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+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65718 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65718)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Whaleman's Wife, by Frank Thomas Bullen
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A Whaleman's Wife
-
-
-Author: Frank Thomas Bullen
-
-
-
-Release Date: June 28, 2021 [eBook #65718]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A WHALEMAN'S WIFE***
-
-
-E-text prepared by MWS, SF2001, and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
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-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
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- See 65718-h.htm or 65718-h.zip:
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- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/65718/65718-h.zip)
-
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- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/whalemanswife00bullrich
-
-
-
-
-
-A WHALEMAN’S WIFE
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
-
- THE CRUISE OF THE CACHALOT.
- THE LOG OF A SEA WAIF.
- THE MEN OF THE MERCHANT SERVICE.
- IDYLLS OF THE SEA.
- WITH CHRIST AT SEA.
- A SACK OF SHAKINGS.
- DEEP SEA PLUNDERINGS.
- THE APOSTLES OF THE SOUTH-EAST.
- WITH CHRIST IN SAILORTOWN.
- THE PALACE OF POOR JACK.
- THE WAY THEY HAVE IN THE NAVY.
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-[Illustration: SHE STOOD THERE FRAMED IN THE PORTAL LIKE A GRACEFUL
-PICTURE.
-
- _P. 11._]
-
-
-A WHALEMAN’S WIFE
-
-by
-
-FRANK T. BULLEN
-
-
-[decoration]
-
-
-
-
-
-
-London: Hodder and
-Stoughton [Decoration] 27
-Paternoster Row: MCMII
-
-Printed by
-Spottiswoode and Co. Ltd., New-Street Square
-London
-
-
-
-
-TO
-
-THEODORE ROOSEVELT
-
-PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
-
-A SMALL TOKEN OF THE AUTHOR’S ESTEEM
-
-FOR A STRONG CHRISTIAN
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. Unrequited Love 1
- II. ‘Veni, Vidi, Vici’ 9
- III. A Sudden Resolve 17
- IV. Departure 25
- V. Outward Bound 34
- VI. Disillusionment 43
- VII. A Stricken Demon 54
- VIII. A Disastrous Day 69
- IX. Reuben Eddy, Mariner 85
- X. The _Good_ Ship ‘Xiphias’ 99
- XI. At the Old Homestead 115
- XII. Repairing Damages 130
- XIII. The Captain Goes Ashore 146
- XIV. Among Right Whales 162
- XV. A Double Deliverance 176
- XVI. A Reign of Terror 192
- XVII. Salvage Operations 207
- XVIII. Humanity Rewarded 221
- XIX. A Great Blow 236
- XX. The Cyclone 251
- XXI. A Strange Rescue 267
- XXII. The Meeting 283
- XXIII. Farewell to the _Xiphias_ 297
- XXIV. Check to the King, and a New Move 311
- XXV. The Education of the Skipper 326
- XXVI. The Loss of the _Grampus_ 344
- XXVII. And Last 361
- Works by the Same Author 379
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-UNREQUITED LOVE
-
-
-‘Yew don’ seem ter keer any gret amount fer me, Pris.’
-
-The speaker was a young man of twenty or thereabouts, whose loosely
-jointed frame showed, even under the shapely rig of homespun,
-consisting of just a shirt and pants, a promise to the observant eye
-that he would presently develop into a man of massive mould. He lay
-upon the stubbly ground, his head resting on one arm, looking wistfully
-up into the face of a girl about his own age. His clean-shaven face
-wore that keenness of outline so characteristic of the true Yankee
-blend in which the broad Saxon or Frisian features seem to have been
-modified by the sharp facial angles of the indigenous owners of the
-soil. But in the softness of his grey eyes a close observer would have
-foreseen a well of trouble springing up for their owner on behalf of
-others. It was the face of the typical burden-bearer.
-
-In her face, on the other hand, there were evident manifestations of
-discontent and weariness of restraint. A healthy, pleasant countenance
-enough, with dark brown eyes and curling hair, well-shaped nose and
-short upper lip just spotted with freckles. The eyes looked, however,
-as if they could harden and grow black upon occasion, while the square
-chin and firm curve of the shut mouth told a plain tale of self-will.
-There was just a touch of petulance in the quick movement of her head
-as she replied:
-
-‘You’re so exactin’, Rube. An’ surely you wouldn’t want me to be a
-hypocrite an’ gush over you when I don’t feel a bit like it. The honest
-fact is that I like you better than anybody I’ve ever seen, but you
-know I haven’t seen many people at all; and as for the men folks about
-here, they’re almost as dull and stupid as the cattle themselves. An’
-more than that, Rube, I’m afraid I don’t know what this love is that
-you seem to be et up with, an’ I’m not going to say I do to please
-anybody.’
-
-There was silence. Over the wide stretches of newly reaped land not a
-breath of air was stirring; at evening’s beckoning finger the voices
-of the day were hushed. It was nearing the gloaming of one of those
-heavenly days common in Vermont towards the end of harvest, when
-Nature seems to be contemplating in satisfied peace the result of her
-summer’s fruitage, and baring her bosom to the mellowing sun for a
-while, as if to store up warmth against the coming of the fierce blasts
-of the bitter Northern winter. The smell of the patient earth was
-sweet, restful in its effect upon the senses, and insensibly moulding
-impressions upon the mind that would remain through life ineffaceable
-by any subsequent experiences, and assert themselves in after-years by
-vivid reproductions of the present scene. Yet the calm beauty of their
-surroundings had upon each of the two young people an almost entirely
-opposite effect. He was permeated with a serene sense of satisfaction
-with life in all its details but one--if only he could be certain that
-Priscilla loved him! Born and bred upon the typical Green Mountain
-farm, educated up to the simple standard of the village school, and
-utterly unacquainted with the seething world beyond his horizon, he
-was as nearly happy as it is good for man to be in this stage of his
-existence. His parents, although, like himself, New Englanders born
-and bred, had somehow escaped from the soul-withering domination of
-that cruel creed that finds an awful satisfaction in the consignment to
-eternal fires of all who by one hair’s-breadth should dare to differ
-from its blindly ignorant conception of theology. Love formed the basis
-of their faith, and their ideas of an immanent God were mainly derived
-from the parable of the Prodigal Son.
-
-Under such mild influences it was hardly wonderful that Reuben Eddy
-had early ‘got religion,’ in the queer phraseology of the States,
-although in his case, as in that of his parents, there was scarcely
-any point of resemblance common to the ordinary religious professor.
-Following none of the orthodox forms of worship, and pretending to no
-formulated creed, the Eddys lived and moved and had their being in a
-quiet consciousness of the friendliness of God. They looked as if they
-would at no time have been surprised, as they certainly would have
-been unafraid, to see His face with their mortal eyes. They seemed to
-love God, as birds sing, from an inward impulse that is not a duty but
-a part of the organism, as natural a necessity as the breath or the
-heart-beat. Yet, or perhaps because of this, they were intensely human.
-There was none of that aloofness from the interests of their kind that
-some excellent people regard as the hall-mark of a Christian. In fact,
-they were a lovable family whose influence was like that of the spring
-sun upon all (though they were but few) with whom they came in contact.
-
-Within this last year or two, however, Reuben had felt the deep placid
-current of his life strangely disturbed. His life-long playmate,
-Priscilla Fish, whose parents’ farm (three miles away) was the nearest
-to that of the Eddys, had suddenly assumed a totally different
-appearance in his eyes. For some time he went about dreamily wondering
-whatever the change could be that had at once removed her so far above
-the category of ordinary, everyday people, and at the same time had
-made him long for her society so ardently that every hour spent away
-from her seemed to drag, and every thought was shot through and through
-with side-issues about her. Now between him and his father there had
-been a life-long intimacy, gently sought and fostered by the elder man
-as soon as Rube was old enough to know him. Thus they were more than
-father and son--they were David and Jonathan, with no secrets from one
-another. So after Reuben had wrestled with this new experience long
-enough to be able to reduce it to some formulable expression, he took
-it to his father, as he had done every other difficulty as long as
-he could remember. The old man listened in sympathetic silence while
-his son described his symptoms with a gravity that would have been
-ludicrous but for its earnestness and sincerity. How he felt like a
-caged bird until he saw Priscilla, yet when she appeared he became hot
-and cold by turns, and felt so awkward and clumsy that he wanted to
-hide himself in the earth, and so on, in the same old way that was all
-so new and disconcerting to him.
-
-Very gently the old man explained matters to him, winding up with a
-merry twinkle in his eyes, as he said:
-
-‘Haow en the name er pashense yeu’ve shun clar ov this complaint all
-these years ez er merricle. Ef I know ye--en I ain’t so dead certain
-of that as I wuz--yew’re just the kinder lad to fall in love fust go.
-Anyhow, I’m goin’ ter chip in ’n ’elp ye if it kin be did et all.’
-
-With all his fatherly instincts aroused, the fine old fellow trudged
-over to his neighbour’s farm that same evening, and sought out old man
-Fish. In quaint fashion, and blaming himself whimsically for his lack
-of observation in not seeing how things were going before, he explained
-the situation, finding, much to his gratification, that Priscilla’s
-father was entirely agreeable to the match. Solemnly the two patriarchs
-discussed ways and means, planning all manner of pleasant things
-for the future of their children as far as their sober wishes would
-allow them. That Reuben and Priscilla should marry, inherit the Eddy
-homestead, and glide placidly along through life as their parents
-had done, seemed to these two fond old hearts as roseate a prospect
-as could be desired. So they sat on, exchanging their slow-moving
-thoughts, until long past their usual early hour for bed. After a long
-pause, Farmer Eddy stretched himself with a yawn and said:
-
-‘Wall, Zeke, I reckon I’ll be gittin’ to’rds hum. Seems ter me we ben
-havin’ er mighty long yarn to-night, ’relse I’m most amazin’ sleepy.
-Good-night t’ye.’
-
-There was no reply. It was perfectly dark, for they had been sitting in
-the barn, and when the night closed softly down they had not thought
-to get a lamp, in their earnestness of conversation. Slightly raising
-his voice, Farmer Eddy repeated his salutation, but it fell upon the
-unresponsive darkness around like a pebble dropped into a deep well.
-With a chill creeping over his scalp the old man reached forward to
-where his friend was sitting and groped for his hand. It was some
-seconds before he could find what he sought, and when he did, the truth
-sank into his marrow instantly: Ezekiel Fish was dead.
-
-Trembling in every fibre, Eddy hastily made for the house, coming into
-the well-lighted living-room with his message in his face. The family,
-consisting of Mrs. Fish, her two grown-up sons, and Priscilla, were all
-seated there, eagerly discussing a knotty point in some book Priscilla
-had been reading aloud, but the entry of the old man and their first
-glance at his face froze them into silence. Going straight up to the
-mother, Eddy laid his trembling hand upon her shoulder, and said,
-‘Hepziber, the Lord be good t’ye. He’s taken away yew’re husband.’
-
-There was no outcry. Priscilla came swiftly to her mother’s side and
-tried to soothe the heavily stricken woman, whose silent suffering was
-pitiful to see; while the two sons and the old man, bearing lights,
-returned to the barn and reverently carried in the body. The usual sad
-offices were soon rendered to the remains, and with slow, uncertain
-steps Eddy returned home to tell his sorrowful story and warn Reuben
-that, for the present at any rate, a prior claim to attention had been
-made upon their neighbour’s family.
-
-Some months, therefore, elapsed before anything of the matter that lay
-so close to his heart passed Reuben’s lips. But he was by no means
-impetuous, and besides, he had always been trained to subordinate his
-wishes to those of others, so that while his love was undoubtedly
-rooting and grounding itself more firmly every day, he was able
-to abstain from all mention of it to its object. Summer came, and
-with it an opportunity during a long Sunday afternoon’s ramble with
-Priscilla to broach the important matter to her. She listened--somewhat
-listlessly, it is true, but still she listened; while Rube, growing
-bolder as he went on, and marvelling at his own powers of speech,
-poured out to her his hopes and plans. But no enthusiasm could hold out
-long under the unconcealed air of indifference with which his fervent
-speech was received, and he soon sobered down to wonder quietly how
-it was she took his vehemence so coolly. Being ready, however, to
-supply all deficiencies from his own abundant stock, he was not unduly
-depressed. And as the days went by his sweet sunny temperament asserted
-itself, and hope, almost amounting to certainty, arose within him that
-she would presently, as he had done, find all things changed under the
-new light of love. Yet in spite of his hopefulness, a weary sense of
-the hilly road he was travelling would occasionally give him serious
-pause, and he grew hungry for some return, however slight, of his
-lavish affection. And it was with one of these moods that this chapter
-and the story open.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-‘VENI, VIDI, VICI’
-
-
-After the death of Ezekiel Fish the care of the farm devolved upon the
-two brothers, both of them typical Yankee farmers, but without a trace
-of the kindliness so characteristic of the Eddys. Rube had never been a
-favourite with them. They dared not despise him openly--he was too big
-and strong for that; but they spoke of him behind his back in terms of
-disparagement, and did all in their power to discourage the slightest
-feeling of affection for him that they imagined their sister to have.
-Jake, the elder brother, a man some three years older than Rube, had
-by virtue of his seniority assumed full charge of affairs, and already
-had begun to launch out in various speculative ways that troubled the
-old lady sorely. His visits to Boston ‘on business’ were frequent and
-prolonged, and already he was becoming known to a few of his less
-reputable associates as a ’feller thet wuz makin’ things hum a bit.’
-
-In these altered circumstances it was no wonder that Rube pressed his
-suit more earnestly than ever. His unselfish nature was fully alarmed
-for Priscilla’s immediate future, and his anxiety on her behalf gave
-his love an added lustre which it had lacked before. But to his
-distress and chagrin, the steady growth of his affection did not
-awaken in her the slightest responsiveness. To a stranger it would
-have been at once manifest that she merely tolerated the young man;
-even to his love-blinded perceptions the fact stubbornly persisted in
-revealing itself. Rube endured this coldness patiently for months,
-until on the evening of the commencement of our story he had drifted
-almost unconsciously into a protest against this treatment of himself
-by Priscilla who, if she had never given him any encouragement worth
-speaking of, had at least tacitly accepted him as a lover. She had
-received his complaint in the manner already specified, speaking the
-exact truth about the state of her feelings towards him as far as she
-knew them. The trouble was that she had not quite realised the strength
-of a feeling of unrest and discontent with her surroundings which had
-been steadily eating into her mind for months past. It was largely due
-to her brother Jake, who, in the elated condition generally noticeable
-on his return from Boston, was wont to launch into extravagant praise
-of city life with its light and bustle and abundant enjoyments.
-Naturally he was correspondingly contemptuous of the well-ordered
-procession of days characteristic of the country. The majestic
-harmonies and sweet confidences of Nature, the changeful orchestra of
-each day, and the placid stillness of the nights, had become to his
-disorganised ideas like the stagnation of death. His was that subtle
-malaise that stealthily undermines the natural order of things, and,
-leaving the countryside to go out of cultivation, herds men and women
-together in vast feverish crowds to stew and fret and die, but never to
-return to the quiet of the country again.
-
-This miserable change had, without her knowledge, infected Priscilla
-also in such a manner that now every task was irksome, the stillness
-of the evenings almost unbearable. Irritability, which had never
-before disfigured her character, became increasingly noticeable. Even
-Rube saw the change, but could not dream of its cause, and innocently
-added to it by his dog-like untiring affection. Matters were in this
-unsatisfactory state when one evening the sound of wheels through the
-crisp air warned the inmates of the Fish place that Jake was returning
-from one of his Boston jaunts. Priscilla dropped her knitting and went
-to the door which looked across the wide paddock down the road. To her
-surprise she saw in the fast approaching buggy two forms. Jake was
-bringing a visitor! The prospect of any break in what had now become
-almost an intolerable monotony so affected her that she felt nearly
-intoxicated, her face flushed rosily, and a tingling thrill that was
-almost pain rushed all over her. Yet she could not move, but stood
-there framed in the portal like a graceful picture, while the buggy
-drew up at the roadside and the men alighted. As they came across the
-paddock towards her she saw that the stranger was tall and stalwart,
-walking with the easy loose-jointed swing of the smart sailor. He
-was dressed in the garb of an ordinary well-clothed townsman, but a
-wide sombrero, of brown velvet apparently, shaded his face. Whether
-by accident or design on his part, this hat completed his resemblance
-to one of the old conquistadores or grandees of Spain painted by
-Velasquez. For his visage was swarthy and oval, his eyes large, black,
-and brilliant, and the lower half of his face was covered by a pointed
-beard and immense moustache so black and thick and silky that it hardly
-seemed of natural growth. To Priscilla’s eyes he looked as if he had
-just stepped across the years out of Prescott’s living page, and, like
-so many others of her sex, in that moment she gave him her whole heart,
-offered herself up to the husk of a man, unknowing and uncaring what it
-contained.
-
-Her mind in a confused whirl of thought, she stood as if petrified
-until the travellers reached her, and made no sign, even when Jake
-said, ‘Thishyer’s my sister Priscilla, Cap’n. Pris, Cap’n Da Silva.’
-The Captain bowed, gracefully enough because naturally, but with
-evident signs that the movement was unusual, and held out his small and
-well-shaped brown hand to meet Priscilla’s white and plump one. The
-contact of their hands acted upon her like a vigorous restorative, and
-the blood fled back again from her face and neck, leaving them for the
-moment unnaturally pale as she found her voice and bade the stranger
-welcome. Even Jake’s dull eyes could not fail to see how powerfully his
-sister was impressed by the Captain, and it pleased him well. Selfish
-and grasping, he was by no means sorry to get rid of his sister, nor
-did the thought of his mother’s loneliness affect him in the slightest
-degree. So that it was with a chuckle of satisfaction he turned away to
-put up his horse and buggy, saying carelessly as he did so, ‘’Scuse me,
-Cap. My sister’ll look after you in shape, won’t ye, Pris?’
-
-Thenceforward Priscilla and the Captain were constant companions,
-their intimacy tacitly encouraged by Jake, who was in a high state
-of satisfaction at the prospect of getting rid of his sister finally.
-The mother made many attempts to gain her daughter’s confidence,
-for she felt an innate distrust of the handsome stranger. But
-Priscilla, forgetting all her mother’s claims, avoided with intuitive
-diplomacy any approach to the subject on her part, showing at times
-an irritability of manner that sorely troubled the old lady, who,
-having no one to turn to in her distress of mind, was lonely indeed.
-At last, one day when Pris, the Captain, and Jake had driven off upon
-some excursion of pleasure, she felt that she could bear the trouble
-alone no longer, and taking advantage of her younger son’s absence at
-a neighbouring farm, she made a pilgrimage over to the Eddy farmhouse,
-intent upon pouring out her heart to Mrs. Eddy. The meeting between the
-two old dames was full of pathetic interest, for Mrs. Eddy loved her
-boy so fondly that, although she had never felt drawn to Priscilla,
-it was enough for her that Rube loved the girl. His happiness was
-the consideration that overtopped all others in her heart. So that
-when Mrs. Fish unburdened herself, her hearer was torn by maternal
-solicitude for her boy, and for the time her anxiety as to the effect
-this news would have upon him was too great to allow her to reply. And
-when she did speak, her words sounded hollow and unmeaning--so much so
-that her visitor stared at her wonderingly. For Mrs. Eddy’s powers of
-consolation and wisdom of counsel were matters of common knowledge over
-a wide extent of country--she was looked up to as infallible. The look
-in her visitor’s eyes recalled her to herself somewhat, and choking
-down her feelings by a great effort, she said:
-
-‘Wall, Hepziber, yewrs ’s surely a hard case, ’n’ I kain’t fur th’ life
-of me see wut yew’re to do. Ef Pris is ’tarmined tu go her own way ’n’
-wun’t listen to yew on the matter ’t all, ’n’ ef, ’s yew say, Jake’s
-doin’ his best t’ encourage her, yew’re jest brought face to face with
-th’ wall, ’s yew may say. My Rube w’d hev made her a good husband, an’
-one ’bout whose record there couldn’t be any doubt; but I’ve seen fur a
-long time that she wuz jest puttin’ up with him like--she didn’t love
-him more ’n she did me, ’n’ you know she never took ter me, ner dad
-eyther. Go home ’n’ pray about it, Hepziber; it’s all we kin do. As fur
-myself, I’ve got ter wrassle with th’ Lord for my boy, fur how he’ll
-b’ar this I kain’t begin ter think.’
-
-And with this cold comfort (to her), Widow Fish had to depart for the
-home she was beginning to feel a stranger in, after all these years,
-leaving Mrs. Eddy with a heart overflowing with sorrowful love for her
-only son. With a natural dread of the effect the news would have upon
-him, she put in practice all the simple arts she knew to keep him in
-ignorance of what was brewing, and finally succeeded, by the aid of her
-husband, in despatching him to Boston on business without his calling
-at the Fish place first. He was absent from home for a fortnight,
-and when he returned, after an hour or two spent with his father and
-mother, he rose and said, with a transparent attempt to conceal his
-eagerness:
-
-‘I guess I’ll jest stroll over an’ see Pris. I’d like to tell her ’bout
-some o’ the Boston sights. ’N’ I’ve brought her a cunning little watch
-for a birthday present.’
-
-The mother looked appealingly at her husband, who, answering her gaze
-with eyes full of fondness, rose, and laying his hand upon Rube’s
-shoulder, said:
-
-‘My son, yew’re a man in years an’ strength, ’n’ I’ve brung ye up to be
-the _good_ man I b’lieve y’ are. Y’ haven’t hed enny big trouble yet,
-but y’ know ther’ ain’t nothin’ in th’ world yew kin ’pend on till it’s
-tested. Yew’re goin’ ter be tested now. Priscilla’s married.’
-
-The watch dropped from the young man’s fingers on to the stone floor
-and was broken. Except for that sound there was absolute silence: none
-of the three seemed to breathe. Presently Rube spoke:
-
-‘Thank ye, father, fur tellin’ me plain ’n’ prompt. Now I think I’ll go
-upstairs ’n’ rest.’
-
-And with heavy uncertain steps Rube left the kitchen, mounted to the
-little room he had occupied since he was a child, and shut himself in.
-
-It was true. With a haste that was explained by the Captain as
-absolutely necessary on account of his ship being ordered to sea at
-a very short notice, he had pressed his suit when once he found how
-willing Priscilla was to take him at his own valuation. Mrs. Fish,
-thoroughly bewildered by the whole hasty proceeding, wandered about the
-house like an unquiet ghost, doing nothing either to help or hinder
-the preparations. Jake was unwontedly lavish with the funds necessary,
-and indefatigable in giving assistance, so that two days before Rube
-returned from Boston the newly married pair had departed for New
-Bedford with the intention of spending their honeymoon on board Captain
-Da Silva’s ship as she journeyed southward on the commencement of her
-long voyage. She was called the _Grampus_, and was one of the fine
-fleet of South Sea whaleships then sailing from New Bedford, although
-so ignorant were the farm-folk of Vermont of maritime matters that even
-Jake, smart as he fancied himself, had but the dimmest, vaguest idea of
-what the life was that his sister was going to be shut up to for the
-next three or four years. Still less did he care. As for Priscilla, she
-would have accepted unquestioningly any situation into which she might
-be brought so long as she was by the side of the man she worshipped
-with a fierce unreasoning intensity. Of Rube she never thought for more
-than a minute at a time, and then it was only with a sense of relief
-at the knowledge that he would trouble her no more. From her mother
-she parted without regret: there seemed to be no room in her mind
-for anything else but intense satisfaction in the prize she believed
-herself to have won. Even the prospect of seeing the great world which
-had once claimed all her desires was but a feeble unit now in the vast
-sum of her delight in the possession of Ramon Da Silva. Nor was her joy
-in the least damped by the masterful way in which he accepted all the
-affection she lavished upon him. To do him justice, he was hardly to
-blame for this. His career, from the time he had enlisted as a green
-hand on board of an American whaler at Fayal, in his sixteenth year,
-had been one long series of successes, due to the great force of his
-character, his utter unscrupulousness, and entire absence of fear. Step
-by step he had risen in his dangerous profession until he had become
-master of a whaleship, while his name was a household word among the
-fleet for smartness, courage, and--brutality.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-A SUDDEN RESOLVE
-
-
-When Rube came down the next morning and composedly met his father’s
-and mother’s anxious looks, he had the listless air of a man whose
-spirit had been broken. There was a droop in his shoulders, a dulness
-in his eyes that contrasted painfully with the bright alertness of his
-glance and carriage of the day before. But he said nothing of his blow,
-and his parents wisely forbore to say anything either, trusting that
-his young and healthy body would come to the assistance of his mind,
-and that the wound would soon skin over. Unfortunately for their hopes,
-his love had been the pivot of his life. While a good farmer, a good
-son, and a good business man, he had no hobbies, he read little, and,
-being much alone, he had allowed his passion for Priscilla to become so
-interwoven with his every thought and action that the knowledge of her
-loss had been like a rending of soul from body. So he went about his
-duties like a somnambulist, seeking no comfort, making no confidences,
-and apparently as insensible to externals as a hypnotised man would be.
-
-In this dull round of daily tasks several weeks passed away, until it
-happened that he found himself at the village grocery on some trivial
-errand. There was the usual knot of loungers ready to talk, and
-absurdly grateful for the coming of any stranger with something fresh
-to say. As he passed through them with a brief nod of recognition
-to one and another, and entered the store, he saw standing erect in
-their midst a tall wiry-looking man, whose face was unfamiliar to him.
-Pausing for an instant, with the first symptom of interest he had
-manifested for many days, he heard the stranger say:
-
-‘Yas, ’n’ if enny ov yew fellers hed th’ grit ov a chipmunk, yew
-wouldn’t take twicet t’ think over yer anser. Wut man’d go on grindin’
-mud all his life in a dead-’n’-alive God-fergotten corner like this
-when he’s got ’n opportoonity of seein’ the world--all th’ world, mind
-ye, east, west, north, and south--an’ makin’ a small forchin ’s well?
-I dunno wuts come over the yewth ov Amurica to-day. Sims t’ me they’ve
-lost their old vim ’n’ push altogether. Well, s’ long, boys; if I
-kain’t persuade ye I kain’t, ’n’ there’s an eend on ’t, ’n’ I mus’ be
-gittin’ ’long. But ef enny ov ye wants time t’ make up yer minds, I
-sh’l be back this way ag’in ter-morrer ev’nin’, ’n’ that’ll be the las’
-chance you’ll git, enny ov ye.’
-
-Although he had not heard any of the stranger’s preliminary discourse,
-and shrank from making inquiries, Rube’s interest was aroused to the
-highest pitch. He returned to his home with the few words he had
-heard seething and bubbling in his mind. For he felt that at last
-here was a way of escape from the almost insupportable deadness of
-his life. He could not realise that ‘the mind is its own place,’ and
-so, like a caged animal, seeing a door of hope open to him, he felt
-an unconquerable longing to flee. He said not a word throughout the
-evening meal, but that was so much his habit now that it passed
-unnoticed. Mechanically he bowed his head at ‘worship,’ but his
-father’s reading of a chapter from the Bible might have been in the
-original Hebrew for all he understood of it. After gaining the solitude
-of his room, he sat on the bed, his head on his hands, trying hard to
-reduce the whirlpool of his thoughts to some definite shape until far
-into the night, but in vain. Only one idea seemed to stand out sharply
-and distinctly against the misty tumult: he must _go_. At last, wearied
-with mental conflict, he fell backward, dressed as he was, and went to
-sleep.
-
-He rose unrefreshed, with a racking headache for the first time in
-his life, and went about his usual round of duties automatically. But
-his face bore such evident traces of his last night’s conflict that
-they could not escape his mother’s keen eye. She anxiously inquired
-after his health, but was met with the careless reply that he was ‘all
-right.’ She knew better, of course, but it had never been her way to
-force confidence, and so she manifested no more curiosity. She only
-looked wistfully at her boy when unobserved by him, and hovered about
-him as if more than ordinarily solicitous for his comfort. All day long
-he moved and looked like a man in a dream, every thought, every feeling
-merged in one idea--escape. Strange, that it never occurred to him how
-impossible it is for a man to flee from himself.
-
-Without waiting for supper, and as if dreading to be questioned, no
-sooner was the day’s work done than he strode off to the village
-grocery, assuming, as he approached it, a most elaborate air of
-unconcern, and lounging into the midst of the little knot of listless
-men hanging about the door as if nothing mattered--an attitude common
-to all of them. He had not long to wait. In about ten minutes after his
-arrival a brisk footfall was heard, and turning the corner sharply the
-lean, keen-looking stranger of the previous evening strode into the
-midst of the group.
-
-‘Evenin’, boys,’ he jerked out, diving into the pockets of his pants
-at the same time and producing a formidable plug of hard tobacco and
-a knife. Having provided himself with a fresh cud and passed on the
-materials to his next neighbour, he proceeded:
-
-‘Wall, boys, hev ye made up yer minds yet? This, as the paestor sez, is
-the last time ov askin’. Ye’ve got ter speak up now, ’relse stay right
-whar y’ are f’rever ’n’ ever. ’N’ that, _I_ sh’d say, ’d be ’nough t’
-decide fr’anny young _man_. Veg’tables don’ count anyhaow.’
-
-This short harangue ended, he looked slily at his hearers to see
-whether he had made any impression upon them, but with the exception
-of a vacant half laugh or two, accompanied by an uneasy shuffle on the
-part of the utterers thereof, they might as well all have been deaf
-for any notice they took of him. But suddenly, to his astonishment
-(although he was careful not to show it), Rube, who was a stranger to
-him, stepped forward and said:
-
-‘Wall, stranger, I guess I’ll hitch hosses with ye. When d’ ye start,
-an’ what’s th’ ’rangements?’
-
-‘Right, my boy, I’m real proud of ye. I’m startin’ this evenin’ as
-ever is; ’n’ as t’ ’rangements, ye’ve only got ter sign thishyer paper
-agreein’ t’ join any ship I s’lect f’r ye, ’n’ take a little keepsake
-from me in the shape of two-an’-a-haef dollars. Then ye’ll pack up
-yer traps, ’n’ I’ll see ye booked through to Noo Bedford. Yew’ll start
-first thing in the mornin’.’
-
-Hardly looking at the form of agreement, Rube signed, the stranger
-being provided with pen and ink, and dropping the money loosely into
-his pocket, he strode off homewards, leaving the loungers all agape at
-the idea of Rube Eddy, who was well known to be one of the steadiest
-and most comfortably established young men in the county, going off at
-a minute’s notice to foreign lands. Long and earnest was the discussion
-that followed, all sorts of possible and impossible reasons for the
-step Rube had taken being brought forward. The stranger lolled at his
-ease, listening in the hope that Rube’s example might prove contagious,
-but, to his disappointment, it seemed to have quite a contrary effect.
-The talkers were like men who had just witnessed one of their number
-take a plunge into the fathomless abyss, from the brink of which they
-all drew back with horror. This state of mind soon became evident
-to the stranger, who, jerking himself to his feet, shook himself,
-stretched, yawned, and finally said:
-
-‘Wall, boys, kain’t linger with ye always. I’m beginnin’ t’ feel like
-Rip Van Winkle meself in thishyer slumbersom place. I reckon I shall
-hev to hurry back to civilisation agen before I go to sleep too. How on
-airth yew fellers keep ’wake long ’nough t’ eat ’n drink I d’no.’
-
-With this parting shot he turned on his heel and disappeared into the
-gathering darkness, and they saw him no more.
-
-Meanwhile Rube, his mind a blank, reached home and, hastily ascending
-to his room, busied himself gathering together his clothing. Good
-serviceable homespun, most of it, such as would be fit for any work,
-however rough, that might fall to his lot. Having made it into a
-compact bundle, with a celerity that raised a dim wonder even in
-himself, he drew himself up, as if bracing all his fortitude to meet
-father and mother. Memories of the quiet, pleasant years began to
-crowd in upon him, but with a gesture as if to crush them back, he
-deliberately walked down the narrow stairway, whose every step seemed
-to utter a reproachful creak. Entering the kitchen, he crossed over
-to the fireside, where his parents sat facing each other and calmly
-talking over some trivial happening of the day. Standing before them,
-he waited a moment, while they both looked up at him, and in that one
-swift glance his mother knew that a crisis had arrived. In a husky
-voice, that sounded as if it belonged to someone else, he said:
-
-‘Mother, Dad, I’m goin’ away termorrer mornin’. Fergive me fer leavin’
-ye like this, but I jest had ter go. I’m no good here any more. I’m
-goin’ t’ sea, ’n’ when I come back mebbe I’ll be a stronger man. Naow
-I’m a wuthless, dreamy shote, ’n’ I feel ’s if thishyer quiet easy life
-’d certainly drive me mad befo’ very long.’
-
-‘_Must_ you go to-morrow, my son?’ murmured his mother hopelessly, for
-she knew the breed, knew that once set upon a thing the Eddys were
-immovable, and yet she felt obliged to make an effort.
-
-‘Yes, mother. ’Greement’s signed, th’ airnest money’s in my pocket, an’
-my duds are all packed. I’m goin’, sure.’
-
-‘Rube,’ said his father, ‘we’ve been mighty cluss friends all our
-lives, an’ we ain’t goin’ ter fall eout naouw, I’m dead shore o’ that.
-But ye mout ha’ told me wut ye wuz meditatin’. ’T wan’t far t’ me, boy,
-naow wuz it?’
-
-For all answer Rube reached for his father’s hand and held it tight,
-while the working of his face showed how hard the simple words had hit
-him.
-
-The father broke the silence again by saying, ‘Let us pray.’ With a
-sudden return to his childhood Rube knelt at his mother’s knee, while
-the old man, as had been his nightly wont ever since he first brought
-home his young bride, but with an added solemnity born of the shadow of
-his first bereavement, spoke to his Friend:
-
-‘Father, eour hearts air troubled. Yew’ve brung us along a pleasant
-road right inter the green valley of comfortable old age. We’ve hed a
-happy time together, ’n’ this our son hez alwus ben a delight to us. We
-looked that he sh’d still be so, that he sh’d close eour eyes when we
-laid us down at last t’ sleep. P’raps we hev been selfish, ’n’ need a
-lesson to teach us wut it means to spare an only son. He’s goin’ away
-from us f’r a long time--where, he doesn’t know himself; but however
-fur he goes, don’t let him get away from you. We don’t ask you t’ spare
-him t’ us ef it’s necessary we sh’d never see him alive any more; but
-ef it _might_ be, Father, you know how ’tis yourself, ’n’ therefore you
-know what it’ll mean t’ us t’ have him back again. Make him through
-all he’ll have t’ bear such a man as yew’d love to have him, ’n supply
-his place at home, if it ken be supplied, by a truer sense of yew’re
-presence with us. Bless my son, O Father, and bless us, f’r _yewr_
-Son’s sake. Amen.’
-
-Little more was said, although they sat hand in hand far into the
-night. Rube wanted nothing that his father could give him, having
-sufficient money for all his prospective needs; but he accepted his
-mother’s Bible gratefully, feeling that it would be a palpable link
-with her. At last they went to bed, where Rube, not from callousness,
-but from sheer overstrain of mind, slept soundly. His mother lay all
-through the hours silently praying, while the unhindered tears trickled
-slowly and continuously down. And his father watched with her.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-DEPARTURE
-
-
-Morning broke over the Eddy homestead grey and cheerless, a fitting
-reflection of the frame of mind holding sway over its inmates. Rube
-came down with his grip-sack in his hand, his best clothes donned, and
-an air of stern resolve on his strong features. He found his father and
-mother awaiting him in the humble room where he had met them ever since
-his mind first awakened to the knowledge of worldly matters. For a few
-moments after the ‘good mornings’ were said, no word further passed the
-lips of the three. Suddenly the mother spoke, saying:
-
-‘Rube, my son, you never told us _whar’_ you were goin’.’
-
-To some of us perhaps it may seem strange that neither father nor
-mother had asked this question before, but the fact is that in their
-secluded lives the mere idea of one of them leaving home for so long
-was sufficiently terrible, without any definition of the precise
-locality to which the wanderer might be directing his steps being
-thought of. But the mother’s heart was already in prospect reaching out
-after the absent one, and therefore it was but fitting and natural that
-she should be the first to desire to know whither he was going. Rube
-flushed a deep red as the necessary vagueness of his reply dawned upon
-him, but he said:
-
-‘I’m goin’ ter sea, mother; thet’s all I know at present. When I git t’
-Noo Bedford an’ find out whar’ I kin git letters or write frum, be sure
-I’ll let you know to onct. I’m drefful sorry I kain’t tell you anythin’
-more ’n thet.’
-
-The morning meal, ample and palatable as it always is on these Eastern
-farms, was spread, and the three took their places at the board; but
-although they made a brave show of eating, the food would not be got
-rid of, and suddenly Rube arose, as if the sight of his father’s worn
-face and his mother’s eyes, bleared with weeping through the long
-night, was too much for him, saying as he did so:
-
-‘Wall, it’s time I wuz off. Good-bye, mother; good-bye, father. I know
-yewr prayers’ll hover roun’ me wharever I go; and ez soon ez I hev
-worn out this drefful restless feelin’ I’ll come back and settle down,
-please God, never to go away any more.’
-
-A silent kiss from the mother, a grave handshake from the father, and
-Rube turned his back upon home. Nor did he once look behind him as he
-strode down the road towards where, in the little village, a conveyance
-was waiting to take him to the station, whence he might reach New
-Bedford by railroad. He did not look back because he feared to see
-his mother’s face. Not that his resolve to go would have been thereby
-weakened, but that he could not help feeling guilty in that he was
-weakly fleeing from what he could not help knowing was his duty--weakly
-giving way to what he could not help knowing was after all, cowardice.
-But who shall dare to judge the action of his fellow-men under
-abnormal conditions? ‘Put yourself in his place’ is a good motto,
-but how very rarely is it possible for us to act it out! Therefore,
-although many of us may very well feel inclined to judge Rube harshly
-for thus deserting father and mother and a life of usefulness, and
-becoming a wanderer on the face of the deep simply because the woman
-of his choice could not be his, let us not forget that ever since
-the world began, and men and women have been able to recount their
-experiences, strange things have been recorded as done by disappointed
-lovers against their better judgment.
-
-Rube’s mind as the train sped him onwards towards the beautiful New
-England town whence he was to start upon his long sea journeyings was
-almost a blank. Never given much to a habit of introspection, he was
-by reason of the shock that he had recently received less able now to
-devote himself to concentrated thought than ever; and so, had he been
-asked what he was thinking about during that long railway journey, he
-would have replied, no doubt with perfect frankness, ‘Hardly anything.’
-I think this experience is not uncommon, even among men and women given
-to meditation, when suddenly they have received a mental blow. Be that
-as it may--and I will own that it is a debatable point--when Rube
-arrived at New Bedford he had just the air of stolid bewilderment that
-is generally noticeable upon the faces of country-bred people first
-coming in contact with the strangeness of life in a seaport town. And
-truly one might have sailed the wide world round and not have found
-a more wonderful seaport than New Bedford was in those days. Men of
-almost every nation under heaven, clad in outlandish garments, jostled
-each other along the strongly smelling wharves and picturesque streets
-bordering the bay. New Bedford was then in the height of her prosperity
-as metropolis of the whaling world. Over six hundred fine ships came
-and went on their adventurous sea-questings, bringing with them from
-the uttermost ends of the earth queer-looking denizens of those far-off
-lands. Kanakas from the multitudinous Isles of the Pacific, Aborigines
-from Central America, Aleuts from Alaska, Japanese from Nippon,
-Chinese, Malays, Papuans, and Dyaks from the East Indian Archipelago,
-Lascars from Hindustan, Arabs from the Persian Gulf, and last, but
-by far the most numerous of all these wanderers, Portuguese of every
-hue, from deepest black to creamy white, from the Fortunate Isles.
-The diversity of peoples was not more wonderful than the quaintness
-of their costumes, which were, indeed, a chance medley of all the
-national dresses of the world. Yet in every case a keen observer, and
-one acquainted with the subject, might have recognised evidences of an
-attempt on the part of the wearer to give to his nondescript raiment
-some national peculiarity. Not only were the people a wonderful sight,
-but another sense--that of smell--was overpoweringly arrested on the
-crowded wharves, where scores of weatherbeaten ships discharged their
-greasy spoils, the odour from which permeated the entire atmosphere,
-seizing upon a stranger with almost intoxicating effect. Then the
-sounds!--the loud cries of the labourers as they toiled to discharge
-the cargoes from the ships, the wonderful medley of languages spoken
-by the strange seafarers slouching along the shore, and, pervading
-all, the hollow murmur of the sea as it rolled in on the beaches of the
-beautiful bay under the stress of a strong landward gale.
-
-Amidst these novel sights, sounds, and smells, Rube made his way like
-a man in a dream towards the place whither he had been directed, not
-without considerable difficulty, as three out of every four persons
-of whom he inquired his direction did not understand a word that he
-said. This, to a man who had never before met with anybody not speaking
-his own tongue, was really bewildering, and it was not therefore
-to be wondered at that by the time Rube had found the building he
-sought, his mental processes, never too acute, were reduced almost
-to numbness. Inquiring timidly at the door of the building to which
-he had been directed as the place where he should find Mr. Sawtell,
-he was answered nonchalantly by an elderly man, whose grey beard was
-plentifully streaked with tobacco juice, that if he went right in
-and took the first door on the left he’d find what he sought. Rube
-meekly obeyed, and entered a large, high-ceilinged room, scantily
-furnished, with several desks enclosed by a low fence and some benches.
-Two men sat at the desks looking as unlike the embodiment of our
-modern ideas of clerks as could well be imagined, for both of them
-had soft wideawake hats perched on the backs of their heads, both
-were smoking enormous cigars, and both bore in their countenances
-the expression of temporarily out-of-work pirates more than that of
-peaceful quill-drivers. As Rube approached the nearest desk he was
-somewhat amazed to see the clerk with his chair tilted back and his
-feet apparently resting upon the papers before him. He gazed at the
-strongly-marked lineaments of the official, and that worthy returned
-his look with interest, presently removing the cigar from his mouth
-and saying: ‘Wal, young feller; an’ wut kin I hev the pleasure?’ Rube
-stammered out, rather incoherently: ‘Mr. Sawtell engaged me th’ other
-day to come down here to jine a ship to go to sea.’ ‘Oh!’ said the
-clerk, ‘Sawtell engaged yer, did he? And wut mought be the name of
-the ship?’ ‘I don’ know,’ replied Reuben, who was fast recovering his
-equanimity; ’he jest told me to come right here.’ ‘That’s all right,
-sonny,’ said the clerk. ‘Sit down thar an’ wait fer him; he’ll be roun’
-bimeby.’
-
-Reuben sat down as directed, and for nearly two hours had the interest
-of seeing individuals, something like himself, enter, ask almost the
-same question, and receive almost the same reply, until the room was
-fairly full. Then, when Reuben began to think that the whole affair
-must be a mistake, Sawtell entered. With him there came a man looking
-more like an Eastern patriarch than a seafarer--a tall, loose-jointed,
-hook-nosed, grey-bearded man, clad in homespun, a long coat reaching
-nearly to his feet, and a soft steeple-crowned felt hat upon his head.
-But quaint as his figure might be, there was no mistaking the keen,
-eagle-like glance of his eyes as he swept them round on the silent
-men meekly awaiting the arbiter of their fate. And it was he, the
-Patriarch, who spoke first. ‘Is this the crowd you’ve gut fur me,
-Sawtell?’ ‘Yes, Cap’n Hampden, an’ ez likely a lookin’ lot ’s ever
-I see.’ ‘H’m, mebbe so, but jest naow I guess there’s a consid’ble
-quantity of plough soil hangin’ to ’em. But they _do_ seem likely
-enough, as yer say. However, I gut no time to spare. We’re bound out
-first tide to-morrer, an’ if these gentlemen air _quite_ disengaged’
-(waving his hand towards the clerks) ‘we’ll purceed to business to
-once.’ Then, raising his voice, he addressed the waiting candidates
-comprehensively, saying: ‘Wal, young men, so ye feel inclined to try
-yewr fortunes upon the ragin’ deep, do ye?’ Muttered responses went up,
-of which no man might gather the import, save that they were in the
-affirmative. ‘Right an’ good,’ said the Patriarch; ‘step up here, and
-hear this _gentleman_’ (with a sarcastic inflection upon the last word)
-‘read eout t’ ye the conditions of sarvice.’
-
-With an unexpected alacrity one of the clerks sprang to his feet,
-and, from a somewhat grimy document, read in a high sing-song tone of
-voice an agreement whereby the said crew covenanted to proceed in the
-good ship _Xiphias_ to any port or ports of the navigable ocean in
-pursuit of whales, seals, and any other denizens of the deep capable
-of being made profitable to crew and owners; voyage not to exceed four
-years. It must be confessed that, slurred over as the last two words
-were (unintentionally, no doubt), several of the candidates suddenly
-showed a wistfulness of countenance, as if they had a prospective idea
-of what those four years might mean, but no word was spoken by any of
-them. Then, one by one, they stepped up to the desk and signed their
-names, first being told that they would be entitled to receive a good
-and sufficient quantity of cooked provisions, and the 250th lay, in
-return for their unquestioning obedience at all times to all orders
-that Captain Hampden and his officers might issue to them. And this
-important preliminary finished, they were all sternly ordered, as being
-men now under command, to be down at the ship by six o’clock in the
-morning at latest.
-
-So the newly engaged crew filed out of the office and stood in a little
-group on the sidewalk hesitatingly. A few words passed--invitations to
-drink for the most part--and one or two spoke to Rube; but he answered
-them unthinkingly, feeling, indeed, the need for being alone. It was
-all so new and strange to the country-bred man, and he felt that
-conversation with anybody would be insupportable. So, with muttered
-excuses, he left the company, and went for a stroll along the wharves,
-taking in all the wonders of this strange place with wide-open eyes,
-but most of his other senses nearly out of action. At last, utterly
-weary, he turned into a respectable-looking eatinghouse by the
-waterside, and called for some food, inquiring of the young woman who
-brought it whether he might take up his lodging there for the night.
-She answered ‘Yes’ with a surprised air, and, apparently unable to
-overcome her curiosity, put several questions to him, as to whence he
-came and whither he was going, all of which he answered evasively,
-conveying the idea that what he wanted was to be left alone in peace
-with his own thoughts. Quite unaccustomed to such rudeness on the
-part of her customers, the young woman tossed her head and departed,
-leaving him to his solitary meal. Nor did she return again until,
-rapping on the table, he summoned her and asked to be shown his room.
-With a scornful look at a man who could be so utterly unresponsive to
-the offer of polite conversation, she led the way to a very small,
-barely-furnished chamber, showed him in and left him; and he, with the
-same bewildered air that he had worn ever since reaching the town,
-slowly took off his clothes and got into bed, although it was hardly
-yet dark. In a few minutes the strain of the past twenty-four hours was
-relaxed, and he was fast asleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-OUTWARD BOUND
-
-
-Rube awakened before dawn without being called, but with a momentary
-feeling of terror lest he should have overslept himself. The sound of
-a neighbouring church clock striking five reassured him, and hurriedly
-dressing he made his way downstairs, paid his modest bill to the sleepy
-landlord, who was peering out into the grey of the early morning, and
-rapidly passed along the wharves in the direction of the ship which had
-been pointed out to him the previous afternoon. Arriving alongside,
-he was surprised to see how little bustle and apparent preparation
-for seafaring was in evidence. Several men were slouching about the
-decks, and one energetic individual was bellowing occasional orders
-in an exceedingly loud voice, but beyond that the vessel might, for
-all he could see, have been going to stay where she was indefinitely.
-Presently, however, he noticed a little group coming with swaying steps
-up the wharf, and soon they were alongside, several of them evidently
-suffering from their potations of the previous evening. Then the tall
-patriarchal figure of the Captain appeared, stepped on board, and
-instantly the ship wakened into life.
-
-All unaware of what was expected of him, Rube stood on deck just
-where he had first stepped over the side, his few belongings in his
-grip-sack lying by him, until a short, thick-set man, with a face
-like unpolished mahogany, came up to him and said: ‘Naow, wut yew
-doin’ here--hain’t shipped as passenger, hev ye? Them yewr duds? Get
-’em below and be mighty smart abaout it, ’less you want consid’ble
-trouble.’ Mechanically he obeyed the man’s actions more than his words,
-which were, indeed, more than half of them almost unintelligible to
-him. Going forward in the direction indicated by his interlocutor,
-and finding his way below, he entered a large apartment wrapped in
-the densest gloom, and it was not until somebody (who, he could not
-see) struck a light, that he was able to discern its outlines, to
-see all around it bunks, some occupied by bundles of clothing and
-miscellaneous objects, and others by sleeping men. The atmosphere of
-this dark den was foul in the extreme--so much so, in fact, that he
-felt choking--and, without losing any time, he pushed his belongings
-into the nearest corner that presented itself and hastened on deck.
-
-The next hour passed with him like a fevered dream. What he was doing
-or why he was doing it he knew not at all; for is there any creature
-more helpless and ignorant than a grown-up man who, for the first time
-in his life, takes part in the work of a ship putting out to sea? The
-very language is unintelligible. Everything is so new, so strange,
-and when presently to these mysteries is added the curious staggering
-motion of the ship, the neophyte’s plight is a most unhappy one. But
-it may be doubted whether of all the much-advertised remedies for
-sea-sickness there are any so effectual as being kept at work, allowed
-no respite, no moment to brood over the physical inconveniences that
-assail the candidate for sea honours. The remedy is a terrible one, it
-is true, but that it is effectual is equally true, and so Rube found
-it. But when he was ordered aloft to loose a sail he gazed piteously up
-the rigging and mentally commended himself to the care of God. For as
-the ship was just feeling the inroll of the wide sea, and putting on
-a most disconcerting motion, it appeared to him perfectly impossible
-that he should be able to get up aloft and down again alive. Added to
-this was the fact that he had not the remotest conception of what he
-was intended to do. But a stalwart Portuguese standing near him when
-the order was given murmured, ‘Kem along, Greenie; I shows you haow,’
-and, gratefully willing, in spite of his wretched bodily condition,
-he clumsily clambered up the rigging after his mentor, followed by a
-perfect hurricane of opprobrium from the officer on deck, who felt
-justly angered at his most reprehensible want of smartness. He gained
-the foretopsail yard, and then, despite all his earnest endeavours to
-learn from the Portuguese what he was supposed to do, was so overcome
-with nausea that he could do nothing but hold on, just hanging there, a
-limp, swaying body, unconscious of everything around and about him in
-the utter misery of his inner man.
-
-Perhaps it is as well that we draw a veil over the proceedings of the
-next few days. To follow a novice like Rube through such an ordeal as
-he was now undergoing, while it might certainly be interesting, could
-not fail, if faithfully reported, to be very distressing to anybody
-possessing a scintilla of sympathy. Let it, then, suffice to say that
-on the third morning at daybreak Rube, while sitting between the main
-stays keeping the look-out, began to realise that an interest in his
-surroundings was rapidly beginning. Also, for the first time since he
-had left home, he found himself thinking of how matters might be going
-on at the farm, and then, as he pictured father and mother coming down
-to the morning meal and offering up a prayer for the absent one, his
-heart melted, familiar words of prayer formed upon his lips, he bowed
-his head and sought the ante-chamber of the King. And, for the first
-time since he had received the news that had wrought so tremendous a
-change in his life, he coupled with his prayers the name of Priscilla,
-that she might be blessed and helped wherever she might be, and that
-her path in life might be made infinitely smoother for her than she
-had, innocently enough, made his for him.
-
-While engaged in this sacred reverie he allowed his head to droop
-upon his hand, and became for the time utterly unconscious of his
-surroundings.
-
-And so it came to pass that the second mate, whose watch it happened
-to be at the time, making his periodical prowl round the deck to see
-that all was in order, peered up at the look-out place and saw, as he
-thought, the watchman asleep. His next move was to procure a bucket of
-water, which he launched with accurate aim at Rube’s crouching form.
-Rube started upright, gasping and full of bewilderment at this strange
-thing that had befallen him. But he was not left long in doubt, for
-almost immediately came a storm of profanity, interspersed with grim
-warnings as to the kind and quantity of evil that would befall him if
-ever again he went to sleep on his look-out. At the first opportunity
-Rube essayed to reply, and point out that he was not asleep, not
-knowing, poor fellow, that no excuses of the kind are ever accepted on
-board ship. His few stammered words only brought the bucket flying at
-his head, and being, after all, a sensible young fellow, he took this
-rough hint to mean that the only possible course for him to pursue,
-under present conditions at any rate, was to take all that might be
-tendered to him, making no reply unless ordered.
-
-But the _Xiphias_ was not at all a bad ship. We may go farther, and
-say she was a good ship, because Captain Hampden, stern grey Quaker
-that he was, discountenanced all ill-usage of the crew that was not,
-to his mind, absolutely necessary. And as he, being part owner, had
-provided his crew with a plentiful supply of fairly good food, another
-great source of misery on board ship was removed from them. But still
-the life for a time seemed very hard to our hero, and would have
-been much harder but for his magnificent physique and his splendid
-patience. Moreover, he now found much comfort and a grand outlet for
-his long pent-up affections in ministering to the many needs of his
-hapless shipmates. For they, like himself, were drawn largely from
-inland dwelling people, and several of them were much more helpless
-than he. They had come to sea all unwittingly, without the slightest
-foreknowledge of what awaited them, just as he had, and therefore, of
-necessity, it would be some considerable time before they could settle
-down to the stolid endurance which is absolutely necessary for all
-those who go down to the sea in sailing ships.
-
-A week elapsed, during which all hands were gradually being shaken down
-into their several grooves. Every man on board had been allotted his
-post in the boats or as a shipkeeper against the day of battle with the
-monarchs of the deep. The various green hands had now some of their
-greenness mellowed, and were learning, or had learned, to get aloft
-and do something else beside hold on tightly when they got there. But
-this was the smallest part--the mere rudiments, as it were--of their
-education. Sailors on board whaling ships are, of course, required to
-be fairly smart aloft, fairly smart at the ordinary avocations of a
-sailor; but the principal object of their life is that they shall be
-smart boatmen, and herein they differ entirely from any other merchant
-seafarers whatever. And this was soon made evident to them, for at
-the first opportunity, the weather being fine enough to admit of
-boats being lowered with a crew of absolutely incompetent men without
-danger of those valuable vessels being damaged, all hands, except four
-retained to handle the ship under the charge of the captain, were sent
-away to practise boatmanship.
-
-This was a severe trial, and all the green hands suffered much. But
-even here Rube’s patience and muscular development stood him in good
-stead--saved him, in fact, from the energetic attentions lavishly
-bestowed by the officer and harpooner of his boat upon the other
-occupants. It must be confessed that he felt many misgivings upon
-being so near that great heaving blue surface as he was in the frail
-whaleboat. Different (and so much harder) as his life had already
-been on board the ship from all his previous experiences, it was ease
-and comfort as compared with this apparent tempting of fortune in a
-mere cockleshell. However, given sufficient energy on the part of the
-teachers, a modicum of courage and sufficient docility on the part of
-the taught, men can speedily accommodate themselves to any alteration
-in their habits of life, no matter how great it may be, and so, after
-three days of tremendously hard training, Captain Hampden expressed
-himself satisfied that his newly-gathered crew of clodhoppers might
-safely be taken into battle with the great sperm whale, and have
-a reasonable chance of emerging therefrom victorious. The weather
-had, mercifully to those new-comers, been fairly fine for the time
-of year--late autumn--although the wind had hung persistently from
-the S.E., thus hindering their progress greatly; but one morning at
-daybreak, the sky lowering threateningly, they were suddenly attacked
-by a severe gale from the N.E. Amid the hoarse cries of the officers
-and the blundering but hearty efforts of the crew, sail was shortened
-to the two close-reefed topsails and foresail, and the old _Xiphias_
-fled southward at a great rate for her. Then it was that Reuben, being
-sent aloft upon some errand of fastening a loose end, was suddenly
-seized with an attack of giddiness and fell, an inert mass, into the
-sea. In a wonderfully short space of time the vessel was rounded to
-and a boat lowered and manned, not by her own crew, but by picked men
-capable of handling her as she _should_ be handled. So smart were their
-efforts that in less than ten minutes they came up with the helpless
-form of Rube as he lay unconscious upon the surface. He was seized and
-hauled into the boat, brought on board, and immediately subjected to
-the orthodox operations for restoring life to the apparently drowned.
-Long and carefully they toiled to bring him back to life, and at last
-succeeded in doing so, but when he opened his eyes upon the world
-again all the details of his previous life seemed as if they had
-been completely obliterated. Dismissed to the forecastle, he groped
-forward like a man suddenly awakened from a long dream, and to all the
-inquiries of his shipmates he turned a blank face, an uncomprehending
-demeanour.
-
-But his grand bodily powers enabled him to return to his duties almost
-immediately, and from thenceforward, strangely enough, he seemed to
-assimilate all that was taught him with wonderful ease--in fact, as
-the hard-bitten officer to whose watch he belonged said: ‘Thet big
-hayseed o’ mine seems as if ’e was a born sailorman.’ So fast did he
-learn that his watchmates became absurdly jealous of him--a waste of
-attention on their part, since of it he took not the slightest notice
-whatever--seemed, indeed, really incapable of doing so.
-
-Captain Hampden became interested in this peculiar development, and
-occasionally condescended to ply him with questions as to his previous
-experience, but all in vain. Nothing could be got out of him, and,
-baffled, the good old skipper had to content himself by saying to his
-chief officer: ‘Wall, at any rate, we seem to hev gut hold of a mighty
-good man.’ And gradually his quiet perseverance in well doing, the
-impossibility of making him angry, and the readiness with which he
-would always help to the utmost of his power any of his shipmates that
-were in trouble, won him a high place in the hearts of all on board;
-even the Portuguese (never very friendly to men of northern breed)
-could not withhold from him some uncouth tributes of affection.
-
-And so the ship made her way slowly down to the Line, failing, however,
-to the disgust of the officers, to raise a whale for the first month
-after her departure from port. But the time was well spent, for all
-hands, by dint of incessant practice, were now in a high state of
-efficiency, only requiring their baptism of fire, if it may be called
-so--their initiation into the art and mystery of whale-fighting--to
-make them as good a crew as any whaling skipper could desire to
-have under his command. All bullying, hazing, and what we should
-call brutality, had ceased. The ship was quite as peaceful as any
-‘limejuicer,’ and it was easy to see from the contented faces and
-pleasant remarks of the officers how well satisfied they were with
-the progress made by the men under their command in the direction of
-becoming decent sailormen.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-DISILLUSIONMENT
-
-
-Perhaps it is high time that we returned for a while to the career of
-our heroine in her new sphere. It must be remembered that she, as so
-many other young women have done, took a leap in the dark, committing
-herself and her future to the care of a man about whose antecedents and
-character she knew absolutely nothing, having only in the few short
-days of their acquaintance seen him at his very best. But such was the
-glamour with which she had invested her hero that, although she was
-startled and troubled in mind by his brutal language and still more
-brutal treatment of the men under his command from the first hour that
-she came on board his ship, she attributed it all to the necessities of
-a captain’s position. Every oath made her shudder, every blow made her
-wince, yet she bore it all without remark, as belonging to a new order
-of things of which she had hitherto been entirely ignorant, and upon
-the merits of which at present she felt herself quite unable to give
-an opinion. Perhaps, had she been able to hear the remarks that were
-passed by the crew to one another when they thought such remarks might
-safely be made, she would have shuddered still more. But, poor girl,
-all such warning words were hidden from her, neither did she know--how
-could she, indeed?--that her husband bore the unenviable reputation
-of being the hardest skipper of all the hard-bitten crowd of such
-men sailing from the whaling ports of North America. Still, even her
-trustful heart could not fail to be wounded at the incessant cruelty
-which she was now compelled to witness.
-
-The crew, driven on board at the last moment before sailing like a pack
-of cowed dogs, were a set of miserable ragamuffins, taken, apparently,
-because none others could be obtained at any price. There were only
-two Americans among them--two poor lads from the Western States, who
-had run away from home to go to sea; the rest were representatives of
-almost as many races as there were members. This, in itself, made for
-the safety of the officers--made the brutality much less likely to be
-resented successfully, because, among that medley of foreigners, there
-could be no banding together for a common purpose of revenge. Not that
-such an event was at all probable, because, according to the fixed plan
-pursued on board the majority of such vessels, the precaution was taken
-while yet the crew, who were nearly all green hands, were in the throes
-of nausea and bewilderment at their strange surroundings, to beat them,
-with or without pretext, until their spirits were thoroughly broken and
-the possibility of their retaliating was hopelessly remote. Captain
-Da Silva, in spite of the presence of his wife, which might have been
-expected to have a humanising influence over him, was this voyage more
-savagely brutal than ever he had been before. His four officers, who
-knew him well, and who were all eager followers of his plans (had to
-be, indeed, in order to keep their position with him), confessed one
-to another that the old man seemed as if he wanted to show his bride
-how black a demon he _could_ be. _He_ said, not by way of excuse, but
-apparently stating a mournful fact, in conversation with his officers,
-that in all his fishing he had never had such a crowd to deal with
-as he had got this time, and before they had been at sea a week he
-discussed with the officers elaborate plans for running across to the
-Azores, driving his present crew overboard and shipping a crowd of his
-fellow-countrymen therefrom. But this was going a little too far, for
-three of his officers were Americans, and they by no means relished the
-prospect of having an entire crew of Portuguese on board an American
-ship. They felt that it would be indeed exchanging the devils they knew
-for the devils they did _not_ know, and, as far as they dared, made
-this plain to their brutal commander. And he, wise as well as wicked,
-took the hint, for he could not afford to lose such splendid whalemen
-as his officers had proved themselves to be. So, instead of working
-to the eastward, they shaped a course for the Line, and met with such
-good fortune in the shape of weather that, without the parting of a
-rope-yarn, they found themselves at the end of a fortnight well within
-the Tropics.
-
-It was one of the characteristics of Da Silva’s career that he always
-seemed to have extraordinary luck. This voyage was no exception, for
-no sooner was the vessel shipshape, the whaling gear rigged, and all
-fishing preparations made, than he, taking the masthead trip one
-morning, sighted a grand school of sperm whales. Instantly his voice
-rang throughout the ship, calling all hands to action, and even those
-unhappy men who had had the hardest experience of his cruelty could not
-withhold a tribute of admiration for his wonderful powers of command,
-presence of mind, and exact knowledge of how to do the right thing at
-the right moment.
-
-That scratch crew of wastrels, broken-spirited as they were, seemed
-to catch a spark of his enthusiasm, and exerted themselves in
-extraordinary ways in order to gain his approval.
-
-Priscilla, utterly neglected amid this hurly-burly, sat perched on
-the taffrail looking with wide-eyed wonderment upon the busy scene. A
-thrill of terror seized her as she saw her husband, standing erect in
-the stern of the first boat lowered, urging his crew, with an unbroken
-stream of profanity, to the highest efforts of which they were capable.
-She could see the whales, but she hardly knew what was afoot. All that
-was real to her was that the ship was deserted by almost all hands,
-including the commander, only three or four being left to handle the
-sails. So there she sat solitary, alarmed, full of fears for her
-husband’s safety, for the result of this tremendous manœuvre, the
-object of which she only dimly understood. The cries from the two men
-at the masthead to those on deck she understood not at all, nor did she
-dare to ask the helmsman for any information for fear that her innocent
-inquiry might reach her husband’s ears later and be fiercely resented
-by him. But he had obtained such a hold over her that even now she did
-not blame him: she only felt sorry that he should not have had time (as
-she put it to herself) to acquaint her with the reason for his hurried
-departure.
-
-Meanwhile the five boats, their crews straining at the oars to the
-utmost limit of their strength, sped away at right angles to the
-direction in which the whales lay. The Captain kept the lead, not that
-the men in the other boats were not doing their best, but that he had a
-picked crew, and that every man of them was working as if in imminent
-bodily fear of some terrible punishment unless he exerted all his
-muscular power. The oars rose and fell with the regularity of steam
-pistons, the water foamed past the boats, but no other sound was heard
-save the laboured panting of the men and the low, hissing execrations
-of the Captain. It is popularly supposed that when rowing boats after
-whales there is a great deal of shouted encouragement, either kindly or
-the reverse, that the men themselves are apt to break into song, as Dr.
-Beale permits himself to say, ‘The men sang the time-honoured whaling
-chant of “Away, my boys, away, my boys, it’s time for us to go,”’ but
-when it is remembered how very slight a sound, even at the distance of
-miles, will suffice to alarm the valuable quarry, it will at once be
-seen that experienced whale hunters would not be likely to do such a
-foolish thing as to make unnecessary noises, even supposing that they
-had breath to spare for doing so.
-
-At last, when the rowers felt as if their arms would drop off at the
-shoulders, the Captain’s deep voice was heard saying, ‘Peak oars, step
-mast, up sprit.’ These actions were immediately copied by each of
-the other boats, and, in three minutes from the time they had ceased
-rowing, the five boats, under the steady stress of their big sails,
-were bounding over the bright sea before the wind down on to the
-whales. The propulsion with the oars had only been resorted to for the
-purpose of obtaining a good weather gauge. That once reached, and the
-sails set, the boats’ heads were turned at right angles to the course
-they had been pursuing so that they might now, with the wind almost
-astern, run down upon the whales at high speed, and with the least
-possible amount of splash.
-
-It was a splendid sight, that group of unconscious monsters calmly
-and methodically pursuing their way, quietly attending to their own
-business of procuring food and enjoying their life; and here, close
-at hand, stealing upon them like pirates upon a helpless merchantman,
-this little flotilla of destroyers. Each officer and harpooner was now
-in the throes of expectation, every nerve tense, all their hopes high
-that they would reach their prey before the periodical descent of the
-whales took place. In nine cases out of ten this would not have been
-the case, but here again, Captain Da Silva’s luck appeared to be in the
-ascendant, for, as if the boats were living creatures, full of eager
-desire to come to close quarters with the enemy, they leaped forward
-with ever-accelerating speed, until the foremost whale, a large bull of
-about seventy barrels (or, say, sixty feet in length) was only a couple
-of lengths ahead of the skipper’s boat. Hoarsely he growled, ‘Stand up,
-Jose!’ The harpooner’s crouching form straightened itself, and, raising
-the harpoon in both hands while steadying himself by his left thigh in
-the hollow of the clumsy cleat, he waited, a heroic figure, until,
-by a skilful sweep of the steering oar, the boat swung end on to the
-whale’s broad side, and struck it, at the same moment as the harpoon
-flew from those nervous hands and buried itself in the quivering
-blubber up to the hitches. Calmly pitching the stray line out of the
-box over the boat’s side, the harpooner turned to go aft with the face
-of a man knowing that his duty had been well done. Without taking the
-slightest notice of the writhings of the tortured leviathan so near or
-the tremendous commotion in the water, he superintended the rolling
-up of the sail, the unshipping of the mast, and the passing of it aft
-where it would be out of the way of the operations.
-
-[Illustration: THE WHALE WENT STEADILY DOWN, DOWN, DOWN.
-
-_P. 49._]
-
-While the crew of the boat were thus engaged the Captain, with that
-skill for which he was justly famous, had, by means of the big steering
-oar, manipulated the boat so that she lay at a safe distance from the
-whale. The hardly-pressed monster, in orthodox fashion, finding that
-he could not free himself from the galling weapon, descended steadily,
-taking out line at a gentle rate, while the Captain changed ends with
-the harpooner, unsheathed his favourite lance, and awaited the return
-of the whale to the surface. While so doing, his countenance was a
-study in ferocity. The immediate prospect of bloodshed seemed to arouse
-in him all the animal, and, as he glared fiercely around upon his crew,
-they hardly dared meet his eye, so terrible did he look. But he was
-compelled to forego his delightful occupation for a while, and remain
-as quiet as it was possible for him to do while the whale went steadily
-down, down, down. Meanwhile, by a piece of amazing good fortune, each
-of the other boats had succeeded in getting fast to a whale without
-any accident, and now they were all engaged in the same manner as the
-Captain’s boat, waiting, with such patience as the officers could
-command, for the rising to the surface of their respective whales.
-The remainder of the school, having apparently lost all control of
-themselves, wandered aimlessly around the little company of boats,
-going slowly backwards and forwards, thrusting their great heads out of
-the water without apparently the slightest idea of what to do or where
-to go, and arousing in the minds of the officers, especially in that of
-the Captain, the fiercest resentment at their inability to take more
-advantage of so splendid an opportunity as was now offered them. After
-a wait of nearly half an hour, all the harpooned whales came to the
-surface at nearly the same moment, and immediately the scene underwent
-a change as complete as it is possible to imagine. The wounded
-monsters, rushing frantically in every direction in their vain efforts
-to escape, the fierce guttural yells of the officers as they plied
-their slender, gleaming lances upon those vast bodies, the welling
-fountains of blood that befouled the bright sea surface, all went to
-make up a picture of savagery which could hardly be equalled by that
-presented in any land battle. So successful was the conduct of this
-first encounter that hardly two hours had elapsed since the boats first
-left the ship when the whole five whales were dead, the boats cleared
-up, and all was in readiness for the prey to be taken alongside the
-ship. She, being well and smartly handled by the three or four people
-left on board, and having got well to windward of the area of battle,
-now ran down to where the Captain’s boat lay by the side of his dead
-whale. Having made the line fast to a hole in the whale’s fluke, he
-ordered his boat to run alongside the ship, and, climbing smartly on
-board, he superintended the hauling of the whale alongside. Now, the
-ship being hampered by that gigantic body made fast to her, it became
-necessary for the crews of the other boats to tow their whales as best
-they could in the direction of the vessel. Fearfully long and tedious
-was the process, and the impatience of the Captain rose to a height
-of almost maniacal fury, although he knew full well that every man
-was doing his utmost to perform the tremendous task allotted to him.
-Without a break they toiled until the sun was nearly setting, nor was
-one moment’s respite allowed them until the whole of the day’s catch
-was secured alongside and astern of the ship. Then, and not till then,
-the Captain shouted with a grudging note in his voice, ‘Mr. Court, send
-the hands to dinner.’ The order was repeated by the mate, and the men
-wearily dragged themselves below, where the food--cooked long ago--was
-awaiting them. But as they went the Captain shouted again, ‘Look lively
-now; yew wanter be on deck again in twenty minutes.’ Having delivered
-himself thus, he turned towards his cabin, where, for the first time
-that day, he greeted his wife. She, quite bewildered by the day’s
-proceedings, summoned up all her affection, and came to greet him with
-arms outspread, but he, glowering fiercely at her, said, ‘I got no time
-for fooling now; I got something else to think about.’
-
-This rebuff reduced her to a pitiable state of mind, for it was utterly
-incomprehensible. That she had done anything to deserve it she could
-not feel, and, indeed, it was a strange thing that a man in the height
-of his success, having inaugurated his cruise in so splendid a fashion,
-with enormous profits lying only waiting to be realised, should be so
-hatefully morose and savage in his demeanour.
-
-It was a puzzle beyond hope of solution. The meal was taken in utter
-silence, the food being bolted in truly animal fashion; and, while yet
-the last mouthfuls were being masticated, the skipper rose abruptly
-from his seat and said, ‘Now, then, Mr. Court, start the hands again.’
-While they had been at dinner the shipkeepers had completed their task
-of getting the gear ready for cutting in, so that when the officers
-came on deck and summoned the hands it only remained to commence
-cutting in the whales at once. Loud orders resounded along the decks,
-but, for perhaps half a minute, there was no response, and this seemed
-to act upon the Captain maddeningly. Snatching a belaying-pin from the
-rail, he strode forward muttering curses, and, beating his weapon upon
-the scuttle hatch of the forecastle, he roared down into the gloomy
-cavern, ‘D’ ye want to be smoked out like a nest of hornets?’ Full of
-alarms, the weary men clambered up the steep ladder, but as the first
-one reached the deck he was met by a tremendous blow full in the face,
-which sent him reeling to the deck.
-
-It must be admitted that captain and officers worked hardest of all;
-in fact, they seemed like men of steel rather than of flesh and blood,
-and even the weary seamen could hardly refuse a tribute of admiration
-to the way in which they were led. By midnight, under the glare of
-blazing cressets suspended from the davit heads, they had managed to
-cut in two of the whales, and had decapitated the remaining three,
-the great columnar heads being strung astern by hawsers. Then the
-Captain reluctantly gave orders that half the crew should retire for an
-hour while the other half busied themselves in making some sort of a
-clearance on the deck, which was now piled almost from end to end with
-blubber, and ankle-deep in oil. How speedily that hour passed for the
-privileged ones only they could tell. Indeed, it seemed but a moment
-before they were back at work again, and the other half were sent for
-the same brief period to rest. But the savage brute of a captain took
-no rest. He seemed superhuman, and when day dawned the whole of the
-spoil had been taken on board, with the exception of the three heads,
-for which no room could be found at present.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-A STRICKEN DEMON
-
-
-It has been a frequent matter of remark, not merely by myself, but by
-all the writers with whom I have conversed who have ever interviewed
-old sailors on the subject of their experiences, how difficult it is
-for the latter to tell what they have seen. Their memories are most
-keen, but the mighty happenings they have witnessed seem to overwhelm
-their simple vocabulary, and they will suddenly break off in the
-midst of a splendid tale, and, holding up their hands in a gesture of
-despair, cry out, ‘Oh, God, if I _could_ only tell ye what I’ve seen!’
-I am led to think that perhaps it is this felt inability to do justice
-to the memory of what they have really seen that has often made sailors
-possessed of vivid imaginations invent magnificent lies, rushing by
-some curious mental paradox into the opposite extreme, from the sober
-recital of fact to an absurdly extravagant invention of fiction.
-
-But be that as it may, there can be no doubt that even those who have
-been most successful in the attempt to transport their readers to
-the scenes which they themselves have witnessed, are often touched
-by the same feeling of inability, as the grandeur of the scenes they
-would fain depict flashes through their minds. They sit with poised
-pen--present, indeed, as to the body at their desks, but in spirit, by
-some unexplainable mystery, away back amid the surroundings of those
-former years, going through it all again. And thus they sit waiting,
-waiting, prisoners of hope, until relief comes in some commonplace word
-or thought, and the pen is re-started, to run perchance glibly enough
-until again arrested in like manner.
-
-These reflections irresistibly arise as I recall similar scenes to the
-one which I would now describe: that splendid silken circle of sea and
-dome of sky just commencing to palpitate with the glories of the new
-day; those low, tender ranges of softest cloud like carelessly piled
-heaps of snowy down, with sober grey bases almost parallel with the
-horizon, and summits blushing sweetly with all the warm tints of the
-coming sun; through the eternal concave overhead running tremulous
-sprays of liveliest colour throbbing and changing incessantly on their
-background of deep violet, from which the modest stars are quietly
-fading before the advent of morning. Across the mirror-like surface
-of the ocean great splashes of colour come and go in never-ending
-progression, although there be never a cloud from which they may be
-reflected and their pure hues come direct from the impalpable ether
-around. And in the centre of it all, grating at first upon the mind
-as the only discordant note in the harmony otherwise reigning, is a
-ship surrounded by the greasy, mutilated carcasses of her spoil--that
-spoil which was so recently fulfilling the exhortation of that glorious
-hymn, ‘O ye whales, and all that move in the waters, bless ye the
-Lord, praise Him and magnify Him for ever.’ What a hideous scene of
-squalor it does appear, to be sure! Great shapeless masses of flesh
-and fat and bone, huge clots of black blood, an undefinable odour of
-death--for the time has not yet come for corruption to defile air as
-well as sea--and in the midst of it all, fiercely toiling, hacking,
-thrusting, tearing, yelling, blaspheming, are the slayers. From every
-pore the ship exudes oil warm from the body, at every roll a new extent
-of ‘sleeky’ water is thrust out from her slimy sides. Gradually, as the
-space in her main-hold known as the blubber-room becomes filled up, the
-limited area on deck is piled with the masses of blubber, and the oil
-which exudes from them fills up the carefully caulked decks and at each
-wallowing roll she makes rises against the bulwarks, which are almost
-as impervious as the deck itself. So inside, outside, half-way up the
-mainmast, she reeks with blood and grease, while the water all around
-is a seething mass of silent voracity. From who knows how far away the
-hungry denizens of the deep sea have hastened to the feast, summoned by
-some unerring sense, of which we know nothing at all. No one, as far as
-I know, has ever attempted to compute the number of the host of sharks
-alone which surround a whaleship while she secures her spoil; so I
-shall not try. It would be only a wild guess, after all, for they come
-and go incessantly in utmost haste, and as far as the eye can see the
-water is aboil with their strugglings to secure at least some portion
-of the great feast.
-
-Of the other deep-sea citizens present I can say little. They are to be
-seen of course, but only occasionally, for this feast is peculiarly the
-shark’s great opportunity, and it is no easy matter for any other fish
-to displace him. In the air, the hungry self-invited guests may be few
-or many, according to the position of the ship. In the North Atlantic
-birds are far less plentiful than they are in the South, for some
-reason which I have never been able to find out, and consequently in
-this great scene of spoliation which I am now attempting to limn there
-were only about a dozen or twenty ’gulls.’
-
-During its progress, as during the hunting, Priscilla sat on the top
-of the after-house motionless under the influence of some horrible
-fascination which she could not resist. She watched the lithe form of
-her saturnine husband as, leaning over the rail of the cutting-stage,
-he dealt blow after blow at the black and white masses beneath him,
-or occasionally varied his labours by a sidelong thrust which severed
-some thieving shark’s head from its body. But she noted that while
-he appeared to be doing more than any other member of the crew, his
-physical efforts never interfered with his mental energies in the
-oversight of his men. He seemed to know where every man was, and what
-he was, or ought to be, doing. An incessant stream of orders, threats,
-and cursings poured from his throat, which was apparently of brass,
-since it never got hoarse. The only physical sign of his vocal labours
-was the foam with which his raven-black beard was flecked.
-
-Utterly brutal, utterly callous and heartless as she now knew her
-husband to be, she could not withhold from him a silent tribute of
-admiration for his powers of command and organisation, and for his
-courage. She felt shuddering pity for the poor men, who, against
-the most urgent calls of Nature to rest their tortured limbs, went
-fiercely toiling on as if only by that means could they avert sudden,
-violent death. Once or twice she gave vent to a low moan of compassion
-as she saw the Captain leap inboard with a tiger-like spring and fall
-upon some man whom his eagle eye had detected lagging behind the
-others, assailing him with the utmost ferocity by knocking him down,
-jumping on him, kicking him as if determined to do him to death. Again
-and again she turned to go, overcome by the horror of these constantly
-recurring scenes, but she could not: she was compelled to remain and
-witness them while powerless to help and unable even to pray that God
-would have mercy upon these poor wretches upon whom man--at least her
-man--had none.
-
-What man has done, man can and will do unless restrained by powerful
-laws, and what was done amid such scenes as I am recalling was
-gentleness itself when compared with what went on aboard the galleys
-of ancient days--scenes which no modern writer has dared, or would
-dare, to put comprehensively into print. For even on board a whaler,
-where one man embodied all the law or justice obtainable by anybody,
-the blessed influences of Christianity in the modifying of cruelty were
-felt, and things were thus not nearly as bad as they might have been;
-nay, they were only in exceptional cases as bad as I have represented.
-This fact, I think, deserves special emphasis, because it goes to show
-that the majority of men in command of these ships, knowing full well
-that they were never likely to be called to account for any cruelties
-they might commit in the name of discipline, yet abstained from
-exercising their autocratic power, or only used it when it became
-undoubtedly necessary that they should do so.
-
-Gradually the mighty task drew to its close. One by one the vast
-carcasses were cut adrift and floated away, each the centre of a
-writhing mass of hungry creatures fiercely fighting for places at the
-feast, which, great as it was, seemed but a trifle compared with the
-host of candidates for it. One by one the huge square ‘cases’ were hove
-up alongside and their bland contents ladled out into the tanks below.
-But when the last but one was being emptied, as it hung, a weight of
-some twenty tons, suspended from the cutting-in falls, Captain Da Silva
-went to the waist, and, leaning up against the case, looked down to see
-whether or not the precious spermaceti was draining away from some cut
-in its walls, as he suspected it was. As he did so the ship rolled ever
-so slightly, and without any warning the massive chain slings which
-held the case aloft tore out. It fell like an avalanche descending,
-a big flap of ‘white horse’ or head integument curling round the
-Captain’s body and whirling him after it into the fathomless depths. It
-was so terribly sudden that Priscilla was momentarily stunned, but with
-returning breath she uttered a wild cry of terror and fell fainting,
-her overwrought condition of nerves unable to bear this last great
-shock. For one moment the crew also stood like statues, but ere one
-could count five, the third mate and second boat-steerer had leaped
-into the sea after their commander, although they knew (none better)
-of the swarming sharks and the many other reasons why they should be
-unsuccessful. But all traces of him had vanished, and realising that
-not only were they most dangerously situated, but that they could
-see better from above, they climbed on deck again with all the speed
-they might, reaching it at the same moment as Captain Da Silva’s head
-appeared on the other side above the rail.
-
-For a few moments all who witnessed his rising stared with starting
-eyes at what they deemed to be his wraith, but his hoarse voice, full
-of anger, roused them instantly from their brief lethargy. ‘Naouw,
-then, whutye all gapping at, like a lot er ---- suckers’s y’air. Git
-along wi’ thet work, ’relse I’ll be ’mong ye in mighty short order,
-naouw I’m telling ye.’ And each man sprang to his task as does a
-mettled horse when the lash falls unexpectedly across his flanks. And
-Captain Da Silva strode off muttering maledictions. Perhaps it was all
-the formula of thanksgiving which he knew: certainly no word of praise
-for the miracle of his escape out of the very jaws of death crossed
-his lips. He had been carried down by that long sliver of skin which
-had enwrapped him and held him tightly bound to the mighty mass of the
-case until he felt as if his head were a boiler under a full pressure
-of steam. But as the ‘case’ sank, by some mysterious influence it
-spun round, or rather revolved, for its motion was but slow, and in
-doing so it unwound the clinging band from the skipper’s body. Never
-having lost his presence of mind, and being as nearly amphibious as the
-rest of his island countrymen, he sprang upward to the surface, just
-grazing the bilge on the opposite side of the ship to that from which
-he had descended, and grasping a bight of the main sheet which dangled
-invitingly alongside, he swung himself aboard, ready and alert to
-resume the tyranny he loved.
-
-The whole affair of his departure and return had been so dramatically
-sudden that Captain Da Silva was in his cabin shouting for Priscilla
-to give him dry garments before she had recovered from her swoon. His
-angry demands brought the trembling steward at his best gait. To his
-breath-bated inquiry the skipper shouted:
-
-‘Whar’s Mrs. Da Silva, yew black beast; whar’s my wife?’
-
-‘Please, sah, de madam’s done gone swounded, an’ I ain’t can fotch ’er
-to yit. I----’
-
-But flinging him aside as if he had been a bundle of rags, the skipper
-rushed on deck to where Priscilla was sitting up wearily passing a
-hand over her dazed eyes and wondering what strange thing had befallen
-her. He seized her arm roughly, and in tones of deepest scorn demanded
-what sort of ---- game she called this? Was he to wait in his wet
-clothes while she lolled about on deck playing the (more unsavoury
-adjectives) fool? Mechanically she staggered to her feet, and, like
-some unreasoning but faithful animal, tottered towards the cabin. I
-doubt if she would have been surprised had her husband accelerated her
-progress by a kick, to such a numbness of brain had she come. But she
-did his bidding, accepted all his blasphemous grumbling, and made no
-sign. For she was, in the fullest sense of that much-abused brace of
-words, heart-broken. Her spirit was crushed, never to awake again as it
-had been; her love was dead, and only patient, animal-like obedience
-remained. Did any compunction arise in the man’s mind for what he had
-done to that trusting, loving woman? Those who think so little know
-the capacity of man for cruelty. A grim smile lit up his diabolically
-handsome features as he noted her quiet performance of his commands,
-and although he said no word it was easy to see with what fiendish
-pleasure he realised this new proof of his power to rule others with a
-rod of iron.
-
-Without pausing to do more than glance at his injuries--one long
-black and green bruise which wound twice round his body, and another
-extending from his right thigh to his heel, with the skin broken in
-many places--he hastily dressed himself in dry clothes and, without
-casting another glance at the submissive figure of his wife, rushed
-on deck. Fortunately for all of them, the crew were working hard
-to secure the masses of junk (solid pieces, each several tons in
-weight, cut from the whale’s head), lashing jaw-bones, clearing away
-try-works, getting up mincing-machine and tricing up gear out of the
-way of the all-pervading grease. He cast one comprehensive, scowling
-glance around, which deepened in its frown when he found no cause of
-complaint, and at once assumed sole command. For the next hour his
-orders flew like volleys of musketry, spurring on the almost spent men
-to give up the last ounce of their strength. And then suddenly, as
-if God had taken pity on those hapless men, the tyrant’s indomitable
-strength and pluck gave out together, and he sank to the deck moaning
-feebly, ‘Take me below, ---- ye, take me below.’ Even with what seemed
-the last breath he needs must curse those upon whom he was now utterly
-dependent for all his wants.
-
-So, inert, all his great energy vanished, and his wiry limbs hanging
-limply as loose ropes’ ends, he was borne below to his bunk, his
-appearance in this guise startling Priscilla again, but arousing in
-her now no such feelings as those with which she had witnessed his
-disappearance over the rail so short a time before. With quiet dignity
-she directed the bearers where to lay him, thanked them, and dismissed
-them. Then, left alone with the man for whom she had given up her
-life, and more than her own life, had she but known, she went about
-the duty of attendance upon him methodically, carefully, but with no
-more feeling than if he had been an utter stranger. All that she could
-do for him she did, but of affection in her ministrations there was no
-trace. Presently with a feeling of relief, such as usually accompanies
-the successful conclusion of a difficult task, she saw him pass from
-coma to sleep, heard him breathe naturally, and watched the ghastly
-pallor of his face give place to its healthy olive hue. Then she took
-some needlework and sat down by his side, ready to attend upon him when
-he woke, determined to do her very utmost for him dutifully, and hoping
-to make faithful service take the place of the love she knew she would
-never feel for him again.
-
-Perhaps I may be pardoned for anticipating criticism here by a word
-or two. I know well that women can, and do, show love of the deepest,
-truest, holiest kind for men who not merely speak to them harshly, but
-beat, starve, or ill-treat them in every way. But Priscilla was not
-one of these women. It may be, too, that her love for Ramon Da Silva
-was not love in the best sense of the word, but merely a hurricane
-gust of passion that for a season had changed the whole surface of
-her being, while leaving unruffled the great depths below. I do not
-know, nor do I care to dogmatise, but of this I am sure--that there
-are many Priscillas about, worthy of all the love of a good man, and
-fully capable of returning it, whose love, calmly, thoughtfully given,
-would be changed into utter dislike and contempt for the once loved
-one if they should have the misfortune to discover him to be cruel or
-disgusting. And for one I dare not say that they are therefore in any
-way worthy of blame, or are not perfectly true and lovable women.
-
-Now ensued a period of calm satisfaction for all hands, tempered only
-by the knowledge that it would soon come to an end. The exceedingly
-heavy toil of mincing the blubber, boiling down the oil, storing it in
-casks, and disposing those casks in easily accessible positions about
-the decks, went on without intermission, but quietly. Every man worked
-as if the knowledge of his tyrant’s impotence, for a time at any rate,
-had supplied him with an incentive. But the Captain was suffering utter
-torment below. Ordinarily he was quite wanting in what we vaguely
-speak of as nerves: he worried about nothing. Now, however, his great
-strength entirely gone from him, knowing how large a task was in hand
-on deck, and knowing, too, how glad was every man on board that he,
-their despot, was helpless, he raged and fumed, and thereby retarded
-his recovery greatly. But for those who came in contact with him, this
-time was a terrible one. His poor wife and the negro steward lived in
-utter terror of him, although physically he was powerless to do them
-harm.
-
-Perhaps it may be thought that too severe a description of this man
-has been given, and that thereby some injustice has been done to men
-generally. But if so, I would like to ask objectors whether they have
-never had the misfortune to know anybody, not necessarily a man, who
-would, given the opportunity have behaved quite as badly as Captain
-Da Silva. God knows, I have no wish to libel any of my fellow men or
-women, but I am absolutely certain that but for the grace of God, the
-sweet influences of Christianity, there are very few of us who can be
-trusted with absolute power over our fellows. And if any doubt were
-possible, surely the records of the National Society for the Prevention
-of Cruelty to Children would dispel it. The sight of helplessness does
-in some infernal way seem to generate in many minds an irresistible
-desire to inflict suffering upon the helpless. And it needs all our
-faith in God, as well as all our recollection of the tender love that
-fills so many hearts, to keep us from feeling that mankind in general
-is possessed by all those attributes which we have agreed to consider
-as the characteristics of Satan. Of course, like all other qualities,
-cruelty needs special opportunities for its full development as well as
-a deliberate cultivation. And for this reason I have never been able to
-understand why so many otherwise level-headed people should object to
-corporal punishment for the perpetrators of cruelty, since it is almost
-invariably the case that cruel people are most tenderly solicitous
-for the care of their own susceptibilities to pain. Exceptions there
-are to this rule, of course, and Captain Da Silva was one. No amount
-of corporal punishment would have deterred him from being again the
-merciless monster he was by nature, given fitting opportunity; for
-he, as I have already endeavoured to point out, had an almost Chinese
-disregard of personal suffering. But even he was certainly no worse for
-the tasting in his own proper person of some of the pains he was wont
-to bestow lavishly upon others.
-
-Only two persons wished him speedily well, and for obvious reasons.
-They were his personal attendants. The chief mate, whose business
-brought him below periodically to report progress, always had to summon
-up all his courage to face his suffering chief, always returned to
-upper air again acutely conscious of relief, although he was a man of
-great ability and resource, and, moreover, had the comforting knowledge
-that under his (comparatively) mild rule the work was slipping along
-on greased wheels. But (and this is one of the peculiarly subtle
-depravities of some natures) he could not help feeling that his
-commander’s irritation at his own helplessness was in no way lessened
-by the knowledge that affairs were going on quite smoothly without his
-interference--that, in fact, it would have been in some measure an
-alleviation of his sufferings could he have known that, bereft of his
-oversight, matters were at sixes and sevens. And each time the mate
-came to report, and gave him the bland information that all was going
-as well as possible, the men were working with a will, the weather
-continued fine, and the blubber was yielding most richly, the skipper
-was instant in cross-examination on every detail, apparently in the
-hope that he might somehow find occasion to vent his long pent-up
-spleen upon someone else beside his wife and the negro steward.
-
-Nothing transpired, however, to gratify him, and at the end of the
-sixth day from his accident the mate reported all oil barrelled
-and half of it stowed; that the crew were busy now with lye and
-sand cleaning up; that the mastheads were manned, and---- But right
-in the middle of his flow of words came the most thrilling cry of
-‘Blo-o-o-o-w.’ The mate stopped in the middle of a word and looked
-round listeningly. But his skipper, maddened almost beyond endurance
-at the knowledge of his own helplessness, and that his subordinates
-would now have an opportunity of showing their capabilities without
-any overlordship of his, hurled at the listening mate one long yell
-of profanity which had the effect of sending the latter scampering
-rabbit-wise up the tortuous cuddy stairs on deck.
-
-Fortunately for Priscilla, the raging emotions of her husband,
-conjoined with his bodily weakness, had the effect of rendering him
-utterly helpless both in mind and body. For a while she busied herself
-quietly in such necessary attentions as she was able to render, then,
-hearing as in some realistic dream the weird tumult on deck, and
-feeling her own utter loneliness, she did that which is, thank God,
-open to us all, if in varying degrees. She lifted her tired heart to
-God, remembering with a bitter pang of repentance the many perfunctory
-repetitions of ‘Our Father’ she had performed; a remembrance which
-brought a host of others in its wake. The quiet times of family worship
-she had yawned over behind her hand, the glorious words of Holy Writ
-passing her then unlistening ears like meaningless jargon, the tender
-father who had never given her a harsh word during her recollection
-of him, the faithful, plodding mother, whom she had forsaken at the
-lightest word of a stranger, and the dog-like devotion of---- But no;
-_that_ thought must not be encouraged. From her uneasy seat she slid
-to her knees, and from her overloaded heart poured forth her unspoken
-prayers--not for deliverance, but for strength, for peace of mind, for
-knowledge how to do and say the right thing and word at the right time.
-And as the subtle communications passed between that suffering heart
-and the Centre of all Solace, the blessed dew of peace descended upon
-her spirit, and she felt that the victory was won, for the present at
-any rate.
-
-Meanwhile, though unheeded by her, the uproar on deck had reached its
-climax, then suddenly ceased, and a profound silence reigned. She
-sat, listening intently, but in nowise alarmed: she felt past all
-that. Until presently a comical black head, with wide white eyeballs,
-protruded from the state-room door. Its glance, fearfully questing,
-caught hers, and in reply to her whispered inquiry came a murmur:
-‘Dey’s awl goen away, Mistis; on’y me an’ de cook, carpenter an’ cooper
-an’ shipkeepers am lef’. But it looks laik a mighty fine school of spam
-whales dey’s onter, an’ ef dey gets um may be de skipper please, an’t
-it?’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-A DISASTROUS DAY
-
-
-Undoubtedly there was a certain fierce delight in Mr. Court’s mind,
-as well as great relief, when he fled precipitately on deck from the
-presence of the terrible man who was his present commander. As any
-other man of his abilities and bravery would have done, he felt a
-certain measure of contempt for himself that he should be so meekly
-subservient to one whom he believed in his heart of hearts to be no
-braver or more skilful than he was himself; but the deeply ingrained
-habit of discipline prevented that feeling from reaching its logical
-conclusion. And, unlike the Dago, he, being an Anglo-Saxon, also
-felt a certain compassion for a man stricken down by accident in the
-performance of his duty, and utterly unwilling to take the smallest
-advantage thereof. More, in some dim manner he felt that if his part
-were well played now, there might be some alleviation in the lot of
-that pale saint (for in such a light had the mate come to regard
-Priscilla--you cannot keep family secrets on board a ship); and so,
-fired with all the best ambitions that can energise a man, he sprang on
-deck, every sense keenly alert.
-
-The air was full of wailing cries of ‘Bl-o-o-o-o-w.’ All hands were
-waiting ready by their boats with an air of expectation, as if each
-man was taking the highest personal interest in the outcome of the
-present adventure. The second mate, standing on the little bridge over
-the wheel conning the ship, no sooner saw his superior than he said,
-‘School o’ th’ biggest sparm whale ever I sot eyes on, sir. Ain’t one
-under a hundred an’ thutty bar’l, I swar. An’ thar’s one--ef he ain’t
-the father of all the whales ever bo’n I ain’t ever seen one before.’
-
-For all answer the mate shouted ‘’Way boats! Down from aloft.’ And
-for the next few minutes the whirring of patent sheaves, as the
-graceful boats ran waterwards, the hoarse, gasping orders given by
-the boat-headers, and the sharp concussions in the water, filled the
-air. What a scene of furious energy manifested by men who a little
-while before were lolling uncouthly about as if incapable of any
-exertion whatever, under no matter what stimulus or provocation!
-Within five minutes the ship was deserted by all her crew, save only
-the discontented half-dozen whose unhappy lot it was to abide by the
-stuff and labour monotonously to keep the ship as far to windward of
-the arena of battle as might be. In every man’s heart there was a deep
-sensation of thankfulness that one ominous figure was absent from
-this fray--that for once they were free to do their best unhampered
-by the paralysing knowledge that, whatever they did, their efforts
-would surely be rewarded by savage treatment which they must endure,
-because no safe way of rebellion presented itself. How the rowers did
-lay to their oars! How keenly when, a sufficient weather gauge being
-reached, the sails were set and the boats bounded blithesomely over the
-blue waves under the stress of the freshening breeze, did every man
-peer forward for sight of their gigantic prey; and how fervently each
-harpooner hoped that he might be privileged to strike the first blow!
-
-I have never been able to understand how it is that all other seamen
-seem to have cherished contemptuous feelings towards the whale-fishers.
-That they always have done so is undoubtedly true, and possibly the
-foundation of so utterly false a sentiment may have been that it is but
-seldom that ordinary seafarers have been able to witness the mighty
-conflict between men and whales. Usually when sailors meet whalers it
-is at a time when the latter are conserving their energies against the
-coming of the next great fight, or are greasily labouring to harvest
-their spoil, an occupation which needs much true appreciation of the
-romantic to see anything in it at all worthy of admiration. In the rare
-cases that have occurred when sailors have been in at the death of a
-whale, they have been simply stricken dumb with admiring wonder, and
-thenceforward have enjoyed a vicarious popularity as the retailers of
-yarns in the dog-watches to a gaping but utterly sceptical crowd of
-their shipmates.
-
-So, swiftly the four boats sped whalewards, the mate always ahead,
-for his intense nervous energy had communicated itself to his crew,
-who, not content with the pace being made under the pressure of the
-wind, had each stealthily seized a paddle, and were thrusting them
-deeply into the hissing waters alongside at every opportunity that was
-presented, as if their overmastering impatience could not let them
-rest for one instant. Strange to say, on this occasion, although it
-seemed to the mate that, large as the whales were, they should have
-long ago made their periodical descent, they did not do so, but lolled
-about on the bright sea-surface in an orderly series of rows which
-converged, until at the apex, as it were, of the whole school lay the
-gigantic leader of whom the second mate had spoken in such breathless
-terms of admiration. There could at last be no doubt about the matter:
-that school of whales had seen their aggressors coming, and for some
-mysterious reason had decided that on this occasion they would not obey
-their natural promptings bidding them flee, but would await the foe and
-do battle with him in befitting manner, with never a doubt as to the
-issue.
-
-The reason for this strange behaviour could not, of course, be known to
-the mate, since even the keenest of human observers has never been able
-to penetrate the motives influencing what we are pleased to call the
-‘lower animals’ in their pursuance of any abnormal course of behaviour;
-although there can be no doubt that had he known why the whales thus
-awaited him, the knowledge would not have caused him to alter his
-procedure in any way. For he was a perfectly brave man, whom no amount
-of prospective peril could turn aside from what he considered to be the
-path of duty. True, he was but an ordinary example of the New England
-whale-fisher; but it must ever be remembered that this wonderful
-calling--_i.e._, hunting the sperm whale--of necessity bred a most
-extraordinary type of man, having as it did the grand old Puritan stock
-to work upon.
-
-So Mr. Court led his little flotilla into battle, every man watching
-with keenest anticipation the gently heaving masses of the mighty
-foes, and wondering much what so unusual an attitude portended. Some
-of the fellows felt a queer clutching sensation at the pit of the
-stomach as every bound of the buoyant craft brought them nearer those
-silent, listless-looking whales. But it was not fear; it was but the
-nerve-centres notifying the brain to call up all the energies of the
-body to face the unknown, and it would at the first crash of battle be
-replaced by a tautening of every muscle, an exaltation of spirit heady
-as that produced by wine, and a great, if dimly understood, sense of
-the power of man in the world.
-
-A short, blast-like order, and Mr. Court, gripping his steer-oar
-fiercely, bent his body almost double and swung his boat’s head round
-at right angles to the leader of the great company. His harpooner,
-Gonsalvo, one thigh firmly pressed into the ‘clumsy cleat,’ raised the
-harpoon high overhead, and a hissing expiration burst from his clenched
-teeth as the weapon flew from his hand and buried itself up to the
-hitches in the whale’s broad side. One could see the convulsive quiver
-run through that vast body as the stab was felt; but Gonsalvo did not
-look; he snatched up his second iron and hurled it after the first to
-such good purpose that it buried itself like the first one--only about
-a foot higher up the body. Then, turning coolly round, the gratified
-assailant cast adrift the backstays of the mast and proceeded to roll
-up the sail as if quietly coming alongside a wharf. Meanwhile the
-boat had swung up into the wind and lay side by side with the whale,
-at a distance of about twenty feet. Hoarsely the mate encouraged his
-crew in their efforts to get the hampering mast unshipped, keeping
-at the same time a wary eye upon his prey. He was astonished beyond
-measure to see that the whale made no sign beyond that quivering of
-the skin before spoken of, but lay as if meditating upon this strange
-event. Then without further sign the whale sank, sank with hardly a
-ripple, and for a moment or two all was quiet, just giving Mr. Court
-an opportunity to glance around and see that his lieutenants were all
-busily engaged similarly to himself.
-
-There was no lack of readiness or watchfulness; but suddenly a vast
-black mass appeared on the other side of the boat, and with a perfectly
-indescribable motion turned a somersault in the air, just missing, in
-the downward sweep of that awful tail, the frail boat by an inch or so.
-But the steer-oar was snapped off soundlessly, like a radish severed by
-the sweeping blow of a knife, leaving the boat helpless. Mr. Court’s
-orders flew; his men seconded him nobly, pulling first on this side,
-then on that, to turn the boat; but, bereft of that great oar aft, her
-movements were slow and hesitating. Then uprose that massive head, with
-jaws wide extended, which, taking the boat amidships, crashed through
-her as if she had been a stick of celery, destroying utterly two men
-and seriously injuring the mate. His right arm and leg were broken, and
-his whole side lacerated in appalling fashion.
-
-In the suddenness of the shock the mate was mercifully spared the
-full realisation of his injuries; but the absence of pain only made
-his brain more active, and his mental agony was extreme. For not
-only had he been the victim of a complete defeat, but he did not know
-how matters were proceeding with his subordinates, and he feared
-the worst. Then as he paddled mechanically, conscious of a whelming
-drowsiness stealing over him, his left arm touched something hard--an
-empty line-tub. With one last flash of energy he rove his arm through
-its becket and passed immediately into blissful unconsciousness, that
-merciful suspension of the ‘suffering’ faculties that has been Divinely
-provided to smooth the way from life to death of shrinking, sensitive
-flesh. His poor fellows, those who were left, were fortunately
-uninjured, but thoroughly demoralised at the terrible shock they had
-received. They also were able to support themselves amid the whirling
-waters upon fragments of the broken boat; but, of course, like their
-officer, in a most precarious and tentative fashion.
-
-And round about them, in leisurely fashion, as if contemplating the
-result of his strategical effort, swam the whale, neither doing nor
-attempting to do them any harm, but putting them in serious danger of
-drowning from the abnormal whirling of the water which the passage of
-his monstrous bulk effected. Occasionally, too, there would appear,
-cutting the water in erratic directions, the tall dorsal fin or ‘gaff
-topsail’ of a great shark, hunger-driven almost to madness by the
-taint of blood in the water, but (as yet) scrupulously respecting the
-bodily integrity of the hapless men still living. Overhead flitted
-restlessly a few birds, screaming mournfully, as if they realised that
-in the effort of providing a great banquet for them man had utterly
-failed this time. But of everything except the fast-weakening desire
-of living the principal actors in this stormy scene were utterly
-oblivious, and thus for a while we must leave them.
-
-The other three boats, arriving upon the scene of conflict almost
-simultaneously, saw their leader get fast to the monarch of the school.
-And had they obeyed the regular rule, well known to them all, they
-would certainly have deputed the fourth boat to lie off and watch
-events, in case of need for assistance. But, freed from the baleful
-overglance of the skipper and fired to utmost emulation of each other
-as they were, it was easy to forget so necessary a precaution, and
-consequently, each singling out his whale, the three boats rushed to
-the attack, all harpooning about the same time. At once the scene
-became almost indescribable. For the stricken whales, unlike their
-leader, each fought with Titanic energy to free himself from the
-galling weapon, rearing monstrous heads high in the air at one moment,
-at the next flourishing with sufficient force to smash in a ship’s side
-their mighty tails, the supple corners of which actually snapped like
-whip-lashes from the vigour with which they were lashed to and fro.
-Also the loose whales, apparently with some indefinite object in view
-of rendering aid, glided about and between the combatants, making it
-impossible for the men to do what they tried and converting the sea
-into the semblance of the surface of a huge cauldron of water fiercely
-boiling.
-
-Yet such was the skill and energy displayed by these hardly bestead
-hunters that for a considerable time they all escaped damage, although
-they often did so by a couple of inches only. At last, as they were
-weakening, the first calamity came, sudden and complete. The third
-mate’s boat was towed swiftly in a certain direction (and so furious
-had been the fight that the sail had not yet been secured) until the
-crew found themselves between two ominously revolving bodies, one that
-of the whale to which the fourth mate was fast, and the other their
-own quarry. There was no room wherein to use oars, nor was there time
-had there been place, when the two huge carcasses, rolling in opposite
-directions, crashed against the tender shell of the boat, which
-collapsed into matchwood, while the crew leapt madly upon the shiny,
-slippery bodies of the monsters, and, slithering downwards, disappeared
-in the smother of foam around.
-
-With a groan of regret the fourth mate cut from his whale, and,
-regardless of his own immediate danger, incited his crew with all his
-powers to pick up their shipmates. And they did strive, literally for
-dear life. The huge bulk of the whales brushing past them, the frantic
-motions of their boat, apparently harassed them not at all. Intent upon
-the orders of the erect, keenly observant figure at the stern, they
-pulled, backed, peaked oars, or lay still as commanded, and while in
-the full tide of their tremendous labours were suddenly hoisted, as
-if by some submarine earthquake, upon the uprushing head of a whale
-ten feet into the air. They were flung in a writhing heap from their
-thwarts, and when they recovered themselves they were clinging sadly to
-a wreck, for the boat, although still holding together as to her frame,
-had her keel or backbone broken in three places, and, full of water,
-just sufficed to sustain their weary heads occasionally above the sea
-surface. Even at that dread time the minds of all were bent upon the
-fate of those whom they had failed to rescue. For themselves they cared
-nothing; they were comparatively safe with something floatable beneath
-their uncertain feet; but alas for those who in that tormented whirl of
-waves had not even a splinter unto which they might cling hopefully.
-
-What of the second mate? Well, some might call him a coward, for
-although he had got fast like the rest, before three minutes had
-passed, having witnessed the disaster which had overtaken his senior
-officer, he had coolly cut his line and withdrawn with all the speed
-he could command from the arena. One thing, and one only, was in his
-mind, and that was how he could avoid being entangled in a fight, so
-that he might, as soon as opportunity offered, rush in and rescue
-some of the drowning ones. But, as he afterwards said, never in all
-his fishing had such a task fallen to his lot. For every whale in the
-school seemed to make for him, and although they did not attack, whales
-being magnanimous beyond all other powerful and sensible animals, they
-circled about him with majestic movement, occasionally scarifying the
-faces of himself and his patient men with the blistering drops from
-their condensed spoutings as they blew across his boat, and clearly
-made him understand that he existed only by their favour. And he was
-fretting his heart to fragments over his inactivity, and wondering how
-long it would be ere he could emerge from his august environment, and
-save those shipmates of his whom he knew to be perishing so near. Even
-then he had no notion of the completeness of the disaster. But his
-heart failed him as he thought of meeting the tyrant of his life, on
-that terrible man’s recovery, and endeavouring to explain away so great
-a failure.
-
-Meanwhile as far as the eye could reach the boat was hemmed in by
-whales, that with majestic movement circled around their tiny captive,
-or, perpendicularly erected in the water, protruded their vast
-cylindrical heads from the surface like symmetrical columns of black
-rock. Then, as if at a given signal, the great assemblage divided,
-leaving between their closely packed ranks a lane of clear water. Not
-an instant was lost by Mr. Winslow; if his hand trembled, in its grip
-of the steer-oar, his voice did not; if his men looked wistfully at
-one another and at their gigantic escort, they pulled none the less
-lustily at the word of command. And presently they came upon a pitiful
-sight. In an area that might have been covered by a big ship’s mainsail
-floated listlessly six men, each clinging to some derelict portion of
-their late vessel’s equipment. None of them appeared able to appreciate
-their most perilous position; no gasp of fear passed their cracked and
-blistered lips when the long, quivering body of some ravening shark
-glided closely past them. No; for them nothing mattered any longer:
-they had passed beyond the reach of either hope or fear. And had one
-remembered how painful were their lives, how remote the possibilities
-of brightness ever lightening their dreary way through the world, the
-thought would inevitably have compelled admission that it was almost
-criminal to bring them back again to the suffering they had left
-behind--especially remembering how full of pain to them would be the
-process.
-
-Such an idea, however, never occurred to those tender-hearted if
-ruffianly looking rescuers. Forgetting all their own danger--oblivious,
-indeed, to anything else but the manifestly urgent needs of the
-perishing ones they saw around them--they toiled furiously to get the
-exhausted men into their boat. Nor did they desist until, the gunwale
-of the boat being just awash, they were warned that any further
-attempts to pick up men would certainly mean the loss of all, both
-rescuers and rescued. Six were still a-missing, but that could not be
-helped, and with the utmost care they moved heavily off towards the
-ship, which was standing down the wind in their direction. A careful
-shipkeeper of a whaleship always devotes all his energies, as soon
-as boats have left, to keeping his vessel to windward of the scene
-of conflict--a position of advantage whence, when the great fight is
-over, he may run down with a free sheet and pick up the boats and their
-gigantic prizes.
-
-So that, although the time seemed interminably long, it was really
-only a matter of minutes before the boat was alongside the ship and
-the broken men were being hauled on board. All the time this work
-was going on the ship was the centre of a vast assemblage of whales,
-seemingly satisfied that their enemies were now powerless to harm them,
-and, although majestically refusing to attack a helpless foe, quite
-determined to let that foe see unmistakably what might be his fate
-should his late prospective victims become aggressive. No sooner were
-the rescued men on board than Mr. Winslow, as if he and his crew were
-machines of iron rather than men of weariable muscles, pushed off from
-the ship’s side and carefully steering between the bulky bodies of the
-assembled whales, made the best of their way back to where they hoped
-to find the remainder of their shipmates. Six were still missing, among
-them the mate, who since the captain’s accident had endeared himself
-to all hands. But it really seemed as if their colossal escort knew
-the errand they were upon, for their progress was hindered in the most
-extraordinary manner by the whales crowding about them. No assault was
-made; had it been, however slight, they must all have perished; but it
-was as if they were incessantly reminded by the whales that forbearance
-had, even with such magnanimous monsters, its limits, and that while no
-advantage would be taken of primary helplessness, they (the whalers)
-would not lightly be permitted to help those who were receiving the due
-reward of their own aggression.
-
-So, with infinite pains, the second mate and his hardly entreated
-boat’s crew made their way back to the scene of conflict, and found one
-man, the mate, still afloat, and possibly alive. They could not be sure
-of the latter, but took him in on the chance. Further search, although
-prolonged to the utmost limit of their endurance, failed to show them
-any more of their lost shipmates, and at last in a faint voice Mr.
-Winslow ordered them to give way for the ship. As his men doggedly
-obeyed, and called up their final reserve of energy, the attendant
-whales, as if satisfied with the progress of the day’s events, drew
-off, and with their great leader well ahead, took their departure
-to windward along the bright glorious path of the setting sun, whose
-rays touched their mighty bodies with gold and made every little spray
-they threw upwards in their stately progress glisten like a shower of
-diamonds.
-
-The overburdened crew reached the ship without further incident, and,
-once alongside, realised how terrible had been the strain imposed. For
-even the simple business of hoisting the boat, usually a matter of at
-most two minutes, became a herculean task hardly to be accomplished
-by the united efforts of all hands remaining capable of standing on
-their feet. Once secured on her cranes, Mr. Winslow dismissed his
-boat from his mind and wearily slouched to where the mate lay on a
-mattress brought up by one of the harpooners. So great was his loss of
-vigour, that although he saw the mate had recovered consciousness and
-was now peacefully asleep in his drying clothes, he felt a dull want
-of interest in that fact, as in everything else, and without taking
-further interest of his surroundings or of the claims of his position,
-he cast himself down in the little clear space abaft the wheel on the
-starboard side, pillowed his head upon his right arm, and immediately
-fell asleep.
-
-The shipkeepers--that is, the four petty officers, carpenter, cooper,
-steward, and cook, with the four men appointed to assist them in the
-duty of managing the ship during the process of catching whales--had
-been hardly pressed both by work and anxiety. But they saw and realised
-how easy had been their lot as compared with that of the hunters; and
-although they had well earned a relief, they said nothing, but went
-grimly on with their by no means easy task of preparing the vessel for
-the night, clearing away gear, &c.
-
-Now during this terrible day Priscilla had found great peace. We left
-her at its beginning comforted as only those heavy-laden ones can be
-comforted who are in direct communication with the Comforter. Permeated
-by that Peace which passeth all understanding, she felt content to
-abide in quiet security any event that might happen, and she looked
-down upon the insensible form by her side with something of the Divine
-compassion, although without one spark of the human love which should
-exist between husband and wife. All that her simple ideas of nursing
-could suggest as good to be done for him she did assiduously, while his
-face twitched convulsively, unintelligible muttering flowed ceaselessly
-from his lips, and every muscle of his body seemed as if under the
-influence of a powerful galvanic battery.
-
-It was very quiet down in the small cabin. The workers on deck went
-about their duties softly in dread of rousing the skipper, and only a
-faint echo of an occasional carefully modulated cry from aloft came
-stealing softly to her ears. She did not feel hunger, weariness, or
-anxiety. Whenever the good darkey steward could spare a few minutes
-from the work of the ship he stole down to see if he could do anything
-for her; but beyond accepting a cup of tea and a biscuit at midday, she
-gently declined all his kindly offers. The only feeling, as she said
-afterwards, that did occasionally shoot athwart the placid state of her
-mind was one of thankfulness that her husband was so long oblivious of
-all that must, she knew, be going on, for she could not help realising
-what his fury would be if, with all his senses about him, he should be
-unable to take part in the hunting.
-
-And so quietly the long day wore to its close. She remained in utter
-ignorance of the outcome until, at about 7 P.M., the steward crept
-to her side with a cup of soup, and begged her to sup it. While she
-languidly did so, he sketched for her in a few hurried whispers the
-condition of things, and wound up by saying, his swart face looking a
-ghastly green in the dim light of the swinging lamp: ‘An’ de good Lawd
-Hisself only knows wa’s gwine happen t’ us wen _he_ comes to an’ fine’s
-eout abaout it. Lawd hab massy on us all den.’ She answered him not a
-word, but, handing back the cup, laid her tired head back in her chair
-and passed peacefully to sleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-REUBEN EDDY, MARINER
-
-
-We left Rube not only entered conclusively upon his new career, the
-very antithesis of all his previous experiences, but, by one of those
-mysterious happenings which prove how little we know of the workings of
-the human brain, completely dissociated from that former life of his as
-if it had never been. And yet by some merciful connection, inexplicable
-in view of his entire loss of memory, but certainly bridging the dark
-gulf, his former Christian training not merely influenced him, but
-its effect was intensely deepened and strengthened. So with all his
-old attributes of patience, of kindliness, of love; attributes which
-all must confess may exist without any acknowledgment on the part of
-their possessor of the power of Christianity at all. Also his physical
-powers developed amazingly. Seemingly quite careless what he ate, but
-always with bared head returning thanks to God for it, he throve upon
-that poor food until his torso would have served as a model for an
-ancient Greek statue of Hercules. Upon his bright face the shadow of
-a frown was never seen, his serenity of mind seemed proof against all
-the pettiness of aggravation that men allow to do so much harm in the
-world, the gnat-bites of daily intercourse which fester into various
-plagues far more deadly in their continual evil than all the great
-crimes which shock us so by the horrors of their incidence upon the
-life of man.
-
-And with all this he was essentially a _man_, taking with highest
-intelligence his daily part in all around him, excelling in ability
-as he did in strength every one of his shipmates until he came to be
-looked upon by them as a kind of demi-god whose superiority in all
-things they ungrudgingly acknowledged because he himself was obviously
-entirely unconscious of it. Forward and aft it was the same. If any
-felt they had aught to teach him they immediately did so for the sheer
-joy of the thing; he was so eager to learn, so keen-witted in absorbing
-new knowledge, so humble and entirely grateful. At first this attitude
-of his was looked upon with suspicion by his shipmates, for suspicion
-and jealousy are baleful plants that thrive apace on shipboard among
-the crew, especially on long voyages; then, when the impossibility of
-being suspicious or jealous of such a man had been fully demonstrated,
-good-natured, bantering toleration took its place. This was succeeded
-by reverence, which gradually overcame the most sceptical, those who
-longest maintained that ‘Rube wuz jest a easy-goin’ loony ’at y’ c’d
-do anythin’ y’ liked with.’ This latter phase of feeling towards him
-arose, I think, as far as the foc’s’le was concerned, in consequence of
-the stand he took against rows in their common abiding place. Whenever
-men quarrelled (and shore-folk can hardly imagine how difficult it is
-to keep the peace in a small apartment tenanted by thirty men), Rube
-was at once on hand, unless it happened to be his wheel or masthead
-look-out. And, owing to his great size and strength and utter
-disregard of himself, it was impossible to bring off a fight when he
-was about. For he would propose the most absurd things, such as that
-the two belligerents, if they felt they must beat somebody, should beat
-him in turn; but beat one another they should not while he was able to
-prevent them, and they could not doubt his ability to do that. Once an
-infuriated man did strike him a heavy blow full in the mouth. It was
-like striking a rock. Rube leaped at the striker, caught his fist, and,
-holding it up, said, ‘Poor feller, jes’ look at them knuckles, they’re
-all cut about shameful. Less get a bit er rag an’ tie ’em up.’
-
-What could they do with a man like that but love him? Nothing. And
-surely never was man so loved aboard ship before. When in the long
-evenings after the first dog-watch the crew lolled about the fore part
-of the deck smoking, it became quite an institution for Rube to sit
-(he didn’t smoke) and tell them stories in his own quaint language out
-of the Bible from memory. He possessed the only one on board, and read
-it continually in his watch below, giving up to its delights much of
-the time his great frame needed for sleep. Perhaps the quotation of a
-sample of his Bible yarns (as the fellows termed them) may be admitted.
-
-‘Way back in the old days, boys, it seems t’ me thet most people hed
-a mighty rough time of it. In th’ cities, frum what I c’n see, they
-wuz pow’ful little ’musement fur the wealthy folks ’cept buildin’
-uncomfortable palaces, stuffin’ grub down their necks they didn’t feel
-to want, gettin’ drunk, an’ seein’ a lot of poor people suffer. Funny
-how a man or woman should _like_ to see _sufferin_’, ain’t it? Even
-then when these rich folks was havin’ what they persuaded themselves
-wuz a hot ole time, they wuz always expectin’ some feller’d come along
-an’ make a big hole in ’em with one o’ them old-fashioned stickers you
-see in pictures, about a foot long, four inches wide, and razzur sharp
-on both edges. But they was a lot o’ people hadn’t got no palaces.
-They was something like sailors ashore--always on th’ move, carryin’
-their grub with ’em, an’ only stoppin’ any length o’ time where there
-was water an’ plenty grass fur th’ live stock. ’Course they managed
-t’ steal a lot of poor fellers ’at didn’t know enough t’ keep out er
-the way, and make these slaves do all the work. We’re most of us built
-like that. Comfort was a word that hadn’t come into use those days;
-but then neither had indigestion, nerves, corns, or rheumatics. Well,
-among these people was one a good deal better’n most ov ’em, though, of
-course, he had his faults, an’ his name was Isaac. Only that. Jest a
-given name, an’ no more: easy to remember. Now this good man was well
-off as those days went. He had lots o’ sheep ’n’ goats an’ donkeys an’
-camels, an’ a mighty big country to travel about in, an’ let ’em feed
-wherever they would, with no rent or taxes to pay. He had a wife he was
-very fond of--only one, which was sing’lar for those times, when th’
-best o’ men didn’t seem able to get along without a bunch o’ wives.
-An’ he had two sons. One of these sons was a fine fellow, free an’
-open an’ brave, fond of all manly sports, but one of those chaps such
-as we say’ll never get on in th’ world. He was his father’s darlin’.
-The other was a quiet, say-nothin’-t’-nobody sort o’ feller, fond of
-hangin’ around the tents and looking after the breedin’ o’ the cattle
-an’ sheep, an’ he was what we call a good business man. But you had to
-watch him close, or he’d get t’ wind’ard of ye every time. His name was
-a sort o’ warning to anybody t’ keep their weather eye liftin’ when he
-was havin’ truck with ’em. It was Jacob, meanin’ a feller that gets
-into another feller’s place after he’s jockeyed him out of it. An’ he
-wasn’t partikler who it was he bested, his father or his brother jes’
-as soon as anybody else. He was his mother’s favourite.
-
-‘Well, after both boys had grown up, an’ Jacob had ben workin’ off his
-little schemes pretty frequent, ’specially on his twin brother Esau,
-his dotin’ mother puts him up to a dodge to take in the old man, who
-was gettin’ pretty shaky, so’s he’d scratch Esau outer his will, and
-put Jacob in. And between ’em they rigged up Jacob in goatskins to make
-him feel like Esau, who was one of those big, burly, hairy men, so as
-his poor old father, who was blind, shouldn’t know the difference, an’
-give him all the property as well as his blessin’, which counted in
-them days fur even more than property. And th’ scheme worked all right.
-But when Esau come home from the country, and found it out, Jacob had
-to quit, or else Esau would have killed him sure. So his mother lost
-him altogether. I don’t s’pose that bothered him greatly. Anyhow, he
-did just as well in the new country he run to, and in just the same
-way. An’ he kem back a good many years after with quite a procession of
-wives an’ children an’ no end of property, an’ who should meet him but
-Esau, without any wives an’ children or property, but an army, which
-was almost the best thing to have in those days, ’cause when you’d got
-it you could get the other things whenever you wanted ’em by taking ’em
-away from somebody else.
-
-‘And Jacob, bein’ scared ’most to death, offers to buy Esau off from
-what he s’posed was goin’ to be his revenge, with a whole heap of his
-property. But Esau says, “Thanks, old man, I don’t want to take away
-what belongs to you; I’ve got all I want. But I’ll send a bit of my
-army along with you to see that nobody else comes and robs ye.” But
-Jacob says to himself, “Oh, no, this is just a scheme for taking all
-I’ve got away bymeby.” So he refused. An’ they parted, an’ never saw
-one another again.’
-
-Loud cries of ‘Bully for Esau!’ and opprobrious remarks about Jacob,
-changing into utter bewilderment when next evening Jacob’s subsequent
-history was told in the same quaintly familiar fashion, and the
-justification of his being chosen by God was pointed out. For not
-only did Rube tell Bible stories, but in the most artless manner he
-based conversation upon them; never arguing, but gently suggesting;
-familiarising his hearers with Scripture in the most pleasing way, and
-never attempting to compel belief by his efforts. It is no exaggeration
-to say that in spite of the disappointment felt by the men at the long
-period of unsuccessful searching, Rube’s sweet influence was felt by
-all hands. And although many of them still had their occasional doubts
-of his sanity, none doubted the perfect goodness and beauty of his
-character.
-
-They became a very smart crew. Every duty they were called upon to
-perform they did as if they loved it, and the skipper’s rugged face
-glowed with eagerness to see how they would behave on whales if and
-when the chance came. But it was not until they were midway between
-the Line and Cape Horn that they sighted their first sperm whale. He
-was a lone whale of enormous size, and evidently making a passage to
-some other feeding-ground, since he kept his course as if steering by
-compass, spouting with the utmost regularity a given number of times,
-descending and rising again as if timed by a chronometer. Cautiously,
-but with all the attention possible, the ship was worked to windward
-of him, until, in a suppressed shout, Captain Hampden gave the order,
-‘’Way boats!’ It had previously been decided that only two boats were
-needed for the job, so the first and second mates’ boats started,
-dropped alongside lightly as foam flakes, and with a long, swinging
-stroke they pulled away to windward. Rube was in the mate’s boat
-pulling midship oar--the heaviest of the five--and the mate simply
-gasped with astonishment to see how this recent yokel handled his
-eighteen-foot oar, how all his powers were given to its manipulation,
-and what a beautiful stroke he had. They pulled for half an hour, then
-with sails set to the strong breeze that was blowing, bore down upon
-the unconscious whale, the other boat following hard after them at a
-cable’s distance. Nearer, nearer they drew, all hands holding their
-breath. Now a wide sheer to port because of that little eye’s power of
-seeing astern. They gain rapidly; they are abeam. A strong sweep of the
-steer oar, the main sheet is slacked off, and the boat sweeps round and
-leaps at the whale’s broadside like a living thing. Before she strikes,
-the harpooner has hurled his iron, and it sinks its length into the
-black side; the whale is fast. Haul aft the sheet, flat as possible,
-the boat flies up into the wind, the harpooner casting out the stray
-line meanwhile, and there, although tossing tremendously because of the
-fuss being made by the indignant whale, they get the hampering sail
-rolled up and mast unshipped and fleeted aft out of the way.
-
-Before they have finished their task the second mate is alongside
-awaiting orders. He is told not to go near, but wait and see what
-the whale is going to do, always an uncertain factor in scenes like
-this. The whale is going to behave in orthodox fashion--_i.e._,
-descend to where beyond these voices there is peace. Downward he goes
-deliberately, as if hurry were never less needed, but apparently taking
-no heed of the strain kept on the line by the buoyant boat above.
-Presently it becomes evident that he is a stayer, for the second
-line-tub is nearly empty, and he shows no signs of slackening in his
-downward path. So the second mate is called upon to pass the end of his
-line aboard, and it is spliced on at once. (The strands are always kept
-plaited up, so that a splice may be made almost as rapidly as a knot,
-and much neater and more safe.) Still he goes down, down, down; while
-faces gather blackness as fake after fake of line disappears. Will he
-_never_ weaken? The heavy drogue (equal in retarding strain to four
-boats) has been bent on at the splice, but seems to have no effect upon
-him. The mate’s heart sinks. Up goes the urgent wheft, a signal to the
-ship that more line is needed immediately; but, alas! it is too late.
-There is a short interval of almost agonising suspense, and the end of
-the line flips over the bows. He is gone!
-
-Then the mate gives vent to his feelings. His cursings comprehensively
-embrace everything he can bring to memory, himself chiefly. When he is
-exhausted Rube’s lips are seen to be moving, and the mate, fiercely
-desirous of some animate object whereupon to vent his rage, yells,
-‘You hayseed, what _you_ mumblin’ about?’ (I suppress even the blank
-profanity with which every word or two is loaded.) Rube softly replies,
-‘I was so sorry for your disappointment and the skipper’s that I was
-just askin’ God that all our labour shouldn’t be lost.’
-
-The mate was dumb--what could he say to this? And every man in the
-boat looked at Rube as if he were uncanny--they had no more idea than
-most professing Christians have of the simple faith that believes in
-an immanent God always ready and willing to hear the requests of His
-children. And up into the midst of their wonderment rose the whale, the
-long line trailing behind him, evidently exhausted by his tremendous
-efforts to reach a depth of safety. A dozen strokes in reply to the
-swiftly shouted orders of the mate, and they were alongside of him,
-the harpooner had hooked up the line and passed it into the boat, and
-the mate had thrust his long lance so fiercely in between the third
-and fourth ribs of the leviathan that the whole vast body quivered
-from snout to flukes with the pangs of approaching death. Secure in
-the knowledge that he had dealt a deathblow, the mate shouted to the
-harpooner to cut the loose line adrift; but even that small loss was
-avoided, for the second mate’s boat sheered alongside in the nick of
-time and took it.
-
-No other stroke was needed; a thin stream of blood was seen to be
-trickling over the edge of the spiracle, and the next great expiration
-hurled into the air, with a bursting groan, masses of clotted blood
-so large that it was almost miraculous how they had been forced along
-the single air-tube which supplies the lungs with breath. Filled with
-a great awe, the new hands drew off slowly in obedience to the orders
-given, unable to take their eyes off the dying giant. And then, to
-their horror, they saw him suddenly rear his gigantic head high in air,
-and hurl his body along the blood-stained sea-surface in hundred-foot
-leaps, swaying first to this side and then to that as if under the
-influence of an agony so intolerable that he was endowed with at least
-ten times his usual great strength. All around his awful way the sea
-was torn into a thousand fantastic shapes, and blocks of purple foam
-were flung on high and caught by the wind, which drove them like
-some dreadful snow in showers of flakes far to leeward. At last--and
-although the paroxysm had only lasted about three minutes, they seemed
-like hours--there was a momentary lull: the whale disappeared. But
-almost immediately after there was an upheaval like the rearing of a
-suddenly formed volcano in the midst of the sea, and high into the
-air soared the whole mighty mass, apparently hung suspended there for
-an appreciable space, and fell! In the thundering noise and violent
-commotion occasioned by that great act, the hunters lost for a moment
-their strained attention on the whale. When they regained it he lay an
-inert mass, gently undulating to the touch of the waves, with his head
-as usual pointed straight towards the wind’s eye.
-
-[Illustration: HIGH INTO THE AIR SOARED THE WHOLE MIGHTY MASS.]
-
-There was a great peace succeeding the tumult, and a moaning little
-voice in the wind which filled the air with mournfulness. Also the
-plash of the wavelets over the quiet bank of flesh had in it, to all
-seeming, a murmur of regret. The influences of that restful time
-affected all for a brief space, and Rube’s eyes glistened as he thought
-of the cruel end so suddenly befalling the brave, strong, harmless
-monster, a short hour ago so placidly enjoying his life, and perfectly
-filling his appointed place in the scheme of things. But with a jerk
-all musings were ended, for the mate’s voice broke harshly upon the
-accented silence, as he shouted, ‘Naow, then, m’ lads, pull two, starn
-three, an’ le’s git th’ tow line fast, ’relse the ship’ll be here ’fore
-we’re half ready.’ She was coming straight for them before the wind,
-and only about a mile away--a homely, clumsy-looking craft enough,
-but invested for each of the green hands with a new character now, a
-home of rest after their late heavy toil, a place where they would be
-met with a great satisfaction as returning conquerors bringing their
-gigantic spoil with them, warriors who had abundantly justified the
-training they had received. They had been able in that one fleeting
-hour of tremendous experiences to attain unto the highest physical
-pleasure of which man is capable--the sense that, by the use of his
-puny powers, rightly directed, he is able to overcome what seems to
-be at first sight the most overwhelming odds brought against him. All
-the solemnity of the first moments of victory was forgotten, and even
-Rube’s eyes sparkled with delight as he watched the look of content
-glowing on the mate’s face, as with his short boat spade he hacked at
-the great limber tail until he had cut a hole in it through which the
-tow-line could be passed.
-
-The ship rounded to as easily as one of the boats would have done, only
-about her own length from the whale. And the mate with a triumphant
-roar of ‘Give way, m’lads!’ steered for her, no man prouder than he
-of the way in which his ‘greenies’ had acquitted themselves on their
-maiden venture. The grizzled leonine head of the skipper loomed in the
-waist, where, the boards out, all was in readiness to receive them.
-And as ready hands hooked up the tow-line, and prepared to walk up
-alongside the huge mass of their prize, he said to the mate standing
-beneath him erect in the stern of the boat: ‘Wall, Mr. Pease, yew
-du seem t’ hev got on t’ a logy this time. I sh’d say he’s all ov
-a hundred an’ forty bar’l be his look, ’less he’s dry-skin.’ ‘Nary
-dry-skin ’baout him, Cap’n Hampden,’ replied the mate, cheerfully.
-‘He’s jest a-teemin’ outer him. Iron went in’s if it hed fell into a
-kag er butter. Fattes’ whale ever I struck, ’n’ thet’s the cole truth,
-sir.’
-
-Then with a joyful noise all hands tallied on to the tow-line, and
-snaked that whale alongside in great shape. Everything had been
-prepared for the arrival, cutting falls rove, spades ranged, cutting
-stage ready, and although the experience was absolutely novel to
-most of the men, they were so keen, so eager to do as they were told
-to the best of their ability, that really I doubt whether the most
-seasoned crew could have made a better show than they did. And this in
-spite of the almost feverish desire possessed by all to look upon the
-gigantic prize they had won in fair fight from his appointed realm,
-the vasty deep. It was all so wonderful, so new, so strange. And then
-in hurried glimpses they saw coming up in the clear blue around hosts
-of queer-looking creatures (to them, for none of the new hands had
-ever seen a shark before). One fellow, a lank Kentuckian, in a stolen
-moment remarked in a stage whisper to a shipmate, as they leaned over
-the rail hauling at the fluke-chain, ‘Gosh! look’t all them little
-fish daown thar.’ Said little fish, rising rapidly, presently revealed
-themselves as sharks averaging ten feet in length, who, regardless
-of consequences, hurled themselves end-ways at the whale’s body, and
-gouged at it furiously, as if driven mad by hunger.
-
-The whale fairly secured alongside, the skipper’s voice rose above the
-tumult, commanding instant attention from everybody. ‘Mr. Pease, let
-th’ boys go to dinner. I guess we won’t miss an hour, and th’ weather
-looks sorter settled.’ ‘Dinner!’ shouted the mate, and there was a
-stampede forward, for every man, as soon as he had time to think of it,
-was ravenously hungry. The cook had, under orders from the skipper,
-made a few additions to the usual dietary, and it is not too much to
-say that every man there when he sat down to enjoy his well-earned meal
-was, for the time being, as happy as ever he had been in his life. And
-only because the man who controlled their destinies for the time had
-in addition to his fund of common-sense, a little of the milk of human
-kindness.
