fell in with the wreck—if she was
-still afloat.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But now to resume the story of Master Rockafellar’s
-voyage: we caught the south-east trades
-much closer to the equator than they are used to
-blow, and bowled merrily down the South Atlantic,
-rounding the Cape of Good Hope at a distance
-of fifty leagues from it, and driving ahead, with
-a strong westerly gale over our stern, straight as
-an arrow for Cape Leeuwin. Though the <i>Lady
-Violet</i> showed like a frigate upon the water, with
-a beam that made her look somewhat tub-like, and
-a round massive bow that would crush a sea as
-the head of a whale might, she sailed nobly, easily
-reeling off a full twelve knots when there was wind
-enough to drive her, looking up when on a bowline
-with erect spars and a wake without an inch
-of lee-way in it; and I have known her, even in
-regions of calms and cats-paws and baffling airs,
-to travel in some mysterious manner a hundred
-miles in twenty-four hours.</p>
-
-<p>She was a favourite ship among passengers, and
-almost as punctual in her dates as though she were
-a steamer; and this voyage, true to her old records,
-she sailed through the Sydney Heads one sparkling
-morning at about eight o’clock, making the time
-of her passage from the Thames exactly eighty-one
-days.</p>
-
-<p>I will pass swiftly over our stay at Sydney. I
-should need a deal of room to describe the glories
-of this rich Australian scene, of islands and blue<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-water and shores, with white houses peeping out
-from amidst the fringe of the bush. We hauled in
-alongside the Circular Quay, and then followed
-much grimy work in the shape of discharging
-cargo, furbishing up the ship, attending to the
-rigging, and the like. Then the vessel was conveyed
-to the other side of the harbour to receive
-her freight of wool. I was ashore a good many
-times, yet cannot say that I saw much of Sydney.
-Many a long hour would I spend in the beautiful
-Botanical Gardens, gazing at the astonishing vegetation,
-and watching with admiration the songless
-birds of superb plumage which throng those acres
-of grace, beauty, and colour. Mr. Cock took me
-to the theatre. I was out rowing and sailing too
-very often; but the captain would not let me have
-much liberty. He said I was too young to be
-cruising about ashore alone, and indeed my half-crown
-a week did not help me very largely to
-partake of the diversions of Sydney. My chief
-pleasure lay in sitting in the main-chains, when
-there was nothing to do, and fishing. Many fish,
-wonderful in colour, did I haul up, and some of
-them were a very delicate food.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Lady Violet</i> was pretty deep with wool when
-we were towed out to sea. The passengers we had
-brought out were replaced by a new set—all of
-them colonials, intending a visit to the old home
-for purposes of pleasure or business. Three of our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-sailors had run away, and new men were taken in
-their place; otherwise the ship’s company remained
-as it had been.</p>
-
-<p>I remember going on the forecastle in the second
-dog-watch of the first day that we were out, and
-leaning over the head-rail and looking into the
-evening-shadowed distance, and saying to myself,
-“We are homeward bound!” Ah, the delight of
-those words to the sailor, be he old or young! It
-is the most inspiriting of all the sentiments in the
-songs Jack sings. It is a thought that seems to
-compensate for all past hardships, and to hearten
-a man to endure all that may be harsh and painful
-in the time that yet lies between him and his
-arrival home. My young heart beat high, I remember,
-and I found a wonderful delight, as I overlay
-the forecastle rail, in looking straight down
-under me, where the coppered fore-foot of the ship
-was sheering through the satin-like seas rolling to
-her bow, and in thinking that every fathom of white
-water, with its tinkling foam-bells and bubbles of
-yellow spume which ran past, shortened the distance
-between me and my dear old home by six
-feet!</p>
-
-<p>We were in the South Pacific now, making for
-the terrible Cape Horn, about whose enormous
-icebergs and leviathan seas and black snow-storms
-there was a deal said in our midshipmen’s berth;
-but it was still delicious weather; the indescribable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-sweetness and softness of the Pacific was in the
-temperature; the sun-touched billows chased us
-in lines of dark blue and flaming gold; sea-birds
-with breasts of snow, poised on long tremulous
-wings of ermine, hovered in our wake; and the
-albicore and the bonito merrily kept us company,
-as the <i>Lady Violet</i> went ambling through the
-caressing waters.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus20.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“LISTENING TO THE YARNS HE SPUN.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This was the pleasantest part of the voyage, so
-far as I was concerned. I made friends with one
-of the boatswain’s mates, and was much in the
-forecastle with him during my watches below. I
-can see myself now, sitting on his sea-chest, listening
-to the yarns he spun me about the voyages he
-had made and the countries he had visited, or
-learning from him how to lay up sennit, to wield
-a marline-spike, to use the palm and needle, and
-so on. A lamp fed by slush spluttered under
-a blackened beam just over us; a number of
-hammocks hung from the ceiling or upper deck,
-with here and there a weather-darkened face, well
-whiskered, overlying the edge of the canvas with a
-pipe in its mouth. A double tier of bunks went
-curving into the eyes of the ship where the hawse-pipes
-were, and where the gloom lay heavy. In
-one of these beds a man would lie with a book in
-his hand, laboriously reading, his lips moving like
-a child’s as his eyes spelt down the page. Squatting
-on a chest would be a grim unshaven salt, sourly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-stitching at a pair of breeches. Elsewhere you
-would see a fellow greasing his sea-boots, another
-munching at a sea-biscuit with his eyes fixed like
-an owl’s, a third cutting up a pipeful of tobacco
-from a black flat cake that made me think of toffee.
-Yet, despite the life and movement within, the
-forecastle was always very quiet. My boatswain’s
-mate would talk to me in hoarse whispers, and the
-other sailors rarely conversed above their breath.
-Sleep is naturally prized at sea. The opportunities
-for taking it are short, and must be made the most
-of. Hence, seamen are very careful that their
-mates, when turned in, should repose undisturbed
-that when their own turn comes round for a nap
-they may sleep in quiet.</p>
-
-<p>The dog-watches are the holiday hours at sea,
-and on a fine evening, whilst we were in the Pacific,
-I would repair to the forecastle and there sit,
-listening to and watching the men until the sun
-went down and the black shadow of night came
-along. They had a fiddle amongst them, and one
-of them played the concertina, and these instruments
-made music enough to set them a-dancing.
-I have laughed till the tears stood in my eyes to
-watch the brawny capering Jacks sliding about in
-a waltz, tenderly embracing one another as partners,
-capsizing over the flukes of the stowed anchors,
-and making a very pageant of the forecastle deck—with
-its rough details of capstan, catheads, scuttle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-and the like—by their swimming, floating, jovial
-figures, coloured of every hue with the clothes they
-wore. My friend the boatswain’s mate danced the
-hornpipe to perfection. He valued himself on this
-art, and was not always very forward in obliging
-us. When he suffered himself to be coaxed, the
-treat he gave us was a real one. He would dress
-himself so as to resemble a man-of-war’s man, and
-make his appearance with a straw hat on the back
-of his head-on “nine-hairs,” as sailors say—flowing
-trousers, pumps, an open shirt that disclosed
-his mossy breast, and take his stand on a part of
-the forecastle where the passengers aft could see
-him. The fiddler would then clamber on to the
-booms over the long-boat, and begin to saw away,
-and off would start the boatswain’s mate in a
-delightful shuffle—feet twinkling, legs vibrating,
-arms arched—a manly figure indeed! whilst the
-sailors noisily clapped their hands in huge relish
-of the show.</p>
-
-<p>We were drawing into colder weather, though
-Cape Horn was still a long way off, when there
-happened two incidents in the same morning,
-one of which—as you will suppose when I have
-related it—made a very deep impression on me.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was under all plain sail, by which is
-signified all the canvas a vessel carries saving her
-studding-sails. The breeze was moderate and off
-the bow, and there was very little sea; but through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-the bosom of the deep there ran, as regular as the
-beat of the pulse, a long swell, slipping its volumes
-into our quarter with weight enough in each broad-backed
-fold to keep the <i>Lady Violet</i> curtseying
-until the forecastle of her looked as flat as a spoon
-on the slope of water ahead. I was at work with
-Kennet in one of the quarter-boats, clearing her
-out. The boat hung from a pair of irons, termed
-“davits,” over the side, and was steadied by flat
-mat-like lashings, called “gripes.” From over the
-gunwale of the boat we could obtain a clear view
-of the sea ahead, whereas, from the poop the
-horizon over the bows was concealed by the foresail
-and mainsail.</p>
-
-<p>Presently, pausing in my work to glance ahead,
-I caught sight of a body of foam about a couple of
-points on the bow, as we should say, though how
-far off it was I could not imagine. Figure the
-moon reflecting herself in water just as she shows
-in the heavens—that is to say, as a bright silver
-disk—and you will obtain a good idea of the
-appearance on which my eyes had fastened. It
-rose and fell upon the swell, by which one knew
-that it must be afloat, whatever it was.</p>
-
-<p>“See that, Kennet?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>He peered and cried, “Ha! doth it move?”</p>
-
-<p>We stared at it.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said he, “it ith’nt moving. I thought it
-wath a whirlwind firtht. I thay tho’—what the
-doothe—tain’t a <em>windmill</em>, ith it?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I now saw, as he had seen, what resembled the
-vanes of a windmill revolving in the foam—a wet
-black arm that rose and fell out of the white seething
-like to the blades of a propeller rotating under
-the counter of a tall light steamer, amidst the
-boiling of the water churned up by the machine.</p>
-
-<p>“See that thrasher!” suddenly shouted the chief
-mate. “By George, gentlemen and ladies, a fight
-between a thrasher and a whale, as I live! A rare
-sight, truly!”</p>
-
-<p>And all the passengers who were on deck came
-rushing with him over to the side to look. As we
-approached, the spectacle grew in magnitude, and
-proved one of the wildest—I may say one of the
-most terrific—pictures which the imagination could
-body forth, even of the sea—that arena of wonders
-and of terrors. There was so much fury of foaming
-water, that it was hard to distinguish the gigantic
-combatants. Yet now and again I would catch a
-sight of a large space of the gleaming dark body of
-a leviathan whale, upon which the great arms of the
-thrasher were beating in blows, the echoes of which
-had something of a metallic twang in them that
-made you think of a giant blacksmith striking upon
-an enormous anvil. The boiling commotion covered
-a large space of water, and might easily have
-passed for the first fierce foamings of a waterspout.</p>
-
-<p>I watched, breathless with astonishment and awe,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-my eyes half out of my head. Here was something
-to talk about to my father and mother! But
-would they believe it? It was a sight I could
-scarcely credit, specially when Kennet told me that
-what I saw of the whale was only a little bit of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Will the thrasher kill him?” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“I expect tho,” he answered; “anyhow, of the
-two, I’d thooner not be the whale.”</p>
-
-<p>When the monster duellists had settled down
-upon our quarter, the long black arms suddenly
-vanished. The seething turmoil expired into
-smooth water, and the swell rolled flawless as
-before.</p>
-
-<p>“The whale’th killed,” said Kennet; “keep a
-bright look-out, Rockafellar, and you’ll thee his
-body rithe.”</p>
-
-<p>But though I stared long and earnestly, it was to
-no purpose; the body did <em>not</em> rise: haply because
-the whale wasn’t dead.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, but,” said Kennet, “a big chap like that
-ithn’t going to rithe up with a pop ath though he
-wath a little fith. When a whale gothe to work,
-no matter what hith buthineth ith, he’th bound
-to take hith time. Did you ever thee a fat man
-hurry himthelf. Courth not. Tho ith it with
-whaleth.”</p>
-
-<p>For a long time I continued to furtively glance
-at the sea, and then gave up looking, secretly<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-pleasing myself with the idea that the whale was
-still alive, and not very much hurt; for it seemed
-to me very hard that any creature should meet
-with so dreadful an end as being flogged to death.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE SEES AN ICEBERG.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>When I had finished my work in the boat, I
-walked forward to toast my hands for a little at the
-galley-fire. The cook and I were good friends.
