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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
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+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #62344 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/62344)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of My Shipmate Louise, Volume 2 (of 3), by
-William Clark Russell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: My Shipmate Louise, Volume 2 (of 3)
- The Romance of a Wreck
-
-Author: William Clark Russell
-
-Release Date: June 8, 2020 [EBook #62344]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY SHIPMATE LOUISE, VOLUME 2 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David E. Brown and The Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-MY SHIPMATE LOUISE
-
-VOL. II.
-
-
-
-
-NEW NOVELS AT ALL LIBRARIES.
-
-
- A FELLOW OF TRINITY. By ALAN ST. AUBYN and WALT WHEELER. 3 vols.
-
- THE WORD AND THE WILL. By JAMES PAYN. 3 vols.
-
- AUNT ABIGAIL DYKES. By GEORGE RANDOLPH. 1 vol.
-
- A WARD OF THE GOLDEN GATE. By BRET HARTE. 1 vol.
-
- RUFFINO. By OUIDA. 1 vol.
-
-London: CHATTO & WINDUS, Piccadilly, W.
-
-
-
-
- MY SHIPMATE LOUISE
-
- The Romance of a Wreck
-
-
- BY
-
- W. CLARK RUSSELL
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- IN THREE VOLUMES
-
- VOL. II.
-
-
- London
- CHATTO & WINDUS, PICCADILLY
- 1890
-
-
-
-
- PRINTED BY
- SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
- LONDON
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
- OF
- THE SECOND VOLUME
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- XV. A SINGULAR PLOT 1
-
- XVI. WE SIGHT A WRECK 22
-
- XVII. THE ‘MAGICIENNE’ 45
-
- XVIII. ADRIFT 66
-
- XIX. NIGHT 86
-
- XX. I SEARCH THE WRECK 108
-
- XXI. WE SIGHT A SAIL 134
-
- XXII. THE ‘LADY BLANCHE’ 156
-
- XXIII. CAPTAIN BRAINE 178
-
- XXIV. THE CREW OF THE BARQUE 202
-
- XXV. I KEEP A LOOKOUT 223
-
- XXVI. I AM QUESTIONED 245
-
- XXVII. THE BRIG’S LONGBOAT 269
-
- XXVIII. I QUESTION WETHERLY 289
-
-
-
-
-MY SHIPMATE LOUISE
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-A SINGULAR PLOT
-
-
-It speedily ran amongst us of the cuddy that the dead sailor who had
-been so very impressively interred by old Keeling had returned to the
-ship, and was alive in some part of her, secure in handcuffs or in
-leg-irons; but so much was made of the fire which had broken out that
-Crabb’s reappearance lost as a miracle half the weight it would have
-carried had it happened alone. Besides, the sense of the people soon
-gathered that the business was a plot which had been managed with
-astonishing cleverness, and it all seemed plain as mud in a wine-glass
-when the whisper went round that Hemmeridge was under arrest as an
-arch-conspirator in the matter. And certainly it made one feel far
-from comfortable even to think that for the past weeks a ruffian of a
-true piratical complexion had been secreted in the ship’s hold, where
-his confederates would keep him supplied with tobacco and the means of
-lighting it, and where, in his borings and pryings, he was tolerably
-certain to have stumbled upon something inflammatory in the shape of
-spirits. Indeed, it made me draw my breath short when my mind went to
-the rum puncheons and the powder-magazine below, and to the vision of
-Crabb, drunk, stupidly groping with a naked light in his hand, during
-some midnight hour, maybe, when we were all in bed.
-
-However, the imagination of the passengers would hardly go to these
-lengths. Their thoughts held to the fire, and their talk chiefly
-concerned it. When the skipper came below for a glass of grog that
-night, the ladies so baited him with questions that one pitied him
-almost for not being able to enjoy the privilege of venting his heated
-soul in a few strong words.
-
-‘I _cannot_ satisfy myself, Captain Keeling, that the fire is utterly
-extinguished,’ said Mrs. Bannister.
-
-‘Might it not burst out again, capting?’ cried Mrs. Hudson. ‘There
-should be plenty of pails kept filled with water ready to empty if
-smoke is smelt.’
-
-‘Perhaps something may be on fire even now!’ exclaimed Mrs Joliffe,
-‘something that doesn’t make a smoke; and how _then_ are the sailors to
-tell if all is right in the bottom of the ship?’
-
-‘Captain Keeling,’ cried Mrs. Trevor, ‘is it quite safe to go to bed,
-do you think?’
-
-‘If a fire should break out,’ said Miss Hudson in a trembling voice,
-as though shudder after shudder were chasing through her, ‘how can we
-depend upon being called? It is impossible to hear downstairs what is
-going on on deck.’
-
-Poor old marline-spike made a bolt of it at last, fairly turning tail
-and rushing up the companion steps when it came to the colonel striking
-in and topping off the female broadsides by inquiries of a like nature
-delivered at the very height of his pipes.
-
-However, the night passed quietly; and when next morning came and the
-people assembled at breakfast, all fear of fire was seemingly gone,
-and little more was talked about than Crabb and what his designs had
-been, the topic gathering no mean accentuation from the doctor’s vacant
-place. Somewhere about ten o’clock I was standing at the taffrail
-watching the ship’s wake, that was languidly streaming off in a short
-oily surface, and wondering whether, if we were to fall in with nothing
-brisker than these faint airs and draughts of wind, all hands would not
-have grown white-haired and decrepit by the time we were up with the
-Cape, leaving the Indian Ocean and Bombay out of consideration, when
-the head-steward came up to me.
-
-‘Captain Keeling’s compliments, sir, and he’ll feel greatly hobliged,
-providing you’re not hotherwise occupied, by your stepping to his
-cabin, sir.’
-
-‘Oh yes, with pleasure,’ said I. ‘Is he alone?’
-
-‘He is not, sir.’
-
-I went down the companion steps, knocked at the captain’s door, and
-entered. It was a roomy interior, a very noble ship’s berth, occupying
-hard upon the width of the deck right aft, saving, as I have before
-described, a sort of small chart-room alongside, bulkheaded off. There
-was a large stern window, after the olden fashion, with the blue
-line of the horizon gently sliding up and down it, and a shivering
-light lifting off the sea to the glass, sharp and of a sort of azure
-brilliancy, as though from diamonds set a-trembling. Keeling, in full
-fig, his face showing of a dark red against some maple-coloured ground
-of bulkhead or ship’s side, was seated at a table. He instantly rose
-on my entering, gave me one of his wire-drawn bows, and motioned me
-to a seat, thanking me in a few words for coming. On the starboard
-hand stood Crabb and the sailmaker, handcuffed, and on either side of
-them was a seaman with a cutlass dangling at his hip. On the port hand
-sat Dr. Hemmeridge, his legs crossed, his thumbs in the armholes of
-his waistcoat, and his head drooped. He was deadly pale, and looked
-horribly ill and worried. Near him was one of the sailors, a young
-fellow of some seven or eight and twenty, with a quantity of hair
-falling over his brow, a straggling beard, and small black eyes, which
-roamed swiftly in glances charged methought with the spirit of mutiny
-and menace and defiance. Mr. Prance was at the captain’s elbow; and the
-third mate was seated at an end of the table with a pen in his hand and
-some paper in front of him.
-
-I bowed to Hemmeridge, but he took no notice. Until the captain
-addressed me, I stared hard at Crabb; for even now, with the ugly
-ruffian standing before me, my mind found it difficult to realise
-that he was alive; that the creature I gazed at was the man whom all
-hands of us, with an exception or two, supposed overboard a thousand
-fathoms deep. There was, besides, the fascination of his ugliness. The
-hunch-like curve of his back, his little blood-stained eyes looking
-away from his nose, as though they sought to peer at something at the
-back of his head, the greasy trail of carroty hair upon his back,
-the fragment of nose over his hare-lip, these and the rest of him
-combined into the representation of the most extravagantly grotesque,
-ill-favoured figure ever witnessed outside the bars of a menagerie. The
-sailmaker’s face was as white as one of his bolts of canvas, but it
-wore a determined look, though I noticed a quivering in the nostrils of
-his high-perched nose, and a constant uneasy movement of the fingers,
-as of dying hands plucking at bedclothes.
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale,’ exclaimed old Keeling with the dignity and gravity of
-a judge, ‘I’ve taken the liberty to send for you, as I am informed
-by Mr. Prance that when that man there’--inclining his head towards
-Crabb without looking at him--‘was lying, as it was supposed, dead in
-his bunk, you accompanied Mr. Hemmeridge, the ship’s surgeon’--here he
-indicated the doctor with a motion of his head but without looking at
-him either--‘into the forecastle, and stood for some considerable time
-surveying the so-called corpse.’
-
-‘That is quite true,’ said I.
-
-‘Did Mr. Hemmeridge expose the man’s face to you?’
-
-‘He did.’
-
-‘What impression was produced upon your mind by the sight of the--of
-the--body?’
-
-Crabb gave a horrible grin.
-
-‘That he was stone-dead, Captain Keeling; so stone-dead, sir, that I
-can scarcely credit the man himself is now before me.’
-
-Hemmeridge looked up and fixed his eyes upon me.
-
-‘It is but reasonable I should inform you, Mr. Dugdale,’ continued
-old marline-spike, ‘that Mr. Hemmeridge is under arrest on suspicion
-of conspiring with Crabb, with Willett, and with Thomas Bobbins’--he
-glanced at the man who stood next to the doctor--‘to plunder the ship.
-Bobbins has given evidence that leaves me in no doubt as to the guilt
-of Crabb and Willett.’
-
-Crabb uttered a curse through his teeth, accompanied with a look at the
-young seaman, in the one-eyed gleam of which murder methought was writ
-too large to be mistaken for any other intention. Old Keeling did not
-heed him.
-
-‘Bobbins’s story,’ he continued, ‘is to this effect: that Crabb was to
-swallow a potion which would produce the appearance of death; that the
-sailmaker was to have a hammock weighted, shaped, and in all respects
-equipped to resemble the one in which Crabb would be stitched up: that
-in the dead of night, when the ship was silent, and the deck forward
-vacant, the sham hammock was to be placed upon the fore-hatch by the
-sailmaker and Bobbins, and the cover containing that man’--inclining
-his head at Crabb--‘conveyed into the sailmaker’s cabin, where it
-was to be cut open, the man freed, and secreted in the berth till
-consciousness had returned, and he was in a fit state to seize the
-first opportunity of sneaking into the hold. All this was done,’ old
-Keeling went on, Mr. Prance meanwhile looking as grave as an owl over
-the skipper’s shoulder, whilst every now and again a hideous grin
-would distort Crabb’s frightful mouth, though the sailmaker continued
-to stare at the captain with a white and determined countenance, and
-Hemmeridge to listen with a frowning worried look, his leg that crossed
-the other swinging like a pendulum. ‘The man Crabb got into the hold,
-was supplied with food and drink by Willett and Bobbins, and with tools
-to enable him to break into the mail-room’----
-
-‘And I’d ha’ done it too,’ here interrupted Crabb in a voice like a saw
-going through a balk of timber, ‘if it hadn’t been for the stinking
-smoke of them blasted blankets.’
-
-‘This inquiry,’ continued Keeling, ‘now entirely concerns Mr.
-Hemmeridge. You tell me, Mr. Dugdale, that Crabb seemed to you as a
-stone-dead man.’
-
-‘The devil himself couldn’t ha’ told the difference,’ bawled Crabb.
-‘_He’s_ not in it,’ insolently motioning with his elbow towards the
-doctor. ‘Wouldn’t that blooming Bobbins ha’ said so?’ and he darted
-another murderous glance at the hairy young sailor.
-
-‘I can assure you, Captain Keeling,’ said I, ‘that the man was
-perfectly dead. There is not a shadow of a doubt in my mind that Mr.
-Hemmeridge was fully convinced the body was a corpse. Convinced,
-captain, but dissatisfied too; and perhaps,’ said I, with a glance at
-Crabb, ‘it is a pity for more sakes than one that he did not carry out
-his idea of a post-mortem examination.’
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale,’ exclaimed Hemmeridge in a low, deep, trembling voice,
-‘before God and man, I am innocent; and I hope to live to call Captain
-Keeling to account for this monstrous slander, this enormous suspicion,
-this dishonourable and detestable accusation.’
-
-‘I’ve never heered,’ said the man named Bobbins, in a long-drawn
-whining voice, ‘that this gent was consarned. I remembered Crabb asking
-what was to be done if so be the surgeon should cut him up to see what
-he died of, and Mr. Willett kissed the Bible afore Crabb and me to
-this: that if the surgeon made up his mind to open Crabb, Willett was
-to show him the bottle of physic, and to tell him that Crabb had took
-it for some bad complaint, and that, though he might look dead, he
-worn’t so.’
-
-Crabb hove a fearful curse at the man. The bushy-whiskered sailor who
-guarded him on the right significantly put his hand upon the hilt of
-his cutlass whilst he said something to him under his breath.
-
-‘This is new to me,’ exclaimed Keeling, screwing his eye gimlet-fashion
-into the face of Bobbins, and then letting it drop, as if satisfied.
-‘Mr. Hemmeridge, I have _suspected_ you, sir; but it’s a little soon
-for you to talk of my having _accused_ you. You are a medical man. If
-anybody knows death by looking upon it you should. Yet, though this man
-Crabb is merely counterfeiting death, you come aft to me and report him
-dead! What am I to infer? Your ignorance or your guilt, sir?’
-
-‘Captain Keeling,’ cried I, ‘believe me when I promise you the man
-was not _counterfeiting_ death. He was to all intents and purposes
-a corpse. How was this brought about? Surely by no exercise of his
-own art. The look of the eye--the droop of the jaw--the hue of the
-skin--Captain Keeling, it was death to the sight: no counterfeit--an
-effect produced by something much more powerful than the effort of such
-a will as that man has;’ and I pointed with my thumb at Crabb, who
-told me with a curse to mind my own business.
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale, I thank you,’ said Hemmeridge, bowing to me.
-
-Captain Keeling held up a long thin phial about three-quarters full of
-a dark liquor. I had not before noticed it.
-
-‘This has been produced,’ said he, ‘by the man Bobbins, who states that
-it is the stuff which Crabb swallowed, and which caused the death-like
-aspect you saw in him.’ He put the bottle down; then clenching his
-fist, smote the table violently. ‘I cannot credit it!’ he cried.
-‘I cannot be imposed on. Am I to believe that there is any drug in
-existence which will produce in a living being the exact semblance of
-death?’
-
-‘Oh, I think so, sir,’ said Prance, speaking mildly.
-
-Hemmeridge sneered.
-
-‘A semblance of death,’ roared old Keeling, twisting round upon his
-chief mate, ‘capable of deceiving the eye--the practised eye of a
-medical man? You may give me a dose of laudanum, and I may look dead
-to you, sir, but not to Mr. Hemmeridge yonder. No, sir; I am not to be
-persuaded,’ and here he brought his fist down upon the table again.
-‘It is either gross ignorance or direct connivance, and I mean to be
-satisfied--I mean to sift it to the bottom--I mean to get at the truth,
-by----!’
-
-His face was full of blood, and he puffed and blew like a swimmer
-struggling for his life.
-
-‘You’ve got the truth, and be so-and-so to you,’ broke in Crabb.
-
-The armed sailor ground his elbow into the fellow’s ribs.
-
-‘I am merely here to answer your questions, Captain Keeling,’ said I,
-‘and must apologise for taking a single step beyond the object you
-had in calling me to you; but at least permit me to ask, cannot Mr.
-Hemmeridge explain the nature of the drug contained in that bottle?’
-
-‘I do not know what it is,’ exclaimed Hemmeridge.
-
-‘Suppose, sir,’ said Mr. Prance, ‘we give Crabb another dose; then
-you’ll be able to judge for yourself.’
-
-‘You don’t give me no more doses!’ said Crabb. ‘Try it on yourselves.’
-
-The captain sat a little, looking at me vacantly, lost in thought. He
-suddenly turned to Hemmeridge.
-
-‘You are at liberty, sir; I remove the arrest.’
-
-‘And is that all?’ exclaimed the other, after a brief pause, viewing
-him steadily. ‘I must have an apology, sir; an apology ample, abundant,
-satisfying.’
-
-‘I will see you’--began old Keeling, then checked himself. ‘You can
-leave this cabin, sir.’
-
-Hemmeridge rose from his chair. ‘I leave this cabin, sir,’ said he,
-‘and I also leave my duties. Professionally, I do no more in this
-ship, sir. You have disgraced, you have dishonoured me. But,’ said
-he, shaking his finger at him, ‘you shall make me amends at Bombay,
-sir--you shall make me amends at Bombay!’
-
-He stalked from the cabin, old Keeling watching him with a frown, but
-in silence.
-
-‘Captain,’ I exclaimed, rising as the door closed behind the doctor,
-‘I am persuaded that Mr. Hemmeridge is innocent of all participation in
-this bad business. You have on board a gentleman who, I believe, has a
-very extensive knowledge of drugs and herbs and the like--I mean Mr.
-Saunders. It is just possible he might know the nature of the contents
-of that bottle.’
-
-Keeling reflected a minute, and then said: ‘Mr. Prance, send my
-compliments to Mr. Saunders, and ask him to my cabin.’
-
-The mate went out; I was following him.
-
-‘Pray, stay a little, Mr. Dugdale,’ said the skipper.--‘Men, take those
-fellows forward.--Remain where you are,’ he added, turning to Bobbins.
-
-A seaman flung open the door, and Crabb and the sailmaker passed out,
-followed by the second armed sailor, who silenced some blasphemous
-abuse that Crabb had paused to deliver, by giving him a shove that
-drove him headlong into the cuddy.
-
-‘I am sorry to detain you, Mr. Dugdale,’ said the captain. ‘Mr.
-Saunders is a rather nervous gentleman, and it might be agreeable to
-him to find you here.’
-
-‘You do not detain me, Captain Keeling. This is an amazing business,
-almost too wonderful in its way to believe in. Have you ascertained how
-Crabb became possessed of that magical drug?--and magical it must be,
-captain, for I give you my word that never showed any corpse deader
-than that fellow when Hemmeridge removed the canvas from his face.’
-
-‘I beg your honour’s pardon,’ exclaimed Bobbins, preserving his
-lamenting and whining voice, and knuckling his forehead as he spoke,
-whilst I could see old Keeling lifting his eyes to him with disgust
-and aversion strong in his purple countenance. ‘Mr. Willett told me
-that Crabb ’ud say he’d got that there stuff off a travelling Jew that
-he fell in with at some Mediterranean port. He bought two lots of it,
-and tried a dose on a man who took it unbeknown, reckoning it good for
-spasms. He believed as it had killed the chap, sich was his corpse-like
-swound; but he come to all right arter four-and-twenty hours, and niver
-knowed nothen about it, and believed it still to be Monday when it were
-Toosday. This put the scheme he tried on here into his head.’
-
-‘Has he ever attempted anything of the same sort before?’ inquired
-Keeling.
-
-‘I dunno, sir. He’s a bad un. It ’ud make a marble heffigy sweat to
-hear him talk in his sleep.’
-
-There was a knock at the cabin door, and Mr. Prance ushered in Mr.
-Saunders. The little chap looked very small as he entered, holding his
-large hat in his hand. He was pale, and stared up at us with something
-of alarm as we rose to his entrance, the skipper giving him the same
-hide-bound bow that he had greeted me with.
-
-‘Is Mr. Saunders acquainted with the story of this business, Mr.
-Prance?’ old Keeling inquired.
-
-‘Yes, sir,’ replied the mate. ‘I gave him the substance of it in a few
-words as we came along.’
-
-‘It is extremely startling,’ said the little man, climbing on to the
-chair into which old Keeling had waved him, and dangling his short legs
-over the edge as a small boy might.
-
-‘Your knowledge of drugs and medicines, Mr. Saunders, is, I believe,
-very considerable?’ said the skipper. The little fellow bowed. ‘This,’
-said Keeling, holding up the phial, ‘is a drug, the stupefying effects
-of which, I am informed, are so remarkable that any one who takes it
-entirely loses animation, and presents such an aspect of death as will
-deceive the eye of the most expert medical practitioner. Is such a
-thing conceivable, Mr. Saunders?’
-
-The little man reflected very earnestly for some moments, with his eyes
-fixed upon Keeling. He then asked Mr. Prance to hand him the phial,
-which he uncorked, and smelt and tasted.
-
-‘I cannot be positive,’ he exclaimed, with a slow, wise shake of
-his large head; ‘but I strongly suspect this to be what is known as
-_morion_, the death-wine of Pliny and Dioscorides. Mr. Dugdale, observe
-the strange, peculiar faint smell--what does it suggest?’
-
-I put the bottle to my nose and sniffed. ‘Opium will it be, Mr.
-Saunders?’
-
-‘Just so,’ he cried. ‘Captain Keeling, smell you, sir.’
-
-The old skipper applied the bottle to his nostrils and snuffled a
-little. ‘I should call this a kind of opium,’ said he.
-
-‘If,’ exclaimed Mr. Saunders, ‘it be morion, as I believe it is, it
-is made from the mandragora or mandrake of the kind that flourishes
-in Greece and Palestine and in certain parts of the Mediterranean
-seaboard.’
-
-‘But am I to understand,’ said Keeling, ‘that a dose of it is going to
-make a man look as dead as if he were killed?’
-
-‘The effect of morion,’ responded Mr. Saunders, ‘is that of suspended
-animation, scarcely distinguishable from death.’
-
-‘Could it deceive a qualified man such as Dr. Hemmeridge?’ demanded the
-skipper.
-
-‘I should think it very probable,’ answered little Saunders cautiously;
-‘in fact, sir, as we have seen, he _was_ deceived by the effects of
-that drug, be it morion or anything else.’
-
-‘You can go forward,’ said the captain to Bobbins.
-
-The fellow flourished a hand to his brow and left the cabin.
-
-‘Mr. Saunders, I am obliged to you, sir, for your information,’
-continued old Keeling. ‘I trust to have your opinion confirmed either
-in Bombay or in London. To me it seems a very incredible thing. Mr.
-Dugdale, I thank you for the trouble you have given yourself to attend
-here.’
-
-He bowed; and little Saunders and myself, accompanied by Mr. Prance,
-entered the cuddy.
-
-‘A most extraordinary business altogether,’ cried the little man: ‘it
-is wonderful enough, supposing the stuff to be morion, that a common
-sailor should be in possession of such a drug; but much more wonderful
-yet that it should occur to him to employ it as an instrument in
-probably the most audacious project ever adventured on board ship.’
-
-‘Hemmeridge might have opened Crabb,’ said I.
-
-‘Well, the rogue foresaw it, and provided against it, as we know,’
-exclaimed Mr. Prance. ‘There is pocketable booty in the mail-room to
-the value of hard upon a hundred and fifty thousand pounds. A man like
-Crabb will run risks for such plunder, Mr. Dugdale. If the sailmaker
-had kept his word and produced the bottle to Hemmeridge, the doctor
-would have been pretty sure to stay his hand.’
-
-‘Why, likely as not,’ I exclaimed: ‘but tell me, Mr. Prance--that
-fellow Bobbins seems to have been coaxed very easily into peaching.’
-
-‘Ay,’ said he; ‘there’d been an ugly quarrel between him and Willett
-ten days ago. I believe the rascal would not have split whilst Crabb
-lay snug and secret in the hold, but on his showing himself, Bobbins
-took fright, thought of his neck, and being actuated besides by hatred
-of Willett, came forward and volunteered the whole yarn.’
-
-‘And how is he to be served?’ inquired Mr. Saunders.
-
-‘Left to be at large, sir,’ answered the mate; ‘and punishment enough,
-too, as any one may suppose, of a false-hearted, lily-livered shipmate
-who has to swing his hammock three or four months among a forecastle
-full of hands. For my part,’ added he with a laugh, ‘if I were that
-miscreant, I’d rather be snug in irons along with Willett and the
-cast-eyed pirate, stowed safe out of sight.’
-
-He entered his cabin, and Mr. Saunders and I stepped on to the
-quarter-deck.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-WE SIGHT A WRECK
-
-
-The wonder and excitement raised in us by the extraordinary forecastle
-conspiracy to plunder the ship’s mail-room passed away in two or three
-days. Monotony at sea is heavy and flattening. It passes over the soul
-as an iron roller over a lawn, and smoothes down every asperity of
-memory into the merest flatness of moods and humours. Hemmeridge showed
-himself no more. I never again saw him whilst I was in the _Countess
-Ida_. He lay hid in his cabin, where he was fed, by the captain’s
-orders, from the cuddy table; but he refused to leave his berth, swore
-he would not prescribe so much as a pill though a pestilence should
-fall upon the whole ship’s company, and virtually left us all without
-the means of obtaining professional advice. His part in Crabb’s and the
-sailmaker’s scheme was vehemently discussed, as you will suppose. The
-colonel of course was without a shadow of a doubt of his guilt; but
-the rest of us, saving Mr. Johnson, who declined to give an opinion,
-considered him as wholly innocent.
-
-Little Saunders gave himself a small air of importance as a person
-referred to by the captain on his knowledge of herbs, and strutted on
-the merits of his suspicion that the liquor was what he called morion.
-He took me into his cabin, and climbing into his bunk, produced a folio
-volume half the size of himself, with which he dropped upon the deck,
-hugging the book to his heart as though it were his wife.
-
-‘Here,’ said he, opening the volume and pointing at it and looking
-up into my face, ‘is an account of the growth out of which morion is
-extracted. That,’ continued he, still pointing with a little forefinger
-and a long white nail, ‘is a picture of the plant in flower. This is
-an illustration of the young fruit. Here is the ovary, and here is the
-stamen. It is, in short, the well known mandragora of Hippocrates. It
-consists of three or four species of stemless herbs, perennial,’ said
-he, carrying his eyes to the book, ‘and very hardy. Their roots are
-large and thick; and, as I told the captain,’ cried he with a little
-movement of triumph, and pointing to the sentence eagerly, ‘it is an
-inhabitant of the Mediterranean parallels.’
-
-And then the little chap read out a long description of the flowers of
-the mandrake, of the corolla and lobes, of the berries and leaves, and
-I know not what else besides, in all of which my ignorant ear could
-find nothing of the smallest interest.
-
-He afterwards went with his big book to the skipper, who, Mr. Prance
-told me, was impressed, though he was not to be persuaded.
-
-‘He will not believe,’ said the chief officer, ‘that there can be any
-aspect in a living body to deceive a medical man into a belief that the
-person is dead. I said to him: “How about the folks that are buried
-alive, sir?” He answered: “They are unhappy wretches, whom ignorant
-and gross persons, calling themselves medical men, lightly glance at
-and pronounce dead, and hurry away from. Hemmeridge would know better,
-sir. He _does_ know better. I cannot satisfy myself that he could not
-distinguish life in that man Crabb. And what’s the inference then? No
-matter, sir. I will have this thing gone closely into when we arrive
-at Bombay.” Captain Keeling is an obstinate old sailor, Mr. Dugdale,’
-continued the mate. ‘In truth, Hemmeridge is as innocent as you or I.’
-
-Three days passed away. All this while the Indiaman was scarcely doing
-more than rippling through it. It was hard to realise that we were out
-in the mid-heart almost of one of old earth’s mightiest oceans, so
-peaceful was the water, so still the heavens, so placid the dim sultry
-distances, where sky and sea were blended in a blue faintness, out of
-the north-west corner of which the light wind blew without power enough
-to swing the foot of the courses or to put a twinkle into the tall
-moon-coloured cloths of the topmast studdingsails.
-
-It was a Monday morning, as very well indeed do I remember. I went
-on deck at about seven o’clock for a bath; and on looking over the
-forecastle rail, down away upon the starboard bow I caught sight of
-something sparkling that might very well have passed for the reflection
-in the water of a brilliant luminary. The old Scotch carpenter
-was leaning against the forecastle capstan smoking a pipe, his
-weather-hardened face of leather drooping over his folded arms.
-
-‘Pray, what is that object shining down there?’ said I.
-
-‘Well, it puzzled me, sir,’ he answered, slowly raising his head,
-and then leisurely staring in the direction of the appearance: ‘It’s
-naething mair nor less than a ship’s hull, sir.’
-
-By this time I was able to distinguish a bit clearer, and could trace,
-amid the delicate haze of silver glory that was hanging all over the
-sea that way, as it came in gushing and floating folds of magnificence
-from the sun that was already many degrees above the horizon, the
-outline of the hull of a small vessel, the proportions so faint as
-to be almost illusive. She was too far distant to exhibit much more
-than the mere flash she made, yet she was an object to constrain the
-attention in that wide blank shining calm of sea, and I lingered a
-little while looking at her, meanwhile yarning with the old carpenter
-about Crabb and the sailmaker and the incident of the fire, and such
-matters.
-
-At breakfast there was some talk about this hull, and Mr. Emmett told
-the captain that he hoped a shot would be sent at her, as who was to
-know but that another cargo of monkeys might be exorcised out of the
-fabric.
-
-‘I should rather like to visit a wreck,’ I heard Miss Temple say across
-the table to Mr. Colledge: ‘I mean, of course, an abandoned vessel
-floating in the middle of the ocean.’
-
-‘I protest I would rather die than think of such a thing,’ exclaimed
-her aunt.
-
-‘Well, I don’t know,’ said Colledge; ‘it would be something to do and
-something to talk about. Did you ever board a wreck, Captain Keeling?’
-
-‘No, sir.’
-
-‘I would choose a wreck,’ continued Miss Temple, in her clear, rich,
-somewhat trembling voice, but with an air that let you know she
-confined her speech to Mrs. Radcliffe and the young sprig opposite,
-and old marline-spike, as I love to call him, ‘that had been abandoned
-for months, indeed for years, if such a thing could be: a hull covered
-with shells and weed and grass, into which the spirit of the enormous
-loneliness of the wide ocean had entered, so that you could get to
-think of her as a creation of the sea itself, as an uninhabited island
-is, or a noble seabird. Think,’ she continued, fixing her large dark
-eyes upon Colledge with a light, almost sarcastic smile flickering
-about her lips, as though she was perfectly sensible that her
-thoughts and language were a trifle taller than that honourable young
-gentleman’s intellectual stature rose to--‘think of being utterly alone
-during a long, breathless, moonlit night on board such a wreck as I am
-imagining. The stillness! the imaginations which would come shaping out
-of the shadows! By putting one’s ear to the hatchway, as you sailors
-call it, Captain Keeling, what should one be able to hear?’
-
-‘The noise of water washing about below, ma’am--I don’t see what else,’
-answered the old skipper, stiffening up his figure, whilst he adjusted
-his cravat, and gazing at her with a highly literal countenance over
-the points of his shirt collars.
-
-She did not seem to hear him; her head had drooped, as though to a
-sudden engrossing thought, and her gaze rested upon something which her
-delicate fingers toyed with upon the table.
-
-‘What very odd fancies you have, Louise,’ exclaimed Mrs. Radcliffe with
-a peck of her face at the girl’s handsome profile.
-
-‘Rather a good subject for a descriptive article, Johnson,’ exclaimed
-Emmett aside with a drawl.
-
-‘Or for a picture,’ answered Johnson; ‘better on canvas than on paper,
-I think; don’t you, Mr. Saunders? Calm sea--a moon up in the air--a
-wreck showing black against the white reflection under the planet--a
-haughty young lady’--here he softened his voice--‘inclining her head to
-the fore-hatch with her hand to her ear.--A first-class idea, Emmett.
-Seize it, or it may occur to another man.’
-
-Miss Temple was speaking again, but the rude imbecile jabber of the
-journalist prevented me from hearing her; and bestowing a sea-blessing
-on his head under my breath, I left the table and went on deck.
-
-There was every promise of a dead calm anon. The sea looked like ice
-in places with the bluish glint of the brine that softened the lines
-and curves betwixt the crawlings of the air into a tender contrast for
-the lustrous azure of the water where it was touched by the wind. It
-was a high, hot, cloudless morning, the topmost canvas, white as milk,
-looking dizzy up in the blue, as though it trembled in some sultry
-belt of atmosphere there. I went to the rail to view the wreck, and
-instantly made out on the other side of her the shining square of a
-sail--some ship on the rim of the horizon that had crawled into sight
-since six bells of the morning watch, and was now creeping down the
-smooth plain of sea with her yards braced somewhat forward, making a
-wind for herself out of what was scarce more than a catspaw to us, who
-had the thin fanning nearly over the stern.
-
-Prance came up from the breakfast table with a telescope in his hand
-and stood by my side.
-
-‘That ship down yonder grows,’ he exclaimed, pointing the glass and
-speaking with his eye at it; ‘there’ll be more air stirring down there
-than here; but little enough anywhere presently, though I tell you
-what, Mr Dugdale, there’s drop enough in the mercury to inspire one
-with hope.’
-
-He brought the telescope to bear upon the hull, and was silent for
-a few moments, whilst I waited impatiently for him to make an end,
-wanting to look too.
-
-‘I don’t think I can be mistaken,’ said he presently in a musing
-voice: ‘look you, Mr. Dugdale.’
-
-‘At what?’ said I, as I took the glass from him.
-
-‘At the hull yonder.’
-
-I put the telescope upon the rail and knelt to it. Points which were
-invisible to the naked sight were clear enough now. The wreck was that
-of a vessel of some two hundred and fifty tons. She sat very light or
-high upon the water, and it was a part of the copper that rose to her
-bends which had emitted the flash that caught my eye on the forecastle.
-Her foremast was standing, and her foreyard lay crossed upon it. Her
-bowsprit also forked out, but the jib-booms were gone. Lengths of her
-bulwark were smashed level to the deck; but gaunt as her mastless
-condition made her look, miserable as she showed in the mutilation of
-her sides, the beautiful shape of the hull stole out upon the sight
-through the deformities of her wrecked condition, as the fine shape of
-a woman expresses itself in defiance of the beggar’s rags which may
-clothe her.
-
-‘By George, then, Mr. Prance--why, yes, to be sure! I see what you
-mean,’ I cried all on a sudden--‘that must be our buccaneering friend
-of the other day!’
-
-‘Neither more nor less,’ said he; ‘an odd rencontre certainly,
-considering what a big place the sea is. And yet I don’t know: such
-a clipper will have sailed two feet to our one, though she exposed
-no more than her foresail. She’ll have run as we did, and the light
-airs and baffling weather which followed will easily account for this
-meeting.’
-
-‘She is not yet the handful of charred staves you thought her, Mr.
-Prance,’ said I; ‘they managed to get the fire under anyway, though
-they had to abandon the brig in the end. What is that fellow beyond
-her? She has the look of a man-of-war: a ship, I believe: yes, I think
-I can catch sight of the yards on the mizzen peeping past the sails on
-the main.’
-
-All her canvas had risen, but nothing of her hull, saving the black
-film of her bulwark hovering upon the horizon with an icy gleam betwixt
-it and the sea-line, as though there was no more of her than that. When
-the others came on deck there was no little excitement amongst them on
-learning that the hull was neither more nor less than the veritable
-wreck of the brig whose presence had filled us with alarm and misery a
-few days before. Glasses of all sorts were brought to bear upon her,
-and by this time it was to be ascertained without doubt that she was
-absolutely deserted; ‘unless,’ I heard Mr. Emmett say to Mr. Prance,
-‘her people should be lying concealed within, hoping to coax us to
-visit her by an appearance of being deserted, when, of course, they
-would cut us off, and plunder our remains--I mean, those who would be
-fools enough to board her out of curiosity.’
-
-‘Likely as not,’ Mr. Prance answered with a sour smile. ‘I would advise
-you not to attempt to inspect her.’
-
-‘Not I,’ answered the painter; and the chief officer turned abruptly
-from him to smother a laugh.
-
-It was not long, however, before the delicate miracle of distant canvas
-shining past the hull upon the calm blue like some spire of alabaster
-was recognised as a man-of-war, not alone by the cut of her canvas and
-by other peculiarities aloft readily determinable by the seafaring
-eye, but by the chequered band upon her hull, that had mounted fair
-to the firm crystal-like rim of the ocean, and by the line of white
-hammock-cloths that crowned her tall defences. She was some small
-corvette or ship-sloop, with her nationality to be sworn to even all
-that way off.
-
-‘An Englishman, do you think, Captain Keeling?’ asked Colonel Bannister.
-
-‘Oh, God bless my heart, yes, sir,’ answered the skipper.
-
-‘Now, _how_ do you know, capting?’ cried Mrs. Hudson.
-
-‘By my instincts as a Briton, ma’am,’ he answered; ‘patriotism so
-enlarges the nostril that a man can taste with his nose whenever
-anything of his country’s about in the air.’
-
-‘To think of it now!’ exclaimed Mrs. Hudson. ‘I’m sorry the robbers
-have left that wreck. I should like the pirates to have been caught by
-the man-of-war and hung up.’
-
-The hour of noon had been ‘made,’ as it is called at sea, and it was
-then a dead calm, with the clear chimes of eight bells ringing through
-a wonderful stillness on high, so faint was the undulation in the
-water, so soft the stir in the canvas to the gentle swaying of the
-tall spars. The wreck of the brig lay about two miles distant off the
-starboard beam, and by this hour the corvette, as she now proved to
-be, with the crimson cross fluttering at her peak, had floated to
-within a mile and a half or thereabouts on the other side of the hull;
-and thus the three of us lay. The corvette, slewing her length out to
-us to the twist of some subtle current upon the still surface, showed
-a very handsome stately figure of a ship, at that distance at least.
-Her sails had the fairy-like delicacy of silver tint you observe in
-the moon when she hangs in an afternoon sky; they fitted the yardarms
-to perfection, and I stood admiring for a long quarter of an hour at
-a time the graceful lines of the bolt-ropes faintly curving to the
-yardarm sheave-holes, each clew looking a little way past the corner of
-the sail beneath it. A gilt figure-head of some royal device flashed
-at her bows and shed a ruddy gleam upon the water under it. There was
-the glistering of gilt about her quarter-galleries, and the sparkle of
-glass there. But Mr. Prance said that he would swear she was an old
-ship, her timbers as soft as cheese, and her chain-pumps nearly worn
-out with plying, for all that she looked in the perspective of that
-azure atmosphere as airy a beauty as ever gave the milk-white bosoms of
-her canvas to the wind.
-
-I went down on the quarter-deck to smoke a pipe, and whilst I lay
-over the bulwark rail watching the man-of-war, my eye was taken by a
-somewhat curious appearance in the line of the ocean away down in the
-south-west quarter. It was a sensible depression in the edge of the
-sea, as though you viewed it through defective window-glass. It was
-an atmospheric effect, and an odd one. The circle went round with the
-clearness of the side of a lens, save to that part, and there it looked
-as though some gigantic knife had pared a piece clean out--with this
-addition: that there was a curious sort of faintness as of mist where
-the sky joined the sea in the hollow of this queer dip. I ran my eye
-over the poop to see if others up there were noting this appearance,
-but I did not observe that it had won attention. For my part, I should
-have made nothing of it, accepting it as some trick of refraction, but
-for it somehow entering into my head to remember how the second mate of
-the ship I had made my first voyage in once told me of a sudden shift
-of weather that had taken his craft aback and wrecked her to her tops,
-and that it had been heralded, though there was no man to interpret the
-sign, by just such another horizontal depression as that upon which my
-eyes were now resting.
-
-However, on dismounting from the bulwarks for a brief yarn with little
-Saunders, the matter went out of my mind and I thought no more of it.
-
-Whilst we were at lunch, Mr. Cocker came down the companion steps cap
-in hand, and said something to the captain.
-
-‘All right, sir,’ I heard old Keeling answer: ‘it will be a visit of
-curiosity rather than of courtesy. How far is the boat?’
-
-‘She’s only just left the wreck, sir.’
-
-‘Very well, Mr. Cocker.’
-
-The second mate remounted the steps.
-
-‘The corvette,’ exclaimed old Keeling, addressing us generally, ‘has
-sent a boat to the wreck, presumably to overhaul and report upon her.
-The boat is now approaching us. I have little doubt that the corvette
-is homeward bound, in which case, ladies and gentlemen, you might be
-glad to send letters by her. There will be plenty of time. The calm, I
-fear, threatens to last.’
-
-There was instantly a hurry amongst the passengers, most of whom rushed
-away from the table to write their letters.
-
-I emptied my wine-glass and went on deck, and saw a man-of-war’s boat
-approaching us; the bright ash oars rose and fell with exquisite
-precision, and the white water spat from the stem of the little craft
-as she was swept through it by the rowers, with a young fellow in
-the uniform of a naval lieutenant of that day steering her. She came
-flashing alongside; up rose the oars, the lively hearty in the bows
-hooked on, and the officer, lightly springing on to the rope ladder
-which had been dropped over the side for his convenience, gained the
-deck with a twist of his thumb that was meant as a salutation to the
-ship.
-
-Old Keeling was now on the poop, and Mr. Cocker conducted the
-lieutenant to him. I happened to be standing near, talking with
-Colledge and Mrs. Radcliffe, Miss Temple not yet having returned with
-the letter which she had gone to her cabin to write. The skipper
-received the naval officer with a gracious bow.
-
-‘Our captain,’ exclaimed the young fellow, in a gentlemanly easy way,
-‘instructed me to overhaul yonder wreck, and then come on to you to see
-if we can be of any service;’ and I saw his eye rest with an expression
-of delight upon Miss Hudson, who rose through the companion at that
-instant and drew close to hear what passed.
-
-‘Sir,’ cried old Keeling, with another bow, ‘I am obliged to your
-captain, sir. It is, sir, very considerate of him to send. My
-passengers are preparing letters, and we shall be very sensible of your
-goodness in receiving and transmitting them.’
-
-‘Pray, what ship is this, sir?’ exclaimed the lieutenant, glancing
-about him with the curiosity of a stranger, and then taking another
-thirsty peep at the golden young lady.
-
-‘The _Countess Ida_, sir, of and from London for Bombay, so many days
-out. And pray, what ship is that?’
-
-‘His Majesty’s ship _Magicienne_.’
-
-Colledge started. ‘Beg pardon,’ he exclaimed. ‘Isn’t Sir Edward Panton
-her commander?’
-
-‘He is,’ answered the lieutenant.
-
-‘By George, my cousin!’ cried Colledge; ‘haven’t seen him these seven
-years. How doocid odd, now, to fall in with him _here_!’
-
-‘Oh, indeed,’ said the lieutenant, with a hint of respect in his manner
-that might have been wanting in it before. ‘May I venture to ask your
-name?’
-
-‘Colledge.’
-
-‘Ah! of course; a son of my Lord Sandown. This will be news for Sir
-Edward.’ He sent a look at the corvette, as though measuring the
-distance between the vessels.
-
-‘Sir,’ here said old Keeling, ‘I believe that luncheon is still upon
-the table. Let me conduct you below, sir. It will have been a mighty
-hot ride for you out upon those unsheltered waters.’
-
-The lieutenant bowed, and followed the skipper to the companion.
-Colledge put his arm through mine and led me to the rail.
-
-‘I say, Dugdale,’ he exclaimed. ‘I should like to see my cousin. It
-would be rather a lark to visit his ship, wouldn’t it? Not too far off,
-is she, d’ye think?’ he added, cocking his eye at the vessel.
-
-‘Why, no; not on such a day as this.’
-
-‘Will you come if I go?’
-
-‘With the greatest pleasure.’
-
-‘Oh, that’s downright jolly of you, by George. We’ll go in my cousin’s
-boat, and he’ll send us back. I like the look of those men-of-war’s
-men. It makes one feel safe even to see them rowing. Ah, there goes
-something to drink for the poor fellows. Upon my word, old Keeling
-buttons up a kind heart under that queer coat of his.’
-
-‘I presume,’ said I, ‘that the lieutenant will make no difficulty in
-consenting to carry us in his boat. I am ignorant of the rules which
-govern his service. Suppose you step below, and arrange with him? If he
-may not take us, Keeling will lend us a boat, I am sure.’
-
-Down he went full of eagerness, his handsome face flushed with
-excitement. Mrs. Radcliffe had joined two or three ladies, and stood
-with them asking questions of Mr. Cocker about the corvette and the
-wreck. On glancing through the skylight presently, I saw the lieutenant
-picking a piece of cold fowl at the table, with a bottle of champagne
-at his elbow. Old Keeling sat at his side, and opposite were Colledge
-and Miss Temple. The four of them were chatting briskly. I took a peep
-at the boat under the gangway. It was a treat to see the jolly English
-faces of the fellows, and to hear the tongue of the old home spoken
-over the side. A number of our seamen had perched themselves on the
-bulwarks and were calling questions to the men-of-war’s-men whilst they
-watched them draining the glasses which the steward had sent down to
-them in a basket. From the answers the fellows made I gathered that the
-_Magicienne_ was from Simon’s Bay, having been relieved on the coast,
-where she had been stationed for I will not pretend to remember how
-long. Small wonder that the bronzed, round-faced, bullet-headed, but
-exceedingly gentlemanly lieutenant should have fixed a transported eye
-on the sweet face and golden hair and the violet stars of Miss Hudson
-after his unendurably long frizzling months of West African beauties.
-
-In about twenty minutes he made his appearance upon deck, followed by
-Keeling and Miss Temple and Colledge, who came sliding up to me to say
-that it was all right: the lieutenant would convey us with pleasure and
-bring us back: and what did I think? Miss Temple was to be of our party.
-
-‘Humph!’ said I; ‘any other ladies?’
-
-He made a grimace. ‘No,’ he responded in a whisper; ‘the lieutenant
-suggested others; but I could twig in Miss Temple’s face that if others
-went she would remain. You know there’s not a woman on board that she
-cares about. I rather want,’ said he, returning to his former voice,
-‘to introduce her to my cousin. He will be seeing my father when he
-returns, and is pretty sure to talk,’ said he, giving me a wink.
-
-‘Does Miss Temple know that you’ve invited me?’
-
-‘She does, Trojan.’
-
-‘And how did she receive the news?’
-
-‘With rapture,’ he cried.
-
-‘A fig for such raptures! but I’ll go, spite of her delight.’
-
-By this time Miss Temple had made known her intentions to her aunt.
-I became aware of this circumstance by the old lady uttering a loud
-shriek.
-
-‘It is entirely out of the question; I forbid you to go,’ she cried,
-with a face of agony on her.
-
-‘Nonsense!’ answered Miss Temple: she and her aunt and old Keeling and
-the lieutenant were slowly coming towards the break of the poop, where
-Colledge and I waited whilst this altercation proceeded; so everything
-said was plainly to be heard by us. ‘It is as calm as a river,’
-exclaimed the girl, sending one of her flashing looks at the sea.
-
-‘You may be drowned; you may never return. I will not permit it. What
-would your mother think?’ cried poor Mrs. Radcliffe vehemently, pecking
-away with her face, and clapping her hands to emphasise her words.
-
-‘Aunt, do not be ridiculous, I beg. I shall go. It will amuse me, and
-I am already very weary of the voyage. Only consider: at this rate of
-sailing we may be five or six months longer at sea. This is a little
-harmless, safe distraction. Now, _don’t_ be foolish, auntie.’
-
-The old lady appealed to Captain Keeling. He was looking somewhat
-dubiously round the horizon when the lieutenant broke in; then Colledge
-indulged in a flourish, and though I can’t trace the steps of it, nor
-recollect the talk, somehow or other a little later on the three of us
-were in the boat, a bag of letters on a thwart, the lieutenant picking
-up the yoke-lines as he seated himself, the bow-oar thrusting off,
-with a vision through the open rail of the poop of old Captain Keeling
-stiffly sawing the air with his arms, in some effort, as I took it, to
-console Mrs. Radcliffe, who flourished a handkerchief to her face as
-though she wept.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-THE ‘MAGICIENNE’
-
-
-The corvette looked a mighty long distance away from the low elevation
-of the boat’s gunwale--almost as far as the horizon, it seemed to my
-eyes, though from the height of the deck of the Indiaman the sea-line
-showed something above the bulwarks of the man-of-war. One hardly
-noticed the movement in the sea on board the _Countess Ida_, so solemn
-and steady was the swing of the great fabric, a movement stealing into
-one’s thoughts like a habit, and leaving one unconscious of it; but
-the heave was instantly to be felt in the boat, and I own that I could
-not have believed there was so much swell until I felt the lift of the
-noiseless polished fold and marked the soft blue volume of the water
-brimming to the hot and blistered sides and green sheathing of the
-Indiaman.
-
-A huge lump of a ship she looked as we were swept away from her; her
-masts soaring in three spires with the flash of a vane above the airy
-gossamer of the loftiest cloths; groups of passengers watching us from
-the violet-tinted shadow under the awning, heads of seamen at the rail,
-or figures of them upon the forecastle near the huge cathead that
-struck a shadow of its own into the water under it. The great bowsprit
-went tapering to the delicacy of the flying-jib-boom end marshalling
-the flight of white jibs; a stream of radiance floated in the water
-under each large window. Inexpressible is the effect she produced taken
-along with the dwindling of her to the impulse of our oars, with the
-fining down into thinnest notes of the voices of the people, and with
-the soft and still softening sounds of her canvas lightly swaying.
-
-‘A grand old ship,’ exclaimed the lieutenant.
-
-‘I had no idea she owned such a handsome stern,’ said Colledge;
-‘quite a blaze of gilt, I do protest, Miss Temple. How gloriously old
-Keeling’s cabin-window sparkles amid the gingerbread magnificence of
-decoration.’
-
-‘What is there in the art of painting to reproduce such a picture
-as that?’ exclaimed Miss Temple, with her dark eyes glowing to the
-mood of delight raised in her by the beautiful spectacle. ‘It is like
-looking at an image in a soap-bubble. What brush could fling those
-silver-bluish daintinesses of tint upon canvas, and make one see the
-ship through this atmosphere filled with ocean-light?’
-
-‘Ocean-light!’ exclaimed the lieutenant, viewing her with an air of
-profound admiration; ‘that is the fit expression, madam. Light at sea
-is different from light on shore.’
-
-‘As how?’ cried Colledge.
-
-‘Oh, my dear fellow, see what a reflecting eye the ocean has,’ said I;
-‘it stares back in glory to the glory that looks down upon it. Mould
-and clay can’t do that, you know.’
-
-‘True,’ said the lieutenant.
-
-‘Pray,’ said I, addressing him, ‘when you overhauled that hull yonder,
-did you meet with anything to warrant our suspicion that she was a
-rover?’
-
-‘I found no papers,’ said he; ‘forward, she is burnt into a shell. All
-her guns are gone--dropped overboard, I suppose, to keep her afloat.
-She has a little round-house aft, and in it sits a man.’
-
-‘A man?’ exclaimed Miss Temple.
-
-‘He sits in a musing posture,’ continued the lieutenant; ‘he frowns,
-and seems vexed. He holds a feather pen in one hand, and supports his
-head on the elbow of his left arm, but he doesn’t write: possibly
-because there is no ink and the wind seems to have blown his paper
-away.’
-
-‘Is he dead?’ exclaimed Miss Temple.
-
-‘Quite,’ responded the lieutenant, with a smile of enjoyment of her
-beauty.
-
-‘God bless me!’ cried Colledge, staring at the hull under the sharp of
-his hand.
-
-‘Is she a picaroon, think you, sir?’ said I.
-
-‘Impossible to say,’ he answered; ‘there are stands of small-arms in
-her cabin below, and a sweep of ’tweendecks full of piratic bedding.
-She will have been crowded with sailors, I should think, sir.’
-
-The six men-of-war’s men were making the fine little cutter hum as
-they bent to their oars, one hairy face showing past another, the eyes
-of each man upon his blade, though now and again one or another would
-steal a respectful peep at Miss Temple. What exquisite discipline their
-demeanour suggested! One hardly needed to do more than glance at them
-to sound to the very depths the whole philosophy of our naval story.
-How should it be otherwise than as it is with a nation that could be
-the mother of such children as those fellows?
-
-The lieutenant was very talkative, and had a deal to say about the
-West Coast of Africa and Cape Town; and he had a great many questions
-to ask about home. Miss Temple constantly directed her eyes over the
-side, as though affected and even startled by the proximity of the
-mighty surface. And boundless the light blue heaving plain looked as it
-went swimming to the far-off slope of sky that it seemed to wash--the
-vaster, the more enormous for the breaks of toy-like craft upon it; for
-the Indiaman and the corvette were standards to assist the mind into
-some perception of the surrounding immensity, and never to me did the
-heavens seem so high nor the curve of the ocean boundary so remote as I
-found them from the low seat of the cutter, with the corvette growing
-over the bow, and the Indiaman astern dwarfed to the dimensions of a
-boy’s model of a ship.
-
-It was a longer pull than I should have believed, and roastingly hot,
-thanks to the flaming reflection that filled the heart of the sea, and
-to the motionless atmosphere, which was scarcely to be stirred even
-into the subtlest fanning of the cheek by our passage through it. Miss
-Temple’s face in the shadow of her parasol resembled some incomparable
-carving in marble, and but little of vitality was to be seen in it
-outside of her rich, full, eloquent eyes, when she fell into some pause
-of thought and looked away into the dim blue distance as though she
-beheld a vision down in it. The corvette appeared deserted, with her
-high bulwarks topped yet with a line of hammocks; but it was easy to
-see that it was known on board the lieutenant was bringing a lady along
-with others to visit the man-of-war, for there was already a proper
-gangway ladder over the side, with a grating to step out on, though the
-broad-beamed craft swayed more to the swell than the Indiaman, and so
-dipped the platform that it needed a deal of manoeuvring to save Miss
-Temple from wetting her feet.
-
-Sir Edward Panton, a tall, exceedingly handsome man, with iron-grey
-hair and a sun-reddened complexion, received us at the gangway. He
-seemed scarcely able to believe his eyes when Colledge called out to
-him. He welcomed Miss Temple with an air of lofty respectful dignity
-that would have sat well upon some nobleman of magnificence welcoming
-a royal visitor to his home. Chairs were brought from the cabin and
-placed on the quarter-deck in the shelter of the awning, along with
-a little table, upon which were put some excellent sherry, claret,
-and seltzer-water, and a box of capital cigars. The look of this
-ship, after the Indiaman’s encumbered decks broken by their poop and
-topgallant forecastle, was a real treat to the seafaring eye. She
-was flush fore and aft: every plank was as white as a peeled almond;
-the black breeches of her artillery gave a noble, massive, imposing
-character to her tall, immensely thick bulwarks; the ratlines showed
-straight as thin bars of iron in the wide spread of shrouds and
-topmast rigging; the running gear was flemish-coiled; the brass-work
-sparkled like burnished gold; the snow-like cloths of the fore-course
-gathered an amazing brightness from their mere contrast with the red
-coat of a marine pacing the forecastle; the sailors, in white clothes,
-straw-hats, and naked feet, sprang softly here and there to the light
-chirrupings of a pipe, or went on with the various jobs they were about
-on deck and in the rigging amid a silence that one might ask for in
-vain among a crew of merchantmen. Far away down upon the starboard beam
-was the Indiaman, blue in the airy distance, with a sort of winking of
-shadows upon her square and lofty canvas, as the cloths swung in and
-out, brightening and dimming.
-
-Sir Edward was delighted to see his cousin, and it seemed as if there
-was to be no end to their talk, so numberless were the questions
-the commander put about home, his family, doings in London, matters
-political, and so on, and so on. I had a chance, whilst Colledge was
-spinning some long twister of private interest to Sir Edward, to
-exchange a few words with Miss Temple, whose behaviour in the main
-might have easily led me to believe that she was absolutely unconscious
-of my presence; in fact, I shouldn’t have addressed her then but for
-finding in the domestic and personal gossip of the two cousins an
-obligation of either talking or walking away.
-
-‘The _Countess Ida_ looks a long distance off, Miss Temple.’
-
-‘Farther, I think, than this ship looks from her.’
-
-‘That is owing to a change in the atmosphere. We shall be having some
-weather by-and-by.’
-
-‘Not before we return, I hope.’
-
-‘The blue thickens yonder,’ I exclaimed, indicating that quarter of the
-sea where I had noticed the depression of the horizon.
-
-She gazed listlessly; her eyes then went roaming over the ship with a
-sparkle in them of the pleasure the whiteness and the brightness and
-the orderliness of all that she beheld gave her.
-
-Presently Sir Edward exclaimed: ‘Miss Temple, you would like to inspect
-this vessel, I am sure. I wish to show Stephen my wife’s portrait, and
-I want you to see it. Mr. Dugdale, you will join us.’
-
-Down we went into a very pleasant cabin, and the captain produced a
-water-colour sketch of his lady.
-
-‘A sweet face!’ exclaimed Miss Temple; whilst Sir Edward gazed at the
-picture with eyes full of the yearning heart of a sailor long divorced
-from his love.
-
-‘Have you found your charmer yet, Stephen?’ said he. ‘Any girl won your
-budding affections?’
-
-The youth looked at me suddenly and turned of a deep red. I believe he
-would have said no at once, and with a cocksure face, had I not been
-there. Miss Temple’s gaze rested upon him.
-
-‘Why, who is it, Stephen, eh?’ exclaimed Sir Edward with a merry laugh.
-‘See how he blushes, Miss Temple! a sure sign that he has let go his
-anchor, though he is riding to a long scope all the way out here. Who
-is it, Steve?’
-
-‘Oh, hang it, Ned, never mind; you bother a fellow so,’ answered
-Colledge with a fine air of mingled irritation and confusion, and a
-half-look at me that was just the same as saying, ‘What an ass I am
-making of myself!’
-
-‘Miss Temple,’ exclaimed Sir Edward, laughing heartily again, ‘he
-may possibly have confided the lady’s name to you? Pray satisfy my
-curiosity, that I may congratulate him before we part.’
-
-‘I am as ignorant as you are,’ she replied, with an expression of cold
-surprise in her face.
-
-I marched to a porthole to look out, that I might conceal an
-irrepressible grin.
-
-‘I say, show us the ship, will ye, Ned?’ shouted Colledge; ‘there’s a
-long pull before us, and we’re bound to India, you know.’
-
-Captain Panton led the way out of the cabin, and went in advance with
-Miss Temple, pointing here and explaining there, and full of his ship.
-Colledge sidled up to me.
-
-‘Dugdale,’ he exclaimed in a whisper, ‘do you believe that Miss Temple
-will guess from my idiotic manner just now that I’m engaged to be
-married?’
-
-‘Oh yes; I saw her gaze sink right into you and then go clean through
-you. It is best as it is, Colledge. You may breathe freely now.’
-
-He smothered an execration, and continued gloomy and silent for some
-time. There was not very much to be seen below. We were presently on
-deck; and after another ten minutes’ chat, during which Colledge seemed
-to regain his spirits, the boat was ordered alongside.
-
-‘It shall be my secret as well as yours, Stephen, long before you are
-home from your tiger-hunts!’ exclaimed Sir Edward at the gangway,
-waggishly shaking his forefinger at his cousin.
-
-We shook hands, entered the boat; the lieutenant took his seat, the
-oars sparkled, and away we went with a flourish of our hats to the
-commander, who stood for some time in the open gangway watching us.
-
-‘There’s a trifle more swell than there was, I fancy,’ said I to the
-lieutenant.
-
-‘I think there is,’ he answered, looking over the sea as if he thought
-of something else.
-
-‘What a confounded quiz Ned is!’ exclaimed Colledge. ‘He’s rather too
-fond of a laugh at other people’s expense. I think that sort of thing a
-mistake myself.’
-
-‘He is a very handsome gentleman,’ said I.
-
-‘Well, I’m mighty glad to have seen him,’ said Colledge. ‘He’s a dear
-good fellow, only---- I hope you’ve enjoyed the trip, Miss Temple?’
-
-‘Thoroughly, thank you; it is a delightful change. How strange to think
-of that toy yonder as being our home for some months to come! It is
-like fancying one’s self as dwelling in a star, to see her floating out
-there in the blue haze, as though she were poised in the atmosphere.’
-
-She fastened her eyes on the Indiaman as she spoke. One saw in this
-that she had a sailor’s observation for atmospheric effect. Star-like
-the ship looked in the distance--a dash of misty light in the blue
-haze, hovering, as it were, above the junction of sea and sky, where
-the blending of the elements was so dim and hot that you couldn’t tell
-where they met.
-
-‘Isn’t it thickening up a trifle, somehow?’ said I to the lieutenant.
-‘Look to the right of the wreck there--what is that appearance?’
-
-‘What do you see?’ he exclaimed.
-
-‘Why, to my fancy, it is as though there were a dust-storm miles away
-yonder.’
-
-He smiled, and answered: ‘Mere heat. One doesn’t need many months on
-the West African coast to grow used to that sort of aspects. They
-suggest nothing but quinine to me.’
-
-‘What time is it?’ said Colledge.
-
-We pulled out our watches: it was half-past four.
-
-‘I am sorry we are returning to the Indiaman,’ said he. ‘I should like
-to get away from her for a little while; then one would find something
-of freshness in her when one returned. I am not thirsting to meet Mr.
-Johnson and Mr. Emmett and Mr. Greenhew again. Are you, Miss Temple?’
-
-She slightly smiled, and said, ‘I wish Bombay were as near to us as the
-_Magicienne_ is to the Indiaman.’
-
-‘I have an idea!’ cried Colledge, whose shining eyes, methought, seemed
-to suggest the influence of the last large bumper of sherry he had
-tossed down before leaving the corvette. ‘Let us kill another hour by
-boarding the wreck.’
-
-‘I shall be very pleased to put the boat alongside,’ said the
-lieutenant. ‘What do you say, Miss Temple?’
-
-She looked at the Indiaman, and then sent a swift glance at me, as
-though she would read my face without having me know she had peeped at
-it.
-
-‘Will there be time before it falls dark?’ she answered. ‘I am in
-no hurry to return; but I do not want to make my aunt miserable by
-remaining out upon the water until after sunset.’
-
-‘Oh, we have abundance of time,’ said the lieutenant.
-
-‘It will give us so much to talk about,’ exclaimed Colledge. ‘I want
-to see what sort of a ship it was that frightened us so abominably the
-other day.’
-
-‘What do you say, Mr. Dugdale?’ said Miss Temple.
-
-‘I am thinking of the lonely sentinel this gentleman was telling us
-about as we came along,’ said I.
-
-‘Oh, one peep! one peep at him, just one peep!’ cried Colledge:
-‘_don’t_ let us go back to the Indiaman too soon. At this rate,’ he
-added, turning up his slightly flushed face to the sky, ‘we may have
-another six months of her.’
-
-The lieutenant laughed, and, anxious to please him, as I supposed,
-quietly pulled a yoke-line and swept the boat’s head fair for the
-hull. His making nothing of the appearance I had called his attention
-to was reassuring. I should have thought nothing of it either but for
-the indent in the horizon that morning, and the recollection that grew
-out of it, as I have told you. But then old Keeling had let us start
-from his ship without a hint, and Sir Edward had uttered no caution,
-though, to be sure, in those days the barometer was not the shaper
-of marine speculations it has since become; and the silence of these
-two skippers, and the smile and careless rejoinder of the lieutenant,
-should have been amply satisfying. Nevertheless, there was no question
-but that the light swell heaving out of the north-west was sensibly
-gaining in volume and speed, and that it was the mere respiration of
-the ocean I could by no means persuade myself, though it might signify
-nothing.
-
-Colledge grew somewhat frolicsome; indeed, I seemed to find an
-artificiality in his spirits, as though he would clear Miss Temple’s
-memory of Captain Panton’s _badinage_ by laughter and jokes. The
-lieutenant fell in with his humour, said some comical things, and told
-one or two lively anecdotes of the blacks of that part of the coast the
-corvette was fresh from. The men-of-war’s men pulled steadily, and the
-keen stem of the cutter sheared through the oil-smooth surface with a
-noise as of the ripping of satin; but now and again she would swing
-down into a hollow that put the low sides of the wreck out of sight,
-whilst, as we approached, I noticed that the hull was leaning from side
-to side in a swing which did not need to greatly increase to put the
-lieutenant to his trumps to get Miss Temple aboard.
-
-But by this time the girl was showing some vivacity, smiling at the
-lieutenant’s jokes, laughing lightly in her clear, rich, trembling
-tones at Colledge’s remarks. It seemed to me as if her previous
-quietude had produced a resolution which she was now acting up to.
-She was apparently eager to inspect the wreck, and said that such an
-adventure would make a heroine of her at home when she came to tell the
-story of it.
-
-It was a long, dragging pull over that heaving, breathless sea, and
-through that sweltering afternoon, with its sky of the complexion
-of brass about the zenith. The three craft, as they lay, formed a
-right-angled triangle, the apex, to call it so, being the derelict,
-and the getting to her involved a longer stretching of the Jacks’
-backs than, as I suspected, the lieutenant had calculated on. The
-sweat poured from the men’s brows, and their faces were like purple
-rags under their straw hats as they swung with the precision and the
-monotony of the tick of a clock over the looms of their oars.
-
-‘She’s rather unsteady, isn’t she?’ exclaimed Colledge as we
-approached the hulk.
-
-‘So much the better,’ said the lieutenant; ‘her bulwarks are gone, and
-every dip inclines her bare deck as a platform for a jump.’
-
-‘She may be sinking,’ cried Miss Temple.
-
-‘Dry as a bone, madam, I assure you,’ said the officer. ‘I looked into
-her hold, and there’s scarce more water than would serve to drown a
-rat.’
-
-‘I see her name in long white letters under her counter,’ I exclaimed.
-‘Can you read it, Colledge?’
-
-‘The _Aspirante_,’ said the lieutenant.
-
-We now fell silent, with our eyes upon the hull, whilst the officer
-manœuvred with the yoke-lines to run the cutter handsomely alongside. A
-single chime from a bell came thrilling with a soft silver note through
-the hushed air. Miss Temple started, and the officer grinned into
-Colledge’s face, but nothing was said. She was a very clean wreck. Her
-foremast stood stoutly supported by the shrouds; but the braces of the
-foreyard were slack, and the swing of the spar, upon which the canvas
-lay rolled in awkward heaps, roughly secured by lines, as though the
-work of hands wild with hurry, somehow imparted a strange, forlorn,
-most melancholy character to the nakedness of that solitary mast. She
-showed no guns; her decks appeared to have been swept; the rise of her
-in the water proved that her people must have jettisoned a deal of
-whatever they were able to come at; her wheel was gone, and her rudder
-slowly swayed to every heave. There were a few ropes’ ends over her
-side, the hacked remains of standing-rigging; but the water brimmed
-clear of wreckage to her channels.
-
-‘Oars!’ cried the lieutenant. The bowman sprang erect; and in a few
-moments we were floating alongside, soaring and falling against the
-black run of her, with the deck gaping through the length of smashed
-bulwark to the level of our heads when we stood up, each time she came
-lazily rolling over to us. The clear chime of the bell rang out again.
-
-‘What is it?’ cried Miss Temple.
-
-‘The ship’s bell,’ said the lieutenant; ‘it has got jammed as it hangs,
-and the tongue strikes the side when the heave is a little sharper than
-usual.’
-
-He followed this on with certain directions to the men. Two of them,
-watching their chance, sprang on to the slope of the deck, and then
-went hoisting up away from us as the hull swayed wearily to starboard.
-‘Stand by now!’ bawled the lieutenant. ‘Miss Temple, let me assist you
-on to this thwart.’ She leapt upon it with something of defiance in her
-manner, and the officer, grasping her elbow, supported her. I thought
-Colledge looked a little uneasy and pale. We waited; but an opportunity
-was some time in coming.
-
-‘Mr. Colledge,’ said the lieutenant, ‘be kind enough to take my place
-and support the lady.’ He jumped lightly into the main-chains, and was
-on deck in a jiffy. ‘Haul her in close, men. Now, Miss Temple. Catch
-hold of my hand and of this sailor’s when I say so.’
-
-Up swung the boat; the girl extended her hands, which were instantly
-grasped. ‘Jump, madam!’ and she went in a graceful bound from the
-thwart to the deck.
-
-I watched till a heave brought me on a line with the chains into which
-I jumped.
-
-‘Now, Mr. Colledge!’ called out the lieutenant. He hung in the wind,
-and I thought he would refuse to leave the boat; but Miss Temple with
-her face slightly flushed stood watching as though waiting for him,
-her noble figure swaying with a marvellous careless grace upon the
-floating slopes of the planks; and this started him. He got on to a
-thwart, where he was supported by a sailor till a chance offered for
-his hands to be gripped, and then he was hauled on to the hull; but
-he came perilously near to going overboard, for the sudden sinking
-away of the cutter from under him paralysed his effort to jump, and he
-swung against the side of the wreck in the grasp of the lieutenant and
-a seaman, who dragged him up just in time to save his legs from being
-ground by the soaring of the boat. The two sailors then jumped into the
-cutter, which shoved off, and lay rising and falling upon the quarter
-to the scope of her painter.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-ADRIFT
-
-
-There was a small deck-house standing abaft the jagged ends of the
-stump of the mainmast, a low-pitched, somewhat narrow, and rather long
-structure, with a door facing the wheel, or where the wheel had stood,
-and a couple of small windows on either hand, the glass of which was
-entirely gone.
-
-‘The lonely watchman of this wreck is still at home, doubtless waiting
-to receive us,’ said the lieutenant, pointing to the little building.
-‘Shall we pay him a visit?’
-
-‘Oh yes; let us see everything that there may be to look at,’ answered
-Colledge, who had not yet recovered his breath, but who was working
-hard, I could see, to regain his late air of vivacity, though he was
-pale, and shot several uneasy glances around him as he spoke.
-
-‘I would rather not look,’ said Miss Temple; ‘it will make me dream.’
-
-‘You will have nothing to talk about, then,’ said Colledge.
-
-‘It is the most natural object in the world,’ exclaimed the lieutenant;
-‘if he could be stuffed, preserving the posture he is in, and exhibited
-in London, thousands would assemble to view him.’
-
-I left them to persuade Miss Temple if they could, and walking aft,
-opened the door, and peeped in. It was just a plain, immensely strong,
-roughly furnished deck erection, with a small hatch close against the
-entrance, conducting, as I supposed, to the cabin beneath. On either
-side went a row of lockers; in the centre was a short narrow table,
-supported by stanchions; and at this table sat the figure of a man. He
-was in an attitude of writing; his right hand grasped a long feather
-pen; his left elbow was on the table, and his cheek was supported by
-his hand. He was dressed in white jean breeches, the ends of which were
-stuffed into a pair of yellow leather half-boots. There was a large
-belt round his waist, clasped by some ornament resembling a two-headed
-eagle, of a shining metal, probably silver. His shirt was a pale red
-flannel, over which was a jacket cut in the Spanish fashion; his hair
-was long, and flowed in black ringlets upon his back. His hat was a
-large sombrero, and I had to walk abreast of him to see his face. I was
-prepared to witness a ghastly sight. Instead, I beheld a countenance
-of singular beauty. It was as if the hand of death had moulded some
-faultless human countenance out of white wax. The lids of the eyes
-drooped, and the gaze seemed rooted upon the table, as though the man
-lay rapt and motionless in some sweet and perfect dream. His small
-moustache was like a touch of delicate pencilling. He looked to have
-been a person of some three or four and twenty years of age.
-
-As I stood surveying the figure, the interior was shadowed. Miss Temple
-and the others stood in the doorway. The lieutenant and Colledge
-entered; the girl would not approach.
-
-‘Here, Miss Temple,’ said I, ‘is the handsomest man I have ever seen.’
-
-‘Can he be dead?’ exclaimed Colledge in a subdued voice of awe.
-
-‘He’ll never be deader,’ said the lieutenant, peering curiously into
-the face of the corpse. ‘_Handsome_, do you consider him, sir? Well,
-we all have our tastes, to be sure. He looks like a woman masquerading.’
-
-‘Who was he, I wonder?’ asked Miss Temple in a low tone, standing in a
-half-shrinking attitude at the door.
-
-‘Very hard to say,’ said I. ‘Too young for the captain, I should think.
-Probably the mate.’
-
-‘A pirate, anyway,’ said the lieutenant.
-
-‘Hark!’ cried Miss Temple; ‘this ship is tolling his knell.’
-
-The mellow chime floated past the ear. The effect was extraordinary, so
-clear was the note as it rang through the soft sounds of the weltering
-waters; so ghostly, wild, and unreal, too, the character it gathered
-from the presence of that silent, stirless penman.
-
-‘I say, we’ve seen enough of him, I think,’ exclaimed Colledge.
-
-‘Shall we bury him?’ said I.
-
-‘Oh no, sir,’ exclaimed the lieutenant; ‘this sheer hulk is his coffin.
-Leave the dead to bury their dead. Now for a glimpse of the cabin.’
-
-Miss Temple entered with some reluctance; the lieutenant handed her
-through the hatch down the short ladder, and Colledge and I followed.
-We found ourselves in a moderately-sized state-room of the width of the
-little vessel, with bulkheads at either end, each containing a couple
-of cabins. There was a small skylight overhead, all the glass of it
-shattered, but light enough fell through to enable us to see easily.
-Colledge had plucked up heart, and now bustled about somewhat manfully,
-opening the cabin doors, starting as if he saw horrible sights,
-cracking jokes as in the boat, and calling to Miss Temple to look here
-and look there, and so on.
-
-‘Hallo!’ cried the lieutenant, putting his head into one of the
-cabins at the fore-end of the state-room; ‘I missed this room when I
-overhauled her. What have we here? A pantry is it, or a larder?’
-
-I looked over his shoulder, and by the faint light sifting through the
-bull’s-eye in the deck, made out the contents of what was apparently
-a storeroom. There were several shelves containing crockery, cheeses,
-hams, and other articles of food. Under the lower shelf, heaped upon
-the deck, were stowed several dozens of bottles in straw.
-
-‘The corsairs,’ said the lieutenant, ‘will always be memorable for the
-excellence of their tipple. What is this, now?’
-
-He picked up a bottle, knocked off the head, and taking a little tin
-drinking-vessel from a shelf, half filled it, then smelled, and tasted.
-
-‘An exquisite Burgundy,’ he cried. ‘Try it, Mr. Dugdale.’
-
-It was indeed a very choice sound wine. The lieutenant half filled a
-pannikin for Colledge, who emptied it with a sigh of enjoyment. ‘What
-would my father give for such stuff as this!’ said he.
-
-The lieutenant found a wine-glass, which he carefully cleansed with
-the liquor, and then filling it, he asked Miss Temple to drink to the
-confusion of all pirates. She laughed, and declined.
-
-‘Oh, you must sip it, if you please,’ cried Colledge, ‘if only to
-heighten the romance of this adventure. Think of the additional colour
-your story will get out of this incident of drinking perdition to the
-corsairs in wine of their own!’
-
-She was about to answer, when the hull rolled heavily. The lieutenant
-slipped; the wine-glass fell to the deck, and was shivered; Colledge,
-grasping me to steady himself, threw me off my balance, and the pair of
-us went rolling to the bottles. The young fellow scrambled on to his
-legs with a loud laugh.
-
-‘I believe this vessel is tipsy,’ said he.
-
-‘Do you mark the increase in the weight of the swell?’ I exclaimed as I
-regained my legs.
-
-The roll of the vessel the other way had been severe, and now she was
-dipping her sides regularly with an oscillation extravagant enough to
-render standing very inconvenient.
-
-‘We must be off, I think,’ said the lieutenant.
-
-‘Miss Temple hasn’t drunk confusion to the pirates,’ exclaimed Colledge
-with the persistency of brains flushed with wine.
-
-‘I would rather not do so,’ she answered, her fine face looking
-curiously pale in that dull light, whilst she glanced restlessly
-towards the state cabin. She pulled out a little watch. ‘It is
-certainly time to return to the Indiaman,’ she added.
-
-‘Oh, but don’t let us leave all this noble drink to go down to the
-bottom of the sea,’ cried Colledge. ‘Is there nothing that we can pack
-some of the bottles in? If we could only manage to get away with a
-couple of dozen--twelve for ourselves and twelve for my cousin?’--and
-with red face and bright eyes he went staggering with the heave of the
-hull to the shelves and stood holding on, looking about him.
-
-‘It might be managed, I think,’ said the lieutenant, who seemed all
-anxiety to oblige him.
-
-‘I wish to be gone,’ exclaimed Miss Temple with a strong hint of the
-imperiousness that had been familiar to me in the Indiaman in the air
-with which she looked at and addressed the lieutenant. ‘What is the
-meaning of this increased rolling? I shall not be able to enter the
-boat.’
-
-‘No fear of that, madam,’ answered the lieutenant; ‘a dismasted
-egg-shell like this will roll to the weakest heave. A trifle more swell
-has certainly set in, but it is nothing.’
-
-I was not so sure of that. What he was pleased to describe as
-a trifling increase was to my mind, and very distinctly too,
-a heightening and broadening of the undulations, of which the
-significance was rendered strong by the suddenness of the thing. It
-meant wind close at hand, I could swear.
-
-‘I’ll go on deck and see how things are,’ said I.
-
-‘Take me with you, Mr. Dugdale,’ exclaimed Miss Temple.
-
-‘You will suffer me to assist you?’ said the lieutenant.
-
-‘Oh, I say, _don’t_ leave all this wine here,’ cried Colledge. ‘Mr.--I
-mean Lieutenant--upon my word, I must apologise for not having asked
-your name--can’t we manage to find some old basket’----
-
-‘What is that down in the corner there, Mr. Colledge?’ said the
-lieutenant, laughing.
-
-‘Pray, take me on deck, Mr. Dugdale?’ exclaimed Miss Temple haughtily
-and with temper, and she came to my side and passed her arm through
-mine.
-
-The swaying of the light hull without top-hamper to steady her so
-hindered one’s movements by the staggering lurches it flung one into,
-that it cost me no small effort to steer a fair course with Miss Temple
-hanging to me, to the cabin steps. I helped her up the ladder, and felt
-in her arm the shudder that swept through her as she sent a single
-swift glance at the dead figure at the table.
-
-The moment I emerged I cried out: ‘My God! see there! Why, if we are
-not quick’---- And putting my head into the doorway again, I roared
-down the hatch: ‘For heaven’s sake, come on deck, or we shall lose both
-ships!’
-
-Indeed, all away in the north-west was a white blankness of vapour
-bearing right down upon the hull, with a long and heavy swell rolling
-out of it, the heads of which as they came washing from under the base
-of the thickness were dark with wind. The sky overhead was of a sort
-of watery ashen colour, going down to the eastern sea-line in a weak,
-dim blue, so obscure with the complexion of the approaching vaporous
-mass that the corvette on the left hand and the Indiaman on the right
-appeared as little more than pallid smudges, with a kind of looming
-out of their dull, distorted proportions that made them show as though
-they hung upon the very verge of the ocean. I told Miss Temple to hold
-to the side of the deck-house to steady herself, and rushed to the
-quarter. The cutter lay there to the scope of her painter, rising and
-falling in a manner bewildering to see to one who knew that she had to
-be entered from these perilously sloping decks. The moment my head was
-seen, one of the sailors bawled out: ‘The Indiaman’s fired two guns,
-sir.’
-
-‘Why the deuce,’ I shouted in a passion, ‘didn’t one of you jump aboard
-to report what was coming? Haul alongside, for God’s sake.’
-
-At this moment the lieutenant appeared, followed by Colledge. He took
-one look, and came in a bound to the sheer edge of the deck, where the
-remains of the line of crushed bulwarks stood like fangs. ‘Lively now!’
-he cried; ‘hand over hand with it.’
-
-‘We shall be smothered out of sight in a few minutes,’ I exclaimed;
-‘shall we be acting wisely in quitting this hull? We may lose both
-ships in that weather there, and what will there be to do then?’
-
-‘Don’t frighten the lady, sir,’ he answered, turning upon me with a
-frown. ‘Miss Temple, there is nothing to be alarmed at. We shall get
-you into the boat simply enough, and the vapour will speedily clear. I
-know these waters.’
-
-Colledge stood gazing round him, looking horribly frightened. The boat
-was dragged alongside: one moment she was above the level of the naked
-edge of the deck; the next she was sliding away out of sight into the
-hollow, with the wreck rolling heavily off from her.
-
-‘Now, Miss Temple,’ cried the lieutenant. ‘Help me to steady the lady,
-Mr. Dugdale. Stand by, two of you men there, to receive her.’
-
-Miss Temple set her lips, and her eyes were on fire with anger and
-fear. ‘I shall not be able to enter that boat,’ said she.