-
-A little judicious appreciation costs nothing, and is so valuable: it
-often lifts weary men over the dead centres of life; indeed, it often
-makes a youth who, full of fear lest in his very anxiety to do well
-he has made some irreparable mistake, feel that no effort can be too
-great to please a man who has recognised his desire to do his duty. And
-when, at the call of ‘Turn to!’ the rested, well-fed crowd climbed on
-deck again into the keen, pure air, and found that while they had been
-dining the skipper and his officers had been toiling at the stupendous
-task of cutting off the whale’s head, they almost felt ashamed at
-having taken so long over their meal.
-
-I know very well that there will be many a cynical sneer at this, but
-that does not matter at all so long as the thing is true. If men (and
-I care not whether they be white, black, brown, or yellow) are treated
-like cattle they will yield worse than bovine service; if they are
-pampered and allowed to feel that they can do as they like, they will,
-their natural depravity getting the upper hand, become practically
-worthless; but if, as under Captain Hampden, they are kept under
-discipline, yet made to feel that their efforts to do well are fully
-appreciated, they will behave as men should behave who realise to the
-full the dignity of obeying the call of duty, who realise abundantly
-how good it is to be a _man_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-THE _GOOD_ SHIP ‘XIPHIAS’
-
-
-Of definite purpose I have italicised the adjective in the heading of
-this chapter because I have often feared that readers of ‘The Cruise
-of the _Cachalot_’ may have been led to believe that there could not
-be such a thing as a good whaleship. And yet even there I did try to
-show how vast a difference a change of captains made. The _Xiphias_,
-however, was good from the beginning. A certain amount of unavoidable
-suffering was endured by the new hands at the beginning of the cruise,
-consequent entirely upon the sudden violent change in their lives. And
-perhaps the officers were just a trifle exuberant in their attentions
-to the helpless, clumsy men they were endeavouring to lick into
-shape. But there never was any actual cruelty. Discipline once firmly
-established, and rudimentary ideas of the work they must do instilled
-into the men’s minds, their lives became as comfortable as a sailor’s
-life can ever be at sea. They worked hard, but only at necessary
-duties, and they were never wantonly deprived of needed rest. Their
-food was none too good, but it was certainly better than usual and
-always plentiful. Even here the genial spirit of the skipper was able
-to exercise itself beneficially for the comfort of his men. He and his
-officers were always on the keenest look-out for fish of any sort, and
-no effort was spared to catch them, all sorts of fishing tackle being
-carried for the purpose. He knew, too, many little dodges by means of
-which sea-fowl could be rendered palatable, and was a past master in
-the art of devising changes of dietary for his crew.
-
-But more than all this, the man himself was one of those glorious old
-Yankees who combine with a supreme ability to command their fellows--a
-power of enforcing discipline among the roughest with splendid,
-never-failing courage--the simple, fun-loving, joyous instincts of a
-child: terrible in their just anger to meet as a tiger in the jungle,
-but happy and light-hearted as any child when their men behave like
-men. So that Captain Hampden was not merely obeyed, he was loved both
-by officers and men, and all the more because not one of them would
-have dared to impose upon him in any way. I speak feelingly, for I
-know the man, who now, midway between eighty and ninety years of age,
-is not in his second childhood, but his first, his broad back unbent,
-his hawk-like eye undimmed, his huge limbs as steady as they were half
-a century ago. To him the children flock as to one who understands
-them. They talk to him as to one of themselves, and parents laughingly
-upbraid him with being foremost among the mischief-loving urchins of
-the sweet little New England town in which he lives. And I am sure that
-when the call comes for him to close his long and useful schooling
-here, he will lie down to sleep with the perfect confidence of a little
-child. It would be an impertinence to say ‘God bless him,’ for God has
-blessed him exceedingly abundantly, and made him also a blessing to
-many thousands who are the happier for his having lived.
-
-But I must get back apologetically to the _Xiphias_, with her crew
-girding their loins to the great task in front of them. The cutting-in
-of the first whale of a voyage is always a serious matter, since the
-crew, however willing, must needs be educated in the performance of
-an entirely novel task. I am anxious not to repeat myself, but the
-work of collecting the spoil from a dead whale is of so wonderful a
-character--is, in spite of the greasy nature of the surroundings, so
-truly romantic--that the temptation to dwell upon its description is
-ever present. To the casual unthinking observer there may seem nothing
-very wonderful in the operation of cutting-in, except the astounding
-magnitude of the masses raised from the body and disposed of in the
-blubber-room and on deck. But really it is a piece of work requiring
-not merely the utmost skill and care on the part of its directors,
-but a certain natural aptitude as well, for want of this latter
-characteristic always entails an enormous amount of extra labour upon
-the crew. Take, for instance, the preliminary operation of cutting off
-the huge head. Even with the utmost skill this task demands an amazing
-amount of muscular force, but if that be wrongly applied it is indeed
-a heart-breaking job. There is practically nothing to guide the eye
-in the selection of a line upon which to start cutting down into the
-body and finding the junction of the neck. And there is in a whale of
-the size captured by the _Xiphias_ fully six feet of muscular tissue
-to be severed by the spades before the central bone is reached. In
-other words, the diameter of the body there is about fourteen feet.
-A few inches to one side or the other, and the work may take double
-the number of hours it should do, while the able whaleman will plunge
-unerringly down through the mass blow after blow of his razor-edged
-spade until he feels--he cannot see--his blade strike the exact spot
-in the centre of the joint, a ball-and-socket about fourteen inches in
-diameter.
-
-So well had Captain Hampden and his officers performed their task that
-when the crew rushed on deck eager for work the joint had been severed,
-a hole had been bored through the snout, and the end of a snout-chain
-was already passed through this hole and dangling down under water,
-awaiting the turning over of the carcass to be got hold of. This was
-for the purpose of dropping the head astern when it was cut off, for it
-is always the last to be dealt with.
-
-Swiftly the chain-sling was passed round the base of the lower jaw,
-hooked to one of the big tackles, with a cheery shout the windlass
-levers were manned, and presently, upward pointing, arose the shaft of
-bone, studded with foot-long teeth, while the officers cut vigorously
-away at the throat, and started the unwinding of that thick overcoating
-of rich fat their prize had worn so long. And all the while the busy
-spades of the skipper and mate went plunging almost with the regularity
-of a pair of pistons down into the scarph dividing the head from the
-body, until as the first blanket piece rose alongside the head slipped
-easily aft and floated, an almost cylindrical mass of some thirty-five
-tons in weight, at the end of a hawser passed over the taffrail.
-
-All plain sailing now for a time. Merrily clattered the pawls,
-accentuated by the occasional cries of ‘Heave on yer whale!’ ‘Surge
-on yer piece!’ ‘’Vast heaving!’ ‘Lower away!’ ‘Walk back!’ and the
-like, all so definite in their application with seamen, and so utterly
-unintelligible ashore. So briskly, indeed, did the work go on that
-in less than an hour from the time that the first blanket piece was
-lowered into the blubber-room, all hands were gratified to see the
-great flukes dangling at the end of a tackle, the last joint of the
-backbone having been cut through and the mountainous mass of black
-flesh allowed to drift slowly away, torn at by innumerable sharks on
-all sides, and the centre of a perfect cloud of screaming sea-birds.
-
-Now for the head. Smart as the work had been, there was no time to be
-lost. Although the whale had been struck at 8 A.M., it was now nearly
-3 P.M. Barely three hours of daylight remained; and, besides, on the
-south-eastern horizon there was rising a mass of cloud, with outlines
-as sharp and clearly defined as those of a mountain. It loomed ever
-higher, vast, menacing, and deepening into blackness. But although
-the skipper could not help casting an anxious glance to windward
-occasionally, his manner was cheery as ever, and he and his officers
-toiled as if fatigue was to them a word without meaning. Certainly,
-whatever other virtues be denied them, the Yankee whaling officers
-could never be accused of laziness. If they worked their men almost to
-death they never spared themselves: they always led the way, and showed
-by their example what a man could do if he tried.
-
-The task of dividing the ‘case’ and ‘junk’ from the head, which was now
-taken in hand, is the heaviest of all, not excepting cutting off the
-head. For the case is a huge oblong tank, full of pure spermaceti, and
-extending almost the whole length of the head, of which, indeed, it
-forms nearly half the bulk. It must be cut out, for in a whale of this
-size it contains nearly three tons of spermaceti as fluid as oil, and
-there is no way of getting at this precious substance without lifting
-the whole case. Lifting the head entirely is sometimes effected, but
-only when the whale is small. In so large a one as this the lifting
-of the case alone when detached is a task demanding the utmost energy
-of all hands, and often, when a heavy sea is running, straining the
-ship dangerously. Even then it cannot be taken on board, but must be
-suspended alongside, and the spermaceti baled out of it with a bucket
-in a most cumbrous and unsatisfactory way. The junk, being one solid
-mass cut off the point of the snout, and weighing about four or five
-tons, is easier dealt with, since a slip of the spade in cutting it off
-does not mean a possible leakage of all its valuable contents, for in
-it the spermaceti is contained in cells as water is held in a sponge,
-and is, moreover, almost congealed.
-
-By dint of the most strenuous toil, the junk and case were separated,
-and the former hove on deck and secured, half an hour before dark. Then
-the mighty case was hooked on and held up alongside. As the ship was
-beginning to roll uneasily in the new cross swell coming up from the
-south-east, precursor of the impending storm, it was necessary to pass
-a heavy chain around it to bind it in to the side. Then a light spar
-was rigged across the two tackles, high above the case, and a single
-whip or pulley, with a rope running through it, to one end of which was
-attached a long bucket. Then a man--he happened to be a merry little
-Irish teamster, named MacManus--mounted nimbly aloft, and sat upon the
-spar grasping a spade pole, with which to push the bucket down into
-the case after he had slit open the top of it. Then, at his word, the
-waiting men on deck hauled the bucket out and lowered it to the tank
-awaiting its contents on deck.
-
-Meanwhile all on deck were as busy as ants. Inspired by the skipper,
-they toiled to get the decks clear, and certain of them, at the word,
-rushed aloft to furl the few remaining sails that were set, except the
-close-reefed main topsail. Rube, being on the leeside, did not trouble
-to cross the deck and go up in orthodox fashion, but as he climbed
-somewhat wearily he saw MacManus take a header from his precarious
-seat into the yawning cavity of the case. A scream of horror burst
-from his lips, but overcoming the paralysis that momentarily affected
-his bodily powers, he leaped like a cat from the main shrouds to the
-cutting falls, and, grabbing the bucket in one hand, slid down into
-the yawning chasm beneath. As he went he felt the slimy walls of the
-great case embracing him all round, and thought with agony of the
-depth beneath him--fourteen feet at least of oil--then soundlessly the
-bland greasiness closed over his head, and all was darkness. But his
-mind was clear, and his hope was high that those who saw him go would
-spring to the whip and haul up ere it was too late. And while he thus
-thought he groped with one arm through the bucket loop, and, feeling
-something hard, seized it with a drowning man’s grip just as he felt
-himself ascending. Reluctantly those sucking walls yielded up their
-prey; his arms felt as if they were being torn from their sockets;
-but although there was a roaring as of loudest thunder in his ears,
-he held on. And presently he hung limply in mid-air, one arm still
-through the bucket loop, the other around the body of MacManus. Four
-eager and willing men slid down the falls and seized the pair. Securing
-them with ropes passed to them from the main-top, they lowered them as
-rapidly as possible on deck. Even then there was no time to be lost,
-for both were apparently dead--ears, nostrils, and mouths being clogged
-with the rapidly coagulating spermaceti. But after the application of
-some highly original methods of clearing it away, and most patient
-artificial respiration following it, the pair gradually returned from
-their visit to the shades, and sat up wonderingly.
-
-It was not for several hours that either of them could recall what had
-befallen them, and when they did both fell a-trembling violently as
-they again realised the sensation of sliding down into that darksome
-well of grease. But Rube recovered first, having, as he said, the need
-laid upon him to offer up thanks to God for permitting him to save his
-shipmate’s life. He remembered how, as he slid out of the fast-fading
-daylight, his heart said, ‘O God, make me save him,’ and he felt that
-by nothing short of a miracle he had been able to do so. Poor MacManus
-could not speak of it, so broken up was he, but for hours, emitting
-every now and then a rending sob, he lay holding Rube’s hand in his as
-if only by so doing could he be prevented from gliding back again into
-that pit of death.
-
-This accident had, of course, caused much delay, but still, through
-the now almost pitchy blackness of the night, by the aid of cressets
-of blazing fuel suspended from the boat-davits, the work had gone on,
-until at four bells (10 P.M.) a few strokes of a spade released the
-ponderous mass from its slings, and with a sullen, thunderous boom it
-fell back into the sea. Immediately upon its disappearance the skipper
-ordered half the crew below for a couple of hours’ rest, and himself
-hastened to visit the victims of the late mishap. He found MacManus
-asleep, nervously twitching all over, but Rube lying with hands folded
-on his breast, his lips moving slowly as he murmured praises for his
-deliverance.
-
-‘Well, Rube, ’n’ haow d’ye seem t’ be hittin’ it b’ now, hey?’ said the
-old man cheerily.
-
-Rube turned on him a dazzling smile, and answered in a quiet tone: ‘Jes
-’s grand ’s grand kin be, Cap’n. I don’t know as I was ever so happy in
-all m’ life. Only one thing I’m sorry fur, ’at I kain’t be up ’n’ doin’
-my share o’ th’ work thet’s goin’ on. But as yew’re all so kind, I
-don’t feel able t’ worry nearly ’s much ’bout thet ’s I feel I oughter.’
-
-‘Jes’ yew stop right thar,’ said the skipper. ‘Don’t wanter hyar ‘et
-yew’re worryin’ any ‘t all. Why, blame my cats, I want ye well, ’n’
-haow in thunder air ye goin’ t’ git well ef you lays thar a-worryin’?
-Guess me an’ th’ rest ov yew’re shipmates ’ll dew all th’ worryin’
-thet’s called fur till yew’re round again. We kain’t git ’long ’thout
-yew a bit, ’n’ thet’s a fact.’
-
-‘Ah, Cap’n,’ murmured Rube, ‘it does sound good ov ye to say so, and
-say it so kinder tender like. Fact is, yew’re all of ye so kind ’at
-I’m’s happy as a man k’n be. Nothin’ don’t seem able t’ hurt me. Naow
-and then thar’s a set o’ blurred pictures comes up in my mind of a long
-time ago, when I was very unhappy an’ looked ahead to see nawthin’
-but trouble an’ misery waitin’ fur me all my days. But it never gits
-quite clear. I never remember anything fur certain, and I don’t seem
-ter--I kain’t seem ter--feel ’at I keer a row o’ pins what’s goin’ t’
-happen ter-morrer. I seem ter ben here all my life, ’n’ don’t want a
-little bit t’ be anywhere else. I ain’t gut a care ner a fret ner a
-want in the world.’ Then, as the Captain turned as if about to leave
-abruptly--for the need upon him to do so was great--Rube gently laid
-a detaining hand upon his arm, saying: ‘Cap’n, I believe it’s all the
-goodness of God. Some of us don’t think as much of Him as we might. I
-know I don’t, but I b’lieve ther’ ain’t one of _us_ but what thinks
-more about God’s love to ’em than they do ’bout anythin’ else in this
-world.’ ‘Stop,’ almost shouted the skipper, ‘yew’re hurtin’ me wuss ’n
-ye know. I dassent say a word ’at w’d hurt yer faith in us, but fur
-God’s sake don’t make us out like that. I kain’t tell ye haow mean an’
-low down an’ ord’nary yew make me feel when yew talk like that. Naow I
-must git, fur yew’re mighty low, ’n’ I got work wants doin’. Try an’
-git t’ sleep an’ be about among us as quickly as ever yew can.’ And the
-skipper hurriedly departed.
-
-In truth he was glad to get away from what was rapidly becoming an
-intolerable situation. Back to his mind had been brought with startling
-clearness the old Quaker home, the sweet placid face of his mother, as
-with a cooing gentleness she taught him to utter his earliest prayers
-to the All-Father with whom she was on such beautifully intimate terms.
-He remembered how the light upon his mother’s face always seemed to him
-to be reflected from the sky, and how he used to shut his eyes tight
-and wish that he might have a vision of that dear Friend whom he felt
-sure that mother could see and hear so clearly. Also the grave face of
-his father came up before him, never, as far as he could remember, lit
-by a smile, always looking as if the tremendous realities of life had
-left their indelible impress there. He knew that while he had loved
-his mother he had reverenced his father, but never seemed able to get
-beyond that feeling of awe-stricken admiration. Then came the death
-of both those holy ones, the breaking up of the old home, and the
-gradual loss through the struggling years that followed of personal
-communion with his mother’s Friend, while still retaining through all
-the hardnesses of a whaler’s life a blend of her sweet temper and his
-father’s exalted rectitude. And now he was set a-wondering in the
-presence of this gentle ‘greenie’ how much he had lost through his
-gradually letting slip his acquaintance with his mother’s God. But
-like most men of Anglo-Saxon race, he felt a strange fear lest he
-should betray to anyone around him these ennobling, uplifting thoughts
-that welled up from his heart. His face burned and his voice trembled
-curiously as he walked among his toiling men, glancing furtively at
-each familiar face as if wondering whether any of them could detect
-any difference in him--for difference he knew there was--from what he
-had been yesterday.
-
-After a short interval of oversight, a few words with the officers
-who were superintending the commencement of the trying-out process,
-and an entirely contented look around at the storminess of the night,
-he said to the second mate, who was in charge of the watch at the
-time: ‘Wall, Mr. Peck, I guess I’ll go and turn in fur a spell. It’s
-goin’t’ be a dirty night, an’ ye mout’s well rig up the cover over
-th’ try-works, ’case it rains, ’r she ships any water. Don’t want th’
-pots bilin’ over ’n catchin’ light, do we? Nawthin’ else yew’d like t’
-talk t’ me abaout, is there, ’fore I go below?’ ‘No, sir,’ said the
-officer; ‘everythin’ seems to be goin’ in good shape so far, ’n’ as fur
-this dirt, wall, I reckon the moon’s ’bout due at seven bells ’n’ I
-shouldn’t wonder if she scorfs it all.’ ‘Ha, ha,’ laughed the old man;
-‘it’s mighty certain she wunt scorf the fly jib anyhaow. It’s too well
-fast fur thet. Good-night.’ He alluded to the old, old yarn at sea of
-the careful mate who, because the night was threatening in appearance,
-asked the skipper whether he shouldn’t ‘take some of the kites off
-her.’ ‘Oh, no,’ said the skipper, ‘the moon’ll scorf (eat) all that’
-(alluding to the ugly appearance of the clouds). But when aroused by
-the tumult on deck an hour or two latter the skipper came rushing on
-deck and anxiously inquired what had become of the flying jib, the mate
-replied nonchalantly, ‘Oh, the moon’s scorfed that, sir.’
-
-Diving below, the old man took a searching look at his barometer,
-noted the direction of the ship’s head, and then passed on to his own
-tiny state-room, slipped off his boots and sat down. Alone with his
-thoughts, they flew back again to that far-off time to which they had
-been directed by his contemplation of Rube. Slowly his head dropped
-upon his hands, lower and lower he bowed himself, until, utterly
-oblivious of all the sea-noises around him, of the uneasy motion of his
-ship as she headed the rising sea, or of his responsibility for the
-welfare of every soul on board, he slipped down upon his knees, and
-as simply as ever he did when a child, but with an added fervour, he
-lifted up his heart to God.
-
-It was at least half an hour before he rose from his knees, but in the
-space of that brief period he had learned more than most men learn
-during the whole of their lives. Confessing his sins he asked for
-pardon, admitting his blindness he asked for sight, acknowledging his
-ignorance he asked for teaching; and he obtained all his desires. Then
-with a sense of lightness and freedom from care never before felt he
-lay down on his little settee to be ready for a call, and in about the
-space of one minute was fast asleep.
-
-On deck, the scene to an uninitiate would have been appalling. With a
-monotonous, never-ceasing, and ever-increasing wail the wild wind bore
-down out of the windward blackness upon the brave old ship. A peep
-over the weather bulwarks revealed the long, long ranges of gleaming
-wave-crests rolling down upon her, their uncanny greenish light
-flickering against the black background and showing by the distances
-they were apart longitudinally how mightily the waves had grown. There
-was a fascination about them, too, which held the observer gazing until
-like a splash of small shot a spray of spindrift struck him in the face
-and sent him smarting to shelter. But as if it had been the finest of
-summer evenings the steady stress of labour continued. Up from the
-blubber-room were hurled the massive horse-pieces of blubber, carved
-with so much labour from the great blanket pieces by the slipping,
-struggling labourers below. Of all the strange places I have ever seen
-I think the blubber-room of a whaleship at night in a gale of wind is
-beyond comparison the strangest. It is a square space of about thirty
-feet each way and between six and seven feet high. Into it are piled
-the blanket pieces, those immense widths of blubber, each weighing
-a ton or so, which have been ripped from the carcass of the whale.
-In uncouth masses they lie one upon another, piled often almost to
-touching the beams overhead. As the ship rolls they glide and heave
-upon one another as if still actuated by the breath of the monster
-they so lately covered. From a beam, generally in a corner, swings a
-primitive lamp, little more than accentuating the darkness. And at the
-beginning of operations two dim forms crawl precariously about among
-those greasy masses, occasionally slipping a leg down into a temporary
-crevice and having it squeezed into numbness before being able to
-withdraw it. They wield short-handled spades like Dutch hoes, and with
-infinite labour hew off blocks from the masses of blubber of a fit
-size to pass through the mincer. When they have a dozen or so of these
-blocks ready they must needs in some unexplainable fashion balance
-themselves under the hatchway, and with a sort of diminutive pitchfork
-hurl the blocks (horse-pieces) upwards into a shallow trough secured
-to the coaming or upper edge of the hatch, whence the attendant on the
-mincer loads a tub with them and drags them away. And unless these
-blubber-room men be exceedingly skilful as well as strong, they will
-not only never have a breathing space during the six hours of their
-stay below, but will, in addition, have to bear much contumely from the
-officer in charge, who will be instant in his sarcastic inquiries as to
-what they may be doing below--whether they are asleep or not.
-
-The clank-clank of the mincer is unceasing, tall tongues of flame from
-the funnels of the try-works make long red smears upon the gloom as
-they stream away to leeward, and the two harpooners feed the bubbling
-cauldrons with minced blubber, bale out the sufficiently boiled oil,
-and watch with unceasing care against a sudden splash of cold water
-into the pots, which may cause the oil to rise in a moment, and,
-overflowing into the furnaces, set fire to the ship. All the watch is
-so busy that there is no time to notice the weather, or moralise upon
-this most romantic scene--a ship’s company who, having succeeded in
-winning from a hostile element the spoil of the mightiest creature
-known, have now converted their vessel into a floating factory, and
-under the most extraordinarily difficult conditions conceivable are
-engaged in realising that spoil in order to convey it to their home
-port thousands of miles away.
-
-Here let us leave them for awhile, and exercising our privilege of
-instant transition, glance back at the quiet village whence the
-departure of our hero withdrew so much consolation and manly assistance
-in the old age of his parents.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-AT THE OLD HOMESTEAD
-
-
-Saturday night in the Eddy homestead. In their respective chairs,
-occupied by them with hardly a break through thirty-eight years of
-ideally happy married life, sat Farmer Eddy and his wife. The labours
-of the week were ended, the hired people gone to rest, and husband
-and wife sat face to face as they had done for so many years, but
-never until the last six months with such weary hearts. Mrs. Eddy had
-aged very much. Not that any care for her boy’s spiritual welfare
-worried her--she felt as certain of him in that respect as if he had
-been always under her eye. But since his departure from New Bedford
-in the _Xiphias_ it was as if he had passed into the eternal silence,
-and although she said little her heart-hunger was terrible. His
-last letter was but half-a-dozen lines, hastily scrawled and posted
-without signature, telling his parents that he was outward bound on a
-South Sea whaling voyage, and in the hurry of the moment omitting to
-mention even the name of his ship. Naturally, therefore, as the days
-went by lengthening into weeks, the weeks into months, the disease of
-uncertainty made her its prey, and she aged fast, perhaps as much from
-the heroic effort she made to conceal her anxiety from her husband as
-from its direct effect.
-
-Alas, what Mrs. Eddy endured has too often been the lot of American
-mothers. For in those days recruiting agents for the New England
-whalers prowled about the country beguiling simple young men with
-specious tales of the glories of a roving life and the wealth they
-would by-and-by bring home. And as the recruits never knew where they
-were going except that it was out upon the wide ocean, nor when they
-might possibly return, except that it must not _legally_ be longer than
-four years, the news they were able to send their people at the time
-of shipment, even supposing they felt in good heart enough to do so,
-was of necessity extremely meagre. Nor were opportunities for sending
-letters frequent afterwards. An occasional whaler was spoken which
-might or might not be homeward bound in the course of a year or so. It
-was hardly worth while entrusting letters to such a casual packet as
-that. And the land touched was almost always carefully selected for its
-aloofness from civilisation, as well as its offering few inducements to
-a would-be deserter who was anxious to return home.
-
-Farmer Eddy went about much the same as usual but noticeably graver,
-and, if possible, more gentle than ever. He never spoke to his
-neighbours about his son, and scarcely ever to his wife, but this
-latter omission mattered little, since at the evening prayer he had
-ever since Rube’s departure devoted at least half of that pleasant
-season to pleading with his Father for his son. Together as the old
-couple knelt they saw with the eye of faith Rube upheld in right-doing,
-cleansed by affliction, drawn nearer to God, and never unmindful of
-them. Their simple assurance that all was well with him never wavered,
-nor, although they so seldom mentioned his name at any other than
-these sacred times, did either of them lose his image from their
-mental vision for one waking hour. Here, however, Farmer Eddy had one
-advantage over his wife--the usual one, she was the mother. And as such
-she could no more help yearning over her absent son than she could help
-breathing. Her faith was as robust as her husband’s without doubt, but,
-oh, she wanted her boy back so badly.
-
-In a worldly sense all had prospered with them, and looked as if that
-prosperity would continue. And they had been almost compelled to extend
-their possessions by the acquisition of the Fish farm. For after
-Priscilla’s departure with her husband, Mrs. Fish, feeling utterly
-alone except for the hired girls who came and went, visibly drooped day
-by day. Mrs. Eddy came as often as she could to visit her old friend,
-but that was not often, and moreover her visits were of necessity very
-short. Not only was Mrs. Fish lonely, but her heart was a prey to all
-sorts of apprehensions. Jake, her eldest son, was steadily going from
-bad to worse, leaving the oversight of the farm more and more to his
-younger brother Will, who, instead of rising to the occasion, chafed
-and fretted at his position of, as he put it, farm-bailiff without
-salary, except what Jake was minded to fling him occasionally with an
-air of lofty contempt. Unknown to either his mother or brother, but not
-unsuspected, Jake was also mortgaging the farm up to the very roof-tree
-of the house, and, with an infatuation almost amounting to lunacy,
-was spending the money in riotous trips to New York and Boston. He
-apparently did not permit himself to think at all of the certain ruin
-he was courting, nor spend one thought upon the unmerited suffering he
-was bringing upon his mother and brother.
-
-The climax was reached at last by his returning from one of his New
-York trips accompanied by an exceedingly handsome but vulgar young
-woman, whom he swaggeringly announced as his intended bride. His
-brother and mother were sitting at their evening meal when this
-happened, and when he made the announcement his mother, with one swift
-and comprehensive glance at her son’s female companion, rose from her
-seat, saying, ‘Will, he’p me up stairs.’ Jake, his face flaring with
-rage, interposed between the departing pair and the door, demanding
-almost in a shout and with many oaths what they meant by insulting him
-and his intended wife. Releasing his mother’s arm, Will took a step
-towards his brother, saying quietly and distinctly: ‘Yew misbul shote,
-ain’t it ’nough fur yew t’ break mother’s heart with yer goin’s on but
-yew must insult her ole age by bringin’ _thet_ home an’ flauntin’ it in
-her face. Naow, ’r ye goin’ t’ git aout o’ eour way or ain’t ye----?’
-
-There were no more words. Jake, maddened, flew at his brother’s throat,
-and the pair, both strong young men, but the elder much debilitated
-by his recent excesses, writhed and wrestled and tumbled about the
-living-room like a pair of tigers. The woman Jake had brought with
-him, retreating to a safe corner, eyed the wretched struggle with a
-serene aloofness befitting a Roman amphitheatre, but the mother sat
-wringing her hands and feebly calling upon her sons for God’s sake to
-cease their unnatural strife. Suddenly, over the wreck of the table,
-the pair collapsed, Will uppermost. Hoarsely he shouted, as with one
-knee on his brother’s breast, one hand clutching Jake’s throat, he
-raised himself a little: ‘Y’ onnatural beast, will y’ git eout o’ this,
-’r sh’ll I kill ye t’ onct? Y’ ain’t fit t’ live, I know, but b’ th’
-’Tarnal y’ ain’t fit t’ die. Will y’ git ’r shall I mash y’r face into
-a jelly?’ ‘Yes, I’ll go,’ gasped the almost choking man, and Will,
-carefully releasing him, watched him out of the house, and into the
-buggy, which had been waiting ever since he arrived. No sooner had the
-pair taken their seats, and the horse, under a merciless cut of Jake’s
-whip, had bounded off, than Will returned to his mother, finding her
-in a dead faint; indeed, looking as if coming to again was a quite
-unlikely contingency. Desperately alarmed, Will called for the hired
-girl, who had been busy outside, and leaving his mother to her care,
-hitched up his cart and drove furiously over to the Eddy place. It did
-not take many minutes for him to persuade Mrs. Eddy to return with
-him to the aid of his suffering mother. But when they arrived she was
-past all earthly comfort. Her mind wandered from the good man of her
-youthful days to Priscilla and Jake; the only one she did not mention
-in her rambling remarks was Will. But he, good fellow, made no sign of
-how this omission smote upon his heart. Nevertheless, could anyone have
-read his thoughts, it would have been seen how deeply he was wounded,
-and how sincere was his unspoken resolve that, should his mother die,
-the home of his youth, grown hateful to him, should know him no more.
-
-At 4 A.M. Mrs. Fish passed away, still unconscious of those around,
-still talking more or less intelligibly of her husband and elder son
-and daughter. And Mrs. Eddy, tired out, having first persuaded Will to
-retire, went to her own well-earned rest against the labours of the
-coming day. The following week tried her and her husband to the utmost,
-for Will, besides being almost penniless (his brother having had every
-cent he could lay hands on), manifested much eagerness to be gone and
-leave everything just as it was. Farmer Eddy was at his wits’ end what
-to do, and it was no small relief to him when a Boston lawyer came
-down empowered to sell the place and all that was on it to the highest
-bidder for the benefit of the mortgagees. Then it was that Mr. Eddy
-decided to buy, being, as he said, desirous that the heart-broken young
-man, now so eager to be gone, should, if he were ever able, be allowed
-to redeem the home of his childhood from the careful hand of a friend
-instead of seeing it pass into the unsympathetic grip of a stranger.
-Will professed entire indifference, but no doubt the unostentatious
-kindness of his father’s old friend did him much good--especially
-when in the kindest manner possible Farmer Eddy pressed upon him
-a sufficient store of dollars to allow him time to look around in
-Chicago, whither he was bent upon going.
-
-Farmer Eddy saw him off, gave him his blessing, but very little
-advice (wise man!--full well he knew how advice at such a time would
-be received), but earnest encouragement to keep up communication
-between himself and his old home; ‘for--who knows?’ said the good old
-fellow--‘your sister may want a home some day.’ To his utter amazement
-Will turned upon him almost fiercely, saying: ‘That wouldn’t be a
-bad thing for her. It might throw for her the true light upon how she
-treated mother. Don’t talk t’ me of Pris. I don’t care a cent what
-becomes of her----’ But the farmer, with uplifted hand, stayed him,
-saying: ‘Don’t, Will. Yew’re het up naow, an’ say wut ye don’t at all
-mean. Thar, we won’t persoo th’ subjec’. Let me know as often as ye
-can haow yew’re gittin’ along, an’ I’ll be glad. Good-bye, my boy,
-good-bye.’ And the last of the Fish family departed.
-
-Thenceforward the Fish place received even more attention than did his
-own homestead from old man Eddy. He looked upon it in the light of a
-sacred trust, a view in which he was keenly supported by his wife. For
-he did cherish an earnest hope that some day his old friends’ children
-might be reunited, purged by suffering, and, returning to their old
-home, find with grateful hearts how good to them had been the God of
-whom they had thought so little. And to this end he and his wife added
-to their nightly intercourse with their Friend the petition that these
-wayward ones might yet be gathered in and find peace at home.
-
-Of Priscilla, of course, they had never heard a word since her
-departure, but without a shade of resentment they remembered her and
-wondered how she was faring. Their ideas, naturally, could be only of
-the vaguest, since they knew no more than they did of Reuben where
-she was or whither she was going. But from what they had heard from
-Will, applying sensibly considerable allowance for pique, they feared
-that she had before now found how great a mistake she had made, and
-had repented too late to avoid the suffering it had entailed. But
-none of these reflections had the effect of making them despair of a
-righting of matters at the long last, and so they cheerfully took up
-the additional burden of their self-imposed duties, finding that, so
-far from their being irksome to perform, they brought with them many
-consolations. If only they could have heard from Rube! But apparently
-that could not be, and so they waited, in patient well-doing, for the
-breaking of the day.
-
-When Jake, driven forth ignominiously from the home he had so wronged,
-by the brother he had despised, returned to New York, he was utterly
-reckless. Without troubling to look into his affairs, he and his
-companion were driven from the depot to a high-class hotel, where
-they immediately resumed the course of high living and deplorable
-extravagance which seemed to have become necessary to Jake’s life.
-Now, the squandering of money is a thing that requires very little
-teaching, and can be carried on successfully in most so-called centres
-of civilisation, but I doubt very much whether any great city can
-afford the spendthrift more facilities for speedily reaching the end of
-his resources than New York. For its plethora of supereminently wealthy
-men have perhaps unconsciously raised such a standard of expenditure
-as does not obtain anywhere else in the world, and, of course, this is
-ever before those fools who have neither sufficient money nor brains
-as a shining example to go and do likewise as closely as circumstances
-will permit them. Without blaming the multi-millionaires too much,
-there can be no doubt that the example most of them set in the
-direction of foolish waste of money is wholly evil.
-
-So it came about that a fortnight after Jake Fish’s return to New
-York he had exhausted every possible means of raising funds, and was
-confronted with the prospect of being utterly unable to meet his
-bill due on Saturday at the Hoffman House. Sobered a little by this,
-he consulted his companion on the matter, and suggested her parting
-with some of the costly jewellery he had given her. Vain fool! She
-sympathised with him tearfully, avowed her willingness to share a
-crust with him rather than live in luxury with any other man, said
-the shock had so unnerved her that she must go and lie down awhile to
-recover herself, after which she would come with him and dispose of
-all the glittering ‘trash’--yes, she called it that--when they would
-go away to some quiet spot and be very happy. Overjoyed, Jake lavished
-multitudinous caresses upon her, sent her up stairs, and retired to
-the smoke-room to work out some plan for making these new funds go as
-far as possible without too much appearance of retrenchment. Then in
-his easy chair, surrounded by every luxury of appointment a man could
-desire, he fell asleep.
-
-He was awakened by a waiter, who handed him a scented note. At
-first he stared at the man stupidly, only half awake, and utterly
-uncomprehending. Then as sense returned he tore open the envelope and
-read:
-
- ‘Dear Jake,--You’ve had a pretty high old time, and so have I. But you
- might have the savvy to let it go at that. You must be a bigger fool
- than even I took you for if you imagine that I am going to slide down
- to the bottom along with you, and begin by coughing up all the stuff
- you’ve paid me with. No, no; you’ve been playing long enough: now run
- along like a wise little man and _earn_ something. I’m off on a much
- better campaign. Good luck.--Not yours,
-
- ‘A. C.
-
- ‘P.S.--If you feel inclined to kick, watch out how you do it. It isn’t
- very healthy exercise for you.’
-
-Jake read this letter thrice without understanding a word of it. Its
-general import he knew, and it had paralysed him. He sat staring
-stupidly at the paper until the waiter, nudging him, politely called
-his attention to the fact that his bill was before him. That roused
-him as does the far-heard crack of the fowling-piece arouse the timid
-hare. Summoning all his energies, he dismissed the waiter with a curt
-‘All right, I’ll ’tend t’ this d’reckly,’ and rising, lounged toward
-the lift, his head throbbing furiously. Poor wretch, he was really
-more fool than rogue--thoroughly selfish, yet beaten by one more
-selfish than himself, upon whom he had lavished all he had; heartless
-towards his own, yet punished for his benevolence to a stranger who
-had befooled him; he was really a fair type of a large class of men
-everywhere who are only virtuous because they lack opportunity or
-initiative to be otherwise. Reaching his sumptuous room, he found
-his clothes bestrewing the floor, showing how thorough had been the
-search made by the departed one for portable plunder. He felt his head
-beginning to swim, and realising that he _must_ escape or make the
-acquaintance of a Tombs gaoler, he pulled himself together, slammed his
-door, and, descending by another lift, passed from the hotel and was
-soon lost in the crowd.
-
-Now, there is one tremendous difference between the cities of North
-America and those of Great Britain in respect of their harbourage of
-such men as Jake Fish was now in a fair way to become. London, for
-instance, seems to offer a premium to the most worthless. A loafing,
-shiftless vagabond need exercise no ingenuity, no originality of
-resource, in order to be better looked after in every way than,
-let us say, a seaman in a merchant ship. London workhouses swarm
-with humans of this type, well fed, well clothed, well housed, and,
-oh, _so_ tenderly entreated as to work. Any little ailment that a
-working man would never notice is considered sufficient warrant for
-lapping these spoilt children of fortune in cotton wool and tenderly
-nursing them back to convalescence again in palace chambers fitted
-with all the appliances for the healing of disease that the mind of
-benevolence and medical skill can devise. And for all this the sorely
-burdened ratepayer must needs provide, although he, in common with
-most of England’s working poor, thinks of the workhouse as the home
-of disgrace, and would in most instances rather die of starvation in
-silence than go there.
-
-But in North America, while there is great store of loafers, not
-confined either to the lowest class, they must have some original
-talent, some inventive enterprise about them, whether in criminal way
-or merely low trickery. Otherwise they become hoboes, or as we should
-call them in England ‘tramps,’ whose chief qualifications must be an
-unconquerable aversion to work, great powers of passive endurance, a
-love of filth--in fact, a reversion to the worst type of savage without
-one savage virtue. There is little room, however, for the hobo in
-a city. The exercise of his chosen calling needs great open spaces
-sparsely peopled, where there are hardly any police. Moreover, the
-hoboes, according to Mr. Josiah Flynt, are a close corporation looking
-with much disfavour upon would-be recruits, so that admission to their
-ranks is not easily gained.
-
-Jake Fish then, had he realised it, was in evil case. He was a
-veritable prodigal, unrepentant, and with no father’s house to return
-to in case of repentance. Only fit for farming, and hating that
-furiously, he had no idea of doing anything else for his bread, and,
-as we have seen, his tastes were costly. Consequently, now that he had
-spent all, he felt that he had a bitter grievance against society for
-not graciously providing him with the means to continue his career of
-viciousness. But he was, besides, an arrant coward, an essentially
-worthless man, such as may be, by a miracle, made into a useful member
-of society, but, alas, very seldom is. He drifted down, down, down. The
-few dollars in his pockets when he left the hotel were squandered with
-the same utter absence of forethought as had always characterised him,
-and then, when, driven by hunger, he would have obtained some labouring
-work, he found himself fiercely shoved aside by far better men.
-
-He disappeared. Not that there is not work and food for all in the
-Great Republic, but the conditions of life are strenuous, and if a man
-will not work, and work hard, he must scheme, and that cleverly, or he
-will certainly disappear as Jake did, and no one will take any trouble
-to inquire whither.
-
-Will, on the other hand--bright, eager, and industrious--arrived in
-Chicago with resolute determination to take his fate by the throat,
-also to husband his small resources with the utmost care while seeking
-among the busy throngs for something that he could do. And he was
-determined not to stand choosing, but to do as he had read that so
-many others had done--take the first employment offered, no matter how
-deficient in qualification he might feel himself to be for it, and,
-having once got work, to strive manfully to keep it, and rise from
-one point to another by ceaseless attention and industry, and, above
-all, to avoid the saloon (public-house) as he would a plague-spot.
-Fortunately for him, he had never acquired the taste for dissipation
-which had destroyed his brother, for opportunity had been lacking. It
-was not a question of moral principle at all. And now, although he did
-not know it, would not have believed it had he been told, he was in a
-position of the utmost danger. Without any home ties, with no religious
-convictions, nothing to safeguard him from ruin, he might easily have
-sunk; but he had no physical inclination for the destroying vices,
-having never been tempted.
-
-At this juncture he was standing one day watching a busy little knot of
-porters loading up packages of hardware from a warehouse into a couple
-of heavy waggons. The swiftness and apparent eagerness with which
-they did their work, without any appearance of being driven, appealed
-to him, and unconsciously his face took on a wistful expression--he
-would so much have liked to be one of that busy band. A keen-eyed,
-pleasant-faced man of middle age, who stood in the doorway with a book
-in his hand making certain entries, caught sight of the waiting,
-earnest-looking man. And being of an imaginative, romantic turn of mind
-(which, scoff at the idea as you may, is almost essential to the making
-of a successful business man), he began in a side alley of his brain to
-build up a theory concerning this evidently country-bred young fellow
-who was watching manual labour being carried on with such manifest
-desire to take part in it. Moreover, the owner of the warehouse, for
-it was he, was a kindly Christian, whose interest in all men, but
-specially his own employés, was proverbial in Chicago--that humming
-hive of business that contains so much that is evil, but, thank God,
-has also so much that is pre-eminently good.
-
-Will began to move away slowly, but Mr. Schermer made half-a-dozen
-swift strides after him, and tapping him smartly upon the shoulder,
-said, ‘Say, young man, are you looking for work?’ ‘I am, sir,’ Will
-replied smartly. ‘Then come right in here, and I’ll start you at
-once. I’m wanting a young fellow of your build pretty bad.’ And in
-ten minutes Will felt that he was on the high road to fortune. Plenty
-of work, not difficult to learn, good thews and muscle to do it, and
-a hearty, appreciative man at the head of things; he was delighted.
-More by a turn of Fortune’s wheel than any design discoverable by man,
-Will had fallen into just the place he needed, where not only did he
-receive fair play, but where the employer kept ever before himself the
-fact that each of his men was an individual soul for whom Christ died,
-and not just the cog of a machine; where the employer shouldered his
-responsibility for his men as he did the bills he endorsed, and with
-just the same absence of consciousness that he was doing anything more
-than his obvious duty. No one praised him for meeting his bills as they
-fell due; why should they praise him for considering the men who were
-serving him faithfully, and all the more faithfully because they knew
-full well that their employer had their interests at heart as well as
-his own--nay, that he regarded their interests and his as inseparable?
-
-I must leave Will here, under the most favourable conditions, to push
-his manful way up the ladder of prosperity, and to preserve, if he can,
-a measure of humility with it all, in that it was his lot to fall into
-good hands without any seeking of his own. Also I have a half-guilty
-feeling that this has been a prosy old chapter, quite at variance with
-the strain of high adventure which I have endeavoured to maintain
-throughout the rest of the book. And now we must return to Priscilla.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-REPAIRING DAMAGES
-
-
-The old _Grampus_, all unknowing of the hopes and fears and aches and
-pains she bore, rolled uneasily throughout that terribly long night. To
-tell the exact truth, she was often left entirely to herself, existing
-only by the good will of the elements or any passing ship. In much the
-same condition as the remnant of a beaten army, whose outposts, weary
-to death, fall down and sleep weltering in mud and blood because poor
-human nature has said her last word, the broken mate lay sleeping,
-his fractured leg, benumbed from heel to thigh, straightened out, and
-his utterly worn-out body not disturbing it by a single movement.
-The battered men below in the stifling reek of the foc’s’le also lay
-asleep (blessed be God for sleep and death), utterly unconscious of
-their woes. The shipkeepers, whom a sense of duty kept, desperate as
-their need was, from sleeping too long at one spell, lay in uncouth
-attitudes about the moonlit deck. Occasionally one of them would rise
-and aimlessly rove aft to the binnacle, gaze into its glittering oval
-with eyes that distinguished not North from South, and then with
-another owl-like glance aloft would stagger forward and tumble down
-asleep again. And the missing ones, six stalwart men who yesterday
-morning were each a centre of activity and private hopes, desires, and
-possibilities? At any rate their rest would be long and sound.
-
-Priscilla woke about midnight, and looked uneasily about her. The
-almost stifling atmosphere of the tiny cabin, the reek of the lamp,
-and the innumerable exhalations from below, made the place almost
-unbearable. And as with a feeling of nausea overpowering her she
-surveyed her prison, there came to her, like a voice from a previous
-life, the most vivid recollection possible of the sweet breath stealing
-over the fields of her old home; of the careless days when singing she
-went about her household work; of the many delights brought by the
-changing seasons, each with its own particular charm; yes, even the
-hard, bitter winters when all the land was held in a grip of steel, and
-only amusement, out of doors, seemed possible. That seemed to her like
-a glimpse of paradise, from which, by her own act and because she did
-not value its joys, she had been shut out: she had exchanged it for
-this. And her eyes filled, her heart swelled with self-pity, regret,
-repentance, until suddenly a hoarse murmur by her side resolved itself
-into: Pris, whar air ye?’
-
-Immediately she was recalled to present realities. Swift as thought she
-had asked and received strength, and leaning over her helpless husband,
-she said, quite tenderly, ‘Yes, dear, I am here. What can I do for
-you?’ Apparently ignoring her gentle question, he muttered savagely but
-disconnectedly, ‘What’s th’ matter? whar’s everybody? what’s doin’?
-call th’ mate.’ I do not see any necessity for indicating the stream
-of fantastic blasphemies which followed, apparently to emphasise his
-demand for information. They made her shrink, as does a delicate skin
-upon meeting a cold blast; but as soon as she was able she said, ‘The
-mate has been badly hurt, Ramon, but I can call the second mate if
-you will. He can explain so much better than I can what has happened.’
-‘Well, whyn’t yew call him, then? Kain’t ye see, yo’ pulin’ idiot,
-’at I want t’ know--t’ _know_, d’ ye hear?’ More horrible emphasis,
-in the midst of which Priscilla crept from the cabin, and, going to
-the companion, rung a little handbell, an agreed signal for summoning
-the steward. That worthy man was lapped in profoundest slumber by
-the side of the galley, but at almost the first tinkle of the little
-bell he sprang to his feet, and, hastening to the companion, listened
-breathlessly to his mistress’s orders (he called them so, but they
-sounded more like entreaties).
-
-As soon as he understood them he departed, and returning in two minutes
-announced to Priscilla that he had succeeded in arousing the second
-mate, who was coming immediately. Receiving Priscilla’s instructions to
-keep handy in case she wanted anything, he retired to the lee-side of
-the skylight and waited. In about a minute the second mate appeared,
-still heavy with sleep (the deep sleep of utter exhaustion from which
-he had been aroused), and lumberingly made his way down into the
-darksome cabin. Tapping gently at the skipper’s state-room door, he
-was greeted with a torrent of oaths, and understood that if he didn’t
-hurry in nameless consequences awaited him. Trembling in every limb, he
-instantly obeyed, and presently stood beside his commander’s couch like
-an utterly abject coward. Yet he was, as we have seen, nothing less
-than a hero. His deeds on the preceding day were those of a man who
-counted the preservation of his own life but a very little thing, if
-haply he might save some of his shipmates from death. In the midst of
-those aggressive monsters he did not quail, but led his men on to deeds
-as noble as any that have ever been recorded--yet here he stood abashed
-and quivering before a helpless man morally as much his inferior as it
-was possible for a man to be. Mystery of mysteries, and one that men
-have never yet taken sufficient account of, even with the stupendous
-object-lesson of that utterly contemptible animal, but supereminent
-commander of men, Napoleon, before their eyes. The meanest soldier
-of Napoleon’s armies was a greater hero than he; but the possession
-of that awful power of domination enabled this utter egotist, this
-unutterable cad, to rule Europe and send to sordid deaths rejoicingly
-hundreds of thousands of men, most of whom were in a moral and physical
-sense immeasurably superior to himself.
-
-Thus Mr. Winslow stood before his skipper, who, glaring up at him with
-an expression of fiercest contempt in his black eyes, demanded of him
-why he had not reported before the doings of that disastrous day.
-Falteringly, as if personally to blame for the skipper’s incapability
-of receiving any information before, Mr. Winslow began his melancholy
-narration. His nervousness, coupled with a most excusable desire to
-make the best account he could of an exceedingly bad job, caused him at
-times to be almost unintelligible, and subjected him to the fiercest
-abuse from the skipper. But this incitement had one good effect. It
-tended to brevity of account, and in ten minutes there was little left
-to tell. For a moment or two after he ceased speaking there was a dead
-silence, through which the ceaseless wash of the watchful waves outside
-against the topsides could be felt rather than heard.
-
-Then suddenly the skipper spoke again. ‘’Spose ye’re all hard at it
-repairin’ damages, hey?’ ‘Well, sir,’ stammered the officer, ‘ye see,
-sir----’ ‘Give _me_ none o’ yer lyin’ backin’ an’ fillin’, y’ lazy
-hog, ’r I’ll----’ He got no further. All Mr. Winslow’s manhood came
-to his assistance, breaking through the mysterious bonds that had held
-him so long. With all his nervousness gone, he made one stride nearer
-the skipper, a dangerous light gleamed in his blue eyes, and he said:
-‘Stop right thar, Cap’n Da Silva. Ther’ ain’t a man aboard this ship
-but wut’s done his duty like a man, an’ no one could ha’ done any
-better. We’re all nearly dead with fightin’ fag, all ’cept me sleepin’
-w’ere we fell down, an’ some of us is broke up so in body ’at it’ll
-be months before we’re fit again. An’ you dare t’ lie there ’n’ speak
-t’ me ov lyin’ and laziness. Say it again, an’ jes’ ’s if yew wuz any
-other varmint I’ll choke th’ life outen ye where ye lie.’ He wound up
-with a terrible oath. But Priscilla rose and confronted him, her grave
-eyes looking unnaturally large in the whiteness of her face. ‘Go on
-deck, Mr. Winslow,’ she said; ‘you forget yourself. The Captain is very
-ill and irritable, and cannot be held responsible for what he says.’
-Without a word the second mate bowed his head and departed, leaving her
-alone to face the fiendish malice of her husband, who, as soon as his
-officer had departed, turned upon her and exhausted even his perverted
-ingenuity in abuse.
-
-Strange to say, this bad exercise seemed to improve his bodily
-condition, for in about an hour, during which Priscilla waited on him
-with the utmost care and in as perfect a silence as if she were stone
-deaf to his shameful words, he ordered her to assist him to dress. When
-she had done so he staggered to the state-room door, rudely thrusting
-aside her proffered arm, and dragged himself on deck. As soon as he was
-gone from the room she prayed with all her heart on her lips for peace,
-filled with pity for the poor men above now that their tyrant was
-unloosed again. A hoarse cry of pain sent a thrill of sympathy through
-her, but she _would_ not be distressed, believing that in some way she
-would have a satisfying answer to her prayer.
-
-On deck the skipper, his cold heart full of malicious intent, had
-stumbled over the body of the steward lying by the side of the cabin
-skylight, and kicking savagely at the prostrate man had aroused him to
-an immediate sense of his peril. Scrambling to his feet, the frightened
-black man was slinking below, when the hoarse command of the skipper to
-‘Come here’ arrested him, and he obeyed with shaking knees. ‘Whar’s the
-helmsman?’ demanded the Captain. ‘I d’ no, sah,’ pleaded the steward.
-‘I’ll go see, sah.’ ‘Stop right whar y’ air, will ye?’ was the fierce
-answer, and in the dim light of the binnacle the steward saw the
-skipper’s hand go to his hip-pocket, produce something that glittered,
-and immediately a couple of shots rang out startlingly through the
-quiet night. At that dread summons men began to appear from all around,
-first of them all the second mate, with wild inquiry in his eyes. ‘Mr.
-Winslow,’ snarled the skipper, whose voice was growing stronger with
-each word he spoke, ‘call all hands t’ make sail. A hand ’t th’ wheel
-at once.’ By this time all those who were able to do so had mustered,
-and with the instinctive habit of obedience, as if all recollection of
-their recent interview had disappeared from his mind, the second mate
-replied in his usual tone, ‘Aye, aye, sir,’ then roaring, ‘All hands
-make sail, loose taups’ls ’n t’gallants’ls fore and aft. Clear away
-stays’ls, jib, ’n’ spanker. Naow git a move on yerselves, d’ ye hear?’
-
-There was a rush to obey, for all felt somehow that their brief season
-of relief from the skipper’s oversight had come to an end, and as they
-disappeared in different directions with their old frantic haste, the
-skipper said to the second mate in a voice that could not be overheard
-by any other: ‘See hyar, Mr. Winslow, fur what yew said to me to-night
-I’ll pay ye full price an’ interest, ef it takes me all this voy’ge.
-But fur now yew go scot free ’cause I need yer assistance, ’n’ I hain’t
-goin’ t’ hev enny limejuicer rot of bullyin’ my officers ’fore the men
-an’ destroyin’ disciplin’. Only ef thar’s enny sign ov ye playin’ it on
-me, wall, yew’ll hev to shoot quick ’r yew’ll be a goner. I’m heeled
-an’ I’m watchin’ fur ye.’ Again the second mate replied steadily, ‘Aye,
-aye, sir,’ and almost instantly after his shouts of ‘Sheet home fore
-taups’l, sheet home mizen taups’l, histe away stays’ls,’ &c., made the
-solemn night hideous.
-
-A low groan a little forward of where the skipper stood caused him to
-move that way, and, stooping, he found the mate, who had been aroused
-to a miserable consciousness of bone-wrenching pain by the clamour
-around him. Stooping towards him, the skipper said in a grating tone,
-‘Wall, ’n’ wut’s wrong with yew? Whyn’t yew gettin’ abaout yer dooties?
-Pretty fine condition yew’ve let the ship git into in a few days.’
-Pausing as if for a reply, and receiving none, the skipper went on,
-‘What in thunder yew lyin’ thar fur? Don’t ye know it’s “all hands”?’
-‘Kain’t move, sir,’ came slowly from the mate’s parched lips, as if
-dragged thence by torture, ‘fur me right arm an’ leg seem’s if they wuz
-one big pain. Fact, I seem to be all raw on thet side of me. _Kain’t_ I
-hev a drink o’ water, sir?’ ‘Wall, I guess yew kin. Here, boy!’ to one
-of the younger men hastening across the deck, ‘give the mate a drink of
-water, an’ look slippy.’ The skipper looked on while the unfortunate
-man drank as if his poor throat had been a bed of unslaked lime. Then
-he said, ‘I guess yew wun’t du any wuss till daylight, ’n’ I’ll be
-all th’ better fit to see wut kin be done with ye. But yew’ve made a
-hell ov a mess ov th’ cruise, naow, ain’t ye?’ The sufferer drew in
-his breath sharply as this mental blow was added to all his physical
-sufferings, but he did not--indeed, he could not--answer. The merciful
-climax of suffering was reached, the broken human machinery protested
-vainly to the surcharged brain, and Mr. Court, relapsing into blessed
-insensibility, passed into a place where neither the malignity of man
-nor the liabilities of the body could trouble him.
-
-The Captain strode away muttering until he stood by the wheel and
-gazed into the face of the compass. He was revolving in his mind the
-possibilities of fetching the Cape Verde Islands, as they were now on
-the edge of the Doldrums, those neutral latitudes between the trade
-winds that are such a sore trial to the patience of sailing-ship
-masters. Only a gentle zephyr was stirring, like the last breath of
-the departing N.E. trade winds, and it was rather a serious question
-to decide whether to struggle eastward to Brava, or keep on southward,
-doing all the repairs possible until reaching Rio de Janeiro. One thing
-only was needed to turn the scale--the personal touch. And it availed.
-He knew the place so well; although he had not been born there, much
-of his youth had been spent there, and he was sure not only of getting
-a few fresh hands who would be devoted to himself, but there would not
-be the faintest opportunity given for any one of his remaining crew
-to desert. So he gave a muttered order to the helmsman, followed by a
-shout of ‘Square away the mainyard,’ as the old ship fell off the wind.
-With his usual skill and alertness he conned her as she slowly wore
-round on to the port tack, and to his grim satisfaction he found that
-she would head a little to the northward of east, and that the breeze
-was even then freshening a little.
-
-By this time the whole of the available canvas had been set, and the
-men were busy coiling up the gear. Again the skipper called Winslow
-to him, and in a quiet, passionless tone gave him certain orders
-concerning the repairing of damage that would keep all hands busy
-for some time to come. Then the carpenter and cooper were summoned,
-and each received a few vitriolic remarks concerning their so-called
-laziness, coupled with a warning that before long they would have paid
-very dearly for the advantage they had taken of his helplessness.
-Moreover, he told them that, being now quite well again, he was fully
-prepared to keep them at their work, if he had to do it at the mouth
-of a revolver. They stood perfectly silent and submissive, neither
-attempting the faintest justification of himself, and when dismissed
-with the contemptuous remark, ‘Naow git t’ hell eout er this, an’ do
-some work,’ they turned and slunk away like beaten curs. Both were
-Americans of the best type, both were splendid workmen of middle
-age, with whose way of performing their duties it would seem utterly
-impossible to find any fault, and yet both endured such utterly
-undeserved and blistering contumely as this without a word, and, what
-is more, without a thought of retaliation. So well had they been
-trained in whaleship ways.
-
-Thus having resumed the reins of power in altogether vigorous fashion,
-and reasserted his ability to make himself feared as well as obeyed
-fore and aft, the skipper went below, growling as he passed the
-helmsman, ‘Naow jes’ keep her full an’ bye, an’ ef I hear anythin’
-shakin’, by ---- I’ll shake _yew_, till y’ don’ know whether yew’re dead
-’r alive.’ The man replied cheerfully in the stereotyped phrase, ‘Aye,
-aye, sir,’ relieved beyond measure to find that he should be free of
-the presence of his enemy for a little while, at any rate.
-
-The skipper’s first action on getting below was to send for the steward
-by ringing his bell, and on the darkey’s immediate appearance to order
-some food and coffee to be prepared for himself. Of his wife he took
-not the slightest heed. Then going to his medicine-chest he took out
-the little book of simple instructions in surgery and medicine that is
-always part of the furniture of a ship’s medicine-chest, and, seating
-himself at the cabin table, with one hand fiercely tugging at his
-black beard, he began to study the chapter on setting broken limbs. A
-sardonic smile twitched upwards the corners of his mouth as he imagined
-how the poor mate would suffer. There was just a glint of pleasure in
-the thought lighting the otherwise beclouded horizon of his mind. When
-he had settled to his own satisfaction the course of his operations
-upon his mate (fancy learning to set a broken arm and leg in an hour!),
-he sulkily called to his wife, ‘Here, you, git me some bandages ready,
-an’ be quick abaout it.’ She, watching for his lightest word, came on
-the instant, and quietly asked how long and how wide he wanted them.
-Even this essential question seemed to afford him an opportunity of
-venting more of his spleen upon her, but wearying of that soon (indeed,
-he was as yet far from strong), he supplied the information, and
-went on with his studies. Then lying down upon the transom locker he
-composed himself to sleep, well satisfied with his watches work.
-
-On deck the ship hummed like a hive. Even the men who had been so
-badly bruised that the most elementary exercise of humanity would
-have allowed them to rest, dragged themselves wearily up out of
-the forecastle, and did whatever they could do towards the general
-refitment which was going on. Some were hoisting on deck coils of
-‘tow-line,’ the beautiful rope which is fastened to the harpoons;
-others were taking the superfluous turns out of it, and stretching it
-by passing it through a block as high as the topgallant crosstrees,
-and coiling it again and again the reverse way of the lay. Others,
-again, were fitting harpoons to poles, and securing to them their
-bridles of tow-line; others were doing the same to lances, or putting
-keen edges on new weapons. Several, under the carpenter’s orders, were
-working away at the repairing of the one boat which had been picked
-up, sawing timbers and planks, and carefully unriveting broken knees
-from splintered skin. Two men were assisting the cooper to make new
-line-tubs. And amidst it all Mr. Winslow moved alert, with eyes like
-a cat’s, unhindered by the encompassing darkness, but for all that
-earnestly desirous of the day.
-
-Unto these toilers at last came the blessing of light, bringing with
-it a certain satisfaction, as it always does, to those who have been
-working in the dark, but also sadly associated with the idea that the
-skipper would soon be on deck among them. Every now and then one of
-them would glance furtively aft in search of his dreaded appearance,
-and, relieved temporarily by the assurance that he was not yet among
-them, would renew energetically his efforts to accomplish his task.
-Suddenly all hands were startled by his voice, all its old vigour
-having returned, shouting, ‘Mr. Winslow.’ The second mate immediately
-hurried aft, and saying inquiringly, ‘Yes, sir,’ awaited his orders.
-‘Clear away the carpenter’s bench, an’ bring it aft here!’ snarled the
-Captain. ‘Pedro, Bibra, come here.’ The carpenter’s bench having been
-placed on the fore side of the skylight, athwart the deck, the steward
-made his appearance, carrying the bandages and certain bottles, also
-some pieces of rough but thin boards, just portions of canned meat
-cases with the nails drawn, split to necessary narrowness, and cut
-in proper lengths. At an order from the Captain, the two Portuguese
-harpooners lifted the still insensible body of the mate on to the
-bench, and began to bare his broken limbs, a most difficult task, owing
-to their having become glued to the clothing with dried blood.
-
-This operation roused him at once from his stupor, and with groans
-that shook his whole frame his glazed eyes opened. He muttered feebly,
-‘For God’s sake go easy: ain’t I sufferin’ enough?’ But a glance at
-the skipper showed these rough attendants that, even had they been
-inclined to yield to the mate’s prayer, and ‘go easy,’ they dare not,
-so, disregarding his agony, they persevered, and after dragging and
-slitting and soaking his clothes, succeeded at last in exposing the
-leg and arm, each with fragments of bone protruding through the torn
-and swollen flesh. By the time this had been done the mate could only
-feebly gasp, ‘Water! water!’ and the steward, with a fearful glance at
-the skipper for permission, put a pannikin full to his cracked lips.
-Then with a corner of the towel he carried he was about to wipe the
-sweat from the mate’s drawn face, but an execration from the skipper
-caused him to scuttle back into his place like a frightened rabbit.
-
-The operation began, and really it is questionable whether the utter
-callousness and brutality of the operator were not more merciful to the
-sufferer than the tender, half-afraid manipulations of a kindhearted
-and unskilful man would have been. For in any case much pain had to
-be endured, and, as I have before noted, the human body can only feel
-a certain amount. When that has been borne, whatever you may have to
-endure does not matter in the least as far as your consciousness of
-it goes. It is a comforting thought when reading of the infliction of
-ancient tortures. So now, before the mangled arm had been straightened,
-the fragments of bone drawn within the swollen muscles, the mate had
-again lapsed into insensibility. The attendants glanced fearfully at
-the white, set face, and from it to the scowling visage of the skipper,
-but dared not utter their fears that the patient was dead. The operator
-worked on with a skill amazing to see in one who had never performed
-such an operation before, nor had ever seen such a thing done. Without
-again referring to his book, without a moment’s hesitation, he placed
-the splints, passed the bandages, saturated them with carbolic lotion,
-and then, having satisfied himself that, in spite of the ghastly
-appearance of the mate’s side, it was only an extensive superficial
-laceration--there were no ribs broken--he ordered the two harpooners to
-carry the patient to a mattress placed for his reception on the after
-corner of the deck behind the tiller, and leave him there. The steward
-was given orders to keep an eye on him, and feed him occasionally with
-a little soup and bread, and again the skipper retired below.
-
-By this time the meal-hour had arrived--eight bells--and a brief
-respite from their labours was enjoyed by all hands. The day was fair
-and bright, the wind was steady at about north, and the old ship was
-making good progress. So Mr. Winslow sent everybody but the helmsman
-to breakfast, and himself came aft and sat beside his brother officer,
-full of pity, but oppressed by his own utter inability to do anything
-for him. But he had the satisfaction of noting how well the work of
-repairing the broken limbs had been done, and, as he was thinking how
-even the worst of men sometimes compel our admiration, he was intensely
-gratified to see Mr. Court open his eyes and look wearily round. ‘Wall,
-haow d’ ye feel abaout it naow, sir?’ said he earnestly. The mate
-stifled a groan, and at last managed to reply, ‘Winslow, I’d rather ten
-thousan’ times ’a’ died than ben thro’ wut I’ve suffered this laest
-twenty-four hours. But I don’t feel’s much pain’s I did, an’ if only
-I k’n git a little food ’at I k’n eat I think I sh’ll do. Ole man’s
-awful mad, ain’t he?’ Bending his head close down, Winslow gave the
-mate a hurried outline of the proceedings since the skipper’s return to
-command, and wound up by saying, ‘He ain’t said nawthin’ abaout it, but
-I believe he’s makin’ fur Cape Verdes. We’re carryin’ all sail to th’
-eastward.’ ‘Thank God fur that,’ murmured the mate; ‘thar’ll be some
-chance ov seem’ a doctor if I need one by then. Say, Winslow, ef ye k’n
-git one o’ th’ fellows t’ give an eye to me now an’ then, I’ll be glad.’
-
-For all answer Winslow patted his cheek, and in response to the
-breakfast bell departed below. He and the mate, while respecting each
-other, had not been chums in any sense of the word, but the recent
-happenings had drawn them very close, this feeling especially affecting
-Winslow. And he began to feel as if he could do anything, endure
-anything on the mate’s behalf while he was so helpless--yes, even dare
-the risk of being shot by the skipper, if he should go too far in his
-calculated brutality.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-THE CAPTAIN GOES ASHORE
-
-
-Favoured by exquisite weather, and trade-winds hanging well to the
-northward, the _Grampus_ ploughed steadily along towards her objective,
-no one but the skipper knowing that it was Brava. After the first three
-days of almost frantic labour the skipper’s experienced eye noted
-how stale the men had become; want of rest and poor food had reduced
-them so that threats and blows no longer goaded them; they were fast
-approaching that stage when nothing matters, and suffering least of
-all, because it had become a normal condition. So Captain Da Silva,
-being anything but a fool, ‘let up’ on them as he termed it, not
-because he considered their punishment at all adequate to the crime
-they had committed of being beaten in spite of having done their best,
-but because he needed their services in the future. He restored their
-regular watches, and although the amount of quite unnecessary work
-still carried on would have caused a mutiny in any British merchant
-ship, this crew chuckled to think what a good time they were now
-having. And, besides, their lives were not so devoid of interest, for
-there could be no doubt that they were bound to some anchorage--it did
-not matter much where--they would see the land again and perhaps taste
-vegetables.
-
-And the sorely wounded mate, despite the roughness of his treatment,
-the almost utter absence of nursing, steadily improved. His iron
-constitution, a certain ox-like patience, and the absence of drugs
-combined with perfectly pure air--all these helped to make his recovery
-marvellously rapid. But he almost had a relapse ten days after the
-accident. He had so far progressed as to be able to sit up upon an
-improvised little platform by the taffrail, and was watching the
-sea, when his dull eye suddenly brightened, his form stiffened, and
-lifting up his voice he raised the cry of ‘Blow!’ The skipper since
-the surgical operation had held no conversation with the injured man,
-except one or two of the briefest remarks passed each day, just what
-were absolutely necessary. But now he spun round on his heel, his black
-eyes flaming, and shouted, ‘Whar away, Mr. Court? Aloft there! wut ye
-doin’? Kain’t ye see ’t all?’ Springing up on the little hurricane
-deck peculiar to all whaleships, he at once caught sight of the whale,
-a big lone fellow, proceeding in leisurely fashion due south. Without
-apparently considering for one moment the fact that he had only two
-boats to use, he issued his orders, sharp and sudden like rifle-shots.
-Sail was shortened to the topsails, the vessel put upon the other
-tack; then, springing upon the starboard quarter, where the best boat
-hung, he shouted, ‘’Way boats!’ sweeping contemptuously away the third
-mate, who of course was standing by to take his place in his regular
-craft. A whirring of the sheaves followed, and down went the boat,
-striking the water fairly and being released at once with a smartness
-delightful to see. Then, grasping the dangling falls with one hand,
-the skipper turned to the mate, who lay fretting himself into a fever
-at his inability to move, saying as coolly as if just setting off for
-a pleasure trip, ‘Guess yew k’n con th’ ship whar y’ air, Mr. Court,
-kain’t ye?’ ‘Sure, sir,’ murmured the mate, the prospect of being able
-to do something seeming delightful to him. No answer, but for a moment
-the skipper’s body was outlined against the sky as he launched himself
-downwards, struck the boat, seized the steer oar, and issued his
-orders. Away flew both boats as if the lives of their crews depended
-upon their utmost speed.
-
-Now, I do not wish to weary my readers with repeated accounts of
-whale-fights, and therefore I must omit all the circumstantial
-details of this one. But I do need to say that Captain Da Silva had
-apparently found exceeding compensation for his late tribulations in
-this opportune encounter, and he behaved as one possessed of a demon of
-destruction, to whom no mishap could possibly come. Yet he was by no
-means reckless. Every precaution that could be taken against disaster
-he took, but, on the other hand, he neglected no opportunity of rushing
-in whenever and wherever the slightest opening presented itself.
-Scorning bomb-lances, he used only the long primitive spear, and with
-fiendish howls he ordered the second mate to keep aloof in readiness
-to aid in case of accident. The whale, evidently an old hand at the
-game, tried every ruse known to whales, but in vain, for, rolling over
-towards the oncoming boat, and sinking his body in the middle in order
-to get a grip of the boat with his gaping jaws, he felt suddenly the
-diamond-shaped head of a lance gliding through the thick muscles of
-his throat downward to his mighty heart. Six feet from that searching
-point the captain leaned his shoulder upon the lance-butt, lending all
-his great strength to the thrust. The boat passed to the other side of
-the body. ‘Pull ahead all!’ yelled the skipper, and out drew the steel,
-distorted to the likeness of a conventional lightning flash. ‘Pull
-all!’ again yelled the skipper, and in response the boat shot away from
-the vast writhing body, so fatally pierced that in three minutes, with
-a few gigantic convulsions, it lay still, dead.
-
-Again the voice of the skipper arose--no note of triumph in it, no
-suggestion of rest for his crew. ‘Hull in thet line, lively naow. Hyar
-yew,’ to the after oarsman, ’histe thet wheft’ (small blue signal
-flag) ‘’n’ wave fur th’ secon’ mate t’ come up.’ So they hauled up
-alongside of the whale and cut the line from the harpoon, by which time
-Mr. Winslow, who had kept close to the fight all the time, was also
-alongside. ‘Naow,’ shouted the skipper to him, ‘git thet fluke-rope
-passed ’s if ye knew haow, an’ be ready with yer eend to pass aboard
-when I come. Pull two, starn three, so, all together,’ and away shot
-the boat towards the ship, which was coming down towards them at a fine
-rate. So fast, indeed, did the two craft draw together, that barely
-ten minutes had elapsed from the time the skipper’s boat left the
-whale until he was again on board and, hoisting his boat, was issuing
-his orders as if he were an engineer handling the cranks, levers, and
-throttle-valves of his engines. Now he was in his element--now he
-felt the primal delight of power--to rule his fellows and bend to his
-moulding will. The whale was not large as regards bulk, but full of
-fatness--so full, indeed, that the utmost care must needs be exercised
-lest the hoisting gear should tear out of the almost rotten blubber.
-The operations were conducted in peerless fashion, the skipper being
-apparently the mind of all hands--his late disablement appeared to
-have given him an impetus that none of his previous experiences had
-supplied. So great, indeed, was he that muttering passed from man to
-man after this fashion: ‘Oh, but he’s a horse, ain’t he?’ ‘Don’t he do
-it?’ ‘What a man he is!’ &c.
-
-The work of securing the spoil was carried on with such vigour, such
-exquisite skill, and due apportionment of labour, that before the day
-was closed all the worst of the duty was done, and the skipper strode
-proudly the scanty limits of his quarter-deck with the mien of a man
-who could not possibly learn from any a better way of doing his work.
-And, as I have already noted, he had also earned the intense admiration
-of all hands, although each one of those men was aching from head to
-heel with the extraordinary strain put upon him.
-
-And Priscilla? Well, she had not suffered. She had learnt to wait in
-patience the outcome of all things--not to be distressed by strange
-noises as of strife, or no less strange interludes of silence, when
-it seemed as if everyone but herself was dead. Even when upon the
-deep quiet (as of the grave) which enwrapped her there impinged a
-great noise, she did not shrink or shudder: she just looked up and was
-comforted. That she should have been thus becalmed, as it were, in the
-midst of tempests, that to her wilful, wayward heart should have come
-so bountiful a measure of the Divine patience, will naturally seem
-incredible to many--quite as great a miracle as the raising of the
-widow’s son. But, thank God! there are also many of us who know that
-such miracles are daily wrought by the direct interposition of God.
-Sometimes man is honoured by being the instrument in such cases, but
-more often they are the outcome of an answer given by the trembling,
-tired soul out into the darkness whence comes the comforting, still
-small voice.
-
-When at last the skipper came down he wore all the self-conferred
-honours of a successful tyrant. He had vindicated his position as the
-one man who could do things without making mistakes, who could be
-depended upon to come upon the scene when disaster seemed imminent,
-and, taking the helm of affairs, conduct them triumphantly to victory.
-And the knowledge was almost too much for him. He strode into his
-state-room and flung his orders at Priscilla much as if she had been a
-negro slave--with little distinction between her and the steward. And
-she, with calmest demeanour, obeyed him to the foot of the letter. She
-gave him no cause of complaint, and to his intense surprise he found
-himself looking furtively at her and wondering how it was she did not
-cry or protest or do something, anything except act like one whom
-nothing could make unhappy or disobedient. At last he could no longer
-endure the spur of his curiosity, and he said, in strangely subdued
-tones (the steward having gone on deck), ‘Wut’s th’ matter with ye,
-Pris? Ain’t feelin’ sick, air ye? Yer lookin’ kinder curis, y’ know.’
-She turned her calm face to him and said, ‘No, Ramon; I’m feeling very
-well, thank you. Is there anything more I can do for you?’ He did not
-answer. For his keen Latin wits had come up against something that was
-quite outside of his experience. Something of the baffled rage of the
-early persecutors possessed him as he realised that his wife had passed
-into a region from which he was quite shut out. So he hurled a savage
-curse, a farrago of Portuguese blasphemy, at her, which sounded like
-the rattling of manacles, and passed on deck again.
-
-Remember, if you would blame Priscilla for not trying to win this bad
-man, that she knew him, knew that any language she might use would be
-utterly unintelligible to him, knew that his long and successful career
-of cruelty had hardened in him all the baser attributes, and she felt
-it would be hopeless to try. She felt, too, that she would only be
-bringing more suffering down upon herself, and was not at all confident
-as to the limit of her endurance. She was wrong, of course: she had not
-a sufficiently ample idea of the power of God to save. But we dare not
-blame her: many of us in her position would have gone mad. And she did
-pray for him, but without the faintest belief that her prayer would
-be answered. She felt, as Mr. Moody once expressed it, as if when she
-prayed for that man the heavens above her were as brass, that prayers
-on his behalf could not ascend.
-
-So the _Grampus_ sped onward towards Brava under the most favourable
-conditions possible. The work of securing the spoil of the whale was
-carried through in marvellous fashion; the wind held true to the north,
-even sometimes a point to the westward of north, and freshened enough
-to give the old ship a speed, rap-full, of five knots an hour. Whether
-it was any anticipation of meeting old acquaintances (a man like that
-never has friends) or not, the skipper, too, was certainly less severe
-than usual in his treatment of his men. He even condescended to inquire
-occasionally after the health of his mate, who was doing wonderfully
-well in the pure air and utter lack of all medicine, aided by his
-splendid constitution. So well, indeed, did the old ship progress, that
-by the time she had been restored to her ordinary condition of spotless
-cleanliness, the beautiful outlines of the islands were sighted, and
-all hands, with quickened pulse-beats, began to look forward to a
-little change in the ordered monotony of their lives. But great was
-their disappointment when they found that, instead of going as closely
-in as was safe, the Captain anchored his ship in thirty fathoms of
-water--far out to sea. And without the loss of an hour he ordered his
-boat to be manned (by Portuguese only), and, dressed like a bridegroom,
-mounted the rail preparatory to descending. The second mate stood
-near; the mate listened from the corner aft, where he sat helpless,
-with painful earnestness for any word the skipper might drop of his
-intentions.
-
-‘See here, Mr. Winslow,’ drawled the skipper, ‘ye’ll keep the men at
-work, watch on watch, same’s at sea. Yew’ll keep a bright look-out
-for me comin’ back, as I shall be ’fore long, anyway. An’ if anythin’
-happens ’at ye want me sudden, set the ensign at the peak.’ And without
-another word he was gone, and his boat’s crew, with the splendid stroke
-of the trained American whaleman, was making the pretty craft fly
-towards the shore, its captain standing erect in the stern, handling
-his steer-oar, like a figure of stone. The second mate watched him
-out of definition range, then, descending from the rail with a sigh,
-he sought the mate, saying, ‘Well, Mr. Court, whut ye think of him?
-Ain’t he a daisy? I really dunno haow it es, but th’ wuss he is th’
-more I admire at him, until his back’s turned, ’n’ then I want t’ kill
-him. An’,’ dropping his voice, ‘d’ jever before in a ’Merican ship see
-a lady treated like this one? I have stood, I k’n stand, a good deal
-frum him, but if ever he raises his hand t’ thet poor broken-hearted
-woman when I’m erroun’ I’m goin’t’ kill him right in his tracks--naow,
-yew hear me!’ ‘Oh, shet yer head!’ fretfully replied the mate. ‘I know
-all abaout thet; wut’s th’ use er chawin’ it over? What I wunt t’
-know is, wut sort of a gang of dagoes is he goin’ t’ bring with him.
-All his own relations, I suppose, ’n’ thar’ll be the usual amount er
-spyin’ an’ lyin’ an’ devilishness generally. If only I had this leg
-’n’ arm o’ mine usable! I ben thinkin’ over a good many things sense
-I ben a-laying here, I tell ye, but I got one idea solid, ’n’ that is
-thet, live er die, I’m a-goin’ t’ stand up t’ him an’ whoever he brings
-aboard here, an’ hev’ my rights as mate. You, too, I know, Winslow; but
-only as man to man; no hatchin’ anything’ or conspirin’. We’ll leave
-that to them. But I do wish we could help the poor woman.’
-
-‘Thank you, friends,’ said Priscilla, who had glided on deck and
-overheard the last portion of the mate’s remarks. ‘It’s very good of
-you to think about me, but I shall be grateful if you will behave as if
-I were not on board. I cannot, must not, be a source of trouble, and,
-moreover, the Captain is my husband. Now don’t, please don’t, think
-of helping me, as you call it, any more. I’ve got help of the best
-kind always available. I didn’t know I had until a short time ago. I’d
-forgotten God, as it seems to me God _is_ forgotten at sea. But when
-I was ready to go mad with what I thought was my undeserved trouble,
-He came to my rescue, and now I feel I can bear anything. And, anyhow,
-what is my trouble compared with yours? Ah, Mr. Court, I have felt so
-much for you in your awful pain, and not to be able to help you at all.
-Are you in pain now?’ ‘Oh, no, ma’am, thank you kindly,’ murmured the
-mate; ‘that’s all over and done with. Anyhow, it was never quite as
-bad as you might think. Sounds a good deal worse than it is. I’m hurt
-more at havin’ to lie here doin’ nothin’ than by any pain I’ve got.’
-‘Well, I’m glad to hear you say so. Now I must go down. I feel that I’m
-doing wrong sitting up here talking to you, as I should certainly not
-be doing if my husband were here.’ And she departed below, leaving the
-two mates, with a totally new set of sensations, staring at each other
-dumbly.
-
-Unfortunately, mischief had been done. One of the Portuguese sailors
-had been ostensibly occupied in renewing the seizings on the mizen
-shrouds, but for the last ten minutes he had devoted all his faculties
-to listening. Vainly; he did not know enough of the language to take
-in the conversation, but he knew that the Captain’s wife had been
-talking for a long time to the two mates. And he determined that the
-knowledge should not be wasted. The two officers, so deeply interested
-were they, did not notice this man, and when presently the second
-mate almost guiltily resumed his oversight of the men and their work
-he did not even see Lazzaro furtively glancing at him from the mizen
-rigging. No more was said by either of the mates or Mrs. Da Silva on
-the subject, and the work of the ship went on throughout the day with
-something of its old machine-like regularity. Night fell, and still no
-sign of the skipper. With deepening distrust and anxiety the officer
-saw the watches set, attending to every detail of his duties with the
-utmost fidelity, and reporting at eight o’clock all his doings to the
-mate. Mr. Court sent a respectful message to Priscilla on hearing this,
-acquainting her with the condition of affairs and assuring her that
-she had no cause for alarm. She would receive instant attention to her
-lightest wish, and probably the Captain would be aboard before morning.
-And so, quietly enough to all outward seeming, but with much anxiety
-among the afterguard, the night passed away.
-
-Ashore the Captain was having what sailors term a mighty good time.
-Congenial spirits awaited him of both sexes, long known to him, and,
-flinging aside all the restraints he felt he had been bound by during
-the last year, he plunged into the wildest excesses. He was one of
-those men to whom such an outburst, even at very long intervals, seems
-a necessity of life--one that when the opportunity for obtaining it
-arrives can by no effort of will be refrained from, although it is hard
-to suppose that such an effort is ever made or attempted. And yet he
-could be, as far as abstention from vulgar vice was concerned, a very
-eremite for a year at a time, otherwise he would never have reached his
-present position; for the American shipowner--or, indeed, employer of
-any kind--is entirely intolerant of drunkenness or debauchery among
-his servants, and will have none of it if by any means he can prevent
-it. Now, however, his boat’s crew disposed of--allowed to run a little
-riot of their own among their cronies, and merely ordered to turn up
-in the morning at eight o’clock, bringing six recruits with them, he
-abandoned himself to the fierce delights of the Latin seaman when let
-loose.
-
-But in spite of the long night’s excesses there was little alteration
-in his appearance or manner when he met his men in the morning, noting
-with high approval that they had succeeded in obtaining the new hands
-he wanted: six huge piratical-looking ruffians, three of whom were
-of that peculiar type of Portuguese which can only be found in the
-islands of the North-West Atlantic--men, that is, with the high-bred
-facial characteristics of the Portuguese allied to a perfect blackness
-of skin. Some of these men are of great size, and almost all of them
-know something about sperm-whaling, since all of these islands were for
-hundreds of years most prolific haunts of the cachalot. Therefore they
-have always been welcomed as recruits for whaleships, their undoubted
-courage and great powers of endurance adding to their desirability. But
-to Captain Da Silva they represented more than these advantages. They
-were his own countrymen, and might be relied upon to abet him in any
-scheme of devilry he might devise, in which he would certainly lack
-the support of his American officers. And a dim idea of vengeance upon
-those officers was certainly taking shape within his mind, which, once
-definitely arranged, he would spare no pains to carry out nor allow any
-peevish scruples to prevent him doing so.
-
-With a few quiet words to the newcomers about pay, position, &c., also
-the time of meeting to make the engagement--a very simple matter in
-those ships--he gave them some money, and went his way to purchase
-three new whaleboats. In this he was also fortunate, for a local bay
-whaling company had just dissolved partnership, and all their gear was
-on sale. He succeeded in purchasing from the representative of the late
-company four boats and a large quantity of gear for less than half
-their ordinary value, which pleased him so much that he determined to
-stay another night ashore and continue his enjoyment. But first he made
-arrangements for his new purchases to be taken off to the ship. The
-only message he condescended to send was that the boat should return
-for him the next day at 10 A.M. And not an ounce of fresh meat or
-fruit or vegetables went off. These articles were cheap enough in all
-conscience, but Captain Da Silva never pampered his crew, especially
-this early in a long voyage, and, besides, there was punishment to be
-carried out. And no form of punishment on board ship as applied to a
-whole crew is more effective than to be anchored near a fruitful shore
-after months of bad salt food and be denied a taste of the delicious
-things they can almost see growing. Under ordinary conditions such a
-deprivation would be next to impossible, as there are always people
-along shore anxious to earn a little by catering for the needs of a
-ship’s company, except in the most savage lands. And if there be no
-money on board, barter can always be resorted to: quite a quantity of
-sweet potatoes, oranges, or bananas can be obtained for a shirt. The
-Captain, however, had arranged all that; according to his wishes not a
-boat had been near his ship. And, besides, she was a long way out.
-
-When the officers saw the gear and boats, and received the message,
-they looked at each other significantly, but said no word. Mr. Court,
-now able to hobble about, took charge of operations, and in quite a
-short time the newly acquired boats had been placed in position, had
-each received a coat of white paint, that being the colour of the
-_Grampus’s_ boats, their gear fitted to them, and everything made ready
-for their lowering to a whale. They came alongside at midday, and by
-nightfall were ready for use. During all this activity Priscilla had
-been quite forgotten. The officers felt doubtful how she would receive
-any information about her husband which, in answer to questions,
-they might have felt tempted to supply, so they did not mention the
-matter. Only the genial darkey steward, in the perfectly respectful yet
-familiar manner common to negro servants in America, chatted away to
-his mistress, and kept her from being too lonely or dwelling too much
-upon the unknown reasons which had induced her husband to leave her on
-board the ship for two days without giving her any information at all
-of his doings. Had she known it, she might have felt surprised that he
-had never so much as given her a thought. But she would hardly have
-been grieved at anything he did now to her, having fortified her mind
-against the worst that could befall.
-
-Punctually at the time appointed the boat arrived at the place ordered
-by the Captain, who almost immediately appeared, and gave orders for
-the transhipment to the boat of a number of cases. Altogether they made
-a heavy cargo for such a frail boat; but whalers are most expert at
-this business, and effect transportation by means of these boats that
-seems impossible to any ordinary sailormen. This done they shoved off,
-Captain Da Silva standing erect in the stern, his eyes fixed upon his
-ship, and noting detail after detail as they became visible. A frown,
-never entirely absent from his handsome face, deepened upon it as he
-failed to see any cause for complaint. She looked beautifully trim; not
-a rope yarn out of its place, the weather-beaten patches on her side
-carefully touched up, the boats all bright with new paint, the three
-mastheads manned, and, as he came alongside, the mate at the gangway
-to receive him, and the crew all standing by the boat’s falls ready to
-hoist her up the moment he should step on board.
-
-As he put his foot on the rail, Mr. Court said, ‘Good morning, sir.’
-But instead of replying, the Captain said, ‘Whyn’t ye git under weigh?’
-And without pausing for an answer shouted: ‘Man th’ windlass.’ The
-cry was re-echoed all over the ship, and almost immediately nothing
-could be heard for the clatter of the pawls as the big windlass barrel
-revolved at top speed. ‘Down frum aloft there an’ loose sail, courses,
-taups’les, an’ t’gallantsails,’ again shouted the Captain. ‘Lively
-naow; think yer goin’ t’ sit up thar an’ sleep while th’ ship’s gittin’
-under weigh?’ Oh, he was a hustler, was Captain Da Silva. In ten
-minutes from the time he came on board the boat’s cargo was discharged,
-she was hoisted, the _Grampus_ was under weigh, and pointing south for
-the resumption of the long and weary voyage. Then, and not till then,
-did the skipper condescend to say anything to his chief officer. He
-called him, and with a coldly sarcastic curl of his lip as he saw him
-hobbling aft on improvised crutches, he said, ‘Anythin’ t’ report?’
-‘No, sir,’ replied Mr. Court, ‘’cept thet I’ve returned t’ duty.’ ‘No
-need t’ report _thet_, anyhaow,’ growled the skipper; ‘I k’n use my
-eyes. But yew don’t look pretty, ’n thet’s a fact. Mout’s well hide
-yerself a bit longer, moutn’t ye? Hain’t gut tired doin’ nawthin’, I’m
-sure.’ ‘See here, Captain Da Silva,’ hissed the mate, ‘you’ve gut th’
-whip hand now, I’ll own, but if ever I git on equal terms with ye, all
-this’ll hev t’ be settled fur.’ ‘Go, lie daown, dog,’ muttered the
-Captain. ‘I’ll attend t’ you an’ all th’ rest right along ’n’ git all
-th’ sleep I need too.’ And the _Grampus_ began to rise and fall gently
-to the incoming swell as the Captain went below.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-AMONG RIGHT WHALES
-
-
-We left our hero Rube suffering in body but triumphant in soul, and
-also in perfect ignorance of the astounding change his behaviour was
-bringing about in all hands. I have always maintained that a Christian
-ship presents as near an approach to what most of us agree Heaven must
-be like as we can make on this side of the gate thereof. For look at
-the position! The grosser forms of temptation are entirely absent, yet
-there is none of the selfish side of monasticism present. Men talk and
-laugh and work with their fellows amid the most glorious of all earthly
-surroundings--the pure, wide, bright ocean. There is no monotony,
-since every day brings diversified duties, and in hours of rest not
-needed for sleep there is an ever-changing panorama of glory present
-to the newly awakened eyes, drawing ever-deepening thankfulness from
-the regenerated heart. The thousand-and-one miseries and pettinesses
-that distract men ashore are absent. From the little world evil has
-departed--almost the knowledge of it, since there is no daily paper
-recording the never-ending succession of crimes.
-
-Yes, it is an ideal state of existence, a sort of Happy Valley in the
-midst of the ocean, whence the trail of the serpent has been removed,
-and where the community bask, unshadowed by sin, in the sunshine of
-God. Of course, it will be cynically remarked that this is a picture
-of perfection, unattainable, impossible. Well, it is nearly, but not
-quite. I have experienced something very near it, and I beg to submit
-that it was so idyllic that it could not be made a subject for cynical
-sarcasm, even by the editor of the _Freethinker_, if he only saw it in
-operation. It might be called right fruit of wrong belief; but I do not
-love paradoxes. I prefer to believe that men do not gather grapes of
-thorns or figs of thistles.
-
-But I am doing an injustice to Reuben and his shipmates by
-interpolating my own meditations in their story. When the work of
-realising the spoil of their first whale had been finished, all hands
-felt that they had now served their apprenticeship--were now fully
-equipped for their work on board, whatever it might be. And in their
-watches below the men found a wondrous fund of conversational matter
-in the happenings of the past few days. But whenever they approached
-the subject of Rube’s rescue of MacManus there was a perceptible
-lowering of the voice, an air of solemnity upon everybody, for they
-all felt that here was a man who, given opportunity, would have dived
-into hell itself if by so doing he might haply rescue a comrade. And
-that a comrade by no means specially dear to him, but just one of the
-many. The incident brought them a truer insight into the character of
-Christ than millions of sermons could have done. And in saying this
-I in no wise undervalue sermons. ‘It hath pleased God through the
-foolishness of preaching to save them that believe.’ But the living
-example of faith’s outcome, a far-off and feeble imitation of Christ,
-carries us beyond the reach of argument, makes the most sceptical
-silent. Against it the waves of criticism beat in vain. Logic, with
-all its perverseness; the scornful finger-pointing at the unfaithful
-professors; the cavilling of the sticklers for formulated creeds--all,
-all are silenced or stopped; and the splendour of Christ manifest in
-the flesh again, though it be but in the flesh of one of His humblest
-servants, overwhelms us.
-
-But it must be confessed that Captain Hampden, even in the midst of his
-new-found peace of soul, had occasional fits of despondency when he
-realised how little progress the ship was making towards a prosperous
-voyage. Over six months had now elapsed and only one sperm-whale had
-been seen. Hope buoyed him, of course, but it was often deferred,
-and, consequently, though he maintained a cheery demeanour towards
-his officers his heart was becoming very sick. Going below into his
-lonely little cabin he would stand as if in deep thought, gazing
-into vacancy and wondering in some indefinite way how it was that he
-was so unfortunate this voyage. For he had the reputation of being a
-‘lucky’ skipper who never stayed out all his legal time, and on several
-occasions so great had been his success that he had found no need to
-go out of the Atlantic Ocean. Twice, indeed, he had spent gloriously
-successful seasons on ‘Coffin’s Ground,’ just a little south and west
-of the English Channel, finding there sperm-whale, so numerous and fat
-that he was inclined to wonder why it should ever be necessary to go
-farther afield. I could not help thinking of him last year, when, on my
-way to the Mediterranean in one of the crack P. and O. liners, I heard
-the veteran captain tell a lady at dinner that there were hardly any
-whales now--they had been almost exterminated. I ventured to question
-his dictum, and we had rather an interesting discussion. But next
-morning he and I met on deck a little after daybreak, to find the ship
-gliding along at her usual seventeen knots through the midst of a
-school of sperm-whales of the largest size, extending to the horizon on
-both sides, and taking us an hour to get away from them.
-
-Nothing of that kind, however, came in the way of the _Xiphias_.
-Day after day passed, lengthening into weeks, during which from the
-lofty eminence of the crow’s-nest nothing could be seen but sea and
-sky, an occasional barnacle-encrusted piece of drift-timber, a school
-of dolphin or bonito, a few porpoises, flying fish innumerable, and
-now and then a fin-back whale. But with the exception of the skipper
-nobody seemed to worry or find the life monotonous. Work went on with
-clock-like regularity, but outside of the work the men’s lives appeared
-to be full of interest. Interminable yarns, often inconsequential,
-were exchanged, and hardly a detail of their lives remained unrevealed
-to each other. Reuben’s return to active service was hailed with such
-delight that he did not appear to understand what it meant. He could
-not realise that the service he had rendered to his shipmate so readily
-could have taken such heroic proportions in the eyes of the crew. If
-he could have known, that great deed was, after all, but an incident:
-it was the lovely life, the splendid man in him which appealed to all
-hands, as, indeed, it will ever do where men are gathered together.
-Many complaints of lack of appreciation are heard from men of all
-classes, but the truth appears to be that with few exceptions men
-and women are marvellously generous in their appreciation of one
-another’s good deeds. There is, of course, a bogus hero-worship, an
-undiscriminating appreciation of work that only makes for evil, and
-consequently had far better be left undone, but it is only a virtue
-carried to excess. Let men or women do ever so little good work to-day,
-and, if it becomes known, their reward is almost certain to transcend
-their merits by far.
-
-So Reuben, unconsciously as the sun shines or the birds sing, was
-made the means of sweetening the crew of the _Xiphias_, and keeping
-them sweet, and at the same time, as a consequence, was teaching
-them--teaching them how to teach themselves from the great book open
-around them lessons that would be the delight of their whole remaining
-lives. Meanwhile the Captain grew more and more irritable, moody,
-despondent. He still prayed, but listlessly, as if wondering what good
-it could do. And all this mental agony of his was just due to the lack
-of common-sense appreciation of the benefits conferred by the Gospel
-of Christ. What should we say of a parent, who, while ever ready to
-confer upon his children the best of advice, the best educational
-advantages possible, and who gave them promises of glorious prospects
-in the future, should yet keep them without the common necessaries of
-life, food and clothing--yes, not only keep them without, but hinder
-them from obtaining those things for themselves? Yet this is the idea
-which so many, the vast majority of orthodox Christians, have of the
-dear Father God. But the educational process, if of any value, is slow,
-and Captain Hampden was learning, unwillingly it is true, but still he
-_was_ learning. At times, though, the content which seemed to possess
-all hands but himself was very trying to him. He naturally felt that
-his crew should in some measure share his anxiety over the non-success
-of the voyage so far, and resentment at their apparently callous
-conduct often made him miserable. Their behaviour was irreproachable.
-There was no slackness shown in any duty, and he knew that as far as
-the look-out was concerned not a fish could leap by day within a radius
-of four or five miles without being instantly noted by one or more of
-the six pairs of keen eyes at the mastheads.
-
-But it was not until the old _Xiphias_ had rolled her way eastward as
-far as Gough Island that payable whales were sighted again. Then when
-within about ten miles of that huge isolated crag rising solitary,
-awful, out of the vast waste of the Southern Ocean, a dubious cry of
-‘Blo--o--o--w’ was heard from the fore crow’s-nest. It told plainly
-that the utterer was not at all sure whether what he was reporting was
-worth while troubling after. So many false alarms had been raised,
-rorquals, finbacks, grampuses had so often filled them with delusive
-hopes, that only the unmistakable bushy spout of a sperm-whale was
-looked for. Since, however, no chance, slight though it might be, was
-neglected, the warning was given, and was presently being repeated by
-all the other watchers. Captain Hampden rather listlessly mounted the
-rigging, his binoculars slung to his neck, and reaching the mainyard,
-focussed them upon the, as yet, far-off whales. One glance was enough.
-In a tremendous voice he roared his orders to come down from aloft,
-prepare to leave the ship, alter the course, &c. He had discovered
-that a school of ‘right’ whales was in sight: a species of cetacean,
-almost identical with the great Greenland whale, and because of the
-high value of the baleen, or whalebone found in the mouth, worth almost
-as much in those days as the sperm-whale in spite of the poor quality
-of ‘right’ whale oil--perhaps, when all the circumstances were taken
-into consideration, more, for even the Southern right whale, although
-certainly more elegant in figure and swifter in movement than his
-Northern congener, is a meek and gentle creature, in the chase of which
-an accident is almost unknown.
-
-There were about twenty individuals in the school, of average
-size--that is to say, each looking as if he or she might yield eighty
-or ninety barrels of oil and seven or eight hundredweight of bone. I
-mix up the genders, for, curiously enough, while the sperm-whale cow
-never attains to much more than one-fourth of the size of the adult
-cachalot, the mysticetus, or right whale has little or no disparity
-between the size of the sexes; what difference does occur is usually
-in favour of the female. With great glee the skipper ordered all five
-boats away, leaving the ship in charge of the four petty officers
-and two men only; and having told each boat-header to do his level
-best to get fast to a whale for himself, and not interfere with any
-other boat’s quarry, also to make the best possible time down to
-where the whales awaited them all unconscious of their proximity,
-the chase began. Oars and sails were both used with such good effect
-that although the breeze was not strong the boats fairly flew over
-the darkened surface of the sea. It was in the mid-morning--about 10
-A.M. and the sky was, as usual in those latitudes, on the edge of the
-roaring forties, overcast with a thick veil of grey clouds which shut
-out the sun as effectually as night. And when the sun goes the sea’s
-aspect is cold and cheerless even on the Line. Also, there rolled
-up from the west mighty knolls of water, the heaving of old ocean’s
-breast, which when they caught a boat, hurled her forwards as if she
-were flying, sometimes accurately balanced upon a gliding summit as
-if by the fingers of a juggling genie. Viewed from an independent
-standpoint, the enterprise of these seafarers would have looked like
-some forlorn hope whereof the prize was leave to live a little longer
-and the penalty death. But the men in those boats had no such thought.
-Their teeth clenched, their nostrils expanded, their eyes ablaze with
-excitement, they plied their oars, scorning fatigue, overcoming the
-ache in their bones by sheer will-power, and without a word or sign
-of encouragement save those which proceeded from their own fierce
-desire to do better than the fellows in the next boat. It was emulation
-unpaid, unfostered, raised to its highest power, and achieving far more
-than any hope of reward could have done.
-
-With a wild yell of delight, the mate’s boat dashed into the centre
-of the school, and his harpooner’s weapon flew into the body of the
-nearest monster like a lightning flash. The other boats, spreading
-themselves fan-wise, came on the scene almost immediately, and then
-all the wild delight of the chase, all the romantic interest of the
-scene was for a season in abeyance. It was too sordid. The clean sea
-became a slaughter-house; the soul-sickening smell of blood permeated
-the air. The exuding oil from the wounds made the sea quite smooth,
-although, of course, the swell rolled high as ever. The bewildered
-victims, unable to fight or flee, rolled helplessly upon the surface,
-exposing their vitals to the deadly thrust of the long lances, and only
-by an occasional flap of their mighty tails did they show any sign of
-resentment or desire to escape. Happily it was soon over. Within half
-an hour from the time of attack and without the expenditure of one
-hundred fathoms of line, five whales lay dead upon the solemn sea.
-No boat was injured, no damage of any kind had been done. And round
-about the victims and their slayers quietly circled the still-living
-monsters as if by some horrible fascination held to the spot. The
-skipper gave orders that none of these apparently mourning ones should
-be molested--not, be it noted, because of any tenderness for them,
-but because the average sailor, and especially the whaler, is averse
-to taking life wantonly. Where profit is concerned blood flows like
-water--slay, slay, slay, insatiable apparently of slaughter; but kill
-for killing’s sake as some gentlemen do in a pheasant battue--no: the
-rude whalemen leave such practices to their betters.
-
-The deadly work had been so well and swiftly done that, as the mate
-said figuratively, ‘a good-sized handkerchief would have covered ’em
-all.’ Making allowance for pardonable exaggeration, the whole of the
-five certainly lay within half a square mile, and, therefore, two
-boats were judged sufficient to attend to the needful tail-boring,
-&c., while the other three cut adrift and sped back to the fast
-approaching ship, all their crews in a state of wild delight at so
-successful an encounter, and feeling quite fresh, for really they had
-hardly got their second wind. Indeed, it was a busy day for them,
-although rendered much easier than it would otherwise have been by
-the exceptionally favourable circumstances. Still, even then the work
-of getting alongside and securing by the passing of fluke-chains five
-gigantic bodies like those was bound to be a heavy one in any case.
-However, it was successfully accomplished by eight bells, noon, and
-with a satisfied sigh of relief every man made his way below to as good
-a dinner as the circumstances would admit of.
-
-A full hour was allowed the resting men for food and smoke, and then at
-the first cry of ‘Turn to!’ they all scurried on deck as if eager to
-get to work again. But a surprise awaited them. Instead of the tedious
-and terribly hard work which they had seen before of cutting off and
-splitting lengthways the head of the sperm-whale, now the clatter of
-the pawls was unceasing. Once the upper jaw of the right whale, with
-its valuable fringe of baleen, is lifted out, the rest of the work of
-‘flenching,’ or skinning the blubber off the body of the whale, is just
-a pleasant piece of recreation. And here let me say that, whatever
-may be the practice in bay-whaling when the big body is stranded, it
-is utterly ridiculous to suppose, as so many readers of fiction do
-suppose, that men with spikes in their boots get down upon the whale’s
-back and hew slabs of blubber off his body, which they fling on deck.
-Such a feat would be utterly impossible, besides being most wasteful
-of time as well as spoil. For the ship and the whale roll and tumble
-about to such an extent that standing upon that rolling mass alongside
-is inconceivable. No: the great ‘cutting-tackles’ come into play, and
-once having a wide riband of blubber started off the whale’s neck the
-blubber is unwound as it were by continual hoisting, cutting at the
-still attached side, and the rolling round of the body.
-
-The men all toiled as if fatigue were a word of no import, nor was a
-word spoken or needed to spur them on to greater efforts. They toiled
-until the deck, as well as the blubber-room, was packed from end to end
-with the mountainous masses of blubber and upper jaws with their wealth
-of bone. And as the last despoiled carcass was cut adrift the men
-raised a great shout of joy. It had been such a mighty task, so well
-and profitably performed, that their exultation was legitimate, and
-even praiseworthy. But the Captain, feeling the reaction from his great
-exertions, in a sense of almost overpowering lassitude, slowly dragged
-himself up on to the little deck aft to have a look round before going
-below for a meal and a short rest. And he saw a sight that drove the
-blood back to his heart, and left his extremities cold and numb. In the
-fury of labour no one had noticed the drift of the ship, nor indeed,
-the worsening of the weather. True, the sails had all, except the
-close-reefed main topsail and fore topmast staysail, been furled before
-beginning, so that the weather mattered little, but--the grim, towering
-mass of the island was close abeam to leeward. Like some vast cloud
-it loomed above them, while to windward, through the fast-gathering
-gloom of evening, came thundering on the rising, gleaming seas of the
-great Southern Ocean, precursors of the gale that would presently be
-here--nay, was already making its presence felt and heard.
-
-For a few moments Captain Hampden stood and gazed irresolute. What
-could he do? With his deck so hampered by those vast greasy masses
-that movement fore and aft was well-nigh impossible, with night almost
-here, and crew worn out with the severe labour they had so cheerfully
-performed all day, what could he resolve upon? Like an inspiration
-came the thought, ‘Man’s extremity is God’s opportunity,’ and baring
-his head he said, ‘O God, save us, don’t let us perish like this. Let
-us escape, please, Father, from this awful danger.’ In a moment his
-relaxing muscles stiffened, he stood erect, and with a voice that
-reached every corner of the ship he shouted, ‘Lay aloft and loose
-taups’les an’t’gallants’les. Drop everything, men, and get sail on
-her.’ There was a momentary hush as the crew took in his words, and
-then cheerful cries of response came back to him as the weary fellows
-realised that they were being called upon for a supreme effort.
-Slipping, clutching, fighting their way over the greasy masses, they
-scrambled aloft, and soon the white gleams above told of the loosened
-canvas, while the waiters below tailed on to the halyards and sheets,
-and in all kinds of apparently impossible attitudes among the slimy
-obstructions dragged the reluctant sails up again. By the time all
-possible sail was made there was another and a deeper note mingling
-with the voice of the storm--the deep roar of the great Atlantic
-rollers beating up against those aged barriers of rock. But to their
-amazement the crew felt the vessel’s motion ease. She had been rolling
-heavily, labouring under the immense upper weight as if bewildered by
-it and hardly knowing what to do. And now she hardly moved at all,
-while overside the whole sea seemed smoothed down and ablaze with
-phosphorescent light. Even the veteran officers were puzzled, until the
-Captain suddenly bethought him of the gigantic seaweed that in fronds
-of hundreds of feet in length, and the thickness of a man’s body, grows
-upward to the surface in those waters all around the bases of the
-island mountains. But was there any protection there? True, the sea
-had become smooth, but the ship’s way had also deadened so that she no
-longer forged ahead, while it was impossible to ascertain in any way
-whether or not she was drifting broadside on over the heads of the kelp
-towards the stern precipices to leeward. The night was now so dark that
-in spite of the proximity of the mountain to leeward it was impossible
-to distinguish between one side and the other. Only the ear could tell
-by that deep moan of the sea against the rock bases.
-
-Nothing could be done now but wait patiently to see what was the will
-of God concerning them. It was most obvious that if the kelp let them
-through, the ship must be battered to pieces against those precipices,
-where the sea was at least twenty fathoms deep alongside the rocks.
-Anchoring was out of the question--seamanship, in fact, was entirely
-discounted. And so, feeling all this, Captain Hampden, again raising
-his voice, summoned all hands aft. ‘Boys,’ he said, when they had
-gathered around him, ‘this looks like our last night of life. Now
-we’ll pray that God will let us live, but specially we’ll pray that
-if He doesn’t see fit to grant us any more life we may die clean an’
-wholesome. An’ whether we live or die we’ve done our best, and that’s a
-great comfort.’ So holding on in all sorts of attitudes, those hardly
-bestead men prayed with the skipper, full of faith that whatever the
-outcome of the night might be, it would be all right. They finished and
-were dismissed to their quarters, while the gale howled ever louder,
-and the awful shadow to leeward deepened.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-A DOUBLE DELIVERANCE
-
-
-Hour after hour wore on, while many of the men, in spite of their
-fears, slept soundly. Rube, indeed, seemed unable to realise that
-there was any danger at all. Having joined in the general prayer for
-deliverance he appeared to regard the matter as quite settled, and
-as not requiring any more care on his or anyone else’s part except
-the Father’s. Most of the men, over-borne with weariness both of
-body and brain, slept fitfully in many uncouth attitudes, some half
-reclining upon banks of grease-exuding blubber gently heaving with
-the motion of the ship, others twisted into comfortable corners,
-apparently impervious to cold, or wet, or fear. But the Captain, more
-at peace with his surroundings than he could understand, and dimly,
-subconsciously wondering why, sat on the little deck aft listening to
-the angry roar of the baffled sea far outside the engirdling groves
-of kelp. The sullen boom of the rollers against that unseen mass to
-leeward, the hissing, swishing sound of the great leaves restlessly
-sliding over each other and against the ship, and the ever-deepening
-roar of the gale overhead made up a concert truly terrifying in its
-effect upon the heart. And yet Captain Hampden felt little terror.
-Knowing his utter helplessness, he was driven to as utter a dependence
-upon a kindly Power which he knew was not merely capable of saving his
-ship and all hands, but was always benevolently disposed towards man,
-and never more so than in his hour of deepest distress.
-
-So he sat calmly and wished for the day. Several times he made the
-beginning of a move, feeling that action of some kind, even though only
-in the direction of clearing the decks, would be better for all than
-quietly enduring this season of suspense. But each time he realised
-how hopeless such an attempt would be in the present condition of the
-deck and the state of all hands. Therefore, he waited with wonderful
-patience until the cook’s head appeared at his side above the break
-of the house, and a deferential voice said, ‘Wun’t yo hab drop ob
-hot coffee, sah? I got it yah, all ready, sah.’ ‘Yes, cook, think I
-will. Jest wut I ben needin’ fur a long time ’n’ didn’t know it.’ And
-as he took the cup from the delighted black man he thought how good
-a thing was service done whole-heartedly, and how well and willingly
-it was rendered by such men as these. A smile may rise at the thought
-of any shipmaster considering his cook like this, but it would be the
-smile of ignorance. For if a cup of cold water given in the Master’s
-name shall in no wise lose its reward, there is little doubt that a
-cup of coffee on a bitter night, prepared with much difficulty, by a
-man who, although only doing his duty, is doing that duty with all
-his might, will in like manner gain him a reward. I remember when I
-was lamp-trimmer on board the _Wentworth_, running between Sydney and
-Melbourne, I used to be called at daybreak to duty. After taking in
-the lamps, my first thought was to make a cup of coffee--it being some
-time before the cooks were at work. And it was my practice, though
-in no sense my duty, to take a cup and a piece of toast up to Mr.
-Wallace, the chief officer, on the bridge, whom I used to picture as
-burdened with the care of the ship up there in the bleak night. He was
-a brusque, almost coarse, sailor, but I know he was grateful. A word
-of thanks from him set my heart dancing (I was barely fifteen years
-of age), but my chief reward was in the knowledge of having done a
-kindness. And this is the spirit that moves the world to-day. Everyone
-should take courage, whatever their creed, in the thought that the
-Christ ideal, which is unselfishness raised to its highest power, is
-becoming universal, and that the many exceptions have no contradictory
-force at all.
-
-By the time Captain Hampden had finished his coffee he found that there
-was a perceptible lightening of the gloom around, although the wind had
-increased so much that it was evident, unless something was speedily
-done to ease the strain upon them, the masts would certainly go. So,
-rising stiffly to his feet, the skipper sought the mate, finding him
-ready, standing near the compass, and apparently endeavouring to get a
-bearing of the land, which was becoming more visible, and, if possible,
-more horribly threatening in appearance as it did so. ‘Good morning,
-sir,’ said Mr. Pease, as soon as he saw the skipper; ‘pipin’ up, ain’t
-she, sir?’ ‘Yaas; guess she is, an’ ef we want to carry any of our
-sticks eout o’ this, we’ll hev t’ git thet canvas off her as quick ’s
-it kin be did. I don’t think it matters much, anyway, whether she hez
-canvas on her or not--she can’t make much, if any, headway through this
-weed, an’ it looks ’s if th’ Lord wunt let her go ashore. Go ahead,
-Mr. Pease, git th’ rags off her, ’n’ by thet time, please God, it’ll be
-daylight good.’
-
-So the mate obediently roared out his message to the crew, who
-responded with a phenomenal cheerfulness, clambering over those
-slimy, greasy masses on deck as if they cared nothing at all for the
-difficulty of their passage. In half an hour they had shortened her
-down to the three close-reefed topsails, and besides had cleared up the
-gear so that no ropes should be in the way of the whale-matter lying
-about. And having done this they stood by, waiting, oh, so anxiously,
-the whole of that ship’s company; with just one exception--Rube. He it
-was who wore always a beaming smile, and sidled up to first one and
-then the other with some cheering word. Just as a doctor who is always
-hoping for the best, while taking precaution against the worst, is the
-most likely to pull his patient through, so this Divine teaching of
-cheerfulness in the presence of dangerous and depressing circumstances
-does really seem to win the battle before it is fought. In any case, if
-the warrior does fall he falls with his face to the foe, and with the
-high satisfaction thrilling his soul that he has behaved in that last
-dread hour as became a _man_.
-
-To this little waiting crowd came suddenly the blessing of light.
-As if some mighty angel’s hand had grasped the swart veil of cloud
-closing them darkly in, and had rent it in sunder from horizon to
-zenith, the whole western quadrant of the sky was suddenly lighted up
-by the brilliant beams of the newly risen sun. So splendid was this
-enlightening that for a few moments all hands stood awe-stricken,
-watching the rapidly glancing sabres of glorious flashing colour
-thrusting the encompassing gloom through and through. Then as if by
-one impulse all turned to leeward to see how near was the fateful
-rock. As if it had just leapt out of the gloom, Gough Island was
-revealed, within a mile (which looks at sea less than a hundred yards
-does ashore), and every heart for a moment stood still. But after that
-tribute to human weakness hope instantly reasserted her lovely self.
-Had they not been kept from perishing all through the blackness of that
-terrible night? Was it not certain that they were now no nearer the
-land than when they last saw it clearly, in spite of the stress of the
-gale upon the ship’s broadside? Undoubtedly it was; and more--some of
-them began to take mental bearings and compare them with the position
-they could remember the previous evening, finding that at any rate if
-they were not gaining ground they were certainly not losing.
-
-Suddenly the Captain shouted to the mate, ‘Mr. Pease, turn the hands
-to on the tryin’ out. We kain’t do nothin’ with the ship as she is,
-an’ we mout so well ’muse ourselves doin’ somethin’ useful.’ This
-pronouncement was hailed with the utmost delight by all hands, and like
-a swarm of ants they were soon busy cutting, slicing, mincing, boiling,
-and getting out the bone--so busy, indeed, as well as interested
-in their work, that they scarcely ever paused to look at the great
-precipices to leeward of them.
-
-Meanwhile, the Captain had very carefully taken his cross bearings, and
-had no sooner completed the simple operation than he felt certain that
-his vessel was drifting south in almost imperceptible fashion. Hope
-revived, and he joined his workers with a heart greatly lightened.
-There by his tremendous exertions and cheery voice he encouraged all
-hands to attend to present duties, and thus exclude forebodings for the
-future. And two hours later when he again took his bearings his hopeful
-supposition became a definite certainty: she had drifted through that
-hindering kelp, in apparent defiance of the fateful pressure of the
-gale striving to thrust her on shore, quite two miles nearer safety.
-Now he felt impelled to shout the glad news to his splendid men who had
-so nobly responded to the call made upon them. So raising his voice to
-its fullest compass he roared: ‘She’s gettin’ eout ov it, boys. Praise
-God we’ll be all right yet. There isn’t any shipwreck coming off this
-time. She’s gettin’ raound th’ corner ov th’ island in great shape. So
-peg away, men--while yew’re workin’ she’s a-dreeftin’, an’ as soon ’s
-ever she gits clear we’ll give her every rag she’ll drag, an’ git away
-fr’m this uncomf’ble neighbourhood.’
-
-A wild cheer answered him, and all hands immediately redoubled their
-efforts to clear that grease-encumbered deck. Perhaps the gentle reader
-may feel a little nausea at the idea of a whole crew of men wallowing
-about in a deck full of dripping--for really it is no exaggeration
-to call it by that homely name--but I dare make no apology for being
-as literal and realistic as possible in this matter, since by such
-methods alone is it possible to make the land-living reader understand
-what manner of men these were who wrested such gigantic spoil from
-the depths of the mighty ocean, and under what circumstances they
-lived. Here you have men involved in toil of the most strenuous kind
-under conditions which to the majority of mankind would preclude any
-action whatever except for self-preservation. And in addition thereto
-destruction to all waits grimly by the vessel’s side, unveiling all its
-possibilities of horror and inviting man’s heart to quail, his muscles
-to grow flaccid, his mind to become unhinged. And in spite of all you
-find this lonely group of seafarers steadfastly setting their strength
-to the accomplishment of their unpoetic task in the highest frame of
-heroism, which is to do what lies before you with a single eye, not
-looking for the commendation of your fellow men, but because of the
-inherent joy involved in just doing one’s duty.
-
-So hour by hour slipped by, the mincing-machine clattered incessantly,
-the flame from the twin chimneys of the try-works soared palely into
-the keen air, and was swept off at right angles to leeward by the wind
-as if it were some angelic sword stabbing at the grim mass to eastward
-of them. And the effect of their labours was manifest in that a clear
-gangway along the deck was now made right fore and aft. Into the midst
-of the toil came the clear, cheerful voice of the skipper calling,
-‘Dinner, men, an’ befo’ y’ go remember she’s gittin’ cl’ar’s fast ’s
-ever th’ weed’ll allow her. She’s made quite four miles of southin’
-sence eight bells--thet’s a mile an hour. An’ ef she keeps thet goin’
-through the afternoon as she has this forenoon we’ll be cl’ar o’ th’
-whole thing by sundown.’ ‘Hooray! bully fer th’ skipper,’ shouted the
-crew, and seizing such rags, wads of oakum, and the like, as they
-could get hold of they sauntered forward, wiping down as they went.
-They were saturated from head to heel with oil, they looked like a
-gang of piratical scarecrows, but I make bold to say that they were as
-heroic a crowd as ever came out of the most hardly contested battle.
-And on reaching the dim chamber, reeking with a foul combination of
-evil smells, they squatted around on the greasy deck and received each
-man in his little tin dish a portion of salt pork, a few spoonfuls of
-haricot beans, and a little loaf. Everyone doffed his cap, everyone
-felt thankful for this portion of coarsest food, and Reuben only
-focussed the general sense of the company when he said, holding one
-hand out before him, ‘Lovin’ God, we’re alive t’ eat, an’ work, an’
-thank Thee. We do, an’ ask You t’ make us thankful men, keep us good
-men, not ashamed of one another or of Thee. For Christ’s sake. Amen.’
-The ‘Amen’ was so heartily echoed that Rube looked around startled. He
-could hardly believe his ears. With all his beautiful, childlike faith
-in God, he had, like most of us, but little faith in man, and when he
-found how mightily God was working in the crowd around him he was, as
-most of us would be, moved to profoundest wonder. Like most of us, he
-had not believed ’according to your faith be it unto you,’ or that when
-man’s faith fails, God, who cannot be disheartened, steps in and does
-in His own way His own work at His own appointed time.
-
-Little was said during the meal--all were too ravenous with hunger
-for that; but when the last scrap of food had been eaten up, and the
-utensils cleared away by the cook of the mess, pipes were stuffed with
-greasy tobacco and lighted, and although each pipe emitted a peculiar
-frizzling sound as of frying, and the odour of the oily weed would
-certainly have driven an ordinary smoker frantic, each man’s face wore
-a perfectly satisfied expression, and a desultory conversation began.
-‘Don thatt wass a narr’ squeak, hey,’ muttered a square-built little
-Italian, who lay coiled up by the pawl-bitt. ‘I thinkin’ I promesso
-giva candela thosa sainta, onlee I carn faget thees name thata time.’
-‘Mean yew cuddent ’member, I ’spose,’ grumbled a Down Easter by his
-side. ‘Si, grazie,’ eagerly responded the Italian. ‘Don’t can memb’.
-Nev’ mine. Savea one dolla. ’Sides, how I know ef thatt Sancta goin’
-elpa me bord una barca eretico lika thees?’ ‘Look here,’ Antone,’ said
-a deep voice out of the gloom across the fo’c’sle, ‘You better pay fur
-thet candle, annyhow. Give it as a thank-offrin’ ’at yew wuz aboard a
-heretic ship. I guess ’fore th’ machinery of your crowd c’d a-got in
-working order we sh’d all a-ben gone up. Wut d’ ye say, boys?’ A hoarse
-murmur of approval ran round, while poor Antone grew hot as if feeling
-that it was incumbent upon him to defend his faith. But suddenly
-realising that as he had never understood what his faith was except
-doing just what he was told (when it was easy) by the priest, he fell
-back upon common-sense, and replied, ‘Well, ’corse I don’ know anyt’ing
-about ’cept I’m eatina dinner, smokina pipe. Ef I say Dio Grazie thatt
-goin’ be alia righta, no Rube, eh, whatt?’ The deep, cheerful voice of
-Reuben immediately chimed in, ‘Of course, Antone, if you reelly are
-thankful to God. But if He’s spared your life, you ought to remember it
-an’ see if you can’t do somethin’ with it for Him. An’ when you come
-to think of it--it ain’t much to ask--that you shall be clean in mind,
-an’ tongue, that you shall be kind and helpful, an’ true, an’ that you
-shall remember not now and then, but always, the gentle, loving Jesu
-Christo, your every-day and all-day Friend.’ The impressionable little
-Italian’s face was all awork as this little talk fell from Rube’s lips.
-It went, in spite of his disability in language, right home to his hot
-southern heart, and the bright drops of sensibility’s precious dew
-glistened on his russet beard.
-
-But Mr. Pease’s stentorian voice was heard shouting, ‘Turn-to!’ and on
-the instant pipes were laid aside, belts were tightened, caps pressed
-down upon tanned brows, and a rush upwards was made from those fœtid
-quarters into the bright, invigorating air, which really seizes upon
-a man newly emerged from the foulness below like a pleasant vertigo,
-making him wonder whatever can be the matter with him. The first thing
-each man did upon reaching the deck was to give a swift glance to
-leeward. And as each did so a very real sense of gratitude flooded his
-heart. For it no longer needed the skipper’s cheery assurance that
-all was well to satisfy the most ignorant of them that they were now,
-humanly speaking, out of danger. True, they were not yet past the
-fringe of kelp, their vessel was as yet quite unmanageable, and the
-gale blew with undiminished vigour. But still it was evident that the
-steady stress of that invisible force beneath them would not allow them
-to be driven any farther shoreward, and, quite satisfied, they turned
-to their work with as much lack of concern for the safety of the ship
-as if no land had been in sight.
-
-Seeing that all was proceeding so cheerily, Captain Hampden called
-the mate, and said, ‘Mr. Pease, I ain’t quite ’s young’s I wuz, ’n’
-after last night I begin t’ feel the flesh pullin’ a bit. So if you’ll
-jest give an eye t’ her, I’ll go ’n’ hev an hour’s caulk. Maybe I’ll
-need it to-night, though I hope all will be in good shape ’fore
-dark. ’N’ ’s soon ’s ever yer git th’ decks cl’ar o’ blubber, set
-yer watches--blubber watches, o’ course. Le’s give this grand lot er
-fellows all th’ rest we kin.’ ‘Aye, aye, sir,’ cheerily answered the
-mate; ‘ef I hadn’t ’a felt it ’d be persoomin’ I’d ’a’ asked yew to
-go ’n’ hev a spell long ago. We kain’t afford t’ hev yew crackin’ up,
-y’ know, sir. An’ yew c’n be quite sure ’at everythin’ ’ll go like
-clockwork. I don’t believe they’s a spouter afloat to-day ’s got such a
-bully crowd ’s we hev, an’ I’m sure yew think the same, Cap’n.’ ‘I dew
-jest thet,’ sleepily murmured the old man as he swung off towards the
-companion and disappeared.
-
-Thoroughly wearied as he was, and with a great weight lifted from his
-mind, the good old man sank at once, as soon as he lay down, into a
-deep sleep. But although it was in reality fully two hours since he
-lay down, when he suddenly realised that he was wide awake he seemed
-certain that he had but just dozed off. It is a curious sensation, but
-fairly common among seamen, this of suddenly passing from the depths
-of sleep to uttermost clearness of thought and readiness for action.
-For a moment he waited, listening intently for some recurring sound,
-explaining why he should thus have awakened, as he thought, so soon.
-But except for the creaking of the old ship’s timbers and the deep
-murmur of the gale there was no sound noticeable, and these lullabies
-would certainly have kept him sleeping. However, the feeling that
-something had happened which needed his attention forced itself upon
-him, and rising stiffly from the hard cushions of the transom locker,
-he snatched his cap and climbed on deck. One swift glance forward
-showed him how strenuously his men had been toiling while he slept,
-for the deck was clear to the try-works, and the latter were smoking
-furiously, while the attendant gnomes came and went, tirelessly
-carrying on their great task. He looked overside and saw that the weed
-was perceptibly less in quantity; he looked at the land and--surely it
-could not be--and yet--his hawk-like vision could not play him false.
-He grabbed his glasses and focussed them on what he saw--a rag of
-fluttering white among the sombre rocks, immediately satisfying himself
-that someone needing help was there. Instantly all the powers of his
-mind were busy devising means for the assistance of any unfortunate
-stranded in so wild a spot. Again and again he surveyed that tiny
-flutter of white; again and again he took an undecided step forward as
-if to give an order, until at last he said aloud, ‘Wall, God he’pin’
-us, we ort to do something, though how is more than I can see. All
-hands on deck!’ he roared, and in two minutes the mate was by his side,
-his big eyes staring full of inquiry at his commander. ‘Wut is it,
-sir?’ he gasped. ‘It’s a wrecked crew, I reckon, Mr. Pease. D’ ye see
-yonder flicker of white in that cleft between those two big rocks--no,
-a bit to starboard, so?’ ‘Yes, sir, I see it,’ said the mate; ‘d’ ye
-make it out to be a signal, sir?’ ‘I do, jest that, Pease, an’--but
-here kems the boys. Naow, then, m’lads, thar’s life to be saved. Lower
-away starboard quarter-boat, ’n’ yew, Mr. Peck (it’s yewr boat anyhow)
-make the best way yew kin to whar yew see yon white flicker among th’
-rocks. Yew’ll hev to warp yewr way along through the kelp as best yew
-can, and when yew git cluss to it, be keerful--be jest as keerful as
-yew know how; fur we kain’t spare either yew er yewr boat’s crew.
-Thar’ll be an all-fired heavy swell on the beach (if they is any beach)
-fur all it looks so smooth frum here. Thish yer kelp stops the sea
-rollin’ in, but it kain’t stop th’ swell, y’ know. Now, give way, and
-God go with yew t’ save.’
-
-At the word the boat left the ship, the crew plying their oars with
-great difficulty, because of the encumbering weed. So they soon shipped
-oars, and took their paddles--every whaleboat having five of these
-primitive but exceedingly useful propellers stowed in their beckets
-under the thwarts--and with much laborious effort urged their boat
-shoreward. As they neared the black, forbidding cliffs the officer’s
-heart sank, for he saw how apparently inaccessible they were, and
-how the gigantic southern swell, with never a foamy break, rose and
-fell against those awful precipices. The long streamers of kelp like
-multitudinous serpents writhed around the bared rock bases, then
-disappeared as the whole mighty body of water lifted, lifted, lifted
-until it seemed as if it must submerge the mountain tops. And still
-that tiny white rag fluttered forth its agonising message: ‘Come and
-save us.’
-
-Be it noted that while Mr. Peck was fully alive to the tremendous
-danger awaiting him and his brave fellows, the possibility of his not
-being able to fulfil his errand of mercy never occurred to him. He
-was one of those wonderful fellows who never calculate beforehand the
-chances of defeat. And these are the men who do great deeds, although
-it be accounted criminal in war to neglect the keeping open of a line
-of retreat. So by every encouraging word he could speak he urged the
-toiling crew to greater effort, until the kelp became so thick that
-paddling was no longer possible, and they had perforce to haul the
-boat along by grasping the long strands of black vegetation that rose
-and fell rhythmically around them. Nearer and nearer they drew, near
-enough to distinguish a forlorn little company of people clambering
-precariously over the rocks and making (as yet) unintelligible signs to
-them. Nearer and nearer yet, until it became evident that the refugees
-were waving them towards a gigantic escarpment which rose fully five
-hundred feet almost perpendicularly from the sea, and at one angle
-seemed to present an edge just like a jagged sabre. They altered their
-course in obedience to these frantic signallings, and presently found
-themselves fighting for life against the heave and hurl of the swell,
-which suddenly seemed to have found force that was lacking before
-when they were farther from the land. The ropes of kelp slithered
-through their bleeding hands, great fronds arose mysteriously from
-the blackness and swept across the boat, scourging them as with giant
-whips; they cowered and groaned, and begged for mercy in undertones,
-but toiled on. And then, when all their efforts appeared to have
-failed because the poor human machines could no longer respond to the
-merciless call made upon them, came a blessed lull, the boat swept
-round the sabre-edge of the cliff, and there, free from kelp, was a
-tiny crevasse with deep blue water just gently rising and falling,
-and a ledge of clean rock running all round it. Upon this ledge was
-clustered a strange company, savage and weird-looking, long elf-locks
-bleached by wind and storm, garments of every imaginable material and
-shape. Ten of this company were crouching at the edge nearest the boat
-with uplifted hands and streaming eyes.
-
-But when the boat came near enough for them to leap in there was a
-pause. Even in here the outer swell made itself felt, and without
-careful handling a calamity was imminent at the last moment. Therefore
-Mr. Peck shouted to the little group to watch when the swell came
-gently, as it did after every three rolls, when he would let the
-boat almost graze the rocks, and four, no more, at a time, must jump
-into the middle of the boat. Then it was seen that the refugees were
-encouraging three smaller figures, patting them, pointing to the boat,
-making signs as they talked, until one voice rang out sharply from
-the shore: ‘Dear boys, these three are women--do try and catch them,
-they’ve suffered so much.’ Ah! had any stimulus been wanted this would
-have supplied it, for it is the glory of the Anglo-Saxon race, and
-especially of the American branch of the old tree--its reverence for
-woman, whether mother, wife, or sister. The boat rose gently shoreward,
-the officer shouted, ‘Now,’ and three shrinking figures half jumped,
-half fell, into the outstretched arms of the boatmen. ‘Safe, thank
-God!’ shouted the former speaker from the shore. The rest was easy. The
-remaining seven took careful bearings and leaped at the right moments
-until the whole ten were snugly bestowed, and it was time to turn the
-boat’s head seaward again.
-
-But now she was overloaded. If it had been a heavy task coming in with
-her light before the swell, what would it now be going out deeply
-laden--not six inches of freeboard amidships--against that awful surge?
-For one moment Peck’s heart failed him as he weighed the possibilities.
-Then--and this was a miraculous thing, seeing that never before had
-he entertained such an idea--he lifted his cap and said, or rather
-shouted, for the roar of the swell was almost deafening: ‘Boys, le’s
-ask God t’ he’p us out of this hole. Keep her steady with the paddles.
-“O God, we’re all in Your han’s. We’re tryin’ t’ save life, we’re doin’
-our best, we b’lieve we _kain’t_ go under without You lets us. Naow
-save our lives so’s we k’n praise You all the days ov our life.” Naow
-let her have it, boys. Paddle fur yer lives, an’ as soon ’s we strike
-the kelp, gather it in an’ haul fur all yer wuth. Passengers, lie still
-in th’ bottom o’ th’ boat.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-A REIGN OF TERROR
-
-
-Far more frequently than any shore-living people can imagine, there
-occur times on board ship when it seems as if the whole condition of
-things must be overwhelmed in one red holocaust. No ship, whatever
-her position or character may be, is quite exempt from such crises
-as these. For at sea all hands are compelled to feel that they have
-been driven back upon primitive conditions, and the one paramount
-question demanding answer is: ‘How much longer can I bear this?’ No
-such problem ever confronts shore people, for the most obvious reason:
-there is always a way of escape--at sea there is none. And, if the
-true inwardness of all the awful sea tragedies that have ever been
-known were inquired into, it would be found that nearly all of them
-originated in a condition of things such as I have been sketching. A
-brutal, unscrupulous villain (we have had them in the British Navy)
-at the head of affairs, a vilely truckling gang of officers ready at
-a nod to carry out that villain’s behests, and before the mast a mob
-of men driven frantic by ill-treatment yet lacking initiative, the
-one ignition spark which only a genius can supply. A case in point
-is afforded by the tragedy of the _Bounty_. Concerning that terrible
-mutiny reams have been written wherein the horrid crimes of the sailors
-are continually held up to execration, but how seldom is passing
-mention given to the true cause of the whole awful business--the
-treatment of the men by the commander, who seemed to have felt it his
-duty to make his men realise before death what sort of a place the
-infernal regions must be. Only the lack of initiative has prevented the
-tale of sea tragedies from being a hundredfold as many, not the desert
-of those in charge, who seem to have exhausted the ingenuity of fiends
-in their behaviour towards their hapless crews.