-Our esteem for each other had grown up through
-my giving him a portion of my allowance of rum,
-which acts of attention he repaid by presenting me,
-from time to time, with a hot roll or jam tart. For,
-though the owner of the <i>Lady Violet</i> had told my
-father that his ships were sober vessels, yet with us
-it was the practice for the steward to serve out
-every day at noon, on the drum of the capstan
-on the quarter-deck, a gill, or tot, of rum to the
-whole ship’s company. We midshipmen, as being
-on the articles, were included, and, regularly with
-the rest, I presented myself for my “tot”; but the
-stuff was much too fiery for me; the flavour, moreover,
-I thought extremely disagreeable; so, instead
-of swallowing the dose, I preserved it in a bottle
-and gave it to the boatswain’s mate, and the cook,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-and to the man who washed my linen, and to one
-or two others.</p>
-
-<p>Well, having yarned a bit with the cook about
-the fight between the whale and the thrasher, whilst
-I warmed my fingers at his genial stove, I quitted
-the galley to go aft again. As I left the structure,
-the chief mate, standing at the break of the poop,
-sang out for some hands to clew up the main-royal
-and furl it. The mizzen-royal, I saw, was in
-process of being stowed by Poole, and there was
-a fellow dancing up the lower fore-shrouds on his
-way to furl the fore-royal. Some hands came
-tumbling past me; they let go the halliards and
-tailed on to the clew-lines, and a couple of sailors
-jumped on to the bulwarks to get into the rigging.
-One continued on his way aloft; the other halted
-with his feet still upon the bulwark-rail, and his left
-hand upon his heart.</p>
-
-<p>He was a short man, with a yellowish, coarse
-face, dingy and stained, the skin like an old blanket.
-He had a tuft of ginger-coloured beard under his
-chin, a rounded back that seemed hunched, and
-stunted bow legs. I looked at him as I came
-abreast on my way to the poop, struck by his lingering
-when he should have been running aloft—struck,
-also, by a quite indescribable expression in his face.
-His eyes were upturned like those of a sleeper when
-you part the lids. I was exactly opposite him
-when he fell. He tumbled inboards like a wooden<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>
-figure; and his head struck my shoulder with such
-force that I was spun round and felled, half-senseless,
-to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>I recovered in a few moments, and sat upright;
-nobody took any notice of me. A crowd had
-gathered round the prostrate man, and presently
-two or three of the sailors lifted him up and carried
-him forwards. <em>He was stone dead!</em> The doctor
-examined the body, and said it was disease of the
-heart that had killed him.</p>
-
-<p>I cannot express the effect this shock produced
-upon me. The mere seeing the poor fellow fall
-a corpse would have been painful and terrible to
-my young nerves; but to be struck by him—to
-carry about with me a shoulder aching from the
-blow of his head!—it was an incident that filled
-my boyish sleep with nightmares that lasted me
-for a long fortnight. Again and again I would
-start from my slumbers—from some horrible vision
-of the dead man clasping me—drawing me from
-my bed—struggling to carry me on deck to jump
-overboard with me! Had I found courage to speak
-out, my mind might have been soothed; but I did
-not dare whisper my thoughts for fear of being
-laughed at, and though the impression faded before
-long, yet, whilst it lasted I was the most nervous
-miserable creature, I do believe, that was ever afloat.</p>
-
-<p>The burial of this poor fellow gave me an
-opportunity of witnessing what I cannot but think<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-the most impressive ceremony that is anywhere to
-be viewed. How solemn a thing is a funeral on
-shore we all know; but at sea those points and
-features which render the interment of the dead on
-land affecting and awful are immeasurably heightened
-by the vastness of the ocean, the mystery of
-its depths, the contrast between it and the littleness
-of the form committed to its great dark heart, and,
-above all, by the utter extinction of the body.
-Ashore there is a grave: you can point to the
-mound or to the stone; but at sea nothing but a
-bubble follows the plunge of the corpse: it is
-swallowed up in the immensity of the deep as the
-mounting lark dies out in the blue into which it
-soars.</p>
-
-<p>The dead sailor was stitched up in his hammock
-and a weight attached to his feet. The shrouded
-figure was placed upon a hatch grating, and the
-large ensign thrown over it, after which it was
-brought by four seamen to the gangway. The
-captain stood bare-headed close by, prayer-book in
-hand; the whole ship’s company gathered round,
-most of them having made some little difference
-in their attire for the occasion; the passengers
-collected at the break of the poop, the gentlemen
-with their caps in their hands, and the ladies looking
-down upon the quarter-deck with grave and earnest
-faces. A stillness fell upon the ship, and you
-heard nothing but the voice of the captain reading<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-the Service, mingled with the hissing noise of the
-foam washing past, and the humming of the wind
-in the concavities of the canvas. At a signal one
-end of the grating was lifted, and the hammock
-flashed overboard. A shudder ran through me as
-I saw it go. Then, when the last words of the
-Service had been recited, the captain put on his hat
-and entered the cabin, the boatswain’s pipe rung
-out shrilly in dismissal of the men, and within a
-quarter of an hour the ship had regained her
-familiar appearance—the ladies walking on the
-poop, the captain briskly chatting with some
-passengers near the wheel, and the sailors of the
-watch at work on their several jobs about the deck
-and in the rigging.</p>
-
-<p>It was customary in my time to hold an auction
-of the effects of a dead sailor shortly after his
-burial. There was an odd mixture of humour and
-pathos in the scene. The poor fellow’s chest was
-brought on to the quarter-deck, and the mate at
-the capstan played the part of auctioneer. I stood
-under the break of the poop, looking on; and,
-young as I was, I seemed to have mind enough
-to appreciate the queer appearance the Jacks
-presented as they stood shouldering one another
-in bunches, with something of shyness in their
-manner, and with askant, half-sheepish, yet grinning
-glances directed at the ladies who stood on
-the poop, viewing the scene.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was not much of an auction, for the poor
-fellow had left very few clothes behind him. He
-had been one of those improvident sailors who will
-spend in a single night ashore the earnings for
-which they have laboured during a twelvemonth,
-and who are driven by poverty to ship again in
-a hurry, often rolling into the forecastle with
-nothing but a jumper and a pair of tarry breeches
-in their bags. The articles were held up for the
-crew to see; Mr. Johnson did not apparently
-relish the idea of handling them. The steward
-pulled a pair of trousers out of the chest, and
-expanded them between his raised hands.</p>
-
-<p>“What bid for these?” said the mate; “you all
-behold them. Observe that patch; the neatness of
-the stitching heightens the value of those trousers
-by at least five shillings more than they are
-intrinsically worth, if only as an object of art just
-to look at. How much shall I say?”</p>
-
-<p>One bid two shillings, another five, and the
-breeches were ultimately knocked down to the
-cook for ten—not a little to my astonishment, for
-it seemed to me that an offer of even threepence for
-them would have been excessive. The steward
-then flourished a worn shirt, for which a sailor with
-a hoarse voice offered three-and-sixpence. It was
-knocked down to him, and, had it been an extraordinary
-bargain, he could not have looked more
-pleased. Then a very rusty monkey-jacket was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-exposed, together with a belt and sheath-knife, a
-pair of shoes which certainly did not match, a
-greasy Scotch cap, and one or two other articles of
-a like nature. They all fetched high prices. The
-sailors seemed to regard the biddings as a joke;
-yet it was impossible that there should be much
-humour in the thing to those to whom these
-specimens of squalid raiment were knocked
-down, since the money was deducted from their
-pay. Nor could I gather of what use the clothes
-were likely to prove to the fellows who purchased
-them, there being superstitious fancies in every
-forecastle concerning dead men’s attire, so that
-very few sailors will ever be got to clothe themselves
-in a drowned ship-mate’s dress.</p>
-
-<p>But there is a deal of good nature in the recklessness
-of Jack’s character, and the bids made at
-these auctions are owing, not to the desire of
-the men to possess the articles, but to the feeling
-that the money they spend will be of help to the
-dead man’s relatives.</p>
-
-<p>The captain, in making the Horn this voyage,
-was running his ship on the Great Circle track;
-at all events, he was steering a very much more
-southerly course than was customary with vessels
-whose masters deemed a wide spread of longitude
-preferable to the risks of ice amongst the narrower
-meridians. It was not the harshest time of the
-year down off the South American headland; but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-even with Cape Horn in sight, the weather would
-have been bitterly and abominably cold. Judge,
-then, how it was with us when I tell you that the
-navigation of the <i>Lady Violet</i> carried her to within
-a league or two of sixty degrees south latitude. I
-had often heard of Cape Horn seas and skies, and
-here they were now with a vengeance—an horizon
-shrouded by a wall of grey mist to within a musket-shot