-
-‘Oh, madam, be persuaded,’ cried the lieutenant, speaking irritably
-out of his clear perception of the danger of delay and of the peril of
-passing her into the cutter. ‘Mr. Dugdale, take Miss Temple’s arm.’
-
-She shrank back, with a firmer grip of the deck-house, against which
-she had set her shoulder to steady herself. ‘You will kill me!’ she
-cried.
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale,’ exclaimed the lieutenant wildly, ‘for God’s sake, jump
-into the boat, that Miss Temple may see how easily it is to be done. I
-must be the last to leave.’
-
-‘Let Mr. Colledge jump first,’ said I. ‘I may probably be more useful
-to you and the lady than he.’
-
-‘Jump, Mr. Colledge!’ cried the lieutenant.
-
-The young fellow went to the edge of the deck. ‘I shall break my neck,’
-he shouted; ‘I shall fall into the sea; I shall be drowned.’
-
-‘No, sir! no, sir!’ roared one of the seamen; ‘jump as the boat lifts;
-we’ll catch you.’
-
-‘_Now!_’ cried the lieutenant.
-
-Colledge sprang; down sank the boat out of sight; then up she soared
-again with Colledge safe in the embrace of one of the most powerful of
-the sailors.
-
-‘Here it comes!’ said I.
-
-As the words left my lips, the wind, with a long fierce howl, swept
-over the deck of the hull, and a moment later the fog was boiling
-all about us. It was like a mighty burst of steam; and in a breath
-the ocean vanished, and there was nothing to see but the wool-white
-blankness and a space of thirty or forty feet of water beyond the
-wreck. All on a sudden, the lieutenant, who had gone to the edge of
-the deck, perhaps to see how it was with Colledge, or to bawl some
-further directions to the seamen, staggered to a deep and swinging heel
-of the hull and went overboard. It happened in a second. My instant
-impression was that he had jumped for the boat; but I knew better when
-I heard the men roaring out.
-
-‘For heaven’s sake, Miss Temple,’ I cried, ‘keep a firm hold, and do
-not attempt to stir, or the angle of the decks will certainly rush you
-over the side.’
-
-So saying, I staggered to the quarter where there were some eight or
-ten feet of bulwarks still standing, and looked over. The men had
-let go the painter of their boat, and were shouting instructions to
-one another as some of them flung their oars over into the rowlocks,
-whilst others overhung the gunwale eagerly with pale faces and looks
-of consternation and dread, searching the round volumes of the swell,
-which the wind was now whipping into yeast, for any signs of their
-officer.
-
-‘Keep alongside!’ I bellowed; ‘he will rise near.’
-
-But the fellows were distracted, unnerved, and there was nobody to give
-them orders. The howling of the wind, the sudden leaping down upon them
-of this blindness of white vapour, the violent upheavals and sinkings
-of the cutter upon the run of the liquid hills, heavily increased the
-distraction raised in them by their lieutenant’s disappearance. They
-had three oars out, possessed, I suppose, by some mad fancy of merely
-paddling whilst they stared round the water; and even whilst I watched
-them, and whilst I yelled to them to get their six oars over, and to
-pull for their lives to alongside the wreck, the boat, yielding to the
-full weight of the blast and to the long irresistible heavings of the
-swell, faded out of sight in the flying thickness; and ere I could
-fully realise what had occurred, the narrow space of foam-freckled
-pouring waters showed blank to where the flying vapour seemed to hang
-like a wall of white smoke.
-
-I continued to stare, occasionally bringing my eyes away from the spot
-where the boat had vanished to the water alongside; but the lieutenant
-had sunk. There could be no doubt that the poor fellow on rising from
-his first dive had struck the bends of the hull as she rolled heavily
-over to the trough where he had vanished, and so had been drowned,
-struck down again into the depths, to rise no more. I could not realise
-the truth. I felt as if I had fallen crazy, and was imagining dreadful
-horrors. It was but a minute or two before that he had turned to me
-with a frown--it was but a little while before that he was full of
-jokes and laughter in the cabin--and now he lay a dead man, sinking and
-yet sinking under our heaving and plunging keel, dead as the figure
-yonder in that little cabin, of whom he had spoken jestingly so lately
-that the words and tone of his voice were still in my ear!
-
-‘Where is the boat, Mr. Dugdale?’
-
-I turned slowly round and looked at the girl with an air of
-stupefaction, then stared again into the blankness, and with shuddering
-heart swept my eyes over the water alongside, brimming in humpbacked
-rounds to the very line of the deck, and sweeping away into the near
-thickness with a spitting and seething and flashing of foam off each
-long slant to the fierce shrill smiting of the wind.
-
-‘Has the boat left us, Mr. Dugdale?’
-
-With a desperate effort I rallied myself, and watching for my chances
-betwixt the wild slopings of the deck, I reached the deck-house, and
-held on by the girl’s side.
-
-‘The boat has been blown away. The men fell imbecile, I do believe,
-when they saw their officer drop overboard. What madmen to let go the
-painter, to manœuvre with three oars in a heavy cutter in the teeth of
-such a wind as this, and on the top of that swell!’
-
-‘Did they recover the lieutenant?’ she asked.
-
-‘No.’
-
-‘Oh, Mr. Dugdale,’ she shrieked, ‘do you tell me he is drowned?’
-
-‘Yes--yes--he is drowned,’ I answered, scarce able to articulate for
-the sudden fit of horror that came upon me again.
-
-‘Drowned!’ she exclaimed. ‘Oh no--not so suddenly! He may be struggling
-close against the vessel now’--she moved as if to go to the side to
-look. I grasped her arm.
-
-‘Do not stir,’ I cried; ‘the slope of the deck will carry you
-overboard. It is all open to the water abreast of us.’
-
-‘Shocking! It is unendurable! Drowned so swiftly! And the boat--the
-boat, Mr. Dugdale?’
-
-The cruel distress in her voice, the anguish of mind expressed in her
-parted lips, her heaving breast, her strained, brilliant, wide-open
-staring looks about her, obliged me to recollect myself by forcing me
-to understand my obligations as a man.
-
-‘Miss Temple, this fog may prove but a passing thickness. There is a
-clear sky over it, and when the vapour settles away, the sea will open
-to its confines. The Indiaman knows we are here. We were watched, too,
-from the corvette, no doubt, and she must regain her boat besides. The
-cutter is a powerful little fabric, and there is nothing as yet in this
-weather or in that sea to hurt her. It is a hard experience for you;
-but it will prove a brief one only, I am sure. Let me assist you to a
-seat in this deck-house. Your having to hold on here is fatiguing and
-dangerous.’
-
-‘I could not enter whilst that man is there,’ she exclaimed. ‘Oh, hark
-to that bell!’ she cried hysterically; ‘it is tolling for _us_ now!’
-
-‘You must be sheltered,’ I exclaimed; ‘and that body must come out of
-it. Will you sit on the deck? You will be safer so.’
-
-She sank down; and to still further secure her, I went sliding and
-clawing like a monkey to the quarter, where, with my knife, I severed
-an end of rope--a piece of gear belayed to a pin--with which I
-returned to her side. I passed the line round her waist, and firmly
-attached the ends to one of several iron uprights which supported the
-structure; and begging her to compose her mind, and not to doubt of our
-deliverance within the next two or three hours, I entered the little
-building.
-
-It was a loathsome job; but the girl must be sheltered, and it was not
-to be borne that she should have such a companion as that corpse, when
-there was the great graveyard of the sea within an easy drag to receive
-the body. Yet I must own to coming to a stand with a long look at the
-silent figure before I could muster up stomach enough to lay hands upon
-him. Indeed, as I now fixed my eyes on the body, I wondered whether
-he could be really dead, so startlingly lifelike was his posture, so
-pensive his air, so vital the aspect of him to the minutest feature,
-down to the pen betwixt his fingers, and the reposeful position of his
-small wax-white hand upon the table. How could I tell but that he might
-be in some sort of trance, and that my heaving him overboard would be
-the same as murdering him? However, after a spell of staring, I shook
-off these alarms and conjectures, and grasping him by the arm, got him
-upon the deck; and presently I had him abreast of that part of the
-brig’s side where the bulwarks were gone; and trembling as violently as
-though I were about to drown a living being, I waited for a roll of the
-hull, then gave the body a heave, and away it went, striking the swell
-in a diving attitude, and floating off and down into it, as if it swam.
-
-This done, I crept back to Miss Temple and squatted beside her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-NIGHT
-
-
-The wind blew hard, and the vapour swept past in a horizontal pouring,
-masses of it coming on a sudden in a blinding thickness till you could
-not see half the wreck’s length; then the silver-tinted volumes would
-brighten for a breath or two, and show the steel-coloured sea heaving
-its freckled and foamless folds into the vaporous faintness a few
-hundred feet off; then the mist would boil down and over us once more
-until it was like being in a room filled with steam.
-
-‘The cabin is empty,’ said I--the girl being on the port side, I had
-taken care to drag the body to starboard--‘there are seats, and you
-will be sheltered there. This is damping stuff.’
-
-‘Not yet,’ she answered. ‘I am as safe here. I hate the thought of
-having anything to screen the sea from me. I want to look--at any
-moment the Indiaman or the man-of-war may come close to us.’
-
-‘Be it so,’ said I. ‘Heavens, how rapidly has all this happened! One of
-the cutter’s men shouted to me that the Indiaman had fired two guns.
-Why did they not report this to us? Did they believe the swell would
-not let them get aboard? They saw--of course they saw--this fog bearing
-down; why did not the madmen let us know of it?’
-
-‘What will my aunt think?’
-
-‘Why, she will be in a terrible fright. But it will not last. We shall
-be picked up presently. I would rather be here than in the cutter. If
-they are wise, they will ride to their oars; if they row or allow the
-wind and seas to drive them, they are bound to lose both ships, the
-night being at hand; and then God help them!’
-
-‘Oh, it was an evil moment,’ she cried, ‘when we sighted the corvette!’
-
-‘It was an evil moment,’ I exclaimed bitterly and wrathfully, ‘when
-Mr. Colledge, who had undoubtedly taken too much wine on board the
-_Magicienne_, suggested that we should kill an hour on this hull.
-Where,’ I cried passionately, ‘could the unhappy lieutenant’s wits
-have been? He laughed at me for indicating the appearance I witnessed
-in the north-west. Was there nothing in the weight of this swell to
-convince him that there must be mischief not far off?’
-
-‘What will my aunt think?’ she repeated, as though she scarcely heeded
-my words, whilst she brought her hands, brilliant with rings, together
-and stared into the thickness with her eyes on fire with fear and
-amazement and the score of wild emotions which filled her.
-
-Though I held my peace on the subject, the wind, that was blowing with
-the spite of an ugly squall, was exciting an alarm in me that rose
-above all other considerations of our situation. The hatches lay open
-and there was nothing to be seen of their covers about the decks. If
-this weather continued, a high sea must presently follow, in which case
-there could be nothing to save the wreck from filling and foundering.
-The lieutenant had assured us that she was dry; but it was certain that
-she had been badly wrenched by the lightning stroke that had dismasted
-and apparently set her on fire forward, and by the furious gale that
-had chased her afterwards; and though she may have been tight when
-the lieutenant overhauled her, this constant working in the strong
-swell might at any instant cause her to start a butt or open a seam,
-and then what should I be able to do? Both pumps were smashed level
-to the deck; there was no boat; there was nothing discoverable fore
-and aft which I could launch and secure my companion and myself to. It
-was with inexpressible anxiety, therefore, that I would send my gaze
-from time to time to windward, in the hope of observing a thinning in
-the thickness there, or any the faintest imaginable sign to elate me
-with the belief that the worst of the fog was on us, that we were now
-feeling the worst of the wind, and that the ocean would be clearing
-soon.
-
-The time passed. I looked at my watch after we had been sitting a
-little, and found it six o’clock. The sun would be setting in something
-more than an hour, and a bitter black night was bound to follow if the
-vapour had not cleared when daylight ended. There was now a smart sea
-running, but the swell had flattened something, I thought. The hull was
-horribly frisky, leaning at desperate angles from side to side, and
-often recovering herself with a jerk that must have flung us to the
-deck had we not been seated. But she was extraordinarily light, and
-floated very tall, and though there would sometimes come a blow of salt
-water against the bow that flashed across the deck in a mass of foam
-and green crystals, yet she soared so nimbly to the height of every
-surge that she took in amazingly little water. Indeed, it was not long
-before I felt myself infinitely comforted by her behaviour, convinced
-that it would have to breeze up with much more spite than the wind now
-had to put us in jeopardy from a filling hold.
-
-Shortly before the hour of sundown, I induced Miss Temple to occupy
-the deck-house. She entered with a great deal of reluctance, and
-seated herself in a corner that was the furthest away from where the
-body had been. It had not been very easy to converse outside. The
-ceaseless roaring and washing noises of the water, with the alarming
-thumps and leapings of froth at the bow, and the sounds of the rushing
-wind sweeping in gusty cries over the mutilated rails of the hull as
-she was hove up full into it, and then sinking into a sort of humming
-moaning as the wreck drove down the liquid acclivity into the swift
-comparative stillness of the trough: all this was distracting and
-terrifying, and speech had been difficult. But the interior of the
-deck-house was a shelter to the ear and voice. I seated myself opposite
-the girl, giving her as wide, respectful a berth as the narrow cabin
-permitted. The shadow of the evening lay already sullen in the white
-mist that seemed to boil upon the wind, though at that hour it was not
-so thick but that the gaze might be able to penetrate a distance of
-a quarter of a mile. Miss Temple was deadly pale. Even her lips had
-lost their delicate rosy tint, and sat blanched in their compression.
-Her eyes looked preternaturally large, and there was an expression of
-passionate desperation in them, as one might figure of some proud,
-high-spirited creature driven at bay, and rounding upon the pursuer
-with a gaze charged with despair and wrath and the misery of some
-heart-breaking resolution.
-
-‘I believe I shall go mad,’ she said, ‘if this fog does not cease. I
-feel as though I were now insane, and that what we are suffering is the
-imagination of madness.’
-
-‘It is a frightful time of suspense,’ I answered; ‘we must have
-patience: there is no other medicine for this sort of affliction.’
-
-‘I could stab myself,’ she cried, ‘for being in this position. There is
-the Indiaman close at hand; I see her saloon cheerful with lamplight,
-the tables glittering, the passengers seated, talking and laughing,
-without a thought of us by this time.’ I shook my head. She continued:
-‘I think of the security, the comfort of that ship, which I never once
-reflected on when in her. And now contrast this!’
-
-She rolled her wonderful eyes over the narrow compartment in a
-shuddering way that was eloquent with abhorrence.
-
-‘Why am I here? It is my own fault. I could stab myself for my folly.’
-
-It made one think of some beautiful wild creature newly caged to watch
-her.
-
-‘It is bad enough,’ said I; ‘but it might be much worse. Think of
-yourself in that open boat--on this high sea, and amidst this blinding
-vapour: no water, no food, the blackness of the night coming down, and
-a thousand leagues of ocean all around you.’
-
-‘Is not the cutter safer than this horrible wreck?’ she cried. ‘If the
-morning exposes the ships to the people in her, they can row; but what
-can we do?’
-
-‘If the morning exposes the ships,’ said I, ‘they’ll see us, and very
-joyfully attempt to fetch us--that is to sail to us.’
-
-She turned to look through a window the glass of which was gone, and
-through which the wind was shrilling as though it blew into a cylinder.
-It was fast darkening. In these latitudes twilight is brief, and in
-such weather as this there would be none. It was little more now than
-sombre blank greyness outside, with a sight of the steel-coloured
-swell, over whose humps the seas were rushing in foam, shouldering and
-vanishing into the thickness. But there was no increase in the wind,
-and the run of the surge did not gain in weight.
-
-I watched the girl while she looked through the window. It is not in
-language to convey the tragic irony that was put into our situation by
-her sparkling holiday attire. Her dress was of some white material, of
-a silken or lustrous nature, that most perfectly fitted the beauties of
-her person. Her hat was some rich combination of richly plumed straw.
-She had removed her gloves on descending into the cabin of the hull
-when we boarded her, and many rings of splendour and value flashed on
-her fingers in a very armour of jewels and gold. There were gems in her
-ears, and a heavy chain of gold round her neck, terminating in a whole
-cluster of trinkets at her girdle, in which was sheathed a watch of the
-size of her thumb-nail. Think of this glittering figure, this stately,
-most perfect shape of womanhood in the gloom of the strong, rude
-interior of the deck-house, with its few rough details of fittings in
-the shape of a table and lockers, nothing to see through the window but
-the rough deck spreading naked to its splinters of bulwark, with the
-angry foam of waters beyond, and a near sky of fast blackening vapour!
-
-‘What are we to do?’ she exclaimed, resuming her former attitude and
-fixing her large desperate eyes upon me.
-
-‘We must wait,’ said I.
-
-‘You have been a sailor, Mr. Dugdale; tell me what you think?’
-
-‘Well, first of all, we must be prepared to spend the night on this
-wreck’---- She flashed her hands to her face and held them there, and I
-waited for her to look at me again. ‘This weather,’ I proceeded, ‘is
-not likely to last very long. The dawn will probably exhibit a clear
-sky. If the ships are not in sight’--she drew in her breath with an
-hysterical ‘Oh’--‘they will still have the bearings of the wreck, and
-search for us. Were there but a single vessel to hunt after the hull,
-we might still feel perfectly safe; but there are two, and one of them
-is an English man-of-war.’
-
-‘But will Sir Edward Panton know that we are here?’
-
-‘No doubt. He or others will have seen the cutter deviate for the wreck
-instead of pulling for the Indiaman.’
-
-‘But they may think we are in the boat; and if she is not recovered,
-they will search for her, and not trouble themselves about the wreck.’
-
-‘We must be hopeful, and we must be patient,’ said I.
-
-It was now rapidly growing dark. The white waters showed ghastly over
-the edge of the bare deck to each convulsive jerking roll of the hull,
-and my companion’s white face was little more than a glimmer in the
-gloom of the corner in which she sat. The thought of the long black
-hours which lay before us was intolerable. I looked about me for a
-lamp, but there was nothing of the kind, nor hook nor bracket to prove
-that a lamp or lantern was ever used in this small abode. I told Miss
-Temple that I would go below and search for something wherewith to make
-a light.
-
-‘Will you be long?’ she asked.
-
-‘I’ll make haste,’ said I.
-
-‘Yes, if you please, Mr. Dugdale,’ she exclaimed.
-
-I had in my pocket the old-fashioned arrangement of tinder-box and
-sulphur matches, being, indeed, too confirmed a smoker to stir very far
-without that convenience. The mere descent of the steps was a horrible
-labour, owing to the extravagant leaps and rolls of the mere shell of
-wreck, and my progress was scarcely more than inch by inch, forced to
-hold on as I was with the tenacity of the grip of a parrot’s beak. The
-straining noises in the cabin might have easily led me to suppose that
-the hull was going to pieces. Every blow of the sea trembled through
-her down here as though the fabric forward were breaking up, and I
-recollect swinging by a stanchion for some minute or two, overwhelmed
-with the consternation excited in me by the sounds, and by a sudden
-recollection of the lieutenant’s words that the brig in her forecastle
-had been burnt out. But I had promised Miss Temple to be speedy; and
-the thought of her sitting lonely above in terror and despair brought
-my mind back to its bearings.
-
-It was almost pitch-dark, but remembering the situation of the pantry
-in which the lieutenant had cracked the bottle of wine, I dropped on my
-hands and knees, not daring to trust my feet, and crawled towards it.
-When I guessed by groping that I was near the door, I kindled a match
-and entered the pantry; and after consuming about half-a-dozen matches,
-I met with a tin box that was full of long wax candles, which looked to
-me very much like a sample of booty, as it was scarcely to be supposed
-that a vessel of the class of the _Aspirante_ would lay in stores of
-that quality. I hunted for a candlestick, and found a small empty
-pickle bottle, which would very well answer the purpose of holding the
-candle. This I squeezed under my waistcoat, and filled my coat-pockets
-with a couple of bottles of wine, a handful of ship’s biscuit, and a
-little tin drinking-vessel; and then putting the box of candles under
-my arm, I fell again upon my hands and knees, crawled to the cabin
-ladder, and joined the deck-house so wearied by the posture I had been
-forced to adopt and by the convulsive motions of the deck, which had
-put an aching as of rheumatism into every bone, that I was forced to
-sit and remain quiet for some minutes.
-
-The wind swept in through the denuded windows; but the structure, as
-I have before said, was long in proportion to its width, and at the
-fore-end the atmosphere was quiet enough for a candle to burn in. I
-secured the empty pickle bottle to a stanchion with my handkerchief,
-and placed the lighted candle in it; and the square of the bottle
-held the flame at a sufficient distance from the stanchion to provide
-against all risk of fire. The light seemed to raise some little heart
-in Miss Temple.
-
-‘You are brave,’ she exclaimed, with a glance at the black square of
-the hatch, ‘to descend into that dreadful dungeon. There may be dead
-bodies there.’
-
-‘I am not afraid of dead bodies,’ said I. ‘I wish there were nothing
-more harmful in this world than dead men. Here are two bottles of wine
-and some biscuit. You will be the better for a little refreshment.’
-
-I knocked off the head of a bottle and handed her a draught. She
-looked at the rough drinking-vessel for a little, and then said with a
-painful smile: ‘A desperate change, Mr. Dugdale, from the table of the
-Indiaman! Will this wine hurt me?’
-
-‘I will drink first, to reassure you, if you please,’ said I.
-
-‘No,’ she exclaimed; ‘I must not be too cowardly;’ and she drank.
-
-I took a good drain myself, and found it the same noble wine that the
-poor lieutenant had tasted.
-
-‘Try one of these biscuits, Miss Temple,’ said I; ‘they are but coarse
-eating for you, I fear; they are the bread that poor Jack is fed on.’
-
-She took one and nibbled at it.
-
-‘Ha!’ said I, ‘this is an ocean experience indeed. This is being
-shipwrecked. You will have a deal more to talk about when you get home
-than Colledge could have dreamt of in proposing this excursion for that
-purpose. Can you bite that biscuit?’
-
-‘Yes,’ she answered.
-
-‘It is rather flinty,’ said I, munching. ‘There should be something
-more relishable than this to be come at below. I will make another
-hunt.’
-
-‘No, if you please,’ she cried vehemently; ‘do not leave me, Mr.
-Dugdale.’
-
-‘Ay, but food apart, since we must needs remain here through the night,
-I must endeavour to find something soft for you to lie upon. You cannot
-rest upon that hard locker.’
-
-‘Oh, I do not want to rest,’ she exclaimed. ‘Do you think I could
-sleep? I shall sit as I am, and pray for the light to come and for a
-sight of the ships.’
-
-I made no answer, though it was on the tip of my tongue to say I was
-sorry for her sake that it was I, and not Colledge, whom she was adrift
-with. It was an impulse coming through some sudden hot recollection of
-her treatment of me on board the _Countess Ida_; but I bit my lip, and
-was grateful for my silence a moment after, when I saw her fine eyes
-swimming with tears.
-
-‘Pray have hope,’ I exclaimed. ‘I am sure after a bit you will find
-plenty of courage in your heart to confront this little passage, hard
-as it is. I will do what I can. I would you had a better sailor than I
-by your side; but what can be done by me shall be done, and the worst
-is a long way off yet, I am certain.’
-
-She put her hands upon the table and hid her face in them. I lifted the
-lid of the locker I was using as a seat, to stow away the bottles in a
-safe place; for, talk as I might, it was only God could know whether it
-might not end in a single drop of the liquor becoming more precious to
-us than twenty times the value of the cargo of the Indiaman. There were
-some wearing apparel, a few small coils of ratline-stuff, and other
-odds and ends in the locker, but nothing noticeable. I then clawed my
-way to the deck-house door to take a look round. It was black as fog
-and darkness could make it. Close alongside, the foam glanced dimly,
-with now and again a flash of phosphoric light in some dark coil down
-whose slope the hull was sliding; but there was nothing else to see.
-The wind still blew fresh, but there was no recognisable increase in
-it since the hour of its first coming down upon the wreck. It made a
-most dismal and melancholy noise of howling in the sky, as it swept
-through the dark obscurity, splitting upon the foremast and the shrouds
-which supported the spar, in a low-toned long-drawn shriek, which
-had something of the sound of a human note as it pierced through the
-hissing and seething round about, and through the strange, low, dull
-thunder made by the shouldering of liquid folds coming together as they
-ran, and by the hurl of the surge as it rounded and dissolved into foam.
-
-There could be very little doubt that the drift of a light empty shell
-of a wreck with a yard and mast and shrouds forward for the wind to
-catch hold of would be considerable in such weather as this. Helped
-by the beat of the seas, she might easily blow dead to leeward, in
-the trough as she was, at the rate of some three to four miles in the
-hour, so that daybreak would find her forty or fifty miles distant
-from the spot where we had boarded her. However, I comforted myself
-with the reflection that the commanders of the two ships would have
-a clear perception of such a drift as I calculated, and allow for
-it in the search they would surely make for the hull. I had but one
-fear: that the cutter had been seen leaving the wreck, for there was
-an interval at least of a minute or two between her dropping astern
-and manœuvring with her three oars and her envelopment by the fog. If,
-then, she had been sighted, the inference would inevitably be that Miss
-Temple, Colledge, and myself were in her; and so the hunt would be for
-the cutter, without reference to the hull, with every prospect of the
-search carrying the ships miles below the verge of our horizon.
-
-Meanwhile, as I stood in that doorway looking into the blackness over
-the sides, I bent my ear anxiously forward; but though there were
-constant shocks of the sea smiting the bow, I never caught the noise
-of water falling in weight enough upon the deck to alarm me. The leap
-of the surge seemed to be always forward of the fore-shrouds, and the
-ducking and tossing of the fabric was so nimble, and the pouring of
-the blast so steadfast, that nearly all the water that sprang to the
-blow of the bow was carried overboard by the wind. This was about as
-comforting an assurance as could come to me; for I tell you it was
-enough to turn one’s heart into lead to look into that starless wall of
-blackness close against the ship, to see nothing but the pallid glimmer
-of froth, to hearken to the noises in the air, to feel the sickening
-and dizzy heavings of the sea, and then realise that this hull had been
-struck by lightning, that the forepart of her was burnt into a thin
-case of charred timbers, and that all three hatches in her, together
-with the skylight, lay open and yawning like the mouths of wells to the
-first rush of sea that should tumble over the side.
-
-I will not feign to remember how that night passed. The tall wax candle
-burnt bravely and lasted long; but the guttering of it to the circlings
-of the air in the extremity of the cabin obliged me to light another
-before the night was spent. It a little encouraged Miss Temple to be
-able to see. God knows how it might have been with her had we been
-obliged to sit in that blackness. Once the candle was blown out, and
-when I had succeeded in lighting it afresh, after a few minutes of
-groping and hunting and manœuvring with my tinder-box, I looked at the
-girl, and knew by the horror that shone in her eyes, and the marble
-hardness in the aspect of her parted lips, as though her mouth were
-some carved expression of fear, how heart-subduing had that short spell
-of blackness proved. From time to time she would ask for a little wine,
-which she sipped as though thirsty, but she swallowed a few drops only,
-as if she feared that the wine, by heating her, would increase her
-thirst; yet when I spoke of going below to seek for some fresh water,
-she begged me not to leave her.
-
-‘It is the memory of the body that sat at this table which makes
-loneliness insupportable to me, Mr. Dugdale,’ she exclaimed. ‘I seemed
-to see the dreadful object when the candle went out. I thought I had
-more spirit. I am but a very weak woman, after all.’
-
-‘I do not think so,’ said I; ‘you are bearing this frightful trial
-very nobly. How would it be with some girls I know? They would be
-swooning away; they would be exhausting themselves in cries; they would
-be tearing themselves to pieces in hysterics. And how is it with me?
-Sometimes I am frightened to death, but not with fears of darkness or
-of the dead. I am certain we shall be rescued; this hull is making
-excellent weather of it; there is food and drink below, yet I am filled
-with consternation and grief. Why should it be otherwise? We are
-creatures of nerves, and this is an experience to test the courage of a
-saint.’
-
-Well, we would exchange a few sentences after this pattern, and then
-fall silent for a whole hour at a time. She never closed her eyes
-throughout the night. Whenever I glanced at her, I met her gaze
-brilliant with emotion. The change was so sudden that I found it
-impossible to fully realise it. When I thought of Miss Temple aboard
-the _Countess Ida_, her haughtiness, her character of almost insolent
-reserve, how she had hardly found it in her to address me with an
-accent of courtesy, her ungracious treatment of me after the service
-I had done her in rescuing her from a perilous situation: I say when
-I recalled all this and a deal more, and then viewed her as she sat
-opposite, crouching in a corner, supporting herself by grasping the
-table with her heavily ringed fingers, the high-born delicate beauty of
-her lineaments showing like some cameo in ivory, and reflected that she
-and I were absolutely alone, that it might come to her owing her life
-to me, or that we might be doomed to miserably perish together--this
-girl, this unapproachable young lady, at whom I had been wont to stare
-furtively with fascinated eyes on board the Indiaman for long spells
-at a stretch--I could not bring my mind to credit the reality of our
-situation.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-I SEARCH THE WRECK
-
-
-All night long it blew a strong wind, but shortly before daybreak it
-fined down on a sudden into a light air out of the south-west, leaving
-a troubled rolling sea behind it. It was still very thick all round
-the horizon, so that from the door of the deck-house my gaze scarcely
-penetrated a distance of two miles. It was no longer fog, however,
-but cloud, sullen, low-lying, here and there shaping out; a familiar
-tropical dawn in the parallels, though it made one think too of the
-smothers you fall in with on the edge of the Gulf Stream.
-
-I stepped on deck to wait for the light to break, and Miss Temple
-came to the door to look also. The hull still rolled violently, but
-without the dangerous friskiness of the jumps, recoils, and staggering
-recoveries of the night when there was a sharp sea running as well as a
-long heaving swell. My heart was in my gaze as the dim faintness came
-sifting into the darkness of the east. In a few minutes it was a grey
-morn, the sea an ugly lead, and the horizon all round of the aspect
-of a drizzling November day in the English Channel. We both swept the
-water with our sight, again and again looking, straining our vision
-into the dim distances; but to no purpose.
-
-‘Do you see anything?’ exclaimed Miss Temple.
-
-‘No,’ I answered, ‘there is nothing in sight.’
-
-‘Oh, my heart will break!’ she cried.
-
-‘We must wait awhile,’ said I: ‘this sort of weather has a trick of
-clearing rapidly, and it may be all bright sky and wide shining surface
-of ocean long before noon; then we shall see the ships, and they will
-see us. But this is a low level. Something may heave into view from
-the height of that mast. I shall not be long gone. Be careful to hold
-on firmly, Miss Temple; nay, oblige me by sitting in the deck-house.
-Should you relax your grasp, a sudden roll may carry you overboard.’
-
-In silence, and with a face of despair, she took her seat on a locker,
-and very warily I made my way forwards. We had taken but a brief view
-of the hull when we boarded her, and the appearance of her towards the
-bows was new to me. There were twenty signs of her having been swept
-again and again by the seas. No doubt, her hatches had been uncovered,
-that her people might rummage her before going away in her boats; and
-the covers, for all I could tell, might have been rolled overboard by
-some of her violent workings. Yet it was certain that she must have
-been swept when her hatches were covered, or the lieutenant would not
-have found her with a dry hold. But I had been long enough at sea to
-know that it is the improbable conjecture that oftenest fits the fact
-of a marine disaster.
-
-I took a view of the foremast, to make sure that all was sound with
-it, and then sprang into the shrouds and gained the top. Some few feet
-of the splintered topmast still stood, and under the platform at which
-I had arrived the foreyard swang drearily to its overhauled braces
-hanging in bights. There was no more to see here than from the deck.
-The thick atmosphere receded nothing to this elevation, and would have
-been as impenetrable had I climbed a thousand feet. It was like being
-in the heart of an amphitheatre of sulky shadows. The water rolled
-foamless, and there was little more air to be felt than was made by
-the sickeningly monotonous swing of the solitary spar from whose
-summit I explored the ocean limits in all directions, frowning to the
-heart-breaking intensity of my stare. By heaven, then, thought I, we
-_are_ alone! and if we are to be picked up by either of the ships, it
-will not be to-day nor maybe to-morrow!
-
-I glanced down at the deck of the hull, and observed that the sides of
-the fore-hatch were black with extinguished fire. The head-rail was
-gone to port, and from the eyes of her to the deck-house aft the fabric
-had a fearfully wrecked look, with its mutilated bulwark stanchions,
-its yawning hatchways, its dislocated capstan, and other details of
-a like kind, all helping to a horrible wildness of appearance to one
-who viewed, as I did, from an eminence, the crazy, fire-blackened,
-dismasted old basket, that wallowed as though every head of swell that
-rolled at her must overwhelm and drown her hollow interior.
-
-I again sent my eyes in another passionate search, then descended. As I
-sprang from the shrouds on to the deck, my eye was taken by the brig’s
-bell, that dangled from a frame close against the foremast. Dreading
-lest some increase in the swell should start it off into ringing
-in some dismal hour of gloom and heighten Miss Temple’s misery and
-terror, I unhooked the tongue of it, and threw it down, and rejoined my
-companion, whose white face put the piteous question of her heart to me
-in silence.
-
-‘No,’ said I, swaying in front of her as I held on to the door; ‘there
-is nothing to be seen.’
-
-‘Oh it is hard! it is hard!’ she cried. ‘If one could only recall a few
-hours--be able to go back to yesterday! I do not fear death: but to die
-thus--to drown in that dreadful sea--no one to be able to tell how I
-perished.’ She sobbed, but with dry eyes.
-
-There was no reasoning with such a fit of despair as this, nor was it
-possible for me to say anything out of which she might extract a grain
-of comfort, seeing that I could but speak conjecturally, and with no
-other perception than was to be shaped by the faint light of my own
-hopes. My heart was deeply moved by her misery. Her beauty showed wan,
-and was inexpressibly appealing with its air of misery. The effects
-of the long and fearful vigils of the night that was gone were cruelly
-visible in her. There was a violet shadow under her eyes, her lips were
-pale, her lids drooped, her hair hung in some little disorder about her
-brow and ears; her very dress seemed significant of shipwreck, mocking
-the eye with what the grim usage of the sea had already transformed
-into mere ironical finery. Yet there was too much of the nature she had
-familiarised me to on board the Indiaman still expressed in the natural
-haughty set of her lips, even charged as they were with the anguish
-that worked in her, to win me to any attempt of tender reassurance. I
-watched her dumbly, though my soul was melted into pity. Presently she
-looked at me.
-
-‘I suppose there is nothing to be done, Mr. Dugdale?’
-
-‘Indeed, then,’ said I, ‘there is a deal to be done. First of all, you
-must cheer up your heart, which you will find easy if you can credit me
-when I tell you that this hull is perfectly buoyant; that though the
-weather is thick and gloomy, the sun, as he gains power, is certain
-to open out the ocean to us; that there are two ships close at hand
-searching for us; that there are provisions enough below to enable
-us to support life for days and perhaps weeks; and that, even if the
-Indiaman or the corvette fail to fall in with us, we are sure to be
-sighted by one of the numerous vessels which are daily traversing this
-great ocean highway. What, then, are we to do but compose our minds,
-exert our patience, keep a bright lookout, be provided with means for
-signalling our distress, and meanwhile not to suffer our unfortunate
-condition to starve us? And that reminds me to overhaul the pantry for
-something better than biscuit to break our fast with.’
-
-A softness I should have thought impossible to the spirited fires of
-her eyes when all was well with her entered her gaze for a moment as
-it rested upon me, and a faint smile flickered upon and vanished off
-her lips; but she did not speak, and I dropped through the hatch to
-ascertain if the pantry could yield us something more nourishing than
-ship’s bread.
-
-The sullenness of the day without lay in gloom below. I was forced to
-return for a candle, with which I entered the little cabin that I had
-visited on the previous day; but when I came to make a search I could
-find nothing more to eat than cheese, biscuit, and marmalade. There
-was a number of raw hams, but the galley was gone, and there was no
-means to cook them. There were two casks of flour, a sack of some kind
-of dried beans, and a small barrel of moist sugar. These matters had
-probably been overlooked when the crew hurriedly removed themselves
-from the brig. No doubt, at the time of jettisoning such commodities
-as the hold might have stored, they had broken out as much food and
-water as they could take with them. There was more than a bottle of
-wine in the deck-house; down here, stowed away in straw and secured
-by a batten, were some three or four scores of full bottles, all, I
-supposed, holding the same generous liquor contained in the first
-of them we had tasted. But there was no fresh water. I sought with
-diligence, but to no purpose. Possibly the people might have left some
-casks of it in the hold; but that was a search I would not at present
-undertake.
-
-I took some cheese and marmalade and another handful of biscuits,
-along with a knife and a couple of tin dishes. As I passed through
-the cabin, the light of the candle I held glanced upon a stand of
-small-arms fixed just abaft the short flight of the hatch-ladder.
-There were some thirty to forty muskets of an old-fashioned make, even
-for those days, and on either hand of them, swinging in tiers or rows
-from nails or hooks in the bulkhead, were a quantity of cutlasses,
-half-pikes, tomahawks, and other items of the grim machinery of murder.
-I placed the food upon the deck-house table.
-
-‘A shabby repast, Miss Temple,’ said I, ‘but we may easily support life
-on such fare until we are rescued.’
-
-She ate some biscuit and marmalade, and drank a little wine; but she
-incessantly sent her gaze through the windows or the open door, and
-sighed frequently in tremulous respirations, and sometimes there
-would enter a singular look of bewilderment into the expression of
-her eyes, as though her mind at such moments failed her, and did but
-imperfectly understand our situation. I would then fear that the horror
-which possessed her might end in breaking down her spirits, and even
-dement her, indeed. Already her eyes were languid with grief and want
-of rest, and such strength and life as they still possessed seemed
-weakened yet by the shadowing of the long fringes. I endeavoured to win
-her away from her thoughts by talking to her.
-
-I possessed a pocket-book, which supplied me with pencil and paper,
-and I drew a diagram of the two ships’ and the wreck’s position, as I
-was best able to conceive it, and made arrows to figure the direction
-of the wind, and marked distances in figures, and enlarged freely and
-heartily upon our prospects, pointing with my pencil to the paper
-whilst I talked. This interested her. She came round to the locker on
-which I sat, and placed herself beside me, and leaned her face near
-to mine, supporting her head by her elbow whilst she gazed with eyes
-riveted to the paper, listening thirstily. I had never had her so close
-to me before saving that day when we swung together on to the hencoop,
-but then it was a constrained situation, and she had let me suspect
-that it was very distasteful to her. It was far otherwise now. She was
-near me of her own will; I felt her warm breath on my cheek; the subtle
-fragrance of her presence was in the air I respired. I talked eagerly
-to conceal the emotions she excited, and I felt the blood hot in my
-face when I had made an end with my diagram, and drew a little away to
-restore the book to my pocket.
-
-She now seemed able and willing to converse, but she did not offer to
-leave my side.
-
-‘Suppose the ships are unable to find us, Mr. Dugdale?’
-
-‘Some other vessel is certain to fall in with us.’
-
-‘But she may be bound to a part of the world very remote from India or
-England.’
-
-‘True,’ said I; ‘but as she jogs along she may encounter a vessel
-proceeding to England, into which we shall be easily able to tranship
-ourselves.’
-
-‘How tedious! We may have to wander for months about the ocean!’
-
-‘It is always step by step, Miss Temple, in this life. Let us begin at
-the beginning, and quit this wreck, at any rate.’
-
-‘All my luggage is in the Indiaman. How I am to manage I cannot
-conceive,’ said she, running her eyes over her dress, and lifting her
-hand to her hat.
-
-‘Pray let no such consideration as dress trouble you. The experience
-will gain in romance from our necessities, and we shall be able to read
-“Robinson Crusoe” with new enjoyment.’
-
-She faintly smiled, with just a hint of peevishness in the curl of her
-lip.
-
-‘If this be romance, Mr. Dugdale, may my days henceforth, if God be
-merciful enough to preserve us, be steeped in the dullest prose.’
-
-‘I wonder where Colledge and the cutter’s crew are?’ said I.
-
-‘I do not think,’ she exclaimed, ‘if Mr. Colledge were in your place he
-would show your spirit.’
-
-‘He was a great favourite of yours, Miss Temple.’
-
-‘Not great. I rather liked him. I knew some of his connections. He was
-an amiable person. I did not know that he was engaged to be married.’
-
-I was astonished that she should have said this, but I was eager to
-encourage her to talk, and in our state of misery it would signify but
-little what topic we lighted upon.
-
-‘Did he inform you he was engaged?’ said I.
-
-‘No. I perceived it in his looks when his cousin asked him the
-question. Did he ever tell you who the young lady was?’ she added
-listlessly, and though she spoke of the thing it was easy to see that
-she was without interest in it.
-
-I could not tell a lie, and silence would have been injurious to my
-wishes for her. Besides, she had guessed the truth by no help from
-me, and then, again, our situation rendered the subject exquisitely
-trifling and insignificant.
-
-‘Yes,’ I replied; ‘we were cabin fellows, and intimate. He showed me
-the girl’s portrait--a plump, pretty little woman. Her name is Fanny
-Crawley, daughter of one of the numberless Sir Johns or Sir Thomases of
-this age.’
-
-She was looking through the cabin door at the sea, and scarcely seemed
-to hear or to heed me. Am I strictly honourable in this? thought I.
-Pshaw! it was no moment to consider the rights and wrongs of such a
-thing. Her discovery had freed me from all obligation of secrecy, and
-what I had supplied she would have easily been able to ascertain for
-herself on her return home, if, indeed, home was ever to be viewed
-again by either of us.
-
-‘What horrible weather!’ she exclaimed, bringing her eyes to my face;
-‘there is no wind, and the sea rolls like liquid lead. When you were at
-sea, were you ever in a situation of danger such as this?’
-
-‘This is an uneasy time,’ said I; ‘but do not call it a situation of
-danger yet. I am going shortly to overhaul the wreck. I must keep her
-afloat until we are taken off her.’
-
-‘How long were you at sea, Mr. Dugdale?’
-
-‘Two years.’
-
-‘Is your father a sailor?’
-
-‘No; my father is dead. He was captain in the 38th Regiment of Foot,
-and was killed at Burmah.’
-
-There was a kind of dawning of interest in her eyes, an expression I
-had not noticed when she talked of Colledge and his engagement.
-
-‘My father was in the army, too,’ said she; ‘but he saw very little
-service. Is your mother living?’
-
-‘She is.’
-
-She sighed bitterly, and hid her face whilst she exclaimed:
-
-‘Oh, my poor mother! my poor mother! How little she knows! And she was
-so reluctant to let me leave her.’ She sighed again deeply, and let her
-hands fall, and then sank into silence.
-
-I quitted the deck-house to take another look round. Just then rain
-began to fall, and the sea became shrouded with the discharge. So
-oil smooth now was the swell that each drop as it fell pitted the
-lead-coloured rounds with a black point, and the water alongside looked
-to be spotted with ink. As I had met with no fresh water in the little
-room that I call the pantry, and as there might be none in the hold, or
-none that with my single pair of hands I should be able to come at, I
-resolved to take advantage of the wet that was pouring down, and dived
-into the cabin to search for any vessel that would catch and hold it.
-The flour and sugar casks in the pantry would not do. I peered into the
-other berths, but could see nothing to answer the purpose. It was of
-the first consequence, however, to us that we should possess a store
-of drinking water to mix with our wine, for we were in the tropics;
-the atmosphere was heavy with heat, even under a shrouded heaven; it
-was easy to figure what the temperature would rise to when the sun
-should shine forth; and the mere fancy of days of stagnation and of
-vertical suns, of this hull roasting; under the central broiling eye,
-of the breathless sea, stretching in feverish breathings into the
-dim, blue distance, unbroken by any tip of sail, and no fresh water
-to drink, was horribly oppressive, and rendered me half crazy to find
-some contrivance to catch the rain, which might at any moment cease.
-The thought of the lockers in the deck-house occurred to me. I mounted
-the ladder and searched them, and to my unspeakable joy, found in the
-locker upon which Miss Temple had been seated during the night, four
-canvas buckets, apparently brand new, as I might judge, from the cloth
-and from the rope handles. The rain fell heavily, and the water gushed
-in streams from the roof of the deck-house at many points of it. In a
-very short time the buckets were filled, but they were of a permeable
-substance, and it was necessary to decant them as soon as possible.
-There was no difficulty in doing this, for there were several empty
-bottles in the shelves below along with a couple of large jars, some
-tin pannikins, and so forth. These I brought up, washed them in the
-rain, and then filled them, and in this manner contrived to store away
-a good number of gallons, not to mention the contents of the buckets,
-which I left hanging outside to fill up afresh, meaning to use them
-first, and taking my chance of loss through the water soaking through
-them.
-
-All this, that is to be described in a few lines of writing, signified
-a lengthy occupation, that broke well into the day. Miss Temple watched
-my labours with interest, and begged to be of service; but she could be
-of little use to me, nor would I suffer her to expose herself to the
-wet.
-
-‘Will not this rain fill the hull,’ she exclaimed, ‘and sink her?’
-
-‘It would need to keep on raining for a long while to do that,’ said
-I, laughing. ‘I am going below to inspect the forepart of her, and to
-ascertain, if possible, what her hold contains. Will you accompany me?
-The hull rolls steadily; you will not find walking inconvenient, and it
-is very necessary that you should occupy your mind.’
-
-‘I should like to do so,’ she answered; ‘but ought not one of us to
-stay here in case the sea should clear and show us the ships?’
-
-‘Alas!’ said I, ‘there is no wind, and the ships probably lie as
-motionless as we. This weather will not speedily clear, I believe.
-We shall not be long below, and any sort of exertion is better than
-sitting here in loneliness and musing upon the inevitable, and adding
-the misery of thought to the distress of our situation.’
-
-‘Yes, you are right,’ she exclaimed, rising. ‘You give me some heart,
-Mr. Dugdale, yet I do not know why. There is nothing that you can say
-to encourage me to hope.’
-
-To this I made no reply, but took her hand, and assisted her to descend
-the ladder. She came to a stand at the foot of it, as though terrified
-by the gloom.
-
-‘It is dreadful,’ she exclaimed in a low voice, ‘to think that only
-a few short hours ago the poor lieutenant whose heart was beating
-high with thoughts of returning home, should have been laughing and
-joking--here! I can hear his voice still; I can hear Mr. Colledge’s
-laughter. Hark! What noises are those?’
-
-‘Rats!’ I exclaimed.
-
-The squeaking was shrill and fierce and close to. I lighted a candle,
-she meanwhile coming to my side, her elbow rubbing mine, as though she
-would have my hand within an instant’s reach of her own. The squeaking
-continued. It sounded as though there were some score of rats worrying
-something, or fighting among themselves.
-
-‘Hold this candle for a moment,’ said I, and I advanced to the bulkhead
-and grasped a cutlass, and then peeped into the little passage that
-divided the after cabins. The rats were somewhere along it, but it was
-too dark to see; so laying the cutlass aside, I took down a musket
-and sent the heavy weapon javelin-fashion sheer into the thick of the
-hideous noise. A huge rat as big as a kitten rushed over my feet; Miss
-Temple uttered a shriek, and let fall the candle.
-
-‘Do not be alarmed!’ I shouted; ‘the beasts know their way below;’ and
-seeing the pallid outline of the candle upon the deck I picked it up
-and relighted it.
-
-‘Oh, Mr. Dugdale,’ she cried, in a voice that trembled with disgust and
-fear, ‘what am I to do? I dare not be here, and I dare not be above,
-alone. What is more shocking and terrifying than a rat?’
-
-I told her that rats were much more afraid of us than we could possibly
-be of them; but, commiserating her alarm, I offered to escort her to
-the deck-house.
-
-‘But you will not leave me there,’ she exclaimed.
-
-‘It is very necessary,’ said I, ‘that I should examine the state of the
-hull.’
-
-‘Then I will stay with you,’ said she. ‘I cannot endure to be alone.’
-
-She gathered up her dress, holding the folds of it with one hand,
-whilst she passed the other through my arm. I could feel her shuddering
-as she clung to me. Her eyes were large with fright and aversion, and
-they sparkled to the candle-flame as she rolled them over the deck.
-At the extremity of the passage that separated the foremost berths
-from the pantry stood what I believed a bulkhead; but on bringing the
-candle to it I discovered that it was a door of very heavy scantling
-that slided in grooves with a stout iron handle for pulling it by. It
-travelled very easily, as something that had been repeatedly used.
-The moment it was open there was plenty of daylight, for the open
-square of the main hatch yawned close by overhead, of dimensions
-considerable enough to illuminate every part of this interior. I stood
-viewing with wonder a scene of extraordinary confusion. There were
-no hammocks, but all about the decks, in higgledly-piggledly heaps
-and clusters, were mats of some sort of West Indian reeds, rugs and
-blankets, bolster-shaped bags, a few sea-chests, most of them capsized,
-with their lids open, and a surprising intermixture of hook-pots,
-tin-dishes, sea-boots, oilskins, empty broken cases, staves of casks,
-tackles, and a raffle of gear and other things of which my mind does
-not preserve the recollection. Several large rats, on my swinging the
-door along its grooves, darted from out of the various heaps and shot
-with incredible velocity down through the large hatch that conducted
-into the hold, and that lay on a line with the hatch above.
-
-‘By all that’s---- Well, well! here’s been excitement, surely,’ said
-I. ‘Was ever panical terror more incomparably suggested? But this brig
-was full of men, and there was manifestly a tremendous scramble at the
-last. Would not anyone think that there had been a fierce fight down
-here?’
-
-‘Do you think there are any dead bodies under those things?’ exclaimed
-Miss Temple in a hollow whisper.
-
-‘See!’ cried I; ‘lest there should be more rats about, suppose I
-contrive some advantage for you over the beasts;’ and so saying I
-dragged one of the largest of the sea-chests to the bulkhead and helped
-her to get upon it.
-
-This seemed to make her easier. Filled as my mind was with conflicting
-emotions excited by the extraordinary scene of hurry and disorder
-which I surveyed, I could yet find leisure to glance at and deeply
-admire her fine, commanding figure, as she stood with inimitable,
-unconscious grace, swaying upon the chest to the regular rolling of the
-hull. It was a picture of a sort to live as long as the memory lasted.
-There she stood, draped in the elegancies of her white apparel, her
-full, dark eyes large and vital again in the shadow of her rich hat,
-under which her face showed colourless and faultless in lineament as
-some incomparable achievement of the sculptor’s art: her beauty and
-dignity heightened in a manner not to be expressed or explained by
-the character of the scene round about--the uncovered square of hatch
-through which the rain was falling, the wild disorder of the deck, the
-rude beams and coarse sides of the interior.
-
-I approached the edge of the hatchway and looked down. Little more was
-to be seen than ballast, on the top of which lay a couple of dismounted
-guns, apparently twelve-pounders. A short distance forward in the gloom
-were the outlines of some casks and cases. The hull was dry, as the
-lieutenant had said. Water there undoubtedly must have been, washing to
-and fro under the ballast and down in the run, but too inconsiderable
-in quantity to give me the least uneasiness. One glance below sufficed
-to assure me that the fabric of the wreck was tight.
-
-I considered a little whether it might not be possible to so protect
-the yawning hatches as to provide against any violent inroads of water
-should this dirty shadow of weather that overhung the wreck in wet end
-in wind; but there were no tarpaulins to be seen, no spare planks or
-anything of a like kind which could be converted into a cover, nothing
-but mats and rugs, which were not to be put to any sort of use in the
-direction I had in my mind.
-
-I left Miss Temple standing on the chest, darting alarmed glances at
-the huddled heaps which littered the decks, and walked forward to a
-doorway in a stout partition that bulkheaded off a short space of
-forecastle from these ’tweendecks. There was an open forescuttle here
-that made plenty of light. This was the interior that had been burnt
-out, as the lieutenant had told me, to the condition of a charred
-shell. The deck and sides were as black as a hat, and the place showed
-as if it had been constructed of charcoal. A strong smell as of fire
-still lingered. Whatever had been here in the shape of sea-furniture
-was burnt, or removed by the people. I picked up a small handspike,
-and entering the cindery apartment, beat here and there against the
-semi-calcined planks, almost expecting to find the handspike shoot
-through; but black as the timber looked it yielded a hearty echo to my
-thumps, and I returned to Miss Temple satisfied that the hull was still
-very staunch, and, but for her uncovered hatches, as seaworthy as ever
-she had been at any time since her launch.
-
-Whilst turning over some of the mats and wearing apparel on the deck
-with my foot I spied a large cube of something yellow, and, picking it
-up and examining it, I was very happy to discover that it was tobacco.
-I made more of this than had I found a purse of a hundred guineas, for,
-though I had my pipe in my pocket, I was without anything to smoke, and
-I cannot express how hungrily during the night I had yearned for the
-exceeding solace of a few whiffs, and with what melancholy I had viewed
-the prospect of having to wait until we were rescued before I should
-obtain a cigar or a pipe of tobacco.
-
-‘What have you there, Mr. Dugdale?’ cried Miss Temple.
-
-‘A little matter that, coming on top of the discovery that this hull
-is as good as a cork under our feet, helps very greatly towards
-reestablishing my peace of mind--a lump of very beautiful tobacco,’ and
-I smelt it fondly again.
-
-‘Oh, Mr. Dugdale, I thought it was a dead rat,’ she exclaimed. ‘What
-are all those mats?’
-
-‘The privateersmen used them to sleep on, I expect. The quantity of
-them tells us how heavily manned this old waggon went.’
-
-‘There is no wind, Mr. Dugdale. The rain falls in perfectly straight
-lines. Let us return to the deck-house.’
-
-I took her hand and helped her to dismount. She gathered her dress
-about her as before, and passed with trepidation through the darksome
-cabin, holding tightly by my arm, and then, with a wearied despairful
-air, seated herself upon a locker and leaned her chin in her hand,
-biting her under lip whilst she gazed vacantly through the little
-window at the sullen raining gloom of the sky.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-WE SIGHT A SAIL
-
-
-I should but tease you by attempting to narrate the passage of the
-hours from this point. All day long it rained; no air stirred, and
-the leaden sea flattened into sulky heavings wide apart, on which the
-hull rolled quietly. Possessing but the clothes in which I stood, I
-fetched an oilskin from the ’tweendecks to save me from a wet skin, and
-thus attired made several journeys into the foretop, where I lingered,
-straining my gaze all around into the shrouded horizon till my eyeballs
-seemed to crack to the stretching of my vision. Sometimes, when in
-the deck-house, I would start to my feet on fancying I heard a sound
-of oars, but it was never more than some sobbing wash of swell, or
-some stir of the rudder swayed on its pintles by the movement of the
-fabric. There was plenty of stuff below with which to produce smoke,
-but no preparation for such a signal could be made whilst it rained,
-nor could any purpose be served by having the materials ready until the
-weather cleared, and wind blew, and something hove into sight.
-
-Miss Temple’s miserable dejection grieved me bitterly. The horror
-of our situation seemed to increase upon her, and say what I might
-I never succeeded in coaxing the least air of spirit into her face.
-It was distressing beyond language to see this haughty, beautiful,
-high-born woman, accustomed to every refinement and elegance that was
-to be purchased or contrived, reduced to such a pass as this: languidly
-putting her lips to the rough pannikin in which I would hand her a
-draught of wine and water; scarcely able to bite the flinty biscuit
-which, with marmalade and cheese, formed our repasts; sitting for weary
-long spells at a time motionless in a corner of the rough structure,
-her eyelids heavy, her gaze fixed and listless, her lips parted, with
-all their old haughty expression of imperious resolution gone from
-them, her fingers locked upon her lap, her breast now and again rising
-and falling with hysteric swiftness to some wrenching emotion which
-yet found her face marble-like, and her eyes without their familiar
-impassioned glow.
-
-I recollect wondering once, whilst watching her silently, whether
-there would prove anything in this experience to change her character.
-Should the Indiaman recover us, there might be a full fourteen or even
-sixteen weeks of association before us yet. Once safely aboard the
-_Countess Ida_, would she let this experience slip out of her mind
-as an influence, and repeat in her manner towards myself the cold
-indifference, the haughty neglect, the distant supercilious usage
-which I had found so objectionable, that I was coming very near to
-as cordially hating her character as I deeply admired the beauties
-and perfections of her face and person. Was she not a sort of woman
-to accept an obligation and to look, if it suited her to do so, very
-coldly afterwards upon the person who had obliged her? Ridiculous as
-the emotion was at such a time, when, for all I knew, in a few hours
-the pair of us might be floating a brace of corpses, fathoms deep in
-that leaden ocean over the side, yet I must confess to a small stir
-of exultation to the thought that supposing us to be rescued, let her
-behave as she pleased, she never could escape the memory of having
-been alone with me in this horrible hull, nor avert the discovery of
-this circumstance by her relatives and friends. It was a consideration,
-indeed, to bring her mightily closer to me than ever she had dreamt of,
-and to my mind it was as complete a turning of the tables as the most
-romantic fancy could have invented--that she who could scarce address
-me on board the Indiaman for pride, and for dislike too, for all I
-could tell, should now be in the intimate and lonely association of
-shipwreck with me, clinging to me, entreating me not to leave her side;
-dependent upon such spirit and energy as I possessed for the food and
-drink that was to support us, and again and again talking to me with
-a freedom which she would have exhibited to no living creature in the
-Indiaman, her aunt excepted.
-
-When that second night came down black as thunder, raining hard, the
-ocean breathless, I entreated her to rest.
-
-‘You must sleep, Miss Temple,’ said I; ‘I will keep watch.’
-
-She shook her head.
-
-‘Nay,’ I continued, ‘you will rest comfortably upon this locker. You
-need but a pillow. There is nothing in the cabins to be thought of for
-that purpose; but I believe I can contrive a soft bolster for you out
-of my coat.’
-
-‘You are very kind, but I shall not be able to sleep.’
-
-I continued to entreat her, and I saw she was affected by my
-earnestness.
-
-‘Since it will please you if I lie down, Mr. Dugdale, I will do so,’
-said she.
-
-I whipped off my coat and rolled it up, and she removed her hat with
-a manner that made me see she abhorred even this trifling disturbance
-of her apparel, as though it signified a sort of settling down to the
-unspeakable life of the wreck. The fabric swayed so tenderly that the
-bottle containing the candle stood without risk of capsizal upon the
-table, and the small but steady flame shone clearly upon her. How
-delicate were her features by that light; how rich and beautiful the
-exceeding abundance of the dark coils of her hair, the richer and the
-more beautiful for the neglect in it, for the shadowing of her white
-brow by the disordered tresses, for the drooping of it about her ears,
-with the sparkle of diamonds there! Presently she was resting.
-
-I removed the candle to the stanchion, and secured the bottle where
-the light would be off her eyes, and sat me down near the doorway as
-far from her as the narrow breadth of the structure would permit,
-where I filled a pipe and smoked, expelling the fumes into the air,
-and listening with a heavy heart to the faint sounds breaking from the
-interior of the hull to the washing moan at long intervals of some
-passing heave of swell, and to the squeaking of the rats in the cabin
-below--a most dismal and shocking sound, I do protest, to hearken to
-amidst the hush and blackness of that ocean night, scarce vexed by more
-than the pattering of the rain.
-
-From time to time Miss Temple would address me; then she fell silent,
-and by-and-by looking towards her, and observing her to lie motionless,
-I softly crept to abreast of her, keeping the table between, and found
-her sleeping.
-
-It was then something after ten by my watch, and she slept for five
-hours without a stir, though now and again she spoke in her sleep. I
-know not why I should have remained awake unless it was to keep my
-weather-eye lifting for the rats. There was nothing to watch for or to
-hope for in such weather as that. Once, when the beasts below were
-very noisy--for, as you will suppose, in that solemn stillness their
-squeakings rose with a singularly sharp edge to the ear--I bethought
-me of the pantry, and could not remember whether I had shut the door.
-For all I could yet tell, the stores we had to depend upon were in
-that little cabin, and if the rats found their way to the food, we
-might speedily starve. I lighted a second candle, that, should the girl
-suddenly awake, she might not find herself in the dark, and stepped
-below, and found the door closed. I opened it, and minutely surveyed
-the interior, and observing all to be well, shut the door and came
-away; but never can I forget the uncontrollable chills and shudders
-which seized me on passing through that cabin! I do not doubt my mind
-had been a little weakened. The remains of the mainmast pierced the
-deck, and stood like a pillar; it stirred to the movement of the candle
-in my hand, and I stopped with a violent start to gaze at it while
-the perspiration broke from my forehead. Vague indeterminable shapes
-seemed to flit past and about the stand of arms. The dull noises in the
-hold took to my alarmed ear the notes of human groans. Several rats
-scurried in flying forms of blackness towards the after cabins: they
-seemed to start up through the deck at my feet!
-
-When I resumed my seat on the locker, I was trembling from head to
-foot, and my heart beat with feverish rapidity. A draught of wine
-rallied me, and I tried to find something ridiculous in my fears. But
-all the same my dejection was as that of a man under sentence of death,
-and again and again I would put up a prayer to God for our speedy
-deliverance, whilst I sat hearkening to the noises below, to the steady
-pattering of the rain, to the occasional melancholy sob of water, and
-to the broken, unintelligible muttering of the sleeping girl.
-
-At some hour between three and four my companion awoke. She sat up with
-a cry of wonder, and by the candle-light I observed her staring around,
-with looks of astonishment and horror such as might appear in the face
-of a person who starts from some pleasant dream into the realities of a
-dreadful situation. I waited until she should have recollected herself,
-to use the fine expressive word of the old writers.
-
-‘I have been dreaming of home,’ she said, in a low voice, ‘of safety,
-of comfort, of everything that I am now wanting. What time is it, Mr.
-Dugdale?’
-
-I put my watch close to my face and told her the hour.
-
-‘How black the night continues!’ she said--‘how silent, too!’ she
-added, after hearkening awhile. ‘It has ceased to rain, and there is
-not a breath of air.’
-
-‘It has not rained for these two hours past,’ said I. ‘I am impatient
-for the day to break. The horizon should be tolerably clear, if there
-be no rain; yet what can daybreak possibly disclose to us on top of
-such a night of stagnation as this has been?’
-
-‘Have you slept?’
-
-‘No.’
-
-‘Then you will take some rest now. It is my turn to watch.’
-
-‘The dawn will be breaking in a couple of hours,’ said I; ‘I will
-wait till it comes to take a look. Should nothing be in sight, I will
-endeavour to rest. You will not suffer in the daylight from the feeling
-of loneliness that would make you wretched now if I slept.’
-
-‘Whilst you are here, although sleeping, Mr. Dugdale, I should not feel
-lonely. Your voice assures me that you need sleep. I have been resting
-five hours. How patient you are!’
-
-She took up my jacket, reformed it pillow-fashion, placed it on the
-locker where her own head had lain, and moved to make room for me,
-seating herself where my feet would about come.
-
-‘Pray lie down, Mr. Dugdale. I shall be closer to you here than you
-have been to me, and I can awaken you in an instant if there should be
-occasion to do so.’
-
-I complied, rather to please her than to humour my own wishes; for
-though my eyelids had the heaviness of lead, there was a thrilling and
-hurrying of nervous sensation in me which were as good as a threat that
-I should not sleep. And so it proved, for after I had held my head
-pillowed for some half hour, I was still broad awake; and then growing
-impatient of my posture, I sat erect.
-
-‘No use, Miss Temple, I cannot sleep; and since that is so, pray resume
-this hard couch and finish out your slumbers.’
-
-But this she would not do, protesting that she was fully rested. I was
-too desirous of her company to weary her with entreaties, and until the
-day broke we sat at that narrow table with the light close enough to
-enable us to see each other clearly. I remember saying to her:
-
-‘Since this is an experience you were fated to pass through--I suppose
-we must all believe in the pre-ordination of our lives--my sincere
-regret is that you should not have been imprisoned in this hull with
-somebody more agreeable to yourself than I.’
-
-‘Why do you say that?’ she exclaimed, giving me a look that carried me
-back. ‘In this state of misery a compliment would be shocking.’
-
-‘I seek no compliment,’ said I. ‘I am merely expressing a regret.’
-
-‘You regret that you are here?’ she exclaimed. ‘So do I, for then I
-should not be here. But since it is my lot to be here, I am satisfied
-with my companion; I would not exchange him for any other person on
-board the _Countess Ida_.’
-
-I bowed.
-
-‘Should we be rescued,’ she continued, keeping her dark gaze full upon
-me as she spoke (and something of their beauty and brilliancy of light
-had returned to her eyes with her rest), ‘I shall be deeply in your
-debt. My mother will thank you, Mr. Dugdale.’
-
-‘I have done nothing, Miss Temple. It is you who are now complimentary,
-and I fear ironical.’
-
-She slightly shook her head and sighed, then remained silent for a
-minute or two, and said: ‘How small and contemptible my spirit shows
-itself when I am tested! Do you recollect when this wretched brig was
-lying near us, how I took a parasol from my aunt and levelled it at
-this vessel and talked of wishing to see a sea fight and of shooting a
-man? How brave I was when there was nothing particularly to be afraid
-of, and how cowardly I have shown myself here.’
-
-‘I should have scarcely believed,’ said I, ‘that you were sensible of
-my presence at the time you speak of.’
-
-‘Why?’ she asked.
-
-‘Indeed,’ I continued, ‘I should have scarcely believed that you were
-sensible that I was on board the ship.’
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale, if my manner did not please you, this is no time to
-reproach me with it.’ Her eyes sparkled and her lip curled peevishly.
-
-‘Hark!’ I exclaimed; ‘I hear a rippling noise as of approaching
-wind.’ I passed round the table, gained the door, and looked out. The
-atmosphere was still motionless, but the sounds of rippling drew near,
-and presently I felt a pleasant little air blowing over the stern of
-the hull, accompanied with the tinkling and lipping noises of water
-set in motion trembling to the brig’s side. But it was still pitch
-dark, and search the sky where I would, I could observe no break of
-faintness, no leanest vision of star, no vaguest outline of cloud in
-the impenetrable obscurity.
-
-I returned to the table, this time seating myself opposite to Miss
-Temple. It was easily seen in her face that she was sensible I did this
-consciously. Indeed, the gaze she rested upon me was a look of inquiry
-as though she would discover whether this holding aloof on my part was
-due to respect or to dislike. Then, as though she suddenly sickened to
-such idle considerations, she exclaimed with an eager awakening of her
-in her whole manner, ‘Does this breeze come from the direction where
-the ships are, or where you may suppose them to be, Mr. Dugdale?’
-
-‘For the life of me I could not tell you,’ I responded; ‘there are no
-quarters of the compass for human senses on such a night as this, in
-a hull that may be headed on all sorts of courses by the set of the
-swell; but the dawn will be here anon, and if this draught hold, we
-shall be able to find out whence it proceeds.’
-
-It was still blowing the same light breeze when day broke, and I then
-knew that the wind sat about north-west. Miss Temple and I stepped on
-to the deck, where we stood in an agony of impatience awaiting the full
-revelation of the sea. One saw why it should have been so pitch dark
-throughout the night; the sky was overcast from horizon to horizon by a
-sheet of sallowish leaden-hued vapour. Yet the atmosphere had cleared
-so as to enable the sight to penetrate to the verge of the normal
-sea-line, where the ocean stood in a firm rim of the darkness of indigo
-in the east against the grey of the morning that was spreading out
-behind it. I took a long and steady view of the circle; my companion’s
-eyes were riveted upon me as I did so; she had rather trust my sight
-than hers, and her gaze glowed with an inexpressible eagerness to
-witness in my face an expression that should inform her I beheld a sail.
-
-‘It is the same inhuman abominable blankness as that of yesterday,’
-said I, fetching a deep breath of rage and grief; then shocked by the
-air of horror and despair in Miss Temple, I added: ‘Yet this gives us
-a view of but little more than seven miles. Here is an air, surely, to
-whip something along. The ships of this ocean cannot all have rotted
-in yesterday’s pestilential calm. Oh for such another telescope as Mr.
-Prance’s!’ and so saying I trudged forwards, and in a few minutes was
-sweeping the horizon from the elevation of the foretop.
-
-I ran my eyes slowly and piercingly along the sea-line, starting from
-the part into which the vessel’s mutilated bowsprit pointed, and when
-my vision was over the starboard quarter, I beheld trembling upon
-the utmost verge of the livid waters stretching to the shrouded sky
-a minute fragment of white--a tip as of a seagull’s pinion, but of a
-certainty a sail! I lingered to make sure. Miss Temple watched me from
-abaft the deck-house. My glance went to her for an instant, and I saw
-her bring her hands together and lift them, as though she witnessed in
-my posture that I descried something. My heart hammered violently in my
-ears, and my breathing was short and laboured.
-
-‘What do you see?’ Miss Temple cried at last, her rich voice, tremulous
-with excitement and expectation, floating up like the notes of a flute.
-
-‘A sail!’ I exclaimed, calling with an effort. ‘Patience! I must stay
-here to make sure of the direction she is taking,’ and I stood for a
-minute pointing while she strained her sight; but there was nothing for
-her to see down there.
-
-The breeze had weight enough to determine the matter with some
-despatch, and I knew that if the sail were heading away from us, it
-must speedily vanish, so mere a speck was it that showed. Instead,
-though I will not say that it _grew_ whilst I stood staring, it hung
-with a fixedness to satisfy me that the vessel was steering a course
-that must bring us into the sphere of her horizon; and not having the
-least doubt of this, I dropped over the short futtock shrouds of the
-wreck and sprang on to the deck.
-
-‘It is a ship, Mr. Dugdale!’ cried Miss Temple with something of an
-hysteric accent of inquiry in her voice.
-
-‘Assuredly,’ I answered.
-
-‘Will she see us, do you think?’
-
-‘Ay, if she does not shift her helm. But we will _compel_ her to see
-us.’
-
-The girl suddenly grasped my hand in both hers, bowed her head over
-it, and I felt a tear. I was so affected that I stood looking, unable
-to speak. It was a sort of submission in its way. I cannot convey my
-thoughts of it. She was without her hat; I see her now as she bent
-over my hand; I feel the ice-cold pressure of her fingers, and recall
-the tears glittering through the beauty of her downcast lashes as they
-rose. She slowly lifted her large wet eyes to my face.
-
-‘What an experience this has been!’ she whispered; ‘how shall I be able
-to persuade people that I underwent it and lived?’
-
-She still unconsciously held my hand. I put my lips to her fingers, and
-she released me.
-
-‘It must always be one of the very happiest memories of my life to me,’
-said I. ‘I shall never make you believe in the joy your deliverance
-will fill me with.’
-
-‘Oh yes, yes!’ she cried passionately; then sending a look over the
-quarter, she added: ‘Are we not losing time? Is there not something we
-can do to summon her to us? Will it be long before she appears?’
-
-‘No; we are not losing time,’ I answered. ‘I shall have plenty of
-leisure to make a smoke, and that is what we must presently do. If she
-be the Indiaman or the corvette, all that is visible of her from yonder
-foretop is her royals. Her topgallant sails, her topsails, and her
-courses will have to climb before her hull shows. Her speed to this air
-will not exceed four knots. She is probably twenty miles distant yet,
-and we must allow her, unless the breeze freshens, a good three hours
-to give us a full sight of herself on that horizon out there. So let us
-first get something to eat, Miss Temple, and then I will go to work.’
-
-But our excitement was too strong to suffer us to make more than
-a phantom of a meal. A little biscuit soaked in wine formed my
-companion’s breakfast, but her spirits had returned to her; the
-remembered brilliancy was in her eyes again; a faint, most delicate
-flush was on her cheek; with unconscious fingers she caressed her
-hair as though, influenced by a womanly instinct of which she was
-insensible, she adjusted her tresses in preparation of our reception by
-the people of the ship. She was sure it was the _Countess Ida_. There
-was real gaiety in the laugh with which she said that she knew Mrs.
-Radcliffe’s character, that she could well imagine how her aunt had
-tormented Captain Keeling, how ceaselessly the old lady would importune
-the captain to make haste and recover her niece.
-
-‘Oh, what a meeting it will be!’ she cried.
-
-‘The sail may prove the corvette, though,’ said I.
-
-‘But she will rescue us, Mr. Dugdale, and hunt after the Indiaman, and
-Sir Edward will put us on board of her.’
-
-I left her to enter the ’tweendecks, where I collected a number of
-mats, blankets, staves of casks, and other material, which would burn
-and produce a thick smoke; and presently, with the assistance of Miss
-Temple, had a great heap of these things stacked on deck betwixt the
-foremast and the mainhatch. It was a hard job to get the stuff to
-kindle, for the mats were damp and the staves not to be set on fire
-by a sulphur match. But on overhauling the lockers in the deck-house
-I found a tin can half full of oil and a small parcel of rags; and by
-means of these I set my bonfire alight. The planks of the deck were
-thick and wet, and securely calked, and the burning stuff was well
-clear of the hatch; there was no fear then, as I believed, of the fire
-penetrating the deck. It made a prodigious smoke. The mass of damp
-blankets and rags smouldered into a dark thick column, which mounted
-high ere it arched over to the wind. It was a signal to be sighted as
-far away as the ship was, and I stood watching it with transported eyes
-as it soared in belching folds gyrating into and blackening out upon
-the breeze till it showed like a steamer’s smoke or a ship on fire.
-
-I waited a little, and then got into the fore-shrouds to mark the sail
-afresh, and beheld the gleam of her canvas when I was still two or
-three ratlines below the futtock shrouds: good assurance, indeed, of
-her rising, and nimbly too, and heading square for us. I strained my
-gaze at her from the height of the top, but she was far too remote to
-be distinguishable; nothing more, indeed, than a little ivory shaft
-against the sulky sallow of the sky.
-
-It now occurred to me that I might accentuate the signal of the smoke
-by letting fall the foresail, for here was a space of canvas that would
-not only catch the eye, but suggest the hull as a still inhabited wreck
-that was on fire. I called to Miss Temple. She looked up eagerly.
-
-‘Do you see those ropes leading to the deck from the arms of this
-yard?’ said I, pointing.
-
-‘Yes.’
-
-‘I want you to haul them taut, Miss Temple--gather in the slack to
-prevent the yard from swinging, as I mean to get upon it.’
-
-She understood me perfectly. Her jewelled fingers flashed upon the rope
-as she threw the brace off the belaying pin, and I gazed down with a
-smile of deep admiration at her noble figure whilst she swayed at the
-line tightening and then belaying it again.
-
-‘You should have been a sailor’s daughter,’ I cried; ‘there is the
-true skill of the ancient mariner in your trick of holding on with one
-hand and making fast with the other. Will you please now tighten the
-brace on the right-hand side.’
-
-She did so, and I got upon the yard and, ‘laying out’ upon it, as it
-is called, severed with my knife the ropes with which the canvas was
-frapped to the spar, and down fell the sail with a large rent right
-amidships of it, though that signified nothing in a square of white
-that was to serve as a signal only. I descended to the deck.
-
-‘Why have you loosed that sail?’ inquired Miss Temple. I explained.
-‘But will not the wreck now blow away from that ship?’
-
-‘No,’ said I; ‘she will fall off and come to. But the yard must be
-trimmed to achieve that.’
-
-So saying I let go the weather-brace and swung the yard fore and aft
-as far as I could bring it, then overhauled the clew-garnets, that all
-there was of the sail might show. The hull slewed to the pressure, then
-hung quiet; meanwhile I continued to feed the blaze, heaping on rugs
-and blankets and so firing up that at times the smoke hung as thick to
-leeward as a thundercloud.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-THE ‘LADY BLANCHE’
-
-
-So light was the breeze, that it was drawing on to ten o’clock in the
-morning before the approaching vessel lay plain on the sea. Long before
-this I had made her out to be a square-rigged craft, and sometimes I
-would imagine that she was the corvette, and sometimes that she was
-the _Countess Ida_. It had been a time of breathless expectation, of
-crushing suspense. Again and again had I mounted the rigging to make
-sure that she had not shifted her course, and was edging away from
-us. Again and again had I run my eyes round the sea with a passionate
-prayer in my heart that the wind might hold; for if it shifted, we
-stood to lose the ship; and if it fell, the calm might last all day,
-with the prospect of another black night before us and a deserted ocean
-at daybreak.
-
-But now, drawing on to this hour of ten, the hull of the vessel had
-risen to its bends, and though I might be certain of nothing else,
-it was absolutely sure that the stranger was neither the _Magicienne_
-nor the _Countess Ida_. She had puzzled me greatly for a considerable
-time; for even when her fore-course had fairly lifted she yet seemed to
-be rising more canvas. But by this hour I could distinguish. She was a
-small vessel, painted white--whether barque or ship I could not then
-tell. She had studdingsails out and skysails set, and showed as an airy
-delicate square of pearl; and indeed I might have believed that she was
-the Indiaman for that reason, until her snow-white body came stealing
-out to the stare I fixed upon her, and then I looked at Miss Temple.
-
-Her sight for seafaring details was not mine. She was trembling as she
-said: ‘Which ship is she, Mr. Dugdale?’
-
-‘Neither,’ I answered.
-
-‘Neither!’ she cried.
-
-‘Do not you observe that yonder craft has a white hull, and that she is
-a small ship? But what does it matter? She is bound to see us. She will
-rescue us; and, let the future be what it may, our one consuming need
-now is to quit this hull.’
-
-She had so reckoned upon the stranger proving either the corvette or
-the Indiaman, that, had the approaching craft been no more than a
-mirage, had the fabric melted upon the air as we watched it, she could
-not have looked more blank, more wildly and hopelessly disappointed.
-
-‘Neither!’ she repeated, breathing with difficulty. ‘Oh, Mr. Dugdale,
-what are we to do?’
-
-‘Why, get on board of her, in the name of God,’ I cried--‘giving Him
-thanks when we are there.’
-
-‘But she may--she will be’--she paused, unable to articulate: then with
-an effort: ‘She may be going to another part of the world.’
-
-‘It matters not,’ I answered, observing with rapture that the vessel
-was heading more directly for us; ‘she will put us aboard something
-homeward bound. Will not that be better than stopping here, Miss
-Temple?’
-
-‘Oh yes, oh yes!’ she cried; ‘but if we waited a little, the Indiaman
-might find us.’
-
-‘Heaven forbid! we have waited long enough.’
-
-So speaking, I rushed forward, picked up the handspike with which I
-had beaten upon the forecastle wall, secured a blanket to it, and,
-dancing aft, fell to flourishing it with all my might. Very slowly
-the vessel came floating down upon us with a light swaying of her
-trucks from side to side, and a tender twinkling of the folds of her
-lower canvas, which there was not weight enough in the wind to hold
-distended. Her hull was exceedingly graceful, and of a milky whiteness;
-and, as she leaned from us on some wide fold of the breathing waters,
-she exposed a hand’s-breadth of burnished copper, which put a wonderful
-quality of beauty and delicacy into the whole fabric, as though she
-were a little model in frosted silver.
-
-‘Before she takes us on board, Mr. Dugdale,’ exclaimed Miss Temple,
-‘will not you mount the rigging to see if there is another ship in
-sight that may prove the Indiaman?’
-
-‘But even if the Indiaman were in sight,’ said I, ‘we should seize this
-the first of our opportunities to escape from this floating tomb. For
-heaven’s sake, let us get aboard that fellow!’
-
-As I spoke, I seized the handspike again and frantically flourished it.
-All this while there was a column of smoke ascending steadily from my
-fire of rugs and mats and darkening the sea over the starboard bow. I
-was now able to make out that the coming craft was a barque. My eyes
-were glued to her; my heart thumped furiously; the wildest alternations
-of joy and dread seized me. Suppose she should prove some foreigner in
-charge of a man indifferent to human life, some cold-blooded miscreant
-who had shifted his helm merely to satisfy his curiosity, and who, on
-perceiving that the smoke was no more than a signal, and that the wreck
-floated high, should slide quietly on and leave us to our fate? Such
-things had been; such things were again and again happening. As she
-drew with a snail-like motion abreast without touching a brace, without
-any signs of movement about her deck, my eyes turned dim; I feared I
-was about to swoon.