-
-Still, it must be confessed, and gladly, too, that few indeed are the
-captains or officers who set out with the deliberate intention of
-goading their crews to the point of madness just apparently in order
-to exhibit their power of command, their ability to control even the
-most frantic crowd of men. Few men are as wicked as that. But Captain
-Da Silva certainly was, and his visit to Brava was made with deliberate
-intent to procure certain auxiliaries upon whom he could rely for aid
-in the vile purpose he had set before himself--viz., that of trampling
-under foot triumphantly men of the hated Anglo-Saxon race, with all
-their nonchalant assumption of moral and mental superiority. Therefore
-it was that no sooner had sail been made and filled away for the
-southward than his plan of campaign began. The recruits--all of whom,
-be it noted, had been to sea before--were carefully apportioned by him
-throughout the two watches. They alone were allowed to steer the ship,
-and with each of them while at the wheel the skipper would converse
-in their own language, while the American officers could not help but
-listen uncomprehendingly, with black rage in their hearts, yet in utter
-impotence. For what could they do? If the skipper was powerful before,
-sufficiently so to enforce his will, he was omnipotent now. And these
-six black Portuguese felt it in their bones. They did not refuse to
-carry out any order given them by the officers, but they behaved in a
-singularly offensive manner as who should say, ‘We do this not to obey
-you, but because we are your master’s cronies, and it isn’t yet time in
-his opinion that we should show you how we regard you.’
-
-If this state of things was hard of endurance for the officers, it was
-trebly so for the men. In the foc’s’le the Dagoes were now about even
-in numbers with the Americans and other white men, but in physique
-the former were far superior. And all conversation ceased in that sad
-place. No man dared to complain, even under his breath, for everyone
-felt that the foc’s’le was a sort of Dionysius’ Ear, where every word
-uttered immediately resounded in the private apartments of the skipper.
-All the worst of the work was reserved for the white men, every soft
-job was kept for the blacks, and no man durst say a word, for all
-knew as well as could be that sitting in the midst of this web of
-devilishness was the skipper pulling the cords and gloating over his
-revenge.
-
-Finest weather, bluest of skies, and an almost utter absence of squalls
-attended the _Grampus_ as she crossed the Line. And through it all,
-watch and watch, the sorely tried white portion of the crew were
-kept at work scrubbing and polishing until even the flagship of our
-Mediterranean Squadron would not, so far as cleanliness went, have
-surpassed her. And it was with a perfect pang of delight that all hands
-heard the long-drawn cry of ‘Blow’ from the mastheads when off Fernando
-Noronha. Well knowing what bone-wrenching toil it would bring, they
-yet welcomed the prospect of whaling almost gleefully--anything for a
-change in the deadly monotony of their daily life. Poor fellows!
-
-They had a grand day’s sport, about which I can say very little since
-it was all so orthodox and free from extraordinary incident. The whales
-were medium-sized cows--that is to say, ranging from twenty-five to
-forty barrels each--and as the big bull leader of the school went off
-to windward at top speed when the battle began, there was but little
-fighting: it was just a butchery. The poor, silly creatures crowded
-round each other quite helplessly, and submitted to be done to death
-almost as complacently as does the great right whale of the Arctic
-regions. Of course, Captain Da Silva took part in the slaughter. Else
-it had been but a wasted day for him. For he had, in common with
-some of the old Romans, an insatiable blood-thirst that could not be
-gratified as he craved owing to the hampering laws of civilisation, and
-he was therefore driven to quench it by conflict with the mighty whale,
-utterly heedless, to all appearance, of any probability of danger to
-himself. His absence from the ship tempted Priscilla on deck.
-
-She has been neglected of late in this chronicle for several reasons.
-First, any allusion to her must of necessity be tame, since she had
-voluntarily taken upon herself the _rôle_ of a patient martyr, from
-whom no taunt or even ill-usage could wring a complaint. Secondly,
-any information about her is scarcely possible since she was more
-like an automaton than aught else--moving, indeed, waking, sleeping,
-and eating (very little), but speaking hardly ever, and apparently
-determined to efface herself as much as possible from the life of the
-ship. She was an insoluble puzzle to her husband. At first he was
-brutal in the extreme, even to the length of striking her, but to this
-treatment she opposed a stolidity of demeanour which alarmed him. Then
-he became gentler, spoke to her civilly, almost kindly, with the same
-result. Superstitious terrors took possession of him, for he began
-to wonder whether, indeed, she had not died, only her body retaining
-sufficient volition to keep about among them. He noticed that she
-never spoke one word to anyone but him, and gave way to the opinion
-that some change--he knew not what--had taken place, and unless he
-wished to be haunted (of which, like the majority of Latins, he had
-an awful dread) he had better let her alone. So, unconsciously, she
-had been led to do just the right thing in order to secure what tiny
-modicum of comfort still remained possible of attainment in her present
-position. And, as for suffering--well, the edge of that was dulled
-to such an extent that she often surveyed herself as it were from an
-impartial mental standpoint, and wondered mildly whether she was indeed
-the discontented, prideful Priscilla Fish of olden days or not. I do
-not like, especially in a work of this kind, to insist continually
-upon the sacred ability to detach oneself from the things of sense
-that God gives His dear ones, yet how otherwise, I ask myself, can
-the literalness, the common-sense application of real Christianity be
-brought home to people who have been trained from infancy to believe
-that religion is an excrescence, as it were--something of external
-growth which can be applied like a poultice by a skilled professional
-at hand at seasons when needed?--how otherwise explain that Christ
-_does_ dwell in the hospitable heart, and there produces a toleration
-of (not an indifference to) the world’s vicissitudes, so that ‘in the
-world, but not of it’ becomes a fact of experience, not a pretty theory?
-
-Priscilla had been taught this by the Teacher Himself; the Comforter
-had come with His consolations to this poor soul, and there amid
-all that made for misery she was as nearly happy as the flesh will
-allow. Occasionally, in almost an ecstasy of joy, she sat communing
-with God, forgetting all else, unconscious for the time of any other
-environment than that of the Holy of Holies. Herein I can see lie
-twin dangers--in the expression of this fact, I mean: the one that
-this must be an argument for the conventual life, the other that such
-matters are entirely unreal--the outcome of mystical meditation, and
-as unsubstantial and inapplicable to the ordinary details of life as
-is the hermetic philosophy of the ancients. Well, it takes all sorts
-of people to make a world, and if there were no unbelievers in God’s
-immanent companionship and no misunderstandings of His dealings with
-His children, His Kingdom would be come, and we should no longer need
-to pray for it. I can only reiterate with all simplicity and directness
-that in such wise (as I have feebly tried to describe Priscilla’s
-case) God _does_ associate with men and women. That the words, ‘Lo, I
-am with you always, even unto the end of the world,’ are literally,
-not figuratively, true; and that millions of His children, given the
-opportunity, will gladly testify to the same. How else, do you think,
-do men and women live on through long lives, seeing what they do see
-of their fellow humans, knowing what they must know of the Powers of
-Darkness visible, and still preserve intact their childlike faith in
-Jesus and His love? Only because it is literally, absolutely true that
-‘He that dwelleth in the secret place of the Most High shall abide
-under the shadow of the Almighty.’
-
-But in spite of her joy in the Lord, it must be admitted that Priscilla
-occasionally felt an almost overwhelming longing to breathe the free,
-fresh air of Heaven. For that had of late been a luxury denied her.
-She had been practically forbidden to go on deck, to appear at table.
-Her husband had developed along with his belief in her uncanny powers
-a horrible jealousy of her--so much so that he would not allow her
-to be seen by any of the crew or officers. And although he had not
-actually in so many words forbidden her to come on deck, yet so many
-obstacles had been placed in her way, even to locking her in her berth,
-that at last she had dumbly acquiesced in this condition of things,
-and submitted to breathe the fetid air of the little cabin, which, as
-everyone who has ever been on board of even a trading vessel knows,
-is foul and vitiated beyond description. It is no paradox to say that
-there is more air and less ventilation at sea than anywhere on earth.
-Therefore it was no wonder that, learning from the faithful darkey
-steward of her husband’s absence at the whaling, she crept timidly
-on deck and sat on the transom, looking out over the wide brightness
-of the sea with feelings of almost intolerable complexity. She had
-learned, in the same perfect way, to take the keenest delight in the
-beauties of creation; scenes that so many of us pass over unheedingly
-were to her almost poignant in their revelations of the Father’s
-benevolent and beautiful designs, and in proportion as she was debarred
-from enjoying them so she prized them. Perfectly natural. How many
-an old sailor has gone grumbling through his long seafaring career
-apparently all unheeding the glories so lavishly spread before his
-sullen gaze, and then when retired to some dull, inland village in his
-old age, perhaps blind and deaf, he has feasted on the treasures of
-memory, and again in fancy watched his gallant vessel leaping blithely
-from sea to sea, or breasting steadily as if with unconquerable
-resolution and force the relentless thrust of the storm-wind and its
-accompanying sea.
-
-So Priscilla sat aft, soaking her soul in beauty and utterly oblivious
-of her surroundings, until even her inexperienced eye detected a
-returning boat--one that neared the ship at a great rate, the oars
-rising and falling as if steam driven, and with a feather of spray at
-her bow, showing at what a high rate of speed she was approaching.
-Priscilla slipped quickly below, her heart full of thankfulness that
-she had been enabled to get a glimpse of the sea and sky, and also that
-she had succeeded in retreating before the advent of her husband. Truly
-she had but little margin of time, for he, standing erect in his boat’s
-stern, had been watching the ship with vulture eyes, and before she had
-been ten minutes below he was on board, his awful voice ringing fore
-and aft like that of some destroying angel.
-
-Seven cow whales had been killed, and the securing of them alongside
-meant a truly herculean task, which was prolonged until nearly
-midnight, by which time the vessel looked as if she was the centre of
-an island of flame. Surrounded by these great carcasses against which
-the sea broke in lambent light, the rendezvous for tens of thousands
-of sharks, whose swift coming and going through the phosphorus-charged
-waves made them glow like the moon, the scene was one of almost awful
-beauty. But none there took any notice of it. The crew, half dead
-with fatigue, stumbled about obeying mechanically the orders given,
-but hardly able to keep awake, much less pull or lift as they were
-ordered. At last the mate approached the skipper, saying: ‘Cap’n Da
-Silva, hadn’t I better order the men to rest awhile? I’m afraid we’ll
-be losing some of ’em overboard if I don’t, they’re all so dead beat,
-sir.’ Looking around to see if any of the men were within hearing, the
-skipper took a step towards the mate, and with a perfectly devilish
-glare in his eyes, said: ‘Yew lazy American pig, yew dirty helpless
-dog, I’ll teach yew t’ interfere with _my_ business. I’d jes’ soon kill
-ye as look at ye, f’r all th’ good y’ are. But I’ll do worse ’n that.
-I’ll make yew wish yew was dead, hunderds of times ’fore I’m done with
-ye.’ Up flew the mate’s fist as he made a spring towards his skipper,
-but as he sprang he was confronted by the muzzles of two revolvers in
-the skipper’s hands. He stopped with a groan--the thought of his dear
-ones at home in Fairhaven was too much for him; and as he fell back he
-heard a chuckle overhead, and there was a Portuguese harpooner on the
-top of the house with another revolver pointed at him. ‘Wall,’ drawled
-the skipper, ‘y’ see I’m heeled. I’m layin’ fur ye every time. Ef y’
-git t’ windward of me yew’ve only one more t’ git ahead of, an’ thet’s
-Satin himself. I tell ye, I’m goin’ t’ make this ship hell f’r all of
-ye, but yew an’ th’ secon’ mate specially. But if y’ wa’n’t such curs,
-yew’d take y’r chances. I don’t mind dyin’ a little bit, ’n’ ef yew
-liked to try it on at a little risk why y’ mout git my gun an’ shoot
-me.’
-
-For decency’s sake it becomes necessary to draw a veil over the
-proceedings of the next few weeks. No one likes to record the
-degradation of his fellowmen or dwell upon their unmerited miseries.
-And, indeed, every white man on board the _Grampus_ endured for the
-rest of the passage such torments and indignities as make the blood
-boil only to think of--endured them helplessly, hopelessly. Meanwhile,
-every slice of good fortune imaginable seemed to attend upon the
-miscreant. The passage round the Cape was made in lovely weather, and
-as soon as ever they hauled up for the Mozambique Channel they fell in
-with a school of whales extending to the horizon. It was at daybreak,
-too, so for the whole of that terrible day they toiled at slaying under
-the furious sun. No idea apparently was entertained by the skipper of
-the enormous amount of labour being accumulated. When night fell there
-were over twenty carcasses encumbering the sea, the ship was unable to
-move for the weight already attached to her, and, had she been able,
-the wind had fallen to an almost perfect calm. But not until every man,
-including his own personal bodyguard, had succumbed to sheer weariness
-did the skipper ‘let up,’ and say that a ‘spell-ho’ of an hour or
-two might be enjoyed. In strict justice it must be said that he had
-taken no rest--in fact, it appeared as if he had laboured harder than
-any other man on board. But what of that? What would become of us all
-if we were compelled to keep up to the physical standard of the most
-sinewy and strenuous among us? Certainly a great thinning out of the
-population would immediately ensue.
-
-Therefore, at 8 P.M. a halt was reluctantly called, and one by one the
-boats returned, their crews barely able to drag themselves on deck,
-and utterly incapable of hoisting the boats when they had done so. Of
-the difficulty of getting alongside, thrusting their frail boats in
-between the massy bodies attached to the ship and tumbling gigantically
-about upon the sullen swell, I dare not speak: it needs a chapter to
-itself. It must be sufficient to say that all hands returned, succeeded
-in getting on board, fell down where they alighted, and slept like
-the dead--so much like that two happy fellows did not trouble to wake
-again: they were found stiff and cold in the morning. But as that was
-merely an incident of the campaign (in war it is thought nothing of)
-there is no excuse for dwelling upon it--let it pass.
-
-The matter worth recording is that at midnight, the placid moon looking
-down upon the deck of the _Grampus_ as if it were a stricken field--the
-corpses lying hideously scattered where they fell--there was a great
-outcry. The skipper, ever alert, had seen along the moonbeams’ path the
-oncoming of some suspicious-looking craft. His experience fixed them
-at once as Arab dhows bent on plunder. Strange how the Arab is a born
-thief and murderer, as is the Chinese, and neither of them ever feels
-any compunction for his crimes.
-
-[Illustration: THE DHOWS CREPT CAUTIOUSLY TOWARDS THE IMMOVABLE SHIP.
-
- _P. 203._]
-
-The dhows crept cautiously towards the immovable ship, and Captain Da
-Silva watched them coming, the fierce light of battle in his eye. But
-he wasted no time. He knew that his ship was surrounded by an almost
-impregnable defence (at night), and so he devoted his leisure to
-loading carefully the half-dozen Sniders possessed by the ship. (Those
-old Tower Sniders have gone all over the world.) Then he called up his
-chums, sailors and harpooners, and no small task it was to get life
-into them. But he succeeded at last, and then posting them all aft
-with a Snider and a revolver apiece, and much ammunition, he waited
-gleefully the advent of the sea Bedawy. They came, and were astonished
-to find that a barrier of something floating, slimy, massive, and
-impassable interposed between them and their objective. And while they
-groped darkling, the Sniders sang their awful song, red spear-points
-of flame clove the darkness, and many an Arab sank down upon the
-rough-timbered deck of his buggalow coughing out his foul life. Only an
-hour, and the attack was over. It would never have been begun but that
-the Arabs forecasted a helpless merchant ship whose crew they could
-kill easily as sheep, and with as little compunction, and whose hold
-they should find crammed with choicest merchandise only awaiting the
-advent of the enterprising sons of the East.
-
-It seems incredible, but such was the fatigue of the crew that
-when morning dawned the majority of them were quite unaware of the
-happenings of the night. Perhaps, dimly through their dreams had come
-the ping of dropping shots, uneasy shudderings might have accompanied
-the dying yells of the Arabs, but taking everything all round they knew
-nothing about it. Nor did they greatly care. The dawn but brought them
-bone-wrenching toil. Who among them would have given thanks for the
-paternal (?) care manifested for them by the skipper during the dead
-hours of the night? For their condition was that so amply and aptly
-summed up by Moses in his dread warning to the children of Israel:
-‘In the morning thou shalt say, Would God it were evening, and in the
-evening thou shalt say, Would God it were morning.’
-
-Long before daylight they were aroused and started upon the tremendous
-task, too broken to give more than a passing regretful thought to
-the two favoured ones whose trials were over. This will, I know,
-strike many as an utterly uncalled-for exaggeration of horror, an
-incident that could only have occurred during mediæval times. I beg
-to say, however, that in the American whaleships mediæval disregard
-of life persisted as nowhere else among civilised peoples down to
-well within the latter half of the nineteenth century. Heroic figures
-the commanders were, brave beyond praise were the officers, but with
-that wonderful quality was, alas, too generally mingled an utter
-callousness to suffering--an utter disregard of the elementary rights
-of their fellow men which to a humaner age will hardly bear detailed
-description. And, of course, this was an exceptionally bad case. The
-cruelty of the Latin is inherent--generally speaking, he takes a
-greedy pleasure in the suffering of others; while the cruelty of the
-Teutonic races is incidental--an abnormality calling forth the fiercest
-reprobation from those of the same race to whom it becomes known.
-
-For the next ten days the _Grampus_ was a horrid shambles. She reeked
-in every part with blood and grease, and the blazing sun, pouring down
-upon her with never a cloud to temper his fierceness throughout the
-long and weary days, made her foul with a fœtor beyond description.
-Captain Da Silva and his Portuguese seemed to flourish and wax stronger
-among the awful vileness of stench and filth, even as do the Arabs of
-African coast-towns. But the American portion of the crew fell ill one
-by one. Although haggard and woe-worn, they stuck to their work until
-they fell at their posts. In this calamity Priscilla was involved.
-Indeed, it would have been a miracle had she escaped. The confinement
-alone in that terrible climate was sufficient to make anyone seriously
-ill, especially when the miserable food and lack of exercise were
-added, without the fearful foulness of that ten days.
-
-The sickness of his crew gave the skipper no concern. He thought
-grimly of the splendid recruits he would by and by obtain, supposing
-all the cursed Americans were dead. But the illness of his wife gave
-him pause. In some inexplicable way, he--well, I cannot say loved or
-had a tenderness for her--I would not desecrate the holy word love by
-associating it with such a monster of evil as he was, but he did not
-desire to be without her. And so, cursing his ill-luck, he bore up
-under all sail for the Cosmoledo group of islands intending to spend
-there, amid the pure fresh breezes of the South-East Trade, and free
-from the miasmatic vapours of a great port, a sufficient time to rest
-his invalids, and by judicious distribution of quinine, fresh cocoanut,
-and fresh food to bring them round again. Strangely enough, this
-complication in the midst of his success, the dread presence on board
-of fever, and the illness of half his crew gave this extraordinary man
-no anxiety. He seemed to stand aloof from all merely human emotions
-except the viler ones, and as for fear he apparently knew not the
-meaning of the word. And his auxiliaries were the same. For them it
-was a time of rejoicing. They were the undoubted rulers of the vessel,
-and their superiority to the much-vaunted white man was overwhelmingly
-manifest.
-
-Two more poor fellows succumbed to their burden before reaching port.
-One of them was the third mate. Their passing excited no comment, nor
-did their informal burial (they were just dumped like so much lumber)
-more than punctuate the day’s work. Then the vessel arrived, and was
-piloted in between the reefs with consummate skill by the skipper. Down
-went her anchor, and in the peaceful waters of a coral-locked lagoon
-the _Grampus_ lay secure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-SALVAGE OPERATIONS
-
-
-Thorough in all his undertakings, Captain Da Silva wasted no time after
-the vessel was well moored in carrying out the purpose for which he had
-visited this outlandish group of islands. Boats were at once lowered
-and loaded with all the requisite material for erecting tents ashore.
-Then while one party was sent to establish a temporary sanatorium on
-a high part of the largest island, a place where the sweet unceasing
-breeze should blow through the open doors of the tents, another party
-was detailed to catch fish, tortoises (for here are to be found still
-some of those most interesting survivals of a long-departed day, the
-gigantic tortoise), and to collect unripe cocoanuts, one of the most
-healthful of all foods as well as one of the pleasantest of drinks.
-The preparations were rapidly completed--when Captain Da Silva was
-around no one wasted time--the sick were transferred to the shore, and
-in business-like fashion attended to, as far as a change of diet and
-such primitive medicines as were available could be brought to bear
-upon them. Priscilla, much to the skipper’s concern, apparently took no
-interest in the proceedings at all. He was really alarmed to see how
-automatically she behaved and how attenuated was her once bonny form.
-He did _not_ want to lose her--would rather have lost all hands--though
-he could not tell why. And therefore, having done all he could think
-of for her, and consequently much more for the other sufferers than
-he would otherwise have thought of doing, he turned from sheer need
-of occupation to the ship again; and his energy was such that all his
-innate power of command was needed to maintain discipline among his
-own countrymen. The Portuguese, like the Italian, can and does work
-for amazingly long periods at high pressure, always providing that the
-incentive is sufficiently powerful. But always these two races would
-rather loaf than work--would rather lie round in the sun and let the
-world wag as it will than put their shoulders to any wheel whatever.
-And they always make the severest task-masters, slave-drivers. There
-must be a deep delight for a truly lazy man in the power of compelling
-his fellows to stretch their sinews under his eye. Must be, because
-one sees so much of it in journeying around the world--the measureless
-content evidenced in the boss who lolls and shouts curses and commands
-at the toilers below him, with a very real satisfaction in the
-knowledge that any one of them would gladly trample his face into the
-mud they work in if only the chance came.
-
-Captain Da Silva, then, having arranged for his invalids
-satisfactorily, and left the negro steward and one of his cronies to
-guard his wife in her lonely tent, returned on board and entered upon
-a furious campaign of scrubbing and disinfecting. His countrymen,
-who were practically the whole working gang, seconded his efforts
-splendidly, albeit with deep resentment, at first against him, but by
-his clever manipulation, afterwards against all the whites on board.
-‘Why should these fellows be lyin’ up ashore while better men were
-doin’ the work?’ This with but little variation was the burden of
-the Portuguese song, and by a skilfully dropped word at well-chosen
-intervals Captain Da Silva fanned the incipient flames and made every
-Dago understand that the _Grampus_ was a Dago ship from henceforth, and
-that, although the American flag flew overhead, her American crew were
-of no importance whatever. In spite of this satisfaction, however, the
-Dagoes were very sore at being worked so hard, and it needed all the
-great influence of the skipper’s master mind to prevent an outbreak. He
-kept them at work so steadily, too, that they got little or no chance
-to brood over their wrongs. The water in the casks below was started
-and run off, fresh, sweet water being brought on board to re-fill;
-and the newly emptied casks were all fresh scoured and fired within
-before replenishing. An enormous supply of wood was obtained, mostly
-drift-timber, for upon this little group of neglected islands the whorl
-of many currents centres, bringing flotsam from immense distances. And
-when nothing else was a-doing, the sick needed attention, and got it
-too, although of a horribly rough and grudging kind.
-
-At last the discontent ran so high that it may reasonably be doubted
-whether even Captain Da Silva could have much longer held it in
-check, but then with his usual extraordinary good fortune there came
-a diversion that effectually settled all grumbling and put all hands
-in high feather. A huge four-masted iron ship, grossly under-manned as
-usual, came blundering up through the Mozambique Channel, bound for
-Diego Garcia with coal. The parsimony of her owners had provided her
-with but one chronometer, and her skipper was not only a poor man who
-couldn’t afford one of his own, but he was withal so poorly educated
-that he couldn’t have worked a lunar observation to save his life.
-Thus it came to pass that one night during a heavy thunderstorm, when
-the whole heavens were apparently draped with black velvet, he found
-his vessel bumping upon the reefs, not heavily, for there was but
-little wind or swell, but sufficiently forceful to make him feel that
-his command was doomed. And ships like the _Warrior Queen_ are only
-manned for the finest of fine weather--when trouble of any kind comes
-they must needs trust to luck. Out of eighteen men in the forecastle,
-four were sailors, and they were old, the rest were just unskilled
-labourers, loafers, not worth their salt, whose one aim was to do as
-little as possible, and take the maximum time over it. There were eight
-apprentices, nice lads, each of whom had paid sixty guineas premium
-for the privilege of doing men’s work, and were expected to learn how
-intuitively, for no one ever showed them anything--no, not even how to
-live decently in their den of the halfdeck. These boys were really the
-backbone of the ship, for being all decently brought up young fellows
-they had not yet learned the vicious root-idea which is sapping the
-heart out of our workers--viz., that a man’s duty to himself is to
-study how best he can get money without working for it, and that his
-highest aim in life should be to give as little as possible in labour
-for the wages he receives.
-
-In consequence of this wretched condition of things on board there
-was something very like a collapse of all the energies (not many at
-the best of times) of the crew. According to the novelists who write
-of the sea from the abyss of utter ignorance of sea conditions, the
-crew should now have raided the ‘spirit-room’ (there isn’t such a
-place in the great majority of merchant ships), and fearful scenes of
-bloodshed and anarchy would have ensued. As a matter of fact, the whole
-situation was peculiarly sordid and commonplace. There lay the great
-cumbrous tank upon the reef, canted to one side in a shamefaced manner
-as if acknowledging how much she owed to the sea for any gainliness
-of outline she ever possessed. Listlessly the crew slouched about the
-sloping decks, obeying such calls as were made upon them in a half or
-quarter hearted fashion and casting wistful eyes upon the sandy shore.
-They were a motley gang, and there was no prospect of immediate danger
-to life, only to property--and that, they knew, didn’t matter a row of
-pins to anybody: they had obtained sufficient smattering of insurance
-problems to tell them that.
-
-So that I think, apart from the disheartened condition of skipper and
-officers, it will be seen that the _Warrior Queen_ was in evil case.
-How evil may be imagined from the fact that not one of her company had
-seen, far off on the other side of the little group, a trio of upright
-trees with branches crossing them at right angles with extraordinary
-regularity. When seamen neglect the obvious duty of looking around
-for another ship things are bad indeed. It was so in this case, and
-the first intimation that Captain Smith had of there being any help
-at hand was the arrival alongside of a white double-ended boat with
-five swarthy-looking men at the oars and a tall devilishly handsome
-man erect in the stern. This boat rounded to under the _Warrior
-Queen’s_ stern in grand style, and before the dreaming fellows on
-board had realised that a visitor was coming Captain Da Silva had
-swung himself on board by the mizen chains, and with light elastic
-step had gained the side of Captain Smith on his broad quarter-deck.
-‘Good morning, sir,’ said the new-comer. ‘G’ mornin’,’ sulkily replied
-the merchantman, for even in his dire distress he had the quaint old
-notion that he must show himself unapproachable in order to maintain
-his dignity. Dignity, forsooth! It’s worth a great deal when a man
-has to make a hog of himself to keep it in evidence. ‘Got a bit er
-trouble here, Cap’n?’ said Da Silva. ‘Yaas,’ drawled Captain Smith;
-‘I’m afraid she isn’t worth more ’n old iron price, if that. It’s a
-bad job. Compasses wrong, y’ know.’ ‘Oh don’t say that,’ interjected
-the Portuguese; ‘I’ve got a bully crowd o’ boys here all spoilin’ fer
-a job. They’d ask nothin’ better than t’ git y’ afloat ag’in.’ ‘You
-have--an’ where, may I ask?’ said Captain Smith haughtily. (You see,
-his dignity needed conserving.) Captain Da Silva waved his hand airily
-to where the _Grampus_ lay just discernible as a three-masted ship far
-off to the southward. ‘Thet’s my ship,’ said he, ‘’n’ ef yer like t’
-come t’ terms with me, I’ve a-got a gang aboard thar thet’d snake yew
-eout of Purgatory itself. It’s only a matter of terms.’ ‘Come down
-below, Cap’n,’ said the now thoroughly aroused Mr. Smith. ‘I want t’
-talk to you.’ And as they descended the polished teak companion, he
-laid his hand familiarly upon the swarthy visitor’s shoulder, saying
-in a confidential tone: ‘I ’spose yew’re a wrecker of some kind, ain’t
-you?’ ‘Me! oh, no, Captain. I’m jest a low-down whaling skipper, but
-I got a crew of boys a-spilin’ fur somethin’ t’ do, and ef yew’ll only
-say th’ word, an’ give me jes’ a leetle bill on yewr owners, I’ll bet
-we’ll snake yewr ship eout o’ this in short order.’ By this time they
-had reached the cosy saloon of the big ship, and Captain Smith had
-summoned the steward to bring the whisky and cigars. Solemnly they
-drank to each other, and then Captain Smith broached his latent idea.
-His ship had run ashore through no fault of his. Couldn’t he arrange
-for his new-found friend to take on a contract to get her off on the
-‘no cure, no pay’ principle? Indeed he couldn’t. In Captain Da Silva
-he had met a man as much his superior in business ability as he was
-in seamanship, and that scheme did not work for a moment. Well, then,
-couldn’t he arrange for a liberal payment to the salvors with an
-equally liberal percentage to himself?--‘for,’ said he, ‘my pay is only
-twelve pounds (sixty dollars) a month here.’ The Portuguese shook his
-head decisively, as befitted a man who held the reins of the team.
-
-‘Naow looky here, Cap’n Smith,’ drawled he, ‘I’ll tell you what I’ll
-do. My best endeavours t’ git yewr ship offn thishyer reef--yew
-givin’ me a bill on yewr owners fur 2,500 dollars t’ begin with, and
-a note t’ th’ effect that if I git her off the pay’s double. As fur
-pussentidges, I don’t know anything about ’em an’ don’t want. Ef yew
-mean that I’m to share any of my earnin’s with yew--well, yew’re ’way
-off, ’n’ thet’s all there is to it. Ther’ isn’t anythin’ o’ that kind
-abaout _me_, young man, be sure o’ thet.’ And the two men sat and
-looked hard at each other. Not for long. The odds were too great, and
-with a heavy sigh Captain Smith went to his state-room producing paper
-and pen, and wrote out the agreement and the bill on his owners. This
-instrument, having been duly witnessed by the mate and steward, was
-carefully read and signed by Captain Da Silva, who then pocketed it,
-and springing to his feet declared himself ready to begin the carrying
-out of his contract. The merchant skipper, not at all used to such
-energetic proceedings, was taken ‘flat aback,’ as the sea saying has
-it, but said nothing, and Captain Da Silva departed with big leaps up
-the cuddy stairs. As soon as he reached the deck he shouted in a voice
-of thunder: ‘My boat ready? _Grampus_ boat’s crew away!’ Then without
-waiting for an answer he rushed to the gangway, and finding his men all
-in their places (they had not dared to come on deck) he flung himself
-over the side, and in one minute was on his way back to his ship,
-standing erect in the stern and urging the toiling rowers with many
-figures of profane speech to do better than their very best.
-
-It was a long pull back to the _Grampus_, but not one of the rowers got
-a spell until she was reached. Well was it for them that their training
-had been so severe and thorough. And on reaching the side all hands
-were summoned to prepare the ship for the most arduous task she had yet
-undertaken. Sundry orders were given with reference to mooring-chains,
-hawsers, kedges, &c., and while the crew fled about their tasks of
-filling those orders, the Captain dived below and knitted his brow
-over a calculation of the tides. He found (and it is noteworthy that
-he was able to detach his mind from all else while he worked out this
-important matter) that the ‘springs’ were due the following day at
-noon. This important matter settled, he replaced his books and sprang
-up the companion to the deck as if his life depended upon the ensuing
-minutes being husbanded with the most jealous care.
-
-A few short, volcanic orders, and the windlass was manned, the cable
-came clattering in, and as soon as the anchor was ready to be broken
-out the sails were set, and the _Grampus_, obedient to the master mind,
-turned gently to the wind, while the few remaining links of cable were
-hove in, and she passed out of the tortuous reef channel seaward. The
-skipper stood by the helmsman, conning his vessel as if he had been
-acquainted with the navigation of those intricate channels all his
-life. It was only the usual whaler’s style, but to the ordinary seaman
-it was nothing short of wonderful. The clumsy-looking old ship sidled
-out to sea as if she knew what was required of her, and presently the
-waiting men on board the _Warrior Queen_ were astonished to see a
-short, thick-set, full-rigged ship come around the nearest point and
-suddenly bring to with a kedge about two miles away, waiting apparently
-for the word of command to do something totally unexpected. But there
-was no time wasted. Two boats were lowered from the new-comer, each
-double-banked, and under the pressure of foaming oars they ranged
-alongside the big helpless hulk, their crews leaped on board headed by
-the Captain, who immediately demanded that all hands should be called
-and placed under his orders. There was a moment or so of hesitation on
-the part of the English ship’s officers, but while they paused the new
-comers had the hatches off and had rigged a couple of single whips over
-each. Then as the original crew realised what was a-doing, they buckled
-to manfully, and soon the coal was flying overboard in an almost
-continuous stream. Something of Captain Da Silva’s superhuman energy
-communicated itself to the crew of the _Warrior Queen_, for before
-many minutes had elapsed they were toiling as fiercely as any of the
-whaler’s men, and without in the least understanding why they should
-thus do violence to their long-cherished leisureliness.
-
-Through the thick haze of coal dust might have been seen Captain Da
-Silva and a chosen little body of men fiercely engaged in unbending
-the cables from the great anchors, getting up hawsers from below, and
-overhauling the long-neglected boat gear. The big wire rope, intended
-for towing purposes and therefore leading forward, was unwound and
-passed aft on the starboard side, while on the port side a length
-of cable was shackled on to the stoutest of the ship’s hawsers, and
-ranged in readiness to be taken off when needed. Then Captain Da Silva,
-getting into his boat, carefully sounded the reef to see whether the
-_Warrior Queen_ had, as so often happens, found her way alone along
-some special channel. He knew that many wrecks on coral reefs have done
-just that, and afterwards, owing to superficial observation of the
-surroundings, it has been taken for granted that some awful convulsion
-of nature in the shape of an earthquake wave or something of the sort
-must be held responsible for the vessel’s reaching so apparently
-inaccessible a spot. After an absence of only an hour he returned,
-having found the channel by which the ship had entered, and buoyed it
-with sundry lengths of lead-line and ‘blackfish’ pokes, or bladders of
-the small cetacean known to whalers by that trivial name. Just a few
-minutes on board to see that the jettison of the coal was proceeding
-with as much vigour as possible under the circumstances, and then off
-again on board the _Grampus_. He caused her to be worked right into the
-channel he had found, but stern first and as easily as a barge is taken
-up a winding canal. Finally, when near enough for his liking, he had
-two hawsers attached to his bow anchors, and the latter dropped in the
-channel. These were veered away to their utmost length, which brought
-the stern of the _Grampus_ near enough to the stern of the _Warrior
-Queen_ to allow of the wire hawser and cable-bridled hawser being
-secured to the former. When all these preparations were complete he
-gave orders that all hands should rest so as to be capable of a supreme
-effort next day at noon, it now being about 10 P.M., and some five
-hundred tons of coal having been jettisoned.
-
-After a good meal all round, the worn-out men went to their bunks--all
-except Captain Da Silva, who, calling upon his particular boat’s crew,
-started at midnight for the long and perilous pull back to the islet
-where the sick were encamped. Threading the dangers of that terrible
-group of reef-rocks and sandbanks apparently was mere amusement to him,
-although at times it must have seemed to a novice as if nothing could
-save the frail craft from being overwhelmed by the breaking of one of
-those vast swells over the jagged surface of a fringing reef, through
-one of whose openings they were passing. But this extraordinary man
-seemed to bear a charmed life, and, without shipping a drop of water
-even, the boat arrived at the camp in three hours from the time of
-leaving the _Warrior Queen_. Noiselessly she grounded on the smooth
-sand, light as a fawn the skipper sprang out, and in a few minutes had
-peered in at both tents and seen that all was silent as the grave, at
-which peaceful termination to his investigations he was apparently
-much annoyed. Returning to the boat, he caused an impromptu shelter
-to be rigged up by turning her over and spreading the sail over the
-upraised gunwale, and, creeping in under with his satellites, all were
-soon sound asleep; not, however, before a huge black bottle had been
-impartially passed round.
-
-At daylight the skipper awoke and went to visit his sick, finding,
-to his great satisfaction, that several of them were sufficiently
-recovered to be brought on board--they could do something, if it was
-only holding on the hawsers abaft the windlass. To Priscilla he said
-nothing--he stood looking at her doubtfully for a few minutes, while
-she endured his gaze as if unconscious of it. Then he turned on his
-heel and departed, and in a few minutes the trembling steward reported
-to her that ‘de Cappen, he make’n dem boat’s crew pull fur sixty sure,
-ma’m; dat boat jes’ a-flyin’.’
-
-He was back at the scene of salvage operations by ten o’clock, and
-found, as he had expected, that all hands were loafing about, waiting
-for him to come and tell them what to do. But he said nothing about
-that, only gave orders for all square sail to be loosed on both vessels
-and set with as little delay as possible. For there was the usual sea
-breeze setting in, at no great rate it is true, but with every promise
-of being much stronger by noon. And it blew right fair for the channel,
-along which, if in any direction at all, the _Warrior Queen_ must go.
-Nearer and nearer drew the critical moment, the tide rising rapidly.
-All hands were ordered to their stations, the _Warrior Queen’s_ crew
-being, with the exception of just sufficient to trim her yards in case
-of necessity, all on board the _Grampus_ at the windlass. The breeze
-freshened as the tide rose, and a few minutes before noon Captain Da
-Silva gave orders for all his reinforced crew to heave away at the
-windlass for dear life. The powerful leverage of that great spread of
-canvas on both ships, aided by the strain on the hawsers applied at
-just the right time, gradually made itself manifest. The vast bulk of
-the _Warrior Queen_ slowly rolled, shuddered, slipped, and with a long
-grinding groan she moved. Frantic yells arose from the windlass-men on
-board of the _Grampus_. They felt the weight yielding, and forgetting
-the danger of breaking the old-fashioned machine they were trying so
-hardly, redoubled their efforts.
-
-Slowly, majestically, the big ship glided seaward, steered by the mate
-in response to the desperate signals made from the whaler, where the
-skipper was now in an almost insane state of excitement lest some fool
-should, at the last minute, spoil all his work. But no; gently the
-whaler increased her speed, followed clumsily by her tow, until, at
-1.30 the rescued merchantman was able to turn and pursue her way alone.
-Before she did so, however, Captain Da Silva, having anchored his ship,
-hastened on board the saved vessel, and, shaking hands warmly with
-Captain Smith, bade him ‘so long,’ saying to himself as he did so: ‘I
-guess yew want somebody to dry-nurse yew mighty bad. Don’t matter to
-me, though. Five thousand dollars ain’t half a bad day’s pay, an’ I
-guess I’ll snake it in soon ’s ever I git t’ port. He ain’t a bit t’ be
-’pended ’pon, thet man.’
-
-And, leaving the big ship to pursue her journey, the energetic rascal
-returned on board his own vessel, got under weigh and hastened back to
-his former anchorage, fully determined to get the rest of his ailing
-men on board, fit or not, and leave next day for sea. He reached the
-camp at sunset, anchored, and went ashore, finding that his wife was
-well on the way to complete recovery, and the rest of the poor fellows
-doing very well. So without any further delay, he caused the camp to
-be broken up, the invalids brought on board, and everything got in
-readiness for departure the following day.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-HUMANITY REWARDED
-
-
-Doubtless many of the superior persons, who, like Matthew Arnold, their
-high priest, have led sheltered lives, will, also like him, curl the
-lip of scorn at any sorely pressed human creature in his extremity of
-need lifting his heart in prayer to God for help. Let them do so, if it
-please them, while they may. For many thousands know most gratefully
-that prayer is indeed a perfect communication between man and his
-Maker, and is answered so fully and so frequently as to put all coldly
-logical or brilliantly poetical objectors entirely out of court. Who,
-indeed, would accept the evidence of a blind man as to the value of
-a certain picture, or of a deaf man upon the merits of an oratorio?
-Therefore, _pace_ Matthew Arnold and his ‘Self Help,’ let me gratefully
-return to the comforted little company in that sorely bestead
-whaleboat. In the midst of that wilderness of kelp, with the awful hand
-of the gale pressing them back from the goal they so sorely desired,
-they yet felt a security, a peace such as can only accrue to those who,
-in a like position, know that underneath them are the Everlasting Arms.
-
-Almost literally inch by inch they fought their way seaward. Much as
-they valued the smooth which the kelp brought them, its hindering
-environment was terribly wearisome to the humanly limited strength.
-But doggedly they toiled on, often only half consciously, as squalls
-of sleet slashed savagely across their cowering faces and every fresh
-blast of wind beat at them as if it were the spirit of some malicious
-demon determined upon their destruction. Suddenly they emerged from the
-slimy smoothness of the kelp into the free dash of the great waves.
-And as they did so Mr. Peck, with a great voice, shouted, ‘Now, boys,
-for y’r lives; out oars an’ pull jest a leetle bit; perhaps we can
-histe a rag of sail and keep her away a bit presently. That’s it--lift
-her, lift her; oh, too good, boys, too good, one, two, three; better
-’n’ better. I see the ship! She ain’t no distance off. Stick t’ it,
-me hearties, give ’r all you got--thet’s y’r style.’ In such wise did
-the fine fellow encourage his men, who were taking the last ounce out
-of themselves in their desperate fight with the forces of nature.
-And the passengers cowering in the bottom of the boat heard and saw
-not, endured dimly, dumbly; until just as it seemed impossible that
-the overborne sailors could hold out any longer came the glorious cry
-of ‘Boat ahoy!’ A yell of thankful reply, and the great bulk of the
-ship materialised out of the darkness. A minute or two of breathless
-suspense as the boat swung off the wind, and then a blessed sense of
-security and calm as she surged up under the lee of the grand old tub,
-where all hands, by the light of the flaring try-works, were awaiting
-them. Life from the dead, fellow creatures welcomed back from out the
-gaping jaws of the grave--how glorious a sensation to true men! And
-when the whisper ran round that some of the saved ones were women there
-were chokings and dim eyes among these rough-looking but tender-hearted
-fellows, although comments were mostly limited to the commonplace
-expression, ‘Poor things, poor things.’
-
-Safely on board, and the boat hoisted into her place, Captain Hampden
-whispered an order to his mate to keep all the southing he could
-so as to get well clear of that awful pile of rock, still much too
-near for comfort. Then with a courtly old-world grace he led the way
-to his cabin, and begged his strangely shipped passengers to make
-themselves at home. The three quaint little figures revealed themselves
-as ladies--young, but haggard with anxiety and privation. Alone in
-the world, too. For the story of the lost ship from which they had
-escaped was just this, so bald and simple, yet so full of pathos to the
-imaginative mind. She was a huge four-master, with splendid passenger
-accommodation, bound for Australia, and specially recommended as
-affording a grand opportunity for a perfect sea trip for consumptives.
-So thirty poor wrecks of humanity, but possessing money enough to buy
-a chance of life, availed themselves of the opportunity, for, after
-all, the fare was much lower than in a fast steamer, and the attendance
-likely to be much better. But the crew! What agony the Captain endured
-as he found that sailing-ships were in such bad odour that men could
-not be obtained--that if he would get to sea at all he must needs ship
-men who hardly knew a cringle from a scupper-hole. However, this is one
-of the penalties a man must pay to-day when working his way up in a
-sailing-ship prior to taking charge in steam. And Captain Weston paid
-it. Running the easting down, he found his handful of wastrels not
-merely incompetent, but afraid--a poor group of fellows whom no threats
-or bribes could make do their duty, while he had upon his heart
-the helpless passengers. So he ran her, recklessly as it appeared,
-really because he could do nothing else, and strained his heartstrings
-nightly as he looked up through the blackness at those great sails, and
-wondered what _would_ happen should they blow away, for to take them in
-he knew was impossible.
-
-Is it fair to put such a strain upon one man as this? I do not think
-so, yet most captains of our big sailing-ships must shoulder such a
-burden to-day, and for, at most, £200 a year. No wonder the Mercantile
-Marine is unpopular. Captain Weston endured his load almost helplessly
-in view of the season and the quality of his crew; and when, while
-snatching a few moments’ sleep in his chart-room, he felt his ship
-go over, over, over, until on her beam ends, and knew that she had
-broached-to in the height of one of the southern gales, he gave a sigh
-almost of relief as knowing the worst. Out of the half-dozen boats he
-carried one succeeded in getting away with three ladies on board, whose
-charges, a consumptive father, uncle, and sweetheart, were practically
-killed by the shock. There were also two male passengers, the mate, and
-four seamen. And these were all the survivors of that awful mid-sea
-catastrophe, when a great ship, through bad steering, was thrown on her
-beam ends and, her decks bursting, sank like a broken cup in the midst
-of that lonely ocean.
-
-For two days the surviving boat and her miserable freight managed to
-keep ahead of the hungry, following sea, until, in the blackness of
-the third night, when hope was well-nigh dead, she entered the kelp
-fringing Gough Island, and after a series of hairbreadth escapes the
-whole party succeeded in landing upon its frowning shores. There, for
-nearly three months, they had maintained life in semi-savage fashion,
-wondering whether they were doomed to spend the rest of their days
-there, when help came in the shape of the hardly beset _Xiphias_, and
-they were once more restored to a little world of living people.
-
-With a sigh Captain Hampden bore up for Cape Town. It was much out of
-his way, and, besides, he was so far to the southward that it would be
-difficult to make the port, especially in such a sluggish old craft.
-But the idea of carrying those poor ladies on to the Mauritius, which
-was the only place that lay anywhere near his track whence they could
-be shipped home, was not to be thought of for one moment. And having
-decided upon what to do, he did it with all his heart, allowing no one
-to see what a struggle it had cost him. All sail was made, therefore,
-and the course set for Cape Town, the rescued mate and his four
-shipmates taking a vigorous part in the handling of the ship, so that
-the _Xiphias’_ crew could finish their heavy task of securing the oil
-from their previous catch.
-
-She was a mighty busy ship, as well as a happy one, for there was
-so much to do with the two and a half tons of baleen secured, after
-the oil was all stored below, that no one had any time of leisure.
-This peculiar substance--‘whalebone,’ as we have agreed to call
-it--is really of the nature of dried gristle or soft horn, and when
-it is green--_i.e._, newly taken from the whale--it needs constant
-care and labour in scraping, drying in the sun, and other trade
-treatment. Without this it soon becomes valueless, and, since it is so
-high-priced when properly cured, it is obviously the most important
-duty on a whaleship to attend to it. But this duty tries the patience
-of all hands most sorely. In the present case, however, there were
-compensations. For, in the first place, Captain Hampden was not the man
-to keep his crew at other work all day and scraping, &c., whalebone all
-night; and, secondly, a cheery whisper ran round the ship that he (the
-old man) intended landing the stuff at Cape Town for transhipment to
-market.
-
-And then, to the great joy of the crew and the unbounded chagrin of
-the passengers, the ship ran one morning at daybreak into the midst
-of a vast school of sperm-whales, extending from one horizon to the
-other. Their numbers no man could calculate, any more than what
-stupendous stores of food must be necessary to feed such an army of
-monsters. Captain Hampden’s heart glowed with thankfulness that he
-had been by humanity turned thus far out of his intended course, and,
-in obedience to his newly born instinct, went away into a corner by
-himself and lifted up his heart, not merely in gratitude to God, but
-for wisdom, after all these years of experience, to do just the right
-thing in the manipulation of this great store so lavishly spread
-before him. It only took a minute or two (how simply and quickly can
-we prefer our petitions and praises to the King of kings), and he was
-back again among his men, the guiding, ruling spirit of all. As if
-his plan of campaign had been laid out a week ahead, he apportioned
-to each officer his place in the coming struggle, took advantage of
-the presence of the passenger mate and four seamen to give them the
-handling of the vessel, and then gaily took the field himself with five
-boats, skipper leading.
-
-It was an ideal day, the great sun just rising from the smooth ocean
-bed into an absolutely clear sky--clear from clouds, that is, but
-splashed with all the splendid colours of a tropical dawn, the glassy
-undulating sea-surface broken in all directions by the lolling masses
-of the sea monsters, each lazily exhaling his or her bushy tuft of
-vapour. Occasionally the heavenly silence was broken by a playful rush
-of a dozen or so of these colossal forms in some given direction,
-making the placid sea foam and curdle around their massive bodies as
-if it had suddenly met some newly risen rocks. Or a few sedate bulls
-would gravely invert themselves, and as if by a concerted movement
-slowly beat upon the sea with their great flukes, the gigantic strokes
-reverberating along the silent surface like the echoes of a distant
-cannonade.
-
-Yes, they were a happy, placid company, recking not of evil, least of
-all apparently of the presence of those five small white things that,
-a hundred fathoms or so apart, were coming gliding among them, each
-with cruel points protruding from its front and glittering fiercely
-in the rays of the mounting sun. And before any attempt at flight
-could be made by one member of that great company, the five boats were
-among them, each boat had singled out the largest victim near (for so
-had run the Captain’s orders), and the slaughter had begun. Now while
-it is undoubtedly true that the sperm-whale is brave and will under
-ordinary circumstances fight for his life with a fury and sagacity not
-to be excelled by those of any mammal afloat or ashore, it is also
-quite true that occasionally, especially in large companies like the
-present one, sperm-whales will become panic-stricken, and, making not
-the slightest attempt either to fight or flee, will suffer themselves
-to be slain like a flock of silly sheep when the wolf leaps into the
-fold among them. The present was one of those occasions. Harpoons
-flew and lances flashed, the boats rode easily, hardly moving in any
-direction amid closely packed squads of utterly demoralised whales,
-and the sea speedily became foul with blood and oil. It needed all the
-skipper’s power of command to call his men off, frantic as they were
-with the lust of killing, which overtakes the gentlest and most amiable
-of mankind once the first shudder of compunction has been overcome. But
-Captain Hampden’s cool judgment realised that already--only one hour
-from lowering--sufficient work had been provided to last all hands,
-work as they would, until the odour of their spoil would become utterly
-intolerable, which is the principal drawback in sperm-whaling to taking
-full advantage of such an opportunity as the present one.
-
-Reluctantly the boats drew each to her prey, unwillingly the officers
-ceased plying their lances among the aimlessly wandering monsters, and
-there amid lanes of coming and going whales they laboured to attach
-their tow-lines to dead whale flukes, while the Captain, returning on
-board, took charge of his ship again, and aided by a gentle southerly
-breeze that had just sprung up, manœuvred her around in order to
-secure the spoil. It was a wonderful sight when all the great carcasses
-had been secured alongside to see the assembled hundreds--maybe
-thousands--of survivors surrounding the ship as if held there by
-some dread fascination they were unable to resist. Usually the sight
-or scent or presence of blood is sufficient to send them fleeing at
-the top of their speed to the four airts; but now was one of the
-exceptions, and in the clear sleeky water around the ship their vast
-bodies rolled and turned without apparent objective, until one of the
-passengers was fain to ask the skipper whether he did not think they
-were meditating an attack in force upon her. Captain Hampden laughed
-loud and long, for he had several times been privileged to witness a
-similar scene, and he knew that no more danger was to be apprehended
-from the presence of all those whales than there was from the coming of
-the thousands of sharks that in all the fury of their ravenous hunger
-were already tearing at the mighty carcasses secured to the ship.
-
-Again was that ship’s company involved in the most tremendous toil,
-but better fitted than before by experience, and unhindered by the
-awful prospect of imminent death by their vessel being dashed ashore.
-Moreover, the weather was beautifully fine as well as mild, the
-barometer stood steadily high, the sea was as smooth as it ever is in
-35° S., and there were seven willing additional hands. All the more
-willing because the skipper assured them that as soon as ever the
-cutting-in was accomplished he would make sail again for Cape Town, and
-that this splendid accession to his profits for the voyage would only
-hinder their progress for at most a couple of days. A ship’s company
-all in the highest spirits, working as if their very lives depended
-upon the amount they did, with never a harsh word spoken; every man,
-seaman or officer, bubbling over with cheerfulness and good temper, and
-seven splendid auxiliaries joining their forces as if the whole affair
-was a gigantic piece of fun. It was too. For as the capture of the
-whales had been the easiest on record for sperm-whales, the whole seven
-taken having been slain in less than one hour, so the weather was as
-perfect as the most exacting desire could make it. The little southerly
-breeze that had been so valuable in the getting of the spoil alongside
-had died completely away, and the only movement of the vessel, hardly
-noticeable, was due to an almost imperceptible westerly swell. As Mr.
-Pease said, ‘Anybody ’d think we wuz ridin’ snug in some harbour.’
-
-As the weather was so propitious, every effort was directed at first
-to getting the whales beheaded, and the strange spectacle was to be
-witnessed of men hacking away at those great masses below them from
-little stages slung all round the ship, wherever a whale’s head could
-be got at comprehensively. And all this to such good purpose that by
-sunset, although the men were not over-fatigued, the whole of the
-seven heads were off and floating astern at the ends of stout ropes,
-and one whale had been skinned and his blubber carefully stowed below.
-A perfect illumination of the ship by means of cressets was devised,
-each of which, slung where it could be of the most service, was kept
-supplied with whale ‘scrap,’ or the blubber from preceding whales,
-from which as much oil had been boiled as possible. This is the only
-fuel used for boiling the oil, and as it blazes almost like a Lucigen
-light it makes a splendid illuminant as well. Besides, the glorious
-moon, a huge disc of blazing silver, made the night bright, enough to
-read quite small print--so bright, indeed, that although there was not
-a trace of cloud or mist, the pretty stars were hardly visible. So as
-soon as the well-earned supper was eaten a system was devised whereby
-ten men and two officers at a time should have two hours’ sleep, there
-being then quite sufficient to handle the windlass and rip off the
-blubber.
-
-Then the great night’s work began. The rattling of the windlass pawls
-was incessant; there seemed to be no pause in the steady ascent of
-the great black-and-white blankets, and the shouting of orders, the
-cheerful gabble, and the roaring of the fires made a most pleasant
-tumult. In the midst of it all, after midnight, a voice was heard
-across the sea shouting, ‘Ship ahoy! Want any assistance?’ Mr. Pease,
-in charge at the time, roared back, ‘No; why?’ ‘Thought ye was on fire.
-I’ll send a boat on board.’ And sure enough from a trim frigate, which
-had stolen up by the aid of the light upper airs, came a boat, full of
-sorely puzzled men, who had never witnessed a scene like it in their
-lives, and, having witnessed it, would never be likely to forget it. It
-was only by the most careful piloting and obedience to the instructions
-shouted at them from the deck of the whaler that the boat was able
-to pick her way among those floating masses; but, that difficulty
-successfully overcome, the officer in charge leaped on to the rail and
-stood gazing with wide-eyed wonder upon the deck. For, do what they
-would, the hardly pressed toilers had been unable to stow more than the
-blubber from two whales in the blubber-room, so that the blankets of
-three others were encumbering the deck and making it, to anybody but a
-whaleman, almost impassable.
-
-The visitor clambered aft and introduced himself to Captain Hampden,
-newly awakened, as a lieutenant of H.M.S. _Griffon_, and apologised for
-intrusion, saying that he, with all the rest of his ship’s company,
-could not help but believe that they were coming in the nick of time
-to the assistance of a vessel on fire. But he added, while he was
-glad to find that not the case, he was delighted to have had the
-opportunity of gazing upon such a scene, which his wildest dreams of
-sea-happenings had never before pictured. Then the skipper gave him
-the news of the rescue, and asked if it would be agreeable to have the
-passengers transferred. This, however, they themselves demurred to,
-feeling no doubt that such an opportunity as now presented itself for
-gaining experience was not to be lightly given up; and, besides, they
-found that there would be no saving of time, as the warship was bound
-to Ascension. So, after a hearty shake hands all round, the gallant
-officer swung himself over the rail and departed, primed with material
-for yarns for years to come.
-
-That night passed with almost the rapidity of a sound sleep, but its
-hours had been so well utilised that when the lovely morning broke
-and gilded the haggard faces of the toilers, all the carcasses had
-been disposed of and the great heads were ranged alongside ready
-for dissection. Now these whales, though large, were by no means of
-the largest, and therefore it occurred to the skipper to test his
-lifting-gear to the utmost. So he had the ‘junk’ or snout point of
-the first cut off, hoisted on deck, and secured; then, hooking both
-tackles on to the remainder of the head, all hands buckled on to the
-windlass, and, although the old vessel listed dangerously, succeeded
-in bringing the great mass on deck. Now for activity. A long rip fore
-and aft the case; ten willing hands dipping their buckets at once into
-the reservoir of spermaceti. Plenty more behind passing it away into
-the tanks. Wonderful! In twenty minutes it is empty, and at a word
-from the skipper as the ship rolls to starboard, two or three swift
-spade blows release the empty head and it slides massively into the
-sea. Hurrah! Now for another. Will these men never tire? Apparently
-not. But the skipper’s brow is knotted with care. Receptacles for the
-bland spermaceti, semi-liquid as it is, are beginning to fail. ‘Cooper,
-what shall we do? Tanks are all full. Kain’t ye git us some pipes?’
-‘Gimme three hands, sir, ’n’ I’ll git y’ all yew want.’ ‘Bully fur you,
-cooper. Jim, Rube, Manuel, go with the cooper and help him.’ And in
-half-an-hour two 336-gallon pipes are ready to receive the rest of the
-spermaceti: the difficulty is met.
-
-Four P.M. sees the _Xiphias_ so utterly blocked from knight-heads to
-cabin skylight with blubber that the passenger seamen look solemnly
-at one another and wonder what will be the end of it all. They do
-not know how recently this crowd have disposed of an almost similar
-difficulty, with an awful shore grinning up at them from close a-lee.
-A faint westerly breeze springs up, the passengers are asked if they
-will make sail, and as they gladly assent, away goes the grand old tub
-under every stitch, smoking like two or three steamers rolled into one,
-and leaving behind her a wide wake of smoothness from exuding oil--for
-she is fast becoming more like an oil-saturated sponge than a ship.
-But nothing daunts her crew. They are happy. Visions of a glorious
-ending of their voyage, of farms bought, and a position among their
-stay-at-home neighbours proudly pre-eminent, fill their minds and make
-them call up the last ounce of energy to cut a horse-piece or turn the
-mincer-handle when they have felt for the last half-hour that it was
-impossible to put in another stroke.
-
-These visions come to all but Rube. For of him it may truly be said
-that he lives in the present. The past has no memories for him, the
-future no anticipation. To all the cheery chatter of his shipmates
-anent their plans for the future he turns a disinterested ear. When
-they say, ‘Wut _you_ goin’ t’ do, Rube ole man, w’en yew gits home?’
-he replies solemnly, ‘Only God knows. I ain’t got no plans. I want Him
-to ’range things fur me, then I know they’ll be all right. Anyhow,
-I know I kain’t be any happier than I am ’mong yew dear fellers--I
-never thought ’t would be possible t’ be so happy ’s I am naow. But,
-dear chaps, ef I wuz yew I wouldn’t go buildin’ too many castles. Y’
-see at fust, yew know, they’re only castles in th’ air, but ef yew go
-on buildin’ an’ buildin’, bimeby they gets t’ be so real t’ yew thet
-w’en yew finds ’at yew kain’t build ’em indeed, th’ disappointment
-is awful.’ So he talked, and, good-naturedly, they bantered him. And
-meanwhile the great work was being well done; so well done that two
-days before they entered Table Bay, and passing close under Robben
-Island, anchored well clear of the mail steamers’ track into the
-harbour, the last trace of foulness was removed from the old ship--she
-looked clean as a ship should look. She did not smell sweet, but that,
-alas! could not be helped. In those warm climates it is only possible
-to avoid bad smells in a whaler that has no luck, and the _Xiphias_
-certainly had redeemed her apparent bad luck at last; for she had only
-been out seven months, and now she had on board 800 barrels of sperm
-oil and 550 right-whale oil, besides two and a half tons of baleen, so
-that her catch at the market price of that day may be invoiced thus:--
-
- 800 barrels of sperm oil = 80 tons, at £100 =
- $500 per ton £8,000 = $40,000
-
- 550 barrels of black oil = 55 tons, at £20 =
- $100 per ton £1,100 = $5,500
-
- 2½ tons, bone at £1,500 =
- $7,500 per ton £3,750 = $17,750
- ------- -------
- £12,850 = $63,250
-
-An ideal trip so far, and yielding even to the poor holder of the 250th
-lay, a comfortable sum of £51 8_s._ = $256·50, of course subject to
-deduction for slops, tobacco, advance, &c.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-A GREAT BLOW
-
-
-Many and terrible are the temptations which await the striving
-Christian, whatever his or her spiritual age may be. It is a moot
-point whether they (the temptations) are felt more severely by the
-babe in Christ in the first fervour of the new life, or by the mature
-Christian who is insensibly led to feel that he or she has attained
-unto a firm standing in the Faith. But one thing is, or should be,
-beyond controversy, and that is that no fiercer temptations assail any
-man than those which await the newly converted sailor, who has begun,
-in the solitude of the ocean and its sweet freedom from the allurements
-of shore vices, the upward way. He has been born, and has grown up to
-a certain Christian stature in a state of peaceful freedom from the
-evils of shore life, and has almost come to regard them as belonging to
-a previous state of existence to which he can never return. Then, when
-he is suddenly plunged headlong into them again he is in great, very
-great, danger of a relapse that may give him an agonising season of
-remorse. But I must not carry this digression too far. I only wish, in
-beginning this chapter, to point out how dire were the perils awaiting
-the crew of the _Xiphias_, many of whom were only, in the imitative
-way common to the majority of human beings, behaving as they saw the
-general sense of their little community would have them behave, and not
-at all from any conviction as to the necessity of such behaviour to
-their peace or from any inward urging whatever.
-
-It is, however, safe to say that such considerations troubled no one
-on board the ship at all. Every man was in an overflowing state of
-happiness at again anchoring in a civilised port after the long and
-weary cruise and the many hardships and dangers encountered. Every
-man, too, with the exception of Rube, was half-intoxicated with a
-quite lawful pride in his achievements during the past two months. All
-remembered how helplessly, ignorantly, and painfully they had begun
-the voyage, traced easily the educational way they had come, mentally
-visualised vividly each heroic detail, and gradually lost sight of the
-great central fact of it all, the Fatherly care of God. Therefore,
-when, the next day after arrival, the rescued passengers returned on
-board with urgent requests to the Captain that he would allow them
-the privilege of entertaining the crew ashore as a slight return for
-benefits received, all who could be spared on that day, except Rube,
-joyfully availed themselves of the permission readily given and went
-ashore.
-
-They were royally welcomed at one of the principal hotels by the
-rescued ones, some of whom had wired home and received in reply advices
-enabling them to draw upon the local banks for all moneys needed. They
-were entertained far too well, for two-thirds of them returned on board
-drunk and quarrelsome, and for the first time that voyage the foc’s’le
-was the scene of a riotous conflict, in the midst of which Rube moved
-like a strong apostle of peace, able, as well as eager, to enforce
-quietude upon the most unruly, even though it involved a considerable
-amount of what some weak-minded people might call brutality. The lesson
-taught by this episode was not without its valuable effect upon those
-who had remained on board. With a self-sacrifice entirely laudable,
-they refused to go ashore at all. This may not, probably will not, be
-assessed by my readers at its proper value; but, oh, if landsfolk could
-only realise the intense longing for a run ashore which seizes upon
-sailors after being cooped up on board ship for seven or eight months,
-it would be understood. Truly, Reuben and the skipper had done their
-best to give the ship-keeping crew such amusement as was possible, and
-the best shore food, fresh beef, mutton, and vegetables that could be
-procured had been provided.
-
-Table Bay swarms, or did swarm, with a splendid species of crustacean
-known as ‘craw-fish,’ many of which grow to a huge size, weighing
-several pounds, and have a flavour in no way inferior to that of a
-lobster. There was great sport in catching these in impromptu nets made
-of rope-yarn meshed upon hoops and baited with bones, and even greater
-satisfaction in knowing that they would live for months in tanks of
-salt water frequently renewed. Then there was ordinary fishing, or,
-perhaps, I should say extraordinary fishing, of the schnapper, the cod,
-and other fish which swarm around the southern extremity of Africa
-almost unmolested. And sailors love fishing, though scarcely any class
-of men living within reach of fishable waters get less of it.
-
-So quite pleasantly the time passed away--the four days during which
-Captain Hampden found it possible to sell his baleen and tranship it,
-and to expend a liberal sum in fresh food, vegetables, and live-stock.
-On the fifth morning, at daybreak, the cry of ‘Man the windlass!’
-rang along the deck of the _Xiphias_, and all hands responded. But,
-unhappily, most of those who had been ashore did so very unwillingly.
-The memory of their spree was secretly most alluring; they had tasted
-illicit delights again, and were lamenting the deprivation of them.
-Thus they were sullen, unwilling, and miserable. Vainly did Rube exert
-all his simple arts to rouse them out of themselves, to cheer them.
-They would not be cheered; they hugged their misery and almost infected
-several of their shipmates.
-
-But the work was going on, all unconsciously the best cure was being
-applied, and by nightfall, with their fine old ship heading northward
-for the Mozambique Channel before a fine following breeze, they had
-gone much farther than they were aware of on the road to repentance and
-recovery. By repentance I do not mean that spurious sentiment which
-is really sorrow for one’s inability to go and repeat former sins or
-excesses, disgust and annoyance at being compelled to reap what one has
-sown, but a comprehensive change of mind with reference to one’s former
-behaviour, a distrust of one’s own powers of resistance to the drawings
-of evil, and a determination to trust for deliverance from them to
-Almighty God. A simple definition, perhaps, but one that I know is far
-too often neglected or wilfully misunderstood.
-
-Day succeeded day in perfect loveliness of weather and peace on board.
-The routine of the ship had fallen easily back into its accustomed
-grooves, and opportunity had been taken to renew all the wastage that
-had been made in the general equipment of the ship and boats by reason
-of the recent heavy demands made upon it. But no whales were seen.
-Eager eyes scanned the wide sea for every moment of the daylight, but
-nothing was seen of any value. Still, the previous sense of irritation
-and almost hopelessness was not there, could hardly be, since so great
-an accession of profit had been made during the last two months; a haul
-that, as Captain Hampden gratefully admitted, might not have been made
-on some voyages during the first two years. But as day succeeded day
-and week followed week, there came upon all hands a querulous desire to
-question the wisdom which had brought the ship into a part of the ocean
-where everything desirable was found except the one central object of
-the voyage: profit. As watch followed watch under those lovely skies,
-the watchers became listless, careless, their attitude at the mastheads
-showed how weary they had become of the fruitless gaze across the wide
-sea-plain. And the wise skipper, who, as a skipper should, carefully
-noted all the symptoms of discontent, gradually tightened the somewhat
-relaxed disciplinary fibres, and had many things done which, under
-the pressure of whaling, might quite safely have remained undone. The
-recently obtained cargo was overhauled and re-stowed, the reeking hold
-was thoroughly cleansed, and although nothing was ever undertaken which
-could not be dropped at one minute’s notice, had whales appeared, an
-enormous amount of valuable work was accomplished, and that, too,
-without any friction whatever. In addition to the work of the ship, the
-Captain unofficially encouraged the men to undertake in their leisure
-moments the making of ‘scrimshaw,’ the name given to _objets-d’art_
-(?), fabricated of ivory and bone, and calling out all the latent
-mechanical genius possessed by the men.
-
-To this end, foreseeing an easy, quiet time, he had caused several
-jaw-pans of the sperm-whale to be set aside and towed astern in order
-that they might bleach to a dazzling whiteness. All the teeth had
-been saved and pickled in barrels of strong brine, and a considerable
-number of the shorter blades or laminæ of baleen had been retained when
-the bulk of it was transhipped at Cape Town. Word was passed forward
-that any man who felt inclined might have for the asking such of
-these materials as he chose in order to try his hand at curio-making;
-and the carpenter, although, like most good workmen, he would not
-lend his tools, never refused to saw off a length of jawbone for a
-walking-stick, or cut up into rough pieces the bleached bone, for
-any man who asked him. Nor did he make any favour of showing a man
-how to make his own tools out of old knives, files, rasps, or even
-sail-needles. This amiability had great results, for before long
-practically all hands were engaged upon this fascinating hobby, and,
-emulating one another, were turning out some really beautiful pieces
-of work in carved ivory, bone, and baleen. Some of the sticks were
-quite works of art. A length of, say, three feet by one inch square,
-sawn from a jaw-pan after it had been subjected to a long tow astern,
-would be tightly lashed down to a spar in the sun so that it would dry
-perfectly straight. Then, by the aid of a ‘cutter’ or rasp, softened
-in the fire and filed into deep ridges with cutting edges, it would
-be worked down into a rough roundness of outline. By the aid of other
-equally primitive tools the stick would then be gradually fashioned
-into the semblance of a rope, with ‘worming,’ or a much smaller rope
-twisted into its lays--a form of art which is highly interesting, as
-having been practised by sailors from very remote days. Three years
-ago, when staying at Repton School, I was shown over the ruins of the
-ancient abbey there, and in the recently unearthed crypt, dating back
-to Anglo-Saxon times I was told, there were four monolithic pillars
-of stone supporting the roof, each of which was carved into the same
-semblance of a rope with ‘worming’ in its lays. Also at a great country
-house where I stayed last year, whose noble and hospitable owner
-made a hobby of collecting books on ancient art, I saw some superb
-illustrations in colour of ancient croziers, upon which were carved in
-ivory or worked in precious metals the universally used ‘Turk’s-head’
-of the sailor, which has not altered one jot of its details down to the
-present day through all those hundreds of years.
-
-But to return to our stick-maker. At one end of the stick about eight
-or ten inches would be cut away until only a slender square rod of
-about three-eighths of an inch thickness remained; upon this would be
-threaded medallions of ivory, baleen, silver (quarter-dollars), ebony,
-and coco-tree wood. An albatross head or some similarly well-known
-object would be patiently carved and secured on top, and the whole
-stick was then polished, first with fine sand, then with powdered
-pumice-stone, and finished with chalk and oil. And really, when
-completed, many of these pieces of work would have made no bad show
-in an industrial exhibition, especially if the primitive tools could
-have been shown with them. Besides this fascinating pursuit, there were
-several others tacitly encouraged by the skipper, such as model-making,
-gymnastics, swimming (on calm days), and, of course, fishing. And thus
-gradually what had threatened to become a painful set-back to all of
-them turned out to be a veritable blessing, a halcyon time which many
-remembered all their lives after with the most tender regret.
-
-But still they were not earning anything, and after their experience
-on the other side of the Cape they began to feel as if their fortunes
-were already made. They did not realise the vastness of the ocean and
-the tiny little circle, after all, that their outlook gave them from
-the mastheads. And in spite of the noble bounty offered by the skipper
-of twenty-five dollars to whoever should ‘raise’ a sperm-whale, it was
-very hard, to hang up there for two hours in that blazing sun and keep
-one’s attention fixed upon one’s business. At last, however (eleven
-weeks having passed since they left Cape Town), it happened to be
-Rube’s masthead at daybreak--that is to say, shortly after 5 A.M. With
-his usual pleasant alacrity he swallowed his coffee and sprang into the
-fore-rigging at the cry from aft, ‘Man mastheads!’ As he went MacManus
-said jestingly, ‘Reubin, darlin’, ef yez do be raisin’ sperm-whales
-Oi’ll share th’ bounty wid yez.’ ‘Yew shall that,’ replied Rube gaily,
-‘an’ everybody else as well ef I know myself.’ As he went springingly
-aloft his eye dwelt lovingly upon the marvellous colouring of the sea,
-the ever-changing sequence of shades reflected from the glory above;
-and his heart filled with loving worship, for there is no education
-in appreciative observation of God’s wonderful works like an intimate
-acquaintance with Him. When he reached the topgallant-yard he saw the
-great glowing arc of the sun’s upper limb just shedding a long line
-of blazing gold along the horizon, as if it could not contain all its
-store of glory, but must needs let some run freely on every hand. And
-as Rube climbed into his perch the awful majesty of the whole orb swung
-clear of the sea, and ocean and sky blazed ineffably, blindingly upon
-Rube’s sight, making him for a moment veil his face in his hands and
-murmur a few disjointed words of praise.
-
-Never in all his experience had he seen so glorious a sunrise. He could
-not help feeling an intense desire for more ability to appreciate its
-marvels, for more power to praise, more capacity for gratitude. And
-then as his eyes swept the horizon round, remembering his duty, he saw
-immediately beneath the sun’s disc a curious peak, black, but edged
-with flame, which gave him the impression of its being some gigantic
-mountain top upon which the sun had been resting, and now was rising
-after it in readiness to receive it if it should fall. So strong was
-the impression that it made him shudder in spite of himself and turn
-away. As he did so, broad on the port beam about five miles away
-rose the well-known figure of a sperm-whale exhaling a great volume
-of vapour diagonally from his spiracle and sending before his blunt
-head a perfect cascade of diamond spray. One moment’s pause, and from
-Rube’s deep chest burst the startling whalers’ call, at which the
-previously half-awakened decks below burst suddenly into seeming life.
-Not one minute was lost, for the crew were in the highest state of
-efficiency and eagerness. Only two boats were lowered, for the whale
-had no fellow; he was apparently one of those morose old bulls that had
-been ejected from his overlordship of the school he had led so long
-and was doomed to wander lonely till the end. One drawback there was
-to the chase; it was almost a flat calm, and at such a time approach
-to a lone sperm-whale is exceedingly difficult. His senses (whatever
-they are, they are not like ours) are so acute that unless there be
-a little sea on, something that by its natural sounds may render the
-splash of an oar or the rattle of a rowlock inaudible, the whale will
-almost certainly be alarmed and make good his escape. But as they were
-paddling with the utmost caution in his direction, a puff of wind
-darkened the water and at the same time sent a cold shiver through
-all hands. The mate recovered from his surprise first, and his hoarse
-whisper ran through the crew’s ears: ‘In paddles, step mast, quietly
-now.’ He was obeyed in swiftness and silence, and the second mate,
-following the example, had his sail up almost as soon. Then, as the
-graceful boats glided noiselessly across the just rising ripples, all
-hands had leisure to look about them, and to their intense uneasiness
-they saw that the whole aspect of the heavens was changed. The colour
-of the blessed sun itself had faded from glowing gold to a stale,
-sickly, greenish hue, and the morning cheerfulness of the sky was
-replaced by a dreary, leaden blue, to which the sea had responded by
-turning almost black. And it was so cold. The sun seemed at once to
-have been shorn of his beams and his power of distributing warmth. He
-still shone, it is true, but as if through a veil of some deadly mist
-depriving him of all his beneficent influences. Yet there was no vapour
-whatever visible.
-
-The mate, however, alone of the little company, seemed entirely
-unconscious of any change in the weather. With his eyes fixed upon the
-supine monster ahead he steered the boat as if he were part of it,
-as if, indeed, he were enduing it with some of his own personality.
-Occasionally, it is true, he cast furtive glances at the second mate’s
-boat, but that was only to see whether he was keeping as far ahead of
-that officer as etiquette demanded. And as the breeze freshened the
-lively craft began leaping gamesomely over the infant waves, nearing
-the whale at a great rate. At last! The harpooner, a lean American from
-Nantucket, rose stealthily to his feet, balancing the clumsy-looking
-weapon as if it were a feather in his right hand, and methodically
-arranging the coils of stray line on the little forward deck or ‘box’
-of the boat. She made one last spring forward; then, with a great
-swooping curve, graceful as that of an albatross, she glided alongside
-the whale, and two harpoons flew from Walter’s sinewy fingers into the
-whale’s body. She passed into a little offing of safety as the sail
-was brailed in, but the whale wasted no time or strength in fruitless
-struggle to free himself of the irons. He apparently gathered all
-his powers together and fled to windward through the rapidly rising
-waves, heeding not the weight behind him more than as if it had not
-existed. He went so fast, indeed, and so dead end on to the sea that
-the accomplishment of the boat’s clearance was a task of uncommon
-difficulty, taking nearly thrice the usual time. And when it was
-finished neither the companion boat nor the ship was to be seen. More,
-the black pinnacle of cloud noted by Rube at sunrise had now overspread
-fully one half of the heavens. The other half had a menacing shade, not
-of cloud, but the shadow of the great eastern mass, and yet behind the
-gloom there was the suggestion of an unearthly glow. No one could say
-why or how the ship had disappeared, but not a sign of her was visible.
-A strange fear fell upon all, even Rube, who by virtue of his great
-strength had the midship thwart (the heaviest oar) in the mate’s boat.
-Instinctively the mate came aft and got out the compass; but, except to
-tell in which direction the whale was going, which they already knew
-was something near east, its indications were of little value--they
-had no bearing of the ship. And the whale went steadily on into the
-gathering darkness.
-
-Meanwhile, on board the ship signals of recall were being frantically
-made in the hope that the fast boat might see them. Mr. Peck did see,
-and in less than half an hour was safe alongside again, his boat
-hoisted, and his men putting all their energies into the preparations
-to meet the coming cyclone. The ship was now between the Seychelles and
-the Saya de Malha Bank, having been gradually working north and east
-from the Mozambique Channel upon finding that usually prolific hunting
-ground so barren of result. And consequently she was now in one of
-the very worst places in the whole ocean for meeting with those awful
-circular storms which are variously known as hurricanes, cyclones, or
-typhoons, according as they are experienced in the Atlantic Ocean,
-the Indian Ocean, or the China Sea, but which are all the same kind
-of terrible natural convulsion, beneficent in their after-effects
-undoubtedly, but while they last filling most men with the conviction
-that the end of all things is at hand. Still, so staunch and seaworthy
-was the _Xiphias_, in common with most of her sisters built by those
-old-fashioned, methodical descendants of the old Puritans in New
-England, that the near approach of such a cataclysm would have given
-Captain Hampden very little additional uneasiness but for the fact of
-his mate’s boat being away, lost to sight, and of his own inability to
-follow it up when once the meteor burst, which it was now evidently
-upon the point of doing. Nothing, however, could be left undone that
-ought to be done for the safety of those remaining on board, and no
-time wasted in vain regrets; so for two or three hours all hands
-were kept at full pressure putting extra lashings upon everything
-movable--double gaskets, ‘marling’ down the sails, hoisting the boats
-as high as they would go to the davit-heads, and there securing them
-with all the skill available. Also a quantity of food was hastily
-cooked (the _Xiphias_, like most of those old ships, carried little
-canned provisions) and stored where it could be got at without opening
-hatches or depending upon a lighted fire. Everything, in fact, was done
-that skill and forethought could suggest or urge to, and then the men
-were called aft. All hands stood facing the gallant old skipper as with
-head bare he steadied himself against the skylight.
-
-‘Men,’ said he, ‘we’ve kem up agenst big trouble, for a boat’s crew
-of our shipmates air a-missin’, an’ only God He knows whether we sh’l
-ever see ’em agen. I feel a’most heart-broken at lettin’ ’em go; but,
-men, I’d no idea ’at thishyer hurrican’--fur hurrican’ it’s a-goin’
-t’be, there’s no possible doubt o’ that--wuz a-comin’ on so sudden.
-An’, besides, yew all know how eager all han’s wuz t’ git some whale
-after eour long spell athout seein’ one. Thar’s no denyin’ the fact,
-eour shipmates air in terrible danger. We’re in danger, too, fur
-these hurrican’s is enough t’ make the bravest man ’at ever lived
-feel quaky t’ his very soul. But we’ve a grand ship under eour feet,
-an’ we’ve a-done all thet man k’n do to make her ready fur the great
-fight thet’s a-comin’. Naow we’ve a-got another duty t’ perform. In
-thet boat beside Mr. Pease, as good an officer ’s ever trod a deck ’r
-hove a lance, an’ Walter his harpooner, also one ov th’ very best, and
-MacManus, Joey, and Manuel, all good, sterlin’ men as all th’ crew is,
-thar’s Rube Eddy. Thet man’s taught us all lessons we needed worse
-than any of us knew. By his example he’s shamed us into bein’ better
-men, an’ every one of us is happier then we could ’a’ben if we hadn’t
-known him. Already I feel at the thought of losin’ him’s if I don’t
-care t’ live myself, an’ I know thet all of you ’r feelin’ with me how
-great a blessin’ he’s ben t’ us aboard this ship. So I ask you all t’
-kneel down like men an’ pray each in your own fashion fur Rube an’
-his fellows in th’ boat; thet in this fearful time, God, who kin do
-anything, may be with ’em t’ save, and thet He may see fit t’ bring us
-all together again. An’ if not, to make us all what Rube Eddy often
-prayed we might be--good men, ready t’ live ’r die as it should please
-God, but whichever it is, to keep unbroken the image of God in us.
-Let’s pray.’
-
-All hands fell on their knees, and there, in the gathering darkness,
-these wanderers from many lands, uncouth, ignorant, careless seafarers,
-each in his own way silently pleaded with an unmistakably present God
-for the safety of the boat’s crew, and all added, ‘especially Rube.’
-Occasionally an ejaculation which could not be suppressed burst forth,
-but for the space of about a quarter of an hour, except for the voice
-of the wind like the growing wailings of a tortured spirit, and the
-continual mutter of the thunder, there was no other sound. Then, as
-if at a given signal, the skipper lifted up his voice in the sublime
-old Apostles’ Prayer, the Amens were fervently murmured, and with
-perceptibly strengthened hearts the crew dispersed to their several
-duties or resting places, and thick darkness clothed them as with a
-garment, shutting out all the view of sea and sky.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-THE CYCLONE
-
-
-Although all hands had dispersed and half of them were free to seek
-their berths, they could none of them go below. A great awe, not
-to say fear, was upon them, for none of them save the skipper and
-some of the officers had ever witnessed the upheaval of the sea and
-down-pressing of the heavens which were now imminent, and the coming
-thereof exercised a fearful fascination upon them. They huddled in
-groups, only whispering an occasional word, and waited for they knew
-not what. Yet all had a feeling that it must be the Trump of Doom. As
-yet the wind had not attained any great force, but the motion of the
-ship was exceedingly uneasy, for the ocean is so responsive to the
-power of the wind that long before a gale which is somewhere raging has
-reached a ship, she will often be most violently tossed by big waves
-coming sweeping towards her, and this without any barometrical warning
-that can be noticed. Nay, it sometimes happens that after several hours
-of anxious waiting for the expected gale, with almost every stitch in
-the ship close furled, the restless sea will again quiet down, the
-filminess will disappear from the sky, and serene weather will once
-more prevail: the gale has either blown itself out or has by a very
-well understood meteorological event been diverted from its original
-course into a totally new one.
-
-None of these things, however, was known to or noticed by the crew of
-the _Xiphias_. They felt the pall above descending lower and lower
-until they could imagine its inky folds resting upon the mastheads;
-they heard the wailing and moaning of the wind, rising to an occasional
-wild shriek, as if impatient to begin the elemental strife; they
-experienced the peculiar sensation inseparable from the environment
-of an atmosphere surcharged with electricity; and they were obliged
-to hold on to keep themselves from being thrown off their feet by the
-unnatural, unexpected lurches of the puzzled ship. But it is fair to
-them to say that through all their apprehensions for the next few hours
-they felt most for their half-dozen shipmates in that frail boat, far
-away in the awful darkness, doomed to face the fiercest conflict of
-wind and wave known to seafarers, all unsheltered even by a little
-deck. Then came a new terror. The accumulation of electric fluid all
-around them, having become greater than the atmosphere could hold,
-commenced to discharge itself in blinding streaks of vari-coloured
-flame, which quiveringly ran about the blackness overhead and almost
-seemed to light up the black heaps of water rising and falling without
-order all around them. Every yard-arm, masthead, davit-head--in fact,
-every point, even to their own heads--gleamed palely with latent
-electricity, and strange sensations as of pricking roughened all the
-surfaces of their bodies. Some became numbed with fear, others wished
-they could be so.
-
-And then--it was almost a relief--with a roar as of ten thousand lions
-mad with hunger, the full hurricane burst upon them. Where it struck
-them none knew, or what the ship did when she felt it; for whether
-she was beneath the sea or above no one could tell. The awful blast
-ripped off the surface of the sea, and spread it through the air so
-that sight, speech, almost breath became impossible. But they all
-noticed that, although the ship beneath their feet seemed as if she
-was being hurled through space, she was now quite steady; the drunken
-uncertain motion she had previously been suffering from had altogether
-ceased, for under that pressure of wind no sea could lift its head. I
-said there was almost a sense of relief, and this is really true, for
-now it did not appear possible that matters could become worse. Men’s
-minds refused to entertain the possibility of any increase in the force
-of the wind, and all felt dimly that any change now must be for the
-better--that the hurricane was doing its worst.
-
-The skipper, aft by the useless wheel, with the two mates near him,
-endured like the rest. Having done all that was humanly possible, and
-commended himself and his charge to his Father, he had now but to set
-his teeth, bend his head, and bear in patience, awaiting without a
-tremor the manifestation of God’s will concerning him. There was a
-certain indefinite satisfaction in having his two mates near him--the
-same feeling that the other members of the crew had in being huddled
-together like sheep on the edge of a cliff when the gale howls
-furiously landward and sweeps the downs like the breath of a destroying
-angel. In fact, neither Captain Hampden nor his officers took the
-trouble to think now. They just let their mental powers lie dormant,
-having used them at the right time to the best advantage, and being
-quite ready to exercise them again when any good could thereby be done.
-
-And now, what of those brave men so perilously cut off from their
-ship, left to themselves in the midst of such potentialities of
-destruction that camping out unsheltered and unarmed in the heart of
-an Indian jungle would have been safety itself by comparison? For a
-time, while the whale kept his unswerving and unfaltering rush into
-the blackness ahead, Mr. Pease’s energies and thought seemed solely
-concentrated upon the means of compassing the death of his gigantic
-steed--any ideas concerning his own danger or that of his crew did not
-seem to find admission to his mind. After satisfying himself that the
-whale was holding a straight course he called upon all hands to put
-forth a supreme effort to get up near enough to the monster, and make
-some feasible attempt at fatally wounding him. And they, seizing the
-tow-line and straining every sinew to the work, found that they could
-actually gain upon him a little, although the sprays coming over the
-bows threatened every now and then to swamp them. But gradually they
-found their task becoming easier, and although the thickening gloom
-chilled their hearts they encouraged one another with shouts of ‘There
-she feels it,’ ‘Hand over hand, hearties,’ ‘Walk her up to him!’ ‘He’s
-our whale,’ &c. And suddenly the mate yelled at the utmost strain of
-his lungs, ‘Lay off--lay her off, Walter; lay off, fur God’s sake!’
-Nobly Walter responded; the light craft sprang off sideways under the
-pressure of the great steer oar and Walter’s straining muscles, and
-the whale’s huge flukes, brandished high in air, came down with a
-crash like thunder, and smote the water just a yard or two abaft the
-after oar. But that blow cost the whale his life. For the boat shot
-up alongside of him, and in towards his side withal, and at the same
-moment Mr. Pease, taking deliberate aim, sent a bomb-lance point blank
-into the great body. Almost before the muffled report from within told
-that the destructive weapon had exploded, a hand-lance had followed it,
-and slid up to its pole within the vast black mass.
-
-Either of those terrible wounds had been sufficient to kill, and
-the two combined had the effect of bringing the whale to a sudden
-stop, when, with a long expiration, like the escaping steam from a
-water-loaded syren, he gasped out his life and was still, save for
-the easy motion communicated to his huge carcass by the waves. So
-sudden was his death that the usual tremendous convulsion which takes
-place when these leviathans die was totally absent. As soon as it was
-evident that he _was_ dead, Mr. Pease, rising to the height of his
-responsibilities, and realising how short a time was left during which
-anything might be done, caused two more harpoons to be driven into the
-whale’s side near the first two, but bridled to the main line. Then
-allowing about fifty fathoms drift he cut the tow-line, and veering
-away to the tail succeeded with very great difficulty in getting a hole
-cut through its thickest part, and the end of the towline rove through
-it. That accomplished, the boat was hauled back again to a position
-midway between the whale’s tail and its head, the lines made well fast,
-and the men told to make themselves as comfortable as circumstances
-permitted by crouching low in the bottom of the boat, and arranging the
-sail so as to keep off just a little of the spindrift that was already
-beginning to fill the air.
-
-It was now quite dark, although but little after noon; the sea was in
-that curiously undecided state before-mentioned, and the mate knew very
-well that at any moment the full power of the hurricane might burst
-upon them. Yet, strange as it may seem to landsmen or even ordinary
-sailors, he had by no means lost hope, neither had Walter. Both of
-them knew from long experience, and not theoretically, how splendid
-a breakwater is made by a dead whale. Both of them had time and time
-again owed their lives to the shelter afforded by one in the midst of
-such stupendous seas as are encountered in the Southern Ocean, where
-unhindered the lone sea sweeps round the globe, and consequently both
-felt that even in the present apparently hopeless circumstances they
-might yet be found living when the hurricane had passed and left the
-ocean bestrewn with the wreckage of many a score of noble ships. I
-think it is not generally known on land how magical (there is really no
-other word to describe it) is the power exercised by oil upon the sea.
-A little oil spilt upon the water during the prevalence of the roughest
-gale makes a tiny oasis of smoothness, around which the most gigantic
-waves rear their furious crests in vain in the endeavour to encroach
-upon it. ‘Oil upon the troubled waters’ has long been a paraphrase for
-the gentle work of the peacemaker, but it is much more than that--it
-is a scientific expression of fact; and since shipmasters (being, as
-I am never weary of pointing out, the most conservative of men) have
-taken to using oil, as it should be used, for the purpose of stilling
-the angry waves, the number of shipping disasters that have been
-averted is past all counting. It is safe to say that if, wherever any
-breakwater, pier, or similar structure is exposed to the fury of stormy
-seas, a large perforated pipe were to be laid on the sea-bed a few
-yards seaward of the foundations and surrounding them, through which
-in time of storm oil might be pumped at high pressure, we should never
-have any of those costly works destroyed by the impact of the waves at
-all; for they (the structures) would be surrounded by a ring fence of
-smoothness beyond which, no matter how fierce their anger, the great
-waves could never pass.
-
-Now, a whale is a natural reservoir of oil, and, whether alive or dead,
-he always has around him an area of calm induced by the exudations from
-his skin. Therefore, when we read of ‘whales taking refuge in sheltered
-bays from the fury of gales,’ we may be held blameless for curling
-the lip of derision, and wondering what manner of fools they are who
-perpetrate such twaddle for the deluding of their readers. Also a whale
-when it is dead does by some mysterious volition point its head, not
-in the wind’s eye, or directly to the quarter from whence the wind
-comes, but about eight points, or forty-five degrees, therefrom, and,
-stranger still, does invariably drift _towards_ the wind, and not,
-like a ship, away from it. Various explanations have been proffered to
-account for this really wonderful movement of the whale’s great carcass
-after death, but none of them, I think, is feasible save this: that
-the whale’s tail, being a huge limber piece of gristle of exquisite
-propulsive shape, is so actuated by the wash of the waves past the
-great body that its motions, like those of an oar turned in a groove
-at the stern of a boat, are sufficient to keep the body to which it
-is attached working to windward. Not, be it noted, against a current,
-which moves the whole mass of water, but against the wind through the
-water and incidentally against the sea, which is quite a different
-matter.
-
-Perhaps an apology is necessary for so long a digression, when the fate
-of Mr. Pease and his brave men is trembling in the balance, but there
-are so many utterly impossible and unexplainable things to be read in
-stories now, written to account for the escape of the hero, that I
-have felt compelled to take up a little more space than usual in which
-to explain the entire reasonableness and possibility of escape from
-their dire peril which actuated and hardened Mr. Pease and his crew.
-A whisper had run from end to end of the boat full of hope, and Rube
-in the middle had accepted it with heartfelt joy, not for his own sake
-(for this extraordinary man never thought about himself at all), but
-for the sake of his shipmates. And then all settled down to wait and
-watch. High over them, with a most terrific noise, a blaze of unearthly
-light, and a peculiarly chilling sensation, burst the hurricane.
-Really, terrible though it was, they were immensely surprised that it
-was not worse. They did not, could not realise how that great bank of
-flesh, already floating much higher than ever it did with life in it,
-was protecting them, not merely from the impact of the sea, but from
-the swamping effect of the spindrift, the sea face carried airwards by
-the wind. As this came flying along it met the body of the whale, and
-shot upwards, just passing over the frail cockleshell riding in the
-little smooth to leeward. All heaven’s artillery opened out, the roar
-of the wind, the rumble of the thunder, the hiss of the lightning; but
-cowering low down in their tiny craft rocking easily in the quiet water
-under the lee of the whale, those six men lived. And as the hours wore
-on they forgot to be afraid; nay, they even slept, or hazily speculated
-upon what they should do when, the storm having passed, they might, and
-probably would, find themselves alone on that wide, wide sea, foodless
-and waterless. And so the hours succeeded each other, day insensibly
-passed into night, leathery tongues vainly roamed round parched mouths
-seeking moisture and finding none, and still hope lived.
-
-How long they had thus patiently borne the burden of a peril of
-which no landsman can have aught but the feeblest adumbration of an
-idea, none of them knew, for none of them had a watch, and even had
-there been one there was no light. The darkness was of that Egyptian
-character that one experiences in a coal mine, and the blazing rivers
-of lightning which occasionally coursed over their heads only added to
-their blindness. But presently, as at some celestial word of command,
-the elemental tumult ceased, the wind fell to a dead calm, and a
-strange motion, totally unlike the steady heave and roll of the former
-hours, took its place. Overhead the cloud-pall thinned and a star or
-two appeared. Their eyes, grown accustomed to the velvety blackness,
-saw that they were the centre of a charmed circle, all around which,
-at so short a distance that they seemed to be at the bottom of a
-whirlpool, enormous masses of water rose and fell in disorderly heaps.
-It was an appalling sight, and the mate, with thoughtful wisdom,
-distracted their attention from it by advising them to take advantage
-of the temporary lull to get a drink and eat a biscuit. Each whaleboat
-carries a wooden vessel like a large bucket, holding about four gallons
-of fresh water. It is headed up like a cask, but has a wooden spigot
-attached by a short lanyard, and this, withdrawn, suffers the water to
-escape in a thin stream into a piggin which is held beneath it. There
-is also a long narrow keg kept under the little deck over the stern of
-the boat, also headed up tightly but easy to open by those who know
-how, in which are a number of biscuits, a lantern, and some candles and
-matches. This was now produced, and a biscuit each handed round, which,
-with a drink of water, had a wonderful effect in raising everybody’s
-spirits.
-
-Mr. Pease then said, ‘M’ lads, I don’ s’pose ’at ever in the history
-of seafarin’ a boat’s crew has bin known t’ hang out a hurrican in the
-open sea same ’s we’ve done, fur which we’ve gut t’ thank ole Johnny
-Squarehead here as th’ means sent by Almighty God fur our safety.
-B’lieve me, boys, we’re through th’ wust of it. We sh’ll hev almost
-as much wind as before, but not fur near as long, an’ yew know how
-safe a harbour the whale gives us. I needn’t ask ye t’ thank God: I
-know yew’ve all done that, ’specially Rube thar. Say, Rube, sonny,
-haow’re ye hittin’ it, eh?’ ‘Glorious, Mr. Pease, glorious. I wuz jest
-thinkin’ as ye spoke, “though I walk through the Valley of the Shadow
-of Death, I will fear no evil, Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort me.”’
-‘Bully fer yew, Rube,’ said Mr. Pease. ‘They wuz a time when I sh’d
-have miscalled yew ’r anybody else ’at talked like that fur a darned
-hypocrite; but, thank God, I know better now. I’ve a-learnt how good a
-_man_ a Christian kin be.’
-
-He had hardly uttered the last words than with an awful howling sound
-the wind burst out upon them from the opposite direction, bringing with
-it such a cloud of spray that for a few minutes they fought gaspingly
-for breath, and groped blindly to bale the boat. They hardly knew while
-those few fateful minutes lasted whether they were sinking or not, but
-their faithful defender, in death returning good for evil, gradually
-took up his relative position to the wind as before, and although they
-could not see they could feel that they were again on the sheltered
-side of the great carcass. And, besides, it seemed to them as if it
-afforded more protection than it had done before. They could not think
-the wind had lessened--indeed, they believed it to blow harder than
-ever--but certainly their boat rode easier; and with a relief not to
-be expressed in words they saw that light was coming. Only one thing
-gave them additional uneasiness: the increasing glare beneath them.
-The lightning had almost entirely ceased, but, as if to compensate for
-that cessation of the unearthly fires above, the waters beneath them
-fairly glowed with green illumination in broad bands, which came and
-went incessantly. They all knew that this meant the gathering of the
-ravening deep-sea hosts, attracted thereto by the mighty banquet, and
-entirely oblivious of the war of the winds above.
-
-How, throughout those hours of terror, had it fared with the crew of
-the _Xiphias_ remaining on board that staunch old ship? Peacefully
-enough until the passing of the storm-centre. Then indeed they were
-in evil case. For _they_ had no charmed circle, beyond which the waves
-could not pass, to protect them. It was an omission only too frequently
-made, and almost unpardonable in these ships. Had they but hung canvas
-bags of oil from both bows and both quarters, through which the calming
-liquid might have drained, they would have been spared much of the
-labour, danger, and anxiety. But nothing of the kind had been arranged
-for, and consequently when that fearful vortex sea broke upon them,
-not only did their vessel’s decks fill with water in masses weighing
-hundreds of tons, and smashing everything that was smashable, but the
-working of the ship opened her seams so much that, in spite of the
-risk of being exposed in the waist, it was absolutely necessary for
-all hands to muster at the pumps. There, secured by ropes around their
-bodies, and occasionally entirely overwhelmed by the towering masses
-of water breaking on board, they toiled unmurmuringly. Again and again
-they were hurled like a scattered bundle of chips in all directions;
-the ropes with which they were secured threatened to cut them in
-halves, making deep discoloured grooves in their flesh, and floating
-wreckage beat and bruised them savagely in its dashing to and fro.
-But they still stuck to their posts unflinchingly, officers and men
-together putting forth all their powers, and hoping, ever hoping, even
-when all hope seemed dead.
-
-For the _Xiphias_ was, to all outward seeming, a wreck. Her bulwarks
-were gone fore and aft; the massive brick erection of the try-works
-had been swept so cleanly away that no trace of it remained; three
-of the fine boats were gone, and only the ringbolts with which they
-had been hoisted still dangled at the davit-heads. Several sails, in
-spite of the care exercised in their securing, had wriggled adrift,
-and the tigerish wind had snatched them from the yards as dry leaves
-are stripped from the trees in autumn. But it is in times like these
-that the Divine in man shines out, and Captain Hampden stood erect,
-not counting his burden of years, nor his present load of care for his
-crew, nor the heartache for the brave fellows long ago, he thought,
-gone to their well-earned rest in the silence of the sea. His eyes
-shone bright, his heart beat temperately, his voice rang steady, and
-when, the short calm gone, the hurricane burst again upon them from
-its opposite segment, all hands felt his noble influence, and braced
-themselves to endure to the end.
-
-Forty miles away Mr. Pease and his brave little crew still lived. Once
-settled into their old position to leeward of the dead whale they felt,
-such was the effect upon their minds of their recent experience, almost
-safe from the tempest above and the assault of the sea. They noticed,
-indeed, that the latter gradually became more furious, as if, enraged
-beyond measure by its previous restraint, it was now determined to make
-up for loss of opportunity, and destroy everything in its path alien to
-its domain. But even that carried some comfort, for while feeling well
-protected to leeward of the whale they cared little for waves however
-high: the very fact of those waves rearing their heads so savagely told
-them that the force of the hurricane must be waning; and, besides,
-the thinning of the cloud-pall above, the absence of the lightning,
-and an indescribable elevation of spirits, all had their part in the
-growth of hope. Only, there remained the increasing menace beneath.
-Occasionally a slight tap, smartly given, under the boat sent a shudder
-through them as it reminded them how slight was the barrier which
-intervened between them and the hungry jaws of that host of sharks.
-Men, however, who had ridden out such a day and night of terror were
-hardly likely now to become panic-stricken: they had come to regard
-themselves as under the special protection of God. So, terrible as
-their position undoubtedly was, it had not the same effect upon them as
-it would have had if it had come upon them suddenly.
-
-The hurricane passed away, going as usual through its various fining
-phases as better weather came. By noon the sky was clear, the sea
-deeply azure, the sun sending down new vigour into that hardly used
-group of men. A great exaltation of spirit possessed them all, for it
-is noticeable how, whenever the hurricane, cyclone, or typhoon has
-passed, everything in nature seems bound to rejoice, not because it
-has been allowed to live, but because of the cleansing, sweetening,
-freshening up of the world.
-
-The sharks swarmed in incredible numbers, the birds came in myriads,
-the dead mass to windward began to emit a charnel-house fœtor, but all
-the men were cheerful, and munched their half-biscuit determinedly, as
-if to show that they meant to live up to the hopefulness engendered
-by their atmospheric environment. Only the mate, in moments when
-not engaged in cheering up his crew, looked grave. He felt the
-responsibility for those trustful souls. And he could not help feeling
-how remote was the possibility of their ship (or, indeed, any ship)
-picking them up. He knew, too, how short a time would elapse before
-they would be compelled to abandon their shelter--how few the hours
-before it would become so foul that not a human being could live near
-it. But he said nothing of this. Instead, he maintained his part,
-with that strange mixture of gravity and cheerfulness puckering his
-brow. He often caught Rube’s earnest eyes fixed upon him as if in deep
-questioning, but he evaded them. ‘Time enough,’ he thought, ‘for the
-revelation that must surely come.’
-
-The night passed in perfect peace. The burning stars mirrored
-themselves in the glassy bosom of the deep, the new moon peeped shyly
-forth, a glittering silver sickle with a clearly seen though dull
-disc filling up the round. Gently as an infant on its mother’s breast
-the boat rose and fell to the softly undulating swell. All except Mr.
-Pease seemed asleep, but continually sleepers half-raised themselves
-with indistinct expressions of disgust as the foulness of the air half
-awakened them. ‘To-morrow,’ thought the mate, ‘we must cut adrift flesh
-and blood can stand this no longer.’ So with the dawn (and what a
-lovely dawn it was!--like the first in its brightness), the lines were
-cut, and with a few strokes of the oars the boat was propelled beyond
-that area of stench, the whale having now swollen to the semblance of a
-ship bottom up or some huge oblong bladder floating high upon the sea
-surface. When all hands had eaten the few crumbs of food remaining, and
-had moistened their aching throats with a little swallow of water, Mr.
-Pease said, ‘Boys, we’ve been through a lot, but perhaps we’ve got th’
-worst ahead. Never mind. We’re all men here, we know that, an’ whatever
-happens we’ll remain men. We’ll die if we must die, or live if we’re
-let live, like men made in the image of God.’
-
-And the six of them solemnly said, ‘Amen.’
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-A STRANGE RESCUE
-
-
-Reluctantly, but of necessity, we return to the _Grampus_ getting under
-weigh from her snug anchorage among the Cosmoledo reefs, and as smart
-as cleanliness and a complete equipment can make her, emerging once
-more upon her proper domain, the sea. Her ruler sat in awful state
-upon the top of the little house aft, Priscilla by his side in a deck
-chair made for her by the carpenter. She gazed with listless eyes upon
-the wonderful panorama spread out before her, not daring to appear
-interested lest her terrible husband should see in that some excuse for
-ordering her below again. Full well she knew that it was only because
-he feared that she would have another serious attack of illness that he
-allowed her this sweet privilege of breathing the fresh air of heaven;
-a privilege she had enjoyed all her stay ashore, and the deprivation
-of which while on board had certainly led up to her illness. But in
-pursuance of her resolve to endure unto the uttermost, she would have
-died rather than ask any consideration at his hands, while taking with
-calm thankfulness such crumbs as he chose to fling her contemptuously.
-
-The late invalids, still pale from their recent close struggle
-with death, were doing their best to ‘keep their ends up’ with the
-Portuguese portion of the crew, who--trained fine, hard as nails, and
-with that elevating sense of superiority which counts for so much in
-human conflict--were, while working harmoniously side by side with the
-white men, continually letting the latter see in what estimation they
-were held. And no sooner was the ship clear of the reefs, and watches
-set, than the white men were confronted with another degradation. All
-sailors know that there are certain berths in the worst of forecastles
-which are considered better than any others for who can explain what
-sea-reasons. These berths are usually occupied by the best men in the
-ship obviously, and especially on a whaling voyage. Now, when the
-watch that was released went below, its members, who were of the now
-despised race, were confronted with a state of things which had never
-before occurred to them. They were ordered to shift and give up their
-bunks to better men. For a few moments it looked as if there would be a
-great fight. All the fighting blood of the Anglo-Saxon surged up, but
-the odds were far too heavy: no anger could blind men to that, nor any
-courage persuade them to hurl themselves headlong upon the knives and
-pistols borne by the black Dagoes and ostentatiously displayed by them.
-Therefore the white men accepted the inevitable and shifted, amid the
-chuckling jeers of their triumphant watchmates, and another step in
-Captain Da Silva’s carefully calculated revenge had been attained.
-
-It may perhaps be thought from the way in which I have insisted upon
-this sad tyranny of black over white that I have a serious bias against
-the black man. That is not true. I love him generally as a man, and
-because I do I am not blind to his limitations, and I say emphatically
-that he is not so constituted that it is safe to trust him with the
-rule over white men. He may retaliate with the opposite proposition,
-which I do not care to defend for one moment. By all means let Black
-rule Black, but do not ever let Black rule White, or you will see
-Hayti reproduced wherever the shameful law is put in operation, and
-what it means let my friend Hesketh Pritchard tell you. Moreover,
-these rulers of the _Grampus_ were not negroes. I should no more wish
-to be ruled by negroes than by a laughing bevy of children out of the
-nursery, ready at any moment to become cruel apes tearing in pieces
-their toys. But I might be able to keep my masters amused, should such
-be my sad fate, and so escape disintegration. If, however, my negro
-masters had been bred in and in with Portuguese or Spaniards, I ought
-to seek death at once. When to the cold cruelty of the Latin is added
-the irresponsibility of the negro, the blend should never be allowed to
-exercise its power over men of Teutonic breed. Wherever it has done so,
-the records of such rule are not for general reading lest readers go
-mad with horror.
-
-Aft the conditions were altered also. In every whaleship there is a
-space (on the port side generally) abaft the main hatch, and of course
-below deck, where the harpooners and petty officers are berthed. The
-first, second, and third mates have their berths allotted to them in
-the main cabin, offshoots from it of a grim and fearful stuffiness,
-but possessing a peculiar desirability because of their contiguity to
-the dwelling-place of the lord of all. Now Captain Da Silva calmly
-intimated to his officers that he contemplated considerable changes in
-the housing accommodation aft. He told them that he had ordered the
-carpenter to knock up three extra berths in the ‘half-deck,’ as the
-harpooners’ berth is called, and as soon as that was done, why, they
-(the officers) would have to clear out, as he needed all the space aft
-for his own accommodation. The insult was gross, palpable. Indeed,
-it was hardly veiled, especially remembering the expression of face
-and the tone of voice accompanying it. But Mr. Court and his brother
-officer did not forget what they owed to themselves. They were under
-no misapprehension as to why this line of conduct was being pursued
-by the skipper, and although both of them felt that the time might
-arrive when further endurance would be impossible, even at the cost of
-death for rebellion, that time was not yet. So apparently not noticing
-the triumphant glitter in the skipper’s eyes, or the exultant ring
-in his voice, they acquiesced, serenely to all outward seeming, but
-with hearts on fire, and by so doing riveted another link in the heavy
-chains they were wearing. When does it become a sacred duty to rebel?
-Who shall say? But one thing seems clear: that there does come a time
-when, for the sake of others, it is imperative that one man (or it may
-be woman) stand up and face the tyrant. He may, probably will, die, but
-how can man die better? And no such death is in vain. However, this
-high strain may seem unsuited to the present sordid recital--only a
-little ship’s company being tyrannised over by one devil, and enduring
-doggedly all that he chooses to load them with.
-
-Once clear of the islands the ship’s course was made N.E., and under
-easy sail the _Grampus_ bore away across the smiling Indian Ocean.
-All went well. Apparently it could not do otherwise where Captain Da
-Silva was. He never seemed to make a mistake. And when he suddenly
-came on deck one beautiful afternoon and interrupted the busy tide of
-work that never slacked off night or day by calling all hands to make
-all possible sail, and altered the ship’s course to due east, no one
-wondered. They obeyed briskly enough to a casual observer, but in the
-heart of every white man what weariness of life! For two whole days the
-_Grampus_ fled to the east as fast as her braced-up condition would
-allow, the look-outs never once relaxing their careful watch around.
-No one discussed the movement--the time for that had gone. Every white
-man in the foc’s’le knew that should he speak one word capable of
-being construed into something the skipper might be interested in, it
-would, before many minutes had elapsed, be repeated with such fantastic
-additions as the carrier of it was capable of making, into the
-Captain’s greedy ear, with results the most unpleasant to the original
-utterer of the remark.
-
-As suddenly as the course had been altered and all sails set so was
-another change made. Everything was furled but the fore and main lower
-topsails, the ship was brought to the wind on the starboard tack, and
-lay lazily wallowing in the gentle swell coming up from the south-east.
-And then, to the surprise of no one on board (for by this time all
-hands, including his own particular friends, if friends they could be
-called, believed him to be in league with the devil), there appeared as
-if from the bosom of the deep an enormous multitude of small whales.
-Like sperm-whales arrested in their growth, and only about twice the
-size of ‘black-fish.’ That is to say, each of them would not be more
-than three to five tons in weight. It was early morning when they
-were sighted, and immediately the whole ship was the scene of most
-violent activity. All sorts of alterations were made, notably the
-passing out of the boats of the big line-tubs, and only leaving the
-small hundred-fathom ones behind. Extra harpoons, too, were placed in
-each boat, and before they left the ship all hands were called aft and
-thus harangued by the skipper: ‘Looky here,’ said he, ‘these ain’t
-sperm-whales, an’ I doan’ want no foolin’ with ’em. Get fast t’ one or
-two, an’ then as th’ others come roun’ lance ’em, an’ leave ’em. T’
-the fust man ’at kills over ten, I’ll give fifty dollars in gold. Naow
-mind, I’m tellin’ ye. Don’t waste line ’n’ irons on these fish: ef y’
-du thar’ll be big trouble with me ’fore the day’s over.’ There was no
-response but a sort of guttural murmur, succeeded by the quick splashes
-as the boats took the water and sped away under the utmost pressure of
-the oars to where the sea was all a foam by reason of the gambollings
-of that great and joyous company of ‘kogia.’
-
-Just as the skipper had forecasted, no sooner had a boat got fast to
-one of these quaint, short-headed creatures than she became the centre
-of a curious crowd of his unfortunate fellows, apparently bent upon
-sharing his fate, and for that purpose thrusting one another aside in
-their efforts to get as near as possible to the boat. Every man was
-armed with a lance, and directed to use it with all his might upon
-the whale nearest him. What an awful scene of slaying ensued, to be
-sure! The sea became literally encumbered with dead. The men who had
-felt that life was not worth living took new hold upon life in their
-fierce desire of killing, and forgot for the time all their woes. It
-seemed as if this great slaughter must be prolonged indefinitely, but
-suddenly, like a trumpet blast, the voice of the skipper rang out:
-‘’Vast killin’! All but th’ mate and second mate’s boats, pull for th’
-ship’s quick ’s th’ devil ’ll let ye. Hurry, naow.’ And they did hurry.
-The ship, having been kept close at hand, required no great amount of
-manipulation to bring her into the midst of the stricken field, and
-presently the amazing sight was to be seen of the great carcasses one
-after another, as she (the ship) came alongside them, rising into the
-air, a chain sling having been whipped round their tails and a tackle
-hooked to it by means of which the whole body was hoisted on deck. By
-five in the afternoon thirty of those huge masses encumbered the deck
-of the _Grampus_, and she presented an even more gruesome sight than
-she did when her decks were full of the spoils of the last great catch
-of sperm-whales.
-
-Now the skipper was in his element. No anxiety about the overside
-business, everything on deck and snug, although the ship did tumble
-about most dangerously from the great top weight. All hands were armed
-with spades, and driven like slaves to use them. But N.B.: no two white
-men were allowed to work together, lest they might, in desperation,
-consider the time opportune for making a dash for freedom. No; Captain
-Da Silva saw to that. He had such a head for detail! All that night and
-all the next day, without a minute for rest, except just sufficient to
-swallow the indispensable food, the fuel to keep these human engines
-performing their allotted motions, the men laboured in silence for
-the most part, save when the stern commands of the skipper broke the
-stillness. Doggedly, desperately all hands toiled on, every plunge of
-a great carcass denuded of spoil over the starboard covering-board
-punctuating, as it were, the progress being made. And if the decks had
-been foul before when the last great catch of sperm-whales was made, it
-was trebly so now. Then, there was little besides the all-prevailing
-grease, except an occasional block of flesh still left adhering to the
-blubber: now, all the nameless foulnesses inseparable from cutting up
-such huge bodies in tropical heat on deck were present in full volume,
-and---- But this is not a subject to be pursued.
-
-Wonderful to relate, the health of the recent invalids held out against
-this tremendous strain upon it, and as soon as the last carcass plunged
-overboard blubber watches were set, and it looked as though relief
-had come. But not yet. Some attempt must be made to remove a portion
-at least of the accumulated filth from the deck, and so for nearly
-half of their first watch below the almost fainting men toiled with
-water-buckets and brooms to that end. And as they did so they noticed,
-in half-dazed, unappreciative fashion, how frequently the skipper
-mounted his little deck aft and gazed earnestly at the lee quadrant of
-the horizon. This happened so often that at last long dormant curiosity
-was aroused also, and they looked earnestly in that direction too.
-‘Thank God,’ all thought, ‘it isn’t whales he’s looking at.’ No, it
-was not: it was an awful-looking Himalaya of blackest cloud, violet
-edged, that reared its mighty head persistently in that quarter, but
-did not seem to rise any higher than half-way to the zenith. No one on
-board knew with what consummate skill and attention, in spite of the
-many matters claiming his oversight, this wonderful man was manœuvring
-his ship out of the path of what he knew to be a devastating cyclone.
-He needed no sympathy, no help in his calculations; in fact, he took a
-secret but colossal pride in standing alone. And reckoning to a nicety,
-but with a dangerously narrow margin, he kept his crew going to clear
-away their last great catch, at the same time making all preparations
-to meet what he knew would soon be there--the frightful swell raised by
-the hurricane and extending for thousands of miles on either side of
-its track.
-
-When it came all was ready for it. Double lashings on everything, the
-tiers of casks below all carefully chocked and tom’d off to beams
-above, preventer backstays on masts, &c. And as the great green hills
-of water reaching from horizon to horizon came sweeping onward, tossing
-the noble ship from summit to valley and back again as if she were just
-a ball in the hands of gleeful children, the crew cast wistful glances
-at their saturnine tyrant, wondering, ‘How did he know this was coming?
-What kinder man _is_ he, anyhow?’ Well, had the answer been forthcoming
-it would have been just this: That Captain Da Silva was one of those
-men of native genius who first of all absorb knowledge as a sponge does
-water, whose capacity for courage is as great as their capacity for
-mercy or consideration is small, whose frames are more like automata
-constructed of steel wire and rubber than sinews and flesh, and who,
-given the opportunity, could juggle the globe in their hands as a
-conjurer does his properties, and would do so, but for the wisdom of
-God, who has ordained that such men shall never go too far. If this
-sounds like fantastic eulogy as applied to the obscure master of a
-whaleship, I do not feel at all inclined to argue the point: it is for
-each one to study out for him or herself and see whether the theory be
-reasonable or no.
-
-The decks were quite clear, three-fourths of the blubber had been
-boiled out and the resultant oil run below, when a very strange thing
-happened. The weather was beautifully fine, the air serene, and a
-little breeze wafted the _Grampus_ at a gentle rate over the sunlit
-sea. Captain Da Silva, fully contented with himself, was lolling in
-his wife’s chair abaft the wheel smoking a peculiarly rank, oily, and
-foul-smelling cigar, one of a large quantity which, just suiting his
-taste, he had bought at Brava. I think it may safely be said that
-he was just then in the full enjoyment of _dolce far niente_, that
-peculiarly delightful frame of mind and body conjoined of which ‘sweet
-doing nothing’ seems so poor a description--when into the midst of it
-came Priscilla. Lest it should be thought that I have neglected her of
-late, I feel bound to say that she had been leading a sort of comatose
-existence, in this busy little cosmos but not of it, alive but hardly
-conscious of her surroundings. What could I have said of her but that
-she awoke, ate a little, lived alone through the day, and slept again?
-If perfect life be, as Herbert Spencer says, perfect correspondence
-with a perfect environment, then was Priscilla only just dwelling on
-the fringes of life, and might truly be said to be nine-tenths dead.
-Her placid demeanour and speechless endurance of all things as they
-came had become so regular an experience with her husband that it
-was with something very like alarm that he saw her standing before
-him on deck and heard her sweet, low voice saying distinctly, ‘May I
-speak to you, Ramon?’ With a gasp of surprise he rose to his feet and,
-stepping to the wheel, said to the shrinking helmsman: ‘Git t’ ’ell
-forrard outa this,’ and the man was gone. Then, turning his lowering
-eye upon Priscilla, yet not without a certain noticeable twitching of
-his facial muscles, he muttered, ‘Wall, what is it naow? Spit it eout.’
-She answered timidly, but as if she must speak: ‘Ramon, please forgive
-me, but I know there’s a boat with some dying men in it over there.’
-And she pointed to the north. ‘It’s a whaleboat, and there’s six men,
-all alive, but going fast. Will you try and save them?’ He burst into a
-very storm of curses upon her for daring to interfere with the working
-of his ship and for her unmentionable folly in supposing that he, of
-all men in the world, would be likely to take any notice of such a
-baby-tale as that. But even as he raved and hissed his foul language
-at his wife, she could see that in his fierce eyes there was a latent
-look of awe--that he was only trying by noise and bluster to persuade
-himself that he was asserting his power in the surest way. Priscilla
-appeared to be entirely deaf to his awful words. And when, breathless,
-he paused, she resumed quietly, ‘You will find the boat before evening
-if you alter the course now, but I am afraid some of the men are
-already dying.’ And with that she turned and went away, leaving her
-husband like a man just about to have an epileptic fit. However, he
-managed to restrain himself, and presently his voice was heard roaring
-for the man whom he had sent from the wheel. Having given up the wheel,
-he took a few short, undecided turns about the quarter-deck, and then,
-like one acting upon some entirely irresistible impulse, he growled to
-the helmsman, ‘Keep her away!’ ‘Keep her away, sir,’ replied the man,
-immediately putting the helm up. As she swung off the wind the skipper
-shouted, ‘Square the mainyard!’ and as the watch flew to the braces and
-trimmed sail he steadied the course at north, which brought the wind a
-little on the starboard quarter and made the speed about four knots.
-
-This being done he went below as if, disgusted beyond measure at
-having to do such a thing, he must needs use more opprobrious language
-to his wife for thus in some mysterious way imposing her will upon
-his. But when he saw her sitting in their little cabin looking with
-preternaturally bright eyes into vacancy as if she were seeing
-something with other than mortal vision, he could say nothing to her
-at all, but with a muttered curse upon himself for this unheard-of
-folly he fled on deck, not daring to look behind him. As if he must
-do something, he slung his binoculars about his neck and mounted to
-the fore crow’s-nest, from which the occupant had to depart suddenly
-upon the skipper’s appearance. He searched the horizon with most
-jealous care, but nothing could be seen, nothing but sea and sky and
-an occasional bird. So after half an hour up there he descended again
-and solaced his excited feelings by harrying the men, who, as usual,
-were kept at work upon perfectly needless jobs as if their very lives
-depended upon getting the work done in record time. And so congenial
-did he find this occupation that he had almost forgotten why, contrary
-to his own plans, he was running his ship almost dead before the wind
-up the middle of the Indian Ocean instead of getting away across to
-the Straits of Sunda as he had intended, when ‘What’s that?’ shouted
-the mate. ‘Somethin’ right ahead, sir; looks like dead whale ’r a boat
-’r a big log.’ Ah! Trembling in every limb, Captain Da Silva snatched
-his glasses and sprang aloft. Panting with his speed he reached the
-crow’s-nest. He did not need to ask where the object was. It stood up
-with remarkable distinctness against that wide, clear blue, a little
-ungainly black patch. He focussed his glasses upon it and stared
-through the double tubes so earnestly that his eyeballs burnt in their
-sockets. A cold shudder, in that tropical day, possessed him, ran
-through him, and made the hair of his flesh stand up. It was a boat and
-nothing else. What manner of woman could his wife be, and was it safe
-for him to treat her as he had been doing? Superstitious fears seized
-upon him, for ever it will be found that gross cruelty and superstition
-go hand in hand, and at that moment he registered a mental vow that in
-future there should be a great change in his treatment of Priscilla.
-Indeed, he blamed himself bitterly for having allowed himself to behave
-to her as he had done. But he took refuge in the mental coward’s lying
-plea by muttering, ‘How was I to know?’
-
-Go down from aloft he dared not. Slow, exasperatingly slow, as his
-ship’s progress was, he felt that he must remain at his lofty perch
-until the last moment, when he would go himself and see what this
-strange business meant. It was a weary business, for under such
-circumstances a ship’s progress seems to be so deliberate, one’s
-impatience is so futile and yet so impossible to avoid showing, that
-it tries men more than any words can say. It was nearly sunset when at
-last the waif was near enough for a boat to be lowered for the purpose
-of bringing her alongside. Long before that time arrived Captain Da
-Silva had devoured every detail of her--had seen that to all appearance
-the six men in her were dead, that she was a whaleboat, but, of course,
-could not read her name, since it was not the practice for whaleboats
-to carry the name of their ship painted on them, as is done in the
-merchant service. The same haughty disregard of any other person’s
-curiosity is usually shown in the Navy, where scarcely any of the
-smaller boats give the ship’s name--you can read it on the men’s caps
-if you want to know it.
-
-Leaping into the boat he had ordered to be lowered, the skipper gave
-the order to ‘give way’ in such a tone that the men fairly lifted the
-boat through the water. None of them dared to steal a glance at him;
-if they had they would have marvelled. He was in a piteous state of
-nervous excitement. He felt as if his wife’s eyes were penetrating
-through the massive sides of the ship, that she was cognisant of his
-very thoughts; and the idea made great beads of cold sweat stand out
-upon his swarthy skin. He fought with his fears as a man fights with
-death, now devising strange punishments for Priscilla for having thus
-obtained a strange power of frightening him, and now vowing to himself
-that he would devote the rest of his time with her to making amends for
-his previous treatment of her. Not that he was conscious of having done
-anything he should not do--men of that class seldom are--but because
-she did not seem to be happy under the discipline which he felt was his
-prerogative to mete out to all under his command. And then they reached
-the boat.
-
-Are those bundles of rags and bones men? By night the dews and by day
-the pitiless sun have alternately soaked and scorched them. They have
-endured such agonies as men do not care to think of. The boat herself
-is so bleached with sun and dew and wind that it seems wonderful she
-still holds together. And there is a faint smell as of death. Round to
-windward, quick. Look closely. Is there any life at all? Yes, there is
-a slight movement. A bight of tow-line is flung on board and secured
-to the bow thwart, a curt order is given, and the waif is being towed
-to the ship. Arriving alongside, she is hoisted level with the rail
-so that the hapless ones may be lifted out, as they are, so gently,
-so tenderly, by those rude, much-persecuted men, while the skipper
-looks on loweringly. One is dead. He is a little Italian apparently so
-reduced by his sufferings that he looks more like an Egyptian mummy
-uncased than anything else. But in all the rest there is some spark of
-life, notably in one big-framed--alas, every bone is awfully visible,
-and his eyes are away in the back of his head somewhere at the bottom
-of two long tunnels--fair-haired man, whose broken lips part and whose
-blackened tongue tries pitifully to frame a word.
-
-The skipper goes away and leaves willing, eager hands to attend
-mercifully upon these castaways. He has said no word forbidding
-anything to be done, and so the group around the bodies give such aid
-as they know how, while the rest of the crew trim yards again for
-Anjer. And by the time she is settled upon her old course and the
-Captain has carelessly strolled forward again, he is humbly informed
-that five of the men he has rescued are not only still alive, but
-likely to go on living.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-THE MEETING
-
-
-Now, owing to the way in which Priscilla kept her cabin when not
-absolutely driven on deck by the foulness of the air below, she was,
-strange as it must appear, quite ignorant of what was going on above
-her. Had the steward not been exceedingly busy upon some domestic task,
-he would, poor little man, have gladly carried her the news. But so it
-was, the boat’s crew had been rescued, the boat hoisted inboard, and
-things had all resumed their normal course without her being any the
-wiser. And yet somehow she felt a lightening of the heart. She felt
-sure, in spite of the coarse and brutal way in which her husband had
-received her vision, that he had done, or would do, what she had asked
-him--she had no anxiety upon that head at all. But then she was never
-anxious now. She had cultivated unintentionally the serene detachment
-of mind of those Indian devotees who, by dint of long meditation and
-abstinence from all but the barest necessities in the way of food and
-sleep, have attained unto a condition of mind that is favourable to
-the detachment of body from soul without the catastrophe of death. Of
-its psychology I know nothing, but I do feel that, given sufficient
-will power, the human brain may be capable of some wonderful power of
-sending thought waves out into the unseen. It does not matter, anyhow,
-since I only wish to record the trance condition in which Priscilla
-seemed now to spend most of her time.
-
-But in some mysterious way she was subconsciously easier in her mind,
-and that although she knew absolutely nothing about what was going on.
-Also her husband seemed, for some reason or another, to be anxious
-that she should not know. Perhaps he was ashamed, or whatever kindred
-feeling to shame he might be capable of, to let her know that he had,
-after all, obeyed her words and found that she had been absolutely
-correct. Truth to tell, he was immensely impressed, and something very
-like fear of his wife was slowly getting the mastery over him. Thus
-days went by as the _Grampus_ drew steadily towards the great East
-Indian Archipelago, and the rescued ones grew steadily well by dint of
-careful letting alone and the help of their previous clean lives. Then
-there came a day when Captain Da Silva took it upon him to have the
-apparent head man of the boat’s crew he had saved brought aft to him,
-and the following colloquy ensued. (It must be borne in mind that the
-rescued men’s voices had only just returned to them.)
-
-The Captain: ‘Wall, wut ship d’ ye b’long to?’ The Officer: ‘_Xiphias_,
-sir, of New Bedford.’ A grunt from the skipper and a short interval
-of silence. Then the skipper spoke again, after carefully rolling his
-cigar between his lips, as if to extract the last grain of nicotine
-out of it. ‘’N’ wut wuz ye doin’ t’ git lost? Sounds funny, grown
-men like you air gittin’ lost.’ The scorn and contempt and utter
-brutality of his manner passed all description. ‘Wall, sir,’ replied
-the mate faintly, ‘the circumstances wuz peculiar. We left the ship
-in chase of a whale just before a hurricane kem on, an’ I hung on t’
-the whale mebbe a bit too long, so ’t we got outer sight o’ the ship.
-’N’ then we’d all we knew t’ keep in shelter ov th’ carcass till thet
-awful weather wuz over. ’N’ by thet time th’ whale wuz so blown up we
-couldn’t stand his stink any longer, an’ we cut away from him an’ put
-fur th’ Seychelles as near as I could judge. But there wuz only th’
-lantern keg of bread an’ th’ ushal water, an’ thet’s all we’ve a-had
-fur twelve days. If th’ boys hadn’t been th’ very best we sh’d all
-a-ben mad long ago.’ Another spell of silence, broken at last by the
-skipper saying: ‘S’pose you don’ reckon on ever seeing yewr ship agen,
-hey? Le’s see, old man Hampden got her, er had her, I think. Ef so,
-they ain’t ’nough of her left by this time t’ repair a whaleboat with.
-He was a soft-hearted old greenie, anyhow, kinder pious, I seem to
-remember, ’n’ didn’t know his nose fr’m the jibboom end.’ ‘Excuse me,
-sir,’ said the mate suddenly, with some energy, ’thet kain’t be eour
-Capt’n Hampden. I ben fishin’ fur two-an’-twenty year, and he wuz the
-smartest skipper at anything a skipper ought to do ’at ever I gammed.’
-‘Oh, shet yer big mouth, yew wouldn’t know a smart man w’en yew see
-him. It’s the same man right enough. I knew him very well, an’ wouldn’t
-ha’ carried him fur ballast in my ship. But I ain’t got no time t’ be
-yarnin’ with yew, ner inclination either if yer come to thet. I’m jest
-figgerin’ eout wut t’ dew with ye. I want a few han’s, an’ although
-yew ain’t th’ kind I’d have if I c’d choose, y’r better than none, I
-s’pose, an’ so I’ll ship th’ five of yew ’n’ give ye th’ 250th lay,
-same’s th’ rest of th’ men ’r gettin’.’ ‘But, Captain,’ replied the now
-thoroughly alarmed man, ‘I wuz mate of the _Xiphias_--I ben mate fur
-th’ las’ ten years, ’n’ yew kain’t mean t’ take such a slice of my life
-as to ship me here fur a three years’ cruise on a seaman’s lay. In th’
-name ov common humanity, sir, yew kain’t mean it.’ And the big drops of
-sweat started out of the poor fellow’s face. ‘Kain’t I!’ sneered the
-skipper. ‘Jest yew say yew don’ know, and yew’ll be more ’n half right.
-I k’n an’ dew mean just that thing. Yew’ll take my offer, yew an’ the
-rest ov th’ great babies ’at come with ye, ’r if ye don’t yew’ll wish
-yew’d been left to rot in thet boat. ’N’ mine yew, not a word outa yewr
-heads, ’r ye’ll fine me t’ deal with, ’n I’ll try an’ teach ye wut a
-smart cap’n is.’
-
-Poor Mr. Pease! No braver man ever stepped, but he was weak and
-trembling from exhaustion. A strong desire to live had returned to
-him, and, moreover, he was overborne by the fierceness of the terrible
-man with whom he was confronted, and he dimly remembered some of the
-terrible stories current about him--of the dark deeds done by him in
-the secret places of the sea, and up till now with impunity, because of
-his phenomenal success as a whale-fisher. When will people in business
-learn that it is a crime against man and God to condone, yes, connive
-at abominable wickedness in those they have set over their employees,
-because, forsooth, they are ‘smart men’? When will people learn to
-brand a man as a demon, whatever his place in society or the Church or
-in business, who, in his villainous methods of getting rich, brings woe
-and death unto thousands of homes? When will ministers of the Gospel
-dare to say to such men bringing their vilely acquired wealth and
-pouring it into the coffers of the Church, ‘Thy money perish with thee!’
-
-So with this terror upon him, Mr. Pease signed the articles, and his
-crew followed suit, becoming by that act the slaves of the skipper
-for the next three years unless some heaven-sent happening should
-release them. And immediately, though they were yet so exhausted,
-they were set to such work as they could do--making sinnet, scraping,
-and mat-weaving. Well was it for them that no whales were sighted, or
-assuredly they would have been called upon to take their places in the
-various boats, under which severe treatment they would probably have
-died.
-
-It may perhaps be thought strange that as yet no allusion has been
-made to the strange fact of Reuben and Priscilla being on board the
-same ship at last. But really, as far as these two principal actors
-in our story are concerned, it did not seem possible that anything
-should come of it, the circumstances being so peculiar. As repeatedly
-observed, Priscilla came on deck but little, for she could not bear
-the jealous watchfulness with which her husband followed her every
-movement. And in the fo’c’sle, or, indeed, out of it, such was the
-terror under which all hands lived, not merely of the skipper, but of
-his Portuguese allies, that any conversation concerning the skipper was
-tacitly banned. No word ever passed between the white men about him or
-his affairs. The Portuguese may have discussed him freely, but as it
-was in their own tongue, no one but themselves was any the wiser. Thus
-it came to pass that Reuben was on board the ship a month before he so
-much as knew that the Captain had his wife with him, which is all the
-more noteworthy from the fact that in small vessels like the _Grampus_
-it is the rule that the Captain cannot sneeze in the solitude of his
-state-room without it being known and commented upon all over the
-ship in an hour. Poor fellows, they have so little to talk about. But
-whalers generally needed to be exempt from this law. Their discipline
-was much too strict for it to run even in the best of them, while in
-the _Grampus_, as we have seen, it was in the highest degree dangerous
-to mention the Captain’s name at all.
-
-The ship had passed through the Straits of Sunda into the Java Sea,
-and was one night, under the skilful pilotage of the skipper, working
-her darkling way westward along the south coast of Borneo. There was
-but little wind, except occasionally when a passing squall gave a
-heavier puff than usual, causing the staunch and well-balanced ship to
-heel like a yacht. Terrific peals of thunder and blazing flashes of
-lightning followed one another in quick succession, for the heat of
-the day was being healthfully dispersed over the sea from the land,
-although in a somewhat terrifying manner. Rube was at the wheel,
-his great figure erect and head slightly turned aside to listen for
-the skipper’s slightest word, while keeping one eye fixed upon the
-faithful little face of the compass suspended inside the skylight.