-of the ship; the shadows of black clouds
-whirling overhead and darkening the air yet with
-heavy snowfalls, which blew along in horizontal
-masses, thick as the contents of a feather-bed, or
-with volleys of hail big as plums, which rang upon
-the decks as though tons of bullets were being
-emptied out of the tops; seas of mountainous
-height of a dark olive-green, whose white and
-roaring heads seemed to brush the flying soot of
-the heavens as they came storming at us; the
-rigging glazed with ice; the running gear so frozen
-that the ropes crackled in our hands as wood spits
-in a fire; the decks full of water, with such a rolling
-and plunging of them besides that it was sometimes
-at the risk of your life that you let go the rope you
-swung by to obey an order—this was my experience
-of the Horn!</p>
-
-<p>And only a little bit of it, too. Spite of our oilskins,
-we were so repeatedly wet through that it
-came to our having no dry clothes to put on. I
-have known what it is to come down from aloft<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-after reefing the mizzen topsail, and to shed tears,
-child as I was, with the agony of the cold in my
-hands. The cook could do nothing with the
-galley-fire, and there was no warm food to be
-had. Again and again would we of the watch
-on deck go below, and appease our hunger by a
-meal of mouldy biscuit, which I would endeavour
-to sweeten with a coating of salt butter and moist
-sugar, and with a pannikin of cold water, tasting
-already like the end of a voyage. The passengers
-remained in the cuddy. The every-day ship’s
-routine could not be carried on, and the sailors
-kept under cover, but always ready to rush out
-at the first summons. The decks therefore seemed
-deserted, and, but for the two hands at the wheel,
-and but for the mate of the watch, who crouched
-hugging himself under the lee of a square of canvas
-in the mizzen rigging, the ship might have been
-deemed abandoned—a craft speeding aimlessly
-before the gale with a company of souls dead
-below!</p>
-
-<p>Never shall I forget the impression produced
-upon me one night by the sight of the sea. I came
-on deck at twelve o’clock, and found the ship hove-to
-under a close-reefed main topsail and fore-topmast
-staysail. There was a curl of reddish moon
-in the northern sky, and over that shapeless blotch
-of light, as it looked to be, the loose scud was
-flying like rolls of brown smoke at hurricane<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-speed. The roaring of the surges was almost
-deafening, and there is nothing in language to
-convey the astounding noise of the wind in the
-ice-glaced rigging—the shrieking, the shrilling, the
-whistling of it, as it split in fiendish howlings upon
-the ropes, and swept away under the foot of the
-bursting band of topsail, with a note of thunder
-like the noise of a train of empty waggons speeding
-along the metals in tow of a locomotive.</p>
-
-<p>I crept up the lee poop-ladder, but on gaining
-the deck was pinned to the rail for some minutes
-by the force of the wind. Then, finding I could
-do nothing with my legs, I fell upon my knees
-and crawled like a rat to windward; and, still
-crawling, I passed along under the shelter of the
-line of hencoops until I arrived at the mizzen
-rigging, where the mate stood protected by the
-piece of sailcoth fastened to the shrouds. He
-handed me the end of a rope, which I passed
-round my waist and belayed to a pin, and then I
-could stand up without fear of falling, otherwise the
-prodigious slope of the deck rendered the feet
-entirely helpless.</p>
-
-<p>I could now look about me. The first thing I
-saw, broad on the weather-bow, was a huge mass of
-faintness—a great blurr as it seemed of dim light—that
-seemed to blend with the flying gloom as
-you gazed, though if you withdrew your eye from
-it for a moment and then looked afresh, it showed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-I may even say, it <em>shone</em> out clearly. I shouted to
-Mr. Johnson to tell me what it was.</p>
-
-<p>“An iceberg,” he roared; for I can tell you it
-needed all the wind our lungs could hold to render
-ourselves audible to each other amid the fierce
-clamour of that Cape Horn night.</p>
-
-<p>It was the first ice that I had seen. Several bergs
-of magnitude had been passed during the week, but
-always when I was below, and, as the weather was
-continuously thick, they were out of sight promptly,
-long before eight bells called me to keep my watch.</p>
-
-<p>I stared, fascinated by the huge visionary spectral
-mass that lay, of the colour of faint starlight, out
-upon the bow. It came and went, for our ship was
-rolling furiously. Never could I have dreamt that
-the waves of the ocean raged to such a height
-as they were now running to. One moment the
-ship was on a level keel in the trough, in a valley
-deep down, with moving walls of water on either
-hand of her; for a breathless moment there was a
-lull, the gale seemed to have been spent, you heard
-nothing but the howl of it on high, and the savage
-hissing of boiling foam.</p>
-
-<p>But in a moment the vessel was sweeping up the
-huge liquid incline—up and yet up, with sickening
-rapidity, with spars sloping till the angle of the
-deck was like that of the roof of a house, with all
-her top hamper shrieking anew, as it soared into
-the full weight of the gale. Then would follow<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-another instant’s pause, whilst she hung poised on
-the flickering peak of the sea that had hoisted her,
-when once more down she would slip, reeling to
-windward as she went, until the heart of the valley
-was again reached, with its terrifying interval of
-calm and its deafening uproar of storm above.</p>
-
-<p>I forgot the iceberg presently in watching the
-tremendous billows; and for a considerable time I
-swung in the bight of the rope that was round me,
-full of consternation. As I looked at the approaching
-seas it seemed impossible that the ship could
-ride to them; but she was a noble vessel, buoyant
-as an ocean bird, and she took every surge with a
-magnificent ease, falling away, as it were, from the
-first Titanic blow of it upon her bow, then rising,
-like a thing on wings and full of life, never shipping
-a drain of water save right forwards, where now and
-again you would see the spray blowing in a smoke
-of crystals right over the forecastle head.</p>
-
-<p>Her glorious behaviour after a while restored
-confidence to me, and then I looked at the iceberg
-again. I longed to ask Mr. Johnson questions
-about it, but talking, beyond now and again a
-brief shout, was out of the question. Such a night
-as this was the right sort of frame in which to view
-the picture of that dim, wild, gigantic berg. The
-distorted smudge of red moon, the sweeping
-shadows of vapour, the enormous seas, frothing,
-as it seemed, to the very sky, the darkness, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-savage, warring noises of the tempest, all concurred
-to impart an inexpressible quality of awe
-and mystery and terror to that silent mass of paleness
-which loomed up out of the obscurity of the
-horizon each time our ship rose to the height of
-the sea.</p>
-
-<p>The gale abated before my watch was out, but
-we were still hove-to when I went below. At eight
-o’clock, when the midshipmen in the starboard
-watch came down to rout us out, they told us that
-the wind had shifted, that the captain had come
-up on deck at seven and ordered the yards to be
-squared and the reefed fore-topsail and foresail
-set, and that the ship was now running dead
-before it on a course well to the north of east,
-which looked as if the “old man” feared that he
-had made more southing than was good for him,
-and was now heading for a warmer part of the
-ocean whilst there was a wind to serve him.</p>
-
-<p>One did not need to be told that the vessel had
-the sea right astern of her. She was going along
-on a level keel, though pitching heavily, and the
-comparative evenness of her decks after the late
-fearful slope of them came with something of
-novelty to my strained and tired little legs.</p>
-
-<p>On passing through the booby-hatch, I found
-the ship almost hidden in a snowstorm. The
-fall had the density of a fog, and I do not exaggerate
-when I say that nothing was to be seen<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-of the spars above the maintop, whilst the forecastle
-was an indistinguishable outline in the white
-smother blowing like steam along the decks. One
-of us midshipmen had to be on the poop within
-eyeshot of the mate. We took turn and turn about
-at this, Poole going first, and the others of us
-hanging together in the cuddy embrasure under
-the break of the deck, where there was some shelter
-to be obtained from the marrow-freezing, man-killing
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>When my turn came round, the weather, that
-had been tolerably clear for half-an-hour, grew
-as thick as “mud in a wine-glass” again with
-snow. From the poop-rail the two men who were
-keeping a look-out on the forecastle head were
-hardly to be seen. It was blowing half a gale
-of wind, but, being dead aft, much of its weight
-was taken out of it.</p>
-
-<p>Under reefed topsails and yawning foresail dark
-with saturation and iron-hard with frost, the ship
-drove before the blast, chased by huge seas which
-scared me to watch, as the summits rose in grey,
-freckled, and foaming hills high above the heads
-of the steersmen, who were clinging to the wheel
-with nervous, sinewy grip. The mate stood at the
-head of the weather-poop ladder; the captain,
-clothed in water-proof garments from head to foot,
-paced a bit of deck from the grating abaft the
-wheel to the mizzen-shrouds. Through the weeping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-skylight you caught a dim glimpse of the outlines
-of passengers cuddling themselves in the cabin.