-
-‘Will she not stop?’ exclaimed Miss Temple, in a voice of terror.
-
-Lifting the handspike with its fluttering blanket high above my head,
-I waved it furiously for some moments, then flinging it down upon the
-deck, applied my hands to the sides of my mouth, and, in a voice of
-such energy that it came near to cracking every vein in my head, I
-yelled: ‘Barque ahoy! For God’s sake, send a boat and take us off.’
-
-As the words left my throat, the vessel’s helm was put down; the clew
-of the mainsail mounted, and her topsail yard slowly revolved, bringing
-every cloth upon the main aback, and in a few minutes the graceful
-little craft was lying without way within speaking distance of us.
-
-In the violence of my transport, I grasped Miss Temple’s hand and again
-and again pressed my lips to it, congratulating her and myself so, for
-I had no words. The figures of the people were clearly visible: a row
-of heads forward, the fellow at the wheel on a short raised deck, and
-two men dressed in white clothes with large straw hats at the mizzen
-rigging. One of them leisurely clambered on to the rail, and, holding
-by one hand to a backstay, sang out:
-
-‘Wreck ahoy! How many are there of you?’
-
-‘Two of us only,’ I shouted back; ‘this lady and myself.’
-
-‘Any contagious sickness?’
-
-‘No, no,’ I bawled, amazed by the question. ‘Pray, send a boat.’
-
-He continued to stand, as though viewing us meditatively; then, ‘Wreck
-ahoy!’
-
-‘Hallo!’ I cried, scarcely able to send my voice owing to the
-consternation excited in me by the man’s behaviour.
-
-‘Are you a sailor?’ he roared.
-
-‘Oh, say yes, say yes!’ cried Miss Temple; ‘he may be in want of men.’
-
-‘Ay, ay,’ I cried; ‘I’m a sailor.’
-
-‘What sort of sailor?’
-
-‘I belonged to an Indiaman.’
-
-‘Afore the mast?’
-
-‘No, no! send a boat--I’ll tell you all about it.’
-
-He descended from the rail and apparently addressed the man that stood
-near, who walked to the companion-hatch and returned with a telescope;
-the other took it from him, then knelt down to rest the glass on the
-rail, and surveyed us through the lenses for at least a couple of
-minutes, after which he rose, returned the glass to his companion, and
-flourished his hand at us. I watched, utterly unable to guess what was
-next to happen. My fears foreboded the departure of the barque, and
-the impatience in me worked like madness in my blood. But mercifully
-we were not to be kept long in this intolerable state of suspense.
-A few minutes after the man, whom I supposed to be the captain, had
-motioned to us with his arm, a number of sailors came to the davits at
-the foremost extremity of the raised after-deck, where swung a small
-white boat of a whaling pattern. Four of them entered her, and she
-sank slowly to the water’s edge, where she was promptly freed from her
-tackles, and three oars thrown over. The fellow in the stern sheets
-was the man who had handed the glass to the other. The oarsmen pulled
-swiftly, and in a very short time the little craft was alongside.
-
-‘Only two of ye, is it?’ said the fellow who grasped the tiller, a
-short, square, sun-blackened, coarse-looking sailor.
-
-‘Only two,’ I cried.
-
-‘Any luggage?’
-
-‘No,’ I answered.
-
-‘Nothen portable aboard worth carrying off, is there?’
-
-‘Yes,’ I answered, cursing him in my heart for the delay these
-questions involved; ‘there are several hams, bottles of fine wine,
-cheeses, and the like below.’
-
-‘Odds niggers! we’ll have ’em then,’ he exclaimed; and in an instant he
-was in the wreck’s chains, wriggling over the side and calling to one
-of his fellows to follow him. They hung in the wind a moment, staring
-their hardest at Miss Temple and myself; then said the short square man
-in white: ‘Where be the goods, master?’
-
-I pointed to the hatch in the deck-house, and directed them to what I
-called the pantry. But nothing could have induced me to leave the deck.
-As they disappeared I stepped to the side where the bulwarks were gone.
-
-‘Bring the boat close under, my lads,’ I exclaimed to the two fellows
-in her, ‘and stand by to receive the lady.’
-
-The hull was rolling gently, with just enough of depression to render
-a jump into the little fabric as it rose very easy and safe. ‘Now,
-Miss Temple,’ I cried. She sprang without an instant’s hesitation, was
-caught by one of the sailors, and in a jiffy the pair of us were snug
-in the stern sheets side by side.
-
-The two men could not take their eyes off us. They surveyed us with
-countenances of profound astonishment, running their gaze over Miss
-Temple as though she were some creature of another world: as well they
-might, indeed, seeing the contrast between the groaning, mutilated,
-smoking hull and this girl leaping from her deck in the choice and
-elegant attire of the highest fashion, as the two poor devils would
-imagine--for what eye would _they_ have for the disorder of her
-apparel?--and her hands, breast, and ears sparkling with jewels of
-value and splendour.
-
-‘Are ye English, sir?’ said one of them, a middle-aged man, of an
-honest cast of countenance, with minute eyes deep sunk in his head, and
-a pair of greyish whiskers uniting at his throat.
-
-‘Why, yes, to be sure,’ I answered.
-
-‘The lady too, sir?’
-
-‘Yes, man, yes. What ship are you?’
-
-‘The _Lady Blanche_,’ he answered.
-
-‘Where bound?’
-
-‘To Mauritius, from the river Thames.’
-
-I glanced at Miss Temple; but either she had not heeded the fellow’s
-answer or her mind failed to collect its meaning.
-
-‘Been long aboard here, sir?’ said the man, indicating the hull by a
-sideways motion of his head.
-
-‘Two nights,’ I answered. ‘There should be a corvette and an Indiaman
-close at hand hereabouts. Have you met with either ship?’
-
-‘No, sir.’
-
-‘Sighted no sail at all?’
-
-‘Nothen like un,’ exclaimed the other sailor. ‘Th’ ocean’s gone and
-growed into a Hafrican desert.’
-
-The square man in white, followed by his attendant seaman, arrived at
-the side, bearing between them a blanket loaded with the produce of
-the pantry, to judge by the clinking of bottle glass and the orbicular
-bulgings of cheeses and rounds of hams.
-
-‘Catch this here bundle now,’ sung out the square man, who, later on, I
-ascertained was the barque’s carpenter, acting also as the second mate.
-‘Handsomely over the bricks. It’s wine, bullies.’
-
-The blanket and its contents were received, and deposited in the bottom
-of the boat. The men entered her, and we shoved off.
-
-‘Did you make up that there fire, sir?’ inquired the square man,
-bringing his eyes in a stare of astonishment from Miss Temple to
-myself.
-
-‘Yes; nobody else. This lady and I are alone.’
-
-‘Then you’ve set the bloomin’ hull on fire,’ said he.
-
-I started, and sent a look at the column of smoke, at which I had never
-once glanced whilst lying alongside, so distracted was my attention by
-the multiplicity of emotions which surged in me. There was no need to
-gaze long to gather that more was going, to the making of the coils of
-smoke which were now rising in soot than the nearly consumed remains of
-the mats and rugs which I had stacked and fed.
-
-‘The fire’s burnt clean through the deck,’ said the square man, ‘and
-there are some casks in flames just forrads of the main hatch. What
-might they have contained, d’ye know?’
-
-‘I don’t know,’ I answered, trembling like a half-frozen kitten as I
-watched the smoke, and thought of what must have come to us, if yonder
-barque’s approach had been delayed!
-
-‘I suppose there’ll be gunpowder aboard?’ continued the square man.
-‘Pull, lads! If a bust-up happens, it’ll find us too near at this.’
-
-The men bent their backs, and the sharp-ended little boat went smoking
-through the quiet rippling waters. Nothing more was said. The square
-man, whose rugged, weather-blackened face preserved an inimitable air
-of amazement, eyed us askant, particularly running his gaze over Miss
-Temple’s attire, and letting it rest upon her rings. The toil of the
-seamen kept them silent. For my part, I was too overcome to utter a
-word. The passion of delight excited by our deliverance--that is to
-say, as signified by our rescue by the barque--was paralysed by the
-horror with which I viewed the growing denseness of the smoke rising
-from the hull. She was on fire! Great heaven, what would have been
-our fate--without a boat, without the materials for the construction
-of a raft--with no more than a few staves of casks to hold by! Such a
-sea-brigand as the wreck had been in her day was sure to have a liberal
-store of gunpowder stowed somewhere below: in all probability, in a
-magazine in the hold under her cabin. What, then, would there have been
-for us to do? We must either have sought death by leaping overboard,
-or awaited the horrible annihilation of an explosion!
-
-Miss Temple’s eyes were large and her lips pale and her face bloodless,
-as though she were in a swoon. She was seeing how it was, and how it
-must have been with us, and she seemed smitten to the motionlessness
-of a statue by the perception as she sat by my side staring at the
-receding hull.
-
-We swept to the little gangway ladder that had been dropped over the
-rail, and with some difficulty I assisted the girl over the side,
-swinging by the man-rope with one hand and supporting her waist with
-the other. The man who had hailed us stood at the gangway. I instantly
-went up to him with my hand outstretched.
-
-‘Sir,’ said I, ‘you are the captain, no doubt. I thank you for this
-deliverance, for this preservation of our lives, for this rescue from
-what _now_ must have proved a horrible doom of fire.’
-
-He took my hand and held it without answering, whilst he continued to
-stare at me with an intentness that in a very few moments astonished
-and embarrassed me.
-
-‘What is your name, sir?’ he presently said.
-
-‘Laurence Dugdale,’ I answered.
-
-‘Mate of an Indiaman, I think you said, sir?’
-
-‘No,’ I replied. ‘I was for two years at sea in an Indiaman as
-midshipman.’
-
-He let fall my hand, and his face changed whilst he recoiled a step,
-meanwhile running his eyes from top to toe of me.
-
-‘A midshipman?’ he exclaimed, with an accent of contempt. ‘Why, a
-midshipman ain’t a _sailor_! How long ago is it since you was a
-midshipman?’
-
-‘Six years,’ I answered, completely bewildered by questioning of this
-sort at such a moment.
-
-‘Six years!’ he cried, whilst his face grew longer still. ‘Why, then, I
-don’t suppose you’ll even _know_ what a quadrant means?’
-
-‘Certainly I know all about it,’ I answered, with a half-glance at Miss
-Temple, who stood beside me listening to these questions in a torment
-of surprise and suspense.
-
-‘Are ye acquainted with navigation, then?’ inquired the captain.
-
-‘Sufficiently well, I believe, to enable me to carry a ship to any
-part of the world,’ I rejoined, controlling my rising temper, though I
-was sensible that there was blood in my cheeks and that my eyes were
-expressing my mood.
-
-‘Why, then, that’s all right!’ he cried, brightening up. ‘You tell me
-you could find your way about with a sextant?’
-
-‘Yes, sir, I have told you so.’
-
-‘By heaven! then,’ he roared, ‘I’m glad to see ye! Welcome aboard the
-_Lady Blanche_, sir. And you, mem, I am sure.’ Here he pulled off his
-immense straw hat and gave Miss Temple an unspeakably grotesque bow.
-‘What have you got there?’ he bawled to the square man.
-
-‘A blanket full of wines and cheeses and ’ams,’ answered the man, who
-was helping to manœuvre the bundle inboards over the side.
-
-‘All right, all right!’ shouted the captain. ‘Now put ’em down, do, and
-get your boat hooked on and hoisted, d’ye hear? and get your topsail
-yard swung. Why, who’s been and set that wreck on fire?’
-
-‘The flare’s burnt through her deck,’ cried the square man in a surly
-tone, ‘and I allow she’ll be ablowing up in a few minutes.’
-
-But she was too far distant to suffer this conjecture to alarm the
-captain.
-
-‘Let her blow up,’ said he; ‘there’s room enough for her,’ and then
-giving Miss Temple another convulsive bow, he invited us to step into
-the cabin.
-
-This was a little state-room under the short after-deck, and, with
-its bulkheaded berths abaft, a miniature likeness in its way of the
-_Countess Ida’s_ saloon. It was a cosy little place, with a square
-table amidships, a bench on either hand of it screwed to the deck, a
-flat skylight overhead, a couple of old-fashioned lamps, a small stove
-near to the trunk of the mizzenmast, a rack full of tumblers, and so
-forth.
-
-‘Sit ye down, mem,’ said the captain, pointing to a bench. ‘Sir, be
-seated. I heard Mr. Lush just now talk of wines, and cheeses, and hams;
-but what d’ye say to a cut of boiled beef and a bottle of London stout?
-Drifting about in a wreck ain’t wholesome for the soul, I believe; but
-I never heard that it affected the appetite.’
-
-‘You are very good,’ I exclaimed; ‘our food for the last three days has
-been no more than ship’s bread and marmalade--poor fare for the lady,
-fresh from the comforts and luxuries of an Indiaman’s cuddy.’
-
-He went to the cabin door and bawled; and a young fellow, whom I
-afterwards found out was his servant, came running aft. He gave him
-certain directions, then returned to the table, where he sat for a
-long two minutes first staring at me and then at Miss Temple without
-a wink of his eyes. I observed that my companion shrunk from this
-extraordinary silent scrutiny. I had never witnessed in any other human
-head such eyes as that fellow had. They were a deformity by their size,
-being about twice too big for the width and length of his face, of a
-deep ink-black, resembling discs of ebony gummed upon china. There was
-no glow, no mind in them, that I could distinguish, scarcely anything
-of vitality outside their preternatural capacity of staring, that
-was yet immeasurably heightened by the steadiness of the lids, which
-I never once beheld blinking. His face was long and yellow, closely
-shorn, and of an indigo blue down the cheeks, upon the chin, and upon
-the upper lip. He had a very long aquiline nose with large nostrils,
-which constantly dilated, as though he snuffed up rather than breathed
-the air. His eyebrows were extraordinarily thick, and met in a peculiar
-tuft in the indent of the skull above the nose; whilst his hair, black
-as his eyes, and smooth and gleaming as the back of a raven, lay combed
-over his ears down upon his back. He was dressed in a suit of white
-drill, the flowing extremities of his trousers rounding to his feet
-in the shape of the mouth of a bell, from which protruded a pair of
-long square-toed shoes of yellow leather. I should instantly have put
-him down as a Yankee but for his accent, that was cockney beyond the
-endurance of a polite ear.
-
-I broke into his intolerable scrutiny by asking him from what port
-his ship hailed; but he continued to stare at me in silence for some
-considerable time after I had made this inquiry. He then started,
-flourished a great red cotton pocket-handkerchief to his brow, and
-exclaimed: ‘Sir, you spoke?’
-
-I repeated the question.
-
-‘The _Lady Blanche_ is owned at Hull,’ said he; ‘but we’re from the
-Thames for Mauritius. And what’s your story? How came you and this
-beautiful lady aboard that hull? You’re gentlefolks, I allow. I see
-breeding in your hands, mem,’ fixing his unwinking eyes upon her
-rings. ‘You talk of an Indeeman. Let’s have it all afore the boiled
-beef comes along.’
-
-So saying, he hooked his thumbs in his waistcoat, brought his back
-against the table, and forking his long shanks out, sat in a posture of
-attention, keeping his amazing eyes bent on my face whilst I spoke. It
-did not take me very long to give him the tale. He listened without so
-much as a syllable escaping from him, and when I had made an end, he
-continued to craze at me in silence.
-
-‘By what name shall I address you?’ said Miss Temple.
-
-He started, as before, and answered: ‘John Braine; Captain John Braine,
-mem; or call it Captain Braine: John’s only in the road. That’s my
-name, mem.’
-
-She forced a smile, and said: ‘Captain Braine, the _Countess Ida_
-cannot be far distant, and I have most earnestly to entreat you to
-seek her. I am sure she is to be found after a very short hunt. I have
-a dear relative on board of her, who will fret her heart away if she
-believes I am lost. All my luggage, too, is in that ship. My mother,
-Lady Temple, will most cheerfully pay any sum that may be asked for
-such trouble and loss of time as your search for the Indiaman might
-occasion.’
-
-I thought he meant to stare at her without answering; but after a short
-pause he exclaimed: ‘The Indeeman’s bound to Bombay, ain’t she? Well,
-we’re a-navigating the same road she’s taking. It is three days since
-you lost her; where’ll she be now, then? That can only be known to
-the angels, which look down from a taller height than there’s e’er a
-truck afloat that’ll come nigh. Now, mem, I might shift my hellum and
-dodge about for a whole fortnight and do no good. It would be the same
-as making up our minds to lose her. But by keeping all on as we are,
-there’ll ne’er be an hour that won’t hold inside of it a chance of our
-rising her on one bow or t’other. See what I mean, mem? You’re aboard
-of a barque with legs, as Jack says. Your Indeeman’s had a three days’
-start; and if so be as she is to be picked up, I’ll engage to have ye
-aboard of her within a week. But to dodge about in search of her--the
-Lord love’ee, mem! The sea’s too big for any sort of chiveying.’
-
-‘I am completely of Captain Braine’s opinion,’ said I, addressing
-Miss Temple, whose face was full of distress and dismay. ‘It would be
-unreasonable to expect this gentleman to delay his voyage by a search
-that, in all human probability, must prove unprofitable. A hunt would
-involve the loss of our one chance of falling in with her this side the
-Cape.’
-
-She clasped her hands and hung her head, but made no reply. The
-captain’s servant entered at that moment with a tray of food, which
-he placed upon the table; and the skipper bidding us fall to and make
-ourselves at home in a voice as suggestive of the croak of a raven as
-was his hair of the plumage of that bird, stalked on to the deck, where
-the sailors--who by this time had hoisted the boat and trimmed the
-barque’s yards--were coiling down the gear and returning to the various
-jobs they had been upon before they had hove the ship to.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-CAPTAIN BRAINE
-
-
-After three days of sailors’ biscuit and strong cheese and marmalade
-of the flavour of foot sugar, the lump of cold salt beef that the
-captain’s man set before me ate to my palate with a relish that I
-had never before found in the choicest and most exquisitely cooked
-meat; and a real treat, too, to my shipwrecked sensibilities, was the
-inspiration of home and civilisation in the tumbler of foaming London
-stout. Miss Temple seemed too harassed, too broken down in mind, to
-partake of food; but by dint of coaxing and entreating I got her to
-taste a mouthful, and then put her lips to a glass of stout; and
-presently she appeared to find her appetite by eating, as the French
-say, and ended with such a repast as I could have wished to see her
-make.
-
-When the man put the tray down, he went out, and the girl and I
-were alone during the meal. Now that I had recovered from the first
-heart-subduing shock of the discovery that the hull was on fire, and
-could realise that, even supposing she had not been set on fire, we
-had still been delivered from what in all probability must have proved
-a long, lingering, soul-killing time of expectation, dying out into
-hopelessness and into a period of famine, thirst, and death: I say now
-that I could realise our rescue from these horrors, my spirits mounted,
-my joy was an intoxication, I could have cried and laughed at the same
-time, like one in hysteria. I longed to jump from my chair and dance
-about the cabin that I might vent the oppression of my transports
-by movement. I was but a young man, and life was dear to me, and we
-had been in dire peril, and were safe. What a paradise was this cosy
-little cabin after that ghost-haunted, narrow crib of a deck-house!
-How soothing beyond all words to the nerves was the light floating
-rolling of the graceful little snow-white barque, under control of her
-helm, and vitalised in every plank by the impulse of her airy soaring
-canvas, compared with the jerky, feverish, staggering, tumblefication
-of the wreck, with its deadly deck leaning at desperate angles to the
-fang-like remnants of the crushed bulwarks, and its uncovered hatches
-yawning to the heavens, as though in a dumb mouthing of entreaty for
-extinction!
-
-‘Oh! Miss Temple,’ I cried, ‘I cannot bring my mind to believe in our
-good fortune! This time yesterday! how hopeless we were! And now we are
-safe! I thank God, I most humbly thank God, for His mercy! Your lot
-would soon have become a frightful one aboard that wreck.’
-
-‘Yet what would I give,’ she exclaimed, ‘if this ship were the
-_Countess Ida_! What is to become of us? For how long are we to wander
-about in a state of destitution, Mr. Dugdale--mere beggars, without
-apparel, without conveniences, dependent for our very meals upon the
-bounty of strangers?’ and she brought her eyes, with the old flash in
-them, from the table to my face, at which she gazed with an expression
-of temper and mortification.
-
-‘You would not be a woman,’ said I, ‘if you did not think of your
-dress. But, pray, consider this: that your baggage is now recoverable;
-whereas, but for this _Lady Blanche_----’
-
-‘Oh! but it would have been so happy a thing, that might so easily have
-happened too, had this vessel been the Indiaman.’
-
-‘Cannot you summon a little patience to your aid?’ said I. ‘Our
-strange-eyed captain spoke with judgment when he suggested the
-probability of your exchanging his ship for the _Countess Ida_ within a
-week.’
-
-‘Well, I will be patient, if I can,’ said she, looking down with an air
-of trouble and distress in the pout of her lip; ‘but is it not about
-time that the adventure ended?’
-
-‘Suppose it may be only now beginning?’
-
-She gave me a side-glance and exclaimed somewhat haughtily: ‘I really
-believe, Mr. Dugdale, you enjoy this sort of experiences; and if I
-were a man---- But it _must_ end!’ she added with an air as though she
-was about to weep. ‘It is unendurable to think of being carried about
-the world in this fashion. I shall insist--well, I shall bribe Captain
-Braine to question every ship he passes as to her destination, and the
-first vessel we encounter that is going home I shall go on board of.’
-
-‘Alone?’ said I.
-
-‘No,’ she answered, half closing her eyes and looking a little away
-from me; ‘you would not suffer me to travel alone? Besides, do not you
-want to get home too?’
-
-‘I would rather find my way to Bombay,’ said I. ‘My baggage as well as
-yours is aboard the _Countess Ida_, and I should like to get it, though
-not at the cost of too much trouble. I am bound to India on a visit,
-and am not expected home for a good many months. Now, I don’t see why
-both of us shouldn’t keep our appointments by sticking in this barque,
-and sailing in her to the Mauritius, whence we ought to be able,
-without difficulty, to ship ourselves for Bombay. The _Lady Blanche_
-has the hull of a clipper, and it will be strange if the pair of us are
-not ashore at Bombay some weeks before the _Countess Ida_ sails.’
-
-She listened with impatience, and when I had ended, said: ‘If the
-chance offers, I shall certainly go home. I shall take the first ship
-that passes, though it should cost a thousand pounds to bribe Captain
-Braine and the commander of the vessel that receives me. How is it
-possible for me to continue thus?’ and here she looked at her dress.
-‘And where is Mauritius? Is it not nearly as far off as Bombay? Whereas
-England is not so very remote from this part of the ocean.’
-
-‘Well, Miss Temple, I am your humble servant,’ said I. ‘Head as you
-will, I shall most dutifully follow you.’
-
-‘I beg that you will not be satirical.’
-
-‘God forbid!’ said I, averting my eyes; for I was sensible that they
-were expressing more than I had any desire she should observe. ‘I wish
-to see you safe, and meanwhile happy. If we pick up a ship homeward
-bound, we can commission Captain Braine to request Keeling, if he
-encounters him, to transfer our baggage to the first craft he speaks
-going to England. Your aunt’s maid will know all about your luggage.’
-
-She watched me, as though doubtful whether I was joking or not; but I
-was cut short by the entrance of Captain Braine.
-
-‘I hope you have done pretty well?’ he exclaimed, after gazing at us
-for a short time without speaking; ‘it is poor fare, mem, for the likes
-of you. But the ship’ll afford nothing fresh till we kill a pig. What
-did you say your name was, sir?’
-
-‘Dugdale,’ said I.
-
-‘Ha!’ he cried, whilst he viewed me steadfastly, ‘to be sure. Dugdale.
-That was it. Well, Mr. Dugdale, there might be an edifying sight for
-you and the lady to behold from the deck.’
-
-‘What?’ swiftly exclaimed Miss Temple with a start.
-
-‘The hull, mem, we took you from,’ he replied in his hollow somewhat
-deep voice, ‘is rapidly growing into a big blaze.’
-
-Her face changed to a mood of disappointment. I believe she thought
-that the captain had come to announce the Indiaman in sight: I was
-about to speak:
-
-‘Captain Braine,’ she said, approaching him by a dramatic stride, and
-exclaiming proudly, as though she would subdue him by her mere manner
-to acquiescence in her wishes, ‘I am without wearing apparel, saving
-the attire in which you now view me, and it is absolutely necessary I
-should return home as speedily as possible. My mother will fear that I
-have perished, and I must be the bearer of my own news, or the report
-of my being lost may cause her death, so exceedingly delicate is her
-health. She is rich, and will reward you in any sum you may think
-proper to demand for enabling me to return to England quickly.’
-
-An indescribable smile as she said these words crept over the man’s
-face and vanished. I was strongly impressed by the expression of it,
-and observed him closely.
-
-‘Therefore, Captain Braine,’ she proceeded, ‘I have to entreat you to
-promise me that you will signal to the ships you may pass, and put me
-on board the first one, no matter what sort of vessel she be, that is
-sailing directly to England.’
-
-He silently surveyed her, and then directed his eyes at me.
-
-‘You’ll be wanting to get home too, sir, I suppose?’ said he.
-
-‘Oh yes,’ I replied. ‘Miss Temple is under my care, and I must see her
-safe.’
-
-He turned to her again, and stood staring; then said: ‘That’ll be all
-right, mem; we’re bound to be falling in with something coming along
-presently; and if England’s her destination and she’ll receive ye, the
-boat that brought you from the hull shall take you to her, weather
-permitting. That’ll do, I think?’
-
-She bowed, looking as pleased as agitation and anxiety would allow her.
-
-‘Come now and take a look at the hull,’ continued Captain Braine; ‘and
-then’----
-
-‘You quite understand, I hope,’ she interrupted, ‘that any sum’----
-
-He broke in with an odd flourish of his hand. ‘No need to mention
-that matter, mem,’ he exclaimed;--‘we are Christian men in that part
-of the country where I come from, and there’s never no talk of pay
-amongst us for doing what the Lord directs--succouring distressed
-fellow-creatures.’
-
-With which he spun upon his heels and walked out of the cabin, leaving
-us to follow him.
-
-I had no eyes nor thoughts for anything else than the hull the moment
-I saw her. I remember recoiling as to a blow, and panting for a few
-breaths with my hand to my side. She had slipped to something more
-than two miles away down on the starboard quarter, and although only a
-portion of her was as yet on fire, she was showing as a body of flame
-brilliant and forked, soaring and drooping against the leaden-hued
-background of sky. Shudder after shudder went like ice through me as my
-sight swept the mighty girdle of the deep, coming back to the little
-body of flame that most horribly to every trembling instinct in me
-accentuated the lonely immensity of the surface on which it glowed.
-
-‘Think--if we were on her now!’ I muttered to Miss Temple. She hid her
-face.
-
-‘Was there any valleyables aboard her, Mr. Dugdale, d’ye know?’ said
-the captain.
-
-‘I cannot tell you,’ I answered in a voice subdued by emotion; ‘I did
-not search the sleeping-berths. There was little enough in her hold.’
-
-‘Ye should have crept away down in the run,’ said he; ‘that’s where the
-chaps which peopled her would stow their booty if they had any. If I’d
-known she’d been a privateersman---- How came ye to set her on fire?’
-
-‘My signal burnt through her deck, so I was informed by that gentleman
-there,’ I replied, indicating the square man, who stood a little way
-from us.
-
-‘Was that so, Mr. Lush?’ cried the captain.
-
-‘Was what so?’ asked Mr. Lush. The captain explained. ‘Well, I dunno,’
-answered the other; ‘there was fire in the hold when I looked down, and
-it seemed to me as if flakes of it was falling through the deck. But
-what does it signify? Wood ain’t cast-iron, and if ye makes a flare
-upon a timber deck, why, then what I says is, stand by!’
-
-‘Oh look, Mr. Dugdale!’ shrieked Miss Temple at that moment, tossing
-her arms in horror, and standing with her hands-upraised, as though in
-a posture of calling down a curse upon the distant thing.
-
-My eye was on the wreck, as hers had been, and I saw it all. There was
-a huge crimson flash, as though some volcanic head had belched in fire;
-daylight as it was, the stretch of clouds above and beyond the wreck
-glared out in a dull rusty red to the amazing stream of flame; a volume
-of smoke white as steam, shaped like a balloon, and floating solid to
-the sight, slowly rose like some phenomenal emanation from the secret
-depths of the ocean. There followed the sullen, deep-throated blast of
-the explosion. Captain Braine snatched a telescope from the skylight
-and levelled it, and after peering a little, thrust the glass into my
-hand.
-
-‘See if you can find out where she’s gone to,’ said he with a singular
-grin, in which his eyes did not participate.
-
-I looked: the water delicately brushed by the light wind flowed in
-nakedness under the shadow of the slowly soaring and enlarging cloud of
-white smoke. Not the minutest point of black, not the merest atom of
-fragment of wreck, was visible. I put down the glass with a quivering
-hand, and going to the rail, looked into the sea to conceal my moist
-eyes, too overcome to speak.
-
-‘A good job you weren’t in that hull, mem,’ said the captain to Miss
-Temple; ‘it would be sky high with any one that had been there by
-this time: a devil of a mount, as Jack says. But you’re aboard a tidy
-little ship now. If so be that you are at all of a nautical judge,
-mem, cast your eyes aloft and tell me if there’s e’er an Indeeman or
-a man-of-war, too, if ye will, with spars stayed as my masts is, with
-such a fit of canvas, with such a knowing cocked-ear like look as the
-run of them yardarms has, with such mastheads tapering away like the
-holy spire of a meetinghouse, and that beautiful little skysail atop to
-sarve as a cloud for any tired angel that may be flying along to rest
-upon! Ha!’
-
-He drew so deep a breath as he concluded that I turned to look at him.
-He stood gazing up at the canvas on the main as though in an ecstasy;
-his hands were crossed upon his breast after the manner of coy virgins
-in paintings; his right knee was crooked and projected; I could not
-have imagined so curious a figure off the stage. Indeed, I supposed he
-was acting now to divert Miss Temple. I glanced at the tough, sullen,
-storm darkened face of old Lush, to gather his opinion on the behaviour
-of this captain; but his expression was of wood, and there was no other
-meaning in it that I could distinguish save what was put there by the
-action of his jaws as he gnawed upon a junk of tobacco, carrying his
-sight from seawards to aloft and back again as regularly as the swing
-of the spars.
-
-Miss Temple drew to my side with a manner of uneasiness about her. She
-whispered, while she seemed to be speaking of the wreck, motioning with
-her hand in the direction of the smoke that was slowly drawing on to
-our beam in a great staring, still-compacted mass, white as fog against
-the leaden heaven: ‘I believe he is not in his right mind.’
-
-‘No matter,’ I swiftly replied; ‘his ship is sound. Captain,’ I
-exclaimed, ‘I hope you will have a spare cabin for this lady. For my
-part, you may sling me a hammock anywhere, or a rug and a plank will
-make me all the bed I want.’
-
-‘Oh, there’s accommodation for ye both below,’ he answered; ‘there’s
-the mate’s berth unoccupied. The lady can have that. And next door to
-it there’s a cabin with a bunk in it. I’ll have it cleared out for you.
-Come down and see for yourselves.’
-
-He led the way into the little cuddy, as I may term it, and conducted
-us to a hatch close against the two sleeping berths right aft.
-He descended a short flight of steps, and we found ourselves in
-’tweendecks in which I should not have been able to stand erect with
-a tall hat on. It was gloomy down here. I could distinguish with
-difficulty a number of cases of light goods stowed from the deck to
-the beams, and completely blocking up all the forward portion of
-this part of the vessel. There were two cabins in the extremity
-corresponding with the cabins above, with such another small hatch
-as we had descended through lying close against them, but covered:
-the entrance as I took it to ‘the run’ or ‘lazarette.’ Captain Braine
-opened the cabin door on the port side, and we peered into a small but
-clean and airy berth lighted by a large scuttle. I noticed a couple of
-sea-chests, a suit of oilskins hanging under a little shelf full of
-books, a locker, a mattress, and a bundle of blankets in the bunk, a
-large chart of the English Channel nailed against the side, and other
-matters of a like sort.
-
-‘You’ll be able to make yourself pretty comfortable here, mem,’ said
-Captain Braine.
-
-‘Are there any rats?’ asked Miss Temple, rolling her eyes nervously
-over the deck.
-
-‘Bless you, no!’ answered the captain. ‘At the very worst, a cockroach
-here and there, mem.’
-
-‘But this cabin is occupied,’ said I.
-
-‘It was, young gentleman, it was,’ he exclaimed, in a hollow raven
-voice, that wonderfully corresponded with his countenance, and
-particularly somehow or other with his hair--‘it was my chief-mate’s
-cabin. But he’s dead, sir.’ He gazed at me steadfastly, and added,
-‘Dead and gone, sir.’
-
-Miss Temple slightly started, and with a hurried glance at the bunk,
-asked how long the man had been dead.
-
-‘Three weeks,’ responded Captain Braine, preserving his sepulchral
-tone, as though he supposed it was the correct voice in which to
-deliver melancholy information.
-
-‘May I see the next cabin?’ said Miss Temple.
-
-‘Certainly’ he answered; and going out, he opened the door.
-
-This room was the same size as the berth which adjoined it; but it was
-crowded with a collection of sailmakers’ and boatswains’ stores, bolts
-of canvas, new buckets, scrubbing brushes, and so on. There was a bunk
-under the scuttle full of odds and ends.
-
-‘I would rather occupy this berth than the other,’ said Miss Temple.
-
-‘You’re not afraid of ghosts, mem?’ exclaimed the captain, fixing his
-immense dead black eyes upon her.
-
-‘I presume this room can be cleared out, and I prefer it to the other,’
-she answered haughtily.
-
-I broke in, somewhat alarmed by these airs: ‘Oh, by all means, Miss
-Temple. Choose the cabin you best like. Captain Braine is all kindness
-in furnishing us with such excellent accommodation. This stuff can be
-put into my berth, if you please, captain. I shall merely need room
-enough to get into my bunk.’
-
-‘I’ll make that all right,’ he answered somewhat sulkily. ‘How about
-bedding? The lady’s a trifle particular, I fear. She wouldn’t be
-satisfied to roll herself up in a dead man’s blanket, I guess.’
-
-‘Leave me to manage,’ said I, forcing a note of cheerfulness into
-my voice, though I was greatly vexed by Miss Temple’s want of tact.
-‘There’s more bedding than either of us will require in less than a
-bolt of your canvas. We are fresh from an experience that would make a
-paradise of your forepeak, captain. And so,’ said I, plunging from the
-subject, in the hope of carrying off the ill-humour that showed in his
-face, ‘you are without a chief-mate?’
-
-‘I’ll tell you about that by-and-by,’ said he. ‘This here crib, then,
-is to be the lady’s? Now, what have I got that you’ll be wanting, mem?
-There’s a bit of a looking-glass next door. He used to shave himself
-in it. You won’t mind that, perhaps? His image ain’t impressed on the
-plate. It’ll show ye true as you are, for all that he shaved himself in
-it.’
-
-Miss Temple smiled, and said that she would be glad to have the glass.
-
-‘There’ll be his hairbrush,’ continued Captain Braine, ‘though _that_
-might prove objectionable,’ he added doubtfully, talking with his eyes
-fixed unwinkingly upon her. ‘And yet I don’t know; if it was put to
-soak in a bucket of salt-water, it ought to come out sweet enough.
-There’s likewise a comb,’ he proceeded, taking his chin betwixt his
-thumb and forefinger and stroking it: ‘there’s nothing to hurt in a
-comb, and it’s at your sarvice, mem. If poor old Chicken were here,
-he’d be very willing, I’m sure; but he’s gone--gone dead.’
-
-He looked at Miss Temple again. I watched him with attention. He seemed
-to sink into a fit of musing; then, waking up out of it in a sudden
-way, he cried: ‘You’ve got no luggage at all, have ye, mem?’
-
-‘No,’ responded Miss Temple with gravity.
-
-‘I’m sorry,’ said he, ‘that I didn’t bring Mrs. Braine along with
-me this voyage. She wanted to come, poor thing, observing me to be
-but very ordinary during most of the time I was ashore--very ordinary
-indeed,’ he repeated, shaking his head. ‘If she was here we could
-manage.’
-
-‘Pray, give yourself no concern on that head, captain,’ said I; ‘we
-shall be falling in with the Indiaman presently; and supposing the
-worst to come to the worst--what time do you give yourself for the run
-from here to the Mauritius?’
-
-‘I’m not agoing to say--I’m not agoing to say!’ he cried with an accent
-of excitement that astonished me; ‘what’s the good of talking when you
-don’t know? Wouldn’t it be a sin to go and make promises to people
-in your condition and disappoint ’em? I can just tell ye this: that
-Baltimore itself never turned out a keel able to clip through it as
-this here _Lady Blanche_ can when the chance is given her. And now,’ he
-exclaimed, changing his voice, ‘suppose we clear out of this, and go up
-into the daylight and fresh air;’ and without pausing for an answer he
-trudged off.
-
-I handed Miss Temple up the ladder, and we gained the little cabin,
-or living-room as it might be termed. The young fellow who acted as
-steward or servant was busy at the glass-rack. The captain called
-to him, and peremptorily and most intelligently gave him certain
-instructions with respect to the clearing out and preparing of the
-berths below for our reception. He told him where he would find a
-spare mattress--‘Quite new, never yet slept on,’ he said, contorting
-his figure into a bow to Miss Temple--he had a couple of shawls and a
-homely old rug which had made several voyages, and these were to be put
-into her bunk; the man was to see that the lady lacked no convenience
-which the barque could afford. ‘The late Mr. Chicken’s mattress was
-to be given to me along with his bedding, if so be that I was willing
-to use the same.’ Other instructions, all expressive of foresight and
-hospitable consideration, he gave to the fellow, who then went forward
-to obtain help to clear out the cabins.
-
-‘We are deeply indebted to you, captain,’ said I, ‘for this very
-generous behaviour’----
-
-‘Not a word, sir, if you please,’ he interrupted. ‘I have a soul as
-well as another, and I know my duty. Lady, a hint: you have some fine
-jewelry upon you; take my advice and put it in your pocket.’
-
-She was alarmed by this, and looked at me.
-
-I smiled, and said, ‘The captain of a ship is Lord Paramount; his
-orders must be obeyed, Miss Temple.’
-
-Without another word she began to pull off her rings, the skipper
-steadfastly watching her.
-
-‘Will you take charge of them for me, Mr. Dugdale?’ said she.
-
-I placed them in my pocket. She then took off a very beautiful diamond
-locket from her throat, and this I also carefully stowed away.
-
-‘I will remove my earrings presently,’ she exclaimed with a slight
-flush in her cheek and a sparkle as of ire in her gaze, though her lips
-still indicated an emotion of dismay.
-
-‘My advice to you is--at once, mem,’ said the captain.
-
-‘We must believe that Captain Braine is fully sensible of the meaning
-of his requests,’ said I, answering the glance she shot at me.
-
-She removed the earrings and gave them to me. The captain stood running
-his eyes over her figure; then, with a melodramatic gesture, pointed
-to her watch. This, too, with the handsome chain belonging to it, I
-pocketed. He now addressed himself to contemplating me.
-
-‘You don’t need to show any watch-chain,’ said he, speaking with
-his head drooping towards his left shoulder; ‘there’s no good in
-that signet ring either. As to the breast-pin’--he half-closed one
-eye--‘well, perhaps that’s a thing that won’t hurt where it is.’
-
-He waited until I had taken off my ring and dropped my chain into my
-waistcoat pocket, and then, looking first of all aft and then forward,
-then up at the little skylight, whilst he seemed to hold his breath
-as though intently listening, he approached us, as we stood together,
-by a stride, and said in a low deep voice, tremulous with intensity
-of utterance: ‘My men are not to be trusted. Hush! If they imagined I
-suspected them, they would cut my throat and heave me overboard.’
-
-Miss Temple took my arm.
-
-‘Let me understand you?’ said I, wrestling with my amazement. ‘In what
-sense are they untrustworthy?’
-
-He stared eagerly and nervously about him again, and then, extending
-the fingers of his left hand, he touched one of them after another, as
-though counting, whilst he said: ‘First, I have reason to believe that
-Lush, the carpenter, who acts as my second mate, committed a murder
-four years ago.’
-
-‘Good God!’ I ejaculated.
-
-‘Hold!’ he cried. ‘Next, there ain’t no shadow of a doubt that two at
-least of my able seamen are escaped convicts. Next, there is a man
-forward who was concerned in a mutiny that ended in the ringleaders
-being hung. Next’--he paused, and then exclaimed: ‘but no need to go on
-alarming the lady.’
-
-‘But were you not acquainted with these men’s characters at the time of
-their signing articles?’ said I.
-
-‘No, young man--no,’ he answered with a most melancholy shake of the
-head; ‘it’s all come out since, and a deal more atop of it. But hush!
-Discretion is the better part of valour, as Jack says. There’s no call
-to be afraid. They know the man I am, and what’s better, they know I
-know _them_. Ye’re quite safe, mem; only, don’t be a-tempting sailors
-of their sort by a sight of the valleyables you’ve been a-carrying
-about with you. And now, perhaps you’ll excuse me whilst I goes and
-looks after the ship.’
-
-He gave us another extraordinary bow--I never met with any
-posture-maker who approached this man in the capacity of distorting his
-person--and walked out of the cabin.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-THE CREW OF THE BARQUE
-
-
-Miss Temple released my arm and sank upon a bench.
-
-‘Can you doubt now that he is mad?’ she exclaimed.
-
-‘Somewhat eccentric, certainly, but perhaps not mad, though. He is
-treating us very kindly. How intelligently he instructed his man in
-regard to our cabins!’
-
-‘He may be kind; but I believe we should have been safer on the hull
-than here.’
-
-‘Oh no, no, no!’
-
-‘But I say yes,’ she exclaimed in her most imperious air, and gazing
-at me with hot and glowing eyes. ‘It is quite true the wreck was
-burnt; but if this vessel had not come into sight, you would not have
-signalled, and then the hull would not have been set on fire. It is
-maddening to think that perhaps within the next three or four hours the
-Indiaman or the corvette may sail over the very spot where the wreck
-blew up.’
-
-‘I heartily hope that one or the other will do so,’ said I; ‘for if she
-be so close to us as all that, we’re bound to fall in with her.’
-
-She looked at her hands, turning her fingers back and front, as though
-they were some novel and unexpected sight to her.
-
-‘I wonder, Mr. Dugdale,’ said she, ‘you can doubt that the man is
-insane. Remember the extraordinary questions he put to you when we
-first arrived. I believe, had you told him you were ignorant of
-navigation, he would have sent us back to the wreck. And then how
-he stares! There is something shocking in the fixed regard of his
-dreadfully inanimate black eyes. What a very extraordinary face, too!
-I cannot believe that he is a sailor. He has the appearance of a monk
-just released from some term of fearful penance and mortification.’
-
-‘On the other hand he has received us very kindly. He would not
-suffer you to speak of paying him. He promptly set us down to such
-entertainment as his vessel furnishes. He may be mad half-way round the
-compass, but all the rest of the points are sound,’
-
-‘I am astonished,’ she cried with a manner of petulant vivacity, ‘to
-hear you say that we are safer in this ship than had we remained in the
-hull. There we were alone; but who are the people with whom we must
-be locked up in this vessel until we sight the Indiaman or some sail
-that will receive us? A murderer--convicts--mutineers--a crew of men in
-whose sight a jewel must not be exhibited lest they should be tempted.
-Tempted to what?’ She violently shuddered. ‘How can you speak of this
-ship as safer than the wreck?’
-
-‘Because I happen to feel quite certain that she is; but I will not say
-so, for it vexes you to hear me.’
-
-‘Oh this ridiculous, this horribly ridiculous degrading situation
-fills me with anger. To think of being reduced to a perfect state of
-squalor--having to conceal one’s jewelry for fear of--of--something
-awful, I am sure; and you dare not, though you _could_ name it, Mr.
-Dugdale.’ I smiled, and her warmth increased. ‘That I should have
-been ever tempted,’ she proceeded, ‘to undertake the odious voyage
-to Bombay, for _this_! To be without a change of dress, to be obliged
-to sleep in a little dark horrid cabin, and meanwhile not to have the
-least notion when it is all to end!’
-
-Well, thought I, as I looked at her eyes shining with spirit and
-temper, and marked the faint hectic of her ill-humour in her cheeks,
-the expression of mingled pride and fretfulness in her lips, the
-wrathful rising and falling of her breast, here, to be sure, is a new
-version of the play of Katharine and Petruchio; only, though she be
-Kate to the life, it is not I, but old daddy Neptune who is to break
-her spirit, and unshrew her into somebody’s very humble servant.
-But is there any magic, I thought, even in ocean’s rough, brutal,
-unconscionable usage to render docile such a woman as this? Nay, would
-any man wish it otherwise with her than as it is when he gazes at her
-eyes and figure, beholds the dignity and haughtiness of her carriage,
-the assumption of maiden sovereignty visible in every move of her arm,
-in every curl of her lip, in every motion of her form!
-
-‘What are you thinking of?’ she asked: ‘you are plunged in thought. I
-hope you are struggling to do justice to my perception of the truth.’
-
-I started, and then laughed out. ‘I will not tell you what I was
-thinking of,’ said I; ‘but I will express what was in my mind whilst
-you were speaking just now. You dwell with horror upon the captain’s
-account of his crew. Well, I heartily wish for both our sakes that
-they were an honest straight-headed body of men. But then every
-ship’s forecastle is a menagerie. There is ruffianism, and there is
-respectability. Quite likely that the carpenter Lush may have killed
-a man; but one must hear the story before deciding to call him a
-murderer. So of the convicts; so of the mutineers. In many ships at sea
-there is unspeakable provocation, and crimes are committed of which
-the blood rests upon the head of anyone sooner than those who are held
-guilty and punished by the law. I am not to be greatly frightened by
-Captain Braine’s talk of his crew, particularly since in a few days we
-may either be on board the Indiaman or homeward-bound in another ship.
-Let us now go on deck. I wish to take a view of the sailors, and see
-what sort of a craft this is, for as yet I have seen but little of her.’
-
-I could not help remarking that she kept very close to me as we
-made our way out of the cuddy, and that the glances she directed
-forwards where some seamen were at work were full of apprehension.
-The short poop of the _Lady Blanche_ was gained by a central ladder
-falling fair in the face of the little doorway of the cuddy front
-with its two small windows and row of buckets. A low, handsomely
-carved wooden rail was fixed athwart the break of this raised deck,
-and I stood with Miss Temple at a point of it that provided me with a
-clear view fore and aft. The captain sat on a grating abaft the wheel
-reading. Mr. Lush was near the mizzen rigging, gazing seawards with
-a stubborn wooden expression of face. After the spacious decks and
-wide topgallant-forecastle of the Indiaman, this little _Lady Blanche_
-looked a mere toy. But though a ship shows least admirably from her
-own deck, I found a deal to please and even delight me in the first
-comprehensive look I threw around. She was as clean as a yacht; the
-insides of her bulwarks were painted a delicate green, and they were as
-spotless as though the brush were just off them; on either side were
-two little brass guns, mounted on carriages, and they shone as freshly
-as though the sunlight were upon them; the running gear was everywhere
-neatly coiled away. The small caboose, with its smoking chimney, abaft
-the foremast; the length of windlass close in under the overlap of the
-short space of forecastle; the white longboat; the white scuttle-butt
-abreast of it; the little winch abaft the mainmast; the brass-lined
-circle of the wheel in the grasp of the sober, good-tempered-looking
-old fellow who had made one of the boat’s crew; the two shapely
-clinker-built quarter-boats hanging at the davits abreast of the mizzen
-mast--these and much more seemed details of a miniature delicacy and
-finish, that entered with surprising effect into the fabric’s general
-character of toy-like grace and elegance. On high, the white canvas
-soared in symmetrical spaces; but after the towering spires of the
-Indiaman, the main-yard of this little barque seemed within reach
-of the hand, and the tiny skysail that crowned the summit of the
-airy, snow-white, faintly-swelling cloths, no bigger than a lady’s
-pocket-handkerchief.
-
-‘This is really a beautiful little ship, Miss Temple,’ said I.
-
-‘I might be able to admire her from the deck of the _Countess Ida_,’
-she answered; ‘but there must be happiness to enable me to find beauty,
-and I am not happy here.’
-
-I searched the sea-line, but it was as bare and flawless as the rim of
-a brand-new guinea. The dull shadow of the morning still overspread
-the heavens; it was the same leaden sky, with here and there a little
-break of faintness, revealing some edge of apparently motionless
-cloud, and the ocean lay sallow beneath it, darker than it was for
-the pencilling of the ripples which wrinkled the wide expanse as they
-rode the long, light heave of the swell. There were some sailors at
-work in the waist on jobs, of which I forget the nature; I examined
-them attentively--they were within easy eyeshot; but though there
-was no lack of prejudice in my observation, I protest I could find
-nothing rascally in their appearance. They were all of them of the
-then familiar type of merchant seaman, as like to members of the crew
-of the Indiaman as one pea is to another; faces burnt by the sun and
-decorated with the usual assemblage of warts and moles, all of them
-of an unmistakably English cut--I am speaking of the five of them
-then visible--dressed in the rough apparel of the ocean, rude shirts
-revealing the bare hairy breast, duck breeches with stains of oil and
-tar in them which there was no virtue in the scrubbing-brush and the
-lee-scuppers to remedy. Miss Temple, standing at my side, gazed at them.
-
-‘They have quite the look of cut-throats, I think,’ said she.
-
-‘Well, now, to my fancy,’ said I, ‘they seem as honest a set of lively
-hearties as one could wish to sail with.’
-
-‘You merely say that to encourage me,’ she exclaimed with a pout of
-vexation. ‘Observe that man with the black beard--the one that is
-nearest to us. Could you figure a completer likeness of a pirate? I do
-not like his way of glancing at us out of the corner of his eyes. An
-honest sailor would stare boldly.’
-
-I laughed, and then put on a face of apology.
-
-‘You will be smiling at these fears in a few days, I hope,’ I exclaimed.
-
-‘Yes; but it is the meanwhile we have to think of,’ she answered. ‘Look
-at that man there’--meaning Mr. Lush; ‘pray, tell me, Mr. Dugdale, that
-he has a very handsome, manly, good-tempered face.’
-
-‘No; I confess I don’t like his appearance,’ I answered, stealing
-a peep at the sulky-looking old dog, who continued to stare at the
-horizon with the immovability of a figure-head; ‘yet inside of that
-hide there may be stowed away a very worthy member of society. A
-crab-apple is not a fruit to delight the eye; but I believe it is
-wholesome eating, though a trifle austere.’
-
-At that moment the captain looked up from his book, and after taking a
-prolonged view of us, came in a slow walk to where we were standing,
-holding the volume in his hand.
-
-‘You have a charming little ship here, captain,’ said I; ‘I am
-exceedingly pleased with her.’
-
-‘Yes, sir; she’s a handy craft. She will do her work,’ he answered,
-sending his unwinking eyes with their sort of slow dead look along the
-deck.
-
-‘Which of those men down there are the convicts and mutineers?’ began
-Miss Temple.
-
-He whipped round upon her with a vehemence of manner that seemed a
-veritable fury of temper to the first seeing and hearing of it.
-
-‘For God Almighty’s sake, not a word! D’ye want to see me a murdered
-man?’ He twisted round on to me: ‘Sir, you are to know nothing if you
-please. This lady is to know nothing. I asked ye both in the cabin
-to be secret. God’s death! if that man yonder had overheard her!’ He
-stopped short, pointing with his thumb over his shoulder at Lush.
-
-Miss Temple was deadly pale. She had the same cowed air I had observed
-in her during our first few hours aboard the wreck.
-
-‘I am very sorry--’ she muttered.
-
-‘For the love of God, mem!’ he exclaimed in a whisper, putting his
-finger to his lips.
-
-It was time to change the subject. I asked him how long he had occupied
-in his passage from the Thames to this point, spoke of the light
-trade-wind and baffling airs we had encountered, told him once again of
-the privateering brig, asked him what he thought would be the chance
-of the corvette’s cutter in such weather as she went adrift in, and
-in this way coaxed him out of his temper until I had got him to some
-posture of affability once more. I do not recollect the number of days
-he named as contained in his passage from London, but I can remember
-that it was a very swift run, proving daily totals which must have
-come very near to steam at times.
-
-‘Such a nimble keel as this should make you very easy, Miss Temple,’
-said I; ‘why, here is a craft to sail round and round the _Countess
-Ida_. Even though we shouldn’t pick her up, it is fifty to one that of
-all her passengers we two shall be the first to arrive in India.’
-
-She fastened her eyes upon the deck with a countenance of incredulity
-and despair.
-
-‘I suppose your port will be St. Louis, sir?’ said I.
-
-He stared at me for some moments without speaking, and then slowly
-inclined his head in a single nod.
-
-‘I was never in that island,’ I continued; ‘but I presume we shall not
-be at a loss for a vessel to carry us to some part of India whence we
-may easily make our way to Bombay.’
-
-His lack-lustre gaze seemed to grow deader as, after a pause, he
-exclaimed: ‘There’ll be some French skipper to make terms with, I don’t
-doubt, for a passage north.’
-
-‘You talk, Mr. Dugdale,’ said Miss Temple, ‘as though you were well
-assured that we should not fall in with the Indiaman.’
-
-‘I am desirous of creating plenty of chances for ourselves,’ said I;
-then gathering that this might not be a topic profitable to pursue
-in the presence of so singular a listener as Captain Braine, I again
-branched off. ‘How many,’ said I carelessly, ‘go to a crew with you,
-captain?’
-
-He answered leisurely: ‘Thirteen as we now are, all told. There was
-fourteen afore Mr. Chicken died.’
-
-‘Well, even at that,’ said I, ‘a single watch should be able to reef
-down for you. I suppose’--here I sunk my voice--‘that Mr. Lush yonder
-is now your chief mate?’
-
-‘No,’ he replied, speaking stealthily; ‘I’m my own chief mate. He’s
-the ship’s carpenter, and stands watch as second officer. But what are
-ye to do,’ he proceeded, preserving his stealthy delivery, ‘with a man
-whose education don’t let him go no further than making a mark for his
-name?’
-
-‘Then, I take it, there is nobody aboard capable of navigating the
-vessel but yourself?’
-
-‘We’ll talk about that presently,’ said he with a singular look, and
-pointing with his finger to the deck.
-
-I observed that Miss Temple narrowly watched him.
-
-‘Was Mr. Chicken a pretty good navigator?’ said I.
-
-He appeared to forget himself in thought, then with a slow emerging
-air, so to speak, and a steadfast, quite embarrassing stare, he
-responded: ‘Chicken was acquainted with the use of the sextant. He
-likewise understood the meaning of Greenwich time. He couldn’t take a
-star; but his reckonings was always close when he got them out of the
-sun. He’d been bred a collierman, and it took him some time to recover
-the loss of coasts and lee shores and lights. But he was a good sailor,
-and a religious man; and his death was a blow, sir.’
-
-‘Almost a pity that it wasn’t Mr. Lush who was beckoned overboard,’
-said I. (The carpenter had now trudged aft, and was looking into the
-compass out of hearing.)
-
-‘Ah!’ exclaimed Captain Braine, heaving a deep sigh and shaking his
-head: ‘Lush’s loss would have been my gain. One Chicken was worth all
-the Lushes that were ever afloat.--But hush, mem, if _you_ please.’
-
-‘I shall certainly say nothing more about your crew,’ exclaimed Miss
-Temple quickly and a little haughtily, while she slightly recoiled from
-the face he turned upon her.
-
-‘Have you any books aboard, Captain Braine?’ said I, glancing at the
-volume he held in his hand. ‘Any sort of amusement in the shape of
-chess or cards to help Miss Temple and myself to kill an hour or two
-from time to time?’
-
-‘There are some vollums in Chicken’s cabin that belonged to him,’
-answered Captain Braine. ‘I’ve read two or three of them. His cargo
-that way was usually edifying. There’s Baxter’s “Shove:” a good yarn;
-there’s the “Pilgrim’s Progress;” and there’s the “Whole Dooty o’
-Man”--a bit leewardly; I couldn’t fetch to windward in it myself.
-For my part, one book’s enough for me; and excepting some vollums on
-navigation, it is the only work I goes to sea with.’
-
-‘The Bible!’ I exclaimed, taking it from him. I was astonished and
-pleased. There seemed little for one to apprehend in the character of
-a man who could dedicate his leisure to the study of that Book, and I
-was sensible of an emotion of respect for the strange-looking, staring
-figure as I returned the little volume to him.
-
-He dropped it into a side-pocket, and then most abruptly walked to the
-rail, took a long look at the weather and a long look aloft, trudged
-over to Mr. Lush, with whom he exchanged a sentence or two, and
-immediately afterwards disappeared down the companion.
-
-For some time after this Miss Temple and I paced the deck together.
-There was much to talk about, and my companion found a deal to say
-about Captain Braine, whilst, as we walked, I would catch her taking
-furtive peeps at Mr. Lush, who, it was easy to see, had inspired her
-with aversion and fear, though the man had not offered to address a
-word to us, nor had he once looked our way, thirstily inquisitive as
-his stare had been whilst in the boat. I could not help contrasting her
-behaviour now with what I recollected of it aboard the _Countess Ida_.
-She had put her hand into my arm, and the intimacy of our association
-in this way might well have suggested an affianced pair. She talked
-eagerly and with all the passion of the many emotions which rose in
-her with her references, to our situation, to her aunt, to the chance
-of our sighting the Indiaman, and the like; and I don’t doubt that the
-men who watched us from the forepart of the vessel put us down either
-as husband and wife or a betrothed couple.
-
-And all this in three days! Three days ago she could hardly bring
-herself to speak or even to look at me; and now fortune had contrived
-that she should have no other companion, that she should be locked up
-with me alone in a dismasted hull, and then be brought, always with me
-at her side, into a vessel where, as she believed, there was much more
-to fill us with alarm than in the worst of the conditions which entered
-into our existence aboard the wreck! Again and again she would ask,
-with her dark and glowing eyes bent with an expression of despair upon
-my face, when it was to end and how it was to end; and these questions
-my heart would echo as I gazed at the cold and alarmed beauty of her
-face, but with a very different meaning from what she attached to the
-inquiries.
-
-At last she grew weary of walking, and I took her below and sat with
-her awhile on a cushioned locker. It was now drawing on to four
-o’clock in the afternoon; the breeze quiet, the sky in shadow, the
-sea very smooth save for the soft undulation of the swell, which
-pleasantly and soothingly cradled the little fabric as she slipped
-through it, of a milky white from water-line to truck, to the impulse
-of her wide overhanging pinions. After a bit, I observed a heaviness
-in the lids of my companion, and urged her to lie down and take some
-rest. She consented; and I lingered at her side until sleep overcame
-her, and then I stood for awhile surveying with deep admiration the
-calm sweetness of her face, into which had stolen the tenderness of
-the unconscious woman, softening down the haughty arching of eyebrow,
-unbending the imperious set of the mouth. It was as though her spirit
-clad in her own beauty was revealed to me disrobed of all the trappings
-of the waking humours. I could have knelt by her side, and in that
-posture have watched her for an hour. Can it be, thought I, as I crept
-softly to the cuddy door, that I am in love with her?
-
-I leisurely filled my pipe from the hunk of tobacco I had met with in
-the wreck, taking, whilst I did so, as I stood on the quarter-deck,
-a good steady look at such of the sailors as were about, though I
-contrived an idly curious manner, and directed my eyes as often at the
-barque’s furniture as at the seamen. After I had been on the poop a few
-minutes, Mr. Lush left it to go forward; and with my pipe betwixt my
-teeth, I lounged over to the binnacle to see how the ship headed. The
-man who grasped the spokes was the honest-faced fellow I had before
-noticed at the wheel; he, I mean, of the minute eyes and whiskers
-joined at his throat, who had addressed me in the boat whilst we lay
-alongside the hull. I noticed that he seemed to stir a little uneasily
-as I approached, as though nervously meditating a speech, and I had
-scarcely glanced into the compass bowl when he exclaimed: ‘I beg your
-pardon, sir.’
-
-I looked at him.
-
-‘The noose,’ said he, ‘came forrads afore I lay aft for this here trick
-that the ship you came out of and lost sight of was the _Countess Ida_.’
-
-‘That is so,’ I exclaimed.
-
-‘Might I make so bold,’ he continued, slightly moving the wheel, and
-bringing his specks of eyes into a squint over my head as he sent a
-glance at the tiny skysail pulling under the main-truck, ‘as to inquire
-if so be that the bo’sun of that ship was a man named Smallridge?’
-
-‘Yes, Smallridge; that was the boatswain’s name,’ I replied, warming up
-to the mere reference to that hearty sailor.
-
-‘Well,’ said he, ‘I heerd that he was agoing bo’sun in that ship, and I
-was pretty nigh signing for her myself, only that her date of sailing
-didn’t give me quite long enough ashore. And how _is_ Mr. Smallridge,
-sir?’
-
-‘Very well indeed,’ said I.
-
-‘I’ve got a perticler respect for Mr. Smallridge,’ he continued; ‘he
-kep’ company with my sister for some time, and would ha’ married her,
-but she tailed on to a sojer whilst he was away, prefarring the lobster
-to the shellback, sir. Well, I’m glad to larn that he’s hearty, I’m
-sure. If so be as we should fall in with the _Countess Ida_, and put
-you aboard without my seeing of Mr. Smallridge, I’d take it werry kind,
-sir, if you’d give him Joe Wetherly’s respects.’
-
-‘I certainly will,’ said I with alacrity; ‘but I fear there is little
-chance of our meeting with the Indiaman.’
-
-‘Well, there’s no telling,’ he exclaimed; ‘but she’ll have to be right
-in this here barque’s road, supposing her to be ahead; and if we should
-pass her in the dark, why, then, good-night! for she’s like grease in
-the water is this here _Lady Blanche_.’
-
-‘Smallridge and I were very good friends. He’d been a sailor in the
-ship I was afterwards midshipman in.’
-
-‘Oh, indeed,’ cried he. ‘And so _you_ was at sea, sir?’
-
-I was about to reply, designing to lead him on into answering certain
-questions I had in my mind concerning the captain and crew of the
-barque, when Mr. Lush came up the poop ladder; so, knowing the
-etiquette, I hauled off, but with the full intention of sounding Mr.
-Joe Weatherly at large when an opportunity should offer.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-I KEEP A LOOKOUT
-
-
-I slipped half-way down the little companion ladder to take a peep at
-Miss Temple, and on observing her to be resting quietly, I returned,
-and after lighting my pipe anew, stepped over to Mr. Lush, who was
-employed in cutting off a piece of tobacco from a black cake to serve
-him as a quid.
-
-‘It is not often hereabouts,’ said I, by way of starting a
-conversation, ‘that one has a sky like that all day long overhanging
-one’s mastheads.’
-
-‘No,’ said he; ‘but it’s better than the roasting sun;’ and he opened
-his lame mouth to receive the cube of tobacco into the hollow of his
-cheek, whilst he eyed the sky askant, as though in recognition of it as
-a subject of talk.
-
-‘Did you fall in with the smother that ended in the lady and I being
-stranded aboard the wreck?’ I inquired.
-
-‘No; there’s been ne’er a smother with us.’
-
-‘The death of Mr. Chicken,’ said I, ‘must have been a blow, seeing that
-the barque carried but a couple of mates.’
-
-‘How many mates do a ship of this size want?’ said he, without looking
-at me and slowly masticating.
-
-‘Well, she has only one now, anyway,’ said I.
-
-‘No; she ain’t got even one,’ he exclaimed, with the manner of an
-ill-tempered man who only listens for the sake of contradiction and
-argument.
-
-‘Are not _you_ second mate?’ I asked.
-
-‘Not I,’ he replied with a gruff laugh. ‘They calls me second mate,
-and I keeps watch and watch with the capt’n as if I _was_ second mate;
-but what I’m signed for is carpenter, and carpenter I be, and there’s
-nothen more to be made out of me than that, and I don’t care who the
-bloomin’ blazes hears me say it.’
-
-He drew to the rail by a step and expectorated violently over it. I
-was too anxious for information about this little ship and her crew
-to suffer my curiosity to be hindered by the man’s rough, coarse,
-ill-natured speech and demeanour.
-
-‘I was wondering where you took your meals,’ said I. ‘I now understand.
-You live forward?’ He gave me a surly nod. ‘But not in the forecastle?’
-
-‘Where else? Ain’t the fok’sle good enough for me?’
-
-‘But does not association of that sort weaken your control over the
-men?’
-
-‘_I’ve_ got no control, and don’t want none. The men’ll run if I sing
-out. And what more’s to be expected of sailors?’
-
-‘It seems queer, though,’ said I, ‘since you undertake the work of a
-second mate, that you shouldn’t live aft. It must have been lonely
-eating for the skipper after Mr. Chicken died?’
-
-‘I did live aft afore Mr. Chicken died,’ he exclaimed, biting his
-tobacco with temper, whilst his weather-stained face gathered a new
-shade of duskiness to the mounting of the blood into his head; ‘and
-then when the capt’n and me comes to be alone, he tarns to and finds
-out that I ain’t choice enough to sit down with--says I ain’t got the
-art of perlite eatin’, calls me a hog to my face, and tells me that my
-snout’s for the mess kid and not for knives and forks and crockery.
-Him!’ He turned his face to the rail and spat again, and looked at me
-with an expression of anger, but checked himself with violence, and
-pushed his hands into his breeches pockets with an irritable motion of
-his whole frame.
-
-I considered that enough had been said; and though I had gained but
-little information, it was at least made clear to me that there was no
-love lost between Captain Braine and Mr. Lush. But further conversation
-would have been rendered impossible in any case, for just then a man
-struck eight bells on the main-deck, and a minute or two later the
-wheel was relieved, the captain arrived, and the carpenter went forward
-in a round-backed sulky walk, his legs bowed, his muscular arms hanging
-up and down without a swing, each bunch of his fingers curled like
-fish-hooks.
-
-I had talked enough, and was weary of standing and walking; so, when
-I spied the skipper, I slipped off the poop and seated myself on a
-bench abreast of my sleeping companion, where I remained for half an
-hour, often gazing at her, my mind very busy with a hundred thoughts,
-foremost amongst which was the shuddering recollection of our late
-experiences and narrow escape, and deep thankfulness to God for His
-merciful preservation of us. The entrance of the captain’s servant--a
-young fellow named Wilkins, to be hereafter so called: a memorable
-figure in this startlingly eventful passage of my life which I am
-endeavouring to relate: a veal-faced, red-headed, shambling fellow of
-some two-and-twenty years, with white eyebrows and lashes, and a dim
-blue eye--the entrance, I say, of this man with a tray of tea-things
-aroused Miss Temple, who, after a brief bewildered stare at me, smiled,
-and sat upright.
-
-‘There is always something new now,’ she exclaimed, ‘to look at when I
-open my eyes after sleeping. Yesterday it was the wreck; to-day it is
-this ship. What will it be to-morrow? Is there anything in sight, Mr.
-Dugdale?’
-
-‘There was nothing when I left the deck half an hour ago,’ said I.
-
-She had awakened with a slight flush of sleep in her face that greatly
-enriched her eyes; but the delicate glow quickly faded; she was
-speedily colourless as alabaster. She smoothed her hair and put on her
-hat, that she had removed when she lay down.
-
-‘It is strange,’ she exclaimed in a low voice, ‘I should not seem able
-to endure feeling that I am not in a condition to instantly leave this
-vessel. It was so with me in the wreck. Even without my hat, I feel
-unready; and then, again, there is the sense of not being exactly as I
-was when I left the _Countess Ida_.’
-
-The captain called through the skylight: ‘Wilkins, bring me some tea
-and a biscuit up here.’
-
-‘Ay, ay, sir.’
-
-‘Pray,’ said I, ‘when and where does the captain dine?’
-
-‘I took his dinner to his cabin,’ responded the young fellow; ‘he
-mostly eats there. But now you’re here, I allow he’ll be a-jining of
-you.’
-
-‘This is no meal for you, Miss Temple,’ said I, with a glance at the
-old teapot and the small plate of biscuits which furnished out the
-repast. ‘No milk--brown sugar--no butter, of course!’ Wilkins grinned
-whilst he poured out some tea into a cup. ‘You’ve had nothing to eat
-since we first came aboard.’
-
-‘I want nothing,’ she answered.
-
-‘Well, then, _I_ do,’ said I. ‘Captain Braine is quite right.
-Shipwreck doesn’t impair the appetite.’
-
-‘There’ll be supper at seven, sir,’ said Wilkins.
-
-‘And what do you call supper?’ I inquired.
-
-‘Why,’ answered the fellow, ‘there’ll be the beef ye had this morning,
-piccalillis, bottled stout, biscuit after this here pattern, and cold
-currant dumplings.’
-
-He then went up the companion steps with some biscuit and tea for the
-captain. I laughed out.
-
-‘Not so good as the Indiaman’s dinner-table, Miss Temple, but better
-than the hull’s entertainment. We must wait till supper’s served.
-Meanwhile, I’ll blunt my appetite on a biscuit. Will you give me a cup
-of tea?’
-
-It was genuine forecastle liquor, such as might have been boiled in a
-copper, of the hue of ink, and full of fragments of stalk. However,
-the mere looking at it was something to do, and we sat toying with our
-cups, making-pretend, as it were, to be drinking tea and talking.
-
-‘I wonder,’ I exclaimed in the course of our conversation, ‘whether
-the cutter was picked up by one of the ships? If she lost both of them,
-will she have lived in the weather that followed? Anyway, the corvette
-is certain to make a long hunt for her, with the hope also of falling
-in with the Indiaman, for Sir Edward will think it possible that
-Keeling has his men aboard, and will want to make sure. I fear this
-business of the cutter may have led to such manœuvring on the part of
-the two ships as must render our falling-in with one or the other of
-them very unlikely.’
-
-‘Oh, why do you say that?’ she cried.
-
-‘It is but a surmise,’ said I; ‘anyhow, I heartily hope the cutter
-_has_ been picked up, if only for Colledge’s sake. The sudden loss of
-the lieutenant will have dreadfully scared him.’
-
-‘I earnestly wish that Mr. Colledge may have been saved,’ said she with
-a faint glitter of temper in her gaze; ‘but I could wish ten times more
-earnestly that he had never been born, or that he had sailed in any
-other ship than the _Countess Ida_; for then I should not be here.’
-
-‘Your aunt endeavoured to dissuade you.’
-
-‘She did; and I am rightly served for not obeying her.’
-
-‘You are very high-spirited, Miss Temple; it is your nature, and you
-cannot help yourself. You are a young lady to insist upon having your
-own way, and you always get it.’
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale, you are too young to lecture me.’
-
-‘How old do you think I am?’ said I.
-
-‘Oh, about six-and-twenty,’ she answered with a slight incurious run of
-her eyes over me that recalled her manner in the Indiaman.
-
-‘Well, if I am,’ said I, ‘it is a good solid age to achieve. There
-is room for enough experiences in six-and-twenty years to enable a
-young man to utter several very truthful observations to high-spirited
-young ladies who insist upon having their way, and then quarrel with
-everybody because their way is not exactly the road they wish to tread.’
-
-She slightly knitted her fair brows and looked at me fixedly.
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale,’ said she, ‘you would not have dared to talk to me like
-this on board the _Countess Ida_.’
-
-‘I was afraid of you there.’
-
-‘You _respected_ me there, you mean, and now--because’---- She came to
-a stop, with a little quivering at the extremities of her mouth.
-
-‘I am no longer afraid of you, or, rather, I no longer respect you
-because you happen to be in this particular situation, which needs no
-explanation whatever: that is, I suppose, what you wish to say. But
-you misjudge me indeed. I was afraid of you on board the Indiaman,
-but I did not respect you; nay, my aversion was as cordial as could
-be possibly imagined in a man who thought you then, as he thinks you
-still, the handsomest woman he has ever seen in his life, or could
-ever have dreamt of. But that aversion is passing,’ I continued,
-watching with delight her marvellous gaze of astonishment and the warm
-flush that had overspread her face. ‘I am discovering that much of
-what excited my dislike and regret aboard the Indiaman is artificial,
-an insincerity in you. This afternoon, whilst you slept, I sat near
-you for half an hour, gazing at you. All expression of haughtiness
-had faded from your mouth: your countenance wore an air of exquisite
-placidity, of gentle kindness, of tender good nature. In short, Miss
-Temple, I saw you as you are, as your good angel knows you to be, as
-you have it in your power to appear.’ I sprang to my feet. ‘How shall
-we kill the blessed hours that lie before us? Only think, it is barely
-five o’clock.’
-
-She gazed at me with an amazement that seemed to render her speechless;
-her face was on fire, and her throat blushed to where the collar of her
-dress circled it. ‘It will not do,’ I continued, ‘to attempt to murder
-time by talking, or it will come to your killing me instead of the
-hours. I’ll go and overhaul the late Mr. Chicken’s bedroom, or, rather,
-his effects. There _may_ be something to interest. Even the mouldiest
-backgammon board would be worth a million;’ and I made for the little
-hatch that conducted to our sleeping berths, leaving her motionless at
-the table.
-
-Come, thought I, as I dropped into the ’tweendecks, a short spell of
-loneliness will do you good, my haughty beauty, by making you realise
-how it would be with you were you actually alone. This is the first of
-the homely thrusts I have been preparing for you, and I will not spare
-you less as I grow to love you more, taking my chance of your abhorring
-me, though it may not come to _that_ either.
-
-I peeped into the berth that had been prepared for her, and found all
-the odds and ends which had encumbered it gone; there was a clean
-mattress on the bunk, and on top of it an old but comely rug and a
-couple of shawls; a small looking-glass dangled near the porthole. But
-what an interior for this delicately nurtured, high and mighty young
-lady of quality to lie in! No carpet, no chest of drawers, nothing
-beyond the looking-glass and a tin dish for washing in; in short,
-a mere marine cell, as like as might be to any little whitewashed
-room with grated window ashore in which a policeman would lock up a
-pick-pocket!
-
-I entered my own berth. The boatswain’s and sailmaker’s stores were
-not here, and I found a ‘clean hold,’ as a sailor might say. In fact,
-all Chicken’s traps being about, caused the berth to present a much
-more hospitable aspect than the adjacent one afforded. I examined the
-books, but found most of them to consist of religious literature, as
-the captain had said, and the rest of them works on the nautical life.
-Though it was hard to reconcile a fancy of cards with the late Mr.
-Chicken’s character as portrayed by the skipper, I yet looked into a
-couple of chests in the hope of meeting with a pack; but neither cards
-nor any species of object calculated to divert did I come across; and
-growing weary of hunting, I returned to the cuddy.
-
-I perceived or imagined an air of reproach in Miss Temple; but she had
-mastered her temper and astonishment.
-
-‘There is nothing belonging to the late Mr. Chicken to entertain us,’
-said I.
-
-‘It surely does not signify, Mr. Dugdale. Do you suppose that I have
-the heart to play at cards or chess? Is not there more wind than there
-was? I will ask you to take me on deck. Something may be in sight, and
-it will not be dark for some time yet.’
-
-I gave her my hand, and helped her up the little ladder. There was
-more wind, as she had said; the skysails had been furled and a
-studdingsail or two hauled down, and the little barque, with her
-yards almost square, was sweeping swiftly over the smooth waters,
-slightly heeling from side to side as she went. The foam in yeasty
-bubbles and soft cream-hued clouds went spinning and writhing from
-her bows into her wake, that ran like a path of coral sand over the
-darkling waters, now complexioned into lividness by the gloomy plain
-of vaporous sky. The crew were on the forecastle--it was well into
-the first dog-watch--lounging, sitting, yarning, and smoking. Amidst
-them I noticed Mr. Lush, leaning against the rail with a short sooty
-pipe in his mouth, the bowl of which was inverted. He was in his
-shirt sleeves, and he reclined with his arms folded upon his breast,
-apparently listening, in that dogged posture, to one of the sailors,
-who was reciting something with outstretched arm and a long forefinger,
-with which he seemed to be figuring diagrams upon the air. Upon the
-slope of the starboard cathead, coming into the deck, sat my friend Joe
-Wetherly, with a pair of thick-rimmed spectacles on his nose; he pored
-on a book with moving lips, from which he would expel at intervals
-great clouds of smoke through a pipe betwixt his teeth. So small was
-the barque, so seemingly close at hand the forecastle to the break of
-the poop, that even such minute details as these were perfectly visible
-to me.
-
-Captain Braine stood near the wheel. He continuously stared at us,
-but did not shift his attitude nor offer to address us. I swept the
-sea-line, but to no purpose.
-
-‘How sickeningly wearisome has that bare horizon grown to me!’
-exclaimed Miss Temple, with a shuddering sigh; ‘it has just the sort
-of monotony that would speedily drive me crazy. I am sure; not the
-wearisomeness of four walls, nor the tiresomeness of a single eternal
-glimpse of unchanging country to be had through a window; no! there is
-a mockery in it which you do not find in the most insipid, colourless
-scene on land. It is not, and still it always _is_, the same. It
-recedes to your pursuit, yet it is unalterable, and how cruelly barren
-is it of suggestions!’
-
-‘Yet a sight of the Indiaman,’ said I, ‘should develop whatever of the
-picturesque may be hidden in that tiresome girdle.’
-
-‘Ah, yes!’ she answered; ‘but we are now running away from our chances.
-How swiftly this boat sails! If the Indiaman is behind us, we shall see
-no more of her.’
-
-‘Do not let us depress each other with talk of this kind,’ said I; ‘let
-me give you my arm, and we will stroll a little.’
-
-We had been on deck about twenty minutes, when the captain, who had
-continued to steadfastly gaze at us in a most extraordinary ruminating
-way, crossed the deck.
-
-‘Pray, sir,’ said he, ‘could I trust you to keep a lookout for me if I
-went below for a short spell?’
-
-‘I will do so with pleasure.’
-
-‘D’ye know what orders to give, if anything requiring orders should
-happen?’
-
-‘Why,’ said I, smiling, ‘there are a good many orders going at sea, you
-know, captain. Figure a situation, and I will see if I can recollect
-the routine.’
-
-He stared at me musingly with his dead black eyes, and then said:
-‘Well, suppose the breeze freshens with a dark look to wind’ard, and
-I’m below and asleep, and have left ye no instructions; what would you
-do?’
-
-‘Call you,’ said I.
-
-‘And quite right, too,’ he cried, with a vehement nod of approval, and
-a glance at Miss Temple, as if he would have her participate in his
-satisfaction. ‘But put me out of the question, and allow that you’ve
-got to act for yourself.’
-
-‘Why, Captain Braine,’ I exclaimed, ‘though my time at sea was brief,
-I am no longshoreman. Such a question as yours means merely the first
-letter in the marine alphabet.’
-
-‘I ain’t so sure of that,’ said he, with his fixed regard.
-
-‘I admit,’ continued I, ‘that I have never been shipmate with a
-fore-and-aft rigged mizzenmast; but if it’s merely a question of
-shortening sail, why, what else under the moon is to be done than to
-take in your studdingsails and clew up your royals and haul down your
-flying jib, and then let go your foretopgallant halliards, and haul
-down your light staysails’--and so I rambled on, winding up with, ‘I am
-leaving your after-canvas untouched, because it is already in, you see;
-whilst as to your jibs and staysails, I assume of course that they are
-set.’
-
-He lifted his hand. ‘Thank’ee,’ said he; ‘I shan’t be long;’ and down
-he went.
-
-‘You will surely believe _now_ that he is mad!’ said Miss Temple with
-anxiety, but softly, for the fellow at the wheel stood near, and I had
-seen a grin crumple up his features to the skipper’s question.
-
-‘He may want me to serve him as a mate,’ said I, laughing.
-
-‘You will do nothing of the kind, I hope,’ she exclaimed, as we fell to
-pacing the deck afresh.
-
-‘I will do anything that may help me to see you safe,’ said I.