-Suddenly there was an awful crash of thunder as if a Himalayan Range
-were tumbling to pieces, a short breathless hush, and with a hiss as
-of escaping steam, sky and sea were flooded with violet flame. As Rube
-raised his arm instinctively to shield his face he saw by that brief
-blaze a woman facing him within a few feet. For that vivid instant
-the two faces were revealed, then utter blackness succeeded. Through
-Priscilla rushed a spasm of fear. Who was this huge bearded stranger,
-and whence had he come? More, why did the sight of him put her poor
-deadened mind into such a ferment as the optic nerves experience when
-after long darkness the eyes are suddenly exposed to the glare of day?
-As she groped her way below these things flitted across her brain, but
-never for one moment did she imagine why or how, and soon, very soon,
-she resumed her listless introspective attitude again. She had only
-crept up with some message to her husband of trivial import, and soon
-the whole incident receded to the background of her mind.
-
-As for Reuben, for one moment he thought he had been struck by
-lightning, and with the stroke had come a vision of an angel, a
-sorrowful angel outlined in living light. But the shock, great though
-it was, did not suffice to unlock that closed door of memory, only to
-let a few broken gleams of illumination through, tantalising, almost
-maddening in their incompleteness. He soon recovered, and when relieved
-from the wheel at eight bells, sought one of the American portion of
-the old crew and whispered, ‘Is they a woman aboard this ship?’ ‘Hush,
-for Heaven’s sake. If the skipper gits to know you’ve asked such a
-question, or I’ve answered it, he’ll trice us up an’ flog us, sure’s
-death. An’ ye kain’t breathe here without somebody listening. Yes.’
-‘Thanks,’ replied Rube; and straightway going to his bunk he lifted up
-his heart in fervent though silent prayer for the owner of that sweet
-pale face. In doing this he but obeyed an irresistible impulse, since
-he knew not at all of Priscilla’s suffering, and, indeed, even before
-the accident which shut him off from the past, had always thought of
-her as being full of happiness with her husband. Now, however, knowing
-no more of who Priscilla was than of a person he had never seen or
-heard of, he was full of a mysterious compassion for her, and felt that
-he would gladly have laid down his life to serve her.
-
-The crew of the _Grampus_ never ate any idle bread, but now they were
-indeed having a time of travail. For Captain Da Silva was making
-a passage to the Japan grounds, being mightily wroth because of
-the ill-success which had attended him lately. The wonderful good
-fortune enjoyed by him previously had been relegated to the limbo of
-forgotten things. He felt no joy in it now, looked upon it as only
-a bare reward for his phenomenal ability and smartness, of which no
-man was more fully conscious than himself. So he harassed his crew by
-night and by day, making, trimming, furling, sail; so that no breath
-of wind should be wasted, and when, as occasionally happened, a dead
-calm befell, getting all the boats out and setting their crews to tow
-the vessel along with their oars. It was a fearful ordeal in that
-climate, and some of the crew were only kept at it by sheer dread of
-the skipper. They feared him more than sunstroke or death by sheer
-exhaustion. It was this state of things which brought about a collision
-between him and Reuben. The latter stalwart recruit being always so
-willing and apparently eager to work, had hitherto escaped even the
-usual opprobrious epithets with which most of the crew, except the
-Portuguese, were favoured. But because no occasion of fault could be
-found in him he was jealously watched by the skipper’s cronies, and, as
-it was bound to do sooner or later, the longed-for opportunity came.
-The boats had just returned to the ship, after a four hours’ tow in
-the afternoon sun, because a little breeze had sprung up and relieved
-them. The boat in which Reuben pulled midship oar had just come
-alongside, and Mr. Pease, who had been pulling tub-oar (next to Rube)
-had fainted, overcome by heat and exhaustion. Unfortunately, just then
-the skipper looked over the side, and taking in the position of things
-with one glance of his flashing eyes, shouted with an awful Portuguese
-oath, ‘Start that lazy Yankee brute there, Pedro! Hit him, hit him
-with anything!’ Pedro, not at all unwillingly, seized a bight of the
-towline, and was just about to deal the unconscious man a tremendous
-blow, when Rube, calmly turning round, seized the descending arm, and
-with his other hand quietly wrenched the rope from the harpooner’s
-fingers. The maddened Portuguese snatched his knife from his belt at
-the moment of his release, and with his skipper’s yell of ‘Kill him,
-kill him!’ piercing his ears, made one frantic stab at Rube. But as
-calmly as he had caught the rope-wielding wrist, so now he caught the
-murderous one, and with a quick twist made Pedro drop his knife into
-the sea. A yell of pain escaped the Portuguese as his wrist cracked,
-and Rube, releasing him, said quietly, ‘Sorry t’ hurt ye, shipmate,
-but ye mustn’t kill, y’ know.’ By this time the skipper had recovered
-from the speechlessness of rage into which he had been thrown by Rube’s
-action, and shouted, ‘On deck with ye, on deck!’ All obeyed but the
-man who had fainted: he was beyond obedience. As Rube stepped over the
-rail the skipper met him with a blow of a heavy bludgeon of oak that
-might have felled an ox. Right across the head and face it came, and
-the splendid fellow dropped senseless and bleeding at his master’s
-feet. Stooping, the latter dragged the unconscious body to the middle
-of the deck, and sang out, ‘Up waist boat.’ But the white men stood
-irresolute for one moment as if inclined to resent the vileness of this
-last assault. That moment was fatal. For without a sign made every
-Portuguese in the ship had ranged himself by the skipper, and in their
-hands gleamed revolver barrels. Howling out the order again, the unled
-whites seized the falls and ran the boat up on to her cranes. One of
-the Portuguese asked if the man was to be lifted out of the boat, but
-the skipper turned upon him with an oath so fierce that he shrank back,
-regretting that he had spoken.
-
-No one dared suggest aid to Rube, and so, with the knowledge that again
-he had fully asserted his superiority over the white man, Captain Da
-Silva went quite happy to his supper. And sitting there with his wife,
-he could not forbear saying exultantly: ‘Nice crowd o’ hogs these
-countrymen o’ yours are. I d’ ’no’ wut I wuz fool ’nough t’ take any
-of ’em aboard here for at all. Some of ’em kem aboard through yew,
-anyhow--one ’specially I remember just now. I’m goin’ t’ give myself
-th’ pleasure of floggin’ him to-morrow, if he ain’t dead, and yew shall
-be a witness to see it’s all done legally, y’ know.’ And he winked
-hideously at her. She, poor thing, sat as usual silent and white,
-hardly realising the horror of the whole thing. And her misery of mind
-and body was only slightly increased when, as a sort of praise-meeting
-to whatever devil they felt protected by, the skipper invited the
-Portuguese harpooners below to a drinking bout, first locking
-Priscilla into her room. The baffled Pedro was there with his arm in
-a sling, looking a veritable fiend. ‘Never mind,’ said the skipper in
-Portuguese, ‘yew shall have the flogging of that big Yankee beast if
-he lives. What do you think of that?’ Pedro muttered some inarticulate
-profanity and took another drink. He did not mind much what was done as
-long as he ‘got even,’ as he termed it. And now it is time to draw a
-veil over that bestial scene, worthy of the worst days of the pirates,
-and especially those Portuguese pirates who sailed the China Seas
-commanding gangs composed of all the scum of the Far East and outdoing
-them all in cruelty.
-
-On deck a stealthy figure had crept forward to where Rube lay, with a
-mat to put under his head and a little water to moisten his parched
-lips. It was the poor darky steward, who had been shut out of the
-cabin while the drinking was going on, and who thus, for pity’s sake,
-risked undergoing the same treatment. Not that it would have been much
-novelty, for there was scarcely an inch of the poor wretch’s body which
-had not its scar. And at last men get used to such treatment (some men,
-that is) and take it as a matter of course. It is pleasant to record
-that this poor samaritan was enabled to carry out his beneficent little
-ministration unseen, save by Mr. Court, who still kept his watch,
-although in a dogged sullen way that was intensely painful to see, but
-which, strange to say, did not seem to detract from his efficiency.
-But, as he said to himself very often in the solitudes wherein his
-soul roamed during the night watches, was there ever an officer so
-treated? He did not know, from his favourable position heretofore in
-American ships, that many hundred British mercantile officers have
-had to endure treatment even worse than his, because they have been,
-as well as kept at arm’s length by the skipper and made to feel that
-they were of less account than anybody on board, openly and constantly
-reviled before all the crew, and then expected to maintain discipline.
-Happily, with the morning came, instead of the shameful exhibition
-purposed by the skipper, a diversion welcomed by all hands, except
-Rube, who, but for his stertorous breathing, appeared to be dead. It
-was the raising of a ‘pod’ of cow whales at daylight, with a brisk
-breeze and everything in favour of a splendid day’s hunting. Rube was
-dragged aft out of the way. Pedro, whose wrist was so badly strained
-that he could not lift a harpoon with it, grumblingly took up his
-station aloft for signalling purposes, and in ten minutes from the time
-of sighting the whales five boats were away, the skipper leading as
-usual. This, however, was to be an exception to the usual celerity of
-capture shown by the _Grampus’s_ crew. In the first place, the whales
-were going so fast that it seemed for a long while as if the chase
-must be fruitless; and then, when at last the boats did rush in among
-them, their movements were so marvellously agile that the danger was
-very great. The skipper as usual seemed ubiquitous, compelling the
-admiration of all by the way he manipulated his boat. He had already
-killed his whale when he saw that Mr. Court was exceedingly hampered
-by the movements of a loose cow, which behaved as if she understood
-exactly how best to frustrate all the deadly intentions of the enemy of
-her companion. Without a moment’s hesitation the skipper cut loose from
-his whale, shouted to his men, and tore off to help the mate, leaping
-like a flying fish from one boat to the other as they flew swiftly in
-opposite directions. Snatching the lance from the hand of the amazed
-officer, he had just dealt a tremendous blow at the fast whale with it,
-when, as the boat lay off, the loose whale rose spectrally between,
-on her back, with her jaws agape. Swiftly turning, those great jaws
-closed, catching the skipper’s arm, with which he was poising his newly
-straightened lance again, and dragging him headlong out of the boat.
-Paralysed with horror, the mate stood for a moment, then stooped and
-caught the skipper as he came bounding to the surface almost at the
-spot where he went overboard. But in doing so Mr. Court overbalanced
-himself, and he and the skipper, interlocked in each other’s arms,
-went down again. The harpooner, a wonderfully smart black Portuguese,
-immediately cut the line, allowing the whale to run, and after a minute
-or two’s manœuvring, succeeded in bringing the mate and skipper to the
-surface and into the boat, the latter almost dead.
-
-[Illustration: THE LOOSE WHALE ROSE SPECTRALLY BETWEEN, ON HER BACK,
-WITH HER JAWS AGAPE.
-
-_P. 295._]
-
-The best haste possible was made to the ship, and the skipper was
-carefully lifted on board, laid on the deck aft, and his clothes cut
-off as the only way of uncovering his wounded arm and side. All the
-time the examination took place he was unconscious, so the mate was
-able to dress the extensive lacerations, set two broken ribs and the
-mangled arm, and make him fairly comfortable before he came to. Then
-with very great care he was lowered through the cabin skylight and laid
-upon the settee in his berth. Here he was left to the care of his wife,
-while the mate returned to his arduous duties on deck. It is pleasant
-to record that his first care was to see some adequate attention given
-to the case of Rube, who was moaning and tossing ceaselessly in the
-throes of brain fever.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-FAREWELL TO THE _XIPHIAS_
-
-
-We left the _Xiphias_ in evil case as far as appearance went, but with
-her brave crew still undaunted by the long series of misfortunes which
-had now, as they thought, almost reached the culminating point in the
-loss of their vessel and all of their lives. Perhaps a bitter pang did
-stab some of their hearts as they realised that if the hurricane now
-raging should succeed in its efforts to destroy them all, their fate
-would never be known. That adds a new terror to death, for man loves
-to think that his going hence is no mystery, and that its incidents
-will be remembered to his credit by someone, if only for a little time.
-But gradually hope grew stronger (they had never quite lost it) that
-they might be saved, for the weather was, as always in the following
-segment of a cyclone, growing perceptibly better, although the force of
-the wind showed as yet no sign of lessening. Unfortunately, herein lay
-their present danger; for the _Xiphias_ was leaking so badly, she had
-evidently been strained to such an extent, that the sea, now rising and
-tossing her about like a ball, bade fair to complete her destruction
-after all. Therefore, encouraged by the skipper and Mr. Peck, who had
-now of course assumed the position of chief officer, they all toiled
-unremittingly at the pumps, even though the face of the carpenter as he
-sounded the well every hour never lightened.
-
-The struggle for life had been so fierce that when at last the awful
-meteor had passed quite away, the sea had resumed its placid calm, and
-all nature seemed through that tremendous convulsion to have renewed
-its vigorous youth, the poor tired old ship was hardly able to rise
-to the long, long swell that still came rolling majestically towards
-her, extending from one horizon to the other. She just slowly wallowed
-like a top that is ‘going to sleep’ and will presently lie dead. So
-alarming was the outlook that Captain Hampden and a few of the more
-weary of the men commenced to provision the boats in readiness to leave
-the ship in case she foundered. One thing puzzled the fine old skipper,
-though, and that was how, with nearly twelve feet of water in her, the
-_Xiphias_ floated at all. And then suddenly, calling himself a fool, he
-remembered all that oil below tightly bunged in stout casks, which in
-their turn were well stowed and secured from floating adrift by ‘toms’
-from the beams above them. Due to his own forethought, and yet he had
-forgotten--could not realise why his ship had not, long ere this,
-‘turned turtle’ and sunk.
-
-Having realised it, he called all hands aft and explained the
-circumstances to them; told them that they were only about three
-hundred miles south of Mahé, in the Seychelles, which was the nearest
-port where they could hope to find their needs supplied and whence
-they could send news home that would arrive there within reasonable
-time. Finally, he concluded his speech by saying: ‘Men, God hasn’t
-forgotten us. We shall live, I feel sure. And I don’t believe He’s
-forgotten our poor shipmates either. I feel almost certain that they
-are still alive, and that in His own good time we shall see them
-again. Carpenter, sound that well again.’ The order was obeyed amidst
-breathless attention, and the cheer that went up when Chips announced,
-‘Eleven-three, sir, just what it was an hour ago,’ could not have been
-improved upon by the healthiest and most vigorous crew. Now every man
-went on with his work soberly and in good heart, as if persuaded of
-his perfect security, and the ship crawled daily nearer port, while,
-although regular pumping continued, there was none of the energy of
-despair in the work because it certainly was not needed. But at the
-mastheads every eye while daylight lasted roamed around the great blank
-circle unceasingly as untiringly, hoping against hope to see, not
-whales, but some sign of the lost ones. In the foc’s’le the fellows
-could talk of nothing else but Rube; and MacManus, who had been one
-of those left on board, refused to be comforted. In fact, with the
-emphasis of his warm-hearted, illogical race, he went so far as to say
-that if Rube was lost he wouldn’t survive him, and that if even his
-own father confessor dared to suggest to him that Rube was a heretic
-instead of a blessed saint and martyr he would peril all his chances of
-eternal salvation by committing a fierce, premeditated assault upon the
-unworthy man.
-
-All the patience possessed by this crew of good fellows was needed by
-them now. For while their hope was strong again, it was sickeningly
-deferred day after day by the lightness of the airs and the
-sluggishness of the vessel. Besides, as often happens in such cases,
-the leak, having unaccountably ceased to gain upon them, now began to
-increase again, although very slowly. There is something appalling in
-being on board ship under such conditions. Knowing the possibilities,
-one cannot help expecting that presently the opening through which the
-hungry water is forcing itself may widen out so extensively as to make
-the sinking of the ship a matter of minutes. This feeling of dreadful
-anticipation is, I am bound to say, not nearly so much warranted on
-board a wooden ship as it is in an iron or steel vessel, where the
-springing of a leak may mean the starting of one rivet in a row, which,
-resenting the extra strain put upon them, promptly give up their hold,
-and the great plate, gaping, admits the sea so fast that the hull sinks
-like a bottle with the bottom knocked out.
-
-However, all hands stuck manfully by their task, and on the twelfth day
-from the ceasing of the hurricane they were rewarded by hearing from
-the masthead the joyful shout of ‘Land-ho!’ It was early morning, but
-so slow was the pace at which their vessel crawled towards this haven
-of refuge that it was nightfall before they anchored in the beautiful
-little bay of Mahé. And as the anchor rattled joyfully down, its
-clangour reverberating among the hills, all hands felt deeply grateful,
-and then very sad, as they thought of the brave fellows who had not
-been permitted to reach port with them. Then the sails were quickly
-furled and the decks cleared up, and a spell at the pumps was decided
-upon by the skipper before allowing everybody to have a long night’s
-rest. So after a good meal and smoke, the pumps were manned by three
-gangs, who relieved one another at ten minutes’ intervals until nine
-o’clock, by which time the water in the hold had been so much reduced
-that, after consultation with the carpenter, the skipper decided
-that except for an anchor watch of one seaman and a harpooner, all
-hands might go below and remain until eight bells (eight o’clock) the
-following morning.
-
-When aroused, not only did they find a splendid assortment of fruit
-alongside, but the anchor watch had been busy fishing, and the
-appetising odour of fresh fish being cooked greeted their nostrils as
-they came on deck. It was a happy breakfast party held forward that
-morning. Sweet potatoes, fried fish, coffee, and soft bread, with
-oranges and bananas to follow, made up a meal which, after their late
-terrible experiences, seemed to them the richest banquet imaginable.
-As soon as breakfast was over, their heavy task began. First of all,
-they got under weigh, and worked the vessel in as near the shore as
-possible. Then, having moored her head and stern, they commenced
-operations by discharging her cargo, lowering the casks of oil into
-the water and towing them to the beach, where they were laboriously
-rolled up above high-water mark. Then, some lighters being hired, all
-the provisions, movable furniture, clothing, &c., were also discharged,
-the sails were unbent and sent ashore also, while the upper yards
-were sent down and floated alongside. A great raft was made ready to
-work upon, and then the vessel was hauled in as closely as she would
-go in her now empty condition to the beach, the cutting falls secured
-to the fore and main lower mastheads, and the two bower anchors laid
-out shoreward. This heavy toil occupied four days. Then came Sunday,
-when, comfortably housed in tents of their own rigging ashore, the
-weary crew enjoyed a long luxurious day’s rest, helped by a very homely
-service of thanksgiving conducted by the skipper.
-
-On Monday the great work of repairing the ship’s bottom began by
-attaching the cutting falls to the bower anchors, leading the
-hauling parts ashore, and heaving the ship down upon her side until
-her keel was exposed. It was then found that the leak was in the
-garboard-strake, or the next plank to the keel, and manfully did the
-carpenter, the cooper, and as many of the crew as could handle a tool,
-attack the work of repair. Four days from sunrise to sunset were spent
-in this labour, then, satisfied that all was right on the starboard
-side, the skipper ordered the vessel to be turned round and the other
-side hove out for the same treatment.
-
-It is very wonderful to consider in how few words--in a sentence, for
-instance, like the preceding one--can be described an enormous amount
-of work. A whole chapter might easily be devoted to the elucidation
-of the various processes necessary for the performance of this work
-spoken of so baldly, but I am afraid it would be far from interesting.
-Sufficient, perhaps, to say that these duties, involving so much
-painful labour, and for so long a time, are now performed in dry docks
-or on patent slips with a celerity and ease that, considering the bulk
-and weight of modern ships, would be nothing short of miraculous to a
-casual observer unversed in engineering feats.
-
-Fortunately the men were all contented with as well as interested in
-their work. They had grown to love the ship as they had the captain
-and officers, and so each duty, however hard or unpleasant, was gaily
-performed, and apparently without half the labour expended on similar
-tasks by discontented men. At the expiration of a month from the time
-of entering Mahé the ship was again ready for sea. ‘Tight as a bottle,’
-said the proud carpenter, who had worked like any three men, and,
-besides, had managed to teach much of his art to sailors (farmers most
-of them a year ago), so that they were able to assist him, not merely
-in sawing, hauling, or chopping, but in much more important detail
-work. No man had given any trouble. Loafing natives or beachcomers of
-doubtful nationality, skulking around for an opportunity to do mischief
-by purveying a peculiarly vile brand of fire-water, were sternly warned
-off the premises of the sailors--told to keep outside a certain area
-set apart as the special grounds of the men of the _Xiphias_.
-
-When the work was all done, the cargo reshipped, and the _Xiphias_
-quite ready for sea, Captain Hampden called all hands aft, and said:
-‘Men, I’m dredful proud of ye. Ye’ve take the last ounce out of
-yourselves, you’ve never given me a minute’s uneasiness, and I don’t
-know how to thank ye enough. But I got it in my head that as we are
-all ready to sail to-morrow if need be, maybe yew’d some of yew like
-a little run loose with some money of your own, and if so I feel that
-yew’re all so worthy of trust that I ought to give yew the opportunity,
-and I will--if yew want it. Ef not, I’ll gladly go with yew to a
-regular picnic down to one of these beautiful outlying beaches. We’ll
-take all our own provisions, we’ll cook them ourselves, every man
-shall amuse himself just as he likes, fishing, rambling, swimming, or
-what not, and we shall come aboard tired out with real enjoyment, but
-happy and not a cent poorer in pocket or health. Now, all those in
-favour of my scheme step forward--those that want to go by themselves
-and spend their own money remain behind.’
-
-All hands stepped forward but two harpooners. The prospect of such a
-‘Sunday School outing,’ as one of them termed it, did not appeal to
-them--they were men, not babies. So they went both of them together
-in search of what they considered to be enjoyment, while Captain
-Hampden and all hands, except the mate (Mr. Peck), the carpenter, and
-steward, left the ship on their excursion, and spent a day of unalloyed
-pleasure, happy as a lot of children let loose from school. And if
-any old sailor turns up his nose at this I would like to ask him, as
-an honest fellow, to tell me how much enjoyment he ever got prowling
-about the purlieus of a great seaport from one dirty public-house
-to another, always meeting the same kind of furtive-eyed loafer and
-blatant female, and always pounced upon by these harpies with shouts of
-welcome, changing into derisive curses as soon as they found he had no
-more money to spend on them or to give them? I have no doubt but that
-his answer would be that it was all sickening and exasperating in the
-last degree, but as long as he knew of no other way in which to spend
-his money and leisure, it was not his fault that he behaved as an utter
-idiot.
-
-But enough of this. The two malcontents returned in the morning sadly,
-having had their enjoyment and looking fearfully the worse for it. No
-one said anything to them about their experiences, and they did not
-volunteer any information, but it was at least a fortnight before they
-had regained their healthy appearance, and a much longer time before
-they had lost a certain hanging of the head. This last was novel, and
-would not have been the case, but that they had been practically alone
-in their folly. And, perhaps, there was just a little of the Pharisee’s
-attitude in their shipmates, who, having chosen to keep out of harm’s
-way, were inclined to be inordinately proud of their virtue. It is this
-which makes so many Christians offensive, makes them shunned by those
-who are really penitent. They do not understand the Divine pity nor the
-Divine humility, much less endeavour to practise them, and so repel
-those whom they are professing to try and attract.
-
-At noon that day the _Xiphias_ sailed short-handed by the loss of those
-six fine men (for recruits were not to be obtained in Mahé), but well
-equipped again for the voyage. She now carried seven boats--five in the
-davits and two on the skids aft, and all repairs had been substantially
-carried out. As soon as she was clear of the land and heading across
-east for the archipelago, Captain Hampden called all hands aft, and in
-their presence complimented the carpenter for his noble efforts and his
-great skill. The Captain said that what he had done was truly above
-all reward, but as a mark of his appreciation he had much pleasure in
-handing Chips an order on the owners for $250 = £50. Chips turned brick
-red, fidgeted, shuffled, and finally said, ‘Thankee, sir.’ More than
-that he could not say--he was one of those doers who cannot talk. But
-the men cheered him to the echo, and another kindly link in the chain
-which bound all hands was forged.
-
-That evening Captain Hampden communicated to his officers his plans. He
-intended making a passage with all possible speed to the Bonins, hoping
-there to pick up half-a-dozen good men, and then go on the Japan ground
-for a season--it being then at the height of its fame. But, he said, he
-was not without hope that on the way thither they might meet with some
-whales, and be fortunate enough to obtain such an addition to their
-stock as would repay them for their recent losses. All the officers
-were in the best possible spirits. They felt that, depleted as the crew
-was, if only favoured with opportunity they would all give the best
-possible account of themselves, and each reiterated his firm belief
-that this would yet be a most successful voyage. Then they separated
-for the night.
-
-At daylight in the morning the gladsome cry was again heard from the
-crow’s-nest notifying the nearness of sperm-whales. And for the next
-week they had a real, old-fashioned busy time. They killed four fine
-large bulls, one of which was apparently very sick, and, besides,
-so fat that each lance-thrust was almost like piercing a bladder
-of lard. So peculiar was his lethargy that, in the absence of any
-apparent reason for it in the shape of recent encounters with whalers,
-the Captain decided upon an unusual examination of the body, which,
-favoured by wonderfully fine weather and a smooth sea, Mr. Peck was
-able to accomplish successfully. The search revealed an enormous mass
-of ambergris, packed tightly in the lower bowel, and weighing over two
-hundredweight. This alone at the lowest possible quotation of $5 an
-ounce represented nearly $18,000, or about £3,500, more than the value
-of the whole four whales put together, although in those days sperm oil
-and spermaceti were easily worth $500 per ton to the ship.
-
-All hands rejoiced exceedingly, feeling that the monetary loss of
-their late disaster was well wiped out, and anticipating again a
-most prosperous voyage. Heartened and encouraged thus, they worked
-so splendidly that by the time they reached the Sunda Straits the
-vessel was in her normal state of cleanliness and fitness for further
-adventure. But none came along. They just glided quietly through
-the straits, buying up with great delight the stores of fruit and
-vegetables brought by the islanders, who could hardly believe their
-good fortune. For most of the sailing ships that loiter through there
-do not yield the canoe-men much profit--the trade is mostly barter,
-an old shirt for a punnet of sweet potatoes, a pair of shoes for a
-section bunch of bananas, &c. And the demand for monkeys, parrots,
-musk-deer,&c., has greatly fallen off even in homeward bound ships.
-The _Xiphias_’ crew, however, took all the fresh food that came along,
-and got it a bargain, because they paid for it in silver dollars or
-five-franc pieces, money current all over the islands of the Indian
-Ocean from Madagascar to Singapore.
-
-All the way along from Anjer to Luzon they coasted peacefully, keeping
-wide-eyed watch for possible thieves--it would be using too big a word
-to call them pirates--who, even to this day, are ever ready to pounce
-upon a helpless craft and rifle her, incidentally killing her crew.
-Our splendid sea-patrol, ever engaged in keeping the peace all round
-the world, is specially busy in Eastern waters protecting the world’s
-commerce from these polyglot marauders, and on the East Coast of Africa
-in suppressing slavery. Yet for this truly beneficent work one never
-hears a word of praise. All our sins, or even our supposed sins, are
-remembered--not merely, I regret to say, on the Continent of Europe,
-where we expect it to be so, but in the United States of America, and
-all our good deeds are studiously ignored, or, worse still, distorted
-into deep-dyed hypocritical designs upon some innocent people’s
-independence. But I often wonder what would become of Eastern commerce
-if the British Fleet in those seas were to be suddenly withdrawn.
-
-One more piece of good fortune awaited the _Xiphias_ and her good
-crew before getting clear of those mazy waters. It was just after
-they had cleared the Molucca Passage, and were hauling up north for
-the Bonins. About half an hour before sunset the fore crow’s-nest
-reported something, he didn’t know what, but it was making a tremendous
-commotion in the water away ahead about four or five miles. The vessel
-being under full sail, and with a moderate breeze, nothing more could
-be done but keep her as she was going, except that Captain Hampden
-mounted up to the fore-topgallant yard with his glasses and succeeded
-in noting a black object in the sea. No more disturbance was visible.
-The sun went down, the quick tropical twilight faded into night, and
-still the skipper kept his eyes fixed upon the spot. Then to his great
-joy the moon rose--in that clear atmosphere shedding a flood of light
-along the sea. Suddenly the skipper’s voice rang out of the darkness
-above: ‘Lower away y’r boat, Mr. Peck, an’ keep her jest ez we’re
-goin’. I think yew’ll find somethin’ worth havin’ jest ahead there. The
-res’ of th’ hands shorten sail an’ heave ship to.’ ‘Aye, aye, sir,’
-responded the cheery voice of the mate. And in about three minutes the
-vessel was lying-to, the rattle of boat’s falls was heard, and the
-faint glimmer of a lantern was seen as Mr. Peck sped away along the
-lane of silver sheen spread by the moon on the surface of the quiet
-waters. He was no sooner gone than the skipper reached the deck, and
-immediately kept the ship away again after the boat. In half an hour
-all hands were straining to get alongside the biggest whale any of
-them had ever seen, slain apparently by one of his fellows, since his
-jaw and part of his throat were completely torn away. Thus, without
-any effort on their part, beyond realising the spoil, they had gained
-a prize worth about $6,000; a sort of crumb flung to them out of the
-boundless wealth of the sea.
-
-And now, much to my sorrow, we must part company with Captain Hampden
-and his crew. The further matters treated of in this history do not
-concern him: he did not even hear of them till two years later. It
-would be a pleasant task to tell of how he reached the Bonins in peace,
-and found there the recruits he needed, also an indefinite rumour,
-which gave him many anxious hours, of some men having been there in
-the _Grampus_, who said they had been lost from his ship. For his own
-peace of mind he was bound to put it down to one of those loosely
-invented tales that ship-frequenters in foreign ports concoct in order
-to get on fairly intimate speaking terms with shipmen; terms which,
-skilfully manipulated, should result in profit to the tale-tellers.
-Also of how, through the usual thrilling series of adventures
-which always fell to the lot of a whaleship in those days out for
-a three-years’ cruise to the uttermost parts of the sea, Captain
-Hampden and his men passed unscathed bodily and exceedingly prosperous
-financially, since the _Xiphias_ returned, having been absent three
-years to the week, with almost the largest cargo ever brought from the
-depths of the sea to New Bedford, or, indeed, any other port in New
-England.
-
-But that must not be. Our business now is with the _Grampus_, and to
-her, however unwillingly, we must return, bidding the _Xiphias_ a long
-farewell.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-CHECK TO THE KING, AND A NEW MOVE
-
-
-As on a previous and never-to-be-forgotten occasion, in the midst of
-the multifarious activities prevailing on the deck of the _Grampus_
-there was a sense of profound peace. And now there was also a feeling
-of fierce delight that their tyrant was tasting in his own body some
-of the pains he had so joyously inflicted upon others. All the white
-men’s faces wore a pleasant expression, not at all mitigated by the
-presence of the Portuguese jealously noting the satisfaction and fully
-aware of its cause. And, human nature being what it is, there is no
-doubt whatever that had Captain Da Silva died, his Portuguese henchmen
-would have been compelled to eat the humblest of humble-pie, or commit
-themselves to a fearful mutiny with all its consequences.
-
-Mr. Court moved majestically among the toilers with the air of a man
-from whom an awful incubus has been removed, and to whom has come a
-veritable inspiration. He did not shout; all his orders were issued
-quietly, but how wise and far-seeing were all his arrangements! And,
-first of all, he told off Mr. Pease to watch Rube, who was fighting
-with all the splendid reserve of force in his clean, healthy body
-against the encroaching Angel of Death. Mr. Court’s reasons for this
-were two-fold. First, he needed badly to show his detestation of the
-malice which had placed this fine officer in the position of a seaman,
-and next he had noticed that in Rube’s delirium one name continually
-fell from his lips like a peal of dactyls, ‘Priscilla, Priscilla,
-Priscilla.’ And Mr. Court knew that Priscilla was the name of his
-skipper’s wife. Therefore, although he fully believed poor Rube’s
-chanting of that name to be a mere coincidence, he knew how essential
-it was that the skipper should not hear of it. For he was sure that in
-that case Rube’s days would be few and evil, supposing the skipper to
-live. So calling Mr. Pease to him, after being exceedingly careful to
-see that none of the Dagoes was within earshot, he explained the matter
-to him carefully, winding up by saying that at least until the devil
-was unchained again, he (Mr. Court) would see that a brother officer
-was, as far as possible, saved from the degradation deliberately
-prepared for him.
-
-All this, of course, was seen, noted, and commented upon by the
-Portuguese, secure in the general utter ignorance of their language by
-the white men, and consequently not needing to get away in private for
-consultation. But all they could do under present circumstances was to
-‘bide their time, doing their duty meanwhile as before, for they knew
-quite enough of their skipper to be sure that no amount of favouritism
-would be held to excuse slackness of work when money-making was to the
-fore. And as the Americans worked now with a hearty good will because
-of the absence of the skipper, it was truly marvellous to see how the
-tremendous task of cutting-in and trying-out was tackled. A spirit of
-emulation was abroad, manifesting itself in extraordinary ways. For
-instance, a lean American from Connecticut, who had somehow learned
-to swim splendidly, was down on the back of a whale for the purpose
-of hooking a mighty iron hook into what is called the ‘rising,’ or
-eye-piece. He sprang there at the word, alighting in the foul pool
-of grease and blood and salt water at the same moment as a gigantic
-Portuguese, but just as they both reached out for the hook a big swell
-came along, the ship gave a heave, and a vast volume of water swept
-over the carcass, washing both the men into the sea alongside, which
-as usual was alive with sharks. They disappeared for a moment among
-the shovel heads and dorsal fins crowding round; then, springing to
-the surface, Nat, the American, snatched at a strip of blubber, and by
-sheer agility flung himself back to his former position, grabbing at
-the dangling hook as he reached it, and yelling in a half-strangled
-voice, ‘Heave away!’ Then, with a contemptuous look at the Dago
-struggling to climb back, he seized the already rising parts of the
-tackle and swung himself on deck. The Dago’s friends had flung him
-a rope, and he mounted easily enough by its aid, but their remarks
-to him, aided by the satisfied chuckles of the white men, seemed to
-depress him very much. He was about to slouch off to the foc’s’le to
-change, when Mr. Court’s voice rang out clearly:
-
-‘Whar you goin’?’
-
-‘Changea me close,’ was the sullen answer.
-
-‘You git right on with the work,’ said Mr. Court, and, taken by
-surprise, the man obeyed. He and his countrymen felt that it was
-only another item in the account to be paid off presently when their
-champion returned to his command.
-
-Below, however, that champion was in evil case. In his previous
-mishap, although his bruises were many and severe, there had been no
-bones broken, but now his injuries were of so extensive a character
-that he could hardly find energy enough to curse his wife and the
-steward, his only attendants. In fact, the conditions of things were
-entirely altered. Mr. Court, in full vigour, was in charge, and came
-in to report to him twice a day in the most formal manner how matters
-were progressing on deck. The mate never asked him how he was, never
-attempted any conversation, and, after the report had been made,
-only answered questions, and that in the curtest manner possible. At
-certain intervals, being responsible for his commanders welfare, he
-made careful examination of the injuries, and saw that they were doing
-as well as possible under the circumstances. Also he gave the steward
-secret orders that all the ventilation possible should be secured in
-the cabin for the Captain’s wife’s sake, who throughout this trying
-time, as before, scarcely ever left her husband’s side.
-
-On deck Rube progressed most favourably. His splendid constitution won
-in the great fight, and when at last he opened his eyes sanely on his
-devoted nurse, that much-tried man made up his mind at once that Rube
-would live. No matter that he was worn to a shadow, that he looked even
-worse than when rescued from the boat, he had evidently got a grip
-on life which he had no idea of relinquishing just yet. He wanted to
-live, and, as all doctors know, that is the great factor in the problem
-of recovery from any illness. But Mr. Pease was mightily puzzled as
-Rube grew stronger to find him so constantly referring to the early
-incidents occurring during the cruise of the _Xiphias_. He seemed to
-have no knowledge whatever of the stirring events which had happened
-since. Also Mr. Pease noticed that his eyes had an anxious careworn
-look in them as of a man who feels that the threads of his life are all
-entangled, and that he has no ability to clear them. He had, besides, a
-habit of muttering to himself and of mentioning names all unfamiliar to
-Mr. Pease, as if by some freak of memory a certain portion of his life,
-utterly forgotten until now, had just been recalled, while another
-portion, much more recent in its incidence upon his brain, had become
-completely obliterated. There was as well an utter absence of that
-cheery, wide-eyed outlook which he used to wear, the true expression of
-the Biblical injunction to take no thought for the morrow. Moreover, he
-was so anxious to get well. He did not know where he was, except that
-he was at sea and ill, and his helplessness worried him much. It took
-all Mr. Pease’s power of persuasion to convince him that by worrying he
-was retarding his own recovery, and that, as matters were, it really
-did not matter a pin whether he was fit again in a week or a month. But
-it was a difficult job to explain things to a man who knew absolutely
-nothing about the necessary details, who remembered nothing at all of
-the happenings of the last eleven months. At last Mr. Pease sought an
-audience of the mate, taking care that there should be a white man at
-the wheel, and that all the rest of the hands should be busy forward.
-
-To him Mr. Pease told all that he knew about Rube, of his joining the
-ship, of his terrible accident and recovery therefrom, how since then
-he had always behaved more like an angel than a man, and how every man
-on board had grown from deriding him to loving him--in fact, the story
-which the reader knows. During the recital Mr. Court glanced from time
-to time most curiously at Mr. Pease, as if wondering whether the latter
-were crazed or not. Nor could this be wondered at, remembering the life
-Mr. Court had been leading in the _Grampus_. What wonder that he had
-come to disbelieve in the existence of a God at all?--having always
-been indifferent in his acceptance of the existence of a Supreme Being
-as a matter of course, and since he had been mate of the _Grampus_
-having grown certain that whether there was a God or not there must
-be a devil, and that this devil was apparently permitted to have
-everything his own way for the present. Now he was interested in spite
-of himself at the idea of one greenie having been permitted to alter
-the character of everybody on board his ship. Also he told Mr. Pease
-how Rube’s present condition was entirely due to his interference on
-behalf of his former officer. At this news, now first made known to
-him, Mr. Pease bowed his head, saying:
-
-‘Wall, I alwuz thought he wuz a sure-’nough angel, but I never
-calculated on him so nearly coming to his death for me. Anyway, my
-life’s his frum this eout, ef he wants it--there’s no question ’bout
-that.’
-
-Now, whether it was the intensity of devotion manifested towards Rube
-thenceforward by Mr. Pease, or his own innate vigour asserting itself,
-is no doubt a moot point, but certainly from that day Rube’s recovery
-was exceedingly rapid. But he was puzzled beyond expression at his
-former mate’s dog-like affection for him, also at the want of deference
-shown to Mr. Pease by all hands. And as it was entirely useless trying
-to remember anything about recent events or to understand what he
-was told about them, he resigned himself to the mystery. Long before
-the skipper was able to move sufficiently to come on deck he had
-resumed his place among the crew, and was doing his work, but with a
-hesitation, awkwardness, and want of spring that made Mr. Pease tremble
-for his welfare when once the skipper had again taken command of the
-ship.
-
-With that consummate ability for navigating difficult seas that seems
-inherent in American whaling officers, Mr. Court had, despite his
-limitation of access to the means of navigation, due to the Captain’s
-behaviour, brought the _Grampus_ through the intricacies of those
-waters south of Celebes, and had steered her safely past the western
-end of New Guinea out to the southward of the Pelew Islands before
-Captain Da Silva came on deck. I have purposely avoided all mention of
-his behaviour while thus laid helpless a second time, for the subject
-is such a painful one that it is difficult to do more than hint at it.
-A wounded tiger would certainly have been far more docile, and have
-repaid his nurses with much more gratitude than this man, from whom
-every one of the Divine qualities of our nature seemed to have been
-withheld. Doubtless this vile temper did much to delay his recovery,
-but that he could not see; and hard as his language was to bear, the
-mate felt that it was infinitely better to listen to it occasionally
-below than to have his presence on deck again. And as the news of his
-approaching recovery crept about the ship, every white man, except
-Rube, kept repeating to himself most fervently, ‘Oh, if he would only
-die!’--‘he,’ of course, being the common enemy. As for Priscilla, the
-long confinement and constant strain of nursing this terrible man had
-worn her to a shadow. He did not abuse her so much now, but she had
-to listen constantly to his abuse of others, listen to his furious
-conversations with his Portuguese harpooners, who were daily summoned
-below to his bedside to report to him their observations of how the
-Yankee unmentionables were handling the ship. But this latter affected
-her as little as the former, which she could understand. The abominable
-phrases in her own language fell upon utterly unheeding ears, and left
-no more impression than did the imprecations in an unknown tongue.
-What she was suffering from was purely physical, as it had been before
-reaching the Cosmoledos.
-
-At last one lovely morning, with the ship’s head pointed towards the
-Bonins under his instructions, the skipper gave orders that Pedro and
-Manuel should attend him and assist him on deck. He needed help. He
-was worn to a shadow, his face was like a hatchet for sharpness of
-outline, and many threads of white appeared in his hair and whiskers.
-But from out the caverns whither his eyes had retreated gleamed the
-same infernal fires: the indomitable will had not been subdued in the
-slightest degree. Upon reaching the deck, he cast a comprehensive
-glance around the vessel. She was like a new pin for cleanliness, not a
-rope yarn was awry, and most of the watch were busy scraping the spare
-spars, always a favourite device with him when nothing else could be
-found for them to do.
-
-From forward came the clink, clink of iron where the remainder of the
-men were beating iron-rust off the anchors and cables. Everything was
-going, in fact, as goes a good watch after it has been wound by the
-master’s hand. There was absolutely nothing to find fault with, yet the
-mate surely knew that fault would be found. So he stood near, offering
-no salutation nor expecting any, but awaiting the contemptuous burning
-words he knew would soon be flung at him. Suddenly the skipper said,
-without looking at the mate:
-
-‘Wall, seems yew’ve mistook th’ ship fur a pleasure boat. Wut in
-thunder yew ben doin’ all the way up hyar from Borneo?’
-
-‘Doin’ wut hed t’ be done, ’n’ doin’ it well too,’ growled Mr. Court.
-‘Wat d’ye expect I’d be doin’, ef I mout be askin’?’
-
-‘Ha, _thet’s_ wut ye ben doin’, is it--gittin’ things ripe fur a
-mut’ny a’gin’ me. All right. I’m layin’ fur ye. Y’ mout hev made sure
-while I ben lyin’ thar he’pless ef yew hed th’ grit ov a purp, but
-yew haint, yew ----’ There is no need to suggest the remainder of
-the vile sentence. But Mr. Court had found time not only to recover
-his self-control and respect, but to gauge the capacity of Captain
-Da Silva’s supporters to overcome the white portion of the crew.
-Moreover he had, with commendable forethought, drawn the stings of the
-harpooners and as many of the foremost Portuguese hands as he could
-convict of possessing them--that is, he had taken away their revolvers
-and ammunition, and by perfect equality of treatment had re-established
-a proper order of things in the foc’s’le. All of these things Captain
-Da Silva, with his almost superhuman grasp of matters only faintly
-shadowed forth to his senses, had already seen except the disarming of
-his gang. He was not likely to mistake the import of the change in Mr.
-Court’s tone and bearing towards him. It was a heavy blow, but he was
-wily as a snake, and immediately changing his tone slightly, he resumed:
-
-‘Thar, I s’pose it’s no use makin’ more trouble than thar’s any need
-fur. P’r’aps I’m a bit frazzled eout with lyin’ below like a gutted
-herrin’. Anyhaow, I guess I’ll be all right time we git on the Jappan
-groun’, an’ then we’ll hev some fun. Hyar! Manuel, Pedro, come an’ git
-me b’low ’gen. I ain’t feelin’ good a bit.’
-
-As the two scowling dark men passed him and placed each an arm
-carefully behind the skipper’s back to assist him down into the cuddy,
-Mr. Court viewed them with clear eyes, saying nothing, but pondering
-a great deal. He was not in the least deceived by the change in his
-skipper’s tone. He knew full well that no stone would be left unturned
-to do him a mischief, and he determined to treble his vigilance and
-that of his compatriot officers in order to guard against any sudden
-surprise, and, satisfied that he was doing all that in him lay both
-for duty and self-preservation, he turned away and resumed his daily
-business of supervision.
-
-What he did not, could not, know was that by his resolute bearing
-and brave words he had saved one of his countrymen from being put to
-the torture. It had been the skipper’s determination when he came on
-deck to see his cruel intention towards Rube carried out, and, as
-we know, he was not easily turned away from his purpose. Ever since
-he had regained consciousness the idea of wreaking his will upon
-Rube--first as being one of the rescued boat’s crew he had been, as
-it were, driven to save; and, secondly, as the successful opponent of
-that will--had been fermenting in his busy brain, and at the earliest
-possible opportunity he had appeared on deck for the purpose of putting
-it into practice. But for the first time that voyage he had found
-himself successfully thwarted by one of the hated Americans, and he
-needed all his marvellous powers of self-control and dissimulation not
-to indulge in some frantic outburst that would certainly have resulted
-in his being disabled from doing any more harm that cruise. His cup
-of humiliation was not yet full either. As they went slowly down the
-companion-way, Manuel whispered to him in Portuguese:
-
-‘Do you know that the mate has taken away our weapons?’
-
-‘What!’ he hissed, and wrenching himself free from Pedro on the other
-side, he struck at Manuel with all his might, and missed him, falling
-down four stairs upon his injured side, and lying there foaming with
-pain and fury. Manuel, his face green with rage, turned upon his heel
-and remounted the cabin stairs. What black thoughts filled his heart
-we cannot tell, but certainly the cost of that injudicious outburst to
-Captain Da Silva was an exceedingly heavy one. He reckoned too much
-upon the perfect subjugation of his countrymen to his will, forgetting
-the obvious fact that if you give your subordinates too much power over
-you they are apt to use it at inconvenient times, to the complete
-upheaval and reversal of some of your most cherished plans.
-
-Pedro, alarmed at the Captain’s condition, for the latter was quite
-beside himself with agony, called in that subdued voice common to
-sailors when they are in the cabin, ‘Madem, senhora, Missis, Capena
-very too mucha bad; pleasea come!’ But there was no answer. Nor could
-be, for Priscilla, completely worn out, was lying in a dead faint
-upon the settee in their little state-room. The mate was away forward
-conducting the work, the steward was busy washing clothes on deck,
-and poor Pedro, looking upon his skipper’s horribly distorted face,
-listening to the gnashing of his teeth and watching the writhings
-of his body, forgot everything but the need for instant aid, and
-shouted, ‘On deck, dere, somebody, anybody, comea down here quick!’
-At that moment Rube was on his way to relieve the wheel, being now
-fully recovered as far as physical strength went. With one glance at
-the sphinx-like face of the helmsman, Rube sprang down the companion,
-finding the skipper in convulsions, and Pedro at his wits’ end to know
-what to do. Together they raised the twisting body and carried it into
-the state-room, where the first object which met Rube’s eyes was the
-apparently lifeless form of his loved and lost Priscilla.
-
-[Illustration: THE APPARENTLY LIFELESS FORM OF HIS LOVED AND LOST
-PRISCILLA.
-
-_P. 322._]
-
-For a moment all things reeled with him, and then, quietly laying the
-skipper on the deck, and controlling himself by a Titanic effort, he
-said, ‘Pedro, some water--quick!’ Even as he did so and Pedro started
-off, Priscilla gave a deep, deep sigh, opened her eyes, and seeing a
-strange man before her, made an effort to rise, while a faint tinge
-of pink came into her face. But with a mingled pang of regret and
-thankfulness Rube saw that there was no recognition in the look--he was
-just one of the crew to her, and nothing more. And then, to his intense
-relief, came hurrying the steward and the mate, called frantically by
-Pedro. Rube stole away, leaving the new-comers to render such aid as
-was possible, and wearily crept to the wheel, taking absolutely no heed
-of the bitter words with which he was greeted by the waiting helmsman.
-
-A trick at the wheel by a good steersman is a splendid place for
-meditation. For while the mechanical section of the brain is busy
-with the primal duty of keeping the particular point of the course
-given as near the ‘lubber’s point,’ or line drawn on the inner rim of
-the compass-bowl, corresponding to the midship line of the ship, as
-circumstances will allow, the lobes devoted to thought may be fully
-occupied with the most recondite speculations. May be, but are not
-often, for your ordinary sailor is a most unimaginative human animal.
-Reuben, however, for the first half-hour of the present ‘trick’ found
-the meditative side of his brain one seething whirlpool surging
-around its vortex. ‘Priscilla is aboard this ship.’ True, she had
-not recognised him, and that was, so far, a gain; but how could he
-control himself? His speech, his looks? Moreover, she was unhappy. How
-much so he did not, could not, know, for the reasons that have before
-been fully given; but that wan face, those thin hands, those deeply
-shadowed eyes, what a tale of misery they had to tell to a loving
-heart like Rube’s! Yet even had he not been powerless to do anything,
-loyalty, honour, truth demanded that he should be silent, cost what
-it might, unless he saw danger to that dear life. Then the problem
-of her being here at all suddenly came back with awful force. And
-utterly confounded, he lifted his heart again to God, not blithely or
-hopefully, but in a sort of mechanical way, or instinctively, if it be
-better put so. Instantly a great peace fell upon him. A merciful veil
-stole down between him and his mental troubles, and the utter blankness
-of want of thought enwrapped his mind.
-
-In the cabin the mate and the steward had laboured manfully at their
-task, although much hampered by the want of knowledge of how this
-condition of things had been brought about. Priscilla had fully
-recovered consciousness, but was still too weak to help. Still she was
-no hindrance. She was just watching, and claiming no attention. Mr.
-Court found several of his bandages displaced, much of the laceration
-re-opened, and altogether the patient in a bad way. With native skill
-and judgment he did his best to make his tyrant comfortable, and then
-having instructed the steward to devote his whole time to the Captain
-and his wife, returned on deck and sent for the two Portuguese.
-
-‘Now,’ said Mr. Court sternly, when they appeared, ‘I got to know wut
-yew two ben a-doin’ t’ th’ Captain. Yew wuzn’t thar, Manuel, when I
-kem an’ Pedro wuz. Wut d’ ye go ’way fur?’ Volubly Pedro began, but
-the mate in a roar bade him ‘shet erp,’ and turning to Manuel, said
-quietly, ‘Heave ahead.’
-
-‘Well, sah,’ said Manuel savagely, ‘we’s a-he’pin’ ole man daown
-companyon, an’ ole man le’s go my arm an’ hits me. Then he fall daown
-steps. I don’ care if he break his neck, so I don’ go daown ’n’ look. I
-kem on deck. Dat’s all, sah.’ And this lucid explanation he followed up
-with asseverations unprintable--indeed, untranslatable.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-THE EDUCATION OF THE SKIPPER
-
-
-In spite of the gravity of his position, a smile broke over Mr.
-Court’s rugged face as he realised the situation. All unversed in any
-Machiavellian arts of diplomacy, he had unwittingly, by straightforward
-conduct, driven a wedge into the base of the vile edifice so
-laboriously reared by his commander. For it was impossible for him to
-help seeing how deep was Manuel’s resentment at the treatment meted
-out to him by the Captain, although the reason for the outburst was
-entirely hidden from the mate. He was seriously troubled in his mind,
-though, about Priscilla. How to proceed in order to save her from
-another painful illness he did not know. For he felt that, though he
-could and would dare a good deal now to keep the ship from becoming
-a den of wild beasts as far as the crew was concerned, interference
-between the skipper and his wife was quite another matter.
-
-Yet, could he see her die? For that sad event seemed to him entirely
-probable within the next few days. She looked so frail, almost
-transparent, wax-like, in her perfect colourlessness of skin from her
-long seclusion, and, which alarmed him most,--there was a vacant,
-far-away look in her eyes that was most uncanny to him. He discussed
-the situation at great length with the second mate, who was fast
-recovering from the morbid condition of mind into which he had been
-thrown by the continued success of the skipper. But discuss as they
-might there seemed no solution of this difficult problem--indeed, as
-they vividly remembered, the chief difficulty was Priscilla herself,
-who, loyal to the core, would not, whatever her sufferings, do or say
-anything which might in her estimation weaken her husband’s authority.
-
-So, with a heavy sigh, the two good fellows would close their
-conference and part, the one to his dreamless bunk, the other to
-his four hours’ tramp up and down the small area of the _Grampus’s_
-quarter-deck, revolving, almost maddeningly, all sorts of schemes for a
-further amelioration of the present conditions.
-
-I fear that many ship officers, whether of merchant ships, whaleships,
-or men-of-war, deliberately cultivate a kind of stultification of the
-mental faculties while on watch. The mechanical side of the brain
-previously spoken of will go on doing its part no matter how dense have
-become the thinking processes. But that any intelligent man should
-set himself to become a Peter Bell, who ‘whistled as he went for want
-of thought,’ is akin to the idea of a man who should hermetically
-seal up his nostrils so that he should not smell, or render himself
-colour-blind so that pictures should not appeal to him, or cultivate
-stone-deafness in order not to enjoy harmony. It is true that to a
-highly sensitive, overstrung organisation such an ordeal as a cruise in
-a whaler must be a terrible one. For there are no inducements to ‘get
-there.’
-
- ‘Day after day, day after day,
- We stuck, nor breath nor motion;
- As idle as a painted ship
- Upon a painted ocean.’
-
-This condition of things, so wonderfully portrayed by Coleridge, is
-well-nigh intolerable to a merchantman, whose employment probably
-depends upon the smartness of his passage: to the whaler it matters
-no more than it does to the steamship, for exactly the opposite
-reason. The one doesn’t care because his engines are doing the work
-and his ship’s swift passage through the stagnant air makes a pleasant
-breeze; the other doesn’t care because he isn’t going anywhere, and
-consequently the longer he loiters where he is the more chances there
-are of his seeing what he wishes to see--whales.
-
-In the foc’s’le there was a marked improvement in the mental and
-moral atmosphere. Released from the awful nightmare of the skipper’s
-presence, and quite conscious of the fact that the officers were in
-sympathy with them, the white men grew cheerful and spoke boldly.
-Moreover, the disarmament of the Portuguese had a splendid effect.
-It enabled men, hitherto silent under gross provocation because they
-wanted to live a little longer, to lift up their heads and speak with
-the enemy in the gate. This feeling of freedom culminated one day in
-a huge Portuguese ordering a smart little Yankee from Edgar town to
-‘git away wiv that face while I sit-a down comf’ble.’ The invited
-party, being at the time sitting on a stool he had made himself, felt
-naturally aggrieved, and with a considerable amount of spirit retorted
-in terms that need not be clearly set down, at the same time retaining
-his seat. The Portuguese stared stupidly for a breathing space or two,
-then seizing the little Yankee, flung him in a clucking heap across
-the foc’s’le. But Rube was sitting next to Hiram, and immediately rose,
-seized the wrists of the black man, and forcing him backwards on to the
-deck, sat on his chest, saying: ‘Looky here, my friend, we’ve done with
-this fun. They’s goin’ to be no more of it onless yew’re prepared to
-take on the job of killing every white man aboard. I doan’t kyar much
-which way ’tis, but _this_ hez t’ be stopped anyhow.’ As soon as he had
-finished speaking every white man sprang to his feet cheering lustily.
-The Portuguese looked at each other, Reuben’s understudy was allowed
-to rise, looking foolish and--nothing happened. There was a sense of
-relief all round, for all felt that the power of the tyrant was broken.
-And in half an hour all the watch was as chummy as possible, even the
-bruised Hiram feeling quite satisfied--at least he expressed himself so
-to be.
-
-Naturally there was a perceptible falling-off in the smartness with
-which the ship was worked. That was inevitable. In a small unlimited
-monarchy, such as a ship must be, you cannot have divided rule without
-a certain loss of power. Mr. Court fought against this tendency with
-all his might, but do what he would he could not quite overcome it.
-Still, the only visible effect of the ferment that was going on below
-was that no whales were sighted, and that of course might be due to
-natural causes. Four times every day Mr. Court went below and attended
-on his skipper, always looking stealthily at Mrs. Da Silva as he did
-so, whenever he could look unobserved, and endeavouring to note any
-change that should make it imperative for him to interfere actively
-on her behalf. There was none, however. She seemed to exist and do
-her duty to her husband automatically, but to grow no worse even in
-the close confinement of that tiny cabin. But anything more absolutely
-hopeless than her whole pose was surely never seen.
-
-There was a great change in the skipper, though. Since his mad outburst
-of rage at Manuel and its result he had to all outward seeming been
-a different man. His injuries, so rudely handled, resented fiercely
-their treatment, and for long he had lain in high fever, alternating
-with periods of utter exhaustion. Only his splendid physique and iron
-constitution, aiding the careful nursing he received, pulled him
-through. And as he slowly progressed towards convalescence, he looked
-strangely at Priscilla, not gratefully, but with some such expression
-as the West African savage regards his ‘ju-ju,’ believing it all
-powerful to harm or help him as the case might present itself to the
-reasoning powers of the dreadful thing. A resolution slowly shaped
-itself in his brain that come what would he must be very careful of
-this white, frail woman, who seemed to have passed completely beyond
-the reach of all the emotions. And he determined to get better in order
-to carry out this resolve, although had he been capable of entertaining
-the feeling it would surely have forced its way into his dark heart
-that the best way in which he could treat his wife would be to die, and
-set her free from the hourly horror of his companionship, which for
-obvious reasons has not been insisted upon definitely here.
-
-So he mended rapidly--so rapidly, in fact, that one week after he had
-come to the conclusion above noted he was seated on the top of the
-little deck aft with Priscilla by his side, both luxuriously inhaling
-the sweet air as the homely old ship wallowed along northward. It was
-a heavenly afternoon. The sky had the appearance of a great green
-field--the first tender, unsullied green of spring, upon which lay
-billowy masses of fleecy cloud, motionless as masses of whitest wool
-and arranged in regular rows converging to a point in the south-east.
-An unaccountable longing for the peace of those heavenly solitudes,
-a desire to leave behind her the weighing down of her earthy part
-possessed Priscilla’s soul, and quite unnoted by her the heavy tears
-rose to her eyes, coursed down her thin cheeks and dropped upon the
-deck. He, stealthily watching as usual while he was awake, became
-alarmed, because he had not seen a tear for so long. ‘Wut ails ye,
-Pris?’ he inquired anxiously. ‘Ain’t sick, air ye? C’n I order y’
-anythin’--c’n I do anythin’?’
-
-Immediately the gracious fountain ceased to flow, and, turning, she
-looked steadily at him, saying, ‘No, thank you, Ramon; I want nothing.’
-
-‘Wall, wut ye cryin’ fur, then?’ he demanded irritably.
-
-‘I don’t know, Ramon, and, what is more, I didn’t know that I was
-crying until you spoke.’
-
-Then, to her great relief--for her dread was a long and acrid
-cross-examination by her husband upon any subject whatever--the skipper
-half rose from his chair and hissed out, ‘Whar’s the watch? Wut ye all
-doin’? Look thar!’ Involuntarily Priscilla looked where he pointed,
-and was filled with admiration and wonder. A mighty sperm whale had
-risen from unknown depths and roamings within a cable’s length of the
-ship and lay there, clearly visible in the beautifully transparent
-blue of the sea, almost motionless. All his majestic outlines defined
-themselves to the eye, the great down-hanging shaft of the jaw, the
-huge rotundity of the belly, and the vast fans of the flukes that,
-apparently motionless, were in reality quivering with receptivity
-like the diaphragm of a telephone. She had never before seen a whale
-at close quarters, never had an opportunity of admiring this, the
-mightiest of all God’s creations in the plenitude of his powers and in
-his own proper element, and the sight filled her with awe.
-
-The reason of the whale’s nearness to the ship, not merely without
-alarm--for that can readily be understood, since whales, like other
-animals, long unmolested become perfectly tame--but without having
-been previously seen, is not to be very clearly stated. When such an
-occurrence does take place on board a whaleship there is usually much
-unpleasantness, because the captain is bound to believe that it proves
-that the watchers aloft are neglecting their duty, or they would have
-reported the proximity of the whale before. The supposition is only
-reasonable because really from the masthead of a ship on a fine day,
-such as this was, the whole vast circle spread out beneath one looks
-so small, and objects upon it are so clearly defined, that it seems
-impossible for four pairs of eyes to miss the spout of a whale. And
-as the distance from that height to the visible horizon is not less
-than fifteen miles, within which in such weather a sperm-whale’s spout
-should be clearly discernible, the whale should have risen twice
-within the visible range to spout. His utmost speed when going for all
-he is worth is only about fourteen miles an hour, his usual cruising
-speed when underneath only about three or four. He can stay down an
-hour, but rarely exceeds forty-five minutes, and he does not care,
-unless driven by necessity, to travel fast under water. When he does
-come to the surface, too, after a stay beneath of that length, he must
-stay up until he has finished a certain number of inspirations and
-expirations or ‘spoutings out’--fifty, sixty, or seventy, as the case
-may be. And no matter how hardly he may be pressed by enemies, this
-always holds good. Yet I have seen a sperm whale rise in ghost-like
-fashion almost alongside the ship during a stark calm on a day when sea
-and sky were one flawless expanse of blue, blending into each other
-at the horizon so perfectly that no one could tell exactly where sea
-ended and sky began. All hands were most eager to ‘raise whale,’ for
-the bounty offered was five pounds--equal to twenty-five dollars--and
-we had fine men at the mastheads. Yet our first intimation of his
-appearance was given by himself spouting almost alongside. As silently
-as shadows we prepared to go after him, but as the boats were about
-to be lowered he disappeared, nor did we ever catch a glimpse of him
-again, although all hands clustered aloft straining their eyes in
-every direction. He vanished so unaccountably that there was an uneasy
-feeling on board that what we had all seen was no whale at all, but a
-sportive spook sent to befool us by some sarcastic sea-demon. There is
-no doubt that both coming and going were exceptions to all the ordinary
-laws governing the actions of the whale-folk.
-
-All this explanatory matter, taking so long to set down, was as
-familiar as breathing to Captain Da Silva, yet his only emotion upon
-‘raising’ the whale so closely alongside was black, murderous rage. He
-dared not shout for fear of scaring or ‘galleying’ the whale. But his
-enforced quiet made his hissed-out orders sound all the more furious.
-The men flew to their stations silently. The boats were lowered by
-inches at a time, and with the utmost deliberation, lest the rattle of
-the patent sheaves should alarm the as yet unconscious monster. Only
-two boats went--the mate’s and the second mate’s--and the skipper sat
-on his high perch and watched them depart with bitter muttered comments
-upon all they did. Every movement was criticised as if the makers of it
-were ‘greenies’ just commencing the great business. And the worst of
-the matter was that the men in the boats knew this. It made them less
-confident than they would otherwise have been, and therefore they felt
-as if they were going into a fight whereof the issue was already half
-decided against them.
-
-Still, they paddled steadily towards the foe without him betraying by
-the slightest sign a knowledge of any danger likely to be threatening
-him. By common consent the boats parted company as they neared him, and
-came on at the great head sheering slightly to either side. Suddenly
-he saw them or felt them--no one knows which it is--and with one great
-sweep of his flukes he leapt forward. Too late. Both boats closed in
-on him like sentient destroyers, and as if at one signal the harpoons
-flew from either harpooner’s nervous hands and sank quivering into
-the flank of the whale. Instead of turning to fight, as usual, he
-settled at once, quite quietly, and immediately the attackers felt an
-impetus forward, steady and increasing. Away he went, well below, only
-momentarily breaking the surface to spout, and getting up speed in such
-a fashion that in a very few minutes, despite the smoothness of the
-sea, it was evident that all the boatmen could do was to hold on and
-wait until their gigantic steed tired.
-
-On board the skipper watched with eyes aflame, blaming them all
-impartially for what he was pleased to call their idiotic behaviour,
-only his expressions were not so mild as that, and cursing his
-inability, owing to the absence of wind, to follow them up. Priscilla
-watched too, fascinated, and all unconscious of the danger the brave
-fellows were in. And then, with a suddenness seen only in tropical
-latitudes,
-
- The sun’s rim dips; the stars rush out;
- At one stride comes the dark;
-
-and the fleeing boats fade from view. Only then does it dawn upon
-her what awful danger these men are in, and even then, such is the
-deadness of her mind, she cannot bring herself to realise as she thinks
-she ought to do the peril of her shipmates. There is a great silence
-on board. No one can do anything but wait, except the Captain, who
-can, and does, keep up a muttered succession of evil words in his own
-language. The leaden-footed minutes creep along, the heavy dews fall, a
-solemn silence, only accentuated by the creak of a spar or the slight
-rattle of a block, reigns supreme, for the Captain has gone below, and
-she is up there quite alone. And suddenly relief comes. Into her dry
-heart there steals the blessed consciousness of God’s loving presence,
-her almost deadened mental perceptions revive on the memory of ‘I
-will never leave thee nor forsake thee,’ and immediately she is able
-to pray. Not for herself--that has not yet come--but for the safety
-of those whom she has seen go out into the night. Most fervently she
-implores the Father that they may be preserved through the perils
-around them, and that when they return (as she at once feels assured
-they will) her terrible husband may be merciful to them. As she forms
-the petitions in her heart there is a great cry from many throats, a
-rushing, roaring sound, a crash, and the babel of many voices. All
-hands spring into violent activity, and high over all the other sounds
-rises the voice of the Captain. Another boat is lowered into the
-darkness, which is presently illuminated in ghastly fashion by a blue
-light which is fired and spreads its glare all around the ship.
-
-We must leave Priscilla for a few minutes suffering all the tortures of
-uncertainty, and avail ourselves of our privilege of knowing at once
-all that is happening. Dragged away at such speed in the darkness,
-and dependent entirely upon the phosphorescent glare in the water for
-their knowledge of the whale’s whereabouts, the two boats’ crews were
-in no enviable case. But the officers did their manful best, whenever a
-slackening in the whale’s speed gave them opportunity to get near him,
-to hurl lances and fire bombs into his shadowy-looking mass. But all
-had apparently been of little or no avail in staying his forward rush,
-and as for its direction they knew absolutely nothing. In the midst of
-this confusion there suddenly towered up before them the great bulk of
-the ship, menacing like the shadow of death. Both officers drew knives
-and touched the tow lines, yelling at the same moment, ‘Lay off--lay
-on!’ So as the impetus brought them alongside, instead of coming end
-on at that great speed and being dashed in pieces, one sheered to port
-and the other to starboard, both intact and safe. They heard the crash,
-though, in the midst of that strange evolution, and feared the worst.
-It was not, however, as bad as they feared, although bad enough. The
-whale, nearing his end, and collecting all his powers to meet it, had
-suddenly become instinctively aware of the ship confronting him, and,
-swerving to the left almost cleared her. But his great head struck the
-rudder such a tremendous blow that it was wrenched from the sternpost,
-without, however, doing that essential portion of the ship any damage.
-The rudder was simply gone clean, and none of them ever saw it again.
-
-Then were heard the strange noises made by a whale in its dying agonies
-close alongside the ship. She rolled and heaved in the swell he made,
-but he was not near enough to give her another blow. Presently the
-silence closed in upon them again. It was broken by the skipper,
-who, excited beyond endurance, yet compelled to inaction, almost
-screamed, ‘’Longside thar! See anythin’ of th’ whale? Hez he stove in
-th’ counter, or wut? ’R ye all dead? ’n’ ef y’ ain’t, why’nt ye do
-somethin’ or say somethin’ ’r make a sign?’ Then compliments after his
-foul fashion.
-
-Presently up out of the darkness came a voice, Mr. Court’s:
-
-‘All right, sir, we’ve got hold of him; just passin’ tow-line.’
-
-There was a growl like that of a wild beast in response, and an order
-to light up all the suspended cressets. All hands girded up their loins
-for the long night’s work pending, and as the tow-line was passed
-on board bent their backs to the task of hauling the great whale
-alongside, thinking meanwhile of the possibility of his having started
-a butt when he collided with the stern fittings. Priscilla, her heart
-full of gratitude for answered prayer, went below, lay down, and in a
-few minutes slept the blessed sleep of a relieved mind.
-
-All through the night, goaded on by the rasping voice of the skipper,
-who, perched aloft upon the after platform, suffered terribly from
-his inability to make himself felt as well as heard, the weary men
-toiled on. And to such good purpose that when the pageant of morning
-blazed forth upon the welcoming sky they had actually consummated the
-cutting-in, and were all ready for the trying-out. The skipper having
-hobbled below, Mr. Court proceeded to set blubber watches of six hours
-each, but also gave word to go easy, for he knew, judging by his own
-feelings, how spent all hands were, and he would not be so foolish as
-to lay them up. The relieved ones had just cast themselves down as
-they were and passed into the depths of utterly exhausted nature’s
-refreshment when, as Mr. Court was diving below to his well-earned
-rest, the skipper reappeared shouting, ‘Lay aft here, yew lazy hogs,
-’n’ rig a stage over the stern. I want ter git a jury rudder rigged.’
-Returning to the deck, Mr. Court said gravely, ‘Captain, that kind o’
-thing wunt work no more. Yew’ve gut t’ be reasonable. I wunt let ye
-play the fool with men’s lives any more, and ef yew’re goin’t’ shoot,
-shoot quick, ’r ye’ll be too late.’ And Captain Da Silva saw, to his
-intense amazement, a revolver-barrel gleaming in the fingers of the
-officer whom in his blind passion and prejudice he had abused as a
-coward.
-
-His sufferings were terrible to witness. His keen intelligence showed
-him clearly that at present, at any rate, the mate had the key of the
-situation, and that again he must stoop to dissimulation where he had
-been used to enforce his will with the utmost disregard of what anyone
-thought or felt. At last, when the first few agonising spasms had
-passed, he mastered himself by a supreme effort and said huskily, ‘All
-right, Mr. Court. It’s yewr call. It’ll be mine some day. Meanwhile
-we’ll keep eour trouble indoors.’
-
-Raising his voice a little for the benefit of the few haggard-looking,
-anxious men who were clustered about the mainmast awaiting the word to
-come aft and recommence work, he said, ‘Oh, all right, Mr. Court; I
-guess we’ll leave it a bit. Don’ look ’s if we sh’d hev enny change in
-th’ weather fur a while, anyhow. We’ll git on with th’ tryin’-out, ’n’
-leave th’ repairs until she’s cleaned erp agen. Thet’ll do th’ watch
-below,’ he snarled in conclusion. And the worn-out men shuffled away.
-
-Without another word Mr. Court descended to his bunk, not, to be sure,
-without many misgivings as to whether, in the absence of any defence
-to his sleeping-place, any door to bar, he should, in the quaint
-sailor phrase, ‘wake up and find himself dead.’ But he reasoned, and
-correctly, that under present conditions the skipper would hardly
-proceed to open murder, for open it must be since four men would be
-in full view of the crime if it were done while he slept. And with a
-final, ‘Well, I kain’t he’p it, anyhaow; mout so well die this way
-’s any other, fur all I k’n see,’ the mate turned in, put his loaded
-revolver under his pillow, and in two minutes was fast asleep.
-
-The Captain, in spite of his weakened body, of his still aching limbs,
-paced the narrow limits of the cabin like a caged leopard, his mind
-seething with deadly thoughts about the mate and, in a lesser degree,
-all the members of his crew. For this was the first voyage of his
-career as captain that any of his ship’s company had been able to
-oppose his will successfully. Also it was the first voyage of his
-life that he had suffered so much in his own body, and he was gravely
-in doubt as to what the change meant. He was inclined to lay all his
-disasters at the door of his wife; but of her he was now quite afraid,
-and, moreover, satisfied that if he were not very careful in his
-treatment of her worse misfortunes would befall him. These thoughts
-worried him so much that he had recourse to the bottle, the great
-store of fiery liquor he had brought on board at Brava having been
-only slightly encroached upon. And after a few glasses and a couple of
-cigars he was reassured as to his own importance and power, feeling,
-indeed, that his recent fears were quite unwarranted. And yet he could
-not help casting a curiously furtive glance at the pale, mask-like
-face of his wife.
-
-The next day, his physical improvement having been well maintained,
-he took full charge at eight bells in the morning, and all hands fell
-obediently into line at his word. Work on the blubber proceeded apace,
-but there was a much more important duty to perform, and that was the
-rigging of a contrivance by means of which the ship might be steered.
-Here Captain Da Silva shone as a perfect seaman. He ordered a spar
-about the size of a medium scaffold-pole to be made into a huge oar,
-the blade being formed of stout planks bolted together athwart, and the
-interstices on each side of the spar filled with old chain for weight
-to keep the machine down. A solid crutch, lined with leather and well
-greased, was fixed on the taffrail for the upper part of the spar to
-work in, with plenty of play allowed, but strong lashings to prevent
-its jumping out of its bed. Also a severe holdfast was made just above
-the blade of the ‘oar,’ into which a stout tackle was hooked on either
-side; the upper blocks of these tackles were led to outriggers over
-each quarter, and the falls passed into the barrel of the steering
-wheel. And--of course recognising that a vast amount of uninteresting
-but essential detail has been left out--that is how Captain Da Silva
-rigged his jury-rudder. It was so successful, too, that three days
-afterwards he navigated his ship into the difficult harbour of Port
-Lloyd with it, none of the captains of whaling ships anchored there
-noticing any difference, except that there were one or two remarks
-about the _Grampus’s_ wild steering and a little wonder as to what she
-was towing astern.
-
-Before going into the harbour Captain Da Silva called all hands aft and
-made them a speech. He said: ‘Men we’re a-goin’ in here fur repairs,
-wood, an’ water. Any of ye ’at wants t’ run away ’ud better make erp
-yewr mines before yew go fur the wust floggin’ y’ ever had w’en yew’re
-brought back. ’N’ yew will be, fur I’m goin’ t’ offer one hundred
-dollars reward fur any deserter brought back to the ship dead er alive.
-’N’ thar’s lots er folks here as’d kill a man fur one dollar, let alone
-a hundred. No gammin’ allowed. This ship’s ben runnin’ slack. I’m
-goin’t’ tighten things up a bit. Naow git.’ And as all hands slunk away
-the skipper cast a triumphant glance at the officers as who should say,
-‘What are you going to do now?’ There was no answering look. Who could
-reply to a challenge like that without putting himself irrevocably in
-the wrong?
-
-Now it would be useless to recapitulate the proceedings at Port Lloyd,
-so tame and commonplace were they. The men were kept at work not merely
-from daylight till dark, but before daylight till after dark, doing all
-the thousand-and-one things needed when a whaleship comes into harbour
-after a long cruise. No boats other than her own were allowed near the
-ship, so the men got no fresh fruit, while no fresh beef or vegetables
-were sent on board by the skipper, so that all the fresh food obtained
-by the hungry men was fish, which, fortunately for them, bit at night
-and were caught in fairly large numbers. The skipper went ashore but
-very little; when he did, he now took Priscilla with him, closely
-muffled up so that no one should see her but himself. He saw none of
-his fellow-skippers, and cared nothing that he was the talk of the
-harbour. At the end of four days he ordered the windlass to be manned,
-and took the _Grampus_ out to sea again, no man but himself knowing
-whither he was bound.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-THE LOSS OF THE _GRAMPUS_
-
-
-It could not possibly have escaped the memory of Mr. Court that he had
-been told by the skipper that their next cruising-place would be the
-‘Japan-ground.’ Not that he was foolish enough to place any serious
-reliance upon anything said by Captain Da Silva, only he knew, as every
-whaling officer did in those days--I write of half a century ago--that
-the Japan grounds were the most prolific of all known haunts of the
-sperm whale. He was just a little startled, then, on getting clear of
-the Bonins, to find a course set S.W., which looked very much like
-getting down on to the Line grounds, and in any case could not mean
-that the _Grampus_ was bound for the carrying out of the previously
-arranged programme. But he had such an implicit faith in the astounding
-ability of his skipper, and he felt so sure that even revenge would be
-made to wait until the money-making was over, that he did not trouble
-his head much about the rather startling change in the course. He could
-not know, of course, what Captain Da Silva did, that the common talk of
-Port Lloyd had been the inexplicable absence of sperm whales from the
-Japan grounds that season, neither could he tell by what curious chain
-of reasoning, amounting almost to instinct, the skipper had decided
-upon going south among the islands and gradually working his way down
-to the Line whaling grounds.
-
-For two days they steered S.E., and then, as if in justification of
-the skipper’s foresight, they ran into a vast school of whales. Now,
-without going over previously well-trodden ground, I may remark that
-it will have been noticed how on board a whaleship, as in an army,
-things may be done by officers with impunity in time of war that would
-certainly cause a mutiny in time of peace. And the skipper’s eyes
-glistened as the boats took the water at the thought of how, during the
-coming campaign, he would take the last ounce out of his officers and
-men, making them pay most dearly for any little ‘let-up’ they might
-have enjoyed during his enforced retirement. One other step he had
-taken which I have omitted to mention, the separation of Rube and Mr.
-Pease, taking the former to pull his own midship oar, and putting the
-latter under his third mate, a Portuguese very much after his own heart.
-
-Now for the next three months Reuben led the life of a daily martyr,
-a galley slave. The ship seemed never to be out of sight of whales,
-and exercising the greatest possible skill in the manipulation of his
-forces, the skipper managed to keep the war going continually, favoured
-as the ship was by the finest of weather. But he never in the midst of
-all his multifarious energies forgot for one hour the exercise of his
-awful animosity towards Reuben. The other Americans suffered also, but
-in a much lesser degree. It was Reuben who for any fault committed by
-anyone in the boat was smitten with the heavy oak tiller over head or
-shoulders or face, Reuben who was selected for every dangerous, filthy,
-and heavy piece of work; Reuben, in fact, saved the rest of his white
-shipmates much pain and trouble by being the lightning conductor,
-attracting nearly all the skipper’s cruelty. And strangely enough, it
-seemed to make little difference to him. He did not smile so sweetly as
-he used to do, and his rather worn face wore a puzzled look that was
-very pathetic. But he never resented any of his ill-treatment, never
-seemed to notice it, in fact, after the first week or two.
-
-What the condition of the ship became during those three strenuous
-months I do not propose attempting to describe. Only the pen of a Zola
-could do it justice, and the result would be almost, if not quite,
-unreadable to any cleanly living person. She was an offence to the
-clean, wide sea--much worse, indeed, than she was in the Mozambique
-Channel in respect of foulness, but not so bad with regard to health,
-because of the sweet breeze that steadily blew, and kept clearing off
-some of the miasma she exhaled. The skipper, however, alarmed for the
-health of Priscilla, for the reasons before noted, caused a little
-bower to be built on the top of the tiny deck aft, and did away with
-the spanker boom so that it (the bower) should not be disturbed. Here
-Priscilla sat all day long carefully screened from the smell as far as
-could be, and exposed to the fresh air. And, although she naturally
-suffered very much, as she always had done, since first she came on
-board, from lack of exercise, she became better in her general health,
-and more ready to take a little interest in life than she had been for
-a long time. Nevertheless, little as her ship surroundings had ever
-power to impress her, she got very weary of the incessant inflow of
-greasy masses from overside, heartily sick of the aroma of slaughter.
-Also it seemed to her as if, instead of her husband growing more and
-more satisfied at the way in which he was accumulating wealth without
-any other ship near to share his good fortune, he became ever more
-morose and scowling. Nor was she wrong. The check to his cruelty which
-he had received worried him like a green wound, and all his prosperity
-was not nearly sufficient to compensate him for the loss of prestige
-he felt he had endured. If only, without destroying the efficiency of
-his ship’s company, he could have set his foot upon the neck of those
-pale-faced men of an alien race, who, despite his masterfulness, had
-succeeded in great measure in setting themselves free from his tyranny,
-and who now strode before him with erect heads and clear eyes! The
-story of Haman is no myth. It is being repeated all around us every
-day, and I do not know of any more cogent proof of the existence of the
-devil than this.
-
-At last the whales seemed to have learned their lesson, and began to
-fight shy of this lonely ship which had transferred so many of them
-to her own interior. No longer did they crowd around like a flock of
-frightened sheep awaiting the butcher and unable to see whither to
-flee in all that wide expanse of ocean. There came a time when the
-thoroughly wearied men were able to, not rest, but find an intensely
-welcome relief from the all-pervading filth in strenuously endeavouring
-to cleanse it away. And although they worked just as hard as ever, they
-went about their altered occupation with something like enthusiasm.
-
-Meanwhile the skipper had by frequent secret conferences, by sundry
-quietly bestowed tots of grog, and such grim pleasantries as he could
-give utterance to, been endeavouring quite successfully to regain his
-former status among his countrymen. Mr. Court saw, in common with
-every other white man on board, the trend of matters, and passed,
-therefore, many uneasy hours, unable to formulate any plans, since he
-knew not what was brewing except that it meant mischief for him and
-his compatriots. But in the absence of any overt act of offence on the
-part of the skipper he could take no step, he could only whisper Mr.
-Winslow to keep a bright look-out for whatever devilry might be afloat.
-What troubled him principally was his utter want of knowledge of the
-ship’s whereabouts. This is always a hardship at sea even under the
-best conditions, and if sailors were only to allow their minds to dwell
-upon the fact that they are not allowed by the skipper to know even the
-approximate position of the ship there would be far more discontent
-than there is now. I have been in a ship on a passage of nearly seven
-months between Liverpool and an Indian port, and during the whole of
-that time not one foremast hand ever knew the ship’s position within a
-thousand miles, so carefully was the secret guarded. And I have been
-in ships where the skipper refused to allow his mate to know, would
-not let him take an observation, seeming to take some insane pleasure
-in knowing that he alone of the ship’s company had any idea where upon
-that vast blank space of sea the tiny dot of a ship was poised.
-
-Thus it was in the _Grampus_, when at the last clearing up certain
-sail was set, and a definite course to the eastward was steered.
-Indications of land were many, for they were now in that part of the
-Pacific where Nature would appear to have her busiest workshops;
-where islands rise in a few hours from unknown depths and isolated
-patches of land are suddenly met with, summits of submerged mountains
-rivalling the Himalayas in their tremendous altitudes. So, although no
-more whales were seen, the watchers at the masthead scarcely passed
-an hour without reporting some new appearance, some discolouration
-of the bright sea that upon nearer approach resolved itself into a
-floating island of weed about which played an innumerable company of
-bright-hued fish making the water foam again with their blithe gambols.
-Or a derelict cocoa-palm torn from its reef-edge moorings, and long
-since denuded of its feathery crown, floated by, recognisable only to a
-whaleman’s eye as anything belonging to earth at all from the wealth of
-parasitic life which had accumulated upon it, making it look more like
-the head of some vast sea-serpent with a snowy mane than anything else
-the mind can depict. An occasional canoe, waterlogged or bottom-up,
-floated along, making the watcher wonder where the recent occupant
-had gone, and what manner of struggle he or she made for life ere the
-fateful moment came when the sea claimed its toll as of right.
-
-All through this pleasant time Priscilla kept her vigil during the
-daylight hours in her breezy house aloft, above the working people’s
-heads. There was a sort of placid wonder why the Captain should
-have so radically altered in his behaviour towards her. Benumbed as
-her faculties had undoubtedly become, since she had lived up on the
-after-deck she had begun to regain a certain interest in life which
-had not been possible to her while confined to the cabin. And she
-certainly found herself speculating upon the change in her husband.
-She noticed that he was less brutal in his behaviour to the crew,
-too, as far as physical ill-treatment went, but, of course, she did
-not know the cause. There was no easement of the hardships of their
-lives, nor any relenting in those fierce black eyes when looking upon
-a subordinate. But when his gaze fell upon her it changed into the
-puzzled, frightened glance of the savage face to face with the unknown,
-and dominated by an illogical fear, a state of mind which culminates in
-a sudden plunge into nameless cruelties.
-
-She and her husband never held any conversation, their intercourse
-being limited to monosyllables almost. Discussion was out of the
-question, since she was docile as a well-trained dog, and besides
-did not seem to care about anything sufficiently to discuss it. Yet
-all unknown to her, a change was taking place in her mind. A renewed
-interest in life was springing up there. It may have been her long
-contemplation of the ever-wonderful and changeful life of the sea,
-but I am inclined to think that it was the intensity of that unknown
-love burning in one loyal breast near her, the outpouring of those
-fervent supplications for her well-being that Reuben was continually
-offering communicating something of their own force in some mysterious
-way, not understandable as yet, but some day surely to be explained
-to us. At last, after about a fortnight of this pleasant sailing, she
-came up to her little haven of refuge to witness a scene of almost
-fairy-like loveliness. Stretching away to the northward like a
-cluster of jewels set upon the shining bosom of the sea was a group of
-islands. Some rose sheer from the waves that rolled creamily against
-their jet-black bases, just failing to reach the tender festoons of
-every shade of green that clothed them from high-water mark to summit.
-Others glittered in dazzling white against the intense blue of the
-quiet lagoon, shielded from all ruffling by a barrier of living rock
-encircling them, and crested with a mighty feather of purest white
-as the great swell surged up against it, and found its onward sweep
-effectually stayed. Others from serene palm-fringed heights sloped
-sweetly seaward to inviting beaches of all colours sheltered from any
-onslaught of waves and apparently inviting the weary seafarer to come
-and rest himself after all his ocean wanderings.
-
-Quite close to the ship was a long, formidable barrier of black rocks,
-outliers of the main group, whose jagged, saw-like teeth snarled
-threateningly up from the fret and foam of the sea around. But even
-they were robbed of half their terrors by the beautiful play of light
-and colour around them, gift of the golden sun which hung in the limpid
-sky, shedding his fervent fires upon sea and land, and investing the
-most commonplace objects with supreme beauty. As Priscilla gazed upon
-the lovely scene she felt the tears steal down her cheeks: the whole
-panorama appealed to her innate sense of loveliness so strongly that
-the happy tears would come, and her heart was lifted by the adoring
-creature’s joy in the Creator’s lovely handiwork. She forgot all
-else in the glories of the present scene, took no heed of the swift
-changing of the view as the homely old ship glided past that long,
-long barrier through the smoothest and brightest of seas. She took
-no heed of the skilful handling of the ship, all her mind being bent
-upon the wonders overside. It seemed to her as if now for the first
-time she understood what voyaging really meant, as if only now was she
-realising some of the impressions given her long ago in reading records
-of wonderful voyages. A faint flush mounted into her pale cheeks, her
-breath came and went quickly through her parted lips, and she was
-nearer happiness than she had been since the first week out from home.
-
-Suddenly she became conscious of an apparent increase in the wind,
-caused by an alteration in the vessel’s course, bringing her
-close-hauled, and like magic the whole scene changed. The ship was
-now running in between a wide opening in the great barrier before
-mentioned, where on either side of her the frowning rocks with their
-white crests of foam stopped abruptly in a sea of deepest blue. Ahead
-this lovely colour took a dozen different shades from inequality in the
-depth, and here and there, where a patch of coral neared the surface
-and the sun’s rays touched its summit through the intervening water,
-there was a blending of hues that would make an artist despair.
-
-Thus, piloted with the utmost skill by the skipper, the _Grampus_ drew
-near the main group of islands, sheltered as they were by all this
-intricate network of reefs from any roughness of water, and, finally,
-turning sharply to starboard, she came up into the wind behind a low
-bluff, and by her own impetus forged ahead into a little bay, sheltered
-from every wind of heaven, bordered by a snow-white beach, which,
-in its turn, was fringed by tropical growth of trees and shrubs of
-many kinds, and looking an ideal haven of rest. Midway of the bay’s
-semicircle, and at less than half a mile from the beach, at a hoarse
-shout from the skipper the anchor rattled down, its crash and roar
-awakening echoes that long resounded like peals of distant thunder.
-Then the shouts of the officers succeeded as they gave the necessary
-orders for furling sails and clearing up the ship generally. And in
-half-an-hour, when the word ‘supper’ was given, an intense hush as of
-the first Sabbath succeeded--a calm and peace over sea and land that
-fell upon Priscilla’s heart like the touch of a mother’s cool hand upon
-the hot brow of her ailing child.
-
-Captain Da Silva’s officers, however, were far from enjoying a like
-serenity of mind. That very peace which was so grateful to an unknowing
-one was to them like the calm preceding the outburst of a hurricane.
-They looked anxiously around, precluded from consulting each other by
-their absurd relations, yet fearing the worst. Then the skipper, going
-below and summoning his unfortunate steward, had the ‘trade,’ always
-carried by these ships in that day for the purpose of barter among the
-islands, brought out and placed in readiness for conveyance on deck.
-His (the skipper’s) plans had long been made, but only his Portuguese
-accomplices on board knew anything of them. As far back as the visit to
-Brava he had been preparing for this event, when that load of cases of
-most potent liquor was brought on board. And now it was not so much the
-possibility of treachery on the part of the natives as the ruin of his
-plan of pleasure (?) which made him anxiously scan beach and bay for
-any sign of human life.
-
-The sun neared the horizon, the busy fishing birds began to fly
-shoreward to their nests laden with the fruits of their labours, and
-the fresh sweetness of the coming night began to make itself felt.
-Then, as if at a given signal, a whole fleet of canoes came rushing
-round the headland into the bay, the water foaming around them under
-the strokes of multitudinous paddles. As they neared the ship it was to
-be seen that each canoe carried a green branch with streamers of white
-‘tapa’ or native cloth, betokening peace, also that the still green
-coverts ashore had suddenly burst into life and scores of dusky female
-forms were hurling themselves into the water, and almost like denizens
-of the deep sea were rushing towards the ship. A few sharp orders from
-the skipper, and the Portuguese members of the crew hurried aft to
-assist him in the handing and distribution of his presents. They had
-barely got the things on deck when with yells of delight the natives
-reached the vessel, climbing on board everywhere like an invasion of
-happy children without one thought save the joyful indulgence of idle
-infantile curiosity. Priscilla had previously retired, being sternly
-ordered below by her husband as soon as the natives were seen, and in
-the little state-room she sat listening with mingled feelings to the
-hubbub prevailing on deck, not knowing what it meant.
-
-It was well that she did not, for there was now commencing on board
-the _Grampus_ one of those orgies which have done so much to hinder
-the spread of Christianity among these savage isles. There is no
-danger that I should attempt to particularise; that, I am sorry to
-say, has been done _ad nauseam_, and to what good end I am unable to
-see. Even the bald official records of such scenes strike a chill of
-horror into any decent mind, but they also leave a sense of profound
-gratitude that in spite of all these dire hindrances to the spread of
-the Gospel it does spread, it is embraced by these simple children of
-Nature, so apt to be influenced by the latest impression, especially
-if that impression be evil. Every careful reader of South Sea Island
-records must have noticed the frequency with which the good work of the
-missionaries--and, let it be said, in all justice, the good work of
-the honest, sober, truthful, and decent trader--has been undone by the
-infernal exploits of a crew of black-guards coming soon after. Also, it
-must have been seen how frequently the ill-usage (in the worst sense)
-of the confiding but undiscriminating natives by some bad ship’s crew
-has led to the awful massacre of the next ship’s company calling there,
-and the subsequent laying waste of the village of these dispensers
-of wild justice. In Stevenson’s ‘Wrecker’ one of the most appalling
-facts is stated quite dispassionately concerning the murder of Bishop
-Patteson, and it makes the flesh creep. Here it is:--
-
-‘He was tried for his life in Fiji in Sir Arthur Gordon’s time, and
-if ever he prayed at all, the name of Sir Arthur was certainly not
-forgotten. He was speared in seven places in New Ireland--the same
-time his mate was killed--the famous outrage on board the brig _Jolly
-Roger_, but _the treacherous savages made little by their wickedness_’
-(the italics are mine) ‘and Bostock, in spite of their teeth, got
-seventy-five head of volunteer (?) labour on board, of whom not more
-than a dozen died of injuries. He had a hand besides in the amiable
-pleasantry which cost the life of Patteson; and when the sham bishop
-landed, prayed, and gave his benediction to the natives, Bostock,
-arrayed in a female chemise out of the trade-room, had stood at his
-right hand and boomed Amens. This, when he was sure he was among good
-fellows, was his favourite yarn. “Two hundred head of labour for a
-hatful of Amens,” he used to name the tale; and its sequel, the death
-of the real bishop, struck him as a circumstance of extraordinary
-humour.’
-
-It was evident to Mr. Court at once what his commander had come into
-this bay for, and he was in a greater difficulty than ever. The ship
-was practically in possession of the natives, all uproariously good
-humoured, but all, liable to pass at once from riotous pleasantry to
-mad fury of slaughter. The only comfort he had was that no natives were
-allowed to invade the cabin. The foc’s’le, the half-deck, was overrun
-by them, and nearly all the crew had been induced to join them in their
-curious gambols--all the more curious that the skipper had liberally
-distributed his fire-water among them. Reuben, at the first descent of
-native men and women into the foc’s’le, had made his way on deck and
-into the fore-top, then along the topgallant stay he had climbed to the
-main-crosstrees, and in similar fashion had reached the mizen-top. Here
-he determined to camp until morning with some vague idea of watching
-over the safety of Priscilla, and at the least, descending among the
-natives if they should prove treacherous (?) and losing his life in her
-defence. From his lofty perch he looked down upon that ugly scene, and
-his clean soul revolted at it. But he saw to his intense satisfaction
-the actors therein gradually sink to slumber, overcome by fatigue, and
-by midnight the pale moon shone down upon heaps of sleepers in all
-sorts of varied attitudes, exposing shamefulnesses that the tender dark
-had hidden. And overwearied at last he slept also.
-
-The morning brought tumult, a renewal of the orgies of the previous
-night. All work, discipline, order, seemed to be at an end. The
-skipper, like a maddened Bacchanal, swayed to and fro between two dusky
-nymphs, daughters of the paramount chief, and Mr. Court, looking at him
-with disgust, could take no steps. Once, indeed, finding a huge native
-endeavouring to force his body down through the insufficient opening
-of the cabin skylight, the mate almost forgot the stern control he had
-placed upon himself, and was just about to seize the man fiercely and
-hurl him away when he was seized from behind, and turning furiously to
-see who it was he looked into the mild but fearless eyes of Reuben, who
-said, ‘For heaven’s sake, sir, don’t anger them--for her sake.’ That
-was all, and Mr. Court’s anger died instantly away.
-
-But none of the devoted few who throughout this terrible time retained
-their manliness and clean living were able to retain much hope that a
-final and terribly complete disaster could be avoided. And all they
-could do was to look helplessly on and see it coming, powerless to
-avert it. For the skipper, in spite of the madness of his orgies,
-not only kept cunning watch over his end of the ship, and allowed no
-native, whether male or female, to enter the cabin, but he also kept
-the sober ones in view also, and by this I do not merely mean those
-to whom he had handed out drink--his own countrymen--but those of the
-white men who had allowed themselves to wallow in debauchery.
-
-The end came very suddenly, on the fourth night. All the revellers had
-been carrying on furiously, with but brief intervals of exhaustion,
-and the number of natives was greatly increased by fresh arrivals from
-some of the outlying islands. Several serious quarrels had broken out,
-and been patched up without bloodshed, and there was much murmuring
-among the natives because the supply of liquor seemed to be failing--at
-any rate, the Captain was not so free with it as he had been. More, a
-belief had steadily gained ground among them that something of great
-value was secured in that after-part of the ship into which none of
-them had been permitted to penetrate. Now, whether either of these
-causes had anything to do with the final catastrophe, or whether it was
-just an outburst of savagery like the mischief of petulant children,
-no one will ever know, but the fact remains that about midnight there
-was a strong smell of fire, and before any of the sleeping roysterers
-had awakened, tall flames upreared their terrible shapes from the
-main-hatch, and a roar as of some vast furnace was heard. Almost in
-an instant the ship was alive with men running hither and thither as
-if dazed, others fiercely fighting, others drawing water in buckets,
-and casting it into the glowing furnace of the main-hatch without the
-slightest appreciable effect. In the midst of it all four men kept
-their heads clear--Reuben, Mr. Court, Mr. Winslow, and Mr. Pease. As it
-was very evident at an early stage that the fire, even if attacked by
-competent hands, was unsubduable, and that, moreover, the natives were
-bent not only upon destroying the ship but the lives of every European
-on board, these four devoted all their energies to the means of escape.
-The Captain was somewhere in the midst of the yelling crowd, fighting
-fiercely, no doubt, his voice heard occasionally above the tumult, so
-that no counsel could be taken with him. And to make the confusion
-still more terrible, blinding columns of smoke began bursting, as it
-seemed, out of every crevice of the vessel. This decided Reuben that
-the time had come to act finally, and tearing the cabin door off its
-hinges by one effort of his strength, he rushed below, and seizing
-the half-suffocated Priscilla in his arms bore her on deck, and,
-half-blinded, groped his way to the port quarter boat, and placed her
-safely in the stern sheets. He had previously ‘racked’ the falls--that
-is, fastened two of the parts of each together--and had thrown the
-coils into the boat. Now he took a round turn round the midship thwart
-with both the falls, and, holding them firmly, went to both ends of the
-boat consecutively and cut the rackings, the boat falling a foot or so
-each time with an ugly jerk. Then he lowered away handsomely, feeling
-sure that in the hubbub on deck the rattle of the blocks would never
-be noticed. She took the water, he unhooked and pushed off, full of
-anguish of mind as to the fate of his three friends, but not knowing
-what to do for them without risking the helpless woman for whom he
-would gladly have suffered any pain or manner of death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-AND LAST
-
-
-It may well be wondered why in the much-abused name of common-sense the
-mariners on board the _Grampus_ did not, seeing the hopelessness of
-saving their vessel, make for the boats and leave her. But it must be
-remembered that, apart from the fact that they were nearly all mixed
-up in that horrible compost of savagery, there were really only three
-of them who had any clearness of head remaining. These three, whom I
-have already named, were busy preparing the starboard quarter boat
-for leaving when suddenly there burst upon them, like a flood, a mob
-of natives, and before they had time to draw their weapons they were
-overpowered, and another dark deed was consummated. As so often has
-happened in South Sea Island story, the innocent suffered equally with
-the guilty--indeed, more, for one guilty man escaped for a time. Off in
-the dark Reuben waited, all his nerves raw with anxiety for those who
-would never come. What to do he did not know, for light and graceful as
-a whaleboat is when she has her full complement of men on board, she is
-cumbrous as a barge to be handled by one man at any time without sail;
-and when to that one man’s task is added the hampering of darkness
-and ignorance of the way he should go, the hill of difficulty becomes
-well-nigh insurmountable.
-
-Reuben stood with his feet upon the two cleats, made and fastened for
-the purpose of raising the steersman’s body, one on each side of the
-stern-sheets, staring with smarting eyes into the smoky, flame-stabbed
-darkness where the ship lay. Occasionally a great spurt of blood-red
-fire lit up sea, shore, and sky, and made him tremble for fear of
-discovery; then a wild chorus of yells and shrieks chilled his blood
-as he pictured mentally the scene being enacted on board. Strangely
-enough, he had quite forgotten his own peril, had forgotten how many
-were the native canoes, how impossible it would be for him to propel
-that heavy boat one quarter as fast as those amphibious natives could
-swim after him if once they realised his departure. Ah! The boat sagged
-heavily to one side, and in over the bluff of the bow climbed a dark
-figure, gasping as if its chest was being rent asunder. Reuben sprang
-forward, and found it was the skipper. The two men stared at each other
-for a moment; then the skipper gurgled out, ‘Oars, pull for life; all
-dead but me.’ And as he spoke he seized an oar and began to pull.
-Reuben said no word, but took another, and with the long, splendid
-stroke of the whaler they propelled the beautiful craft silently
-seaward, passing the headland safely and unobserved. A light breeze was
-blowing, and no sooner were they clear of the head than the skipper
-said, his native gruffness asserting itself even in that terrible hour,
-‘Come, lend a hand ’n’ git th’ mast up. She’ll go twice as fast under
-sail. Git a move on ye.’ It was a heavy task for two men, one of whom
-was evidently fighting hard against overpowering weakness, but Reuben’s
-great strength again stood him in good stead, and before ten minutes
-had elapsed the big sail was bellying bravely forward, and the boat,
-heading out into the night, was gently bowing to the incoming Pacific
-swell, seeming eager to escape from those awful shores.
-
-Captain Da Silva took the steer-oar, and with something of his old
-skill laid the boat on the direct course for the nearest reef-opening,
-steering by the white curdlings on the reef-tops around, which showed
-up most conspicuously against the dark of the night. Astern the
-_Grampus_, now one vast flame, filled the sky with a lurid glare, and
-the smoke of her burning came floating over the heads of the fugitives
-in a long grey cloud. For a space of about half an hour not a word was
-spoken by either of the men. Then suddenly the skipper said sharply,
-‘Who’s this?’ pointing to the motionless figure lying in the stern
-sheets at his feet as if he had only just seen it.
-
-‘It’s yewr wife, Cap’n,’ answered Rube in the most matter-of-fact
-manner possible.
-
-‘How ’d she kem here?’ demanded the skipper again.
-
-‘I brought her, sir,’ replied Rube, without the slightest change of
-voice.
-
-‘Oh, yew did, eh?’ said the skipper faintly. And then stooping and
-letting go his hold of the oar, he laid his hand upon the unconscious
-woman and said, ‘’R y’ all right, Pris? I’m drefful sorry t’ have brung
-ye t’ this; but I kain’t do nothin’ f’r y’ naow. I’m mighty sick man
-myself.’ And with that word he fell forward in a heap fainting.
-
-This brought Rube aft on the jump, but it was well for him that
-Priscilla had been roused from her curious stupor and was able to
-attend to her husband, as the steering of the boat demanded all one
-man’s attention now.
-
-They were nearing the reef passage, and the swell meeting them was
-causing the boat to leap as she surmounted its crests, and demanding a
-very steady hand at the steer-oar to keep her bow on to it. Besides,
-the channel was barely five boats’ lengths wide, and the foam of the
-incoming breakers almost obscured it at times. Still Rube steered
-seaward with a steady hand, and presently with a sigh of relief he saw
-the gallant craft shoot out from between those walls of white on to the
-dark, free ocean beyond. Then he was about to try and ship the rudder,
-which always hangs alongside, when he heard her voice saying:
-
-‘Would you please look at the Captain? I think he has fainted, or
-something, and his clothes are all sticky, as well as wet.’
-
-Rube answered thickly, ‘Certainly, ma’am, only yew must ’scuse me if I
-divide my ’tention between him and the boat. She wants a good deal of
-steering just now, an’ we kain’t afford to linger about here, in case
-we ain’t far enough from that awful place by sun-up.’
-
-Then Rube stooped down and peered into the skipper’s face, feeling all
-over his body at the same time and noting the sticky feeling of which
-she spoke. But he knew no more of what it was than she, and as he had
-no light he could not investigate. And so he gave all his attention to
-the navigation of the boat away from those dangerous shores while yet
-the land wind held, knowing full well that it would die away before
-dawn and the sea breeze come with the sun. Then if he were not well off
-the land he would run great risk of being caught by the natives, whose
-blood thirst would by this time be unassuageable.
-
-Priscilla, only conscious apparently of one fact, that her husband
-needed her ministrations, was doing her best under those sadly hampered
-conditions to give them. That she was tossing about on the open sea in
-a small boat with only her unconscious husband and one sailor to keep
-her company did not seem to impress her at all. And yet it would be
-grievous if anyone reading her story should think of her scornfully as
-having degenerated under her terrible trials into something very much
-resembling an imbecile. Oh, no; really her present state of mind had
-been reached through a series of shocks that would have driven a weaker
-woman to death or madness, but in her case had providentially resulted
-in a sort of calm acceptance, without any apparent surprise, of
-whatever strange experiences should befall her. Mechanically she bathed
-her husband’s face with her handkerchief dipped in the water overside,
-and, warned by his stertorous breathing, she loosed his neckband and
-managed to raise his head on to her lap. And thus she sat quietly
-enduring the cramping of her limbs, accepting the sharp pains shooting
-through her body as inevitable, and making no sound.
-
-A hush stole over the dark sea as the wind died away, broken only
-by the heavy occasional flap of the now useless sail. Without a
-word Reuben shipped the steer-oar and stepped lightly forward. In a
-minute or two he had tightly furled the sail and taken an extra pull
-at the backstays and stay, after deciding that owing to his being
-single-handed and not sure of his power to elevate it again he must
-take the risk of being seen through leaving the mast standing. He
-did not realise how far the swift boat had glided under the gentle
-stress of the light land breeze during those past hours of darkness.
-With almost hungry eagerness he waited for the dawn, noted the first
-faint blush as of surprise tinting the eastern sky, watched with
-growing feelings of worship tremulous threads of delicate colour
-running searchingly into the sombre concave of the departing night,
-saw the flood of palest golden light appear, and then springing into
-its midst ablaze with glory, majesty, and life, the sun. And the
-land out of sight. His head sank upon his bosom, and he thanked God
-for deliverance. Yet, having done so, he could not help a sinking
-at his heart as he looked aft at those two crouching forms--one so
-inexpressibly precious to him, the other a sacred charge because--well,
-because of right and truth and honour. He knew that upon him, under
-God, depended their lives, although he did not then know how far gone
-the skipper was. And just one little moan escaped him as he thought how
-ill-provided they were for a long cruise in those unfrequented seas.
-Then hope revived again as he felt, because of his ignorance, that
-he could not sail far in any direction without making land, and land
-meant food and water, and (but that he did not trouble about) savages,
-cannibals made, if possible, worse than they were by nature by the
-utter villainy of white men far more culpable than they.
-
-Then, treading softly as a cat, he stepped over the thwarts aft again,
-and as he did so Priscilla lifted her wan face to his, saying calmly:
-
-‘Are we safe from pursuit?’
-
-Rube nodded: he could not trust himself to speak.
-
-‘Then, will you see what you can do for Captain Da Silva. I--I am
-afraid he is badly injured.’
-
-With one glance at the boat fore and aft and a satisfied noting of the
-little darkness on the water which betokened the coming breeze, Rube
-obeyed, and stooped to the Captain’s side. As soon as he did so he
-saw to his horror that the stickiness they had both felt during the
-darkness was blood; the skipper had been wounded in many places, and
-his blood, aided by the salt water, had congealed upon him and stopped
-its own flow, or he would have been dead long before.
-
-‘Ma’am,’ said Rube unsteadily, ‘I’ll dew my best fur the Cap’n, but, as
-yew k’n see, that isn’t much. He’s badly cut, an’ I daren’t interfere
-with his hurts ’cause at present they’ve stopped bleedin’, and if I
-tech him an’ start ’em agen I mayn’t be able to stanch th’ flow then.
-Pity I got nothin’ t’ give him but a little soak biscuit an’ water.
-P’raps you’ll take a little yewrself, ma’am, at the same time t’ keep
-up yewr strength and courage.’
-
-The ghost of a smile flickered for a second about her white lips, and
-she said simply, ‘Thank you. You are very kind. What shall I call you?’
-
-He answered shortly, with a tightening at the heart, ‘My name’s Rube,
-ma’am--at least, that’s what I get usually. Call me thet, if ye don’t
-mind.’
-
-And then he busied himself with the preparation of the simple meal,
-measuring crumb and drop as if each represented so many minutes of
-life, and deciding that, as for himself, he could go a much longer
-time yet before encroaching upon the small stock which must suffice for
-them all. The breeze freshening, he set the sail again, and, hauling
-the boat’s head as near the wind as she would lie, found that she would
-make about E.N.E. on the starboard tack--by guess, that is, for there
-was no compass in the boat. And this course he chose, not because he
-knew whither it would lead them, but because he saw that it was taking
-them well away from those accursed isles, of whose very name and
-whereabouts he was ignorant. And having got the boat so easily trimmed
-that by lashing the tiller at a certain angle she would steer herself,
-coming up and falling off just as if a hand was at the helm, he turned
-his attention again to the skipper and his wife, finding that the
-former had returned to a reasonable appreciation of his surroundings
-and was quietly taking the biscuit pap from Priscilla’s fingers. His
-filmy eyes lighted upon Reuben, and he said in low but clear tones:
-
-‘Ah! yew never gut thet floggin’ I promised ye. Wall, I doan’ know as
-I’m sorry thet yew missed it. I guess I ben a pretty hard case ever
-sence I gut a chance t’ be, ’n’ I don’t believe I ever ben sorry fur
-anything I ever done befo’. I felt mad, but not sorry--no, never. ’N’
-I thought I’d go some day jest like that. ’N’ now I kain’t. Pris’
-(turning to his wife with sudden energy), ‘I want yew t’ fergive
-me--I’ve done y’ a power of harm. I ben an awful brute t’ ye. Wut I
-ben t’ th’ men don’ matter--that’s wut they’re aboard fur--but yew ben
-good t’ me, ’n’ I ben a devil t’ yew. Naow I’m a-dyin’, ’n’ I don’ care
-a plunk fer thet, but I’d like y’ t’ know I’m sorry fur wut I done t’
-ye. Ez fur this galoot, I don’t know who he is er wut he is, ’n’ ef I
-a-hed my way with him he’d a-hed a pretty tough time, but I do b’lieve
-he ain’t half bad. Kiender soft mebbe fur all he’s so big an’ hefty,
-but I think he’ll put ye through in shape. An’----’ But then the
-voice suddenly melted into a few unintelligible sounds, and again the
-skipper’s head sank on to his wife’s lap and he was silent in another
-swoon. Rube looked at him helplessly for a moment, then, reflecting
-that the best thing for him would be to concentrate his mind upon the
-only thing he could do--viz., the handling of the boat--he stepped
-thoughtfully back to the tiller, and cast his eye first over the boat
-herself, then all around. She was going sweetly along, unguided, like a
-creature of intelligence, and as if she needed no human intervention,
-so, satisfied of this, Rube busied himself in making everything within
-her as neat and ship-shape as possible. Having done all he could at
-this, he counted their treasured biscuit, felt the weight of the water
-supply, and looked inquiringly at Priscilla, holding up the little
-wooden beaker or piggin with one hand and pointing to the keg with the
-other. But Priscilla, moistening her parched lips as well as she could,
-shook her head, giving a meaning glance at the little bucket wherein he
-had soaked the biscuit of which she and the Captain had been partaking,
-to show him that there was still some left.
-
-Just as Rube was wondering what he could do next for her comfort, and
-his own satisfaction, there was a commotion in the water alongside, and
-with a series of sharp taps against the sides and bottom of the boat,
-half-a-dozen large flying-fish fell into her in their hurried rush
-upwards from the onslaught of a big albacore, which went sweeping past
-with one of their late comrades thwartwise in his mouth. In a moment
-Rube had gathered the welcome little wanderers together and hidden them
-all out of the sun’s rays but one. This he cleaned with the utmost
-delicacy and filleted, cutting the fillets into dainty narrow strips.
-With half-a-dozen of them balanced on his knife-blade, he approached
-Priscilla, who had been watching him languidly, saying, ‘Here, ma’am,
-is suthin’ that’ll dew yew and the skipper both good. It’s cool and
-moist, an’ ef yew shet yew eyes fur a minit yew’ll be surprised haow
-easy yew can take it. Thousan’s of people prefer it this way t’ cooked.
-’N’ I’ll dry some fur ye then, only it ain’t so good fur ye because
-of its makin’ y’ thirsty, an’ water’s none too plentiful.’ With
-utmost docility she roused herself, took the tender looking strips,
-and put one of them to her husband’s cracked lips. His mouth opened
-mechanically and his jaws moved, but he had no power to swallow, and
-his breath began to come and go laboriously. Putting one hand under his
-head, she beckoned Rube with the other, whispering, ‘Is he dying? Can’t
-you _do_ anything for him?’
-
-With a fervent petition for aid to do the right thing, for wisdom to
-see it, Rube stepped to her side and took the Captain’s weight off
-Priscilla’s arm upon his own. There was, even to a man with as little
-experience of death as Rube’s, but scanty room to doubt that Captain
-Da Silva was going to his account. And then, incredible as it may seem
-to most of us, this simple-minded Christian man, forgetting all else
-but the pitiable plight of the sufferer before him, actually burst
-suddenly into earnest prayer that he might be spared--if only for a
-little while--spared to repent of the evil done and intended. But as
-he prayed he was conscious of something, he knew not what, driving into
-his mind the certainty that his prayer was not to be granted. That
-Ramon Da Silva had done all the direct ill he was to be allowed to do.
-Rube’s voice ceased, the skipper’s eyes opened, glazed and fixed, his
-lower jaw dropped heavily, and he was dead. Catching Priscilla’s eyes
-fixed earnestly upon his face, Reuben said solemnly, ‘He’s dead, ma’am,
-and the rest is with God.’ ‘May God have mercy upon him now,’ she
-replied.
-
-Until the evening scarcely another word was spoken by either of them,
-both busy with their own thoughts. But just before sunset, Rube said
-questioningly, ‘We kain’t do no good, and may do much harm, by keeping
-the body any longer: d’ you mind my offering up a prayer an’ committin’
-it to th’ deep?’ She answered humbly, ‘Do what you think is right--I am
-willing. God knows I have every confidence in you.’ So Rube sank upon
-his knees on the thwart, and with bowed head commended the dead man to
-the mercy of the Merciful. Then he rose, and with a sudden heave of his
-great shoulders, lifted the piece of clay; there was a sullen splash,
-an eddy, and all that was mortal of Ramon Da Silva had disappeared for
-ever from human sight.
-
-With an unutterable sense of relief Reuben turned to the business of
-living, and bringing forth his little store of filleted fish and a
-handful of broken biscuits gently pressed Priscilla to eat. She at once
-commenced to try, only stipulating that he should also take something,
-for she felt sure that, since the catastrophe, at any rate, he had not
-broken his fast. He gravely acceded to her wish and began to eat, but
-had only taken two or three mouthfuls when he laid down the morsel he
-was conveying to his lips, put both hands to his face, and, his huge
-body shaken as with ague, burst into a tempest of sobs. Priscilla
-watched him in awe-stricken silence, until she, too, moved beyond
-bearing by such a passion in this quiet, self-possessed man, began to
-weep. But as soon as she did, Rube, by a tremendous effort, regained
-command of himself and began in tenderest fashion to speak such
-comforting words to her as his close acquaintance with the Source of
-all comfort had given him possession of. But be it noted, neither his
-consolation nor Priscilla’s distress had any reference to their present
-desperate condition whatever. That apparently gave them no uneasiness.
-These tears of Priscilla’s were due to reaction, to self-pity perhaps
-a little, but principally were an evidence of the passing away of an
-awful bondage. Such tears as a prisoner might shed on first emerging
-from a loathsome captivity in an underground dungeon into the blessed
-light of Heaven--free.
-
-There is no need to enlarge upon the cause of Rube’s breakdown: if it
-be not palpable, it would be futile to explain.
-
-Now he was torn with a raging conflict between his desires and his
-fears. Would Priscilla, after all, love him? Dare he make himself known
-without appearing to take any unmanly advantage of her helplessness,
-her utter need of some strong arm upon which to lean, whether she loved
-its owner or not so long as he was kind? Foolish--oh, yes, but quite
-natural where such faithful love as Rube’s reigns in a man’s heart,
-allied with such a distrust of self as he possessed. So he sat speaking
-to Priscilla such things as he found best to say with this backlash
-of harassing thoughts occupying one corner of his brain, and causing
-his eyes to shine with almost audible intensity. And presently lifting
-her head Priscilla’s gaze met his. For a moment she stared spellbound,
-then gasped, ‘Rube, it’s _you_, it’s YOU. O God, how good You are to
-me!’ And she bent towards him. All his fears were forgotten now, all
-his delicate self-tormenting diffidences vanished like breath-mist from
-a diamond, and he took her to his broad breast as a mother takes her
-infant, yearningly, hungrily.
-
-The boat sailed on steadily into the blankness of the horizon, hunger
-and thirst, and dreadful outlook all forgotten, and in that happy hour
-each lived a lifetime of perfect joy, feeling that, come what might,
-the price to pay would not be grudged by them. Then, with a sigh of
-perfect content, they released one another, and Rube, feeling as if
-the strength of ten lay in his great frame, the wisdom of a dozen old
-sea-captains had accumulated in his brain, set about preparing for the
-night. He felt ready to wrestle with death itself for her as Jacob did
-with the angel, and with no more fear. And she followed him with her
-eyes as he busied himself about the boat and made ready their tiny
-meal. It was so sweet to feel once more the presence of unselfish love
-ready to do and dare all things for her. If the prospect of that wide
-sea-plain and their utter loneliness upon it, and the knowledge of
-their want of food, did for a moment give her a chilly feeling as of
-the approach of darkness, it was only momentary: one glance again at
-his bright, brave, calm face dispelled it, and brought instead the glow
-of perfect happiness--that is, as nearly perfect as a spirit clothed
-with flesh can feel.
-
-They took their evening morsel of food, and uttered their evening
-prayers sitting hand in hand like little children, and with as little
-care or fear for the future as babes would have; they saw the bright
-sky darken into the violet of the night, while the gentle breeze held
-steadily and the boat still swept quietly forward to the east. Rube
-made Priscilla as comfortable as possible, sacrificing the jib’s
-usefulness for the night in order to protect her from the drenching
-dew, and as she laid her head down upon his coat rolled up for a
-pillow she gave a happy little sigh, murmured, ‘Thank you, dear,’ put
-up her face to be kissed as a tired child would out of its cot, and
-went instantly to sleep. Rube, noting this with intense satisfaction,
-composed himself upon the little deck aft, where he could look down
-upon Priscilla’s form, cast off the tiller, and, sitting with it
-under his arm, steered the boat steadily by the wind, still making,
-as nearly as he could judge by the stars, about a N.E. course. So
-through the night he sat, and dozed and woke alternately, never finding
-any alteration in the pose of that recumbent figure beneath him,
-never needing to do aught but just sit still and commune with his own
-thoughts. Strangely enough, do what he would he could not feel any
-apprehension for the future. Again and again he endeavoured to depict
-Priscilla and himself dying of hunger and thirst under the great solemn
-eye of heaven. Again and again he recalled his experiences in the
-_Xiphias_’ boat when all the bitterness of such a death was actually
-undergone, and the survivors were literally haled back from the dark
-entry of the grave. But no answering tremor came. Not even when he
-thought of his father and mother, those waiting, lonely figures sitting
-by their cosy but quiet fireside praying for him. Ah--that was it. The
-effectual, fervent prayer of a righteous man availeth much, and whether
-he (and _she_) were to live or die, the peace which they were enjoying
-was undoubtedly due to that stream of real prayer ascending continually
-from the Eddy Homestead for the wanderers on unknown seas.
-
-Therefore, in the morning, as daylight filled the sky, he faced the
-waking Priscilla with a countenance scarcely less bright. He drew her
-a bucket of water from overside, and recommended a sluicing of hands,
-and face, and neck, telling her that for the next half-hour it would
-be necessary for him to seat himself upon the bow and look steadfastly
-ahead in case in that clear dawn-light some vessel should be visible.
-And when such a toilet as she was able to make was completed, a word
-from her would bring him aft on the jump supposing his vigil were not
-over. She smiled gratefully, appreciatively; and met him presently,
-when in response to her call he came leaping aft, with a face so bright
-and rosy in spite of its thinness that an involuntary exclamation of
-wonder and admiration burst from him. Then they sat down to their
-frugal breakfast of water and biscuit--the fish was now too stale to
-eat, unless they were much more ravenous than at present--and for sauce
-they had reminiscences, all that Rube could remember on both sides of
-the blank, and all that she _would_ recall of the doings of her dead
-husband. Then Rube, interesting Priscilla greatly, produced a hook
-and line which he had found stowed away in the ‘eyes’ of the boat.
-Carefully mounting a strongly smelling flying fish upon the hook, he
-trolled it astern, and in a few minutes succeeded in flinging into the
-boat a beautiful coryphena, or dolphin as the sailor calls it, of over
-ten pounds in weight. A portion of its flesh was cut off, and preserved
-for bait, a portion was carefully prepared for the next meal--they did
-not mind raw fish now--and the rest cleansed, and cut in strips, was
-laid in the sun to dry. And then they thanked God, ate another meal,
-and took courage.
-
-On the fourth morning, although they had caught plenty of fish--for in
-those prolific seas the deep-sea denizens swarm--they drank their last
-drop of water. They had husbanded it carefully, and as at the outset
-there was but little over a gallon, it had lasted well. But even now
-they did not feel dismayed. Amid their terrible surroundings they were
-quite, or nearly quite, happy. That same strange assurance enjoyed by
-Rube had communicated itself to Priscilla, and together they discussed
-their meeting with the dear old people, and all the wonderments that
-people so entirely ignorant of what had been happening since their
-departure might naturally be supposed to entertain. They caught a
-skip-jack that day, a kind of vivacious mackerel, weighing about five
-pounds, and almost gaily munched its juicy flesh, which was so grateful
-to their already parching mouths.
-
-Then, at the close of day, as usual--it seemed as if they had been thus
-associated for a lifetime--they prayed, kissed each other good-night,
-and Priscilla went to sleep, while Rube, as usual, sat erect and dozed.
-He was suddenly awakened by a great glare of light which dazzled him,
-proceeding from he knew not where. Next moment a clear voice sounded
-across the blackness following upon the blaze: ‘Boat ahoy!’ ‘Hallo,’
-replied the deep tones of Rube. And then he saw the towering form of
-a ship, her green light glaring down at him as if in judicial inquiry
-just overhead. In fact, so close that only by putting his tiller hard
-over and bringing his boat up in the wind he escaped running into
-her with a crash. A side ladder was lowered, a couple of agile men
-glided down ropes into the boat, and in less than ten minutes Rube and
-Priscilla stood upon the deck of H.M.S. _Alcestis_, surveying ship, to
-whose splendid lookout they owed their rescue, and whose crew they had
-provided with a babblement of talk that was already surging throughout
-the remotest corners of the ship.
-
-A cabin was immediately found for Priscilla, and the wardroom
-attendants could not sufficiently show their zeal and readiness
-to anticipate her every want. Rube, brought before a charming
-young-looking officer, was interrogated as to the how and why of this
-miraculous appearance in mid-Pacific in a boat, at night with one
-woman, but not before he had been offered and had refused a glass of
-grog and a cigar, and had accepted instead a plate of soup on the
-condition that some was first given to Priscilla.
-
-So Reuben told his tale to the Captain of the man-o’-war, and whether
-the sentry at the door had his ear to the keyhole all the while or
-not I don’t know, but certain it is that almost as soon as Reuben
-retired for the rest of the night to a comfortable berth, having first
-visited Priscilla’s cabin and found her supremely happy, his story
-was the common property of the ship’s company, and he could have
-had any one of them shed blood, their own or another’s, for him. Of
-that, of course, there was no need, but anyone who knows the British
-man-o’-warsman, officer or seaman, needs not to be told that on arrival
-at Honolulu the paymaster of the _Alcestis_ handed over to Reuben a sum
-of money sufficient for all reasonable expenses and fare to Vermont.
-Among those _reasonable_ expenses was included the cost of a wedding
-at the English church, to which over one hundred of the _Alcestis’_
-crew invited themselves, and made those proceedings vibrate with
-their own enthusiasm. I regret to say, though, that after escorting
-the newly wedded pair on board the mail steamer bound to ’Frisco, and
-cheering themselves hoarse as she departed, several of those gallant
-blue-jackets were found so full of spirits, animal and vegetable, that
-it became necessary for the preservation of the public peace to put
-them under lock and key, with serious results to themselves.
-
-Reuben and his adoring wife had no more adventures. They were the
-heroes of the passengers and crew of the _Golden Gate_, and they had
-much ado to dodge the wily reporters in the Queen City of the West.
-Nor were they able to prevent the appearance of their histories (with
-such extraordinary verbal embellishments as the said reporters deemed
-it necessary to add) in the flamboyant local newspapers. But in due
-time they found themselves travelling together the quiet moss-grown
-paths between Boston and the home farm, and arriving at the door of
-the Eddy Homestead to be received as the latest and best gifts of a
-loving God to the faithful old couple who had never wavered in the
-long waiting for them, nor doubted that they would come. Also it seems
-an anti-climax to record their settling down to a happy, useful, and
-loving life in the old farm of Priscilla’s youth, kept in readiness for
-them by Rube’s father against the day of their return.
-
-It was somewhat of a wrench for them to be compelled to make a journey
-to New Bedford and depose to the circumstances in which the _Grampus_
-was lost, and there always remained a sense of something incomplete in
-Reuben’s mind about the early days of his departure from New Bedford,
-and the intervening months before awaking on board the _Grampus_. But
-these ripples made no impression upon the steady flow of their stream
-of happiness. Brother Will came to see them from Chicago, portly and
-full of dollar-talk, being almost a millionaire, and departed West
-again, feeling that there was, after all, something which even dollars
-could not buy, and that Rube and his sister possessed the chief of
-those things.
-
-Here let us leave the much-tried pair, nestling under the wing of the
-Loving Father, whose watchful care had been over them through all their
-perils, being serenely carried onwards to a golden sunset.
-
-
-_Spottiswoode & Co. Ltd., Printers, New-street Square, London._
-
-
-
-
-WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.
-
-
-WITH CHRIST AT SEA
-
-A RELIGIOUS AUTOBIOGRAPHY.
-
-Fifth Edition. Crown 8vo. cloth, 6_s._
-
- ‘There is not a dull page in the whole narrative.’--TIMES.
-
- ‘Those who are acquainted with Mr. Bullen’s work will know that he
- cannot fail to compel the attention of his readers. He writes with a
- sincerity and a simplicity which lend a great charm to all he does....
- He has much to say of the conditions of the service in which he spent
- many years, and most of what he tells us is extremely interesting.
- Moreover, to those who love the sea the book is worth reading for
- its description of the varied moods, the storm and stress, the calm
- benignity, the delicate play of the ocean on which this religious life
- is spent.’--DAILY TELEGRAPH.
-
- ‘Mr. Bullen has told the story of his inner life of faith as it grew
- amid the very real hardships and temptations of his life at sea. And
- by doing so, we do not doubt that he will have given to many men
- and boys the best help a fellow-man can give in their own struggle
- with like circumstance. Had he kept his book back for posthumous
- publication, he would probably have considerably lessened, as well as
- postponed, the good it is calculated to do, for the help to be got out
- of a biography is very much increased by the contemporaneousness of
- the experiences it records.’--SPECTATOR.
-
- ‘We count this one of the most daring books ever printed--a book
- in which a very powerful writer has risked a great reputation for
- Christ’s sake. It is quite as fascinating as the book that made him,
- only in another kind of way. For simple verity, for power to make the
- thing live before readers, few autobiographies have the power of this.
- We could not put it down until we were through with it, and as we were
- going through we could not command our tears. The book will do a world
- of good; and, we say again, the witness is a very brave one, manfully
- borne.’--METHODIST TIMES.
-
- ‘As a human document nothing more interesting of its kind has appeared
- for many years.... No one can doubt on reading this book that Mr.
- Bullen has lived his religion. There is so little to be gained by
- professing to be a Christian at sea that a man who does profess to be
- a Christian probably is a Christian. If his rule is made applicable to
- the author of this book the present writer records his impression for
- what it is worth, that Mr. Bullen is one who has lived the Life, and
- that his account of it is interesting and manly.’--DAILY CHRONICLE.
-
- ‘One of the most popular books that he has written.... Mr. Bullen, as
- usual, writes with considerable charm, and will once again elicit the
- sympathy and admiration of all who peruse his pages.’--WESTMINSTER
- GAZETTE.
-
-
-THE APOSTLES OF THE SOUTH-EAST
-
-Second Edition. Crown 8vo. cloth, 6_s._
-
-
- ‘The story is touching and impressive, and fully establishes what we
- believe to be the real point about which Mr. Bullen is zealous--that
- there are no actually Godless corners anywhere in the world, simply
- because though men may forget God, God does not forget men, and in
- some way or other witness is borne to the truth of the spiritual
- life in the darkest times, and the most seemingly abandoned
- places.’--SPECTATOR.
-
- ‘One of the most beautiful religious stories ever written. Mr.
- Bullen’s incomparable knowledge of the details of the sailor’s life is
- displayed as wonderfully as in his earliest books.’--BRITISH WEEKLY.
-
- ‘An inspiring book, and charmingly written.’--METHODIST RECORDER.
-
- ‘The whole tone of the book is healthy, inspirational, and
- hopeful.’--METHODIST TIMES.
-
- ‘A story as interesting as any that could be written.’--DAILY NEWS.
-
- ‘A remarkable book, interesting in the extreme to really religious
- readers as giving a view--accurate, the writer protests--of a phase of
- London life very little known and hardly ever realised by middle-or
- upper-class people.’--RECORD.
-
- ‘No one knows better how to make his characters picturesque, and yet
- actually faithful to nature, than does Mr. Bullen, and these humble
- Christians of the slums of Rotherhithe are wonderfully life-like. “The
- Apostles of the South-East” have been drawn from real life, and are
- sketched with all that vigour and fidelity that are so characteristic
- of the writer.’--ROCK.
-
-
-WITH CHRIST IN SAILORTOWN
-
-With Illustrations. Fcp. 8vo. cloth, 1_s._ 6_d._
-
- ‘It stands apart from books of a similar kind, not only because of
- the writer’s unique experience of the sailor’s life, but because of
- the high literary gifts which he can bring to his task; and it will
- help the public to know more than they do of an excellent work which
- appeals, above all, to Englishmen.’--LITERATURE.
-
- ‘Never has the pathetic side of sailor life been more vividly
- presented.’--BIRMINGHAM DAILY GAZETTE.
-
- ‘We congratulate the author without reserve upon the judicious
- and generous use which he has made of his remarkable ability and
- popularity.’--MANCHESTER GUARDIAN.
-
- ‘Everybody should buy it, read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest
- it, and do all in his power to forward the amelioration and
- Christianisation of our merchant seamen, which implies the creation of
- an adequate Royal Naval Reserve.’--QUEEN.
-
- ‘It is written with sympathy and vivacity; and is full of inimitable
- touches which throw into relief the manly sympathy and moral courage
- of the writer, as well as the peculiar needs of the poor fellows of
- whom he writes at once so wisely and so well.’--LEEDS MERCURY.
-
-
-London: HODDER & STOUGHTON, 27 Paternoster Row, E.C.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-A number of typographical errors have been corrected silently.
-
-Books by the Same Author added to Table of Contents.
-
-
-
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, A Whaleman's Wife, by Frank Thomas Bullen</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: A Whaleman's Wife</p>
-<p>Author: Frank Thomas Bullen</p>
-<p>Release Date: June 28, 2021 [eBook #65718]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A WHALEMAN'S WIFE***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by MWS, SF2001,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (https://www.pgdp.net)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (https://archive.org)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/whalemanswife00bullrich
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
- <div class="figcenter illowp100" id="i_cover" style="max-width: 30em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="Cover" />
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1>A WHALEMAN’S WIFE</h1>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</span></p>
-
-<div class="page-in-box">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="WORKS_BY_THE_SAME_AUTHOR"><small>WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.</small></h2>
-<p>
-THE CRUISE OF THE CACHALOT.<br />
-THE LOG OF A SEA WAIF.<br />
-THE MEN OF THE MERCHANT SERVICE.<br />
-IDYLLS OF THE SEA.<br />
-WITH CHRIST AT SEA.<br />
-A SACK OF SHAKINGS.<br />
-DEEP SEA PLUNDERINGS.<br />
-THE APOSTLES OF THE SOUTH-EAST.<br />
-WITH CHRIST IN SAILORTOWN.<br />
-THE PALACE OF POOR JACK.<br />
-THE WAY THEY HAVE IN THE NAVY.