-Heavens, how did I envy them! What would
-I have given for the liberty to exchange this
-freezing, snow-swept deck for the warmth of the
-glowing cuddy-stove and the luxury of the wine-scented
-atmosphere, the comfortable sofas, the
-piano, and the little library of books which the
-steward had charge of!</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Master Rockafellar,” said the chief mate,
-“pray, sir, what do you think of Cape Horn?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t like it, sir,” said I.</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t it cold enough?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p>“I prefer the equator, sir,” I exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>I could see by a laugh in his eye that he was
-about to deliver something mirthful; but all on a
-sudden he fell as grave as a mute, and began to
-sniff, as though scenting something in the air
-whilst he cast a look at the captain, who continued
-to patrol the after part of the deck with
-a careless step. He sniffed again.</p>
-
-<p>“I smell ice!” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>I thought he might wish me to sniff too, which
-I did, somewhat ostentatiously, perhaps, that he
-might notice me; but as to smelling ice—why, ’twas
-all snow to me, with a coldness in it that went beyond
-ice, to my mind. The flakes were still rolling
-over us, dense as smoke, from the lead-coloured
-sky, and the ship’s bowsprit was nearly out of sight.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Once more the mate sniffed up the air with wide
-nostrils, went to the rail and thrust his head over,
-with a long, probing look ahead, and then came
-back to where I was standing. He was about to
-speak, when, out from the whirling, wool-white
-thickness forward, came the loud and fearful cry:</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Ice right ahead, sir!</em>”</p>
-
-<p>“Ice right ahead, sir!” re-echoed the mate in a
-shriek, whipping round his face towards the captain.</p>
-
-<p>“I see it, sir! I see it!” cried the skipper.
-“Hard a starboard! hard a starboard! over with
-it for your lives, lads!”</p>
-
-<p>The spokes revolved like the driving-wheel of
-a locomotive in the hands of the two seamen, and
-the ship paid off with a slow, stately sweep of her
-head, as she swung upon the underrun of a huge
-Pacific sea, brimming to her counter, and roaring
-in thunder along the line of her water-ways—and
-just in time!</p>
-
-<p>For, out upon the starboard bow there leapt out
-of the snowstorm, in proportions as huge as those
-of the cathedral of St. Paul’s, a monster iceberg.
-It all happened in a minute, and what a minute
-was that! It was a prodigious crystalline mass,
-some of the sharp curves of it of a keen blue, the
-summits deep in snow, and the sides frightfully
-scored and gashed into ravines and gorges and
-caverns, whilst all about the sky-line of it, showing
-faintly in the whirling flakes, were forms of pinnacles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-and spires, of towers and minarets, columns
-like those of ruins, and wild and startling shapes
-like couchant beasts of colossal size, giant helmets,
-forts, turreted heads of castles, and I know not
-what besides.</p>
-
-<p>In the fair and streaming sunshine, that would
-have filled it with flaming jewels of light, and
-kindled all kinds of rich and shining colours, it
-would have glowed out upon the sea as a most
-glorious, most magnificent object; but now, with
-the shadow upon it of the storm-laden sky, and rendered
-wild beyond imagination by the gyrations
-of the clouds of snow all about it, it offered a most
-dreadful and terrifying picture as it swept past,
-with the noise of the great seas bursting at its
-base, smiting the ear like shocks of earthquake.</p>
-
-<p>We had escaped it by a miracle. Our ship’s
-head had been pointed for it as neatly as the
-muzzle of a musket at the object to be shot at.
-In another three minutes our bows would have
-been into it, and the ship have ground herself
-away from the bows aft, as you shut up the tubes
-of a telescope!</p>
-
-<p>Our captain seemed to take fright at this experience,
-and whilst the loom of the mighty mass
-was still visible on the lee quarter, orders were
-given for all hands to turn out and heave the ship
-to. Nor was way got upon her again till the
-weather cleared, and even then for several days<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-our progress was exceedingly stealthy, the order
-of the time being that whenever it came on thick
-the ship was to be hove-to. It was weary, desperate
-work, and every hand on board the ship
-soon grew to yearn, with almost shipwrecked
-longings, for the blue skies and the trade-winds
-of the South Atlantic.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE SIGHTS A WRECK.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>But at last came a day when the meridian of
-Staten Island was passed under our counter; and
-when eight bells had been made, the ship’s course
-was altered, and we were once more heading for
-the sun with a strong wind on the beam, the ocean
-working in long sapphire lines of creaming billows,
-the ship leaning down under a maintopgallant
-sail, with a single reef in the topsail under it, and
-the sailors going about their work with cheerful
-countenances; for this northward course made us
-all feel that we were really and truly homeward
-bound at last.</p>
-
-<p>It was thought that our passage would be a
-smart one, as good a run as any on record, for
-though, to be sure, we had been detained a bit
-off the Horn by the frequent heaving to of the ship,
-yet we had traversed the long stretch of the South
-Pacific very briskly, whilst for a long eight days
-now there blew a strong, steady beam wind that
-drove us through it at an average of two hundred<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>
-and fifty miles in the twenty-four hours. With
-less weight in the breeze we should have done
-better still. We could never show more than a
-maintopgallant sail to it, and the high seas were
-by no means helpful to the heels of the ship. Yet
-Cape Horn was speedily a long way astern of us;
-the horrible weather of it was forgotten as pain
-is. Every night, stars which had become familiar
-to us were sinking in the south, and new constellations
-soaring out of the horizon over the bows.
-It was delightful to handle the ropes, and find
-them supple as coir instead of stiff as iron bars,
-to pick up the sails, and feel them soft again to
-the touch instead of that hardness of sheets of steel
-which they gathered to them in the frosty parallels.
-The sun shone with a warmth that was every day
-increasing in ardency; the dry decks sparkled
-crisply like the white firm sand of the sea-beach.
-The live-stock grew gay and hearty with the Atlantic
-temperature: the cocks crew cheerily, the
-hens cackled with vigour, the sheep bleated with
-voices which filled our salted, weather-toughened
-heads with visions of green meadows, of fields
-enamelled with daisies, of hedges full of nosegays,
-and of twinkling green branches melodious with
-birds.</p>
-
-<p>We slipped into the south-east trade wind, and
-bore away for the equator under fore-topmast studding-sail.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 300px;">
-<img src="images/illus21.jpg" width="300" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“I ... SAT RIDING A-COCK-HORSE OF IT” (<a href="#Page_231">p. 231</a>).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>One moonlight night a fancy to view the ship
-from the bowsprit entered my mind. I went on
-to the forecastle and crawled out on to the jibboom,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-and there sat riding a-cock-horse of it,
-holding by the outer jib-stay. The moon shone
-brightly over the maintopsail yard-arm; all sail
-was on the ship, and she was leaning over from
-the fresh breeze like a yacht in a racing match.
-The moonlight made her decks resemble ivory,
-and stars of silver glory sparkled fitfully along
-them in the glass and brass work. The whole
-figure of the noble fabric seemed to be rushing
-at me; the foam poured like steam from her stem
-that was smoking and sheering through the ocean
-surge. Over my head soared the great jibs, like
-the wings of some mighty spirit. My heart leapt
-up in me to the rise and fall of the spar that I
-jockeyed. It was like sitting at one end of a
-leviathan see-saw, and every upheaval was as exhilarating
-as a flight through the air. Ah, thought
-I, as I leisurely made my way inboards, if sailoring
-were always as pleasant as <em>this</em>, I believe I should
-wish to continue at sea all my life.</p>
-
-<p>It was two days afterwards, at about half-past
-six in the morning watch, that a fellow in the foretop
-hailed the deck and reported a black object
-on the lee-bow which, he said, didn’t look like a
-ship, though it was a deal too big for a long-boat.
-I was staring wistfully in the direction the man<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-had indicated. Mr. Johnson noticed this, and said,
-with a kind smile (I seemed to be a favourite of
-his, maybe because I was but a little chap to be at
-sea, otherwise I do not know what particularly
-entitled me to his kindness)—</p>
-
-<p>“Here, Rockafellar, take my glass into the foretop,
-and see what you can make of the object.”</p>
-
-<p>I was very proud of this commission, and not a
-little pleased to escape even for a short spell the
-grimy, prosaic business of scrubbing the poop.