-
-‘But cannot you perceive, Mr. Dugdale, that if he believes you fit to
-serve him as a mate, as you call it, he may prevent you from leaving
-his ship by declining to communicate with passing vessels?’
-
-‘That is true,’ said I.
-
-‘I am certain,’ she cried, squeezing my arm in the energy of her
-emotion, ‘that he has some design in his mind to make you serve
-him. Why should he have teased you when we came, poor miserable
-creatures! fresh from the wreck, with inquiries about your knowledge of
-navigation? Oh, beware of him! He may not be quite mad, but he may be
-as wicked as the worst of his men.’
-
-‘We must wait,’ said I, for her conjectures were quite reasonable
-enough to prove disturbing. ‘But after all,’ I cried, brightening up
-to the new idea that possessed me, ‘if we are to sail to the Mauritius
-with him’----
-
-‘No!’ she exclaimed; ‘that is not to be dreamt of.’
-
-‘Yet listen, I entreat you. If it is our uncomfortable doom to remain
-in this barque until she reaches her port, I do not know but that the
-captain would be very honestly in the right in expecting me to work
-my passage--that is to say, to help him by keeping a lookout, and by
-serving him in other ways which may be possible to me.’
-
-‘Do not dream of sailing to the Mauritius!’ she cried impetuously; ‘we
-must either soon meet with the Indiaman or return home.’
-
-I could not forbear a smile at her imperious _we_, as though whatever
-she did I must do.
-
-‘Ay, that is what we want,’ I exclaimed; ‘but then if we don’t fall in
-with the Indiaman nor with a vessel homeward bound’----
-
-‘Absurd! Dozens of ships are to be met with every day sailing home to
-England from some part or other of the world. The idea of remaining
-in this vessel is not to be entertained for an instant. It would be
-intolerable enough for me even to make the comparatively short passage
-home, destitute as I am of everything; but to leisurely proceed _all_
-the way to the Mauritius---- Oh, be very careful, Mr. Dugdale. I beg
-you not to know anything at all about navigation and the duties of a
-sailor.’
-
-‘I can’t do that,’ I answered; ‘I have loaded my gun and must stick to
-it; but I promise you I will put no more shot in it.’
-
-She eyed me with great impatience and warmth, as though provoked by my
-answer: but she held her peace, and presently our conversation went to
-other matters.
-
-Shortly before six o’clock the sky cleared somewhat to windward. The
-wide pall of leaden cloud lifted there, as though it were some huge
-carpet a corner of which was being rolled up, and there looked to flow
-a very lagoon of pure blue ether, moist and rich with the evening
-shadow, into the space betwixt the rim of the sea and the edge of the
-cloud. A clearer, more penetrating light broadened out; and going to
-the companion hatch, I took the telescope that lay in brackets there
-and carefully searched the horizon. But the sea washed bare to the sky
-on all sides.
-
-I did not observe that the men gathered together on the forecastle
-seemed to notice the captain’s absence, though I expected they would
-come to stare a bit when the fellow who stood at the wheel should go
-forward and tell them that I had been acting as mate of the watch.
-For my part this queer duty coming upon me made the whole experience
-more wild and improbable to my imagination than had been any other
-feature of it since we quitted the Indiaman. Never was there such a
-forcing of adventures, as it were, upon a man. It was like dreaming
-to reflect that a little time ago I was a passenger, an easy-going,
-smoking, drinking, chess-playing young fellow, without a care, with
-plenty of clothes and money enough in my cabin, and that now I was
-a half-starved, shipwrecked wretch, without the value of a straw in
-the shape of possessions, outside of what I stood up in and had in
-my pockets, keeping a lookout as though, faith, I was some poor,
-struggling, hungry second mate, newly enlarged from an odious term
-of apprenticeship! like dreaming, I say, to think that a little time
-ago the young lady by my side was a reserved, disdainful creature,
-with scarcely a word betwixt her lips to throw at me, and that now
-she could not speak of her future without making me a sharer in it,
-that she could not see enough of me, nor have my arm too close for her
-hand; whilst in point of destitution she, the most richly clad of the
-Indiaman’s lady passengers, she, who had seemed to me to appear in a
-new dress nearly every day, was out and away more beggared than I; for
-so far as I was concerned there was always the barque’s slop chest to
-come upon; or, failing that, there would be jackets and breeches and
-‘housewives’ enough forward to serve my turn if the push grew severe;
-whereas Miss Temple was as badly off as if she had been cast away upon
-a desert island!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-I AM QUESTIONED
-
-
-The captain did not again return on deck. At six o’clock Mr. Lush’s
-white jacket was forked up to him through the forecastle hatch: he
-slipped it on and came aft to relieve the watch; but though he looked
-about a little for the skipper, I could not find in his wooden face
-that he made anything of not perceiving him. By seven o’clock the sky
-had cleared; the wide stretch of vapour which had all day long obscured
-the sky had settled away down beyond the southern rim, and the soft
-violet of the tropic evening heaven was made beautiful by spaces at
-wide intervals of a delicate filigree-work of white cloud, dainty and
-fine to the eye as frost on a meadow. The setting sun glowed in the
-west like a golden target, rayless, palpitating, and a cone-shaped wake
-of flame hung under him. There was a pleasant whipping of wind over the
-sea, a merry air that whitened the heads of the ripples, and it blew
-sweet and warm.
-
-Lush had loosed the skysails again and sent the royal studdingsails
-up, and the barque went nimbly floating through it in the resemblance
-of some golden-tinctured fabric of silver hull and sails of cloth of
-silver; indeed, from the point of view of the space of deck abaft the
-wheel, she showed like some fairy creation in that atmosphere that was
-brimful of scarlet light, and upon that sapphire plain whose tender
-long-drawn undulations seemed to wave a faint golden hue through, the
-blue of the brine, as though there were dyes of a westering sun-colour
-rising from the heart of the deep, and then subsiding.
-
-On looking through the skylight I perceived Wilkins placing supper
-on the table. This was an unusual meal at sea, at least aboard of a
-homely trader of the pattern of the _Lady Blanche_, and was a distinct
-illustration in its way, to my recollections of seafaring life, of the
-odd character of the man who commanded the barque. He came out of his
-cabin as we seated ourselves, giving Miss Temple a grotesque bow before
-taking his place.
-
-‘Sorry, mem,’ said he, casting his slow eye over the table, ‘that
-there’s nothing choicer in the way of victuals to offer you. I find
-that the wine brought aboard from the wreck is a middling good quality
-of liquor, and it is to be saved for you, mem. Wilkins, open a bottle,
-and give it to the lady. Pity that shore-going folks who take interest
-in the nautical calling don’t turn to and invent something better for
-the likes of me than salt pork and beef and biscuit, and peas which
-are only fit to load a blunderbuss with. There have been times when a
-singular longing’s come upon me for a cut of prime sirloin and a floury
-potato, as Jack says. But the sea-life’s a hard calling, look at it
-from which end of the ship ye may. How did you get on in your watch on
-deck, Mr. Dugdale?’ he added with a gaunt smile, in which I could not
-distinguish the least complexion of mirth.
-
-‘There was nothing to be done,’ said I, working away at a piece of salt
-beef, for I was exceedingly hungry.
-
-‘But ye’d have known what to do if there had been?’ said he.
-
-Miss Temple’s glance admonished me to be wary.
-
-‘Oh, I am no sailor,’ said I, ‘in the sense that you and Mr. Lush are
-sailors.’
-
-‘Not Mr. Lush!’ he cried, elevating his forefinger and staring hard
-at me past it. ‘Mr. Lush, as you term him, is a hog on two legs. Let
-him go on all fours, and there’s ne’er an old sow under a longboat
-that wouldn’t take him to her heart as one of her long-lost children.
-Such manners, mem!’ he continued, addressing Miss Temple, whilst with
-upturned eyes and raised hands he counterfeited an air of disgust;
-‘when he ate, you could hear the smack of his lips fore and aft. He’d
-make nothing of laying hold of a bit of cold beef and gnawing upon it
-as a dawg might, head first on one side and then on t’other; and you’d
-find yourself listening to hear him growl, if you looked at him. And
-then his language! I’ve been eating by myself pretty nigh since Chicken
-died, but it’s entertainment for me to have company;’ and he bestowed
-another bow upon each of us.
-
-‘You will not find the manners of a nobleman in a plain ship’s
-carpenter,’ said I, thankful to believe that he had forgotten the
-subject of my sea-going qualifications. But I was mistaken. He gazed
-at me with a steadfastness that was absolutely confusing, whilst he
-seemed lost in deep thought, then said:
-
-‘I’m not going to regard you, Mr. Dugdale, as a tip-top sailor, of
-course. Ye’ve knocked off too long; but it’ll all come back very soon.’
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale was at sea for only two years,’ said Miss Temple. ‘It
-would be unreasonable to expect anyone to know much of a calling in
-that time.’
-
-‘Don’t you believe _that_, mem,’ he exclaimed. ‘After twelve months
-of it, there was but little left for me to larn--proper, I mean, to
-fit me to sarve as able seaman aboard anything afloat, from a hoy to a
-line-of-battle ship. What don’t ye know now, Mr. Dugdale?’
-
-He somewhat softened his voice as he said this, and a queer sort of
-yearning expression entered his unwinking stare.
-
-‘Oh, much, captain, much,’ I answered smiling, yet feeling somewhat
-bothered betwixt these questions and Miss Temple’s glances.
-
-‘You could put a ship about, I suppose.’
-
-‘Well, I might do that,’ I replied; ‘but there would be a chance of my
-getting her into irons, though.’
-
-‘You’d be able to know when to shorten sail anyway, and what orders to
-give. You told me ye could take a star?’
-
-‘Did I?’ I exclaimed.
-
-‘Certainly you did, sir,’ he cried.
-
-‘I do not recollect,’ said Miss Temple.
-
-‘Ha!’ he exclaimed, with another of his mirthless grins, ‘the lady’s
-afraid of your knowing too much, sir. I don’t mean no offence, but
-there’s a forecastle saying that all the male monkeys ’ud talk if it
-wasn’t for their sweethearts, who advise them to hold their jaw lest
-they should be put upon.’
-
-Miss Temple’s face changed into stone, after one withering glance at
-the man, whose countenance remained distorted with a smile.
-
-‘Some of Jack’s sayings are first class,’ he went on. ‘Yes, ye told me
-you could take a star. Can you find the latitude by double altitudes?’
-
-‘A few trials would recall the trick, I daresay,’ I answered.
-
-‘And of course you know how to find the longitude by lunar
-observations?’
-
-‘Pray excuse me, Captain Braine,’ said I; ‘but what, may I inquire, is
-your motive in asking these questions?’
-
-He eyed me fixedly for some moments, and then silently nodded his head
-three or four times. Miss Temple seemed to shrink slightly as she
-watched him.
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale,’ said he very slowly, ‘on your giving me to understand
-that you had sarved aboard an Indiaman, I was willing to receive you
-and the lady aboard my ship. When you came aboard, you told me that you
-understood navigation. Didn’t ye?’
-
-I felt the blood in my cheek as I answered: ‘I have some recollection
-of speaking to that effect.’
-
-‘Then why d’ye want to go and try to make out _now_ that ye know
-nothing about it?’
-
-‘I am trying to do nothing of the kind,’ said I, assuming an air of
-dignity and resentment, though I feared it was good for very little.
-‘You have questioned me, sir, and now I ask _you_ a question. I have
-a right to an answer, seeing how you expect that I should rapidly and
-fluently reply to you.’
-
-‘I’ll be talking to you afore long,’ he said, bestowing another
-succession of dark mysterious nods upon me.
-
-‘Captain Braine,’ cried Miss Temple, breaking with an air of
-consternation out of the cold, contemptuous resentment that had made
-marble of her face, ‘you have rescued us from a condition of dreadful
-distress, and I have your promise that you will not lose an opportunity
-to transfer us to the first ship you meet that is homeward bound,
-providing we do not shortly fall in with the _Countess Ida_.’
-
-‘I ha’n’t broke my promise yet, have I?’ he replied, rounding slowly
-upon her and staring.
-
-‘I can only repeat,’ she continued, preserving her expression of
-dismay, ‘that any sum of money you may choose to ask’----
-
-‘I know all about that, mem,’ he interrupted, but not offensively, and
-with a gesture that was almost bland. He then leisurely turned to me.
-‘You gave me to believe this morning, sir, that you was acquainted with
-navigation?’
-
-‘And what then?’ I exclaimed impatiently.
-
-‘I hope that you didn’t deceive me,’ he said with a dark look.
-
-‘You shall have the full truth when I know your motive in examining me
-in this fashion,’ said I hotly, ‘and not before.’
-
-But immediately after I had spoken I was sensible of my folly in losing
-my temper. Talk as we might, vapour as we would, we were in this man’s
-power: in the power of a man who was absolutely unintelligible as a
-character whether sane or mad, and the girl’s and my own safety might
-wholly depend upon our judgment and tact. He gazed at me with eyes
-whose expression seemed to grow more and more malignant, though, God
-knows, this might have been my fancy, since I was in the humour at the
-moment to figure all things very blackly.
-
-‘Understand me,’ I exclaimed, wholly changing my manner, and speaking
-in a softened tone; ‘if I can be of service to you in any direction,
-you have but to command me. I owe you my own and this lady’s life; and
-though it is an obligation beyond my power of discharging in full, yet
-it must be my duty and happiness to diminish it in any direction I am
-equal to.’
-
-‘We will before long talk together, sir,’ said he, and then fell
-silent, nor did he again open his lips during the seven or eight
-minutes in which we continued sitting together at that table.
-
-I was exceedingly puzzled and troubled by what had passed. What did
-this captain mean by his dark mysterious nods, by his saying that he
-would talk to me presently, by his insistence in ascertaining the
-extent of my nautical knowledge? It was possible, indeed, that being
-the only navigator aboard his vessel, he might consider himself in
-serious need of some one to take his place if he should fall sick. But
-his behaviour was scarcely reconcilable with this plain clear want, and
-it seemed certain that there was more going to his speech and manner
-than the desire that I should fill the part of mate to him.
-
-It was a fair, warm, delightful night, rich with stars, and soothing
-with the dew-sweetened wind that blew with steady freshness over the
-quarter, running the pale shape of the barque over the dark waters,
-as though she were some wreath of mist that must presently dissolve.
-Miss Temple and I, sometimes walking, sometimes sitting on the
-skylight, held to the deck till a late hour. She abhorred the thought
-of withdrawing to the cabin allotted to her; and short as my sleep
-had been since the hour of my quitting the Indiaman’s side, I was as
-little willing as she to quit the silence and coolness and beauty of
-the open night for the confinement of a small hot berth.
-
-The captain had charge of the deck from eight to twelve; but he only
-once approached us to say that a lantern containing an end of candle
-had been placed in each of our berths; ‘and I will ask you both,’ he
-added, ‘to mind your fire, for we’re full up with dry light goods in
-the steerage.’ He then returned to the side of the deck he had crossed
-from, and did not again offer to approach us.
-
-You will suppose that the girl and I could talk of nothing but the
-captain’s intentions, the probable condition of his intellect, and the
-like.
-
-‘He may refuse to part with me,’ said I, ‘and yet be perfectly willing
-to send you on board of the first homeward-bound ship we sight. What
-then, Miss Temple?’
-
-‘I could not travel alone. It is not endurable that such a man as
-Captain Braine should compel you, against your wishes, to remain with
-him! How could he do so? How could he compel you to take a star, as
-he calls it, whatever that may mean; and to keep watch?’ She sighed
-deeply. ‘Alas! my language is fast becoming that of the common sailor.
-To think of me talking to you about taking a star and keeping watch!’
-
-‘And why not? Jack’s is a noble tongue. Omit the oaths, and there is no
-dialect more swelling and poetic than that of the sea.’
-
-‘I detest it because it is forced upon me. An odious and dreadful
-experience obliges me to think and speak in it. Otherwise, I might
-rather like it. But tell me now, Mr. Dugdale, surely this captain could
-not compel you to remain with him?’
-
-This led to a deal of talk. I did my utmost to reassure her; I exhorted
-her to bear in mind that whilst we were on board the barque, we were
-literally at the mercy of the skipper, who, down to the present moment,
-had certainly treated us with great humanity, though his behaviour
-and conversation in the main were undeniably of a lunatic sort. I
-bitterly condemned myself for losing my temper, and I entreated her
-to be patient, to control all resentment that the man might excite by
-purposed or involuntary insult, not to doubt that he would put her on
-board a ship proceeding home, and to leave me to play a part of my own
-that should keep us together.
-
-‘For,’ said I, ‘since fate, cruel to you, but not to me, Miss Temple,
-has placed you so far in my keeping, I must be jealous of all
-interference down to the very termination of our adventure.’
-
-‘I wish for no other companion,’ she exclaimed in a low voice; ‘my
-mother will thank you, Mr. Dugdale.’
-
-‘And, please God, your mother shall,’ said I, ‘trifling as may be my
-claims upon her gratitude. But however my merits may turn out before we
-again sight Old England, I shall be abundantly satisfied if I believe
-that you think of me with more kindness than you did on board the
-_Countess Ida_.’
-
-‘Mr. Dugdale, I thought of no one on board the _Countess Ida_. But let
-us avoid that subject--you have already been very plain-spoken.’
-
-She ceased. I made no answer, and for some time we paced the deck in
-silence, harking then back again to the old topic of the captain’s
-intentions, the whereabouts of the Indiaman, and so on, and so on.
-By-and-by I looked at my watch; the dial-plate showed clearly by the
-starlight. It was eleven o’clock; and as I looked the ship’s bell
-rang out six chimes, which came floating down again in echoes out of
-the tremorless pallid concavities on high. Miss Temple was still most
-reluctant to leave the deck.
-
-‘I am thinking of Mr. Chicken,’ she exclaimed.
-
-‘Chicken’s ghost, like a hen’s egg, is laid,’ said I. ‘Besides, what
-remains of him will be all about my bunk.’
-
-‘Oh for the Indiaman’s saloon,’ she cried, ‘for my dear aunt, for
-old Captain Keeling! How welcome would be a sight of even the most
-intolerable of the passengers, say Mr. Johnson; even that horrid little
-creature with the eye-glass, Miss Hudson’s admirer.’
-
-‘I fear I am tolerated for the same reason that would render Mr.
-Johnson endurable to you.’
-
-‘No!’ she answered quickly and warmly; ‘you are incessantly personal. I
-do not like it.’
-
-‘Suffer me to escort you to your cabin?’
-
-She lingered yet, turning her face to the skies.
-
-‘How rich are those stars! Such lovely jewels are never to be seen in
-the English heavens. Mark how the meteors score the dark spaces between
-the lights with scars and paths of diamond dust! Oh that some gigantic
-shadowy finger would shape itself up there pointing downwards, to let
-us know where the _Countess Ida_ is.’
-
-She rose from the skylight with a long tremulous sigh, and passed her
-hand through my arm that I might conduct her below. For an instant I
-hung in the wind.
-
-‘Why do you wait? I am now ready,’ said she.
-
-‘I am debating within myself whether I should offer to stand watch
-to-night--the captain might expect me to do so.’
-
-‘I do believe you desire that I should think you as mad as he is,’ she
-exclaimed, exerting pressure enough on my arm to start me towards the
-poop-ladder; ‘you shall do nothing of the sort with my consent. If you
-wish to resume your old vocation, Mr. Dugdale, pray wait until this
-adventure is ended.’
-
-‘Anyway, we must bid him good-night,’ said I; and with that I called
-out to him. He answered: ‘Good-night, Mr. Dugdale; good-night to you,
-mem. If there’s anything a-missing which the _Lady Blanche_ can supply
-let me know, and you shall have it.’
-
-‘You’re extremely good, and we’re very much obliged to you,’ said I.
-
-‘Good-night, Captain Braine,’ called Miss Temple in her rich voice; and
-down we went.
-
-The cabin lamp showed a small light. Miss Temple waited here whilst I
-went below for one of the two lanterns which the captain had told me
-I should find in our berths. I was obliged to kindle a sulphur match,
-and I remember cursing the tardy operation of obtaining a light whilst
-I stood hammering away with flint and steel, injuring my knuckles, and
-wishing the tinder-box at the deuce. I found the lanterns, and left one
-alight in Miss Temple’s cabin, and carried my own, also alight, into
-the cuddy. Miss Temple’s eyes sparkled to the glare as I approached
-her, and her face might have been a spirit’s for its whiteness in that
-faint illumination vexed with shadows as the lantern swayed to the
-light rolling of the barque.
-
-‘I wish I could sleep here,’ said she.
-
-‘You will be equally comfortable below,’ said I; ‘and what is better,
-quite private.’
-
-‘Did you see any rats?’
-
-‘None.’
-
-She took my arm with a firm clasp, and hardly seemed willing to release
-me at the hatch, though the aperture was too narrow to admit of our
-descending together. When we had gained the lower deck, she again
-seized my arm and stood staring and hearkening.
-
-‘Oh, Mr. Dugdale,’ she cried, ‘it is very lonely down here!’
-
-‘Yes; but you are not alone. You must have courage. I would rather you
-should be next me than overhead next the captain.’
-
-Yet, as I spoke, my heart was full of pity for her. It was indeed
-lonely, as she had said, with a sense of imprisonment besides, all that
-way down, thinking of where we stood, I mean, with reference to the
-poop. The stowed cases in the forepart seemed to stir as though to some
-internal throes to the weak light that swung in my hand; the atmosphere
-was charged with an unpleasant smell of cargo and the mingled fumes
-of a ship’s hold; and there was something of the heat of an oven also
-in the air that felt to rest with a sort of weight upon the head, due
-perhaps to the fancy begotten by the nearness of the upper deck or
-ceiling as you may term it. Small straining noises stole upon the ear
-from round about in stealthy notes, as though they were giants below
-moving warily. I say I was full of concern for the poor girl. Somehow
-the misery of her condition had not before affected me as it now did.
-
-‘It will not last long. It will be a thing of the past very shortly:
-meanwhile, keep up your heart, and trust me as your protector whilst
-God leaves me a hand to lift,’ I exclaimed with a tenderness of which
-I was insensible until a little later on, when the tones of my voice
-recurred to me in memory.
-
-She looked at me as though she were about to speak, yet said nothing;
-and releasing my arm, she stepped to her cabin door and peeped in.
-
-‘Is there anything I can do?’ said I, keeping at a respectful distance.
-
-She peered awhile, and then answered: ‘I think not. But that candle
-will not last long, and I shall be in darkness. Or if I should
-extinguish it, how am I to light it again?’
-
-‘If you want a light,’ said I, ‘knock on the bulkhead. I shall hear
-you, and will answer by knocking. But it already draws on for twelve
-o’clock. The dawn will be breaking at five or thereabouts. I trust you
-will sleep. You greatly need rest.’
-
-I removed my cap to kiss her hand, and met her gaze, that was fixed
-full of wistfulness upon me. ‘Good-night, Miss Temple,’ said I. She
-entered her cabin looking as though her heart was too full for speech,
-and closed the door.
-
-I was now feeling exceedingly weary, yet, as I feared that she might
-need me, or, in some nervous fit, knock if it were but to know that
-I was awake, I filled my pipe, got into Mr. Chicken’s bunk, and sat
-smoking. I cannot express the peculiar character of the stillness down
-here. It was very extraordinarily accentuated by the sounds which at
-intervals penetrated it: such as the muffled jar of the rudder working
-upon its post, the dim wash of water, startlingly close at hand, along
-with the faint seething noise of the barque’s wake hissing within arm’s
-reach, as it seemed, and coming and going upon the hearing fitfully.
-The suit of oilskins against the bulkhead swayed to the heave of the
-fabric, and they resembled the body of a man who had hanged himself by
-the nail from which they dangled. There was a pair of sea-boots up in
-a corner with a dropsical bulging out about the foot of them in the
-part where a man’s bunions would come, and they showed so very much as
-if they had just been drawn off the legs of Mr. Chicken, that they grew
-ghastly presently, and to relieve my imagination, I directed my eyes at
-other objects.
-
-I sat smoking and full of thought. My eyelids were as of lead, yet my
-mind continued impertinently active. The horrors we had escaped from
-lay like the shadow of a thundercloud upon my spirits; the oppression
-was too violent to suffer the continuance of any emotion of exultation
-over our deliverance. Dark and dismal fancies possessed me. I thought
-of Captain Braine as a man whose reason was unsound, and who was
-capable of playing me some devilish trick; I thought of the coarse
-and surly carpenter, and of the charge of murder hinted against him
-by the skipper. I thought of the convicts and of the mutineer in the
-forecastle, and then my raven-like imagination going to Miss Temple,
-I reflected that I was unarmed, that I had no weapon about me but a
-knife, that must prove of very little use should it come to my having
-to make a fight of it for hers and my own life. Surely, I mused,
-old Chicken will not have come to sea without some instrument of
-self-defence, be it blunderbuss, pistol, or cutlass.
-
-I took an earnest view of the interior. There was a locker against the
-bulkhead that divided Miss Temple’s cabin from mine; I had incuriously
-opened and looked into it when searching for something to divert
-ourselves with, being by the time I had come to that locker too tired
-to continue overhauling the dead man’s effects. Besides this receptacle
-there were two chests of clothes and other matters along with a bagful
-of things, and a shelf over the bunk filled with odds and ends. There
-was still about an hour of candle-light in the lantern. I raised the
-lid of the locker, and found within a truly miscellaneous ‘raffle’ of
-objects, as a sailor would term it: charts, slippers, sextant in case,
-a number of tobacco pipes, bundles of papers, and I know not what
-besides. At the bottom, in the left-hand corner, was a small canvas bag
-very weighty for its size. I drew it out, and found about forty pounds
-in gold inside it, with three Australian one-pound notes, dark with
-thumbing and pocketing, and a five-pound note scarcely distinguishable
-for dirt and creases. I replaced the bag; and coming to the other end
-of the locker, working my way to it through a very rag-and-bottle shop
-of queer gatherings, I met with the object that I was longing for: to
-wit, a heavy, long, double-barrelled pistol, with a couple of nipples
-and a ramrod, and a butt massive enough to bring an ox to earth with.
-There were a parcel of bullets, and a small brown powder-flask full in
-the piece of canvas in which the pistol was wrapped; but for some time
-I could not find any caps. Without them, the pistol would not be of the
-least use, and my satisfaction yielded to mortification as I continued
-to probe into the locker without result. I was about to abandon the
-quest in despair, when my fingers touched a circular metal box like to
-those which used to contain paste for the polishing of boots; I fished
-it up, and was mighty glad to find it filled with caps. Come, thought
-I, if difficulties are to happen, I am better off now than I was half
-an hour ago, anyhow.
-
-All this time there had been no noise next door, and I could but hope
-that Miss Temple was sleeping. I carefully put the pistol and its
-little furniture into the foot of my bunk, and pulling off my coat
-and waistcoat, and removing my shoes, I vaulted on to Mr; Chicken’s
-mattress, blew out the candle in the lantern and stretched my length.
-It was hard upon two o’clock, however, before I fell asleep. The
-scuttle or porthole was abreast of the bunk, and the black disc of it
-framed the low-lying stars of the horizon as they slided up and down
-to the lift and fall of the hull. My thoughts went out to the great
-dark ocean, and shivers chased me, hot as the cabin was, as I lay
-reflecting upon the fire and explosion of the wreck, and upon how it
-would have been with us if Captain Braine, having taken a view of the
-hull, had proceeded and left us to our fate. The noises which violated
-the singular stillness down in that part of the ship where we lay, and
-which had rendered me somewhat uneasy at first, now proved lulling
-as I lay hearkening to them, growing drowsier and drowsier. There
-was a slumberous monotony in the creaking and jarring of the rudder,
-something soothing in the dim hissing of the wake dying out, and then
-seething afresh like the noise of champagne in a glass held to the
-ear, as the frame of the barque slightly soared and sank in delicate
-floating movements upon the under-run of the dark swell. Perhaps by
-this time to-morrow we may be aboard a ship homeward-bound, I remember
-thinking: and that was the last of my thoughts that night, for I
-immediately afterwards sank into a sound sleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-THE BRIG’S LONGBOAT
-
-
-I was awakened by a knocking at the door. The little cabin was bright
-with sunshine, that was flashing off sea and sky upon the thick glass
-of the scuttle. ‘Hallo!’ I cried, ‘who is that?’ The voice of the young
-fellow Wilkins responded:
-
-‘Capt’n Braine’s compliments, sir, and he’d be glad to know if there’s
-anything you or the lady wants which it’s in his power to supply ye
-with?’
-
-I got out of the bunk and opened the door.
-
-‘Captain Braine is very kind,’ said I to the veal-faced youth, who
-stood staring at me with faint eyes under his white lashes and brows.
-‘What time is it, Wilkins?’
-
-‘Half-past eight, sir,’ he answered.
-
-I knocked upon the bulkhead. ‘Are you awake, Miss Temple?’
-
-‘Oh yes,’ she answered, her voice sounding weak through the partition.
-
-‘Captain Braine wishes to know if you are in want of anything it is in
-his power to let you have?’
-
-‘There are many things I want,’ she exclaimed; ‘but they are not to
-be had, I fear. I am afraid I shall have to use that comb. I can do
-nothing with my hair, Mr. Dugdale.’
-
-‘All right, Wilkins,’ said I; ‘we shall be on deck in a few minutes.’
-He went away.
-
-I found the comb that had belonged to Mr. Chicken on a shelf, and
-knocked on Miss Temple’s door. She opened it, and an arm of snow, of
-faultless shape, was projected to receive the comb. ‘Thank you,’ said
-she, whipping the door to, and I entered my cabin, calling out that I
-would wait for her there till she was ready.
-
-Happily, in respect of toilet conveniences we were not wholly
-destitute. The water in my can was indeed salt, but I contrived to get
-some show of lather out of the fragment of marine soap which I found
-inside of the tin dish that served me as a wash-basin. I was without
-Miss Temple’s scrupulosity, and found old Chicken’s hairbrush good
-enough to flourish. There was a little parcel of razors, too, on
-the shelf where the comb had been, and with one of them I made shift
-to scrape my cheeks into some sort of smoothness, wholly by dint of
-feeling, for Miss Temple had Chicken’s glass, and there was nothing in
-my cabin to reflect my countenance. By the time this little business
-was ended, and I had carefully concealed the pistol and powder-flask,
-Miss Temple was ready. She knocked on my door, and I stepped out.
-
-I could see her but very imperfectly in the dim light of that steerage,
-yet it seemed to me that there was more vivacity in her eyes, more life
-in her carriage and air, than I had witnessed in her on the yesterday.
-She told me that she had slept soundly, and that her mattress was as
-comfortable as her bed aboard the _Countess Ida_.
-
-‘I am heartily glad to hear that,’ said I. ‘You found the marine soap
-tough, I fear?’
-
-‘It cannot be good for the complexion, I should think,’ said she with a
-slight smile.
-
-‘How shocking,’ I exclaimed, as we moved to the hatch, ‘would such a
-situation as yours be to a young lady who is dependent for her beauty
-on cosmetics and powder! How would Miss Hudson manage if she were here,
-I wonder?’
-
-‘Is there anything in sight, do you know, Mr. Dugdale? That is a more
-important subject to me than complexions.’
-
-‘I did not ask; but we will find out.’
-
-It was a brilliant morning, a wide blue, blinding flash of day, as it
-seemed to my eyes after the gloom below. The sea was all on fire under
-the sun, and the wind held it trembling gloriously. A hot and sparkling
-breeze in the same old quarter gushed freshly into the wide expanded
-wings of the _Lady Blanche_, whose swift pace over the smooth plain of
-ocean seemed a sort of miracle of sailing to me when I contrasted it
-with the rate of going of the _Countess Ida_. The flying-fish in scores
-sparkled out from the barque’s white sides. The foam came along her
-sheathing like a roll of cotton-wool to her wake. The ocean line ran
-round in a firm edge with an opalescent clarification of the extreme
-rim that gave the far-off confines a look of crystal.
-
-But I had not stood longer than a minute gazing around me when I spied
-a gleam of canvas about a point on our weather-bow. I saw it under the
-curve of the fore-course that lay plain in sight under the lifted clew
-of the mainsail.
-
-‘A sail, Miss Temple.’
-
-‘Where?’ she cried, with her manner full of fever on the instant. I
-pointed. ‘Oh,’ she exclaimed, bringing her hands together, ‘if it
-should be the Indiaman!’
-
-But the captain was walking aft, and it was time to salute him.
-
-‘Good morning, sir,’ I said as I approached him with Miss Temple at my
-side. ‘We have paused a moment to admire this very beautiful morning. I
-perceive a sail right ahead, captain.’
-
-It was a part of his destiny, I suppose, that he should stare hard at
-those who accosted him before answering. He carried his unwinking dead
-black eye from my companion to me, and then stepped out of the shell of
-his mood of meditation as a bird might be hatched.
-
-‘Hope you slept pretty comfortably?’
-
-‘Yes; I passed a good night; and I am happy to know that Miss Temple
-rested well.’
-
-‘Which way is that ship going?’ cried the girl, whose cheeks were
-flushed with impatience.
-
-‘She is not a ship, mem,’ he answered; ‘she is seemingly a big boat
-that’s blowing along the same road as ourselves under a lug.’
-
-The telescope lay on the skylight, and I pointed it. Sure enough, the
-sail was no ship, as I had first imagined, though the white square
-hovering upon the horizon exactly resembled the canvas of a large
-craft slowly climbing up the sea. I could readily distinguish a boat,
-apparently a ship’s longboat, running before the wind under a lugsail;
-but she was as yet too distant to enable me to make out the figures of
-people aboard, considerable as were the magnifying powers of the glass
-I levelled at her.
-
-‘Only a boat?’ cried Miss Temple, in accents of keen disappointment.
-
-‘What will a craft of that sort be doing in the middle of this wide
-sea?’ said I.
-
-‘She may have gone adrift, as you did,’ answered Captain Braine.
-
-‘Is it imaginable that she should be the corvette’s cutter?’ cried Miss
-Temple, straining her fine eyes, impassioned with conflicting emotion,
-at the object ahead.
-
-‘Oh, no,’ said I. ‘First of all, the cutter had no sail; next, yonder
-boat is three or four times bigger than she was; and then, even if she
-had a sail, I question if she could have run all this distance in the
-time from the spot she started from.’
-
-I noticed whilst I spoke that Captain Braine watched me with a singular
-expression, and that his face slightly changed as to an emotion of
-relief when I had concluded my answer.
-
-‘The lady,’ said he, ‘is speaking of the man-of-war cutter that rowed
-ye aboard the wreck, and lost ye there?’
-
-‘Yes,’ said I.
-
-‘How many of a crew?’ he asked.
-
-‘Six men and a lieutenant; but the officer was drowned.’
-
-He took the telescope from me, and brought it to bear upon the little
-sail over the bow, and kept it levelled for some moments. He then put
-the glass down and said: ‘Have you had any breakfast?’
-
-‘Not yet,’ I answered.
-
-He called through the skylight to Wilkins, and told him to put some
-biscuit and tea and cold meat upon the table. ‘I have made my meal,’
-said he, contriving one of his extraordinary bows as he addressed Miss
-Temple; ‘and so, I hope, mem, you’ll excuse my presence below. Eat
-hearty, both of ye, I beg. There’s no call to stint yourselves, and I’m
-sorry I can’t put anything more tempting afore ye, as Jack says.’
-
-We at once descended, both of us being anxious to get the meal, such as
-it might be, over.
-
-‘Why is he repeatedly saying, “as Jack says?”’ asked Miss Temple.
-
-‘Ah!’ I exclaimed,‘and why does he stare so? Yet, on my word, he seems
-an exceedingly good-natured fellow. I assure you we might have fallen
-into worse hands. No man could make a homeward-bound ship to rise up
-out of the sea or signal our whereabouts to the _Countess Ida_ when she
-is leagues and leagues out of sight; but another captain might not have
-shown half the friendly concern this poor eccentric creature exhibits
-in our comfort.’
-
-She agreed with me, but quickly dropped the subject as something
-distasteful, and spoke of her disappointment, and of the strangeness of
-meeting a small boat in the middle of such an ocean as we were sailing
-through. By some trick above my comprehension, she had contrived to
-smooth out her dress, insomuch that a deal of its castaway aspect had
-left it. She had also manœuvred in some fashion with the feather in her
-hat; and I told her, as she sat opposite me, that she looked as fresh
-as though she had just left her cabin in the Indiaman.
-
-‘Youth must always triumph,’ I said, ‘if it be but fairly treated.
-Sleep has made your former self dominant again: but I will reserve all
-my compliments until I am able to pull my hat off to you ashore and say
-good-bye.’
-
-She shot a glance at me under her long fringes, but held her peace.
-
-The tea was so vile that I called to Wilkins, who stood on the
-quarter-deck, to procure us some coffee if there were any aboard; and
-in a few minutes he returned with a sailor’s hook-pot full of it from
-the galley. This Miss Temple seemed able to sip without a face of
-aversion. It vexed me to see her imperilling her delicate white teeth
-with the hard fare that was sheer forecastle stuff, and bad at that;
-but it was not for me to give orders, nor was I willing to protract our
-sitting by inquiring if there was other food aboard. Besides, every
-hour in such weather as this might provide us with the opportunity we
-hungered for, to escape into some homeward-bound ship with a cabin
-capable of affording endurable entertainment.
-
-We rose from the table, and regained the deck. The moment my head
-showed above the companion-way, the captain called to me hastily. There
-was a look of disorder in his countenance that immediately excited my
-wonder; there was the alacrity of fear in his manner; he could address
-me now without a prolonged stare and his usual tardy emergence of mind.
-
-‘Please, take this glass,’ said he, thrusting the telescope into my
-hand; ‘and look at that there boat, and tell me what you think.’
-
-The smooth, swift sliding of the _Lady Blanche_ over the level surface
-of sea that was running in fire and foam lines to the brushing of
-the merry breeze and the sparkling of the soaring sun, had closed us
-rapidly with the boat ahead since Miss Temple and I left the deck.
-The little fabric was now scarcely more than a mile on the bow, and
-the captain’s glass, when I put it to my eye, brought her as close
-to me as if she were no further off than our forecastle. She was a
-large, carvel-built longboat; one of those round-bowed, broad-beamed
-structures which in the olden days used to stand in chocks betwixt a
-ship’s foremast and galley, with often another boat stored inside of
-her, unless she was used to keep sheep or other live-stock in. She was
-deep in the water, and as much of her hull as was visible was of a
-dingy sallow white. She showed a broad square of dark old lug, before
-which she was running with some show of nimbleness. She seemed to
-be crowded with men, and even whilst I stood looking at her through
-the glass, I counted no less than twenty-seven persons. They were
-all looking our way, and though it was scarcely possible to define
-individual faces amid such a yellow huddle of countenances, I could
-yet manage to determine a prevailing piratic expression of the true
-sort, suggested not so much by the vagueness of swarthy cheek and
-shaggy brow as by the singularity of the fellows’ apparel--the flapping
-sombrero, the red sash, the blue shirt, with other details--which but
-very faintly corresponded indeed with one’s notion of the coarse homely
-attire of the merchant sailor.
-
-Captain Braine’s eyes were fixed upon me as I turned to him. ‘What do
-you think of her, sir?’ said he.
-
-‘I don’t like the look of those fellows at all,’ I answered. ‘I would
-not mind making a bet that they are a portion of the crew of the
-privateering brig from whose hull you rescued us yesterday morning.’
-
-‘Just the idea that occurred to me,’ he cried. He levelled the glass
-again. ‘A boatful of rascals, sir. Armed to the teeth, I daresay, and
-on the lookout for some such a vessel as mine to seize and get away
-back to their own waters in. And yet, it is awful, too, to think that
-the creatures may be in want of water. What’s to be done? I can’t allow
-them to board: and I’m not going to heave to, to give ’em a chance of
-doing so.’
-
-‘We’re overhauling them fast,’ said I. ‘Best plan perhaps, captain,
-will be to hail them as we slide past and ascertain their wants, if we
-can understand their lingo; and if they need water, there’s nothing
-to be done but to send some adrift for them to pick up. But for God’s
-sake, sir, don’t let them come aboard. They look as devilish a lot of
-cut-throats as ever I saw; and besides the safety of our lives and of
-the ship, we have this lady to consider.’
-
-Captain Braine listened to me with his eyes fixed upon the boat.
-
-‘She can’t hook on at this,’ said he, as if thinking aloud; ‘we should
-tow her under water at such a pace. By heavens,’ he shouted, with a
-wild look coming into his face, ‘if she attempts to sheer alongside,
-I’ll give her the stem!’ and springing with the agility of a monkey
-upon the rail, he grasped a backstay, and stood in a posture for
-hailing the boat as we swept past.
-
-Forward, the seamen had quitted the jobs they were upon, and were
-staring open-mouthed from the forecastle rail. I picked up the glass
-again to look at the crowd, and every face in the lens was now as
-distinct as Miss Temple’s who stood beside me. An uglier, more
-ferocious-looking set of men never stepped the deck of a picaroon.
-I had not the least doubt whatever that they were a portion of the
-crew of the brig. Indeed, I seemed to have some recollection of the
-boat, for I remembered, whilst examining the brig from the poop of the
-Indiaman, that I had been struck by the unusual size of her longboat,
-and that the colour of her was the sallow pea-soup tint of the fabric
-yonder. There were several chocolate-coloured faces amongst the little
-crowd; here and there, a coal-black countenance with a frequent glitter
-of earrings and gleam of greasy ringlets. Many of them eyed us over
-the low gunwale under the sharp of their hands; one stood erect on
-the thwart through which the mast was stepped, clasping the spar with
-his arm, and apparently waiting to hail us. The steersman watched us
-continuously, and now and again the boat’s head would slightly fall off
-to a sneaking movement of the helm, as though to some notion of edging
-down upon us without attracting our observation. But the barque’s keen
-stem was ripping through the water as the jaws of a pair of shears
-drive through a length of sailcloth. I had no fear of the boat hooking
-on; she would have to manœuvre under our bows to do that, and it needed
-but a little twirl of the spokes of our wheel to drive her into staves
-and to send her people bobbing and drowning into our wake.
-
-‘Boat ahoy!’ shouted the captain with such delivery of voice as I
-should have thought impossible in so narrow shouldered a man.
-
-‘Yash! yash!’ vociferated the fellow who clasped the mast, frantically
-brandishing his arms. ‘Ve are sheepwreck--you veel take us--ve starve!’
-
-The captain looked and hardly seemed to know what to say.
-
-‘How long have you been adrift?’ he bawled.
-
-The fellow, who wore a red nightcap, shook it till the tassel danced to
-the violent gestures of his head. He evidently did not understand the
-question. ‘Take us!’ he shrieked;--‘ve starve!’
-
-The boat was now on the bow, within pistol-shot from the forecastle
-rail.
-
-‘Mind your helm, Captain Braine,’ I suddenly shouted, ‘or she’ll be
-aboard you!’ for my young and, in those days, keen eyes had marked the
-action of the fellow who steered the boat, and even as I bawled out,
-the head of the little fabric swept round with a fellow in the bows
-flourishing a boathook, to which was attached a length of line, and
-others standing by ready to help him when he should have hooked on.
-
-‘Steady as she goes!’ cried Captain Braine.
-
-‘Oh Mr. Dugdale,’ shrieked Miss Temple, ‘they will get on board of us!’
-
-The boat’s head drove sheering alongside into our bow just forward of
-the fore-chain plates. I saw the fellow erect in her head fork out his
-boathook to catch hold.
-
-‘Let go!’ roared a voice forward. The figure of Joe Wetherly overhung
-the rail, poising either an iron marline-spike or a belaying-pin, or
-some short bar of metal; this I saw. Then he hurled it at the moment
-that the boathook had caught a plate. The missile struck the man full
-on the head; he fell like a statue in the bottom of the boat, and the
-boat herself ground past us as the barque, to the impulse of her great
-overhanging squares of studdingsail, swept onwards at some seven or
-eight knots in the hour.
-
-They were so crowded as to be in one another’s road. I saw a dozen
-grimy paws extended to catch hold of the main-chain plates as the
-boat came bruising and groaning and washing past; but the iron bars
-were swept like smoke out of the wretches’ frantic grip. Never shall
-I forget the picture the little fabric offered in the swift glimpse
-I caught of her as she glided past. The crowd, in their desperate
-efforts to catch hold of the sweeping projections in the barque’s side,
-squirmed and surged and rose and fell like rags of meat stirred up
-in a boiling stewpot. Their cries, their yells, their Spanish oaths,
-the brandishings of their arms, the fury expressed in their malignant
-faces, the sudden uprootal and crash of their one mast and sail by the
-fouling of it with our mainbrace, all combine into a memory which is
-not to be expressed in words. I caught sight of a number of breakers
-in the bottom of the boat along with some bags, and was instinctively
-assured that they were lacking in neither food nor water. As the boat
-sped under the rail on which Captain Braine was standing, the fellow
-who had been at her helm, a brawny mulatto in a wide straw-hat, loose
-red shirt, and naked feet, suddenly whipped a pistol out of his breast,
-took aim at the skipper, and fired; and then, in a breath or two, the
-craft was astern, tumbling in the seething white of our wake, lessening
-into a toy even as you looked, with half of her people getting the
-wreck of mast and rail inboard, and the rest of them furiously
-gesticulating at us.
-
-Captain Braine stood on the rail watching them with an air of musing
-that was incredibly odd in the face of the wild excitement of the
-moment.
-
-‘Are you hurt?’ I cried.
-
-He turned slowly to survey me, then very leisurely dismounted from his
-perch, meanwhile continuing to gaze at me.
-
-‘No,’ said he, after an interval during which I ran my eyes over him
-with anxiety, thinking to see blood or to behold him suddenly fall;
-‘it’s all right. This is the fourth time I’ve been shot at in my
-life; and be my end what it will, it is certain I am not to perish by
-another man’s bullet. Rogues all, ha!’ he continued, directing his dead
-black vision at the boat astern; ‘they would have carried the little
-_Blanche_, and slit our throats. Just the sort of ship, sir, for the
-likes of their trade: the heels of a racehorse and the sober look of
-the honest marchantman. Slit our throats; all saving _yours_, mem, I
-expect; but only to reserve ye for something worse than death to you,
-if your noble looks don’t belie your taste.’
-
-‘They never could have held on with that boathook,’ said I, struck more
-by the man’s manner than his speech, strange as it was. ‘I suppose
-they hoped to cling long enough to chuck a few of their beauties aboard
-us. Well, Miss Temple, let us trust that we have now seen the very last
-of that confounded privateer brig and the gallant, good-looking chaps
-who stocked her.’
-
-‘When is all this going to end?’ said she.
-
-‘Every man of them,’ exclaimed the captain, ‘will have had a firearm in
-his breast.’
-
-‘No doubt,’ I answered; ‘the vessel must have been handsomely furnished
-in that way to judge by what we found remaining in the cabin of the
-wreck.’
-
-‘Were they starving, d’ye think?’ he exclaimed with a sudden troubled
-manner, as he looked at the speck in our wake.
-
-‘I should say not,’ said I; ‘there were breakers in the bottom of the
-boat, and parcels resembling bread bags aft.’
-
-‘Thirst is a fearful thing at sea, sir,’ said he, slowly: ‘it’s worse
-than hunger. Hunger, whilst it remains appetite, is agreeable; but
-the first sensation of thirst is a torture. I have known ’em both--I
-have known ’em both,’ he added, with a melancholy shake of his head
-and a profound sigh; then bringing his unwinking stare to bear upon
-me, he exclaimed: ‘Supposing that shot had taken effect, the _Lady
-Blanche_ would now be without a master; and if you wasn’t on board,
-she’d be without a navigator. Less than two sea-going heads to every
-ship _won’t_ do. I felt that truth when Chicken went, and I’m feeling
-of it every time I catch sight of that there man Lush.’ Miss Temple
-and I exchanged glances. ‘Well,’ said he, with one of his mirthless
-grins, ‘I don’t expect those privateersmen’ll trouble us any more;’ and
-in his abrupt way he walked to the compass, and stood there looking
-alternately from it to the canvas.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-I QUESTION WETHERLY
-
-
-It had now become so much one thing on top of another with us, and
-everything happening in a moment, so to speak, too: first our being
-left on the wreck all in a breath as it were: then our being picked up
-by this barque without the dimmest prospect, as my instincts advised
-me, of our falling in with the _Countess Ida_ this side of Bombay:
-then our destitute condition aboard a craft whose skipper’s sanity I
-was now honestly beginning to distrust, and whose people, if he did
-not lie, were for the most part a gang of scoundrels: then this sudden
-narrow shave of being boarded by above a score of miscreants whose
-undoubted hope was to seize the _Lady Blanche_ and to use her in the
-room of their own extinguished brig; I say it was so much one thing
-on top of another--a catalogue of adventures scarcely conceivable in
-these safe-going days of the ocean mailboat, though real enough and in
-one way or another frequent enough in my time, I mean in the time of
-this narrative--that I protest something of the dismay which possessed
-Miss Temple visited me, though I struggled hard in the direction of
-a composed face, as we talked over the incident of the morning, and
-took a view of the singular staring figure who had charge of the
-barque, and directed our eyes at the crew, all hands of whom hung
-about forward, briskly yarning, as I might suppose, about the Spanish
-longboat’s attempt (and with God knows what sympathy, I would think, as
-I peered at the groups), or as we sent our eager gaze into the blue and
-brilliant ocean distance in search of any little leaning flake of white
-that might flatter us with promise of escape from our disagreeable
-situation.
-
-‘I have fully and immovably formed my opinion on two points,’ said
-Miss Temple to me as we continued to pace the deck together for some
-half hour after the boat had disappeared astern: ‘one is, that Captain
-Braine is mad; and the other that he is firmly bent on making you serve
-him as his mate.’
-
-‘I own that I now believe he is madder than I first suspected,’ I
-answered. ‘His manner and language to you just now were extraordinary.
-But as to his employing me as mate--I think this: if the man is crazy,
-he may easily go wrong in his navigation; if we sight nothing that will
-carry us home, we must obviously stick to the barque, and her safety,
-therefore, is ours; consequently, it is desirable, I think, that I
-should know what her skipper is doing with her from day to day; and
-this I can contrive by consenting to oblige him with taking sights.’
-
-‘I see what you mean,’ she exclaimed thoughtfully. ‘I had not taken
-that view; but it is a cruel one to entertain; it implies our remaining
-on board until--until---- Oh, Mr. Dugdale! this sort of imprisonment
-for the next two or three months is not to be borne.’
-
-‘Anyway,’ said I, ‘you now understand that our very safety demands we
-should know where that fellow is carrying his ship. If, then, he should
-request me to shoot the sun as we call it, you will not be vexed by my
-compliance?’
-
-‘Who am I, Mr. Dugdale, that you should trouble yourself about my
-opinion?’
-
-‘You can make yourself felt,’ said I, smiling; ‘I should consider your
-eyes matchless in their power to subdue. There is a little passage in
-Shakespeare that very exquisitely fits my theory of you.’
-
-‘I would rather not hear it,’ she answered, with a slight curl of her
-lip and a faint tinge of rose in her cheeks. ‘You once applied to me a
-sentence from Shakespeare that was very unflattering.’
-
-‘What was it?’
-
-‘You compared my complexion to the white death that one of
-Shakespeare’s girls talks about.’
-
-‘I remember. I am astonished that your aunt should have repeated to you
-what she overheard by stealth.’
-
-‘I do not understand,’ she exclaimed, firing up.
-
-‘She was behind me when I made that quotation, and I was unconscious
-of her presence. She should have respected my ignorance. I meant no
-wrong,’ I went on, pretending to get into a passion. ‘Your complexion
-is pale, and I sought to illustrate it to my little friend Saunders by
-an expression of striking nobility and beautiful dignity. If ever I
-have the fortune to find myself in your aunt’s company, I shall give
-her my mind on this business. How am I to know but that her repeating
-what she had heard me let fall excited in you the disgust I found in
-your treatment of me?’
-
-She cooled down as I grew hot.
-
-‘The extravagance of your language shocks me,’ she exclaimed, but with
-very little temper in her voice. ‘Disgust? You have no right to use
-that word. You were always very courteous to me on board the _Countess
-Ida_.’
-
-‘Am I less so here?’ said I, still preserving an air of indignation.
-
-‘Do not let us quarrel,’ she said gently, with such a look of sweetness
-in her eyes as I should have thought their dark and glowing depths
-incapable of.
-
-‘If we quarrel, it will not be my fault,’ said I, disguising myself
-with my voice, whilst I looked seawards that my face might not betray
-me.
-
-At that moment the captain called out my name: ‘Can I have a word with
-you, sir?’ he cried along the short length of poop, standing as he was
-at the wheel, whilst we were conversing at the fore-end of the raised
-deck.
-
-‘With pleasure,’ I answered.
-
-‘I shall go into the cabin,’ said Miss Temple; ‘it is too hot here. You
-will come and tell me what he wants.’
-
-I waited until she had descended the ladder, and then strolled over
-to the captain, determined to let him know by my careless air that
-whatever I did for him he must regard as an obligation, or as an
-expression of my gratitude; but that I was not to be commanded. I
-believed I could witness an expression of embarrassment in his fixed
-regard that I had not before noticed in him. He eyed me as though lost
-in thought, and I waited.
-
-‘Would you object,’ said he, ‘to ascertain our latitude at noon to-day?’
-
-‘Not in the least.’
-
-He seemed to grow a little brighter. ‘And I should feel obliged,’ he
-continued, ‘if you’d work out the longitude.’
-
-‘With pleasure,’ I said. I looked at my watch. ‘But I have no sextant.’
-
-‘I have a couple,’ he exclaimed; ‘I will lend you one;’ and down he
-went for it with a fluttered demeanour of eagerness.
-
-I lingered till I supposed he had entered his cabin, then put my head
-into the skylight and called softly to Miss Temple, who was seated
-almost directly beneath for the air there: ‘He wishes me to take an
-observation with him.’
-
-‘What is that?’ she answered, also speaking softly and turning up her
-face.
-
-‘I am to shoot the sun--you know, Miss Temple.’
-
-‘Oh, pray, contrive to make some error--commit some blunder to make him
-suppose’---- She checked herself, and I heard the captain say that it
-was very hot as he came to the companion steps.
-
-In a few moments he arrived on deck, hugging a brace of sextant cases
-to his heart. He told me to choose; I took the one nearest to me,
-perceived that the instrument was almost new, and as it was now hard
-upon the hour of noon, applied it to my eye, the captain standing
-alongside of me ogling the sun likewise. I could see the men forward,
-waiting for the skipper to make eight bells, staring their hardest at
-the now unusual spectacle to them of two sextants at work. For my
-part, I should have been shocked by the weakness of my memory if I had
-not known what to do. During the two years I had spent at sea I was
-thoroughly grounded in navigation--such as it was in those days; and as
-I stood screwing the sun down to the horizon, the whole practice of the
-art, so far as my education in it went, came back to me as freshly as
-though I had been taking sights ever since.
-
-We made eight bells. Mr. Lush came aft to relieve the deck, and I went
-below with Captain Braine to work out the barque’s position.
-
-I smiled at Miss Temple as I entered the cuddy; she watched me
-eagerly, and the movement of her lips seemed to say, ‘Don’t be long.’
-In fact, her face had that meaning; and I gave her a reassuring nod
-ere turning to follow the captain into his berth. The apartment was
-small and cheerful, plainly stocked with the customary details of a
-humble skipper’s sea bedroom; a cot, a small table, a cushioned locker,
-a few mathematical instruments, a little hanging shelf of strictly
-nautical books, and so on. His chronometer was a good one, handsome for
-those days, of a quality one would hardly expect to find in a little
-trading-barque of the pattern of this _Lady Blanche_. There was a bag
-of charts in a corner, and a small chart of the world lay half unrolled
-upon the table, with a bit of the Atlantic Ocean visible exhibiting the
-skipper’s ‘pricking’ or tracing of his course down to the preceding day.
-
-‘Here’s ink and paper, sir,’ said he; ‘sit ye down, and let’s see if we
-can tally.’
-
-I was always a tolerably quick hand at figures, and had soon completed
-my calculations, feeling as though I was at sea again in sober
-professional earnest. The captain worked with extraordinary gravity;
-his singular eyes overhung the paper without a wink, and his yellow
-countenance, with his blue chops and chin, wore the melancholy of a
-mute’s face, mixed with an indefinable quality of distress, as though
-his mental efforts were putting him to physical pain. We agreed to a
-second in our latitude, but differed in our longitude by something over
-seven miles.
-
-‘You’ll be in the right, sir--you’ll be in the right!’ he cried,
-smiting the table with his fist. ‘It is clear you know the ropes, Mr.
-Dugdale. I’ll abide by your reckonings. And now I want ye to do me a
-further sarvice.’
-
-‘What is that, captain?’ said I.
-
-‘Well, ye may reckon, of course, that I can write,’ he answered; ‘but
-I never was topweight with my pen, as Jack says, nor, for the matter
-of that, was Chicken much of a hand. There was some words which he was
-always making a foul hawse of. Now, what I want ye to do, Mr. Dugdale,
-is to keep my log for me.’
-
-‘All this,’ said I carelessly, yet watching him with attention, ‘is
-practically making a chief officer of me.’ He did not answer. ‘Of
-course, I don’t object,’ I continued, stimulated more perhaps by Miss
-Temple’s than by my own views, ‘to oblige in any possible manner a
-gentleman’----
-
-‘I am no gentleman,’ said he, with a wave of the hand.
-
-‘----to whom Miss Temple and myself owe our lives. But I may take it
-that it is thoroughly understood the young lady and myself are to quit
-your hospitable little ship at the first opportunity that may offer.’
-
-He regarded me in silence for I should say at least a minute; I was
-positively beginning to believe that he had fallen dumb. At last he
-seemed to come to life. He nodded slowly three times and said very
-deliberately: ‘Mr. Dugdale, you and me will be having a talk later on.’
-
-‘But good God, captain,’ cried I, startled out of my assumed manner of
-indifference or ease, ‘you will at least assure me that you’ll make no
-difficulty of transhipping us when the chance to do so occurs?’
-
-He was again silent, all the while staring at me; and presently, in a
-deep voice, said, ‘Later on, sir;’ and with that stood up.
-
-‘How much later on?’ I inquired.
-
-He tapped his brow with his forefinger and answered: ‘It needs
-reflection, and I must see my way clearly. So far it’s all right. I’m
-much obliged to ye, I’m sure;’ and he went to the door and held it
-open, closing it upon himself after I had stepped out.
-
-At the instant I resolved to tell Miss Temple of what had passed; then
-swiftly thought no! it will only frighten the poor girl, and she cannot
-advise me; I must wait a little; and with a smiling face I seated
-myself by her side. But secretly, I was a good deal worried. I chatted
-lightly, told her that there was nothing whatever significant in the
-captain’s request that I should check his calculations by independent
-observations, and did my utmost, by a variety of cheerful small talk
-referring wholly to our situation, to keep her heart up. Nevertheless,
-secretly I was much bothered. The man had something on his mind of
-a dark mysterious nature, it seemed to me; and I could not question
-that it formed the motive of his interrogatories as to my seamanship,
-and of his testing my qualities as a navigator by putting a sextant
-into my hand. Whatever his secret might prove, was it likely to stand
-between us and our quitting this barque for something homeward bound?
-It was most intolerably certain that if Captain Braine chose to keep me
-aboard, I must remain with him. For how should I be able to get away?
-Suppose I took it upon myself to signal a vessel when he was below: the
-hailing, the noise of backing the yards, the clamour of the necessary
-manœuvring, would hardly fail to bring him on deck; and if he chose to
-order the men to keep all fast with the boat, there could be no help
-for it; he was captain, and the seamen would obey him.
-
-These thoughts, however, I kept to myself. The day passed quietly.
-Again and again Miss Temple and I would search the waters for any
-sign of a ship; but I took notice that the barrenness of the ocean
-did not produce the same air of profound misery and dejection which
-I had witnessed in her yesterday. In fact, she had grown weary of
-complaining; she was beginning to understand the idleness of it. From
-time to time, though at long intervals, something fretful would escape
-her, some reference to the wretched discomfort of being without change
-of apparel; to the misfortune of having fallen in with a ship, whose
-forecastle people, if her captain was to be believed, were for the most
-part no better than the company of brigands whom we had scraped clear
-of that morning. But it seemed to me that she was slowly schooling
-herself to resignation, that she had formed a resolution to look with
-some spirit into the face of our difficulties, a posture of mind I was
-not a little thankful to behold in her, for, God knows, my own anxiety
-was heavy enough, and I did not want to add to it the sympathetic
-trouble her grief and despair caused me.
-
-All day long the weather continued very glorious. The captain ordered
-a short awning to be spread over the poop, and Miss Temple and I sat
-in the shadow of it during the greater part of the afternoon. There
-was nothing to read; there was no sort of amusement to enable us to
-kill the time. Nevertheless, the hours drifted fleetly past in talk.
-Miss Temple was more communicative than she had ever before been;
-talked freely of her family, of her friends and acquaintances, of her
-visits abroad, and the like. She told me that she was never weary
-of riding, that her chief delight in life was to follow the hounds;
-and indeed she chatted so fluently on one thing and another that she
-appeared to forget our situation: a note almost of gaiety entered her
-voice; her dark eyes sparkled, and the cold, marble-like beauty of her
-face warmed to the memories which rose in her. I gathered from her
-conversation that she was the only living child of her mother, and that
-there was nothing between her and a very tolerable little fortune, as
-I might infer from her description of the home Lady Temple had kept
-up in her husband’s life, and that she still, though in a diminished
-degree, supported for the sake of her daughter, though she herself lay
-paralysed and helpless, looked after in Miss Temple’s absence by a
-maiden sister.
-
-I recollect wondering whilst I listened to her that so fine a woman as
-she, and a fortune to boot, had not long ago married. Was she waiting
-for some man with whom she could fall in love? or was it some large
-dream of title and estate that hindered her? or was it that she was
-without a heart? No, thought I; her heart will have had nothing to
-do with it. Your heartless girls get married as fast as the rest of
-them. And was she heartless? It was not easy to let one’s gaze plumb
-the glowing liquid depths of her eyes, which seemed to my fancy to be
-charged with the fires of sensibility and passion, and believe her
-heartless.
-
-There was something wild in the contrast betwixt the imaginations she
-raised in me by her talk of her home and her pleasures with her own
-beauty at hand to richly colour every fancy she inspired--betwixt
-my imagination, I say, and the realities about us, as I would most
-poignantly feel whenever I sent a glance at old Lush. He was a mule of
-a man, and stood doggedly at a distance, never addressed nor offered,
-indeed, to approach us, though sometimes I would catch him taking me
-in from head to toe out of the corner of his surly eyes. Possibly, my
-showing that I had a trick of navigation above his knowledge excited
-his spleen; or maybe his hatred of the captain led him to dislike me
-because of the apparent intimacy between the skipper and me. Anyway,
-I would catch myself looking at him now with a feeling of misgiving
-for which I could find no reason outside of the mere movement of my
-instincts.
-
-It was in the second dog-watch that evening; Miss Temple was resting in
-the little cuddy, and I stepped on to the main-deck to smoke a pipe.
-The topmost canvas of the barque delicately swayed under a cloudless
-heaven that was darkly, deeply, beautifully blue with the shadow of
-the coming night. A large star trembled above the ocean verge in the
-east; but the glow of sunset still lingered in the west over a sea of
-wonderful smoothness rippling in frosty lines to the breeze that gushed
-from between the sunset and the north.
-
-The carpenter had charge of the deck; the captain was in his cabin.
-Whilst I lighted my pipe, I caught sight of the man Joe Wetherly seated
-on the coaming of the fore-hatch past the little galley. He was puffing
-at an inch of dusky clay with his arms folded upon his breast, and his
-countenance composed into an air of sailorly meditation. This seemed
-an opportunity for me to learn what he had to tell or might be willing
-to impart about the inner life of the _Lady Blanche_, and I went along
-the deck in an easy saunter, as though it was my notion to measure the
-planks for an evening stroll. I started when abreast of him with a
-manner of pleased surprise.
-
-‘Oh! it is you, Wetherly? My old acquaintance Smallridge’s friend! No
-sign of the Indiaman, though. I fear we have outrun her by leagues. And
-always when you are on the lookout for a sail at sea, nothing heaves
-into sight.’
-
-He rose to my accost, and saluted me with a respectful sea-bow, that
-is, by scraping his forehead with his knuckle with a little kick back
-of his left leg.
-
-‘That’s right enough, sir,’ he answered. ‘I’ve been sailing myself in a
-ship for six weeks in middling busy waters, too, with ne’er a sight of
-anything--not so much as the tail of a gull.’
-
-‘Pray sit,’ said I; ‘I’ll keep you company. This is the right spot for
-a smoke and a yarn; quiet and cool and out of the road of the poop.’
-
-He grinned, and we seated ourselves side by side. I talked to him
-first about the _Countess Ida_, explained the circumstance of my being
-in company with Miss Temple, told him who she was, and spoke of her
-shipwrecked condition so far as her wardrobe went, and how eager she
-was to return to England; but the old sailor made very little of her
-being in want of a change of dress.
-
-‘There is no need, sir,’ said he, ‘for the lady to distress her mind
-with considerations of a shift o’ vestments. I allow she can use a
-needle for herself; there’s needles and thread at her sarvice forrads;
-and how much linnen do she want? Why one of the skipper’s table-cloths
-’ud fit her out, I should say.’ He turned his figure-head of a face
-upon me as he added: ‘’Tain’t the loss of clothes, sir, as should
-occupy her thoughts, but the feeling that she’s been took off that
-there wreck and is safe.’
-
-I fully agreed with him, with some inward laughter, wondering what Miss
-Temple would think if she had overheard his speech. One thing led to
-another; at last I said:
-
-‘Wetherly, I am going to ask you a plain question; it is one sailor
-making inquiry of another, and you’ll accept me as a shipmate, I know.’
-He nodded. ‘Is not your captain wanting?’ and I touched my head.
-
-‘Well,’ he answered after a pause, ‘_I_ think so, and I’ve been
-a-thinking so pretty nigh ever since I’ve been along with him.’
-
-‘What caused his mate’s death?’
-
-‘He died in a swound,’ he answered--‘fell dead alongside the wheel as
-he was looking into the compass.’
-
-‘Have the sailors noticed anything queer in their captain?’
-
-‘They’re such a party of ignorant scow-bankers,’ said he, with a slow
-look round, to make sure that the coast was clear, ‘that I don’t
-believe they’re capable of noticing anything if it ain’t a pannikin of
-rum shoved under their noses.’
-
-‘I don’t mind whispering to you,’ said I, ‘that the captain hinted
-to me they were not a very reputable body of men--talked vaguely of
-mutineers and convicts, with one fellow amongst them,’ I went on,
-bating my voice to a mere whisper, ‘who had committed a murder.’
-
-He stared at me a moment, and then tilted his cap over his nose to
-scratch the back of his head.
-
-‘He’ll know more about ’em, then, than I do,’ he responded; ‘they’re
-ignorant enough to do wrong without troubling themselves much to think
-of the job when it was over. Mutineering I don’t doubt some of ’em
-have practised. As to others of ’em being convicts, why who’s to tell?
-Likely as not, says I. But when it comes to murder--a middling serious
-charge, ain’t it, sir? Of course I dunno--who might the party be, sir?’
-
-‘Oh!’ I exclaimed, ‘it was a vague sort of talk, as I told you. But
-if Miss Temple and I are to stick to this ship till we get to the
-Mauritius, it would comfort her, and me, too, for the matter of that,
-to learn that her crew are not the band of ruffians we have been led to
-imagine them.’
-
-‘Well, sir,’ he exclaimed thoughtfully--‘I’m sure you’ll forgive me,
-but I don’t rightly recollect your name.’
-
-‘Dugdale.’
-
-‘Well, Mr. Dugdale, as you asks for my opinion, I’ll give it ye. Of
-course, it’ll go no furder, as between man and man.’
-
-‘Certainly not. I am myself trusting you up to the hilt, as what I have
-said must assure you. You may speak in perfect confidence.’
-
-He cast a cautious look round: ‘There’s but one man to be regularly
-afeerd of, and that’s Mr. Lush. I believe he’d knife the capt’n right
-off if so be as he could be sure we men wouldn’t round upon him. I
-don’t mean to say he han’t got cause to hate the capt’n. He’s a working
-man without knowledge of perlite customs, and I believe the capt’n’s
-said more to him than he ought to have said; more than any gen’leman
-would have dreamt of saying, and all because this here carpenter han’t
-got the art o’ dining in a way to please the eye. But this here Mr.
-Lush feels it too much: he’s allowed it to eat into his mind; and if so
-be there should come a difficulty, the capt’n wouldn’t find a friend in
-him, and so I tells ye, sir. I don’t want to say more n’s necessary and
-proper to this here occasion of your questions; but though the crew’s
-a desperate ignorant one, ne’er a man among ’em capable of writing or
-spelling any more’n the carpenter hisself, there’s only _him_ to be
-afeerd of, so far as I’m capable of disarning; though, of course, if he
-should tarn to and try and work up their feelings, there’s naturally no
-telling how the sailors ’ud show.’
-
-‘They seem a pretty smart set of fellows,’ said I, finding but little
-comfort to be got out of this long-winded delivery; ‘the ship is
-beautifully clean, and everything looks to be going straight aboard of
-you.’
-
-‘Oh! every man can do his bit,’ he answered; ‘but if I was you, sir,
-being in charge, as you are, of a beautiful young lady, for the likes
-of which this here little barque, with nothen but men aboard and such
-shabby food as goes aft, is no proper place--if I was you, I says, says
-I, I’d get away as soon as ever I could.’
-
-I mentally bestowed a few sea-blessings on the head of this marine
-Job’s comforter, but contrived, nevertheless, to look as though I was
-much obliged to him for his information and advice; and after we had
-continued discoursing on a variety of nautical topics for some ten
-minutes or a quarter of an hour longer, I proceeded aft, and spent the
-rest of the evening in conversing with Miss Temple in the cabin or in
-walking the deck with her.
-
-
-END OF THE SECOND VOLUME
-
-
- PRINTED BY
- SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE
- LONDON
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-TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
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- Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.
-
- Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
-
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-
-
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-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of My Shipmate Louise, Volume 2 (of 3), by
-William Clark Russell
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of My Shipmate Louise, Volume 2 (of 3), by
-William Clark Russell
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: My Shipmate Louise, Volume 2 (of 3)
- The Romance of a Wreck
-
-Author: William Clark Russell
-
-Release Date: June 8, 2020 [EBook #62344]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MY SHIPMATE LOUISE, VOLUME 2 ***
-
-
-
-
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-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
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-</pre>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<h1>MY SHIPMATE LOUISE</h1>
-
-<p class="center"><b>VOL. II.</b></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="bbox">
-<p class="ph1">NEW NOVELS AT ALL LIBRARIES.</p>
-
-
-<div class="hangingindent">
-
-<p>A FELLOW OF TRINITY. By <span class="smcap">Alan St. Aubyn</span>
-and <span class="smcap">Walt Wheeler</span>. 3 vols.</p>
-
-<p>THE WORD AND THE WILL. By <span class="smcap">James Payn</span>.
-3 vols.</p>
-
-<p>AUNT ABIGAIL DYKES. By <span class="smcap">George Randolph</span>.
-1 vol.</p>
-
-<p>A WARD OF THE GOLDEN GATE. By <span class="smcap">Bret
-Harte</span>. 1 vol.</p>
-
-<p>RUFFINO. By <span class="smcap">Ouida</span>. 1 vol.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">London: CHATTO &amp; WINDUS, Piccadilly, W.</p>
-
-
-</div></div></div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/iTitle.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<p><span class="xlarge">MY SHIPMATE LOUISE</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="large"><span class="antiqua">The Romance of a Wreck</span></span></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-
-<span class="large">W. CLARK RUSSELL</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/iTitlelogo.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>IN THREE VOLUMES<br />
-
-<span class="large">VOL. II.</span></p>
-<br />
-
-<p><span class="antiqua">London</span><br />
-<span class="large">CHATTO &amp; WINDUS, PICCADILLY</span><br />
-1890</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="center">
-PRINTED BY<br />
-SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE<br />
-LONDON</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS<br />
-<span class="tiny">OF</span><br />
-<small>THE SECOND VOLUME</small></h2></div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XV.</td><td> A SINGULAR PLOT</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVI.</td><td> WE SIGHT A WRECK</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_22"> 22</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVII.</td><td> THE &#8216;MAGICIENNE&#8217;</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_45"> 45</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVIII.</td><td> ADRIFT</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_66"> 66</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIX.</td><td> NIGHT</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_86"> 86</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XX.</td><td> I SEARCH THE WRECK</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_108"> 108</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXI.</td><td> WE SIGHT A SAIL</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_134"> 134</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXII.</td><td> THE &#8216;LADY BLANCHE&#8217;</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_156"> 156</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIII.</td><td> CAPTAIN BRAINE</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_178"> 178</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIV.</td><td> THE CREW OF THE BARQUE</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_202"> 202</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXV.</td><td> I KEEP A LOOKOUT</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_223"> 223</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVI.</td><td> I AM QUESTIONED</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_245"> 245</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVII.</td><td> THE BRIG&#8217;S LONGBOAT</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_269"> 269</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVIII.</td><td> I QUESTION WETHERLY </td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_289"> 289</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[1]</a></span>
-
-
-
-<p class="ph2">MY SHIPMATE LOUISE</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<small>A SINGULAR PLOT</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> speedily ran amongst us of the cuddy that
-the dead sailor who had been so very impressively
-interred by old Keeling had returned to
-the ship, and was alive in some part of her,
-secure in handcuffs or in leg-irons; but so
-much was made of the fire which had broken
-out that Crabb&#8217;s reappearance lost as a miracle
-half the weight it would have carried had it
-happened alone. Besides, the sense of the
-people soon gathered that the business was a
-plot which had been managed with astonishing
-cleverness, and it all seemed plain as mud
-in a wine-glass when the whisper went round
-that Hemmeridge was under arrest as an arch-conspirator
-in the matter. And certainly it
-made one feel far from comfortable even to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[2]</a></span>
-think that for the past weeks a ruffian of a
-true piratical complexion had been secreted in
-the ship&#8217;s hold, where his confederates would
-keep him supplied with tobacco and the means
-of lighting it, and where, in his borings and
-pryings, he was tolerably certain to have
-stumbled upon something inflammatory in the
-shape of spirits. Indeed, it made me draw my
-breath short when my mind went to the rum
-puncheons and the powder-magazine below,
-and to the vision of Crabb, drunk, stupidly
-groping with a naked light in his hand, during
-some midnight hour, maybe, when we were
-all in bed.</p>
-
-<p>However, the imagination of the passengers
-would hardly go to these lengths. Their
-thoughts held to the fire, and their talk chiefly
-concerned it. When the skipper came below
-for a glass of grog that night, the ladies so
-baited him with questions that one pitied him
-almost for not being able to enjoy the privilege
-of venting his heated soul in a few strong
-words.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I <i>cannot</i> satisfy myself, Captain Keeling,
-that the fire is utterly extinguished,&#8217; said Mrs.
-Bannister.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Might it not burst out again, capting?&#8217;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[3]</a></span>
-cried Mrs. Hudson. &#8216;There should be plenty
-of pails kept filled with water ready to empty
-if smoke is smelt.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Perhaps something may be on fire even
-now!&#8217; exclaimed Mrs Joliffe, &#8216;something that
-doesn&#8217;t make a smoke; and how <i>then</i> are the
-sailors to tell if all is right in the bottom of
-the ship?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Captain Keeling,&#8217; cried Mrs. Trevor, &#8216;is it
-quite safe to go to bed, do you think?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;If a fire should break out,&#8217; said Miss
-Hudson in a trembling voice, as though shudder
-after shudder were chasing through her, &#8216;how
-can we depend upon being called? It is impossible
-to hear downstairs what is going on
-on deck.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Poor old marline-spike made a bolt of it
-at last, fairly turning tail and rushing up the
-companion steps when it came to the colonel
-striking in and topping off the female broadsides
-by inquiries of a like nature delivered at
-the very height of his pipes.</p>
-
-<p>However, the night passed quietly; and
-when next morning came and the people
-assembled at breakfast, all fear of fire was
-seemingly gone, and little more was talked
-about than Crabb and what his designs had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[4]</a></span>
-been, the topic gathering no mean accentuation
-from the doctor&#8217;s vacant place. Somewhere
-about ten o&#8217;clock I was standing at the taffrail
-watching the ship&#8217;s wake, that was languidly
-streaming off in a short oily surface, and
-wondering whether, if we were to fall in with
-nothing brisker than these faint airs and
-draughts of wind, all hands would not have
-grown white-haired and decrepit by the time
-we were up with the Cape, leaving the Indian
-Ocean and Bombay out of consideration, when
-the head-steward came up to me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Captain Keeling&#8217;s compliments, sir, and
-he&#8217;ll feel greatly hobliged, providing you&#8217;re
-not hotherwise occupied, by your stepping to
-his cabin, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh yes, with pleasure,&#8217; said I. &#8216;Is he
-alone?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He is not, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I went down the companion steps, knocked
-at the captain&#8217;s door, and entered. It was a
-roomy interior, a very noble ship&#8217;s berth,
-occupying hard upon the width of the deck
-right aft, saving, as I have before described, a
-sort of small chart-room alongside, bulkheaded
-off. There was a large stern window, after the
-olden fashion, with the blue line of the horizon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</a></span>
-gently sliding up and down it, and a shivering
-light lifting off the sea to the glass, sharp and
-of a sort of azure brilliancy, as though from
-diamonds set a-trembling. Keeling, in full
-fig, his face showing of a dark red against
-some maple-coloured ground of bulkhead or
-ship&#8217;s side, was seated at a table. He instantly
-rose on my entering, gave me one of his wire-drawn
-bows, and motioned me to a seat, thanking
-me in a few words for coming. On the
-starboard hand stood Crabb and the sailmaker,
-handcuffed, and on either side of them was a
-seaman with a cutlass dangling at his hip.
-On the port hand sat Dr. Hemmeridge, his
-legs crossed, his thumbs in the armholes of
-his waistcoat, and his head drooped. He was
-deadly pale, and looked horribly ill and worried.
-Near him was one of the sailors, a young fellow
-of some seven or eight and twenty, with a
-quantity of hair falling over his brow, a straggling
-beard, and small black eyes, which
-roamed swiftly in glances charged methought
-with the spirit of mutiny and menace and
-defiance. Mr. Prance was at the captain&#8217;s
-elbow; and the third mate was seated at an
-end of the table with a pen in his hand and
-some paper in front of him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</a></span>I bowed to Hemmeridge, but he took no
-notice. Until the captain addressed me, I
-stared hard at Crabb; for even now, with the
-ugly ruffian standing before me, my mind found
-it difficult to realise that he was alive; that
-the creature I gazed at was the man whom all
-hands of us, with an exception or two, supposed
-overboard a thousand fathoms deep.
-There was, besides, the fascination of his
-ugliness. The hunch-like curve of his back,
-his little blood-stained eyes looking away from
-his nose, as though they sought to peer at
-something at the back of his head, the greasy
-trail of carroty hair upon his back, the fragment
-of nose over his hare-lip, these and the
-rest of him combined into the representation
-of the most extravagantly grotesque, ill-favoured
-figure ever witnessed outside the
-bars of a menagerie. The sailmaker&#8217;s face
-was as white as one of his bolts of canvas,
-but it wore a determined look, though I
-noticed a quivering in the nostrils of his high-perched
-nose, and a constant uneasy movement
-of the fingers, as of dying hands plucking at
-bedclothes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; exclaimed old Keeling with
-the dignity and gravity of a judge, &#8216;I&#8217;ve taken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</a></span>
-the liberty to send for you, as I am informed
-by Mr. Prance that when that man there&#8217;&mdash;inclining
-his head towards Crabb without looking
-at him&mdash;&#8216;was lying, as it was supposed,
-dead in his bunk, you accompanied Mr.