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_frontis" style="max-width: 28em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_frontis.jpg" alt="" />
-
- <div class="caption"><p>SHE STOOD THERE FRAMED IN THE PORTAL LIKE A GRACEFUL PICTURE.</p>
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><a href="#picture"><i>P. 11.</i></a></p>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</span></p>
-
-<div class="page-in-box">
-<p class="center">
-<big><span class="red">A Whaleman’s Wife</span></big><br />
-By Frank T. Bullen<br />
-</p>
-
-<p class="center"><big>&#9753;</big></p>
-
-<p class="center">
-LONDON: <span class="red">HODDER AND<br />
-STOUGHTON</span><big> &#128609; &#128609;</big> 27 <br />
-PATERNOSTER ROW : MCMII
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">
-<small>PRINTED BY<br />
-SPOTTISWOODE AND CO. LTD., NEW-STREET SQUARE<br />
-LONDON</small>
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">
-TO<br />
-<big>THEODORE ROOSEVELT</big><br />
-PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA<br />
-<br />
-A SMALL TOKEN OF THE AUTHOR’S ESTEEM<br />
-FOR A STRONG CHRISTIAN<br />
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="TOC">
-<tbody>
-<tr><td class="right"><span class="allsmcap">CHAPTER</span></td>
- <td />
- <td><span class="allsmcap">PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">I.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">Unrequited Love</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">1</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">II.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">‘Veni, Vidi, Vici’</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">9</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">III.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">A Sudden Resolve</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">17</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">IV.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">Departure</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">25</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">V.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">Outward Bound</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">34</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">VI.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">Disillusionment</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">43</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">VII.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">A Stricken Demon</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">54</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">VIII.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">A Disastrous Day</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">69</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">IX.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">Reuben Eddy, Mariner</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">85</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">X.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">The <i>Good</i> Ship ‘Xiphias’</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">99</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XI.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">At the Old Homestead</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">115</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XII.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">Repairing Damages</a>
- <span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</span></td>
- <td class="tocpage">130</td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XIII.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII" >The Captain Goes Ashore</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">146</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XIV.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV" >Among Right Whales</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">162</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XV.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV" >A Double Deliverance</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">176</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XVI.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI" >A Reign of Terror</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">192</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XVII.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII" >Salvage Operations</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">207</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XVIII.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">Humanity Rewarded</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">221</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XIX.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX" >A Great Blow</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">236</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XX.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX" >The Cyclone</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">251</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XXI.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI" >A Strange Rescue</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">267</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XXII.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII" >The Meeting</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">283</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XXIII.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">Farewell to the <i>Xiphias</i></a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">297</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XXIV.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV" >Check to the King, and a New Move</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">311</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XXV.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV" >The Education of the Skipper</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">326</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XXVI.</td>
- <td class="toctext"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI" >The Loss of the <i>Grampus</i></a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">344</td> </tr>
-<tr><td class="right">XXVII.</td>
- <td class="toctext">
- <a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">And Last</a></td>
- <td class="tocpage">361</td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td />
- <td class="toctext"><span class="smcap">
- <a href="#WORKS">Works by the Same Author</a></span></td>
- <td class="tocpage"> 379</td>
- </tr>
- </tbody>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">UNREQUITED LOVE</p>
-
-<p>‘Yew don’ seem ter keer any gret amount fer me,
-Pris.’</p>
-
-<p>The speaker was a young man of twenty or thereabouts,
-whose loosely jointed frame showed, even
-under the shapely rig of homespun, consisting of
-just a shirt and pants, a promise to the observant eye
-that he would presently develop into a man of
-massive mould. He lay upon the stubbly ground, his
-head resting on one arm, looking wistfully up into
-the face of a girl about his own age. His clean-shaven
-face wore that keenness of outline so characteristic
-of the true Yankee blend in which the broad
-Saxon or Frisian features seem to have been modified
-by the sharp facial angles of the indigenous owners
-of the soil. But in the softness of his grey eyes a
-close observer would have foreseen a well of trouble
-springing up for their owner on behalf of others. It
-was the face of the typical burden-bearer.</p>
-
-<p>In her face, on the other hand, there were evident
-manifestations of discontent and weariness of restraint.
-A healthy, pleasant countenance enough, with dark
-brown eyes and curling hair, well-shaped nose and
-short upper lip just spotted with freckles. The eyes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</span>
-looked, however, as if they could harden and grow
-black upon occasion, while the square chin and firm
-curve of the shut mouth told a plain tale of self-will.
-There was just a touch of petulance in the quick
-movement of her head as she replied:</p>
-
-<p>‘You’re so exactin’, Rube. An’ surely you
-wouldn’t want me to be a hypocrite an’ gush over
-you when I don’t feel a bit like it. The honest fact
-is that I like you better than anybody I’ve ever seen,
-but you know I haven’t seen many people at all; and
-as for the men folks about here, they’re almost as dull
-and stupid as the cattle themselves. An’ more than
-that, Rube, I’m afraid I don’t know what this love is
-that you seem to be et up with, an’ I’m not going to
-say I do to please anybody.’</p>
-
-<p>There was silence. Over the wide stretches of
-newly reaped land not a breath of air was stirring; at
-evening’s beckoning finger the voices of the day were
-hushed. It was nearing the gloaming of one of those
-heavenly days common in Vermont towards the end
-of harvest, when Nature seems to be contemplating
-in satisfied peace the result of her summer’s fruitage,
-and baring her bosom to the mellowing sun for a while,
-as if to store up warmth against the coming of the
-fierce blasts of the bitter Northern winter. The smell
-of the patient earth was sweet, restful in its effect upon
-the senses, and insensibly moulding impressions upon
-the mind that would remain through life ineffaceable
-by any subsequent experiences, and assert themselves
-in after-years by vivid reproductions of the present
-scene. Yet the calm beauty of their surroundings
-had upon each of the two young people an almost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</span>
-entirely opposite effect. He was permeated with a
-serene sense of satisfaction with life in all its details
-but one&mdash;if only he could be certain that Priscilla
-loved him! Born and bred upon the typical Green
-Mountain farm, educated up to the simple standard of
-the village school, and utterly unacquainted with the
-seething world beyond his horizon, he was as nearly
-happy as it is good for man to be in this stage of
-his existence. His parents, although, like himself,
-New Englanders born and bred, had somehow
-escaped from the soul-withering domination of that
-cruel creed that finds an awful satisfaction in the
-consignment to eternal fires of all who by one
-hair’s-breadth should dare to differ from its blindly
-ignorant conception of theology. Love formed the
-basis of their faith, and their ideas of an immanent
-God were mainly derived from the parable of the
-Prodigal Son.</p>
-
-<p>Under such mild influences it was hardly wonderful
-that Reuben Eddy had early ‘got religion,’ in the
-queer phraseology of the States, although in his case,
-as in that of his parents, there was scarcely any point
-of resemblance common to the ordinary religious
-professor. Following none of the orthodox forms of
-worship, and pretending to no formulated creed, the
-Eddys lived and moved and had their being in a
-quiet consciousness of the friendliness of God. They
-looked as if they would at no time have been surprised,
-as they certainly would have been unafraid,
-to see His face with their mortal eyes. They seemed
-to love God, as birds sing, from an inward impulse
-that is not a duty but a part of the organism, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</span>
-natural a necessity as the breath or the heart-beat.
-Yet, or perhaps because of this, they were intensely
-human. There was none of that aloofness from the
-interests of their kind that some excellent people
-regard as the hall-mark of a Christian. In fact, they
-were a lovable family whose influence was like that
-of the spring sun upon all (though they were but few)
-with whom they came in contact.</p>
-
-<p>Within this last year or two, however, Reuben had
-felt the deep placid current of his life strangely disturbed.
-His life-long playmate, Priscilla Fish, whose
-parents’ farm (three miles away) was the nearest to
-that of the Eddys, had suddenly assumed a totally
-different appearance in his eyes. For some time he
-went about dreamily wondering whatever the change
-could be that had at once removed her so far above
-the category of ordinary, everyday people, and at the
-same time had made him long for her society so
-ardently that every hour spent away from her seemed
-to drag, and every thought was shot through and
-through with side-issues about her. Now between
-him and his father there had been a life-long intimacy,
-gently sought and fostered by the elder man as soon
-as Rube was old enough to know him. Thus they
-were more than father and son&mdash;they were David and
-Jonathan, with no secrets from one another. So
-after Reuben had wrestled with this new experience
-long enough to be able to reduce it to some formulable
-expression, he took it to his father, as he had done
-every other difficulty as long as he could remember.
-The old man listened in sympathetic silence while his
-son described his symptoms with a gravity that would
-have been ludicrous but for its earnestness and sincerity.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</span>
-How he felt like a caged bird until he saw Priscilla,
-yet when she appeared he became hot and cold by
-turns, and felt so awkward and clumsy that he wanted
-to hide himself in the earth, and so on, in the same
-old way that was all so new and disconcerting to
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Very gently the old man explained matters to
-him, winding up with a merry twinkle in his eyes, as
-he said:</p>
-
-<p>‘Haow en the name er pashense yeu’ve shun clar
-ov this complaint all these years ez er merricle. Ef
-I know ye&mdash;en I ain’t so dead certain of that as I wuz&mdash;yew’re
-just the kinder lad to fall in love fust go.
-Anyhow, I’m goin’ ter chip in ’n ’elp ye if it kin be
-did et all.’</p>
-
-<p>With all his fatherly instincts aroused, the fine old
-fellow trudged over to his neighbour’s farm that same
-evening, and sought out old man Fish. In quaint
-fashion, and blaming himself whimsically for his lack
-of observation in not seeing how things were going
-before, he explained the situation, finding, much to
-his gratification, that Priscilla’s father was entirely
-agreeable to the match. Solemnly the two patriarchs
-discussed ways and means, planning all manner of
-pleasant things for the future of their children as
-far as their sober wishes would allow them. That
-Reuben and Priscilla should marry, inherit the Eddy
-homestead, and glide placidly along through life as
-their parents had done, seemed to these two fond old
-hearts as roseate a prospect as could be desired. So
-they sat on, exchanging their slow-moving thoughts,
-until long past their usual early hour for bed. After
-a long pause, Farmer Eddy stretched himself with a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</span>
-yawn and said:</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, Zeke, I reckon I’ll be gittin’ to’rds hum.
-Seems ter me we ben havin’ er mighty long yarn to-night,
-’relse I’m most amazin’ sleepy. Good-night
-t’ye.’</p>
-
-<p>There was no reply. It was perfectly dark, for
-they had been sitting in the barn, and when the night
-closed softly down they had not thought to get a
-lamp, in their earnestness of conversation. Slightly
-raising his voice, Farmer Eddy repeated his salutation,
-but it fell upon the unresponsive darkness
-around like a pebble dropped into a deep well. With
-a chill creeping over his scalp the old man reached
-forward to where his friend was sitting and groped for
-his hand. It was some seconds before he could find
-what he sought, and when he did, the truth sank into
-his marrow instantly: Ezekiel Fish was dead.</p>
-
-<p>Trembling in every fibre, Eddy hastily made for
-the house, coming into the well-lighted living-room
-with his message in his face. The family, consisting
-of Mrs. Fish, her two grown-up sons, and Priscilla,
-were all seated there, eagerly discussing a knotty
-point in some book Priscilla had been reading aloud,
-but the entry of the old man and their first glance at
-his face froze them into silence. Going straight up
-to the mother, Eddy laid his trembling hand upon her
-shoulder, and said, ‘Hepziber, the Lord be good t’ye.
-He’s taken away yew’re husband.’</p>
-
-<p>There was no outcry. Priscilla came swiftly to
-her mother’s side and tried to soothe the heavily
-stricken woman, whose silent suffering was pitiful to
-see; while the two sons and the old man, bearing
-lights, returned to the barn and reverently carried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</span> in
-the body. The usual sad offices were soon rendered
-to the remains, and with slow, uncertain steps Eddy
-returned home to tell his sorrowful story and warn
-Reuben that, for the present at any rate, a prior
-claim to attention had been made upon their neighbour’s
-family.</p>
-
-<p>Some months, therefore, elapsed before anything
-of the matter that lay so close to his heart passed
-Reuben’s lips. But he was by no means impetuous,
-and besides, he had always been trained to subordinate
-his wishes to those of others, so that while
-his love was undoubtedly rooting and grounding
-itself more firmly every day, he was able to abstain
-from all mention of it to its object. Summer came,
-and with it an opportunity during a long Sunday
-afternoon’s ramble with Priscilla to broach the important
-matter to her. She listened&mdash;somewhat listlessly,
-it is true, but still she listened; while Rube,
-growing bolder as he went on, and marvelling at his
-own powers of speech, poured out to her his hopes
-and plans. But no enthusiasm could hold out long
-under the unconcealed air of indifference with which
-his fervent speech was received, and he soon sobered
-down to wonder quietly how it was she took his
-vehemence so coolly. Being ready, however, to
-supply all deficiencies from his own abundant stock,
-he was not unduly depressed. And as the days
-went by his sweet sunny temperament asserted itself,
-and hope, almost amounting to certainty, arose within
-him that she would presently, as he had done, find
-all things changed under the new light of love. Yet
-in spite of his hopefulness, a weary sense of the hilly
-road he was travelling would occasionally give him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</span>
-serious pause, and he grew hungry for some return,
-however slight, of his lavish affection. And it was
-with one of these moods that this chapter and the
-story open.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">‘VENI, VIDI, VICI’</p>
-
-<p>After the death of Ezekiel Fish the care of the
-farm devolved upon the two brothers, both of them
-typical Yankee farmers, but without a trace of the
-kindliness so characteristic of the Eddys. Rube had
-never been a favourite with them. They dared not
-despise him openly&mdash;he was too big and strong for
-that; but they spoke of him behind his back in terms
-of disparagement, and did all in their power to discourage
-the slightest feeling of affection for him that
-they imagined their sister to have. Jake, the elder
-brother, a man some three years older than Rube,
-had by virtue of his seniority assumed full charge of
-affairs, and already had begun to launch out in
-various speculative ways that troubled the old lady
-sorely. His visits to Boston ‘on business’ were
-frequent and prolonged, and already he was becoming
-known to a few of his less reputable associates
-as a ’feller thet wuz makin’ things hum a bit.’</p>
-
-<p>In these altered circumstances it was no wonder
-that Rube pressed his suit more earnestly than
-ever. His unselfish nature was fully alarmed for
-Priscilla’s immediate future, and his anxiety on her
-behalf gave his love an added lustre which it had
-lacked before. But to his distress and chagrin, the
-steady growth of his affection did not awaken in her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</span>
-the slightest responsiveness. To a stranger it would
-have been at once manifest that she merely tolerated
-the young man; even to his love-blinded perceptions
-the fact stubbornly persisted in revealing itself.
-Rube endured this coldness patiently for months,
-until on the evening of the commencement of our
-story he had drifted almost unconsciously into a
-protest against this treatment of himself by Priscilla
-who, if she had never given him any encouragement
-worth speaking of, had at least tacitly accepted him
-as a lover. She had received his complaint in the
-manner already specified, speaking the exact truth
-about the state of her feelings towards him as far as
-she knew them. The trouble was that she had not
-quite realised the strength of a feeling of unrest and
-discontent with her surroundings which had been
-steadily eating into her mind for months past. It
-was largely due to her brother Jake, who, in the
-elated condition generally noticeable on his return
-from Boston, was wont to launch into extravagant
-praise of city life with its light and bustle and
-abundant enjoyments. Naturally he was correspondingly
-contemptuous of the well-ordered procession
-of days characteristic of the country. The majestic
-harmonies and sweet confidences of Nature, the
-changeful orchestra of each day, and the placid
-stillness of the nights, had become to his disorganised
-ideas like the stagnation of death. His
-was that subtle malaise that stealthily undermines the
-natural order of things, and, leaving the countryside
-to go out of cultivation, herds men and women
-together in vast feverish crowds to stew and fret
-and die, but never to return to the quiet of the <span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</span>country
-again.</p>
-
-<p>This miserable change had, without her knowledge,
-infected Priscilla also in such a manner that now every
-task was irksome, the stillness of the evenings almost
-unbearable. Irritability, which had never before disfigured
-her character, became increasingly noticeable.
-Even Rube saw the change, but could not dream of
-its cause, and innocently added to it by his dog-like
-untiring affection. Matters were in this unsatisfactory
-state when one evening the sound of wheels through
-the crisp air warned the inmates of the Fish place
-that Jake was returning from one of his Boston jaunts.
-Priscilla dropped her knitting and went to the door
-which looked across the wide paddock down the road.
-To her surprise she saw in the fast approaching
-buggy two forms. Jake was bringing a visitor! The
-prospect of any break in what had now become
-almost an intolerable monotony so affected her that
-she felt nearly intoxicated, her face flushed rosily,
-and a tingling thrill that was almost pain rushed all
-over her. Yet she could not move, but stood there
-framed in the portal like a graceful <span id="picture"><a href="#i_frontis">picture</a></span>, while the
-buggy drew up at the roadside and the men alighted.
-As they came across the paddock towards her she
-saw that the stranger was tall and stalwart, walking
-with the easy loose-jointed swing of the smart sailor.
-He was dressed in the garb of an ordinary well-clothed
-townsman, but a wide sombrero, of brown
-velvet apparently, shaded his face. Whether by
-accident or design on his part, this hat completed
-his resemblance to one of the old conquistadores or
-grandees of Spain painted by Velasquez. For his
-visage was swarthy and oval, his eyes large, black,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</span>
-and brilliant, and the lower half of his face was
-covered by a pointed beard and immense moustache
-so black and thick and silky that it hardly seemed
-of natural growth. To Priscilla’s eyes he looked as
-if he had just stepped across the years out of
-Prescott’s living page, and, like so many others of
-her sex, in that moment she gave him her whole heart,
-offered herself up to the husk of a man, unknowing
-and uncaring what it contained.</p>
-
-<p>Her mind in a confused whirl of thought, she
-stood as if petrified until the travellers reached her,
-and made no sign, even when Jake said, ‘Thishyer’s
-my sister Priscilla, Cap’n. Pris, Cap’n Da Silva.’
-The Captain bowed, gracefully enough because naturally,
-but with evident signs that the movement was
-unusual, and held out his small and well-shaped
-brown hand to meet Priscilla’s white and plump one.
-The contact of their hands acted upon her like a
-vigorous restorative, and the blood fled back again
-from her face and neck, leaving them for the moment
-unnaturally pale as she found her voice and bade the
-stranger welcome. Even Jake’s dull eyes could not
-fail to see how powerfully his sister was impressed
-by the Captain, and it pleased him well. Selfish and
-grasping, he was by no means sorry to get rid of his
-sister, nor did the thought of his mother’s loneliness
-affect him in the slightest degree. So that it was
-with a chuckle of satisfaction he turned away to put
-up his horse and buggy, saying carelessly as he did
-so, ‘’Scuse me, Cap. My sister’ll look after you in
-shape, won’t ye, Pris?’</p>
-
-<p>Thenceforward Priscilla and the Captain were
-constant companions, their intimacy tacitly <span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</span>encouraged
-by Jake, who was in a high state of
-satisfaction at the prospect of getting rid of his sister
-finally. The mother made many attempts to gain
-her daughter’s confidence, for she felt an innate
-distrust of the handsome stranger. But Priscilla,
-forgetting all her mother’s claims, avoided with
-intuitive diplomacy any approach to the subject on
-her part, showing at times an irritability of manner
-that sorely troubled the old lady, who, having no one
-to turn to in her distress of mind, was lonely indeed.
-At last, one day when Pris, the Captain, and Jake
-had driven off upon some excursion of pleasure, she
-felt that she could bear the trouble alone no longer,
-and taking advantage of her younger son’s absence
-at a neighbouring farm, she made a pilgrimage over
-to the Eddy farmhouse, intent upon pouring out her
-heart to Mrs. Eddy. The meeting between the two
-old dames was full of pathetic interest, for Mrs. Eddy
-loved her boy so fondly that, although she had never
-felt drawn to Priscilla, it was enough for her that
-Rube loved the girl. His happiness was the consideration
-that overtopped all others in her heart. So
-that when Mrs. Fish unburdened herself, her hearer
-was torn by maternal solicitude for her boy, and for
-the time her anxiety as to the effect this news would
-have upon him was too great to allow her to reply.
-And when she did speak, her words sounded hollow
-and unmeaning&mdash;so much so that her visitor stared at
-her wonderingly. For Mrs. Eddy’s powers of consolation
-and wisdom of counsel were matters of common
-knowledge over a wide extent of country&mdash;she was
-looked up to as infallible. The look in her visitor’s
-eyes recalled her to herself somewhat, and choking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</span>
-down her feelings by a great effort, she said:</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, Hepziber, yewrs ’s surely a hard case, ’n’ I
-kain’t fur th’ life of me see wut yew’re to do. Ef Pris
-is ’tarmined tu go her own way ’n’ wun’t listen to yew
-on the matter ’t all, ’n’ ef, ’s yew say, Jake’s doin’ his
-best t’ encourage her, yew’re jest brought face to face
-with th’ wall, ’s yew may say. My Rube w’d hev
-made her a good husband, an’ one ’bout whose record
-there couldn’t be any doubt; but I’ve seen fur a long
-time that she wuz jest puttin’ up with him like&mdash;she
-didn’t love him more ’n she did me, ’n’ you know she
-never took ter me, ner dad eyther. Go home ’n’ pray
-about it, Hepziber; it’s all we kin do. As fur myself,
-I’ve got ter wrassle with th’ Lord for my boy, fur how
-he’ll b’ar this I kain’t begin ter think.’</p>
-
-<p>And with this cold comfort (to her), Widow Fish
-had to depart for the home she was beginning to
-feel a stranger in, after all these years, leaving Mrs.
-Eddy with a heart overflowing with sorrowful love for
-her only son. With a natural dread of the effect the
-news would have upon him, she put in practice all the
-simple arts she knew to keep him in ignorance of what
-was brewing, and finally succeeded, by the aid of her
-husband, in despatching him to Boston on business
-without his calling at the Fish place first. He was
-absent from home for a fortnight, and when he returned,
-after an hour or two spent with his father and mother,
-he rose and said, with a transparent attempt to conceal
-his eagerness:</p>
-
-<p>‘I guess I’ll jest stroll over an’ see Pris. I’d like
-to tell her ’bout some o’ the Boston sights. ’N’ I’ve
-brought her a cunning little watch for a birthday
-present.’</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</span></p>
-<p>The mother looked appealingly at her husband,
-who, answering her gaze with eyes full of fondness,
-rose, and laying his hand upon Rube’s shoulder, said:</p>
-
-<p>‘My son, yew’re a man in years an’ strength, ’n’
-I’ve brung ye up to be the <i>good</i> man I b’lieve y’ are.
-Y’ haven’t hed enny big trouble yet, but y’ know ther’
-ain’t nothin’ in th’ world yew kin ’pend on till it’s tested.
-Yew’re goin’ ter be tested now. Priscilla’s married.’</p>
-
-<p>The watch dropped from the young man’s fingers
-on to the stone floor and was broken. Except for
-that sound there was absolute silence: none of the
-three seemed to breathe. Presently Rube spoke:</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank ye, father, fur tellin’ me plain ’n’ prompt.
-Now I think I’ll go upstairs ’n’ rest.’</p>
-
-<p>And with heavy uncertain steps Rube left the
-kitchen, mounted to the little room he had occupied
-since he was a child, and shut himself in.</p>
-
-<p>It was true. With a haste that was explained by
-the Captain as absolutely necessary on account of his
-ship being ordered to sea at a very short notice, he
-had pressed his suit when once he found how willing
-Priscilla was to take him at his own valuation. Mrs.
-Fish, thoroughly bewildered by the whole hasty proceeding,
-wandered about the house like an unquiet
-ghost, doing nothing either to help or hinder the
-preparations. Jake was unwontedly lavish with the
-funds necessary, and indefatigable in giving assistance,
-so that two days before Rube returned from
-Boston the newly married pair had departed for New
-Bedford with the intention of spending their honeymoon
-on board Captain Da Silva’s ship as she journeyed
-southward on the commencement of her long voyage.
-She was called the <i>Grampus</i>, and was one of the fine
-fleet of South Sea whaleships then sailing from New<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</span>
-Bedford, although so ignorant were the farm-folk of
-Vermont of maritime matters that even Jake, smart
-as he fancied himself, had but the dimmest, vaguest
-idea of what the life was that his sister was going to
-be shut up to for the next three or four years. Still less
-did he care. As for Priscilla, she would have accepted
-unquestioningly any situation into which she might
-be brought so long as she was by the side of the man
-she worshipped with a fierce unreasoning intensity.
-Of Rube she never thought for more than a minute
-at a time, and then it was only with a sense of relief
-at the knowledge that he would trouble her no more.
-From her mother she parted without regret: there
-seemed to be no room in her mind for anything else
-but intense satisfaction in the prize she believed herself
-to have won. Even the prospect of seeing the
-great world which had once claimed all her desires
-was but a feeble unit now in the vast sum of her
-delight in the possession of Ramon Da Silva. Nor
-was her joy in the least damped by the masterful way
-in which he accepted all the affection she lavished
-upon him. To do him justice, he was hardly to
-blame for this. His career, from the time he had
-enlisted as a green hand on board of an American
-whaler at Fayal, in his sixteenth year, had been one
-long series of successes, due to the great force of
-his character, his utter unscrupulousness, and entire
-absence of fear. Step by step he had risen in his
-dangerous profession until he had become master of
-a whaleship, while his name was a household word
-among the fleet for smartness, courage, and&mdash;brutality.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">A SUDDEN RESOLVE</p>
-
-<p>When Rube came down the next morning and composedly
-met his father’s and mother’s anxious looks, he
-had the listless air of a man whose spirit had been
-broken. There was a droop in his shoulders, a dulness
-in his eyes that contrasted painfully with the
-bright alertness of his glance and carriage of the day
-before. But he said nothing of his blow, and his
-parents wisely forbore to say anything either, trusting
-that his young and healthy body would come to the
-assistance of his mind, and that the wound would soon
-skin over. Unfortunately for their hopes, his love had
-been the pivot of his life. While a good farmer, a
-good son, and a good business man, he had no hobbies,
-he read little, and, being much alone, he had allowed
-his passion for Priscilla to become so interwoven with
-his every thought and action that the knowledge of
-her loss had been like a rending of soul from body. So
-he went about his duties like a somnambulist, seeking
-no comfort, making no confidences, and apparently
-as insensible to externals as a hypnotised man
-would be.</p>
-
-<p>In this dull round of daily tasks several weeks
-passed away, until it happened that he found himself
-at the village grocery on some trivial errand.
-There was the usual knot of loungers ready to <span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</span>talk, and
-absurdly grateful for the coming of any stranger with
-something fresh to say. As he passed through them
-with a brief nod of recognition to one and another,
-and entered the store, he saw standing erect in their
-midst a tall wiry-looking man, whose face was unfamiliar
-to him. Pausing for an instant, with the first
-symptom of interest he had manifested for many days,
-he heard the stranger say:</p>
-
-<p>‘Yas, ’n’ if enny ov yew fellers hed th’ grit ov a
-chipmunk, yew wouldn’t take twicet t’ think over yer
-anser. Wut man’d go on grindin’ mud all his life in
-a dead-’n’-alive God-fergotten corner like this when
-he’s got ’n opportoonity of seein’ the world&mdash;all th’
-world, mind ye, east, west, north, and south&mdash;an’
-makin’ a small forchin ’s well? I dunno wuts
-come over the yewth ov Amurica to-day. Sims t’
-me they’ve lost their old vim ’n’ push altogether.
-Well, s’ long, boys; if I kain’t persuade ye I kain’t,
-’n’ there’s an eend on ’t, ’n’ I mus’ be gittin’ ’long. But
-ef enny ov ye wants time t’ make up yer minds, I sh’l
-be back this way ag’in ter-morrer ev’nin’, ’n’ that’ll be
-the las’ chance you’ll git, enny ov ye.’</p>
-
-<p>Although he had not heard any of the stranger’s
-preliminary discourse, and shrank from making inquiries,
-Rube’s interest was aroused to the highest
-pitch. He returned to his home with the few words
-he had heard seething and bubbling in his mind.
-For he felt that at last here was a way of escape from
-the almost insupportable deadness of his life. He
-could not realise that ‘the mind is its own place,’
-and so, like a caged animal, seeing a door of hope
-open to him, he felt an unconquerable longing to flee.
-He said not a word throughout the evening meal,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</span>
-but that was so much his habit now that it passed
-unnoticed. Mechanically he bowed his head at
-‘worship,’ but his father’s reading of a chapter from
-the Bible might have been in the original Hebrew for
-all he understood of it. After gaining the solitude of
-his room, he sat on the bed, his head on his hands,
-trying hard to reduce the whirlpool of his thoughts
-to some definite shape until far into the night, but in
-vain. Only one idea seemed to stand out sharply
-and distinctly against the misty tumult: he must <i>go</i>.
-At last, wearied with mental conflict, he fell backward,
-dressed as he was, and went to sleep.</p>
-
-<p>He rose unrefreshed, with a racking headache for
-the first time in his life, and went about his usual
-round of duties automatically. But his face bore
-such evident traces of his last night’s conflict that
-they could not escape his mother’s keen eye. She
-anxiously inquired after his health, but was met with
-the careless reply that he was ‘all right.’ She knew
-better, of course, but it had never been her way to
-force confidence, and so she manifested no more
-curiosity. She only looked wistfully at her boy when
-unobserved by him, and hovered about him as if
-more than ordinarily solicitous for his comfort. All
-day long he moved and looked like a man in a dream,
-every thought, every feeling merged in one idea&mdash;escape.
-Strange, that it never occurred to him how
-impossible it is for a man to flee from himself.</p>
-
-<p>Without waiting for supper, and as if dreading to
-be questioned, no sooner was the day’s work done
-than he strode off to the village grocery, assuming,
-as he approached it, a most elaborate air of unconcern,
-and lounging into the midst of the little knot of listless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</span>
-men hanging about the door as if nothing
-mattered&mdash;an attitude common to all of them. He
-had not long to wait. In about ten minutes after
-his arrival a brisk footfall was heard, and turning the
-corner sharply the lean, keen-looking stranger of the
-previous evening strode into the midst of the group.</p>
-
-<p>‘Evenin’, boys,’ he jerked out, diving into the
-pockets of his pants at the same time and producing
-a formidable plug of hard tobacco and a knife.
-Having provided himself with a fresh cud and passed
-on the materials to his next neighbour, he proceeded:</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, boys, hev ye made up yer minds yet?
-This, as the paestor sez, is the last time ov askin’.
-Ye’ve got ter speak up now, ’relse stay right whar y’
-are f’rever ’n’ ever. ’N’ that, <i>I</i> sh’d say, ’d be ’nough
-t’ decide fr’anny young <i>man</i>. Veg’tables don’ count
-anyhaow.’</p>
-
-<p>This short harangue ended, he looked slily at his
-hearers to see whether he had made any impression
-upon them, but with the exception of a vacant half
-laugh or two, accompanied by an uneasy shuffle on
-the part of the utterers thereof, they might as well
-all have been deaf for any notice they took of him.
-But suddenly, to his astonishment (although he was
-careful not to show it), Rube, who was a stranger to
-him, stepped forward and said:</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, stranger, I guess I’ll hitch hosses with ye.
-When d’ ye start, an’ what’s th’ ’rangements?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Right, my boy, I’m real proud of ye. I’m
-startin’ this evenin’ as ever is; ’n’ as t’ ’rangements,
-ye’ve only got ter sign thishyer paper agreein’ t’ join
-any ship I s’lect f’r ye, ’n’ take a little keepsake from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</span>
-me in the shape of two-an’-a-haef dollars. Then
-ye’ll pack up yer traps, ’n’ I’ll see ye booked through to
-Noo Bedford. Yew’ll start first thing in the mornin’.’</p>
-
-<p>Hardly looking at the form of agreement, Rube
-signed, the stranger being provided with pen and
-ink, and dropping the money loosely into his pocket,
-he strode off homewards, leaving the loungers all agape
-at the idea of Rube Eddy, who was well known to
-be one of the steadiest and most comfortably established
-young men in the county, going off at a
-minute’s notice to foreign lands. Long and earnest
-was the discussion that followed, all sorts of possible
-and impossible reasons for the step Rube had taken
-being brought forward. The stranger lolled at his
-ease, listening in the hope that Rube’s example
-might prove contagious, but, to his disappointment,
-it seemed to have quite a contrary effect. The
-talkers were like men who had just witnessed one of
-their number take a plunge into the fathomless
-abyss, from the brink of which they all drew back
-with horror. This state of mind soon became evident
-to the stranger, who, jerking himself to his feet, shook
-himself, stretched, yawned, and finally said:</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, boys, kain’t linger with ye always. I’m
-beginnin’ t’ feel like Rip Van Winkle meself in
-thishyer slumbersom place. I reckon I shall hev to
-hurry back to civilisation agen before I go to sleep
-too. How on airth yew fellers keep ’wake long
-’nough t’ eat ’n drink I d’no.’</p>
-
-<p>With this parting shot he turned on his heel and
-disappeared into the gathering darkness, and they
-saw him no more.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</span></p>
-<p>Meanwhile Rube, his mind a blank, reached home
-and, hastily ascending to his room, busied himself
-gathering together his clothing. Good serviceable
-homespun, most of it, such as would be fit for any
-work, however rough, that might fall to his lot.
-Having made it into a compact bundle, with a
-celerity that raised a dim wonder even in himself,
-he drew himself up, as if bracing all his fortitude to
-meet father and mother. Memories of the quiet,
-pleasant years began to crowd in upon him, but with
-a gesture as if to crush them back, he deliberately
-walked down the narrow stairway, whose every step
-seemed to utter a reproachful creak. Entering the
-kitchen, he crossed over to the fireside, where his
-parents sat facing each other and calmly talking over
-some trivial happening of the day. Standing before
-them, he waited a moment, while they both looked
-up at him, and in that one swift glance his mother
-knew that a crisis had arrived. In a husky voice,
-that sounded as if it belonged to someone else, he
-said:</p>
-
-<p>‘Mother, Dad, I’m goin’ away termorrer mornin’.
-Fergive me fer leavin’ ye like this, but I jest had ter
-go. I’m no good here any more. I’m goin’ t’ sea, ’n’
-when I come back mebbe I’ll be a stronger man.
-Naow I’m a wuthless, dreamy shote, ’n’ I feel ’s if
-thishyer quiet easy life ’d certainly drive me mad
-befo’ very long.’</p>
-
-<p>‘<i>Must</i> you go to-morrow, my son?’ murmured
-his mother hopelessly, for she knew the breed, knew
-that once set upon a thing the Eddys were immovable,
-and yet she felt obliged to make an effort.</p>
-
-<p>‘Yes, mother. ’Greement’s signed, th’ airnest
-money’s in my pocket, an’ my duds are all packed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</span>
-I’m goin’, sure.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Rube,’ said his father, ‘we’ve been mighty cluss
-friends all our lives, an’ we ain’t goin’ ter fall eout
-naouw, I’m dead shore o’ that. But ye mout ha’ told
-me wut ye wuz meditatin’. ’T wan’t far t’ me, boy,
-naow wuz it?’</p>
-
-<p>For all answer Rube reached for his father’s hand
-and held it tight, while the working of his face
-showed how hard the simple words had hit him.</p>
-
-<p>The father broke the silence again by saying,
-‘Let us pray.’ With a sudden return to his childhood
-Rube knelt at his mother’s knee, while the old
-man, as had been his nightly wont ever since he first
-brought home his young bride, but with an added
-solemnity born of the shadow of his first bereavement,
-spoke to his Friend:</p>
-
-<p>‘Father, eour hearts air troubled. Yew’ve brung
-us along a pleasant road right inter the green valley
-of comfortable old age. We’ve hed a happy time together,
-’n’ this our son hez alwus ben a delight to us.
-We looked that he sh’d still be so, that he sh’d close
-eour eyes when we laid us down at last t’ sleep.
-P’raps we hev been selfish, ’n’ need a lesson to teach
-us wut it means to spare an only son. He’s goin’
-away from us f’r a long time&mdash;where, he doesn’t know
-himself; but however fur he goes, don’t let him
-get away from you. We don’t ask you t’ spare him
-t’ us ef it’s necessary we sh’d never see him alive any
-more; but ef it <i>might</i> be, Father, you know how ’tis
-yourself, ’n’ therefore you know what it’ll mean t’ us
-t’ have him back again. Make him through all he’ll
-have t’ bear such a man as yew’d love to have him,
-’n supply his place at home, if it ken be supplied,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</span> by
-a truer sense of yew’re presence with us. Bless my
-son, O Father, and bless us, f’r <i>yewr</i> Son’s sake.
-Amen.’</p>
-
-<p>Little more was said, although they sat hand in
-hand far into the night. Rube wanted nothing that
-his father could give him, having sufficient money
-for all his prospective needs; but he accepted his
-mother’s Bible gratefully, feeling that it would be a
-palpable link with her. At last they went to bed,
-where Rube, not from callousness, but from sheer
-overstrain of mind, slept soundly. His mother lay
-all through the hours silently praying, while the unhindered
-tears trickled slowly and continuously
-down. And his father watched with her.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">DEPARTURE</p>
-
-<p>Morning broke over the Eddy homestead grey and
-cheerless, a fitting reflection of the frame of mind
-holding sway over its inmates. Rube came down
-with his grip-sack in his hand, his best clothes donned,
-and an air of stern resolve on his strong features.
-He found his father and mother awaiting him in the
-humble room where he had met them ever since his
-mind first awakened to the knowledge of worldly
-matters. For a few moments after the ‘good mornings’
-were said, no word further passed the lips of
-the three. Suddenly the mother spoke, saying:</p>
-
-<p>‘Rube, my son, you never told us <i>whar’</i> you were
-goin’.’</p>
-
-<p>To some of us perhaps it may seem strange that
-neither father nor mother had asked this question
-before, but the fact is that in their secluded lives the
-mere idea of one of them leaving home for so long
-was sufficiently terrible, without any definition of the
-precise locality to which the wanderer might be
-directing his steps being thought of. But the
-mother’s heart was already in prospect reaching out
-after the absent one, and therefore it was but fitting
-and natural that she should be the first to desire to
-know whither he was going. Rube flushed a deep<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</span>
-red as the necessary vagueness of his reply dawned
-upon him, but he said:</p>
-
-<p>‘I’m goin’ ter sea, mother; thet’s all I know at
-present. When I git t’ Noo Bedford an’ find out
-whar’ I kin git letters or write frum, be sure I’ll let
-you know to onct. I’m drefful sorry I kain’t tell you
-anythin’ more ’n thet.’</p>
-
-<p>The morning meal, ample and palatable as it
-always is on these Eastern farms, was spread, and the
-three took their places at the board; but although they
-made a brave show of eating, the food would not be
-got rid of, and suddenly Rube arose, as if the sight
-of his father’s worn face and his mother’s eyes, bleared
-with weeping through the long night, was too much
-for him, saying as he did so:</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, it’s time I wuz off. Good-bye, mother;
-good-bye, father. I know yewr prayers’ll hover
-roun’ me wharever I go; and ez soon ez I hev worn
-out this drefful restless feelin’ I’ll come back and
-settle down, please God, never to go away any more.’</p>
-
-<p>A silent kiss from the mother, a grave handshake
-from the father, and Rube turned his back upon home.
-Nor did he once look behind him as he strode down
-the road towards where, in the little village, a conveyance
-was waiting to take him to the station,
-whence he might reach New Bedford by railroad.
-He did not look back because he feared to see his
-mother’s face. Not that his resolve to go would have
-been thereby weakened, but that he could not help
-feeling guilty in that he was weakly fleeing from
-what he could not help knowing was his duty&mdash;weakly
-giving way to what he could not help knowing was
-after all, cowardice. But who shall dare to judge<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</span> the
-action of his fellow-men under abnormal conditions?
-‘Put yourself in his place’ is a good motto, but how
-very rarely is it possible for us to act it out! Therefore,
-although many of us may very well feel inclined
-to judge Rube harshly for thus deserting father and
-mother and a life of usefulness, and becoming a wanderer
-on the face of the deep simply because the
-woman of his choice could not be his, let us not
-forget that ever since the world began, and men and
-women have been able to recount their experiences,
-strange things have been recorded as done by disappointed
-lovers against their better judgment.</p>
-
-<p>Rube’s mind as the train sped him onwards
-towards the beautiful New England town whence he
-was to start upon his long sea journeyings was almost
-a blank. Never given much to a habit of introspection,
-he was by reason of the shock that he had
-recently received less able now to devote himself to
-concentrated thought than ever; and so, had he been
-asked what he was thinking about during that long
-railway journey, he would have replied, no doubt with
-perfect frankness, ‘Hardly anything.’ I think this
-experience is not uncommon, even among men and
-women given to meditation, when suddenly they
-have received a mental blow. Be that as it may&mdash;and
-I will own that it is a debatable point&mdash;when
-Rube arrived at New Bedford he had just the air of
-stolid bewilderment that is generally noticeable upon
-the faces of country-bred people first coming in contact
-with the strangeness of life in a seaport town.
-And truly one might have sailed the wide world
-round and not have found a more wonderful seaport
-than New Bedford was in those days. Men of almost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</span>
-every nation under heaven, clad in outlandish garments,
-jostled each other along the strongly smelling
-wharves and picturesque streets bordering the bay.
-New Bedford was then in the height of her prosperity
-as metropolis of the whaling world. Over six
-hundred fine ships came and went on their adventurous
-sea-questings, bringing with them from the
-uttermost ends of the earth queer-looking denizens of
-those far-off lands. Kanakas from the multitudinous
-Isles of the Pacific, Aborigines from Central America,
-Aleuts from Alaska, Japanese from Nippon, Chinese,
-Malays, Papuans, and Dyaks from the East Indian
-Archipelago, Lascars from Hindustan, Arabs from the
-Persian Gulf, and last, but by far the most numerous
-of all these wanderers, Portuguese of every hue, from
-deepest black to creamy white, from the Fortunate
-Isles. The diversity of peoples was not more wonderful
-than the quaintness of their costumes, which
-were, indeed, a chance medley of all the national
-dresses of the world. Yet in every case a keen
-observer, and one acquainted with the subject, might
-have recognised evidences of an attempt on the part
-of the wearer to give to his nondescript raiment some
-national peculiarity. Not only were the people a
-wonderful sight, but another sense&mdash;that of smell&mdash;was
-overpoweringly arrested on the crowded
-wharves, where scores of weatherbeaten ships discharged
-their greasy spoils, the odour from which
-permeated the entire atmosphere, seizing upon a
-stranger with almost intoxicating effect. Then the
-sounds!&mdash;the loud cries of the labourers as they
-toiled to discharge the cargoes from the ships, the
-wonderful medley of languages spoken by the strange<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</span>
-seafarers slouching along the shore, and, pervading
-all, the hollow murmur of the sea as it rolled in on
-the beaches of the beautiful bay under the stress of a
-strong landward gale.</p>
-
-<p>Amidst these novel sights, sounds, and smells,
-Rube made his way like a man in a dream towards
-the place whither he had been directed, not without
-considerable difficulty, as three out of every
-four persons of whom he inquired his direction
-did not understand a word that he said. This,
-to a man who had never before met with anybody
-not speaking his own tongue, was really bewildering,
-and it was not therefore to be wondered at that by
-the time Rube had found the building he sought, his
-mental processes, never too acute, were reduced
-almost to numbness. Inquiring timidly at the door
-of the building to which he had been directed as the
-place where he should find Mr. Sawtell, he was
-answered nonchalantly by an elderly man, whose
-grey beard was plentifully streaked with tobacco
-juice, that if he went right in and took the first door
-on the left he’d find what he sought. Rube meekly
-obeyed, and entered a large, high-ceilinged room,
-scantily furnished, with several desks enclosed by a
-low fence and some benches. Two men sat at the
-desks looking as unlike the embodiment of our
-modern ideas of clerks as could well be imagined, for
-both of them had soft wideawake hats perched on
-the backs of their heads, both were smoking enormous
-cigars, and both bore in their countenances
-the expression of temporarily out-of-work pirates
-more than that of peaceful quill-drivers. As Rube
-approached the nearest desk he was somewhat amazed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</span>
-to see the clerk with his chair tilted back and his
-feet apparently resting upon the papers before him.
-He gazed at the strongly-marked lineaments of the
-official, and that worthy returned his look with
-interest, presently removing the cigar from his mouth
-and saying: ‘Wal, young feller; an’ wut kin I hev
-the pleasure?’ Rube stammered out, rather incoherently:
-‘Mr. Sawtell engaged me th’ other day to
-come down here to jine a ship to go to sea.’ ‘Oh!’
-said the clerk, ‘Sawtell engaged yer, did he? And
-wut mought be the name of the ship?’ ‘I don’
-know,’ replied Reuben, who was fast recovering his
-equanimity; ’he jest told me to come right here.’
-‘That’s all right, sonny,’ said the clerk. ‘Sit down
-thar an’ wait fer him; he’ll be roun’ bimeby.’</p>
-
-<p>Reuben sat down as directed, and for nearly two
-hours had the interest of seeing individuals, something
-like himself, enter, ask almost the same question, and
-receive almost the same reply, until the room was
-fairly full. Then, when Reuben began to think that
-the whole affair must be a mistake, Sawtell entered.
-With him there came a man looking more like an
-Eastern patriarch than a seafarer&mdash;a tall, loose-jointed,
-hook-nosed, grey-bearded man, clad in homespun, a
-long coat reaching nearly to his feet, and a soft
-steeple-crowned felt hat upon his head. But quaint
-as his figure might be, there was no mistaking the
-keen, eagle-like glance of his eyes as he swept them
-round on the silent men meekly awaiting the arbiter
-of their fate. And it was he, the Patriarch, who
-spoke first. ‘Is this the crowd you’ve gut fur me,
-Sawtell?’ ‘Yes, Cap’n Hampden, an’ ez likely a
-lookin’ lot ’s ever I see.’ ‘H’m, mebbe so, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</span> jest
-naow I guess there’s a consid’ble quantity of plough
-soil hangin’ to ’em. But they <i>do</i> seem likely enough,
-as yer say. However, I gut no time to spare. We’re
-bound out first tide to-morrer, an’ if these gentlemen
-air <i>quite</i> disengaged’ (waving his hand towards
-the clerks) ‘we’ll purceed to business to once.’ Then,
-raising his voice, he addressed the waiting candidates
-comprehensively, saying: ‘Wal, young men, so ye
-feel inclined to try yewr fortunes upon the ragin’
-deep, do ye?’ Muttered responses went up, of
-which no man might gather the import, save that
-they were in the affirmative. ‘Right an’ good,’ said
-the Patriarch; ‘step up here, and hear this <i>gentleman</i>’
-(with a sarcastic inflection upon the last word) ‘read
-eout t’ ye the conditions of sarvice.’</p>
-
-<p>With an unexpected alacrity one of the clerks
-sprang to his feet, and, from a somewhat grimy
-document, read in a high sing-song tone of voice an
-agreement whereby the said crew covenanted to
-proceed in the good ship <i>Xiphias</i> to any port or
-ports of the navigable ocean in pursuit of whales,
-seals, and any other denizens of the deep capable of
-being made profitable to crew and owners; voyage
-not to exceed four years. It must be confessed that,
-slurred over as the last two words were (unintentionally,
-no doubt), several of the candidates suddenly
-showed a wistfulness of countenance, as if they had
-a prospective idea of what those four years might
-mean, but no word was spoken by any of them.
-Then, one by one, they stepped up to the desk and
-signed their names, first being told that they would
-be entitled to receive a good and sufficient quantity
-of cooked provisions, and the 250th lay, in return for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</span>
-their unquestioning obedience at all times to all orders
-that Captain Hampden and his officers might issue
-to them. And this important preliminary finished,
-they were all sternly ordered, as being men now under
-command, to be down at the ship by six o’clock in
-the morning at latest.</p>
-
-<p>So the newly engaged crew filed out of the office
-and stood in a little group on the sidewalk hesitatingly.
-A few words passed&mdash;invitations to drink
-for the most part&mdash;and one or two spoke to Rube; but
-he answered them unthinkingly, feeling, indeed, the
-need for being alone. It was all so new and strange
-to the country-bred man, and he felt that conversation
-with anybody would be insupportable. So, with
-muttered excuses, he left the company, and went for
-a stroll along the wharves, taking in all the wonders
-of this strange place with wide-open eyes, but most of
-his other senses nearly out of action. At last, utterly
-weary, he turned into a respectable-looking eatinghouse
-by the waterside, and called for some food,
-inquiring of the young woman who brought it
-whether he might take up his lodging there for the
-night. She answered ‘Yes’ with a surprised air,
-and, apparently unable to overcome her curiosity,
-put several questions to him, as to whence he came
-and whither he was going, all of which he answered
-evasively, conveying the idea that what he wanted was
-to be left alone in peace with his own thoughts.
-Quite unaccustomed to such rudeness on the part of
-her customers, the young woman tossed her head
-and departed, leaving him to his solitary meal. Nor
-did she return again until, rapping on the table, he
-summoned her and asked to be shown his room.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</span>
-With a scornful look at a man who could be so
-utterly unresponsive to the offer of polite conversation,
-she led the way to a very small, barely-furnished
-chamber, showed him in and left him; and he, with
-the same bewildered air that he had worn ever since
-reaching the town, slowly took off his clothes and
-got into bed, although it was hardly yet dark. In a
-few minutes the strain of the past twenty-four hours
-was relaxed, and he was fast asleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">OUTWARD BOUND</p>
-
-<p>Rube awakened before dawn without being called,
-but with a momentary feeling of terror lest he should
-have overslept himself. The sound of a neighbouring
-church clock striking five reassured him, and hurriedly
-dressing he made his way downstairs, paid his modest
-bill to the sleepy landlord, who was peering out into
-the grey of the early morning, and rapidly passed
-along the wharves in the direction of the ship which
-had been pointed out to him the previous afternoon.
-Arriving alongside, he was surprised to see how little
-bustle and apparent preparation for seafaring was
-in evidence. Several men were slouching about the
-decks, and one energetic individual was bellowing
-occasional orders in an exceedingly loud voice, but
-beyond that the vessel might, for all he could see,
-have been going to stay where she was indefinitely.
-Presently, however, he noticed a little group coming
-with swaying steps up the wharf, and soon they were
-alongside, several of them evidently suffering from
-their potations of the previous evening. Then the
-tall patriarchal figure of the Captain appeared, stepped
-on board, and instantly the ship wakened into life.</p>
-
-<p>All unaware of what was expected of him, Rube
-stood on deck just where he had first stepped over
-the side, his few belongings in his grip-sack lying<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</span> by
-him, until a short, thick-set man, with a face like unpolished
-mahogany, came up to him and said: ‘Naow,
-wut yew doin’ here&mdash;hain’t shipped as passenger, hev
-ye? Them yewr duds? Get ’em below and be
-mighty smart abaout it, ’less you want consid’ble
-trouble.’ Mechanically he obeyed the man’s actions
-more than his words, which were, indeed, more than
-half of them almost unintelligible to him. Going
-forward in the direction indicated by his interlocutor,
-and finding his way below, he entered a large apartment
-wrapped in the densest gloom, and it was not
-until somebody (who, he could not see) struck a light,
-that he was able to discern its outlines, to see all
-around it bunks, some occupied by bundles of clothing
-and miscellaneous objects, and others by sleeping
-men. The atmosphere of this dark den was foul in
-the extreme&mdash;so much so, in fact, that he felt choking&mdash;and,
-without losing any time, he pushed his belongings
-into the nearest corner that presented itself
-and hastened on deck.</p>
-
-<p>The next hour passed with him like a fevered
-dream. What he was doing or why he was doing it
-he knew not at all; for is there any creature more
-helpless and ignorant than a grown-up man who, for
-the first time in his life, takes part in the work of
-a ship putting out to sea? The very language is
-unintelligible. Everything is so new, so strange, and
-when presently to these mysteries is added the
-curious staggering motion of the ship, the neophyte’s
-plight is a most unhappy one. But it may be
-doubted whether of all the much-advertised remedies
-for sea-sickness there are any so effectual as being
-kept at work, allowed no respite, no moment to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</span>
-brood over the physical inconveniences that assail
-the candidate for sea honours. The remedy is a
-terrible one, it is true, but that it is effectual is
-equally true, and so Rube found it. But when he
-was ordered aloft to loose a sail he gazed piteously
-up the rigging and mentally commended himself
-to the care of God. For as the ship was just
-feeling the inroll of the wide sea, and putting on a
-most disconcerting motion, it appeared to him perfectly
-impossible that he should be able to get up
-aloft and down again alive. Added to this was the
-fact that he had not the remotest conception of what
-he was intended to do. But a stalwart Portuguese
-standing near him when the order was given murmured,
-‘Kem along, Greenie; I shows you haow,’
-and, gratefully willing, in spite of his wretched bodily
-condition, he clumsily clambered up the rigging after
-his mentor, followed by a perfect hurricane of opprobrium
-from the officer on deck, who felt justly angered
-at his most reprehensible want of smartness. He
-gained the foretopsail yard, and then, despite all his
-earnest endeavours to learn from the Portuguese
-what he was supposed to do, was so overcome with
-nausea that he could do nothing but hold on, just
-hanging there, a limp, swaying body, unconscious of
-everything around and about him in the utter misery
-of his inner man.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it is as well that we draw a veil over the
-proceedings of the next few days. To follow a
-novice like Rube through such an ordeal as he was
-now undergoing, while it might certainly be interesting,
-could not fail, if faithfully reported, to be
-very distressing to anybody possessing a scintilla<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</span> of
-sympathy. Let it, then, suffice to say that on the
-third morning at daybreak Rube, while sitting between
-the main stays keeping the look-out, began to
-realise that an interest in his surroundings was
-rapidly beginning. Also, for the first time since he
-had left home, he found himself thinking of how
-matters might be going on at the farm, and then, as
-he pictured father and mother coming down to the
-morning meal and offering up a prayer for the absent
-one, his heart melted, familiar words of prayer formed
-upon his lips, he bowed his head and sought the
-ante-chamber of the King. And, for the first time
-since he had received the news that had wrought
-so tremendous a change in his life, he coupled with
-his prayers the name of Priscilla, that she might be
-blessed and helped wherever she might be, and that
-her path in life might be made infinitely smoother for
-her than she had, innocently enough, made his for him.</p>
-
-<p>While engaged in this sacred reverie he allowed
-his head to droop upon his hand, and became for the
-time utterly unconscious of his surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>And so it came to pass that the second mate,
-whose watch it happened to be at the time, making
-his periodical prowl round the deck to see that all
-was in order, peered up at the look-out place and
-saw, as he thought, the watchman asleep. His next
-move was to procure a bucket of water, which he
-launched with accurate aim at Rube’s crouching
-form. Rube started upright, gasping and full of
-bewilderment at this strange thing that had befallen
-him. But he was not left long in doubt, for almost
-immediately came a storm of profanity, interspersed
-with grim warnings as to the kind and quantity of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</span>
-evil that would befall him if ever again he went to
-sleep on his look-out. At the first opportunity Rube
-essayed to reply, and point out that he was not
-asleep, not knowing, poor fellow, that no excuses of
-the kind are ever accepted on board ship. His few
-stammered words only brought the bucket flying at
-his head, and being, after all, a sensible young fellow,
-he took this rough hint to mean that the only
-possible course for him to pursue, under present conditions
-at any rate, was to take all that might be
-tendered to him, making no reply unless ordered.</p>
-
-<p>But the <i>Xiphias</i> was not at all a bad ship. We
-may go farther, and say she was a good ship, because
-Captain Hampden, stern grey Quaker that he was,
-discountenanced all ill-usage of the crew that was
-not, to his mind, absolutely necessary. And as he,
-being part owner, had provided his crew with a
-plentiful supply of fairly good food, another great
-source of misery on board ship was removed from
-them. But still the life for a time seemed very hard
-to our hero, and would have been much harder but
-for his magnificent physique and his splendid patience.
-Moreover, he now found much comfort and a grand
-outlet for his long pent-up affections in ministering
-to the many needs of his hapless shipmates. For
-they, like himself, were drawn largely from inland
-dwelling people, and several of them were much
-more helpless than he. They had come to sea all
-unwittingly, without the slightest foreknowledge of
-what awaited them, just as he had, and therefore, of
-necessity, it would be some considerable time before
-they could settle down to the stolid endurance which
-is absolutely necessary for all those who go down to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</span>
-the sea in sailing ships.</p>
-
-<p>A week elapsed, during which all hands were
-gradually being shaken down into their several
-grooves. Every man on board had been allotted
-his post in the boats or as a shipkeeper against the
-day of battle with the monarchs of the deep. The
-various green hands had now some of their greenness
-mellowed, and were learning, or had learned, to get
-aloft and do something else beside hold on tightly
-when they got there. But this was the smallest part&mdash;the
-mere rudiments, as it were&mdash;of their education.
-Sailors on board whaling ships are, of course, required
-to be fairly smart aloft, fairly smart at the
-ordinary avocations of a sailor; but the principal
-object of their life is that they shall be smart boatmen,
-and herein they differ entirely from any other
-merchant seafarers whatever. And this was soon
-made evident to them, for at the first opportunity, the
-weather being fine enough to admit of boats being
-lowered with a crew of absolutely incompetent men
-without danger of those valuable vessels being
-damaged, all hands, except four retained to handle
-the ship under the charge of the captain, were sent
-away to practise boatmanship.</p>
-
-<p>This was a severe trial, and all the green hands
-suffered much. But even here Rube’s patience and
-muscular development stood him in good stead&mdash;saved
-him, in fact, from the energetic attentions
-lavishly bestowed by the officer and harpooner of his
-boat upon the other occupants. It must be confessed
-that he felt many misgivings upon being so near that
-great heaving blue surface as he was in the frail whaleboat.
-Different (and so much harder) as his life had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</span>
-already been on board the ship from all his previous
-experiences, it was ease and comfort as compared with
-this apparent tempting of fortune in a mere cockleshell.
-However, given sufficient energy on the part
-of the teachers, a modicum of courage and sufficient
-docility on the part of the taught, men can speedily
-accommodate themselves to any alteration in their
-habits of life, no matter how great it may be, and so,
-after three days of tremendously hard training, Captain
-Hampden expressed himself satisfied that his newly-gathered
-crew of clodhoppers might safely be taken
-into battle with the great sperm whale, and have a
-reasonable chance of emerging therefrom victorious.
-The weather had, mercifully to those new-comers,
-been fairly fine for the time of year&mdash;late autumn&mdash;although
-the wind had hung persistently from the S.E.,
-thus hindering their progress greatly; but one morning
-at daybreak, the sky lowering threateningly, they
-were suddenly attacked by a severe gale from the N.E.
-Amid the hoarse cries of the officers and the blundering
-but hearty efforts of the crew, sail was shortened
-to the two close-reefed topsails and foresail, and the
-old <i>Xiphias</i> fled southward at a great rate for her.
-Then it was that Reuben, being sent aloft upon some
-errand of fastening a loose end, was suddenly seized
-with an attack of giddiness and fell, an inert mass,
-into the sea. In a wonderfully short space of time the
-vessel was rounded to and a boat lowered and manned,
-not by her own crew, but by picked men capable
-of handling her as she <i>should</i> be handled. So smart
-were their efforts that in less than ten minutes they
-came up with the helpless form of Rube as he lay
-unconscious upon the surface. He was seized and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</span>
-hauled into the boat, brought on board, and immediately
-subjected to the orthodox operations for
-restoring life to the apparently drowned. Long and
-carefully they toiled to bring him back to life, and at
-last succeeded in doing so, but when he opened his
-eyes upon the world again all the details of his previous
-life seemed as if they had been completely obliterated.
-Dismissed to the forecastle, he groped forward like a
-man suddenly awakened from a long dream, and to
-all the inquiries of his shipmates he turned a blank
-face, an uncomprehending demeanour.</p>
-
-<p>But his grand bodily powers enabled him to return
-to his duties almost immediately, and from thenceforward,
-strangely enough, he seemed to assimilate
-all that was taught him with wonderful ease&mdash;in fact,
-as the hard-bitten officer to whose watch he belonged
-said: ‘Thet big hayseed o’ mine seems as if ’e was a
-born sailorman.’ So fast did he learn that his watchmates
-became absurdly jealous of him&mdash;a waste of
-attention on their part, since of it he took not the
-slightest notice whatever&mdash;seemed, indeed, really
-incapable of doing so.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Hampden became interested in this peculiar
-development, and occasionally condescended to ply
-him with questions as to his previous experience, but
-all in vain. Nothing could be got out of him, and,
-baffled, the good old skipper had to content himself
-by saying to his chief officer: ‘Wall, at any rate, we
-seem to hev gut hold of a mighty good man.’ And
-gradually his quiet perseverance in well doing, the
-impossibility of making him angry, and the readiness
-with which he would always help to the utmost of his
-power any of his shipmates that were in trouble, won<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</span>
-him a high place in the hearts of all on board; even
-the Portuguese (never very friendly to men of northern
-breed) could not withhold from him some uncouth
-tributes of affection.</p>
-
-<p>And so the ship made her way slowly down to the
-Line, failing, however, to the disgust of the officers, to
-raise a whale for the first month after her departure
-from port. But the time was well spent, for all hands,
-by dint of incessant practice, were now in a high state of
-efficiency, only requiring their baptism of fire, if it may
-be called so&mdash;their initiation into the art and mystery
-of whale-fighting&mdash;to make them as good a crew as
-any whaling skipper could desire to have under his
-command. All bullying, hazing, and what we should
-call brutality, had ceased. The ship was quite as
-peaceful as any ‘limejuicer,’ and it was easy to see
-from the contented faces and pleasant remarks of the
-officers how well satisfied they were with the progress
-made by the men under their command in the direction
-of becoming decent sailormen.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">DISILLUSIONMENT</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it is high time that we returned for a while
-to the career of our heroine in her new sphere. It
-must be remembered that she, as so many other
-young women have done, took a leap in the dark,
-committing herself and her future to the care of a
-man about whose antecedents and character she
-knew absolutely nothing, having only in the few
-short days of their acquaintance seen him at his very
-best. But such was the glamour with which she had
-invested her hero that, although she was startled and
-troubled in mind by his brutal language and still
-more brutal treatment of the men under his command
-from the first hour that she came on board his ship,
-she attributed it all to the necessities of a captain’s
-position. Every oath made her shudder, every blow
-made her wince, yet she bore it all without remark,
-as belonging to a new order of things of which she
-had hitherto been entirely ignorant, and upon the
-merits of which at present she felt herself quite
-unable to give an opinion. Perhaps, had she been
-able to hear the remarks that were passed by the
-crew to one another when they thought such remarks
-might safely be made, she would have shuddered
-still more. But, poor girl, all such warning words
-were hidden from her, neither did she know&mdash;how<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</span>
-could she, indeed?&mdash;that her husband bore the unenviable
-reputation of being the hardest skipper of
-all the hard-bitten crowd of such men sailing from
-the whaling ports of North America. Still, even her
-trustful heart could not fail to be wounded at the
-incessant cruelty which she was now compelled to
-witness.</p>
-
-<p>The crew, driven on board at the last moment
-before sailing like a pack of cowed dogs, were a set
-of miserable ragamuffins, taken, apparently, because
-none others could be obtained at any price. There
-were only two Americans among them&mdash;two poor
-lads from the Western States, who had run away
-from home to go to sea; the rest were representatives
-of almost as many races as there were members.
-This, in itself, made for the safety of the officers&mdash;made
-the brutality much less likely to be resented
-successfully, because, among that medley of foreigners,
-there could be no banding together for a common
-purpose of revenge. Not that such an event was at
-all probable, because, according to the fixed plan
-pursued on board the majority of such vessels, the
-precaution was taken while yet the crew, who were
-nearly all green hands, were in the throes of nausea
-and bewilderment at their strange surroundings, to
-beat them, with or without pretext, until their spirits
-were thoroughly broken and the possibility of their
-retaliating was hopelessly remote. Captain Da Silva,
-in spite of the presence of his wife, which might have
-been expected to have a humanising influence over
-him, was this voyage more savagely brutal than ever
-he had been before. His four officers, who knew him
-well, and who were all eager followers of his plans<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</span>
-(had to be, indeed, in order to keep their position
-with him), confessed one to another that the old man
-seemed as if he wanted to show his bride how black
-a demon he <i>could</i> be. <i>He</i> said, not by way of excuse,
-but apparently stating a mournful fact, in conversation
-with his officers, that in all his fishing he had
-never had such a crowd to deal with as he had got
-this time, and before they had been at sea a week he
-discussed with the officers elaborate plans for running
-across to the Azores, driving his present crew overboard
-and shipping a crowd of his fellow-countrymen therefrom.
-But this was going a little too far, for three
-of his officers were Americans, and they by no means
-relished the prospect of having an entire crew of
-Portuguese on board an American ship. They felt
-that it would be indeed exchanging the devils they
-knew for the devils they did <i>not</i> know, and, as far as
-they dared, made this plain to their brutal commander.
-And he, wise as well as wicked, took the
-hint, for he could not afford to lose such splendid
-whalemen as his officers had proved themselves to
-be. So, instead of working to the eastward, they
-shaped a course for the Line, and met with such
-good fortune in the shape of weather that, without
-the parting of a rope-yarn, they found themselves at
-the end of a fortnight well within the Tropics.</p>
-
-<p>It was one of the characteristics of Da Silva’s
-career that he always seemed to have extraordinary
-luck. This voyage was no exception, for no sooner
-was the vessel shipshape, the whaling gear rigged,
-and all fishing preparations made, than he, taking
-the masthead trip one morning, sighted a grand
-school of sperm whales. Instantly his voice rang<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</span>
-throughout the ship, calling all hands to action, and
-even those unhappy men who had had the hardest
-experience of his cruelty could not withhold a tribute
-of admiration for his wonderful powers of command,
-presence of mind, and exact knowledge of how to do
-the right thing at the right moment.</p>
-
-<p>That scratch crew of wastrels, broken-spirited as
-they were, seemed to catch a spark of his enthusiasm,
-and exerted themselves in extraordinary ways in
-order to gain his approval.</p>
-
-<p>Priscilla, utterly neglected amid this hurly-burly,
-sat perched on the taffrail looking with wide-eyed
-wonderment upon the busy scene. A thrill of terror
-seized her as she saw her husband, standing erect in
-the stern of the first boat lowered, urging his
-crew, with an unbroken stream of profanity, to the
-highest efforts of which they were capable. She could
-see the whales, but she hardly knew what was
-afoot. All that was real to her was that the ship
-was deserted by almost all hands, including the commander,
-only three or four being left to handle the
-sails. So there she sat solitary, alarmed, full of fears
-for her husband’s safety, for the result of this tremendous
-manœuvre, the object of which she only
-dimly understood. The cries from the two men at
-the masthead to those on deck she understood not
-at all, nor did she dare to ask the helmsman for any
-information for fear that her innocent inquiry might
-reach her husband’s ears later and be fiercely resented
-by him. But he had obtained such a hold over her
-that even now she did not blame him: she only felt
-sorry that he should not have had time (as she put
-it to herself) to acquaint her with the reason for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</span> his
-hurried departure.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the five boats, their crews straining at
-the oars to the utmost limit of their strength, sped
-away at right angles to the direction in which the
-whales lay. The Captain kept the lead, not that the
-men in the other boats were not doing their best,
-but that he had a picked crew, and that every man
-of them was working as if in imminent bodily fear of
-some terrible punishment unless he exerted all his
-muscular power. The oars rose and fell with the
-regularity of steam pistons, the water foamed past
-the boats, but no other sound was heard save the
-laboured panting of the men and the low, hissing
-execrations of the Captain. It is popularly supposed
-that when rowing boats after whales there is a great
-deal of shouted encouragement, either kindly or the
-reverse, that the men themselves are apt to break
-into song, as Dr. Beale permits himself to say, ‘The
-men sang the time-honoured whaling chant of “Away,
-my boys, away, my boys, it’s time for us to go,”’ but
-when it is remembered how very slight a sound, even
-at the distance of miles, will suffice to alarm the
-valuable quarry, it will at once be seen that experienced
-whale hunters would not be likely to do
-such a foolish thing as to make unnecessary noises,
-even supposing that they had breath to spare for
-doing so.</p>
-
-<p>At last, when the rowers felt as if their arms
-would drop off at the shoulders, the Captain’s deep
-voice was heard saying, ‘Peak oars, step mast, up
-sprit.’ These actions were immediately copied by
-each of the other boats, and, in three minutes from
-the time they had ceased rowing, the five boats, under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</span>
-the steady stress of their big sails, were bounding
-over the bright sea before the wind down on to the
-whales. The propulsion with the oars had only been
-resorted to for the purpose of obtaining a good
-weather gauge. That once reached, and the sails
-set, the boats’ heads were turned at right angles to
-the course they had been pursuing so that they
-might now, with the wind almost astern, run down
-upon the whales at high speed, and with the least
-possible amount of splash.</p>
-
-<p>It was a splendid sight, that group of unconscious
-monsters calmly and methodically pursuing their
-way, quietly attending to their own business of procuring
-food and enjoying their life; and here, close
-at hand, stealing upon them like pirates upon a
-helpless merchantman, this little flotilla of destroyers.
-Each officer and harpooner was now in the throes of
-expectation, every nerve tense, all their hopes high
-that they would reach their prey before the periodical
-descent of the whales took place. In nine cases out
-of ten this would not have been the case, but here
-again, Captain Da Silva’s luck appeared to be in the
-ascendant, for, as if the boats were living creatures,
-full of eager desire to come to close quarters with the
-enemy, they leaped forward with ever-accelerating
-speed, until the foremost whale, a large bull of about
-seventy barrels (or, say, sixty feet in length) was
-only a couple of lengths ahead of the skipper’s boat.
-Hoarsely he growled, ‘Stand up, Jose!’ The harpooner’s
-crouching form straightened itself, and,
-raising the harpoon in both hands while steadying
-himself by his left thigh in the hollow of the clumsy
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</span>cleat, he waited,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</span> a heroic figure, until, by a skilful
-sweep of the steering oar, the boat swung end on to
-the whale’s broad side, and struck it, at the same
-moment as the harpoon flew from those nervous
-hands and buried itself in the quivering blubber up
-to the hitches. Calmly pitching the stray line out of
-the box over the boat’s side, the harpooner turned to
-go aft with the face of a man knowing that his duty
-had been well done. Without taking the slightest
-notice of the writhings of the tortured leviathan so
-near or the tremendous commotion in the water, he
-superintended the rolling up of the sail, the unshipping
-of the mast, and the passing of it aft where it
-would be out of the way of the operations.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_048fp" style="max-width: 28em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_048fp.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>THE WHALE WENT STEADILY DOWN, DOWN, DOWN.</p>
-
-<p><i>P. 49.</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>While the crew of the boat were thus engaged
-the Captain, with that skill for which he was justly
-famous, had, by means of the big steering oar,
-manipulated the boat so that she lay at a safe distance
-from the whale. The hardly-pressed monster,
-in orthodox fashion, finding that he could not
-free himself from the galling weapon, descended
-steadily, taking out line at a gentle rate, while the
-Captain changed ends with the harpooner, unsheathed
-his favourite lance, and awaited the return of the whale
-to the surface. While so doing, his countenance was a
-study in ferocity. The immediate prospect of bloodshed
-seemed to arouse in him all the animal, and, as
-he glared fiercely around upon his crew, they hardly
-dared meet his eye, so terrible did he look. But he
-was compelled to forego his delightful occupation for
-a while, and remain as quiet as it was possible for
-him to do while the whale went steadily down, down,
-down. Meanwhile, by a piece of amazing good
-fortune, each of the other boats had succeeded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</span> in
-getting fast to a whale without any accident, and
-now they were all engaged in the same manner as
-the Captain’s boat, waiting, with such patience as
-the officers could command, for the rising to the
-surface of their respective whales. The remainder of
-the school, having apparently lost all control of
-themselves, wandered aimlessly around the little
-company of boats, going slowly backwards and forwards,
-thrusting their great heads out of the water
-without apparently the slightest idea of what to do
-or where to go, and arousing in the minds of the
-officers, especially in that of the Captain, the fiercest
-resentment at their inability to take more advantage
-of so splendid an opportunity as was now offered
-them. After a wait of nearly half an hour, all the
-harpooned whales came to the surface at nearly the
-same moment, and immediately the scene underwent
-a change as complete as it is possible to
-imagine. The wounded monsters, rushing frantically
-in every direction in their vain efforts to escape, the
-fierce guttural yells of the officers as they plied their
-slender, gleaming lances upon those vast bodies, the
-welling fountains of blood that befouled the bright
-sea surface, all went to make up a picture of savagery
-which could hardly be equalled by that presented in
-any land battle. So successful was the conduct of
-this first encounter that hardly two hours had elapsed
-since the boats first left the ship when the whole five
-whales were dead, the boats cleared up, and all was
-in readiness for the prey to be taken alongside the
-ship. She, being well and smartly handled by the
-three or four people left on board, and having got well
-to windward of the area of battle, now ran down to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</span>
-where the Captain’s boat lay by the side of his dead
-whale. Having made the line fast to a hole in the
-whale’s fluke, he ordered his boat to run alongside
-the ship, and, climbing smartly on board, he superintended
-the hauling of the whale alongside. Now,
-the ship being hampered by that gigantic body made
-fast to her, it became necessary for the crews of the
-other boats to tow their whales as best they could in
-the direction of the vessel. Fearfully long and tedious
-was the process, and the impatience of the Captain
-rose to a height of almost maniacal fury, although he
-knew full well that every man was doing his utmost
-to perform the tremendous task allotted to him.
-Without a break they toiled until the sun was nearly
-setting, nor was one moment’s respite allowed them
-until the whole of the day’s catch was secured alongside
-and astern of the ship. Then, and not till then,
-the Captain shouted with a grudging note in his
-voice, ‘Mr. Court, send the hands to dinner.’ The
-order was repeated by the mate, and the men wearily
-dragged themselves below, where the food&mdash;cooked
-long ago&mdash;was awaiting them. But as they went the
-Captain shouted again, ‘Look lively now; yew
-wanter be on deck again in twenty minutes.’ Having
-delivered himself thus, he turned towards his
-cabin, where, for the first time that day, he greeted
-his wife. She, quite bewildered by the day’s proceedings,
-summoned up all her affection, and came
-to greet him with arms outspread, but he, glowering
-fiercely at her, said, ‘I got no time for fooling now;
-I got something else to think about.’</p>
-
-<p>This rebuff reduced her to a pitiable state of mind,
-for it was utterly incomprehensible. That she had done<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</span>
-anything to deserve it she could not feel, and, indeed,
-it was a strange thing that a man in the height of his
-success, having inaugurated his cruise in so splendid
-a fashion, with enormous profits lying only waiting
-to be realised, should be so hatefully morose and
-savage in his demeanour.</p>
-
-<p>It was a puzzle beyond hope of solution. The
-meal was taken in utter silence, the food being bolted
-in truly animal fashion; and, while yet the last mouthfuls
-were being masticated, the skipper rose abruptly
-from his seat and said, ‘Now, then, Mr. Court, start
-the hands again.’ While they had been at dinner
-the shipkeepers had completed their task of getting
-the gear ready for cutting in, so that when the
-officers came on deck and summoned the hands it
-only remained to commence cutting in the whales at
-once. Loud orders resounded along the decks, but,
-for perhaps half a minute, there was no response, and
-this seemed to act upon the Captain maddeningly.
-Snatching a belaying-pin from the rail, he strode
-forward muttering curses, and, beating his weapon
-upon the scuttle hatch of the forecastle, he roared down
-into the gloomy cavern, ‘D’ ye want to be smoked
-out like a nest of hornets?’ Full of alarms, the
-weary men clambered up the steep ladder, but as the
-first one reached the deck he was met by a tremendous
-blow full in the face, which sent him reeling to
-the deck.</p>
-
-<p>It must be admitted that captain and officers
-worked hardest of all; in fact, they seemed like men
-of steel rather than of flesh and blood, and even the
-weary seamen could hardly refuse a tribute of admiration
-to the way in which they were led. By midnight,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</span>
-under the glare of blazing cressets suspended
-from the davit heads, they had managed to cut in two
-of the whales, and had decapitated the remaining
-three, the great columnar heads being strung astern
-by hawsers. Then the Captain reluctantly gave
-orders that half the crew should retire for an hour
-while the other half busied themselves in making
-some sort of a clearance on the deck, which was now
-piled almost from end to end with blubber, and ankle-deep
-in oil. How speedily that hour passed for the
-privileged ones only they could tell. Indeed, it
-seemed but a moment before they were back at work
-again, and the other half were sent for the same brief
-period to rest. But the savage brute of a captain
-took no rest. He seemed superhuman, and when
-day dawned the whole of the spoil had been taken
-on board, with the exception of the three heads, for
-which no room could be found at present.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">A STRICKEN DEMON</p>
-
-<p>It has been a frequent matter of remark, not merely
-by myself, but by all the writers with whom I have
-conversed who have ever interviewed old sailors on the
-subject of their experiences, how difficult it is for the
-latter to tell what they have seen. Their memories
-are most keen, but the mighty happenings they have
-witnessed seem to overwhelm their simple vocabulary,
-and they will suddenly break off in the midst of a
-splendid tale, and, holding up their hands in a gesture
-of despair, cry out, ‘Oh, God, if I <i>could</i> only tell ye
-what I’ve seen!’ I am led to think that perhaps it
-is this felt inability to do justice to the memory of
-what they have really seen that has often made
-sailors possessed of vivid imaginations invent magnificent
-lies, rushing by some curious mental paradox
-into the opposite extreme, from the sober recital of
-fact to an absurdly extravagant invention of fiction.</p>
-
-<p>But be that as it may, there can be no doubt that
-even those who have been most successful in the
-attempt to transport their readers to the scenes which
-they themselves have witnessed, are often touched by
-the same feeling of inability, as the grandeur of the
-scenes they would fain depict flashes through their
-minds. They sit with poised pen&mdash;present, indeed, as
-to the body at their desks, but in spirit, by some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</span>
-unexplainable mystery, away back amid the surroundings
-of those former years, going through it all
-again. And thus they sit waiting, waiting, prisoners
-of hope, until relief comes in some commonplace
-word or thought, and the pen is re-started, to run
-perchance glibly enough until again arrested in like
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>These reflections irresistibly arise as I recall
-similar scenes to the one which I would now describe:
-that splendid silken circle of sea and dome of
-sky just commencing to palpitate with the glories
-of the new day; those low, tender ranges of softest
-cloud like carelessly piled heaps of snowy down, with
-sober grey bases almost parallel with the horizon, and
-summits blushing sweetly with all the warm tints of
-the coming sun; through the eternal concave overhead
-running tremulous sprays of liveliest colour
-throbbing and changing incessantly on their background
-of deep violet, from which the modest stars
-are quietly fading before the advent of morning.
-Across the mirror-like surface of the ocean great
-splashes of colour come and go in never-ending progression,
-although there be never a cloud from which
-they may be reflected and their pure hues come direct
-from the impalpable ether around. And in the centre
-of it all, grating at first upon the mind as the only
-discordant note in the harmony otherwise reigning,
-is a ship surrounded by the greasy, mutilated carcasses
-of her spoil&mdash;that spoil which was so recently fulfilling
-the exhortation of that glorious hymn, ‘O ye
-whales, and all that move in the waters, bless ye the
-Lord, praise Him and magnify Him for ever.’ What
-a hideous scene of squalor it does appear, to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</span> sure!
-Great shapeless masses of flesh and fat and bone, huge
-clots of black blood, an undefinable odour of death&mdash;for
-the time has not yet come for corruption to defile
-air as well as sea&mdash;and in the midst of it all, fiercely
-toiling, hacking, thrusting, tearing, yelling, blaspheming,
-are the slayers. From every pore the ship
-exudes oil warm from the body, at every roll a new
-extent of ‘sleeky’ water is thrust out from her slimy
-sides. Gradually, as the space in her main-hold
-known as the blubber-room becomes filled up, the
-limited area on deck is piled with the masses of
-blubber, and the oil which exudes from them fills up
-the carefully caulked decks and at each wallowing
-roll she makes rises against the bulwarks, which are
-almost as impervious as the deck itself. So inside,
-outside, half-way up the mainmast, she reeks with
-blood and grease, while the water all around is a
-seething mass of silent voracity. From who knows
-how far away the hungry denizens of the deep sea have
-hastened to the feast, summoned by some unerring
-sense, of which we know nothing at all. No one, as
-far as I know, has ever attempted to compute the
-number of the host of sharks alone which surround
-a whaleship while she secures her spoil; so I shall
-not try. It would be only a wild guess, after all, for
-they come and go incessantly in utmost haste, and as
-far as the eye can see the water is aboil with their
-strugglings to secure at least some portion of the great
-feast.</p>
-
-<p>Of the other deep-sea citizens present I can say
-little. They are to be seen of course, but only
-occasionally, for this feast is peculiarly the shark’s
-great opportunity, and it is no easy matter for any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</span>
-other fish to displace him. In the air, the hungry
-self-invited guests may be few or many, according to
-the position of the ship. In the North Atlantic birds
-are far less plentiful than they are in the South, for
-some reason which I have never been able to find
-out, and consequently in this great scene of spoliation
-which I am now attempting to limn there were only
-about a dozen or twenty ’gulls.’</p>
-
-<p>During its progress, as during the hunting, Priscilla
-sat on the top of the after-house motionless
-under the influence of some horrible fascination
-which she could not resist. She watched the lithe
-form of her saturnine husband as, leaning over the
-rail of the cutting-stage, he dealt blow after blow at
-the black and white masses beneath him, or occasionally
-varied his labours by a sidelong thrust which
-severed some thieving shark’s head from its body.
-But she noted that while he appeared to be doing
-more than any other member of the crew, his physical
-efforts never interfered with his mental energies in
-the oversight of his men. He seemed to know where
-every man was, and what he was, or ought to be,
-doing. An incessant stream of orders, threats, and
-cursings poured from his throat, which was apparently
-of brass, since it never got hoarse. The
-only physical sign of his vocal labours was the foam
-with which his raven-black beard was flecked.</p>
-
-<p>Utterly brutal, utterly callous and heartless as
-she now knew her husband to be, she could not
-withhold from him a silent tribute of admiration for
-his powers of command and organisation, and for his
-courage. She felt shuddering pity for the poor men,
-who, against the most urgent calls of Nature to rest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</span>
-their tortured limbs, went fiercely toiling on as if
-only by that means could they avert sudden, violent
-death. Once or twice she gave vent to a low moan
-of compassion as she saw the Captain leap inboard
-with a tiger-like spring and fall upon some man
-whom his eagle eye had detected lagging behind the
-others, assailing him with the utmost ferocity by
-knocking him down, jumping on him, kicking him as
-if determined to do him to death. Again and again
-she turned to go, overcome by the horror of these
-constantly recurring scenes, but she could not: she
-was compelled to remain and witness them while
-powerless to help and unable even to pray that God
-would have mercy upon these poor wretches upon
-whom man&mdash;at least her man&mdash;had none.</p>
-
-<p>What man has done, man can and will do unless
-restrained by powerful laws, and what was done amid
-such scenes as I am recalling was gentleness itself
-when compared with what went on aboard the galleys
-of ancient days&mdash;scenes which no modern writer
-has dared, or would dare, to put comprehensively
-into print. For even on board a whaler, where one
-man embodied all the law or justice obtainable by
-anybody, the blessed influences of Christianity in the
-modifying of cruelty were felt, and things were thus
-not nearly as bad as they might have been; nay, they
-were only in exceptional cases as bad as I have
-represented. This fact, I think, deserves special
-emphasis, because it goes to show that the majority
-of men in command of these ships, knowing full well
-that they were never likely to be called to account
-for any cruelties they might commit in the name
-of discipline, yet abstained from exercising their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</span>
-autocratic power, or only used it when it became
-undoubtedly necessary that they should do so.</p>
-
-<p>Gradually the mighty task drew to its close. One
-by one the vast carcasses were cut adrift and floated
-away, each the centre of a writhing mass of hungry
-creatures fiercely fighting for places at the feast,
-which, great as it was, seemed but a trifle compared
-with the host of candidates for it. One by one the
-huge square ‘cases’ were hove up alongside and
-their bland contents ladled out into the tanks below.
-But when the last but one was being emptied, as it
-hung, a weight of some twenty tons, suspended from
-the cutting-in falls, Captain Da Silva went to the
-waist, and, leaning up against the case, looked down
-to see whether or not the precious spermaceti was
-draining away from some cut in its walls, as he
-suspected it was. As he did so the ship rolled ever
-so slightly, and without any warning the massive
-chain slings which held the case aloft tore out. It
-fell like an avalanche descending, a big flap of
-‘white horse’ or head integument curling round the
-Captain’s body and whirling him after it into the
-fathomless depths. It was so terribly sudden that
-Priscilla was momentarily stunned, but with returning
-breath she uttered a wild cry of terror and fell fainting,
-her overwrought condition of nerves unable to bear
-this last great shock. For one moment the crew
-also stood like statues, but ere one could count five,
-the third mate and second boat-steerer had leaped
-into the sea after their commander, although they
-knew (none better) of the swarming sharks and the
-many other reasons why they should be unsuccessful.
-But all traces of him had vanished, and realising that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</span>
-not only were they most dangerously situated, but
-that they could see better from above, they climbed
-on deck again with all the speed they might, reaching
-it at the same moment as Captain Da Silva’s head
-appeared on the other side above the rail.</p>
-
-<p>For a few moments all who witnessed his rising
-stared with starting eyes at what they deemed to be
-his wraith, but his hoarse voice, full of anger, roused
-them instantly from their brief lethargy. ‘Naouw,
-then, whutye all gapping at, like a lot er&mdash;&mdash; suckers’s
-y’air. Git along wi’ thet work, ’relse I’ll be ’mong ye
-in mighty short order, naouw I’m telling ye.’ And
-each man sprang to his task as does a mettled horse
-when the lash falls unexpectedly across his flanks.
-And Captain Da Silva strode off muttering maledictions.
-Perhaps it was all the formula of thanksgiving
-which he knew: certainly no word of praise for the
-miracle of his escape out of the very jaws of death
-crossed his lips. He had been carried down by that
-long sliver of skin which had enwrapped him and
-held him tightly bound to the mighty mass of the case
-until he felt as if his head were a boiler under a full
-pressure of steam. But as the ‘case’ sank, by some
-mysterious influence it spun round, or rather revolved,
-for its motion was but slow, and in doing so it unwound
-the clinging band from the skipper’s body.
-Never having lost his presence of mind, and being as
-nearly amphibious as the rest of his island countrymen,
-he sprang upward to the surface, just grazing the
-bilge on the opposite side of the ship to that from
-which he had descended, and grasping a bight of the
-main sheet which dangled invitingly alongside, he
-swung himself aboard, ready and alert to resume the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</span>
-tyranny he loved.</p>
-
-<p>The whole affair of his departure and return had
-been so dramatically sudden that Captain Da Silva
-was in his cabin shouting for Priscilla to give him dry
-garments before she had recovered from her swoon.
-His angry demands brought the trembling steward
-at his best gait. To his breath-bated inquiry the
-skipper shouted:</p>
-
-<p>‘Whar’s Mrs. Da Silva, yew black beast; whar’s
-my wife?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Please, sah, de madam’s done gone swounded,
-an’ I ain’t can fotch ’er to yit. I &mdash;&mdash;’</p>
-
-<p>But flinging him aside as if he had been a bundle
-of rags, the skipper rushed on deck to where Priscilla
-was sitting up wearily passing a hand over her dazed
-eyes and wondering what strange thing had befallen
-her. He seized her arm roughly, and in tones of
-deepest scorn demanded what sort of &mdash;&mdash; game she
-called this? Was he to wait in his wet clothes while
-she lolled about on deck playing the (more unsavoury
-adjectives) fool? Mechanically she staggered to her
-feet, and, like some unreasoning but faithful animal,
-tottered towards the cabin. I doubt if she would
-have been surprised had her husband accelerated her
-progress by a kick, to such a numbness of brain had
-she come. But she did his bidding, accepted all his
-blasphemous grumbling, and made no sign. For she
-was, in the fullest sense of that much-abused brace of
-words, heart-broken. Her spirit was crushed, never
-to awake again as it had been; her love was dead, and
-only patient, animal-like obedience remained. Did
-any compunction arise in the man’s mind for what he
-had done to that trusting, loving woman? Those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</span>
-who think so little know the capacity of man for
-cruelty. A grim smile lit up his diabolically handsome
-features as he noted her quiet performance of
-his commands, and although he said no word it was
-easy to see with what fiendish pleasure he realised this
-new proof of his power to rule others with a rod of iron.</p>
-
-<p>Without pausing to do more than glance at his
-injuries&mdash;one long black and green bruise which
-wound twice round his body, and another extending
-from his right thigh to his heel, with the skin broken
-in many places&mdash;he hastily dressed himself in dry
-clothes and, without casting another glance at the
-submissive figure of his wife, rushed on deck.
-Fortunately for all of them, the crew were working
-hard to secure the masses of junk (solid pieces, each
-several tons in weight, cut from the whale’s head),
-lashing jaw-bones, clearing away try-works, getting
-up mincing-machine and tricing up gear out of the
-way of the all-pervading grease. He cast one comprehensive,
-scowling glance around, which deepened
-in its frown when he found no cause of complaint,
-and at once assumed sole command. For the next
-hour his orders flew like volleys of musketry,
-spurring on the almost spent men to give up the last
-ounce of their strength. And then suddenly, as if
-God had taken pity on those hapless men, the
-tyrant’s indomitable strength and pluck gave out
-together, and he sank to the deck moaning feebly,
-‘Take me below, &mdash;&mdash; ye, take me below.’ Even
-with what seemed the last breath he needs must
-curse those upon whom he was now utterly dependent
-for all his wants.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</span></p>
-<p>So, inert, all his great energy vanished, and his
-wiry limbs hanging limply as loose ropes’ ends, he
-was borne below to his bunk, his appearance in this
-guise startling Priscilla again, but arousing in her
-now no such feelings as those with which she had witnessed
-his disappearance over the rail so short a time
-before. With quiet dignity she directed the bearers
-where to lay him, thanked them, and dismissed them.
-Then, left alone with the man for whom she had
-given up her life, and more than her own life, had
-she but known, she went about the duty of attendance
-upon him methodically, carefully, but with no
-more feeling than if he had been an utter stranger.
-All that she could do for him she did, but of affection
-in her ministrations there was no trace. Presently
-with a feeling of relief, such as usually accompanies
-the successful conclusion of a difficult task, she saw
-him pass from coma to sleep, heard him breathe
-naturally, and watched the ghastly pallor of his face
-give place to its healthy olive hue. Then she took
-some needlework and sat down by his side, ready to
-attend upon him when he woke, determined to do
-her very utmost for him dutifully, and hoping to
-make faithful service take the place of the love she
-knew she would never feel for him again.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps I may be pardoned for anticipating
-criticism here by a word or two. I know well that
-women can, and do, show love of the deepest, truest,
-holiest kind for men who not merely speak to them
-harshly, but beat, starve, or ill-treat them in every
-way. But Priscilla was not one of these women.
-It may be, too, that her love for Ramon Da Silva
-was not love in the best sense of the word, but
-merely a hurricane gust of passion that for a season<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</span>
-had changed the whole surface of her being, while
-leaving unruffled the great depths below. I do not
-know, nor do I care to dogmatise, but of this I am
-sure&mdash;that there are many Priscillas about, worthy of
-all the love of a good man, and fully capable of returning
-it, whose love, calmly, thoughtfully given, would be
-changed into utter dislike and contempt for the once
-loved one if they should have the misfortune to discover
-him to be cruel or disgusting. And for one I
-dare not say that they are therefore in any way worthy
-of blame, or are not perfectly true and lovable women.</p>
-
-<p>Now ensued a period of calm satisfaction for all
-hands, tempered only by the knowledge that it would
-soon come to an end. The exceedingly heavy toil
-of mincing the blubber, boiling down the oil, storing
-it in casks, and disposing those casks in easily accessible
-positions about the decks, went on without
-intermission, but quietly. Every man worked as if
-the knowledge of his tyrant’s impotence, for a time
-at any rate, had supplied him with an incentive.
-But the Captain was suffering utter torment below.
-Ordinarily he was quite wanting in what we vaguely
-speak of as nerves: he worried about nothing. Now,
-however, his great strength entirely gone from him,
-knowing how large a task was in hand on deck, and
-knowing, too, how glad was every man on board
-that he, their despot, was helpless, he raged and
-fumed, and thereby retarded his recovery greatly.
-But for those who came in contact with him, this
-time was a terrible one. His poor wife and the
-negro steward lived in utter terror of him, although
-physically he was powerless to do them harm.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</span></p>
-<p>Perhaps it may be thought that too severe a description
-of this man has been given, and that thereby
-some injustice has been done to men generally. But
-if so, I would like to ask objectors whether they have
-never had the misfortune to know anybody, not
-necessarily a man, who would, given the opportunity
-have behaved quite as badly as Captain Da Silva.
-God knows, I have no wish to libel any of my fellow
-men or women, but I am absolutely certain that but
-for the grace of God, the sweet influences of Christianity,
-there are very few of us who can be trusted with
-absolute power over our fellows. And if any doubt
-were possible, surely the records of the National
-Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children
-would dispel it. The sight of helplessness does in
-some infernal way seem to generate in many minds
-an irresistible desire to inflict suffering upon the helpless.
-And it needs all our faith in God, as well as all
-our recollection of the tender love that fills so many
-hearts, to keep us from feeling that mankind in
-general is possessed by all those attributes which we
-have agreed to consider as the characteristics of
-Satan. Of course, like all other qualities, cruelty
-needs special opportunities for its full development as
-well as a deliberate cultivation. And for this reason
-I have never been able to understand why so many
-otherwise level-headed people should object to corporal
-punishment for the perpetrators of cruelty,
-since it is almost invariably the case that cruel
-people are most tenderly solicitous for the care of
-their own susceptibilities to pain. Exceptions there
-are to this rule, of course, and Captain Da Silva was
-one. No amount of corporal punishment would
-have deterred him from being again the merciless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</span>
-monster he was by nature, given fitting opportunity;
-for he, as I have already endeavoured to point
-out, had an almost Chinese disregard of personal
-suffering. But even he was certainly no worse
-for the tasting in his own proper person of some
-of the pains he was wont to bestow lavishly upon
-others.</p>
-
-<p>Only two persons wished him speedily well, and
-for obvious reasons. They were his personal attendants.
-The chief mate, whose business brought him
-below periodically to report progress, always had to
-summon up all his courage to face his suffering chief,
-always returned to upper air again acutely conscious
-of relief, although he was a man of great ability and
-resource, and, moreover, had the comforting knowledge
-that under his (comparatively) mild rule the
-work was slipping along on greased wheels. But
-(and this is one of the peculiarly subtle depravities of
-some natures) he could not help feeling that his commander’s
-irritation at his own helplessness was in
-no way lessened by the knowledge that affairs were
-going on quite smoothly without his interference&mdash;that,
-in fact, it would have been in some measure an alleviation
-of his sufferings could he have known that, bereft
-of his oversight, matters were at sixes and sevens.
-And each time the mate came to report, and gave
-him the bland information that all was going as well
-as possible, the men were working with a will, the
-weather continued fine, and the blubber was yielding
-most richly, the skipper was instant in cross-examination
-on every detail, apparently in the hope that he
-might somehow find occasion to vent his long pent-up
-spleen upon someone else beside his wife and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</span>
-negro steward.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing transpired, however, to gratify him, and
-at the end of the sixth day from his accident the mate
-reported all oil barrelled and half of it stowed; that
-the crew were busy now with lye and sand cleaning
-up; that the mastheads were manned, and&mdash;&mdash; But
-right in the middle of his flow of words came the
-most thrilling cry of ‘Blo-o-o-o-w.’ The mate
-stopped in the middle of a word and looked round
-listeningly. But his skipper, maddened almost
-beyond endurance at the knowledge of his own helplessness,
-and that his subordinates would now have
-an opportunity of showing their capabilities without
-any overlordship of his, hurled at the listening mate
-one long yell of profanity which had the effect of
-sending the latter scampering rabbit-wise up the
-tortuous cuddy stairs on deck.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately for Priscilla, the raging emotions of
-her husband, conjoined with his bodily weakness, had
-the effect of rendering him utterly helpless both in
-mind and body. For a while she busied herself
-quietly in such necessary attentions as she was able
-to render, then, hearing as in some realistic dream
-the weird tumult on deck, and feeling her own utter
-loneliness, she did that which is, thank God, open to
-us all, if in varying degrees. She lifted her tired
-heart to God, remembering with a bitter pang of
-repentance the many perfunctory repetitions of ‘Our
-Father’ she had performed; a remembrance which
-brought a host of others in its wake. The quiet
-times of family worship she had yawned over
-behind her hand, the glorious words of Holy Writ
-passing her then unlistening ears like meaningless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</span>
-jargon, the tender father who had never given her
-a harsh word during her recollection of him, the faithful,
-plodding mother, whom she had forsaken at the
-lightest word of a stranger, and the dog-like devotion
-of&mdash;&mdash; But no; <i>that</i> thought must not be encouraged.
-From her uneasy seat she slid to her knees, and from
-her overloaded heart poured forth her unspoken
-prayers&mdash;not for deliverance, but for strength, for
-peace of mind, for knowledge how to do and say the
-right thing and word at the right time. And as the
-subtle communications passed between that suffering
-heart and the Centre of all Solace, the blessed dew of
-peace descended upon her spirit, and she felt that
-the victory was won, for the present at any rate.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, though unheeded by her, the uproar
-on deck had reached its climax, then suddenly ceased,
-and a profound silence reigned. She sat, listening
-intently, but in nowise alarmed: she felt past all that.
-Until presently a comical black head, with wide white
-eyeballs, protruded from the state-room door. Its
-glance, fearfully questing, caught hers, and in reply
-to her whispered inquiry came a murmur: ‘Dey’s awl
-goen away, Mistis; on’y me an’ de cook, carpenter
-an’ cooper an’ shipkeepers am lef’. But it looks laik a
-mighty fine school of spam whales dey’s onter, an’ ef
-dey gets um may be de skipper please, an’t it?’</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">A DISASTROUS DAY</p>
-
-<p>Undoubtedly there was a certain fierce delight in
-Mr. Court’s mind, as well as great relief, when he fled
-precipitately on deck from the presence of the terrible
-man who was his present commander. As any other
-man of his abilities and bravery would have done, he
-felt a certain measure of contempt for himself that
-he should be so meekly subservient to one whom he
-believed in his heart of hearts to be no braver or more
-skilful than he was himself; but the deeply ingrained
-habit of discipline prevented that feeling from reaching
-its logical conclusion. And, unlike the Dago, he,
-being an Anglo-Saxon, also felt a certain compassion
-for a man stricken down by accident in the
-performance of his duty, and utterly unwilling to take
-the smallest advantage thereof. More, in some dim
-manner he felt that if his part were well played now,
-there might be some alleviation in the lot of that pale
-saint (for in such a light had the mate come to regard
-Priscilla&mdash;you cannot keep family secrets on board
-a ship); and so, fired with all the best ambitions that
-can energise a man, he sprang on deck, every sense
-keenly alert.</p>
-
-<p>The air was full of wailing cries of ‘Bl-o-o-o-o-w.’
-All hands were waiting ready by their boats with an
-air of expectation, as if each man was taking the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</span>
-highest personal interest in the outcome of the present
-adventure. The second mate, standing on the little
-bridge over the wheel conning the ship, no sooner saw
-his superior than he said, ‘School o’ th’ biggest sparm
-whale ever I sot eyes on, sir. Ain’t one under a
-hundred an’ thutty bar’l, I swar. An’ thar’s one&mdash;ef
-he ain’t the father of all the whales ever bo’n I ain’t
-ever seen one before.’</p>
-
-<p>For all answer the mate shouted ‘’Way boats!
-Down from aloft.’ And for the next few minutes the
-whirring of patent sheaves, as the graceful boats
-ran waterwards, the hoarse, gasping orders given by
-the boat-headers, and the sharp concussions in the
-water, filled the air. What a scene of furious energy
-manifested by men who a little while before were
-lolling uncouthly about as if incapable of any exertion
-whatever, under no matter what stimulus or provocation!
-Within five minutes the ship was deserted by
-all her crew, save only the discontented half-dozen
-whose unhappy lot it was to abide by the stuff and
-labour monotonously to keep the ship as far to
-windward of the arena of battle as might be. In
-every man’s heart there was a deep sensation of
-thankfulness that one ominous figure was absent from
-this fray&mdash;that for once they were free to do their best
-unhampered by the paralysing knowledge that, whatever
-they did, their efforts would surely be rewarded
-by savage treatment which they must endure, because
-no safe way of rebellion presented itself. How
-the rowers did lay to their oars! How keenly when,
-a sufficient weather gauge being reached, the sails
-were set and the boats bounded blithesomely over
-the blue waves under the stress of the freshening<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</span>
-breeze, did every man peer forward for sight of their
-gigantic prey; and how fervently each harpooner
-hoped that he might be privileged to strike the first
-blow!</p>
-
-<p>I have never been able to understand how it is
-that all other seamen seem to have cherished contemptuous
-feelings towards the whale-fishers. That
-they always have done so is undoubtedly true, and
-possibly the foundation of so utterly false a sentiment
-may have been that it is but seldom that
-ordinary seafarers have been able to witness the
-mighty conflict between men and whales. Usually
-when sailors meet whalers it is at a time when the
-latter are conserving their energies against the
-coming of the next great fight, or are greasily
-labouring to harvest their spoil, an occupation which
-needs much true appreciation of the romantic to see
-anything in it at all worthy of admiration. In the
-rare cases that have occurred when sailors have been
-in at the death of a whale, they have been simply
-stricken dumb with admiring wonder, and thenceforward
-have enjoyed a vicarious popularity as the
-retailers of yarns in the dog-watches to a gaping but
-utterly sceptical crowd of their shipmates.</p>
-
-<p>So, swiftly the four boats sped whalewards, the
-mate always ahead, for his intense nervous energy
-had communicated itself to his crew, who, not content
-with the pace being made under the pressure of the
-wind, had each stealthily seized a paddle, and were
-thrusting them deeply into the hissing waters alongside
-at every opportunity that was presented, as if
-their overmastering impatience could not let them
-rest for one instant. Strange to say, on this occasion,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</span>
-although it seemed to the mate that, large as the
-whales were, they should have long ago made their
-periodical descent, they did not do so, but lolled
-about on the bright sea-surface in an orderly series
-of rows which converged, until at the apex, as it
-were, of the whole school lay the gigantic leader of
-whom the second mate had spoken in such breathless
-terms of admiration. There could at last be no
-doubt about the matter: that school of whales had
-seen their aggressors coming, and for some mysterious
-reason had decided that on this occasion they
-would not obey their natural promptings bidding
-them flee, but would await the foe and do battle with
-him in befitting manner, with never a doubt as to
-the issue.</p>
-
-<p>The reason for this strange behaviour could not,
-of course, be known to the mate, since even the
-keenest of human observers has never been able to
-penetrate the motives influencing what we are pleased
-to call the ‘lower animals’ in their pursuance of any
-abnormal course of behaviour; although there can be
-no doubt that had he known why the whales thus
-awaited him, the knowledge would not have caused
-him to alter his procedure in any way. For he was a
-perfectly brave man, whom no amount of prospective
-peril could turn aside from what he considered to be
-the path of duty. True, he was but an ordinary
-example of the New England whale-fisher; but it
-must ever be remembered that this wonderful calling&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>,
-hunting the sperm whale&mdash;of necessity bred a
-most extraordinary type of man, having as it did the
-grand old Puritan stock to work upon.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</span></p>
-<p>So Mr. Court led his little flotilla into battle,
-every man watching with keenest anticipation the
-gently heaving masses of the mighty foes, and wondering
-much what so unusual an attitude portended.
-Some of the fellows felt a queer clutching sensation
-at the pit of the stomach as every bound of the
-buoyant craft brought them nearer those silent, listless-looking
-whales. But it was not fear; it was but
-the nerve-centres notifying the brain to call up all
-the energies of the body to face the unknown, and it
-would at the first crash of battle be replaced by a
-tautening of every muscle, an exaltation of spirit
-heady as that produced by wine, and a great, if dimly
-understood, sense of the power of man in the world.</p>
-
-<p>A short, blast-like order, and Mr. Court, gripping
-his steer-oar fiercely, bent his body almost double
-and swung his boat’s head round at right angles to
-the leader of the great company. His harpooner,
-Gonsalvo, one thigh firmly pressed into the ‘clumsy
-cleat,’ raised the harpoon high overhead, and a hissing
-expiration burst from his clenched teeth as the
-weapon flew from his hand and buried itself up to
-the hitches in the whale’s broad side. One could see
-the convulsive quiver run through that vast body as
-the stab was felt; but Gonsalvo did not look; he
-snatched up his second iron and hurled it after the
-first to such good purpose that it buried itself like
-the first one&mdash;only about a foot higher up the body.
-Then, turning coolly round, the gratified assailant
-cast adrift the backstays of the mast and proceeded
-to roll up the sail as if quietly coming alongside a
-wharf. Meanwhile the boat had swung up into the
-wind and lay side by side with the whale, at a
-distance of about twenty feet. Hoarsely the mate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</span>
-encouraged his crew in their efforts to get the hampering
-mast unshipped, keeping at the same time a
-wary eye upon his prey. He was astonished beyond
-measure to see that the whale made no sign beyond
-that quivering of the skin before spoken of, but lay
-as if meditating upon this strange event. Then without
-further sign the whale sank, sank with hardly a
-ripple, and for a moment or two all was quiet, just
-giving Mr. Court an opportunity to glance around
-and see that his lieutenants were all busily engaged
-similarly to himself.</p>
-
-<p>There was no lack of readiness or watchfulness;
-but suddenly a vast black mass appeared on the
-other side of the boat, and with a perfectly indescribable
-motion turned a somersault in the air, just
-missing, in the downward sweep of that awful tail,
-the frail boat by an inch or so. But the steer-oar
-was snapped off soundlessly, like a radish severed by
-the sweeping blow of a knife, leaving the boat helpless.
-Mr. Court’s orders flew; his men seconded
-him nobly, pulling first on this side, then on that, to
-turn the boat; but, bereft of that great oar aft, her
-movements were slow and hesitating. Then uprose
-that massive head, with jaws wide extended, which,
-taking the boat amidships, crashed through her as if
-she had been a stick of celery, destroying utterly two
-men and seriously injuring the mate. His right arm
-and leg were broken, and his whole side lacerated in
-appalling fashion.</p>
-
-<p>In the suddenness of the shock the mate was
-mercifully spared the full realisation of his injuries;
-but the absence of pain only made his brain more
-active, and his mental agony was extreme. For not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</span>
-only had he been the victim of a complete defeat,
-but he did not know how matters were proceeding
-with his subordinates, and he feared the worst.
-Then as he paddled mechanically, conscious of a
-whelming drowsiness stealing over him, his left arm
-touched something hard&mdash;an empty line-tub. With
-one last flash of energy he rove his arm through its
-becket and passed immediately into blissful unconsciousness,
-that merciful suspension of the ‘suffering’
-faculties that has been Divinely provided to smooth
-the way from life to death of shrinking, sensitive
-flesh. His poor fellows, those who were left, were
-fortunately uninjured, but thoroughly demoralised at
-the terrible shock they had received. They also were
-able to support themselves amid the whirling waters
-upon fragments of the broken boat; but, of course,
-like their officer, in a most precarious and tentative
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p>And round about them, in leisurely fashion, as if
-contemplating the result of his strategical effort,
-swam the whale, neither doing nor attempting to do
-them any harm, but putting them in serious danger
-of drowning from the abnormal whirling of the water
-which the passage of his monstrous bulk effected.
-Occasionally, too, there would appear, cutting the
-water in erratic directions, the tall dorsal fin or
-‘gaff topsail’ of a great shark, hunger-driven almost
-to madness by the taint of blood in the water, but
-(as yet) scrupulously respecting the bodily integrity
-of the hapless men still living. Overhead flitted
-restlessly a few birds, screaming mournfully, as if
-they realised that in the effort of providing a great
-banquet for them man had utterly failed this time.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</span>
-But of everything except the fast-weakening desire
-of living the principal actors in this stormy scene
-were utterly oblivious, and thus for a while we must
-leave them.</p>
-
-<p>The other three boats, arriving upon the scene
-of conflict almost simultaneously, saw their leader
-get fast to the monarch of the school. And had
-they obeyed the regular rule, well known to them
-all, they would certainly have deputed the fourth
-boat to lie off and watch events, in case of need for
-assistance. But, freed from the baleful overglance
-of the skipper and fired to utmost emulation of each
-other as they were, it was easy to forget so necessary
-a precaution, and consequently, each singling out
-his whale, the three boats rushed to the attack,
-all harpooning about the same time. At once the
-scene became almost indescribable. For the stricken
-whales, unlike their leader, each fought with Titanic
-energy to free himself from the galling weapon, rearing
-monstrous heads high in the air at one moment,
-at the next flourishing with sufficient force to smash
-in a ship’s side their mighty tails, the supple corners
-of which actually snapped like whip-lashes from the
-vigour with which they were lashed to and fro.
-Also the loose whales, apparently with some indefinite
-object in view of rendering aid, glided about and
-between the combatants, making it impossible for
-the men to do what they tried and converting the
-sea into the semblance of the surface of a huge
-cauldron of water fiercely boiling.</p>
-
-<p>Yet such was the skill and energy displayed by
-these hardly bestead hunters that for a considerable
-time they all escaped damage, although they often<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</span>
-did so by a couple of inches only. At last, as they
-were weakening, the first calamity came, sudden and
-complete. The third mate’s boat was towed swiftly
-in a certain direction (and so furious had been the
-fight that the sail had not yet been secured) until
-the crew found themselves between two ominously revolving
-bodies, one that of the whale to which the
-fourth mate was fast, and the other their own quarry.
-There was no room wherein to use oars, nor was
-there time had there been place, when the two huge
-carcasses, rolling in opposite directions, crashed
-against the tender shell of the boat, which collapsed
-into matchwood, while the crew leapt madly upon the
-shiny, slippery bodies of the monsters, and, slithering
-downwards, disappeared in the smother of foam
-around.</p>
-
-<p>With a groan of regret the fourth mate cut from
-his whale, and, regardless of his own immediate
-danger, incited his crew with all his powers to pick
-up their shipmates. And they did strive, literally for
-dear life. The huge bulk of the whales brushing
-past them, the frantic motions of their boat, apparently
-harassed them not at all. Intent upon the orders of
-the erect, keenly observant figure at the stern, they
-pulled, backed, peaked oars, or lay still as commanded,
-and while in the full tide of their tremendous labours
-were suddenly hoisted, as if by some submarine
-earthquake, upon the uprushing head of a whale ten
-feet into the air. They were flung in a writhing
-heap from their thwarts, and when they recovered
-themselves they were clinging sadly to a wreck, for
-the boat, although still holding together as to her
-frame, had her keel or backbone broken in three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</span>
-places, and, full of water, just sufficed to sustain their
-weary heads occasionally above the sea surface.
-Even at that dread time the minds of all were bent
-upon the fate of those whom they had failed to rescue.
-For themselves they cared nothing; they were
-comparatively safe with something floatable beneath
-their uncertain feet; but alas for those who in that
-tormented whirl of waves had not even a splinter
-unto which they might cling hopefully.</p>
-
-<p>What of the second mate? Well, some might
-call him a coward, for although he had got fast like
-the rest, before three minutes had passed, having
-witnessed the disaster which had overtaken his
-senior officer, he had coolly cut his line and withdrawn
-with all the speed he could command from the arena.
-One thing, and one only, was in his mind, and that
-was how he could avoid being entangled in a fight,
-so that he might, as soon as opportunity offered,
-rush in and rescue some of the drowning ones. But,
-as he afterwards said, never in all his fishing had
-such a task fallen to his lot. For every whale in the
-school seemed to make for him, and although they
-did not attack, whales being magnanimous beyond
-all other powerful and sensible animals, they circled
-about him with majestic movement, occasionally
-scarifying the faces of himself and his patient men
-with the blistering drops from their condensed
-spoutings as they blew across his boat, and clearly
-made him understand that he existed only by their
-favour. And he was fretting his heart to fragments
-over his inactivity, and wondering how long it would
-be ere he could emerge from his august environment,
-and save those shipmates of his whom he knew to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</span>
-perishing so near. Even then he had no notion of
-the completeness of the disaster. But his heart
-failed him as he thought of meeting the tyrant of his
-life, on that terrible man’s recovery, and endeavouring
-to explain away so great a failure.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile as far as the eye could reach the boat
-was hemmed in by whales, that with majestic movement
-circled around their tiny captive, or, perpendicularly
-erected in the water, protruded their vast
-cylindrical heads from the surface like symmetrical
-columns of black rock. Then, as if at a given signal,
-the great assemblage divided, leaving between their
-closely packed ranks a lane of clear water. Not an
-instant was lost by Mr. Winslow; if his hand
-trembled, in its grip of the steer-oar, his voice did
-not; if his men looked wistfully at one another and
-at their gigantic escort, they pulled none the less
-lustily at the word of command. And presently they
-came upon a pitiful sight. In an area that might
-have been covered by a big ship’s mainsail floated
-listlessly six men, each clinging to some derelict
-portion of their late vessel’s equipment. None of
-them appeared able to appreciate their most perilous
-position; no gasp of fear passed their cracked and
-blistered lips when the long, quivering body of some
-ravening shark glided closely past them. No; for
-them nothing mattered any longer: they had passed
-beyond the reach of either hope or fear. And had
-one remembered how painful were their lives, how
-remote the possibilities of brightness ever lightening
-their dreary way through the world, the thought
-would inevitably have compelled admission that
-it was almost criminal to bring them back again<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</span> to
-the suffering they had left behind&mdash;especially remembering
-how full of pain to them would be the
-process.</p>
-
-<p>Such an idea, however, never occurred to those
-tender-hearted if ruffianly looking rescuers. Forgetting
-all their own danger&mdash;oblivious, indeed, to
-anything else but the manifestly urgent needs of the
-perishing ones they saw around them&mdash;they toiled
-furiously to get the exhausted men into their boat.
-Nor did they desist until, the gunwale of the boat
-being just awash, they were warned that any further
-attempts to pick up men would certainly mean the
-loss of all, both rescuers and rescued. Six were still
-a-missing, but that could not be helped, and with the
-utmost care they moved heavily off towards the ship,
-which was standing down the wind in their direction.
-A careful shipkeeper of a whaleship always devotes all
-his energies, as soon as boats have left, to keeping his
-vessel to windward of the scene of conflict&mdash;a position
-of advantage whence, when the great fight is over, he
-may run down with a free sheet and pick up the
-boats and their gigantic prizes.</p>
-
-<p>So that, although the time seemed interminably
-long, it was really only a matter of minutes before the
-boat was alongside the ship and the broken men were
-being hauled on board. All the time this work was
-going on the ship was the centre of a vast assemblage
-of whales, seemingly satisfied that their enemies were
-now powerless to harm them, and, although majestically
-refusing to attack a helpless foe, quite determined
-to let that foe see unmistakably what might
-be his fate should his late prospective victims become
-aggressive. No sooner were the rescued men on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</span>
-board than Mr. Winslow, as if he and his crew were
-machines of iron rather than men of weariable
-muscles, pushed off from the ship’s side and carefully
-steering between the bulky bodies of the assembled
-whales, made the best of their way back to where
-they hoped to find the remainder of their shipmates.
-Six were still missing, among them the mate, who
-since the captain’s accident had endeared himself to
-all hands. But it really seemed as if their colossal
-escort knew the errand they were upon, for their
-progress was hindered in the most extraordinary
-manner by the whales crowding about them. No
-assault was made; had it been, however slight, they
-must all have perished; but it was as if they were
-incessantly reminded by the whales that forbearance
-had, even with such magnanimous monsters, its
-limits, and that while no advantage would be taken
-of primary helplessness, they (the whalers) would not
-lightly be permitted to help those who were receiving
-the due reward of their own aggression.</p>
-
-<p>So, with infinite pains, the second mate and his
-hardly entreated boat’s crew made their way back to
-the scene of conflict, and found one man, the mate,
-still afloat, and possibly alive. They could not be
-sure of the latter, but took him in on the chance.
-Further search, although prolonged to the utmost
-limit of their endurance, failed to show them any
-more of their lost shipmates, and at last in a faint
-voice Mr. Winslow ordered them to give way for the
-ship. As his men doggedly obeyed, and called up
-their final reserve of energy, the attendant whales,
-as if satisfied with the progress of the day’s events,
-drew off, and with their great leader well ahead, took<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</span>
-their departure to windward along the bright glorious
-path of the setting sun, whose rays touched their
-mighty bodies with gold and made every little spray
-they threw upwards in their stately progress glisten
-like a shower of diamonds.</p>
-
-<p>The overburdened crew reached the ship without
-further incident, and, once alongside, realised how
-terrible had been the strain imposed. For even the
-simple business of hoisting the boat, usually a matter
-of at most two minutes, became a herculean task
-hardly to be accomplished by the united efforts of
-all hands remaining capable of standing on their feet.
-Once secured on her cranes, Mr. Winslow dismissed
-his boat from his mind and wearily slouched to where
-the mate lay on a mattress brought up by one of the
-harpooners. So great was his loss of vigour, that
-although he saw the mate had recovered consciousness
-and was now peacefully asleep in his drying
-clothes, he felt a dull want of interest in that fact,
-as in everything else, and without taking further
-interest of his surroundings or of the claims of his
-position, he cast himself down in the little clear
-space abaft the wheel on the starboard side, pillowed
-his head upon his right arm, and immediately fell
-asleep.</p>
-
-<p>The shipkeepers&mdash;that is, the four petty officers,
-carpenter, cooper, steward, and cook, with the four
-men appointed to assist them in the duty of managing
-the ship during the process of catching whales&mdash;had
-been hardly pressed both by work and anxiety.
-But they saw and realised how easy had been their
-lot as compared with that of the hunters; and
-although they had well earned a relief, they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</span>
-said nothing, but went grimly on with their by no
-means easy task of preparing the vessel for the night,
-clearing away gear, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>Now during this terrible day Priscilla had found
-great peace. We left her at its beginning comforted
-as only those heavy-laden ones can be comforted
-who are in direct communication with the Comforter.
-Permeated by that Peace which passeth all understanding,
-she felt content to abide in quiet security any
-event that might happen, and she looked down upon
-the insensible form by her side with something of
-the Divine compassion, although without one spark
-of the human love which should exist between husband
-and wife. All that her simple ideas of nursing
-could suggest as good to be done for him she did
-assiduously, while his face twitched convulsively,
-unintelligible muttering flowed ceaselessly from his
-lips, and every muscle of his body seemed as if
-under the influence of a powerful galvanic battery.</p>
-
-<p>It was very quiet down in the small cabin. The
-workers on deck went about their duties softly in
-dread of rousing the skipper, and only a faint echo
-of an occasional carefully modulated cry from aloft
-came stealing softly to her ears. She did not feel
-hunger, weariness, or anxiety. Whenever the good
-darkey steward could spare a few minutes from the
-work of the ship he stole down to see if he could do
-anything for her; but beyond accepting a cup of tea
-and a biscuit at midday, she gently declined all his
-kindly offers. The only feeling, as she said afterwards,
-that did occasionally shoot athwart the placid
-state of her mind was one of thankfulness that her
-husband was so long oblivious of all that must, she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</span>
-knew, be going on, for she could not help realising
-what his fury would be if, with all his senses about
-him, he should be unable to take part in the hunting.</p>
-
-<p>And so quietly the long day wore to its close.
-She remained in utter ignorance of the outcome
-until, at about 7 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span>, the steward crept to her side
-with a cup of soup, and begged her to sup it. While
-she languidly did so, he sketched for her in a few
-hurried whispers the condition of things, and wound
-up by saying, his swart face looking a ghastly green
-in the dim light of the swinging lamp: ‘An’ de good
-Lawd Hisself only knows wa’s gwine happen t’ us
-wen <i>he</i> comes to an’ fine’s eout abaout it. Lawd
-hab massy on us all den.’ She answered him not a
-word, but, handing back the cup, laid her tired head
-back in her chair and passed peacefully to sleep.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">REUBEN EDDY, MARINER</p>
-
-<p>We left Rube not only entered conclusively upon his
-new career, the very antithesis of all his previous
-experiences, but, by one of those mysterious happenings
-which prove how little we know of the workings
-of the human brain, completely dissociated from that
-former life of his as if it had never been. And yet
-by some merciful connection, inexplicable in view of
-his entire loss of memory, but certainly bridging the
-dark gulf, his former Christian training not merely
-influenced him, but its effect was intensely deepened
-and strengthened. So with all his old attributes of
-patience, of kindliness, of love; attributes which all
-must confess may exist without any acknowledgment
-on the part of their possessor of the power of Christianity
-at all. Also his physical powers developed amazingly.
-Seemingly quite careless what he ate, but always with
-bared head returning thanks to God for it, he throve
-upon that poor food until his torso would have served
-as a model for an ancient Greek statue of Hercules.
-Upon his bright face the shadow of a frown was
-never seen, his serenity of mind seemed proof against
-all the pettiness of aggravation that men allow to do
-so much harm in the world, the gnat-bites of daily
-intercourse which fester into various plagues far more
-deadly in their continual evil than all the great crimes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</span>
-which shock us so by the horrors of their incidence
-upon the life of man.</p>
-
-<p>And with all this he was essentially a <i>man</i>, taking
-with highest intelligence his daily part in all around
-him, excelling in ability as he did in strength every
-one of his shipmates until he came to be looked upon
-by them as a kind of demi-god whose superiority in
-all things they ungrudgingly acknowledged because
-he himself was obviously entirely unconscious of it.
-Forward and aft it was the same. If any felt they
-had aught to teach him they immediately did so
-for the sheer joy of the thing; he was so eager to
-learn, so keen-witted in absorbing new knowledge, so
-humble and entirely grateful. At first this attitude
-of his was looked upon with suspicion by his shipmates,
-for suspicion and jealousy are baleful plants
-that thrive apace on shipboard among the crew,
-especially on long voyages; then, when the impossibility
-of being suspicious or jealous of such a man
-had been fully demonstrated, good-natured, bantering
-toleration took its place. This was succeeded by
-reverence, which gradually overcame the most sceptical,
-those who longest maintained that ‘Rube wuz
-jest a easy-goin’ loony ’at y’ c’d do anythin’ y’ liked
-with.’ This latter phase of feeling towards him
-arose, I think, as far as the foc’s’le was concerned, in
-consequence of the stand he took against rows in
-their common abiding place. Whenever men quarrelled
-(and shore-folk can hardly imagine how difficult
-it is to keep the peace in a small apartment tenanted
-by thirty men), Rube was at once on hand, unless it
-happened to be his wheel or masthead look-out.
-And, owing to his great size and strength and <span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</span>utter
-disregard of himself, it was impossible to bring off a
-fight when he was about. For he would propose the
-most absurd things, such as that the two belligerents,
-if they felt they must beat somebody, should beat
-him in turn; but beat one another they should not
-while he was able to prevent them, and they could
-not doubt his ability to do that. Once an infuriated
-man did strike him a heavy blow full in the mouth.
-It was like striking a rock. Rube leaped at the
-striker, caught his fist, and, holding it up, said, ‘Poor
-feller, jes’ look at them knuckles, they’re all cut
-about shameful. Less get a bit er rag an’ tie ’em up.’</p>
-
-<p>What could they do with a man like that but love
-him? Nothing. And surely never was man so loved
-aboard ship before. When in the long evenings after
-the first dog-watch the crew lolled about the fore part
-of the deck smoking, it became quite an institution
-for Rube to sit (he didn’t smoke) and tell them stories
-in his own quaint language out of the Bible from
-memory. He possessed the only one on board, and
-read it continually in his watch below, giving up to
-its delights much of the time his great frame needed
-for sleep. Perhaps the quotation of a sample of his
-Bible yarns (as the fellows termed them) may be
-admitted.</p>
-
-<p>‘Way back in the old days, boys, it seems t’ me
-thet most people hed a mighty rough time of it. In
-th’ cities, frum what I c’n see, they wuz pow’ful little
-’musement fur the wealthy folks ’cept buildin’ uncomfortable
-palaces, stuffin’ grub down their necks they
-didn’t feel to want, gettin’ drunk, an’ seein’ a lot of
-poor people suffer. Funny how a man or woman
-should <i>like</i> to see <i>sufferin</i>’, <span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</span>ain’t it? Even then when
-these rich folks was havin’ what they persuaded
-themselves wuz a hot ole time, they wuz always
-expectin’ some feller’d come along an’ make a big
-hole in ’em with one o’ them old-fashioned stickers
-you see in pictures, about a foot long, four inches
-wide, and razzur sharp on both edges. But they was
-a lot o’ people hadn’t got no palaces. They was
-something like sailors ashore&mdash;always on th’ move,
-carryin’ their grub with ’em, an’ only stoppin’ any
-length o’ time where there was water an’ plenty grass
-fur th’ live stock. ’Course they managed t’ steal a lot
-of poor fellers ’at didn’t know enough t’ keep out er
-the way, and make these slaves do all the work.
-We’re most of us built like that. Comfort was a
-word that hadn’t come into use those days; but then
-neither had indigestion, nerves, corns, or rheumatics.
-Well, among these people was one a good deal better’n
-most ov ’em, though, of course, he had his faults, an’
-his name was Isaac. Only that. Jest a given name,
-an’ no more: easy to remember. Now this good
-man was well off as those days went. He had lots o’
-sheep ’n’ goats an’ donkeys an’ camels, an’ a mighty
-big country to travel about in, an’ let ’em feed
-wherever they would, with no rent or taxes to pay.
-He had a wife he was very fond of&mdash;only one, which
-was sing’lar for those times, when th’ best o’ men didn’t
-seem able to get along without a bunch o’ wives.
-An’ he had two sons. One of these sons was a fine
-fellow, free an’ open an’ brave, fond of all manly
-sports, but one of those chaps such as we say’ll never
-get on in th’ world. He was his father’s darlin’.
-The other was a quiet, say-nothin’-t’-nobody sort o’
-feller, fond of hangin’ around the tents and looking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</span>
-after the breedin’ o’ the cattle an’ sheep, an’ he was
-what we call a good business man. But you had
-to watch him close, or he’d get t’ wind’ard of ye
-every time. His name was a sort o’ warning to anybody
-t’ keep their weather eye liftin’ when he was
-havin’ truck with ’em. It was Jacob, meanin’ a feller
-that gets into another feller’s place after he’s jockeyed
-him out of it. An’ he wasn’t partikler who it was he
-bested, his father or his brother jes’ as soon as
-anybody else. He was his mother’s favourite.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, after both boys had grown up, an’ Jacob
-had ben workin’ off his little schemes pretty frequent,
-’specially on his twin brother Esau, his dotin’ mother
-puts him up to a dodge to take in the old man, who
-was gettin’ pretty shaky, so’s he’d scratch Esau outer
-his will, and put Jacob in. And between ’em they
-rigged up Jacob in goatskins to make him feel like
-Esau, who was one of those big, burly, hairy men, so
-as his poor old father, who was blind, shouldn’t know
-the difference, an’ give him all the property as well
-as his blessin’, which counted in them days fur even
-more than property. And th’ scheme worked all
-right. But when Esau come home from the country,
-and found it out, Jacob had to quit, or else Esau
-would have killed him sure. So his mother lost him
-altogether. I don’t s’pose that bothered him greatly.
-Anyhow, he did just as well in the new country he
-run to, and in just the same way. An’ he kem back
-a good many years after with quite a procession
-of wives an’ children an’ no end of property, an’ who
-should meet him but Esau, without any wives an’
-children or property, but an army, which was almost
-the best thing to have in those days, ’cause when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</span>
-you’d got it you could get the other things whenever
-you wanted ’em by taking ’em away from somebody
-else.</p>
-
-<p>‘And Jacob, bein’ scared ’most to death, offers to
-buy Esau off from what he s’posed was goin’ to be
-his revenge, with a whole heap of his property. But
-Esau says, “Thanks, old man, I don’t want to take
-away what belongs to you; I’ve got all I want. But
-I’ll send a bit of my army along with you to see that
-nobody else comes and robs ye.” But Jacob says to
-himself, “Oh, no, this is just a scheme for taking all
-I’ve got away bymeby.” So he refused. An’ they
-parted, an’ never saw one another again.’</p>
-
-<p>Loud cries of ‘Bully for Esau!’ and opprobrious
-remarks about Jacob, changing into utter bewilderment
-when next evening Jacob’s subsequent history
-was told in the same quaintly familiar fashion, and
-the justification of his being chosen by God was
-pointed out. For not only did Rube tell Bible stories,
-but in the most artless manner he based conversation
-upon them; never arguing, but gently suggesting;
-familiarising his hearers with Scripture in the most
-pleasing way, and never attempting to compel belief
-by his efforts. It is no exaggeration to say that in
-spite of the disappointment felt by the men at the
-long period of unsuccessful searching, Rube’s sweet
-influence was felt by all hands. And although many
-of them still had their occasional doubts of his sanity,
-none doubted the perfect goodness and beauty of his
-character.</p>
-
-<p>They became a very smart crew. Every duty
-they were called upon to perform they did as if they
-loved it, and the skipper’s rugged face glowed with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</span>
-eagerness to see how they would behave on whales if
-and when the chance came. But it was not until
-they were midway between the Line and Cape Horn
-that they sighted their first sperm whale. He was a
-lone whale of enormous size, and evidently making
-a passage to some other feeding-ground, since he
-kept his course as if steering by compass, spouting
-with the utmost regularity a given number of times,
-descending and rising again as if timed by a chronometer.
-Cautiously, but with all the attention possible,
-the ship was worked to windward of him, until, in a
-suppressed shout, Captain Hampden gave the order,
-‘’Way boats!’ It had previously been decided that
-only two boats were needed for the job, so the first
-and second mates’ boats started, dropped alongside
-lightly as foam flakes, and with a long, swinging
-stroke they pulled away to windward. Rube was in
-the mate’s boat pulling midship oar&mdash;the heaviest of
-the five&mdash;and the mate simply gasped with astonishment
-to see how this recent yokel handled his
-eighteen-foot oar, how all his powers were given to
-its manipulation, and what a beautiful stroke he had.
-They pulled for half an hour, then with sails set
-to the strong breeze that was blowing, bore down
-upon the unconscious whale, the other boat following
-hard after them at a cable’s distance. Nearer, nearer
-they drew, all hands holding their breath. Now a
-wide sheer to port because of that little eye’s power
-of seeing astern. They gain rapidly; they are
-abeam. A strong sweep of the steer oar, the main
-sheet is slacked off, and the boat sweeps round and
-leaps at the whale’s broadside like a living thing.
-Before she strikes, the harpooner has hurled his iron,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</span>
-and it sinks its length into the black side; the whale
-is fast. Haul aft the sheet, flat as possible, the boat
-flies up into the wind, the harpooner casting out the
-stray line meanwhile, and there, although tossing
-tremendously because of the fuss being made by the
-indignant whale, they get the hampering sail rolled
-up and mast unshipped and fleeted aft out of the
-way.</p>
-
-<p>Before they have finished their task the second
-mate is alongside awaiting orders. He is told not to
-go near, but wait and see what the whale is going to
-do, always an uncertain factor in scenes like this.
-The whale is going to behave in orthodox fashion&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>,
-descend to where beyond these voices there is
-peace. Downward he goes deliberately, as if hurry
-were never less needed, but apparently taking no
-heed of the strain kept on the line by the buoyant
-boat above. Presently it becomes evident that he is
-a stayer, for the second line-tub is nearly empty, and
-he shows no signs of slackening in his downward
-path. So the second mate is called upon to pass the
-end of his line aboard, and it is spliced on at once.
-(The strands are always kept plaited up, so that a
-splice may be made almost as rapidly as a knot, and
-much neater and more safe.) Still he goes down,
-down, down; while faces gather blackness as fake
-after fake of line disappears. Will he <i>never</i> weaken?
-The heavy drogue (equal in retarding strain to four
-boats) has been bent on at the splice, but seems to
-have no effect upon him. The mate’s heart sinks.
-Up goes the urgent wheft, a signal to the ship that
-more line is needed immediately; but, alas! it is too
-late. There is a short interval of almost agonising<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</span>
-suspense, and the end of the line flips over the bows.
-He is gone!</p>
-
-<p>Then the mate gives vent to his feelings. His
-cursings comprehensively embrace everything he can
-bring to memory, himself chiefly. When he is exhausted
-Rube’s lips are seen to be moving, and the
-mate, fiercely desirous of some animate object whereupon
-to vent his rage, yells, ‘You hayseed, what <i>you</i>
-mumblin’ about?’ (I suppress even the blank profanity
-with which every word or two is loaded.)
-Rube softly replies, ‘I was so sorry for your disappointment
-and the skipper’s that I was just askin’
-God that all our labour shouldn’t be lost.’</p>
-
-<p>The mate was dumb&mdash;what could he say to this?
-And every man in the boat looked at Rube as if he
-were uncanny&mdash;they had no more idea than most
-professing Christians have of the simple faith that
-believes in an immanent God always ready and
-willing to hear the requests of His children. And up
-into the midst of their wonderment rose the whale,
-the long line trailing behind him, evidently exhausted
-by his tremendous efforts to reach a depth of safety.
-A dozen strokes in reply to the swiftly shouted orders
-of the mate, and they were alongside of him, the harpooner
-had hooked up the line and passed it into the
-boat, and the mate had thrust his long lance so
-fiercely in between the third and fourth ribs of the
-leviathan that the whole vast body quivered from
-snout to flukes with the pangs of approaching death.
-Secure in the knowledge that he had dealt a deathblow,
-the mate shouted to the harpooner to cut the
-loose line adrift; but even that small loss was
-avoided, for the second mate’s boat sheered alongside<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</span>
-in the nick of time and took it.</p>
-
-<p>No other stroke was needed; a thin stream of
-blood was seen to be trickling over the edge of the
-spiracle, and the next great expiration hurled into
-the air, with a bursting groan, masses of clotted blood
-so large that it was almost miraculous how they had
-been forced along the single air-tube which supplies
-the lungs with breath. Filled with a great awe, the
-new hands drew off slowly in obedience to the orders
-given, unable to take their eyes off the dying giant.