-The telescope was a handsome instrument in a
-case, the strap of which I threw over my shoulder;
-and, slipping on a pair of shoes (for I never could
-endure the pressure of the ratlines against the
-soles of my naked feet), I got into the shrouds and
-arrived in the foretop.</p>
-
-<p>“Where is it?” said I to a man who stood peering
-seawards, with a hairy tar-stained hand protecting
-his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>He pointed.</p>
-
-<p>I levelled the glass, and in an instant beheld the
-black hull of a ship lying deep in the water, rolling
-heavily, yet very sluggishly. All three masts were
-gone, and a few splinters forking out between her
-knight-heads were all that remained of her bowsprit.</p>
-
-<p>The sailor asked leave to look, and putting his
-eye to the telescope, exclaimed—</p>
-
-<p>“<em>Here’s</em> a bad job, I lay. She’s a settling down<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-too. She’ll be out of sight under water afore we’re
-abreast, or I’m a Kanaka,” by which he meant a
-South Sea Islander.</p>
-
-<div class="figright" style="width: 325px;">
-<img src="images/illus22.jpg" width="325" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“HE POINTED.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I made my way to the deck, and reported what
-I had seen to the chief mate. It was not twenty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-minutes after this when a loud cry arose from the
-forecastle, followed by a rush of men to the rail, to
-see what the fellow who had called out was pointing
-at. We of the poop, forgetting the ship’s
-discipline in the excitement raised by the shout
-and headlong hurry of men forward, ran to the side
-to look also, and we saw close against the lee-bow
-of the ship, fast sliding along past the side, the
-figure of a man in a lifebuoy. He was naked to
-the waist; his arms overhung the circle, but his
-form, leaning forward, had so tilted the buoy that
-his head lay under water. He rose and fell upon
-the seas, which sometimes threw him a little way
-out and then submerged him again, with his long
-hair streaming like grass at the bottom of a shallow
-running stream.</p>
-
-<p>The sailors along the waist and on the forecastle
-were looking aft, as though they expected that the
-mate would back the topsail yard and send a boat;
-but the man that had gone past was dead as dead
-can be: even my young eyes could have told <em>that</em>,
-though his head had been above water all the time.</p>
-
-<p>“It is a recent wreck, I expect, sir,” I heard Mr.
-Johnson say to the captain, who stepped on deck at
-that moment. “The poor fellow didn’t look to
-have been in the water long.”</p>
-
-<p>“There was no doubt he was a corpse?” inquired
-the captain, to whose sight the form of the drowned
-man was invisible, so rapidly had it veered astern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-into the troubled and concealing foam of our
-wake.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh yes, sir,” answered Mr. Johnson. “His face
-only lifted now and again.”</p>
-
-<p>At eight bells the wreck was in sight from the
-poop, but at a long distance. I went below to get
-some breakfast, and then returned, too much interested
-in the object that had hove into view to
-stay in the cabin, though I had been on deck since
-four o’clock, and had scarcely slept more than two
-hours during the middle watch.</p>
-
-<p>Our ship’s helm had been slightly shifted, so that
-we might pass the wreck close. As we advanced,
-fragments of the torn and mutilated fabric passed
-us; portions of yards, of broken masts with the
-attached gear snaking out from it, casks, hatch-covers,
-and so forth. It was easy to guess, by the
-look of these things, that they had been wrenched
-from the hull by a hurricane. I noticed a length
-of sail-cloth attached to a yard, with a knot in it so
-tied that I did not need to have been at sea many
-months to guess that nothing could have done it
-but some furious ocean blast.</p>
-
-<p>We all stood looking with eagerness towards the
-wreck—the ladies with opera-glasses to their eyes,
-the gentlemen with telescopes; the captain aft was
-constantly viewing her through his glass, and the
-second mate, who had charge of the deck, watched
-her through the shrouds of the main rigging with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-the intentness of a pirate whose eyes are upon a
-chase.</p>
-
-<p>The fact was, it was impossible to tell whether
-there might be human beings aboard of her, let
-alone the sort of pathetic interest one found in the
-sight of the lonely object rolling out yonder in a
-drowning way amidst the sparkling morning waters
-of the blue immensity of the deep. Only a little
-while ago, I thought to myself as I surveyed her,
-she was a noble ship; her white sails soared, she
-sat like a large summer cloud upon the water, the
-foam sparkled at her fore-foot; like ourselves, she
-might have been homeward bound—and now see
-her! Hearts which were lately beating in full life,
-are silent—stilled for ever in those cold depths
-upon whose surface she is heaving.</p>
-
-<p>There is no object in life, I think, that appeals
-more solemnly to the mind than a wreck fallen in
-with far out at sea. She is an image of death, and
-the thought of the eternity that follows upon death
-is symbolized by the secret green profound in
-whose depths she will shortly be swallowed up.</p>
-
-<p>The hull lay so deep in the water that the name
-under her counter was buried, and not to be read.
-A flash of light broke from her wet black side each
-time she rolled from the sun, and the brilliant glare
-was so much like the crimson gleam of a gun, that
-again and again I would catch myself listening for
-the noise of the explosion, as though forsooth there
-were people firing signals to us aboard her.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“An eight hundred ton ship at least,” the captain
-told the ladies, “and a very fine model. Oh
-yes! She’s been hammered to pieces by a storm
-of wind. She has no boats, you see, so let us hope
-her people managed to get away in safety, and that
-they are by this time on board a ship.”</p>
-
-<p>“I daresay,” said a young fellow, one of the
-cuddy passengers, “that her hold is full of valuable
-goods. Pity we couldn’t take her in tow and carry
-her home with us. Why shouldn’t the cargo of
-such a vessel as that be worth—call it twenty thousand
-pounds if you will? There’s just money
-enough in that figure to make me tolerably comfortable
-for the rest of my life. Confounded nonsense
-to have a fortune under your nose, and be
-obliged to watch it sink!”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, Mr. Graham,” said the captain, laughing,
-“there’s the hulk, sir. If you have a mind to take
-charge of her, I’ll put you on board. Nothing
-venture nothing have, you know. That’s particularly
-the case at sea.”</p>
-
-<p>“Too late! too late!” growled out the bass
-voice of an old major who had been making the
-tour of the world for his health. “<em>See there!</em>”
-and he pointed a long, skinny, trembling forefinger
-at the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>She was sinking as he spoke! It was as wild a
-sight in its way as you could conceive; she put her
-bow under and lifted her stern, and made her last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-dive as though she were something living. She
-disappeared swiftly; indeed the ocean was rolling
-clear to the horizon before you could realise that
-the substantial object, which a moment or two
-before was floating firm to your sight, was gone.</p>
-
-<p>The young gentleman named Graham shuddered
-as he turned away.</p>
-
-<p>It was an hour after this that one of the midshipmen
-came into our berth, and said that a ship’s
-boat had been made out right ahead. Nothing
-living in her had as yet been distinguished.</p>
-
-<p>“The notion of course is,” said he, “that she belonged
-to the wreck that we passed this morning.”</p>
-
-<p>I was reading in my bunk, but on hearing this, I
-immediately hopped out and went on deck. There
-was more excitement now than before. A crowd
-of the passengers were staring from the poop, with
-knots of steerage folks and a huddle of the ship’s
-idlers on the forecastle, craning their necks under
-the bowsprit and past the jibs to get a view. Indeed,
-whilst the midshipmen had been telling us
-about this boat below, a glimpse had been caught
-of something moving over the low gunwale of her—some
-said it was a cap that had been waved;
-but whatever it was it had not shown again.
-However, everybody was now sure that there was
-something alive in the boat, and we all seemed
-to hold our breath whilst we waited. It was an
-ordinary ship’s quarter-boat painted white.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“There again!” shouted somebody. “Did you
-see it? A man’s head it looked like.”</p>
-
-<p>“Ay,” said the second mate, who had his telescope
-bearing on the boat at the moment: “a head,
-and no mistake; but of what kind, though? More
-like a cocoa-nut, to my fancy, than a man’s nob.”</p>
-
-<p>“There he is! there’s the poor creature!” cried
-a lady in a sort of shriek, with an opera-glass at
-her eyes. “He’s standing up—he has fallen backwards—ah!
-he’s up again. But, oh dear me!—can
-it be a man?”</p>
-
-<p>“With a tail!” said the second mate, who continued
-to ogle the boat through his telescope.
-“Bless my heart!—why—why—captain, I believe
-it’s a great monkey!”</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes the boat was under the bow,
-and a strange roar of mingled wonder and laughter
-came floating aft to us from the crowd on the forecastle.
-It was a monkey, as the second mate had
-said—a big ape, with strong white whiskers, which
-ringed the lower part of his face like wool. He had
-evidently been some crew’s pet; a small velvet
-cap with a yellow tassel, like a smoking cap, was
-secured to his head; he also wore a pair of large
-spectacles apparently cut out of thin white wood.