-Hemmeridge, the ship&#8217;s surgeon&#8217;&mdash;here he
-indicated the doctor with a motion of his head
-but without looking at him either&mdash;&#8216;into the
-forecastle, and stood for some considerable
-time surveying the so-called corpse.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;That is quite true,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Did Mr. Hemmeridge expose the man&#8217;s
-face to you?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He did.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What impression was produced upon your
-mind by the sight of the&mdash;of the&mdash;body?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Crabb gave a horrible grin.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;That he was stone-dead, Captain Keeling;
-so stone-dead, sir, that I can scarcely credit
-the man himself is now before me.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Hemmeridge looked up and fixed his eyes
-upon me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is but reasonable I should inform you,
-Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; continued old marline-spike,
-&#8216;that Mr. Hemmeridge is under arrest on suspicion
-of conspiring with Crabb, with Willett,
-and with Thomas Bobbins&#8217;&mdash;he glanced at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</a></span>
-man who stood next to the doctor&mdash;&#8216;to plunder
-the ship. Bobbins has given evidence that
-leaves me in no doubt as to the guilt of Crabb
-and Willett.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Crabb uttered a curse through his teeth,
-accompanied with a look at the young seaman,
-in the one-eyed gleam of which murder methought
-was writ too large to be mistaken for
-any other intention. Old Keeling did not heed
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Bobbins&#8217;s story,&#8217; he continued, &#8216;is to this
-effect: that Crabb was to swallow a potion
-which would produce the appearance of death;
-that the sailmaker was to have a hammock
-weighted, shaped, and in all respects equipped
-to resemble the one in which Crabb would be
-stitched up: that in the dead of night, when
-the ship was silent, and the deck forward
-vacant, the sham hammock was to be placed
-upon the fore-hatch by the sailmaker and
-Bobbins, and the cover containing that man&#8217;&mdash;inclining
-his head at Crabb&mdash;&#8216;conveyed into
-the sailmaker&#8217;s cabin, where it was to be cut
-open, the man freed, and secreted in the berth
-till consciousness had returned, and he was in
-a fit state to seize the first opportunity of
-sneaking into the hold. All this was done,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span>&#8217;
-old Keeling went on, Mr. Prance meanwhile
-looking as grave as an owl over the skipper&#8217;s
-shoulder, whilst every now and again a hideous
-grin would distort Crabb&#8217;s frightful mouth,
-though the sailmaker continued to stare at the
-captain with a white and determined countenance,
-and Hemmeridge to listen with a frowning
-worried look, his leg that crossed the other
-swinging like a pendulum. &#8216;The man Crabb
-got into the hold, was supplied with food
-and drink by Willett and Bobbins, and with
-tools to enable him to break into the mail-room&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And I&#8217;d ha&#8217; done it too,&#8217; here interrupted
-Crabb in a voice like a saw going through a
-balk of timber, &#8216;if it hadn&#8217;t been for the
-stinking smoke of them blasted blankets.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;This inquiry,&#8217; continued Keeling, &#8216;now
-entirely concerns Mr. Hemmeridge. You tell
-me, Mr. Dugdale, that Crabb seemed to you as
-a stone-dead man.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The devil himself couldn&#8217;t ha&#8217; told the
-difference,&#8217; bawled Crabb. &#8216;<i>He&#8217;s</i> not in it,&#8217;
-insolently motioning with his elbow towards
-the doctor. &#8216;Wouldn&#8217;t that blooming Bobbins
-ha&#8217; said so?&#8217; and he darted another murderous
-glance at the hairy young sailor.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span>&#8216;I can assure you, Captain Keeling,&#8217; said I,
-&#8216;that the man was perfectly dead. There is
-not a shadow of a doubt in my mind that Mr.
-Hemmeridge was fully convinced the body was
-a corpse. Convinced, captain, but dissatisfied
-too; and perhaps,&#8217; said I, with a glance at
-Crabb, &#8216;it is a pity for more sakes than one
-that he did not carry out his idea of a post-mortem
-examination.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; exclaimed Hemmeridge in
-a low, deep, trembling voice, &#8216;before God and
-man, I am innocent; and I hope to live to call
-Captain Keeling to account for this monstrous
-slander, this enormous suspicion, this dishonourable
-and detestable accusation.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&#8217;ve never heered,&#8217; said the man named
-Bobbins, in a long-drawn whining voice, &#8216;that
-this gent was consarned. I remembered Crabb
-asking what was to be done if so be the surgeon
-should cut him up to see what he died of, and
-Mr. Willett kissed the Bible afore Crabb and
-me to this: that if the surgeon made up his
-mind to open Crabb, Willett was to show him
-the bottle of physic, and to tell him that
-Crabb had took it for some bad complaint,
-and that, though he might look dead, he
-worn&#8217;t so.&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>Crabb hove a fearful curse at the man.
-The bushy-whiskered sailor who guarded him
-on the right significantly put his hand upon
-the hilt of his cutlass whilst he said something
-to him under his breath.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;This is new to me,&#8217; exclaimed Keeling,
-screwing his eye gimlet-fashion into the face of
-Bobbins, and then letting it drop, as if satisfied.
-&#8216;Mr. Hemmeridge, I have <i>suspected</i> you,
-sir; but it&#8217;s a little soon for you to talk of my
-having <i>accused</i> you. You are a medical man.
-If anybody knows death by looking upon it
-you should. Yet, though this man Crabb is
-merely counterfeiting death, you come aft to
-me and report him dead! What am I to infer?
-Your ignorance or your guilt, sir?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Captain Keeling,&#8217; cried I, &#8216;believe me
-when I promise you the man was not <i>counterfeiting</i>
-death. He was to all intents and purposes
-a corpse. How was this brought about?
-Surely by no exercise of his own art. The
-look of the eye&mdash;the droop of the jaw&mdash;the
-hue of the skin&mdash;Captain Keeling, it was death
-to the sight: no counterfeit&mdash;an effect produced
-by something much more powerful than
-the effort of such a will as that man has;&#8217;
-and I pointed with my thumb at Crabb, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-told me with a curse to mind my own business.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale, I thank you,&#8217; said Hemmeridge,
-bowing to me.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Keeling held up a long thin phial
-about three-quarters full of a dark liquor. I
-had not before noticed it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;This has been produced,&#8217; said he, &#8216;by the
-man Bobbins, who states that it is the stuff
-which Crabb swallowed, and which caused
-the death-like aspect you saw in him.&#8217; He put
-the bottle down; then clenching his fist, smote
-the table violently. &#8216;I cannot credit it!&#8217; he
-cried. &#8216;I cannot be imposed on. Am I to
-believe that there is any drug in existence
-which will produce in a living being the exact
-semblance of death?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, I think so, sir,&#8217; said Prance, speaking
-mildly.</p>
-
-<p>Hemmeridge sneered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A semblance of death,&#8217; roared old Keeling,
-twisting round upon his chief mate, &#8216;capable
-of deceiving the eye&mdash;the practised eye of a
-medical man? You may give me a dose of
-laudanum, and I may look dead to you, sir,
-but not to Mr. Hemmeridge yonder. No, sir;
-I am not to be persuaded,&#8217; and here he brought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-his fist down upon the table again. &#8216;It is
-either gross ignorance or direct connivance,
-and I mean to be satisfied&mdash;I mean to sift it
-to the bottom&mdash;I mean to get at the truth,
-by&mdash;&mdash;!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>His face was full of blood, and he puffed
-and blew like a swimmer struggling for his
-life.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You&#8217;ve got the truth, and be so-and-so to
-you,&#8217; broke in Crabb.</p>
-
-<p>The armed sailor ground his elbow into the
-fellow&#8217;s ribs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am merely here to answer your questions,
-Captain Keeling,&#8217; said I, &#8216;and must
-apologise for taking a single step beyond the
-object you had in calling me to you; but at
-least permit me to ask, cannot Mr. Hemmeridge
-explain the nature of the drug contained in
-that bottle?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I do not know what it is,&#8217; exclaimed
-Hemmeridge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Suppose, sir,&#8217; said Mr. Prance, &#8216;we give
-Crabb another dose; then you&#8217;ll be able to
-judge for yourself.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You don&#8217;t give me no more doses!&#8217; said
-Crabb. &#8216;Try it on yourselves.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The captain sat a little, looking at me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-vacantly, lost in thought. He suddenly turned
-to Hemmeridge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You are at liberty, sir; I remove the
-arrest.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And is that all?&#8217; exclaimed the other,
-after a brief pause, viewing him steadily. &#8216;I
-must have an apology, sir; an apology ample,
-abundant, satisfying.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I will see you&#8217;&mdash;began old Keeling,
-then checked himself. &#8216;You can leave this
-cabin, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Hemmeridge rose from his chair. &#8216;I leave
-this cabin, sir,&#8217; said he, &#8216;and I also leave my
-duties. Professionally, I do no more in this
-ship, sir. You have disgraced, you have dishonoured
-me. But,&#8217; said he, shaking his
-finger at him, &#8216;you shall make me amends at
-Bombay, sir&mdash;you shall make me amends at
-Bombay!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He stalked from the cabin, old Keeling
-watching him with a frown, but in silence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Captain,&#8217; I exclaimed, rising as the door
-closed behind the doctor, &#8216;I am persuaded
-that Mr. Hemmeridge is innocent of all participation
-in this bad business. You have on
-board a gentleman who, I believe, has a very
-extensive knowledge of drugs and herbs and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-the like&mdash;I mean Mr. Saunders. It is just
-possible he might know the nature of the contents
-of that bottle.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Keeling reflected a minute, and then said:
-&#8216;Mr. Prance, send my compliments to Mr.
-Saunders, and ask him to my cabin.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The mate went out; I was following him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray, stay a little, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; said the
-skipper.&mdash;&#8216;Men, take those fellows forward.&mdash;Remain
-where you are,&#8217; he added, turning to
-Bobbins.</p>
-
-<p>A seaman flung open the door, and Crabb
-and the sailmaker passed out, followed by the
-second armed sailor, who silenced some blasphemous
-abuse that Crabb had paused to
-deliver, by giving him a shove that drove him
-headlong into the cuddy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am sorry to detain you, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217;
-said the captain. &#8216;Mr. Saunders is a rather
-nervous gentleman, and it might be agreeable
-to him to find you here.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You do not detain me, Captain Keeling.
-This is an amazing business, almost too
-wonderful in its way to believe in. Have
-you ascertained how Crabb became possessed
-of that magical drug?&mdash;and magical it must
-be, captain, for I give you my word that never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-showed any corpse deader than that fellow
-when Hemmeridge removed the canvas from
-his face.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I beg your honour&#8217;s pardon,&#8217; exclaimed
-Bobbins, preserving his lamenting and whining
-voice, and knuckling his forehead as he spoke,
-whilst I could see old Keeling lifting his eyes
-to him with disgust and aversion strong in his
-purple countenance. &#8216;Mr. Willett told me
-that Crabb &#8217;ud say he&#8217;d got that there stuff off
-a travelling Jew that he fell in with at some
-Mediterranean port. He bought two lots of
-it, and tried a dose on a man who took it unbeknown,
-reckoning it good for spasms. He
-believed as it had killed the chap, sich was
-his corpse-like swound; but he come to all
-right arter four-and-twenty hours, and niver
-knowed nothen about it, and believed it still
-to be Monday when it were Toosday. This
-put the scheme he tried on here into his
-head.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Has he ever attempted anything of the
-same sort before?&#8217; inquired Keeling.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I dunno, sir. He&#8217;s a bad un. It &#8217;ud
-make a marble heffigy sweat to hear him talk
-in his sleep.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>There was a knock at the cabin door, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-Mr. Prance ushered in Mr. Saunders. The little
-chap looked very small as he entered, holding
-his large hat in his hand. He was pale, and
-stared up at us with something of alarm as we
-rose to his entrance, the skipper giving him the
-same hide-bound bow that he had greeted me
-with.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is Mr. Saunders acquainted with the story
-of this business, Mr. Prance?&#8217; old Keeling inquired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes, sir,&#8217; replied the mate. &#8216;I gave him
-the substance of it in a few words as we came
-along.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is extremely startling,&#8217; said the little
-man, climbing on to the chair into which old
-Keeling had waved him, and dangling his short
-legs over the edge as a small boy might.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Your knowledge of drugs and medicines,
-Mr. Saunders, is, I believe, very considerable?&#8217;
-said the skipper. The little fellow bowed.
-&#8216;This,&#8217; said Keeling, holding up the phial, &#8216;is
-a drug, the stupefying effects of which, I am
-informed, are so remarkable that any one who
-takes it entirely loses animation, and presents
-such an aspect of death as will deceive the
-eye of the most expert medical practitioner.
-Is such a thing conceivable, Mr. Saunders?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>The little man reflected very earnestly for
-some moments, with his eyes fixed upon
-Keeling. He then asked Mr. Prance to hand
-him the phial, which he uncorked, and smelt
-and tasted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I cannot be positive,&#8217; he exclaimed, with
-a slow, wise shake of his large head; &#8216;but I
-strongly suspect this to be what is known as
-<i>morion</i>, the death-wine of Pliny and Dioscorides.
-Mr. Dugdale, observe the strange,
-peculiar faint smell&mdash;what does it suggest?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I put the bottle to my nose and sniffed.
-&#8216;Opium will it be, Mr. Saunders?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Just so,&#8217; he cried. &#8216;Captain Keeling,
-smell you, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The old skipper applied the bottle to his
-nostrils and snuffled a little. &#8216;I should call
-this a kind of opium,&#8217; said he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;If,&#8217; exclaimed Mr. Saunders, &#8216;it be morion,
-as I believe it is, it is made from the mandragora
-or mandrake of the kind that flourishes
-in Greece and Palestine and in certain parts
-of the Mediterranean seaboard.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But am I to understand,&#8217; said Keeling,
-&#8216;that a dose of it is going to make a man look
-as dead as if he were killed?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The effect of morion,&#8217; responded Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-Saunders, &#8216;is that of suspended animation,
-scarcely distinguishable from death.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Could it deceive a qualified man such as
-Dr. Hemmeridge?&#8217; demanded the skipper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I should think it very probable,&#8217; answered
-little Saunders cautiously; &#8216;in fact, sir, as we
-have seen, he <i>was</i> deceived by the effects of
-that drug, be it morion or anything else.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You can go forward,&#8217; said the captain to
-Bobbins.</p>
-
-<p>The fellow flourished a hand to his brow
-and left the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Saunders, I am obliged to you, sir,
-for your information,&#8217; continued old Keeling.
-&#8216;I trust to have your opinion confirmed
-either in Bombay or in London. To me it
-seems a very incredible thing. Mr. Dugdale,
-I thank you for the trouble you have given
-yourself to attend here.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He bowed; and little Saunders and myself,
-accompanied by Mr. Prance, entered the
-cuddy.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A most extraordinary business altogether,&#8217;
-cried the little man: &#8216;it is wonderful enough,
-supposing the stuff to be morion, that a
-common sailor should be in possession of such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-a drug; but much more wonderful yet that
-it should occur to him to employ it as an
-instrument in probably the most audacious
-project ever adventured on board ship.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Hemmeridge might have opened Crabb,&#8217;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, the rogue foresaw it, and provided
-against it, as we know,&#8217; exclaimed Mr. Prance.
-&#8216;There is pocketable booty in the mail-room
-to the value of hard upon a hundred and fifty
-thousand pounds. A man like Crabb will run
-risks for such plunder, Mr. Dugdale. If the
-sailmaker had kept his word and produced
-the bottle to Hemmeridge, the doctor would
-have been pretty sure to stay his hand.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, likely as not,&#8217; I exclaimed: &#8216;but
-tell me, Mr. Prance&mdash;that fellow Bobbins
-seems to have been coaxed very easily into
-peaching.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ay,&#8217; said he; &#8216;there&#8217;d been an ugly
-quarrel between him and Willett ten days ago.
-I believe the rascal would not have split
-whilst Crabb lay snug and secret in the hold,
-but on his showing himself, Bobbins took
-fright, thought of his neck, and being actuated
-besides by hatred of Willett, came forward and
-volunteered the whole yarn.&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>&#8216;And how is he to be served?&#8217; inquired
-Mr. Saunders.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Left to be at large, sir,&#8217; answered the
-mate; &#8216;and punishment enough, too, as any
-one may suppose, of a false-hearted, lily-livered
-shipmate who has to swing his hammock three
-or four months among a forecastle full of
-hands. For my part,&#8217; added he with a laugh,
-&#8216;if I were that miscreant, I&#8217;d rather be snug
-in irons along with Willett and the cast-eyed
-pirate, stowed safe out of sight.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He entered his cabin, and Mr. Saunders
-and I stepped on to the quarter-deck.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">
-CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-<small>WE SIGHT A WRECK</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> wonder and excitement raised in us by
-the extraordinary forecastle conspiracy to
-plunder the ship&#8217;s mail-room passed away in
-two or three days. Monotony at sea is heavy
-and flattening. It passes over the soul as an
-iron roller over a lawn, and smoothes down
-every asperity of memory into the merest flatness
-of moods and humours. Hemmeridge
-showed himself no more. I never again saw
-him whilst I was in the <i>Countess Ida</i>. He lay
-hid in his cabin, where he was fed, by the
-captain&#8217;s orders, from the cuddy table; but
-he refused to leave his berth, swore he would
-not prescribe so much as a pill though a pestilence
-should fall upon the whole ship&#8217;s company,
-and virtually left us all without the
-means of obtaining professional advice. His
-part in Crabb&#8217;s and the sailmaker&#8217;s scheme
-was vehemently discussed, as you will suppose.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-The colonel of course was without a shadow
-of a doubt of his guilt; but the rest of us,
-saving Mr. Johnson, who declined to give an
-opinion, considered him as wholly innocent.</p>
-
-<p>Little Saunders gave himself a small air of
-importance as a person referred to by the
-captain on his knowledge of herbs, and strutted
-on the merits of his suspicion that the liquor
-was what he called morion. He took me into
-his cabin, and climbing into his bunk, produced
-a folio volume half the size of himself,
-with which he dropped upon the deck, hugging
-the book to his heart as though it were
-his wife.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Here,&#8217; said he, opening the volume and
-pointing at it and looking up into my face, &#8216;is
-an account of the growth out of which morion
-is extracted. That,&#8217; continued he, still pointing
-with a little forefinger and a long white
-nail, &#8216;is a picture of the plant in flower. This
-is an illustration of the young fruit. Here is
-the ovary, and here is the stamen. It is, in
-short, the well known mandragora of Hippocrates.
-It consists of three or four species of
-stemless herbs, perennial,&#8217; said he, carrying his
-eyes to the book, &#8216;and very hardy. Their
-roots are large and thick; and, as I told the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span>
-captain,&#8217; cried he with a little movement of
-triumph, and pointing to the sentence eagerly,
-&#8216;it is an inhabitant of the Mediterranean
-parallels.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>And then the little chap read out a long
-description of the flowers of the mandrake, of
-the corolla and lobes, of the berries and leaves,
-and I know not what else besides, in all of
-which my ignorant ear could find nothing of
-the smallest interest.</p>
-
-<p>He afterwards went with his big book to
-the skipper, who, Mr. Prance told me, was
-impressed, though he was not to be persuaded.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He will not believe,&#8217; said the chief officer,
-&#8216;that there can be any aspect in a living body
-to deceive a medical man into a belief that the
-person is dead. I said to him: &#8220;How about
-the folks that are buried alive, sir?&#8221; He
-answered: &#8220;They are unhappy wretches,
-whom ignorant and gross persons, calling
-themselves medical men, lightly glance at
-and pronounce dead, and hurry away from.
-Hemmeridge would know better, sir. He <i>does</i>
-know better. I cannot satisfy myself that he
-could not distinguish life in that man Crabb.
-And what&#8217;s the inference then? No matter,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-sir. I will have this thing gone closely into
-when we arrive at Bombay.&#8221; Captain Keeling
-is an obstinate old sailor, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; continued
-the mate. &#8216;In truth, Hemmeridge is
-as innocent as you or I.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Three days passed away. All this while
-the Indiaman was scarcely doing more than
-rippling through it. It was hard to realise
-that we were out in the mid-heart almost of
-one of old earth&#8217;s mightiest oceans, so peaceful
-was the water, so still the heavens, so placid
-the dim sultry distances, where sky and sea
-were blended in a blue faintness, out of the
-north-west corner of which the light wind
-blew without power enough to swing the foot
-of the courses or to put a twinkle into the tall
-moon-coloured cloths of the topmast studdingsails.</p>
-
-<p>It was a Monday morning, as very well
-indeed do I remember. I went on deck at
-about seven o&#8217;clock for a bath; and on looking
-over the forecastle rail, down away upon the
-starboard bow I caught sight of something
-sparkling that might very well have passed for
-the reflection in the water of a brilliant
-luminary. The old Scotch carpenter was
-leaning against the forecastle capstan smoking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-a pipe, his weather-hardened face of leather
-drooping over his folded arms.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray, what is that object shining down
-there?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, it puzzled me, sir,&#8217; he answered,
-slowly raising his head, and then leisurely
-staring in the direction of the appearance:
-&#8216;It&#8217;s naething mair nor less than a ship&#8217;s hull,
-sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>By this time I was able to distinguish a
-bit clearer, and could trace, amid the delicate
-haze of silver glory that was hanging all over
-the sea that way, as it came in gushing and
-floating folds of magnificence from the sun
-that was already many degrees above the
-horizon, the outline of the hull of a small
-vessel, the proportions so faint as to be almost
-illusive. She was too far distant to exhibit
-much more than the mere flash she made, yet
-she was an object to constrain the attention in
-that wide blank shining calm of sea, and I
-lingered a little while looking at her, meanwhile
-yarning with the old carpenter about
-Crabb and the sailmaker and the incident of
-the fire, and such matters.</p>
-
-<p>At breakfast there was some talk about
-this hull, and Mr. Emmett told the captain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-that he hoped a shot would be sent at her, as
-who was to know but that another cargo of
-monkeys might be exorcised out of the fabric.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I should rather like to visit a wreck,&#8217; I
-heard Miss Temple say across the table to Mr.
-Colledge: &#8216;I mean, of course, an abandoned
-vessel floating in the middle of the ocean.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I protest I would rather die than think of
-such a thing,&#8217; exclaimed her aunt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, I don&#8217;t know,&#8217; said Colledge; &#8216;it
-would be something to do and something to
-talk about. Did you ever board a wreck,
-Captain Keeling?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I would choose a wreck,&#8217; continued Miss
-Temple, in her clear, rich, somewhat trembling
-voice, but with an air that let you know she
-confined her speech to Mrs. Radcliffe and the
-young sprig opposite, and old marline-spike,
-as I love to call him, &#8216;that had been abandoned
-for months, indeed for years, if such a thing
-could be: a hull covered with shells and weed
-and grass, into which the spirit of the enormous
-loneliness of the wide ocean had entered,
-so that you could get to think of her as a creation
-of the sea itself, as an uninhabited island
-is, or a noble seabird. Think,&#8217; she continued,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-fixing her large dark eyes upon Colledge with
-a light, almost sarcastic smile flickering about
-her lips, as though she was perfectly sensible
-that her thoughts and language were a trifle
-taller than that honourable young gentleman&#8217;s
-intellectual stature rose to&mdash;&#8216;think of being
-utterly alone during a long, breathless, moonlit
-night on board such a wreck as I am imagining.
-The stillness! the imaginations which
-would come shaping out of the shadows! By
-putting one&#8217;s ear to the hatchway, as you
-sailors call it, Captain Keeling, what should
-one be able to hear?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The noise of water washing about below,
-ma&#8217;am&mdash;I don&#8217;t see what else,&#8217; answered the
-old skipper, stiffening up his figure, whilst
-he adjusted his cravat, and gazing at her with
-a highly literal countenance over the points of
-his shirt collars.</p>
-
-<p>She did not seem to hear him; her head
-had drooped, as though to a sudden engrossing
-thought, and her gaze rested upon something
-which her delicate fingers toyed with
-upon the table.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What very odd fancies you have, Louise,&#8217;
-exclaimed Mrs. Radcliffe with a peck of her
-face at the girl&#8217;s handsome profile.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>&#8216;Rather a good subject for a descriptive
-article, Johnson,&#8217; exclaimed Emmett aside with
-a drawl.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Or for a picture,&#8217; answered Johnson;
-&#8216;better on canvas than on paper, I think;
-don&#8217;t you, Mr. Saunders? Calm sea&mdash;a moon
-up in the air&mdash;a wreck showing black against
-the white reflection under the planet&mdash;a
-haughty young lady&#8217;&mdash;here he softened his
-voice&mdash;&#8216;inclining her head to the fore-hatch
-with her hand to her ear.&mdash;A first-class idea,
-Emmett. Seize it, or it may occur to another
-man.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple was speaking again, but the
-rude imbecile jabber of the journalist prevented
-me from hearing her; and bestowing
-a sea-blessing on his head under my breath, I
-left the table and went on deck.</p>
-
-<p>There was every promise of a dead calm
-anon. The sea looked like ice in places with
-the bluish glint of the brine that softened the
-lines and curves betwixt the crawlings of the
-air into a tender contrast for the lustrous
-azure of the water where it was touched by the
-wind. It was a high, hot, cloudless morning,
-the topmost canvas, white as milk, looking
-dizzy up in the blue, as though it trembled in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-some sultry belt of atmosphere there. I went
-to the rail to view the wreck, and instantly
-made out on the other side of her the shining
-square of a sail&mdash;some ship on the rim of
-the horizon that had crawled into sight since
-six bells of the morning watch, and was now
-creeping down the smooth plain of sea with
-her yards braced somewhat forward, making
-a wind for herself out of what was scarce
-more than a catspaw to us, who had the thin
-fanning nearly over the stern.</p>
-
-<p>Prance came up from the breakfast table
-with a telescope in his hand and stood by my
-side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;That ship down yonder grows,&#8217; he exclaimed,
-pointing the glass and speaking with
-his eye at it; &#8216;there&#8217;ll be more air stirring
-down there than here; but little enough anywhere
-presently, though I tell you what, Mr
-Dugdale, there&#8217;s drop enough in the mercury
-to inspire one with hope.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He brought the telescope to bear upon
-the hull, and was silent for a few moments,
-whilst I waited impatiently for him to make
-an end, wanting to look too.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I don&#8217;t think I can be mistaken,&#8217; said he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-presently in a musing voice: &#8216;look you, Mr.
-Dugdale.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;At what?&#8217; said I, as I took the glass from
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;At the hull yonder.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I put the telescope upon the rail and knelt
-to it. Points which were invisible to the
-naked sight were clear enough now. The wreck
-was that of a vessel of some two hundred and
-fifty tons. She sat very light or high upon
-the water, and it was a part of the copper
-that rose to her bends which had emitted the
-flash that caught my eye on the forecastle.
-Her foremast was standing, and her foreyard
-lay crossed upon it. Her bowsprit also forked
-out, but the jib-booms were gone. Lengths
-of her bulwark were smashed level to the
-deck; but gaunt as her mastless condition
-made her look, miserable as she showed in
-the mutilation of her sides, the beautiful
-shape of the hull stole out upon the sight
-through the deformities of her wrecked condition,
-as the fine shape of a woman expresses
-itself in defiance of the beggar&#8217;s rags which
-may clothe her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;By George, then, Mr. Prance&mdash;why, yes,
-to be sure! I see what you mean,&#8217; I cried all<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span>
-on a sudden&mdash;&#8216;that must be our buccaneering
-friend of the other day!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Neither more nor less,&#8217; said he; &#8216;an odd
-rencontre certainly, considering what a big
-place the sea is. And yet I don&#8217;t know: such
-a clipper will have sailed two feet to our one,
-though she exposed no more than her foresail.
-She&#8217;ll have run as we did, and the light airs
-and baffling weather which followed will easily
-account for this meeting.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She is not yet the handful of charred
-staves you thought her, Mr. Prance,&#8217; said I;
-&#8216;they managed to get the fire under anyway,
-though they had to abandon the brig in the
-end. What is that fellow beyond her? She
-has the look of a man-of-war: a ship, I
-believe: yes, I think I can catch sight of the
-yards on the mizzen peeping past the sails on
-the main.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>All her canvas had risen, but nothing of
-her hull, saving the black film of her bulwark
-hovering upon the horizon with an icy gleam
-betwixt it and the sea-line, as though there
-was no more of her than that. When the
-others came on deck there was no little excitement
-amongst them on learning that the hull
-was neither more nor less than the veritable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-wreck of the brig whose presence had filled
-us with alarm and misery a few days before.
-Glasses of all sorts were brought to bear upon
-her, and by this time it was to be ascertained
-without doubt that she was absolutely deserted;
-&#8216;unless,&#8217; I heard Mr. Emmett say to Mr. Prance,
-&#8216;her people should be lying concealed within,
-hoping to coax us to visit her by an appearance
-of being deserted, when, of course, they would
-cut us off, and plunder our remains&mdash;I mean,
-those who would be fools enough to board her
-out of curiosity.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Likely as not,&#8217; Mr. Prance answered with
-a sour smile. &#8216;I would advise you not to attempt
-to inspect her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not I,&#8217; answered the painter; and the chief
-officer turned abruptly from him to smother a
-laugh.</p>
-
-<p>It was not long, however, before the delicate
-miracle of distant canvas shining past the hull
-upon the calm blue like some spire of alabaster
-was recognised as a man-of-war, not alone by
-the cut of her canvas and by other peculiarities
-aloft readily determinable by the seafaring
-eye, but by the chequered band upon her hull,
-that had mounted fair to the firm crystal-like
-rim of the ocean, and by the line of white<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[34]</a></span>
-hammock-cloths that crowned her tall defences.
-She was some small corvette or ship-sloop, with
-her nationality to be sworn to even all that
-way off.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;An Englishman, do you think, Captain
-Keeling?&#8217; asked Colonel Bannister.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, God bless my heart, yes, sir,&#8217; answered
-the skipper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Now, <i>how</i> do you know, capting?&#8217; cried
-Mrs. Hudson.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;By my instincts as a Briton, ma&#8217;am,&#8217; he
-answered; &#8216;patriotism so enlarges the nostril
-that a man can taste with his nose whenever
-anything of his country&#8217;s about in the air.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;To think of it now!&#8217; exclaimed Mrs.
-Hudson. &#8216;I&#8217;m sorry the robbers have left that
-wreck. I should like the pirates to have been
-caught by the man-of-war and hung up.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The hour of noon had been &#8216;made,&#8217; as it
-is called at sea, and it was then a dead calm,
-with the clear chimes of eight bells ringing
-through a wonderful stillness on high, so faint
-was the undulation in the water, so soft the
-stir in the canvas to the gentle swaying of the
-tall spars. The wreck of the brig lay about
-two miles distant off the starboard beam, and
-by this hour the corvette, as she now proved<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span>
-to be, with the crimson cross fluttering at her
-peak, had floated to within a mile and a half
-or thereabouts on the other side of the hull;
-and thus the three of us lay. The corvette,
-slewing her length out to us to the twist of
-some subtle current upon the still surface,
-showed a very handsome stately figure of a
-ship, at that distance at least. Her sails had
-the fairy-like delicacy of silver tint you observe
-in the moon when she hangs in an afternoon
-sky; they fitted the yardarms to perfection,
-and I stood admiring for a long quarter of an
-hour at a time the graceful lines of the bolt-ropes
-faintly curving to the yardarm sheave-holes,
-each clew looking a little way past the
-corner of the sail beneath it. A gilt figure-head
-of some royal device flashed at her bows and
-shed a ruddy gleam upon the water under it.
-There was the glistering of gilt about her
-quarter-galleries, and the sparkle of glass there.
-But Mr. Prance said that he would swear she
-was an old ship, her timbers as soft as cheese,
-and her chain-pumps nearly worn out with
-plying, for all that she looked in the perspective
-of that azure atmosphere as airy a beauty as
-ever gave the milk-white bosoms of her canvas
-to the wind.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[36]</a></span>I went down on the quarter-deck to smoke
-a pipe, and whilst I lay over the bulwark rail
-watching the man-of-war, my eye was taken
-by a somewhat curious appearance in the line
-of the ocean away down in the south-west
-quarter. It was a sensible depression in the
-edge of the sea, as though you viewed it through
-defective window-glass. It was an atmospheric
-effect, and an odd one. The circle went round
-with the clearness of the side of a lens, save
-to that part, and there it looked as though
-some gigantic knife had pared a piece clean
-out&mdash;with this addition: that there was a
-curious sort of faintness as of mist where the
-sky joined the sea in the hollow of this queer
-dip. I ran my eye over the poop to see if
-others up there were noting this appearance,
-but I did not observe that it had won attention.
-For my part, I should have made nothing of
-it, accepting it as some trick of refraction, but
-for it somehow entering into my head to remember
-how the second mate of the ship I had
-made my first voyage in once told me of a
-sudden shift of weather that had taken his craft
-aback and wrecked her to her tops, and that it
-had been heralded, though there was no man
-to interpret the sign, by just such another<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span>
-horizontal depression as that upon which my
-eyes were now resting.</p>
-
-<p>However, on dismounting from the bulwarks
-for a brief yarn with little Saunders, the
-matter went out of my mind and I thought no
-more of it.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst we were at lunch, Mr. Cocker came
-down the companion steps cap in hand, and said
-something to the captain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;All right, sir,&#8217; I heard old Keeling answer:
-&#8216;it will be a visit of curiosity rather than of
-courtesy. How far is the boat?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She&#8217;s only just left the wreck, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Very well, Mr. Cocker.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The second mate remounted the steps.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The corvette,&#8217; exclaimed old Keeling, addressing
-us generally, &#8216;has sent a boat to the
-wreck, presumably to overhaul and report
-upon her. The boat is now approaching us.
-I have little doubt that the corvette is homeward
-bound, in which case, ladies and gentlemen,
-you might be glad to send letters by her.
-There will be plenty of time. The calm, I fear,
-threatens to last.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>There was instantly a hurry amongst the
-passengers, most of whom rushed away from
-the table to write their letters.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>I emptied my wine-glass and went on deck,
-and saw a man-of-war&#8217;s boat approaching us;
-the bright ash oars rose and fell with exquisite
-precision, and the white water spat from the
-stem of the little craft as she was swept through
-it by the rowers, with a young fellow in the
-uniform of a naval lieutenant of that day
-steering her. She came flashing alongside;
-up rose the oars, the lively hearty in the bows
-hooked on, and the officer, lightly springing
-on to the rope ladder which had been dropped
-over the side for his convenience, gained the
-deck with a twist of his thumb that was meant
-as a salutation to the ship.</p>
-
-<p>Old Keeling was now on the poop, and Mr.
-Cocker conducted the lieutenant to him. I
-happened to be standing near, talking with
-Colledge and Mrs. Radcliffe, Miss Temple not
-yet having returned with the letter which she
-had gone to her cabin to write. The skipper
-received the naval officer with a gracious
-bow.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Our captain,&#8217; exclaimed the young fellow,
-in a gentlemanly easy way, &#8216;instructed me to
-overhaul yonder wreck, and then come on
-to you to see if we can be of any service;&#8217;
-and I saw his eye rest with an expression of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-delight upon Miss Hudson, who rose through
-the companion at that instant and drew close
-to hear what passed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sir,&#8217; cried old Keeling, with another bow,
-&#8216;I am obliged to your captain, sir. It is, sir,
-very considerate of him to send. My passengers
-are preparing letters, and we shall be
-very sensible of your goodness in receiving
-and transmitting them.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray, what ship is this, sir?&#8217; exclaimed
-the lieutenant, glancing about him with the
-curiosity of a stranger, and then taking
-another thirsty peep at the golden young
-lady.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The <i>Countess Ida</i>, sir, of and from London
-for Bombay, so many days out. And pray,
-what ship is that?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;His Majesty&#8217;s ship <i>Magicienne</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Colledge started. &#8216;Beg pardon,&#8217; he
-exclaimed. &#8216;Isn&#8217;t Sir Edward Panton her
-commander?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He is,&#8217; answered the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;By George, my cousin!&#8217; cried Colledge;
-&#8216;haven&#8217;t seen him these seven years. How
-doocid odd, now, to fall in with him <i>here</i>!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, indeed,&#8217; said the lieutenant, with a
-hint of respect in his manner that might have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span>
-been wanting in it before. &#8216;May I venture to
-ask your name?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Colledge.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ah! of course; a son of my Lord Sandown.
-This will be news for Sir Edward.&#8217; He sent
-a look at the corvette, as though measuring
-the distance between the vessels.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sir,&#8217; here said old Keeling, &#8216;I believe that
-luncheon is still upon the table. Let me
-conduct you below, sir. It will have been a
-mighty hot ride for you out upon those unsheltered
-waters.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant bowed, and followed the
-skipper to the companion. Colledge put his
-arm through mine and led me to the rail.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I say, Dugdale,&#8217; he exclaimed. &#8216;I should
-like to see my cousin. It would be rather a
-lark to visit his ship, wouldn&#8217;t it? Not too
-far off, is she, d&#8217;ye think?&#8217; he added, cocking
-his eye at the vessel.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, no; not on such a day as this.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Will you come if I go?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;With the greatest pleasure.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, that&#8217;s downright jolly of you, by
-George. We&#8217;ll go in my cousin&#8217;s boat, and
-he&#8217;ll send us back. I like the look of those
-men-of-war&#8217;s men. It makes one feel safe even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-to see them rowing. Ah, there goes something
-to drink for the poor fellows. Upon my
-word, old Keeling buttons up a kind heart
-under that queer coat of his.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I presume,&#8217; said I, &#8216;that the lieutenant
-will make no difficulty in consenting to carry
-us in his boat. I am ignorant of the rules
-which govern his service. Suppose you step
-below, and arrange with him? If he may
-not take us, Keeling will lend us a boat, I am
-sure.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Down he went full of eagerness, his
-handsome face flushed with excitement. Mrs.
-Radcliffe had joined two or three ladies, and
-stood with them asking questions of Mr.
-Cocker about the corvette and the wreck.
-On glancing through the skylight presently, I
-saw the lieutenant picking a piece of cold
-fowl at the table, with a bottle of champagne
-at his elbow. Old Keeling sat at his side, and
-opposite were Colledge and Miss Temple.
-The four of them were chatting briskly. I
-took a peep at the boat under the gangway.
-It was a treat to see the jolly English faces of
-the fellows, and to hear the tongue of the old
-home spoken over the side. A number of
-our seamen had perched themselves on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-bulwarks and were calling questions to the
-men-of-war&#8217;s-men whilst they watched them
-draining the glasses which the steward had
-sent down to them in a basket. From the
-answers the fellows made I gathered that the
-<i>Magicienne</i> was from Simon&#8217;s Bay, having been
-relieved on the coast, where she had been
-stationed for I will not pretend to remember
-how long. Small wonder that the bronzed,
-round-faced, bullet-headed, but exceedingly
-gentlemanly lieutenant should have fixed a
-transported eye on the sweet face and golden
-hair and the violet stars of Miss Hudson after
-his unendurably long frizzling months of West
-African beauties.</p>
-
-<p>In about twenty minutes he made his
-appearance upon deck, followed by Keeling
-and Miss Temple and Colledge, who came
-sliding up to me to say that it was all right:
-the lieutenant would convey us with pleasure
-and bring us back: and what did I think?
-Miss Temple was to be of our party.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Humph!&#8217; said I; &#8216;any other ladies?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He made a grimace. &#8216;No,&#8217; he responded
-in a whisper; &#8216;the lieutenant suggested others;
-but I could twig in Miss Temple&#8217;s face that if
-others went she would remain. You know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-there&#8217;s not a woman on board that she cares
-about. I rather want,&#8217; said he, returning to
-his former voice, &#8216;to introduce her to my
-cousin. He will be seeing my father when
-he returns, and is pretty sure to talk,&#8217; said he,
-giving me a wink.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Does Miss Temple know that you&#8217;ve
-invited me?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She does, Trojan.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And how did she receive the news?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;With rapture,&#8217; he cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A fig for such raptures! but I&#8217;ll go, spite
-of her delight.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>By this time Miss Temple had made known
-her intentions to her aunt. I became aware
-of this circumstance by the old lady uttering
-a loud shriek.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is entirely out of the question; I forbid
-you to go,&#8217; she cried, with a face of agony on her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Nonsense!&#8217; answered Miss Temple: she
-and her aunt and old Keeling and the lieutenant
-were slowly coming towards the break of the
-poop, where Colledge and I waited whilst this
-altercation proceeded; so everything said was
-plainly to be heard by us. &#8216;It is as calm as
-a river,&#8217; exclaimed the girl, sending one of her
-flashing looks at the sea.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>&#8216;You may be drowned; you may never
-return. I will not permit it. What would
-your mother think?&#8217; cried poor Mrs. Radcliffe
-vehemently, pecking away with her face, and
-clapping her hands to emphasise her words.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Aunt, do not be ridiculous, I beg. I
-shall go. It will amuse me, and I am already
-very weary of the voyage. Only consider: at
-this rate of sailing we may be five or six
-months longer at sea. This is a little harmless,
-safe distraction. Now, <i>don&#8217;t</i> be foolish,
-auntie.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The old lady appealed to Captain Keeling.
-He was looking somewhat dubiously round the
-horizon when the lieutenant broke in; then
-Colledge indulged in a flourish, and though I
-can&#8217;t trace the steps of it, nor recollect the
-talk, somehow or other a little later on the
-three of us were in the boat, a bag of letters
-on a thwart, the lieutenant picking up the
-yoke-lines as he seated himself, the bow-oar
-thrusting off, with a vision through the open
-rail of the poop of old Captain Keeling stiffly
-sawing the air with his arms, in some effort,
-as I took it, to console Mrs. Radcliffe, who
-flourished a handkerchief to her face as
-though she wept.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-<small>THE &#8216;MAGICIENNE&#8217;</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> corvette looked a mighty long distance
-away from the low elevation of the boat&#8217;s
-gunwale&mdash;almost as far as the horizon, it
-seemed to my eyes, though from the height of
-the deck of the Indiaman the sea-line showed
-something above the bulwarks of the man-of-war.
-One hardly noticed the movement in
-the sea on board the <i>Countess Ida</i>, so solemn
-and steady was the swing of the great fabric,
-a movement stealing into one&#8217;s thoughts like
-a habit, and leaving one unconscious of it;
-but the heave was instantly to be felt in the
-boat, and I own that I could not have believed
-there was so much swell until I felt the lift of
-the noiseless polished fold and marked the
-soft blue volume of the water brimming to
-the hot and blistered sides and green sheathing
-of the Indiaman.</p>
-
-<p>A huge lump of a ship she looked as we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span>
-were swept away from her; her masts soaring
-in three spires with the flash of a vane above
-the airy gossamer of the loftiest cloths; groups
-of passengers watching us from the violet-tinted
-shadow under the awning, heads of
-seamen at the rail, or figures of them upon
-the forecastle near the huge cathead that
-struck a shadow of its own into the water
-under it. The great bowsprit went tapering
-to the delicacy of the flying-jib-boom end
-marshalling the flight of white jibs; a stream
-of radiance floated in the water under each
-large window. Inexpressible is the effect she
-produced taken along with the dwindling of
-her to the impulse of our oars, with the fining
-down into thinnest notes of the voices of the
-people, and with the soft and still softening
-sounds of her canvas lightly swaying.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A grand old ship,&#8217; exclaimed the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I had no idea she owned such a handsome
-stern,&#8217; said Colledge; &#8216;quite a blaze of gilt, I
-do protest, Miss Temple. How gloriously old
-Keeling&#8217;s cabin-window sparkles amid the
-gingerbread magnificence of decoration.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What is there in the art of painting to
-reproduce such a picture as that?&#8217; exclaimed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-Miss Temple, with her dark eyes glowing to
-the mood of delight raised in her by the
-beautiful spectacle. &#8216;It is like looking at an
-image in a soap-bubble. What brush could
-fling those silver-bluish daintinesses of tint
-upon canvas, and make one see the ship
-through this atmosphere filled with ocean-light?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ocean-light!&#8217; exclaimed the lieutenant,
-viewing her with an air of profound admiration;
-&#8216;that is the fit expression, madam.
-Light at sea is different from light on shore.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;As how?&#8217; cried Colledge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, my dear fellow, see what a reflecting
-eye the ocean has,&#8217; said I; &#8216;it stares back in
-glory to the glory that looks down upon it.
-Mould and clay can&#8217;t do that, you know.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;True,&#8217; said the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray,&#8217; said I, addressing him, &#8216;when you
-overhauled that hull yonder, did you meet
-with anything to warrant our suspicion that
-she was a rover?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I found no papers,&#8217; said he; &#8216;forward,
-she is burnt into a shell. All her guns are
-gone&mdash;dropped overboard, I suppose, to keep
-her afloat. She has a little round-house aft,
-and in it sits a man.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>&#8216;A man?&#8217; exclaimed Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He sits in a musing posture,&#8217; continued
-the lieutenant; &#8216;he frowns, and seems vexed.
-He holds a feather pen in one hand, and
-supports his head on the elbow of his left arm,
-but he doesn&#8217;t write: possibly because there is
-no ink and the wind seems to have blown his
-paper away.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is he dead?&#8217; exclaimed Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Quite,&#8217; responded the lieutenant, with a
-smile of enjoyment of her beauty.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;God bless me!&#8217; cried Colledge, staring at
-the hull under the sharp of his hand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is she a picaroon, think you, sir?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Impossible to say,&#8217; he answered; &#8216;there
-are stands of small-arms in her cabin below,
-and a sweep of &#8217;tweendecks full of piratic
-bedding. She will have been crowded with
-sailors, I should think, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The six men-of-war&#8217;s men were making the
-fine little cutter hum as they bent to their
-oars, one hairy face showing past another, the
-eyes of each man upon his blade, though now
-and again one or another would steal a respectful
-peep at Miss Temple. What exquisite
-discipline their demeanour suggested! One
-hardly needed to do more than glance at them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span>
-to sound to the very depths the whole philosophy
-of our naval story. How should it be
-otherwise than as it is with a nation that
-could be the mother of such children as those
-fellows?</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant was very talkative, and
-had a deal to say about the West Coast of
-Africa and Cape Town; and he had a great
-many questions to ask about home. Miss
-Temple constantly directed her eyes over the
-side, as though affected and even startled by
-the proximity of the mighty surface. And
-boundless the light blue heaving plain looked
-as it went swimming to the far-off slope of
-sky that it seemed to wash&mdash;the vaster, the
-more enormous for the breaks of toy-like
-craft upon it; for the Indiaman and the
-corvette were standards to assist the mind
-into some perception of the surrounding
-immensity, and never to me did the heavens
-seem so high nor the curve of the ocean
-boundary so remote as I found them from the
-low seat of the cutter, with the corvette
-growing over the bow, and the Indiaman
-astern dwarfed to the dimensions of a boy&#8217;s
-model of a ship.</p>
-
-<p>It was a longer pull than I should have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-believed, and roastingly hot, thanks to the
-flaming reflection that filled the heart of the
-sea, and to the motionless atmosphere, which
-was scarcely to be stirred even into the
-subtlest fanning of the cheek by our passage
-through it. Miss Temple&#8217;s face in the shadow
-of her parasol resembled some incomparable
-carving in marble, and but little of vitality
-was to be seen in it outside of her rich, full,
-eloquent eyes, when she fell into some pause
-of thought and looked away into the dim blue
-distance as though she beheld a vision down
-in it. The corvette appeared deserted, with
-her high bulwarks topped yet with a line of
-hammocks; but it was easy to see that it was
-known on board the lieutenant was bringing
-a lady along with others to visit the man-of-war,
-for there was already a proper gangway
-ladder over the side, with a grating to step
-out on, though the broad-beamed craft swayed
-more to the swell than the Indiaman, and so
-dipped the platform that it needed a deal of
-manoeuvring to save Miss Temple from wetting
-her feet.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Edward Panton, a tall, exceedingly
-handsome man, with iron-grey hair and a
-sun-reddened complexion, received us at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-gangway. He seemed scarcely able to believe
-his eyes when Colledge called out to him. He
-welcomed Miss Temple with an air of lofty
-respectful dignity that would have sat well
-upon some nobleman of magnificence welcoming
-a royal visitor to his home. Chairs were
-brought from the cabin and placed on the
-quarter-deck in the shelter of the awning, along
-with a little table, upon which were put some
-excellent sherry, claret, and seltzer-water, and
-a box of capital cigars. The look of this ship,
-after the Indiaman&#8217;s encumbered decks broken
-by their poop and topgallant forecastle, was a
-real treat to the seafaring eye. She was flush
-fore and aft: every plank was as white as a
-peeled almond; the black breeches of her
-artillery gave a noble, massive, imposing character
-to her tall, immensely thick bulwarks;
-the ratlines showed straight as thin bars of
-iron in the wide spread of shrouds and topmast
-rigging; the running gear was flemish-coiled;
-the brass-work sparkled like burnished
-gold; the snow-like cloths of the fore-course
-gathered an amazing brightness from their
-mere contrast with the red coat of a marine
-pacing the forecastle; the sailors, in white
-clothes, straw-hats, and naked feet, sprang<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-softly here and there to the light chirrupings
-of a pipe, or went on with the various jobs
-they were about on deck and in the rigging
-amid a silence that one might ask for in vain
-among a crew of merchantmen. Far away
-down upon the starboard beam was the Indiaman,
-blue in the airy distance, with a sort of
-winking of shadows upon her square and lofty
-canvas, as the cloths swung in and out,
-brightening and dimming.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Edward was delighted to see his
-cousin, and it seemed as if there was to be no
-end to their talk, so numberless were the
-questions the commander put about home,
-his family, doings in London, matters political,
-and so on, and so on. I had a chance, whilst
-Colledge was spinning some long twister of
-private interest to Sir Edward, to exchange a
-few words with Miss Temple, whose behaviour
-in the main might have easily led me to believe
-that she was absolutely unconscious of
-my presence; in fact, I shouldn&#8217;t have addressed
-her then but for finding in the domestic
-and personal gossip of the two cousins an
-obligation of either talking or walking away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The <i>Countess Ida</i> looks a long distance
-off, Miss Temple.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span>&#8216;Farther, I think, than this ship looks
-from her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;That is owing to a change in the atmosphere.
-We shall be having some weather
-by-and-by.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not before we return, I hope.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The blue thickens yonder,&#8217; I exclaimed,
-indicating that quarter of the sea where I had
-noticed the depression of the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>She gazed listlessly; her eyes then went
-roaming over the ship with a sparkle in them
-of the pleasure the whiteness and the brightness
-and the orderliness of all that she beheld
-gave her.</p>
-
-<p>Presently Sir Edward exclaimed: &#8216;Miss
-Temple, you would like to inspect this vessel,
-I am sure. I wish to show Stephen my wife&#8217;s
-portrait, and I want you to see it. Mr. Dugdale,
-you will join us.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Down we went into a very pleasant cabin,
-and the captain produced a water-colour
-sketch of his lady.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A sweet face!&#8217; exclaimed Miss Temple;
-whilst Sir Edward gazed at the picture with
-eyes full of the yearning heart of a sailor long
-divorced from his love.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Have you found your charmer yet,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span>
-Stephen?&#8217; said he. &#8216;Any girl won your budding
-affections?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The youth looked at me suddenly and
-turned of a deep red. I believe he would
-have said no at once, and with a cocksure
-face, had I not been there. Miss Temple&#8217;s
-gaze rested upon him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, who is it, Stephen, eh?&#8217; exclaimed
-Sir Edward with a merry laugh. &#8216;See how
-he blushes, Miss Temple! a sure sign that he
-has let go his anchor, though he is riding to
-a long scope all the way out here. Who is it,
-Steve?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, hang it, Ned, never mind; you
-bother a fellow so,&#8217; answered Colledge with a
-fine air of mingled irritation and confusion,
-and a half-look at me that was just the same
-as saying, &#8216;What an ass I am making of
-myself!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Miss Temple,&#8217; exclaimed Sir Edward,
-laughing heartily again, &#8216;he may possibly
-have confided the lady&#8217;s name to you? Pray
-satisfy my curiosity, that I may congratulate
-him before we part.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am as ignorant as you are,&#8217; she replied,
-with an expression of cold surprise in her
-face.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>I marched to a porthole to look out, that
-I might conceal an irrepressible grin.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I say, show us the ship, will ye, Ned?&#8217;
-shouted Colledge; &#8216;there&#8217;s a long pull before
-us, and we&#8217;re bound to India, you know.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Captain Panton led the way out of the
-cabin, and went in advance with Miss Temple,
-pointing here and explaining there, and full
-of his ship. Colledge sidled up to me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Dugdale,&#8217; he exclaimed in a whisper, &#8216;do
-you believe that Miss Temple will guess from
-my idiotic manner just now that I&#8217;m engaged
-to be married?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh yes; I saw her gaze sink right into
-you and then go clean through you. It is
-best as it is, Colledge. You may breathe
-freely now.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He smothered an execration, and continued
-gloomy and silent for some time.
-There was not very much to be seen below.
-We were presently on deck; and after another
-ten minutes&#8217; chat, during which Colledge
-seemed to regain his spirits, the boat was
-ordered alongside.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It shall be my secret as well as yours,
-Stephen, long before you are home from your
-tiger-hunts!&#8217; exclaimed Sir Edward at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-gangway, waggishly shaking his forefinger at
-his cousin.</p>
-
-<p>We shook hands, entered the boat; the
-lieutenant took his seat, the oars sparkled,
-and away we went with a flourish of our hats
-to the commander, who stood for some time
-in the open gangway watching us.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There&#8217;s a trifle more swell than there was,
-I fancy,&#8217; said I to the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I think there is,&#8217; he answered, looking
-over the sea as if he thought of something
-else.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What a confounded quiz Ned is!&#8217; exclaimed
-Colledge. &#8216;He&#8217;s rather too fond of a
-laugh at other people&#8217;s expense. I think that
-sort of thing a mistake myself.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He is a very handsome gentleman,&#8217;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, I&#8217;m mighty glad to have seen him,&#8217;
-said Colledge. &#8216;He&#8217;s a dear good fellow,
-only&mdash;&mdash; I hope you&#8217;ve enjoyed the trip,
-Miss Temple?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Thoroughly, thank you; it is a delightful
-change. How strange to think of that toy
-yonder as being our home for some months to
-come! It is like fancying one&#8217;s self as dwelling
-in a star, to see her floating out there in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-blue haze, as though she were poised in the
-atmosphere.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She fastened her eyes on the Indiaman as
-she spoke. One saw in this that she had a
-sailor&#8217;s observation for atmospheric effect.
-Star-like the ship looked in the distance&mdash;a
-dash of misty light in the blue haze, hovering,
-as it were, above the junction of sea and sky,
-where the blending of the elements was so
-dim and hot that you couldn&#8217;t tell where they
-met.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Isn&#8217;t it thickening up a trifle, somehow?&#8217;
-said I to the lieutenant. &#8216;Look to the right
-of the wreck there&mdash;what is that appearance?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What do you see?&#8217; he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, to my fancy, it is as though there
-were a dust-storm miles away yonder.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He smiled, and answered: &#8216;Mere heat. One
-doesn&#8217;t need many months on the West African
-coast to grow used to that sort of aspects.
-They suggest nothing but quinine to me.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What time is it?&#8217; said Colledge.</p>
-
-<p>We pulled out our watches: it was half-past
-four.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am sorry we are returning to the Indiaman,&#8217;
-said he. &#8216;I should like to get away
-from her for a little while; then one would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-find something of freshness in her when one
-returned. I am not thirsting to meet Mr.
-Johnson and Mr. Emmett and Mr. Greenhew
-again. Are you, Miss Temple?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She slightly smiled, and said, &#8216;I wish
-Bombay were as near to us as the <i>Magicienne</i>
-is to the Indiaman.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I have an idea!&#8217; cried Colledge, whose
-shining eyes, methought, seemed to suggest
-the influence of the last large bumper of sherry
-he had tossed down before leaving the corvette.
-&#8216;Let us kill another hour by boarding the
-wreck.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I shall be very pleased to put the boat
-alongside,&#8217; said the lieutenant. &#8216;What do you
-say, Miss Temple?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She looked at the Indiaman, and then sent
-a swift glance at me, as though she would read
-my face without having me know she had
-peeped at it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Will there be time before it falls dark?&#8217;
-she answered. &#8216;I am in no hurry to return;
-but I do not want to make my aunt miserable
-by remaining out upon the water until after
-sunset.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, we have abundance of time,&#8217; said the
-lieutenant.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>&#8216;It will give us so much to talk about,&#8217;
-exclaimed Colledge. &#8216;I want to see what sort of
-a ship it was that frightened us so abominably
-the other day.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What do you say, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217; said
-Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am thinking of the lonely sentinel this
-gentleman was telling us about as we came
-along,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, one peep! one peep at him, just one
-peep!&#8217; cried Colledge: &#8216;<i>don&#8217;t</i> let us go back
-to the Indiaman too soon. At this rate,&#8217; he
-added, turning up his slightly flushed face to
-the sky, &#8216;we may have another six months of
-her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant laughed, and, anxious to
-please him, as I supposed, quietly pulled a
-yoke-line and swept the boat&#8217;s head fair for
-the hull. His making nothing of the appearance
-I had called his attention to was reassuring.
-I should have thought nothing of
-it either but for the indent in the horizon that
-morning, and the recollection that grew out of
-it, as I have told you. But then old Keeling
-had let us start from his ship without a hint,
-and Sir Edward had uttered no caution, though,
-to be sure, in those days the barometer was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-not the shaper of marine speculations it has
-since become; and the silence of these two
-skippers, and the smile and careless rejoinder
-of the lieutenant, should have been amply
-satisfying. Nevertheless, there was no question
-but that the light swell heaving out of the
-north-west was sensibly gaining in volume and
-speed, and that it was the mere respiration
-of the ocean I could by no means persuade
-myself, though it might signify nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Colledge grew somewhat frolicsome; indeed,
-I seemed to find an artificiality in his
-spirits, as though he would clear Miss Temple&#8217;s
-memory of Captain Panton&#8217;s <i>badinage</i> by
-laughter and jokes. The lieutenant fell in
-with his humour, said some comical things,
-and told one or two lively anecdotes of the
-blacks of that part of the coast the corvette
-was fresh from. The men-of-war&#8217;s men pulled
-steadily, and the keen stem of the cutter
-sheared through the oil-smooth surface with
-a noise as of the ripping of satin; but now
-and again she would swing down into a hollow
-that put the low sides of the wreck out of
-sight, whilst, as we approached, I noticed that
-the hull was leaning from side to side in a
-swing which did not need to greatly increase<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
-to put the lieutenant to his trumps to get Miss
-Temple aboard.</p>
-
-<p>But by this time the girl was showing
-some vivacity, smiling at the lieutenant&#8217;s jokes,
-laughing lightly in her clear, rich, trembling
-tones at Colledge&#8217;s remarks. It seemed to me
-as if her previous quietude had produced a
-resolution which she was now acting up to.
-She was apparently eager to inspect the wreck,
-and said that such an adventure would make
-a heroine of her at home when she came to
-tell the story of it.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long, dragging pull over that
-heaving, breathless sea, and through that
-sweltering afternoon, with its sky of the complexion
-of brass about the zenith. The three
-craft, as they lay, formed a right-angled triangle,
-the apex, to call it so, being the derelict,
-and the getting to her involved a longer
-stretching of the Jacks&#8217; backs than, as I
-suspected, the lieutenant had calculated on.
-The sweat poured from the men&#8217;s brows, and
-their faces were like purple rags under their
-straw hats as they swung with the precision
-and the monotony of the tick of a clock over
-the looms of their oars.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She&#8217;s rather unsteady, isn&#8217;t she?&#8217; exclaimed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-Colledge as we approached the
-hulk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;So much the better,&#8217; said the lieutenant;
-&#8216;her bulwarks are gone, and every dip inclines
-her bare deck as a platform for a jump.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She may be sinking,&#8217; cried Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Dry as a bone, madam, I assure you,&#8217;
-said the officer. &#8216;I looked into her hold, and
-there&#8217;s scarce more water than would serve to
-drown a rat.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I see her name in long white letters
-under her counter,&#8217; I exclaimed. &#8216;Can you
-read it, Colledge?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The <i>Aspirante</i>,&#8217; said the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>We now fell silent, with our eyes upon
-the hull, whilst the officer man&#339;uvred with
-the yoke-lines to run the cutter handsomely
-alongside. A single chime from a bell came
-thrilling with a soft silver note through the
-hushed air. Miss Temple started, and the
-officer grinned into Colledge&#8217;s face, but nothing
-was said. She was a very clean wreck. Her
-foremast stood stoutly supported by the
-shrouds; but the braces of the foreyard were
-slack, and the swing of the spar, upon which
-the canvas lay rolled in awkward heaps,
-roughly secured by lines, as though the work<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-of hands wild with hurry, somehow imparted
-a strange, forlorn, most melancholy character
-to the nakedness of that solitary mast. She
-showed no guns; her decks appeared to have
-been swept; the rise of her in the water
-proved that her people must have jettisoned
-a deal of whatever they were able to come
-at; her wheel was gone, and her rudder
-slowly swayed to every heave. There were a
-few ropes&#8217; ends over her side, the hacked
-remains of standing-rigging; but the water
-brimmed clear of wreckage to her channels.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oars!&#8217; cried the lieutenant. The bowman
-sprang erect; and in a few moments we
-were floating alongside, soaring and falling
-against the black run of her, with the deck
-gaping through the length of smashed bulwark
-to the level of our heads when we stood
-up, each time she came lazily rolling over to
-us. The clear chime of the bell rang out
-again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What is it?&#8217; cried Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The ship&#8217;s bell,&#8217; said the lieutenant; &#8216;it
-has got jammed as it hangs, and the tongue
-strikes the side when the heave is a little
-sharper than usual.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He followed this on with certain directions<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-to the men. Two of them, watching their
-chance, sprang on to the slope of the deck,
-and then went hoisting up away from us as
-the hull swayed wearily to starboard. &#8216;Stand
-by now!&#8217; bawled the lieutenant. &#8216;Miss
-Temple, let me assist you on to this thwart.&#8217;
-She leapt upon it with something of defiance
-in her manner, and the officer, grasping her
-elbow, supported her. I thought Colledge
-looked a little uneasy and pale. We waited;
-but an opportunity was some time in coming.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Colledge,&#8217; said the lieutenant, &#8216;be
-kind enough to take my place and support
-the lady.&#8217; He jumped lightly into the main-chains,
-and was on deck in a jiffy. &#8216;Haul
-her in close, men. Now, Miss Temple. Catch
-hold of my hand and of this sailor&#8217;s when I
-say so.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Up swung the boat; the girl extended
-her hands, which were instantly grasped.
-&#8216;Jump, madam!&#8217; and she went in a graceful
-bound from the thwart to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>I watched till a heave brought me on a
-line with the chains into which I jumped.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Now, Mr. Colledge!&#8217; called out the lieutenant.
-He hung in the wind, and I thought
-he would refuse to leave the boat; but Miss<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-Temple with her face slightly flushed stood
-watching as though waiting for him, her noble
-figure swaying with a marvellous careless
-grace upon the floating slopes of the planks;
-and this started him. He got on to a thwart,
-where he was supported by a sailor till a
-chance offered for his hands to be gripped,
-and then he was hauled on to the hull; but
-he came perilously near to going overboard,
-for the sudden sinking away of the cutter
-from under him paralysed his effort to jump,
-and he swung against the side of the wreck in
-the grasp of the lieutenant and a seaman, who
-dragged him up just in time to save his legs
-from being ground by the soaring of the boat.
-The two sailors then jumped into the cutter,
-which shoved off, and lay rising and falling
-upon the quarter to the scope of her painter.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-<small>ADRIFT</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> was a small deck-house standing abaft
-the jagged ends of the stump of the mainmast,
-a low-pitched, somewhat narrow, and rather
-long structure, with a door facing the wheel,
-or where the wheel had stood, and a couple of
-small windows on either hand, the glass of
-which was entirely gone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The lonely watchman of this wreck is still
-at home, doubtless waiting to receive us,&#8217; said
-the lieutenant, pointing to the little building.
-&#8216;Shall we pay him a visit?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh yes; let us see everything that there
-may be to look at,&#8217; answered Colledge, who
-had not yet recovered his breath, but who was
-working hard, I could see, to regain his late
-air of vivacity, though he was pale, and shot
-several uneasy glances around him as he
-spoke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I would rather not look,&#8217; said Miss
-Temple; &#8216;it will make me dream.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>&#8216;You will have nothing to talk about, then,&#8217;
-said Colledge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is the most natural object in the world,&#8217;
-exclaimed the lieutenant; &#8216;if he could be
-stuffed, preserving the posture he is in, and
-exhibited in London, thousands would assemble
-to view him.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I left them to persuade Miss Temple if
-they could, and walking aft, opened the door,
-and peeped in. It was just a plain, immensely
-strong, roughly furnished deck erection, with
-a small hatch close against the entrance, conducting,
-as I supposed, to the cabin beneath.
-On either side went a row of lockers; in the
-centre was a short narrow table, supported by
-stanchions; and at this table sat the figure of
-a man. He was in an attitude of writing; his
-right hand grasped a long feather pen; his left
-elbow was on the table, and his cheek was
-supported by his hand. He was dressed in
-white jean breeches, the ends of which were
-stuffed into a pair of yellow leather half-boots.
-There was a large belt round his waist, clasped
-by some ornament resembling a two-headed
-eagle, of a shining metal, probably silver.
-His shirt was a pale red flannel, over which
-was a jacket cut in the Spanish fashion; his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-hair was long, and flowed in black ringlets
-upon his back. His hat was a large sombrero,
-and I had to walk abreast of him to see his
-face. I was prepared to witness a ghastly
-sight. Instead, I beheld a countenance of
-singular beauty. It was as if the hand of
-death had moulded some faultless human
-countenance out of white wax. The lids of
-the eyes drooped, and the gaze seemed rooted
-upon the table, as though the man lay rapt
-and motionless in some sweet and perfect
-dream. His small moustache was like a touch
-of delicate pencilling. He looked to have
-been a person of some three or four and
-twenty years of age.</p>
-
-<p>As I stood surveying the figure, the interior
-was shadowed. Miss Temple and the others
-stood in the doorway. The lieutenant and
-Colledge entered; the girl would not approach.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Here, Miss Temple,&#8217; said I, &#8216;is the handsomest
-man I have ever seen.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Can he be dead?&#8217; exclaimed Colledge in
-a subdued voice of awe.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He&#8217;ll never be deader,&#8217; said the lieutenant,
-peering curiously into the face of the corpse.
-&#8216;<i>Handsome</i>, do you consider him, sir? Well,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-we all have our tastes, to be sure. He looks
-like a woman masquerading.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Who was he, I wonder?&#8217; asked Miss
-Temple in a low tone, standing in a half-shrinking
-attitude at the door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Very hard to say,&#8217; said I. &#8216;Too young
-for the captain, I should think. Probably the
-mate.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A pirate, anyway,&#8217; said the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Hark!&#8217; cried Miss Temple; &#8216;this ship is
-tolling his knell.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The mellow chime floated past the ear.
-The effect was extraordinary, so clear was
-the note as it rang through the soft sounds
-of the weltering waters; so ghostly, wild,
-and unreal, too, the character it gathered
-from the presence of that silent, stirless
-penman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I say, we&#8217;ve seen enough of him, I think,&#8217;
-exclaimed Colledge.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Shall we bury him?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh no, sir,&#8217; exclaimed the lieutenant;
-&#8216;this sheer hulk is his coffin. Leave the dead
-to bury their dead. Now for a glimpse of the
-cabin.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple entered with some reluctance;
-the lieutenant handed her through the hatch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-down the short ladder, and Colledge and I
-followed. We found ourselves in a moderately-sized
-state-room of the width of the little
-vessel, with bulkheads at either end, each containing
-a couple of cabins. There was a
-small skylight overhead, all the glass of it
-shattered, but light enough fell through to
-enable us to see easily. Colledge had plucked
-up heart, and now bustled about somewhat
-manfully, opening the cabin doors, starting as
-if he saw horrible sights, cracking jokes as in
-the boat, and calling to Miss Temple to look
-here and look there, and so on.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Hallo!&#8217; cried the lieutenant, putting his
-head into one of the cabins at the fore-end of
-the state-room; &#8216;I missed this room when I
-overhauled her. What have we here? A
-pantry is it, or a larder?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I looked over his shoulder, and by the faint
-light sifting through the bull&#8217;s-eye in the deck,
-made out the contents of what was apparently
-a storeroom. There were several shelves containing
-crockery, cheeses, hams, and other
-articles of food. Under the lower shelf, heaped
-upon the deck, were stowed several dozens of
-bottles in straw.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The corsairs,&#8217; said the lieutenant, &#8216;will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-always be memorable for the excellence of
-their tipple. What is this, now?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He picked up a bottle, knocked off the
-head, and taking a little tin drinking-vessel
-from a shelf, half filled it, then smelled, and
-tasted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;An exquisite Burgundy,&#8217; he cried. &#8216;Try
-it, Mr. Dugdale.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It was indeed a very choice sound wine.
-The lieutenant half filled a pannikin for
-Colledge, who emptied it with a sigh of enjoyment.
-&#8216;What would my father give for such
-stuff as this!&#8217; said he.</p>
-
-<p>The lieutenant found a wine-glass, which
-he carefully cleansed with the liquor, and then
-filling it, he asked Miss Temple to drink to
-the confusion of all pirates. She laughed, and
-declined.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, you must sip it, if you please,&#8217; cried
-Colledge, &#8216;if only to heighten the romance of
-this adventure. Think of the additional colour
-your story will get out of this incident of
-drinking perdition to the corsairs in wine of
-their own!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She was about to answer, when the hull
-rolled heavily. The lieutenant slipped; the
-wine-glass fell to the deck, and was shivered;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-Colledge, grasping me to steady himself, threw
-me off my balance, and the pair of us went
-rolling to the bottles. The young fellow
-scrambled on to his legs with a loud laugh.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I believe this vessel is tipsy,&#8217; said he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Do you mark the increase in the weight
-of the swell?&#8217; I exclaimed as I regained my
-legs.</p>
-
-<p>The roll of the vessel the other way had
-been severe, and now she was dipping her
-sides regularly with an oscillation extravagant
-enough to render standing very inconvenient.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We must be off, I think,&#8217; said the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Miss Temple hasn&#8217;t drunk confusion to
-the pirates,&#8217; exclaimed Colledge with the persistency
-of brains flushed with wine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I would rather not do so,&#8217; she answered,
-her fine face looking curiously pale in that
-dull light, whilst she glanced restlessly towards
-the state cabin. She pulled out a little watch.
-&#8216;It is certainly time to return to the Indiaman,&#8217;
-she added.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, but don&#8217;t let us leave all this noble
-drink to go down to the bottom of the sea,&#8217;
-cried Colledge. &#8216;Is there nothing that we can
-pack some of the bottles in? If we could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-only manage to get away with a couple of
-dozen&mdash;twelve for ourselves and twelve for
-my cousin?&#8217;&mdash;and with red face and bright
-eyes he went staggering with the heave of the
-hull to the shelves and stood holding on, looking
-about him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It might be managed, I think,&#8217; said the
-lieutenant, who seemed all anxiety to oblige
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I wish to be gone,&#8217; exclaimed Miss Temple
-with a strong hint of the imperiousness that
-had been familiar to me in the Indiaman in the
-air with which she looked at and addressed
-the lieutenant. &#8216;What is the meaning of this
-increased rolling? I shall not be able to enter
-the boat.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No fear of that, madam,&#8217; answered the
-lieutenant; &#8216;a dismasted egg-shell like this
-will roll to the weakest heave. A trifle more
-swell has certainly set in, but it is nothing.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I was not so sure of that. What he was
-pleased to describe as a trifling increase was to
-my mind, and very distinctly too, a heightening
-and broadening of the undulations, of which
-the significance was rendered strong by the
-suddenness of the thing. It meant wind close
-at hand, I could swear.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>&#8216;I&#8217;ll go on deck and see how things are,&#8217;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Take me with you, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; exclaimed
-Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You will suffer me to assist you?&#8217; said the
-lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, I say, <i>don&#8217;t</i> leave all this wine here,&#8217;
-cried Colledge. &#8216;Mr.&mdash;I mean Lieutenant&mdash;upon
-my word, I must apologise for not having
-asked your name&mdash;can&#8217;t we manage to find
-some old basket&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What is that down in the corner there,
-Mr. Colledge?&#8217; said the lieutenant, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray, take me on deck, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;
-exclaimed Miss Temple haughtily and with
-temper, and she came to my side and passed
-her arm through mine.</p>
-
-<p>The swaying of the light hull without top-hamper
-to steady her so hindered one&#8217;s movements
-by the staggering lurches it flung one
-into, that it cost me no small effort to steer a
-fair course with Miss Temple hanging to me,
-to the cabin steps. I helped her up the ladder,
-and felt in her arm the shudder that swept
-through her as she sent a single swift glance
-at the dead figure at the table.</p>
-
-<p>The moment I emerged I cried out: &#8216;My<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-God! see there! Why, if we are not
-quick&#8217;&mdash;&mdash; And putting my head into the
-doorway again, I roared down the hatch:
-&#8216;For heaven&#8217;s sake, come on deck, or we shall
-lose both ships!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, all away in the north-west was
-a white blankness of vapour bearing right
-down upon the hull, with a long and heavy
-swell rolling out of it, the heads of which as
-they came washing from under the base of the
-thickness were dark with wind. The sky
-overhead was of a sort of watery ashen colour,
-going down to the eastern sea-line in a weak,
-dim blue, so obscure with the complexion of
-the approaching vaporous mass that the
-corvette on the left hand and the Indiaman
-on the right appeared as little more than pallid
-smudges, with a kind of looming out of their
-dull, distorted proportions that made them
-show as though they hung upon the very verge
-of the ocean. I told Miss Temple to hold to
-the side of the deck-house to steady herself,
-and rushed to the quarter. The cutter lay
-there to the scope of her painter, rising and
-falling in a manner bewildering to see to one
-who knew that she had to be entered from
-these perilously sloping decks. The moment<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</a></span>
-my head was seen, one of the sailors bawled
-out: &#8216;The Indiaman&#8217;s fired two guns, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why the deuce,&#8217; I shouted in a passion,
-&#8216;didn&#8217;t one of you jump aboard to report
-what was coming? Haul alongside, for God&#8217;s
-sake.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the lieutenant appeared,
-followed by Colledge. He took one look, and
-came in a bound to the sheer edge of the deck,
-where the remains of the line of crushed bulwarks
-stood like fangs. &#8216;Lively now!&#8217; he
-cried; &#8216;hand over hand with it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We shall be smothered out of sight in a
-few minutes,&#8217; I exclaimed; &#8216;shall we be acting
-wisely in quitting this hull? We may lose
-both ships in that weather there, and what will
-there be to do then?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Don&#8217;t frighten the lady, sir,&#8217; he answered,
-turning upon me with a frown. &#8216;Miss Temple,
-there is nothing to be alarmed at. We shall
-get you into the boat simply enough, and the
-vapour will speedily clear. I know these
-waters.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Colledge stood gazing round him, looking
-horribly frightened. The boat was dragged
-alongside: one moment she was above the
-level of the naked edge of the deck; the next<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span>
-she was sliding away out of sight into the
-hollow, with the wreck rolling heavily off from
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Now, Miss Temple,&#8217; cried the lieutenant.
-&#8216;Help me to steady the lady, Mr. Dugdale.
-Stand by, two of you men there, to receive
-her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple set her lips, and her eyes were
-on fire with anger and fear. &#8216;I shall not be
-able to enter that boat,&#8217; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, madam, be persuaded,&#8217; cried the
-lieutenant, speaking irritably out of his
-clear perception of the danger of delay
-and of the peril of passing her into the
-cutter. &#8216;Mr. Dugdale, take Miss Temple&#8217;s
-arm.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She shrank back, with a firmer grip of the
-deck-house, against which she had set her
-shoulder to steady herself. &#8216;You will kill
-me!&#8217; she cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; exclaimed the lieutenant
-wildly, &#8216;for God&#8217;s sake, jump into the boat,
-that Miss Temple may see how easily it is to
-be done. I must be the last to leave.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Let Mr. Colledge jump first,&#8217; said I. &#8216;I
-may probably be more useful to you and the
-lady than he.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>&#8216;Jump, Mr. Colledge!&#8217; cried the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>The young fellow went to the edge of the
-deck. &#8216;I shall break my neck,&#8217; he shouted;
-&#8216;I shall fall into the sea; I shall be drowned.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No, sir! no, sir!&#8217; roared one of the
-seamen; &#8216;jump as the boat lifts; we&#8217;ll catch
-you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;<i>Now!</i>&#8217; cried the lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>Colledge sprang; down sank the boat out
-of sight; then up she soared again with Colledge
-safe in the embrace of one of the most
-powerful of the sailors.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Here it comes!&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>As the words left my lips, the wind, with
-a long fierce howl, swept over the deck of the
-hull, and a moment later the fog was boiling
-all about us. It was like a mighty burst of
-steam; and in a breath the ocean vanished, and
-there was nothing to see but the wool-white
-blankness and a space of thirty or forty feet
-of water beyond the wreck. All on a sudden,
-the lieutenant, who had gone to the edge of
-the deck, perhaps to see how it was with
-Colledge, or to bawl some further directions
-to the seamen, staggered to a deep and swinging
-heel of the hull and went overboard. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-happened in a second. My instant impression
-was that he had jumped for the boat;
-but I knew better when I heard the men
-roaring out.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;For heaven&#8217;s sake, Miss Temple,&#8217; I cried,
-&#8216;keep a firm hold, and do not attempt to stir,
-or the angle of the decks will certainly rush
-you over the side.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>So saying, I staggered to the quarter
-where there were some eight or ten feet of
-bulwarks still standing, and looked over.
-The men had let go the painter of their boat,
-and were shouting instructions to one another
-as some of them flung their oars over into the
-rowlocks, whilst others overhung the gunwale
-eagerly with pale faces and looks of consternation
-and dread, searching the round
-volumes of the swell, which the wind was
-now whipping into yeast, for any signs of
-their officer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Keep alongside!&#8217; I bellowed; &#8216;he will
-rise near.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>But the fellows were distracted, unnerved,
-and there was nobody to give them orders.
-The howling of the wind, the sudden leaping
-down upon them of this blindness of white
-vapour, the violent upheavals and sinkings of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span>
-the cutter upon the run of the liquid hills,
-heavily increased the distraction raised in
-them by their lieutenant&#8217;s disappearance.
-They had three oars out, possessed, I suppose,
-by some mad fancy of merely paddling whilst
-they stared round the water; and even whilst
-I watched them, and whilst I yelled to them
-to get their six oars over, and to pull for
-their lives to alongside the wreck, the boat,
-yielding to the full weight of the blast and to
-the long irresistible heavings of the swell,
-faded out of sight in the flying thickness; and
-ere I could fully realise what had occurred,
-the narrow space of foam-freckled pouring
-waters showed blank to where the flying
-vapour seemed to hang like a wall of white
-smoke.</p>
-
-<p>I continued to stare, occasionally bringing
-my eyes away from the spot where the boat
-had vanished to the water alongside; but the
-lieutenant had sunk. There could be no
-doubt that the poor fellow on rising from his
-first dive had struck the bends of the hull as
-she rolled heavily over to the trough where
-he had vanished, and so had been drowned,
-struck down again into the depths, to rise no
-more. I could not realise the truth. I felt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span>
-as if I had fallen crazy, and was imagining
-dreadful horrors. It was but a minute or
-two before that he had turned to me with a
-frown&mdash;it was but a little while before that
-he was full of jokes and laughter in the cabin&mdash;and
-now he lay a dead man, sinking and
-yet sinking under our heaving and plunging
-keel, dead as the figure yonder in that little
-cabin, of whom he had spoken jestingly so
-lately that the words and tone of his voice
-were still in my ear!</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Where is the boat, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I turned slowly round and looked at the
-girl with an air of stupefaction, then stared
-again into the blankness, and with shuddering
-heart swept my eyes over the water alongside,
-brimming in humpbacked rounds to the very
-line of the deck, and sweeping away into the
-near thickness with a spitting and seething
-and flashing of foam off each long slant to the
-fierce shrill smiting of the wind.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Has the boat left us, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>With a desperate effort I rallied myself,
-and watching for my chances betwixt the wild
-slopings of the deck, I reached the deck-house,
-and held on by the girl&#8217;s side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The boat has been blown away. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-men fell imbecile, I do believe, when they
-saw their officer drop overboard. What
-madmen to let go the painter, to man&#339;uvre
-with three oars in a heavy cutter in the teeth
-of such a wind as this, and on the top of that
-swell!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Did they recover the lieutenant?&#8217; she
-asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; she shrieked, &#8216;do you
-tell me he is drowned?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;he is drowned,&#8217; I answered,
-scarce able to articulate for the sudden fit of
-horror that came upon me again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Drowned!&#8217; she exclaimed. &#8216;Oh no&mdash;not
-so suddenly! He may be struggling close
-against the vessel now&#8217;&mdash;she moved as if to
-go to the side to look. I grasped her arm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Do not stir,&#8217; I cried; &#8216;the slope of the
-deck will carry you overboard. It is all open
-to the water abreast of us.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Shocking! It is unendurable! Drowned
-so swiftly! And the boat&mdash;the boat, Mr.
-Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The cruel distress in her voice, the anguish
-of mind expressed in her parted lips, her
-heaving breast, her strained, brilliant, wide-open<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-staring looks about her, obliged me to
-recollect myself by forcing me to understand
-my obligations as a man.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Miss Temple, this fog may prove but a
-passing thickness. There is a clear sky over
-it, and when the vapour settles away, the sea
-will open to its confines. The Indiaman knows
-we are here. We were watched, too, from
-the corvette, no doubt, and she must regain
-her boat besides. The cutter is a powerful
-little fabric, and there is nothing as yet in this
-weather or in that sea to hurt her. It is a
-hard experience for you; but it will prove a
-brief one only, I am sure. Let me assist you
-to a seat in this deck-house. Your having to
-hold on here is fatiguing and dangerous.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I could not enter whilst that man is there,&#8217;
-she exclaimed. &#8216;Oh, hark to that bell!&#8217; she
-cried hysterically; &#8216;it is tolling for <i>us</i> now!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You must be sheltered,&#8217; I exclaimed;
-&#8216;and that body must come out of it. Will
-you sit on the deck? You will be safer so.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She sank down; and to still further secure
-her, I went sliding and clawing like a monkey
-to the quarter, where, with my knife, I severed
-an end of rope&mdash;a piece of gear belayed to a
-pin&mdash;with which I returned to her side. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-passed the line round her waist, and firmly
-attached the ends to one of several iron uprights
-which supported the structure; and
-begging her to compose her mind, and not to
-doubt of our deliverance within the next two
-or three hours, I entered the little building.</p>
-
-<p>It was a loathsome job; but the girl must
-be sheltered, and it was not to be borne that
-she should have such a companion as that
-corpse, when there was the great graveyard
-of the sea within an easy drag to receive the
-body. Yet I must own to coming to a stand
-with a long look at the silent figure before I
-could muster up stomach enough to lay hands
-upon him. Indeed, as I now fixed my eyes
-on the body, I wondered whether he could be
-really dead, so startlingly lifelike was his posture,
-so pensive his air, so vital the aspect of
-him to the minutest feature, down to the pen
-betwixt his fingers, and the reposeful position
-of his small wax-white hand upon the table.
-How could I tell but that he might be in some
-sort of trance, and that my heaving him overboard
-would be the same as murdering him?
-However, after a spell of staring, I shook off
-these alarms and conjectures, and grasping
-him by the arm, got him upon the deck; and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span>
-presently I had him abreast of that part of the
-brig&#8217;s side where the bulwarks were gone;
-and trembling as violently as though I were
-about to drown a living being, I waited for a
-roll of the hull, then gave the body a heave,
-and away it went, striking the swell in a diving
-attitude, and floating off and down into it, as
-if it swam.</p>
-
-<p>This done, I crept back to Miss Temple
-and squatted beside her.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-<small>NIGHT</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> wind blew hard, and the vapour swept
-past in a horizontal pouring, masses of it
-coming on a sudden in a blinding thickness
-till you could not see half the wreck&#8217;s length;
-then the silver-tinted volumes would brighten
-for a breath or two, and show the steel-coloured
-sea heaving its freckled and foamless
-folds into the vaporous faintness a few hundred
-feet off; then the mist would boil down and
-over us once more until it was like being in a
-room filled with steam.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The cabin is empty,&#8217; said I&mdash;the girl being
-on the port side, I had taken care to drag the
-body to starboard&mdash;&#8216;there are seats, and you
-will be sheltered there. This is damping
-stuff.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not yet,&#8217; she answered. &#8216;I am as safe
-here. I hate the thought of having anything
-to screen the sea from me. I want to look&mdash;at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-any moment the Indiaman or the man-of-war
-may come close to us.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Be it so,&#8217; said I. &#8216;Heavens, how rapidly
-has all this happened! One of the cutter&#8217;s
-men shouted to me that the Indiaman had
-fired two guns. Why did they not report
-this to us? Did they believe the swell would
-not let them get aboard? They saw&mdash;of
-course they saw&mdash;this fog bearing down; why
-did not the madmen let us know of it?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What will my aunt think?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, she will be in a terrible fright. But
-it will not last. We shall be picked up presently.
-I would rather be here than in the
-cutter. If they are wise, they will ride to
-their oars; if they row or allow the wind and
-seas to drive them, they are bound to lose
-both ships, the night being at hand; and then
-God help them!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, it was an evil moment,&#8217; she cried,
-&#8216;when we sighted the corvette!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It was an evil moment,&#8217; I exclaimed bitterly
-and wrathfully, &#8216;when Mr. Colledge,
-who had undoubtedly taken too much wine
-on board the <i>Magicienne</i>, suggested that we
-should kill an hour on this hull. Where,&#8217; I
-cried passionately, &#8216;could the unhappy lieutenant&#8217;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span>
-wits have been? He laughed at me
-for indicating the appearance I witnessed in
-the north-west. Was there nothing in the
-weight of this swell to convince him that
-there must be mischief not far off?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What will my aunt think?&#8217; she repeated,
-as though she scarcely heeded my words,
-whilst she brought her hands, brilliant with
-rings, together and stared into the thickness
-with her eyes on fire with fear and amazement
-and the score of wild emotions which
-filled her.</p>
-
-<p>Though I held my peace on the subject,
-the wind, that was blowing with the spite of
-an ugly squall, was exciting an alarm in me
-that rose above all other considerations of our
-situation. The hatches lay open and there
-was nothing to be seen of their covers about
-the decks. If this weather continued, a high
-sea must presently follow, in which case there
-could be nothing to save the wreck from filling
-and foundering. The lieutenant had
-assured us that she was dry; but it was
-certain that she had been badly wrenched by
-the lightning stroke that had dismasted and
-apparently set her on fire forward, and by the
-furious gale that had chased her afterwards;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span>
-and though she may have been tight when
-the lieutenant overhauled her, this constant
-working in the strong swell might at any instant
-cause her to start a butt or open a seam,
-and then what should I be able to do? Both
-pumps were smashed level to the deck; there
-was no boat; there was nothing discoverable
-fore and aft which I could launch and secure
-my companion and myself to. It was with
-inexpressible anxiety, therefore, that I would
-send my gaze from time to time to windward,
-in the hope of observing a thinning in the
-thickness there, or any the faintest imaginable
-sign to elate me with the belief that the worst
-of the fog was on us, that we were now feeling
-the worst of the wind, and that the ocean
-would be clearing soon.</p>
-
-<p>The time passed. I looked at my watch
-after we had been sitting a little, and found it
-six o&#8217;clock. The sun would be setting in
-something more than an hour, and a bitter
-black night was bound to follow if the vapour
-had not cleared when daylight ended. There
-was now a smart sea running, but the swell
-had flattened something, I thought. The hull
-was horribly frisky, leaning at desperate
-angles from side to side, and often recovering<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</a></span>
-herself with a jerk that must have flung us to
-the deck had we not been seated. But she
-was extraordinarily light, and floated very
-tall, and though there would sometimes come
-a blow of salt water against the bow that
-flashed across the deck in a mass of foam and
-green crystals, yet she soared so nimbly to the
-height of every surge that she took in amazingly
-little water. Indeed, it was not long
-before I felt myself infinitely comforted by her
-behaviour, convinced that it would have to
-breeze up with much more spite than the
-wind now had to put us in jeopardy from a
-filling hold.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly before the hour of sundown, I
-induced Miss Temple to occupy the deck-house.
-She entered with a great deal of
-reluctance, and seated herself in a corner that
-was the furthest away from where the body
-had been. It had not been very easy to converse
-outside. The ceaseless roaring and
-washing noises of the water, with the alarming
-thumps and leapings of froth at the bow, and
-the sounds of the rushing wind sweeping in
-gusty cries over the mutilated rails of the
-hull as she was hove up full into it, and then
-sinking into a sort of humming moaning as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span>
-the wreck drove down the liquid acclivity
-into the swift comparative stillness of the
-trough: all this was distracting and terrifying,
-and speech had been difficult. But the interior
-of the deck-house was a shelter to the
-ear and voice. I seated myself opposite the
-girl, giving her as wide, respectful a berth as
-the narrow cabin permitted. The shadow of
-the evening lay already sullen in the white
-mist that seemed to boil upon the wind, though
-at that hour it was not so thick but that the
-gaze might be able to penetrate a distance of
-a quarter of a mile. Miss Temple was deadly
-pale. Even her lips had lost their delicate
-rosy tint, and sat blanched in their compression.
-Her eyes looked preternaturally large,
-and there was an expression of passionate
-desperation in them, as one might figure of
-some proud, high-spirited creature driven at
-bay, and rounding upon the pursuer with a
-gaze charged with despair and wrath and the
-misery of some heart-breaking resolution.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I believe I shall go mad,&#8217; she said, &#8216;if
-this fog does not cease. I feel as though I
-were now insane, and that what we are suffering
-is the imagination of madness.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is a frightful time of suspense,&#8217; I answered;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</a></span>
-&#8216;we must have patience: there is no
-other medicine for this sort of affliction.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I could stab myself,&#8217; she cried, &#8216;for
-being in this position. There is the Indiaman
-close at hand; I see her saloon cheerful with
-lamplight, the tables glittering, the passengers
-seated, talking and laughing, without a
-thought of us by this time.&#8217; I shook my
-head. She continued: &#8216;I think of the security,
-the comfort of that ship, which I never
-once reflected on when in her. And now
-contrast this!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She rolled her wonderful eyes over the
-narrow compartment in a shuddering way
-that was eloquent with abhorrence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why am I here? It is my own fault. I
-could stab myself for my folly.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It made one think of some beautiful wild
-creature newly caged to watch her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is bad enough,&#8217; said I; &#8216;but it might
-be much worse. Think of yourself in that
-open boat&mdash;on this high sea, and amidst this
-blinding vapour: no water, no food, the
-blackness of the night coming down, and a
-thousand leagues of ocean all around you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is not the cutter safer than this horrible
-wreck?&#8217; she cried. &#8216;If the morning exposes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span>
-the ships to the people in her, they can row;
-but what can we do?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;If the morning exposes the ships,&#8217; said I,
-&#8216;they&#8217;ll see us, and very joyfully attempt to
-fetch us&mdash;that is to sail to us.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She turned to look through a window the
-glass of which was gone, and through which
-the wind was shrilling as though it blew into
-a cylinder. It was fast darkening. In these
-latitudes twilight is brief, and in such weather
-as this there would be none. It was little
-more now than sombre blank greyness outside,
-with a sight of the steel-coloured swell,
-over whose humps the seas were rushing in
-foam, shouldering and vanishing into the
-thickness. But there was no increase in the
-wind, and the run of the surge did not gain
-in weight.</p>
-
-<p>I watched the girl while she looked through
-the window. It is not in language to convey
-the tragic irony that was put into our situation
-by her sparkling holiday attire. Her
-dress was of some white material, of a silken
-or lustrous nature, that most perfectly fitted
-the beauties of her person. Her hat was
-some rich combination of richly plumed
-straw. She had removed her gloves on descending<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-into the cabin of the hull when we
-boarded her, and many rings of splendour
-and value flashed on her fingers in a very
-armour of jewels and gold. There were gems
-in her ears, and a heavy chain of gold round
-her neck, terminating in a whole cluster of
-trinkets at her girdle, in which was sheathed
-a watch of the size of her thumb-nail. Think
-of this glittering figure, this stately, most perfect
-shape of womanhood in the gloom of the
-strong, rude interior of the deck-house, with
-its few rough details of fittings in the shape
-of a table and lockers, nothing to see through
-the window but the rough deck spreading
-naked to its splinters of bulwark, with the
-angry foam of waters beyond, and a near sky
-of fast blackening vapour!</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What are we to do?&#8217; she exclaimed,
-resuming her former attitude and fixing her
-large desperate eyes upon me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We must wait,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You have been a sailor, Mr. Dugdale;
-tell me what you think?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, first of all, we must be prepared
-to spend the night on this wreck&#8217;&mdash;&mdash; She
-flashed her hands to her face and held them
-there, and I waited for her to look at me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-again. &#8216;This weather,&#8217; I proceeded, &#8216;is not
-likely to last very long. The dawn will probably
-exhibit a clear sky. If the ships are
-not in sight&#8217;&mdash;she drew in her breath with an
-hysterical &#8216;Oh&#8217;&mdash;&#8216;they will still have the
-bearings of the wreck, and search for us.
-Were there but a single vessel to hunt after
-the hull, we might still feel perfectly safe;
-but there are two, and one of them is an
-English man-of-war.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But will Sir Edward Panton know that
-we are here?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No doubt. He or others will have seen
-the cutter deviate for the wreck instead of
-pulling for the Indiaman.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But they may think we are in the boat;
-and if she is not recovered, they will search
-for her, and not trouble themselves about the
-wreck.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We must be hopeful, and we must be
-patient,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>It was now rapidly growing dark. The
-white waters showed ghastly over the edge of
-the bare deck to each convulsive jerking roll
-of the hull, and my companion&#8217;s white face
-was little more than a glimmer in the gloom
-of the corner in which she sat. The thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-of the long black hours which lay before us
-was intolerable. I looked about me for a
-lamp, but there was nothing of the kind, nor
-hook nor bracket to prove that a lamp or
-lantern was ever used in this small abode. I
-told Miss Temple that I would go below and
-search for something wherewith to make a
-light.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Will you be long?&#8217; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&#8217;ll make haste,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes, if you please, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; she
-exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>I had in my pocket the old-fashioned arrangement
-of tinder-box and sulphur matches,
-being, indeed, too confirmed a smoker to
-stir very far without that convenience. The
-mere descent of the steps was a horrible
-labour, owing to the extravagant leaps and
-rolls of the mere shell of wreck, and my progress
-was scarcely more than inch by inch,
-forced to hold on as I was with the tenacity
-of the grip of a parrot&#8217;s beak. The straining
-noises in the cabin might have easily led me
-to suppose that the hull was going to pieces.
-Every blow of the sea trembled through her
-down here as though the fabric forward were
-breaking up, and I recollect swinging by a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-stanchion for some minute or two, overwhelmed
-with the consternation excited in
-me by the sounds, and by a sudden recollection
-of the lieutenant&#8217;s words that the brig
-in her forecastle had been burnt out. But I
-had promised Miss Temple to be speedy; and
-the thought of her sitting lonely above in
-terror and despair brought my mind back to
-its bearings.</p>
-
-<p>It was almost pitch-dark, but remembering
-the situation of the pantry in which the
-lieutenant had cracked the bottle of wine, I
-dropped on my hands and knees, not daring
-to trust my feet, and crawled towards it.
-When I guessed by groping that I was near
-the door, I kindled a match and entered the
-pantry; and after consuming about half-a-dozen
-matches, I met with a tin box that was
-full of long wax candles, which looked to me
-very much like a sample of booty, as it was
-scarcely to be supposed that a vessel of the
-class of the <i>Aspirante</i> would lay in stores of
-that quality. I hunted for a candlestick, and
-found a small empty pickle bottle, which
-would very well answer the purpose of holding
-the candle. This I squeezed under my
-waistcoat, and filled my coat-pockets with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span>
-couple of bottles of wine, a handful of ship&#8217;s
-biscuit, and a little tin drinking-vessel; and
-then putting the box of candles under my
-arm, I fell again upon my hands and knees,
-crawled to the cabin ladder, and joined the
-deck-house so wearied by the posture I had
-been forced to adopt and by the convulsive
-motions of the deck, which had put an aching
-as of rheumatism into every bone, that I was
-forced to sit and remain quiet for some
-minutes.</p>
-
-<p>The wind swept in through the denuded
-windows; but the structure, as I have before
-said, was long in proportion to its width, and
-at the fore-end the atmosphere was quiet
-enough for a candle to burn in. I secured
-the empty pickle bottle to a stanchion with
-my handkerchief, and placed the lighted
-candle in it; and the square of the bottle
-held the flame at a sufficient distance from
-the stanchion to provide against all risk of
-fire. The light seemed to raise some little
-heart in Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You are brave,&#8217; she exclaimed, with a
-glance at the black square of the hatch, &#8216;to
-descend into that dreadful dungeon. There
-may be dead bodies there.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>&#8216;I am not afraid of dead bodies,&#8217; said I.
-&#8216;I wish there were nothing more harmful in
-this world than dead men. Here are two
-bottles of wine and some biscuit. You will
-be the better for a little refreshment.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I knocked off the head of a bottle and
-handed her a draught. She looked at the
-rough drinking-vessel for a little, and then
-said with a painful smile: &#8216;A desperate
-change, Mr. Dugdale, from the table of the
-Indiaman! Will this wine hurt me?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I will drink first, to reassure you, if you
-please,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; she exclaimed; &#8216;I must not be too
-cowardly;&#8217; and she drank.</p>
-
-<p>I took a good drain myself, and found it
-the same noble wine that the poor lieutenant
-had tasted.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Try one of these biscuits, Miss Temple,&#8217;
-said I; &#8216;they are but coarse eating for you,
-I fear; they are the bread that poor Jack is
-fed on.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She took one and nibbled at it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ha!&#8217; said I, &#8216;this is an ocean experience
-indeed. This is being shipwrecked. You
-will have a deal more to talk about when you
-get home than Colledge could have dreamt of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-in proposing this excursion for that purpose.
-Can you bite that biscuit?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes,&#8217; she answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is rather flinty,&#8217; said I, munching.
-&#8216;There should be something more relishable
-than this to be come at below. I will make
-another hunt.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No, if you please,&#8217; she cried vehemently;
-&#8216;do not leave me, Mr. Dugdale.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ay, but food apart, since we must needs
-remain here through the night, I must endeavour
-to find something soft for you to lie
-upon. You cannot rest upon that hard
-locker.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, I do not want to rest,&#8217; she exclaimed.
-&#8216;Do you think I could sleep? I shall sit as I
-am, and pray for the light to come and for a
-sight of the ships.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I made no answer, though it was on the
-tip of my tongue to say I was sorry for her
-sake that it was I, and not Colledge, whom
-she was adrift with. It was an impulse
-coming through some sudden hot recollection
-of her treatment of me on board the <i>Countess
-Ida</i>; but I bit my lip, and was grateful for
-my silence a moment after, when I saw her
-fine eyes swimming with tears.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span>&#8216;Pray have hope,&#8217; I exclaimed. &#8216;I am
-sure after a bit you will find plenty of courage
-in your heart to confront this little passage,
-hard as it is. I will do what I can. I would
-you had a better sailor than I by your side;
-but what can be done by me shall be done,
-and the worst is a long way off yet, I am
-certain.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She put her hands upon the table and hid
-her face in them. I lifted the lid of the
-locker I was using as a seat, to stow away
-the bottles in a safe place; for, talk as I
-might, it was only God could know whether
-it might not end in a single drop of the liquor
-becoming more precious to us than twenty
-times the value of the cargo of the Indiaman.
-There were some wearing apparel, a few small
-coils of ratline-stuff, and other odds and ends
-in the locker, but nothing noticeable. I then
-clawed my way to the deck-house door to
-take a look round. It was black as fog and
-darkness could make it. Close alongside, the
-foam glanced dimly, with now and again a
-flash of phosphoric light in some dark coil
-down whose slope the hull was sliding; but
-there was nothing else to see. The wind still
-blew fresh, but there was no recognisable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</a></span>
-increase in it since the hour of its first coming
-down upon the wreck. It made a most
-dismal and melancholy noise of howling in the
-sky, as it swept through the dark obscurity,
-splitting upon the foremast and the shrouds
-which supported the spar, in a low-toned
-long-drawn shriek, which had something of
-the sound of a human note as it pierced
-through the hissing and seething round about,
-and through the strange, low, dull thunder
-made by the shouldering of liquid folds
-coming together as they ran, and by the hurl
-of the surge as it rounded and dissolved into
-foam.</p>
-
-<p>There could be very little doubt that the
-drift of a light empty shell of a wreck with a
-yard and mast and shrouds forward for the
-wind to catch hold of would be considerable
-in such weather as this. Helped by the beat
-of the seas, she might easily blow dead to leeward,
-in the trough as she was, at the rate of
-some three to four miles in the hour, so that
-daybreak would find her forty or fifty miles
-distant from the spot where we had boarded
-her. However, I comforted myself with the
-reflection that the commanders of the two
-ships would have a clear perception of such a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span>
-drift as I calculated, and allow for it in the
-search they would surely make for the hull.
-I had but one fear: that the cutter had been
-seen leaving the wreck, for there was an
-interval at least of a minute or two between
-her dropping astern and man&#339;uvring with her
-three oars and her envelopment by the fog.
-If, then, she had been sighted, the inference
-would inevitably be that Miss Temple, Colledge,
-and myself were in her; and so the
-hunt would be for the cutter, without reference
-to the hull, with every prospect of the
-search carrying the ships miles below the
-verge of our horizon.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, as I stood in that doorway
-looking into the blackness over the sides, I
-bent my ear anxiously forward; but though
-there were constant shocks of the sea smiting
-the bow, I never caught the noise of water
-falling in weight enough upon the deck to
-alarm me. The leap of the surge seemed to
-be always forward of the fore-shrouds, and
-the ducking and tossing of the fabric was so
-nimble, and the pouring of the blast so steadfast,
-that nearly all the water that sprang to
-the blow of the bow was carried overboard by
-the wind. This was about as comforting an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</a></span>
-assurance as could come to me; for I tell you
-it was enough to turn one&#8217;s heart into lead to
-look into that starless wall of blackness close
-against the ship, to see nothing but the pallid
-glimmer of froth, to hearken to the noises in
-the air, to feel the sickening and dizzy heavings
-of the sea, and then realise that this hull
-had been struck by lightning, that the forepart
-of her was burnt into a thin case of
-charred timbers, and that all three hatches in
-her, together with the skylight, lay open and
-yawning like the mouths of wells to the first
-rush of sea that should tumble over the side.</p>
-
-<p>I will not feign to remember how that
-night passed. The tall wax candle burnt
-bravely and lasted long; but the guttering of
-it to the circlings of the air in the extremity
-of the cabin obliged me to light another before
-the night was spent. It a little encouraged
-Miss Temple to be able to see. God knows
-how it might have been with her had we been
-obliged to sit in that blackness. Once the
-candle was blown out, and when I had succeeded
-in lighting it afresh, after a few minutes
-of groping and hunting and man&#339;uvring with
-my tinder-box, I looked at the girl, and knew
-by the horror that shone in her eyes, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span>
-marble hardness in the aspect of her parted
-lips, as though her mouth were some carved
-expression of fear, how heart-subduing had
-that short spell of blackness proved. From
-time to time she would ask for a little wine,
-which she sipped as though thirsty, but she
-swallowed a few drops only, as if she feared
-that the wine, by heating her, would increase
-her thirst; yet when I spoke of going below
-to seek for some fresh water, she begged me
-not to leave her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is the memory of the body that sat at
-this table which makes loneliness insupportable
-to me, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; she exclaimed. &#8216;I seemed
-to see the dreadful object when the candle
-went out. I thought I had more spirit. I
-am but a very weak woman, after all.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I do not think so,&#8217; said I; &#8216;you are bearing
-this frightful trial very nobly. How
-would it be with some girls I know? They
-would be swooning away; they would be
-exhausting themselves in cries; they would
-be tearing themselves to pieces in hysterics.
-And how is it with me? Sometimes I am
-frightened to death, but not with fears of
-darkness or of the dead. I am certain we
-shall be rescued; this hull is making excellent<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-weather of it; there is food and drink below,
-yet I am filled with consternation and grief.
-Why should it be otherwise? We are creatures
-of nerves, and this is an experience to
-test the courage of a saint.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Well, we would exchange a few sentences
-after this pattern, and then fall silent for a
-whole hour at a time. She never closed her
-eyes throughout the night. Whenever I
-glanced at her, I met her gaze brilliant with
-emotion. The change was so sudden that I
-found it impossible to fully realise it. When
-I thought of Miss Temple aboard the <i>Countess
-Ida</i>, her haughtiness, her character of
-almost insolent reserve, how she had hardly
-found it in her to address me with an accent
-of courtesy, her ungracious treatment of me
-after the service I had done her in rescuing
-her from a perilous situation: I say when I
-recalled all this and a deal more, and then
-viewed her as she sat opposite, crouching in
-a corner, supporting herself by grasping the
-table with her heavily ringed fingers, the
-high-born delicate beauty of her lineaments
-showing like some cameo in ivory, and reflected
-that she and I were absolutely alone,
-that it might come to her owing her life to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span>
-me, or that we might be doomed to miserably
-perish together&mdash;this girl, this unapproachable
-young lady, at whom I had been wont
-to stare furtively with fascinated eyes on
-board the Indiaman for long spells at a stretch&mdash;I
-could not bring my mind to credit the
-reality of our situation.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XX<br />
-
-<small>I SEARCH THE WRECK</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">All</span> night long it blew a strong wind, but
-shortly before daybreak it fined down on a
-sudden into a light air out of the south-west,
-leaving a troubled rolling sea behind it. It
-was still very thick all round the horizon, so
-that from the door of the deck-house my gaze
-scarcely penetrated a distance of two miles.
-It was no longer fog, however, but cloud,
-sullen, low-lying, here and there shaping out;
-a familiar tropical dawn in the parallels,
-though it made one think too of the smothers
-you fall in with on the edge of the Gulf Stream.</p>
-
-<p>I stepped on deck to wait for the light to
-break, and Miss Temple came to the door to
-look also. The hull still rolled violently, but
-without the dangerous friskiness of the jumps,
-recoils, and staggering recoveries of the night
-when there was a sharp sea running as well as
-a long heaving swell. My heart was in my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span>
-gaze as the dim faintness came sifting into the
-darkness of the east. In a few minutes it was
-a grey morn, the sea an ugly lead, and the
-horizon all round of the aspect of a drizzling
-November day in the English Channel. We
-both swept the water with our sight, again
-and again looking, straining our vision into
-the dim distances; but to no purpose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Do you see anything?&#8217; exclaimed Miss
-Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; I answered, &#8216;there is nothing in
-sight.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, my heart will break!&#8217; she cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We must wait awhile,&#8217; said I: &#8216;this sort
-of weather has a trick of clearing rapidly, and
-it may be all bright sky and wide shining surface
-of ocean long before noon; then we shall
-see the ships, and they will see us. But this
-is a low level. Something may heave into
-view from the height of that mast. I shall not
-be long gone. Be careful to hold on firmly,
-Miss Temple; nay, oblige me by sitting in the
-deck-house. Should you relax your grasp, a
-sudden roll may carry you overboard.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>In silence, and with a face of despair, she
-took her seat on a locker, and very warily I
-made my way forwards. We had taken but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-a brief view of the hull when we boarded her,
-and the appearance of her towards the bows
-was new to me. There were twenty signs of
-her having been swept again and again by the
-seas. No doubt, her hatches had been uncovered,
-that her people might rummage her
-before going away in her boats; and the
-covers, for all I could tell, might have been
-rolled overboard by some of her violent workings.
-Yet it was certain that she must have
-been swept when her hatches were covered,
-or the lieutenant would not have found her
-with a dry hold. But I had been long enough
-at sea to know that it is the improbable conjecture
-that oftenest fits the fact of a marine
-disaster.</p>
-
-<p>I took a view of the foremast, to make
-sure that all was sound with it, and then
-sprang into the shrouds and gained the top.
-Some few feet of the splintered topmast still
-stood, and under the platform at which I had
-arrived the foreyard swang drearily to its
-overhauled braces hanging in bights. There
-was no more to see here than from the deck.
-The thick atmosphere receded nothing to this
-elevation, and would have been as impenetrable
-had I climbed a thousand feet. It was like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span>
-being in the heart of an amphitheatre of sulky
-shadows. The water rolled foamless, and there
-was little more air to be felt than was made
-by the sickeningly monotonous swing of the
-solitary spar from whose summit I explored
-the ocean limits in all directions, frowning
-to the heart-breaking intensity of my stare.
-By heaven, then, thought I, we <i>are</i> alone! and
-if we are to be picked up by either of the
-ships, it will not be to-day nor maybe to-morrow!</p>
-
-<p>I glanced down at the deck of the hull,
-and observed that the sides of the fore-hatch
-were black with extinguished fire. The head-rail
-was gone to port, and from the eyes of
-her to the deck-house aft the fabric had a
-fearfully wrecked look, with its mutilated
-bulwark stanchions, its yawning hatchways,
-its dislocated capstan, and other details of a
-like kind, all helping to a horrible wildness of
-appearance to one who viewed, as I did, from
-an eminence, the crazy, fire-blackened, dismasted
-old basket, that wallowed as though
-every head of swell that rolled at her must
-overwhelm and drown her hollow interior.</p>
-
-<p>I again sent my eyes in another passionate
-search, then descended. As I sprang from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-shrouds on to the deck, my eye was taken by
-the brig&#8217;s bell, that dangled from a frame close
-against the foremast. Dreading lest some increase
-in the swell should start it off into ringing
-in some dismal hour of gloom and heighten
-Miss Temple&#8217;s misery and terror, I unhooked
-the tongue of it, and threw it down, and rejoined
-my companion, whose white face put
-the piteous question of her heart to me in
-silence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; said I, swaying in front of her as I
-held on to the door; &#8216;there is nothing to be
-seen.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh it is hard! it is hard!&#8217; she cried. &#8216;If
-one could only recall a few hours&mdash;be able to
-go back to yesterday! I do not fear death:
-but to die thus&mdash;to drown in that dreadful
-sea&mdash;no one to be able to tell how I perished.&#8217;
-She sobbed, but with dry eyes.</p>
-
-<p>There was no reasoning with such a fit of
-despair as this, nor was it possible for me to
-say anything out of which she might extract a
-grain of comfort, seeing that I could but speak
-conjecturally, and with no other perception
-than was to be shaped by the faint light of my
-own hopes. My heart was deeply moved by
-her misery. Her beauty showed wan, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-was inexpressibly appealing with its air of
-misery. The effects of the long and fearful
-vigils of the night that was gone were cruelly
-visible in her. There was a violet shadow
-under her eyes, her lips were pale, her lids
-drooped, her hair hung in some little disorder
-about her brow and ears; her very dress
-seemed significant of shipwreck, mocking the
-eye with what the grim usage of the sea had
-already transformed into mere ironical finery.
-Yet there was too much of the nature she had
-familiarised me to on board the Indiaman still
-expressed in the natural haughty set of her
-lips, even charged as they were with the anguish
-that worked in her, to win me to any
-attempt of tender reassurance. I watched
-her dumbly, though my soul was melted into
-pity. Presently she looked at me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I suppose there is nothing to be done,
-Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Indeed, then,&#8217; said I, &#8216;there is a deal to
-be done. First of all, you must cheer up your
-heart, which you will find easy if you can
-credit me when I tell you that this hull is
-perfectly buoyant; that though the weather
-is thick and gloomy, the sun, as he gains
-power, is certain to open out the ocean to us;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-that there are two ships close at hand searching
-for us; that there are provisions enough
-below to enable us to support life for days
-and perhaps weeks; and that, even if the
-Indiaman or the corvette fail to fall in with
-us, we are sure to be sighted by one of the
-numerous vessels which are daily traversing
-this great ocean highway. What, then, are
-we to do but compose our minds, exert our
-patience, keep a bright lookout, be provided
-with means for signalling our distress, and
-meanwhile not to suffer our unfortunate condition
-to starve us? And that reminds me to
-overhaul the pantry for something better than
-biscuit to break our fast with.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>A softness I should have thought impossible
-to the spirited fires of her eyes when all
-was well with her entered her gaze for a
-moment as it rested upon me, and a faint
-smile flickered upon and vanished off her lips;
-but she did not speak, and I dropped through
-the hatch to ascertain if the pantry could
-yield us something more nourishing than
-ship&#8217;s bread.</p>
-
-<p>The sullenness of the day without lay in
-gloom below. I was forced to return for a
-candle, with which I entered the little cabin<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-that I had visited on the previous day; but
-when I came to make a search I could find
-nothing more to eat than cheese, biscuit, and
-marmalade. There was a number of raw
-hams, but the galley was gone, and there was
-no means to cook them. There were two
-casks of flour, a sack of some kind of dried
-beans, and a small barrel of moist sugar.
-These matters had probably been overlooked
-when the crew hurriedly removed themselves
-from the brig. No doubt, at the time of
-jettisoning such commodities as the hold
-might have stored, they had broken out as
-much food and water as they could take with
-them. There was more than a bottle of wine
-in the deck-house; down here, stowed away
-in straw and secured by a batten, were some
-three or four scores of full bottles, all, I
-supposed, holding the same generous liquor
-contained in the first of them we had tasted.
-But there was no fresh water. I sought with
-diligence, but to no purpose. Possibly the
-people might have left some casks of it in the
-hold; but that was a search I would not at
-present undertake.</p>
-
-<p>I took some cheese and marmalade and
-another handful of biscuits, along with a knife<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-and a couple of tin dishes. As I passed
-through the cabin, the light of the candle I
-held glanced upon a stand of small-arms fixed
-just abaft the short flight of the hatch-ladder.
-There were some thirty to forty muskets of
-an old-fashioned make, even for those days,
-and on either hand of them, swinging in tiers
-or rows from nails or hooks in the bulkhead,
-were a quantity of cutlasses, half-pikes, tomahawks,
-and other items of the grim machinery
-of murder. I placed the food upon the deck-house
-table.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A shabby repast, Miss Temple,&#8217; said I,
-&#8216;but we may easily support life on such fare
-until we are rescued.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She ate some biscuit and marmalade, and
-drank a little wine; but she incessantly sent
-her gaze through the windows or the open
-door, and sighed frequently in tremulous respirations,
-and sometimes there would enter a
-singular look of bewilderment into the expression
-of her eyes, as though her mind at
-such moments failed her, and did but imperfectly
-understand our situation. I would then
-fear that the horror which possessed her
-might end in breaking down her spirits, and
-even dement her, indeed. Already her eyes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-were languid with grief and want of rest,
-and such strength and life as they still possessed
-seemed weakened yet by the shadowing
-of the long fringes. I endeavoured to win
-her away from her thoughts by talking to
-her.</p>
-
-<p>I possessed a pocket-book, which supplied
-me with pencil and paper, and I drew a diagram
-of the two ships&#8217; and the wreck&#8217;s position,
-as I was best able to conceive it, and made
-arrows to figure the direction of the wind,
-and marked distances in figures, and enlarged
-freely and heartily upon our prospects, pointing
-with my pencil to the paper whilst I
-talked. This interested her. She came round
-to the locker on which I sat, and placed herself
-beside me, and leaned her face near to
-mine, supporting her head by her elbow whilst
-she gazed with eyes riveted to the paper,
-listening thirstily. I had never had her so
-close to me before saving that day when we
-swung together on to the hencoop, but then it
-was a constrained situation, and she had let
-me suspect that it was very distasteful to her.
-It was far otherwise now. She was near me of
-her own will; I felt her warm breath on my
-cheek; the subtle fragrance of her presence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-was in the air I respired. I talked eagerly to
-conceal the emotions she excited, and I felt
-the blood hot in my face when I had made an
-end with my diagram, and drew a little away
-to restore the book to my pocket.</p>
-
-<p>She now seemed able and willing to converse,
-but she did not offer to leave my side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Suppose the ships are unable to find us,
-Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Some other vessel is certain to fall in
-with us.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But she may be bound to a part of the
-world very remote from India or England.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;True,&#8217; said I; &#8216;but as she jogs along she
-may encounter a vessel proceeding to England,
-into which we shall be easily able to tranship
-ourselves.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How tedious! We may have to wander
-for months about the ocean!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is always step by step, Miss Temple, in
-this life. Let us begin at the beginning, and
-quit this wreck, at any rate.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;All my luggage is in the Indiaman. How
-I am to manage I cannot conceive,&#8217; said she,
-running her eyes over her dress, and lifting
-her hand to her hat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray let no such consideration as dress<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span>
-trouble you. The experience will gain in
-romance from our necessities, and we shall be
-able to read &#8220;Robinson Crusoe&#8221; with new enjoyment.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She faintly smiled, with just a hint of
-peevishness in the curl of her lip.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;If this be romance, Mr. Dugdale, may my
-days henceforth, if God be merciful enough
-to preserve us, be steeped in the dullest
-prose.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I wonder where Colledge and the cutter&#8217;s
-crew are?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I do not think,&#8217; she exclaimed, &#8216;if Mr.
-Colledge were in your place he would show
-your spirit.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He was a great favourite of yours, Miss
-Temple.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not great. I rather liked him. I knew
-some of his connections. He was an amiable
-person. I did not know that he was engaged
-to be married.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I was astonished that she should have
-said this, but I was eager to encourage her to
-talk, and in our state of misery it would signify
-but little what topic we lighted upon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Did he inform you he was engaged?&#8217;
-said I.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</a></span>&#8216;No. I perceived it in his looks when his
-cousin asked him the question. Did he ever
-tell you who the young lady was?&#8217; she added
-listlessly, and though she spoke of the thing
-it was easy to see that she was without interest
-in it.</p>
-
-<p>I could not tell a lie, and silence would
-have been injurious to my wishes for her.
-Besides, she had guessed the truth by no help
-from me, and then, again, our situation rendered
-the subject exquisitely trifling and
-insignificant.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes,&#8217; I replied; &#8216;we were cabin fellows,
-and intimate. He showed me the girl&#8217;s portrait&mdash;a
-plump, pretty little woman. Her
-name is Fanny Crawley, daughter of one of
-the numberless Sir Johns or Sir Thomases of
-this age.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She was looking through the cabin door
-at the sea, and scarcely seemed to hear or to
-heed me. Am I strictly honourable in this?
-thought I. Pshaw! it was no moment to consider
-the rights and wrongs of such a thing.
-Her discovery had freed me from all obligation
-of secrecy, and what I had supplied
-she would have easily been able to ascertain
-for herself on her return home, if, indeed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span>
-home was ever to be viewed again by either
-of us.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What horrible weather!&#8217; she exclaimed,
-bringing her eyes to my face; &#8216;there is no
-wind, and the sea rolls like liquid lead. When
-you were at sea, were you ever in a situation
-of danger such as this?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;This is an uneasy time,&#8217; said I; &#8216;but
-do not call it a situation of danger yet. I
-am going shortly to overhaul the wreck. I
-must keep her afloat until we are taken off
-her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How long were you at sea, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Two years.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is your father a sailor?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No; my father is dead. He was captain
-in the 38th Regiment of Foot, and was killed
-at Burmah.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>There was a kind of dawning of interest
-in her eyes, an expression I had not noticed
-when she talked of Colledge and his engagement.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;My father was in the army, too,&#8217; said
-she; &#8216;but he saw very little service. Is your
-mother living?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She is.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>She sighed bitterly, and hid her face whilst
-she exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, my poor mother! my poor mother!
-How little she knows! And she was so
-reluctant to let me leave her.&#8217; She sighed
-again deeply, and let her hands fall, and then
-sank into silence.</p>
-
-<p>I quitted the deck-house to take another
-look round. Just then rain began to fall,
-and the sea became shrouded with the discharge.
-So oil smooth now was the swell
-that each drop as it fell pitted the lead-coloured
-rounds with a black point, and the
-water alongside looked to be spotted with ink.
-As I had met with no fresh water in the little
-room that I call the pantry, and as there
-might be none in the hold, or none that with
-my single pair of hands I should be able to
-come at, I resolved to take advantage of the
-wet that was pouring down, and dived into the
-cabin to search for any vessel that would
-catch and hold it. The flour and sugar casks
-in the pantry would not do. I peered into
-the other berths, but could see nothing to
-answer the purpose. It was of the first consequence,
-however, to us that we should
-possess a store of drinking water to mix with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span>
-our wine, for we were in the tropics; the
-atmosphere was heavy with heat, even under
-a shrouded heaven; it was easy to figure what
-the temperature would rise to when the sun
-should shine forth; and the mere fancy of
-days of stagnation and of vertical suns, of
-this hull roasting; under the central broiling
-eye, of the breathless sea, stretching in
-feverish breathings into the dim, blue distance,
-unbroken by any tip of sail, and no
-fresh water to drink, was horribly oppressive,
-and rendered me half crazy to find some contrivance
-to catch the rain, which might at
-any moment cease. The thought of the lockers
-in the deck-house occurred to me. I mounted
-the ladder and searched them, and to my unspeakable
-joy, found in the locker upon which
-Miss Temple had been seated during the night,
-four canvas buckets, apparently brand new, as
-I might judge, from the cloth and from the
-rope handles. The rain fell heavily, and the
-water gushed in streams from the roof of the
-deck-house at many points of it. In a very
-short time the buckets were filled, but they
-were of a permeable substance, and it was
-necessary to decant them as soon as possible.
-There was no difficulty in doing this, for there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-were several empty bottles in the shelves below
-along with a couple of large jars, some tin
-pannikins, and so forth. These I brought up,
-washed them in the rain, and then filled them,
-and in this manner contrived to store away
-a good number of gallons, not to mention the
-contents of the buckets, which I left hanging
-outside to fill up afresh, meaning to use them
-first, and taking my chance of loss through
-the water soaking through them.</p>
-
-<p>All this, that is to be described in a few
-lines of writing, signified a lengthy occupation,
-that broke well into the day. Miss
-Temple watched my labours with interest,
-and begged to be of service; but she could
-be of little use to me, nor would I suffer her
-to expose herself to the wet.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Will not this rain fill the hull,&#8217; she exclaimed,
-&#8216;and sink her?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It would need to keep on raining for a
-long while to do that,&#8217; said I, laughing. &#8216;I
-am going below to inspect the forepart of her,
-and to ascertain, if possible, what her hold
-contains. Will you accompany me? The
-hull rolls steadily; you will not find walking
-inconvenient, and it is very necessary that you
-should occupy your mind.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span>&#8216;I should like to do so,&#8217; she answered;
-&#8216;but ought not one of us to stay here in case
-the sea should clear and show us the ships?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Alas!&#8217; said I, &#8216;there is no wind, and the
-ships probably lie as motionless as we. This
-weather will not speedily clear, I believe.
-We shall not be long below, and any sort of
-exertion is better than sitting here in loneliness
-and musing upon the inevitable, and
-adding the misery of thought to the distress
-of our situation.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes, you are right,&#8217; she exclaimed, rising.
-&#8216;You give me some heart, Mr. Dugdale, yet I
-do not know why. There is nothing that you
-can say to encourage me to hope.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>To this I made no reply, but took her
-hand, and assisted her to descend the ladder.
-She came to a stand at the foot of it, as though
-terrified by the gloom.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is dreadful,&#8217; she exclaimed in a low
-voice, &#8216;to think that only a few short hours ago
-the poor lieutenant whose heart was beating
-high with thoughts of returning home, should
-have been laughing and joking&mdash;here! I can
-hear his voice still; I can hear Mr. Colledge&#8217;s
-laughter. Hark! What noises are those?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Rats!&#8217; I exclaimed.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>The squeaking was shrill and fierce and
-close to. I lighted a candle, she meanwhile
-coming to my side, her elbow rubbing mine,
-as though she would have my hand within an
-instant&#8217;s reach of her own. The squeaking
-continued. It sounded as though there were
-some score of rats worrying something, or
-fighting among themselves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Hold this candle for a moment,&#8217; said
-I, and I advanced to the bulkhead and
-grasped a cutlass, and then peeped into the
-little passage that divided the after cabins.
-The rats were somewhere along it, but it
-was too dark to see; so laying the cutlass
-aside, I took down a musket and sent the
-heavy weapon javelin-fashion sheer into
-the thick of the hideous noise. A huge rat
-as big as a kitten rushed over my feet;
-Miss Temple uttered a shriek, and let fall the
-candle.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Do not be alarmed!&#8217; I shouted; &#8216;the
-beasts know their way below;&#8217; and seeing the
-pallid outline of the candle upon the deck I
-picked it up and relighted it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; she cried, in a voice
-that trembled with disgust and fear, &#8216;what
-am I to do? I dare not be here, and I dare<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span>
-not be above, alone. What is more shocking
-and terrifying than a rat?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I told her that rats were much more afraid
-of us than we could possibly be of them; but,
-commiserating her alarm, I offered to escort
-her to the deck-house.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But you will not leave me there,&#8217; she
-exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is very necessary,&#8217; said I, &#8216;that I should
-examine the state of the hull.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Then I will stay with you,&#8217; said she. &#8216;I
-cannot endure to be alone.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She gathered up her dress, holding the
-folds of it with one hand, whilst she passed
-the other through my arm. I could feel her
-shuddering as she clung to me. Her eyes
-were large with fright and aversion, and they
-sparkled to the candle-flame as she rolled them
-over the deck. At the extremity of the passage
-that separated the foremost berths from the
-pantry stood what I believed a bulkhead;
-but on bringing the candle to it I discovered
-that it was a door of very heavy scantling
-that slided in grooves with a stout iron handle
-for pulling it by. It travelled very easily, as
-something that had been repeatedly used.
-The moment it was open there was plenty of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span>
-daylight, for the open square of the main
-hatch yawned close by overhead, of dimensions
-considerable enough to illuminate every part
-of this interior. I stood viewing with wonder
-a scene of extraordinary confusion. There
-were no hammocks, but all about the decks,
-in higgledly-piggledly heaps and clusters, were
-mats of some sort of West Indian reeds, rugs
-and blankets, bolster-shaped bags, a few sea-chests,
-most of them capsized, with their lids
-open, and a surprising intermixture of hook-pots,
-tin-dishes, sea-boots, oilskins, empty
-broken cases, staves of casks, tackles, and a
-raffle of gear and other things of which
-my mind does not preserve the recollection.
-Several large rats, on my swinging the door
-along its grooves, darted from out of the
-various heaps and shot with incredible velocity
-down through the large hatch that conducted
-into the hold, and that lay on a line with the
-hatch above.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;By all that&#8217;s&mdash;&mdash; Well, well! here&#8217;s
-been excitement, surely,&#8217; said I. &#8216;Was ever
-panical terror more incomparably suggested?
-But this brig was full of men, and there was
-manifestly a tremendous scramble at the last.
-Would not anyone think that there had been
-a fierce fight down here?&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>&#8216;Do you think there are any dead bodies
-under those things?&#8217; exclaimed Miss Temple
-in a hollow whisper.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;See!&#8217; cried I; &#8216;lest there should be more
-rats about, suppose I contrive some advantage
-for you over the beasts;&#8217; and so saying I
-dragged one of the largest of the sea-chests to
-the bulkhead and helped her to get upon it.</p>
-
-<p>This seemed to make her easier. Filled as
-my mind was with conflicting emotions excited
-by the extraordinary scene of hurry and
-disorder which I surveyed, I could yet find
-leisure to glance at and deeply admire her
-fine, commanding figure, as she stood with
-inimitable, unconscious grace, swaying upon
-the chest to the regular rolling of the hull.
-It was a picture of a sort to live as long as the
-memory lasted. There she stood, draped in
-the elegancies of her white apparel, her full,
-dark eyes large and vital again in the shadow
-of her rich hat, under which her face showed
-colourless and faultless in lineament as some
-incomparable achievement of the sculptor&#8217;s
-art: her beauty and dignity heightened in a
-manner not to be expressed or explained by
-the character of the scene round about&mdash;the
-uncovered square of hatch through which the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-rain was falling, the wild disorder of the deck,
-the rude beams and coarse sides of the interior.</p>
-
-<p>I approached the edge of the hatchway
-and looked down. Little more was to be seen
-than ballast, on the top of which lay a
-couple of dismounted guns, apparently twelve-pounders.
-A short distance forward in the
-gloom were the outlines of some casks and
-cases. The hull was dry, as the lieutenant
-had said. Water there undoubtedly must
-have been, washing to and fro under the
-ballast and down in the run, but too inconsiderable
-in quantity to give me the least
-uneasiness. One glance below sufficed to
-assure me that the fabric of the wreck was
-tight.</p>
-
-<p>I considered a little whether it might not
-be possible to so protect the yawning hatches
-as to provide against any violent inroads of
-water should this dirty shadow of weather
-that overhung the wreck in wet end in wind;
-but there were no tarpaulins to be seen, no
-spare planks or anything of a like kind which
-could be converted into a cover, nothing but
-mats and rugs, which were not to be put to
-any sort of use in the direction I had in my
-mind.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>I left Miss Temple standing on the chest,
-darting alarmed glances at the huddled heaps
-which littered the decks, and walked forward
-to a doorway in a stout partition that bulkheaded
-off a short space of forecastle from these
-&#8217;tweendecks. There was an open forescuttle
-here that made plenty of light. This was
-the interior that had been burnt out, as the
-lieutenant had told me, to the condition of a
-charred shell. The deck and sides were as
-black as a hat, and the place showed as if it
-had been constructed of charcoal. A strong
-smell as of fire still lingered. Whatever had
-been here in the shape of sea-furniture was
-burnt, or removed by the people. I picked
-up a small handspike, and entering the cindery
-apartment, beat here and there against the
-semi-calcined planks, almost expecting to find
-the handspike shoot through; but black
-as the timber looked it yielded a hearty
-echo to my thumps, and I returned to Miss
-Temple satisfied that the hull was still very
-staunch, and, but for her uncovered hatches,
-as seaworthy as ever she had been at any time
-since her launch.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst turning over some of the mats and
-wearing apparel on the deck with my foot I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-spied a large cube of something yellow, and,
-picking it up and examining it, I was very
-happy to discover that it was tobacco. I made
-more of this than had I found a purse of a
-hundred guineas, for, though I had my pipe
-in my pocket, I was without anything to smoke,
-and I cannot express how hungrily during the
-night I had yearned for the exceeding solace
-of a few whiffs, and with what melancholy I
-had viewed the prospect of having to wait
-until we were rescued before I should obtain
-a cigar or a pipe of tobacco.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What have you there, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;
-cried Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A little matter that, coming on top of the
-discovery that this hull is as good as a cork
-under our feet, helps very greatly towards reestablishing
-my peace of mind&mdash;a lump of
-very beautiful tobacco,&#8217; and I smelt it fondly
-again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, Mr. Dugdale, I thought it was a dead
-rat,&#8217; she exclaimed. &#8216;What are all those
-mats?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The privateersmen used them to sleep on,
-I expect. The quantity of them tells us how
-heavily manned this old waggon went.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There is no wind, Mr. Dugdale. The rain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-falls in perfectly straight lines. Let us return
-to the deck-house.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I took her hand and helped her to dismount.
-She gathered her dress about her as
-before, and passed with trepidation through
-the darksome cabin, holding tightly by my
-arm, and then, with a wearied despairful air,
-seated herself upon a locker and leaned her
-chin in her hand, biting her under lip whilst
-she gazed vacantly through the little window
-at the sullen raining gloom of the sky.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXI<br />
-
-<small>WE SIGHT A SAIL</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I should</span> but tease you by attempting to narrate
-the passage of the hours from this point.
-All day long it rained; no air stirred, and the
-leaden sea flattened into sulky heavings wide
-apart, on which the hull rolled quietly.
-Possessing but the clothes in which I stood, I
-fetched an oilskin from the &#8217;tweendecks to
-save me from a wet skin, and thus attired
-made several journeys into the foretop, where
-I lingered, straining my gaze all around into
-the shrouded horizon till my eyeballs seemed
-to crack to the stretching of my vision. Sometimes,
-when in the deck-house, I would start
-to my feet on fancying I heard a sound of
-oars, but it was never more than some sobbing
-wash of swell, or some stir of the rudder
-swayed on its pintles by the movement of the
-fabric. There was plenty of stuff below with
-which to produce smoke, but no preparation<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span>
-for such a signal could be made whilst it
-rained, nor could any purpose be served by
-having the materials ready until the weather
-cleared, and wind blew, and something hove
-into sight.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple&#8217;s miserable dejection grieved
-me bitterly. The horror of our situation
-seemed to increase upon her, and say what I
-might I never succeeded in coaxing the least
-air of spirit into her face. It was distressing
-beyond language to see this haughty, beautiful,
-high-born woman, accustomed to every refinement
-and elegance that was to be purchased
-or contrived, reduced to such a pass as this:
-languidly putting her lips to the rough pannikin
-in which I would hand her a draught of
-wine and water; scarcely able to bite the flinty
-biscuit which, with marmalade and cheese,
-formed our repasts; sitting for weary long
-spells at a time motionless in a corner of the
-rough structure, her eyelids heavy, her gaze
-fixed and listless, her lips parted, with all their
-old haughty expression of imperious resolution
-gone from them, her fingers locked upon her
-lap, her breast now and again rising and falling
-with hysteric swiftness to some wrenching
-emotion which yet found her face marble-like,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-and her eyes without their familiar impassioned
-glow.</p>
-
-<p>I recollect wondering once, whilst watching
-her silently, whether there would prove
-anything in this experience to change her
-character. Should the Indiaman recover us,
-there might be a full fourteen or even sixteen
-weeks of association before us yet. Once
-safely aboard the <i>Countess Ida</i>, would she let
-this experience slip out of her mind as an influence,
-and repeat in her manner towards
-myself the cold indifference, the haughty
-neglect, the distant supercilious usage which I
-had found so objectionable, that I was coming
-very near to as cordially hating her character
-as I deeply admired the beauties and perfections
-of her face and person. Was she not a
-sort of woman to accept an obligation and to
-look, if it suited her to do so, very coldly
-afterwards upon the person who had obliged
-her? Ridiculous as the emotion was at such
-a time, when, for all I knew, in a few hours
-the pair of us might be floating a brace of
-corpses, fathoms deep in that leaden ocean
-over the side, yet I must confess to a small
-stir of exultation to the thought that supposing
-us to be rescued, let her behave as she pleased,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-she never could escape the memory of having
-been alone with me in this horrible hull, nor
-avert the discovery of this circumstance by
-her relatives and friends. It was a consideration,
-indeed, to bring her mightily closer to
-me than ever she had dreamt of, and to my
-mind it was as complete a turning of the
-tables as the most romantic fancy could have
-invented&mdash;that she who could scarce address
-me on board the Indiaman for pride, and for
-dislike too, for all I could tell, should now be
-in the intimate and lonely association of shipwreck
-with me, clinging to me, entreating me
-not to leave her side; dependent upon such
-spirit and energy as I possessed for the food
-and drink that was to support us, and again
-and again talking to me with a freedom which
-she would have exhibited to no living creature
-in the Indiaman, her aunt excepted.</p>
-
-<p>When that second night came down black
-as thunder, raining hard, the ocean breathless,
-I entreated her to rest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You must sleep, Miss Temple,&#8217; said I; &#8216;I
-will keep watch.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She shook her head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Nay,&#8217; I continued, &#8216;you will rest comfortably
-upon this locker. You need but a pillow.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-There is nothing in the cabins to be thought
-of for that purpose; but I believe I can contrive
-a soft bolster for you out of my coat.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You are very kind, but I shall not be
-able to sleep.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I continued to entreat her, and I saw she
-was affected by my earnestness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Since it will please you if I lie down, Mr.
-Dugdale, I will do so,&#8217; said she.</p>
-
-<p>I whipped off my coat and rolled it up,
-and she removed her hat with a manner that
-made me see she abhorred even this trifling
-disturbance of her apparel, as though it signified
-a sort of settling down to the unspeakable
-life of the wreck. The fabric swayed so tenderly
-that the bottle containing the candle
-stood without risk of capsizal upon the table,
-and the small but steady flame shone clearly
-upon her. How delicate were her features
-by that light; how rich and beautiful the
-exceeding abundance of the dark coils of her
-hair, the richer and the more beautiful for the
-neglect in it, for the shadowing of her white
-brow by the disordered tresses, for the drooping
-of it about her ears, with the sparkle of
-diamonds there! Presently she was resting.</p>
-
-<p>I removed the candle to the stanchion, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-secured the bottle where the light would be
-off her eyes, and sat me down near the doorway
-as far from her as the narrow breadth of
-the structure would permit, where I filled a
-pipe and smoked, expelling the fumes into the
-air, and listening with a heavy heart to the
-faint sounds breaking from the interior of the
-hull to the washing moan at long intervals of
-some passing heave of swell, and to the
-squeaking of the rats in the cabin below&mdash;a
-most dismal and shocking sound, I do protest,
-to hearken to amidst the hush and blackness
-of that ocean night, scarce vexed by more
-than the pattering of the rain.</p>
-
-<p>From time to time Miss Temple would
-address me; then she fell silent, and by-and-by
-looking towards her, and observing her
-to lie motionless, I softly crept to abreast of
-her, keeping the table between, and found
-her sleeping.</p>
-
-<p>It was then something after ten by my
-watch, and she slept for five hours without a
-stir, though now and again she spoke in her
-sleep. I know not why I should have remained
-awake unless it was to keep my
-weather-eye lifting for the rats. There was
-nothing to watch for or to hope for in such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-weather as that. Once, when the beasts
-below were very noisy&mdash;for, as you will suppose,
-in that solemn stillness their squeakings
-rose with a singularly sharp edge to the ear&mdash;I
-bethought me of the pantry, and could not
-remember whether I had shut the door. For
-all I could yet tell, the stores we had to depend
-upon were in that little cabin, and if the
-rats found their way to the food, we might
-speedily starve. I lighted a second candle,
-that, should the girl suddenly awake, she
-might not find herself in the dark, and stepped
-below, and found the door closed. I opened
-it, and minutely surveyed the interior, and
-observing all to be well, shut the door and
-came away; but never can I forget the uncontrollable
-chills and shudders which seized
-me on passing through that cabin! I do not
-doubt my mind had been a little weakened.
-The remains of the mainmast pierced the
-deck, and stood like a pillar; it stirred to the
-movement of the candle in my hand, and I
-stopped with a violent start to gaze at it
-while the perspiration broke from my forehead.
-Vague indeterminable shapes seemed
-to flit past and about the stand of arms. The
-dull noises in the hold took to my alarmed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-ear the notes of human groans. Several rats
-scurried in flying forms of blackness towards
-the after cabins: they seemed to start up
-through the deck at my feet!</p>
-
-<p>When I resumed my seat on the locker, I
-was trembling from head to foot, and my
-heart beat with feverish rapidity. A draught
-of wine rallied me, and I tried to find something
-ridiculous in my fears. But all the
-same my dejection was as that of a man under
-sentence of death, and again and again I
-would put up a prayer to God for our speedy
-deliverance, whilst I sat hearkening to the
-noises below, to the steady pattering of the
-rain, to the occasional melancholy sob of
-water, and to the broken, unintelligible muttering
-of the sleeping girl.</p>
-
-<p>At some hour between three and four my
-companion awoke. She sat up with a cry of
-wonder, and by the candle-light I observed
-her staring around, with looks of astonishment
-and horror such as might appear in the face
-of a person who starts from some pleasant
-dream into the realities of a dreadful situation.
-I waited until she should have recollected
-herself, to use the fine expressive word
-of the old writers.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>&#8216;I have been dreaming of home,&#8217; she
-said, in a low voice, &#8216;of safety, of comfort, of
-everything that I am now wanting. What
-time is it, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I put my watch close to my face and told
-her the hour.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How black the night continues!&#8217; she
-said&mdash;&#8216;how silent, too!&#8217; she added, after
-hearkening awhile. &#8216;It has ceased to rain,
-and there is not a breath of air.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It has not rained for these two hours
-past,&#8217; said I. &#8216;I am impatient for the day to
-break. The horizon should be tolerably clear,
-if there be no rain; yet what can daybreak
-possibly disclose to us on top of such a night
-of stagnation as this has been?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Have you slept?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Then you will take some rest now. It is
-my turn to watch.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The dawn will be breaking in a couple
-of hours,&#8217; said I; &#8216;I will wait till it comes to
-take a look. Should nothing be in sight, I
-will endeavour to rest. You will not suffer in
-the daylight from the feeling of loneliness
-that would make you wretched now if I
-slept.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span>&#8216;Whilst you are here, although sleeping,
-Mr. Dugdale, I should not feel lonely. Your
-voice assures me that you need sleep. I have
-been resting five hours. How patient you
-are!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She took up my jacket, reformed it pillow-fashion,
-placed it on the locker where her
-own head had lain, and moved to make room
-for me, seating herself where my feet would
-about come.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray lie down, Mr. Dugdale. I shall be
-closer to you here than you have been to me,
-and I can awaken you in an instant if there
-should be occasion to do so.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I complied, rather to please her than to
-humour my own wishes; for though my eyelids
-had the heaviness of lead, there was a
-thrilling and hurrying of nervous sensation in
-me which were as good as a threat that I
-should not sleep. And so it proved, for after
-I had held my head pillowed for some half
-hour, I was still broad awake; and then
-growing impatient of my posture, I sat
-erect.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No use, Miss Temple, I cannot sleep;
-and since that is so, pray resume this hard
-couch and finish out your slumbers.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>But this she would not do, protesting that
-she was fully rested. I was too desirous of
-her company to weary her with entreaties,
-and until the day broke we sat at that narrow
-table with the light close enough to enable us
-to see each other clearly. I remember saying
-to her:</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Since this is an experience you were
-fated to pass through&mdash;I suppose we must all
-believe in the pre-ordination of our lives&mdash;my
-sincere regret is that you should not have
-been imprisoned in this hull with somebody
-more agreeable to yourself than I.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why do you say that?&#8217; she exclaimed,
-giving me a look that carried me back. &#8216;In
-this state of misery a compliment would be
-shocking.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I seek no compliment,&#8217; said I. &#8216;I am
-merely expressing a regret.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You regret that you are here?&#8217; she exclaimed.
-&#8216;So do I, for then I should not be
-here. But since it is my lot to be here, I am
-satisfied with my companion; I would not
-exchange him for any other person on board
-the <i>Countess Ida</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I bowed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Should we be rescued,&#8217; she continued,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-keeping her dark gaze full upon me as she
-spoke (and something of their beauty and
-brilliancy of light had returned to her eyes
-with her rest), &#8216;I shall be deeply in your
-debt. My mother will thank you, Mr.
-Dugdale.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I have done nothing, Miss Temple. It is
-you who are now complimentary, and I fear
-ironical.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She slightly shook her head and sighed,
-then remained silent for a minute or two,
-and said: &#8216;How small and contemptible my
-spirit shows itself when I am tested! Do
-you recollect when this wretched brig was
-lying near us, how I took a parasol from
-my aunt and levelled it at this vessel and
-talked of wishing to see a sea fight and of
-shooting a man? How brave I was when
-there was nothing particularly to be afraid
-of, and how cowardly I have shown myself
-here.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I should have scarcely believed,&#8217; said I,
-&#8216;that you were sensible of my presence at the
-time you speak of.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why?&#8217; she asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Indeed,&#8217; I continued, &#8216;I should have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-scarcely believed that you were sensible that
-I was on board the ship.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale, if my manner did not please
-you, this is no time to reproach me with it.&#8217;
-Her eyes sparkled and her lip curled peevishly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Hark!&#8217; I exclaimed; &#8216;I hear a rippling
-noise as of approaching wind.&#8217; I passed round
-the table, gained the door, and looked out.
-The atmosphere was still motionless, but the
-sounds of rippling drew near, and presently I
-felt a pleasant little air blowing over the stern
-of the hull, accompanied with the tinkling
-and lipping noises of water set in motion
-trembling to the brig&#8217;s side. But it was still
-pitch dark, and search the sky where I would,
-I could observe no break of faintness, no
-leanest vision of star, no vaguest outline of
-cloud in the impenetrable obscurity.</p>
-
-<p>I returned to the table, this time seating
-myself opposite to Miss Temple. It was easily
-seen in her face that she was sensible I did
-this consciously. Indeed, the gaze she rested
-upon me was a look of inquiry as though she
-would discover whether this holding aloof on
-my part was due to respect or to dislike.
-Then, as though she suddenly sickened to such
-idle considerations, she exclaimed with an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-eager awakening of her in her whole manner,
-&#8216;Does this breeze come from the direction
-where the ships are, or where you may
-suppose them to be, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;For the life of me I could not tell you,&#8217;
-I responded; &#8216;there are no quarters of the
-compass for human senses on such a night as
-this, in a hull that may be headed on all sorts
-of courses by the set of the swell; but the
-dawn will be here anon, and if this draught
-hold, we shall be able to find out whence it
-proceeds.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It was still blowing the same light breeze
-when day broke, and I then knew that the
-wind sat about north-west. Miss Temple and
-I stepped on to the deck, where we stood in
-an agony of impatience awaiting the full
-revelation of the sea. One saw why it should
-have been so pitch dark throughout the night;
-the sky was overcast from horizon to horizon
-by a sheet of sallowish leaden-hued vapour.
-Yet the atmosphere had cleared so as to enable
-the sight to penetrate to the verge of the
-normal sea-line, where the ocean stood in a
-firm rim of the darkness of indigo in the east
-against the grey of the morning that was
-spreading out behind it. I took a long and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span>
-steady view of the circle; my companion&#8217;s
-eyes were riveted upon me as I did so; she
-had rather trust my sight than hers, and
-her gaze glowed with an inexpressible eagerness
-to witness in my face an expression that
-should inform her I beheld a sail.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is the same inhuman abominable blankness
-as that of yesterday,&#8217; said I, fetching a
-deep breath of rage and grief; then shocked
-by the air of horror and despair in Miss
-Temple, I added: &#8216;Yet this gives us a view of
-but little more than seven miles. Here is an
-air, surely, to whip something along. The
-ships of this ocean cannot all have rotted in
-yesterday&#8217;s pestilential calm. Oh for such
-another telescope as Mr. Prance&#8217;s!&#8217; and so
-saying I trudged forwards, and in a few
-minutes was sweeping the horizon from the
-elevation of the foretop.</p>
-
-<p>I ran my eyes slowly and piercingly along
-the sea-line, starting from the part into which
-the vessel&#8217;s mutilated bowsprit pointed, and
-when my vision was over the starboard quarter,
-I beheld trembling upon the utmost verge of
-the livid waters stretching to the shrouded
-sky a minute fragment of white&mdash;a tip as of a
-seagull&#8217;s pinion, but of a certainty a sail! I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-lingered to make sure. Miss Temple watched
-me from abaft the deck-house. My glance
-went to her for an instant, and I saw her
-bring her hands together and lift them, as
-though she witnessed in my posture that I
-descried something. My heart hammered
-violently in my ears, and my breathing was
-short and laboured.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What do you see?&#8217; Miss Temple cried at
-last, her rich voice, tremulous with excitement
-and expectation, floating up like the
-notes of a flute.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A sail!&#8217; I exclaimed, calling with an
-effort. &#8216;Patience! I must stay here to make
-sure of the direction she is taking,&#8217; and I stood
-for a minute pointing while she strained her
-sight; but there was nothing for her to see
-down there.</p>
-
-<p>The breeze had weight enough to determine
-the matter with some despatch, and I
-knew that if the sail were heading away from
-us, it must speedily vanish, so mere a speck
-was it that showed. Instead, though I will
-not say that it <i>grew</i> whilst I stood staring, it
-hung with a fixedness to satisfy me that the
-vessel was steering a course that must bring
-us into the sphere of her horizon; and not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-having the least doubt of this, I dropped over
-the short futtock shrouds of the wreck and
-sprang on to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is a ship, Mr. Dugdale!&#8217; cried Miss
-Temple with something of an hysteric accent
-of inquiry in her voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Assuredly,&#8217; I answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Will she see us, do you think?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ay, if she does not shift her helm. But
-we will <i>compel</i> her to see us.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The girl suddenly grasped my hand in
-both hers, bowed her head over it, and I felt
-a tear. I was so affected that I stood looking,
-unable to speak. It was a sort of submission
-in its way. I cannot convey my thoughts of
-it. She was without her hat; I see her now
-as she bent over my hand; I feel the ice-cold
-pressure of her fingers, and recall the
-tears glittering through the beauty of her
-downcast lashes as they rose. She slowly lifted
-her large wet eyes to my face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What an experience this has been!&#8217; she
-whispered; &#8216;how shall I be able to persuade
-people that I underwent it and lived?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She still unconsciously held my hand. I
-put my lips to her fingers, and she released
-me.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span>&#8216;It must always be one of the very happiest
-memories of my life to me,&#8217; said I. &#8216;I shall
-never make you believe in the joy your deliverance
-will fill me with.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh yes, yes!&#8217; she cried passionately;
-then sending a look over the quarter, she
-added: &#8216;Are we not losing time? Is there not
-something we can do to summon her to us?
-Will it be long before she appears?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No; we are not losing time,&#8217; I answered.
-&#8216;I shall have plenty of leisure to make a
-smoke, and that is what we must presently do.
-If she be the Indiaman or the corvette, all that
-is visible of her from yonder foretop is her
-royals. Her topgallant sails, her topsails, and
-her courses will have to climb before her hull
-shows. Her speed to this air will not exceed
-four knots. She is probably twenty miles
-distant yet, and we must allow her, unless the
-breeze freshens, a good three hours to give us
-a full sight of herself on that horizon out there.
-So let us first get something to eat, Miss
-Temple, and then I will go to work.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>But our excitement was too strong to
-suffer us to make more than a phantom of a
-meal. A little biscuit soaked in wine formed
-my companion&#8217;s breakfast, but her spirits<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span>
-had returned to her; the remembered brilliancy
-was in her eyes again; a faint, most
-delicate flush was on her cheek; with unconscious
-fingers she caressed her hair as though,
-influenced by a womanly instinct of which she
-was insensible, she adjusted her tresses in
-preparation of our reception by the people of
-the ship. She was sure it was the <i>Countess
-Ida</i>. There was real gaiety in the laugh with
-which she said that she knew Mrs. Radcliffe&#8217;s
-character, that she could well imagine how
-her aunt had tormented Captain Keeling, how
-ceaselessly the old lady would importune the
-captain to make haste and recover her niece.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, what a meeting it will be!&#8217; she
-cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The sail may prove the corvette, though,&#8217;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But she will rescue us, Mr. Dugdale, and
-hunt after the Indiaman, and Sir Edward will
-put us on board of her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I left her to enter the &#8217;tweendecks, where
-I collected a number of mats, blankets, staves
-of casks, and other material, which would
-burn and produce a thick smoke; and presently,
-with the assistance of Miss Temple,
-had a great heap of these things stacked on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-deck betwixt the foremast and the mainhatch.
-It was a hard job to get the stuff to kindle,
-for the mats were damp and the staves not to
-be set on fire by a sulphur match. But on
-overhauling the lockers in the deck-house I
-found a tin can half full of oil and a small
-parcel of rags; and by means of these I set
-my bonfire alight. The planks of the deck
-were thick and wet, and securely calked, and
-the burning stuff was well clear of the hatch;
-there was no fear then, as I believed, of the
-fire penetrating the deck. It made a prodigious
-smoke. The mass of damp blankets
-and rags smouldered into a dark thick column,
-which mounted high ere it arched over to
-the wind. It was a signal to be sighted as
-far away as the ship was, and I stood watching
-it with transported eyes as it soared in
-belching folds gyrating into and blackening
-out upon the breeze till it showed like a
-steamer&#8217;s smoke or a ship on fire.</p>
-
-<p>I waited a little, and then got into the
-fore-shrouds to mark the sail afresh, and
-beheld the gleam of her canvas when I was
-still two or three ratlines below the futtock
-shrouds: good assurance, indeed, of her
-rising, and nimbly too, and heading square<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-for us. I strained my gaze at her from the
-height of the top, but she was far too remote
-to be distinguishable; nothing more, indeed,
-than a little ivory shaft against the sulky sallow
-of the sky.</p>
-
-<p>It now occurred to me that I might
-accentuate the signal of the smoke by letting
-fall the foresail, for here was a space of
-canvas that would not only catch the eye, but
-suggest the hull as a still inhabited wreck
-that was on fire. I called to Miss Temple.
-She looked up eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Do you see those ropes leading to the
-deck from the arms of this yard?&#8217; said I,
-pointing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I want you to haul them taut, Miss
-Temple&mdash;gather in the slack to prevent the
-yard from swinging, as I mean to get upon
-it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She understood me perfectly. Her jewelled
-fingers flashed upon the rope as she threw the
-brace off the belaying pin, and I gazed down
-with a smile of deep admiration at her noble
-figure whilst she swayed at the line tightening
-and then belaying it again.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You should have been a sailor&#8217;s daughter,&#8217;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span>
-I cried; &#8216;there is the true skill of the
-ancient mariner in your trick of holding on
-with one hand and making fast with the
-other. Will you please now tighten the
-brace on the right-hand side.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She did so, and I got upon the yard and,
-&#8216;laying out&#8217; upon it, as it is called, severed
-with my knife the ropes with which the canvas
-was frapped to the spar, and down fell
-the sail with a large rent right amidships of
-it, though that signified nothing in a square
-of white that was to serve as a signal only.
-I descended to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why have you loosed that sail?&#8217; inquired
-Miss Temple. I explained. &#8216;But will not
-the wreck now blow away from that ship?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; said I; &#8216;she will fall off and come to.
-But the yard must be trimmed to achieve that.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>So saying I let go the weather-brace and
-swung the yard fore and aft as far as I
-could bring it, then overhauled the clew-garnets,
-that all there was of the sail might
-show. The hull slewed to the pressure, then
-hung quiet; meanwhile I continued to feed
-the blaze, heaping on rugs and blankets and
-so firing up that at times the smoke hung as
-thick to leeward as a thundercloud.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXII<br />
-
-<small>THE &#8216;LADY BLANCHE&#8217;</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">So</span> light was the breeze, that it was drawing
-on to ten o&#8217;clock in the morning before the
-approaching vessel lay plain on the sea. Long
-before this I had made her out to be a square-rigged
-craft, and sometimes I would imagine
-that she was the corvette, and sometimes that
-she was the <i>Countess Ida</i>. It had been a time
-of breathless expectation, of crushing suspense.
-Again and again had I mounted the
-rigging to make sure that she had not shifted
-her course, and was edging away from us.
-Again and again had I run my eyes round
-the sea with a passionate prayer in my heart
-that the wind might hold; for if it shifted, we
-stood to lose the ship; and if it fell, the
-calm might last all day, with the prospect of
-another black night before us and a deserted
-ocean at daybreak.</p>
-
-<p>But now, drawing on to this hour of ten,
-the hull of the vessel had risen to its bends,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span>
-and though I might be certain of nothing
-else, it was absolutely sure that the stranger
-was neither the <i>Magicienne</i> nor the <i>Countess
-Ida</i>. She had puzzled me greatly for a considerable
-time; for even when her fore-course
-had fairly lifted she yet seemed to be rising
-more canvas. But by this hour I could distinguish.
-She was a small vessel, painted
-white&mdash;whether barque or ship I could not
-then tell. She had studdingsails out and
-skysails set, and showed as an airy delicate
-square of pearl; and indeed I might have
-believed that she was the Indiaman for that
-reason, until her snow-white body came stealing
-out to the stare I fixed upon her, and
-then I looked at Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>Her sight for seafaring details was not
-mine. She was trembling as she said:
-&#8216;Which ship is she, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Neither,&#8217; I answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Neither!&#8217; she cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Do not you observe that yonder craft
-has a white hull, and that she is a small ship?
-But what does it matter? She is bound to
-see us. She will rescue us; and, let the
-future be what it may, our one consuming
-need now is to quit this hull.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>She had so reckoned upon the stranger
-proving either the corvette or the Indiaman,
-that, had the approaching craft been no more
-than a mirage, had the fabric melted upon
-the air as we watched it, she could not have
-looked more blank, more wildly and hopelessly
-disappointed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Neither!&#8217; she repeated, breathing with
-difficulty. &#8216;Oh, Mr. Dugdale, what are we
-to do?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, get on board of her, in the name
-of God,&#8217; I cried&mdash;&#8216;giving Him thanks when
-we are there.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But she may&mdash;she will be&#8217;&mdash;she paused,
-unable to articulate: then with an effort:
-&#8216;She may be going to another part of the
-world.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It matters not,&#8217; I answered, observing
-with rapture that the vessel was heading
-more directly for us; &#8216;she will put us aboard
-something homeward bound. Will not that
-be better than stopping here, Miss Temple?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh yes, oh yes!&#8217; she cried; &#8216;but if we
-waited a little, the Indiaman might find us.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Heaven forbid! we have waited long
-enough.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>So speaking, I rushed forward, picked up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-the handspike with which I had beaten upon
-the forecastle wall, secured a blanket to it,
-and, dancing aft, fell to flourishing it with all
-my might. Very slowly the vessel came
-floating down upon us with a light swaying
-of her trucks from side to side, and a tender
-twinkling of the folds of her lower canvas,
-which there was not weight enough in the
-wind to hold distended. Her hull was exceedingly
-graceful, and of a milky whiteness;
-and, as she leaned from us on some wide fold
-of the breathing waters, she exposed a hand&#8217;s-breadth
-of burnished copper, which put a
-wonderful quality of beauty and delicacy into
-the whole fabric, as though she were a little
-model in frosted silver.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Before she takes us on board, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217;
-exclaimed Miss Temple, &#8216;will not you
-mount the rigging to see if there is another
-ship in sight that may prove the Indiaman?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But even if the Indiaman were in sight,&#8217;
-said I, &#8216;we should seize this the first of our
-opportunities to escape from this floating
-tomb. For heaven&#8217;s sake, let us get aboard
-that fellow!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>As I spoke, I seized the handspike again
-and frantically flourished it. All this while<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-there was a column of smoke ascending
-steadily from my fire of rugs and mats
-and darkening the sea over the starboard
-bow. I was now able to make out that the
-coming craft was a barque. My eyes were
-glued to her; my heart thumped furiously;
-the wildest alternations of joy and dread
-seized me. Suppose she should prove some
-foreigner in charge of a man indifferent
-to human life, some cold-blooded miscreant
-who had shifted his helm merely to satisfy his
-curiosity, and who, on perceiving that the
-smoke was no more than a signal, and that
-the wreck floated high, should slide quietly
-on and leave us to our fate? Such things
-had been; such things were again and again
-happening. As she drew with a snail-like
-motion abreast without touching a brace,
-without any signs of movement about her
-deck, my eyes turned dim; I feared I was
-about to swoon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Will she not stop?&#8217; exclaimed Miss
-Temple, in a voice of terror.</p>
-
-<p>Lifting the handspike with its fluttering
-blanket high above my head, I waved it furiously
-for some moments, then flinging it down
-upon the deck, applied my hands to the sides<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span>
-of my mouth, and, in a voice of such energy
-that it came near to cracking every vein in
-my head, I yelled: &#8216;Barque ahoy! For
-God&#8217;s sake, send a boat and take us off.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>As the words left my throat, the vessel&#8217;s
-helm was put down; the clew of the mainsail
-mounted, and her topsail yard slowly revolved,
-bringing every cloth upon the main
-aback, and in a few minutes the graceful little
-craft was lying without way within speaking
-distance of us.</p>
-
-<p>In the violence of my transport, I grasped
-Miss Temple&#8217;s hand and again and again
-pressed my lips to it, congratulating her and
-myself so, for I had no words. The figures
-of the people were clearly visible: a row of
-heads forward, the fellow at the wheel on a
-short raised deck, and two men dressed in
-white clothes with large straw hats at the
-mizzen rigging. One of them leisurely clambered
-on to the rail, and, holding by one hand
-to a backstay, sang out:</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Wreck ahoy! How many are there of
-you?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Two of us only,&#8217; I shouted back; &#8216;this
-lady and myself.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Any contagious sickness?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>&#8216;No, no,&#8217; I bawled, amazed by the question.