-And then, to their horror, they saw him suddenly
-rear his gigantic head high in air, and hurl his body
-along the blood-stained sea-surface in hundred-foot
-leaps, swaying first to this side and then to that as if
-under the influence of an agony so intolerable that he
-was endowed with at least ten times his usual great
-strength. All around his awful way the sea was torn
-into a thousand fantastic shapes, and blocks of purple
-foam were flung on high and caught by the wind,
-which drove them like some dreadful snow in showers
-of flakes far to leeward. At last&mdash;and although the
-paroxysm had only lasted about three minutes, they
-seemed like hours&mdash;there was a momentary lull: the
-whale disappeared. But almost immediately after
-there was an upheaval like the rearing of a suddenly
-formed volcano in the midst of the sea, and high into
-the air soared the whole mighty mass, apparently
-hung suspended there for an appreciable space, and
-fell! In the thundering noise and violent commotion
-occasioned by that great act, the hunters lost for a
-moment their strained attention on the whale. When
-they regained it he lay an inert mass, gently undulating
-to the touch of the waves, with his head as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</span>
-usual pointed straight towards the wind’s eye.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_094fp" style="max-width: 28em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_094fp.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>HIGH INTO THE AIR SOARED THE WHOLE MIGHTY MASS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There was a great peace succeeding the tumult,
-and a moaning little voice in the wind which filled
-the air with mournfulness. Also the plash of the
-wavelets over the quiet bank of flesh had in it, to all
-seeming, a murmur of regret. The influences of that
-restful time affected all for a brief space, and Rube’s
-eyes glistened as he thought of the cruel end so
-suddenly befalling the brave, strong, harmless monster,
-a short hour ago so placidly enjoying his life, and
-perfectly filling his appointed place in the scheme of
-things. But with a jerk all musings were ended, for
-the mate’s voice broke harshly upon the accented
-silence, as he shouted, ‘Naow, then, m’ lads, pull two,
-starn three, an’ le’s git th’ tow line fast, ’relse the
-ship’ll be here ’fore we’re half ready.’ She was
-coming straight for them before the wind, and only
-about a mile away&mdash;a homely, clumsy-looking craft
-enough, but invested for each of the green hands with
-a new character now, a home of rest after their late
-heavy toil, a place where they would be met with a
-great satisfaction as returning conquerors bringing
-their gigantic spoil with them, warriors who had
-abundantly justified the training they had received.
-They had been able in that one fleeting hour of tremendous
-experiences to attain unto the highest
-physical pleasure of which man is capable&mdash;the sense
-that, by the use of his puny powers, rightly directed,
-he is able to overcome what seems to be at first sight
-the most overwhelming odds brought against him.
-All the solemnity of the first moments of victory was
-forgotten, and even Rube’s eyes sparkled with delight
-as he watched the look of content glowing on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</span>
-mate’s face, as with his short boat spade he hacked
-at the great limber tail until he had cut a hole in it
-through which the tow-line could be passed.</p>
-
-<p>The ship rounded to as easily as one of the boats
-would have done, only about her own length from
-the whale. And the mate with a triumphant roar
-of ‘Give way, m’lads!’ steered for her, no man prouder
-than he of the way in which his ‘greenies’ had
-acquitted themselves on their maiden venture. The
-grizzled leonine head of the skipper loomed in the
-waist, where, the boards out, all was in readiness to
-receive them. And as ready hands hooked up the
-tow-line, and prepared to walk up alongside the huge
-mass of their prize, he said to the mate standing
-beneath him erect in the stern of the boat: ‘Wall,
-Mr. Pease, yew du seem t’ hev got on t’ a logy this
-time. I sh’d say he’s all ov a hundred an’ forty bar’l
-be his look, ’less he’s dry-skin.’ ‘Nary dry-skin ’baout
-him, Cap’n Hampden,’ replied the mate, cheerfully.
-‘He’s jest a-teemin’ outer him. Iron went in’s if it
-hed fell into a kag er butter. Fattes’ whale ever I
-struck, ’n’ thet’s the cole truth, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>Then with a joyful noise all hands tallied on to
-the tow-line, and snaked that whale alongside in great
-shape. Everything had been prepared for the arrival,
-cutting falls rove, spades ranged, cutting stage ready,
-and although the experience was absolutely novel
-to most of the men, they were so keen, so eager to
-do as they were told to the best of their ability, that
-really I doubt whether the most seasoned crew could
-have made a better show than they did. And this
-in spite of the almost feverish desire possessed by all
-to look upon the gigantic prize they had won in fair<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</span>
-fight from his appointed realm, the vasty deep. It
-was all so wonderful, so new, so strange. And then
-in hurried glimpses they saw coming up in the clear
-blue around hosts of queer-looking creatures (to them,
-for none of the new hands had ever seen a shark
-before). One fellow, a lank Kentuckian, in a stolen
-moment remarked in a stage whisper to a shipmate,
-as they leaned over the rail hauling at the fluke-chain,
-‘Gosh! look’t all them little fish daown thar.’
-Said little fish, rising rapidly, presently revealed
-themselves as sharks averaging ten feet in length,
-who, regardless of consequences, hurled themselves
-end-ways at the whale’s body, and gouged at it
-furiously, as if driven mad by hunger.</p>
-
-<p>The whale fairly secured alongside, the skipper’s
-voice rose above the tumult, commanding instant
-attention from everybody. ‘Mr. Pease, let th’ boys
-go to dinner. I guess we won’t miss an hour, and
-th’ weather looks sorter settled.’ ‘Dinner!’ shouted
-the mate, and there was a stampede forward, for every
-man, as soon as he had time to think of it, was
-ravenously hungry. The cook had, under orders
-from the skipper, made a few additions to the usual
-dietary, and it is not too much to say that every man
-there when he sat down to enjoy his well-earned
-meal was, for the time being, as happy as ever he
-had been in his life. And only because the man
-who controlled their destinies for the time had in
-addition to his fund of common-sense, a little of the
-milk of human kindness.</p>
-
-<p>A little judicious appreciation costs nothing, and
-is so valuable: it often lifts weary men over the dead
-centres of life; indeed, it often makes a youth who,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</span>
-full of fear lest in his very anxiety to do well he has
-made some irreparable mistake, feel that no effort
-can be too great to please a man who has recognised
-his desire to do his duty. And when, at the call of
-‘Turn to!’ the rested, well-fed crowd climbed on
-deck again into the keen, pure air, and found that
-while they had been dining the skipper and his
-officers had been toiling at the stupendous task of
-cutting off the whale’s head, they almost felt ashamed
-at having taken so long over their meal.</p>
-
-<p>I know very well that there will be many a
-cynical sneer at this, but that does not matter at all
-so long as the thing is true. If men (and I care not
-whether they be white, black, brown, or yellow) are
-treated like cattle they will yield worse than bovine
-service; if they are pampered and allowed to feel
-that they can do as they like, they will, their natural
-depravity getting the upper hand, become practically
-worthless; but if, as under Captain Hampden, they
-are kept under discipline, yet made to feel that their
-efforts to do well are fully appreciated, they will
-behave as men should behave who realise to the full
-the dignity of obeying the call of duty, who realise
-abundantly how good it is to be a <i>man</i>.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">THE <i>GOOD</i> SHIP ‘XIPHIAS’</p>
-
-<p>Of definite purpose I have italicised the adjective in
-the heading of this chapter because I have often
-feared that readers of ‘The Cruise of the <i>Cachalot</i>’
-may have been led to believe that there could not
-be such a thing as a good whaleship. And yet even
-there I did try to show how vast a difference a change
-of captains made. The <i>Xiphias</i>, however, was good
-from the beginning. A certain amount of unavoidable
-suffering was endured by the new hands at the
-beginning of the cruise, consequent entirely upon the
-sudden violent change in their lives. And perhaps
-the officers were just a trifle exuberant in their
-attentions to the helpless, clumsy men they were
-endeavouring to lick into shape. But there never
-was any actual cruelty. Discipline once firmly
-established, and rudimentary ideas of the work they
-must do instilled into the men’s minds, their lives
-became as comfortable as a sailor’s life can ever be
-at sea. They worked hard, but only at necessary
-duties, and they were never wantonly deprived of
-needed rest. Their food was none too good, but it
-was certainly better than usual and always plentiful.
-Even here the genial spirit of the skipper was able
-to exercise itself beneficially for the comfort of his
-men. He and his officers were always on the keenest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</span>
-look-out for fish of any sort, and no effort was spared
-to catch them, all sorts of fishing tackle being carried
-for the purpose. He knew, too, many little dodges
-by means of which sea-fowl could be rendered
-palatable, and was a past master in the art of devising
-changes of dietary for his crew.</p>
-
-<p>But more than all this, the man himself was one
-of those glorious old Yankees who combine with a
-supreme ability to command their fellows&mdash;a power of
-enforcing discipline among the roughest with splendid,
-never-failing courage&mdash;the simple, fun-loving, joyous
-instincts of a child: terrible in their just anger to
-meet as a tiger in the jungle, but happy and light-hearted
-as any child when their men behave like
-men. So that Captain Hampden was not merely
-obeyed, he was loved both by officers and men, and
-all the more because not one of them would have dared
-to impose upon him in any way. I speak feelingly,
-for I know the man, who now, midway between
-eighty and ninety years of age, is not in his second
-childhood, but his first, his broad back unbent, his
-hawk-like eye undimmed, his huge limbs as steady as
-they were half a century ago. To him the children
-flock as to one who understands them. They talk
-to him as to one of themselves, and parents laughingly
-upbraid him with being foremost among the mischief-loving
-urchins of the sweet little New England town
-in which he lives. And I am sure that when the
-call comes for him to close his long and useful
-schooling here, he will lie down to sleep with the
-perfect confidence of a little child. It would be an
-impertinence to say ‘God bless him,’ for God has
-blessed him exceedingly abundantly, and made him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</span>
-also a blessing to many thousands who are the
-happier for his having lived.</p>
-
-<p>But I must get back apologetically to the <i>Xiphias</i>,
-with her crew girding their loins to the great task in
-front of them. The cutting-in of the first whale of a
-voyage is always a serious matter, since the crew,
-however willing, must needs be educated in the
-performance of an entirely novel task. I am anxious
-not to repeat myself, but the work of collecting the
-spoil from a dead whale is of so wonderful a character&mdash;is,
-in spite of the greasy nature of the surroundings,
-so truly romantic&mdash;that the temptation to dwell upon
-its description is ever present. To the casual unthinking
-observer there may seem nothing very
-wonderful in the operation of cutting-in, except the
-astounding magnitude of the masses raised from the
-body and disposed of in the blubber-room and on
-deck. But really it is a piece of work requiring not
-merely the utmost skill and care on the part of its
-directors, but a certain natural aptitude as well, for
-want of this latter characteristic always entails an
-enormous amount of extra labour upon the crew.
-Take, for instance, the preliminary operation of
-cutting off the huge head. Even with the utmost
-skill this task demands an amazing amount of
-muscular force, but if that be wrongly applied it is
-indeed a heart-breaking job. There is practically
-nothing to guide the eye in the selection of a line
-upon which to start cutting down into the body and
-finding the junction of the neck. And there is in a
-whale of the size captured by the <i>Xiphias</i> fully six
-feet of muscular tissue to be severed by the spades
-before the central bone is reached. In other words,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</span>
-the diameter of the body there is about fourteen feet.
-A few inches to one side or the other, and the work
-may take double the number of hours it should do,
-while the able whaleman will plunge unerringly down
-through the mass blow after blow of his razor-edged
-spade until he feels&mdash;he cannot see&mdash;his blade strike
-the exact spot in the centre of the joint, a ball-and-socket
-about fourteen inches in diameter.</p>
-
-<p>So well had Captain Hampden and his officers
-performed their task that when the crew rushed on
-deck eager for work the joint had been severed, a
-hole had been bored through the snout, and the end
-of a snout-chain was already passed through this hole
-and dangling down under water, awaiting the turning
-over of the carcass to be got hold of. This was for
-the purpose of dropping the head astern when it was
-cut off, for it is always the last to be dealt with.</p>
-
-<p>Swiftly the chain-sling was passed round the
-base of the lower jaw, hooked to one of the big
-tackles, with a cheery shout the windlass levers were
-manned, and presently, upward pointing, arose the
-shaft of bone, studded with foot-long teeth, while the
-officers cut vigorously away at the throat, and started
-the unwinding of that thick overcoating of rich fat
-their prize had worn so long. And all the while the
-busy spades of the skipper and mate went plunging
-almost with the regularity of a pair of pistons down
-into the scarph dividing the head from the body,
-until as the first blanket piece rose alongside the
-head slipped easily aft and floated, an almost cylindrical
-mass of some thirty-five tons in weight, at the
-end of a hawser passed over the taffrail.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</span></p>
-<p>All plain sailing now for a time. Merrily
-clattered the pawls, accentuated by the occasional
-cries of ‘Heave on yer whale!’ ‘Surge on yer piece!’
-‘’Vast heaving!’ ‘Lower away!’ ‘Walk back!’ and the
-like, all so definite in their application with seamen,
-and so utterly unintelligible ashore. So briskly, indeed,
-did the work go on that in less than an hour from
-the time that the first blanket piece was lowered into
-the blubber-room, all hands were gratified to see the
-great flukes dangling at the end of a tackle, the last
-joint of the backbone having been cut through and
-the mountainous mass of black flesh allowed to drift
-slowly away, torn at by innumerable sharks on all
-sides, and the centre of a perfect cloud of screaming
-sea-birds.</p>
-
-<p>Now for the head. Smart as the work had been,
-there was no time to be lost. Although the whale
-had been struck at 8 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span>, it was now nearly 3 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span>
-Barely three hours of daylight remained; and, besides,
-on the south-eastern horizon there was rising a mass
-of cloud, with outlines as sharp and clearly defined
-as those of a mountain. It loomed ever higher, vast,
-menacing, and deepening into blackness. But although
-the skipper could not help casting an anxious glance
-to windward occasionally, his manner was cheery
-as ever, and he and his officers toiled as if fatigue
-was to them a word without meaning. Certainly,
-whatever other virtues be denied them, the Yankee
-whaling officers could never be accused of laziness.
-If they worked their men almost to death they
-never spared themselves: they always led the way,
-and showed by their example what a man could do
-if he tried.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</span></p>
-<p>The task of dividing the ‘case’ and ‘junk’ from
-the head, which was now taken in hand, is the
-heaviest of all, not excepting cutting off the head.
-For the case is a huge oblong tank, full of pure spermaceti,
-and extending almost the whole length of the
-head, of which, indeed, it forms nearly half the bulk.
-It must be cut out, for in a whale of this size it contains
-nearly three tons of spermaceti as fluid as oil,
-and there is no way of getting at this precious substance
-without lifting the whole case. Lifting the
-head entirely is sometimes effected, but only when
-the whale is small. In so large a one as this
-the lifting of the case alone when detached is a task
-demanding the utmost energy of all hands, and often,
-when a heavy sea is running, straining the ship
-dangerously. Even then it cannot be taken on
-board, but must be suspended alongside, and the
-spermaceti baled out of it with a bucket in a most
-cumbrous and unsatisfactory way. The junk, being
-one solid mass cut off the point of the snout, and
-weighing about four or five tons, is easier dealt with,
-since a slip of the spade in cutting it off does not
-mean a possible leakage of all its valuable contents, for
-in it the spermaceti is contained in cells as water is
-held in a sponge, and is, moreover, almost congealed.</p>
-
-<p>By dint of the most strenuous toil, the junk and
-case were separated, and the former hove on deck
-and secured, half an hour before dark. Then the
-mighty case was hooked on and held up alongside.
-As the ship was beginning to roll uneasily in the
-new cross swell coming up from the south-east,
-precursor of the impending storm, it was necessary
-to pass a heavy chain around it to bind it in to the
-side. Then a light spar was rigged across the two<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</span>
-tackles, high above the case, and a single whip or
-pulley, with a rope running through it, to one end of
-which was attached a long bucket. Then a man&mdash;he
-happened to be a merry little Irish teamster,
-named MacManus&mdash;mounted nimbly aloft, and sat
-upon the spar grasping a spade pole, with which to
-push the bucket down into the case after he had slit
-open the top of it. Then, at his word, the waiting
-men on deck hauled the bucket out and lowered it
-to the tank awaiting its contents on deck.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile all on deck were as busy as ants.
-Inspired by the skipper, they toiled to get the decks
-clear, and certain of them, at the word, rushed aloft
-to furl the few remaining sails that were set, except
-the close-reefed main topsail. Rube, being on the
-leeside, did not trouble to cross the deck and go up
-in orthodox fashion, but as he climbed somewhat
-wearily he saw MacManus take a header from his
-precarious seat into the yawning cavity of the case.
-A scream of horror burst from his lips, but overcoming
-the paralysis that momentarily affected his
-bodily powers, he leaped like a cat from the main
-shrouds to the cutting falls, and, grabbing the bucket
-in one hand, slid down into the yawning chasm
-beneath. As he went he felt the slimy walls of the
-great case embracing him all round, and thought with
-agony of the depth beneath him&mdash;fourteen feet at
-least of oil&mdash;then soundlessly the bland greasiness
-closed over his head, and all was darkness. But his
-mind was clear, and his hope was high that those
-who saw him go would spring to the whip and haul
-up ere it was too late. And while he thus thought
-he groped with one arm through the bucket loop,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</span>
-and, feeling something hard, seized it with a drowning
-man’s grip just as he felt himself ascending. Reluctantly
-those sucking walls yielded up their prey; his
-arms felt as if they were being torn from their
-sockets; but although there was a roaring as of
-loudest thunder in his ears, he held on. And presently
-he hung limply in mid-air, one arm still
-through the bucket loop, the other around the body
-of MacManus. Four eager and willing men slid
-down the falls and seized the pair. Securing them
-with ropes passed to them from the main-top, they
-lowered them as rapidly as possible on deck. Even
-then there was no time to be lost, for both were
-apparently dead&mdash;ears, nostrils, and mouths being
-clogged with the rapidly coagulating spermaceti.
-But after the application of some highly original
-methods of clearing it away, and most patient artificial
-respiration following it, the pair gradually returned
-from their visit to the shades, and sat up wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>It was not for several hours that either of them
-could recall what had befallen them, and when they
-did both fell a-trembling violently as they again
-realised the sensation of sliding down into that darksome
-well of grease. But Rube recovered first, having,
-as he said, the need laid upon him to offer up thanks
-to God for permitting him to save his shipmate’s life.
-He remembered how, as he slid out of the fast-fading
-daylight, his heart said, ‘O God, make me save
-him,’ and he felt that by nothing short of a miracle
-he had been able to do so. Poor MacManus could
-not speak of it, so broken up was he, but for hours,
-emitting every now and then a rending sob, he lay<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</span>
-holding Rube’s hand in his as if only by so doing
-could he be prevented from gliding back again into
-that pit of death.</p>
-
-<p>This accident had, of course, caused much delay,
-but still, through the now almost pitchy blackness of
-the night, by the aid of cressets of blazing fuel
-suspended from the boat-davits, the work had gone
-on, until at four bells (10 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span>) a few strokes of a
-spade released the ponderous mass from its slings,
-and with a sullen, thunderous boom it fell back into
-the sea. Immediately upon its disappearance the
-skipper ordered half the crew below for a couple of
-hours’ rest, and himself hastened to visit the victims
-of the late mishap. He found MacManus asleep,
-nervously twitching all over, but Rube lying with hands
-folded on his breast, his lips moving slowly as he
-murmured praises for his deliverance.</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, Rube, ’n’ haow d’ye seem t’ be hittin’ it
-b’ now, hey?’ said the old man cheerily.</p>
-
-<p>Rube turned on him a dazzling smile, and
-answered in a quiet tone: ‘Jes ’s grand ’s grand kin
-be, Cap’n. I don’t know as I was ever so happy in
-all m’ life. Only one thing I’m sorry fur, ’at I kain’t
-be up ’n’ doin’ my share o’ th’ work thet’s goin’ on.
-But as yew’re all so kind, I don’t feel able t’ worry
-nearly ’s much ’bout thet ’s I feel I oughter.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Jes’ yew stop right thar,’ said the skipper.
-‘Don’t wanter hyar ‘et yew’re worryin’ any ‘t all.
-Why, blame my cats, I want ye well, ’n’ haow in
-thunder air ye goin’ t’ git well ef you lays thar
-a-worryin’? Guess me an’ th’ rest ov yew’re shipmates
-’ll dew all th’ worryin’ thet’s called fur till
-yew’re round again. We kain’t git ’long ’thout <span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</span>yew a
-bit, ’n’ thet’s a fact.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah, Cap’n,’ murmured Rube, ‘it does sound good
-ov ye to say so, and say it so kinder tender like.
-Fact is, yew’re all of ye so kind ’at I’m’s happy as a
-man k’n be. Nothin’ don’t seem able t’ hurt me.
-Naow and then thar’s a set o’ blurred pictures comes
-up in my mind of a long time ago, when I was very
-unhappy an’ looked ahead to see nawthin’ but trouble
-an’ misery waitin’ fur me all my days. But it never
-gits quite clear. I never remember anything fur
-certain, and I don’t seem ter&mdash;I kain’t seem ter&mdash;feel
-’at I keer a row o’ pins what’s goin’ t’ happen ter-morrer.
-I seem ter ben here all my life, ’n’ don’t
-want a little bit t’ be anywhere else. I ain’t gut
-a care ner a fret ner a want in the world.’ Then, as
-the Captain turned as if about to leave abruptly&mdash;for
-the need upon him to do so was great&mdash;Rube gently
-laid a detaining hand upon his arm, saying: ‘Cap’n,
-I believe it’s all the goodness of God. Some of us
-don’t think as much of Him as we might. I know
-I don’t, but I b’lieve ther’ ain’t one of <i>us</i> but what
-thinks more about God’s love to ’em than they do
-’bout anythin’ else in this world.’ ‘Stop,’ almost
-shouted the skipper, ‘yew’re hurtin’ me wuss ’n ye
-know. I dassent say a word ’at w’d hurt yer faith in
-us, but fur God’s sake don’t make us out like that.
-I kain’t tell ye haow mean an’ low down an’ ord’nary
-yew make me feel when yew talk like that. Naow I
-must git, fur yew’re mighty low, ’n’ I got work wants
-doin’. Try an’ git t’ sleep an’ be about among us as
-quickly as ever yew can.’ And the skipper hurriedly
-departed.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</span></p>
-<p>In truth he was glad to get away from what was
-rapidly becoming an intolerable situation. Back to
-his mind had been brought with startling clearness
-the old Quaker home, the sweet placid face of his
-mother, as with a cooing gentleness she taught him
-to utter his earliest prayers to the All-Father with
-whom she was on such beautifully intimate terms.
-He remembered how the light upon his mother’s face
-always seemed to him to be reflected from the sky,
-and how he used to shut his eyes tight and wish that
-he might have a vision of that dear Friend whom he
-felt sure that mother could see and hear so clearly.
-Also the grave face of his father came up before him,
-never, as far as he could remember, lit by a smile,
-always looking as if the tremendous realities of life
-had left their indelible impress there. He knew that
-while he had loved his mother he had reverenced his
-father, but never seemed able to get beyond that feeling
-of awe-stricken admiration. Then came the death
-of both those holy ones, the breaking up of the old
-home, and the gradual loss through the struggling
-years that followed of personal communion with his
-mother’s Friend, while still retaining through all the
-hardnesses of a whaler’s life a blend of her sweet
-temper and his father’s exalted rectitude. And now
-he was set a-wondering in the presence of this gentle
-‘greenie’ how much he had lost through his gradually
-letting slip his acquaintance with his mother’s God.
-But like most men of Anglo-Saxon race, he felt
-a strange fear lest he should betray to anyone around
-him these ennobling, uplifting thoughts that welled
-up from his heart. His face burned and his voice
-trembled curiously as he walked among his toiling
-men, glancing furtively at each familiar face as <span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</span>if
-wondering whether any of them could detect any
-difference in him&mdash;for difference he knew there was&mdash;from
-what he had been yesterday.</p>
-
-<p>After a short interval of oversight, a few words with
-the officers who were superintending the commencement
-of the trying-out process, and an entirely contented
-look around at the storminess of the night, he
-said to the second mate, who was in charge of the
-watch at the time: ‘Wall, Mr. Peck, I guess I’ll go
-and turn in fur a spell. It’s goin’t’ be a dirty night,
-an’ ye mout’s well rig up the cover over th’ try-works,
-’case it rains, ’r she ships any water. Don’t want th’
-pots bilin’ over ’n catchin’ light, do we? Nawthin’
-else yew’d like t’ talk t’ me abaout, is there, ’fore I go
-below?’ ‘No, sir,’ said the officer; ‘everythin’ seems
-to be goin’ in good shape so far, ’n’ as fur this dirt,
-wall, I reckon the moon’s ’bout due at seven bells ’n’
-I shouldn’t wonder if she scorfs it all.’ ‘Ha, ha,’
-laughed the old man; ‘it’s mighty certain she wunt
-scorf the fly jib anyhaow. It’s too well fast fur thet.
-Good-night.’ He alluded to the old, old yarn at sea
-of the careful mate who, because the night was
-threatening in appearance, asked the skipper whether
-he shouldn’t ‘take some of the kites off her.’ ‘Oh,
-no,’ said the skipper, ‘the moon’ll scorf (eat) all
-that’ (alluding to the ugly appearance of the clouds).
-But when aroused by the tumult on deck an hour or
-two latter the skipper came rushing on deck and
-anxiously inquired what had become of the flying
-jib, the mate replied nonchalantly, ‘Oh, the moon’s
-scorfed that, sir.’</p>
-
-<p>Diving below, the old man took a searching look
-at his barometer, noted the direction of the ship’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</span>
-head, and then passed on to his own tiny state-room,
-slipped off his boots and sat down. Alone with his
-thoughts, they flew back again to that far-off time to
-which they had been directed by his contemplation
-of Rube. Slowly his head dropped upon his hands,
-lower and lower he bowed himself, until, utterly
-oblivious of all the sea-noises around him, of the
-uneasy motion of his ship as she headed the
-rising sea, or of his responsibility for the welfare
-of every soul on board, he slipped down upon his
-knees, and as simply as ever he did when a child,
-but with an added fervour, he lifted up his heart
-to God.</p>
-
-<p>It was at least half an hour before he rose from
-his knees, but in the space of that brief period he had
-learned more than most men learn during the whole
-of their lives. Confessing his sins he asked for
-pardon, admitting his blindness he asked for sight,
-acknowledging his ignorance he asked for teaching;
-and he obtained all his desires. Then with a sense
-of lightness and freedom from care never before felt
-he lay down on his little settee to be ready for a
-call, and in about the space of one minute was fast
-asleep.</p>
-
-<p>On deck, the scene to an uninitiate would have
-been appalling. With a monotonous, never-ceasing,
-and ever-increasing wail the wild wind bore down
-out of the windward blackness upon the brave old
-ship. A peep over the weather bulwarks revealed
-the long, long ranges of gleaming wave-crests rolling
-down upon her, their uncanny greenish light flickering
-against the black background and showing by
-the distances they were apart longitudinally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</span> how
-mightily the waves had grown. There was a fascination
-about them, too, which held the observer
-gazing until like a splash of small shot a spray of
-spindrift struck him in the face and sent him smarting
-to shelter. But as if it had been the finest of
-summer evenings the steady stress of labour continued.
-Up from the blubber-room were hurled the massive
-horse-pieces of blubber, carved with so much labour
-from the great blanket pieces by the slipping, struggling
-labourers below. Of all the strange places I
-have ever seen I think the blubber-room of a whaleship
-at night in a gale of wind is beyond comparison
-the strangest. It is a square space of about thirty
-feet each way and between six and seven feet high.
-Into it are piled the blanket pieces, those immense
-widths of blubber, each weighing a ton or so, which
-have been ripped from the carcass of the whale. In
-uncouth masses they lie one upon another, piled often
-almost to touching the beams overhead. As the
-ship rolls they glide and heave upon one another as
-if still actuated by the breath of the monster they so
-lately covered. From a beam, generally in a corner,
-swings a primitive lamp, little more than accentuating
-the darkness. And at the beginning of operations
-two dim forms crawl precariously about among
-those greasy masses, occasionally slipping a leg down
-into a temporary crevice and having it squeezed into
-numbness before being able to withdraw it. They
-wield short-handled spades like Dutch hoes, and with
-infinite labour hew off blocks from the masses of
-blubber of a fit size to pass through the mincer.
-When they have a dozen or so of these blocks ready
-they must needs in some unexplainable fashion<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</span>
-balance themselves under the hatchway, and with a
-sort of diminutive pitchfork hurl the blocks (horse-pieces)
-upwards into a shallow trough secured to the
-coaming or upper edge of the hatch, whence the
-attendant on the mincer loads a tub with them and
-drags them away. And unless these blubber-room
-men be exceedingly skilful as well as strong,
-they will not only never have a breathing space
-during the six hours of their stay below, but will,
-in addition, have to bear much contumely from the
-officer in charge, who will be instant in his sarcastic
-inquiries as to what they may be doing below&mdash;whether
-they are asleep or not.</p>
-
-<p>The clank-clank of the mincer is unceasing, tall
-tongues of flame from the funnels of the try-works
-make long red smears upon the gloom as they stream
-away to leeward, and the two harpooners feed the
-bubbling cauldrons with minced blubber, bale out the
-sufficiently boiled oil, and watch with unceasing care
-against a sudden splash of cold water into the pots,
-which may cause the oil to rise in a moment, and,
-overflowing into the furnaces, set fire to the ship.
-All the watch is so busy that there is no time to
-notice the weather, or moralise upon this most
-romantic scene&mdash;a ship’s company who, having
-succeeded in winning from a hostile element the
-spoil of the mightiest creature known, have now converted
-their vessel into a floating factory, and under
-the most extraordinarily difficult conditions conceivable
-are engaged in realising that spoil in order to
-convey it to their home port thousands of miles
-away.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</span></p>
-<p>Here let us leave them for awhile, and exercising
-our privilege of instant transition, glance back at the
-quiet village whence the departure of our hero withdrew
-so much consolation and manly assistance in
-the old age of his parents.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">AT THE OLD HOMESTEAD</p>
-
-<p>Saturday night in the Eddy homestead. In their
-respective chairs, occupied by them with hardly a
-break through thirty-eight years of ideally happy
-married life, sat Farmer Eddy and his wife. The
-labours of the week were ended, the hired people
-gone to rest, and husband and wife sat face to face
-as they had done for so many years, but never until
-the last six months with such weary hearts. Mrs.
-Eddy had aged very much. Not that any care for
-her boy’s spiritual welfare worried her&mdash;she felt as
-certain of him in that respect as if he had been always
-under her eye. But since his departure from New
-Bedford in the <i>Xiphias</i> it was as if he had passed
-into the eternal silence, and although she said little
-her heart-hunger was terrible. His last letter was
-but half-a-dozen lines, hastily scrawled and posted
-without signature, telling his parents that he was outward
-bound on a South Sea whaling voyage, and in
-the hurry of the moment omitting to mention even
-the name of his ship. Naturally, therefore, as the
-days went by lengthening into weeks, the weeks into
-months, the disease of uncertainty made her its prey,
-and she aged fast, perhaps as much from the heroic
-effort she made to conceal her anxiety from her husband
-as from its direct effect.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</span></p>
-<p>Alas, what Mrs. Eddy endured has too often been
-the lot of American mothers. For in those days
-recruiting agents for the New England whalers
-prowled about the country beguiling simple young
-men with specious tales of the glories of a roving life
-and the wealth they would by-and-by bring home.
-And as the recruits never knew where they were
-going except that it was out upon the wide ocean,
-nor when they might possibly return, except that it
-must not <i>legally</i> be longer than four years, the news
-they were able to send their people at the time of
-shipment, even supposing they felt in good heart
-enough to do so, was of necessity extremely meagre.
-Nor were opportunities for sending letters frequent
-afterwards. An occasional whaler was spoken which
-might or might not be homeward bound in the course
-of a year or so. It was hardly worth while entrusting
-letters to such a casual packet as that. And the land
-touched was almost always carefully selected for its
-aloofness from civilisation, as well as its offering few
-inducements to a would-be deserter who was anxious
-to return home.</p>
-
-<p>Farmer Eddy went about much the same as usual
-but noticeably graver, and, if possible, more gentle
-than ever. He never spoke to his neighbours about
-his son, and scarcely ever to his wife, but this latter
-omission mattered little, since at the evening prayer
-he had ever since Rube’s departure devoted at least
-half of that pleasant season to pleading with his Father
-for his son. Together as the old couple knelt they
-saw with the eye of faith Rube upheld in right-doing,
-cleansed by affliction, drawn nearer to God, and never
-unmindful of them. Their simple assurance that all
-was well with him never wavered, nor, although they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</span>
-so seldom mentioned his name at any other than
-these sacred times, did either of them lose his image
-from their mental vision for one waking hour. Here,
-however, Farmer Eddy had one advantage over his
-wife&mdash;the usual one, she was the mother. And as such
-she could no more help yearning over her absent son
-than she could help breathing. Her faith was as robust
-as her husband’s without doubt, but, oh, she wanted
-her boy back so badly.</p>
-
-<p>In a worldly sense all had prospered with them,
-and looked as if that prosperity would continue. And
-they had been almost compelled to extend their
-possessions by the acquisition of the Fish farm. For
-after Priscilla’s departure with her husband, Mrs. Fish,
-feeling utterly alone except for the hired girls who
-came and went, visibly drooped day by day. Mrs.
-Eddy came as often as she could to visit her old friend,
-but that was not often, and moreover her visits were
-of necessity very short. Not only was Mrs. Fish
-lonely, but her heart was a prey to all sorts of apprehensions.
-Jake, her eldest son, was steadily going
-from bad to worse, leaving the oversight of the farm
-more and more to his younger brother Will, who,
-instead of rising to the occasion, chafed and fretted
-at his position of, as he put it, farm-bailiff without
-salary, except what Jake was minded to fling him
-occasionally with an air of lofty contempt. Unknown
-to either his mother or brother, but not unsuspected,
-Jake was also mortgaging the farm up to the very roof-tree
-of the house, and, with an infatuation almost
-amounting to lunacy, was spending the money in
-riotous trips to New York and Boston. He apparently
-did not permit himself to think at all of the certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</span>
-ruin he was courting, nor spend one thought upon
-the unmerited suffering he was bringing upon his
-mother and brother.</p>
-
-<p>The climax was reached at last by his returning
-from one of his New York trips accompanied by an
-exceedingly handsome but vulgar young woman,
-whom he swaggeringly announced as his intended
-bride. His brother and mother were sitting at their
-evening meal when this happened, and when he
-made the announcement his mother, with one swift
-and comprehensive glance at her son’s female companion,
-rose from her seat, saying, ‘Will, he’p me up
-stairs.’ Jake, his face flaring with rage, interposed
-between the departing pair and the door, demanding
-almost in a shout and with many oaths what they
-meant by insulting him and his intended wife. Releasing
-his mother’s arm, Will took a step towards
-his brother, saying quietly and distinctly: ‘Yew
-misbul shote, ain’t it ’nough fur yew t’ break mother’s
-heart with yer goin’s on but yew must insult her ole
-age by bringin’ <i>thet</i> home an’ flauntin’ it in her face.
-Naow, ’r ye goin’ t’ git aout o’ eour way or ain’t
-ye&mdash;&mdash;?’</p>
-
-<p>There were no more words. Jake, maddened,
-flew at his brother’s throat, and the pair, both strong
-young men, but the elder much debilitated by his
-recent excesses, writhed and wrestled and tumbled
-about the living-room like a pair of tigers. The
-woman Jake had brought with him, retreating to a
-safe corner, eyed the wretched struggle with a serene
-aloofness befitting a Roman amphitheatre, but the
-mother sat wringing her hands and feebly calling
-upon her sons for God’s sake to cease their unnatural<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</span>
-strife. Suddenly, over the wreck of the table, the
-pair collapsed, Will uppermost. Hoarsely he shouted,
-as with one knee on his brother’s breast, one hand
-clutching Jake’s throat, he raised himself a little: ‘Y’
-onnatural beast, will y’ git eout o’ this, ’r sh’ll I kill
-ye t’ onct? Y’ ain’t fit t’ live, I know, but b’ th’
-’Tarnal y’ ain’t fit t’ die. Will y’ git ’r shall I mash
-y’r face into a jelly?’ ‘Yes, I’ll go,’ gasped the
-almost choking man, and Will, carefully releasing
-him, watched him out of the house, and into the
-buggy, which had been waiting ever since he arrived.
-No sooner had the pair taken their seats, and the
-horse, under a merciless cut of Jake’s whip, had
-bounded off, than Will returned to his mother, finding
-her in a dead faint; indeed, looking as if coming to
-again was a quite unlikely contingency. Desperately
-alarmed, Will called for the hired girl, who had been
-busy outside, and leaving his mother to her care,
-hitched up his cart and drove furiously over to the
-Eddy place. It did not take many minutes for him
-to persuade Mrs. Eddy to return with him to the aid
-of his suffering mother. But when they arrived she
-was past all earthly comfort. Her mind wandered
-from the good man of her youthful days to Priscilla
-and Jake; the only one she did not mention in her
-rambling remarks was Will. But he, good fellow,
-made no sign of how this omission smote upon his
-heart. Nevertheless, could anyone have read his
-thoughts, it would have been seen how deeply he was
-wounded, and how sincere was his unspoken resolve
-that, should his mother die, the home of his youth,
-grown hateful to him, should know him no more.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</span></p>
-<p>At 4 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> Mrs. Fish passed away, still unconscious
-of those around, still talking more or less intelligibly
-of her husband and elder son and daughter. And
-Mrs. Eddy, tired out, having first persuaded Will to
-retire, went to her own well-earned rest against the
-labours of the coming day. The following week
-tried her and her husband to the utmost, for Will,
-besides being almost penniless (his brother having had
-every cent he could lay hands on), manifested much
-eagerness to be gone and leave everything just as it
-was. Farmer Eddy was at his wits’ end what to do,
-and it was no small relief to him when a Boston
-lawyer came down empowered to sell the place and
-all that was on it to the highest bidder for the benefit
-of the mortgagees. Then it was that Mr. Eddy
-decided to buy, being, as he said, desirous that the
-heart-broken young man, now so eager to be gone,
-should, if he were ever able, be allowed to redeem the
-home of his childhood from the careful hand of a
-friend instead of seeing it pass into the unsympathetic
-grip of a stranger. Will professed entire indifference,
-but no doubt the unostentatious kindness of his
-father’s old friend did him much good&mdash;especially
-when in the kindest manner possible Farmer Eddy
-pressed upon him a sufficient store of dollars to allow
-him time to look around in Chicago, whither he was
-bent upon going.</p>
-
-<p>Farmer Eddy saw him off, gave him his blessing,
-but very little advice (wise man!&mdash;full well he knew
-how advice at such a time would be received), but
-earnest encouragement to keep up communication
-between himself and his old home; ‘for&mdash;who knows?’
-said the good old fellow&mdash;‘your sister may want a
-home some day.’ To his utter amazement Will<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</span>
-turned upon him almost fiercely, saying: ‘That
-wouldn’t be a bad thing for her. It might throw for
-her the true light upon how she treated mother. Don’t
-talk t’ me of Pris. I don’t care a cent what becomes
-of her &mdash;&mdash;’ But the farmer, with uplifted hand,
-stayed him, saying: ‘Don’t, Will. Yew’re het up
-naow, an’ say wut ye don’t at all mean. Thar, we
-won’t persoo th’ subjec’. Let me know as often as
-ye can haow yew’re gittin’ along, an’ I’ll be glad.
-Good-bye, my boy, good-bye.’ And the last of the
-Fish family departed.</p>
-
-<p>Thenceforward the Fish place received even more
-attention than did his own homestead from old man
-Eddy. He looked upon it in the light of a sacred
-trust, a view in which he was keenly supported by
-his wife. For he did cherish an earnest hope that
-some day his old friends’ children might be reunited,
-purged by suffering, and, returning to their old home,
-find with grateful hearts how good to them had been
-the God of whom they had thought so little. And
-to this end he and his wife added to their nightly
-intercourse with their Friend the petition that these
-wayward ones might yet be gathered in and find
-peace at home.</p>
-
-<p>Of Priscilla, of course, they had never heard a
-word since her departure, but without a shade of
-resentment they remembered her and wondered how
-she was faring. Their ideas, naturally, could be only
-of the vaguest, since they knew no more than they
-did of Reuben where she was or whither she was
-going. But from what they had heard from Will,
-applying sensibly considerable allowance for pique,
-they feared that she had before now found how great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</span>
-a mistake she had made, and had repented too late
-to avoid the suffering it had entailed. But none of
-these reflections had the effect of making them
-despair of a righting of matters at the long last, and
-so they cheerfully took up the additional burden of
-their self-imposed duties, finding that, so far from
-their being irksome to perform, they brought with
-them many consolations. If only they could have
-heard from Rube! But apparently that could not
-be, and so they waited, in patient well-doing, for the
-breaking of the day.</p>
-
-<p>When Jake, driven forth ignominiously from the
-home he had so wronged, by the brother he had despised,
-returned to New York, he was utterly reckless.
-Without troubling to look into his affairs, he
-and his companion were driven from the depot to a
-high-class hotel, where they immediately resumed
-the course of high living and deplorable extravagance
-which seemed to have become necessary to Jake’s
-life. Now, the squandering of money is a thing that
-requires very little teaching, and can be carried on
-successfully in most so-called centres of civilisation,
-but I doubt very much whether any great city can
-afford the spendthrift more facilities for speedily
-reaching the end of his resources than New York.
-For its plethora of supereminently wealthy men have
-perhaps unconsciously raised such a standard of expenditure
-as does not obtain anywhere else in the
-world, and, of course, this is ever before those fools
-who have neither sufficient money nor brains as a
-shining example to go and do likewise as closely as
-circumstances will permit them. Without blaming
-the multi-millionaires too much, there can be no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</span>
-doubt that the example most of them set in the
-direction of foolish waste of money is wholly evil.</p>
-
-<p>So it came about that a fortnight after Jake
-Fish’s return to New York he had exhausted every
-possible means of raising funds, and was confronted
-with the prospect of being utterly unable to meet
-his bill due on Saturday at the Hoffman House.
-Sobered a little by this, he consulted his companion
-on the matter, and suggested her parting with some
-of the costly jewellery he had given her. Vain fool!
-She sympathised with him tearfully, avowed her
-willingness to share a crust with him rather than live
-in luxury with any other man, said the shock had
-so unnerved her that she must go and lie down
-awhile to recover herself, after which she would come
-with him and dispose of all the glittering ‘trash’&mdash;yes,
-she called it that&mdash;when they would go away to some
-quiet spot and be very happy. Overjoyed, Jake
-lavished multitudinous caresses upon her, sent her
-up stairs, and retired to the smoke-room to work out
-some plan for making these new funds go as far as
-possible without too much appearance of retrenchment.
-Then in his easy chair, surrounded by every
-luxury of appointment a man could desire, he fell
-asleep.</p>
-
-<p>He was awakened by a waiter, who handed him
-a scented note. At first he stared at the man stupidly,
-only half awake, and utterly uncomprehending.
-Then as sense returned he tore open the envelope
-and read:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Dear Jake,&mdash;You’ve had a pretty high old time,
-and so have I. But you might have the savvy to let
-it go at that. You must be a bigger fool than even
-I <span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</span>took you for if you imagine that I am going to
-slide down to the bottom along with you, and begin
-by coughing up all the stuff you’ve paid me with.
-No, no; you’ve been playing long enough: now run
-along like a wise little man and <i>earn</i> something. I’m
-off on a much better campaign. Good luck.&mdash;Not
-yours,</p>
-
-<p class="right">
-‘A. C.
-</p>
-
-<p>‘P.S.&mdash;If you feel inclined to kick, watch out how
-you do it. It isn’t very healthy exercise for you.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Jake read this letter thrice without understanding
-a word of it. Its general import he knew, and it had
-paralysed him. He sat staring stupidly at the paper
-until the waiter, nudging him, politely called his
-attention to the fact that his bill was before him.
-That roused him as does the far-heard crack of the
-fowling-piece arouse the timid hare. Summoning all
-his energies, he dismissed the waiter with a curt ‘All
-right, I’ll ’tend t’ this d’reckly,’ and rising, lounged
-toward the lift, his head throbbing furiously. Poor
-wretch, he was really more fool than rogue&mdash;thoroughly
-selfish, yet beaten by one more selfish than himself,
-upon whom he had lavished all he had; heartless
-towards his own, yet punished for his benevolence to
-a stranger who had befooled him; he was really
-a fair type of a large class of men everywhere who
-are only virtuous because they lack opportunity or
-initiative to be otherwise. Reaching his sumptuous
-room, he found his clothes bestrewing the floor,
-showing how thorough had been the search made by
-the departed one for portable plunder. He felt his
-head beginning to swim, and realising that he <i>must</i>
-escape or make the acquaintance of a Tombs gaoler,
-he pulled himself together, slammed his door, and,
-descending by another lift, passed from the hotel and
-was soon lost in the crowd.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</span></p>
-
-<p>Now, there is one tremendous difference between
-the cities of North America and those of Great
-Britain in respect of their harbourage of such men as
-Jake Fish was now in a fair way to become. London,
-for instance, seems to offer a premium to the most
-worthless. A loafing, shiftless vagabond need exercise
-no ingenuity, no originality of resource, in order
-to be better looked after in every way than, let us
-say, a seaman in a merchant ship. London workhouses
-swarm with humans of this type, well fed,
-well clothed, well housed, and, oh, <i>so</i> tenderly entreated
-as to work. Any little ailment that a working
-man would never notice is considered sufficient
-warrant for lapping these spoilt children of fortune
-in cotton wool and tenderly nursing them back to
-convalescence again in palace chambers fitted with
-all the appliances for the healing of disease that the
-mind of benevolence and medical skill can devise.
-And for all this the sorely burdened ratepayer must
-needs provide, although he, in common with most of
-England’s working poor, thinks of the workhouse as
-the home of disgrace, and would in most instances
-rather die of starvation in silence than go there.</p>
-
-<p>But in North America, while there is great store
-of loafers, not confined either to the lowest class, they
-must have some original talent, some inventive
-enterprise about them, whether in criminal way or
-merely low trickery. Otherwise they become hoboes,
-or as we should call them in England ‘tramps,’ whose
-chief qualifications must be an unconquerable aversion
-to work, great powers of passive endurance, a love
-of filth&mdash;in fact, a reversion to the worst type of savage
-without one savage virtue. There is little room,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</span>
-however, for the hobo in a city. The exercise of his
-chosen calling needs great open spaces sparsely peopled,
-where there are hardly any police. Moreover, the
-hoboes, according to Mr. Josiah Flynt, are a close
-corporation looking with much disfavour upon would-be
-recruits, so that admission to their ranks is not
-easily gained.</p>
-
-<p>Jake Fish then, had he realised it, was in evil
-case. He was a veritable prodigal, unrepentant, and
-with no father’s house to return to in case of repentance.
-Only fit for farming, and hating that furiously,
-he had no idea of doing anything else for his bread,
-and, as we have seen, his tastes were costly. Consequently,
-now that he had spent all, he felt that he
-had a bitter grievance against society for not graciously
-providing him with the means to continue his
-career of viciousness. But he was, besides, an arrant
-coward, an essentially worthless man, such as may
-be, by a miracle, made into a useful member of
-society, but, alas, very seldom is. He drifted down,
-down, down. The few dollars in his pockets when
-he left the hotel were squandered with the same
-utter absence of forethought as had always characterised
-him, and then, when, driven by hunger, he
-would have obtained some labouring work, he found
-himself fiercely shoved aside by far better men.</p>
-
-<p>He disappeared. Not that there is not work and
-food for all in the Great Republic, but the conditions
-of life are strenuous, and if a man will not work, and
-work hard, he must scheme, and that cleverly, or he
-will certainly disappear as Jake did, and no one will
-take any trouble to inquire whither.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</span></p>
-<p>Will, on the other hand&mdash;bright, eager, and industrious&mdash;arrived
-in Chicago with resolute determination
-to take his fate by the throat, also to husband
-his small resources with the utmost care while seeking
-among the busy throngs for something that he could
-do. And he was determined not to stand choosing,
-but to do as he had read that so many others had
-done&mdash;take the first employment offered, no matter
-how deficient in qualification he might feel himself to
-be for it, and, having once got work, to strive manfully
-to keep it, and rise from one point to another
-by ceaseless attention and industry, and, above all, to
-avoid the saloon (public-house) as he would a plague-spot.
-Fortunately for him, he had never acquired
-the taste for dissipation which had destroyed his
-brother, for opportunity had been lacking. It was
-not a question of moral principle at all. And now,
-although he did not know it, would not have believed
-it had he been told, he was in a position of the utmost
-danger. Without any home ties, with no religious
-convictions, nothing to safeguard him from ruin,
-he might easily have sunk; but he had no physical
-inclination for the destroying vices, having never
-been tempted.</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture he was standing one day watching
-a busy little knot of porters loading up packages
-of hardware from a warehouse into a couple of heavy
-waggons. The swiftness and apparent eagerness with
-which they did their work, without any appearance of
-being driven, appealed to him, and unconsciously his
-face took on a wistful expression&mdash;he would so much
-have liked to be one of that busy band. A keen-eyed,
-pleasant-faced man of middle age, who stood in
-the doorway with a book in his hand making certain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</span>
-entries, caught sight of the waiting, earnest-looking
-man. And being of an imaginative, romantic turn of
-mind (which, scoff at the idea as you may, is almost
-essential to the making of a successful business man),
-he began in a side alley of his brain to build up a
-theory concerning this evidently country-bred young
-fellow who was watching manual labour being carried
-on with such manifest desire to take part in it.
-Moreover, the owner of the warehouse, for it was he,
-was a kindly Christian, whose interest in all men, but
-specially his own employés, was proverbial in Chicago&mdash;that
-humming hive of business that contains so
-much that is evil, but, thank God, has also so much
-that is pre-eminently good.</p>
-
-<p>Will began to move away slowly, but Mr.
-Schermer made half-a-dozen swift strides after him,
-and tapping him smartly upon the shoulder, said,
-‘Say, young man, are you looking for work?’ ‘I
-am, sir,’ Will replied smartly. ‘Then come right in
-here, and I’ll start you at once. I’m wanting a
-young fellow of your build pretty bad.’ And in ten
-minutes Will felt that he was on the high road to
-fortune. Plenty of work, not difficult to learn, good
-thews and muscle to do it, and a hearty, appreciative
-man at the head of things; he was delighted. More
-by a turn of Fortune’s wheel than any design discoverable
-by man, Will had fallen into just the place he
-needed, where not only did he receive fair play, but
-where the employer kept ever before himself the fact
-that each of his men was an individual soul for whom
-Christ died, and not just the cog of a machine;
-where the employer shouldered his responsibility for
-his men as he did the bills he endorsed, and with just<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</span>
-the same absence of consciousness that he was doing
-anything more than his obvious duty. No one
-praised him for meeting his bills as they fell due;
-why should they praise him for considering the men
-who were serving him faithfully, and all the more
-faithfully because they knew full well that their
-employer had their interests at heart as well as his
-own&mdash;nay, that he regarded their interests and his as
-inseparable?</p>
-
-<p>I must leave Will here, under the most favourable
-conditions, to push his manful way up the ladder of
-prosperity, and to preserve, if he can, a measure of
-humility with it all, in that it was his lot to fall into
-good hands without any seeking of his own. Also I
-have a half-guilty feeling that this has been a prosy
-old chapter, quite at variance with the strain of high
-adventure which I have endeavoured to maintain
-throughout the rest of the book. And now we must
-return to Priscilla.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">REPAIRING DAMAGES</p>
-
-<p>The old <i>Grampus</i>, all unknowing of the hopes and
-fears and aches and pains she bore, rolled uneasily
-throughout that terribly long night. To tell the
-exact truth, she was often left entirely to herself,
-existing only by the good will of the elements or any
-passing ship. In much the same condition as the
-remnant of a beaten army, whose outposts, weary to
-death, fall down and sleep weltering in mud and
-blood because poor human nature has said her last
-word, the broken mate lay sleeping, his fractured
-leg, benumbed from heel to thigh, straightened out,
-and his utterly worn-out body not disturbing it by a
-single movement. The battered men below in the
-stifling reek of the foc’s’le also lay asleep (blessed be
-God for sleep and death), utterly unconscious of their
-woes. The shipkeepers, whom a sense of duty kept,
-desperate as their need was, from sleeping too long
-at one spell, lay in uncouth attitudes about the moonlit
-deck. Occasionally one of them would rise and
-aimlessly rove aft to the binnacle, gaze into its
-glittering oval with eyes that distinguished not North
-from South, and then with another owl-like glance
-aloft would stagger forward and tumble down asleep
-again. And the missing ones, six stalwart men who
-yesterday morning were each a centre of activity and
-private hopes, desires, and possibilities? At any rate
-their rest would be long and sound.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</span></p>
-<p>Priscilla woke about midnight, and looked uneasily
-about her. The almost stifling atmosphere of the
-tiny cabin, the reek of the lamp, and the innumerable
-exhalations from below, made the place almost unbearable.
-And as with a feeling of nausea overpowering
-her she surveyed her prison, there came to
-her, like a voice from a previous life, the most vivid
-recollection possible of the sweet breath stealing over
-the fields of her old home; of the careless days
-when singing she went about her household work;
-of the many delights brought by the changing seasons,
-each with its own particular charm; yes, even the
-hard, bitter winters when all the land was held in a
-grip of steel, and only amusement, out of doors, seemed
-possible. That seemed to her like a glimpse of
-paradise, from which, by her own act and because
-she did not value its joys, she had been shut out:
-she had exchanged it for this. And her eyes filled,
-her heart swelled with self-pity, regret, repentance,
-until suddenly a hoarse murmur by her side resolved
-itself into: Pris, whar air ye?’</p>
-
-<p>Immediately she was recalled to present realities.
-Swift as thought she had asked and received strength,
-and leaning over her helpless husband, she said, quite
-tenderly, ‘Yes, dear, I am here. What can I do for
-you?’ Apparently ignoring her gentle question, he
-muttered savagely but disconnectedly, ‘What’s th’
-matter? whar’s everybody? what’s doin’? call th’
-mate.’ I do not see any necessity for indicating the
-stream of fantastic blasphemies which followed,
-apparently to emphasise his demand for information.
-They made her shrink, as does a delicate skin upon
-meeting a cold blast; but as soon as she was able
-she said, ‘The mate has been badly hurt, Ramon,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</span> but
-I can call the second mate if you will. He can
-explain so much better than I can what has happened.’
-‘Well, whyn’t yew call him, then? Kain’t ye see,
-yo’ pulin’ idiot, ’at I want t’ know&mdash;t’ <i>know</i>, d’ ye
-hear?’ More horrible emphasis, in the midst of
-which Priscilla crept from the cabin, and, going to
-the companion, rung a little handbell, an agreed
-signal for summoning the steward. That worthy
-man was lapped in profoundest slumber by the side
-of the galley, but at almost the first tinkle of the little
-bell he sprang to his feet, and, hastening to the
-companion, listened breathlessly to his mistress’s
-orders (he called them so, but they sounded more
-like entreaties).</p>
-
-<p>As soon as he understood them he departed, and
-returning in two minutes announced to Priscilla that
-he had succeeded in arousing the second mate, who
-was coming immediately. Receiving Priscilla’s instructions
-to keep handy in case she wanted anything,
-he retired to the lee-side of the skylight and waited.
-In about a minute the second mate appeared, still
-heavy with sleep (the deep sleep of utter exhaustion
-from which he had been aroused), and lumberingly
-made his way down into the darksome cabin. Tapping
-gently at the skipper’s state-room door, he was greeted
-with a torrent of oaths, and understood that if he
-didn’t hurry in nameless consequences awaited him.
-Trembling in every limb, he instantly obeyed, and
-presently stood beside his commander’s couch like
-an utterly abject coward. Yet he was, as we have
-seen, nothing less than a hero. His deeds on the
-preceding day were those of a man who counted the
-preservation of his own life but a very little thing,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</span> if
-haply he might save some of his shipmates from
-death. In the midst of those aggressive monsters
-he did not quail, but led his men on to deeds as
-noble as any that have ever been recorded&mdash;yet here
-he stood abashed and quivering before a helpless
-man morally as much his inferior as it was possible for
-a man to be. Mystery of mysteries, and one that
-men have never yet taken sufficient account of, even
-with the stupendous object-lesson of that utterly contemptible
-animal, but supereminent commander of
-men, Napoleon, before their eyes. The meanest
-soldier of Napoleon’s armies was a greater hero than
-he; but the possession of that awful power of
-domination enabled this utter egotist, this unutterable
-cad, to rule Europe and send to sordid deaths
-rejoicingly hundreds of thousands of men, most of
-whom were in a moral and physical sense immeasurably
-superior to himself.</p>
-
-<p>Thus Mr. Winslow stood before his skipper, who,
-glaring up at him with an expression of fiercest
-contempt in his black eyes, demanded of him why he
-had not reported before the doings of that disastrous
-day. Falteringly, as if personally to blame for the
-skipper’s incapability of receiving any information
-before, Mr. Winslow began his melancholy narration.
-His nervousness, coupled with a most excusable
-desire to make the best account he could of an
-exceedingly bad job, caused him at times to be
-almost unintelligible, and subjected him to the
-fiercest abuse from the skipper. But this incitement
-had one good effect. It tended to brevity of account,
-and in ten minutes there was little left to tell. For a
-moment or two after he ceased speaking there was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</span>
-a dead silence, through which the ceaseless wash of
-the watchful waves outside against the topsides could
-be felt rather than heard.</p>
-
-<p>Then suddenly the skipper spoke again. ‘’Spose
-ye’re all hard at it repairin’ damages, hey?’ ‘Well,
-sir,’ stammered the officer, ‘ye see, sir &mdash;&mdash;’ ‘Give
-<i>me</i> none o’ yer lyin’ backin’ an’ fillin’, y’ lazy hog,
-’r I’ll &mdash;&mdash;’ He got no further. All Mr. Winslow’s
-manhood came to his assistance, breaking through
-the mysterious bonds that had held him so long.
-With all his nervousness gone, he made one stride
-nearer the skipper, a dangerous light gleamed in
-his blue eyes, and he said: ‘Stop right thar, Cap’n
-Da Silva. Ther’ ain’t a man aboard this ship but
-wut’s done his duty like a man, an’ no one could ha’
-done any better. We’re all nearly dead with fightin’
-fag, all ’cept me sleepin’ w’ere we fell down, an’ some
-of us is broke up so in body ’at it’ll be months before
-we’re fit again. An’ you dare t’ lie there ’n’ speak t’
-me ov lyin’ and laziness. Say it again, an’ jes’ ’s if
-yew wuz any other varmint I’ll choke th’ life outen
-ye where ye lie.’ He wound up with a terrible oath.
-But Priscilla rose and confronted him, her grave eyes
-looking unnaturally large in the whiteness of her
-face. ‘Go on deck, Mr. Winslow,’ she said; ‘you
-forget yourself. The Captain is very ill and irritable,
-and cannot be held responsible for what he says.’
-Without a word the second mate bowed his head and
-departed, leaving her alone to face the fiendish
-malice of her husband, who, as soon as his officer had
-departed, turned upon her and exhausted even his
-perverted ingenuity in abuse.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</span></p>
-<p>Strange to say, this bad exercise seemed to improve
-his bodily condition, for in about an hour,
-during which Priscilla waited on him with the utmost
-care and in as perfect a silence as if she were stone
-deaf to his shameful words, he ordered her to assist
-him to dress. When she had done so he staggered
-to the state-room door, rudely thrusting aside her
-proffered arm, and dragged himself on deck. As
-soon as he was gone from the room she prayed with
-all her heart on her lips for peace, filled with pity
-for the poor men above now that their tyrant was
-unloosed again. A hoarse cry of pain sent a thrill
-of sympathy through her, but she <i>would</i> not be distressed,
-believing that in some way she would have
-a satisfying answer to her prayer.</p>
-
-<p>On deck the skipper, his cold heart full of
-malicious intent, had stumbled over the body of the
-steward lying by the side of the cabin skylight, and
-kicking savagely at the prostrate man had aroused
-him to an immediate sense of his peril. Scrambling to
-his feet, the frightened black man was slinking below,
-when the hoarse command of the skipper to ‘Come
-here’ arrested him, and he obeyed with shaking knees.
-‘Whar’s the helmsman?’ demanded the Captain. ‘I
-d’ no, sah,’ pleaded the steward. ‘I’ll go see, sah.’
-‘Stop right whar y’ air, will ye?’ was the fierce answer,
-and in the dim light of the binnacle the steward saw
-the skipper’s hand go to his hip-pocket, produce
-something that glittered, and immediately a couple
-of shots rang out startlingly through the quiet night.
-At that dread summons men began to appear from
-all around, first of them all the second mate, with
-wild inquiry in his eyes. ‘Mr. Winslow,’ snarled the
-skipper, whose voice was growing stronger with each<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</span>
-word he spoke, ‘call all hands t’ make sail. A hand
-’t th’ wheel at once.’ By this time all those who were
-able to do so had mustered, and with the instinctive
-habit of obedience, as if all recollection of their
-recent interview had disappeared from his mind, the
-second mate replied in his usual tone, ‘Aye, aye, sir,’
-then roaring, ‘All hands make sail, loose taups’ls ’n
-t’gallants’ls fore and aft. Clear away stays’ls, jib, ’n’
-spanker. Naow git a move on yerselves, d’ ye hear?’</p>
-
-<p>There was a rush to obey, for all felt somehow
-that their brief season of relief from the skipper’s
-oversight had come to an end, and as they disappeared
-in different directions with their old frantic
-haste, the skipper said to the second mate in a voice
-that could not be overheard by any other: ‘See
-hyar, Mr. Winslow, fur what yew said to me to-night
-I’ll pay ye full price an’ interest, ef it takes me all
-this voy’ge. But fur now yew go scot free ’cause I
-need yer assistance, ’n’ I hain’t goin’ t’ hev enny
-limejuicer rot of bullyin’ my officers ’fore the men an’
-destroyin’ disciplin’. Only ef thar’s enny sign ov ye
-playin’ it on me, wall, yew’ll hev to shoot quick ’r
-yew’ll be a goner. I’m heeled an’ I’m watchin’ fur
-ye.’ Again the second mate replied steadily, ‘Aye,
-aye, sir,’ and almost instantly after his shouts of
-‘Sheet home fore taups’l, sheet home mizen taups’l,
-histe away stays’ls,’ &amp;c., made the solemn night
-hideous.</p>
-
-<p>A low groan a little forward of where the skipper
-stood caused him to move that way, and, stooping,
-he found the mate, who had been aroused to a
-miserable consciousness of bone-wrenching pain by
-the clamour around him. Stooping towards him,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</span>
-the skipper said in a grating tone, ‘Wall, ’n’ wut’s
-wrong with yew? Whyn’t yew gettin’ abaout yer
-dooties? Pretty fine condition yew’ve let the ship
-git into in a few days.’ Pausing as if for a reply,
-and receiving none, the skipper went on, ‘What in
-thunder yew lyin’ thar fur? Don’t ye know it’s “all
-hands”?’ ‘Kain’t move, sir,’ came slowly from the
-mate’s parched lips, as if dragged thence by torture,
-‘fur me right arm an’ leg seem’s if they wuz one big
-pain. Fact, I seem to be all raw on thet side of me.
-<i>Kain’t</i> I hev a drink o’ water, sir?’ ‘Wall, I guess
-yew kin. Here, boy!’ to one of the younger men
-hastening across the deck, ‘give the mate a drink of
-water, an’ look slippy.’ The skipper looked on while
-the unfortunate man drank as if his poor throat had
-been a bed of unslaked lime. Then he said, ‘I
-guess yew wun’t du any wuss till daylight, ’n’ I’ll be
-all th’ better fit to see wut kin be done with ye. But
-yew’ve made a hell ov a mess ov th’ cruise, naow,
-ain’t ye?’ The sufferer drew in his breath sharply
-as this mental blow was added to all his physical
-sufferings, but he did not&mdash;indeed, he could not&mdash;answer.
-The merciful climax of suffering was
-reached, the broken human machinery protested
-vainly to the surcharged brain, and Mr. Court, relapsing
-into blessed insensibility, passed into a place
-where neither the malignity of man nor the liabilities
-of the body could trouble him.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain strode away muttering until he stood
-by the wheel and gazed into the face of the compass.
-He was revolving in his mind the possibilities of
-fetching the Cape Verde Islands, as they were now
-on the edge of the Doldrums, those neutral latitudes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</span>
-between the trade winds that are such a sore trial to
-the patience of sailing-ship masters. Only a gentle
-zephyr was stirring, like the last breath of the departing
-N.E. trade winds, and it was rather a serious
-question to decide whether to struggle eastward to
-Brava, or keep on southward, doing all the repairs
-possible until reaching Rio de Janeiro. One thing only
-was needed to turn the scale&mdash;the personal touch.
-And it availed. He knew the place so well; although
-he had not been born there, much of his youth had
-been spent there, and he was sure not only of getting
-a few fresh hands who would be devoted to himself,
-but there would not be the faintest opportunity given
-for any one of his remaining crew to desert. So he
-gave a muttered order to the helmsman, followed by
-a shout of ‘Square away the mainyard,’ as the old
-ship fell off the wind. With his usual skill and alertness
-he conned her as she slowly wore round on to
-the port tack, and to his grim satisfaction he found
-that she would head a little to the northward of east,
-and that the breeze was even then freshening a little.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the whole of the available canvas had
-been set, and the men were busy coiling up the gear.
-Again the skipper called Winslow to him, and in
-a quiet, passionless tone gave him certain orders
-concerning the repairing of damage that would keep
-all hands busy for some time to come. Then the
-carpenter and cooper were summoned, and each
-received a few vitriolic remarks concerning their
-so-called laziness, coupled with a warning that before
-long they would have paid very dearly for the advantage
-they had taken of his helplessness. Moreover,
-he told them that, being now quite well again, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</span> was
-fully prepared to keep them at their work, if he had
-to do it at the mouth of a revolver. They stood
-perfectly silent and submissive, neither attempting
-the faintest justification of himself, and when dismissed
-with the contemptuous remark, ‘Naow git t’ hell eout
-er this, an’ do some work,’ they turned and slunk
-away like beaten curs. Both were Americans of the
-best type, both were splendid workmen of middle age,
-with whose way of performing their duties it would
-seem utterly impossible to find any fault, and yet
-both endured such utterly undeserved and blistering
-contumely as this without a word, and, what is more,
-without a thought of retaliation. So well had they
-been trained in whaleship ways.</p>
-
-<p>Thus having resumed the reins of power in
-altogether vigorous fashion, and reasserted his ability
-to make himself feared as well as obeyed fore and
-aft, the skipper went below, growling as he passed the
-helmsman, ‘Naow jes’ keep her full an’ bye, an’ ef I
-hear anythin’ shakin’, by&mdash;&mdash; I’ll shake <i>yew</i>, till y’
-don’ know whether yew’re dead ’r alive.’ The man
-replied cheerfully in the stereotyped phrase, ‘Aye,
-aye, sir,’ relieved beyond measure to find that he
-should be free of the presence of his enemy for a little
-while, at any rate.</p>
-
-<p>The skipper’s first action on getting below was to
-send for the steward by ringing his bell, and on the
-darkey’s immediate appearance to order some food
-and coffee to be prepared for himself. Of his wife
-he took not the slightest heed. Then going to his
-medicine-chest he took out the little book of simple
-instructions in surgery and medicine that is always
-part of the furniture of a ship’s medicine-chest, <span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</span>and,
-seating himself at the cabin table, with one hand
-fiercely tugging at his black beard, he began to study
-the chapter on setting broken limbs. A sardonic
-smile twitched upwards the corners of his mouth as
-he imagined how the poor mate would suffer. There
-was just a glint of pleasure in the thought lighting
-the otherwise beclouded horizon of his mind. When
-he had settled to his own satisfaction the course of
-his operations upon his mate (fancy learning to set a
-broken arm and leg in an hour!), he sulkily called to
-his wife, ‘Here, you, git me some bandages ready,
-an’ be quick abaout it.’ She, watching for his lightest
-word, came on the instant, and quietly asked how long
-and how wide he wanted them. Even this essential
-question seemed to afford him an opportunity of
-venting more of his spleen upon her, but wearying of
-that soon (indeed, he was as yet far from strong), he
-supplied the information, and went on with his
-studies. Then lying down upon the transom locker
-he composed himself to sleep, well satisfied with his
-watches work.</p>
-
-<p>On deck the ship hummed like a hive. Even the
-men who had been so badly bruised that the most
-elementary exercise of humanity would have allowed
-them to rest, dragged themselves wearily up out of
-the forecastle, and did whatever they could do
-towards the general refitment which was going on.
-Some were hoisting on deck coils of ‘tow-line,’ the
-beautiful rope which is fastened to the harpoons;
-others were taking the superfluous turns out of it, and
-stretching it by passing it through a block as high as
-the topgallant crosstrees, and coiling it again and
-again the reverse way of the lay. Others, again, <span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</span>were
-fitting harpoons to poles, and securing to them their
-bridles of tow-line; others were doing the same to
-lances, or putting keen edges on new weapons.
-Several, under the carpenter’s orders, were working
-away at the repairing of the one boat which had been
-picked up, sawing timbers and planks, and carefully
-unriveting broken knees from splintered skin. Two
-men were assisting the cooper to make new line-tubs.
-And amidst it all Mr. Winslow moved alert, with
-eyes like a cat’s, unhindered by the encompassing
-darkness, but for all that earnestly desirous of the
-day.</p>
-
-<p>Unto these toilers at last came the blessing of
-light, bringing with it a certain satisfaction, as it
-always does, to those who have been working in the
-dark, but also sadly associated with the idea that the
-skipper would soon be on deck among them. Every
-now and then one of them would glance furtively aft
-in search of his dreaded appearance, and, relieved
-temporarily by the assurance that he was not yet
-among them, would renew energetically his efforts
-to accomplish his task. Suddenly all hands were
-startled by his voice, all its old vigour having
-returned, shouting, ‘Mr. Winslow.’ The second
-mate immediately hurried aft, and saying inquiringly,
-‘Yes, sir,’ awaited his orders. ‘Clear away the carpenter’s
-bench, an’ bring it aft here!’ snarled the
-Captain. ‘Pedro, Bibra, come here.’ The carpenter’s
-bench having been placed on the fore side of the
-skylight, athwart the deck, the steward made his
-appearance, carrying the bandages and certain
-bottles, also some pieces of rough but thin boards,
-just portions of canned meat cases with the nails<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</span>
-drawn, split to necessary narrowness, and cut in
-proper lengths. At an order from the Captain, the
-two Portuguese harpooners lifted the still insensible
-body of the mate on to the bench, and began to
-bare his broken limbs, a most difficult task, owing
-to their having become glued to the clothing with
-dried blood.</p>
-
-<p>This operation roused him at once from his stupor,
-and with groans that shook his whole frame his glazed
-eyes opened. He muttered feebly, ‘For God’s sake
-go easy: ain’t I sufferin’ enough?’ But a glance at
-the skipper showed these rough attendants that, even
-had they been inclined to yield to the mate’s prayer,
-and ‘go easy,’ they dare not, so, disregarding his
-agony, they persevered, and after dragging and
-slitting and soaking his clothes, succeeded at last
-in exposing the leg and arm, each with fragments of
-bone protruding through the torn and swollen flesh.
-By the time this had been done the mate could only
-feebly gasp, ‘Water! water!’ and the steward, with
-a fearful glance at the skipper for permission, put a
-pannikin full to his cracked lips. Then with a corner
-of the towel he carried he was about to wipe the
-sweat from the mate’s drawn face, but an execration
-from the skipper caused him to scuttle back into his
-place like a frightened rabbit.</p>
-
-<p>The operation began, and really it is questionable
-whether the utter callousness and brutality of the
-operator were not more merciful to the sufferer than
-the tender, half-afraid manipulations of a kindhearted
-and unskilful man would have been. For in
-any case much pain had to be endured, and, as I
-have before noted, the human body can only feel a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</span>
-certain amount. When that has been borne, whatever
-you may have to endure does not matter in the
-least as far as your consciousness of it goes. It is a
-comforting thought when reading of the infliction of
-ancient tortures. So now, before the mangled arm
-had been straightened, the fragments of bone drawn
-within the swollen muscles, the mate had again
-lapsed into insensibility. The attendants glanced
-fearfully at the white, set face, and from it to the
-scowling visage of the skipper, but dared not utter
-their fears that the patient was dead. The operator
-worked on with a skill amazing to see in one who had
-never performed such an operation before, nor had
-ever seen such a thing done. Without again referring
-to his book, without a moment’s hesitation, he
-placed the splints, passed the bandages, saturated
-them with carbolic lotion, and then, having satisfied
-himself that, in spite of the ghastly appearance of
-the mate’s side, it was only an extensive superficial
-laceration&mdash;there were no ribs broken&mdash;he ordered the
-two harpooners to carry the patient to a mattress
-placed for his reception on the after corner of the
-deck behind the tiller, and leave him there. The
-steward was given orders to keep an eye on him, and
-feed him occasionally with a little soup and bread,
-and again the skipper retired below.</p>
-
-<p>By this time the meal-hour had arrived&mdash;eight
-bells&mdash;and a brief respite from their labours was
-enjoyed by all hands. The day was fair and bright,
-the wind was steady at about north, and the old ship
-was making good progress. So Mr. Winslow sent
-everybody but the helmsman to breakfast, and himself
-came aft and sat beside his brother officer, full<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</span>
-of pity, but oppressed by his own utter inability to
-do anything for him. But he had the satisfaction of
-noting how well the work of repairing the broken
-limbs had been done, and, as he was thinking how
-even the worst of men sometimes compel our admiration,
-he was intensely gratified to see Mr. Court open
-his eyes and look wearily round. ‘Wall, haow d’ ye
-feel abaout it naow, sir?’ said he earnestly. The
-mate stifled a groan, and at last managed to reply,
-‘Winslow, I’d rather ten thousan’ times ’a’ died than
-ben thro’ wut I’ve suffered this laest twenty-four
-hours. But I don’t feel’s much pain’s I did, an’ if
-only I k’n git a little food ’at I k’n eat I think I sh’ll
-do. Ole man’s awful mad, ain’t he?’ Bending his
-head close down, Winslow gave the mate a hurried
-outline of the proceedings since the skipper’s return
-to command, and wound up by saying, ‘He ain’t said
-nawthin’ abaout it, but I believe he’s makin’ fur Cape
-Verdes. We’re carryin’ all sail to th’ eastward.’
-‘Thank God fur that,’ murmured the mate; ‘thar’ll
-be some chance ov seem’ a doctor if I need one
-by then. Say, Winslow, ef ye k’n git one o’ th’
-fellows t’ give an eye to me now an’ then, I’ll be
-glad.’</p>
-
-<p>For all answer Winslow patted his cheek, and in
-response to the breakfast bell departed below. He
-and the mate, while respecting each other, had not
-been chums in any sense of the word, but the recent
-happenings had drawn them very close, this feeling
-especially affecting Winslow. And he began to feel
-as if he could do anything, endure anything on the
-mate’s behalf while he was so helpless&mdash;yes, even
-dare the risk of being shot by the skipper, if he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</span>
-should go too far in his calculated brutality.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">THE CAPTAIN GOES ASHORE</p>
-
-<p>Favoured by exquisite weather, and trade-winds
-hanging well to the northward, the <i>Grampus</i> ploughed
-steadily along towards her objective, no one but the
-skipper knowing that it was Brava. After the first
-three days of almost frantic labour the skipper’s experienced
-eye noted how stale the men had become;
-want of rest and poor food had reduced them so that
-threats and blows no longer goaded them; they
-were fast approaching that stage when nothing
-matters, and suffering least of all, because it had
-become a normal condition. So Captain Da Silva,
-being anything but a fool, ‘let up’ on them as he
-termed it, not because he considered their punishment
-at all adequate to the crime they had committed
-of being beaten in spite of having done their
-best, but because he needed their services in the
-future. He restored their regular watches, and
-although the amount of quite unnecessary work still
-carried on would have caused a mutiny in any British
-merchant ship, this crew chuckled to think what a
-good time they were now having. And, besides,
-their lives were not so devoid of interest, for there
-could be no doubt that they were bound to some
-anchorage&mdash;it did not matter much where&mdash;they
-would see the land again and perhaps taste vegetables.</p>
-
-<p>And the sorely wounded mate, despite the roughness
-of his treatment, the almost utter absence of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</span>
-nursing, steadily improved. His iron constitution, a
-certain ox-like patience, and the absence of drugs
-combined with perfectly pure air&mdash;all these helped
-to make his recovery marvellously rapid. But he
-almost had a relapse ten days after the accident.
-He had so far progressed as to be able to sit up
-upon an improvised little platform by the taffrail,
-and was watching the sea, when his dull eye suddenly
-brightened, his form stiffened, and lifting up his
-voice he raised the cry of ‘Blow!’ The skipper
-since the surgical operation had held no conversation
-with the injured man, except one or two of the
-briefest remarks passed each day, just what were
-absolutely necessary. But now he spun round on
-his heel, his black eyes flaming, and shouted, ‘Whar
-away, Mr. Court? Aloft there! wut ye doin’?
-Kain’t ye see ’t all?’ Springing up on the little
-hurricane deck peculiar to all whaleships, he at once
-caught sight of the whale, a big lone fellow, proceeding
-in leisurely fashion due south. Without
-apparently considering for one moment the fact that
-he had only two boats to use, he issued his orders,
-sharp and sudden like rifle-shots. Sail was shortened
-to the topsails, the vessel put upon the other tack;
-then, springing upon the starboard quarter, where
-the best boat hung, he shouted, ‘’Way boats!’ sweeping
-contemptuously away the third mate, who of
-course was standing by to take his place in his
-regular craft. A whirring of the sheaves followed,
-and down went the boat, striking the water fairly
-and being released at once with a smartness delightful
-to see. Then, grasping the dangling falls with
-one hand, the skipper turned to the mate, who lay<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</span>
-fretting himself into a fever at his inability to move,
-saying as coolly as if just setting off for a pleasure
-trip, ‘Guess yew k’n con th’ ship whar y’ air, Mr.
-Court, kain’t ye?’ ‘Sure, sir,’ murmured the mate,
-the prospect of being able to do something seeming
-delightful to him. No answer, but for a moment the
-skipper’s body was outlined against the sky as he
-launched himself downwards, struck the boat, seized
-the steer oar, and issued his orders. Away flew both
-boats as if the lives of their crews depended upon their
-utmost speed.</p>
-
-<p>Now, I do not wish to weary my readers with
-repeated accounts of whale-fights, and therefore I
-must omit all the circumstantial details of this one.
-But I do need to say that Captain Da Silva had
-apparently found exceeding compensation for his
-late tribulations in this opportune encounter, and he
-behaved as one possessed of a demon of destruction,
-to whom no mishap could possibly come. Yet he
-was by no means reckless. Every precaution that
-could be taken against disaster he took, but, on the
-other hand, he neglected no opportunity of rushing
-in whenever and wherever the slightest opening presented
-itself. Scorning bomb-lances, he used only
-the long primitive spear, and with fiendish howls he
-ordered the second mate to keep aloof in readiness
-to aid in case of accident. The whale, evidently an
-old hand at the game, tried every ruse known to
-whales, but in vain, for, rolling over towards the
-oncoming boat, and sinking his body in the middle
-in order to get a grip of the boat with his gaping
-jaws, he felt suddenly the diamond-shaped head of
-a lance gliding through the thick muscles of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</span>
-throat downward to his mighty heart. Six feet from
-that searching point the captain leaned his shoulder
-upon the lance-butt, lending all his great strength to
-the thrust. The boat passed to the other side of the
-body. ‘Pull ahead all!’ yelled the skipper, and out
-drew the steel, distorted to the likeness of a conventional
-lightning flash. ‘Pull all!’ again yelled the
-skipper, and in response the boat shot away from the
-vast writhing body, so fatally pierced that in three
-minutes, with a few gigantic convulsions, it lay still,
-dead.</p>
-
-<p>Again the voice of the skipper arose&mdash;no note of
-triumph in it, no suggestion of rest for his crew.
-‘Hull in thet line, lively naow. Hyar yew,’ to the
-after oarsman, ’histe thet wheft’ (small blue signal
-flag) ‘’n’ wave fur th’ secon’ mate t’ come up.’ So
-they hauled up alongside of the whale and cut the
-line from the harpoon, by which time Mr. Winslow,
-who had kept close to the fight all the time, was also
-alongside. ‘Naow,’ shouted the skipper to him, ‘git
-thet fluke-rope passed ’s if ye knew haow, an’ be
-ready with yer eend to pass aboard when I come.
-Pull two, starn three, so, all together,’ and away shot
-the boat towards the ship, which was coming down
-towards them at a fine rate. So fast, indeed, did the
-two craft draw together, that barely ten minutes
-had elapsed from the time the skipper’s boat left the
-whale until he was again on board and, hoisting his
-boat, was issuing his orders as if he were an engineer
-handling the cranks, levers, and throttle-valves of his
-engines. Now he was in his element&mdash;now he felt
-the primal delight of power&mdash;to rule his fellows and
-bend to his moulding will. The whale was not large<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</span>
-as regards bulk, but full of fatness&mdash;so full, indeed,
-that the utmost care must needs be exercised lest the
-hoisting gear should tear out of the almost rotten
-blubber. The operations were conducted in peerless
-fashion, the skipper being apparently the mind of all
-hands&mdash;his late disablement appeared to have given
-him an impetus that none of his previous experiences
-had supplied. So great, indeed, was he that muttering
-passed from man to man after this fashion: ‘Oh, but
-he’s a horse, ain’t he?’ ‘Don’t he do it?’ ‘What a
-man he is!’ &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>The work of securing the spoil was carried on
-with such vigour, such exquisite skill, and due
-apportionment of labour, that before the day was
-closed all the worst of the duty was done, and the
-skipper strode proudly the scanty limits of his quarter-deck
-with the mien of a man who could not possibly
-learn from any a better way of doing his work. And,
-as I have already noted, he had also earned the
-intense admiration of all hands, although each one of
-those men was aching from head to heel with the
-extraordinary strain put upon him.</p>
-
-<p>And Priscilla? Well, she had not suffered. She
-had learnt to wait in patience the outcome of all
-things&mdash;not to be distressed by strange noises as of
-strife, or no less strange interludes of silence, when it
-seemed as if everyone but herself was dead. Even
-when upon the deep quiet (as of the grave) which
-enwrapped her there impinged a great noise, she did
-not shrink or shudder: she just looked up and was
-comforted. That she should have been thus becalmed,
-as it were, in the midst of tempests, that to her wilful,
-wayward heart should have come so bountiful a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</span>
-measure of the Divine patience, will naturally seem
-incredible to many&mdash;quite as great a miracle as the
-raising of the widow’s son. But, thank God! there
-are also many of us who know that such miracles are
-daily wrought by the direct interposition of God.
-Sometimes man is honoured by being the instrument
-in such cases, but more often they are the outcome
-of an answer given by the trembling, tired soul out
-into the darkness whence comes the comforting, still
-small voice.</p>
-
-<p>When at last the skipper came down he wore all
-the self-conferred honours of a successful tyrant. He
-had vindicated his position as the one man who could
-do things without making mistakes, who could be
-depended upon to come upon the scene when disaster
-seemed imminent, and, taking the helm of affairs,
-conduct them triumphantly to victory. And the
-knowledge was almost too much for him. He strode
-into his state-room and flung his orders at Priscilla
-much as if she had been a negro slave&mdash;with little
-distinction between her and the steward. And she,
-with calmest demeanour, obeyed him to the foot of the
-letter. She gave him no cause of complaint, and to
-his intense surprise he found himself looking furtively
-at her and wondering how it was she did not cry or
-protest or do something, anything except act like one
-whom nothing could make unhappy or disobedient. At
-last he could no longer endure the spur of his curiosity,
-and he said, in strangely subdued tones (the steward
-having gone on deck), ‘Wut’s th’ matter with ye,
-Pris? Ain’t feelin’ sick, air ye? Yer lookin’ kinder
-curis, y’ know.’ She turned her calm face to him and
-said, ‘No, Ramon; I’m feeling very well, thank you.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</span>
-Is there anything more I can do for you?’ He did
-not answer. For his keen Latin wits had come up
-against something that was quite outside of his experience.
-Something of the baffled rage of the early
-persecutors possessed him as he realised that his
-wife had passed into a region from which he was
-quite shut out. So he hurled a savage curse, a farrago
-of Portuguese blasphemy, at her, which sounded like
-the rattling of manacles, and passed on deck again.</p>
-
-<p>Remember, if you would blame Priscilla for not
-trying to win this bad man, that she knew him, knew
-that any language she might use would be utterly
-unintelligible to him, knew that his long and successful
-career of cruelty had hardened in him all the
-baser attributes, and she felt it would be hopeless to
-try. She felt, too, that she would only be bringing
-more suffering down upon herself, and was not at all
-confident as to the limit of her endurance. She was
-wrong, of course: she had not a sufficiently ample
-idea of the power of God to save. But we dare not
-blame her: many of us in her position would have
-gone mad. And she did pray for him, but without
-the faintest belief that her prayer would be answered.
-She felt, as Mr. Moody once expressed it, as if when
-she prayed for that man the heavens above her were
-as brass, that prayers on his behalf could not ascend.</p>
-
-<p>So the <i>Grampus</i> sped onward towards Brava
-under the most favourable conditions possible. The
-work of securing the spoil of the whale was carried
-through in marvellous fashion; the wind held true to
-the north, even sometimes a point to the westward of
-north, and freshened enough to give the old ship a
-speed, rap-full, of five knots an hour. Whether it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</span>
-was any anticipation of meeting old acquaintances (a
-man like that never has friends) or not, the skipper,
-too, was certainly less severe than usual in his treatment
-of his men. He even condescended to inquire
-occasionally after the health of his mate, who was
-doing wonderfully well in the pure air and utter lack
-of all medicine, aided by his splendid constitution.
-So well, indeed, did the old ship progress, that by the
-time she had been restored to her ordinary condition
-of spotless cleanliness, the beautiful outlines of the
-islands were sighted, and all hands, with quickened
-pulse-beats, began to look forward to a little change
-in the ordered monotony of their lives. But great
-was their disappointment when they found that,
-instead of going as closely in as was safe, the Captain
-anchored his ship in thirty fathoms of water&mdash;far out
-to sea. And without the loss of an hour he ordered
-his boat to be manned (by Portuguese only), and,
-dressed like a bridegroom, mounted the rail preparatory
-to descending. The second mate stood
-near; the mate listened from the corner aft, where he
-sat helpless, with painful earnestness for any word
-the skipper might drop of his intentions.</p>
-
-<p>‘See here, Mr. Winslow,’ drawled the skipper,
-‘ye’ll keep the men at work, watch on watch, same’s
-at sea. Yew’ll keep a bright look-out for me comin’
-back, as I shall be ’fore long, anyway. An’ if anythin’
-happens ’at ye want me sudden, set the ensign
-at the peak.’ And without another word he was
-gone, and his boat’s crew, with the splendid stroke of
-the trained American whaleman, was making the
-pretty craft fly towards the shore, its captain standing
-erect in the stern, handling his steer-oar, like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</span> a figure
-of stone. The second mate watched him out of
-definition range, then, descending from the rail with
-a sigh, he sought the mate, saying, ‘Well, Mr. Court,
-whut ye think of him? Ain’t he a daisy? I really
-dunno haow it es, but th’ wuss he is th’ more I admire
-at him, until his back’s turned, ’n’ then I want t’ kill
-him. An’,’ dropping his voice, ‘d’ jever before in a
-’Merican ship see a lady treated like this one? I
-have stood, I k’n stand, a good deal frum him, but if
-ever he raises his hand t’ thet poor broken-hearted
-woman when I’m erroun’ I’m goin’t’ kill him right in
-his tracks&mdash;naow, yew hear me!’ ‘Oh, shet yer
-head!’ fretfully replied the mate. ‘I know all abaout
-thet; wut’s th’ use er chawin’ it over? What I wunt
-t’ know is, wut sort of a gang of dagoes is he goin’ t’
-bring with him. All his own relations, I suppose, ’n’
-thar’ll be the usual amount er spyin’ an’ lyin’ an’
-devilishness generally. If only I had this leg ’n’ arm
-o’ mine usable! I ben thinkin’ over a good many
-things sense I ben a-laying here, I tell ye, but I got
-one idea solid, ’n’ that is thet, live er die, I’m a-goin’
-t’ stand up t’ him an’ whoever he brings aboard here,
-an’ hev’ my rights as mate. You, too, I know,
-Winslow; but only as man to man; no hatchin’
-anything’ or conspirin’. We’ll leave that to them.
-But I do wish we could help the poor woman.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Thank you, friends,’ said Priscilla, who had
-glided on deck and overheard the last portion of the
-mate’s remarks. ‘It’s very good of you to think
-about me, but I shall be grateful if you will behave
-as if I were not on board. I cannot, must not, be
-a source of trouble, and, moreover, the Captain is my
-husband. Now don’t, please don’t, think of helping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</span>
-me, as you call it, any more. I’ve got help of the
-best kind always available. I didn’t know I had
-until a short time ago. I’d forgotten God, as it seems
-to me God <i>is</i> forgotten at sea. But when I was
-ready to go mad with what I thought was my
-undeserved trouble, He came to my rescue, and now
-I feel I can bear anything. And, anyhow, what is
-my trouble compared with yours? Ah, Mr. Court,
-I have felt so much for you in your awful pain, and
-not to be able to help you at all. Are you in pain
-now?’ ‘Oh, no, ma’am, thank you kindly,’ murmured
-the mate; ‘that’s all over and done with. Anyhow,
-it was never quite as bad as you might think. Sounds
-a good deal worse than it is. I’m hurt more at havin’
-to lie here doin’ nothin’ than by any pain I’ve got.’
-‘Well, I’m glad to hear you say so. Now I must go
-down. I feel that I’m doing wrong sitting up here
-talking to you, as I should certainly not be doing if
-my husband were here.’ And she departed below,
-leaving the two mates, with a totally new set of
-sensations, staring at each other dumbly.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately, mischief had been done. One of
-the Portuguese sailors had been ostensibly occupied
-in renewing the seizings on the mizen shrouds, but
-for the last ten minutes he had devoted all his
-faculties to listening. Vainly; he did not know
-enough of the language to take in the conversation,
-but he knew that the Captain’s wife had been talking
-for a long time to the two mates. And he determined
-that the knowledge should not be wasted.
-The two officers, so deeply interested were they, did
-not notice this man, and when presently the second
-mate almost guiltily resumed his oversight of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</span>
-men and their work he did not even see Lazzaro
-furtively glancing at him from the mizen rigging.
-No more was said by either of the mates or Mrs. Da
-Silva on the subject, and the work of the ship went
-on throughout the day with something of its old
-machine-like regularity. Night fell, and still no sign
-of the skipper. With deepening distrust and anxiety
-the officer saw the watches set, attending to every
-detail of his duties with the utmost fidelity, and
-reporting at eight o’clock all his doings to the mate.
-Mr. Court sent a respectful message to Priscilla on
-hearing this, acquainting her with the condition of
-affairs and assuring her that she had no cause for
-alarm. She would receive instant attention to her
-lightest wish, and probably the Captain would be
-aboard before morning. And so, quietly enough to
-all outward seeming, but with much anxiety among
-the afterguard, the night passed away.</p>
-
-<p>Ashore the Captain was having what sailors
-term a mighty good time. Congenial spirits awaited
-him of both sexes, long known to him, and, flinging
-aside all the restraints he felt he had been bound by
-during the last year, he plunged into the wildest
-excesses. He was one of those men to whom such
-an outburst, even at very long intervals, seems a
-necessity of life&mdash;one that when the opportunity for
-obtaining it arrives can by no effort of will be refrained
-from, although it is hard to suppose that such an
-effort is ever made or attempted. And yet he could
-be, as far as abstention from vulgar vice was concerned,
-a very eremite for a year at a time, otherwise
-he would never have reached his present position; for
-the American shipowner&mdash;or, indeed, employer of any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</span>
-kind&mdash;is entirely intolerant of drunkenness or debauchery
-among his servants, and will have none of it
-if by any means he can prevent it. Now, however, his
-boat’s crew disposed of&mdash;allowed to run a little riot
-of their own among their cronies, and merely ordered
-to turn up in the morning at eight o’clock, bringing
-six recruits with them, he abandoned himself to the
-fierce delights of the Latin seaman when let loose.</p>
-
-<p>But in spite of the long night’s excesses there was
-little alteration in his appearance or manner when he
-met his men in the morning, noting with high approval
-that they had succeeded in obtaining the new hands
-he wanted: six huge piratical-looking ruffians, three of
-whom were of that peculiar type of Portuguese which
-can only be found in the islands of the North-West
-Atlantic&mdash;men, that is, with the high-bred facial characteristics
-of the Portuguese allied to a perfect blackness
-of skin. Some of these men are of great size, and
-almost all of them know something about sperm-whaling,
-since all of these islands were for hundreds
-of years most prolific haunts of the cachalot. Therefore
-they have always been welcomed as recruits for
-whaleships, their undoubted courage and great
-powers of endurance adding to their desirability. But
-to Captain Da Silva they represented more than these
-advantages. They were his own countrymen, and
-might be relied upon to abet him in any scheme of
-devilry he might devise, in which he would certainly
-lack the support of his American officers. And a
-dim idea of vengeance upon those officers was
-certainly taking shape within his mind, which, once
-definitely arranged, he would spare no pains to carry
-out nor allow any peevish scruples to prevent him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</span>
-doing so.</p>
-
-<p>With a few quiet words to the newcomers about
-pay, position, &amp;c., also the time of meeting to make
-the engagement&mdash;a very simple matter in those ships&mdash;he
-gave them some money, and went his way to
-purchase three new whaleboats. In this he was also
-fortunate, for a local bay whaling company had just
-dissolved partnership, and all their gear was on sale.
-He succeeded in purchasing from the representative
-of the late company four boats and a large quantity of
-gear for less than half their ordinary value, which
-pleased him so much that he determined to stay
-another night ashore and continue his enjoyment.
-But first he made arrangements for his new purchases
-to be taken off to the ship. The only message he
-condescended to send was that the boat should return
-for him the next day at 10 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> And not an ounce
-of fresh meat or fruit or vegetables went off. These
-articles were cheap enough in all conscience, but
-Captain Da Silva never pampered his crew, especially
-this early in a long voyage, and, besides, there was
-punishment to be carried out. And no form of punishment
-on board ship as applied to a whole crew is more
-effective than to be anchored near a fruitful shore after
-months of bad salt food and be denied a taste of the
-delicious things they can almost see growing. Under
-ordinary conditions such a deprivation would be
-next to impossible, as there are always people along
-shore anxious to earn a little by catering for the needs
-of a ship’s company, except in the most savage lands.
-And if there be no money on board, barter can
-always be resorted to: quite a quantity of sweet
-potatoes, oranges, or bananas can be obtained for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</span>
-a shirt. The Captain, however, had arranged all
-that; according to his wishes not a boat had been
-near his ship. And, besides, she was a long way
-out.</p>
-
-<p>When the officers saw the gear and boats, and
-received the message, they looked at each other
-significantly, but said no word. Mr. Court, now able
-to hobble about, took charge of operations, and in
-quite a short time the newly acquired boats had been
-placed in position, had each received a coat of white
-paint, that being the colour of the <i>Grampus’s</i> boats,
-their gear fitted to them, and everything made ready
-for their lowering to a whale. They came alongside
-at midday, and by nightfall were ready for use.
-During all this activity Priscilla had been quite forgotten.
-The officers felt doubtful how she would
-receive any information about her husband which, in
-answer to questions, they might have felt tempted to
-supply, so they did not mention the matter. Only
-the genial darkey steward, in the perfectly respectful
-yet familiar manner common to negro servants in
-America, chatted away to his mistress, and kept her
-from being too lonely or dwelling too much upon
-the unknown reasons which had induced her husband
-to leave her on board the ship for two days without
-giving her any information at all of his doings. Had
-she known it, she might have felt surprised that he
-had never so much as given her a thought. But she
-would hardly have been grieved at anything he did
-now to her, having fortified her mind against the worst
-that could befall.</p>
-
-<p>Punctually at the time appointed the boat arrived<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</span>
-at the place ordered by the Captain, who almost
-immediately appeared, and gave orders for the
-transhipment to the boat of a number of cases. Altogether
-they made a heavy cargo for such a frail boat;
-but whalers are most expert at this business, and
-effect transportation by means of these boats that
-seems impossible to any ordinary sailormen. This
-done they shoved off, Captain Da Silva standing
-erect in the stern, his eyes fixed upon his ship, and
-noting detail after detail as they became visible. A
-frown, never entirely absent from his handsome face,
-deepened upon it as he failed to see any cause for
-complaint. She looked beautifully trim; not a rope
-yarn out of its place, the weather-beaten patches on
-her side carefully touched up, the boats all bright
-with new paint, the three mastheads manned, and,
-as he came alongside, the mate at the gangway to
-receive him, and the crew all standing by the boat’s
-falls ready to hoist her up the moment he should step
-on board.</p>
-
-<p>As he put his foot on the rail, Mr. Court said,
-‘Good morning, sir.’ But instead of replying, the
-Captain said, ‘Whyn’t ye git under weigh?’ And
-without pausing for an answer shouted: ‘Man th’
-windlass.’ The cry was re-echoed all over the ship,
-and almost immediately nothing could be heard for
-the clatter of the pawls as the big windlass barrel
-revolved at top speed. ‘Down frum aloft there an’
-loose sail, courses, taups’les, an’ t’gallantsails,’ again
-shouted the Captain. ‘Lively naow; think yer goin’
-t’ sit up thar an’ sleep while th’ ship’s gittin’ under
-weigh?’ Oh, he was a hustler, was Captain Da Silva.
-In ten minutes from the time he came on board the
-boat’s cargo was discharged, she was hoisted, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</span>
-<i>Grampus</i> was under weigh, and pointing south for the
-resumption of the long and weary voyage. Then,
-and not till then, did the skipper condescend to say
-anything to his chief officer. He called him, and
-with a coldly sarcastic curl of his lip as he saw him
-hobbling aft on improvised crutches, he said, ‘Anythin’
-t’ report?’ ‘No, sir,’ replied Mr. Court, ‘’cept
-thet I’ve returned t’ duty.’ ‘No need t’ report <i>thet</i>,
-anyhaow,’ growled the skipper; ‘I k’n use my eyes.
-But yew don’t look pretty, ’n thet’s a fact. Mout’s
-well hide yerself a bit longer, moutn’t ye? Hain’t
-gut tired doin’ nawthin’, I’m sure.’ ‘See here, Captain
-Da Silva,’ hissed the mate, ‘you’ve gut th’ whip
-hand now, I’ll own, but if ever I git on equal terms
-with ye, all this’ll hev t’ be settled fur.’ ‘Go, lie
-daown, dog,’ muttered the Captain. ‘I’ll attend t’ you
-an’ all th’ rest right along ’n’ git all th’ sleep I need
-too.’ And the <i>Grampus</i> began to rise and fall gently
-to the incoming swell as the Captain went below.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">AMONG RIGHT WHALES</p>
-
-<p>We left our hero Rube suffering in body but triumphant
-in soul, and also in perfect ignorance of the astounding
-change his behaviour was bringing about in all hands. I
-have always maintained that a Christian ship presents
-as near an approach to what most of us agree Heaven
-must be like as we can make on this side of the gate
-thereof. For look at the position! The grosser
-forms of temptation are entirely absent, yet there is
-none of the selfish side of monasticism present. Men
-talk and laugh and work with their fellows amid the
-most glorious of all earthly surroundings&mdash;the pure,
-wide, bright ocean. There is no monotony, since every
-day brings diversified duties, and in hours of rest not
-needed for sleep there is an ever-changing panorama
-of glory present to the newly awakened eyes, drawing
-ever-deepening thankfulness from the regenerated
-heart. The thousand-and-one miseries and pettinesses
-that distract men ashore are absent. From the little
-world evil has departed&mdash;almost the knowledge of it,
-since there is no daily paper recording the never-ending
-succession of crimes.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, it is an ideal state of existence, a sort of
-Happy Valley in the midst of the ocean, whence the
-trail of the serpent has been removed, and where the
-community bask, unshadowed by sin, in the sunshine
-of God. Of course, it will be cynically remarked that
-this is a picture of perfection, unattainable, impossible.
-Well, it is nearly, but not quite. I have experienced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</span>
-something very near it, and I beg to submit that it
-was so idyllic that it could not be made a subject for
-cynical sarcasm, even by the editor of the <i>Freethinker</i>,
-if he only saw it in operation. It might be called
-right fruit of wrong belief; but I do not love paradoxes.
-I prefer to believe that men do not gather
-grapes of thorns or figs of thistles.</p>
-
-<p>But I am doing an injustice to Reuben and his
-shipmates by interpolating my own meditations in
-their story. When the work of realising the spoil of
-their first whale had been finished, all hands felt that
-they had now served their apprenticeship&mdash;were now
-fully equipped for their work on board, whatever
-it might be. And in their watches below the men
-found a wondrous fund of conversational matter in
-the happenings of the past few days. But whenever
-they approached the subject of Rube’s rescue of
-MacManus there was a perceptible lowering of the
-voice, an air of solemnity upon everybody, for they all
-felt that here was a man who, given opportunity,
-would have dived into hell itself if by so doing he
-might haply rescue a comrade. And that a comrade
-by no means specially dear to him, but just one of
-the many. The incident brought them a truer insight
-into the character of Christ than millions of sermons
-could have done. And in saying this I in no wise
-undervalue sermons. ‘It hath pleased God through
-the foolishness of preaching to save them that
-believe.’ But the living example of faith’s outcome,
-a far-off and feeble imitation of Christ, carries us beyond
-the reach of argument, makes the most sceptical
-silent. Against it the waves of criticism beat in vain.
-Logic, with all its perverseness; the scornful finger-pointing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</span>
-at the unfaithful professors; the cavilling of
-the sticklers for formulated creeds&mdash;all, all are
-silenced or stopped; and the splendour of Christ
-manifest in the flesh again, though it be but in the
-flesh of one of His humblest servants, overwhelms us.</p>
-
-<p>But it must be confessed that Captain Hampden,
-even in the midst of his new-found peace of soul, had
-occasional fits of despondency when he realised how
-little progress the ship was making towards a prosperous
-voyage. Over six months had now elapsed and
-only one sperm-whale had been seen. Hope buoyed
-him, of course, but it was often deferred, and, consequently,
-though he maintained a cheery demeanour
-towards his officers his heart was becoming very sick.
-Going below into his lonely little cabin he would
-stand as if in deep thought, gazing into vacancy and
-wondering in some indefinite way how it was that he
-was so unfortunate this voyage. For he had the reputation
-of being a ‘lucky’ skipper who never stayed out
-all his legal time, and on several occasions so great
-had been his success that he had found no need to
-go out of the Atlantic Ocean. Twice, indeed, he had
-spent gloriously successful seasons on ‘Coffin’s
-Ground,’ just a little south and west of the English
-Channel, finding there sperm-whale, so numerous and
-fat that he was inclined to wonder why it should ever
-be necessary to go farther afield. I could not help
-thinking of him last year, when, on my way to the
-Mediterranean in one of the crack P. and O. liners,
-I heard the veteran captain tell a lady at dinner that
-there were hardly any whales now&mdash;they had been almost
-exterminated. I ventured to question his dictum,
-and we had rather an interesting discussion. But next<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</span>
-morning he and I met on deck a little after daybreak,
-to find the ship gliding along at her usual seventeen
-knots through the midst of a school of sperm-whales of
-the largest size, extending to the horizon on both
-sides, and taking us an hour to get away from them.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing of that kind, however, came in the way
-of the <i>Xiphias</i>. Day after day passed, lengthening
-into weeks, during which from the lofty eminence of
-the crow’s-nest nothing could be seen but sea and
-sky, an occasional barnacle-encrusted piece of drift-timber,
-a school of dolphin or bonito, a few porpoises,
-flying fish innumerable, and now and then a fin-back
-whale. But with the exception of the skipper nobody
-seemed to worry or find the life monotonous. Work
-went on with clock-like regularity, but outside of the
-work the men’s lives appeared to be full of interest.
-Interminable yarns, often inconsequential, were exchanged,
-and hardly a detail of their lives remained
-unrevealed to each other. Reuben’s return to active
-service was hailed with such delight that he did not
-appear to understand what it meant. He could not
-realise that the service he had rendered to his shipmate
-so readily could have taken such heroic proportions
-in the eyes of the crew. If he could have known,
-that great deed was, after all, but an incident: it was
-the lovely life, the splendid man in him which appealed
-to all hands, as, indeed, it will ever do where
-men are gathered together. Many complaints of lack
-of appreciation are heard from men of all classes, but
-the truth appears to be that with few exceptions men
-and women are marvellously generous in their appreciation
-of one another’s good deeds. There is, of course,
-a bogus hero-worship, an undiscriminating appreciation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</span>
-of work that only makes for evil, and consequently
-had far better be left undone, but it is only a virtue
-carried to excess. Let men or women do ever so
-little good work to-day, and, if it becomes known,
-their reward is almost certain to transcend their merits
-by far.</p>
-
-<p>So Reuben, unconsciously as the sun shines or the
-birds sing, was made the means of sweetening the
-crew of the <i>Xiphias</i>, and keeping them sweet, and
-at the same time, as a consequence, was teaching them&mdash;teaching
-them how to teach themselves from the
-great book open around them lessons that would be
-the delight of their whole remaining lives. Meanwhile
-the Captain grew more and more irritable, moody,
-despondent. He still prayed, but listlessly, as if wondering
-what good it could do. And all this mental
-agony of his was just due to the lack of common-sense
-appreciation of the benefits conferred by the Gospel
-of Christ. What should we say of a parent, who,
-while ever ready to confer upon his children the best
-of advice, the best educational advantages possible,
-and who gave them promises of glorious prospects in
-the future, should yet keep them without the common
-necessaries of life, food and clothing&mdash;yes, not only keep
-them without, but hinder them from obtaining those
-things for themselves? Yet this is the idea which so
-many, the vast majority of orthodox Christians, have
-of the dear Father God. But the educational process,
-if of any value, is slow, and Captain Hampden was
-learning, unwillingly it is true, but still he <i>was</i> learning.
-At times, though, the content which seemed to possess
-all hands but himself was very trying to him. He
-naturally felt that his crew should in some measure<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</span>
-share his anxiety over the non-success of the voyage
-so far, and resentment at their apparently callous
-conduct often made him miserable. Their behaviour
-was irreproachable. There was no slackness shown
-in any duty, and he knew that as far as the look-out
-was concerned not a fish could leap by day within
-a radius of four or five miles without being instantly
-noted by one or more of the six pairs of keen eyes at
-the mastheads.</p>
-
-<p>But it was not until the old <i>Xiphias</i> had rolled
-her way eastward as far as Gough Island that payable
-whales were sighted again. Then when within about
-ten miles of that huge isolated crag rising solitary,
-awful, out of the vast waste of the Southern Ocean,
-a dubious cry of ‘Blo&mdash;o&mdash;o&mdash;w’ was heard from the
-fore crow’s-nest. It told plainly that the utterer was
-not at all sure whether what he was reporting was
-worth while troubling after. So many false alarms
-had been raised, rorquals, finbacks, grampuses had so
-often filled them with delusive hopes, that only the
-unmistakable bushy spout of a sperm-whale was
-looked for. Since, however, no chance, slight though
-it might be, was neglected, the warning was given,
-and was presently being repeated by all the other
-watchers. Captain Hampden rather listlessly
-mounted the rigging, his binoculars slung to his neck,
-and reaching the mainyard, focussed them upon the,
-as yet, far-off whales. One glance was enough. In
-a tremendous voice he roared his orders to come
-down from aloft, prepare to leave the ship, alter the
-course, &amp;c. He had discovered that a school of
-‘right’ whales was in sight: a species of cetacean,
-almost identical with the great Greenland whale,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</span> and
-because of the high value of the baleen, or whalebone
-found in the mouth, worth almost as much in those
-days as the sperm-whale in spite of the poor quality
-of ‘right’ whale oil&mdash;perhaps, when all the circumstances
-were taken into consideration, more, for even
-the Southern right whale, although certainly more
-elegant in figure and swifter in movement than his
-Northern congener, is a meek and gentle creature, in
-the chase of which an accident is almost unknown.</p>
-
-<p>There were about twenty individuals in the school,
-of average size&mdash;that is to say, each looking as if he
-or she might yield eighty or ninety barrels of oil
-and seven or eight hundredweight of bone. I mix
-up the genders, for, curiously enough, while the
-sperm-whale cow never attains to much more than
-one-fourth of the size of the adult cachalot, the
-mysticetus, or right whale has little or no disparity
-between the size of the sexes; what difference does
-occur is usually in favour of the female. With great
-glee the skipper ordered all five boats away, leaving
-the ship in charge of the four petty officers and two
-men only; and having told each boat-header to do
-his level best to get fast to a whale for himself, and
-not interfere with any other boat’s quarry, also to
-make the best possible time down to where the
-whales awaited them all unconscious of their
-proximity, the chase began. Oars and sails were both
-used with such good effect that although the breeze
-was not strong the boats fairly flew over the darkened
-surface of the sea. It was in the mid-morning&mdash;about
-10 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> and the sky was, as usual in those latitudes,
-on the edge of the roaring forties, overcast with a
-thick veil of grey clouds which shut out the sun as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</span>
-effectually as night. And when the sun goes the
-sea’s aspect is cold and cheerless even on the Line.
-Also, there rolled up from the west mighty knolls of
-water, the heaving of old ocean’s breast, which when
-they caught a boat, hurled her forwards as if she
-were flying, sometimes accurately balanced upon
-a gliding summit as if by the fingers of a juggling
-genie. Viewed from an independent standpoint,
-the enterprise of these seafarers would have looked
-like some forlorn hope whereof the prize was leave to
-live a little longer and the penalty death. But the
-men in those boats had no such thought. Their
-teeth clenched, their nostrils expanded, their eyes
-ablaze with excitement, they plied their oars, scorning
-fatigue, overcoming the ache in their bones by sheer
-will-power, and without a word or sign of encouragement
-save those which proceeded from their own
-fierce desire to do better than the fellows in the next
-boat. It was emulation unpaid, unfostered, raised to
-its highest power, and achieving far more than any
-hope of reward could have done.</p>
-
-<p>With a wild yell of delight, the mate’s boat
-dashed into the centre of the school, and his harpooner’s
-weapon flew into the body of the nearest
-monster like a lightning flash. The other boats,
-spreading themselves fan-wise, came on the scene
-almost immediately, and then all the wild delight of
-the chase, all the romantic interest of the scene was
-for a season in abeyance. It was too sordid. The
-clean sea became a slaughter-house; the soul-sickening
-smell of blood permeated the air. The exuding
-oil from the wounds made the sea quite smooth,
-although, of course, the swell rolled high as ever.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</span>
-The bewildered victims, unable to fight or flee, rolled
-helplessly upon the surface, exposing their vitals to
-the deadly thrust of the long lances, and only by an
-occasional flap of their mighty tails did they show
-any sign of resentment or desire to escape. Happily
-it was soon over. Within half an hour from the time
-of attack and without the expenditure of one hundred
-fathoms of line, five whales lay dead upon the solemn
-sea. No boat was injured, no damage of any kind
-had been done. And round about the victims and
-their slayers quietly circled the still-living monsters
-as if by some horrible fascination held to the spot.
-The skipper gave orders that none of these apparently
-mourning ones should be molested&mdash;not, be it noted,
-because of any tenderness for them, but because the
-average sailor, and especially the whaler, is averse to
-taking life wantonly. Where profit is concerned
-blood flows like water&mdash;slay, slay, slay, insatiable
-apparently of slaughter; but kill for killing’s sake as
-some gentlemen do in a pheasant battue&mdash;no: the
-rude whalemen leave such practices to their betters.</p>
-
-<p>The deadly work had been so well and swiftly
-done that, as the mate said figuratively, ‘a good-sized
-handkerchief would have covered ’em all.’
-Making allowance for pardonable exaggeration, the
-whole of the five certainly lay within half a square
-mile, and, therefore, two boats were judged sufficient
-to attend to the needful tail-boring, &amp;c., while the
-other three cut adrift and sped back to the fast
-approaching ship, all their crews in a state of wild
-delight at so successful an encounter, and feeling
-quite fresh, for really they had hardly got their second
-wind. Indeed, it was a busy day for them, although<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</span>
-rendered much easier than it would otherwise have
-been by the exceptionally favourable circumstances.
-Still, even then the work of getting alongside and
-securing by the passing of fluke-chains five gigantic
-bodies like those was bound to be a heavy one in any
-case. However, it was successfully accomplished by
-eight bells, noon, and with a satisfied sigh of relief
-every man made his way below to as good a dinner
-as the circumstances would admit of.</p>
-
-<p>A full hour was allowed the resting men for food
-and smoke, and then at the first cry of ‘Turn to!’
-they all scurried on deck as if eager to get to work
-again. But a surprise awaited them. Instead of the
-tedious and terribly hard work which they had seen
-before of cutting off and splitting lengthways the
-head of the sperm-whale, now the clatter of the pawls
-was unceasing. Once the upper jaw of the right
-whale, with its valuable fringe of baleen, is lifted out,
-the rest of the work of ‘flenching,’ or skinning the
-blubber off the body of the whale, is just a pleasant
-piece of recreation. And here let me say that, whatever
-may be the practice in bay-whaling when the
-big body is stranded, it is utterly ridiculous to
-suppose, as so many readers of fiction do suppose,
-that men with spikes in their boots get down upon
-the whale’s back and hew slabs of blubber off his
-body, which they fling on deck. Such a feat would
-be utterly impossible, besides being most wasteful of
-time as well as spoil. For the ship and the whale
-roll and tumble about to such an extent that standing
-upon that rolling mass alongside is inconceivable.
-No: the great ‘cutting-tackles’ come into play, and
-once having a wide riband of blubber started off <span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</span>the
-whale’s neck the blubber is unwound as it were by
-continual hoisting, cutting at the still attached side,
-and the rolling round of the body.</p>
-
-<p>The men all toiled as if fatigue were a word of no
-import, nor was a word spoken or needed to spur
-them on to greater efforts. They toiled until the
-deck, as well as the blubber-room, was packed from
-end to end with the mountainous masses of blubber
-and upper jaws with their wealth of bone. And as
-the last despoiled carcass was cut adrift the men
-raised a great shout of joy. It had been such a
-mighty task, so well and profitably performed, that
-their exultation was legitimate, and even praiseworthy.
-But the Captain, feeling the reaction
-from his great exertions, in a sense of almost overpowering
-lassitude, slowly dragged himself up on to
-the little deck aft to have a look round before going
-below for a meal and a short rest. And he saw a
-sight that drove the blood back to his heart, and left
-his extremities cold and numb. In the fury of
-labour no one had noticed the drift of the ship, nor
-indeed, the worsening of the weather. True, the
-sails had all, except the close-reefed main topsail and
-fore topmast staysail, been furled before beginning,
-so that the weather mattered little, but&mdash;the grim,
-towering mass of the island was close abeam to leeward.
-Like some vast cloud it loomed above them,
-while to windward, through the fast-gathering
-gloom of evening, came thundering on the rising,
-gleaming seas of the great Southern Ocean, precursors
-of the gale that would presently be here&mdash;nay,
-was already making its presence felt and heard.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</span></p>
-<p>For a few moments Captain Hampden stood and
-gazed irresolute. What could he do? With his
-deck so hampered by those vast greasy masses that
-movement fore and aft was well-nigh impossible,
-with night almost here, and crew worn out with
-the severe labour they had so cheerfully performed all
-day, what could he resolve upon? Like an inspiration
-came the thought, ‘Man’s extremity is God’s
-opportunity,’ and baring his head he said, ‘O God,
-save us, don’t let us perish like this. Let us escape,
-please, Father, from this awful danger.’ In a moment
-his relaxing muscles stiffened, he stood erect, and
-with a voice that reached every corner of the ship he
-shouted, ‘Lay aloft and loose taups’les an’t’gallants’les.
-Drop everything, men, and get sail on her.’ There
-was a momentary hush as the crew took in his words,
-and then cheerful cries of response came back to him
-as the weary fellows realised that they were being
-called upon for a supreme effort. Slipping, clutching,
-fighting their way over the greasy masses, they
-scrambled aloft, and soon the white gleams above
-told of the loosened canvas, while the waiters below
-tailed on to the halyards and sheets, and in all kinds
-of apparently impossible attitudes among the slimy
-obstructions dragged the reluctant sails up again. By
-the time all possible sail was made there was another
-and a deeper note mingling with the voice of the
-storm&mdash;the deep roar of the great Atlantic rollers
-beating up against those aged barriers of rock. But to
-their amazement the crew felt the vessel’s motion ease.
-She had been rolling heavily, labouring under the
-immense upper weight as if bewildered by it and hardly
-knowing what to do. And now she hardly moved at
-all, while overside the whole sea seemed smoothed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</span>
-down and ablaze with phosphorescent light. Even
-the veteran officers were puzzled, until the Captain
-suddenly bethought him of the gigantic seaweed that
-in fronds of hundreds of feet in length, and the thickness
-of a man’s body, grows upward to the surface
-in those waters all around the bases of the island
-mountains. But was there any protection there?
-True, the sea had become smooth, but the ship’s way
-had also deadened so that she no longer forged ahead,
-while it was impossible to ascertain in any way whether
-or not she was drifting broadside on over the heads
-of the kelp towards the stern precipices to leeward.
-The night was now so dark that in spite of the
-proximity of the mountain to leeward it was impossible
-to distinguish between one side and the other.
-Only the ear could tell by that deep moan of the sea
-against the rock bases.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could be done now but wait patiently to
-see what was the will of God concerning them.
-It was most obvious that if the kelp let them through,
-the ship must be battered to pieces against those
-precipices, where the sea was at least twenty fathoms
-deep alongside the rocks. Anchoring was out of the
-question&mdash;seamanship, in fact, was entirely discounted.
-And so, feeling all this, Captain Hampden, again
-raising his voice, summoned all hands aft. ‘Boys,’
-he said, when they had gathered around him, ‘this
-looks like our last night of life. Now we’ll pray that
-God will let us live, but specially we’ll pray that if He
-doesn’t see fit to grant us any more life we may die
-clean an’ wholesome. An’ whether we live or die
-we’ve done our best, and that’s a great comfort.’
-So holding on in all sorts of attitudes, those hardly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</span>
-bestead men prayed with the skipper, full of faith
-that whatever the outcome of the night might be, it
-would be all right. They finished and were dismissed
-to their quarters, while the gale howled ever louder,
-and the awful shadow to leeward deepened.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">A DOUBLE DELIVERANCE</p>
-
-<p>Hour after hour wore on, while many of the men, in
-spite of their fears, slept soundly. Rube, indeed,
-seemed unable to realise that there was any danger
-at all. Having joined in the general prayer for
-deliverance he appeared to regard the matter as quite
-settled, and as not requiring any more care on his or
-anyone else’s part except the Father’s. Most of the
-men, over-borne with weariness both of body and
-brain, slept fitfully in many uncouth attitudes, some
-half reclining upon banks of grease-exuding blubber
-gently heaving with the motion of the ship, others
-twisted into comfortable corners, apparently impervious
-to cold, or wet, or fear. But the Captain,
-more at peace with his surroundings than he could
-understand, and dimly, subconsciously wondering
-why, sat on the little deck aft listening to the angry
-roar of the baffled sea far outside the engirdling
-groves of kelp. The sullen boom of the rollers
-against that unseen mass to leeward, the hissing,
-swishing sound of the great leaves restlessly sliding
-over each other and against the ship, and the ever-deepening
-roar of the gale overhead made up a concert
-truly terrifying in its effect upon the heart.
-And yet Captain Hampden felt little terror. Knowing
-his utter helplessness, he was driven to as utter a
-dependence upon a kindly Power which he knew was
-not merely capable of saving his ship and all hands,
-but was always benevolently disposed towards man,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</span>
-and never more so than in his hour of deepest
-distress.</p>
-
-<p>So he sat calmly and wished for the day.
-Several times he made the beginning of a move,
-feeling that action of some kind, even though only in
-the direction of clearing the decks, would be better
-for all than quietly enduring this season of suspense.
-But each time he realised how hopeless such an
-attempt would be in the present condition of the
-deck and the state of all hands. Therefore, he
-waited with wonderful patience until the cook’s head
-appeared at his side above the break of the house,
-and a deferential voice said, ‘Wun’t yo hab drop ob
-hot coffee, sah? I got it yah, all ready, sah.’ ‘Yes,
-cook, think I will. Jest wut I ben needin’ fur a long
-time ’n’ didn’t know it.’ And as he took the cup
-from the delighted black man he thought how good
-a thing was service done whole-heartedly, and how
-well and willingly it was rendered by such men as
-these. A smile may rise at the thought of any shipmaster
-considering his cook like this, but it would
-be the smile of ignorance. For if a cup of cold
-water given in the Master’s name shall in no wise
-lose its reward, there is little doubt that a cup of
-coffee on a bitter night, prepared with much difficulty,
-by a man who, although only doing his duty,
-is doing that duty with all his might, will in like
-manner gain him a reward. I remember when I was
-lamp-trimmer on board the <i>Wentworth</i>, running
-between Sydney and Melbourne, I used to be called
-at daybreak to duty. After taking in the lamps, my
-first thought was to make a cup of coffee&mdash;it being
-some time before the cooks were at work. And it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</span>
-was my practice, though in no sense my duty, to
-take a cup and a piece of toast up to Mr. Wallace,
-the chief officer, on the bridge, whom I used to
-picture as burdened with the care of the ship up
-there in the bleak night. He was a brusque, almost
-coarse, sailor, but I know he was grateful. A word
-of thanks from him set my heart dancing (I was
-barely fifteen years of age), but my chief reward was
-in the knowledge of having done a kindness. And
-this is the spirit that moves the world to-day.
-Everyone should take courage, whatever their creed,
-in the thought that the Christ ideal, which is unselfishness
-raised to its highest power, is becoming
-universal, and that the many exceptions have no
-contradictory force at all.</p>
-
-<p>By the time Captain Hampden had finished his
-coffee he found that there was a perceptible lightening
-of the gloom around, although the wind had
-increased so much that it was evident, unless something
-was speedily done to ease the strain upon
-them, the masts would certainly go. So, rising stiffly
-to his feet, the skipper sought the mate, finding him
-ready, standing near the compass, and apparently
-endeavouring to get a bearing of the land, which was
-becoming more visible, and, if possible, more horribly
-threatening in appearance as it did so. ‘Good
-morning, sir,’ said Mr. Pease, as soon as he saw the
-skipper; ‘pipin’ up, ain’t she, sir?’ ‘Yaas; guess
-she is, an’ ef we want to carry any of our sticks eout
-o’ this, we’ll hev t’ git thet canvas off her as quick ’s it
-kin be did. I don’t think it matters much, anyway,
-whether she hez canvas on her or not&mdash;she can’t
-make much, if any, headway through this weed, an’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</span>
-it looks ’s if th’ Lord wunt let her go ashore. Go
-ahead, Mr. Pease, git th’ rags off her, ’n’ by thet time,
-please God, it’ll be daylight good.’</p>
-
-<p>So the mate obediently roared out his message to
-the crew, who responded with a phenomenal cheerfulness,
-clambering over those slimy, greasy masses on
-deck as if they cared nothing at all for the difficulty
-of their passage. In half an hour they had shortened
-her down to the three close-reefed topsails, and
-besides had cleared up the gear so that no ropes
-should be in the way of the whale-matter lying about.
-And having done this they stood by, waiting, oh,
-so anxiously, the whole of that ship’s company; with
-just one exception&mdash;Rube. He it was who wore
-always a beaming smile, and sidled up to first one
-and then the other with some cheering word. Just as
-a doctor who is always hoping for the best, while
-taking precaution against the worst, is the most likely
-to pull his patient through, so this Divine teaching of
-cheerfulness in the presence of dangerous and depressing
-circumstances does really seem to win the
-battle before it is fought. In any case, if the warrior
-does fall he falls with his face to the foe, and with the
-high satisfaction thrilling his soul that he has behaved
-in that last dread hour as became a <i>man</i>.</p>
-
-<p>To this little waiting crowd came suddenly the
-blessing of light. As if some mighty angel’s hand had
-grasped the swart veil of cloud closing them darkly
-in, and had rent it in sunder from horizon to zenith, the
-whole western quadrant of the sky was suddenly lighted
-up by the brilliant beams of the newly risen sun. So
-splendid was this enlightening that for a few moments
-all hands stood awe-stricken, watching the rapidly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</span>
-glancing sabres of glorious flashing colour thrusting
-the encompassing gloom through and through. Then
-as if by one impulse all turned to leeward to see how
-near was the fateful rock. As if it had just leapt out
-of the gloom, Gough Island was revealed, within a
-mile (which looks at sea less than a hundred yards
-does ashore), and every heart for a moment stood
-still. But after that tribute to human weakness hope
-instantly reasserted her lovely self. Had they not
-been kept from perishing all through the blackness of
-that terrible night? Was it not certain that they
-were now no nearer the land than when they last saw it
-clearly, in spite of the stress of the gale upon the ship’s
-broadside? Undoubtedly it was; and more&mdash;some
-of them began to take mental bearings and compare
-them with the position they could remember the
-previous evening, finding that at any rate if they were
-not gaining ground they were certainly not losing.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the Captain shouted to the mate, ‘Mr.
-Pease, turn the hands to on the tryin’ out. We kain’t
-do nothin’ with the ship as she is, an’ we mout so
-well ’muse ourselves doin’ somethin’ useful.’ This
-pronouncement was hailed with the utmost delight
-by all hands, and like a swarm of ants they were soon
-busy cutting, slicing, mincing, boiling, and getting
-out the bone&mdash;so busy, indeed, as well as interested in
-their work, that they scarcely ever paused to look at
-the great precipices to leeward of them.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the Captain had very carefully taken
-his cross bearings, and had no sooner completed the
-simple operation than he felt certain that his vessel was
-drifting south in almost imperceptible fashion. Hope
-revived, and he joined his workers with a heart<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</span> greatly
-lightened. There by his tremendous exertions and
-cheery voice he encouraged all hands to attend to
-present duties, and thus exclude forebodings for the
-future. And two hours later when he again took his
-bearings his hopeful supposition became a definite
-certainty: she had drifted through that hindering
-kelp, in apparent defiance of the fateful pressure of
-the gale striving to thrust her on shore, quite two
-miles nearer safety. Now he felt impelled to shout
-the glad news to his splendid men who had so nobly
-responded to the call made upon them. So raising
-his voice to its fullest compass he roared: ‘She’s
-gettin’ eout ov it, boys. Praise God we’ll be all right
-yet. There isn’t any shipwreck coming off this time.
-She’s gettin’ raound th’ corner ov th’ island in great
-shape. So peg away, men&mdash;while yew’re workin’ she’s
-a-dreeftin’, an’ as soon ’s ever she gits clear we’ll give
-her every rag she’ll drag, an’ git away fr’m this
-uncomf’ble neighbourhood.’</p>
-
-<p>A wild cheer answered him, and all hands
-immediately redoubled their efforts to clear that
-grease-encumbered deck. Perhaps the gentle reader
-may feel a little nausea at the idea of a whole crew of
-men wallowing about in a deck full of dripping&mdash;for
-really it is no exaggeration to call it by that homely
-name&mdash;but I dare make no apology for being as literal
-and realistic as possible in this matter, since by such
-methods alone is it possible to make the land-living
-reader understand what manner of men these were
-who wrested such gigantic spoil from the depths of
-the mighty ocean, and under what circumstances
-they lived. Here you have men involved in toil of
-the most strenuous kind under conditions which <span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</span>to
-the majority of mankind would preclude any action
-whatever except for self-preservation. And in addition
-thereto destruction to all waits grimly by the
-vessel’s side, unveiling all its possibilities of horror
-and inviting man’s heart to quail, his muscles to grow
-flaccid, his mind to become unhinged. And in spite
-of all you find this lonely group of seafarers steadfastly
-setting their strength to the accomplishment of their
-unpoetic task in the highest frame of heroism, which
-is to do what lies before you with a single eye, not
-looking for the commendation of your fellow men,
-but because of the inherent joy involved in just doing
-one’s duty.</p>
-
-<p>So hour by hour slipped by, the mincing-machine
-clattered incessantly, the flame from the twin chimneys
-of the try-works soared palely into the keen air, and
-was swept off at right angles to leeward by the wind
-as if it were some angelic sword stabbing at the grim
-mass to eastward of them. And the effect of their
-labours was manifest in that a clear gangway along
-the deck was now made right fore and aft. Into the
-midst of the toil came the clear, cheerful voice of the
-skipper calling, ‘Dinner, men, an’ befo’ y’ go remember
-she’s gittin’ cl’ar’s fast ’s ever th’ weed’ll allow her.
-She’s made quite four miles of southin’ sence eight
-bells&mdash;thet’s a mile an hour. An’ ef she keeps thet
-goin’ through the afternoon as she has this forenoon
-we’ll be cl’ar o’ th’ whole thing by sundown.’
-‘Hooray! bully fer th’ skipper,’ shouted
-the crew, and seizing such rags, wads of oakum,
-and the like, as they could get hold of they
-sauntered forward, wiping down as they went. They
-were saturated from head to heel with oil,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</span> they looked
-like a gang of piratical scarecrows, but I make bold
-to say that they were as heroic a crowd as ever came
-out of the most hardly contested battle. And on
-reaching the dim chamber, reeking with a foul combination
-of evil smells, they squatted around on the
-greasy deck and received each man in his little tin
-dish a portion of salt pork, a few spoonfuls of haricot
-beans, and a little loaf. Everyone doffed his cap,
-everyone felt thankful for this portion of coarsest
-food, and Reuben only focussed the general sense of
-the company when he said, holding one hand out
-before him, ‘Lovin’ God, we’re alive t’ eat, an’ work,
-an’ thank Thee. We do, an’ ask You t’ make us
-thankful men, keep us good men, not ashamed of
-one another or of Thee. For Christ’s sake. Amen.’
-The ‘Amen’ was so heartily echoed that Rube looked
-around startled. He could hardly believe his ears.
-With all his beautiful, childlike faith in God, he had,
-like most of us, but little faith in man, and when he
-found how mightily God was working in the crowd
-around him he was, as most of us would be, moved
-to profoundest wonder. Like most of us, he had not
-believed ’according to your faith be it unto you,’ or
-that when man’s faith fails, God, who cannot be
-disheartened, steps in and does in His own way His
-own work at His own appointed time.</p>
-
-<p>Little was said during the meal&mdash;all were too
-ravenous with hunger for that; but when the last
-scrap of food had been eaten up, and the utensils
-cleared away by the cook of the mess, pipes were
-stuffed with greasy tobacco and lighted, and although
-each pipe emitted a peculiar frizzling sound as of
-frying, and the odour of the oily weed would certainly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</span>
-have driven an ordinary smoker frantic, each man’s
-face wore a perfectly satisfied expression, and a
-desultory conversation began. ‘Don thatt wass a
-narr’ squeak, hey,’ muttered a square-built little
-Italian, who lay coiled up by the pawl-bitt. ‘I
-thinkin’ I promesso giva candela thosa sainta, onlee
-I carn faget thees name thata time.’ ‘Mean yew
-cuddent ’member, I ’spose,’ grumbled a Down Easter
-by his side. ‘Si, grazie,’ eagerly responded the
-Italian. ‘Don’t can memb’. Nev’ mine. Savea one
-dolla. ’Sides, how I know ef thatt Sancta goin’ elpa
-me bord una barca eretico lika thees?’ ‘Look here,’
-Antone,’ said a deep voice out of the gloom across
-the fo’c’sle, ‘You better pay fur thet candle, annyhow.
-Give it as a thank-offrin’ ’at yew wuz aboard a
-heretic ship. I guess ’fore th’ machinery of your crowd
-c’d a-got in working order we sh’d all a-ben gone
-up. Wut d’ ye say, boys?’ A hoarse murmur of
-approval ran round, while poor Antone grew hot as
-if feeling that it was incumbent upon him to defend
-his faith. But suddenly realising that as he had
-never understood what his faith was except doing
-just what he was told (when it was easy) by the
-priest, he fell back upon common-sense, and replied,
-‘Well, ’corse I don’ know anyt’ing about ’cept I’m
-eatina dinner, smokina pipe. Ef I say Dio Grazie
-thatt goin’ be alia righta, no Rube, eh, whatt?’ The
-deep, cheerful voice of Reuben immediately chimed in,
-‘Of course, Antone, if you reelly are thankful to God.
-But if He’s spared your life, you ought to remember
-it an’ see if you can’t do somethin’ with it for Him.