-His body was clothed in a short jacket of some
-faded reddish material, with a slit behind for the
-convenience of his tail, the end of which was raw,
-as though he had been lately breakfasting off it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-His legs were cased in their native hair, which was
-long, something like a goat’s.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus23.jpg" width="500" height="400" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“IT WAS A MONKEY.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>One could see that the poor beast was terribly
-weak. He would climb up on a thwart, then fall
-backwards, and, as his boat slipped past, he lay on
-his side looking up at us through his spectacles
-with the most woebegone, piteous, grinning face of
-appeal that ever monkey in this world assumed.</p>
-
-<p>There was a sudden explosion of laughter from
-amongst us; no man could help himself. Indeed,
-the first sight of the boat had put some fancies of
-horrors to be disclosed into our heads, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-change, from our notion of beholding dead or
-dying human beings, into this apparition of a huge
-monkey in a smoking cap and spectacles, was so
-violent and ridiculous a surprise that it proved too
-much for the gravest amongst the crowd aft.</p>
-
-<p>“Hands to the topsail braces!” bawled the captain;
-“lay the maintopsail to the mast. We must
-pick the poor brute up.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Lady Violet</i> was brought to a stand. Five
-men in charge of the second mate sprang into a
-lee-quarter boat; the tackles were slacked away,
-and in a few minutes our boat was alongside the
-other, with two of the fellows handing out the
-monkey, that lay as quiet as a baby in their arms.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody crowded on to the main-deck to get a
-view of the poor beast when the boat had brought
-him alongside. He had the look of an old man;
-and though you saw that the unhappy animal was
-suffering, his grimaces were so ugly, the appeal
-of his bloodshot eyes through his spectacles so
-ludicrously human-like, that he made you laugh
-the louder at him somehow or other for the very
-pity that he excited in you.</p>
-
-<p>“Get him water and food, lads, some of you,”
-cried the second mate from the poop; “treat him
-as though he were mortal like yourselves. He’ll take
-all ye’ll give him and more than he ought to have;
-and we haven’t saved him to perish of a bust-up.”</p>
-
-<p>He was carried to the forecastle followed by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-crowd of sailors and steerage people, and I lost
-sight of him, though I hung about, boy-like, for a
-bit, hoping they would bring him forth presently.
-However, it seemed that after the seamen had
-given him a drink of water and a couple of
-biscuits to eat, they took off his cap and spectacles
-and put him into a hammock with a blanket up
-to his throat, where he lay like a human being,
-rolling a languishing eye round upon those who
-looked at him, until he fell asleep.</p>
-
-<p>The name <i>Dolphin</i>, Boston, was painted in the
-stern-sheets of the boat in which the monkey was,
-and of course it was supposed, fore and aft, that
-that was the name of the wreck we had fallen in
-with. But I afterwards heard—when I had been
-home some months—that the hull we had seen
-founder was a large English barque called the
-<i>Elijah Gorman</i>, whilst the boat from which we
-had taken the monkey had belonged to the
-Yankee craft whose name was on her. How the
-boat happened to have been adrift, and how her
-sole occupant should have been a monkey, I never
-could get to hear, though my father made many
-inquiries, being much interested in my story of
-this little affair. The crew of the <i>Elijah Gorman</i>
-had been taken off by a steamer bound to England
-from a South American port; so full particulars
-concerning her loss had been published in the newspapers
-some time before we arrived in the Thames.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE SEES A STRANGE LIGHT.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>Well, the sailors made a great pet of this
-immense monkey, who proved a very inoffensive,
-gentle, well-tamed creature, abounding in such
-tricks as a rough forecastle would educate a
-monkey in. The Jacks tried him with a pipe of
-tobacco, and he was observed to take several
-whiffs with an air of great relish, though he put
-the pipe down long before the bowl was empty.
-Once, seeing a man shaving, he imitated the
-fellow to such perfection as to show that he had
-been taught to feign to handle a razor; whereupon
-the carpenter shaped a piece of wood to
-resemble a razor, with which the monkey, whenever
-he was asked, would shave himself, pretending
-to lather his beard, after, with his own hands,
-putting a little bit of canvas under his chin. The
-sailors also discovered that the creature could play
-the fiddle—that is to say, if you put two sticks in
-his hand and told him to fiddle, he would adjust
-one of them to his shoulder, and saw away with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-the other, making the most horrible faces the
-while, as though ravished by the exquisite sounds
-he was producing.</p>
-
-<p>Again and again would I stand watching him
-till the tears flowed from my eyes. The sailors
-called him Old Jacob, dimly conceiving that was a
-good name for anything with a white beard. But
-alas! the ocean had marked him for her own, and
-poor Old Jacob did not live to see land again.
-His death was very tragical, and the manner in
-which I was startled by it leaves the incident, to
-this moment, very clear in my memory.</p>
-
-<p>We had run out of the north-east trades, and
-were sweeping along over a high sea before a
-strong breeze of wind. We had met with a
-bothersome spell of baffling weather north of the
-equator, and the captain was now “cracking on,”
-as the term goes, to make up for lost time,
-carrying a main-royal, when, at an earlier season,
-he would have been satisfied with a furled topgallant
-sail, and through it the <i>Lady Violet</i> was
-thundering with foam to the hawse-pipe, the
-weather-clew of her mainsail up, and the foretop-mast
-staysail and jibs flapping and banging in
-the air over the forecastle, where they were becalmed
-by the forecourse and topsail.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img src="images/illus24.jpg" width="500" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“WOULD SHAVE HIMSELF.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>There was a sailor at work on the rigging low
-down on the fore-shrouds. I had been watching
-him for some minutes, observing the carelessness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>
-of his pose as he stood poised on a ratline, whilst
-I thought how utterly hopeless would be the look-out
-of a man who should fall overboard into the
-white smother roaring alongside; and I turned my
-back to walk aft, when I heard a loud cry of
-“Man overboard!”</p>
-
-<p>I looked; the fellow I had been watching had
-disappeared! I rushed to the side and saw poor
-Old Jacob skimming along astern! He had his
-spectacles and his cap on, and he was swimming
-like a man, striking out with vigour. He swept
-to the height of a sea, and his poor white-whiskered
-face most tragically comical with its
-spectacles stood out clear as a cameo for a breath,
-ere it vanished in the hollow. It then disappeared
-for good.</p>
-
-<p>I glanced forward again and perceived the man
-whom I thought had fallen into the sea climbing
-out of the forechains to the part of the rigging
-where he had been at work.</p>
-
-<p>The mate, coming forward, cried, “Who was it
-that sang out <i>man overboard</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“I did, sir,” answered the sailor.</p>
-
-<p>“Step aft!” said the mate.</p>
-
-<p>The fellow dropped on to the deck and approached
-the officer.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you mean,” cried the mate in a
-passion, “by raising over a monkey such an alarm
-as <i>man overboard</i>?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“I thought it was a man, sir,” answered the
-sailor. “I had caught sight of him on the jibboom,
-and believed it was Bill Heenan.”</p>
-
-<p>“What!” shouted the mate, “with those spectacles
-on?”</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t notice the spectacles, sir,” said the
-man; “I see a figure out on the jibboom, and
-whilst I was looking the jib-sheet chucked him
-overboard, and that’s why I sung out.”</p>
-
-<p>The mate stared hard at the man, but seemed to
-think he was telling the truth, on which he told
-him to go forward and get on with his work, biting
-his underlip to conceal an expression of laughter,
-as he walked towards the wheel.</p>
-
-<p>That evening, in the second dog-watch, there
-was a fight between the sailor, whose name was
-Jim Honeyball, and Bill Heenan. Bill had heard
-that Jim had mistaken him for Old Jacob, and
-had told the mate so; and thereupon challenged
-him to stand up like a man. There was a deal of
-pummeling, much rolling about, encouraging cheers
-from the sailors, and “language,” as it is called, on
-the part of the combatants; but neither was much
-hurt.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the end of the poor monkey; yet he
-seemed to have found a successor in Bill Heenan,
-for, to the end of the voyage, the Irishman was
-always called Old Jacob.</p>
-
-<p>We were talking in the midshipmen’s berth over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-the loss of the monkey, when Poole, the long
-midshipman, who was in my watch, spun us the
-following yarn:—“I made my first voyage,” said
-he, “in a ship called the <i>Sweepstakes</i>, to Madras,
-Calcutta, and Hong Kong. On our way home we
-brought up off Singapore for a day on some business
-of cargo, of which I forget the nature. I was
-standing at the gangway, my duty as midshipman
-being to keep the ship’s side clear of loafers, when
-I saw a large boat heading for us. She was like
-one of those surf-boats you see at Madras. There
-were five fellows rowing her, and one chap steered
-with a long oar. They were all darkies, naked to
-the waist. I was struck by the manner in which
-one of them, as the boat approached, looked over
-the shoulder at our ship. The others kept their
-eyes on their oars or gazed over the stern; but this
-chap stared continuously behind him as the boat
-advanced; by which I mean that he looked ahead,
-for of course a fellow rows with his back upon the
-bow of a boat. They came alongside, and I found
-that the men had a great number of monkeys to
-sell. I looked hard at the fellow whose chin had
-been upon his shoulder as he rowed, and was
-wondering what on earth sort of native he was,
-when, on a sudden, I caught sight of his tail!
-He was a huge ape, of the size of a man—at all
-events, of the size of his shipmates. He so much
-resembled the others at a little distance that there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-was nothing wonderful in my not having distinguished
-him quickly. He had pulled his oar with
-fine precision, keeping time like one of the
-University Eight, and there had been nothing odd
-about him at all, saving his manner of looking
-over his shoulder. The others held up monkeys
-to show us, and, I tell you, I burst into a roar of
-laughter when I saw this great ape pick up a bit of
-a marmozette and flourish it up at me as if he
-would have me buy. In a very little while the
-ship was full of monkeys. Almost every man
-amongst us bought one. I chose a pretty little
-creature that slept in the clews of my hammock
-all the way home; but he grew so tall and quarrelsome
-that my mother, when I was absent last year,
-gave him away to an old gentleman, who shortly
-afterwards, in the most mysterious manner, disappeared,
-together with the monkey.”</p>
-
-<p>“Where wath the mythtery?” asked Kennet.</p>
-
-<p>“Well,” said Poole, “the notion was that the
-monkey had eaten up the old gentleman, dressed
-himself up in his clothes, and gone to London to
-consult a solicitor, with a view of contesting the
-old man’s will, as being next of kin.”</p>
-
-<p>We were gradually now drawing near home.