-&#8216;Pray, send a boat.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He continued to stand, as though viewing
-us meditatively; then, &#8216;Wreck ahoy!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Hallo!&#8217; I cried, scarcely able to send my
-voice owing to the consternation excited in
-me by the man&#8217;s behaviour.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Are you a sailor?&#8217; he roared.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, say yes, say yes!&#8217; cried Miss Temple;
-&#8216;he may be in want of men.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ay, ay,&#8217; I cried; &#8216;I&#8217;m a sailor.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What sort of sailor?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I belonged to an Indiaman.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Afore the mast?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No, no! send a boat&mdash;I&#8217;ll tell you all
-about it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He descended from the rail and apparently
-addressed the man that stood near, who
-walked to the companion-hatch and returned
-with a telescope; the other took it from him,
-then knelt down to rest the glass on the rail,
-and surveyed us through the lenses for at
-least a couple of minutes, after which he rose,
-returned the glass to his companion, and
-flourished his hand at us. I watched, utterly
-unable to guess what was next to happen.
-My fears foreboded the departure of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-barque, and the impatience in me worked
-like madness in my blood. But mercifully
-we were not to be kept long in this intolerable
-state of suspense. A few minutes after the
-man, whom I supposed to be the captain, had
-motioned to us with his arm, a number of
-sailors came to the davits at the foremost
-extremity of the raised after-deck, where swung
-a small white boat of a whaling pattern.
-Four of them entered her, and she sank
-slowly to the water&#8217;s edge, where she was
-promptly freed from her tackles, and three
-oars thrown over. The fellow in the stern
-sheets was the man who had handed the glass
-to the other. The oarsmen pulled swiftly,
-and in a very short time the little craft was
-alongside.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Only two of ye, is it?&#8217; said the fellow
-who grasped the tiller, a short, square, sun-blackened,
-coarse-looking sailor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Only two,&#8217; I cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Any luggage?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; I answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Nothen portable aboard worth carrying
-off, is there?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes,&#8217; I answered, cursing him in my heart
-for the delay these questions involved; &#8216;there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-are several hams, bottles of fine wine, cheeses,
-and the like below.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Odds niggers! we&#8217;ll have &#8217;em then,&#8217; he
-exclaimed; and in an instant he was in the
-wreck&#8217;s chains, wriggling over the side and
-calling to one of his fellows to follow him.
-They hung in the wind a moment, staring
-their hardest at Miss Temple and myself; then
-said the short square man in white: &#8216;Where
-be the goods, master?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I pointed to the hatch in the deck-house,
-and directed them to what I called the pantry.
-But nothing could have induced me to leave
-the deck. As they disappeared I stepped to
-the side where the bulwarks were gone.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Bring the boat close under, my lads,&#8217; I
-exclaimed to the two fellows in her, &#8216;and
-stand by to receive the lady.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The hull was rolling gently, with just
-enough of depression to render a jump into
-the little fabric as it rose very easy and safe.
-&#8216;Now, Miss Temple,&#8217; I cried. She sprang
-without an instant&#8217;s hesitation, was caught by
-one of the sailors, and in a jiffy the pair of us
-were snug in the stern sheets side by side.</p>
-
-<p>The two men could not take their eyes off
-us. They surveyed us with countenances of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-profound astonishment, running their gaze
-over Miss Temple as though she were some
-creature of another world: as well they might,
-indeed, seeing the contrast between the
-groaning, mutilated, smoking hull and this
-girl leaping from her deck in the choice and
-elegant attire of the highest fashion, as the
-two poor devils would imagine&mdash;for what eye
-would <i>they</i> have for the disorder of her
-apparel?&mdash;and her hands, breast, and ears
-sparkling with jewels of value and splendour.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Are ye English, sir?&#8217; said one of them,
-a middle-aged man, of an honest cast of
-countenance, with minute eyes deep sunk in
-his head, and a pair of greyish whiskers
-uniting at his throat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, yes, to be sure,&#8217; I answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The lady too, sir?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes, man, yes. What ship are you?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The <i>Lady Blanche</i>,&#8217; he answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Where bound?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;To Mauritius, from the river Thames.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I glanced at Miss Temple; but either she
-had not heeded the fellow&#8217;s answer or her
-mind failed to collect its meaning.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Been long aboard here, sir?&#8217; said the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-man, indicating the hull by a sideways motion
-of his head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Two nights,&#8217; I answered. &#8216;There should
-be a corvette and an Indiaman close at hand
-hereabouts. Have you met with either
-ship?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sighted no sail at all?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Nothen like un,&#8217; exclaimed the other
-sailor. &#8216;Th&#8217; ocean&#8217;s gone and growed into a
-Hafrican desert.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The square man in white, followed by his
-attendant seaman, arrived at the side, bearing
-between them a blanket loaded with the produce
-of the pantry, to judge by the clinking
-of bottle glass and the orbicular bulgings of
-cheeses and rounds of hams.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Catch this here bundle now,&#8217; sung out
-the square man, who, later on, I ascertained
-was the barque&#8217;s carpenter, acting also as the
-second mate. &#8216;Handsomely over the bricks.
-It&#8217;s wine, bullies.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The blanket and its contents were received,
-and deposited in the bottom of the boat. The
-men entered her, and we shoved off.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Did you make up that there fire, sir?&#8217;
-inquired the square man, bringing his eyes in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-a stare of astonishment from Miss Temple to
-myself.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes; nobody else. This lady and I are
-alone.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Then you&#8217;ve set the bloomin&#8217; hull on fire,&#8217;
-said he.</p>
-
-<p>I started, and sent a look at the column
-of smoke, at which I had never once glanced
-whilst lying alongside, so distracted was my
-attention by the multiplicity of emotions which
-surged in me. There was no need to gaze
-long to gather that more was going, to the
-making of the coils of smoke which were now
-rising in soot than the nearly consumed remains
-of the mats and rugs which I had
-stacked and fed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The fire&#8217;s burnt clean through the deck,&#8217;
-said the square man, &#8216;and there are some
-casks in flames just forrads of the main
-hatch. What might they have contained,
-d&#8217;ye know?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I don&#8217;t know,&#8217; I answered, trembling like
-a half-frozen kitten as I watched the smoke,
-and thought of what must have come to
-us, if yonder barque&#8217;s approach had been
-delayed!</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I suppose there&#8217;ll be gunpowder aboard?<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>&#8217;
-continued the square man. &#8216;Pull, lads! If a
-bust-up happens, it&#8217;ll find us too near at this.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The men bent their backs, and the sharp-ended
-little boat went smoking through the
-quiet rippling waters. Nothing more was
-said. The square man, whose rugged,
-weather-blackened face preserved an inimitable
-air of amazement, eyed us askant, particularly
-running his gaze over Miss Temple&#8217;s
-attire, and letting it rest upon her rings. The
-toil of the seamen kept them silent. For my
-part, I was too overcome to utter a word.
-The passion of delight excited by our deliverance&mdash;that
-is to say, as signified by our
-rescue by the barque&mdash;was paralysed by the
-horror with which I viewed the growing
-denseness of the smoke rising from the hull.
-She was on fire! Great heaven, what would
-have been our fate&mdash;without a boat, without
-the materials for the construction of a raft&mdash;with
-no more than a few staves of casks to
-hold by! Such a sea-brigand as the wreck
-had been in her day was sure to have a
-liberal store of gunpowder stowed somewhere
-below: in all probability, in a magazine in
-the hold under her cabin. What, then,
-would there have been for us to do? We<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-must either have sought death by leaping
-overboard, or awaited the horrible annihilation
-of an explosion!</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple&#8217;s eyes were large and her
-lips pale and her face bloodless, as though
-she were in a swoon. She was seeing how it
-was, and how it must have been with us, and
-she seemed smitten to the motionlessness of a
-statue by the perception as she sat by my
-side staring at the receding hull.</p>
-
-<p>We swept to the little gangway ladder
-that had been dropped over the rail, and
-with some difficulty I assisted the girl over
-the side, swinging by the man-rope with one
-hand and supporting her waist with the
-other. The man who had hailed us stood at
-the gangway. I instantly went up to him
-with my hand outstretched.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sir,&#8217; said I, &#8216;you are the captain, no
-doubt. I thank you for this deliverance, for
-this preservation of our lives, for this rescue
-from what <i>now</i> must have proved a horrible
-doom of fire.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He took my hand and held it without
-answering, whilst he continued to stare at me
-with an intentness that in a very few moments
-astonished and embarrassed me.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>&#8216;What is your name, sir?&#8217; he presently
-said.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Laurence Dugdale,&#8217; I answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mate of an Indiaman, I think you said,
-sir?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; I replied. &#8216;I was for two years at
-sea in an Indiaman as midshipman.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He let fall my hand, and his face changed
-whilst he recoiled a step, meanwhile running
-his eyes from top to toe of me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A midshipman?&#8217; he exclaimed, with an
-accent of contempt. &#8216;Why, a midshipman
-ain&#8217;t a <i>sailor</i>! How long ago is it since you
-was a midshipman?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Six years,&#8217; I answered, completely bewildered
-by questioning of this sort at such a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Six years!&#8217; he cried, whilst his face grew
-longer still. &#8216;Why, then, I don&#8217;t suppose
-you&#8217;ll even <i>know</i> what a quadrant means?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Certainly I know all about it,&#8217; I answered,
-with a half-glance at Miss Temple, who stood
-beside me listening to these questions in a
-torment of surprise and suspense.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Are ye acquainted with navigation, then?&#8217;
-inquired the captain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sufficiently well, I believe, to enable me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-to carry a ship to any part of the world,&#8217; I
-rejoined, controlling my rising temper, though
-I was sensible that there was blood in my
-cheeks and that my eyes were expressing my
-mood.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, then, that&#8217;s all right!&#8217; he cried,
-brightening up. &#8216;You tell me you could find
-your way about with a sextant?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes, sir, I have told you so.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;By heaven! then,&#8217; he roared, &#8216;I&#8217;m glad
-to see ye! Welcome aboard the <i>Lady Blanche</i>,
-sir. And you, mem, I am sure.&#8217; Here he
-pulled off his immense straw hat and gave
-Miss Temple an unspeakably grotesque bow.
-&#8216;What have you got there?&#8217; he bawled to
-the square man.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A blanket full of wines and cheeses and
-&#8217;ams,&#8217; answered the man, who was helping to
-man&#339;uvre the bundle inboards over the side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;All right, all right!&#8217; shouted the captain.
-&#8216;Now put &#8217;em down, do, and get your boat
-hooked on and hoisted, d&#8217;ye hear? and get
-your topsail yard swung. Why, who&#8217;s been
-and set that wreck on fire?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The flare&#8217;s burnt through her deck,&#8217; cried
-the square man in a surly tone, &#8216;and I allow
-she&#8217;ll be ablowing up in a few minutes.&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>But she was too far distant to suffer this
-conjecture to alarm the captain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Let her blow up,&#8217; said he; &#8216;there&#8217;s room
-enough for her,&#8217; and then giving Miss Temple
-another convulsive bow, he invited us to step
-into the cabin.</p>
-
-<p>This was a little state-room under the short
-after-deck, and, with its bulkheaded berths
-abaft, a miniature likeness in its way of the
-<i>Countess Ida&#8217;s</i> saloon. It was a cosy little
-place, with a square table amidships, a bench
-on either hand of it screwed to the deck, a
-flat skylight overhead, a couple of old-fashioned
-lamps, a small stove near to the
-trunk of the mizzenmast, a rack full of
-tumblers, and so forth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Sit ye down, mem,&#8217; said the captain,
-pointing to a bench. &#8216;Sir, be seated. I
-heard Mr. Lush just now talk of wines, and
-cheeses, and hams; but what d&#8217;ye say to a
-cut of boiled beef and a bottle of London
-stout? Drifting about in a wreck ain&#8217;t wholesome
-for the soul, I believe; but I never
-heard that it affected the appetite.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You are very good,&#8217; I exclaimed; &#8216;our
-food for the last three days has been no more
-than ship&#8217;s bread and marmalade&mdash;poor fare<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-for the lady, fresh from the comforts and
-luxuries of an Indiaman&#8217;s cuddy.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He went to the cabin door and bawled;
-and a young fellow, whom I afterwards found
-out was his servant, came running aft. He
-gave him certain directions, then returned to
-the table, where he sat for a long two minutes
-first staring at me and then at Miss Temple
-without a wink of his eyes. I observed that
-my companion shrunk from this extraordinary
-silent scrutiny. I had never witnessed
-in any other human head such eyes as that
-fellow had. They were a deformity by their
-size, being about twice too big for the width
-and length of his face, of a deep ink-black,
-resembling discs of ebony gummed upon
-china. There was no glow, no mind in them,
-that I could distinguish, scarcely anything of
-vitality outside their preternatural capacity of
-staring, that was yet immeasurably heightened
-by the steadiness of the lids, which I never
-once beheld blinking. His face was long and
-yellow, closely shorn, and of an indigo blue
-down the cheeks, upon the chin, and upon the
-upper lip. He had a very long aquiline nose
-with large nostrils, which constantly dilated,
-as though he snuffed up rather than breathed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-the air. His eyebrows were extraordinarily
-thick, and met in a peculiar tuft in the indent
-of the skull above the nose; whilst his hair,
-black as his eyes, and smooth and gleaming
-as the back of a raven, lay combed over his
-ears down upon his back. He was dressed in
-a suit of white drill, the flowing extremities of
-his trousers rounding to his feet in the shape
-of the mouth of a bell, from which protruded
-a pair of long square-toed shoes of yellow
-leather. I should instantly have put him
-down as a Yankee but for his accent, that was
-cockney beyond the endurance of a polite
-ear.</p>
-
-<p>I broke into his intolerable scrutiny by
-asking him from what port his ship hailed;
-but he continued to stare at me in silence for
-some considerable time after I had made this
-inquiry. He then started, flourished a great
-red cotton pocket-handkerchief to his brow,
-and exclaimed: &#8216;Sir, you spoke?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I repeated the question.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The <i>Lady Blanche</i> is owned at Hull,&#8217; said
-he; &#8216;but we&#8217;re from the Thames for Mauritius.
-And what&#8217;s your story? How came
-you and this beautiful lady aboard that hull?
-You&#8217;re gentlefolks, I allow. I see breeding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-in your hands, mem,&#8217; fixing his unwinking
-eyes upon her rings. &#8216;You talk of an
-Indeeman. Let&#8217;s have it all afore the boiled
-beef comes along.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>So saying, he hooked his thumbs in his
-waistcoat, brought his back against the table,
-and forking his long shanks out, sat in
-a posture of attention, keeping his amazing
-eyes bent on my face whilst I spoke. It did
-not take me very long to give him the tale.
-He listened without so much as a syllable
-escaping from him, and when I had made an
-end, he continued to craze at me in silence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;By what name shall I address you?&#8217;
-said Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>He started, as before, and answered:
-&#8216;John Braine; Captain John Braine, mem;
-or call it Captain Braine: John&#8217;s only in the
-road. That&#8217;s my name, mem.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She forced a smile, and said: &#8216;Captain
-Braine, the <i>Countess Ida</i> cannot be far distant,
-and I have most earnestly to entreat you
-to seek her. I am sure she is to be found
-after a very short hunt. I have a dear relative
-on board of her, who will fret her heart
-away if she believes I am lost. All my luggage,
-too, is in that ship. My mother, Lady<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-Temple, will most cheerfully pay any sum
-that may be asked for such trouble and loss
-of time as your search for the Indiaman might
-occasion.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I thought he meant to stare at her without
-answering; but after a short pause he
-exclaimed: &#8216;The Indeeman&#8217;s bound to Bombay,
-ain&#8217;t she? Well, we&#8217;re a-navigating the
-same road she&#8217;s taking. It is three days since
-you lost her; where&#8217;ll she be now, then?
-That can only be known to the angels, which
-look down from a taller height than there&#8217;s
-e&#8217;er a truck afloat that&#8217;ll come nigh. Now,
-mem, I might shift my hellum and dodge
-about for a whole fortnight and do no good.
-It would be the same as making up our minds
-to lose her. But by keeping all on as we are,
-there&#8217;ll ne&#8217;er be an hour that won&#8217;t hold
-inside of it a chance of our rising her on one
-bow or t&#8217;other. See what I mean, mem?
-You&#8217;re aboard of a barque with legs, as Jack
-says. Your Indeeman&#8217;s had a three days&#8217;
-start; and if so be as she is to be picked up,
-I&#8217;ll engage to have ye aboard of her within a
-week. But to dodge about in search of her&mdash;the
-Lord love&#8217;ee, mem! The sea&#8217;s too big
-for any sort of chiveying.&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>&#8216;I am completely of Captain Braine&#8217;s
-opinion,&#8217; said I, addressing Miss Temple, whose
-face was full of distress and dismay. &#8216;It
-would be unreasonable to expect this gentleman
-to delay his voyage by a search that, in
-all human probability, must prove unprofitable.
-A hunt would involve the loss of our
-one chance of falling in with her this side the
-Cape.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She clasped her hands and hung her head,
-but made no reply. The captain&#8217;s servant
-entered at that moment with a tray of food,
-which he placed upon the table; and the
-skipper bidding us fall to and make ourselves
-at home in a voice as suggestive of the croak
-of a raven as was his hair of the plumage of
-that bird, stalked on to the deck, where the
-sailors&mdash;who by this time had hoisted the
-boat and trimmed the barque&#8217;s yards&mdash;were
-coiling down the gear and returning to the
-various jobs they had been upon before they
-had hove the ship to.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-
-<small>CAPTAIN BRAINE</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">After</span> three days of sailors&#8217; biscuit and strong
-cheese and marmalade of the flavour of foot
-sugar, the lump of cold salt beef that the captain&#8217;s
-man set before me ate to my palate with
-a relish that I had never before found in the
-choicest and most exquisitely cooked meat;
-and a real treat, too, to my shipwrecked
-sensibilities, was the inspiration of home and
-civilisation in the tumbler of foaming London
-stout. Miss Temple seemed too harassed, too
-broken down in mind, to partake of food; but
-by dint of coaxing and entreating I got her to
-taste a mouthful, and then put her lips to a
-glass of stout; and presently she appeared to
-find her appetite by eating, as the French say,
-and ended with such a repast as I could have
-wished to see her make.</p>
-
-<p>When the man put the tray down, he went<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-out, and the girl and I were alone during the
-meal. Now that I had recovered from the
-first heart-subduing shock of the discovery
-that the hull was on fire, and could realise
-that, even supposing she had not been set on
-fire, we had still been delivered from what in
-all probability must have proved a long, lingering,
-soul-killing time of expectation, dying
-out into hopelessness and into a period of
-famine, thirst, and death: I say now that I
-could realise our rescue from these horrors,
-my spirits mounted, my joy was an intoxication,
-I could have cried and laughed at the
-same time, like one in hysteria. I longed to
-jump from my chair and dance about the
-cabin that I might vent the oppression of my
-transports by movement. I was but a young
-man, and life was dear to me, and we had
-been in dire peril, and were safe. What a
-paradise was this cosy little cabin after that
-ghost-haunted, narrow crib of a deck-house!
-How soothing beyond all words to the nerves
-was the light floating rolling of the graceful
-little snow-white barque, under control of her
-helm, and vitalised in every plank by the impulse
-of her airy soaring canvas, compared
-with the jerky, feverish, staggering, tumblefication<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-of the wreck, with its deadly deck
-leaning at desperate angles to the fang-like
-remnants of the crushed bulwarks, and its
-uncovered hatches yawning to the heavens, as
-though in a dumb mouthing of entreaty for
-extinction!</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh! Miss Temple,&#8217; I cried, &#8216;I cannot
-bring my mind to believe in our good fortune!
-This time yesterday! how hopeless
-we were! And now we are safe! I thank
-God, I most humbly thank God, for His
-mercy! Your lot would soon have become a
-frightful one aboard that wreck.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yet what would I give,&#8217; she exclaimed,
-&#8216;if this ship were the <i>Countess Ida</i>! What is
-to become of us? For how long are we to
-wander about in a state of destitution, Mr.
-Dugdale&mdash;mere beggars, without apparel,
-without conveniences, dependent for our very
-meals upon the bounty of strangers?&#8217; and she
-brought her eyes, with the old flash in them,
-from the table to my face, at which she gazed
-with an expression of temper and mortification.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You would not be a woman,&#8217; said I, &#8216;if
-you did not think of your dress. But, pray,
-consider this: that your baggage is now<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-recoverable; whereas, but for this <i>Lady
-Blanche</i>&mdash;&mdash;&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh! but it would have been so happy a
-thing, that might so easily have happened too,
-had this vessel been the Indiaman.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Cannot you summon a little patience to
-your aid?&#8217; said I. &#8216;Our strange-eyed captain
-spoke with judgment when he suggested the
-probability of your exchanging his ship for
-the <i>Countess Ida</i> within a week.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, I will be patient, if I can,&#8217; said she,
-looking down with an air of trouble and distress
-in the pout of her lip; &#8216;but is it not
-about time that the adventure ended?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Suppose it may be only now beginning?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She gave me a side-glance and exclaimed
-somewhat haughtily: &#8216;I really believe, Mr.
-Dugdale, you enjoy this sort of experiences;
-and if I were a man&mdash;&mdash; But it <i>must</i> end!&#8217;
-she added with an air as though she was
-about to weep. &#8216;It is unendurable to think
-of being carried about the world in this
-fashion. I shall insist&mdash;well, I shall bribe
-Captain Braine to question every ship he
-passes as to her destination, and the first
-vessel we encounter that is going home I shall
-go on board of.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>&#8216;Alone?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; she answered, half closing her
-eyes and looking a little away from me;
-&#8216;you would not suffer me to travel alone?
-Besides, do not you want to get home
-too?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I would rather find my way to Bombay,&#8217;
-said I. &#8216;My baggage as well as yours is
-aboard the <i>Countess Ida</i>, and I should like to
-get it, though not at the cost of too much
-trouble. I am bound to India on a visit, and
-am not expected home for a good many
-months. Now, I don&#8217;t see why both of us
-shouldn&#8217;t keep our appointments by sticking
-in this barque, and sailing in her to the
-Mauritius, whence we ought to be able, without
-difficulty, to ship ourselves for Bombay.
-The <i>Lady Blanche</i> has the hull of a clipper,
-and it will be strange if the pair of us are
-not ashore at Bombay some weeks before the
-<i>Countess Ida</i> sails.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She listened with impatience, and when I
-had ended, said: &#8216;If the chance offers, I
-shall certainly go home. I shall take the
-first ship that passes, though it should cost
-a thousand pounds to bribe Captain Braine
-and the commander of the vessel that receives<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span>
-me. How is it possible for me to continue
-thus?&#8217; and here she looked at her dress.
-&#8216;And where is Mauritius? Is it not nearly as
-far off as Bombay? Whereas England is
-not so very remote from this part of the
-ocean.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, Miss Temple, I am your humble
-servant,&#8217; said I. &#8216;Head as you will, I shall
-most dutifully follow you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I beg that you will not be satirical.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;God forbid!&#8217; said I, averting my eyes;
-for I was sensible that they were expressing
-more than I had any desire she should
-observe. &#8216;I wish to see you safe, and meanwhile
-happy. If we pick up a ship homeward
-bound, we can commission Captain Braine to
-request Keeling, if he encounters him, to
-transfer our baggage to the first craft he
-speaks going to England. Your aunt&#8217;s maid
-will know all about your luggage.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She watched me, as though doubtful
-whether I was joking or not; but I was cut
-short by the entrance of Captain Braine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I hope you have done pretty well?&#8217; he
-exclaimed, after gazing at us for a short time
-without speaking; &#8216;it is poor fare, mem, for
-the likes of you. But the ship&#8217;ll afford<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</a></span>
-nothing fresh till we kill a pig. What did
-you say your name was, sir?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Dugdale,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ha!&#8217; he cried, whilst he viewed me steadfastly,
-&#8216;to be sure. Dugdale. That was it.
-Well, Mr. Dugdale, there might be an edifying
-sight for you and the lady to behold from the
-deck.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What?&#8217; swiftly exclaimed Miss Temple
-with a start.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The hull, mem, we took you from,&#8217; he
-replied in his hollow somewhat deep voice,
-&#8216;is rapidly growing into a big blaze.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Her face changed to a mood of disappointment.
-I believe she thought that the
-captain had come to announce the Indiaman
-in sight: I was about to speak:</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Captain Braine,&#8217; she said, approaching
-him by a dramatic stride, and exclaiming
-proudly, as though she would subdue him by
-her mere manner to acquiescence in her
-wishes, &#8216;I am without wearing apparel, saving
-the attire in which you now view me, and it
-is absolutely necessary I should return home
-as speedily as possible. My mother will fear
-that I have perished, and I must be the bearer
-of my own news, or the report of my being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span>
-lost may cause her death, so exceedingly delicate
-is her health. She is rich, and will reward
-you in any sum you may think proper to
-demand for enabling me to return to England
-quickly.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>An indescribable smile as she said these
-words crept over the man&#8217;s face and vanished.
-I was strongly impressed by the expression of
-it, and observed him closely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Therefore, Captain Braine,&#8217; she proceeded,
-&#8216;I have to entreat you to promise me that you
-will signal to the ships you may pass, and put
-me on board the first one, no matter what
-sort of vessel she be, that is sailing directly
-to England.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He silently surveyed her, and then directed
-his eyes at me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You&#8217;ll be wanting to get home too, sir, I
-suppose?&#8217; said he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh yes,&#8217; I replied. &#8216;Miss Temple is under
-my care, and I must see her safe.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He turned to her again, and stood staring;
-then said: &#8216;That&#8217;ll be all right, mem; we&#8217;re
-bound to be falling in with something coming
-along presently; and if England&#8217;s her destination
-and she&#8217;ll receive ye, the boat that
-brought you from the hull shall take you<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-to her, weather permitting. That&#8217;ll do, I
-think?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She bowed, looking as pleased as agitation
-and anxiety would allow her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Come now and take a look at the hull,&#8217;
-continued Captain Braine; &#8216;and then&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You quite understand, I hope,&#8217; she interrupted,
-&#8216;that any sum&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>He broke in with an odd flourish of his
-hand. &#8216;No need to mention that matter,
-mem,&#8217; he exclaimed;&mdash;&#8216;we are Christian men
-in that part of the country where I come from,
-and there&#8217;s never no talk of pay amongst us
-for doing what the Lord directs&mdash;succouring
-distressed fellow-creatures.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>With which he spun upon his heels and
-walked out of the cabin, leaving us to follow
-him.</p>
-
-<p>I had no eyes nor thoughts for anything
-else than the hull the moment I saw her. I
-remember recoiling as to a blow, and panting
-for a few breaths with my hand to my
-side. She had slipped to something more
-than two miles away down on the starboard
-quarter, and although only a portion of her
-was as yet on fire, she was showing as a body
-of flame brilliant and forked, soaring and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-drooping against the leaden-hued background
-of sky. Shudder after shudder went like ice
-through me as my sight swept the mighty
-girdle of the deep, coming back to the little
-body of flame that most horribly to every
-trembling instinct in me accentuated the
-lonely immensity of the surface on which it
-glowed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Think&mdash;if we were on her now!&#8217; I muttered
-to Miss Temple. She hid her face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Was there any valleyables aboard her,
-Mr. Dugdale, d&#8217;ye know?&#8217; said the captain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I cannot tell you,&#8217; I answered in a voice
-subdued by emotion; &#8216;I did not search the
-sleeping-berths. There was little enough in
-her hold.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ye should have crept away down in the
-run,&#8217; said he; &#8216;that&#8217;s where the chaps which
-peopled her would stow their booty if they
-had any. If I&#8217;d known she&#8217;d been a privateersman&mdash;&mdash; How
-came ye to set her on
-fire?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;My signal burnt through her deck, so I
-was informed by that gentleman there,&#8217; I replied,
-indicating the square man, who stood a
-little way from us.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>&#8216;Was that so, Mr. Lush?&#8217; cried the captain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Was what so?&#8217; asked Mr. Lush. The
-captain explained. &#8216;Well, I dunno,&#8217; answered
-the other; &#8216;there was fire in the hold when I
-looked down, and it seemed to me as if flakes
-of it was falling through the deck. But what
-does it signify? Wood ain&#8217;t cast-iron, and if
-ye makes a flare upon a timber deck, why,
-then what I says is, stand by!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh look, Mr. Dugdale!&#8217; shrieked Miss
-Temple at that moment, tossing her arms in
-horror, and standing with her hands-upraised,
-as though in a posture of calling down a curse
-upon the distant thing.</p>
-
-<p>My eye was on the wreck, as hers had
-been, and I saw it all. There was a huge
-crimson flash, as though some volcanic head
-had belched in fire; daylight as it was, the
-stretch of clouds above and beyond the wreck
-glared out in a dull rusty red to the amazing
-stream of flame; a volume of smoke white as
-steam, shaped like a balloon, and floating
-solid to the sight, slowly rose like some
-phenomenal emanation from the secret depths
-of the ocean. There followed the sullen,
-deep-throated blast of the explosion. Captain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-Braine snatched a telescope from the skylight
-and levelled it, and after peering a little,
-thrust the glass into my hand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;See if you can find out where she&#8217;s gone
-to,&#8217; said he with a singular grin, in which his
-eyes did not participate.</p>
-
-<p>I looked: the water delicately brushed by
-the light wind flowed in nakedness under the
-shadow of the slowly soaring and enlarging
-cloud of white smoke. Not the minutest
-point of black, not the merest atom of fragment
-of wreck, was visible. I put down the
-glass with a quivering hand, and going to the
-rail, looked into the sea to conceal my moist
-eyes, too overcome to speak.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A good job you weren&#8217;t in that hull,
-mem,&#8217; said the captain to Miss Temple; &#8216;it
-would be sky high with any one that had been
-there by this time: a devil of a mount, as
-Jack says. But you&#8217;re aboard a tidy little
-ship now. If so be that you are at all of a
-nautical judge, mem, cast your eyes aloft and
-tell me if there&#8217;s e&#8217;er an Indeeman or a man-of-war,
-too, if ye will, with spars stayed as my
-masts is, with such a fit of canvas, with such
-a knowing cocked-ear like look as the run of
-them yardarms has, with such mastheads<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-tapering away like the holy spire of a meetinghouse,
-and that beautiful little skysail atop to
-sarve as a cloud for any tired angel that may
-be flying along to rest upon! Ha!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He drew so deep a breath as he concluded
-that I turned to look at him. He stood
-gazing up at the canvas on the main as
-though in an ecstasy; his hands were crossed
-upon his breast after the manner of coy
-virgins in paintings; his right knee was
-crooked and projected; I could not have
-imagined so curious a figure off the stage.
-Indeed, I supposed he was acting now to
-divert Miss Temple. I glanced at the tough,
-sullen, storm darkened face of old Lush, to
-gather his opinion on the behaviour of this
-captain; but his expression was of wood, and
-there was no other meaning in it that I could
-distinguish save what was put there by the
-action of his jaws as he gnawed upon a junk
-of tobacco, carrying his sight from seawards
-to aloft and back again as regularly as the
-swing of the spars.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple drew to my side with a manner
-of uneasiness about her. She whispered,
-while she seemed to be speaking of the wreck,
-motioning with her hand in the direction of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-the smoke that was slowly drawing on to our
-beam in a great staring, still-compacted mass,
-white as fog against the leaden heaven: &#8216;I
-believe he is not in his right mind.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No matter,&#8217; I swiftly replied; &#8216;his ship
-is sound. Captain,&#8217; I exclaimed, &#8216;I hope you
-will have a spare cabin for this lady. For my
-part, you may sling me a hammock anywhere,
-or a rug and a plank will make me all the bed
-I want.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, there&#8217;s accommodation for ye both
-below,&#8217; he answered; &#8216;there&#8217;s the mate&#8217;s
-berth unoccupied. The lady can have that.
-And next door to it there&#8217;s a cabin with a
-bunk in it. I&#8217;ll have it cleared out for you.
-Come down and see for yourselves.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He led the way into the little cuddy, as I
-may term it, and conducted us to a hatch
-close against the two sleeping berths right aft.
-He descended a short flight of steps, and we
-found ourselves in &#8217;tweendecks in which I
-should not have been able to stand erect with
-a tall hat on. It was gloomy down here. I
-could distinguish with difficulty a number of
-cases of light goods stowed from the deck to
-the beams, and completely blocking up all
-the forward portion of this part of the vessel.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-There were two cabins in the extremity corresponding
-with the cabins above, with such
-another small hatch as we had descended
-through lying close against them, but covered:
-the entrance as I took it to &#8216;the run&#8217; or
-&#8216;lazarette.&#8217; Captain Braine opened the cabin
-door on the port side, and we peered into a
-small but clean and airy berth lighted by a
-large scuttle. I noticed a couple of sea-chests,
-a suit of oilskins hanging under a little shelf
-full of books, a locker, a mattress, and a bundle
-of blankets in the bunk, a large chart of the
-English Channel nailed against the side, and
-other matters of a like sort.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You&#8217;ll be able to make yourself pretty
-comfortable here, mem,&#8217; said Captain Braine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Are there any rats?&#8217; asked Miss Temple,
-rolling her eyes nervously over the deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Bless you, no!&#8217; answered the captain.
-&#8216;At the very worst, a cockroach here and
-there, mem.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But this cabin is occupied,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It was, young gentleman, it was,&#8217; he exclaimed,
-in a hollow raven voice, that wonderfully
-corresponded with his countenance, and
-particularly somehow or other with his hair&mdash;&#8216;it
-was my chief-mate&#8217;s cabin. But he&#8217;s dead,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span>
-sir.&#8217; He gazed at me steadfastly, and added,
-&#8216;Dead and gone, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple slightly started, and with a
-hurried glance at the bunk, asked how long
-the man had been dead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Three weeks,&#8217; responded Captain Braine,
-preserving his sepulchral tone, as though he
-supposed it was the correct voice in which to
-deliver melancholy information.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;May I see the next cabin?&#8217; said Miss
-Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Certainly&#8217; he answered; and going out,
-he opened the door.</p>
-
-<p>This room was the same size as the
-berth which adjoined it; but it was crowded
-with a collection of sailmakers&#8217; and boatswains&#8217;
-stores, bolts of canvas, new buckets,
-scrubbing brushes, and so on. There was a
-bunk under the scuttle full of odds and ends.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I would rather occupy this berth than
-the other,&#8217; said Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You&#8217;re not afraid of ghosts, mem?&#8217; exclaimed
-the captain, fixing his immense dead
-black eyes upon her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I presume this room can be cleared out,
-and I prefer it to the other,&#8217; she answered
-haughtily.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>I broke in, somewhat alarmed by these
-airs: &#8216;Oh, by all means, Miss Temple. Choose
-the cabin you best like. Captain Braine is all
-kindness in furnishing us with such excellent
-accommodation. This stuff can be put into
-my berth, if you please, captain. I shall
-merely need room enough to get into my
-bunk.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&#8217;ll make that all right,&#8217; he answered
-somewhat sulkily. &#8216;How about bedding?
-The lady&#8217;s a trifle particular, I fear. She
-wouldn&#8217;t be satisfied to roll herself up in a
-dead man&#8217;s blanket, I guess.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Leave me to manage,&#8217; said I, forcing a
-note of cheerfulness into my voice, though I
-was greatly vexed by Miss Temple&#8217;s want of
-tact. &#8216;There&#8217;s more bedding than either of
-us will require in less than a bolt of your
-canvas. We are fresh from an experience
-that would make a paradise of your forepeak,
-captain. And so,&#8217; said I, plunging from the
-subject, in the hope of carrying off the ill-humour
-that showed in his face, &#8216;you are
-without a chief-mate?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&#8217;ll tell you about that by-and-by,&#8217; said
-he. &#8216;This here crib, then, is to be the lady&#8217;s?
-Now, what have I got that you&#8217;ll be wanting,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-mem? There&#8217;s a bit of a looking-glass next
-door. He used to shave himself in it. You
-won&#8217;t mind that, perhaps? His image ain&#8217;t
-impressed on the plate. It&#8217;ll show ye true as
-you are, for all that he shaved himself in it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple smiled, and said that she
-would be glad to have the glass.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There&#8217;ll be his hairbrush,&#8217; continued
-Captain Braine, &#8216;though <i>that</i> might prove
-objectionable,&#8217; he added doubtfully, talking
-with his eyes fixed unwinkingly upon her.
-&#8216;And yet I don&#8217;t know; if it was put to soak
-in a bucket of salt-water, it ought to come out
-sweet enough. There&#8217;s likewise a comb,&#8217; he
-proceeded, taking his chin betwixt his thumb
-and forefinger and stroking it: &#8216;there&#8217;s nothing
-to hurt in a comb, and it&#8217;s at your sarvice,
-mem. If poor old Chicken were here, he&#8217;d
-be very willing, I&#8217;m sure; but he&#8217;s gone&mdash;gone
-dead.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He looked at Miss Temple again. I watched
-him with attention. He seemed to sink into
-a fit of musing; then, waking up out of it in
-a sudden way, he cried: &#8216;You&#8217;ve got no
-luggage at all, have ye, mem?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; responded Miss Temple with gravity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&#8217;m sorry,&#8217; said he, &#8216;that I didn&#8217;t bring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-Mrs. Braine along with me this voyage. She
-wanted to come, poor thing, observing me to
-be but very ordinary during most of the time
-I was ashore&mdash;very ordinary indeed,&#8217; he repeated,
-shaking his head. &#8216;If she was here
-we could manage.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray, give yourself no concern on that
-head, captain,&#8217; said I; &#8216;we shall be falling in
-with the Indiaman presently; and supposing
-the worst to come to the worst&mdash;what time do
-you give yourself for the run from here to the
-Mauritius?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&#8217;m not agoing to say&mdash;I&#8217;m not agoing to
-say!&#8217; he cried with an accent of excitement
-that astonished me; &#8216;what&#8217;s the good of
-talking when you don&#8217;t know? Wouldn&#8217;t it
-be a sin to go and make promises to people in
-your condition and disappoint &#8217;em? I can
-just tell ye this: that Baltimore itself never
-turned out a keel able to clip through it as
-this here <i>Lady Blanche</i> can when the chance
-is given her. And now,&#8217; he exclaimed, changing
-his voice, &#8216;suppose we clear out of this, and
-go up into the daylight and fresh air;&#8217; and
-without pausing for an answer he trudged
-off.</p>
-
-<p>I handed Miss Temple up the ladder, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span>
-we gained the little cabin, or living-room as it
-might be termed. The young fellow who acted
-as steward or servant was busy at the glass-rack.
-The captain called to him, and peremptorily
-and most intelligently gave him
-certain instructions with respect to the clearing
-out and preparing of the berths below for our
-reception. He told him where he would find
-a spare mattress&mdash;&#8216;Quite new, never yet slept
-on,&#8217; he said, contorting his figure into a bow
-to Miss Temple&mdash;he had a couple of shawls
-and a homely old rug which had made several
-voyages, and these were to be put into her
-bunk; the man was to see that the lady lacked
-no convenience which the barque could afford.
-&#8216;The late Mr. Chicken&#8217;s mattress was to be
-given to me along with his bedding, if so be
-that I was willing to use the same.&#8217; Other
-instructions, all expressive of foresight and
-hospitable consideration, he gave to the fellow,
-who then went forward to obtain help to clear
-out the cabins.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We are deeply indebted to you, captain,&#8217;
-said I, &#8216;for this very generous behaviour&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not a word, sir, if you please,&#8217; he interrupted.
-&#8216;I have a soul as well as another,
-and I know my duty. Lady, a hint: you have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-some fine jewelry upon you; take my advice
-and put it in your pocket.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She was alarmed by this, and looked at
-me.</p>
-
-<p>I smiled, and said, &#8216;The captain of a
-ship is Lord Paramount; his orders must be
-obeyed, Miss Temple.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Without another word she began to pull
-off her rings, the skipper steadfastly watching
-her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Will you take charge of them for me, Mr.
-Dugdale?&#8217; said she.</p>
-
-<p>I placed them in my pocket. She then
-took off a very beautiful diamond locket from
-her throat, and this I also carefully stowed
-away.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I will remove my earrings presently,&#8217; she
-exclaimed with a slight flush in her cheek and
-a sparkle as of ire in her gaze, though her lips
-still indicated an emotion of dismay.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;My advice to you is&mdash;at once, mem,&#8217; said
-the captain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We must believe that Captain Braine is
-fully sensible of the meaning of his requests,&#8217;
-said I, answering the glance she shot at me.</p>
-
-<p>She removed the earrings and gave them
-to me. The captain stood running his eyes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span>
-over her figure; then, with a melodramatic
-gesture, pointed to her watch. This, too, with
-the handsome chain belonging to it, I pocketed.
-He now addressed himself to contemplating
-me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You don&#8217;t need to show any watch-chain,&#8217;
-said he, speaking with his head drooping
-towards his left shoulder; &#8216;there&#8217;s no good in
-that signet ring either. As to the breast-pin&#8217;&mdash;he
-half-closed one eye&mdash;&#8216;well, perhaps that&#8217;s a
-thing that won&#8217;t hurt where it is.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He waited until I had taken off my ring
-and dropped my chain into my waistcoat
-pocket, and then, looking first of all aft and
-then forward, then up at the little skylight,
-whilst he seemed to hold his breath as though
-intently listening, he approached us, as we
-stood together, by a stride, and said in a low
-deep voice, tremulous with intensity of utterance:
-&#8216;My men are not to be trusted. Hush!
-If they imagined I suspected them, they would
-cut my throat and heave me overboard.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple took my arm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Let me understand you?&#8217; said I, wrestling
-with my amazement. &#8216;In what sense are they
-untrustworthy?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He stared eagerly and nervously about him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-again, and then, extending the fingers of his
-left hand, he touched one of them after
-another, as though counting, whilst he said:
-&#8216;First, I have reason to believe that Lush, the
-carpenter, who acts as my second mate, committed
-a murder four years ago.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Good God!&#8217; I ejaculated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Hold!&#8217; he cried. &#8216;Next, there ain&#8217;t no
-shadow of a doubt that two at least of my
-able seamen are escaped convicts. Next, there
-is a man forward who was concerned in a
-mutiny that ended in the ringleaders being
-hung. Next&#8217;&mdash;he paused, and then exclaimed:
-&#8216;but no need to go on alarming the lady.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But were you not acquainted with these
-men&#8217;s characters at the time of their signing
-articles?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No, young man&mdash;no,&#8217; he answered with
-a most melancholy shake of the head; &#8216;it&#8217;s all
-come out since, and a deal more atop of it.
-But hush! Discretion is the better part of
-valour, as Jack says. There&#8217;s no call to be
-afraid. They know the man I am, and what&#8217;s
-better, they know I know <i>them</i>. Ye&#8217;re quite
-safe, mem; only, don&#8217;t be a-tempting sailors
-of their sort by a sight of the valleyables you&#8217;ve
-been a-carrying about with you. And now,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-perhaps you&#8217;ll excuse me whilst I goes and
-looks after the ship.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He gave us another extraordinary bow&mdash;I
-never met with any posture-maker who
-approached this man in the capacity of distorting
-his person&mdash;and walked out of the
-cabin.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-
-<small>THE CREW OF THE BARQUE</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Miss Temple</span> released my arm and sank upon
-a bench.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Can you doubt now that he is mad?&#8217; she
-exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Somewhat eccentric, certainly, but perhaps
-not mad, though. He is treating us
-very kindly. How intelligently he instructed
-his man in regard to our cabins!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He may be kind; but I believe we should
-have been safer on the hull than here.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh no, no, no!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But I say yes,&#8217; she exclaimed in her most
-imperious air, and gazing at me with hot and
-glowing eyes. &#8216;It is quite true the wreck
-was burnt; but if this vessel had not come
-into sight, you would not have signalled, and
-then the hull would not have been set on fire.
-It is maddening to think that perhaps within
-the next three or four hours the Indiaman or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-the corvette may sail over the very spot
-where the wreck blew up.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I heartily hope that one or the other
-will do so,&#8217; said I; &#8216;for if she be so close
-to us as all that, we&#8217;re bound to fall in with
-her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She looked at her hands, turning her
-fingers back and front, as though they were
-some novel and unexpected sight to her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I wonder, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; said she, &#8216;you
-can doubt that the man is insane. Remember
-the extraordinary questions he put to you
-when we first arrived. I believe, had you
-told him you were ignorant of navigation, he
-would have sent us back to the wreck. And
-then how he stares! There is something
-shocking in the fixed regard of his dreadfully
-inanimate black eyes. What a very extraordinary
-face, too! I cannot believe that he
-is a sailor. He has the appearance of a monk
-just released from some term of fearful
-penance and mortification.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;On the other hand he has received us
-very kindly. He would not suffer you to
-speak of paying him. He promptly set us
-down to such entertainment as his vessel
-furnishes. He may be mad half-way round<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-the compass, but all the rest of the points
-are sound,&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am astonished,&#8217; she cried with a manner
-of petulant vivacity, &#8216;to hear you say that we
-are safer in this ship than had we remained in
-the hull. There we were alone; but who are
-the people with whom we must be locked up
-in this vessel until we sight the Indiaman or
-some sail that will receive us? A murderer&mdash;convicts&mdash;mutineers&mdash;a
-crew of men in whose
-sight a jewel must not be exhibited lest they
-should be tempted. Tempted to what?&#8217; She
-violently shuddered. &#8216;How can you speak of
-this ship as safer than the wreck?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Because I happen to feel quite certain
-that she is; but I will not say so, for it vexes
-you to hear me.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh this ridiculous, this horribly ridiculous
-degrading situation fills me with anger. To
-think of being reduced to a perfect state of
-squalor&mdash;having to conceal one&#8217;s jewelry for
-fear of&mdash;of&mdash;something awful, I am sure; and
-you dare not, though you <i>could</i> name it, Mr.
-Dugdale.&#8217; I smiled, and her warmth increased.
-&#8216;That I should have been ever tempted,&#8217; she
-proceeded, &#8216;to undertake the odious voyage
-to Bombay, for <i>this</i>! To be without a change<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-of dress, to be obliged to sleep in a little dark
-horrid cabin, and meanwhile not to have the
-least notion when it is all to end!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Well, thought I, as I looked at her eyes
-shining with spirit and temper, and marked
-the faint hectic of her ill-humour in her
-cheeks, the expression of mingled pride and
-fretfulness in her lips, the wrathful rising and
-falling of her breast, here, to be sure, is a new
-version of the play of Katharine and Petruchio;
-only, though she be Kate to the life, it
-is not I, but old daddy Neptune who is to
-break her spirit, and unshrew her into somebody&#8217;s
-very humble servant. But is there any
-magic, I thought, even in ocean&#8217;s rough,
-brutal, unconscionable usage to render docile
-such a woman as this? Nay, would any man
-wish it otherwise with her than as it is when
-he gazes at her eyes and figure, beholds the
-dignity and haughtiness of her carriage, the
-assumption of maiden sovereignty visible in
-every move of her arm, in every curl of her
-lip, in every motion of her form!</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What are you thinking of?&#8217; she asked:
-&#8216;you are plunged in thought. I hope you are
-struggling to do justice to my perception of
-the truth.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>I started, and then laughed out. &#8216;I will
-not tell you what I was thinking of,&#8217; said I;
-&#8216;but I will express what was in my mind
-whilst you were speaking just now. You
-dwell with horror upon the captain&#8217;s account
-of his crew. Well, I heartily wish for both
-our sakes that they were an honest straight-headed
-body of men. But then every ship&#8217;s
-forecastle is a menagerie. There is ruffianism,
-and there is respectability. Quite likely that
-the carpenter Lush may have killed a man;
-but one must hear the story before deciding
-to call him a murderer. So of the convicts;
-so of the mutineers. In many ships at sea
-there is unspeakable provocation, and crimes
-are committed of which the blood rests upon
-the head of anyone sooner than those who are
-held guilty and punished by the law. I am
-not to be greatly frightened by Captain
-Braine&#8217;s talk of his crew, particularly since in
-a few days we may either be on board the
-Indiaman or homeward-bound in another ship.
-Let us now go on deck. I wish to take a
-view of the sailors, and see what sort of a
-craft this is, for as yet I have seen but little
-of her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I could not help remarking that she kept<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-very close to me as we made our way out of
-the cuddy, and that the glances she directed
-forwards where some seamen were at work
-were full of apprehension. The short poop of
-the <i>Lady Blanche</i> was gained by a central
-ladder falling fair in the face of the little doorway
-of the cuddy front with its two small
-windows and row of buckets. A low, handsomely
-carved wooden rail was fixed athwart
-the break of this raised deck, and I stood
-with Miss Temple at a point of it that provided
-me with a clear view fore and aft. The
-captain sat on a grating abaft the wheel reading.
-Mr. Lush was near the mizzen rigging,
-gazing seawards with a stubborn wooden expression
-of face. After the spacious decks
-and wide topgallant-forecastle of the Indiaman,
-this little <i>Lady Blanche</i> looked a mere
-toy. But though a ship shows least admirably
-from her own deck, I found a deal to please
-and even delight me in the first comprehensive
-look I threw around. She was as clean as a
-yacht; the insides of her bulwarks were
-painted a delicate green, and they were as
-spotless as though the brush were just off
-them; on either side were two little brass
-guns, mounted on carriages, and they shone<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-as freshly as though the sunlight were upon
-them; the running gear was everywhere
-neatly coiled away. The small caboose, with
-its smoking chimney, abaft the foremast; the
-length of windlass close in under the overlap
-of the short space of forecastle; the white
-longboat; the white scuttle-butt abreast of
-it; the little winch abaft the mainmast; the
-brass-lined circle of the wheel in the grasp of
-the sober, good-tempered-looking old fellow
-who had made one of the boat&#8217;s crew; the
-two shapely clinker-built quarter-boats hanging
-at the davits abreast of the mizzen mast&mdash;these
-and much more seemed details of a
-miniature delicacy and finish, that entered
-with surprising effect into the fabric&#8217;s general
-character of toy-like grace and elegance. On
-high, the white canvas soared in symmetrical
-spaces; but after the towering spires of the
-Indiaman, the main-yard of this little barque
-seemed within reach of the hand, and the
-tiny skysail that crowned the summit of the
-airy, snow-white, faintly-swelling cloths, no
-bigger than a lady&#8217;s pocket-handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;This is really a beautiful little ship, Miss
-Temple,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I might be able to admire her from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-deck of the <i>Countess Ida</i>,&#8217; she answered; &#8216;but
-there must be happiness to enable me to find
-beauty, and I am not happy here.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I searched the sea-line, but it was as bare
-and flawless as the rim of a brand-new guinea.
-The dull shadow of the morning still overspread
-the heavens; it was the same leaden
-sky, with here and there a little break of
-faintness, revealing some edge of apparently
-motionless cloud, and the ocean lay sallow
-beneath it, darker than it was for the pencilling
-of the ripples which wrinkled the wide
-expanse as they rode the long, light heave of
-the swell. There were some sailors at work
-in the waist on jobs, of which I forget the
-nature; I examined them attentively&mdash;they
-were within easy eyeshot; but though there
-was no lack of prejudice in my observation,
-I protest I could find nothing rascally in their
-appearance. They were all of them of the
-then familiar type of merchant seaman, as like
-to members of the crew of the Indiaman as
-one pea is to another; faces burnt by the sun
-and decorated with the usual assemblage of
-warts and moles, all of them of an unmistakably
-English cut&mdash;I am speaking of the five
-of them then visible&mdash;dressed in the rough<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-apparel of the ocean, rude shirts revealing
-the bare hairy breast, duck breeches with
-stains of oil and tar in them which there was
-no virtue in the scrubbing-brush and the lee-scuppers
-to remedy. Miss Temple, standing
-at my side, gazed at them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;They have quite the look of cut-throats,
-I think,&#8217; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, now, to my fancy,&#8217; said I, &#8216;they
-seem as honest a set of lively hearties as one
-could wish to sail with.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You merely say that to encourage me,&#8217;
-she exclaimed with a pout of vexation. &#8216;Observe
-that man with the black beard&mdash;the one
-that is nearest to us. Could you figure a completer
-likeness of a pirate? I do not like his
-way of glancing at us out of the corner of his
-eyes. An honest sailor would stare boldly.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I laughed, and then put on a face of
-apology.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You will be smiling at these fears in a
-few days, I hope,&#8217; I exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes; but it is the meanwhile we have to
-think of,&#8217; she answered. &#8216;Look at that man
-there&#8217;&mdash;meaning Mr. Lush; &#8216;pray, tell me,
-Mr. Dugdale, that he has a very handsome,
-manly, good-tempered face.&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span>&#8216;No; I confess I don&#8217;t like his appearance,&#8217;
-I answered, stealing a peep at the sulky-looking
-old dog, who continued to stare at the
-horizon with the immovability of a figure-head;
-&#8216;yet inside of that hide there may be
-stowed away a very worthy member of society.
-A crab-apple is not a fruit to delight the eye;
-but I believe it is wholesome eating, though
-a trifle austere.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the captain looked up
-from his book, and after taking a prolonged
-view of us, came in a slow walk to where we
-were standing, holding the volume in his
-hand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You have a charming little ship here,
-captain,&#8217; said I; &#8216;I am exceedingly pleased
-with her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes, sir; she&#8217;s a handy craft. She will
-do her work,&#8217; he answered, sending his unwinking
-eyes with their sort of slow dead look
-along the deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Which of those men down there are the
-convicts and mutineers?&#8217; began Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>He whipped round upon her with a vehemence
-of manner that seemed a veritable fury
-of temper to the first seeing and hearing of it.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;For God Almighty&#8217;s sake, not a word!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span>
-D&#8217;ye want to see me a murdered man?&#8217; He
-twisted round on to me: &#8216;Sir, you are to
-know nothing if you please. This lady is to
-know nothing. I asked ye both in the cabin
-to be secret. God&#8217;s death! if that man
-yonder had overheard her!&#8217; He stopped
-short, pointing with his thumb over his
-shoulder at Lush.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple was deadly pale. She had
-the same cowed air I had observed in her
-during our first few hours aboard the wreck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am very sorry&mdash;&#8217; she muttered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;For the love of God, mem!&#8217; he exclaimed
-in a whisper, putting his finger to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>It was time to change the subject. I
-asked him how long he had occupied in his
-passage from the Thames to this point, spoke
-of the light trade-wind and baffling airs we
-had encountered, told him once again of the
-privateering brig, asked him what he thought
-would be the chance of the corvette&#8217;s cutter
-in such weather as she went adrift in, and in
-this way coaxed him out of his temper until
-I had got him to some posture of affability
-once more. I do not recollect the number
-of days he named as contained in his passage
-from London, but I can remember that it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-a very swift run, proving daily totals which
-must have come very near to steam at
-times.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Such a nimble keel as this should make
-you very easy, Miss Temple,&#8217; said I; &#8216;why,
-here is a craft to sail round and round the
-<i>Countess Ida</i>. Even though we shouldn&#8217;t pick
-her up, it is fifty to one that of all her
-passengers we two shall be the first to arrive
-in India.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She fastened her eyes upon the deck
-with a countenance of incredulity and
-despair.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I suppose your port will be St. Louis,
-sir?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>He stared at me for some moments without
-speaking, and then slowly inclined his
-head in a single nod.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I was never in that island,&#8217; I continued;
-&#8216;but I presume we shall not be at a loss for
-a vessel to carry us to some part of India
-whence we may easily make our way to Bombay.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>His lack-lustre gaze seemed to grow deader
-as, after a pause, he exclaimed: &#8216;There&#8217;ll be
-some French skipper to make terms with, I
-don&#8217;t doubt, for a passage north.&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>&#8216;You talk, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; said Miss Temple,
-&#8216;as though you were well assured that we
-should not fall in with the Indiaman.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am desirous of creating plenty of
-chances for ourselves,&#8217; said I; then gathering
-that this might not be a topic profitable to
-pursue in the presence of so singular a listener
-as Captain Braine, I again branched off.
-&#8216;How many,&#8217; said I carelessly, &#8216;go to a crew
-with you, captain?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He answered leisurely: &#8216;Thirteen as we
-now are, all told. There was fourteen afore
-Mr. Chicken died.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, even at that,&#8217; said I, &#8216;a single
-watch should be able to reef down for you.
-I suppose&#8217;&mdash;here I sunk my voice&mdash;&#8216;that Mr.
-Lush yonder is now your chief mate?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; he replied, speaking stealthily; &#8216;I&#8217;m
-my own chief mate. He&#8217;s the ship&#8217;s carpenter,
-and stands watch as second officer.
-But what are ye to do,&#8217; he proceeded, preserving
-his stealthy delivery, &#8216;with a man
-whose education don&#8217;t let him go no further
-than making a mark for his name?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Then, I take it, there is nobody aboard
-capable of navigating the vessel but yourself?&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>&#8216;We&#8217;ll talk about that presently,&#8217; said he
-with a singular look, and pointing with his
-finger to the deck.</p>
-
-<p>I observed that Miss Temple narrowly
-watched him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Was Mr. Chicken a pretty good navigator?&#8217;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>He appeared to forget himself in thought,
-then with a slow emerging air, so to speak,
-and a steadfast, quite embarrassing stare, he
-responded: &#8216;Chicken was acquainted with
-the use of the sextant. He likewise understood
-the meaning of Greenwich time. He
-couldn&#8217;t take a star; but his reckonings was
-always close when he got them out of the sun.
-He&#8217;d been bred a collierman, and it took him
-some time to recover the loss of coasts and lee
-shores and lights. But he was a good sailor,
-and a religious man; and his death was a
-blow, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Almost a pity that it wasn&#8217;t Mr. Lush
-who was beckoned overboard,&#8217; said I. (The
-carpenter had now trudged aft, and was looking
-into the compass out of hearing.)</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ah!&#8217; exclaimed Captain Braine, heaving
-a deep sigh and shaking his head: &#8216;Lush&#8217;s
-loss would have been my gain. One Chicken<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-was worth all the Lushes that were ever afloat.&mdash;But
-hush, mem, if <i>you</i> please.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I shall certainly say nothing more about
-your crew,&#8217; exclaimed Miss Temple quickly
-and a little haughtily, while she slightly
-recoiled from the face he turned upon her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Have you any books aboard, Captain
-Braine?&#8217; said I, glancing at the volume he
-held in his hand. &#8216;Any sort of amusement
-in the shape of chess or cards to help Miss
-Temple and myself to kill an hour or two from
-time to time?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There are some vollums in Chicken&#8217;s
-cabin that belonged to him,&#8217; answered Captain
-Braine. &#8216;I&#8217;ve read two or three of them.
-His cargo that way was usually edifying.
-There&#8217;s Baxter&#8217;s &#8220;Shove:&#8221; a good yarn; there&#8217;s
-the &#8220;Pilgrim&#8217;s Progress;&#8221; and there&#8217;s the &#8220;Whole
-Dooty o&#8217; Man&#8221;&mdash;a bit leewardly; I couldn&#8217;t
-fetch to windward in it myself. For my part,
-one book&#8217;s enough for me; and excepting
-some vollums on navigation, it is the only
-work I goes to sea with.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The Bible!&#8217; I exclaimed, taking it from
-him. I was astonished and pleased. There
-seemed little for one to apprehend in the
-character of a man who could dedicate his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-leisure to the study of that Book, and I was
-sensible of an emotion of respect for the
-strange-looking, staring figure as I returned
-the little volume to him.</p>
-
-<p>He dropped it into a side-pocket, and then
-most abruptly walked to the rail, took a long
-look at the weather and a long look aloft,
-trudged over to Mr. Lush, with whom he
-exchanged a sentence or two, and immediately
-afterwards disappeared down the companion.</p>
-
-<p>For some time after this Miss Temple and
-I paced the deck together. There was much
-to talk about, and my companion found a deal
-to say about Captain Braine, whilst, as we
-walked, I would catch her taking furtive peeps
-at Mr. Lush, who, it was easy to see, had
-inspired her with aversion and fear, though
-the man had not offered to address a word to
-us, nor had he once looked our way, thirstily
-inquisitive as his stare had been whilst in the
-boat. I could not help contrasting her
-behaviour now with what I recollected of it
-aboard the <i>Countess Ida</i>. She had put her
-hand into my arm, and the intimacy of our
-association in this way might well have
-suggested an affianced pair. She talked
-eagerly and with all the passion of the many<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-emotions which rose in her with her references,
-to our situation, to her aunt, to the chance of
-our sighting the Indiaman, and the like; and
-I don&#8217;t doubt that the men who watched us
-from the forepart of the vessel put us down
-either as husband and wife or a betrothed
-couple.</p>
-
-<p>And all this in three days! Three days
-ago she could hardly bring herself to speak
-or even to look at me; and now fortune had
-contrived that she should have no other
-companion, that she should be locked up with
-me alone in a dismasted hull, and then be
-brought, always with me at her side, into a
-vessel where, as she believed, there was much
-more to fill us with alarm than in the worst
-of the conditions which entered into our
-existence aboard the wreck! Again and again
-she would ask, with her dark and glowing
-eyes bent with an expression of despair upon
-my face, when it was to end and how it was
-to end; and these questions my heart would
-echo as I gazed at the cold and alarmed beauty
-of her face, but with a very different meaning
-from what she attached to the inquiries.</p>
-
-<p>At last she grew weary of walking, and I
-took her below and sat with her awhile on a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-cushioned locker. It was now drawing on to
-four o&#8217;clock in the afternoon; the breeze
-quiet, the sky in shadow, the sea very smooth
-save for the soft undulation of the swell,
-which pleasantly and soothingly cradled the
-little fabric as she slipped through it, of a
-milky white from water-line to truck, to the impulse
-of her wide overhanging pinions. After
-a bit, I observed a heaviness in the lids of my
-companion, and urged her to lie down and take
-some rest. She consented; and I lingered at her
-side until sleep overcame her, and then I stood
-for awhile surveying with deep admiration the
-calm sweetness of her face, into which had
-stolen the tenderness of the unconscious
-woman, softening down the haughty arching
-of eyebrow, unbending the imperious set of
-the mouth. It was as though her spirit clad
-in her own beauty was revealed to me disrobed
-of all the trappings of the waking
-humours. I could have knelt by her side,
-and in that posture have watched her for an
-hour. Can it be, thought I, as I crept softly to
-the cuddy door, that I am in love with her?</p>
-
-<p>I leisurely filled my pipe from the hunk of
-tobacco I had met with in the wreck, taking,
-whilst I did so, as I stood on the quarter-deck,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-a good steady look at such of the sailors as
-were about, though I contrived an idly curious
-manner, and directed my eyes as often at the
-barque&#8217;s furniture as at the seamen. After I
-had been on the poop a few minutes, Mr. Lush
-left it to go forward; and with my pipe betwixt
-my teeth, I lounged over to the binnacle
-to see how the ship headed. The man who
-grasped the spokes was the honest-faced fellow
-I had before noticed at the wheel; he, I mean,
-of the minute eyes and whiskers joined at his
-throat, who had addressed me in the boat
-whilst we lay alongside the hull. I noticed
-that he seemed to stir a little uneasily as I
-approached, as though nervously meditating a
-speech, and I had scarcely glanced into the
-compass bowl when he exclaimed: &#8216;I beg
-your pardon, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I looked at him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The noose,&#8217; said he, &#8216;came forrads afore
-I lay aft for this here trick that the ship you
-came out of and lost sight of was the <i>Countess
-Ida</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;That is so,&#8217; I exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Might I make so bold,&#8217; he continued,
-slightly moving the wheel, and bringing his
-specks of eyes into a squint over my head as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-he sent a glance at the tiny skysail pulling
-under the main-truck, &#8216;as to inquire if so be
-that the bo&#8217;sun of that ship was a man named
-Smallridge?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes, Smallridge; that was the boatswain&#8217;s
-name,&#8217; I replied, warming up to the mere
-reference to that hearty sailor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well,&#8217; said he, &#8216;I heerd that he was agoing
-bo&#8217;sun in that ship, and I was pretty nigh
-signing for her myself, only that her date of
-sailing didn&#8217;t give me quite long enough
-ashore. And how <i>is</i> Mr. Smallridge, sir?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Very well indeed,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&#8217;ve got a perticler respect for Mr. Smallridge,&#8217;
-he continued; &#8216;he kep&#8217; company with
-my sister for some time, and would ha&#8217; married
-her, but she tailed on to a sojer whilst he was
-away, prefarring the lobster to the shellback,
-sir. Well, I&#8217;m glad to larn that he&#8217;s hearty,
-I&#8217;m sure. If so be as we should fall in with
-the <i>Countess Ida</i>, and put you aboard without
-my seeing of Mr. Smallridge, I&#8217;d take it werry
-kind, sir, if you&#8217;d give him Joe Wetherly&#8217;s
-respects.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I certainly will,&#8217; said I with alacrity; &#8216;but
-I fear there is little chance of our meeting
-with the Indiaman.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>&#8216;Well, there&#8217;s no telling,&#8217; he exclaimed;
-&#8216;but she&#8217;ll have to be right in this here
-barque&#8217;s road, supposing her to be ahead;
-and if we should pass her in the dark, why,
-then, good-night! for she&#8217;s like grease in the
-water is this here <i>Lady Blanche</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Smallridge and I were very good friends.
-He&#8217;d been a sailor in the ship I was afterwards
-midshipman in.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, indeed,&#8217; cried he. &#8216;And so <i>you</i> was
-at sea, sir?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I was about to reply, designing to lead him
-on into answering certain questions I had in
-my mind concerning the captain and crew of
-the barque, when Mr. Lush came up the poop
-ladder; so, knowing the etiquette, I hauled
-off, but with the full intention of sounding Mr.
-Joe Weatherly at large when an opportunity
-should offer.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXV<br />
-
-<small>I KEEP A LOOKOUT</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I slipped</span> half-way down the little companion
-ladder to take a peep at Miss Temple, and on
-observing her to be resting quietly, I returned,
-and after lighting my pipe anew, stepped over
-to Mr. Lush, who was employed in cutting off
-a piece of tobacco from a black cake to serve
-him as a quid.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is not often hereabouts,&#8217; said I, by way
-of starting a conversation, &#8216;that one has a sky
-like that all day long overhanging one&#8217;s mastheads.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; said he; &#8216;but it&#8217;s better than the
-roasting sun;&#8217; and he opened his lame mouth
-to receive the cube of tobacco into the hollow
-of his cheek, whilst he eyed the sky askant, as
-though in recognition of it as a subject of talk.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Did you fall in with the smother that
-ended in the lady and I being stranded aboard
-the wreck?&#8217; I inquired.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>&#8216;No; there&#8217;s been ne&#8217;er a smother with
-us.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The death of Mr. Chicken,&#8217; said I, &#8216;must
-have been a blow, seeing that the barque
-carried but a couple of mates.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How many mates do a ship of this size
-want?&#8217; said he, without looking at me and
-slowly masticating.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, she has only one now, anyway,&#8217;
-said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No; she ain&#8217;t got even one,&#8217; he exclaimed,
-with the manner of an ill-tempered man who
-only listens for the sake of contradiction and
-argument.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Are not <i>you</i> second mate?&#8217; I asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not I,&#8217; he replied with a gruff laugh.
-&#8216;They calls me second mate, and I keeps
-watch and watch with the capt&#8217;n as if I <i>was</i>
-second mate; but what I&#8217;m signed for is
-carpenter, and carpenter I be, and there&#8217;s
-nothen more to be made out of me than that,
-and I don&#8217;t care who the bloomin&#8217; blazes hears
-me say it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He drew to the rail by a step and expectorated
-violently over it. I was too
-anxious for information about this little ship
-and her crew to suffer my curiosity to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span>
-hindered by the man&#8217;s rough, coarse, ill-natured
-speech and demeanour.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I was wondering where you took your
-meals,&#8217; said I. &#8216;I now understand. You live
-forward?&#8217; He gave me a surly nod. &#8216;But
-not in the forecastle?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Where else? Ain&#8217;t the fok&#8217;sle good
-enough for me?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But does not association of that sort
-weaken your control over the men?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;<i>I&#8217;ve</i> got no control, and don&#8217;t want none.
-The men&#8217;ll run if I sing out. And what
-more&#8217;s to be expected of sailors?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It seems queer, though,&#8217; said I, &#8216;since you
-undertake the work of a second mate, that you
-shouldn&#8217;t live aft. It must have been lonely
-eating for the skipper after Mr. Chicken died?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I did live aft afore Mr. Chicken died,&#8217; he
-exclaimed, biting his tobacco with temper,
-whilst his weather-stained face gathered a
-new shade of duskiness to the mounting of
-the blood into his head; &#8216;and then when the
-capt&#8217;n and me comes to be alone, he tarns to
-and finds out that I ain&#8217;t choice enough to sit
-down with&mdash;says I ain&#8217;t got the art of perlite
-eatin&#8217;, calls me a hog to my face, and tells me
-that my snout&#8217;s for the mess kid and not for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-knives and forks and crockery. Him!&#8217; He
-turned his face to the rail and spat again, and
-looked at me with an expression of anger, but
-checked himself with violence, and pushed his
-hands into his breeches pockets with an irritable
-motion of his whole frame.</p>
-
-<p>I considered that enough had been said;
-and though I had gained but little information,
-it was at least made clear to me that
-there was no love lost between Captain Braine
-and Mr. Lush. But further conversation
-would have been rendered impossible in any
-case, for just then a man struck eight bells on
-the main-deck, and a minute or two later the
-wheel was relieved, the captain arrived, and the
-carpenter went forward in a round-backed
-sulky walk, his legs bowed, his muscular arms
-hanging up and down without a swing, each
-bunch of his fingers curled like fish-hooks.</p>
-
-<p>I had talked enough, and was weary of
-standing and walking; so, when I spied the
-skipper, I slipped off the poop and seated myself
-on a bench abreast of my sleeping companion,
-where I remained for half an hour,
-often gazing at her, my mind very busy with
-a hundred thoughts, foremost amongst which
-was the shuddering recollection of our late<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span>
-experiences and narrow escape, and deep
-thankfulness to God for His merciful preservation
-of us. The entrance of the captain&#8217;s
-servant&mdash;a young fellow named Wilkins, to be
-hereafter so called: a memorable figure in
-this startlingly eventful passage of my life
-which I am endeavouring to relate: a veal-faced,
-red-headed, shambling fellow of some
-two-and-twenty years, with white eyebrows
-and lashes, and a dim blue eye&mdash;the entrance,
-I say, of this man with a tray of tea-things
-aroused Miss Temple, who, after a brief bewildered
-stare at me, smiled, and sat upright.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There is always something new now,&#8217; she
-exclaimed, &#8216;to look at when I open my eyes
-after sleeping. Yesterday it was the wreck;
-to-day it is this ship. What will it be to-morrow?
-Is there anything in sight, Mr.
-Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There was nothing when I left the deck
-half an hour ago,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>She had awakened with a slight flush of
-sleep in her face that greatly enriched her
-eyes; but the delicate glow quickly faded;
-she was speedily colourless as alabaster. She
-smoothed her hair and put on her hat, that
-she had removed when she lay down.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[228]</a></span>&#8216;It is strange,&#8217; she exclaimed in a low
-voice, &#8216;I should not seem able to endure feeling
-that I am not in a condition to instantly
-leave this vessel. It was so with me in the
-wreck. Even without my hat, I feel unready;
-and then, again, there is the sense of not being
-exactly as I was when I left the <i>Countess
-Ida</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The captain called through the skylight:
-&#8216;Wilkins, bring me some tea and a biscuit up
-here.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ay, ay, sir.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray,&#8217; said I, &#8216;when and where does the
-captain dine?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I took his dinner to his cabin,&#8217; responded
-the young fellow; &#8216;he mostly eats there. But
-now you&#8217;re here, I allow he&#8217;ll be a-jining of
-you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;This is no meal for you, Miss Temple,&#8217;
-said I, with a glance at the old teapot and
-the small plate of biscuits which furnished out
-the repast. &#8216;No milk&mdash;brown sugar&mdash;no
-butter, of course!&#8217; Wilkins grinned whilst
-he poured out some tea into a cup. &#8216;You&#8217;ve
-had nothing to eat since we first came aboard.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I want nothing,&#8217; she answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, then, <i>I</i> do,&#8217; said I. &#8216;Captain Braine<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span>
-is quite right. Shipwreck doesn&#8217;t impair the
-appetite.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There&#8217;ll be supper at seven, sir,&#8217; said
-Wilkins.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And what do you call supper?&#8217; I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why,&#8217; answered the fellow, &#8216;there&#8217;ll be
-the beef ye had this morning, piccalillis,
-bottled stout, biscuit after this here pattern,
-and cold currant dumplings.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He then went up the companion steps with
-some biscuit and tea for the captain. I
-laughed out.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not so good as the Indiaman&#8217;s dinner-table,
-Miss Temple, but better than the hull&#8217;s
-entertainment. We must wait till supper&#8217;s
-served. Meanwhile, I&#8217;ll blunt my appetite
-on a biscuit. Will you give me a cup of
-tea?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It was genuine forecastle liquor, such as
-might have been boiled in a copper, of the
-hue of ink, and full of fragments of stalk.
-However, the mere looking at it was something
-to do, and we sat toying with our cups,
-making-pretend, as it were, to be drinking tea
-and talking.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I wonder,&#8217; I exclaimed in the course of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-our conversation, &#8216;whether the cutter was
-picked up by one of the ships? If she lost
-both of them, will she have lived in the
-weather that followed? Anyway, the corvette
-is certain to make a long hunt for her, with
-the hope also of falling in with the Indiaman,
-for Sir Edward will think it possible that
-Keeling has his men aboard, and will want to
-make sure. I fear this business of the cutter
-may have led to such man&#339;uvring on the
-part of the two ships as must render our
-falling-in with one or the other of them very
-unlikely.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, why do you say that?&#8217; she cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It is but a surmise,&#8217; said I; &#8216;anyhow, I
-heartily hope the cutter <i>has</i> been picked up,
-if only for Colledge&#8217;s sake. The sudden loss
-of the lieutenant will have dreadfully scared
-him.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I earnestly wish that Mr. Colledge may
-have been saved,&#8217; said she with a faint glitter
-of temper in her gaze; &#8216;but I could wish ten
-times more earnestly that he had never been
-born, or that he had sailed in any other ship
-than the <i>Countess Ida</i>; for then I should not
-be here.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Your aunt endeavoured to dissuade you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>&#8216;She did; and I am rightly served for not
-obeying her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You are very high-spirited, Miss Temple;
-it is your nature, and you cannot help yourself.
-You are a young lady to insist upon
-having your own way, and you always get it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale, you are too young to lecture
-me.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How old do you think I am?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, about six-and-twenty,&#8217; she answered
-with a slight incurious run of her eyes over
-me that recalled her manner in the Indiaman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, if I am,&#8217; said I, &#8216;it is a good solid
-age to achieve. There is room for enough
-experiences in six-and-twenty years to enable
-a young man to utter several very truthful
-observations to high-spirited young ladies who
-insist upon having their way, and then quarrel
-with everybody because their way is not
-exactly the road they wish to tread.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She slightly knitted her fair brows and
-looked at me fixedly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; said she, &#8216;you would not
-have dared to talk to me like this on board
-the <i>Countess Ida</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I was afraid of you there.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You <i>respected</i> me there, you mean, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span>
-now&mdash;because&#8217;&mdash;&mdash; She came to a stop, with
-a little quivering at the extremities of her
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am no longer afraid of you, or, rather,
-I no longer respect you because you happen
-to be in this particular situation, which needs
-no explanation whatever: that is, I suppose,
-what you wish to say. But you misjudge me
-indeed. I was afraid of you on board the
-Indiaman, but I did not respect you; nay, my
-aversion was as cordial as could be possibly
-imagined in a man who thought you then, as
-he thinks you still, the handsomest woman he
-has ever seen in his life, or could ever have
-dreamt of. But that aversion is passing,&#8217; I
-continued, watching with delight her marvellous
-gaze of astonishment and the warm
-flush that had overspread her face. &#8216;I am
-discovering that much of what excited my
-dislike and regret aboard the Indiaman is
-artificial, an insincerity in you. This afternoon,
-whilst you slept, I sat near you for
-half an hour, gazing at you. All expression
-of haughtiness had faded from your
-mouth: your countenance wore an air of exquisite
-placidity, of gentle kindness, of tender
-good nature. In short, Miss Temple, I saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-you as you are, as your good angel knows
-you to be, as you have it in your power to
-appear.&#8217; I sprang to my feet. &#8216;How shall
-we kill the blessed hours that lie before us?
-Only think, it is barely five o&#8217;clock.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She gazed at me with an amazement that
-seemed to render her speechless; her face was
-on fire, and her throat blushed to where the
-collar of her dress circled it. &#8216;It will not do,&#8217;
-I continued, &#8216;to attempt to murder time by
-talking, or it will come to your killing me
-instead of the hours. I&#8217;ll go and overhaul the
-late Mr. Chicken&#8217;s bedroom, or, rather, his
-effects. There <i>may</i> be something to interest.
-Even the mouldiest backgammon board would
-be worth a million;&#8217; and I made for the little
-hatch that conducted to our sleeping berths,
-leaving her motionless at the table.</p>
-
-<p>Come, thought I, as I dropped into the
-&#8217;tweendecks, a short spell of loneliness will do
-you good, my haughty beauty, by making you
-realise how it would be with you were you
-actually alone. This is the first of the homely
-thrusts I have been preparing for you, and I
-will not spare you less as I grow to love you
-more, taking my chance of your abhorring
-me, though it may not come to <i>that</i> either.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>I peeped into the berth that had been prepared
-for her, and found all the odds and ends
-which had encumbered it gone; there was a
-clean mattress on the bunk, and on top of
-it an old but comely rug and a couple of
-shawls; a small looking-glass dangled near
-the porthole. But what an interior for this
-delicately nurtured, high and mighty young
-lady of quality to lie in! No carpet, no chest
-of drawers, nothing beyond the looking-glass
-and a tin dish for washing in; in short, a mere
-marine cell, as like as might be to any little
-whitewashed room with grated window ashore
-in which a policeman would lock up a pick-pocket!</p>
-
-<p>I entered my own berth. The boatswain&#8217;s
-and sailmaker&#8217;s stores were not here, and I
-found a &#8216;clean hold,&#8217; as a sailor might say.
-In fact, all Chicken&#8217;s traps being about, caused
-the berth to present a much more hospitable
-aspect than the adjacent one afforded. I examined
-the books, but found most of them to
-consist of religious literature, as the captain
-had said, and the rest of them works on the
-nautical life. Though it was hard to reconcile
-a fancy of cards with the late Mr. Chicken&#8217;s
-character as portrayed by the skipper, I yet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-looked into a couple of chests in the hope of
-meeting with a pack; but neither cards nor
-any species of object calculated to divert did
-I come across; and growing weary of hunting,
-I returned to the cuddy.</p>
-
-<p>I perceived or imagined an air of reproach
-in Miss Temple; but she had mastered her
-temper and astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There is nothing belonging to the late
-Mr. Chicken to entertain us,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It surely does not signify, Mr. Dugdale.
-Do you suppose that I have the heart
-to play at cards or chess? Is not there
-more wind than there was? I will ask you
-to take me on deck. Something may be in
-sight, and it will not be dark for some time
-yet.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I gave her my hand, and helped her up
-the little ladder. There was more wind, as
-she had said; the skysails had been furled and
-a studdingsail or two hauled down, and the
-little barque, with her yards almost square,
-was sweeping swiftly over the smooth waters,
-slightly heeling from side to side as she went.
-The foam in yeasty bubbles and soft cream-hued
-clouds went spinning and writhing from
-her bows into her wake, that ran like a path<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-of coral sand over the darkling waters, now
-complexioned into lividness by the gloomy
-plain of vaporous sky. The crew were on
-the forecastle&mdash;it was well into the first dog-watch&mdash;lounging,
-sitting, yarning, and smoking.