-An’ when you come to think of it&mdash;it ain’t much to
-ask&mdash;that you shall be clean in mind, an’ tongue, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</span>
-you shall be kind and helpful, an’ true, an’ that you
-shall remember not now and then, but always, the
-gentle, loving Jesu Christo, your every-day and all-day
-Friend.’ The impressionable little Italian’s face
-was all awork as this little talk fell from Rube’s lips.
-It went, in spite of his disability in language, right
-home to his hot southern heart, and the bright drops of
-sensibility’s precious dew glistened on his russet beard.</p>
-
-<p>But Mr. Pease’s stentorian voice was heard
-shouting, ‘Turn-to!’ and on the instant pipes were
-laid aside, belts were tightened, caps pressed down
-upon tanned brows, and a rush upwards was made
-from those fœtid quarters into the bright, invigorating
-air, which really seizes upon a man newly emerged
-from the foulness below like a pleasant vertigo,
-making him wonder whatever can be the matter with
-him. The first thing each man did upon reaching
-the deck was to give a swift glance to leeward. And
-as each did so a very real sense of gratitude flooded
-his heart. For it no longer needed the skipper’s
-cheery assurance that all was well to satisfy the most
-ignorant of them that they were now, humanly
-speaking, out of danger. True, they were not yet
-past the fringe of kelp, their vessel was as yet quite
-unmanageable, and the gale blew with undiminished
-vigour. But still it was evident that the steady
-stress of that invisible force beneath them would not
-allow them to be driven any farther shoreward, and,
-quite satisfied, they turned to their work with as
-much lack of concern for the safety of the ship as if
-no land had been in sight.</p>
-
-<p>Seeing that all was proceeding so cheerily, Captain<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</span>
-Hampden called the mate, and said, ‘Mr. Pease,
-I ain’t quite ’s young’s I wuz, ’n’ after last night I
-begin t’ feel the flesh pullin’ a bit. So if you’ll jest
-give an eye t’ her, I’ll go ’n’ hev an hour’s caulk.
-Maybe I’ll need it to-night, though I hope all will be
-in good shape ’fore dark. ’N’ ’s soon ’s ever yer git
-th’ decks cl’ar o’ blubber, set yer watches&mdash;blubber
-watches, o’ course. Le’s give this grand lot er
-fellows all th’ rest we kin.’ ‘Aye, aye, sir,’ cheerily
-answered the mate; ‘ef I hadn’t ’a felt it ’d be persoomin’
-I’d ’a’ asked yew to go ’n’ hev a spell long
-ago. We kain’t afford t’ hev yew crackin’ up, y’ know,
-sir. An’ yew c’n be quite sure ’at everythin’ ’ll go
-like clockwork. I don’t believe they’s a spouter afloat
-to-day ’s got such a bully crowd ’s we hev, an’ I’m
-sure yew think the same, Cap’n.’ ‘I dew jest thet,’
-sleepily murmured the old man as he swung off towards
-the companion and disappeared.</p>
-
-<p>Thoroughly wearied as he was, and with a great
-weight lifted from his mind, the good old man sank
-at once, as soon as he lay down, into a deep sleep.
-But although it was in reality fully two hours since
-he lay down, when he suddenly realised that he was
-wide awake he seemed certain that he had but just
-dozed off. It is a curious sensation, but fairly
-common among seamen, this of suddenly passing
-from the depths of sleep to uttermost clearness of
-thought and readiness for action. For a moment he
-waited, listening intently for some recurring sound,
-explaining why he should thus have awakened, as he
-thought, so soon. But except for the creaking of the
-old ship’s timbers and the deep murmur of the gale
-there was no sound noticeable, and these lullabies
-would certainly have kept him sleeping. However,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</span>
-the feeling that something had happened which
-needed his attention forced itself upon him, and
-rising stiffly from the hard cushions of the transom
-locker, he snatched his cap and climbed on deck.
-One swift glance forward showed him how strenuously
-his men had been toiling while he slept, for the deck
-was clear to the try-works, and the latter were smoking
-furiously, while the attendant gnomes came and went,
-tirelessly carrying on their great task. He looked
-overside and saw that the weed was perceptibly less
-in quantity; he looked at the land and&mdash;surely it
-could not be&mdash;and yet&mdash;his hawk-like vision could
-not play him false. He grabbed his glasses and
-focussed them on what he saw&mdash;a rag of fluttering
-white among the sombre rocks, immediately satisfying
-himself that someone needing help was there.
-Instantly all the powers of his mind were busy
-devising means for the assistance of any unfortunate
-stranded in so wild a spot. Again and again he
-surveyed that tiny flutter of white; again and again
-he took an undecided step forward as if to give an
-order, until at last he said aloud, ‘Wall, God he’pin’
-us, we ort to do something, though how is more than
-I can see. All hands on deck!’ he roared, and in two
-minutes the mate was by his side, his big eyes staring
-full of inquiry at his commander. ‘Wut is it, sir?’
-he gasped. ‘It’s a wrecked crew, I reckon, Mr. Pease.
-D’ ye see yonder flicker of white in that cleft between
-those two big rocks&mdash;no, a bit to starboard, so?’
-‘Yes, sir, I see it,’ said the mate; ‘d’ ye make it out to
-be a signal, sir?’ ‘I do, jest that, Pease, an’&mdash;but
-here kems the boys. Naow, then, m’lads, thar’s life
-to be saved. Lower away starboard quarter-boat,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</span>
-’n’ yew, Mr. Peck (it’s yewr boat anyhow) make the
-best way yew kin to whar yew see yon white flicker
-among th’ rocks. Yew’ll hev to warp yewr way
-along through the kelp as best yew can, and when
-yew git cluss to it, be keerful&mdash;be jest as keerful as
-yew know how; fur we kain’t spare either yew er
-yewr boat’s crew. Thar’ll be an all-fired heavy
-swell on the beach (if they is any beach) fur all it
-looks so smooth frum here. Thish yer kelp stops the
-sea rollin’ in, but it kain’t stop th’ swell, y’ know.
-Now, give way, and God go with yew t’ save.’</p>
-
-<p>At the word the boat left the ship, the crew plying
-their oars with great difficulty, because of the encumbering
-weed. So they soon shipped oars, and
-took their paddles&mdash;every whaleboat having five of
-these primitive but exceedingly useful propellers
-stowed in their beckets under the thwarts&mdash;and with
-much laborious effort urged their boat shoreward.
-As they neared the black, forbidding cliffs the officer’s
-heart sank, for he saw how apparently inaccessible
-they were, and how the gigantic southern swell, with
-never a foamy break, rose and fell against those
-awful precipices. The long streamers of kelp like
-multitudinous serpents writhed around the bared rock
-bases, then disappeared as the whole mighty body of
-water lifted, lifted, lifted until it seemed as if it must
-submerge the mountain tops. And still that tiny
-white rag fluttered forth its agonising message:
-‘Come and save us.’</p>
-
-<p>Be it noted that while Mr. Peck was fully alive to
-the tremendous danger awaiting him and his brave
-fellows, the possibility<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</span> of his not being able to fulfil
-his errand of mercy never occurred to him. He was
-one of those wonderful fellows who never calculate
-beforehand the chances of defeat. And these are the
-men who do great deeds, although it be accounted
-criminal in war to neglect the keeping open of a line
-of retreat. So by every encouraging word he could
-speak he urged the toiling crew to greater effort, until
-the kelp became so thick that paddling was no longer
-possible, and they had perforce to haul the boat along
-by grasping the long strands of black vegetation that
-rose and fell rhythmically around them. Nearer and
-nearer they drew, near enough to distinguish a forlorn
-little company of people clambering precariously over
-the rocks and making (as yet) unintelligible signs to
-them. Nearer and nearer yet, until it became evident
-that the refugees were waving them towards a gigantic
-escarpment which rose fully five hundred feet almost
-perpendicularly from the sea, and at one angle seemed
-to present an edge just like a jagged sabre. They
-altered their course in obedience to these frantic
-signallings, and presently found themselves fighting
-for life against the heave and hurl of the swell, which
-suddenly seemed to have found force that was lacking
-before when they were farther from the land. The
-ropes of kelp slithered through their bleeding hands,
-great fronds arose mysteriously from the blackness
-and swept across the boat, scourging them as with
-giant whips; they cowered and groaned, and begged
-for mercy in undertones, but toiled on. And then,
-when all their efforts appeared to have failed because
-the poor human machines could no longer respond to
-the merciless call made upon them, came a blessed
-lull, the boat swept round the sabre-edge of the cliff,
-and there, free from kelp, was a tiny crevasse with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</span>
-deep blue water just gently rising and falling, and a
-ledge of clean rock running all round it. Upon this
-ledge was clustered a strange company, savage and
-weird-looking, long elf-locks bleached by wind and
-storm, garments of every imaginable material and
-shape. Ten of this company were crouching at the
-edge nearest the boat with uplifted hands and streaming
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>But when the boat came near enough for them to
-leap in there was a pause. Even in here the outer
-swell made itself felt, and without careful handling a
-calamity was imminent at the last moment. Therefore
-Mr. Peck shouted to the little group to watch
-when the swell came gently, as it did after every
-three rolls, when he would let the boat almost graze
-the rocks, and four, no more, at a time, must jump
-into the middle of the boat. Then it was seen that
-the refugees were encouraging three smaller figures,
-patting them, pointing to the boat, making signs as
-they talked, until one voice rang out sharply from the
-shore: ‘Dear boys, these three are women&mdash;do try
-and catch them, they’ve suffered so much.’ Ah! had
-any stimulus been wanted this would have supplied
-it, for it is the glory of the Anglo-Saxon race, and
-especially of the American branch of the old tree&mdash;its
-reverence for woman, whether mother, wife, or
-sister. The boat rose gently shoreward, the officer
-shouted, ‘Now,’ and three shrinking figures half
-jumped, half fell, into the outstretched arms of the
-boatmen. ‘Safe, thank God!’ shouted the former
-speaker from the shore. The rest was easy. The
-remaining seven took careful bearings and leaped at
-the right moments until the whole ten were snugly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</span>
-bestowed, and it was time to turn the boat’s head
-seaward again.</p>
-
-<p>But now she was overloaded. If it had been
-a heavy task coming in with her light before the
-swell, what would it now be going out deeply laden&mdash;not
-six inches of freeboard amidships&mdash;against that
-awful surge? For one moment Peck’s heart failed
-him as he weighed the possibilities. Then&mdash;and this
-was a miraculous thing, seeing that never before had
-he entertained such an idea&mdash;he lifted his cap and said,
-or rather shouted, for the roar of the swell was almost
-deafening: ‘Boys, le’s ask God t’ he’p us out of this
-hole. Keep her steady with the paddles. “O God,
-we’re all in Your han’s. We’re tryin’ t’ save life, we’re
-doin’ our best, we b’lieve we <i>kain’t</i> go under without
-You lets us. Naow save our lives so’s we k’n praise
-You all the days ov our life.” Naow let her have it,
-boys. Paddle fur yer lives, an’ as soon ’s we strike
-the kelp, gather it in an’ haul fur all yer wuth.
-Passengers, lie still in th’ bottom o’ th’ boat.’</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">A REIGN OF TERROR</p>
-
-<p>Far more frequently than any shore-living people
-can imagine, there occur times on board ship when it
-seems as if the whole condition of things must be
-overwhelmed in one red holocaust. No ship, whatever
-her position or character may be, is quite exempt
-from such crises as these. For at sea all hands are
-compelled to feel that they have been driven back
-upon primitive conditions, and the one paramount
-question demanding answer is: ‘How much longer
-can I bear this?’ No such problem ever confronts
-shore people, for the most obvious reason: there is
-always a way of escape&mdash;at sea there is none. And,
-if the true inwardness of all the awful sea tragedies
-that have ever been known were inquired into, it
-would be found that nearly all of them originated in
-a condition of things such as I have been sketching.
-A brutal, unscrupulous villain (we have had them in
-the British Navy) at the head of affairs, a vilely
-truckling gang of officers ready at a nod to carry out
-that villain’s behests, and before the mast a mob
-of men driven frantic by ill-treatment yet lacking
-initiative, the one ignition spark which only a genius
-can supply. A case in point is afforded by the
-tragedy of the <i>Bounty</i>. Concerning that terrible
-mutiny reams have been written wherein the horrid
-crimes of the sailors are continually held up to
-execration, but how seldom is passing mention given
-to the true cause of the whole awful business&mdash;the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</span>
-treatment of the men by the commander, who seemed
-to have felt it his duty to make his men realise before
-death what sort of a place the infernal regions must
-be. Only the lack of initiative has prevented the
-tale of sea tragedies from being a hundredfold as
-many, not the desert of those in charge, who seem
-to have exhausted the ingenuity of fiends in their
-behaviour towards their hapless crews.</p>
-
-<p>Still, it must be confessed, and gladly, too, that
-few indeed are the captains or officers who set out
-with the deliberate intention of goading their crews
-to the point of madness just apparently in order to
-exhibit their power of command, their ability to
-control even the most frantic crowd of men. Few
-men are as wicked as that. But Captain Da Silva
-certainly was, and his visit to Brava was made with
-deliberate intent to procure certain auxiliaries upon
-whom he could rely for aid in the vile purpose he had
-set before himself&mdash;viz., that of trampling under foot
-triumphantly men of the hated Anglo-Saxon race,
-with all their nonchalant assumption of moral and
-mental superiority. Therefore it was that no sooner
-had sail been made and filled away for the southward
-than his plan of campaign began. The recruits&mdash;all
-of whom, be it noted, had been to sea before&mdash;were
-carefully apportioned by him throughout the two
-watches. They alone were allowed to steer the ship,
-and with each of them while at the wheel the skipper
-would converse in their own language, while the
-American officers could not help but listen uncomprehendingly,
-with black rage in their hearts, yet
-in utter impotence. For what could they do? If the
-skipper was powerful before, sufficiently so to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</span> enforce
-his will, he was omnipotent now. And these six
-black Portuguese felt it in their bones. They did
-not refuse to carry out any order given them by the
-officers, but they behaved in a singularly offensive
-manner as who should say, ‘We do this not to obey
-you, but because we are your master’s cronies, and it
-isn’t yet time in his opinion that we should show you
-how we regard you.’</p>
-
-<p>If this state of things was hard of endurance for
-the officers, it was trebly so for the men. In the
-foc’s’le the Dagoes were now about even in numbers
-with the Americans and other white men, but in
-physique the former were far superior. And all conversation
-ceased in that sad place. No man dared to
-complain, even under his breath, for everyone felt
-that the foc’s’le was a sort of Dionysius’ Ear, where
-every word uttered immediately resounded in the
-private apartments of the skipper. All the worst of
-the work was reserved for the white men, every soft
-job was kept for the blacks, and no man durst say a
-word, for all knew as well as could be that sitting in
-the midst of this web of devilishness was the skipper
-pulling the cords and gloating over his revenge.</p>
-
-<p>Finest weather, bluest of skies, and an almost
-utter absence of squalls attended the <i>Grampus</i> as she
-crossed the Line. And through it all, watch and
-watch, the sorely tried white portion of the crew
-were kept at work scrubbing and polishing until
-even the flagship of our Mediterranean Squadron
-would not, so far as cleanliness went, have surpassed
-her. And it was with a perfect pang of delight
-that all hands heard the long-drawn cry of ‘Blow’
-from the mastheads when off Fernando Noronha.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</span>
-Well knowing what bone-wrenching toil it would
-bring, they yet welcomed the prospect of whaling
-almost gleefully&mdash;anything for a change in the deadly
-monotony of their daily life. Poor fellows!</p>
-
-<p>They had a grand day’s sport, about which I can
-say very little since it was all so orthodox and free
-from extraordinary incident. The whales were
-medium-sized cows&mdash;that is to say, ranging from
-twenty-five to forty barrels each&mdash;and as the big bull
-leader of the school went off to windward at top
-speed when the battle began, there was but little
-fighting: it was just a butchery. The poor, silly
-creatures crowded round each other quite helplessly,
-and submitted to be done to death almost as complacently
-as does the great right whale of the Arctic
-regions. Of course, Captain Da Silva took part in
-the slaughter. Else it had been but a wasted day
-for him. For he had, in common with some of the
-old Romans, an insatiable blood-thirst that could not
-be gratified as he craved owing to the hampering
-laws of civilisation, and he was therefore driven to
-quench it by conflict with the mighty whale, utterly
-heedless, to all appearance, of any probability of
-danger to himself. His absence from the ship
-tempted Priscilla on deck.</p>
-
-<p>She has been neglected of late in this chronicle
-for several reasons. First, any allusion to her must
-of necessity be tame, since she had voluntarily taken
-upon herself the <i>rôle</i> of a patient martyr, from whom
-no taunt or even ill-usage could wring a complaint.
-Secondly, any information about her is scarcely possible
-since she was more like an automaton than
-aught else&mdash;moving, indeed, waking, sleeping, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</span>
-eating (very little), but speaking hardly ever, and
-apparently determined to efface herself as much as
-possible from the life of the ship. She was an insoluble
-puzzle to her husband. At first he was brutal
-in the extreme, even to the length of striking her,
-but to this treatment she opposed a stolidity of
-demeanour which alarmed him. Then he became
-gentler, spoke to her civilly, almost kindly, with the
-same result. Superstitious terrors took possession of
-him, for he began to wonder whether, indeed, she
-had not died, only her body retaining sufficient
-volition to keep about among them. He noticed
-that she never spoke one word to anyone but him,
-and gave way to the opinion that some change&mdash;he
-knew not what&mdash;had taken place, and unless he wished
-to be haunted (of which, like the majority of Latins,
-he had an awful dread) he had better let her alone.
-So, unconsciously, she had been led to do just the
-right thing in order to secure what tiny modicum of
-comfort still remained possible of attainment in her
-present position. And, as for suffering&mdash;well, the
-edge of that was dulled to such an extent that she
-often surveyed herself as it were from an impartial
-mental standpoint, and wondered mildly whether she
-was indeed the discontented, prideful Priscilla Fish
-of olden days or not. I do not like, especially in a
-work of this kind, to insist continually upon the
-sacred ability to detach oneself from the things of
-sense that God gives His dear ones, yet how otherwise,
-I ask myself, can the literalness, the common-sense
-application of real Christianity be brought
-home to people who have been trained from infancy
-to believe that religion is an excrescence, as it were&mdash;something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</span>
-of external growth which can be applied
-like a poultice by a skilled professional at hand at
-seasons when needed?&mdash;how otherwise explain that
-Christ <i>does</i> dwell in the hospitable heart, and there
-produces a toleration of (not an indifference to) the
-world’s vicissitudes, so that ‘in the world, but not of
-it’ becomes a fact of experience, not a pretty theory?</p>
-
-<p>Priscilla had been taught this by the Teacher
-Himself; the Comforter had come with His consolations
-to this poor soul, and there amid all that made
-for misery she was as nearly happy as the flesh will
-allow. Occasionally, in almost an ecstasy of joy,
-she sat communing with God, forgetting all else,
-unconscious for the time of any other environment
-than that of the Holy of Holies. Herein I can see
-lie twin dangers&mdash;in the expression of this fact, I
-mean: the one that this must be an argument for
-the conventual life, the other that such matters are
-entirely unreal&mdash;the outcome of mystical meditation,
-and as unsubstantial and inapplicable to the ordinary
-details of life as is the hermetic philosophy of the
-ancients. Well, it takes all sorts of people to make
-a world, and if there were no unbelievers in God’s
-immanent companionship and no misunderstandings
-of His dealings with His children, His Kingdom would
-be come, and we should no longer need to pray for
-it. I can only reiterate with all simplicity and
-directness that in such wise (as I have feebly tried
-to describe Priscilla’s case) God <i>does</i> associate with
-men and women. That the words, ‘Lo, I am with
-you always, even unto the end of the world,’ are
-literally, not figuratively, true; and that millions of
-His children, given the opportunity, will gladly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</span>
-testify to the same. How else, do you think, do men
-and women live on through long lives, seeing what
-they do see of their fellow humans, knowing what
-they must know of the Powers of Darkness visible,
-and still preserve intact their childlike faith in Jesus
-and His love? Only because it is literally, absolutely
-true that ‘He that dwelleth in the secret place of the
-Most High shall abide under the shadow of the
-Almighty.’</p>
-
-<p>But in spite of her joy in the Lord, it must be
-admitted that Priscilla occasionally felt an almost
-overwhelming longing to breathe the free, fresh air
-of Heaven. For that had of late been a luxury
-denied her. She had been practically forbidden to
-go on deck, to appear at table. Her husband had
-developed along with his belief in her uncanny
-powers a horrible jealousy of her&mdash;so much so that he
-would not allow her to be seen by any of the crew or
-officers. And although he had not actually in so
-many words forbidden her to come on deck, yet so
-many obstacles had been placed in her way, even to
-locking her in her berth, that at last she had dumbly
-acquiesced in this condition of things, and submitted
-to breathe the fetid air of the little cabin, which, as
-everyone who has ever been on board of even a trading
-vessel knows, is foul and vitiated beyond description.
-It is no paradox to say that there is more air
-and less ventilation at sea than anywhere on earth.
-Therefore it was no wonder that, learning from the
-faithful darkey steward of her husband’s absence at
-the whaling, she crept timidly on deck and sat on
-the transom, looking out over the wide brightness of
-the sea with feelings of almost intolerable complexity.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</span>
-She had learned, in the same perfect way, to take the
-keenest delight in the beauties of creation; scenes
-that so many of us pass over unheedingly were to her
-almost poignant in their revelations of the Father’s
-benevolent and beautiful designs, and in proportion
-as she was debarred from enjoying them so she prized
-them. Perfectly natural. How many an old sailor
-has gone grumbling through his long seafaring career
-apparently all unheeding the glories so lavishly
-spread before his sullen gaze, and then when retired
-to some dull, inland village in his old age, perhaps
-blind and deaf, he has feasted on the treasures of
-memory, and again in fancy watched his gallant
-vessel leaping blithely from sea to sea, or breasting
-steadily as if with unconquerable resolution and force
-the relentless thrust of the storm-wind and its accompanying
-sea.</p>
-
-<p>So Priscilla sat aft, soaking her soul in beauty and
-utterly oblivious of her surroundings, until even her
-inexperienced eye detected a returning boat&mdash;one
-that neared the ship at a great rate, the oars rising
-and falling as if steam driven, and with a feather of
-spray at her bow, showing at what a high rate of
-speed she was approaching. Priscilla slipped quickly
-below, her heart full of thankfulness that she had
-been enabled to get a glimpse of the sea and sky,
-and also that she had succeeded in retreating before
-the advent of her husband. Truly she had but little
-margin of time, for he, standing erect in his boat’s
-stern, had been watching the ship with vulture eyes,
-and before she had been ten minutes below he was
-on board, his awful voice ringing fore and aft like that
-of some destroying angel.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</span></p>
-
-<p>Seven cow whales had been killed, and the securing
-of them alongside meant a truly herculean task,
-which was prolonged until nearly midnight, by which
-time the vessel looked as if she was the centre of
-an island of flame. Surrounded by these great
-carcasses against which the sea broke in lambent light,
-the rendezvous for tens of thousands of sharks, whose
-swift coming and going through the phosphorus-charged
-waves made them glow like the moon, the
-scene was one of almost awful beauty. But none
-there took any notice of it. The crew, half dead
-with fatigue, stumbled about obeying mechanically
-the orders given, but hardly able to keep awake,
-much less pull or lift as they were ordered. At last
-the mate approached the skipper, saying: ‘Cap’n Da
-Silva, hadn’t I better order the men to rest awhile?
-I’m afraid we’ll be losing some of ’em overboard if I
-don’t, they’re all so dead beat, sir.’ Looking around
-to see if any of the men were within hearing, the
-skipper took a step towards the mate, and with a
-perfectly devilish glare in his eyes, said: ‘Yew lazy
-American pig, yew dirty helpless dog, I’ll teach yew
-t’ interfere with <i>my</i> business. I’d jes’ soon kill ye
-as look at ye, f’r all th’ good y’ are. But I’ll do
-worse ’n that. I’ll make yew wish yew was dead,
-hunderds of times ’fore I’m done with ye.’ Up flew
-the mate’s fist as he made a spring towards his
-skipper, but as he sprang he was confronted by the
-muzzles of two revolvers in the skipper’s hands. He
-stopped with a groan&mdash;the thought of his dear ones at
-home in Fairhaven was too much for him; and as he
-fell back he heard a chuckle overhead, and there was
-a Portuguese harpooner on the top of the house with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</span>
-another revolver pointed at him. ‘Wall,’ drawled
-the skipper, ‘y’ see I’m heeled. I’m layin’ fur ye
-every time. Ef y’ git t’ windward of me yew’ve only
-one more t’ git ahead of, an’ thet’s Satin himself.
-I tell ye, I’m goin’ t’ make this ship hell f’r all of ye,
-but yew an’ th’ secon’ mate specially. But if y’
-wa’n’t such curs, yew’d take y’r chances. I don’t
-mind dyin’ a little bit, ’n’ ef yew liked to try it on at
-a little risk why y’ mout git my gun an’ shoot me.’</p>
-
-<p>For decency’s sake it becomes necessary to draw
-a veil over the proceedings of the next few weeks.
-No one likes to record the degradation of his fellowmen
-or dwell upon their unmerited miseries. And,
-indeed, every white man on board the <i>Grampus</i>
-endured for the rest of the passage such torments and
-indignities as make the blood boil only to think of&mdash;endured
-them helplessly, hopelessly. Meanwhile,
-every slice of good fortune imaginable seemed to
-attend upon the miscreant. The passage round the
-Cape was made in lovely weather, and as soon as
-ever they hauled up for the Mozambique Channel
-they fell in with a school of whales extending to the
-horizon. It was at daybreak, too, so for the whole
-of that terrible day they toiled at slaying under the
-furious sun. No idea apparently was entertained by
-the skipper of the enormous amount of labour being
-accumulated. When night fell there were over
-twenty carcasses encumbering the sea, the ship was
-unable to move for the weight already attached to
-her, and, had she been able, the wind had fallen to
-an almost perfect calm. But not until every man,
-including his own personal bodyguard, had succumbed
-to sheer weariness did the skipper ‘let up,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</span>
-and say that a ‘spell-ho’ of an hour or two might
-be enjoyed. In strict justice it must be said that he
-had taken no rest&mdash;in fact, it appeared as if he had
-laboured harder than any other man on board. But
-what of that? What would become of us all if we
-were compelled to keep up to the physical standard of
-the most sinewy and strenuous among us? Certainly
-a great thinning out of the population would immediately
-ensue.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, at 8 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> a halt was reluctantly called,
-and one by one the boats returned, their crews barely
-able to drag themselves on deck, and utterly incapable
-of hoisting the boats when they had done so. Of
-the difficulty of getting alongside, thrusting their frail
-boats in between the massy bodies attached to the
-ship and tumbling gigantically about upon the sullen
-swell, I dare not speak: it needs a chapter to itself.
-It must be sufficient to say that all hands returned,
-succeeded in getting on board, fell down where they
-alighted, and slept like the dead&mdash;so much like that
-two happy fellows did not trouble to wake again:
-they were found stiff and cold in the morning. But
-as that was merely an incident of the campaign (in
-war it is thought nothing of) there is no excuse for
-dwelling upon it&mdash;let it pass.</p>
-
-<p>The matter worth recording is that at midnight,
-the placid moon looking down upon the deck of the
-<i>Grampus</i> as if it were a stricken field&mdash;the corpses
-lying hideously scattered where they fell&mdash;there was
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</span>a great outcry. The skipper, ever alert, had seen
-along the moonbeams’ path the oncoming of some
-suspicious-looking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</span> craft. His experience fixed them
-at once as Arab<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</span> dhows bent on plunder. Strange
-how the Arab is a born thief and murderer, as is the
-Chinese, and neither of them ever feels any compunction
-for his crimes.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_202fp" style="max-width: 28em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_202fp.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>THE DHOWS CREPT CAUTIOUSLY TOWARDS THE IMMOVABLE SHIP.</p>
- <div class="blockquot">
- <p><i>P. 203.</i></p>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The dhows crept cautiously towards the immovable
-ship, and Captain Da Silva watched them
-coming, the fierce light of battle in his eye. But
-he wasted no time. He knew that his ship was
-surrounded by an almost impregnable defence (at
-night), and so he devoted his leisure to loading carefully
-the half-dozen Sniders possessed by the ship.
-(Those old Tower Sniders have gone all over the
-world.) Then he called up his chums, sailors and
-harpooners, and no small task it was to get life into
-them. But he succeeded at last, and then posting
-them all aft with a Snider and a revolver apiece, and
-much ammunition, he waited gleefully the advent of the
-sea Bedawy. They came, and were astonished to find
-that a barrier of something floating, slimy, massive,
-and impassable interposed between them and their
-objective. And while they groped darkling, the
-Sniders sang their awful song, red spear-points of
-flame clove the darkness, and many an Arab sank
-down upon the rough-timbered deck of his buggalow
-coughing out his foul life. Only an hour, and the
-attack was over. It would never have been begun
-but that the Arabs forecasted a helpless merchant
-ship whose crew they could kill easily as sheep,
-and with as little compunction, and whose hold
-they should find crammed with choicest merchandise
-only awaiting the advent of the enterprising sons of
-the East.</p>
-
-<p>It seems incredible, but such was the fatigue of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</span>
-the crew that when morning dawned the majority of
-them were quite unaware of the happenings of the
-night. Perhaps, dimly through their dreams had
-come the ping of dropping shots, uneasy shudderings
-might have accompanied the dying yells of the Arabs,
-but taking everything all round they knew nothing
-about it. Nor did they greatly care. The dawn but
-brought them bone-wrenching toil. Who among
-them would have given thanks for the paternal (?)
-care manifested for them by the skipper during the
-dead hours of the night? For their condition was
-that so amply and aptly summed up by Moses in his
-dread warning to the children of Israel: ‘In the
-morning thou shalt say, Would God it were evening,
-and in the evening thou shalt say, Would God it were
-morning.’</p>
-
-<p>Long before daylight they were aroused and
-started upon the tremendous task, too broken to
-give more than a passing regretful thought to the
-two favoured ones whose trials were over. This will,
-I know, strike many as an utterly uncalled-for
-exaggeration of horror, an incident that could only
-have occurred during mediæval times. I beg to say,
-however, that in the American whaleships mediæval
-disregard of life persisted as nowhere else among
-civilised peoples down to well within the latter half
-of the nineteenth century. Heroic figures the commanders
-were, brave beyond praise were the officers,
-but with that wonderful quality was, alas, too generally
-mingled an utter callousness to suffering&mdash;an
-utter disregard of the elementary rights of their
-fellow men which to a humaner age will hardly bear
-detailed description. And, of course, this was an
-exceptionally bad case. The cruelty of the Latin<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</span>
-is inherent&mdash;generally speaking, he takes a greedy
-pleasure in the suffering of others; while the cruelty
-of the Teutonic races is incidental&mdash;an abnormality
-calling forth the fiercest reprobation from those of
-the same race to whom it becomes known.</p>
-
-<p>For the next ten days the <i>Grampus</i> was a horrid
-shambles. She reeked in every part with blood and
-grease, and the blazing sun, pouring down upon her
-with never a cloud to temper his fierceness throughout
-the long and weary days, made her foul with a fœtor
-beyond description. Captain Da Silva and his Portuguese
-seemed to flourish and wax stronger among
-the awful vileness of stench and filth, even as do the
-Arabs of African coast-towns. But the American
-portion of the crew fell ill one by one. Although
-haggard and woe-worn, they stuck to their work
-until they fell at their posts. In this calamity Priscilla
-was involved. Indeed, it would have been a
-miracle had she escaped. The confinement alone in
-that terrible climate was sufficient to make anyone
-seriously ill, especially when the miserable food and
-lack of exercise were added, without the fearful foulness
-of that ten days.</p>
-
-<p>The sickness of his crew gave the skipper no
-concern. He thought grimly of the splendid recruits
-he would by and by obtain, supposing all the cursed
-Americans were dead. But the illness of his wife
-gave him pause. In some inexplicable way, he&mdash;well,
-I cannot say loved or had a tenderness for her&mdash;I
-would not desecrate the holy word love by associating
-it with such a monster of evil as he was, but he did
-not desire to be without her. And so, cursing his
-ill-luck, he bore up under all sail for the Cosmoledo<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</span>
-group of islands intending to spend there, amid the
-pure fresh breezes of the South-East Trade, and free
-from the miasmatic vapours of a great port, a
-sufficient time to rest his invalids, and by judicious
-distribution of quinine, fresh cocoanut, and fresh food
-to bring them round again. Strangely enough, this
-complication in the midst of his success, the dread
-presence on board of fever, and the illness of half
-his crew gave this extraordinary man no anxiety. He
-seemed to stand aloof from all merely human emotions
-except the viler ones, and as for fear he apparently
-knew not the meaning of the word. And his
-auxiliaries were the same. For them it was a time of
-rejoicing. They were the undoubted rulers of the
-vessel, and their superiority to the much-vaunted
-white man was overwhelmingly manifest.</p>
-
-<p>Two more poor fellows succumbed to their
-burden before reaching port. One of them was the
-third mate. Their passing excited no comment, nor
-did their informal burial (they were just dumped
-like so much lumber) more than punctuate the day’s
-work. Then the vessel arrived, and was piloted in
-between the reefs with consummate skill by the
-skipper. Down went her anchor, and in the peaceful
-waters of a coral-locked lagoon the <i>Grampus</i> lay
-secure.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">SALVAGE OPERATIONS</p>
-
-<p>Thorough in all his undertakings, Captain Da Silva
-wasted no time after the vessel was well moored in
-carrying out the purpose for which he had visited
-this outlandish group of islands. Boats were at once
-lowered and loaded with all the requisite material for
-erecting tents ashore. Then while one party was
-sent to establish a temporary sanatorium on a high
-part of the largest island, a place where the sweet
-unceasing breeze should blow through the open doors
-of the tents, another party was detailed to catch fish,
-tortoises (for here are to be found still some of those
-most interesting survivals of a long-departed day,
-the gigantic tortoise), and to collect unripe cocoanuts,
-one of the most healthful of all foods as well as one of
-the pleasantest of drinks. The preparations were
-rapidly completed&mdash;when Captain Da Silva was
-around no one wasted time&mdash;the sick were transferred
-to the shore, and in business-like fashion attended
-to, as far as a change of diet and such primitive
-medicines as were available could be brought to bear
-upon them. Priscilla, much to the skipper’s concern,
-apparently took no interest in the proceedings at all.
-He was really alarmed to see how automatically she
-behaved and how attenuated was her once bonny
-form. He did <i>not</i> want to lose her&mdash;would rather
-have lost all hands&mdash;though he could not tell why.
-And therefore, having done all he could think of for
-her, and consequently much more for the other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</span>
-sufferers than he would otherwise have thought of
-doing, he turned from sheer need of occupation to the
-ship again; and his energy was such that all his innate
-power of command was needed to maintain discipline
-among his own countrymen. The Portuguese, like
-the Italian, can and does work for amazingly long
-periods at high pressure, always providing that the
-incentive is sufficiently powerful. But always these
-two races would rather loaf than work&mdash;would rather
-lie round in the sun and let the world wag as it will
-than put their shoulders to any wheel whatever.
-And they always make the severest task-masters,
-slave-drivers. There must be a deep delight for a
-truly lazy man in the power of compelling his fellows
-to stretch their sinews under his eye. Must be,
-because one sees so much of it in journeying around
-the world&mdash;the measureless content evidenced in the
-boss who lolls and shouts curses and commands at
-the toilers below him, with a very real satisfaction in
-the knowledge that any one of them would gladly
-trample his face into the mud they work in if only
-the chance came.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Da Silva, then, having arranged for his
-invalids satisfactorily, and left the negro steward and
-one of his cronies to guard his wife in her lonely
-tent, returned on board and entered upon a furious
-campaign of scrubbing and disinfecting. His countrymen,
-who were practically the whole working gang,
-seconded his efforts splendidly, albeit with deep
-resentment, at first against him, but by his clever
-manipulation, afterwards against all the whites on
-board. ‘Why should these fellows be lyin’ up ashore
-while better men were doin’ the work?’ This with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</span>
-but little variation was the burden of the Portuguese
-song, and by a skilfully dropped word at well-chosen
-intervals Captain Da Silva fanned the incipient flames
-and made every Dago understand that the <i>Grampus</i>
-was a Dago ship from henceforth, and that, although
-the American flag flew overhead, her American crew
-were of no importance whatever. In spite of this
-satisfaction, however, the Dagoes were very sore at
-being worked so hard, and it needed all the great
-influence of the skipper’s master mind to prevent an
-outbreak. He kept them at work so steadily, too, that
-they got little or no chance to brood over their
-wrongs. The water in the casks below was started
-and run off, fresh, sweet water being brought on board
-to re-fill; and the newly emptied casks were all fresh
-scoured and fired within before replenishing. An
-enormous supply of wood was obtained, mostly drift-timber,
-for upon this little group of neglected islands
-the whorl of many currents centres, bringing flotsam
-from immense distances. And when nothing else
-was a-doing, the sick needed attention, and got it too,
-although of a horribly rough and grudging kind.</p>
-
-<p>At last the discontent ran so high that it may
-reasonably be doubted whether even Captain Da
-Silva could have much longer held it in check, but
-then with his usual extraordinary good fortune there
-came a diversion that effectually settled all grumbling
-and put all hands in high feather. A huge four-masted
-iron ship, grossly under-manned as usual,
-came blundering up through the Mozambique
-Channel, bound for Diego Garcia with coal. The
-parsimony of her owners had provided her with but
-one chronometer, and her skipper was not <span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</span>only a
-poor man who couldn’t afford one of his own, but he
-was withal so poorly educated that he couldn’t have
-worked a lunar observation to save his life. Thus it
-came to pass that one night during a heavy thunderstorm,
-when the whole heavens were apparently
-draped with black velvet, he found his vessel bumping
-upon the reefs, not heavily, for there was but little
-wind or swell, but sufficiently forceful to make him
-feel that his command was doomed. And ships like
-the <i>Warrior Queen</i> are only manned for the finest of
-fine weather&mdash;when trouble of any kind comes they
-must needs trust to luck. Out of eighteen men in
-the forecastle, four were sailors, and they were old,
-the rest were just unskilled labourers, loafers, not
-worth their salt, whose one aim was to do as little as
-possible, and take the maximum time over it. There
-were eight apprentices, nice lads, each of whom had
-paid sixty guineas premium for the privilege of doing
-men’s work, and were expected to learn how intuitively,
-for no one ever showed them anything&mdash;no,
-not even how to live decently in their den of the halfdeck.
-These boys were really the backbone of the
-ship, for being all decently brought up young fellows
-they had not yet learned the vicious root-idea which
-is sapping the heart out of our workers&mdash;viz., that a
-man’s duty to himself is to study how best he can get
-money without working for it, and that his highest
-aim in life should be to give as little as possible in
-labour for the wages he receives.</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of this wretched condition of
-things on board there was something very like a
-collapse of all the energies (not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</span> many at the best of
-times) of the crew. According to the novelists
-who write of the sea from the abyss of utter ignorance
-of sea conditions, the crew should now have raided
-the ‘spirit-room’ (there isn’t such a place in the great
-majority of merchant ships), and fearful scenes of
-bloodshed and anarchy would have ensued. As a
-matter of fact, the whole situation was peculiarly
-sordid and commonplace. There lay the great
-cumbrous tank upon the reef, canted to one side in a
-shamefaced manner as if acknowledging how much
-she owed to the sea for any gainliness of outline she
-ever possessed. Listlessly the crew slouched about
-the sloping decks, obeying such calls as were made
-upon them in a half or quarter hearted fashion and
-casting wistful eyes upon the sandy shore. They
-were a motley gang, and there was no prospect of
-immediate danger to life, only to property&mdash;and that,
-they knew, didn’t matter a row of pins to anybody:
-they had obtained sufficient smattering of insurance
-problems to tell them that.</p>
-
-<p>So that I think, apart from the disheartened condition
-of skipper and officers, it will be seen that the
-<i>Warrior Queen</i> was in evil case. How evil may be
-imagined from the fact that not one of her company
-had seen, far off on the other side of the little group,
-a trio of upright trees with branches crossing them at
-right angles with extraordinary regularity. When
-seamen neglect the obvious duty of looking around
-for another ship things are bad indeed. It was so
-in this case, and the first intimation that Captain
-Smith had of there being any help at hand was the
-arrival alongside of a white double-ended boat with
-five swarthy-looking men at the oars and a tall
-devilishly handsome man erect in the stern. This<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</span>
-boat rounded to under the <i>Warrior Queen’s</i> stern in
-grand style, and before the dreaming fellows on
-board had realised that a visitor was coming Captain
-Da Silva had swung himself on board by the mizen
-chains, and with light elastic step had gained the side
-of Captain Smith on his broad quarter-deck. ‘Good
-morning, sir,’ said the new-comer. ‘G’ mornin’,’ sulkily
-replied the merchantman, for even in his dire distress
-he had the quaint old notion that he must show himself
-unapproachable in order to maintain his dignity.
-Dignity, forsooth! It’s worth a great deal when a
-man has to make a hog of himself to keep it in
-evidence. ‘Got a bit er trouble here, Cap’n?’ said
-Da Silva. ‘Yaas,’ drawled Captain Smith; ‘I’m
-afraid she isn’t worth more ’n old iron price, if that.
-It’s a bad job. Compasses wrong, y’ know.’ ‘Oh
-don’t say that,’ interjected the Portuguese; ‘I’ve got
-a bully crowd o’ boys here all spoilin’ fer a job.
-They’d ask nothin’ better than t’ git y’ afloat ag’in.’
-‘You have&mdash;an’ where, may I ask?’ said Captain
-Smith haughtily. (You see, his dignity needed conserving.)
-Captain Da Silva waved his hand airily to
-where the <i>Grampus</i> lay just discernible as a three-masted
-ship far off to the southward. ‘Thet’s my
-ship,’ said he, ‘’n’ ef yer like t’ come t’ terms with me,
-I’ve a-got a gang aboard thar thet’d snake yew eout
-of Purgatory itself. It’s only a matter of terms.’
-‘Come down below, Cap’n,’ said the now thoroughly
-aroused Mr. Smith. ‘I want t’ talk to you.’ And
-as they descended the polished teak companion, he laid
-his hand familiarly upon the swarthy visitor’s shoulder,
-saying in a confidential tone: ‘I ’spose yew’re a
-wrecker of some kind, ain’t you?’ ‘Me! oh, no,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</span>
-Captain. I’m jest a low-down whaling skipper,
-but I got a crew of boys a-spilin’ fur somethin’ t’ do,
-and ef yew’ll only say th’ word, an’ give me jes’ a
-leetle bill on yewr owners, I’ll bet we’ll snake yewr
-ship eout o’ this in short order.’ By this time they
-had reached the cosy saloon of the big ship, and
-Captain Smith had summoned the steward to bring
-the whisky and cigars. Solemnly they drank to each
-other, and then Captain Smith broached his latent
-idea. His ship had run ashore through no fault of
-his. Couldn’t he arrange for his new-found friend
-to take on a contract to get her off on the ‘no cure,
-no pay’ principle? Indeed he couldn’t. In Captain
-Da Silva he had met a man as much his superior in
-business ability as he was in seamanship, and that
-scheme did not work for a moment. Well, then,
-couldn’t he arrange for a liberal payment to the
-salvors with an equally liberal percentage to himself?&mdash;‘for,’
-said he, ‘my pay is only twelve pounds (sixty
-dollars) a month here.’ The Portuguese shook his
-head decisively, as befitted a man who held the reins
-of the team.</p>
-
-<p>‘Naow looky here, Cap’n Smith,’ drawled he, ‘I’ll
-tell you what I’ll do. My best endeavours t’ git
-yewr ship offn thishyer reef&mdash;yew givin’ me a bill
-on yewr owners fur 2,500 dollars t’ begin with, and
-a note t’ th’ effect that if I git her off the pay’s double.
-As fur pussentidges, I don’t know anything about
-’em an’ don’t want. Ef yew mean that I’m to share
-any of my earnin’s with yew&mdash;well, yew’re ’way off,
-’n’ thet’s all there is to it. Ther’ isn’t anythin’ o’ that
-kind abaout <i>me</i>, young man, be sure o’ thet.’ And
-the two men sat and looked hard at each other. Not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</span>
-for long. The odds were too great, and with a heavy
-sigh Captain Smith went to his state-room producing
-paper and pen, and wrote out the agreement and the
-bill on his owners. This instrument, having been
-duly witnessed by the mate and steward, was carefully
-read and signed by Captain Da Silva, who then
-pocketed it, and springing to his feet declared himself
-ready to begin the carrying out of his contract. The
-merchant skipper, not at all used to such energetic
-proceedings, was taken ‘flat aback,’ as the sea saying
-has it, but said nothing, and Captain Da Silva
-departed with big leaps up the cuddy stairs. As
-soon as he reached the deck he shouted in a voice of
-thunder: ‘My boat ready? <i>Grampus</i> boat’s crew
-away!’ Then without waiting for an answer he
-rushed to the gangway, and finding his men all in
-their places (they had not dared to come on deck) he
-flung himself over the side, and in one minute was on
-his way back to his ship, standing erect in the stern
-and urging the toiling rowers with many figures of
-profane speech to do better than their very best.</p>
-
-<p>It was a long pull back to the <i>Grampus</i>, but not
-one of the rowers got a spell until she was reached.
-Well was it for them that their training had been so
-severe and thorough. And on reaching the side all
-hands were summoned to prepare the ship for the
-most arduous task she had yet undertaken. Sundry
-orders were given with reference to mooring-chains,
-hawsers, kedges, &amp;c., and while the crew fled about
-their tasks of filling those orders, the Captain dived
-below and knitted his brow over a calculation of the
-tides. He found (and it is noteworthy that he was
-able to detach his mind from all else while he worked
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</span>
-out this important matter) that the ‘springs’ were due
-the following day at noon. This important matter
-settled, he replaced his books and sprang up the companion
-to the deck as if his life depended upon the
-ensuing minutes being husbanded with the most
-jealous care.</p>
-
-<p>A few short, volcanic orders, and the windlass was
-manned, the cable came clattering in, and as soon as
-the anchor was ready to be broken out the sails were
-set, and the <i>Grampus</i>, obedient to the master mind,
-turned gently to the wind, while the few remaining
-links of cable were hove in, and she passed out of the
-tortuous reef channel seaward. The skipper stood by
-the helmsman, conning his vessel as if he had been
-acquainted with the navigation of those intricate
-channels all his life. It was only the usual whaler’s
-style, but to the ordinary seaman it was nothing
-short of wonderful. The clumsy-looking old ship
-sidled out to sea as if she knew what was required of
-her, and presently the waiting men on board the
-<i>Warrior Queen</i> were astonished to see a short, thick-set,
-full-rigged ship come around the nearest point
-and suddenly bring to with a kedge about two miles
-away, waiting apparently for the word of command
-to do something totally unexpected. But there was
-no time wasted. Two boats were lowered from
-the new-comer, each double-banked, and under the
-pressure of foaming oars they ranged alongside the
-big helpless hulk, their crews leaped on board
-headed by the Captain, who immediately demanded
-that all hands should be called and placed under
-his orders. There was a moment or so of hesitation
-on the part of the English ship’s officers, but
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</span>
-while they paused the new comers had the hatches off
-and had rigged a couple of single whips over each.
-Then as the original crew realised what was a-doing,
-they buckled to manfully, and soon the coal was
-flying overboard in an almost continuous stream.
-Something of Captain Da Silva’s superhuman energy
-communicated itself to the crew of the <i>Warrior Queen</i>,
-for before many minutes had elapsed they were
-toiling as fiercely as any of the whaler’s men, and
-without in the least understanding why they should
-thus do violence to their long-cherished leisureliness.</p>
-
-<p>Through the thick haze of coal dust might have
-been seen Captain Da Silva and a chosen little body
-of men fiercely engaged in unbending the cables from
-the great anchors, getting up hawsers from below,
-and overhauling the long-neglected boat gear. The
-big wire rope, intended for towing purposes and therefore
-leading forward, was unwound and passed aft on the
-starboard side, while on the port side a length of cable
-was shackled on to the stoutest of the ship’s hawsers,
-and ranged in readiness to be taken off when needed.
-Then Captain Da Silva, getting into his boat, carefully
-sounded the reef to see whether the <i>Warrior Queen</i>
-had, as so often happens, found her way alone along
-some special channel. He knew that many wrecks on
-coral reefs have done just that, and afterwards, owing
-to superficial observation of the surroundings, it has
-been taken for granted that some awful convulsion of
-nature in the shape of an earthquake wave or something
-of the sort must be held responsible for the
-vessel’s reaching so apparently inaccessible a spot.
-After an absence of only an hour he returned, having
-found the channel by which the ship had entered, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</span>
-buoyed it with sundry lengths of lead-line and ‘blackfish’
-pokes, or bladders of the small cetacean known
-to whalers by that trivial name. Just a few minutes
-on board to see that the jettison of the coal was
-proceeding with as much vigour as possible under
-the circumstances, and then off again on board the
-<i>Grampus</i>. He caused her to be worked right into the
-channel he had found, but stern first and as easily as
-a barge is taken up a winding canal. Finally, when
-near enough for his liking, he had two hawsers
-attached to his bow anchors, and the latter dropped
-in the channel. These were veered away to their
-utmost length, which brought the stern of the <i>Grampus</i>
-near enough to the stern of the <i>Warrior Queen</i> to
-allow of the wire hawser and cable-bridled hawser
-being secured to the former. When all these preparations
-were complete he gave orders that all hands
-should rest so as to be capable of a supreme effort
-next day at noon, it now being about 10
-<span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span>, and
-some five hundred tons of coal having been jettisoned.</p>
-
-<p>After a good meal all round, the worn-out men
-went to their bunks&mdash;all except Captain Da Silva,
-who, calling upon his particular boat’s crew, started
-at midnight for the long and perilous pull back to
-the islet where the sick were encamped. Threading
-the dangers of that terrible group of reef-rocks and
-sandbanks apparently was mere amusement to him,
-although at times it must have seemed to a novice
-as if nothing could save the frail craft from being
-overwhelmed by the breaking of one of those vast
-swells over the jagged surface of a fringing reef,
-through one of whose openings they were passing.
-But this extraordinary man seemed to bear a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</span>
-charmed life, and, without shipping a drop of water
-even, the boat arrived at the camp in three hours
-from the time of leaving the <i>Warrior Queen</i>. Noiselessly
-she grounded on the smooth sand, light as a
-fawn the skipper sprang out, and in a few minutes
-had peered in at both tents and seen that all was
-silent as the grave, at which peaceful termination to
-his investigations he was apparently much annoyed.
-Returning to the boat, he caused an impromptu
-shelter to be rigged up by turning her over and
-spreading the sail over the upraised gunwale, and,
-creeping in under with his satellites, all were soon
-sound asleep; not, however, before a huge black
-bottle had been impartially passed round.</p>
-
-<p>At daylight the skipper awoke and went to visit
-his sick, finding, to his great satisfaction, that several
-of them were sufficiently recovered to be brought on
-board&mdash;they could do something, if it was only holding
-on the hawsers abaft the windlass. To Priscilla
-he said nothing&mdash;he stood looking at her doubtfully
-for a few minutes, while she endured his gaze as if
-unconscious of it. Then he turned on his heel and
-departed, and in a few minutes the trembling
-steward reported to her that ‘de Cappen, he make’n
-dem boat’s crew pull fur sixty sure, ma’m; dat boat
-jes’ a-flyin’.’</p>
-
-<p>He was back at the scene of salvage operations
-by ten o’clock, and found, as he had expected, that
-all hands were loafing about, waiting for him to come
-and tell them what to do. But he said nothing
-about that, only gave orders for all square sail to be
-loosed on both vessels and set with as little delay as
-possible. For there was the usual sea breeze setting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</span>
-in, at no great rate it is true, but with every promise
-of being much stronger by noon. And it blew right
-fair for the channel, along which, if in any direction
-at all, the <i>Warrior Queen</i> must go. Nearer and
-nearer drew the critical moment, the tide rising
-rapidly. All hands were ordered to their stations,
-the <i>Warrior Queen’s</i> crew being, with the exception
-of just sufficient to trim her yards in case of necessity,
-all on board the <i>Grampus</i> at the windlass. The
-breeze freshened as the tide rose, and a few minutes
-before noon Captain Da Silva gave orders for all his
-reinforced crew to heave away at the windlass for
-dear life. The powerful leverage of that great spread
-of canvas on both ships, aided by the strain on the
-hawsers applied at just the right time, gradually
-made itself manifest. The vast bulk of the <i>Warrior
-Queen</i> slowly rolled, shuddered, slipped, and with a
-long grinding groan she moved. Frantic yells arose
-from the windlass-men on board of the <i>Grampus</i>.
-They felt the weight yielding, and forgetting the
-danger of breaking the old-fashioned machine they
-were trying so hardly, redoubled their efforts.</p>
-
-<p>Slowly, majestically, the big ship glided seaward,
-steered by the mate in response to the desperate
-signals made from the whaler, where the skipper
-was now in an almost insane state of excitement lest
-some fool should, at the last minute, spoil all his
-work. But no; gently the whaler increased her
-speed, followed clumsily by her tow, until, at 1.30
-the rescued merchantman was able to turn and
-pursue her way alone. Before she did so, however,
-Captain Da Silva, having anchored his ship,
-hastened on board the saved vessel, and, shaking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</span>
-hands warmly with Captain Smith, bade him ‘so
-long,’ saying to himself as he did so: ‘I guess yew
-want somebody to dry-nurse yew mighty bad.
-Don’t matter to me, though. Five thousand dollars
-ain’t half a bad day’s pay, an’ I guess I’ll snake it in
-soon ’s ever I git t’ port. He ain’t a bit t’ be ’pended
-’pon, thet man.’</p>
-
-<p>And, leaving the big ship to pursue her journey,
-the energetic rascal returned on board his own vessel,
-got under weigh and hastened back to his former
-anchorage, fully determined to get the rest of his
-ailing men on board, fit or not, and leave next day
-for sea. He reached the camp at sunset, anchored,
-and went ashore, finding that his wife was well on
-the way to complete recovery, and the rest of the
-poor fellows doing very well. So without any further
-delay, he caused the camp to be broken up, the
-invalids brought on board, and everything got in
-readiness for departure the following day.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">HUMANITY REWARDED</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless many of the superior persons, who, like
-Matthew Arnold, their high priest, have led sheltered
-lives, will, also like him, curl the lip of scorn at any
-sorely pressed human creature in his extremity of
-need lifting his heart in prayer to God for help.
-Let them do so, if it please them, while they may.
-For many thousands know most gratefully that
-prayer is indeed a perfect communication between
-man and his Maker, and is answered so fully and
-so frequently as to put all coldly logical or brilliantly
-poetical objectors entirely out of court. Who, indeed,
-would accept the evidence of a blind man as to the
-value of a certain picture, or of a deaf man upon
-the merits of an oratorio? Therefore, <i>pace</i> Matthew
-Arnold and his ‘Self Help,’ let me gratefully return
-to the comforted little company in that sorely bestead
-whaleboat. In the midst of that wilderness of kelp,
-with the awful hand of the gale pressing them back
-from the goal they so sorely desired, they yet felt a
-security, a peace such as can only accrue to those who,
-in a like position, know that underneath them are the
-Everlasting Arms.</p>
-
-<p>Almost literally inch by inch they fought their
-way seaward. Much as they valued the smooth
-which the kelp brought them, its hindering environment
-was terribly wearisome to the humanly limited
-strength. But doggedly they toiled on, often only
-half consciously, as squalls of sleet slashed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</span> savagely
-across their cowering faces and every fresh blast of
-wind beat at them as if it were the spirit of some
-malicious demon determined upon their destruction.
-Suddenly they emerged from the slimy smoothness of
-the kelp into the free dash of the great waves.
-And as they did so Mr. Peck, with a great voice,
-shouted, ‘Now, boys, for y’r lives; out oars an’ pull
-jest a leetle bit; perhaps we can histe a rag of sail
-and keep her away a bit presently. That’s it&mdash;lift her,
-lift her; oh, too good, boys, too good, one, two, three;
-better ’n’ better. I see the ship! She ain’t no
-distance off. Stick t’ it, me hearties, give ’r all you
-got&mdash;thet’s y’r style.’ In such wise did the fine fellow
-encourage his men, who were taking the last ounce
-out of themselves in their desperate fight with the
-forces of nature. And the passengers cowering in
-the bottom of the boat heard and saw not, endured
-dimly, dumbly; until just as it seemed impossible
-that the overborne sailors could hold out any longer
-came the glorious cry of ‘Boat ahoy!’ A yell of
-thankful reply, and the great bulk of the ship
-materialised out of the darkness. A minute or two
-of breathless suspense as the boat swung off the wind,
-and then a blessed sense of security and calm as she
-surged up under the lee of the grand old tub, where
-all hands, by the light of the flaring try-works, were
-awaiting them. Life from the dead, fellow creatures
-welcomed back from out the gaping jaws of the grave&mdash;how
-glorious a sensation to true men! And when
-the whisper ran round that some of the saved ones
-were women there were chokings and dim eyes among
-these rough-looking but tender-hearted fellows,
-although comments were mostly limited to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</span>
-commonplace expression, ‘Poor things, poor things.’</p>
-
-<p>Safely on board, and the boat hoisted into her
-place, Captain Hampden whispered an order to his
-mate to keep all the southing he could so as to get
-well clear of that awful pile of rock, still much too near
-for comfort. Then with a courtly old-world grace he
-led the way to his cabin, and begged his strangely
-shipped passengers to make themselves at home.
-The three quaint little figures revealed themselves as
-ladies&mdash;young, but haggard with anxiety and privation.
-Alone in the world, too. For the story of the
-lost ship from which they had escaped was just this,
-so bald and simple, yet so full of pathos to the imaginative
-mind. She was a huge four-master, with splendid
-passenger accommodation, bound for Australia,
-and specially recommended as affording a grand
-opportunity for a perfect sea trip for consumptives.
-So thirty poor wrecks of humanity, but possessing
-money enough to buy a chance of life, availed themselves
-of the opportunity, for, after all, the fare was
-much lower than in a fast steamer, and the attendance
-likely to be much better. But the crew! What
-agony the Captain endured as he found that sailing-ships
-were in such bad odour that men could not be
-obtained&mdash;that if he would get to sea at all he must
-needs ship men who hardly knew a cringle from a
-scupper-hole. However, this is one of the penalties
-a man must pay to-day when working his way up in
-a sailing-ship prior to taking charge in steam. And
-Captain Weston paid it. Running the easting down,
-he found his handful of wastrels not merely incompetent,
-but afraid&mdash;a poor group of fellows whom no
-threats or bribes could make do their duty, while he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</span>
-had upon his heart the helpless passengers. So he
-ran her, recklessly as it appeared, really because he
-could do nothing else, and strained his heartstrings
-nightly as he looked up through the blackness at
-those great sails, and wondered what <i>would</i> happen
-should they blow away, for to take them in he knew
-was impossible.</p>
-
-<p>Is it fair to put such a strain upon one man as
-this? I do not think so, yet most captains of our
-big sailing-ships must shoulder such a burden to-day,
-and for, at most, £200 a year. No wonder the
-Mercantile Marine is unpopular. Captain Weston
-endured his load almost helplessly in view of the
-season and the quality of his crew; and when, while
-snatching a few moments’ sleep in his chart-room, he
-felt his ship go over, over, over, until on her beam
-ends, and knew that she had broached-to in the
-height of one of the southern gales, he gave a sigh
-almost of relief as knowing the worst. Out of the
-half-dozen boats he carried one succeeded in getting
-away with three ladies on board, whose charges, a
-consumptive father, uncle, and sweetheart, were
-practically killed by the shock. There were also two
-male passengers, the mate, and four seamen. And
-these were all the survivors of that awful mid-sea
-catastrophe, when a great ship, through bad steering,
-was thrown on her beam ends and, her decks bursting,
-sank like a broken cup in the midst of that
-lonely ocean.</p>
-
-<p>For two days the surviving boat and her miserable
-freight managed to keep ahead of the hungry, following
-sea, until, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</span> the blackness of the third night,
-when hope was well-nigh dead, she entered the kelp
-fringing Gough Island, and after a series of hairbreadth
-escapes the whole party succeeded in landing
-upon its frowning shores. There, for nearly three
-months, they had maintained life in semi-savage
-fashion, wondering whether they were doomed to
-spend the rest of their days there, when help came
-in the shape of the hardly beset <i>Xiphias</i>, and they
-were once more restored to a little world of living
-people.</p>
-
-<p>With a sigh Captain Hampden bore up for Cape
-Town. It was much out of his way, and, besides, he
-was so far to the southward that it would be difficult
-to make the port, especially in such a sluggish old
-craft. But the idea of carrying those poor ladies on
-to the Mauritius, which was the only place that lay
-anywhere near his track whence they could be
-shipped home, was not to be thought of for one
-moment. And having decided upon what to do, he
-did it with all his heart, allowing no one to see what
-a struggle it had cost him. All sail was made, therefore,
-and the course set for Cape Town, the rescued
-mate and his four shipmates taking a vigorous part
-in the handling of the ship, so that the <i>Xiphias’</i> crew
-could finish their heavy task of securing the oil from
-their previous catch.</p>
-
-<p>She was a mighty busy ship, as well as a happy
-one, for there was so much to do with the two and
-a half tons of baleen secured, after the oil was all
-stored below, that no one had any time of leisure.
-This peculiar substance&mdash;‘whalebone,’ as we have
-agreed to call it&mdash;is really of the nature of dried
-gristle or soft horn, and when it is green&mdash;<i>i.e.</i>, newly
-taken from the whale&mdash;it needs constant care and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</span>
-labour in scraping, drying in the sun, and other trade
-treatment. Without this it soon becomes valueless,
-and, since it is so high-priced when properly cured,
-it is obviously the most important duty on a whaleship
-to attend to it. But this duty tries the patience
-of all hands most sorely. In the present case, however,
-there were compensations. For, in the first
-place, Captain Hampden was not the man to keep
-his crew at other work all day and scraping, &amp;c.,
-whalebone all night; and, secondly, a cheery whisper
-ran round the ship that he (the old man) intended
-landing the stuff at Cape Town for transhipment to
-market.</p>
-
-<p>And then, to the great joy of the crew and the
-unbounded chagrin of the passengers, the ship ran
-one morning at daybreak into the midst of a vast
-school of sperm-whales, extending from one horizon
-to the other. Their numbers no man could calculate,
-any more than what stupendous stores of food must
-be necessary to feed such an army of monsters.
-Captain Hampden’s heart glowed with thankfulness
-that he had been by humanity turned thus far out of
-his intended course, and, in obedience to his newly
-born instinct, went away into a corner by himself
-and lifted up his heart, not merely in gratitude to
-God, but for wisdom, after all these years of experience,
-to do just the right thing in the manipulation
-of this great store so lavishly spread before him.
-It only took a minute or two (how simply and
-quickly can we prefer our petitions and praises to
-the King of kings), and he was back again among
-his men, the guiding, ruling spirit of all. As if his
-plan of campaign had been laid out a week ahead,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</span>
-he apportioned to each officer his place in the coming
-struggle, took advantage of the presence of the passenger
-mate and four seamen to give them the
-handling of the vessel, and then gaily took the field
-himself with five boats, skipper leading.</p>
-
-<p>It was an ideal day, the great sun just rising from
-the smooth ocean bed into an absolutely clear sky&mdash;clear
-from clouds, that is, but splashed with all the
-splendid colours of a tropical dawn, the glassy undulating
-sea-surface broken in all directions by the
-lolling masses of the sea monsters, each lazily exhaling
-his or her bushy tuft of vapour. Occasionally
-the heavenly silence was broken by a playful rush of
-a dozen or so of these colossal forms in some given
-direction, making the placid sea foam and curdle
-around their massive bodies as if it had suddenly
-met some newly risen rocks. Or a few sedate bulls
-would gravely invert themselves, and as if by a concerted
-movement slowly beat upon the sea with their
-great flukes, the gigantic strokes reverberating along
-the silent surface like the echoes of a distant cannonade.</p>
-
-<p>Yes, they were a happy, placid company, recking
-not of evil, least of all apparently of the presence of
-those five small white things that, a hundred fathoms
-or so apart, were coming gliding among them, each
-with cruel points protruding from its front and glittering
-fiercely in the rays of the mounting sun. And
-before any attempt at flight could be made by one
-member of that great company, the five boats were
-among them, each boat had singled out the largest
-victim near (for so had run the Captain’s orders),
-and the slaughter had begun. Now while it is undoubtedly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</span>
-true that the sperm-whale is brave and
-will under ordinary circumstances fight for his life
-with a fury and sagacity not to be excelled by those
-of any mammal afloat or ashore, it is also quite true
-that occasionally, especially in large companies like
-the present one, sperm-whales will become panic-stricken,
-and, making not the slightest attempt either
-to fight or flee, will suffer themselves to be slain like
-a flock of silly sheep when the wolf leaps into the
-fold among them. The present was one of those
-occasions. Harpoons flew and lances flashed, the
-boats rode easily, hardly moving in any direction
-amid closely packed squads of utterly demoralised
-whales, and the sea speedily became foul with blood
-and oil. It needed all the skipper’s power of command
-to call his men off, frantic as they were with
-the lust of killing, which overtakes the gentlest and
-most amiable of mankind once the first shudder of
-compunction has been overcome. But Captain
-Hampden’s cool judgment realised that already&mdash;only
-one hour from lowering&mdash;sufficient work had
-been provided to last all hands, work as they would,
-until the odour of their spoil would become utterly
-intolerable, which is the principal drawback in
-sperm-whaling to taking full advantage of such an
-opportunity as the present one.</p>
-
-<p>Reluctantly the boats drew each to her prey,
-unwillingly the officers ceased plying their lances
-among the aimlessly wandering monsters, and there
-amid lanes of coming and going whales they laboured
-to attach their tow-lines to dead whale flukes, while
-the Captain, returning on board, took charge of his
-ship again, and aided by a gentle southerly breeze<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</span>
-that had just sprung up, manœuvred her around in
-order to secure the spoil. It was a wonderful sight
-when all the great carcasses had been secured alongside
-to see the assembled hundreds&mdash;maybe thousands&mdash;of
-survivors surrounding the ship as if held there
-by some dread fascination they were unable to resist.
-Usually the sight or scent or presence of blood is
-sufficient to send them fleeing at the top of their
-speed to the four airts; but now was one of the exceptions,
-and in the clear sleeky water around the
-ship their vast bodies rolled and turned without
-apparent objective, until one of the passengers was
-fain to ask the skipper whether he did not think they
-were meditating an attack in force upon her. Captain
-Hampden laughed loud and long, for he had
-several times been privileged to witness a similar
-scene, and he knew that no more danger was to be
-apprehended from the presence of all those whales
-than there was from the coming of the thousands of
-sharks that in all the fury of their ravenous hunger
-were already tearing at the mighty carcasses secured
-to the ship.</p>
-
-<p>Again was that ship’s company involved in the
-most tremendous toil, but better fitted than before
-by experience, and unhindered by the awful prospect
-of imminent death by their vessel being dashed
-ashore. Moreover, the weather was beautifully fine
-as well as mild, the barometer stood steadily high,
-the sea was as smooth as it ever is in 35° S., and
-there were seven willing additional hands. All the
-more willing because the skipper assured them that
-as soon as ever the cutting-in was accomplished he
-would make sail again for Cape Town, and that this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</span>
-splendid accession to his profits for the voyage would
-only hinder their progress for at most a couple of
-days. A ship’s company all in the highest spirits,
-working as if their very lives depended upon the
-amount they did, with never a harsh word spoken;
-every man, seaman or officer, bubbling over with
-cheerfulness and good temper, and seven splendid
-auxiliaries joining their forces as if the whole affair
-was a gigantic piece of fun. It was too. For as the
-capture of the whales had been the easiest on record
-for sperm-whales, the whole seven taken having been
-slain in less than one hour, so the weather was as
-perfect as the most exacting desire could make it.
-The little southerly breeze that had been so valuable
-in the getting of the spoil alongside had died completely
-away, and the only movement of the vessel,
-hardly noticeable, was due to an almost imperceptible
-westerly swell. As Mr. Pease said, ‘Anybody ’d
-think we wuz ridin’ snug in some harbour.’</p>
-
-<p>As the weather was so propitious, every effort was
-directed at first to getting the whales beheaded, and
-the strange spectacle was to be witnessed of men
-hacking away at those great masses below them
-from little stages slung all round the ship, wherever
-a whale’s head could be got at comprehensively.
-And all this to such good purpose that by sunset,
-although the men were not over-fatigued, the whole
-of the seven heads were off and floating astern at the
-ends of stout ropes, and one whale had been skinned
-and his blubber carefully stowed below. A perfect
-illumination of the ship by means of cressets was
-devised, each of which, slung where it could be of the
-most service, was kept supplied with whale ‘scrap,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</span>
-or the blubber from preceding whales, from which as
-much oil had been boiled as possible. This is the
-only fuel used for boiling the oil, and as it blazes
-almost like a Lucigen light it makes a splendid
-illuminant as well. Besides, the glorious moon, a
-huge disc of blazing silver, made the night bright,
-enough to read quite small print&mdash;so bright, indeed,
-that although there was not a trace of cloud or mist,
-the pretty stars were hardly visible. So as soon as
-the well-earned supper was eaten a system was
-devised whereby ten men and two officers at a time
-should have two hours’ sleep, there being then quite
-sufficient to handle the windlass and rip off the
-blubber.</p>
-
-<p>Then the great night’s work began. The rattling
-of the windlass pawls was incessant; there seemed
-to be no pause in the steady ascent of the great
-black-and-white blankets, and the shouting of orders,
-the cheerful gabble, and the roaring of the fires made
-a most pleasant tumult. In the midst of it all, after
-midnight, a voice was heard across the sea shouting,
-‘Ship ahoy! Want any assistance?’ Mr. Pease,
-in charge at the time, roared back, ‘No; why?’
-‘Thought ye was on fire. I’ll send a boat on board.’
-And sure enough from a trim frigate, which had
-stolen up by the aid of the light upper airs, came a
-boat, full of sorely puzzled men, who had never
-witnessed a scene like it in their lives, and, having
-witnessed it, would never be likely to forget it. It
-was only by the most careful piloting and obedience
-to the instructions shouted at them from the deck of
-the whaler that the boat was able to pick her way
-among those floating masses; but, that difficulty successfully<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</span>
-overcome, the officer in charge leaped on to
-the rail and stood gazing with wide-eyed wonder upon
-the deck. For, do what they would, the hardly pressed
-toilers had been unable to stow more than the
-blubber from two whales in the blubber-room, so that
-the blankets of three others were encumbering the
-deck and making it, to anybody but a whaleman,
-almost impassable.</p>
-
-<p>The visitor clambered aft and introduced himself
-to Captain Hampden, newly awakened, as a lieutenant
-of H.M.S. <i>Griffon</i>, and apologised for intrusion, saying
-that he, with all the rest of his ship’s company, could
-not help but believe that they were coming in the
-nick of time to the assistance of a vessel on fire. But
-he added, while he was glad to find that not the case,
-he was delighted to have had the opportunity of
-gazing upon such a scene, which his wildest dreams
-of sea-happenings had never before pictured. Then
-the skipper gave him the news of the rescue, and
-asked if it would be agreeable to have the passengers
-transferred. This, however, they themselves demurred
-to, feeling no doubt that such an opportunity as now
-presented itself for gaining experience was not to be
-lightly given up; and, besides, they found that there
-would be no saving of time, as the warship was bound
-to Ascension. So, after a hearty shake hands all
-round, the gallant officer swung himself over the rail
-and departed, primed with material for yarns for
-years to come.</p>
-
-<p>That night passed with almost the rapidity of a
-sound sleep, but its hours had been so well utilised
-that when the lovely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</span> morning broke and gilded the
-haggard faces of the toilers, all the carcasses had
-been disposed of and the great heads were ranged
-alongside ready for dissection. Now these whales,
-though large, were by no means of the largest, and
-therefore it occurred to the skipper to test his lifting-gear
-to the utmost. So he had the ‘junk’ or snout
-point of the first cut off, hoisted on deck, and secured;
-then, hooking both tackles on to the remainder of the
-head, all hands buckled on to the windlass, and,
-although the old vessel listed dangerously, succeeded
-in bringing the great mass on deck. Now for activity.
-A long rip fore and aft the case; ten willing hands
-dipping their buckets at once into the reservoir of
-spermaceti. Plenty more behind passing it away
-into the tanks. Wonderful! In twenty minutes it
-is empty, and at a word from the skipper as the ship
-rolls to starboard, two or three swift spade blows
-release the empty head and it slides massively into
-the sea. Hurrah! Now for another. Will these
-men never tire? Apparently not. But the skipper’s
-brow is knotted with care. Receptacles for the bland
-spermaceti, semi-liquid as it is, are beginning to fail.
-‘Cooper, what shall we do? Tanks are all full.
-Kain’t ye git us some pipes?’ ‘Gimme three hands,
-sir, ’n’ I’ll git y’ all yew want.’ ‘Bully fur you, cooper.
-Jim, Rube, Manuel, go with the cooper and help him.’
-And in half-an-hour two 336-gallon pipes are ready
-to receive the rest of the spermaceti: the difficulty is
-met.</p>
-
-<p>Four <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> sees the <i>Xiphias</i> so utterly blocked
-from knight-heads to cabin skylight with blubber
-that the passenger seamen look solemnly at one
-another and wonder what will be the end of it all.
-They do not know how recently this crowd have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</span>
-disposed of an almost similar difficulty, with an awful
-shore grinning up at them from close a-lee. A faint
-westerly breeze springs up, the passengers are asked
-if they will make sail, and as they gladly assent, away
-goes the grand old tub under every stitch, smoking
-like two or three steamers rolled into one, and leaving
-behind her a wide wake of smoothness from exuding
-oil&mdash;for she is fast becoming more like an oil-saturated
-sponge than a ship. But nothing daunts her crew.
-They are happy. Visions of a glorious ending of
-their voyage, of farms bought, and a position among
-their stay-at-home neighbours proudly pre-eminent,
-fill their minds and make them call up the last ounce
-of energy to cut a horse-piece or turn the mincer-handle
-when they have felt for the last half-hour that
-it was impossible to put in another stroke.</p>
-
-<p>These visions come to all but Rube. For of him
-it may truly be said that he lives in the present.
-The past has no memories for him, the future no
-anticipation. To all the cheery chatter of his shipmates
-anent their plans for the future he turns a
-disinterested ear. When they say, ‘Wut <i>you</i> goin’
-t’ do, Rube ole man, w’en yew gits home?’ he replies
-solemnly, ‘Only God knows. I ain’t got no plans.
-I want Him to ’range things fur me, then I know
-they’ll be all right. Anyhow, I know I kain’t be any
-happier than I am ’mong yew dear fellers&mdash;I never
-thought ’t would be possible t’ be so happy ’s I am
-naow. But, dear chaps, ef I wuz yew I wouldn’t go
-buildin’ too many castles. Y’ see at fust, yew know,
-they’re only castles in th’ air, but ef yew go on buildin’
-an’ buildin’, bimeby they gets t’ be so real t’ yew thet
-w’en yew finds ’at yew kain’t build ’em indeed, th’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</span>
-disappointment is awful.’ So he talked, and, good-naturedly,
-they bantered him. And meanwhile the
-great work was being well done; so well done that
-two days before they entered Table Bay, and passing
-close under Robben Island, anchored well clear of
-the mail steamers’ track into the harbour, the last
-trace of foulness was removed from the old ship&mdash;she
-looked clean as a ship should look. She did not
-smell sweet, but that, alas! could not be helped. In
-those warm climates it is only possible to avoid bad
-smells in a whaler that has no luck, and the <i>Xiphias</i>
-certainly had redeemed her apparent bad luck at last;
-for she had only been out seven months, and now
-she had on board 800 barrels of sperm oil and 550
-right-whale oil, besides two and a half tons of baleen,
-so that her catch at the market price of that day may
-be invoiced thus:&mdash;</p>
-
-<table summary="Invoice">
-<tbody>
-<tr><td>800 barrels of sperm oil = 80 tons, at £100 =</td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;&nbsp;$500 per ton</td><td class="right"> £8,000</td>
- <td> =</td>
- <td class="right"> $40,000</td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td>550 barrels of black oil = 55 tons, at £20 =</td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;&nbsp;$100 per ton</td>
- <td class="right"> £1,100</td>
- <td> =</td>
- <td class="right"> $5,500</td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td>2&frac12; tons, bone at £1,500 =</td>
- </tr>
-<tr><td>&nbsp;&nbsp;$7,500 per ton</td>
- <td class="bb right"> £3,750</td>
- <td>=</td>
- <td class="bb right"> $17,750</td>
- </tr>
-
-<tr><td />
- <td>£12,850</td>
- <td> =</td>
- <td> $63,250</td>
- </tr>
-
-</tbody>
-</table>
-
-<p>An ideal trip so far, and yielding even to the poor
-holder of the 250th lay, a comfortable sum of £51 8<i>s.</i>
-= $256·50, of course subject to deduction for slops,
-tobacco, advance, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">A GREAT BLOW</p>
-
-<p>Many and terrible are the temptations which await
-the striving Christian, whatever his or her spiritual
-age may be. It is a moot point whether they (the
-temptations) are felt more severely by the babe in
-Christ in the first fervour of the new life, or by the
-mature Christian who is insensibly led to feel that he
-or she has attained unto a firm standing in the Faith.
-But one thing is, or should be, beyond controversy,
-and that is that no fiercer temptations assail any man
-than those which await the newly converted sailor,
-who has begun, in the solitude of the ocean and its
-sweet freedom from the allurements of shore vices,
-the upward way. He has been born, and has grown
-up to a certain Christian stature in a state of peaceful
-freedom from the evils of shore life, and has almost
-come to regard them as belonging to a previous state
-of existence to which he can never return. Then, when
-he is suddenly plunged headlong into them again he
-is in great, very great, danger of a relapse that may
-give him an agonising season of remorse. But I
-must not carry this digression too far. I only wish,
-in beginning this chapter, to point out how dire were
-the perils awaiting the crew of the <i>Xiphias</i>, many of
-whom were only, in the imitative way common to the
-majority of human beings, behaving as they saw the
-general sense of their little community would have
-them behave, and not at all from any conviction as to
-the necessity of such behaviour to their peace or <span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</span>from
-any inward urging whatever.</p>
-
-<p>It is, however, safe to say that such considerations
-troubled no one on board the ship at all. Every
-man was in an overflowing state of happiness at
-again anchoring in a civilised port after the long
-and weary cruise and the many hardships and
-dangers encountered. Every man, too, with the
-exception of Rube, was half-intoxicated with a quite
-lawful pride in his achievements during the past two
-months. All remembered how helplessly, ignorantly,
-and painfully they had begun the voyage, traced
-easily the educational way they had come, mentally
-visualised vividly each heroic detail, and gradually
-lost sight of the great central fact of it all, the
-Fatherly care of God. Therefore, when, the next
-day after arrival, the rescued passengers returned on
-board with urgent requests to the Captain that
-he would allow them the privilege of entertaining the
-crew ashore as a slight return for benefits received,
-all who could be spared on that day, except Rube,
-joyfully availed themselves of the permission readily
-given and went ashore.</p>
-
-<p>They were royally welcomed at one of the
-principal hotels by the rescued ones, some of whom
-had wired home and received in reply advices
-enabling them to draw upon the local banks for
-all moneys needed. They were entertained far too
-well, for two-thirds of them returned on board drunk
-and quarrelsome, and for the first time that voyage
-the foc’s’le was the scene of a riotous conflict, in
-the midst of which Rube moved like a strong
-apostle of peace, able, as well as eager, to enforce
-quietude upon the most unruly, even though it
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</span>
-involved a considerable amount of what some weak-minded
-people might call brutality. The lesson
-taught by this episode was not without its valuable
-effect upon those who had remained on board. With
-a self-sacrifice entirely laudable, they refused to go
-ashore at all. This may not, probably will not, be
-assessed by my readers at its proper value; but, oh, if
-landsfolk could only realise the intense longing for
-a run ashore which seizes upon sailors after being
-cooped up on board ship for seven or eight months, it
-would be understood. Truly, Reuben and the skipper
-had done their best to give the ship-keeping crew
-such amusement as was possible, and the best shore
-food, fresh beef, mutton, and vegetables that could be
-procured had been provided.</p>
-
-<p>Table Bay swarms, or did swarm, with a splendid
-species of crustacean known as ‘craw-fish,’ many
-of which grow to a huge size, weighing several
-pounds, and have a flavour in no way inferior to
-that of a lobster. There was great sport in
-catching these in impromptu nets made of rope-yarn
-meshed upon hoops and baited with bones,
-and even greater satisfaction in knowing that they
-would live for months in tanks of salt water frequently
-renewed. Then there was ordinary fishing, or,
-perhaps, I should say extraordinary fishing, of the
-schnapper, the cod, and other fish which swarm
-around the southern extremity of Africa almost
-unmolested. And sailors love fishing, though scarcely
-any class of men living within reach of fishable waters
-get less of it.</p>
-
-<p>So quite pleasantly the time passed away&mdash;the
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</span>
-four days during which Captain Hampden found
-it possible to sell his baleen and tranship it, and
-to expend a liberal sum in fresh food, vegetables, and
-live-stock. On the fifth morning, at daybreak, the
-cry of ‘Man the windlass!’ rang along the deck of the
-<i>Xiphias</i>, and all hands responded. But, unhappily,
-most of those who had been ashore did so very
-unwillingly. The memory of their spree was secretly
-most alluring; they had tasted illicit delights again,
-and were lamenting the deprivation of them. Thus
-they were sullen, unwilling, and miserable. Vainly
-did Rube exert all his simple arts to rouse them out
-of themselves, to cheer them. They would not be
-cheered; they hugged their misery and almost infected
-several of their shipmates.</p>
-
-<p>But the work was going on, all unconsciously
-the best cure was being applied, and by nightfall,
-with their fine old ship heading northward for
-the Mozambique Channel before a fine following
-breeze, they had gone much farther than they
-were aware of on the road to repentance and
-recovery. By repentance I do not mean that spurious
-sentiment which is really sorrow for one’s inability to
-go and repeat former sins or excesses, disgust and
-annoyance at being compelled to reap what one has
-sown, but a comprehensive change of mind with
-reference to one’s former behaviour, a distrust of one’s
-own powers of resistance to the drawings of evil, and
-a determination to trust for deliverance from them
-to Almighty God. A simple definition, perhaps, but
-one that I know is far too often neglected or wilfully
-misunderstood.</p>
-
-<p>Day succeeded day in perfect loveliness of
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</span>
-weather and peace on board. The routine of the
-ship had fallen easily back into its accustomed
-grooves, and opportunity had been taken to renew
-all the wastage that had been made in the general
-equipment of the ship and boats by reason of the
-recent heavy demands made upon it. But no whales
-were seen. Eager eyes scanned the wide sea for
-every moment of the daylight, but nothing was seen
-of any value. Still, the previous sense of irritation
-and almost hopelessness was not there, could hardly
-be, since so great an accession of profit had been
-made during the last two months; a haul that, as
-Captain Hampden gratefully admitted, might not
-have been made on some voyages during the first two
-years. But as day succeeded day and week followed
-week, there came upon all hands a querulous desire
-to question the wisdom which had brought the ship
-into a part of the ocean where everything desirable
-was found except the one central object of the
-voyage: profit. As watch followed watch under
-those lovely skies, the watchers became listless, careless,
-their attitude at the mastheads showed how
-weary they had become of the fruitless gaze across
-the wide sea-plain. And the wise skipper, who, as a
-skipper should, carefully noted all the symptoms of
-discontent, gradually tightened the somewhat relaxed
-disciplinary fibres, and had many things done which,
-under the pressure of whaling, might quite safely
-have remained undone. The recently obtained cargo
-was overhauled and re-stowed, the reeking hold was
-thoroughly cleansed, and although nothing was ever
-undertaken which could not be dropped at one
-minute’s notice, had whales appeared, an enormous
-amount of valuable work was accomplished, and that,
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</span>
-too, without any friction whatever. In addition to
-the work of the ship, the Captain unofficially encouraged
-the men to undertake in their leisure
-moments the making of ‘scrimshaw,’ the name given
-to <i>objets-d’art</i> (?), fabricated of ivory and bone, and
-calling out all the latent mechanical genius possessed
-by the men.</p>
-
-<p>To this end, foreseeing an easy, quiet time, he had
-caused several jaw-pans of the sperm-whale to be set
-aside and towed astern in order that they might
-bleach to a dazzling whiteness. All the teeth had
-been saved and pickled in barrels of strong brine, and
-a considerable number of the shorter blades or
-laminæ of baleen had been retained when the bulk
-of it was transhipped at Cape Town. Word was
-passed forward that any man who felt inclined might
-have for the asking such of these materials as he
-chose in order to try his hand at curio-making; and
-the carpenter, although, like most good workmen, he
-would not lend his tools, never refused to saw off a
-length of jawbone for a walking-stick, or cut up into
-rough pieces the bleached bone, for any man who
-asked him. Nor did he make any favour of showing
-a man how to make his own tools out of old knives,
-files, rasps, or even sail-needles. This amiability had
-great results, for before long practically all hands
-were engaged upon this fascinating hobby, and,
-emulating one another, were turning out some really
-beautiful pieces of work in carved ivory, bone, and
-baleen. Some of the sticks were quite works of art.
-A length of, say, three feet by one inch square, sawn
-from a jaw-pan after it had been subjected to a long
-tow astern, would be tightly lashed down to a spar
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</span>
-in the sun so that it would dry perfectly straight.
-Then, by the aid of a ‘cutter’ or rasp, softened in
-the fire and filed into deep ridges with cutting edges,
-it would be worked down into a rough roundness of
-outline. By the aid of other equally primitive tools
-the stick would then be gradually fashioned into the
-semblance of a rope, with ‘worming,’ or a much
-smaller rope twisted into its lays&mdash;a form of art
-which is highly interesting, as having been practised
-by sailors from very remote days. Three years ago,
-when staying at Repton School, I was shown over
-the ruins of the ancient abbey there, and in the
-recently unearthed crypt, dating back to Anglo-Saxon
-times I was told, there were four monolithic
-pillars of stone supporting the roof, each of which
-was carved into the same semblance of a rope with
-‘worming’ in its lays. Also at a great country
-house where I stayed last year, whose noble and
-hospitable owner made a hobby of collecting books
-on ancient art, I saw some superb illustrations in
-colour of ancient croziers, upon which were carved in
-ivory or worked in precious metals the universally
-used ‘Turk’s-head’ of the sailor, which has not
-altered one jot of its details down to the present day
-through all those hundreds of years.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to our stick-maker. At one end of
-the stick about eight or ten inches would be cut
-away until only a slender square rod of about three-eighths
-of an inch thickness remained; upon this
-would be threaded medallions of ivory, baleen, silver
-(quarter-dollars), ebony, and coco-tree wood. An
-albatross head or some similarly well-known object
-would be patiently carved and secured on
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</span> top, and
-the whole stick was then polished, first with fine
-sand, then with powdered pumice-stone, and finished
-with chalk and oil. And really, when completed,
-many of these pieces of work would have made no
-bad show in an industrial exhibition, especially if the
-primitive tools could have been shown with them.
-Besides this fascinating pursuit, there were several
-others tacitly encouraged by the skipper, such as
-model-making, gymnastics, swimming (on calm days),
-and, of course, fishing. And thus gradually what
-had threatened to become a painful set-back to all of
-them turned out to be a veritable blessing, a halcyon
-time which many remembered all their lives after
-with the most tender regret.</p>
-
-<p>But still they were not earning anything, and
-after their experience on the other side of the Cape
-they began to feel as if their fortunes were already
-made. They did not realise the vastness of the
-ocean and the tiny little circle, after all, that their
-outlook gave them from the mastheads. And in
-spite of the noble bounty offered by the skipper of
-twenty-five dollars to whoever should ‘raise’ a sperm-whale,
-it was very hard, to hang up there for
-two hours in that blazing sun and keep one’s attention
-fixed upon one’s business. At last, however (eleven
-weeks having passed since they left Cape Town), it
-happened to be Rube’s masthead at daybreak&mdash;that
-is to say, shortly after 5 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> With his usual
-pleasant alacrity he swallowed his coffee and sprang
-into the fore-rigging at the cry from aft, ‘Man mastheads!’
-As he went MacManus said jestingly,
-‘Reubin, darlin’, ef yez do be raisin’ sperm-whales
-Oi’ll share th’ bounty wid yez.’ ‘Yew shall that,’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</span>
-replied Rube gaily, ‘an’ everybody else as well ef I
-know myself.’ As he went springingly aloft his eye
-dwelt lovingly upon the marvellous colouring of the
-sea, the ever-changing sequence of shades reflected
-from the glory above; and his heart filled with loving
-worship, for there is no education in appreciative
-observation of God’s wonderful works like an intimate
-acquaintance with Him. When he reached the
-topgallant-yard he saw the great glowing arc of the
-sun’s upper limb just shedding a long line of blazing
-gold along the horizon, as if it could not contain all
-its store of glory, but must needs let some run freely
-on every hand. And as Rube climbed into his perch
-the awful majesty of the whole orb swung clear of
-the sea, and ocean and sky blazed ineffably, blindingly
-upon Rube’s sight, making him for a moment veil his
-face in his hands and murmur a few disjointed words
-of praise.</p>
-
-<p>Never in all his experience had he seen so glorious
-a sunrise. He could not help feeling an intense
-desire for more ability to appreciate its marvels, for
-more power to praise, more capacity for gratitude.
-And then as his eyes swept the horizon round, remembering
-his duty, he saw immediately beneath the
-sun’s disc a curious peak, black, but edged with
-flame, which gave him the impression of its being
-some gigantic mountain top upon which the sun had
-been resting, and now was rising after it in readiness
-to receive it if it should fall. So strong was the
-impression that it made him shudder in spite of himself
-and turn away. As he did so, broad on the port
-beam about five miles away rose the well-known figure
-of a sperm-whale exhaling a great volume of vapour<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</span>
-diagonally from his spiracle and sending before his
-blunt head a perfect cascade of diamond spray. One
-moment’s pause, and from Rube’s deep chest burst
-the startling whalers’ call, at which the previously half-awakened
-decks below burst suddenly into seeming life.
-Not one minute was lost, for the crew were in the
-highest state of efficiency and eagerness. Only two
-boats were lowered, for the whale had no fellow; he
-was apparently one of those morose old bulls that
-had been ejected from his overlordship of the school
-he had led so long and was doomed to wander lonely
-till the end. One drawback there was to the chase;
-it was almost a flat calm, and at such a time approach
-to a lone sperm-whale is exceedingly difficult. His
-senses (whatever they are, they are not like ours) are
-so acute that unless there be a little sea on, something
-that by its natural sounds may render the splash
-of an oar or the rattle of a rowlock inaudible, the
-whale will almost certainly be alarmed and make
-good his escape. But as they were paddling with the
-utmost caution in his direction, a puff of wind
-darkened the water and at the same time sent a cold
-shiver through all hands. The mate recovered from
-his surprise first, and his hoarse whisper ran through
-the crew’s ears: ‘In paddles, step mast, quietly now.’
-He was obeyed in swiftness and silence, and the
-second mate, following the example, had his sail up
-almost as soon. Then, as the graceful boats glided
-noiselessly across the just rising ripples, all hands had
-leisure to look about them, and to their intense uneasiness
-they saw that the whole aspect of the heavens
-was changed. The colour of the blessed sun itself
-had faded from glowing gold to a stale, sickly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</span>
-greenish hue, and the morning cheerfulness of the
-sky was replaced by a dreary, leaden blue, to which
-the sea had responded by turning almost black.
-And it was so cold. The sun seemed at once to have
-been shorn of his beams and his power of distributing
-warmth. He still shone, it is true, but as if through
-a veil of some deadly mist depriving him of all his
-beneficent influences. Yet there was no vapour whatever
-visible.</p>
-
-<p>The mate, however, alone of the little company,
-seemed entirely unconscious of any change in the
-weather. With his eyes fixed upon the supine
-monster ahead he steered the boat as if he were part
-of it, as if, indeed, he were enduing it with some of his
-own personality. Occasionally, it is true, he cast
-furtive glances at the second mate’s boat, but that
-was only to see whether he was keeping as far ahead
-of that officer as etiquette demanded. And as the
-breeze freshened the lively craft began leaping gamesomely
-over the infant waves, nearing the whale at a
-great rate. At last! The harpooner, a lean American
-from Nantucket, rose stealthily to his feet, balancing
-the clumsy-looking weapon as if it were a feather
-in his right hand, and methodically arranging the
-coils of stray line on the little forward deck or ‘box’
-of the boat. She made one last spring forward; then,
-with a great swooping curve, graceful as that of an
-albatross, she glided alongside the whale, and two
-harpoons flew from Walter’s sinewy fingers into the
-whale’s body. She passed into a little offing of safety
-as the sail was brailed in, but the whale wasted no
-time or strength in fruitless struggle to free himself of
-the irons. He apparently gathered all his powers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</span>
-together and fled to windward through the rapidly
-rising waves, heeding not the weight behind him
-more than as if it had not existed. He went so fast,
-indeed, and so dead end on to the sea that the accomplishment
-of the boat’s clearance was a task of uncommon
-difficulty, taking nearly thrice the usual time.
-And when it was finished neither the companion
-boat nor the ship was to be seen. More, the black
-pinnacle of cloud noted by Rube at sunrise had now
-overspread fully one half of the heavens. The other
-half had a menacing shade, not of cloud, but the
-shadow of the great eastern mass, and yet behind the
-gloom there was the suggestion of an unearthly glow.
-No one could say why or how the ship had disappeared,
-but not a sign of her was visible. A
-strange fear fell upon all, even Rube, who by virtue of
-his great strength had the midship thwart (the heaviest
-oar) in the mate’s boat. Instinctively the mate came
-aft and got out the compass; but, except to tell
-in which direction the whale was going, which they
-already knew was something near east, its indications
-were of little value&mdash;they had no bearing of the ship.
-And the whale went steadily on into the gathering
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, on board the ship signals of recall
-were being frantically made in the hope that the fast
-boat might see them. Mr. Peck did see, and in less
-than half an hour was safe alongside again, his boat
-hoisted, and his men putting all their energies into
-the preparations to meet the coming cyclone. The
-ship was now between the Seychelles and the Saya
-de Malha Bank, having been gradually working north
-and east from the Mozambique Channel upon finding<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</span>
-that usually prolific hunting ground so barren of
-result. And consequently she was now in one of
-the very worst places in the whole ocean for meeting
-with those awful circular storms which are variously
-known as hurricanes, cyclones, or typhoons, according
-as they are experienced in the Atlantic Ocean, the
-Indian Ocean, or the China Sea, but which are all
-the same kind of terrible natural convulsion, beneficent
-in their after-effects undoubtedly, but while they last
-filling most men with the conviction that the end of
-all things is at hand. Still, so staunch and seaworthy
-was the <i>Xiphias</i>, in common with most of
-her sisters built by those old-fashioned, methodical
-descendants of the old Puritans in New England,
-that the near approach of such a cataclysm would
-have given Captain Hampden very little additional
-uneasiness but for the fact of his mate’s boat being
-away, lost to sight, and of his own inability to follow
-it up when once the meteor burst, which it was now
-evidently upon the point of doing. Nothing, however,
-could be left undone that ought to be done for
-the safety of those remaining on board, and no time
-wasted in vain regrets; so for two or three hours all
-hands were kept at full pressure putting extra lashings
-upon everything movable&mdash;double gaskets, ‘marling’
-down the sails, hoisting the boats as high as
-they would go to the davit-heads, and there securing
-them with all the skill available. Also a quantity
-of food was hastily cooked (the <i>Xiphias</i>, like most of
-those old ships, carried little canned provisions) and
-stored where it could be got at without opening
-hatches or depending upon a lighted fire. Everything,
-in fact, was done that skill and forethought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</span>
-could suggest or urge to, and then the men were
-called aft. All hands stood facing the gallant old
-skipper as with head bare he steadied himself against
-the skylight.</p>
-
-<p>‘Men,’ said he, ‘we’ve kem up agenst big trouble,
-for a boat’s crew of our shipmates air a-missin’, an’
-only God He knows whether we sh’l ever see ’em agen.
-I feel a’most heart-broken at lettin’ ’em go; but,
-men, I’d no idea ’at thishyer hurrican’&mdash;fur hurrican’
-it’s a-goin’ t’be, there’s no possible doubt o’ that&mdash;wuz
-a-comin’ on so sudden. An’, besides, yew all know
-how eager all han’s wuz t’ git some whale after eour
-long spell athout seein’ one. Thar’s no denyin’ the
-fact, eour shipmates air in terrible danger. We’re in
-danger, too, fur these hurrican’s is enough t’ make the
-bravest man ’at ever lived feel quaky t’ his very soul.
-But we’ve a grand ship under eour feet, an’ we’ve
-a-done all thet man k’n do to make her ready fur the
-great fight thet’s a-comin’. Naow we’ve a-got another
-duty t’ perform. In thet boat beside Mr. Pease,
-as good an officer ’s ever trod a deck ’r hove a lance,
-an’ Walter his harpooner, also one ov th’ very best,
-and MacManus, Joey, and Manuel, all good, sterlin’
-men as all th’ crew is, thar’s Rube Eddy. Thet man’s
-taught us all lessons we needed worse than any of us
-knew. By his example he’s shamed us into bein’
-better men, an’ every one of us is happier then we
-could ’a’ben if we hadn’t known him. Already I feel
-at the thought of losin’ him’s if I don’t care t’ live
-myself, an’ I know thet all of you ’r feelin’ with me
-how great a blessin’ he’s ben t’ us aboard this ship.
-So I ask you all t’ kneel down like men an’ pray each
-in your own fashion fur Rube an’ his fellows in th’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</span>
-boat; thet in this fearful time, God, who kin do
-anything, may be with ’em t’ save, and thet He may
-see fit t’ bring us all together again. An’ if not, to
-make us all what Rube Eddy often prayed we might
-be&mdash;good men, ready t’ live ’r die as it should please
-God, but whichever it is, to keep unbroken the image
-of God in us. Let’s pray.’</p>
-
-<p>All hands fell on their knees, and there, in the
-gathering darkness, these wanderers from many lands,
-uncouth, ignorant, careless seafarers, each in his own
-way silently pleaded with an unmistakably present
-God for the safety of the boat’s crew, and all added,
-‘especially Rube.’ Occasionally an ejaculation which
-could not be suppressed burst forth, but for the space
-of about a quarter of an hour, except for the voice of
-the wind like the growing wailings of a tortured spirit,
-and the continual mutter of the thunder, there was no
-other sound. Then, as if at a given signal, the skipper
-lifted up his voice in the sublime old Apostles’ Prayer,
-the Amens were fervently murmured, and with perceptibly
-strengthened hearts the crew dispersed to their
-several duties or resting places, and thick darkness
-clothed them as with a garment, shutting out all the
-view of sea and sky.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">THE CYCLONE</p>
-
-<p>Although all hands had dispersed and half of them
-were free to seek their berths, they could none of
-them go below. A great awe, not to say fear, was
-upon them, for none of them save the skipper and
-some of the officers had ever witnessed the upheaval
-of the sea and down-pressing of the heavens
-which were now imminent, and the coming thereof
-exercised a fearful fascination upon them. They
-huddled in groups, only whispering an occasional
-word, and waited for they knew not what. Yet all
-had a feeling that it must be the Trump of Doom.
-As yet the wind had not attained any great force,
-but the motion of the ship was exceedingly uneasy, for
-the ocean is so responsive to the power of the wind
-that long before a gale which is somewhere raging has
-reached a ship, she will often be most violently tossed
-by big waves coming sweeping towards her, and this
-without any barometrical warning that can be noticed.
-Nay, it sometimes happens that after several hours of
-anxious waiting for the expected gale, with almost
-every stitch in the ship close furled, the restless sea
-will again quiet down, the filminess will disappear
-from the sky, and serene weather will once more
-prevail: the gale has either blown itself out or has
-by a very well understood meteorological event been
-diverted from its original course into a totally new
-one.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</span></p>
-<p>None of these things, however, was known to or
-noticed by the crew of the <i>Xiphias</i>. They felt the
-pall above descending lower and lower until they
-could imagine its inky folds resting upon the mastheads;
-they heard the wailing and moaning of the
-wind, rising to an occasional wild shriek, as if impatient
-to begin the elemental strife; they experienced
-the peculiar sensation inseparable from the environment
-of an atmosphere surcharged with electricity;
-and they were obliged to hold on to keep themselves
-from being thrown off their feet by the unnatural,
-unexpected lurches of the puzzled ship. But it is fair
-to them to say that through all their apprehensions
-for the next few hours they felt most for their half-dozen
-shipmates in that frail boat, far away in the
-awful darkness, doomed to face the fiercest conflict of
-wind and wave known to seafarers, all unsheltered
-even by a little deck. Then came a new terror. The
-accumulation of electric fluid all around them, having
-become greater than the atmosphere could hold,
-commenced to discharge itself in blinding streaks of
-vari-coloured flame, which quiveringly ran about the
-blackness overhead and almost seemed to light up
-the black heaps of water rising and falling without
-order all around them. Every yard-arm, masthead,
-davit-head&mdash;in fact, every point, even to their own
-heads&mdash;gleamed palely with latent electricity, and
-strange sensations as of pricking roughened all the
-surfaces of their bodies. Some became numbed with
-fear, others wished they could be so.</p>
-
-<p>And then&mdash;it was almost a relief&mdash;with a roar as
-of ten thousand lions mad with hunger, the full hurricane
-burst upon them. Where it struck them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</span> none
-knew, or what the ship did when she felt it; for
-whether she was beneath the sea or above no one
-could tell. The awful blast ripped off the surface of
-the sea, and spread it through the air so that sight,
-speech, almost breath became impossible. But they
-all noticed that, although the ship beneath their feet
-seemed as if she was being hurled through space, she
-was now quite steady; the drunken uncertain motion
-she had previously been suffering from had altogether
-ceased, for under that pressure of wind no sea could
-lift its head. I said there was almost a sense of relief,
-and this is really true, for now it did not appear
-possible that matters could become worse. Men’s
-minds refused to entertain the possibility of any
-increase in the force of the wind, and all felt dimly
-that any change now must be for the better&mdash;that the
-hurricane was doing its worst.</p>
-
-<p>The skipper, aft by the useless wheel, with the
-two mates near him, endured like the rest. Having
-done all that was humanly possible, and commended
-himself and his charge to his Father, he had now but
-to set his teeth, bend his head, and bear in patience,
-awaiting without a tremor the manifestation of God’s
-will concerning him. There was a certain indefinite
-satisfaction in having his two mates near him&mdash;the
-same feeling that the other members of the crew had
-in being huddled together like sheep on the edge of
-a cliff when the gale howls furiously landward and
-sweeps the downs like the breath of a destroying
-angel. In fact, neither Captain Hampden nor his
-officers took the trouble to think now. They just let
-their mental powers lie dormant, having used them at
-the right time to the best advantage, and being
-quite ready to exercise them again when any good<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</span>
-could thereby be done.</p>
-
-<p>And now, what of those brave men so perilously
-cut off from their ship, left to themselves in the midst
-of such potentialities of destruction that camping out
-unsheltered and unarmed in the heart of an Indian
-jungle would have been safety itself by comparison?
-For a time, while the whale kept his unswerving and
-unfaltering rush into the blackness ahead, Mr. Pease’s
-energies and thought seemed solely concentrated
-upon the means of compassing the death of his
-gigantic steed&mdash;any ideas concerning his own danger
-or that of his crew did not seem to find admission to
-his mind. After satisfying himself that the whale
-was holding a straight course he called upon all hands
-to put forth a supreme effort to get up near enough
-to the monster, and make some feasible attempt at
-fatally wounding him. And they, seizing the tow-line
-and straining every sinew to the work, found that
-they could actually gain upon him a little, although
-the sprays coming over the bows threatened every
-now and then to swamp them. But gradually they
-found their task becoming easier, and although the
-thickening gloom chilled their hearts they encouraged
-one another with shouts of ‘There she feels it,’ ‘Hand
-over hand, hearties,’ ‘Walk her up to him!’ ‘He’s our
-whale,’ &amp;c. And suddenly the mate yelled at the utmost
-strain of his lungs, ‘Lay off&mdash;lay her off, Walter;
-lay off, fur God’s sake!’ Nobly Walter responded; the
-light craft sprang off sideways under the pressure of
-the great steer oar and Walter’s straining muscles,
-and the whale’s huge flukes, brandished high in air,
-came down with a crash like thunder, and smote the
-water just a yard or two abaft the after oar. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</span>
-that blow cost the whale his life. For the boat shot
-up alongside of him, and in towards his side withal,
-and at the same moment Mr. Pease, taking deliberate
-aim, sent a bomb-lance point blank into the great
-body. Almost before the muffled report from within
-told that the destructive weapon had exploded, a
-hand-lance had followed it, and slid up to its pole
-within the vast black mass.</p>
-
-<p>Either of those terrible wounds had been sufficient
-to kill, and the two combined had the effect of bringing
-the whale to a sudden stop, when, with a long
-expiration, like the escaping steam from a water-loaded
-syren, he gasped out his life and was still, save
-for the easy motion communicated to his huge carcass
-by the waves. So sudden was his death that the
-usual tremendous convulsion which takes place when
-these leviathans die was totally absent. As soon as
-it was evident that he <i>was</i> dead, Mr. Pease, rising to
-the height of his responsibilities, and realising how
-short a time was left during which anything might be
-done, caused two more harpoons to be driven into
-the whale’s side near the first two, but bridled to the
-main line. Then allowing about fifty fathoms drift he
-cut the tow-line, and veering away to the tail succeeded
-with very great difficulty in getting a hole
-cut through its thickest part, and the end of the towline
-rove through it. That accomplished, the boat
-was hauled back again to a position midway between
-the whale’s tail and its head, the lines made well fast,
-and the men told to make themselves as comfortable
-as circumstances permitted by crouching low in the
-bottom of the boat, and arranging the sail so as to
-keep off just a little of the spindrift that was already<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</span>
-beginning to fill the air.</p>
-
-<p>It was now quite dark, although but little after
-noon; the sea was in that curiously undecided state
-before-mentioned, and the mate knew very well that
-at any moment the full power of the hurricane might
-burst upon them. Yet, strange as it may seem to
-landsmen or even ordinary sailors, he had by no
-means lost hope, neither had Walter. Both of them
-knew from long experience, and not theoretically, how
-splendid a breakwater is made by a dead whale.
-Both of them had time and time again owed their
-lives to the shelter afforded by one in the midst of
-such stupendous seas as are encountered in the
-Southern Ocean, where unhindered the lone sea sweeps
-round the globe, and consequently both felt that even
-in the present apparently hopeless circumstances
-they might yet be found living when the hurricane
-had passed and left the ocean bestrewn with the
-wreckage of many a score of noble ships. I think it
-is not generally known on land how magical (there is
-really no other word to describe it) is the power
-exercised by oil upon the sea. A little oil spilt upon
-the water during the prevalence of the roughest
-gale makes a tiny oasis of smoothness, around which
-the most gigantic waves rear their furious crests in
-vain in the endeavour to encroach upon it. ‘Oil upon
-the troubled waters’ has long been a paraphrase for
-the gentle work of the peacemaker, but it is much
-more than that&mdash;it is a scientific expression of fact;
-and since shipmasters (being, as I am never weary
-of pointing out, the most conservative of men) have
-taken to using oil, as it should be used, for the purpose
-of stilling the angry waves, the number of shipping
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</span>
-disasters that have been averted is past all counting.
-It is safe to say that if, wherever any breakwater,
-pier, or similar structure is exposed to the fury of
-stormy seas, a large perforated pipe were to be laid
-on the sea-bed a few yards seaward of the foundations
-and surrounding them, through which in time of storm
-oil might be pumped at high pressure, we should
-never have any of those costly works destroyed by
-the impact of the waves at all; for they (the structures)
-would be surrounded by a ring fence of
-smoothness beyond which, no matter how fierce their
-anger, the great waves could never pass.</p>
-
-<p>Now, a whale is a natural reservoir of oil, and,
-whether alive or dead, he always has around him an
-area of calm induced by the exudations from his
-skin. Therefore, when we read of ‘whales taking
-refuge in sheltered bays from the fury of gales,’ we
-may be held blameless for curling the lip of derision,
-and wondering what manner of fools they are who
-perpetrate such twaddle for the deluding of their
-readers. Also a whale when it is dead does by some
-mysterious volition point its head, not in the wind’s
-eye, or directly to the quarter from whence the wind
-comes, but about eight points, or forty-five degrees,
-therefrom, and, stranger still, does invariably drift
-<i>towards</i> the wind, and not, like a ship, away from it.
-Various explanations have been proffered to account
-for this really wonderful movement of the whale’s
-great carcass after death, but none of them, I think,
-is feasible save this: that the whale’s tail, being a
-huge limber piece of gristle of exquisite propulsive
-shape, is so actuated by the wash of the waves past
-the great body that its motions, like those of an oar
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</span>
-turned in a groove at the stern of a boat, are sufficient
-to keep the body to which it is attached working to
-windward. Not, be it noted, against a current, which
-moves the whole mass of water, but against the wind
-through the water and incidentally against the sea,
-which is quite a different matter.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps an apology is necessary for so long a
-digression, when the fate of Mr. Pease and his brave
-men is trembling in the balance, but there are so
-many utterly impossible and unexplainable things
-to be read in stories now, written to account for the
-escape of the hero, that I have felt compelled to take
-up a little more space than usual in which to explain
-the entire reasonableness and possibility of escape
-from their dire peril which actuated and hardened
-Mr. Pease and his crew. A whisper had run from
-end to end of the boat full of hope, and Rube in the
-middle had accepted it with heartfelt joy, not for his
-own sake (for this extraordinary man never thought
-about himself at all), but for the sake of his shipmates.
-And then all settled down to wait and watch. High
-over them, with a most terrific noise, a blaze of
-unearthly light, and a peculiarly chilling sensation,
-burst the hurricane. Really, terrible though it was,
-they were immensely surprised that it was not worse.
-They did not, could not realise how that great bank
-of flesh, already floating much higher than ever it did
-with life in it, was protecting them, not merely from
-the impact of the sea, but from the swamping effect
-of the spindrift, the sea face carried airwards by the
-wind. As this came flying along it met the body of
-the whale, and shot upwards, just passing over the
-frail cockleshell riding in the little smooth to leeward.
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</span>
-All heaven’s artillery opened out, the roar of the
-wind, the rumble of the thunder, the hiss of the
-lightning; but cowering low down in their tiny craft
-rocking easily in the quiet water under the lee of the
-whale, those six men lived. And as the hours wore
-on they forgot to be afraid; nay, they even slept, or
-hazily speculated upon what they should do when,
-the storm having passed, they might, and probably
-would, find themselves alone on that wide, wide sea,
-foodless and waterless. And so the hours succeeded
-each other, day insensibly passed into night, leathery
-tongues vainly roamed round parched mouths seeking
-moisture and finding none, and still hope lived.</p>
-
-<p>How long they had thus patiently borne the burden
-of a peril of which no landsman can have aught but
-the feeblest adumbration of an idea, none of them
-knew, for none of them had a watch, and even had there
-been one there was no light. The darkness was of
-that Egyptian character that one experiences in a
-coal mine, and the blazing rivers of lightning which
-occasionally coursed over their heads only added to
-their blindness. But presently, as at some celestial
-word of command, the elemental tumult ceased, the
-wind fell to a dead calm, and a strange motion, totally
-unlike the steady heave and roll of the former hours,
-took its place. Overhead the cloud-pall thinned and
-a star or two appeared. Their eyes, grown accustomed
-to the velvety blackness, saw that they were
-the centre of a charmed circle, all around which, at
-so short a distance that they seemed to be at the
-bottom of a whirlpool, enormous masses of water
-rose and fell in disorderly heaps. It was an appalling
-sight, and the mate, with thoughtful wisdom, distracted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</span>
-their attention from it by advising them to
-take advantage of the temporary lull to get a
-drink and eat a biscuit. Each whaleboat carries a
-wooden vessel like a large bucket, holding about four
-gallons of fresh water. It is headed up like a cask,
-but has a wooden spigot attached by a short lanyard,
-and this, withdrawn, suffers the water to escape in a
-thin stream into a piggin which is held beneath it.
-There is also a long narrow keg kept under the little
-deck over the stern of the boat, also headed up tightly
-but easy to open by those who know how, in which
-are a number of biscuits, a lantern, and some candles
-and matches. This was now produced, and a biscuit
-each handed round, which, with a drink of water,
-had a wonderful effect in raising everybody’s spirits.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pease then said, ‘M’ lads, I don’ s’pose ’at
-ever in the history of seafarin’ a boat’s crew has bin
-known t’ hang out a hurrican in the open sea same ’s
-we’ve done, fur which we’ve gut t’ thank ole Johnny
-Squarehead here as th’ means sent by Almighty God
-fur our safety. B’lieve me, boys, we’re through th’
-wust of it. We sh’ll hev almost as much wind as
-before, but not fur near as long, an’ yew know how
-safe a harbour the whale gives us. I needn’t ask ye
-t’ thank God: I know yew’ve all done that, ’specially
-Rube thar. Say, Rube, sonny, haow’re ye hittin’ it,
-eh?’ ‘Glorious, Mr. Pease, glorious. I wuz jest
-thinkin’ as ye spoke, “though I walk through the
-Valley of the Shadow of Death, I will fear no evil,
-Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort me.”’ ‘Bully
-fer yew, Rube,’ said Mr. Pease. ‘They wuz a time
-when I sh’d have miscalled yew ’r anybody else ’at
-talked like that fur a darned hypocrite; but, thank<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</span>
-God, I know better now. I’ve a-learnt how good
-a <i>man</i> a Christian kin be.’</p>
-
-<p>He had hardly uttered the last words than with
-an awful howling sound the wind burst out upon
-them from the opposite direction, bringing with it
-such a cloud of spray that for a few minutes they
-fought gaspingly for breath, and groped blindly to
-bale the boat. They hardly knew while those few
-fateful minutes lasted whether they were sinking
-or not, but their faithful defender, in death returning
-good for evil, gradually took up his relative position
-to the wind as before, and although they could not
-see they could feel that they were again on the
-sheltered side of the great carcass. And, besides,
-it seemed to them as if it afforded more protection
-than it had done before. They could not think the
-wind had lessened&mdash;indeed, they believed it to blow
-harder than ever&mdash;but certainly their boat rode easier;
-and with a relief not to be expressed in words they
-saw that light was coming. Only one thing gave
-them additional uneasiness: the increasing glare
-beneath them. The lightning had almost entirely
-ceased, but, as if to compensate for that cessation
-of the unearthly fires above, the waters beneath them
-fairly glowed with green illumination in broad bands,
-which came and went incessantly. They all knew
-that this meant the gathering of the ravening deep-sea
-hosts, attracted thereto by the mighty banquet,
-and entirely oblivious of the war of the winds above.</p>
-
-<p>How, throughout those hours of terror, had it
-fared with the crew of the <i>Xiphias</i> remaining on
-board that staunch old ship? Peacefully enough<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</span>
-until the passing of the storm-centre. Then indeed
-they were in evil case. For <i>they</i> had no charmed
-circle, beyond which the waves could not pass, to protect
-them. It was an omission only too frequently
-made, and almost unpardonable in these ships. Had
-they but hung canvas bags of oil from both bows and
-both quarters, through which the calming liquid
-might have drained, they would have been spared
-much of the labour, danger, and anxiety. But nothing
-of the kind had been arranged for, and consequently
-when that fearful vortex sea broke upon
-them, not only did their vessel’s decks fill with water
-in masses weighing hundreds of tons, and smashing
-everything that was smashable, but the working of
-the ship opened her seams so much that, in spite
-of the risk of being exposed in the waist, it was
-absolutely necessary for all hands to muster at the
-pumps. There, secured by ropes around their bodies,
-and occasionally entirely overwhelmed by the towering
-masses of water breaking on board, they toiled
-unmurmuringly. Again and again they were hurled
-like a scattered bundle of chips in all directions;
-the ropes with which they were secured threatened to
-cut them in halves, making deep discoloured grooves
-in their flesh, and floating wreckage beat and bruised
-them savagely in its dashing to and fro. But they
-still stuck to their posts unflinchingly, officers and
-men together putting forth all their powers, and
-hoping, ever hoping, even when all hope seemed dead.</p>
-
-<p>For the <i>Xiphias</i> was, to all outward seeming, a
-wreck. Her bulwarks were gone fore and aft; the
-massive brick erection of the try-works had been
-swept so cleanly away that no trace of it remained;
-three of the fine boats were gone, and only the ringbolts<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</span>
-with which they had been hoisted still dangled
-at the davit-heads. Several sails, in spite of the care
-exercised in their securing, had wriggled adrift, and
-the tigerish wind had snatched them from the yards
-as dry leaves are stripped from the trees in autumn.
-But it is in times like these that the Divine in man
-shines out, and Captain Hampden stood erect, not
-counting his burden of years, nor his present load of
-care for his crew, nor the heartache for the brave
-fellows long ago, he thought, gone to their well-earned
-rest in the silence of the sea. His eyes shone
-bright, his heart beat temperately, his voice rang
-steady, and when, the short calm gone, the hurricane
-burst again upon them from its opposite segment, all
-hands felt his noble influence, and braced themselves
-to endure to the end.</p>
-
-<p>Forty miles away Mr. Pease and his brave little
-crew still lived. Once settled into their old position
-to leeward of the dead whale they felt, such was the
-effect upon their minds of their recent experience,
-almost safe from the tempest above and the assault
-of the sea. They noticed, indeed, that the latter
-gradually became more furious, as if, enraged beyond
-measure by its previous restraint, it was now determined
-to make up for loss of opportunity, and destroy
-everything in its path alien to its domain. But even
-that carried some comfort, for while feeling well protected
-to leeward of the whale they cared little for
-waves however high: the very fact of those waves
-rearing their heads so savagely told them that the
-force of the hurricane must be waning; and, besides,
-the thinning of the cloud-pall above, the absence of the
-lightning, and an indescribable elevation of spirits,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</span> all
-had their part in the growth of hope. Only, there remained
-the increasing menace beneath. Occasionally
-a slight tap, smartly given, under the boat sent a
-shudder through them as it reminded them how
-slight was the barrier which intervened between them
-and the hungry jaws of that host of sharks. Men,
-however, who had ridden out such a day and night
-of terror were hardly likely now to become panic-stricken:
-they had come to regard themselves as
-under the special protection of God. So, terrible
-as their position undoubtedly was, it had not the
-same effect upon them as it would have had if it had
-come upon them suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>The hurricane passed away, going as usual
-through its various fining phases as better weather
-came. By noon the sky was clear, the sea deeply
-azure, the sun sending down new vigour into that
-hardly used group of men. A great exaltation of
-spirit possessed them all, for it is noticeable how,
-whenever the hurricane, cyclone, or typhoon has passed,
-everything in nature seems bound to rejoice, not
-because it has been allowed to live, but because of
-the cleansing, sweetening, freshening up of the world.</p>
-
-<p>The sharks swarmed in incredible numbers, the
-birds came in myriads, the dead mass to windward
-began to emit a charnel-house fœtor, but all the men
-were cheerful, and munched their half-biscuit determinedly,
-as if to show that they meant to live up to
-the hopefulness engendered by their atmospheric
-environment. Only the mate, in moments when not
-engaged in cheering up his crew, looked grave. He
-felt the responsibility for those trustful souls. And
-he could not help feeling how remote was the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</span>
-possibility of their ship (or, indeed, any ship) picking
-them up. He knew, too, how short a time would
-elapse before they would be compelled to abandon
-their shelter&mdash;how few the hours before it would become
-so foul that not a human being could live near
-it. But he said nothing of this. Instead, he maintained
-his part, with that strange mixture of gravity
-and cheerfulness puckering his brow. He often
-caught Rube’s earnest eyes fixed upon him as if in
-deep questioning, but he evaded them. ‘Time
-enough,’ he thought, ‘for the revelation that must
-surely come.’</p>
-
-<p>The night passed in perfect peace. The burning
-stars mirrored themselves in the glassy bosom of the
-deep, the new moon peeped shyly forth, a glittering
-silver sickle with a clearly seen though dull disc filling
-up the round. Gently as an infant on its mother’s
-breast the boat rose and fell to the softly undulating
-swell. All except Mr. Pease seemed asleep, but continually
-sleepers half-raised themselves with indistinct
-expressions of disgust as the foulness of the air half
-awakened them. ‘To-morrow,’ thought the mate,
-‘we must cut adrift flesh and blood can stand this no
-longer.’ So with the dawn (and what a lovely dawn
-it was!&mdash;like the first in its brightness), the lines
-were cut, and with a few strokes of the oars the boat
-was propelled beyond that area of stench, the whale
-having now swollen to the semblance of a ship bottom
-up or some huge oblong bladder floating high upon the
-sea surface. When all hands had eaten the few
-crumbs of food remaining, and had moistened their
-aching throats with a little swallow of water, Mr.
-Pease said, ‘Boys, we’ve been through a lot, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</span>
-perhaps we’ve got th’ worst ahead. Never mind.
-We’re all men here, we know that, an’ whatever
-happens we’ll remain men. We’ll die if we must die,
-or live if we’re let live, like men made in the image
-of God.’</p>
-
-<p>And the six of them solemnly said, ‘Amen.’</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">A STRANGE RESCUE</p>
-
-<p>Reluctantly, but of necessity, we return to the
-<i>Grampus</i> getting under weigh from her snug anchorage
-among the Cosmoledo reefs, and as smart as cleanliness
-and a complete equipment can make her,
-emerging once more upon her proper domain, the
-sea. Her ruler sat in awful state upon the top of
-the little house aft, Priscilla by his side in a deck
-chair made for her by the carpenter. She gazed
-with listless eyes upon the wonderful panorama
-spread out before her, not daring to appear interested
-lest her terrible husband should see in that some
-excuse for ordering her below again. Full well she
-knew that it was only because he feared that she
-would have another serious attack of illness that
-he allowed her this sweet privilege of breathing the
-fresh air of heaven; a privilege she had enjoyed all
-her stay ashore, and the deprivation of which while
-on board had certainly led up to her illness. But in
-pursuance of her resolve to endure unto the uttermost,
-she would have died rather than ask any consideration
-at his hands, while taking with calm thankfulness
-such crumbs as he chose to fling her contemptuously.</p>
-
-<p>The late invalids, still pale from their recent close
-struggle with death, were doing their best to ‘keep
-their ends up’ with the Portuguese portion of the
-crew, who&mdash;trained fine, hard as nails, and with that
-elevating sense of superiority which counts for so
-much in human conflict&mdash;were, while working harmoniously<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</span>
-side by side with the white men, continually
-letting the latter see in what estimation they
-were held. And no sooner was the ship clear of the
-reefs, and watches set, than the white men were
-confronted with another degradation. All sailors
-know that there are certain berths in the worst of
-forecastles which are considered better than any
-others for who can explain what sea-reasons. These
-berths are usually occupied by the best men in the
-ship obviously, and especially on a whaling voyage.
-Now, when the watch that was released went below,
-its members, who were of the now despised race,
-were confronted with a state of things which had
-never before occurred to them. They were ordered to
-shift and give up their bunks to better men. For a few
-moments it looked as if there would be a great fight.
-All the fighting blood of the Anglo-Saxon surged
-up, but the odds were far too heavy: no anger could
-blind men to that, nor any courage persuade them to
-hurl themselves headlong upon the knives and pistols
-borne by the black Dagoes and ostentatiously displayed
-by them. Therefore the white men accepted
-the inevitable and shifted, amid the chuckling jeers
-of their triumphant watchmates, and another step in
-Captain Da Silva’s carefully calculated revenge had
-been attained.</p>
-
-<p>It may perhaps be thought from the way in which
-I have insisted upon this sad tyranny of black over
-white that I have a serious bias against the black
-man. That is not true. I love him generally as a
-man, and because I do I am not blind to his limitations,
-and I say emphatically that he is not so
-constituted that it is safe to trust him with the <span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</span>rule
-over white men. He may retaliate with the opposite
-proposition, which I do not care to defend for one
-moment. By all means let Black rule Black, but do
-not ever let Black rule White, or you will see Hayti
-reproduced wherever the shameful law is put in
-operation, and what it means let my friend Hesketh
-Pritchard tell you. Moreover, these rulers of the
-<i>Grampus</i> were not negroes. I should no more wish
-to be ruled by negroes than by a laughing bevy of
-children out of the nursery, ready at any moment to
-become cruel apes tearing in pieces their toys. But
-I might be able to keep my masters amused, should
-such be my sad fate, and so escape disintegration.
-If, however, my negro masters had been bred in and
-in with Portuguese or Spaniards, I ought to seek
-death at once. When to the cold cruelty of the Latin
-is added the irresponsibility of the negro, the blend
-should never be allowed to exercise its power over
-men of Teutonic breed. Wherever it has done so,
-the records of such rule are not for general reading
-lest readers go mad with horror.</p>
-
-<p>Aft the conditions were altered also. In every
-whaleship there is a space (on the port side generally)
-abaft the main hatch, and of course below deck, where
-the harpooners and petty officers are berthed. The
-first, second, and third mates have their berths
-allotted to them in the main cabin, offshoots from it
-of a grim and fearful stuffiness, but possessing a
-peculiar desirability because of their contiguity to
-the dwelling-place of the lord of all. Now Captain
-Da Silva calmly intimated to his officers that he
-contemplated considerable changes in the housing
-accommodation aft. He told them that he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</span>
-ordered the carpenter to knock up three extra berths
-in the ‘half-deck,’ as the harpooners’ berth is called,
-and as soon as that was done, why, they (the officers)
-would have to clear out, as he needed all the space
-aft for his own accommodation. The insult was
-gross, palpable. Indeed, it was hardly veiled,
-especially remembering the expression of face and
-the tone of voice accompanying it. But Mr. Court
-and his brother officer did not forget what they
-owed to themselves. They were under no misapprehension
-as to why this line of conduct was
-being pursued by the skipper, and although both
-of them felt that the time might arrive when further
-endurance would be impossible, even at the cost
-of death for rebellion, that time was not yet. So
-apparently not noticing the triumphant glitter in
-the skipper’s eyes, or the exultant ring in his voice,
-they acquiesced, serenely to all outward seeming,
-but with hearts on fire, and by so doing riveted
-another link in the heavy chains they were wearing.
-When does it become a sacred duty to rebel? Who
-shall say? But one thing seems clear: that there
-does come a time when, for the sake of others, it
-is imperative that one man (or it may be woman)
-stand up and face the tyrant. He may, probably
-will, die, but how can man die better? And no such
-death is in vain. However, this high strain may
-seem unsuited to the present sordid recital&mdash;only a
-little ship’s company being tyrannised over by one
-devil, and enduring doggedly all that he chooses to
-load them with.</p>
-
-<p>Once clear of the islands the ship’s course was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</span>
-made N.E., and under easy sail the <i>Grampus</i> bore
-away across the smiling Indian Ocean. All went
-well. Apparently it could not do otherwise where
-Captain Da Silva was. He never seemed to make a
-mistake. And when he suddenly came on deck one
-beautiful afternoon and interrupted the busy tide of
-work that never slacked off night or day by calling all
-hands to make all possible sail, and altered the ship’s
-course to due east, no one wondered. They obeyed
-briskly enough to a casual observer, but in the heart
-of every white man what weariness of life! For two
-whole days the <i>Grampus</i> fled to the east as fast as her
-braced-up condition would allow, the look-outs never
-once relaxing their careful watch around. No one
-discussed the movement&mdash;the time for that had gone.
-Every white man in the foc’s’le knew that should he
-speak one word capable of being construed into
-something the skipper might be interested in, it
-would, before many minutes had elapsed, be repeated
-with such fantastic additions as the carrier of it was
-capable of making, into the Captain’s greedy ear, with
-results the most unpleasant to the original utterer
-of the remark.</p>
-
-<p>As suddenly as the course had been altered and
-all sails set so was another change made. Everything
-was furled but the fore and main lower topsails, the
-ship was brought to the wind on the starboard tack,
-and lay lazily wallowing in the gentle swell coming
-up from the south-east. And then, to the surprise of
-no one on board (for by this time all hands, including
-his own particular friends, if friends they could be
-called, believed him to be in league with the devil),
-there appeared as if from the bosom of the deep an
-enormous multitude of small whales. Like sperm-whales<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</span>
-arrested in their growth, and only about twice
-the size of ‘black-fish.’ That is to say, each of them
-would not be more than three to five tons in weight.
-It was early morning when they were sighted, and
-immediately the whole ship was the scene of most
-violent activity. All sorts of alterations were made,
-notably the passing out of the boats of the big line-tubs,
-and only leaving the small hundred-fathom ones
-behind. Extra harpoons, too, were placed in each
-boat, and before they left the ship all hands were
-called aft and thus harangued by the skipper: ‘Looky
-here,’ said he, ‘these ain’t sperm-whales, an’ I doan’
-want no foolin’ with ’em. Get fast t’ one or two, an’
-then as th’ others come roun’ lance ’em, an’ leave ’em.
-T’ the fust man ’at kills over ten, I’ll give fifty dollars
-in gold. Naow mind, I’m tellin’ ye. Don’t waste
-line ’n’ irons on these fish: ef y’ du thar’ll be big
-trouble with me ’fore the day’s over.’ There was no
-response but a sort of guttural murmur, succeeded by
-the quick splashes as the boats took the water and
-sped away under the utmost pressure of the oars to
-where the sea was all a foam by reason of the gambollings
-of that great and joyous company of ‘kogia.’</p>
-
-<p>Just as the skipper had forecasted, no sooner had
-a boat got fast to one of these quaint, short-headed
-creatures than she became the centre of a curious
-crowd of his unfortunate fellows, apparently bent
-upon sharing his fate, and for that purpose thrusting
-one another aside in their efforts to get as near as
-possible to the boat. Every man was armed with a
-lance, and directed to use it with all his might upon
-the whale nearest him. What an awful scene of
-slaying ensued, to be sure! The sea became literally<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</span>
-encumbered with dead. The men who had felt that
-life was not worth living took new hold upon life in
-their fierce desire of killing, and forgot for the time
-all their woes. It seemed as if this great slaughter
-must be prolonged indefinitely, but suddenly, like a
-trumpet blast, the voice of the skipper rang out: ‘’Vast
-killin’! All but th’ mate and second mate’s boats,
-pull for th’ ship’s quick ’s th’ devil ’ll let ye. Hurry,
-naow.’ And they did hurry. The ship, having been
-kept close at hand, required no great amount of
-manipulation to bring her into the midst of the stricken
-field, and presently the amazing sight was to be seen
-of the great carcasses one after another, as she (the
-ship) came alongside them, rising into the air, a chain
-sling having been whipped round their tails and a tackle
-hooked to it by means of which the whole body was
-hoisted on deck. By five in the afternoon thirty of
-those huge masses encumbered the deck of the <i>Grampus</i>,
-and she presented an even more gruesome sight than
-she did when her decks were full of the spoils of the
-last great catch of sperm-whales.</p>
-
-<p>Now the skipper was in his element. No anxiety
-about the overside business, everything on deck and
-snug, although the ship did tumble about most
-dangerously from the great top weight. All hands
-were armed with spades, and driven like slaves to
-use them. But N.B.: no two white men were allowed
-to work together, lest they might, in desperation,
-consider the time opportune for making a dash for
-freedom. No; Captain Da Silva saw to that. He
-had such a head for detail! All that night and all
-the next day, without a minute for rest, except just
-sufficient to swallow the indispensable food, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</span> fuel
-to keep these human engines performing their allotted
-motions, the men laboured in silence for the most
-part, save when the stern commands of the skipper
-broke the stillness. Doggedly, desperately all hands
-toiled on, every plunge of a great carcass denuded of
-spoil over the starboard covering-board punctuating,
-as it were, the progress being made. And if the
-decks had been foul before when the last great
-catch of sperm-whales was made, it was trebly so
-now. Then, there was little besides the all-prevailing
-grease, except an occasional block of flesh still left
-adhering to the blubber: now, all the nameless foulnesses
-inseparable from cutting up such huge bodies
-in tropical heat on deck were present in full volume,
-and&mdash;&mdash; But this is not a subject to be pursued.</p>
-
-<p>Wonderful to relate, the health of the recent invalids
-held out against this tremendous strain upon it, and
-as soon as the last carcass plunged overboard blubber
-watches were set, and it looked as though relief had
-come. But not yet. Some attempt must be made
-to remove a portion at least of the accumulated filth
-from the deck, and so for nearly half of their first
-watch below the almost fainting men toiled with
-water-buckets and brooms to that end. And as they
-did so they noticed, in half-dazed, unappreciative
-fashion, how frequently the skipper mounted his little
-deck aft and gazed earnestly at the lee quadrant of
-the horizon. This happened so often that at last
-long dormant curiosity was aroused also, and they
-looked earnestly in that direction too. ‘Thank God,’
-all thought, ‘it isn’t whales he’s looking at.’ No, it
-was not: it was an awful-looking Himalaya of blackest
-cloud, violet edged, that reared its mighty head <span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</span>persistently
-in that quarter, but did not seem to rise any
-higher than half-way to the zenith. No one on board
-knew with what consummate skill and attention, in
-spite of the many matters claiming his oversight, this
-wonderful man was manœuvring his ship out of the
-path of what he knew to be a devastating cyclone.