-The English Channel was no longer so far off but
-that we could think of it as something within
-reach of us. All my clothes had shrunk upon me,
-whence I might know that I had grown much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-taller and broader than I was when I left England.
-My face was dark with weather, the palms of my
-hands hard as horn with pulling and hauling. I
-had the deep-sea rolling gait that is peculiar to
-sailors, and, indeed, I had been transformed during
-the months I had been away into as thorough a
-little “shellback” as was ever made of a boy by
-old ocean. I was wonderfully hearty besides—had
-the appetite of a wolf and the spirits of a young
-spaniel. I was equal to doing “my bit” on board
-ship, whatever might be the job I was set to. I
-could put as neat a bunt to the furl of the mizzen-royal
-as any lad aboard, knew how to send the
-yard down, how to pass an earing—though I was
-too small, and without sufficient strength, to jockey
-the yard-arm in reefing—was well acquainted with
-all the parts of the rigging, and the various uses
-of the complicated gear; could steer, make knots
-of twenty different kinds—in short, I had picked
-up a great deal of sea knowledge of a working
-sort; but I knew nothing of navigation beyond
-the art of bringing the sun down to the horizon
-through a sextant, and working out a simple
-proposition of latitude, for which I had to thank
-Mr. Cock; Captain Tempest taught me nothing.</p>
-
-<p>I was very eager to get home; I had never
-before been so long absent from my parents. I
-was pining, too, for comforts which when at home
-I had made nothing of, but which I would now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-think upon as the highest luxuries. How often
-when hacking with a black-handled knife at a
-piece of iron-hard salt junk and rapping the table
-with a biscuit to free the mouthful of any stray
-weevil which might be lurking in the honeycombed
-fragment—how often, I say, has the vision of my
-father’s table arisen before my eyes: the basin of
-soup at which I have known myself to sometimes
-impatiently turn up my nose; the fried sole or
-delicious morsel of salmon; the roast leg of mutton
-or sirloin of beef, with its attendant vegetables—things
-not to be dreamt of at sea—the jam tarts,
-the apple pies, the custards, not to mention the
-dessert! Oh, how often has the lump of cold salt
-fat pork or the mouthful of nauseous soup and
-bouilli come near to choking me with those thoughts
-of breakfast, dinner, and supper at home, which the
-odious nature of the food on our cabin table has
-excited in my hungry imagination!</p>
-
-<p>After we had crossed the parallels of the Horse
-Latitudes, as they are called, we met with some
-strange weather: thick skies with a look of smoke
-hanging about the horizon, sometimes the sun
-showing as a shapeless oozing, like a rotten orange,
-a dusky green swell rolling up out of two or three
-quarters at once, as it seemed, and shouldering one
-another into a jumble of liquid hills which strained
-the ship severely with rolling, making every tree-nail,
-bolt, and strong fastening cry aloud with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>
-voice of its own, whilst the masts were so wrung
-that you would have expected them any minute to
-snap and fall away overboard.</p>
-
-<p>Some of our passengers whom the mountainous
-seas of the Horn had not in the least degree affected
-were now sea-sick; in fact, I heard of one lady as
-lying below dangerously ill with nausea. The men
-declared it made them feel squeamish to go aloft.
-I should have laughed at this in such salt toughened
-Jacks as they but for an experience of my own; for
-being sent to loose the mizzen topgallant sail, I was
-so oppressed with nausea on my arrival at the cross-trees,
-that it was as much as I could do to get upon
-the yard and cast the gaskets adrift. This was
-owing to the monstrous inequalities of the ship’s
-movements, to the swift jerks and staggering recoveries
-which seemed to displace one’s very stomach
-in one; added to which was the close oppressive
-temperature, a thickness of atmosphere that corresponded
-well with the pease-soup-like appearance
-of the ocean, and that seemed to be explained by
-the sulphur-coloured, smoky sort of sky that ringed
-the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>It was on this same day, or rather in the night
-of it, during the first watch, from eight o’clock to
-midnight, that a strange thing happened. It was
-very dark, so black indeed that though you stood
-shoulder to shoulder with a man you could see
-nothing of him. There was no wind, but a heavy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-swell was running on whose murky, invisible coils
-the ship was violently rolling. There was not a
-break of faintness, not the minutest spot of light
-in the sky, whose countenance, with a scowl of
-thunder upon it, seemed to press close to our
-wildly sheering mast-heads.</p>
-
-<p>There was something so subduing in the impenetrable
-gloom, something that lay with so heavy a
-weight upon the spirits, that the noisiest amongst
-us insensibly softened his voice to a whisper when
-he had occasion to speak. I particularly noticed
-this when some of the watch came aft to clew up
-the main topgallant sail and snug the main sail
-with its gear; there was no singing out at the
-ropes; instead of the hoarse peculiar songs sailors
-are wont to deliver when they drag, the men
-pulled silently as ghosts, and not a syllable fell
-from them that was audible to us when they were
-upon the yard rolling the sail up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 475px;">
-<img src="images/illus25.jpg" width="475" height="700" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“SUDDENLY SHONE OUT A LIGHT.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I was holding on to a belaying pin to steady
-myself when there suddenly shone out a light
-upon the boom iron at the extremity of the main-yard.
-It was of a greenish hue, sickly somewhat,
-so as to make one think of a corpse-candle or a
-graveyard Jack-o’-lantern. It swayed as a bladder
-would or as a soap-bubble might ere it soars from
-the pipe out of which it is blown. It had some
-power of illuminating in spite of its wan complexion,
-for I observed that it threw a very feeble light<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-upon the clew of the sail, and that, as the ship
-rolled the yard-arm on which it shone towards the
-sea, the huge, round, ebony black swell mirrored it
-in the shape of a dull star like a phosphoric jelly-fish.</p>
-
-<p>I had never seen such a sight before, nor indeed
-had I ever heard of the like of such a thing. I was
-standing close to Poole at the time, and he said to
-me—</p>
-
-<p>“What do you think it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, but what <em>is</em> it?” I responded.</p>
-
-<p>“A spirit of the sea!” he exclaimed in a
-sepulchral voice; “the ghost of a dead sailor who
-has grown tired with flying and is resting himself
-on the yard-arm. The souls of dead seamen
-always carry lanterns with them to show them the
-road on dark nights after this pattern.”</p>
-
-<p>As he spoke the fiery exhalation disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>“Ha! he’s started again!” cried Poole. “He’ll
-meet with another ship presently and take another
-spell of rest.”</p>
-
-<p>“A very good explanation, Mr. Poole,” exclaimed
-the voice of the mate, “but not strictly scientific,
-sir.”</p>
-
-<p>He had been standing within earshot of us, yet
-was utterly indistinguishable in the blackness.</p>
-
-<p>“The light, Rockafellar,” continued the officer,
-“is what is called by sailors a corposant. It is
-supposed that the points of iron on board a ship<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-kindle into a flame some quality of electricity in
-the air. I daresay it will show again in a minute.
-Yes, as I thought.... It is on the topsail yard-arm
-now.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.<br />
-<span class="smaller"><i>HE ARRIVES HOME.</i></span></h2>
-
-<p>He had scarcely uttered these words when a shock
-ran through the ship for all the world as though
-the heave of the swell had let her fall with violence
-upon some hard shoal. The decks trembled as
-though to an explosion. The tremor of the fabric
-seemed to enter into one’s very marrow, and it
-would be impossible to express the sense of dismay
-it excited, happening as it did on a black night,
-and in the middle of the wide ocean where we
-knew there could be no shoals for hundreds of
-leagues.</p>
-
-<p>The light at the yard-arm vanished; there was a
-noise of hurrying feet forwards, with a rumbling of
-exclamations uttered in agitation.</p>
-
-<p>“What was that?” was shouted from the companion-hatch
-in the captain’s familiar accents.
-“Mr. Johnson?”</p>
-
-<p>“Sir?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>“What have we struck? Is there any ship near
-us?”</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t know, sir,” answered the mate; “it has
-been as black as thunder all through.”</p>
-
-<p>“Get a cast of the lead,” exclaimed the captain,
-but quietly, with no note of hurry in his voice;
-“send the carpenter aft to sound the pumps; get
-lanterns up to show a light over the side.”</p>
-
-<p>The blow felt as though the ship had struck
-some floating wreck. In a minute the vessel was
-wide awake. The shock had aroused the sleepers,
-who came tumbling up pell-mell out of cabin and
-forecastle. The decks, which before were of a
-death-like stillness, were now alive with sailors
-running about, with passengers full of excitement
-and fear, with lanterns briskly travelling from
-place to place, with one stationary one at the
-pumps, where the white-haired carpenter stood
-lowering his sounding-rod, with the deliberation of
-a Scotchman, down the well.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing to be seen over the side, and
-there was no more water in the bottom of the ship
-than was always to be found there. The sea was
-sounded all around with the hand-lead, but, as will
-readily be supposed, no bottom was got.</p>
-
-<p>In the midst of this commotion the heavens
-seemed to be split open by a flash of lightning;
-the whole surface of the ocean shone out to its
-farthest confines to the crimson blaze, and then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-came, within three seconds of the terrific glare, a
-crash of thunder right overhead. The enormous
-explosion liberated the rain; down it came, a very
-Niagara Falls of water! In a trice it was up to a
-man’s knees in the main-deck, and every mother’s
-son of us was as a drowned rat, soaked through
-and through; the passengers rushing headlong to
-the hatches, and the sailors floundering about here
-and there to the hurried cries of the mate ordering
-sail to be shortened.</p>
-
-<p>There was no more lightning, but the rain continued
-to fall in a living sheet of water, which
-flashed the fire up out of the sea all about us.