-Amidst them I noticed Mr. Lush, leaning
-against the rail with a short sooty pipe in his
-mouth, the bowl of which was inverted. He
-was in his shirt sleeves, and he reclined with
-his arms folded upon his breast, apparently
-listening, in that dogged posture, to one of the
-sailors, who was reciting something with outstretched
-arm and a long forefinger, with
-which he seemed to be figuring diagrams upon
-the air. Upon the slope of the starboard cathead,
-coming into the deck, sat my friend
-Joe Wetherly, with a pair of thick-rimmed
-spectacles on his nose; he pored on a book
-with moving lips, from which he would expel
-at intervals great clouds of smoke through a
-pipe betwixt his teeth. So small was the
-barque, so seemingly close at hand the forecastle
-to the break of the poop, that even such
-minute details as these were perfectly visible
-to me.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Braine stood near the wheel. He
-continuously stared at us, but did not shift<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span>
-his attitude nor offer to address us. I swept
-the sea-line, but to no purpose.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How sickeningly wearisome has that bare
-horizon grown to me!&#8217; exclaimed Miss Temple,
-with a shuddering sigh; &#8216;it has just the sort
-of monotony that would speedily drive me
-crazy. I am sure; not the wearisomeness of
-four walls, nor the tiresomeness of a single
-eternal glimpse of unchanging country to be
-had through a window; no! there is a
-mockery in it which you do not find in the
-most insipid, colourless scene on land. It is
-not, and still it always <i>is</i>, the same. It recedes
-to your pursuit, yet it is unalterable, and how
-cruelly barren is it of suggestions!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yet a sight of the Indiaman,&#8217; said I,
-&#8216;should develop whatever of the picturesque
-may be hidden in that tiresome girdle.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ah, yes!&#8217; she answered; &#8216;but we are
-now running away from our chances. How
-swiftly this boat sails! If the Indiaman is
-behind us, we shall see no more of her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Do not let us depress each other with
-talk of this kind,&#8217; said I; &#8216;let me give you
-my arm, and we will stroll a little.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>We had been on deck about twenty
-minutes, when the captain, who had continued<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-to steadfastly gaze at us in a most extraordinary
-ruminating way, crossed the deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray, sir,&#8217; said he, &#8216;could I trust you to
-keep a lookout for me if I went below for a
-short spell?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I will do so with pleasure.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;D&#8217;ye know what orders to give, if anything
-requiring orders should happen?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why,&#8217; said I, smiling, &#8216;there are a good
-many orders going at sea, you know, captain.
-Figure a situation, and I will see if I can
-recollect the routine.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He stared at me musingly with his dead
-black eyes, and then said: &#8216;Well, suppose the
-breeze freshens with a dark look to wind&#8217;ard,
-and I&#8217;m below and asleep, and have left ye no
-instructions; what would you do?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Call you,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And quite right, too,&#8217; he cried, with a
-vehement nod of approval, and a glance at
-Miss Temple, as if he would have her participate
-in his satisfaction. &#8216;But put me out of
-the question, and allow that you&#8217;ve got to act
-for yourself.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why, Captain Braine,&#8217; I exclaimed,
-&#8216;though my time at sea was brief, I am no
-longshoreman. Such a question as yours<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-means merely the first letter in the marine
-alphabet.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I ain&#8217;t so sure of that,&#8217; said he, with his
-fixed regard.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I admit,&#8217; continued I, &#8216;that I have never
-been shipmate with a fore-and-aft rigged
-mizzenmast; but if it&#8217;s merely a question of
-shortening sail, why, what else under the
-moon is to be done than to take in your
-studdingsails and clew up your royals and
-haul down your flying jib, and then let go
-your foretopgallant halliards, and haul down
-your light staysails&#8217;&mdash;and so I rambled on,
-winding up with, &#8216;I am leaving your after-canvas
-untouched, because it is already in, you
-see; whilst as to your jibs and staysails, I
-assume of course that they are set.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He lifted his hand. &#8216;Thank&#8217;ee,&#8217; said he;
-&#8216;I shan&#8217;t be long;&#8217; and down he went.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You will surely believe <i>now</i> that he is
-mad!&#8217; said Miss Temple with anxiety, but
-softly, for the fellow at the wheel stood near,
-and I had seen a grin crumple up his features
-to the skipper&#8217;s question.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He may want me to serve him as a mate,&#8217;
-said I, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You will do nothing of the kind, I hope,&#8217;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-she exclaimed, as we fell to pacing the deck
-afresh.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I will do anything that may help me to
-see you safe,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But cannot you perceive, Mr. Dugdale,
-that if he believes you fit to serve him as a
-mate, as you call it, he may prevent you from
-leaving his ship by declining to communicate
-with passing vessels?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;That is true,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am certain,&#8217; she cried, squeezing my arm
-in the energy of her emotion, &#8216;that he has
-some design in his mind to make you serve
-him. Why should he have teased you when
-we came, poor miserable creatures! fresh
-from the wreck, with inquiries about your
-knowledge of navigation? Oh, beware of
-him! He may not be quite mad, but he may
-be as wicked as the worst of his men.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We must wait,&#8217; said I, for her conjectures
-were quite reasonable enough to prove disturbing.
-&#8216;But after all,&#8217; I cried, brightening
-up to the new idea that possessed me, &#8216;if we
-are to sail to the Mauritius with him&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No!&#8217; she exclaimed; &#8216;that is not to be
-dreamt of.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yet listen, I entreat you. If it is our uncomfortable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-doom to remain in this barque
-until she reaches her port, I do not know but
-that the captain would be very honestly in the
-right in expecting me to work my passage&mdash;that
-is to say, to help him by keeping a lookout,
-and by serving him in other ways which
-may be possible to me.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Do not dream of sailing to the Mauritius!&#8217;
-she cried impetuously; &#8216;we must either soon
-meet with the Indiaman or return home.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I could not forbear a smile at her imperious
-<i>we</i>, as though whatever she did I must do.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ay, that is what we want,&#8217; I exclaimed;
-&#8216;but then if we don&#8217;t fall in with the Indiaman
-nor with a vessel homeward bound&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Absurd! Dozens of ships are to be met
-with every day sailing home to England from
-some part or other of the world. The idea of
-remaining in this vessel is not to be entertained
-for an instant. It would be intolerable
-enough for me even to make the comparatively
-short passage home, destitute as I am of everything;
-but to leisurely proceed <i>all</i> the way to
-the Mauritius&mdash;&mdash; Oh, be very careful, Mr.
-Dugdale. I beg you not to know anything at
-all about navigation and the duties of a sailor.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I can&#8217;t do that,&#8217; I answered; &#8216;I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span>
-loaded my gun and must stick to it; but I
-promise you I will put no more shot in it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She eyed me with great impatience and
-warmth, as though provoked by my answer:
-but she held her peace, and presently our
-conversation went to other matters.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly before six o&#8217;clock the sky cleared
-somewhat to windward. The wide pall of
-leaden cloud lifted there, as though it were
-some huge carpet a corner of which was being
-rolled up, and there looked to flow a very
-lagoon of pure blue ether, moist and rich with
-the evening shadow, into the space betwixt
-the rim of the sea and the edge of the cloud.
-A clearer, more penetrating light broadened
-out; and going to the companion hatch, I
-took the telescope that lay in brackets there
-and carefully searched the horizon. But the
-sea washed bare to the sky on all sides.</p>
-
-<p>I did not observe that the men gathered
-together on the forecastle seemed to notice
-the captain&#8217;s absence, though I expected they
-would come to stare a bit when the fellow who
-stood at the wheel should go forward and tell
-them that I had been acting as mate of the
-watch. For my part this queer duty coming
-upon me made the whole experience more wild<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-and improbable to my imagination than had
-been any other feature of it since we quitted
-the Indiaman. Never was there such a forcing
-of adventures, as it were, upon a man. It
-was like dreaming to reflect that a little time
-ago I was a passenger, an easy-going, smoking,
-drinking, chess-playing young fellow, without
-a care, with plenty of clothes and money
-enough in my cabin, and that now I was a
-half-starved, shipwrecked wretch, without the
-value of a straw in the shape of possessions,
-outside of what I stood up in and had in my
-pockets, keeping a lookout as though, faith, I
-was some poor, struggling, hungry second
-mate, newly enlarged from an odious term of
-apprenticeship! like dreaming, I say, to think
-that a little time ago the young lady by my
-side was a reserved, disdainful creature, with
-scarcely a word betwixt her lips to throw at
-me, and that now she could not speak of her
-future without making me a sharer in it, that
-she could not see enough of me, nor have my
-arm too close for her hand; whilst in point of
-destitution she, the most richly clad of the
-Indiaman&#8217;s lady passengers, she, who had
-seemed to me to appear in a new dress nearly
-every day, was out and away more beggared<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span>
-than I; for so far as I was concerned there was
-always the barque&#8217;s slop chest to come upon;
-or, failing that, there would be jackets and
-breeches and &#8216;housewives&#8217; enough forward to
-serve my turn if the push grew severe;
-whereas Miss Temple was as badly off as if
-she had been cast away upon a desert island!</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-
-<small>I AM QUESTIONED</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> captain did not again return on deck.
-At six o&#8217;clock Mr. Lush&#8217;s white jacket was
-forked up to him through the forecastle hatch:
-he slipped it on and came aft to relieve the
-watch; but though he looked about a little
-for the skipper, I could not find in his wooden
-face that he made anything of not perceiving
-him. By seven o&#8217;clock the sky had cleared;
-the wide stretch of vapour which had all day
-long obscured the sky had settled away down
-beyond the southern rim, and the soft violet
-of the tropic evening heaven was made beautiful
-by spaces at wide intervals of a delicate
-filigree-work of white cloud, dainty and fine
-to the eye as frost on a meadow. The setting
-sun glowed in the west like a golden target,
-rayless, palpitating, and a cone-shaped wake
-of flame hung under him. There was a
-pleasant whipping of wind over the sea, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</a></span>
-merry air that whitened the heads of the
-ripples, and it blew sweet and warm.</p>
-
-<p>Lush had loosed the skysails again and
-sent the royal studdingsails up, and the
-barque went nimbly floating through it in the
-resemblance of some golden-tinctured fabric
-of silver hull and sails of cloth of silver;
-indeed, from the point of view of the space
-of deck abaft the wheel, she showed like some
-fairy creation in that atmosphere that was
-brimful of scarlet light, and upon that
-sapphire plain whose tender long-drawn
-undulations seemed to wave a faint golden
-hue through, the blue of the brine, as though
-there were dyes of a westering sun-colour
-rising from the heart of the deep, and then
-subsiding.</p>
-
-<p>On looking through the skylight I perceived
-Wilkins placing supper on the table.
-This was an unusual meal at sea, at least
-aboard of a homely trader of the pattern of
-the <i>Lady Blanche</i>, and was a distinct illustration
-in its way, to my recollections of seafaring
-life, of the odd character of the man who
-commanded the barque. He came out of his
-cabin as we seated ourselves, giving Miss
-Temple a grotesque bow before taking his
-place.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span>&#8216;Sorry, mem,&#8217; said he, casting his slow eye
-over the table, &#8216;that there&#8217;s nothing choicer
-in the way of victuals to offer you. I find
-that the wine brought aboard from the wreck
-is a middling good quality of liquor, and it is
-to be saved for you, mem. Wilkins, open a
-bottle, and give it to the lady. Pity that
-shore-going folks who take interest in the
-nautical calling don&#8217;t turn to and invent something
-better for the likes of me than salt pork
-and beef and biscuit, and peas which are only
-fit to load a blunderbuss with. There have
-been times when a singular longing&#8217;s come
-upon me for a cut of prime sirloin and a
-floury potato, as Jack says. But the sea-life&#8217;s
-a hard calling, look at it from which end of
-the ship ye may. How did you get on in
-your watch on deck, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217; he added
-with a gaunt smile, in which I could not
-distinguish the least complexion of mirth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There was nothing to be done,&#8217; said I,
-working away at a piece of salt beef, for I was
-exceedingly hungry.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But ye&#8217;d have known what to do if there
-had been?&#8217; said he.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple&#8217;s glance admonished me to be
-wary.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[248]</a></span>&#8216;Oh, I am no sailor,&#8217; said I, &#8216;in the sense
-that you and Mr. Lush are sailors.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not Mr. Lush!&#8217; he cried, elevating his
-forefinger and staring hard at me past it.
-&#8216;Mr. Lush, as you term him, is a hog on two
-legs. Let him go on all fours, and there&#8217;s
-ne&#8217;er an old sow under a longboat that wouldn&#8217;t
-take him to her heart as one of her long-lost
-children. Such manners, mem!&#8217; he continued,
-addressing Miss Temple, whilst with
-upturned eyes and raised hands he counterfeited
-an air of disgust; &#8216;when he ate, you
-could hear the smack of his lips fore and aft.
-He&#8217;d make nothing of laying hold of a bit of
-cold beef and gnawing upon it as a dawg
-might, head first on one side and then on
-t&#8217;other; and you&#8217;d find yourself listening to
-hear him growl, if you looked at him. And
-then his language! I&#8217;ve been eating by myself
-pretty nigh since Chicken died, but it&#8217;s entertainment
-for me to have company;&#8217; and he
-bestowed another bow upon each of us.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You will not find the manners of a nobleman
-in a plain ship&#8217;s carpenter,&#8217; said I,
-thankful to believe that he had forgotten the
-subject of my sea-going qualifications. But I
-was mistaken. He gazed at me with a steadfastness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span>
-that was absolutely confusing, whilst
-he seemed lost in deep thought, then said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&#8217;m not going to regard you, Mr. Dugdale,
-as a tip-top sailor, of course. Ye&#8217;ve knocked
-off too long; but it&#8217;ll all come back very
-soon.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale was at sea for only two
-years,&#8217; said Miss Temple. &#8216;It would be unreasonable
-to expect anyone to know much of
-a calling in that time.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Don&#8217;t you believe <i>that</i>, mem,&#8217; he exclaimed.
-&#8216;After twelve months of it, there was
-but little left for me to larn&mdash;proper, I mean,
-to fit me to sarve as able seaman aboard anything
-afloat, from a hoy to a line-of-battle ship.
-What don&#8217;t ye know now, Mr. Dugdale?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He somewhat softened his voice as he said
-this, and a queer sort of yearning expression
-entered his unwinking stare.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, much, captain, much,&#8217; I answered
-smiling, yet feeling somewhat bothered betwixt
-these questions and Miss Temple&#8217;s
-glances.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You could put a ship about, I suppose.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, I might do that,&#8217; I replied; &#8216;but
-there would be a chance of my getting her
-into irons, though.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>&#8216;You&#8217;d be able to know when to shorten
-sail anyway, and what orders to give. You
-told me ye could take a star?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Did I?&#8217; I exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Certainly you did, sir,&#8217; he cried.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I do not recollect,&#8217; said Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ha!&#8217; he exclaimed, with another of
-his mirthless grins, &#8216;the lady&#8217;s afraid of
-your knowing too much, sir. I don&#8217;t mean
-no offence, but there&#8217;s a forecastle saying
-that all the male monkeys &#8217;ud talk if it wasn&#8217;t
-for their sweethearts, who advise them to
-hold their jaw lest they should be put
-upon.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Miss Temple&#8217;s face changed into stone,
-after one withering glance at the man,
-whose countenance remained distorted with a
-smile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Some of Jack&#8217;s sayings are first class,&#8217;
-he went on. &#8216;Yes, ye told me you could
-take a star. Can you find the latitude by
-double altitudes?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A few trials would recall the trick, I daresay,&#8217;
-I answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And of course you know how to find the
-longitude by lunar observations?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray excuse me, Captain Braine,&#8217; said I;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span>
-&#8216;but what, may I inquire, is your motive in
-asking these questions?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He eyed me fixedly for some moments, and
-then silently nodded his head three or four
-times. Miss Temple seemed to shrink slightly
-as she watched him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; said he very slowly, &#8216;on
-your giving me to understand that you had
-sarved aboard an Indiaman, I was willing to
-receive you and the lady aboard my ship.
-When you came aboard, you told me that you
-understood navigation. Didn&#8217;t ye?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I felt the blood in my cheek as I answered:
-&#8216;I have some recollection of speaking to that
-effect.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Then why d&#8217;ye want to go and try to
-make out <i>now</i> that ye know nothing about it?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am trying to do nothing of the kind,&#8217;
-said I, assuming an air of dignity and resentment,
-though I feared it was good for very
-little. &#8216;You have questioned me, sir, and now
-I ask <i>you</i> a question. I have a right to an
-answer, seeing how you expect that I should
-rapidly and fluently reply to you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I&#8217;ll be talking to you afore long,&#8217; he said,
-bestowing another succession of dark mysterious
-nods upon me.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>&#8216;Captain Braine,&#8217; cried Miss Temple, breaking
-with an air of consternation out of the
-cold, contemptuous resentment that had
-made marble of her face, &#8216;you have rescued
-us from a condition of dreadful distress, and
-I have your promise that you will not lose an
-opportunity to transfer us to the first ship you
-meet that is homeward bound, providing we
-do not shortly fall in with the <i>Countess Ida</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I ha&#8217;n&#8217;t broke my promise yet, have
-I?&#8217; he replied, rounding slowly upon her and
-staring.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I can only repeat,&#8217; she continued, preserving
-her expression of dismay, &#8216;that any sum of
-money you may choose to ask&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I know all about that, mem,&#8217; he interrupted,
-but not offensively, and with a gesture
-that was almost bland. He then leisurely
-turned to me. &#8216;You gave me to believe this
-morning, sir, that you was acquainted with
-navigation?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And what then?&#8217; I exclaimed impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I hope that you didn&#8217;t deceive me,&#8217; he
-said with a dark look.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You shall have the full truth when I
-know your motive in examining me in this
-fashion,&#8217; said I hotly, &#8216;and not before.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span>But immediately after I had spoken I was
-sensible of my folly in losing my temper.
-Talk as we might, vapour as we would, we
-were in this man&#8217;s power: in the power of a
-man who was absolutely unintelligible as a
-character whether sane or mad, and the girl&#8217;s
-and my own safety might wholly depend upon
-our judgment and tact. He gazed at me with
-eyes whose expression seemed to grow more
-and more malignant, though, God knows, this
-might have been my fancy, since I was in the
-humour at the moment to figure all things
-very blackly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Understand me,&#8217; I exclaimed, wholly
-changing my manner, and speaking in a
-softened tone; &#8216;if I can be of service to you
-in any direction, you have but to command
-me. I owe you my own and this lady&#8217;s life;
-and though it is an obligation beyond my
-power of discharging in full, yet it must be
-my duty and happiness to diminish it in any
-direction I am equal to.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We will before long talk together, sir,&#8217;
-said he, and then fell silent, nor did he again
-open his lips during the seven or eight minutes
-in which we continued sitting together at that
-table.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>I was exceedingly puzzled and troubled by
-what had passed. What did this captain
-mean by his dark mysterious nods, by his
-saying that he would talk to me presently, by
-his insistence in ascertaining the extent of my
-nautical knowledge? It was possible, indeed,
-that being the only navigator aboard his
-vessel, he might consider himself in serious
-need of some one to take his place if he
-should fall sick. But his behaviour was
-scarcely reconcilable with this plain clear
-want, and it seemed certain that there was
-more going to his speech and manner than
-the desire that I should fill the part of mate
-to him.</p>
-
-<p>It was a fair, warm, delightful night, rich
-with stars, and soothing with the dew-sweetened
-wind that blew with steady freshness
-over the quarter, running the pale shape of
-the barque over the dark waters, as though
-she were some wreath of mist that must presently
-dissolve. Miss Temple and I, sometimes
-walking, sometimes sitting on the skylight,
-held to the deck till a late hour. She
-abhorred the thought of withdrawing to the
-cabin allotted to her; and short as my sleep
-had been since the hour of my quitting the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span>
-Indiaman&#8217;s side, I was as little willing as she
-to quit the silence and coolness and beauty of
-the open night for the confinement of a small
-hot berth.</p>
-
-<p>The captain had charge of the deck from
-eight to twelve; but he only once approached
-us to say that a lantern containing an end of
-candle had been placed in each of our berths;
-&#8216;and I will ask you both,&#8217; he added, &#8216;to mind
-your fire, for we&#8217;re full up with dry light goods
-in the steerage.&#8217; He then returned to the side
-of the deck he had crossed from, and did not
-again offer to approach us.</p>
-
-<p>You will suppose that the girl and I could
-talk of nothing but the captain&#8217;s intentions,
-the probable condition of his intellect, and the
-like.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He may refuse to part with me,&#8217; said I,
-&#8216;and yet be perfectly willing to send you on
-board of the first homeward-bound ship we
-sight. What then, Miss Temple?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I could not travel alone. It is not
-endurable that such a man as Captain
-Braine should compel you, against your
-wishes, to remain with him! How could
-he do so? How could he compel you to take
-a star, as he calls it, whatever that may mean;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-and to keep watch?&#8217; She sighed deeply.
-&#8216;Alas! my language is fast becoming that of
-the common sailor. To think of me talking
-to you about taking a star and keeping
-watch!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And why not? Jack&#8217;s is a noble tongue.
-Omit the oaths, and there is no dialect more
-swelling and poetic than that of the sea.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I detest it because it is forced upon me.
-An odious and dreadful experience obliges me
-to think and speak in it. Otherwise, I might
-rather like it. But tell me now, Mr. Dugdale,
-surely this captain could not compel you to
-remain with him?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>This led to a deal of talk. I did my utmost
-to reassure her; I exhorted her to bear in
-mind that whilst we were on board the barque,
-we were literally at the mercy of the skipper,
-who, down to the present moment, had certainly
-treated us with great humanity, though
-his behaviour and conversation in the main
-were undeniably of a lunatic sort. I bitterly
-condemned myself for losing my temper, and
-I entreated her to be patient, to control all
-resentment that the man might excite by purposed
-or involuntary insult, not to doubt that
-he would put her on board a ship proceeding<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-home, and to leave me to play a part of my
-own that should keep us together.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;For,&#8217; said I, &#8216;since fate, cruel to you, but
-not to me, Miss Temple, has placed you so far
-in my keeping, I must be jealous of all interference
-down to the very termination of our
-adventure.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I wish for no other companion,&#8217; she
-exclaimed in a low voice; &#8216;my mother will
-thank you, Mr. Dugdale.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;And, please God, your mother shall,&#8217; said
-I, &#8216;trifling as may be my claims upon her
-gratitude. But however my merits may turn
-out before we again sight Old England, I shall
-be abundantly satisfied if I believe that you
-think of me with more kindness than you
-did on board the <i>Countess Ida</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mr. Dugdale, I thought of no one on
-board the <i>Countess Ida</i>. But let us avoid
-that subject&mdash;you have already been very
-plain-spoken.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She ceased. I made no answer, and for
-some time we paced the deck in silence,
-harking then back again to the old topic of
-the captain&#8217;s intentions, the whereabouts of
-the Indiaman, and so on, and so on. By-and-by
-I looked at my watch; the dial-plate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-showed clearly by the starlight. It was
-eleven o&#8217;clock; and as I looked the ship&#8217;s bell
-rang out six chimes, which came floating
-down again in echoes out of the tremorless
-pallid concavities on high. Miss Temple
-was still most reluctant to leave the deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am thinking of Mr. Chicken,&#8217; she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Chicken&#8217;s ghost, like a hen&#8217;s egg, is laid,&#8217;
-said I. &#8216;Besides, what remains of him will be
-all about my bunk.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh for the Indiaman&#8217;s saloon,&#8217; she cried,
-&#8216;for my dear aunt, for old Captain Keeling!
-How welcome would be a sight of even the
-most intolerable of the passengers, say Mr.
-Johnson; even that horrid little creature with
-the eye-glass, Miss Hudson&#8217;s admirer.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I fear I am tolerated for the same reason
-that would render Mr. Johnson endurable to
-you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No!&#8217; she answered quickly and warmly;
-&#8216;you are incessantly personal. I do not like
-it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Suffer me to escort you to your cabin?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She lingered yet, turning her face to the
-skies.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How rich are those stars! Such lovely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span>
-jewels are never to be seen in the English
-heavens. Mark how the meteors score the
-dark spaces between the lights with scars and
-paths of diamond dust! Oh that some
-gigantic shadowy finger would shape itself up
-there pointing downwards, to let us know
-where the <i>Countess Ida</i> is.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She rose from the skylight with a long
-tremulous sigh, and passed her hand through
-my arm that I might conduct her below.
-For an instant I hung in the wind.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why do you wait? I am now ready,&#8217;
-said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am debating within myself whether I
-should offer to stand watch to-night&mdash;the
-captain might expect me to do so.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I do believe you desire that I should
-think you as mad as he is,&#8217; she exclaimed,
-exerting pressure enough on my arm to start
-me towards the poop-ladder; &#8216;you shall do
-nothing of the sort with my consent. If you
-wish to resume your old vocation, Mr. Dugdale,
-pray wait until this adventure is ended.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Anyway, we must bid him good-night,&#8217;
-said I; and with that I called out to him.
-He answered: &#8216;Good-night, Mr. Dugdale;
-good-night to you, mem. If there&#8217;s anything<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-a-missing which the <i>Lady Blanche</i> can supply
-let me know, and you shall have it.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You&#8217;re extremely good, and we&#8217;re very
-much obliged to you,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Good-night, Captain Braine,&#8217; called Miss
-Temple in her rich voice; and down we
-went.</p>
-
-<p>The cabin lamp showed a small light.
-Miss Temple waited here whilst I went below
-for one of the two lanterns which the captain
-had told me I should find in our berths. I
-was obliged to kindle a sulphur match, and I
-remember cursing the tardy operation of
-obtaining a light whilst I stood hammering
-away with flint and steel, injuring my knuckles,
-and wishing the tinder-box at the deuce. I
-found the lanterns, and left one alight in Miss
-Temple&#8217;s cabin, and carried my own, also
-alight, into the cuddy. Miss Temple&#8217;s eyes
-sparkled to the glare as I approached her,
-and her face might have been a spirit&#8217;s for its
-whiteness in that faint illumination vexed with
-shadows as the lantern swayed to the light
-rolling of the barque.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I wish I could sleep here,&#8217; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You will be equally comfortable below,&#8217;
-said I; &#8216;and what is better, quite private.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>&#8216;Did you see any rats?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;None.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She took my arm with a firm clasp, and
-hardly seemed willing to release me at the
-hatch, though the aperture was too narrow to
-admit of our descending together. When we
-had gained the lower deck, she again seized
-my arm and stood staring and hearkening.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; she cried, &#8216;it is very
-lonely down here!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes; but you are not alone. You must
-have courage. I would rather you should be
-next me than overhead next the captain.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Yet, as I spoke, my heart was full of
-pity for her. It was indeed lonely, as she
-had said, with a sense of imprisonment besides,
-all that way down, thinking of where we
-stood, I mean, with reference to the poop.
-The stowed cases in the forepart seemed to
-stir as though to some internal throes to
-the weak light that swung in my hand; the
-atmosphere was charged with an unpleasant
-smell of cargo and the mingled fumes of a
-ship&#8217;s hold; and there was something of the
-heat of an oven also in the air that felt to rest
-with a sort of weight upon the head, due
-perhaps to the fancy begotten by the nearness<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-of the upper deck or ceiling as you may term
-it. Small straining noises stole upon the
-ear from round about in stealthy notes, as
-though they were giants below moving warily.
-I say I was full of concern for the poor girl.
-Somehow the misery of her condition had not
-before affected me as it now did.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It will not last long. It will be a thing
-of the past very shortly: meanwhile, keep up
-your heart, and trust me as your protector
-whilst God leaves me a hand to lift,&#8217; I exclaimed
-with a tenderness of which I was
-insensible until a little later on, when the
-tones of my voice recurred to me in memory.</p>
-
-<p>She looked at me as though she were about
-to speak, yet said nothing; and releasing my
-arm, she stepped to her cabin door and peeped
-in.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is there anything I can do?&#8217; said I, keeping
-at a respectful distance.</p>
-
-<p>She peered awhile, and then answered: &#8216;I
-think not. But that candle will not last long,
-and I shall be in darkness. Or if I should extinguish
-it, how am I to light it again?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;If you want a light,&#8217; said I, &#8216;knock on
-the bulkhead. I shall hear you, and will
-answer by knocking. But it already draws<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span>
-on for twelve o&#8217;clock. The dawn will be
-breaking at five or thereabouts. I trust you
-will sleep. You greatly need rest.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I removed my cap to kiss her hand, and
-met her gaze, that was fixed full of wistfulness
-upon me. &#8216;Good-night, Miss Temple,&#8217;
-said I. She entered her cabin looking as
-though her heart was too full for speech, and
-closed the door.</p>
-
-<p>I was now feeling exceedingly weary, yet, as
-I feared that she might need me, or, in some
-nervous fit, knock if it were but to know that
-I was awake, I filled my pipe, got into Mr.
-Chicken&#8217;s bunk, and sat smoking. I cannot
-express the peculiar character of the stillness
-down here. It was very extraordinarily
-accentuated by the sounds which at intervals
-penetrated it: such as the muffled jar of the
-rudder working upon its post, the dim wash of
-water, startlingly close at hand, along with
-the faint seething noise of the barque&#8217;s wake
-hissing within arm&#8217;s reach, as it seemed, and
-coming and going upon the hearing fitfully.
-The suit of oilskins against the bulkhead
-swayed to the heave of the fabric, and they
-resembled the body of a man who had hanged
-himself by the nail from which they dangled.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</a></span>
-There was a pair of sea-boots up in a corner
-with a dropsical bulging out about the foot of
-them in the part where a man&#8217;s bunions would
-come, and they showed so very much as if
-they had just been drawn off the legs of Mr.
-Chicken, that they grew ghastly presently, and
-to relieve my imagination, I directed my eyes
-at other objects.</p>
-
-<p>I sat smoking and full of thought. My
-eyelids were as of lead, yet my mind continued
-impertinently active. The horrors we had
-escaped from lay like the shadow of a thundercloud
-upon my spirits; the oppression was too
-violent to suffer the continuance of any emotion
-of exultation over our deliverance. Dark
-and dismal fancies possessed me. I thought
-of Captain Braine as a man whose reason was
-unsound, and who was capable of playing me
-some devilish trick; I thought of the coarse
-and surly carpenter, and of the charge of
-murder hinted against him by the skipper. I
-thought of the convicts and of the mutineer
-in the forecastle, and then my raven-like
-imagination going to Miss Temple, I reflected
-that I was unarmed, that I had no weapon
-about me but a knife, that must prove of very
-little use should it come to my having to make<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span>
-a fight of it for hers and my own life. Surely,
-I mused, old Chicken will not have come to
-sea without some instrument of self-defence,
-be it blunderbuss, pistol, or cutlass.</p>
-
-<p>I took an earnest view of the interior.
-There was a locker against the bulkhead that
-divided Miss Temple&#8217;s cabin from mine; I had
-incuriously opened and looked into it when
-searching for something to divert ourselves
-with, being by the time I had come to that
-locker too tired to continue overhauling the
-dead man&#8217;s effects. Besides this receptacle
-there were two chests of clothes and other
-matters along with a bagful of things, and a
-shelf over the bunk filled with odds and ends.
-There was still about an hour of candle-light
-in the lantern. I raised the lid of the locker,
-and found within a truly miscellaneous &#8216;raffle&#8217;
-of objects, as a sailor would term it: charts,
-slippers, sextant in case, a number of tobacco
-pipes, bundles of papers, and I know not what
-besides. At the bottom, in the left-hand
-corner, was a small canvas bag very weighty
-for its size. I drew it out, and found about
-forty pounds in gold inside it, with three
-Australian one-pound notes, dark with thumbing
-and pocketing, and a five-pound note<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-scarcely distinguishable for dirt and creases.
-I replaced the bag; and coming to the other
-end of the locker, working my way to it
-through a very rag-and-bottle shop of queer
-gatherings, I met with the object that I was
-longing for: to wit, a heavy, long, double-barrelled
-pistol, with a couple of nipples and
-a ramrod, and a butt massive enough to bring
-an ox to earth with. There were a parcel of
-bullets, and a small brown powder-flask full
-in the piece of canvas in which the pistol was
-wrapped; but for some time I could not find
-any caps. Without them, the pistol would not
-be of the least use, and my satisfaction yielded
-to mortification as I continued to probe into
-the locker without result. I was about to
-abandon the quest in despair, when my fingers
-touched a circular metal box like to those
-which used to contain paste for the polishing
-of boots; I fished it up, and was mighty glad
-to find it filled with caps. Come, thought I,
-if difficulties are to happen, I am better off
-now than I was half an hour ago, anyhow.</p>
-
-<p>All this time there had been no noise next
-door, and I could but hope that Miss Temple
-was sleeping. I carefully put the pistol and
-its little furniture into the foot of my bunk,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span>
-and pulling off my coat and waistcoat, and
-removing my shoes, I vaulted on to Mr;
-Chicken&#8217;s mattress, blew out the candle in the
-lantern and stretched my length. It was
-hard upon two o&#8217;clock, however, before I fell
-asleep. The scuttle or porthole was abreast
-of the bunk, and the black disc of it framed the
-low-lying stars of the horizon as they slided
-up and down to the lift and fall of the hull.
-My thoughts went out to the great dark ocean,
-and shivers chased me, hot as the cabin was,
-as I lay reflecting upon the fire and explosion
-of the wreck, and upon how it would have
-been with us if Captain Braine, having taken
-a view of the hull, had proceeded and left us
-to our fate. The noises which violated the
-singular stillness down in that part of the ship
-where we lay, and which had rendered me
-somewhat uneasy at first, now proved lulling
-as I lay hearkening to them, growing drowsier
-and drowsier. There was a slumberous
-monotony in the creaking and jarring of the
-rudder, something soothing in the dim hissing
-of the wake dying out, and then seething
-afresh like the noise of champagne in a glass
-held to the ear, as the frame of the barque
-slightly soared and sank in delicate floating<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-movements upon the under-run of the dark
-swell. Perhaps by this time to-morrow we
-may be aboard a ship homeward-bound, I
-remember thinking: and that was the last of
-my thoughts that night, for I immediately
-afterwards sank into a sound sleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-
-<small>THE BRIG&#8217;S LONGBOAT</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">I was</span> awakened by a knocking at the door.
-The little cabin was bright with sunshine, that
-was flashing off sea and sky upon the thick
-glass of the scuttle. &#8216;Hallo!&#8217; I cried, &#8216;who is
-that?&#8217; The voice of the young fellow Wilkins
-responded:</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Capt&#8217;n Braine&#8217;s compliments, sir, and he&#8217;d
-be glad to know if there&#8217;s anything you or the
-lady wants which it&#8217;s in his power to supply
-ye with?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I got out of the bunk and opened the door.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Captain Braine is very kind,&#8217; said I to the
-veal-faced youth, who stood staring at me
-with faint eyes under his white lashes and
-brows. &#8216;What time is it, Wilkins?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Half-past eight, sir,&#8217; he answered.</p>
-
-<p>I knocked upon the bulkhead. &#8216;Are you
-awake, Miss Temple?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>&#8216;Oh yes,&#8217; she answered, her voice sounding
-weak through the partition.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Captain Braine wishes to know if you are
-in want of anything it is in his power to let
-you have?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There are many things I want,&#8217; she exclaimed;
-&#8216;but they are not to be had, I fear.
-I am afraid I shall have to use that comb. I
-can do nothing with my hair, Mr. Dugdale.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;All right, Wilkins,&#8217; said I; &#8216;we shall be
-on deck in a few minutes.&#8217; He went away.</p>
-
-<p>I found the comb that had belonged to Mr.
-Chicken on a shelf, and knocked on Miss
-Temple&#8217;s door. She opened it, and an arm of
-snow, of faultless shape, was projected to
-receive the comb. &#8216;Thank you,&#8217; said she,
-whipping the door to, and I entered my cabin,
-calling out that I would wait for her there till
-she was ready.</p>
-
-<p>Happily, in respect of toilet conveniences
-we were not wholly destitute. The water in
-my can was indeed salt, but I contrived to get
-some show of lather out of the fragment of
-marine soap which I found inside of the tin
-dish that served me as a wash-basin. I was
-without Miss Temple&#8217;s scrupulosity, and found
-old Chicken&#8217;s hairbrush good enough to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span>
-flourish. There was a little parcel of razors,
-too, on the shelf where the comb had been,
-and with one of them I made shift to scrape
-my cheeks into some sort of smoothness,
-wholly by dint of feeling, for Miss Temple
-had Chicken&#8217;s glass, and there was nothing in
-my cabin to reflect my countenance. By the
-time this little business was ended, and I had
-carefully concealed the pistol and powder-flask,
-Miss Temple was ready. She knocked
-on my door, and I stepped out.</p>
-
-<p>I could see her but very imperfectly in the
-dim light of that steerage, yet it seemed to
-me that there was more vivacity in her eyes,
-more life in her carriage and air, than I had
-witnessed in her on the yesterday. She told
-me that she had slept soundly, and that her
-mattress was as comfortable as her bed aboard
-the <i>Countess Ida</i>.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am heartily glad to hear that,&#8217; said I.
-&#8216;You found the marine soap tough, I fear?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;It cannot be good for the complexion, I
-should think,&#8217; said she with a slight smile.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How shocking,&#8217; I exclaimed, as we moved
-to the hatch, &#8216;would such a situation as yours
-be to a young lady who is dependent for her
-beauty on cosmetics and powder! How<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-would Miss Hudson manage if she were here,
-I wonder?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is there anything in sight, do you know,
-Mr. Dugdale? That is a more important
-subject to me than complexions.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I did not ask; but we will find out.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It was a brilliant morning, a wide blue,
-blinding flash of day, as it seemed to my eyes
-after the gloom below. The sea was all on
-fire under the sun, and the wind held it
-trembling gloriously. A hot and sparkling
-breeze in the same old quarter gushed freshly
-into the wide expanded wings of the <i>Lady
-Blanche</i>, whose swift pace over the smooth
-plain of ocean seemed a sort of miracle of
-sailing to me when I contrasted it with the
-rate of going of the <i>Countess Ida</i>. The flying-fish
-in scores sparkled out from the barque&#8217;s
-white sides. The foam came along her
-sheathing like a roll of cotton-wool to her
-wake. The ocean line ran round in a firm
-edge with an opalescent clarification of the
-extreme rim that gave the far-off confines a
-look of crystal.</p>
-
-<p>But I had not stood longer than a minute
-gazing around me when I spied a gleam of
-canvas about a point on our weather-bow. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-saw it under the curve of the fore-course that
-lay plain in sight under the lifted clew of the
-mainsail.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;A sail, Miss Temple.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Where?&#8217; she cried, with her manner full
-of fever on the instant. I pointed. &#8216;Oh,&#8217;
-she exclaimed, bringing her hands together,
-&#8216;if it should be the Indiaman!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>But the captain was walking aft, and it
-was time to salute him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Good morning, sir,&#8217; I said as I approached
-him with Miss Temple at my side. &#8216;We have
-paused a moment to admire this very beautiful
-morning. I perceive a sail right ahead,
-captain.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>It was a part of his destiny, I suppose,
-that he should stare hard at those who accosted
-him before answering. He carried his unwinking
-dead black eye from my companion
-to me, and then stepped out of the shell of his
-mood of meditation as a bird might be hatched.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Hope you slept pretty comfortably?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes; I passed a good night; and I am
-happy to know that Miss Temple rested well.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Which way is that ship going?&#8217; cried the
-girl, whose cheeks were flushed with impatience.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span>&#8216;She is not a ship, mem,&#8217; he answered;
-&#8216;she is seemingly a big boat that&#8217;s blowing
-along the same road as ourselves under a lug.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The telescope lay on the skylight, and I
-pointed it. Sure enough, the sail was no ship,
-as I had first imagined, though the white
-square hovering upon the horizon exactly
-resembled the canvas of a large craft slowly
-climbing up the sea. I could readily distinguish
-a boat, apparently a ship&#8217;s longboat,
-running before the wind under a lugsail; but
-she was as yet too distant to enable me to
-make out the figures of people aboard,
-considerable as were the magnifying powers
-of the glass I levelled at her.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Only a boat?&#8217; cried Miss Temple, in
-accents of keen disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What will a craft of that sort be doing
-in the middle of this wide sea?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She may have gone adrift, as you did,&#8217;
-answered Captain Braine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Is it imaginable that she should be the
-corvette&#8217;s cutter?&#8217; cried Miss Temple, straining
-her fine eyes, impassioned with conflicting
-emotion, at the object ahead.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, no,&#8217; said I. &#8216;First of all, the cutter
-had no sail; next, yonder boat is three or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-four times bigger than she was; and then,
-even if she had a sail, I question if she could
-have run all this distance in the time from the
-spot she started from.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I noticed whilst I spoke that Captain Braine
-watched me with a singular expression, and
-that his face slightly changed as to an emotion
-of relief when I had concluded my answer.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The lady,&#8217; said he, &#8216;is speaking of the
-man-of-war cutter that rowed ye aboard the
-wreck, and lost ye there?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yes,&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How many of a crew?&#8217; he asked.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Six men and a lieutenant; but the officer
-was drowned.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He took the telescope from me, and brought
-it to bear upon the little sail over the bow,
-and kept it levelled for some moments. He
-then put the glass down and said: &#8216;Have you
-had any breakfast?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not yet,&#8217; I answered.</p>
-
-<p>He called through the skylight to Wilkins,
-and told him to put some biscuit and tea and
-cold meat upon the table. &#8216;I have made my
-meal,&#8217; said he, contriving one of his extraordinary
-bows as he addressed Miss Temple;
-&#8216;and so, I hope, mem, you&#8217;ll excuse my presence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-below. Eat hearty, both of ye, I beg. There&#8217;s
-no call to stint yourselves, and I&#8217;m sorry I
-can&#8217;t put anything more tempting afore ye, as
-Jack says.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>We at once descended, both of us being
-anxious to get the meal, such as it might be,
-over.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Why is he repeatedly saying, &#8220;as Jack
-says?&#8221;&#8217; asked Miss Temple.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Ah!&#8217; I exclaimed,&#8216;and why does he stare
-so? Yet, on my word, he seems an exceedingly
-good-natured fellow. I assure you
-we might have fallen into worse hands. No
-man could make a homeward-bound ship to
-rise up out of the sea or signal our whereabouts
-to the <i>Countess Ida</i> when she is leagues
-and leagues out of sight; but another captain
-might not have shown half the friendly concern
-this poor eccentric creature exhibits in
-our comfort.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She agreed with me, but quickly dropped
-the subject as something distasteful, and spoke
-of her disappointment, and of the strangeness
-of meeting a small boat in the middle of such
-an ocean as we were sailing through. By
-some trick above my comprehension, she had
-contrived to smooth out her dress, insomuch<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-that a deal of its castaway aspect had left it.
-She had also man&#339;uvred in some fashion with
-the feather in her hat; and I told her, as she
-sat opposite me, that she looked as fresh as
-though she had just left her cabin in the
-Indiaman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Youth must always triumph,&#8217; I said, &#8216;if
-it be but fairly treated. Sleep has made your
-former self dominant again: but I will reserve
-all my compliments until I am able to pull my
-hat off to you ashore and say good-bye.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She shot a glance at me under her long
-fringes, but held her peace.</p>
-
-<p>The tea was so vile that I called to Wilkins,
-who stood on the quarter-deck, to procure us
-some coffee if there were any aboard; and in
-a few minutes he returned with a sailor&#8217;s
-hook-pot full of it from the galley. This Miss
-Temple seemed able to sip without a face of
-aversion. It vexed me to see her imperilling
-her delicate white teeth with the hard fare
-that was sheer forecastle stuff, and bad at
-that; but it was not for me to give orders,
-nor was I willing to protract our sitting by
-inquiring if there was other food aboard.
-Besides, every hour in such weather as this
-might provide us with the opportunity we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[278]</a></span>
-hungered for, to escape into some homeward-bound
-ship with a cabin capable of affording
-endurable entertainment.</p>
-
-<p>We rose from the table, and regained the
-deck. The moment my head showed above
-the companion-way, the captain called to me
-hastily. There was a look of disorder in his
-countenance that immediately excited my
-wonder; there was the alacrity of fear in his
-manner; he could address me now without
-a prolonged stare and his usual tardy emergence
-of mind.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Please, take this glass,&#8217; said he, thrusting
-the telescope into my hand; &#8216;and look at
-that there boat, and tell me what you
-think.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The smooth, swift sliding of the <i>Lady
-Blanche</i> over the level surface of sea that was
-running in fire and foam lines to the brushing
-of the merry breeze and the sparkling of the
-soaring sun, had closed us rapidly with the
-boat ahead since Miss Temple and I left
-the deck. The little fabric was now scarcely
-more than a mile on the bow, and the
-captain&#8217;s glass, when I put it to my eye,
-brought her as close to me as if she were no
-further off than our forecastle. She was a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span>
-large, carvel-built longboat; one of those
-round-bowed, broad-beamed structures which
-in the olden days used to stand in chocks
-betwixt a ship&#8217;s foremast and galley, with
-often another boat stored inside of her, unless
-she was used to keep sheep or other live-stock
-in. She was deep in the water, and as much
-of her hull as was visible was of a dingy
-sallow white. She showed a broad square of
-dark old lug, before which she was running
-with some show of nimbleness. She seemed
-to be crowded with men, and even whilst I
-stood looking at her through the glass, I
-counted no less than twenty-seven persons.
-They were all looking our way, and though it
-was scarcely possible to define individual faces
-amid such a yellow huddle of countenances, I
-could yet manage to determine a prevailing
-piratic expression of the true sort, suggested
-not so much by the vagueness of swarthy
-cheek and shaggy brow as by the singularity
-of the fellows&#8217; apparel&mdash;the flapping sombrero,
-the red sash, the blue shirt, with other details&mdash;which
-but very faintly corresponded indeed
-with one&#8217;s notion of the coarse homely attire
-of the merchant sailor.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Braine&#8217;s eyes were fixed upon me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[280]</a></span>
-as I turned to him. &#8216;What do you think of
-her, sir?&#8217; said he.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I don&#8217;t like the look of those fellows at
-all,&#8217; I answered. &#8216;I would not mind making
-a bet that they are a portion of the crew of
-the privateering brig from whose hull you
-rescued us yesterday morning.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Just the idea that occurred to me,&#8217; he
-cried. He levelled the glass again. &#8216;A
-boatful of rascals, sir. Armed to the teeth,
-I daresay, and on the lookout for some such
-a vessel as mine to seize and get away back
-to their own waters in. And yet, it is awful,
-too, to think that the creatures may be in
-want of water. What&#8217;s to be done? I can&#8217;t
-allow them to board: and I&#8217;m not going to
-heave to, to give &#8217;em a chance of doing
-so.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;We&#8217;re overhauling them fast,&#8217; said I.
-&#8216;Best plan perhaps, captain, will be to hail
-them as we slide past and ascertain their
-wants, if we can understand their lingo; and
-if they need water, there&#8217;s nothing to be done
-but to send some adrift for them to pick up.
-But for God&#8217;s sake, sir, don&#8217;t let them come
-aboard. They look as devilish a lot of cut-throats
-as ever I saw; and besides the safety<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span>
-of our lives and of the ship, we have this lady
-to consider.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>Captain Braine listened to me with his eyes
-fixed upon the boat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She can&#8217;t hook on at this,&#8217; said he, as if
-thinking aloud; &#8216;we should tow her under
-water at such a pace. By heavens,&#8217; he shouted,
-with a wild look coming into his face, &#8216;if she
-attempts to sheer alongside, I&#8217;ll give her the
-stem!&#8217; and springing with the agility of a
-monkey upon the rail, he grasped a backstay,
-and stood in a posture for hailing the boat as
-we swept past.</p>
-
-<p>Forward, the seamen had quitted the jobs
-they were upon, and were staring open-mouthed
-from the forecastle rail. I picked up
-the glass again to look at the crowd, and
-every face in the lens was now as distinct as
-Miss Temple&#8217;s who stood beside me. An
-uglier, more ferocious-looking set of men
-never stepped the deck of a picaroon. I had
-not the least doubt whatever that they were a
-portion of the crew of the brig. Indeed, I
-seemed to have some recollection of the boat,
-for I remembered, whilst examining the brig
-from the poop of the Indiaman, that I had
-been struck by the unusual size of her longboat,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-and that the colour of her was the sallow
-pea-soup tint of the fabric yonder. There
-were several chocolate-coloured faces amongst
-the little crowd; here and there, a coal-black
-countenance with a frequent glitter of earrings
-and gleam of greasy ringlets. Many of them
-eyed us over the low gunwale under the sharp
-of their hands; one stood erect on the thwart
-through which the mast was stepped, clasping
-the spar with his arm, and apparently waiting
-to hail us. The steersman watched us continuously,
-and now and again the boat&#8217;s head
-would slightly fall off to a sneaking movement
-of the helm, as though to some notion of
-edging down upon us without attracting our
-observation. But the barque&#8217;s keen stem
-was ripping through the water as the jaws of
-a pair of shears drive through a length of
-sailcloth. I had no fear of the boat hooking
-on; she would have to man&#339;uvre under our
-bows to do that, and it needed but a little
-twirl of the spokes of our wheel to drive her
-into staves and to send her people bobbing and
-drowning into our wake.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Boat ahoy!&#8217; shouted the captain with
-such delivery of voice as I should have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-thought impossible in so narrow shouldered a
-man.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Yash! yash!&#8217; vociferated the fellow who
-clasped the mast, frantically brandishing his
-arms. &#8216;Ve are sheepwreck&mdash;you veel take us&mdash;ve
-starve!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The captain looked and hardly seemed to
-know what to say.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How long have you been adrift?&#8217; he
-bawled.</p>
-
-<p>The fellow, who wore a red nightcap,
-shook it till the tassel danced to the violent
-gestures of his head. He evidently did not
-understand the question. &#8216;Take us!&#8217; he
-shrieked;&mdash;&#8216;ve starve!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The boat was now on the bow, within
-pistol-shot from the forecastle rail.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Mind your helm, Captain Braine,&#8217; I
-suddenly shouted, &#8216;or she&#8217;ll be aboard you!&#8217;
-for my young and, in those days, keen eyes
-had marked the action of the fellow who
-steered the boat, and even as I bawled out,
-the head of the little fabric swept round with
-a fellow in the bows flourishing a boathook,
-to which was attached a length of line, and
-others standing by ready to help him when he
-should have hooked on.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>&#8216;Steady as she goes!&#8217; cried Captain
-Braine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh Mr. Dugdale,&#8217; shrieked Miss Temple,
-&#8216;they will get on board of us!&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>The boat&#8217;s head drove sheering alongside
-into our bow just forward of the fore-chain
-plates. I saw the fellow erect in her head
-fork out his boathook to catch hold.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Let go!&#8217; roared a voice forward. The
-figure of Joe Wetherly overhung the rail,
-poising either an iron marline-spike or a
-belaying-pin, or some short bar of metal; this
-I saw. Then he hurled it at the moment that
-the boathook had caught a plate. The missile
-struck the man full on the head; he fell like
-a statue in the bottom of the boat, and the
-boat herself ground past us as the barque,
-to the impulse of her great overhanging
-squares of studdingsail, swept onwards at
-some seven or eight knots in the hour.</p>
-
-<p>They were so crowded as to be in one another&#8217;s
-road. I saw a dozen grimy paws extended
-to catch hold of the main-chain plates
-as the boat came bruising and groaning and
-washing past; but the iron bars were swept
-like smoke out of the wretches&#8217; frantic grip.
-Never shall I forget the picture the little<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-fabric offered in the swift glimpse I caught of
-her as she glided past. The crowd, in their
-desperate efforts to catch hold of the sweeping
-projections in the barque&#8217;s side, squirmed and
-surged and rose and fell like rags of meat
-stirred up in a boiling stewpot. Their cries,
-their yells, their Spanish oaths, the brandishings
-of their arms, the fury expressed in their
-malignant faces, the sudden uprootal and
-crash of their one mast and sail by the fouling
-of it with our mainbrace, all combine into a
-memory which is not to be expressed in words.
-I caught sight of a number of breakers in the
-bottom of the boat along with some bags, and
-was instinctively assured that they were lacking
-in neither food nor water. As the boat sped
-under the rail on which Captain Braine was
-standing, the fellow who had been at her helm,
-a brawny mulatto in a wide straw-hat, loose
-red shirt, and naked feet, suddenly whipped a
-pistol out of his breast, took aim at the
-skipper, and fired; and then, in a breath or
-two, the craft was astern, tumbling in the
-seething white of our wake, lessening into a
-toy even as you looked, with half of her people
-getting the wreck of mast and rail inboard, and
-the rest of them furiously gesticulating at us.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>Captain Braine stood on the rail watching
-them with an air of musing that was incredibly
-odd in the face of the wild excitement
-of the moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Are you hurt?&#8217; I cried.</p>
-
-<p>He turned slowly to survey me, then very
-leisurely dismounted from his perch, meanwhile
-continuing to gaze at me.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No,&#8217; said he, after an interval during
-which I ran my eyes over him with anxiety,
-thinking to see blood or to behold him
-suddenly fall; &#8216;it&#8217;s all right. This is the
-fourth time I&#8217;ve been shot at in my life; and
-be my end what it will, it is certain I am not
-to perish by another man&#8217;s bullet. Rogues
-all, ha!&#8217; he continued, directing his dead
-black vision at the boat astern; &#8216;they would
-have carried the little <i>Blanche</i>, and slit our
-throats. Just the sort of ship, sir, for the
-likes of their trade: the heels of a racehorse
-and the sober look of the honest marchantman.
-Slit our throats; all saving <i>yours</i>, mem, I
-expect; but only to reserve ye for something
-worse than death to you, if your noble looks
-don&#8217;t belie your taste.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;They never could have held on with that
-boathook,&#8217; said I, struck more by the man&#8217;s<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span>
-manner than his speech, strange as it was. &#8216;I
-suppose they hoped to cling long enough to
-chuck a few of their beauties aboard us.
-Well, Miss Temple, let us trust that we have
-now seen the very last of that confounded
-privateer brig and the gallant, good-looking
-chaps who stocked her.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;When is all this going to end?&#8217; said she.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Every man of them,&#8217; exclaimed the
-captain, &#8216;will have had a firearm in his
-breast.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;No doubt,&#8217; I answered; &#8216;the vessel must
-have been handsomely furnished in that way
-to judge by what we found remaining in the
-cabin of the wreck.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Were they starving, d&#8217;ye think?&#8217; he
-exclaimed with a sudden troubled manner, as
-he looked at the speck in our wake.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I should say not,&#8217; said I; &#8216;there were
-breakers in the bottom of the boat, and
-parcels resembling bread bags aft.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Thirst is a fearful thing at sea, sir,&#8217; said
-he, slowly: &#8216;it&#8217;s worse than hunger. Hunger,
-whilst it remains appetite, is agreeable; but
-the first sensation of thirst is a torture. I
-have known &#8217;em both&mdash;I have known &#8217;em
-both,&#8217; he added, with a melancholy shake of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-his head and a profound sigh; then bringing
-his unwinking stare to bear upon me, he
-exclaimed: &#8216;Supposing that shot had taken
-effect, the <i>Lady Blanche</i> would now be without
-a master; and if you wasn&#8217;t on board,
-she&#8217;d be without a navigator. Less than two
-sea-going heads to every ship <i>won&#8217;t</i> do. I felt
-that truth when Chicken went, and I&#8217;m feeling
-of it every time I catch sight of that there man
-Lush.&#8217; Miss Temple and I exchanged glances.
-&#8216;Well,&#8217; said he, with one of his mirthless grins,
-&#8216;I don&#8217;t expect those privateersmen&#8217;ll trouble
-us any more;&#8217; and in his abrupt way he walked
-to the compass, and stood there looking alternately
-from it to the canvas.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
-
-<small>I QUESTION WETHERLY</small></h2></div>
-
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> had now become so much one thing on top
-of another with us, and everything happening
-in a moment, so to speak, too: first our being
-left on the wreck all in a breath as it were:
-then our being picked up by this barque
-without the dimmest prospect, as my instincts
-advised me, of our falling in with the <i>Countess
-Ida</i> this side of Bombay: then our destitute
-condition aboard a craft whose skipper&#8217;s sanity
-I was now honestly beginning to distrust, and
-whose people, if he did not lie, were for the
-most part a gang of scoundrels: then this
-sudden narrow shave of being boarded by
-above a score of miscreants whose undoubted
-hope was to seize the <i>Lady Blanche</i> and to
-use her in the room of their own extinguished
-brig; I say it was so much one thing on top
-of another&mdash;a catalogue of adventures scarcely
-conceivable in these safe-going days of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-ocean mailboat, though real enough and in
-one way or another frequent enough in my
-time, I mean in the time of this narrative&mdash;that
-I protest something of the dismay which
-possessed Miss Temple visited me, though I
-struggled hard in the direction of a composed
-face, as we talked over the incident of the
-morning, and took a view of the singular
-staring figure who had charge of the barque,
-and directed our eyes at the crew, all hands of
-whom hung about forward, briskly yarning,
-as I might suppose, about the Spanish longboat&#8217;s
-attempt (and with God knows what
-sympathy, I would think, as I peered at the
-groups), or as we sent our eager gaze into the
-blue and brilliant ocean distance in search of
-any little leaning flake of white that might
-flatter us with promise of escape from our
-disagreeable situation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I have fully and immovably formed my
-opinion on two points,&#8217; said Miss Temple to
-me as we continued to pace the deck together
-for some half hour after the boat had disappeared
-astern: &#8216;one is, that Captain Braine
-is mad; and the other that he is firmly bent
-on making you serve him as his mate.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I own that I now believe he is madder<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-than I first suspected,&#8217; I answered. &#8216;His
-manner and language to you just now were
-extraordinary. But as to his employing me
-as mate&mdash;I think this: if the man is crazy, he
-may easily go wrong in his navigation; if we
-sight nothing that will carry us home, we
-must obviously stick to the barque, and her
-safety, therefore, is ours; consequently, it is
-desirable, I think, that I should know what
-her skipper is doing with her from day to
-day; and this I can contrive by consenting to
-oblige him with taking sights.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I see what you mean,&#8217; she exclaimed
-thoughtfully. &#8216;I had not taken that view;
-but it is a cruel one to entertain; it implies
-our remaining on board until&mdash;until&mdash;&mdash; Oh,
-Mr. Dugdale! this sort of imprisonment
-for the next two or three months is not to be
-borne.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Anyway,&#8217; said I, &#8216;you now understand
-that our very safety demands we should know
-where that fellow is carrying his ship. If,
-then, he should request me to shoot the sun
-as we call it, you will not be vexed by my
-compliance?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Who am I, Mr. Dugdale, that you should
-trouble yourself about my opinion?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>&#8216;You can make yourself felt,&#8217; said I, smiling;
-&#8216;I should consider your eyes matchless
-in their power to subdue. There is a little
-passage in Shakespeare that very exquisitely
-fits my theory of you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I would rather not hear it,&#8217; she answered,
-with a slight curl of her lip and a faint tinge
-of rose in her cheeks. &#8216;You once applied to
-me a sentence from Shakespeare that was
-very unflattering.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What was it?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You compared my complexion to the
-white death that one of Shakespeare&#8217;s girls
-talks about.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I remember. I am astonished that your
-aunt should have repeated to you what she
-overheard by stealth.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I do not understand,&#8217; she exclaimed,
-firing up.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;She was behind me when I made that
-quotation, and I was unconscious of her
-presence. She should have respected my
-ignorance. I meant no wrong,&#8217; I went on,
-pretending to get into a passion. &#8216;Your
-complexion is pale, and I sought to illustrate
-it to my little friend Saunders by an expression
-of striking nobility and beautiful dignity. If<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span>
-ever I have the fortune to find myself in your
-aunt&#8217;s company, I shall give her my mind on
-this business. How am I to know but that
-her repeating what she had heard me let fall
-excited in you the disgust I found in your
-treatment of me?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>She cooled down as I grew hot.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;The extravagance of your language
-shocks me,&#8217; she exclaimed, but with very
-little temper in her voice. &#8216;Disgust? You
-have no right to use that word. You were
-always very courteous to me on board the
-<i>Countess Ida</i>.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Am I less so here?&#8217; said I, still preserving
-an air of indignation.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Do not let us quarrel,&#8217; she said gently,
-with such a look of sweetness in her eyes as I
-should have thought their dark and glowing
-depths incapable of.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;If we quarrel, it will not be my fault,&#8217;
-said I, disguising myself with my voice, whilst
-I looked seawards that my face might not
-betray me.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the captain called out my
-name: &#8216;Can I have a word with you, sir?&#8217;
-he cried along the short length of poop, standing
-as he was at the wheel, whilst we were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[294]</a></span>
-conversing at the fore-end of the raised
-deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;With pleasure,&#8217; I answered.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I shall go into the cabin,&#8217; said Miss
-Temple; &#8216;it is too hot here. You will come
-and tell me what he wants.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I waited until she had descended the
-ladder, and then strolled over to the captain,
-determined to let him know by my careless air
-that whatever I did for him he must regard
-as an obligation, or as an expression of my
-gratitude; but that I was not to be commanded.
-I believed I could witness an
-expression of embarrassment in his fixed
-regard that I had not before noticed in him.
-He eyed me as though lost in thought, and I
-waited.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Would you object,&#8217; said he, &#8216;to ascertain
-our latitude at noon to-day?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Not in the least.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He seemed to grow a little brighter.
-&#8216;And I should feel obliged,&#8217; he continued, &#8216;if
-you&#8217;d work out the longitude.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;With pleasure,&#8217; I said. I looked at my
-watch. &#8216;But I have no sextant.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I have a couple,&#8217; he exclaimed; &#8216;I will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span>
-lend you one;&#8217; and down he went for it with
-a fluttered demeanour of eagerness.</p>
-
-<p>I lingered till I supposed he had entered
-his cabin, then put my head into the skylight
-and called softly to Miss Temple, who was
-seated almost directly beneath for the air
-there: &#8216;He wishes me to take an observation
-with him.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What is that?&#8217; she answered, also speaking
-softly and turning up her face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am to shoot the sun&mdash;you know, Miss
-Temple.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh, pray, contrive to make some error&mdash;commit
-some blunder to make him suppose&#8217;&mdash;&mdash; She
-checked herself, and I heard
-the captain say that it was very hot as he
-came to the companion steps.</p>
-
-<p>In a few moments he arrived on deck,
-hugging a brace of sextant cases to his heart.
-He told me to choose; I took the one nearest to
-me, perceived that the instrument was almost
-new, and as it was now hard upon the hour
-of noon, applied it to my eye, the captain
-standing alongside of me ogling the sun likewise.
-I could see the men forward, waiting
-for the skipper to make eight bells, staring
-their hardest at the now unusual spectacle to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-them of two sextants at work. For my part,
-I should have been shocked by the weakness
-of my memory if I had not known what to
-do. During the two years I had spent at sea
-I was thoroughly grounded in navigation&mdash;such
-as it was in those days; and as I stood
-screwing the sun down to the horizon, the
-whole practice of the art, so far as my education
-in it went, came back to me as freshly as
-though I had been taking sights ever since.</p>
-
-<p>We made eight bells. Mr. Lush came aft
-to relieve the deck, and I went below with
-Captain Braine to work out the barque&#8217;s
-position.</p>
-
-<p>I smiled at Miss Temple as I entered the
-cuddy; she watched me eagerly, and the
-movement of her lips seemed to say, &#8216;Don&#8217;t
-be long.&#8217; In fact, her face had that meaning;
-and I gave her a reassuring nod ere
-turning to follow the captain into his berth.
-The apartment was small and cheerful, plainly
-stocked with the customary details of a
-humble skipper&#8217;s sea bedroom; a cot, a small
-table, a cushioned locker, a few mathematical
-instruments, a little hanging shelf of strictly
-nautical books, and so on. His chronometer
-was a good one, handsome for those days, of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span>
-a quality one would hardly expect to find in
-a little trading-barque of the pattern of this
-<i>Lady Blanche</i>. There was a bag of charts in
-a corner, and a small chart of the world lay
-half unrolled upon the table, with a bit of the
-Atlantic Ocean visible exhibiting the skipper&#8217;s
-&#8216;pricking&#8217; or tracing of his course down to
-the preceding day.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Here&#8217;s ink and paper, sir,&#8217; said he; &#8216;sit
-ye down, and let&#8217;s see if we can tally.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I was always a tolerably quick hand at
-figures, and had soon completed my calculations,
-feeling as though I was at sea again in
-sober professional earnest. The captain
-worked with extraordinary gravity; his
-singular eyes overhung the paper without a
-wink, and his yellow countenance, with his
-blue chops and chin, wore the melancholy of
-a mute&#8217;s face, mixed with an indefinable
-quality of distress, as though his mental
-efforts were putting him to physical pain.
-We agreed to a second in our latitude, but
-differed in our longitude by something over
-seven miles.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;You&#8217;ll be in the right, sir&mdash;you&#8217;ll be in
-the right!&#8217; he cried, smiting the table with
-his fist. &#8216;It is clear you know the ropes, Mr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-Dugdale. I&#8217;ll abide by your reckonings. And
-now I want ye to do me a further sarvice.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What is that, captain?&#8217; said I.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, ye may reckon, of course, that I
-can write,&#8217; he answered; &#8216;but I never was
-topweight with my pen, as Jack says, nor, for
-the matter of that, was Chicken much of a
-hand. There was some words which he was
-always making a foul hawse of. Now, what
-I want ye to do, Mr. Dugdale, is to keep my
-log for me.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;All this,&#8217; said I carelessly, yet watching
-him with attention, &#8216;is practically making a
-chief officer of me.&#8217; He did not answer. &#8216;Of
-course, I don&#8217;t object,&#8217; I continued, stimulated
-more perhaps by Miss Temple&#8217;s than by my
-own views, &#8216;to oblige in any possible manner
-a gentleman&#8217;&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I am no gentleman,&#8217; said he, with a wave
-of the hand.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;&mdash;&mdash;to whom Miss Temple and myself
-owe our lives. But I may take it that it is
-thoroughly understood the young lady and
-myself are to quit your hospitable little ship
-at the first opportunity that may offer.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He regarded me in silence for I should say
-at least a minute; I was positively beginning<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-to believe that he had fallen dumb. At last
-he seemed to come to life. He nodded
-slowly three times and said very deliberately:
-&#8216;Mr. Dugdale, you and me will be having a
-talk later on.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;But good God, captain,&#8217; cried I, startled
-out of my assumed manner of indifference or
-ease, &#8216;you will at least assure me that you&#8217;ll
-make no difficulty of transhipping us when
-the chance to do so occurs?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He was again silent, all the while staring
-at me; and presently, in a deep voice, said,
-&#8216;Later on, sir;&#8217; and with that stood up.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;How much later on?&#8217; I inquired.</p>
-
-<p>He tapped his brow with his forefinger
-and answered: &#8216;It needs reflection, and I must
-see my way clearly. So far it&#8217;s all right. I&#8217;m
-much obliged to ye, I&#8217;m sure;&#8217; and he went
-to the door and held it open, closing it upon
-himself after I had stepped out.</p>
-
-<p>At the instant I resolved to tell Miss
-Temple of what had passed; then swiftly
-thought no! it will only frighten the poor
-girl, and she cannot advise me; I must wait a
-little; and with a smiling face I seated myself
-by her side. But secretly, I was a good deal
-worried. I chatted lightly, told her that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-there was nothing whatever significant in the
-captain&#8217;s request that I should check his calculations
-by independent observations, and
-did my utmost, by a variety of cheerful small
-talk referring wholly to our situation, to keep
-her heart up. Nevertheless, secretly I was
-much bothered. The man had something on
-his mind of a dark mysterious nature, it
-seemed to me; and I could not question that
-it formed the motive of his interrogatories as
-to my seamanship, and of his testing my
-qualities as a navigator by putting a sextant
-into my hand. Whatever his secret might
-prove, was it likely to stand between us and
-our quitting this barque for something homeward
-bound? It was most intolerably certain
-that if Captain Braine chose to keep me
-aboard, I must remain with him. For how
-should I be able to get away? Suppose I
-took it upon myself to signal a vessel when he
-was below: the hailing, the noise of backing
-the yards, the clamour of the necessary
-man&#339;uvring, would hardly fail to bring him
-on deck; and if he chose to order the men to
-keep all fast with the boat, there could be no
-help for it; he was captain, and the seamen
-would obey him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>These thoughts, however, I kept to myself.
-The day passed quietly. Again and again
-Miss Temple and I would search the waters
-for any sign of a ship; but I took notice that
-the barrenness of the ocean did not produce
-the same air of profound misery and dejection
-which I had witnessed in her yesterday. In
-fact, she had grown weary of complaining;
-she was beginning to understand the idleness
-of it. From time to time, though at long
-intervals, something fretful would escape her,
-some reference to the wretched discomfort of
-being without change of apparel; to the misfortune
-of having fallen in with a ship, whose
-forecastle people, if her captain was to be
-believed, were for the most part no better
-than the company of brigands whom we had
-scraped clear of that morning. But it seemed
-to me that she was slowly schooling herself
-to resignation, that she had formed a resolution
-to look with some spirit into the face of
-our difficulties, a posture of mind I was not a
-little thankful to behold in her, for, God
-knows, my own anxiety was heavy enough,
-and I did not want to add to it the sympathetic
-trouble her grief and despair caused
-me.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>All day long the weather continued very
-glorious. The captain ordered a short awning
-to be spread over the poop, and Miss Temple
-and I sat in the shadow of it during the
-greater part of the afternoon. There was
-nothing to read; there was no sort of amusement
-to enable us to kill the time. Nevertheless,
-the hours drifted fleetly past in talk.
-Miss Temple was more communicative than
-she had ever before been; talked freely of
-her family, of her friends and acquaintances,
-of her visits abroad, and the like. She told
-me that she was never weary of riding, that
-her chief delight in life was to follow the
-hounds; and indeed she chatted so fluently
-on one thing and another that she appeared
-to forget our situation: a note almost of
-gaiety entered her voice; her dark eyes
-sparkled, and the cold, marble-like beauty of
-her face warmed to the memories which rose
-in her. I gathered from her conversation
-that she was the only living child of her
-mother, and that there was nothing between
-her and a very tolerable little fortune, as I
-might infer from her description of the home
-Lady Temple had kept up in her husband&#8217;s
-life, and that she still, though in a diminished<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-degree, supported for the sake of her daughter,
-though she herself lay paralysed and helpless,
-looked after in Miss Temple&#8217;s absence by a
-maiden sister.</p>
-
-<p>I recollect wondering whilst I listened to
-her that so fine a woman as she, and a fortune
-to boot, had not long ago married. Was she
-waiting for some man with whom she could
-fall in love? or was it some large dream of
-title and estate that hindered her? or was it
-that she was without a heart? No, thought
-I; her heart will have had nothing to do with
-it. Your heartless girls get married as fast
-as the rest of them. And was she heartless?
-It was not easy to let one&#8217;s gaze plumb the
-glowing liquid depths of her eyes, which
-seemed to my fancy to be charged with the
-fires of sensibility and passion, and believe her
-heartless.</p>
-
-<p>There was something wild in the contrast
-betwixt the imaginations she raised in me by
-her talk of her home and her pleasures with
-her own beauty at hand to richly colour every
-fancy she inspired&mdash;betwixt my imagination,
-I say, and the realities about us, as I would
-most poignantly feel whenever I sent a glance
-at old Lush. He was a mule of a man, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-stood doggedly at a distance, never addressed
-nor offered, indeed, to approach us, though
-sometimes I would catch him taking me in
-from head to toe out of the corner of his surly
-eyes. Possibly, my showing that I had a trick
-of navigation above his knowledge excited
-his spleen; or maybe his hatred of the captain
-led him to dislike me because of the apparent
-intimacy between the skipper and me. Anyway,
-I would catch myself looking at him now
-with a feeling of misgiving for which I could
-find no reason outside of the mere movement
-of my instincts.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the second dog-watch that
-evening; Miss Temple was resting in the little
-cuddy, and I stepped on to the main-deck to
-smoke a pipe. The topmost canvas of the
-barque delicately swayed under a cloudless
-heaven that was darkly, deeply, beautifully
-blue with the shadow of the coming night.
-A large star trembled above the ocean verge
-in the east; but the glow of sunset still
-lingered in the west over a sea of wonderful
-smoothness rippling in frosty lines to the
-breeze that gushed from between the sunset
-and the north.</p>
-
-<p>The carpenter had charge of the deck; the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span>
-captain was in his cabin. Whilst I lighted
-my pipe, I caught sight of the man Joe
-Wetherly seated on the coaming of the fore-hatch
-past the little galley. He was puffing
-at an inch of dusky clay with his arms folded
-upon his breast, and his countenance composed
-into an air of sailorly meditation.
-This seemed an opportunity for me to learn
-what he had to tell or might be willing to
-impart about the inner life of the <i>Lady Blanche</i>,
-and I went along the deck in an easy saunter,
-as though it was my notion to measure the
-planks for an evening stroll. I started when
-abreast of him with a manner of pleased
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh! it is you, Wetherly? My old
-acquaintance Smallridge&#8217;s friend! No sign
-of the Indiaman, though. I fear we have
-outrun her by leagues. And always when
-you are on the lookout for a sail at sea,
-nothing heaves into sight.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He rose to my accost, and saluted me with
-a respectful sea-bow, that is, by scraping his
-forehead with his knuckle with a little kick
-back of his left leg.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;That&#8217;s right enough, sir,&#8217; he answered.
-&#8216;I&#8217;ve been sailing myself in a ship for six weeks<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span>
-in middling busy waters, too, with ne&#8217;er a
-sight of anything&mdash;not so much as the tail of
-a gull.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Pray sit,&#8217; said I; &#8216;I&#8217;ll keep you company.
-This is the right spot for a smoke and a
-yarn; quiet and cool and out of the road of
-the poop.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He grinned, and we seated ourselves side by
-side. I talked to him first about the <i>Countess
-Ida</i>, explained the circumstance of my being in
-company with Miss Temple, told him who she
-was, and spoke of her shipwrecked condition so
-far as her wardrobe went, and how eager she
-was to return to England; but the old sailor
-made very little of her being in want of a
-change of dress.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;There is no need, sir,&#8217; said he, &#8216;for the lady
-to distress her mind with considerations of a
-shift o&#8217; vestments. I allow she can use a needle
-for herself; there&#8217;s needles and thread at her
-sarvice forrads; and how much linnen do she
-want? Why one of the skipper&#8217;s table-cloths
-&#8217;ud fit her out, I should say.&#8217; He turned his
-figure-head of a face upon me as he added:
-&#8216;&#8217;Tain&#8217;t the loss of clothes, sir, as should occupy
-her thoughts, but the feeling that she&#8217;s been
-took off that there wreck and is safe.&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>I fully agreed with him, with some inward
-laughter, wondering what Miss Temple would
-think if she had overheard his speech. One
-thing led to another; at last I said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Wetherly, I am going to ask you a plain
-question; it is one sailor making inquiry of
-another, and you&#8217;ll accept me as a shipmate, I
-know.&#8217; He nodded. &#8216;Is not your captain
-wanting?&#8217; and I touched my head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well,&#8217; he answered after a pause, &#8216;<i>I</i> think
-so, and I&#8217;ve been a-thinking so pretty nigh ever
-since I&#8217;ve been along with him.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;What caused his mate&#8217;s death?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He died in a swound,&#8217; he answered&mdash;&#8216;fell
-dead alongside the wheel as he was looking into
-the compass.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Have the sailors noticed anything queer
-in their captain?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;They&#8217;re such a party of ignorant scow-bankers,&#8217;
-said he, with a slow look round, to
-make sure that the coast was clear, &#8216;that I
-don&#8217;t believe they&#8217;re capable of noticing anything
-if it ain&#8217;t a pannikin of rum shoved under
-their noses.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;I don&#8217;t mind whispering to you,&#8217; said I,
-&#8216;that the captain hinted to me they were not
-a very reputable body of men&mdash;talked vaguely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[308]</a></span>
-of mutineers and convicts, with one fellow
-amongst them,&#8217; I went on, bating my voice to
-a mere whisper, &#8216;who had committed a
-murder.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He stared at me a moment, and then tilted
-his cap over his nose to scratch the back of
-his head.</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;He&#8217;ll know more about &#8217;em, then, than I
-do,&#8217; he responded; &#8216;they&#8217;re ignorant enough to
-do wrong without troubling themselves much
-to think of the job when it was over. Mutineering
-I don&#8217;t doubt some of &#8217;em have practised.
-As to others of &#8217;em being convicts, why who&#8217;s
-to tell? Likely as not, says I. But when it
-comes to murder&mdash;a middling serious charge,
-ain&#8217;t it, sir? Of course I dunno&mdash;who might
-the party be, sir?&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh!&#8217; I exclaimed, &#8216;it was a vague sort of
-talk, as I told you. But if Miss Temple and
-I are to stick to this ship till we get to the
-Mauritius, it would comfort her, and me, too,
-for the matter of that, to learn that her crew
-are not the band of ruffians we have been led
-to imagine them.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, sir,&#8217; he exclaimed thoughtfully&mdash;&#8216;I&#8217;m
-sure you&#8217;ll forgive me, but I don&#8217;t rightly
-recollect your name.&#8217;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[309]</a></span>&#8216;Dugdale.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Well, Mr. Dugdale, as you asks for my
-opinion, I&#8217;ll give it ye. Of course, it&#8217;ll go no
-furder, as between man and man.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Certainly not. I am myself trusting
-you up to the hilt, as what I have said must
-assure you. You may speak in perfect confidence.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>He cast a cautious look round: &#8216;There&#8217;s
-but one man to be regularly afeerd of, and
-that&#8217;s Mr. Lush. I believe he&#8217;d knife the
-capt&#8217;n right off if so be as he could be sure we
-men wouldn&#8217;t round upon him. I don&#8217;t mean
-to say he han&#8217;t got cause to hate the capt&#8217;n.
-He&#8217;s a working man without knowledge of
-perlite customs, and I believe the capt&#8217;n&#8217;s said
-more to him than he ought to have said; more
-than any gen&#8217;leman would have dreamt of
-saying, and all because this here carpenter
-han&#8217;t got the art o&#8217; dining in a way to please
-the eye. But this here Mr. Lush feels it too
-much: he&#8217;s allowed it to eat into his mind;
-and if so be there should come a difficulty, the
-capt&#8217;n wouldn&#8217;t find a friend in him, and so I
-tells ye, sir. I don&#8217;t want to say more n&#8217;s
-necessary and proper to this here occasion
-of your questions; but though the crew&#8217;s a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[310]</a></span>
-desperate ignorant one, ne&#8217;er a man among &#8217;em
-capable of writing or spelling any more&#8217;n the
-carpenter hisself, there&#8217;s only <i>him</i> to be afeerd
-of, so far as I&#8217;m capable of disarning; though,
-of course, if he should tarn to and try and
-work up their feelings, there&#8217;s naturally no
-telling how the sailors &#8217;ud show.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;They seem a pretty smart set of fellows,&#8217;
-said I, finding but little comfort to be got out
-of this long-winded delivery; &#8216;the ship is beautifully
-clean, and everything looks to be going
-straight aboard of you.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>&#8216;Oh! every man can do his bit,&#8217; he answered;
-&#8216;but if I was you, sir, being in charge,
-as you are, of a beautiful young lady, for the
-likes of which this here little barque, with
-nothen but men aboard and such shabby food
-as goes aft, is no proper place&mdash;if I was you,
-I says, says I, I&#8217;d get away as soon as ever I
-could.&#8217;</p>
-
-<p>I mentally bestowed a few sea-blessings on
-the head of this marine Job&#8217;s comforter, but
-contrived, nevertheless, to look as though I
-was much obliged to him for his information
-and advice; and after we had continued discoursing
-on a variety of nautical topics for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[311]</a></span>
-some ten minutes or a quarter of an hour
-longer, I proceeded aft, and spent the rest of
-the evening in conversing with Miss Temple
-in the cabin or in walking the deck with her.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="center">END OF THE SECOND VOLUME</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p class="center"><small>PRINTED BY<br />
-SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., NEW-STREET SQUARE<br />
-LONDON</small></p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<p class="ph1">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
-<p>The cover image for this eBook was created by the transcriber and is entered into the public domain.</p>
-
-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
-
-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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