-Indeed, the black atmosphere was extraordinarily
-full of electricity, and even through the blinding
-veil of the rain you could catch a sight of bluish
-sparks glittering about the ironwork, with the
-coming and going of nebulous lights upon the
-yard-arms and bowsprit. The ship was snugged
-down, but the furling of the wet and beating
-canvas was hard work. You could not see an
-inch before your face. I had to grope my way on
-to the mizzen topsail yard as a man might
-through a small tunnel in the bottom of a
-pyramid. The foot-ropes were as slippery as ice,
-and as my legs were very short my situation was
-one of real danger, not more due to the sickening
-rolling and strong beating of the heavy saturated
-canvas than to the circumstance of Poole being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-alongside of me—by which I mean that his long
-legs, like a pair of compasses, weighed down the
-foot-rope upon which we were standing into an
-angle down which I would slide, until my feet
-were off the line, and there was nothing to save
-me from going overboard but my grip of the jack-stay.</p>
-
-<p>All the while that we were working we expected
-the mass of impenetrable shadow that hung over
-our heads, dark as the midnight inkiness of a vault,
-to burst into a roaring gale of wind; yet all remained
-quiet; the rain ceased; saving the straining
-noises of the rolling ship there was nothing to be
-heard but the sobbing of water cascading off the
-decks overboard through the scupper holes. No
-more shocks were felt, though I fancy the nerves
-of us all continued on the strain in expectation of
-such another thump as that which had sent the
-people below running up in terror through the
-hatches.</p>
-
-<p>At midnight it was still a thick black calm, and
-the same high swell working that had been running
-throughout the watch. I was not a little rejoiced
-to hear the chimes of the bell, for I had been
-soaked by the downfall to the very marrow, yet
-durst not leave the deck for a minute to change
-my wet clothes for dry ones. We turned in dog-tired,
-and slept without a stir throughout the four
-hours; and when we were called again at four<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-o’clock the stars were shining, the moon was setting
-in the west, a fresh breeze was blowing over our
-starboard quarter, and the <i>Lady Violet</i> was once
-more driving through it on her way home under
-canvas that clothed her from truck to waterway.</p>
-
-<p>What it was that we had struck or that had
-struck us could only be a matter of conjecture.
-The captain was of opinion that the shock had
-been caused by a submarine earthquake—a volcanic
-explosion deep down. “It was the right sort of
-night,” he argued, “for disturbances of that kind;
-the water full of fire, and the atmosphere tingling
-with electricity.” On the other hand, Mr. Johnson
-had no doubt that the ship had received a blow
-from the rising of a whale under her keel. The
-creature had risen to spout, but had been frightened
-by the thump it had given itself and made off.</p>
-
-<p>It was a thing, as I had said, that one could only
-speculate upon. The ship was divided into two
-parties, one accepting the captain’s and the other
-the mate’s opinion. Which side I declared for I
-do not remember; but on recurring to the incident
-at this distance of time, I have no doubt whatever
-that the mate was in the right, for since those days
-I have been on board a ship where an earthquake
-has happened in the deep sea beneath her, and the
-sort of vibratory scraping sensation that accompanied
-the shock was entirely different from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-dull lumpish thud that had made every heart in the
-<i>Lady Violet</i> beat fast on that black night.</p>
-
-<p>As we approached the entrance to the English
-Channel ships grew numerous, and every hour
-yielded us a fresh canvas of ocean panorama. At
-daybreak one morning we spied a large ship right
-ahead, and by four o’clock in the afternoon had
-approached her close enough to read the name
-upon her stern; and great was our triumph when
-we discovered that she was the fine clipper ship
-<i>Owen Glendower</i>, that had left Sydney eight days
-before us. We passed her in the night, and the
-watch on deck let fly an ironical cheer at her,
-taking their chance of being heard, and at sunrise
-next morning nothing but her royal and topgallant
-sails were visible on the shining line of the horizon.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus26.jpg" width="700" height="450" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“A FINE CUTTER CAME THRASHING THROUGH IT.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>It was rather thick weather in the Channel, and
-we saw no land till we made the South Foreland.
-A fine cutter came thrashing through it to alongside
-of us when off Dungeness, and a pilot climbed
-out of her over our side. With what profound
-interest, and joy, and admiration did my young
-eyes explore his purple visage, and survey his stout
-coat and the warm shawl round his neck! He had
-not been on board ten minutes when the sun shone
-forth, and the green and frothing waters of the
-Channel showed clear to the horizon. Then it was
-that the coast of our dear old home lay fair and
-beautiful upon our port beam and bow—white cliffs<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-slopes of green sward, delicate as satin, groups of
-Liliputian houses, with windows sparkling, the
-chocolate-coloured canvas of smacks, the white
-wings of pleasure-yachts, the grimy cloths of round-bowed,
-black-hulled colliers, enriching the surface
-of the laughing seas betwixt us and the line of
-shingle upon which the surf was surging.</p>
-
-<p>Off the South Foreland a tug chased and cleverly
-hooked us by making a short cut to the North
-Foreland, where she intercepted us as we swept
-round in a large, majestic arch, with the red-hulled
-lightship stationed abreast of Ramsgate resting
-like a spot of colour against the yellow shelf of the
-Goodwin Sands, on our port quarter, and a busy
-scene of shipping opening under our bows as we
-headed for the River Thames. But the shift of
-helm brought the wind ahead, and by this time our
-captain and the skipper of the tug, having agreed
-upon the question of terms for towage, the order
-was given to clew up and furl; a line from the tug
-was hove to us, the end of a huge hawser attached
-to it and paid out over the bow, and presently the
-<i>Lady Violet</i>, in tow of the panting little steamer,
-was quietly gliding along for her home in the East
-India Docks, with her crew aloft sending down
-sails and unreeving gear.</p>
-
-<p>News of our being in the Channel had reached
-my father long before we had arrived in the river,
-and he was one of the first to step on board<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-when we had been warped to our berth in the
-docks.</p>
-
-<p>I was below, polishing myself up to go ashore,
-when Kennet called through the hatch that my
-father was on the quarter-deck and waiting to see
-me. I rushed up, and in a moment was in his
-arms. I had no objection to his kissing me now;
-in fact, I may say that I kissed him. The overstrained
-sense of manliness in me was gone. I was
-a young sailor with a full heart, and there were
-tears both in my father’s and my own eyes as he
-drew away from me, after our first hug, to have a
-good look at me.</p>
-
-<p>“The picture of health!—gracious, how sunburnt—grown
-a whole foot, I do declare!—my
-goodness, Tommy, what shoulders!”</p>
-
-<p>This, and the like, was all he could say for some
-time. I asked after my mother, my sisters, my
-little brother. Thank God, they were all well, and
-eagerly awaiting my arrival at home.</p>
-
-<p>“I have ordered a jolly good dinner at the
-Brunswick Hotel,” said my father; “let us go and
-partake of it, my son. But first you will say good-bye
-to the officers and your shipmates.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 700px;">
-<img src="images/illus27.jpg" width="700" height="500" alt="" />
-<p class="caption">“WERE SEATED AT A TABLE.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The captain was not to be seen. Mr. Johnson
-shook me cordially by the hand and assured my
-father that I had the making of a sailor in me.
-All the midshipmen had hurried ashore with the
-exception of Kennet, who was below, sitting on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-chest smoking his pipe when I descended to say
-farewell to such of the lads as I could find in the
-cabin. He pretended to weep as he squeezed my
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>I said, “Kennet, are you not going ashore?”</p>
-
-<p>“Yeth,” he said; “but I muth finith my pipe
-firtht.”</p>
-
-<p>“Kennet,” I said, “come and dine with my father
-and me. He has ordered a good dinner to be in
-readiness for us at the Brunswick Hotel.”</p>
-
-<p>He threw down the sooty clay pipe he had been
-smoking and jumped up.</p>
-
-<p>“Rockafellar,” he said, “I alwayth thaid you
-were a brick!”</p>
-
-<p>A little later, my father, Kennet, and myself
-were seated at a table, white with damask and
-sparkling with glass, in a window overlooking the
-Docks. Oh! the excellence of the roast beef!
-Oh! the sweetness of the cauliflower with its
-melted butter! Oh! the incomparable flavour of
-the mealy potatoes!</p>
-
-<p>“Ithth the change from thalt horthe, thir, that
-maketh it nithe,” said Kennet, with his mouth
-full.</p>
-
-<p>And so ended Master Rockafellar’s voyage.
-Would you like to know if I ever went to sea
-again? Well it is a question that need not signify
-just now. If this little yarn which I have been
-spinning has amused you, then, should you desire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-more by-and-by, I don’t doubt there is enough stuff
-stowed away in the locker of my memory to make
-plenty of “twisters,” as stories are called at sea.
-Meanwhile, boys and girls, I touch the peak of my
-midshipman’s cap to you in respectful farewell.</p>
-
-<p class="titlepage">UNWIN BROTHERS, LIMITED, PRINTERS, WOKING AND LONDON.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Master Rockafellar's Voyage, by
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