-He needed no sympathy, no help in his calculations;
-in fact, he took a secret but colossal pride in standing
-alone. And reckoning to a nicety, but with a
-dangerously narrow margin, he kept his crew going
-to clear away their last great catch, at the same time
-making all preparations to meet what he knew would
-soon be there&mdash;the frightful swell raised by the
-hurricane and extending for thousands of miles on
-either side of its track.</p>
-
-<p>When it came all was ready for it. Double
-lashings on everything, the tiers of casks below all
-carefully chocked and tom’d off to beams above,
-preventer backstays on masts, &amp;c. And as the great
-green hills of water reaching from horizon to horizon
-came sweeping onward, tossing the noble ship from
-summit to valley and back again as if she were just
-a ball in the hands of gleeful children, the crew cast
-wistful glances at their saturnine tyrant, wondering,
-‘How did he know this was coming? What kinder
-man <i>is</i> he, anyhow?’ Well, had the answer been
-forthcoming it would have been just this: That
-Captain Da Silva was one of those men of native
-genius who first of all absorb knowledge as a sponge
-does water, whose capacity for courage is as great as
-their capacity for mercy or consideration is small,
-whose frames are more like automata constructed of
-steel wire and rubber than sinews and flesh, and who,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</span>
-given the opportunity, could juggle the globe in their
-hands as a conjurer does his properties, and would
-do so, but for the wisdom of God, who has ordained
-that such men shall never go too far. If this sounds
-like fantastic eulogy as applied to the obscure master
-of a whaleship, I do not feel at all inclined to argue
-the point: it is for each one to study out for him or
-herself and see whether the theory be reasonable
-or no.</p>
-
-<p>The decks were quite clear, three-fourths of the
-blubber had been boiled out and the resultant oil run
-below, when a very strange thing happened. The
-weather was beautifully fine, the air serene, and a
-little breeze wafted the <i>Grampus</i> at a gentle rate
-over the sunlit sea. Captain Da Silva, fully contented
-with himself, was lolling in his wife’s chair abaft the
-wheel smoking a peculiarly rank, oily, and foul-smelling
-cigar, one of a large quantity which, just suiting his
-taste, he had bought at Brava. I think it may safely
-be said that he was just then in the full enjoyment of
-<i>dolce far niente</i>, that peculiarly delightful frame of
-mind and body conjoined of which ‘sweet doing nothing’
-seems so poor a description&mdash;when into the midst
-of it came Priscilla. Lest it should be thought that
-I have neglected her of late, I feel bound to say that
-she had been leading a sort of comatose existence, in
-this busy little cosmos but not of it, alive but hardly
-conscious of her surroundings. What could I have
-said of her but that she awoke, ate a little, lived alone
-through the day, and slept again? If perfect life be,
-as Herbert Spencer says, perfect correspondence with
-a perfect environment, then was Priscilla only just
-dwelling on the fringes of life, and might truly be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</span>
-said to be nine-tenths dead. Her placid demeanour
-and speechless endurance of all things as they came
-had become so regular an experience with her
-husband that it was with something very like alarm
-that he saw her standing before him on deck and
-heard her sweet, low voice saying distinctly, ‘May I
-speak to you, Ramon?’ With a gasp of surprise he
-rose to his feet and, stepping to the wheel, said to
-the shrinking helmsman: ‘Git t’ ’ell forrard outa this,’
-and the man was gone. Then, turning his lowering
-eye upon Priscilla, yet not without a certain noticeable
-twitching of his facial muscles, he muttered,
-‘Wall, what is it naow? Spit it eout.’ She
-answered timidly, but as if she must speak: ‘Ramon,
-please forgive me, but I know there’s a boat with
-some dying men in it over there.’ And she pointed
-to the north. ‘It’s a whaleboat, and there’s six
-men, all alive, but going fast. Will you try and save
-them?’ He burst into a very storm of curses upon
-her for daring to interfere with the working of his
-ship and for her unmentionable folly in supposing
-that he, of all men in the world, would be likely to
-take any notice of such a baby-tale as that. But
-even as he raved and hissed his foul language at his
-wife, she could see that in his fierce eyes there was a
-latent look of awe&mdash;that he was only trying by noise
-and bluster to persuade himself that he was asserting
-his power in the surest way. Priscilla appeared to
-be entirely deaf to his awful words. And when,
-breathless, he paused, she resumed quietly, ‘You
-will find the boat before evening if you alter the
-course now, but I am afraid some of the men are
-already dying.’ And with that she turned and went<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</span>
-away, leaving her husband like a man just about to
-have an epileptic fit. However, he managed to
-restrain himself, and presently his voice was heard
-roaring for the man whom he had sent from the
-wheel. Having given up the wheel, he took a few
-short, undecided turns about the quarter-deck, and
-then, like one acting upon some entirely irresistible
-impulse, he growled to the helmsman, ‘Keep her away!’
-‘Keep her away, sir,’ replied the man, immediately
-putting the helm up. As she swung off the wind
-the skipper shouted, ‘Square the mainyard!’ and
-as the watch flew to the braces and trimmed sail
-he steadied the course at north, which brought the
-wind a little on the starboard quarter and made the
-speed about four knots.</p>
-
-<p>This being done he went below as if, disgusted
-beyond measure at having to do such a thing, he
-must needs use more opprobrious language to his
-wife for thus in some mysterious way imposing her
-will upon his. But when he saw her sitting in their
-little cabin looking with preternaturally bright eyes
-into vacancy as if she were seeing something with
-other than mortal vision, he could say nothing to her
-at all, but with a muttered curse upon himself for
-this unheard-of folly he fled on deck, not daring to
-look behind him. As if he must do something, he
-slung his binoculars about his neck and mounted to
-the fore crow’s-nest, from which the occupant had to
-depart suddenly upon the skipper’s appearance. He
-searched the horizon with most jealous care, but
-nothing could be seen, nothing but sea and sky and
-an occasional bird. So after half an hour up there
-he descended again and solaced his excited feelings<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</span>
-by harrying the men, who, as usual, were kept at
-work upon perfectly needless jobs as if their very
-lives depended upon getting the work done in record
-time. And so congenial did he find this occupation
-that he had almost forgotten why, contrary to his
-own plans, he was running his ship almost dead
-before the wind up the middle of the Indian Ocean instead
-of getting away across to the Straits of Sunda
-as he had intended, when ‘What’s that?’ shouted
-the mate. ‘Somethin’ right ahead, sir; looks like
-dead whale ’r a boat ’r a big log.’ Ah! Trembling
-in every limb, Captain Da Silva snatched his glasses
-and sprang aloft. Panting with his speed he reached
-the crow’s-nest. He did not need to ask where the
-object was. It stood up with remarkable distinctness
-against that wide, clear blue, a little ungainly
-black patch. He focussed his glasses upon it and
-stared through the double tubes so earnestly that his
-eyeballs burnt in their sockets. A cold shudder, in
-that tropical day, possessed him, ran through him,
-and made the hair of his flesh stand up. It was a
-boat and nothing else. What manner of woman
-could his wife be, and was it safe for him to treat her
-as he had been doing? Superstitious fears seized
-upon him, for ever it will be found that gross cruelty
-and superstition go hand in hand, and at that
-moment he registered a mental vow that in future
-there should be a great change in his treatment of
-Priscilla. Indeed, he blamed himself bitterly for
-having allowed himself to behave to her as he had
-done. But he took refuge in the mental coward’s
-lying plea by muttering, ‘How was I to know?’</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</span></p>
-<p>Go down from aloft he dared not. Slow,
-exasperatingly slow, as his ship’s progress was, he felt
-that he must remain at his lofty perch until the last
-moment, when he would go himself and see what
-this strange business meant. It was a weary business,
-for under such circumstances a ship’s progress
-seems to be so deliberate, one’s impatience is so
-futile and yet so impossible to avoid showing, that it
-tries men more than any words can say. It was
-nearly sunset when at last the waif was near enough
-for a boat to be lowered for the purpose of bringing
-her alongside. Long before that time arrived Captain
-Da Silva had devoured every detail of her&mdash;had seen
-that to all appearance the six men in her were dead,
-that she was a whaleboat, but, of course, could not
-read her name, since it was not the practice for
-whaleboats to carry the name of their ship painted
-on them, as is done in the merchant service. The
-same haughty disregard of any other person’s
-curiosity is usually shown in the Navy, where
-scarcely any of the smaller boats give the ship’s
-name&mdash;you can read it on the men’s caps if you want
-to know it.</p>
-
-<p>Leaping into the boat he had ordered to be
-lowered, the skipper gave the order to ‘give way’
-in such a tone that the men fairly lifted the boat
-through the water. None of them dared to steal a
-glance at him; if they had they would have marvelled.
-He was in a piteous state of nervous excitement.
-He felt as if his wife’s eyes were penetrating through
-the massive sides of the ship, that she was cognisant
-of his very thoughts; and the idea made great beads
-of cold sweat stand out upon his swarthy skin. He
-fought with his fears as a man fights with death, now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</span>
-devising strange punishments for Priscilla for having
-thus obtained a strange power of frightening him, and
-now vowing to himself that he would devote the rest
-of his time with her to making amends for his previous
-treatment of her. Not that he was conscious
-of having done anything he should not do&mdash;men of
-that class seldom are&mdash;but because she did not seem
-to be happy under the discipline which he felt was
-his prerogative to mete out to all under his command.
-And then they reached the boat.</p>
-
-<p>Are those bundles of rags and bones men? By
-night the dews and by day the pitiless sun have
-alternately soaked and scorched them. They have
-endured such agonies as men do not care to think of.
-The boat herself is so bleached with sun and dew
-and wind that it seems wonderful she still holds
-together. And there is a faint smell as of death.
-Round to windward, quick. Look closely. Is there
-any life at all? Yes, there is a slight movement. A
-bight of tow-line is flung on board and secured to the
-bow thwart, a curt order is given, and the waif is
-being towed to the ship. Arriving alongside, she is
-hoisted level with the rail so that the hapless ones may
-be lifted out, as they are, so gently, so tenderly, by
-those rude, much-persecuted men, while the skipper
-looks on loweringly. One is dead. He is a little
-Italian apparently so reduced by his sufferings that
-he looks more like an Egyptian mummy uncased than
-anything else. But in all the rest there is some spark
-of life, notably in one big-framed&mdash;alas, every bone
-is awfully visible, and his eyes are away in the back
-of his head somewhere at the bottom of two long
-tunnels&mdash;fair-haired man, whose broken lips part and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</span>
-whose blackened tongue tries pitifully to frame a
-word.</p>
-
-<p>The skipper goes away and leaves willing, eager
-hands to attend mercifully upon these castaways.
-He has said no word forbidding anything to be
-done, and so the group around the bodies give such
-aid as they know how, while the rest of the crew
-trim yards again for Anjer. And by the time she is
-settled upon her old course and the Captain has
-carelessly strolled forward again, he is humbly
-informed that five of the men he has rescued are not
-only still alive, but likely to go on living.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">THE MEETING</p>
-
-<p>Now, owing to the way in which Priscilla kept her
-cabin when not absolutely driven on deck by the
-foulness of the air below, she was, strange as it must
-appear, quite ignorant of what was going on above
-her. Had the steward not been exceedingly busy
-upon some domestic task, he would, poor little man,
-have gladly carried her the news. But so it was, the
-boat’s crew had been rescued, the boat hoisted inboard,
-and things had all resumed their normal course
-without her being any the wiser. And yet somehow
-she felt a lightening of the heart. She felt sure,
-in spite of the coarse and brutal way in which her
-husband had received her vision, that he had done, or
-would do, what she had asked him&mdash;she had no
-anxiety upon that head at all. But then she was
-never anxious now. She had cultivated unintentionally
-the serene detachment of mind of those Indian
-devotees who, by dint of long meditation and abstinence
-from all but the barest necessities in the way of
-food and sleep, have attained unto a condition of
-mind that is favourable to the detachment of body
-from soul without the catastrophe of death. Of its
-psychology I know nothing, but I do feel that, given
-sufficient will power, the human brain may be capable
-of some wonderful power of sending thought waves
-out into the unseen. It does not matter, anyhow,
-since I only wish to record the trance condition in
-which Priscilla seemed now to spend most of her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</span>
-time.</p>
-
-<p>But in some mysterious way she was subconsciously
-easier in her mind, and that although she
-knew absolutely nothing about what was going on.
-Also her husband seemed, for some reason or another,
-to be anxious that she should not know. Perhaps he
-was ashamed, or whatever kindred feeling to shame
-he might be capable of, to let her know that he had,
-after all, obeyed her words and found that she had
-been absolutely correct. Truth to tell, he was immensely
-impressed, and something very like fear of
-his wife was slowly getting the mastery over him.
-Thus days went by as the <i>Grampus</i> drew steadily
-towards the great East Indian Archipelago, and the
-rescued ones grew steadily well by dint of careful
-letting alone and the help of their previous clean lives.
-Then there came a day when Captain Da Silva took
-it upon him to have the apparent head man of the
-boat’s crew he had saved brought aft to him, and
-the following colloquy ensued. (It must be borne in
-mind that the rescued men’s voices had only just
-returned to them.)</p>
-
-<p>The Captain: ‘Wall, wut ship d’ ye b’long to?’
-The Officer: ‘<i>Xiphias</i>, sir, of New Bedford.’ A
-grunt from the skipper and a short interval of silence.
-Then the skipper spoke again, after carefully rolling
-his cigar between his lips, as if to extract the last
-grain of nicotine out of it. ‘’N’ wut wuz ye doin’ t’
-git lost? Sounds funny, grown men like you air
-gittin’ lost.’ The scorn and contempt and utter
-brutality of his manner passed all description. ‘Wall,
-sir,’ replied the mate faintly, ‘the circumstances wuz
-peculiar. We left the ship in chase of a whale<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</span> just
-before a hurricane kem on, an’ I hung on t’ the whale
-mebbe a bit too long, so ’t we got outer sight o’ the
-ship. ’N’ then we’d all we knew t’ keep in shelter ov
-th’ carcass till thet awful weather wuz over. ’N’ by
-thet time th’ whale wuz so blown up we couldn’t
-stand his stink any longer, an’ we cut away from him
-an’ put fur th’ Seychelles as near as I could judge.
-But there wuz only th’ lantern keg of bread an’ th’
-ushal water, an’ thet’s all we’ve a-had fur twelve days.
-If th’ boys hadn’t been th’ very best we sh’d all a-ben
-mad long ago.’ Another spell of silence, broken at
-last by the skipper saying: ‘S’pose you don’ reckon
-on ever seeing yewr ship agen, hey? Le’s see, old
-man Hampden got her, er had her, I think. Ef so,
-they ain’t ’nough of her left by this time t’ repair a
-whaleboat with. He was a soft-hearted old greenie,
-anyhow, kinder pious, I seem to remember, ’n’ didn’t
-know his nose fr’m the jibboom end.’ ‘Excuse me,
-sir,’ said the mate suddenly, with some energy, ’thet
-kain’t be eour Capt’n Hampden. I ben fishin’ fur
-two-an’-twenty year, and he wuz the smartest skipper
-at anything a skipper ought to do ’at ever I gammed.’
-‘Oh, shet yer big mouth, yew wouldn’t know a smart
-man w’en yew see him. It’s the same man right
-enough. I knew him very well, an’ wouldn’t ha’
-carried him fur ballast in my ship. But I ain’t got
-no time t’ be yarnin’ with yew, ner inclination either
-if yer come to thet. I’m jest figgerin’ eout wut t’ dew
-with ye. I want a few han’s, an’ although yew ain’t
-th’ kind I’d have if I c’d choose, y’r better than none, I
-s’pose, an’ so I’ll ship th’ five of yew ’n’ give ye th’
-250th lay, same’s th’ rest of th’ men ’r gettin’.’ ‘But,
-Captain,’ replied the now thoroughly alarmed man,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</span>
-‘I wuz mate of the <i>Xiphias</i>&mdash;I ben mate fur th’ las’
-ten years, ’n’ yew kain’t mean t’ take such a slice of
-my life as to ship me here fur a three years’ cruise on
-a seaman’s lay. In th’ name ov common humanity,
-sir, yew kain’t mean it.’ And the big drops of sweat
-started out of the poor fellow’s face. ‘Kain’t I!’
-sneered the skipper. ‘Jest yew say yew don’ know,
-and yew’ll be more ’n half right. I k’n an’ dew mean
-just that thing. Yew’ll take my offer, yew an’ the
-rest ov th’ great babies ’at come with ye, ’r if ye don’t
-yew’ll wish yew’d been left to rot in thet boat. ’N’
-mine yew, not a word outa yewr heads, ’r ye’ll fine
-me t’ deal with, ’n I’ll try an’ teach ye wut a smart
-cap’n is.’</p>
-
-<p>Poor Mr. Pease! No braver man ever stepped,
-but he was weak and trembling from exhaustion. A
-strong desire to live had returned to him, and, moreover,
-he was overborne by the fierceness of the terrible
-man with whom he was confronted, and he dimly
-remembered some of the terrible stories current about
-him&mdash;of the dark deeds done by him in the secret
-places of the sea, and up till now with impunity,
-because of his phenomenal success as a whale-fisher.
-When will people in business learn that it is a crime
-against man and God to condone, yes, connive at
-abominable wickedness in those they have set over
-their employees, because, forsooth, they are ‘smart
-men’? When will people learn to brand a man as a
-demon, whatever his place in society or the Church
-or in business, who, in his villainous methods of getting
-rich, brings woe and death unto thousands of
-homes? When will ministers of the Gospel dare
-to say to such men bringing their vilely acquired<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</span>
-wealth and pouring it into the coffers of the Church,
-‘Thy money perish with thee!’</p>
-
-<p>So with this terror upon him, Mr. Pease signed
-the articles, and his crew followed suit, becoming by
-that act the slaves of the skipper for the next three
-years unless some heaven-sent happening should
-release them. And immediately, though they were
-yet so exhausted, they were set to such work as they
-could do&mdash;making sinnet, scraping, and mat-weaving.
-Well was it for them that no whales were sighted, or
-assuredly they would have been called upon to take
-their places in the various boats, under which severe
-treatment they would probably have died.</p>
-
-<p>It may perhaps be thought strange that as yet no
-allusion has been made to the strange fact of Reuben
-and Priscilla being on board the same ship at last.
-But really, as far as these two principal actors in our
-story are concerned, it did not seem possible that
-anything should come of it, the circumstances being
-so peculiar. As repeatedly observed, Priscilla came
-on deck but little, for she could not bear the jealous
-watchfulness with which her husband followed her
-every movement. And in the fo’c’sle, or, indeed, out
-of it, such was the terror under which all hands
-lived, not merely of the skipper, but of his Portuguese
-allies, that any conversation concerning the
-skipper was tacitly banned. No word ever passed
-between the white men about him or his affairs.
-The Portuguese may have discussed him freely, but
-as it was in their own tongue, no one but themselves
-was any the wiser. Thus it came to pass that Reuben
-was on board the ship a month before he so much as
-knew that the Captain had his wife with him, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</span>
-is all the more noteworthy from the fact that in small
-vessels like the <i>Grampus</i> it is the rule that the
-Captain cannot sneeze in the solitude of his state-room
-without it being known and commented upon
-all over the ship in an hour. Poor fellows, they have
-so little to talk about. But whalers generally needed
-to be exempt from this law. Their discipline was
-much too strict for it to run even in the best of them,
-while in the <i>Grampus</i>, as we have seen, it was in the
-highest degree dangerous to mention the Captain’s
-name at all.</p>
-
-<p>The ship had passed through the Straits of Sunda
-into the Java Sea, and was one night, under the skilful
-pilotage of the skipper, working her darkling way
-westward along the south coast of Borneo. There
-was but little wind, except occasionally when a passing
-squall gave a heavier puff than usual, causing the
-staunch and well-balanced ship to heel like a yacht.
-Terrific peals of thunder and blazing flashes of lightning
-followed one another in quick succession, for the
-heat of the day was being healthfully dispersed over
-the sea from the land, although in a somewhat terrifying
-manner. Rube was at the wheel, his great figure
-erect and head slightly turned aside to listen for the
-skipper’s slightest word, while keeping one eye fixed
-upon the faithful little face of the compass suspended
-inside the skylight. Suddenly there was an awful
-crash of thunder as if a Himalayan Range were
-tumbling to pieces, a short breathless hush, and with
-a hiss as of escaping steam, sky and sea were flooded
-with violet flame. As Rube raised his arm instinctively
-to shield his face he saw by that brief blaze a
-woman facing him within a few feet. For that vivid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</span>
-instant the two faces were revealed, then utter blackness
-succeeded. Through Priscilla rushed a spasm
-of fear. Who was this huge bearded stranger, and
-whence had he come? More, why did the sight
-of him put her poor deadened mind into such a
-ferment as the optic nerves experience when after
-long darkness the eyes are suddenly exposed to the
-glare of day? As she groped her way below these
-things flitted across her brain, but never for one
-moment did she imagine why or how, and soon, very
-soon, she resumed her listless introspective attitude
-again. She had only crept up with some message to
-her husband of trivial import, and soon the whole
-incident receded to the background of her mind.</p>
-
-<p>As for Reuben, for one moment he thought he
-had been struck by lightning, and with the stroke had
-come a vision of an angel, a sorrowful angel outlined
-in living light. But the shock, great though it was,
-did not suffice to unlock that closed door of memory,
-only to let a few broken gleams of illumination
-through, tantalising, almost maddening in their incompleteness.
-He soon recovered, and when relieved
-from the wheel at eight bells, sought one of the
-American portion of the old crew and whispered,
-‘Is they a woman aboard this ship?’ ‘Hush, for
-Heaven’s sake. If the skipper gits to know you’ve
-asked such a question, or I’ve answered it, he’ll trice
-us up an’ flog us, sure’s death. An’ ye kain’t breathe
-here without somebody listening. Yes.’ ‘Thanks,’
-replied Rube; and straightway going to his bunk he
-lifted up his heart in fervent though silent prayer for
-the owner of that sweet pale face. In doing this
-he but obeyed an irresistible impulse, since he <span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</span>knew
-not at all of Priscilla’s suffering, and, indeed, even
-before the accident which shut him off from the past,
-had always thought of her as being full of happiness
-with her husband. Now, however, knowing no more
-of who Priscilla was than of a person he had never
-seen or heard of, he was full of a mysterious compassion
-for her, and felt that he would gladly have
-laid down his life to serve her.</p>
-
-<p>The crew of the <i>Grampus</i> never ate any idle
-bread, but now they were indeed having a time
-of travail. For Captain Da Silva was making a
-passage to the Japan grounds, being mightily wroth
-because of the ill-success which had attended him
-lately. The wonderful good fortune enjoyed by him
-previously had been relegated to the limbo of forgotten
-things. He felt no joy in it now, looked upon
-it as only a bare reward for his phenomenal ability
-and smartness, of which no man was more fully
-conscious than himself. So he harassed his crew by
-night and by day, making, trimming, furling, sail;
-so that no breath of wind should be wasted, and
-when, as occasionally happened, a dead calm befell,
-getting all the boats out and setting their crews to
-tow the vessel along with their oars. It was a fearful
-ordeal in that climate, and some of the crew were
-only kept at it by sheer dread of the skipper. They
-feared him more than sunstroke or death by sheer
-exhaustion. It was this state of things which brought
-about a collision between him and Reuben. The
-latter stalwart recruit being always so willing and
-apparently eager to work, had hitherto escaped even
-the usual opprobrious epithets with which most of the
-crew, except the Portuguese, were favoured. But<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</span>
-because no occasion of fault could be found in him
-he was jealously watched by the skipper’s cronies, and,
-as it was bound to do sooner or later, the longed-for
-opportunity came. The boats had just returned to
-the ship, after a four hours’ tow in the afternoon sun,
-because a little breeze had sprung up and relieved
-them. The boat in which Reuben pulled midship
-oar had just come alongside, and Mr. Pease, who had
-been pulling tub-oar (next to Rube) had fainted,
-overcome by heat and exhaustion. Unfortunately,
-just then the skipper looked over the side, and taking
-in the position of things with one glance of his
-flashing eyes, shouted with an awful Portuguese oath,
-‘Start that lazy Yankee brute there, Pedro! Hit
-him, hit him with anything!’ Pedro, not at all
-unwillingly, seized a bight of the towline, and was
-just about to deal the unconscious man a tremendous
-blow, when Rube, calmly turning round, seized the
-descending arm, and with his other hand quietly
-wrenched the rope from the harpooner’s fingers.
-The maddened Portuguese snatched his knife from
-his belt at the moment of his release, and with his
-skipper’s yell of ‘Kill him, kill him!’ piercing his
-ears, made one frantic stab at Rube. But as calmly
-as he had caught the rope-wielding wrist, so now he
-caught the murderous one, and with a quick twist
-made Pedro drop his knife into the sea. A yell
-of pain escaped the Portuguese as his wrist cracked,
-and Rube, releasing him, said quietly, ‘Sorry t’ hurt
-ye, shipmate, but ye mustn’t kill, y’ know.’ By this
-time the skipper had recovered from the speechlessness
-of rage into which he had been thrown by
-Rube’s action, and shouted, ‘On deck with ye, on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</span>
-deck!’ All obeyed but the man who had fainted:
-he was beyond obedience. As Rube stepped over
-the rail the skipper met him with a blow of a heavy
-bludgeon of oak that might have felled an ox.
-Right across the head and face it came, and the
-splendid fellow dropped senseless and bleeding at his
-master’s feet. Stooping, the latter dragged the unconscious
-body to the middle of the deck, and sang
-out, ‘Up waist boat.’ But the white men stood
-irresolute for one moment as if inclined to resent the
-vileness of this last assault. That moment was fatal.
-For without a sign made every Portuguese in the
-ship had ranged himself by the skipper, and in their
-hands gleamed revolver barrels. Howling out the
-order again, the unled whites seized the falls and ran
-the boat up on to her cranes. One of the Portuguese
-asked if the man was to be lifted out of the boat, but
-the skipper turned upon him with an oath so fierce
-that he shrank back, regretting that he had spoken.</p>
-
-<p>No one dared suggest aid to Rube, and so, with
-the knowledge that again he had fully asserted his
-superiority over the white man, Captain Da Silva went
-quite happy to his supper. And sitting there with
-his wife, he could not forbear saying exultantly:
-‘Nice crowd o’ hogs these countrymen o’ yours are.
-I d’ ’no’ wut I wuz fool ’nough t’ take any of ’em aboard
-here for at all. Some of ’em kem aboard through
-yew, anyhow&mdash;one ’specially I remember just now.
-I’m goin’ t’ give myself th’ pleasure of floggin’ him
-to-morrow, if he ain’t dead, and yew shall be a witness
-to see it’s all done legally, y’ know.’ And he winked
-hideously at her. She, poor thing, sat as usual silent
-and white, hardly realising the horror of the whole thing.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</span>
-And her misery of mind and body was only slightly
-increased when, as a sort of praise-meeting to whatever
-devil they felt protected by, the skipper invited
-the Portuguese harpooners below to a drinking bout,
-first locking Priscilla into her room. The baffled
-Pedro was there with his arm in a sling, looking a
-veritable fiend. ‘Never mind,’ said the skipper in
-Portuguese, ‘yew shall have the flogging of that big
-Yankee beast if he lives. What do you think of that?’
-Pedro muttered some inarticulate profanity and took
-another drink. He did not mind much what was
-done as long as he ‘got even,’ as he termed it. And
-now it is time to draw a veil over that bestial scene,
-worthy of the worst days of the pirates, and especially
-those Portuguese pirates who sailed the China Seas
-commanding gangs composed of all the scum of the
-Far East and outdoing them all in cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>On deck a stealthy figure had crept forward to
-where Rube lay, with a mat to put under his head and
-a little water to moisten his parched lips. It was the
-poor darky steward, who had been shut out of the
-cabin while the drinking was going on, and who thus,
-for pity’s sake, risked undergoing the same treatment.
-Not that it would have been much novelty, for there
-was scarcely an inch of the poor wretch’s body which
-had not its scar. And at last men get used to such
-treatment (some men, that is) and take it as a matter
-of course. It is pleasant to record that this poor
-samaritan was enabled to carry out his beneficent
-little ministration unseen, save by Mr. Court, who still
-kept his watch, although in a dogged sullen way that
-was intensely painful to see, but which, strange to say,
-did not seem to detract from his efficiency. But,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</span> as he
-said to himself very often in the solitudes wherein
-his soul roamed during the night watches, was there
-ever an officer so treated? He did not know, from
-his favourable position heretofore in American ships,
-that many hundred British mercantile officers have
-had to endure treatment even worse than his, because
-they have been, as well as kept at arm’s length by the
-skipper and made to feel that they were of less
-account than anybody on board, openly and constantly
-reviled before all the crew, and then expected
-to maintain discipline. Happily, with the morning
-came, instead of the shameful exhibition purposed
-by the skipper, a diversion welcomed by all hands,
-except Rube, who, but for his stertorous breathing,
-appeared to be dead. It was the raising of a ‘pod’ of
-cow whales at daylight, with a brisk breeze and everything
-in favour of a splendid day’s hunting. Rube
-was dragged aft out of the way. Pedro, whose wrist
-was so badly strained that he could not lift a harpoon
-with it, grumblingly took up his station aloft for signalling
-purposes, and in ten minutes from the time of
-sighting the whales five boats were away, the skipper
-leading as usual. This, however, was to be an exception
-to the usual celerity of capture shown by the
-<i>Grampus’s</i> crew. In the first place, the whales were going
-so fast that it seemed for a long while as if the chase
-must be fruitless; and then, when at last the boats did
-rush in among them, their movements were so marvellously
-agile that the danger was very great. The
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</span>skipper as usual seemed ubiquitous, compelling the
-admiration of all by the way he manipulated his boat.
-He had already <span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</span>killed his whale when he saw that
-Mr. Court was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</span> exceedingly hampered by the movements
-of a loose cow, which behaved as if she understood
-exactly how best to frustrate all the deadly
-intentions of the enemy of her companion. Without
-a moment’s hesitation the skipper cut loose from his
-whale, shouted to his men, and tore off to help the mate,
-leaping like a flying fish from one boat to the other
-as they flew swiftly in opposite directions. Snatching
-the lance from the hand of the amazed officer, he had
-just dealt a tremendous blow at the fast whale with
-it, when, as the boat lay off, the loose whale rose spectrally
-between, on her back, with her jaws agape.
-Swiftly turning, those great jaws closed, catching the
-skipper’s arm, with which he was poising his newly
-straightened lance again, and dragging him headlong
-out of the boat. Paralysed with horror, the mate
-stood for a moment, then stooped and caught the
-skipper as he came bounding to the surface almost at
-the spot where he went overboard. But in doing so
-Mr. Court overbalanced himself, and he and the
-skipper, interlocked in each other’s arms, went down
-again. The harpooner, a wonderfully smart black
-Portuguese, immediately cut the line, allowing the
-whale to run, and after a minute or two’s manœuvring,
-succeeded in bringing the mate and skipper to the
-surface and into the boat, the latter almost dead.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_294fp" style="max-width: 28em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_294fp.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>THE LOOSE WHALE ROSE SPECTRALLY BETWEEN, ON HER BACK, WITH HER
-JAWS AGAPE.</p>
-
-<p><i>P. 295.</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The best haste possible was made to the ship,
-and the skipper was carefully lifted on board, laid on
-the deck aft, and his clothes cut off as the only way
-of uncovering his wounded arm and side. All the
-time the examination took place he was unconscious,
-so the mate was able to dress the extensive lacerations,
-set two broken ribs and the mangled arm, and
-make him fairly comfortable before he came to.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</span>
-Then with very great care he was lowered through
-the cabin skylight and laid upon the settee in his
-berth. Here he was left to the care of his wife,
-while the mate returned to his arduous duties on
-deck. It is pleasant to record that his first care was
-to see some adequate attention given to the case of
-Rube, who was moaning and tossing ceaselessly in
-the throes of brain fever.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">FAREWELL TO THE <i>XIPHIAS</i></p>
-
-<p>We left the <i>Xiphias</i> in evil case as far as appearance
-went, but with her brave crew still undaunted by the
-long series of misfortunes which had now, as they
-thought, almost reached the culminating point in the
-loss of their vessel and all of their lives. Perhaps a
-bitter pang did stab some of their hearts as they
-realised that if the hurricane now raging should
-succeed in its efforts to destroy them all, their fate
-would never be known. That adds a new terror to
-death, for man loves to think that his going hence is
-no mystery, and that its incidents will be remembered
-to his credit by someone, if only for a little
-time. But gradually hope grew stronger (they had
-never quite lost it) that they might be saved, for the
-weather was, as always in the following segment of a
-cyclone, growing perceptibly better, although the
-force of the wind showed as yet no sign of lessening.
-Unfortunately, herein lay their present danger; for
-the <i>Xiphias</i> was leaking so badly, she had evidently
-been strained to such an extent, that the sea, now
-rising and tossing her about like a ball, bade fair to
-complete her destruction after all. Therefore, encouraged
-by the skipper and Mr. Peck, who had now
-of course assumed the position of chief officer, they
-all toiled unremittingly at the pumps, even though
-the face of the carpenter as he sounded the well every
-hour never lightened.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</span></p>
-<p>The struggle for life had been so fierce that when
-at last the awful meteor had passed quite away, the
-sea had resumed its placid calm, and all nature
-seemed through that tremendous convulsion to have
-renewed its vigorous youth, the poor tired old ship
-was hardly able to rise to the long, long swell that
-still came rolling majestically towards her, extending
-from one horizon to the other. She just slowly
-wallowed like a top that is ‘going to sleep’ and will
-presently lie dead. So alarming was the outlook
-that Captain Hampden and a few of the more weary
-of the men commenced to provision the boats in
-readiness to leave the ship in case she foundered.
-One thing puzzled the fine old skipper, though, and
-that was how, with nearly twelve feet of water in her,
-the <i>Xiphias</i> floated at all. And then suddenly,
-calling himself a fool, he remembered all that oil
-below tightly bunged in stout casks, which in their
-turn were well stowed and secured from floating
-adrift by ‘toms’ from the beams above them. Due
-to his own forethought, and yet he had forgotten&mdash;could
-not realise why his ship had not, long ere this,
-‘turned turtle’ and sunk.</p>
-
-<p>Having realised it, he called all hands aft and
-explained the circumstances to them; told them that
-they were only about three hundred miles south of
-Mahé, in the Seychelles, which was the nearest port
-where they could hope to find their needs supplied
-and whence they could send news home that would
-arrive there within reasonable time. Finally, he
-concluded his speech by saying: ‘Men, God hasn’t
-forgotten us. We shall live, I feel sure. And I don’t
-believe He’s forgotten our poor shipmates either.
-I feel almost certain that they are still alive,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</span> and
-that in His own good time we shall see them
-again. Carpenter, sound that well again.’ The
-order was obeyed amidst breathless attention, and
-the cheer that went up when Chips announced,
-‘Eleven-three, sir, just what it was an hour ago,’
-could not have been improved upon by the healthiest
-and most vigorous crew. Now every man went on
-with his work soberly and in good heart, as if persuaded
-of his perfect security, and the ship crawled
-daily nearer port, while, although regular pumping
-continued, there was none of the energy of despair in
-the work because it certainly was not needed. But
-at the mastheads every eye while daylight lasted
-roamed around the great blank circle unceasingly as
-untiringly, hoping against hope to see, not whales,
-but some sign of the lost ones. In the foc’s’le the
-fellows could talk of nothing else but Rube; and
-MacManus, who had been one of those left on board,
-refused to be comforted. In fact, with the emphasis
-of his warm-hearted, illogical race, he went so far as
-to say that if Rube was lost he wouldn’t survive him,
-and that if even his own father confessor dared to
-suggest to him that Rube was a heretic instead of a
-blessed saint and martyr he would peril all his
-chances of eternal salvation by committing a fierce,
-premeditated assault upon the unworthy man.</p>
-
-<p>All the patience possessed by this crew of good
-fellows was needed by them now. For while their
-hope was strong again, it was sickeningly deferred
-day after day by the lightness of the airs and the
-sluggishness of the vessel. Besides, as often happens
-in such cases, the leak, having unaccountably ceased
-to gain upon them, now began to increase again,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</span>
-although very slowly. There is something appalling
-in being on board ship under such conditions.
-Knowing the possibilities, one cannot help expecting
-that presently the opening through which the hungry
-water is forcing itself may widen out so extensively
-as to make the sinking of the ship a matter of
-minutes. This feeling of dreadful anticipation is, I
-am bound to say, not nearly so much warranted on
-board a wooden ship as it is in an iron or steel
-vessel, where the springing of a leak may mean the
-starting of one rivet in a row, which, resenting the
-extra strain put upon them, promptly give up their
-hold, and the great plate, gaping, admits the sea so
-fast that the hull sinks like a bottle with the bottom
-knocked out.</p>
-
-<p>However, all hands stuck manfully by their task,
-and on the twelfth day from the ceasing of the hurricane
-they were rewarded by hearing from the masthead
-the joyful shout of ‘Land-ho!’ It was early
-morning, but so slow was the pace at which their
-vessel crawled towards this haven of refuge that it
-was nightfall before they anchored in the beautiful
-little bay of Mahé. And as the anchor rattled joyfully
-down, its clangour reverberating among the hills, all
-hands felt deeply grateful, and then very sad, as they
-thought of the brave fellows who had not been permitted
-to reach port with them. Then the sails were
-quickly furled and the decks cleared up, and a spell at
-the pumps was decided upon by the skipper before
-allowing everybody to have a long night’s rest. So
-after a good meal and smoke, the pumps were manned
-by three gangs, who relieved one another at ten
-minutes’ intervals until nine o’clock, by which <span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</span>time
-the water in the hold had been so much reduced that,
-after consultation with the carpenter, the skipper
-decided that except for an anchor watch of one
-seaman and a harpooner, all hands might go below
-and remain until eight bells (eight o’clock) the following
-morning.</p>
-
-<p>When aroused, not only did they find a splendid
-assortment of fruit alongside, but the anchor watch
-had been busy fishing, and the appetising odour of
-fresh fish being cooked greeted their nostrils as they
-came on deck. It was a happy breakfast party held
-forward that morning. Sweet potatoes, fried fish,
-coffee, and soft bread, with oranges and bananas to
-follow, made up a meal which, after their late terrible
-experiences, seemed to them the richest banquet
-imaginable. As soon as breakfast was over, their
-heavy task began. First of all, they got under weigh,
-and worked the vessel in as near the shore as possible.
-Then, having moored her head and stern, they commenced
-operations by discharging her cargo, lowering
-the casks of oil into the water and towing them
-to the beach, where they were laboriously rolled
-up above high-water mark. Then, some lighters
-being hired, all the provisions, movable furniture,
-clothing, &amp;c., were also discharged, the sails were
-unbent and sent ashore also, while the upper yards
-were sent down and floated alongside. A great raft
-was made ready to work upon, and then the vessel
-was hauled in as closely as she would go in her now
-empty condition to the beach, the cutting falls secured
-to the fore and main lower mastheads, and the two
-bower anchors laid out shoreward. This heavy toil
-occupied four days. Then came Sunday, when, comfortably<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</span>
-housed in tents of their own rigging ashore,
-the weary crew enjoyed a long luxurious day’s rest,
-helped by a very homely service of thanksgiving
-conducted by the skipper.</p>
-
-<p>On Monday the great work of repairing the ship’s
-bottom began by attaching the cutting falls to the
-bower anchors, leading the hauling parts ashore, and
-heaving the ship down upon her side until her keel
-was exposed. It was then found that the leak was
-in the garboard-strake, or the next plank to the keel,
-and manfully did the carpenter, the cooper, and as
-many of the crew as could handle a tool, attack the
-work of repair. Four days from sunrise to sunset were
-spent in this labour, then, satisfied that all was right
-on the starboard side, the skipper ordered the vessel
-to be turned round and the other side hove out for the
-same treatment.</p>
-
-<p>It is very wonderful to consider in how few words&mdash;in
-a sentence, for instance, like the preceding
-one&mdash;can be described an enormous amount of
-work. A whole chapter might easily be devoted to
-the elucidation of the various processes necessary for
-the performance of this work spoken of so baldly, but
-I am afraid it would be far from interesting. Sufficient,
-perhaps, to say that these duties, involving so
-much painful labour, and for so long a time, are now
-performed in dry docks or on patent slips with a
-celerity and ease that, considering the bulk and
-weight of modern ships, would be nothing short of
-miraculous to a casual observer unversed in engineering
-feats.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately the men were all contented with as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</span>
-well as interested in their work. They had grown
-to love the ship as they had the captain and officers,
-and so each duty, however hard or unpleasant, was
-gaily performed, and apparently without half the
-labour expended on similar tasks by discontented
-men. At the expiration of a month from the time
-of entering Mahé the ship was again ready for sea.
-‘Tight as a bottle,’ said the proud carpenter, who
-had worked like any three men, and, besides, had
-managed to teach much of his art to sailors (farmers
-most of them a year ago), so that they were able
-to assist him, not merely in sawing, hauling, or chopping,
-but in much more important detail work. No
-man had given any trouble. Loafing natives or beachcomers
-of doubtful nationality, skulking around for
-an opportunity to do mischief by purveying a
-peculiarly vile brand of fire-water, were sternly warned
-off the premises of the sailors&mdash;told to keep outside
-a certain area set apart as the special grounds of the
-men of the <i>Xiphias</i>.</p>
-
-<p>When the work was all done, the cargo reshipped,
-and the <i>Xiphias</i> quite ready for sea, Captain Hampden
-called all hands aft, and said: ‘Men, I’m dredful
-proud of ye. Ye’ve take the last ounce out of yourselves,
-you’ve never given me a minute’s uneasiness,
-and I don’t know how to thank ye enough. But I
-got it in my head that as we are all ready to sail
-to-morrow if need be, maybe yew’d some of yew
-like a little run loose with some money of your own,
-and if so I feel that yew’re all so worthy of trust that
-I ought to give yew the opportunity, and I will&mdash;if
-yew want it. Ef not, I’ll gladly go with yew to
-a regular picnic down to one of these beautiful
-outlying beaches. We’ll take all our own provisions,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</span>
-we’ll cook them ourselves, every man shall amuse
-himself just as he likes, fishing, rambling, swimming,
-or what not, and we shall come aboard tired out with
-real enjoyment, but happy and not a cent poorer
-in pocket or health. Now, all those in favour of
-my scheme step forward&mdash;those that want to go
-by themselves and spend their own money remain
-behind.’</p>
-
-<p>All hands stepped forward but two harpooners.
-The prospect of such a ‘Sunday School outing,’ as
-one of them termed it, did not appeal to them&mdash;they
-were men, not babies. So they went both of them
-together in search of what they considered to be
-enjoyment, while Captain Hampden and all hands,
-except the mate (Mr. Peck), the carpenter, and
-steward, left the ship on their excursion, and spent
-a day of unalloyed pleasure, happy as a lot of children
-let loose from school. And if any old sailor turns
-up his nose at this I would like to ask him, as an
-honest fellow, to tell me how much enjoyment he
-ever got prowling about the purlieus of a great
-seaport from one dirty public-house to another, always
-meeting the same kind of furtive-eyed loafer and
-blatant female, and always pounced upon by these
-harpies with shouts of welcome, changing into derisive
-curses as soon as they found he had no more money
-to spend on them or to give them? I have no doubt
-but that his answer would be that it was all sickening
-and exasperating in the last degree, but as long as
-he knew of no other way in which to spend his
-money and leisure, it was not his fault that he behaved
-as an utter idiot.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</span></p>
-<p>But enough of this. The two malcontents returned
-in the morning sadly, having had their enjoyment
-and looking fearfully the worse for it. No one said
-anything to them about their experiences, and they
-did not volunteer any information, but it was at least
-a fortnight before they had regained their healthy
-appearance, and a much longer time before they had
-lost a certain hanging of the head. This last was
-novel, and would not have been the case, but that
-they had been practically alone in their folly. And,
-perhaps, there was just a little of the Pharisee’s
-attitude in their shipmates, who, having chosen to
-keep out of harm’s way, were inclined to be inordinately
-proud of their virtue. It is this which
-makes so many Christians offensive, makes them
-shunned by those who are really penitent. They
-do not understand the Divine pity nor the Divine
-humility, much less endeavour to practise them, and
-so repel those whom they are professing to try and
-attract.</p>
-
-<p>At noon that day the <i>Xiphias</i> sailed short-handed
-by the loss of those six fine men (for recruits were
-not to be obtained in Mahé), but well equipped again
-for the voyage. She now carried seven boats&mdash;five
-in the davits and two on the skids aft, and all repairs
-had been substantially carried out. As soon as she
-was clear of the land and heading across east for the
-archipelago, Captain Hampden called all hands aft,
-and in their presence complimented the carpenter for
-his noble efforts and his great skill. The Captain
-said that what he had done was truly above all
-reward, but as a mark of his appreciation he had
-much pleasure in handing Chips an order on the
-owners for $250 = £50. Chips turned brick red,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</span>
-fidgeted, shuffled, and finally said, ‘Thankee, sir.’
-More than that he could not say&mdash;he was one of those
-doers who cannot talk. But the men cheered him to
-the echo, and another kindly link in the chain which
-bound all hands was forged.</p>
-
-<p>That evening Captain Hampden communicated
-to his officers his plans. He intended making a
-passage with all possible speed to the Bonins, hoping
-there to pick up half-a-dozen good men, and then go
-on the Japan ground for a season&mdash;it being then at
-the height of its fame. But, he said, he was not without
-hope that on the way thither they might meet
-with some whales, and be fortunate enough to obtain
-such an addition to their stock as would repay them
-for their recent losses. All the officers were in the
-best possible spirits. They felt that, depleted as the
-crew was, if only favoured with opportunity they
-would all give the best possible account of themselves,
-and each reiterated his firm belief that this would yet
-be a most successful voyage. Then they separated
-for the night.</p>
-
-<p>At daylight in the morning the gladsome cry
-was again heard from the crow’s-nest notifying the
-nearness of sperm-whales. And for the next week
-they had a real, old-fashioned busy time. They
-killed four fine large bulls, one of which was
-apparently very sick, and, besides, so fat that each
-lance-thrust was almost like piercing a bladder of
-lard. So peculiar was his lethargy that, in the absence
-of any apparent reason for it in the shape of recent
-encounters with whalers, the Captain decided upon
-an unusual examination of the body, which, favoured
-by wonderfully fine weather and a smooth sea, Mr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</span>
-Peck was able to accomplish successfully. The
-search revealed an enormous mass of ambergris,
-packed tightly in the lower bowel, and weighing over
-two hundredweight. This alone at the lowest possible
-quotation of $5 an ounce represented nearly $18,000,
-or about £3,500, more than the value of the whole
-four whales put together, although in those days
-sperm oil and spermaceti were easily worth $500
-per ton to the ship.</p>
-
-<p>All hands rejoiced exceedingly, feeling that the
-monetary loss of their late disaster was well wiped
-out, and anticipating again a most prosperous voyage.
-Heartened and encouraged thus, they worked so
-splendidly that by the time they reached the Sunda
-Straits the vessel was in her normal state of cleanliness
-and fitness for further adventure. But none
-came along. They just glided quietly through the
-straits, buying up with great delight the stores of
-fruit and vegetables brought by the islanders, who
-could hardly believe their good fortune. For most
-of the sailing ships that loiter through there do not
-yield the canoe-men much profit&mdash;the trade is mostly
-barter, an old shirt for a punnet of sweet potatoes, a
-pair of shoes for a section bunch of bananas, &amp;c.
-And the demand for monkeys, parrots, musk-deer,&amp;c.,
-has greatly fallen off even in homeward bound ships.
-The <i>Xiphias</i>’ crew, however, took all the fresh food
-that came along, and got it a bargain, because they
-paid for it in silver dollars or five-franc pieces, money
-current all over the islands of the Indian Ocean from
-Madagascar to Singapore.</p>
-
-<p>All the way along from Anjer to Luzon they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</span>
-coasted peacefully, keeping wide-eyed watch for possible
-thieves&mdash;it would be using too big a word to call
-them pirates&mdash;who, even to this day, are ever ready
-to pounce upon a helpless craft and rifle her, incidentally
-killing her crew. Our splendid sea-patrol, ever
-engaged in keeping the peace all round the world, is
-specially busy in Eastern waters protecting the world’s
-commerce from these polyglot marauders, and on the
-East Coast of Africa in suppressing slavery. Yet for
-this truly beneficent work one never hears a word of
-praise. All our sins, or even our supposed sins, are
-remembered&mdash;not merely, I regret to say, on the
-Continent of Europe, where we expect it to be so,
-but in the United States of America, and all our
-good deeds are studiously ignored, or, worse still,
-distorted into deep-dyed hypocritical designs upon
-some innocent people’s independence. But I often
-wonder what would become of Eastern commerce if
-the British Fleet in those seas were to be suddenly
-withdrawn.</p>
-
-<p>One more piece of good fortune awaited the
-<i>Xiphias</i> and her good crew before getting clear of
-those mazy waters. It was just after they had cleared
-the Molucca Passage, and were hauling up north for
-the Bonins. About half an hour before sunset the
-fore crow’s-nest reported something, he didn’t know
-what, but it was making a tremendous commotion in
-the water away ahead about four or five miles. The
-vessel being under full sail, and with a moderate
-breeze, nothing more could be done but keep her as
-she was going, except that Captain Hampden mounted
-up to the fore-topgallant yard with his glasses and
-succeeded in noting a black object in the sea. No
-more disturbance was visible. The sun went down,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</span>
-the quick tropical twilight faded into night, and still
-the skipper kept his eyes fixed upon the spot. Then
-to his great joy the moon rose&mdash;in that clear
-atmosphere shedding a flood of light along the sea.
-Suddenly the skipper’s voice rang out of the darkness
-above: ‘Lower away y’r boat, Mr. Peck, an’ keep
-her jest ez we’re goin’. I think yew’ll find somethin’
-worth havin’ jest ahead there. The res’ of th’ hands
-shorten sail an’ heave ship to.’ ‘Aye, aye, sir,’
-responded the cheery voice of the mate. And in
-about three minutes the vessel was lying-to, the
-rattle of boat’s falls was heard, and the faint glimmer
-of a lantern was seen as Mr. Peck sped away along
-the lane of silver sheen spread by the moon on
-the surface of the quiet waters. He was no sooner
-gone than the skipper reached the deck, and immediately
-kept the ship away again after the boat.
-In half an hour all hands were straining to get alongside
-the biggest whale any of them had ever seen,
-slain apparently by one of his fellows, since his jaw
-and part of his throat were completely torn away.
-Thus, without any effort on their part, beyond realising
-the spoil, they had gained a prize worth about $6,000;
-a sort of crumb flung to them out of the boundless
-wealth of the sea.</p>
-
-<p>And now, much to my sorrow, we must part
-company with Captain Hampden and his crew. The
-further matters treated of in this history do not
-concern him: he did not even hear of them till two
-years later. It would be a pleasant task to tell of
-how he reached the Bonins in peace, and found there
-the recruits he needed, also an indefinite rumour,
-which gave him many anxious hours, of some men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</span>
-having been there in the <i>Grampus</i>, who said they had
-been lost from his ship. For his own peace of mind
-he was bound to put it down to one of those loosely
-invented tales that ship-frequenters in foreign ports
-concoct in order to get on fairly intimate speaking
-terms with shipmen; terms which, skilfully manipulated,
-should result in profit to the tale-tellers. Also
-of how, through the usual thrilling series of adventures
-which always fell to the lot of a whaleship in
-those days out for a three-years’ cruise to the uttermost
-parts of the sea, Captain Hampden and his men
-passed unscathed bodily and exceedingly prosperous
-financially, since the <i>Xiphias</i> returned, having been
-absent three years to the week, with almost the
-largest cargo ever brought from the depths of the sea
-to New Bedford, or, indeed, any other port in New
-England.</p>
-
-<p>But that must not be. Our business now is with
-the <i>Grampus</i>, and to her, however unwillingly, we
-must return, bidding the <i>Xiphias</i> a long farewell.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</span></p><h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">CHECK TO THE KING, AND A NEW MOVE</p>
-
-<p>As on a previous and never-to-be-forgotten occasion,
-in the midst of the multifarious activities prevailing
-on the deck of the <i>Grampus</i> there was a sense of
-profound peace. And now there was also a feeling
-of fierce delight that their tyrant was tasting in his
-own body some of the pains he had so joyously
-inflicted upon others. All the white men’s faces
-wore a pleasant expression, not at all mitigated by
-the presence of the Portuguese jealously noting the
-satisfaction and fully aware of its cause. And, human
-nature being what it is, there is no doubt whatever
-that had Captain Da Silva died, his Portuguese
-henchmen would have been compelled to eat the
-humblest of humble-pie, or commit themselves to a
-fearful mutiny with all its consequences.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Court moved majestically among the toilers
-with the air of a man from whom an awful incubus
-has been removed, and to whom has come a veritable
-inspiration. He did not shout; all his orders were
-issued quietly, but how wise and far-seeing were all his
-arrangements! And, first of all, he told off Mr. Pease
-to watch Rube, who was fighting with all the splendid
-reserve of force in his clean, healthy body against
-the encroaching Angel of Death. Mr. Court’s
-reasons for this were two-fold. First, he needed
-badly to show his detestation of the malice which
-had placed this fine officer in the position of a seaman,
-and next he had noticed that in Rube’s delirium<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</span>
-one name continually fell from his lips like a peal of
-dactyls, ‘Priscilla, Priscilla, Priscilla.’ And Mr. Court
-knew that Priscilla was the name of his skipper’s wife.
-Therefore, although he fully believed poor Rube’s
-chanting of that name to be a mere coincidence, he
-knew how essential it was that the skipper should not
-hear of it. For he was sure that in that case Rube’s
-days would be few and evil, supposing the skipper to
-live. So calling Mr. Pease to him, after being exceedingly
-careful to see that none of the Dagoes was
-within earshot, he explained the matter to him carefully,
-winding up by saying that at least until the
-devil was unchained again, he (Mr. Court) would see
-that a brother officer was, as far as possible, saved
-from the degradation deliberately prepared for him.</p>
-
-<p>All this, of course, was seen, noted, and commented
-upon by the Portuguese, secure in the
-general utter ignorance of their language by the
-white men, and consequently not needing to get
-away in private for consultation. But all they could
-do under present circumstances was to ‘bide their
-time, doing their duty meanwhile as before, for they
-knew quite enough of their skipper to be sure that no
-amount of favouritism would be held to excuse slackness
-of work when money-making was to the fore.
-And as the Americans worked now with a hearty
-good will because of the absence of the skipper, it
-was truly marvellous to see how the tremendous task
-of cutting-in and trying-out was tackled. A spirit of
-emulation was abroad, manifesting itself in extraordinary
-ways. For instance, a lean American from
-Connecticut, who had somehow learned to swim
-splendidly, was down on the back of a whale for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</span>
-purpose of hooking a mighty iron hook into what is
-called the ‘rising,’ or eye-piece. He sprang there at
-the word, alighting in the foul pool of grease and blood
-and salt water at the same moment as a gigantic
-Portuguese, but just as they both reached out for the
-hook a big swell came along, the ship gave a heave,
-and a vast volume of water swept over the carcass,
-washing both the men into the sea alongside, which
-as usual was alive with sharks. They disappeared
-for a moment among the shovel heads and dorsal fins
-crowding round; then, springing to the surface, Nat,
-the American, snatched at a strip of blubber, and by
-sheer agility flung himself back to his former position,
-grabbing at the dangling hook as he reached it, and
-yelling in a half-strangled voice, ‘Heave away!’
-Then, with a contemptuous look at the Dago struggling
-to climb back, he seized the already rising
-parts of the tackle and swung himself on deck. The
-Dago’s friends had flung him a rope, and he mounted
-easily enough by its aid, but their remarks to him,
-aided by the satisfied chuckles of the white men,
-seemed to depress him very much. He was about
-to slouch off to the foc’s’le to change, when Mr. Court’s
-voice rang out clearly:</p>
-
-<p>‘Whar you goin’?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Changea me close,’ was the sullen answer.</p>
-
-<p>‘You git right on with the work,’ said Mr. Court,
-and, taken by surprise, the man obeyed. He and his
-countrymen felt that it was only another item in the
-account to be paid off presently when their champion
-returned to his command.</p>
-
-<p>Below, however, that champion was in evil case.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</span>
-In his previous mishap, although his bruises were
-many and severe, there had been no bones broken,
-but now his injuries were of so extensive a character
-that he could hardly find energy enough to curse his
-wife and the steward, his only attendants. In fact,
-the conditions of things were entirely altered. Mr.
-Court, in full vigour, was in charge, and came in to
-report to him twice a day in the most formal manner
-how matters were progressing on deck. The mate
-never asked him how he was, never attempted any
-conversation, and, after the report had been made,
-only answered questions, and that in the curtest
-manner possible. At certain intervals, being responsible
-for his commanders welfare, he made careful
-examination of the injuries, and saw that they were
-doing as well as possible under the circumstances.
-Also he gave the steward secret orders that all the
-ventilation possible should be secured in the cabin for
-the Captain’s wife’s sake, who throughout this trying
-time, as before, scarcely ever left her husband’s side.</p>
-
-<p>On deck Rube progressed most favourably. His
-splendid constitution won in the great fight, and
-when at last he opened his eyes sanely on his devoted
-nurse, that much-tried man made up his mind at once
-that Rube would live. No matter that he was worn
-to a shadow, that he looked even worse than when
-rescued from the boat, he had evidently got a grip on
-life which he had no idea of relinquishing just yet.
-He wanted to live, and, as all doctors know, that is
-the great factor in the problem of recovery from any
-illness. But Mr. Pease was mightily puzzled as Rube
-grew stronger to find him so constantly referring to
-the early incidents occurring during the cruise of the
-<i>Xiphias</i>. He seemed to have no knowledge whatever<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</span>
-of the stirring events which had happened since.
-Also Mr. Pease noticed that his eyes had an anxious
-careworn look in them as of a man who feels that
-the threads of his life are all entangled, and that he
-has no ability to clear them. He had, besides, a habit
-of muttering to himself and of mentioning names all
-unfamiliar to Mr. Pease, as if by some freak of
-memory a certain portion of his life, utterly forgotten
-until now, had just been recalled, while another
-portion, much more recent in its incidence upon his
-brain, had become completely obliterated. There
-was as well an utter absence of that cheery, wide-eyed
-outlook which he used to wear, the true expression
-of the Biblical injunction to take no thought for the
-morrow. Moreover, he was so anxious to get well.
-He did not know where he was, except that he was
-at sea and ill, and his helplessness worried him much.
-It took all Mr. Pease’s power of persuasion to convince
-him that by worrying he was retarding his own
-recovery, and that, as matters were, it really did not
-matter a pin whether he was fit again in a week or a
-month. But it was a difficult job to explain things
-to a man who knew absolutely nothing about the
-necessary details, who remembered nothing at all of
-the happenings of the last eleven months. At last
-Mr. Pease sought an audience of the mate, taking
-care that there should be a white man at the wheel,
-and that all the rest of the hands should be busy
-forward.</p>
-
-<p>To him Mr. Pease told all that he knew about
-Rube, of his joining the ship, of his terrible accident
-and recovery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</span> therefrom, how since then he had
-always behaved more like an angel than a man, and
-how every man on board had grown from deriding
-him to loving him&mdash;in fact, the story which the
-reader knows. During the recital Mr. Court glanced
-from time to time most curiously at Mr. Pease, as if
-wondering whether the latter were crazed or not.
-Nor could this be wondered at, remembering the life
-Mr. Court had been leading in the <i>Grampus</i>. What
-wonder that he had come to disbelieve in the existence
-of a God at all?&mdash;having always been indifferent in his
-acceptance of the existence of a Supreme Being as a
-matter of course, and since he had been mate of the
-<i>Grampus</i> having grown certain that whether there
-was a God or not there must be a devil, and that this
-devil was apparently permitted to have everything his
-own way for the present. Now he was interested in
-spite of himself at the idea of one greenie having been
-permitted to alter the character of everybody on
-board his ship. Also he told Mr. Pease how Rube’s
-present condition was entirely due to his interference
-on behalf of his former officer. At this news, now
-first made known to him, Mr. Pease bowed his head,
-saying:</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, I alwuz thought he wuz a sure-’nough
-angel, but I never calculated on him so nearly coming
-to his death for me. Anyway, my life’s his frum this
-eout, ef he wants it&mdash;there’s no question ’bout that.’</p>
-
-<p>Now, whether it was the intensity of devotion
-manifested towards Rube thenceforward by Mr. Pease,
-or his own innate vigour asserting itself, is no doubt
-a moot point, but certainly from that day Rube’s
-recovery was exceedingly rapid. But he was puzzled
-beyond expression at his former mate’s dog-like
-affection for him, also at the want of deference shown<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</span>
-to Mr. Pease by all hands. And as it was entirely
-useless trying to remember anything about recent
-events or to understand what he was told about them,
-he resigned himself to the mystery. Long before the
-skipper was able to move sufficiently to come on deck
-he had resumed his place among the crew, and was
-doing his work, but with a hesitation, awkwardness,
-and want of spring that made Mr. Pease tremble for
-his welfare when once the skipper had again taken
-command of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>With that consummate ability for navigating
-difficult seas that seems inherent in American whaling
-officers, Mr. Court had, despite his limitation of
-access to the means of navigation, due to the
-Captain’s behaviour, brought the <i>Grampus</i> through
-the intricacies of those waters south of Celebes, and
-had steered her safely past the western end of New
-Guinea out to the southward of the Pelew Islands
-before Captain Da Silva came on deck. I have
-purposely avoided all mention of his behaviour while
-thus laid helpless a second time, for the subject is
-such a painful one that it is difficult to do more than
-hint at it. A wounded tiger would certainly have
-been far more docile, and have repaid his nurses with
-much more gratitude than this man, from whom
-every one of the Divine qualities of our nature
-seemed to have been withheld. Doubtless this vile
-temper did much to delay his recovery, but that he
-could not see; and hard as his language was to bear,
-the mate felt that it was infinitely better to listen to
-it occasionally below than to have his presence on
-deck again. And as the news of his approaching
-recovery crept about the ship, every white man,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</span>
-except Rube, kept repeating to himself most fervently,
-‘Oh, if he would only die!’&mdash;‘he,’ of course,
-being the common enemy. As for Priscilla, the long
-confinement and constant strain of nursing this
-terrible man had worn her to a shadow. He did not
-abuse her so much now, but she had to listen constantly
-to his abuse of others, listen to his furious
-conversations with his Portuguese harpooners, who
-were daily summoned below to his bedside to report
-to him their observations of how the Yankee
-unmentionables were handling the ship. But this
-latter affected her as little as the former, which she
-could understand. The abominable phrases in her
-own language fell upon utterly unheeding ears, and
-left no more impression than did the imprecations
-in an unknown tongue. What she was suffering
-from was purely physical, as it had been before
-reaching the Cosmoledos.</p>
-
-<p>At last one lovely morning, with the ship’s head
-pointed towards the Bonins under his instructions,
-the skipper gave orders that Pedro and Manuel
-should attend him and assist him on deck. He
-needed help. He was worn to a shadow, his face
-was like a hatchet for sharpness of outline, and many
-threads of white appeared in his hair and whiskers.
-But from out the caverns whither his eyes had
-retreated gleamed the same infernal fires: the indomitable
-will had not been subdued in the slightest
-degree. Upon reaching the deck, he cast a comprehensive
-glance around the vessel. She was like a
-new pin for cleanliness, not a rope yarn was awry,
-and most of the watch were busy scraping the spare
-spars, always a favourite device with him when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</span>
-nothing else could be found for them to do.</p>
-
-<p>From forward came the clink, clink of iron where
-the remainder of the men were beating iron-rust off
-the anchors and cables. Everything was going, in
-fact, as goes a good watch after it has been wound
-by the master’s hand. There was absolutely nothing
-to find fault with, yet the mate surely knew that
-fault would be found. So he stood near, offering no
-salutation nor expecting any, but awaiting the contemptuous
-burning words he knew would soon be
-flung at him. Suddenly the skipper said, without
-looking at the mate:</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, seems yew’ve mistook th’ ship fur a
-pleasure boat. Wut in thunder yew ben doin’ all
-the way up hyar from Borneo?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Doin’ wut hed t’ be done, ’n’ doin’ it well too,’
-growled Mr. Court. ‘Wat d’ye expect I’d be doin’,
-ef I mout be askin’?’</p>
-
-<p>‘Ha, <i>thet’s</i> wut ye ben doin’, is it&mdash;gittin’ things
-ripe fur a mut’ny a’gin’ me. All right. I’m layin’
-fur ye. Y’ mout hev made sure while I ben lyin’
-thar he’pless ef yew hed th’ grit ov a purp, but yew
-haint, yew &mdash;&mdash;’ There is no need to suggest the
-remainder of the vile sentence. But Mr. Court had
-found time not only to recover his self-control and
-respect, but to gauge the capacity of Captain Da
-Silva’s supporters to overcome the white portion of
-the crew. Moreover he had, with commendable forethought,
-drawn the stings of the harpooners and as
-many of the foremost Portuguese hands as he could
-convict of possessing them&mdash;that is, he had taken
-away their revolvers and ammunition, and by perfect
-equality of treatment had re-established <span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</span>a proper
-order of things in the foc’s’le. All of these things
-Captain Da Silva, with his almost superhuman grasp
-of matters only faintly shadowed forth to his senses,
-had already seen except the disarming of his gang.
-He was not likely to mistake the import of the
-change in Mr. Court’s tone and bearing towards him.
-It was a heavy blow, but he was wily as a snake, and
-immediately changing his tone slightly, he resumed:</p>
-
-<p>‘Thar, I s’pose it’s no use makin’ more trouble
-than thar’s any need fur. P’r’aps I’m a bit frazzled
-eout with lyin’ below like a gutted herrin’. Anyhaow,
-I guess I’ll be all right time we git on the
-Jappan groun’, an’ then we’ll hev some fun. Hyar!
-Manuel, Pedro, come an’ git me b’low ’gen. I ain’t
-feelin’ good a bit.’</p>
-
-<p>As the two scowling dark men passed him and
-placed each an arm carefully behind the skipper’s
-back to assist him down into the cuddy, Mr. Court
-viewed them with clear eyes, saying nothing, but
-pondering a great deal. He was not in the least
-deceived by the change in his skipper’s tone. He
-knew full well that no stone would be left unturned
-to do him a mischief, and he determined to treble his
-vigilance and that of his compatriot officers in order
-to guard against any sudden surprise, and, satisfied
-that he was doing all that in him lay both for duty
-and self-preservation, he turned away and resumed
-his daily business of supervision.</p>
-
-<p>What he did not, could not, know was that by his
-resolute bearing and brave words he had saved one
-of his countrymen from being put to the torture. It
-had been the skipper’s determination when he came
-on deck to see his cruel intention towards Rube<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</span>
-carried out, and, as we know, he was not easily turned
-away from his purpose. Ever since he had regained
-consciousness the idea of wreaking his will upon
-Rube&mdash;first as being one of the rescued boat’s crew
-he had been, as it were, driven to save; and, secondly,
-as the successful opponent of that will&mdash;had been
-fermenting in his busy brain, and at the earliest
-possible opportunity he had appeared on deck for the
-purpose of putting it into practice. But for the first
-time that voyage he had found himself successfully
-thwarted by one of the hated Americans, and he
-needed all his marvellous powers of self-control and
-dissimulation not to indulge in some frantic outburst
-that would certainly have resulted in his being disabled
-from doing any more harm that cruise. His
-cup of humiliation was not yet full either. As they
-went slowly down the companion-way, Manuel
-whispered to him in Portuguese:</p>
-
-<p>‘Do you know that the mate has taken away our
-weapons?’</p>
-
-<p>‘What!’ he hissed, and wrenching himself free
-from Pedro on the other side, he struck at Manuel
-with all his might, and missed him, falling down four
-stairs upon his injured side, and lying there foaming
-with pain and fury. Manuel, his face green with
-rage, turned upon his heel and remounted the cabin
-stairs. What black thoughts filled his heart we
-cannot tell, but certainly the cost of that injudicious
-outburst to Captain Da Silva was an exceedingly
-heavy one. He reckoned too much upon the perfect
-subjugation of his countrymen to his will, forgetting
-the obvious fact that if you give your subordinates
-too much power over you they are apt to use it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</span>
-at inconvenient times, to the complete upheaval and
-reversal of some of your most cherished plans.</p>
-
-<p>Pedro, alarmed at the Captain’s condition, for the
-latter was quite beside himself with agony, called
-in that subdued voice common to sailors when they
-are in the cabin, ‘Madem, senhora, Missis, Capena very
-too mucha bad; pleasea come!’ But there was no
-answer. Nor could be, for Priscilla, completely worn
-out, was lying in a dead faint upon the settee in their
-little state-room. The mate was away forward conducting
-the work, the steward was busy washing
-clothes on deck, and poor Pedro, looking upon his
-skipper’s horribly distorted face, listening to the
-gnashing of his teeth and watching the writhings of
-his body, forgot everything but the need for instant
-aid, and shouted, ‘On deck, dere, somebody, anybody,
-comea down here quick!’ At that moment Rube
-was on his way to relieve the wheel, being now fully
-recovered as far as physical strength went. With
-one glance at the sphinx-like face of the helmsman,
-Rube sprang down the companion, finding the skipper
-in convulsions, and Pedro at his wits’ end to know
-what to do. Together they raised the twisting body
-and carried it into the state-room, where the first
-object which met Rube’s eyes was the apparently
-lifeless form of his loved and lost Priscilla.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter illowp50" id="i_322fp" style="max-width: 28em;">
- <img class="w100" src="images/i_322fp.jpg" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>THE APPARENTLY LIFELESS FORM OF HIS LOVED AND LOST PRISCILLA.</p>
-
-<p><i>P. 322.</i></p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p>For a moment all things reeled with him, and
-then, quietly laying the skipper on the deck, and
-controlling himself by a Titanic effort, he said,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</span>
-‘Pedro, some water&mdash;quick!’ Even as he did so
-and Pedro started off, Priscilla gave a deep, deep
-sigh, opened her eyes, and seeing a strange man
-before her, made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</span> an effort to rise, while a faint tinge
-of pink came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</span> into her face. But with a mingled pang
-of regret and thankfulness Rube saw that there was
-no recognition in the look&mdash;he was just one of the
-crew to her, and nothing more. And then, to his
-intense relief, came hurrying the steward and the
-mate, called frantically by Pedro. Rube stole away,
-leaving the new-comers to render such aid as was
-possible, and wearily crept to the wheel, taking
-absolutely no heed of the bitter words with which he
-was greeted by the waiting helmsman.</p>
-
-<p>A trick at the wheel by a good steersman is a
-splendid place for meditation. For while the
-mechanical section of the brain is busy with the
-primal duty of keeping the particular point of the
-course given as near the ‘lubber’s point,’ or line
-drawn on the inner rim of the compass-bowl, corresponding
-to the midship line of the ship, as
-circumstances will allow, the lobes devoted to thought
-may be fully occupied with the most recondite
-speculations. May be, but are not often, for your
-ordinary sailor is a most unimaginative human
-animal. Reuben, however, for the first half-hour of
-the present ‘trick’ found the meditative side of his
-brain one seething whirlpool surging around its
-vortex. ‘Priscilla is aboard this ship.’ True, she
-had not recognised him, and that was, so far, a gain;
-but how could he control himself? His speech, his
-looks? Moreover, she was unhappy. How much so
-he did not, could not, know, for the reasons that have
-before been fully given; but that wan face, those thin
-hands, those deeply shadowed eyes, what a tale of
-misery they had to tell to a loving heart like Rube’s!
-Yet even had he not been powerless to do anything,
-loyalty, honour, truth demanded that he should be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</span>
-silent, cost what it might, unless he saw danger to
-that dear life. Then the problem of her being here
-at all suddenly came back with awful force. And
-utterly confounded, he lifted his heart again to God,
-not blithely or hopefully, but in a sort of mechanical
-way, or instinctively, if it be better put so. Instantly
-a great peace fell upon him. A merciful veil stole
-down between him and his mental troubles, and the
-utter blankness of want of thought enwrapped his
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>In the cabin the mate and the steward had
-laboured manfully at their task, although much
-hampered by the want of knowledge of how this
-condition of things had been brought about. Priscilla
-had fully recovered consciousness, but was still
-too weak to help. Still she was no hindrance. She
-was just watching, and claiming no attention. Mr.
-Court found several of his bandages displaced, much
-of the laceration re-opened, and altogether the patient
-in a bad way. With native skill and judgment he
-did his best to make his tyrant comfortable, and
-then having instructed the steward to devote his
-whole time to the Captain and his wife, returned on
-deck and sent for the two Portuguese.</p>
-
-<p>‘Now,’ said Mr. Court sternly, when they appeared,
-‘I got to know wut yew two ben a-doin’ t’
-th’ Captain. Yew wuzn’t thar, Manuel, when I kem
-an’ Pedro wuz. Wut d’ ye go ’way fur?’ Volubly
-Pedro began, but the mate in a roar bade him ‘shet
-erp,’ and turning to Manuel, said quietly, ‘Heave
-ahead.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Well, sah,’ said Manuel savagely, ‘we’s a-he’pin’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</span>
-ole man daown companyon, an’ ole man le’s go my
-arm an’ hits me. Then he fall daown steps. I don’
-care if he break his neck, so I don’ go daown ’n’ look.
-I kem on deck. Dat’s all, sah.’ And this lucid
-explanation he followed up with asseverations unprintable&mdash;indeed,
-untranslatable.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">THE EDUCATION OF THE SKIPPER</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the gravity of his position, a smile broke
-over Mr. Court’s rugged face as he realised the
-situation. All unversed in any Machiavellian arts of
-diplomacy, he had unwittingly, by straightforward
-conduct, driven a wedge into the base of the vile
-edifice so laboriously reared by his commander. For
-it was impossible for him to help seeing how deep
-was Manuel’s resentment at the treatment meted out
-to him by the Captain, although the reason for the
-outburst was entirely hidden from the mate. He
-was seriously troubled in his mind, though, about
-Priscilla. How to proceed in order to save her from
-another painful illness he did not know. For he felt
-that, though he could and would dare a good deal
-now to keep the ship from becoming a den of wild
-beasts as far as the crew was concerned, interference
-between the skipper and his wife was quite another
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>Yet, could he see her die? For that sad event
-seemed to him entirely probable within the next
-few days. She looked so frail, almost transparent,
-wax-like, in her perfect colourlessness of skin from
-her long seclusion, and, which alarmed him most,&mdash;there
-was a vacant, far-away look in her eyes
-that was most uncanny to him. He discussed the
-situation at great length with the second mate, who
-was fast recovering from the morbid condition of
-mind into which he had been thrown by the continued
-success of the skipper. But discuss as <span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</span>they might
-there seemed no solution of this difficult problem&mdash;indeed,
-as they vividly remembered, the chief difficulty
-was Priscilla herself, who, loyal to the core,
-would not, whatever her sufferings, do or say anything
-which might in her estimation weaken her
-husband’s authority.</p>
-
-<p>So, with a heavy sigh, the two good fellows
-would close their conference and part, the one to
-his dreamless bunk, the other to his four hours’
-tramp up and down the small area of the <i>Grampus’s</i>
-quarter-deck, revolving, almost maddeningly, all sorts
-of schemes for a further amelioration of the present
-conditions.</p>
-
-<p>I fear that many ship officers, whether of merchant
-ships, whaleships, or men-of-war, deliberately cultivate
-a kind of stultification of the mental faculties
-while on watch. The mechanical side of the brain
-previously spoken of will go on doing its part
-no matter how dense have become the thinking
-processes. But that any intelligent man should set
-himself to become a Peter Bell, who ‘whistled
-as he went for want of thought,’ is akin to the
-idea of a man who should hermetically seal up
-his nostrils so that he should not smell, or render
-himself colour-blind so that pictures should not
-appeal to him, or cultivate stone-deafness in order
-not to enjoy harmony. It is true that to a highly
-sensitive, overstrung organisation such an ordeal as
-a cruise in a whaler must be a terrible one. For
-there are no inducements to ‘get there.’</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">‘Day after day, day after day,</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</span>
- <div class="verse indent2">We stuck, nor breath nor motion;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">As idle as a painted ship</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Upon a painted ocean.’</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This condition of things, so wonderfully portrayed
-by Coleridge, is well-nigh intolerable to a merchantman,
-whose employment probably depends upon the
-smartness of his passage: to the whaler it matters
-no more than it does to the steamship, for exactly
-the opposite reason. The one doesn’t care because
-his engines are doing the work and his ship’s swift
-passage through the stagnant air makes a pleasant
-breeze; the other doesn’t care because he isn’t going
-anywhere, and consequently the longer he loiters
-where he is the more chances there are of his seeing
-what he wishes to see&mdash;whales.</p>
-
-<p>In the foc’s’le there was a marked improvement
-in the mental and moral atmosphere. Released
-from the awful nightmare of the skipper’s presence,
-and quite conscious of the fact that the officers were
-in sympathy with them, the white men grew cheerful
-and spoke boldly. Moreover, the disarmament of
-the Portuguese had a splendid effect. It enabled
-men, hitherto silent under gross provocation because
-they wanted to live a little longer, to lift up their
-heads and speak with the enemy in the gate. This
-feeling of freedom culminated one day in a huge
-Portuguese ordering a smart little Yankee from Edgar
-town to ‘git away wiv that face while I sit-a down
-comf’ble.’ The invited party, being at the time sitting
-on a stool he had made himself, felt naturally
-aggrieved, and with a considerable amount of spirit
-retorted in terms that need not be clearly set down,
-at the same time retaining his seat. The Portuguese
-stared stupidly for a breathing space or two, then
-seizing the little Yankee, flung him in a clucking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</span>
-heap across the foc’s’le. But Rube was sitting next
-to Hiram, and immediately rose, seized the wrists of
-the black man, and forcing him backwards on to the
-deck, sat on his chest, saying: ‘Looky here, my
-friend, we’ve done with this fun. They’s goin’ to be
-no more of it onless yew’re prepared to take on the
-job of killing every white man aboard. I doan’t
-kyar much which way ’tis, but <i>this</i> hez t’ be stopped
-anyhow.’ As soon as he had finished speaking every
-white man sprang to his feet cheering lustily. The
-Portuguese looked at each other, Reuben’s understudy
-was allowed to rise, looking foolish and&mdash;nothing
-happened. There was a sense of relief all round, for
-all felt that the power of the tyrant was broken. And
-in half an hour all the watch was as chummy as
-possible, even the bruised Hiram feeling quite satisfied&mdash;at
-least he expressed himself so to be.</p>
-
-<p>Naturally there was a perceptible falling-off in the
-smartness with which the ship was worked. That
-was inevitable. In a small unlimited monarchy,
-such as a ship must be, you cannot have divided rule
-without a certain loss of power. Mr. Court fought
-against this tendency with all his might, but do what
-he would he could not quite overcome it. Still, the
-only visible effect of the ferment that was going on
-below was that no whales were sighted, and that of
-course might be due to natural causes. Four times
-every day Mr. Court went below and attended on
-his skipper, always looking stealthily at Mrs. Da
-Silva as he did so, whenever he could look unobserved,
-and endeavouring to note any change that
-should make it imperative for him to interfere
-actively on her behalf. There was none, however.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</span>
-She seemed to exist and do her duty to her husband
-automatically, but to grow no worse even in the close
-confinement of that tiny cabin. But anything more
-absolutely hopeless than her whole pose was surely
-never seen.</p>
-
-<p>There was a great change in the skipper, though.
-Since his mad outburst of rage at Manuel and its
-result he had to all outward seeming been a different
-man. His injuries, so rudely handled, resented
-fiercely their treatment, and for long he had lain in
-high fever, alternating with periods of utter exhaustion.
-Only his splendid physique and iron constitution,
-aiding the careful nursing he received, pulled
-him through. And as he slowly progressed towards
-convalescence, he looked strangely at Priscilla, not
-gratefully, but with some such expression as the West
-African savage regards his ‘ju-ju,’ believing it all
-powerful to harm or help him as the case might
-present itself to the reasoning powers of the dreadful
-thing. A resolution slowly shaped itself in his brain
-that come what would he must be very careful of this
-white, frail woman, who seemed to have passed
-completely beyond the reach of all the emotions.
-And he determined to get better in order to carry out
-this resolve, although had he been capable of entertaining
-the feeling it would surely have forced its
-way into his dark heart that the best way in which
-he could treat his wife would be to die, and set her
-free from the hourly horror of his companionship,
-which for obvious reasons has not been insisted upon
-definitely here.</p>
-
-<p>So he mended rapidly&mdash;so rapidly, in fact, that one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</span>
-week after he had come to the conclusion above
-noted he was seated on the top of the little deck aft
-with Priscilla by his side, both luxuriously inhaling
-the sweet air as the homely old ship wallowed along
-northward. It was a heavenly afternoon. The sky
-had the appearance of a great green field&mdash;the first
-tender, unsullied green of spring, upon which lay
-billowy masses of fleecy cloud, motionless as masses
-of whitest wool and arranged in regular rows converging
-to a point in the south-east. An unaccountable
-longing for the peace of those heavenly solitudes, a
-desire to leave behind her the weighing down of her
-earthy part possessed Priscilla’s soul, and quite unnoted
-by her the heavy tears rose to her eyes, coursed
-down her thin cheeks and dropped upon the deck.
-He, stealthily watching as usual while he was awake,
-became alarmed, because he had not seen a tear for
-so long. ‘Wut ails ye, Pris?’ he inquired anxiously.
-‘Ain’t sick, air ye? C’n I order y’ anythin’&mdash;c’n I
-do anythin’?’</p>
-
-<p>Immediately the gracious fountain ceased to flow,
-and, turning, she looked steadily at him, saying,
-‘No, thank you, Ramon; I want nothing.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Wall, wut ye cryin’ fur, then?’ he demanded
-irritably.</p>
-
-<p>‘I don’t know, Ramon, and, what is more, I
-didn’t know that I was crying until you spoke.’</p>
-
-<p>Then, to her great relief&mdash;for her dread was a long
-and acrid cross-examination by her husband upon
-any subject whatever&mdash;the skipper half rose from his
-chair and hissed out, ‘Whar’s the watch? Wut ye
-all doin’? Look thar!’ Involuntarily Priscilla
-looked where he pointed, and was filled with admiration
-and wonder. A mighty sperm whale had risen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</span>
-from unknown depths and roamings within a cable’s
-length of the ship and lay there, clearly visible in the
-beautifully transparent blue of the sea, almost motionless.
-All his majestic outlines defined themselves to
-the eye, the great down-hanging shaft of the jaw, the
-huge rotundity of the belly, and the vast fans of the
-flukes that, apparently motionless, were in reality
-quivering with receptivity like the diaphragm of a
-telephone. She had never before seen a whale at close
-quarters, never had an opportunity of admiring this,
-the mightiest of all God’s creations in the plenitude
-of his powers and in his own proper element, and the
-sight filled her with awe.</p>
-
-<p>The reason of the whale’s nearness to the ship,
-not merely without alarm&mdash;for that can readily be
-understood, since whales, like other animals, long
-unmolested become perfectly tame&mdash;but without
-having been previously seen, is not to be very clearly
-stated. When such an occurrence does take place
-on board a whaleship there is usually much unpleasantness,
-because the captain is bound to believe
-that it proves that the watchers aloft are neglecting
-their duty, or they would have reported the proximity
-of the whale before. The supposition is only reasonable
-because really from the masthead of a ship on
-a fine day, such as this was, the whole vast circle
-spread out beneath one looks so small, and objects
-upon it are so clearly defined, that it seems impossible
-for four pairs of eyes to miss the spout of a whale.
-And as the distance from that height to the visible
-horizon is not less than fifteen miles, within which in
-such weather a sperm-whale’s spout should be clearly
-discernible, the whale should have risen twice within<span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</span>
-the visible range to spout. His utmost speed when
-going for all he is worth is only about fourteen miles
-an hour, his usual cruising speed when underneath
-only about three or four. He can stay down an hour,
-but rarely exceeds forty-five minutes, and he does
-not care, unless driven by necessity, to travel fast
-under water. When he does come to the surface,
-too, after a stay beneath of that length, he must stay
-up until he has finished a certain number of inspirations
-and expirations or ‘spoutings out’&mdash;fifty, sixty,
-or seventy, as the case may be. And no matter how
-hardly he may be pressed by enemies, this always
-holds good. Yet I have seen a sperm whale rise in
-ghost-like fashion almost alongside the ship during
-a stark calm on a day when sea and sky were one
-flawless expanse of blue, blending into each other at
-the horizon so perfectly that no one could tell exactly
-where sea ended and sky began. All hands were
-most eager to ‘raise whale,’ for the bounty offered
-was five pounds&mdash;equal to twenty-five dollars&mdash;and
-we had fine men at the mastheads. Yet our first
-intimation of his appearance was given by himself
-spouting almost alongside. As silently as shadows
-we prepared to go after him, but as the boats were
-about to be lowered he disappeared, nor did we ever
-catch a glimpse of him again, although all hands
-clustered aloft straining their eyes in every direction.
-He vanished so unaccountably that there was an
-uneasy feeling on board that what we had all seen
-was no whale at all, but a sportive spook sent to
-befool us by some sarcastic sea-demon. There is no
-doubt that both coming and going were exceptions
-to all the ordinary laws governing the actions<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</span> of the
-whale-folk.</p>
-
-<p>All this explanatory matter, taking so long to set
-down, was as familiar as breathing to Captain Da
-Silva, yet his only emotion upon ‘raising’ the whale
-so closely alongside was black, murderous rage. He
-dared not shout for fear of scaring or ‘galleying’ the
-whale. But his enforced quiet made his hissed-out
-orders sound all the more furious. The men flew to
-their stations silently. The boats were lowered by
-inches at a time, and with the utmost deliberation,
-lest the rattle of the patent sheaves should alarm the
-as yet unconscious monster. Only two boats went&mdash;the
-mate’s and the second mate’s&mdash;and the skipper sat
-on his high perch and watched them depart with
-bitter muttered comments upon all they did. Every
-movement was criticised as if the makers of it were
-‘greenies’ just commencing the great business. And
-the worst of the matter was that the men in the boats
-knew this. It made them less confident than they
-would otherwise have been, and therefore they felt as
-if they were going into a fight whereof the issue was
-already half decided against them.</p>
-
-<p>Still, they paddled steadily towards the foe without
-him betraying by the slightest sign a knowledge of
-any danger likely to be threatening him. By common
-consent the boats parted company as they neared
-him, and came on at the great head sheering slightly
-to either side. Suddenly he saw them or felt them&mdash;no
-one knows which it is&mdash;and with one great sweep
-of his flukes he leapt forward. Too late. Both
-boats closed in on him like sentient destroyers, and
-as if at one signal the harpoons flew from either
-harpooner’s nervous hands and sank quivering into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</span>
-the flank of the whale. Instead of turning to fight,
-as usual, he settled at once, quite quietly, and immediately
-the attackers felt an impetus forward, steady
-and increasing. Away he went, well below, only
-momentarily breaking the surface to spout, and
-getting up speed in such a fashion that in a very few
-minutes, despite the smoothness of the sea, it was
-evident that all the boatmen could do was to hold on
-and wait until their gigantic steed tired.</p>
-
-<p>On board the skipper watched with eyes aflame,
-blaming them all impartially for what he was pleased
-to call their idiotic behaviour, only his expressions
-were not so mild as that, and cursing his inability,
-owing to the absence of wind, to follow them up.
-Priscilla watched too, fascinated, and all unconscious
-of the danger the brave fellows were in. And then,
-with a suddenness seen only in tropical latitudes,</p>
-
-<p>
-The sun’s rim dips; the stars rush out;<br />
-At one stride comes the dark;<br />
-</p>
-
-<p>and the fleeing boats fade from view. Only then
-does it dawn upon her what awful danger these men
-are in, and even then, such is the deadness of her
-mind, she cannot bring herself to realise as she thinks
-she ought to do the peril of her shipmates. There
-is a great silence on board. No one can do anything
-but wait, except the Captain, who can, and does, keep
-up a muttered succession of evil words in his own
-language. The leaden-footed minutes creep along,
-the heavy dews fall, a solemn silence, only accentuated
-by the creak of a spar or the slight rattle of a block,
-reigns supreme, for the Captain has gone below, and
-she is up there quite alone. And suddenly relief<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</span>
-comes. Into her dry heart there steals the blessed
-consciousness of God’s loving presence, her almost
-deadened mental perceptions revive on the memory
-of ‘I will never leave thee nor forsake thee,’ and
-immediately she is able to pray. Not for herself&mdash;that
-has not yet come&mdash;but for the safety of those
-whom she has seen go out into the night. Most
-fervently she implores the Father that they may be
-preserved through the perils around them, and that
-when they return (as she at once feels assured they
-will) her terrible husband may be merciful to them.
-As she forms the petitions in her heart there
-is a great cry from many throats, a rushing, roaring
-sound, a crash, and the babel of many voices. All
-hands spring into violent activity, and high over all
-the other sounds rises the voice of the Captain.
-Another boat is lowered into the darkness, which is
-presently illuminated in ghastly fashion by a blue
-light which is fired and spreads its glare all around
-the ship.</p>
-
-<p>We must leave Priscilla for a few minutes suffering
-all the tortures of uncertainty, and avail ourselves of
-our privilege of knowing at once all that is happening.
-Dragged away at such speed in the darkness, and
-dependent entirely upon the phosphorescent glare in
-the water for their knowledge of the whale’s whereabouts,
-the two boats’ crews were in no enviable case.
-But the officers did their manful best, whenever a
-slackening in the whale’s speed gave them opportunity
-to get near him, to hurl lances and fire bombs
-into his shadowy-looking mass. But all had apparently
-been of little or no avail in staying his
-forward rush, and as for its direction they knew absolutely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</span>
-nothing. In the midst of this confusion there
-suddenly towered up before them the great bulk of
-the ship, menacing like the shadow of death. Both
-officers drew knives and touched the tow lines, yelling
-at the same moment, ‘Lay off&mdash;lay on!’ So as the
-impetus brought them alongside, instead of coming
-end on at that great speed and being dashed in
-pieces, one sheered to port and the other to starboard,
-both intact and safe. They heard the crash, though,
-in the midst of that strange evolution, and feared the
-worst. It was not, however, as bad as they feared,
-although bad enough. The whale, nearing his end,
-and collecting all his powers to meet it, had suddenly
-become instinctively aware of the ship confronting
-him, and, swerving to the left almost cleared her.
-But his great head struck the rudder such a tremendous
-blow that it was wrenched from the sternpost,
-without, however, doing that essential portion of
-the ship any damage. The rudder was simply gone
-clean, and none of them ever saw it again.</p>
-
-<p>Then were heard the strange noises made by a
-whale in its dying agonies close alongside the ship.
-She rolled and heaved in the swell he made, but he
-was not near enough to give her another blow.
-Presently the silence closed in upon them again. It
-was broken by the skipper, who, excited beyond
-endurance, yet compelled to inaction, almost
-screamed, ‘’Longside thar! See anythin’ of th’
-whale? Hez he stove in th’ counter, or wut? ’R ye
-all dead? ’n’ ef y’ ain’t, why’nt ye do somethin’ or
-say somethin’ ’r make a sign?’ Then compliments
-after his foul fashion.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</span></p>
-<p>Presently up out of the darkness came a voice,
-Mr. Court’s:</p>
-
-<p>‘All right, sir, we’ve got hold of him; just passin’
-tow-line.’</p>
-
-<p>There was a growl like that of a wild beast in
-response, and an order to light up all the suspended
-cressets. All hands girded up their loins for the long
-night’s work pending, and as the tow-line was passed
-on board bent their backs to the task of hauling the
-great whale alongside, thinking meanwhile of the
-possibility of his having started a butt when he
-collided with the stern fittings. Priscilla, her heart
-full of gratitude for answered prayer, went below, lay
-down, and in a few minutes slept the blessed sleep of
-a relieved mind.</p>
-
-<p>All through the night, goaded on by the rasping
-voice of the skipper, who, perched aloft upon the
-after platform, suffered terribly from his inability to
-make himself felt as well as heard, the weary men
-toiled on. And to such good purpose that when the
-pageant of morning blazed forth upon the welcoming
-sky they had actually consummated the cutting-in,
-and were all ready for the trying-out. The
-skipper having hobbled below, Mr. Court proceeded
-to set blubber watches of six hours each, but also
-gave word to go easy, for he knew, judging by his
-own feelings, how spent all hands were, and he would
-not be so foolish as to lay them up. The relieved
-ones had just cast themselves down as they were
-and passed into the depths of utterly exhausted
-nature’s refreshment when, as Mr. Court was diving
-below to his well-earned rest, the skipper reappeared
-shouting, ‘Lay aft here, yew lazy hogs, ’n’ rig a stage
-over the stern. I want ter git a jury rudder rigged.’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</span>
-Returning to the deck, Mr. Court said gravely,
-‘Captain, that kind o’ thing wunt work no more.
-Yew’ve gut t’ be reasonable. I wunt let ye play the
-fool with men’s lives any more, and ef yew’re goin’t’
-shoot, shoot quick, ’r ye’ll be too late.’ And Captain
-Da Silva saw, to his intense amazement, a revolver-barrel
-gleaming in the fingers of the officer whom in
-his blind passion and prejudice he had abused as a
-coward.</p>
-
-<p>His sufferings were terrible to witness. His keen
-intelligence showed him clearly that at present, at
-any rate, the mate had the key of the situation, and
-that again he must stoop to dissimulation where he
-had been used to enforce his will with the utmost disregard
-of what anyone thought or felt. At last, when
-the first few agonising spasms had passed, he
-mastered himself by a supreme effort and said
-huskily, ‘All right, Mr. Court. It’s yewr call. It’ll
-be mine some day. Meanwhile we’ll keep eour trouble
-indoors.’</p>
-
-<p>Raising his voice a little for the benefit of
-the few haggard-looking, anxious men who were
-clustered about the mainmast awaiting the word to
-come aft and recommence work, he said, ‘Oh, all
-right, Mr. Court; I guess we’ll leave it a bit. Don’
-look ’s if we sh’d hev enny change in th’ weather fur
-a while, anyhow. We’ll git on with th’ tryin’-out, ’n’
-leave th’ repairs until she’s cleaned erp agen. Thet’ll
-do th’ watch below,’ he snarled in conclusion. And
-the worn-out men shuffled away.</p>
-
-<p>Without another word Mr. Court descended to his
-bunk, not, to be sure, without many misgivings as to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</span>
-whether, in the absence of any defence to his sleeping-place,
-any door to bar, he should, in the quaint
-sailor phrase, ‘wake up and find himself dead.’ But
-he reasoned, and correctly, that under present conditions
-the skipper would hardly proceed to open
-murder, for open it must be since four men would be
-in full view of the crime if it were done while he slept.
-And with a final, ‘Well, I kain’t he’p it, anyhaow;
-mout so well die this way ’s any other, fur all I k’n
-see,’ the mate turned in, put his loaded revolver under
-his pillow, and in two minutes was fast asleep.</p>
-
-<p>The Captain, in spite of his weakened body, of his
-still aching limbs, paced the narrow limits of the
-cabin like a caged leopard, his mind seething with
-deadly thoughts about the mate and, in a lesser
-degree, all the members of his crew. For this was
-the first voyage of his career as captain that any of
-his ship’s company had been able to oppose his
-will successfully. Also it was the first voyage of his
-life that he had suffered so much in his own body,
-and he was gravely in doubt as to what the change
-meant. He was inclined to lay all his disasters at
-the door of his wife; but of her he was now quite
-afraid, and, moreover, satisfied that if he were not
-very careful in his treatment of her worse misfortunes
-would befall him. These thoughts worried him so
-much that he had recourse to the bottle, the great
-store of fiery liquor he had brought on board at
-Brava having been only slightly encroached upon.
-And after a few glasses and a couple of cigars he
-was reassured as to his own importance and power,
-feeling, indeed, that his recent fears were quite unwarranted.
-And yet he could not help casting a
-curiously furtive glance at the pale, mask-like <span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</span>face
-of his wife.</p>
-
-<p>The next day, his physical improvement having
-been well maintained, he took full charge at eight
-bells in the morning, and all hands fell obediently
-into line at his word. Work on the blubber proceeded
-apace, but there was a much more important duty
-to perform, and that was the rigging of a contrivance
-by means of which the ship might be steered. Here
-Captain Da Silva shone as a perfect seaman. He
-ordered a spar about the size of a medium scaffold-pole
-to be made into a huge oar, the blade being
-formed of stout planks bolted together athwart, and
-the interstices on each side of the spar filled with old
-chain for weight to keep the machine down. A solid
-crutch, lined with leather and well greased, was fixed
-on the taffrail for the upper part of the spar to work
-in, with plenty of play allowed, but strong lashings to
-prevent its jumping out of its bed. Also a severe
-holdfast was made just above the blade of the ‘oar,’
-into which a stout tackle was hooked on either side;
-the upper blocks of these tackles were led to outriggers
-over each quarter, and the falls passed into
-the barrel of the steering wheel. And&mdash;of course
-recognising that a vast amount of uninteresting but
-essential detail has been left out&mdash;that is how Captain
-Da Silva rigged his jury-rudder. It was so successful,
-too, that three days afterwards he navigated his
-ship into the difficult harbour of Port Lloyd with it,
-none of the captains of whaling ships anchored there
-noticing any difference, except that there were one
-or two remarks about the <i>Grampus’s</i> wild steering and
-a little wonder as to what she was towing astern.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</span></p>
-<p>Before going into the harbour Captain Da Silva
-called all hands aft and made them a speech. He
-said: ‘Men we’re a-goin’ in here fur repairs, wood,
-an’ water. Any of ye ’at wants t’ run away ’ud
-better make erp yewr mines before yew go fur the
-wust floggin’ y’ ever had w’en yew’re brought back.
-’N’ yew will be, fur I’m goin’ t’ offer one hundred
-dollars reward fur any deserter brought back to the
-ship dead er alive. ’N’ thar’s lots er folks here as’d
-kill a man fur one dollar, let alone a hundred. No
-gammin’ allowed. This ship’s ben runnin’ slack. I’m
-goin’t’ tighten things up a bit. Naow git.’ And as
-all hands slunk away the skipper cast a triumphant
-glance at the officers as who should say, ‘What are
-you going to do now?’ There was no answering
-look. Who could reply to a challenge like that
-without putting himself irrevocably in the wrong?</p>
-
-<p>Now it would be useless to recapitulate the proceedings
-at Port Lloyd, so tame and commonplace
-were they. The men were kept at work not merely
-from daylight till dark, but before daylight till after
-dark, doing all the thousand-and-one things needed
-when a whaleship comes into harbour after a long
-cruise. No boats other than her own were allowed
-near the ship, so the men got no fresh fruit, while no
-fresh beef or vegetables were sent on board by the
-skipper, so that all the fresh food obtained by the
-hungry men was fish, which, fortunately for them, bit
-at night and were caught in fairly large numbers. The
-skipper went ashore but very little; when he did, he
-now took Priscilla with him, closely muffled up so that
-no one should see her but himself. He saw none of his
-fellow-skippers, and cared nothing that he was the
-talk of the harbour. At the end of four days he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</span>
-ordered the windlass to be manned, and took the
-<i>Grampus</i> out to sea again, no man but himself knowing
-whither he was bound.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">THE LOSS OF THE <i>GRAMPUS</i></p>
-
-<p>It could not possibly have escaped the memory of
-Mr. Court that he had been told by the skipper that
-their next cruising-place would be the ‘Japan-ground.’
-Not that he was foolish enough to place any serious
-reliance upon anything said by Captain Da Silva,
-only he knew, as every whaling officer did in those
-days&mdash;I write of half a century ago&mdash;that the
-Japan grounds were the most prolific of all known
-haunts of the sperm whale. He was just a little
-startled, then, on getting clear of the Bonins, to find
-a course set S.W., which looked very much like
-getting down on to the Line grounds, and in any
-case could not mean that the <i>Grampus</i> was bound
-for the carrying out of the previously arranged
-programme. But he had such an implicit faith in
-the astounding ability of his skipper, and he felt so
-sure that even revenge would be made to wait until
-the money-making was over, that he did not trouble
-his head much about the rather startling change in
-the course. He could not know, of course, what
-Captain Da Silva did, that the common talk of Port
-Lloyd had been the inexplicable absence of sperm
-whales from the Japan grounds that season, neither
-could he tell by what curious chain of reasoning,
-amounting almost to instinct, the skipper had decided
-upon going south among the islands and
-gradually working his way down to the Line whaling
-grounds.</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</span></p>
-<p>For two days they steered S.E., and then, as if
-in justification of the skipper’s foresight, they ran
-into a vast school of whales. Now, without going
-over previously well-trodden ground, I may remark
-that it will have been noticed how on board a whaleship,
-as in an army, things may be done by officers
-with impunity in time of war that would certainly
-cause a mutiny in time of peace. And the skipper’s
-eyes glistened as the boats took the water at the
-thought of how, during the coming campaign, he
-would take the last ounce out of his officers and men,
-making them pay most dearly for any little ‘let-up’
-they might have enjoyed during his enforced retirement.
-One other step he had taken which I have
-omitted to mention, the separation of Rube and Mr.
-Pease, taking the former to pull his own midship
-oar, and putting the latter under his third mate, a
-Portuguese very much after his own heart.</p>
-
-<p>Now for the next three months Reuben led the
-life of a daily martyr, a galley slave. The ship
-seemed never to be out of sight of whales, and
-exercising the greatest possible skill in the manipulation
-of his forces, the skipper managed to keep the
-war going continually, favoured as the ship was by
-the finest of weather. But he never in the midst of
-all his multifarious energies forgot for one hour the
-exercise of his awful animosity towards Reuben.
-The other Americans suffered also, but in a much
-lesser degree. It was Reuben who for any fault
-committed by anyone in the boat was smitten with
-the heavy oak tiller over head or shoulders or face,
-Reuben who was selected for every dangerous, filthy,
-and heavy piece of work; Reuben, in fact, saved the
-rest of his white shipmates much pain and trouble<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</span>
-by being the lightning conductor, attracting nearly
-all the skipper’s cruelty. And strangely enough, it
-seemed to make little difference to him. He did not
-smile so sweetly as he used to do, and his rather worn
-face wore a puzzled look that was very pathetic.
-But he never resented any of his ill-treatment, never
-seemed to notice it, in fact, after the first week or two.</p>
-
-<p>What the condition of the ship became during
-those three strenuous months I do not propose
-attempting to describe. Only the pen of a Zola
-could do it justice, and the result would be almost,
-if not quite, unreadable to any cleanly living person.
-She was an offence to the clean, wide sea&mdash;much
-worse, indeed, than she was in the Mozambique
-Channel in respect of foulness, but not so bad with
-regard to health, because of the sweet breeze that
-steadily blew, and kept clearing off some of the
-miasma she exhaled. The skipper, however, alarmed
-for the health of Priscilla, for the reasons before
-noted, caused a little bower to be built on the top of
-the tiny deck aft, and did away with the spanker
-boom so that it (the bower) should not be disturbed.
-Here Priscilla sat all day long carefully screened
-from the smell as far as could be, and exposed to the
-fresh air. And, although she naturally suffered very
-much, as she always had done, since first she came
-on board, from lack of exercise, she became better
-in her general health, and more ready to take a
-little interest in life than she had been for a long
-time. Nevertheless, little as her ship surroundings
-had ever power to impress her, she got very weary
-of the incessant inflow of greasy masses from overside,
-heartily sick of the aroma of slaughter. Also it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</span>
-seemed to her as if, instead of her husband growing
-more and more satisfied at the way in which he was
-accumulating wealth without any other ship near to
-share his good fortune, he became ever more morose
-and scowling. Nor was she wrong. The check to
-his cruelty which he had received worried him like a
-green wound, and all his prosperity was not nearly
-sufficient to compensate him for the loss of prestige
-he felt he had endured. If only, without destroying
-the efficiency of his ship’s company, he could have
-set his foot upon the neck of those pale-faced men
-of an alien race, who, despite his masterfulness, had
-succeeded in great measure in setting themselves
-free from his tyranny, and who now strode before
-him with erect heads and clear eyes! The story of
-Haman is no myth. It is being repeated all around
-us every day, and I do not know of any more cogent
-proof of the existence of the devil than this.</p>
-
-<p>At last the whales seemed to have learned their
-lesson, and began to fight shy of this lonely ship
-which had transferred so many of them to her own
-interior. No longer did they crowd around like a
-flock of frightened sheep awaiting the butcher and
-unable to see whither to flee in all that wide expanse
-of ocean. There came a time when the thoroughly
-wearied men were able to, not rest, but find an
-intensely welcome relief from the all-pervading filth
-in strenuously endeavouring to cleanse it away. And
-although they worked just as hard as ever, they went
-about their altered occupation with something like
-enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the skipper had by frequent secret<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</span>
-conferences, by sundry quietly bestowed tots of grog,
-and such grim pleasantries as he could give utterance
-to, been endeavouring quite successfully to regain his
-former status among his countrymen. Mr. Court
-saw, in common with every other white man on
-board, the trend of matters, and passed, therefore,
-many uneasy hours, unable to formulate any plans,
-since he knew not what was brewing except that it
-meant mischief for him and his compatriots. But in
-the absence of any overt act of offence on the part of
-the skipper he could take no step, he could only
-whisper Mr. Winslow to keep a bright look-out for
-whatever devilry might be afloat. What troubled
-him principally was his utter want of knowledge of
-the ship’s whereabouts. This is always a hardship
-at sea even under the best conditions, and if sailors
-were only to allow their minds to dwell upon the fact
-that they are not allowed by the skipper to know
-even the approximate position of the ship there
-would be far more discontent than there is now.
-I have been in a ship on a passage of nearly seven
-months between Liverpool and an Indian port, and
-during the whole of that time not one foremast hand
-ever knew the ship’s position within a thousand miles,
-so carefully was the secret guarded. And I have
-been in ships where the skipper refused to allow his
-mate to know, would not let him take an observation,
-seeming to take some insane pleasure in knowing that
-he alone of the ship’s company had any idea where
-upon that vast blank space of sea the tiny dot of a
-ship was poised.</p>
-
-<p>Thus it was in the <i>Grampus</i>, when at the last
-clearing up certain sail was set, and a definite <span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</span>course
-to the eastward was steered. Indications of land
-were many, for they were now in that part of the
-Pacific where Nature would appear to have her busiest
-workshops; where islands rise in a few hours from
-unknown depths and isolated patches of land are
-suddenly met with, summits of submerged mountains
-rivalling the Himalayas in their tremendous altitudes.
-So, although no more whales were seen, the watchers
-at the masthead scarcely passed an hour without
-reporting some new appearance, some discolouration
-of the bright sea that upon nearer approach resolved
-itself into a floating island of weed about which
-played an innumerable company of bright-hued fish
-making the water foam again with their blithe
-gambols. Or a derelict cocoa-palm torn from its reef-edge
-moorings, and long since denuded of its feathery
-crown, floated by, recognisable only to a whaleman’s
-eye as anything belonging to earth at all from the
-wealth of parasitic life which had accumulated upon
-it, making it look more like the head of some vast
-sea-serpent with a snowy mane than anything else
-the mind can depict. An occasional canoe, waterlogged
-or bottom-up, floated along, making the
-watcher wonder where the recent occupant had gone,
-and what manner of struggle he or she made for life
-ere the fateful moment came when the sea claimed its
-toll as of right.</p>
-
-<p>All through this pleasant time Priscilla kept her
-vigil during the daylight hours in her breezy house
-aloft, above the working people’s heads. There was
-a sort of placid wonder why the Captain should
-have so radically altered in his behaviour towards her.
-Benumbed as her faculties had undoubtedly become,
-since she had lived up on the after-deck she had begun<span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</span>
-to regain a certain interest in life which had not been
-possible to her while confined to the cabin. And she
-certainly found herself speculating upon the change
-in her husband. She noticed that he was less brutal
-in his behaviour to the crew, too, as far as physical
-ill-treatment went, but, of course, she did not know
-the cause. There was no easement of the hardships
-of their lives, nor any relenting in those fierce black
-eyes when looking upon a subordinate. But when
-his gaze fell upon her it changed into the puzzled,
-frightened glance of the savage face to face with the
-unknown, and dominated by an illogical fear, a state
-of mind which culminates in a sudden plunge into
-nameless cruelties.</p>
-
-<p>She and her husband never held any conversation,
-their intercourse being limited to monosyllables
-almost. Discussion was out of the question, since
-she was docile as a well-trained dog, and besides did
-not seem to care about anything sufficiently to discuss
-it. Yet all unknown to her, a change was taking
-place in her mind. A renewed interest in life was
-springing up there. It may have been her long
-contemplation of the ever-wonderful and changeful
-life of the sea, but I am inclined to think that it was
-the intensity of that unknown love burning in one
-loyal breast near her, the outpouring of those fervent
-supplications for her well-being that Reuben was
-continually offering communicating something of
-their own force in some mysterious way, not understandable
-as yet, but some day surely to be explained
-to us. At last, after about a fortnight of this pleasant
-sailing, she came up to her little haven of refuge
-to witness a scene of almost fairy-like loveliness.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</span>
-Stretching away to the northward like a cluster of
-jewels set upon the shining bosom of the sea was
-a group of islands. Some rose sheer from the waves
-that rolled creamily against their jet-black bases, just
-failing to reach the tender festoons of every shade
-of green that clothed them from high-water mark
-to summit. Others glittered in dazzling white against
-the intense blue of the quiet lagoon, shielded from
-all ruffling by a barrier of living rock encircling
-them, and crested with a mighty feather of purest
-white as the great swell surged up against it, and
-found its onward sweep effectually stayed. Others
-from serene palm-fringed heights sloped sweetly
-seaward to inviting beaches of all colours sheltered
-from any onslaught of waves and apparently inviting
-the weary seafarer to come and rest himself after all
-his ocean wanderings.</p>
-
-<p>Quite close to the ship was a long, formidable
-barrier of black rocks, outliers of the main group,
-whose jagged, saw-like teeth snarled threateningly
-up from the fret and foam of the sea around. But
-even they were robbed of half their terrors by the
-beautiful play of light and colour around them, gift
-of the golden sun which hung in the limpid sky,
-shedding his fervent fires upon sea and land, and
-investing the most commonplace objects with supreme
-beauty. As Priscilla gazed upon the lovely scene
-she felt the tears steal down her cheeks: the whole
-panorama appealed to her innate sense of loveliness
-so strongly that the happy tears would come, and
-her heart was lifted by the adoring creature’s joy
-in the Creator’s lovely handiwork. She forgot all
-else in the glories of the present scene, took no heed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</span>
-of the swift changing of the view as the homely old
-ship glided past that long, long barrier through the
-smoothest and brightest of seas. She took no heed
-of the skilful handling of the ship, all her mind
-being bent upon the wonders overside. It seemed
-to her as if now for the first time she understood
-what voyaging really meant, as if only now was she
-realising some of the impressions given her long ago
-in reading records of wonderful voyages. A faint
-flush mounted into her pale cheeks, her breath came
-and went quickly through her parted lips, and she
-was nearer happiness than she had been since the
-first week out from home.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly she became conscious of an apparent
-increase in the wind, caused by an alteration in the
-vessel’s course, bringing her close-hauled, and like
-magic the whole scene changed. The ship was now
-running in between a wide opening in the great barrier
-before mentioned, where on either side of her the
-frowning rocks with their white crests of foam stopped
-abruptly in a sea of deepest blue. Ahead this lovely
-colour took a dozen different shades from inequality
-in the depth, and here and there, where a patch of
-coral neared the surface and the sun’s rays touched
-its summit through the intervening water, there was a
-blending of hues that would make an artist despair.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, piloted with the utmost skill by the skipper,
-the <i>Grampus</i> drew near the main group of islands,
-sheltered as they were by all this intricate network
-of reefs from any roughness of water, and, finally,
-turning sharply to starboard, she came up into the
-wind behind a low bluff, and by her own impetus
-forged ahead into a little bay, sheltered from every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</span>
-wind of heaven, bordered by a snow-white beach,
-which, in its turn, was fringed by tropical growth of
-trees and shrubs of many kinds, and looking an ideal
-haven of rest. Midway of the bay’s semicircle, and
-at less than half a mile from the beach, at a hoarse
-shout from the skipper the anchor rattled down, its
-crash and roar awakening echoes that long resounded
-like peals of distant thunder. Then the shouts of
-the officers succeeded as they gave the necessary
-orders for furling sails and clearing up the ship
-generally. And in half-an-hour, when the word
-‘supper’ was given, an intense hush as of the first
-Sabbath succeeded&mdash;a calm and peace over sea and
-land that fell upon Priscilla’s heart like the touch of
-a mother’s cool hand upon the hot brow of her ailing
-child.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Da Silva’s officers, however, were far
-from enjoying a like serenity of mind. That very
-peace which was so grateful to an unknowing one
-was to them like the calm preceding the outburst of
-a hurricane. They looked anxiously around, precluded
-from consulting each other by their absurd
-relations, yet fearing the worst. Then the skipper,
-going below and summoning his unfortunate steward,
-had the ‘trade,’ always carried by these ships in that
-day for the purpose of barter among the islands,
-brought out and placed in readiness for conveyance
-on deck. His (the skipper’s) plans had long been
-made, but only his Portuguese accomplices on board
-knew anything of them. As far back as the visit to
-Brava he had been preparing for this event, when
-that load of cases of most potent liquor was brought
-on board. And now it was not so much the possibility<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</span>
-of treachery on the part of the natives as the
-ruin of his plan of pleasure (?) which made him
-anxiously scan beach and bay for any sign of human
-life.</p>
-
-<p>The sun neared the horizon, the busy fishing birds
-began to fly shoreward to their nests laden with the
-fruits of their labours, and the fresh sweetness of the
-coming night began to make itself felt. Then, as if
-at a given signal, a whole fleet of canoes came rushing
-round the headland into the bay, the water foaming
-around them under the strokes of multitudinous paddles.
-As they neared the ship it was to be seen that each
-canoe carried a green branch with streamers of white
-‘tapa’ or native cloth, betokening peace, also that
-the still green coverts ashore had suddenly burst into
-life and scores of dusky female forms were hurling
-themselves into the water, and almost like denizens of
-the deep sea were rushing towards the ship. A few
-sharp orders from the skipper, and the Portuguese
-members of the crew hurried aft to assist him in the
-handing and distribution of his presents. They had
-barely got the things on deck when with yells of
-delight the natives reached the vessel, climbing on
-board everywhere like an invasion of happy children
-without one thought save the joyful indulgence of idle
-infantile curiosity. Priscilla had previously retired,
-being sternly ordered below by her husband as soon as
-the natives were seen, and in the little state-room she
-sat listening with mingled feelings to the hubbub
-prevailing on deck, not knowing what it meant.</p>
-
-<p>It was well that she did not, for there was now
-commencing on board the <i>Grampus</i> one of those<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</span>
-orgies which have done so much to hinder the spread
-of Christianity among these savage isles. There is no
-danger that I should attempt to particularise; that, I
-am sorry to say, has been done <i>ad nauseam</i>, and to
-what good end I am unable to see. Even the bald
-official records of such scenes strike a chill of horror
-into any decent mind, but they also leave a sense of
-profound gratitude that in spite of all these dire hindrances
-to the spread of the Gospel it does spread, it
-is embraced by these simple children of Nature, so apt
-to be influenced by the latest impression, especially if
-that impression be evil. Every careful reader of
-South Sea Island records must have noticed the frequency
-with which the good work of the missionaries&mdash;and,
-let it be said, in all justice, the good work of
-the honest, sober, truthful, and decent trader&mdash;has been
-undone by the infernal exploits of a crew of black-guards
-coming soon after. Also, it must have been
-seen how frequently the ill-usage (in the worst sense)
-of the confiding but undiscriminating natives by
-some bad ship’s crew has led to the awful massacre
-of the next ship’s company calling there, and the
-subsequent laying waste of the village of these dispensers
-of wild justice. In Stevenson’s ‘Wrecker’
-one of the most appalling facts is stated quite dispassionately
-concerning the murder of Bishop Patteson,
-and it makes the flesh creep. Here it is:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘He was tried for his life in Fiji in Sir Arthur
-Gordon’s time, and if ever he prayed at all, the name
-of Sir Arthur was certainly not forgotten. He was
-speared in seven places in New Ireland&mdash;the same
-time his mate was killed&mdash;the famous outrage on
-board the brig <i>Jolly Roger</i>, but <i>the treacherous savages
-made little by their wickedness</i>’ (the italics are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</span>
-mine) ‘and Bostock, in spite of their teeth, got
-seventy-five head of volunteer (?) labour on board, of
-whom not more than a dozen died of injuries. He
-had a hand besides in the amiable pleasantry which
-cost the life of Patteson; and when the sham
-bishop landed, prayed, and gave his benediction to
-the natives, Bostock, arrayed in a female chemise out
-of the trade-room, had stood at his right hand and
-boomed Amens. This, when he was sure he was
-among good fellows, was his favourite yarn. “Two
-hundred head of labour for a hatful of Amens,” he
-used to name the tale; and its sequel, the death of
-the real bishop, struck him as a circumstance of
-extraordinary humour.’</p>
-
-<p>It was evident to Mr. Court at once what his
-commander had come into this bay for, and he was
-in a greater difficulty than ever. The ship was
-practically in possession of the natives, all uproariously
-good humoured, but all, liable to pass
-at once from riotous pleasantry to mad fury of
-slaughter. The only comfort he had was that no
-natives were allowed to invade the cabin. The
-foc’s’le, the half-deck, was overrun by them, and nearly
-all the crew had been induced to join them in their
-curious gambols&mdash;all the more curious that the
-skipper had liberally distributed his fire-water among
-them. Reuben, at the first descent of native men and
-women into the foc’s’le, had made his way on deck and
-into the fore-top, then along the topgallant stay he had
-climbed to the main-crosstrees, and in similar fashion
-had reached the mizen-top. Here he determined to
-camp until morning with some vague idea of watching
-over the safety of Priscilla, and at the least, descending<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</span>
-among the natives if they should prove treacherous (?)
-and losing his life in her defence. From his lofty
-perch he looked down upon that ugly scene, and
-his clean soul revolted at it. But he saw to his
-intense satisfaction the actors therein gradually sink
-to slumber, overcome by fatigue, and by midnight the
-pale moon shone down upon heaps of sleepers in all
-sorts of varied attitudes, exposing shamefulnesses
-that the tender dark had hidden. And overwearied
-at last he slept also.</p>
-
-<p>The morning brought tumult, a renewal of the
-orgies of the previous night. All work, discipline,
-order, seemed to be at an end. The skipper, like a
-maddened Bacchanal, swayed to and fro between
-two dusky nymphs, daughters of the paramount
-chief, and Mr. Court, looking at him with disgust,
-could take no steps. Once, indeed, finding a huge
-native endeavouring to force his body down through
-the insufficient opening of the cabin skylight, the
-mate almost forgot the stern control he had placed
-upon himself, and was just about to seize the man
-fiercely and hurl him away when he was seized from
-behind, and turning furiously to see who it was he
-looked into the mild but fearless eyes of Reuben,
-who said, ‘For heaven’s sake, sir, don’t anger them&mdash;for
-her sake.’ That was all, and Mr. Court’s anger
-died instantly away.</p>
-
-<p>But none of the devoted few who throughout this
-terrible time retained their manliness and clean living
-were able to retain much hope that a final and
-terribly complete disaster could be avoided. And
-all they could do was to look helplessly on and see
-it coming, powerless to avert it. For the skipper,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</span> in
-spite of the madness of his orgies, not only kept
-cunning watch over his end of the ship, and allowed
-no native, whether male or female, to enter the cabin,
-but he also kept the sober ones in view also, and by
-this I do not merely mean those to whom he had
-handed out drink&mdash;his own countrymen&mdash;but those
-of the white men who had allowed themselves to
-wallow in debauchery.</p>
-
-<p>The end came very suddenly, on the fourth night.
-All the revellers had been carrying on furiously, with
-but brief intervals of exhaustion, and the number of
-natives was greatly increased by fresh arrivals from
-some of the outlying islands. Several serious
-quarrels had broken out, and been patched up without
-bloodshed, and there was much murmuring
-among the natives because the supply of liquor
-seemed to be failing&mdash;at any rate, the Captain was
-not so free with it as he had been. More, a belief
-had steadily gained ground among them that something
-of great value was secured in that after-part of
-the ship into which none of them had been permitted
-to penetrate. Now, whether either of these causes
-had anything to do with the final catastrophe, or
-whether it was just an outburst of savagery like the
-mischief of petulant children, no one will ever know,
-but the fact remains that about midnight there was a
-strong smell of fire, and before any of the sleeping
-roysterers had awakened, tall flames upreared their
-terrible shapes from the main-hatch, and a roar as of
-some vast furnace was heard. Almost in an instant
-the ship was alive with men running hither and
-thither as if dazed, others fiercely fighting, others
-drawing water in buckets, and casting it into the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</span>
-glowing furnace of the main-hatch without the
-slightest appreciable effect. In the midst of it all
-four men kept their heads clear&mdash;Reuben, Mr. Court,
-Mr. Winslow, and Mr. Pease. As it was very evident
-at an early stage that the fire, even if attacked
-by competent hands, was unsubduable, and that,
-moreover, the natives were bent not only upon
-destroying the ship but the lives of every European
-on board, these four devoted all their energies to the
-means of escape. The Captain was somewhere in
-the midst of the yelling crowd, fighting fiercely, no
-doubt, his voice heard occasionally above the tumult,
-so that no counsel could be taken with him. And to
-make the confusion still more terrible, blinding
-columns of smoke began bursting, as it seemed, out
-of every crevice of the vessel. This decided Reuben
-that the time had come to act finally, and tearing the
-cabin door off its hinges by one effort of his strength,
-he rushed below, and seizing the half-suffocated
-Priscilla in his arms bore her on deck, and, half-blinded,
-groped his way to the port quarter boat, and
-placed her safely in the stern sheets. He had
-previously ‘racked’ the falls&mdash;that is, fastened two of
-the parts of each together&mdash;and had thrown the coils
-into the boat. Now he took a round turn round the
-midship thwart with both the falls, and, holding them
-firmly, went to both ends of the boat consecutively
-and cut the rackings, the boat falling a foot or so
-each time with an ugly jerk. Then he lowered away
-handsomely, feeling sure that in the hubbub on deck
-the rattle of the blocks would never be noticed. She
-took the water, he unhooked and pushed off, full of
-anguish of mind as to the fate of his three friends,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</span>
-but not knowing what to do for them without risking
-the helpless woman for whom he would gladly have
-suffered any pain or manner of death.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="h2sub">AND LAST</p>
-
-<p>It may well be wondered why in the much-abused
-name of common-sense the mariners on board the
-<i>Grampus</i> did not, seeing the hopelessness of saving
-their vessel, make for the boats and leave her. But
-it must be remembered that, apart from the fact
-that they were nearly all mixed up in that horrible
-compost of savagery, there were really only three
-of them who had any clearness of head remaining.
-These three, whom I have already named, were busy
-preparing the starboard quarter boat for leaving when
-suddenly there burst upon them, like a flood, a mob
-of natives, and before they had time to draw their
-weapons they were overpowered, and another dark
-deed was consummated. As so often has happened
-in South Sea Island story, the innocent suffered
-equally with the guilty&mdash;indeed, more, for one guilty
-man escaped for a time. Off in the dark Reuben
-waited, all his nerves raw with anxiety for those who
-would never come. What to do he did not know,
-for light and graceful as a whaleboat is when she has
-her full complement of men on board, she is cumbrous
-as a barge to be handled by one man at any time
-without sail; and when to that one man’s task is
-added the hampering of darkness and ignorance
-of the way he should go, the hill of difficulty becomes
-well-nigh insurmountable.</p>
-
-<p>Reuben stood with his feet upon the two cleats,
-made and fastened for the purpose of raising <span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</span>the
-steersman’s body, one on each side of the stern-sheets,
-staring with smarting eyes into the smoky, flame-stabbed
-darkness where the ship lay. Occasionally
-a great spurt of blood-red fire lit up sea, shore, and
-sky, and made him tremble for fear of discovery;
-then a wild chorus of yells and shrieks chilled his
-blood as he pictured mentally the scene being enacted
-on board. Strangely enough, he had quite forgotten
-his own peril, had forgotten how many were the
-native canoes, how impossible it would be for him to
-propel that heavy boat one quarter as fast as those
-amphibious natives could swim after him if once they
-realised his departure. Ah! The boat sagged
-heavily to one side, and in over the bluff of the bow
-climbed a dark figure, gasping as if its chest was
-being rent asunder. Reuben sprang forward, and
-found it was the skipper. The two men stared at
-each other for a moment; then the skipper gurgled
-out, ‘Oars, pull for life; all dead but me.’ And as
-he spoke he seized an oar and began to pull. Reuben
-said no word, but took another, and with the long,
-splendid stroke of the whaler they propelled the
-beautiful craft silently seaward, passing the headland
-safely and unobserved. A light breeze was blowing,
-and no sooner were they clear of the head than the
-skipper said, his native gruffness asserting itself even
-in that terrible hour, ‘Come, lend a hand ’n’ git th’
-mast up. She’ll go twice as fast under sail. Git a
-move on ye.’ It was a heavy task for two men, one
-of whom was evidently fighting hard against overpowering
-weakness, but Reuben’s great strength
-again stood him in good stead, and before ten
-minutes had elapsed the big sail was bellying bravely
-forward, and the boat, heading out into the night,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</span>
-was gently bowing to the incoming Pacific swell,
-seeming eager to escape from those awful shores.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Da Silva took the steer-oar, and with
-something of his old skill laid the boat on the direct
-course for the nearest reef-opening, steering by the
-white curdlings on the reef-tops around, which showed
-up most conspicuously against the dark of the night.
-Astern the <i>Grampus</i>, now one vast flame, filled the
-sky with a lurid glare, and the smoke of her burning
-came floating over the heads of the fugitives in a
-long grey cloud. For a space of about half an hour
-not a word was spoken by either of the men. Then
-suddenly the skipper said sharply, ‘Who’s this?’
-pointing to the motionless figure lying in the stern
-sheets at his feet as if he had only just seen it.</p>
-
-<p>‘It’s yewr wife, Cap’n,’ answered Rube in the
-most matter-of-fact manner possible.</p>
-
-<p>‘How ’d she kem here?’ demanded the skipper
-again.</p>
-
-<p>‘I brought her, sir,’ replied Rube, without the
-slightest change of voice.</p>
-
-<p>‘Oh, yew did, eh?’ said the skipper faintly. And
-then stooping and letting go his hold of the oar, he
-laid his hand upon the unconscious woman and said,
-‘’R y’ all right, Pris? I’m drefful sorry t’ have
-brung ye t’ this; but I kain’t do nothin’ f’r y’ naow.
-I’m mighty sick man myself.’ And with that word
-he fell forward in a heap fainting.</p>
-
-<p>This brought Rube aft on the jump, but it was
-well for him that Priscilla had been roused from her
-curious stupor and was able to attend to her husband,
-as the steering of the boat demanded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</span> all one man’s
-attention now.</p>
-
-<p>They were nearing the reef passage, and the swell
-meeting them was causing the boat to leap as she
-surmounted its crests, and demanding a very steady
-hand at the steer-oar to keep her bow on to it.
-Besides, the channel was barely five boats’ lengths
-wide, and the foam of the incoming breakers almost
-obscured it at times. Still Rube steered seaward
-with a steady hand, and presently with a sigh of
-relief he saw the gallant craft shoot out from between
-those walls of white on to the dark, free ocean
-beyond. Then he was about to try and ship the
-rudder, which always hangs alongside, when he heard
-her voice saying:</p>
-
-<p>‘Would you please look at the Captain? I think
-he has fainted, or something, and his clothes are all
-sticky, as well as wet.’</p>
-
-<p>Rube answered thickly, ‘Certainly, ma’am, only
-yew must ’scuse me if I divide my ’tention between
-him and the boat. She wants a good deal of steering
-just now, an’ we kain’t afford to linger about here, in
-case we ain’t far enough from that awful place by
-sun-up.’</p>
-
-<p>Then Rube stooped down and peered into the
-skipper’s face, feeling all over his body at the same
-time and noting the sticky feeling of which she spoke.
-But he knew no more of what it was than she, and as
-he had no light he could not investigate. And so he
-gave all his attention to the navigation of the boat
-away from those dangerous shores while yet the land
-wind held, knowing full well that it would die away
-before dawn and the sea breeze come with the sun.
-Then if he were not well off the land he would run
-great risk of being caught by the natives, whose blood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</span>
-thirst would by this time be unassuageable.</p>
-
-<p>Priscilla, only conscious apparently of one fact,
-that her husband needed her ministrations, was doing
-her best under those sadly hampered conditions to
-give them. That she was tossing about on the open
-sea in a small boat with only her unconscious husband
-and one sailor to keep her company did not seem to
-impress her at all. And yet it would be grievous if
-anyone reading her story should think of her scornfully
-as having degenerated under her terrible trials
-into something very much resembling an imbecile.
-Oh, no; really her present state of mind had been
-reached through a series of shocks that would have
-driven a weaker woman to death or madness, but in
-her case had providentially resulted in a sort of calm
-acceptance, without any apparent surprise, of whatever
-strange experiences should befall her. Mechanically
-she bathed her husband’s face with her handkerchief
-dipped in the water overside, and, warned by
-his stertorous breathing, she loosed his neckband and
-managed to raise his head on to her lap. And thus
-she sat quietly enduring the cramping of her limbs,
-accepting the sharp pains shooting through her body
-as inevitable, and making no sound.</p>
-
-<p>A hush stole over the dark sea as the wind died
-away, broken only by the heavy occasional flap of
-the now useless sail. Without a word Reuben
-shipped the steer-oar and stepped lightly forward.
-In a minute or two he had tightly furled the sail and
-taken an extra pull at the backstays and stay, after
-deciding that owing to his being single-handed and
-not sure of his power to elevate it again he must take
-the risk of being seen through leaving the mast<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</span>
-standing. He did not realise how far the swift boat had
-glided under the gentle stress of the light land breeze
-during those past hours of darkness. With almost
-hungry eagerness he waited for the dawn, noted the
-first faint blush as of surprise tinting the eastern
-sky, watched with growing feelings of worship
-tremulous threads of delicate colour running searchingly
-into the sombre concave of the departing
-night, saw the flood of palest golden light appear,
-and then springing into its midst ablaze with glory,
-majesty, and life, the sun. And the land out of sight.
-His head sank upon his bosom, and he thanked
-God for deliverance. Yet, having done so, he could
-not help a sinking at his heart as he looked aft at
-those two crouching forms&mdash;one so inexpressibly
-precious to him, the other a sacred charge because&mdash;well,
-because of right and truth and honour. He
-knew that upon him, under God, depended their lives,
-although he did not then know how far gone the
-skipper was. And just one little moan escaped him
-as he thought how ill-provided they were for a long
-cruise in those unfrequented seas. Then hope revived
-again as he felt, because of his ignorance, that he
-could not sail far in any direction without making
-land, and land meant food and water, and (but that
-he did not trouble about) savages, cannibals made, if
-possible, worse than they were by nature by the utter
-villainy of white men far more culpable than they.</p>
-
-<p>Then, treading softly as a cat, he stepped over the
-thwarts aft again, and as he did so Priscilla lifted her
-wan face to his, saying calmly:</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</span></p>
-<p>‘Are we safe from pursuit?’</p>
-
-<p>Rube nodded: he could not trust himself to
-speak.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then, will you see what you can do for Captain
-Da Silva. I&mdash;I am afraid he is badly injured.’</p>
-
-<p>With one glance at the boat fore and aft and a
-satisfied noting of the little darkness on the water
-which betokened the coming breeze, Rube obeyed,
-and stooped to the Captain’s side. As soon as he
-did so he saw to his horror that the stickiness they
-had both felt during the darkness was blood; the
-skipper had been wounded in many places, and his
-blood, aided by the salt water, had congealed upon
-him and stopped its own flow, or he would have been
-dead long before.</p>
-
-<p>‘Ma’am,’ said Rube unsteadily, ‘I’ll dew my best
-fur the Cap’n, but, as yew k’n see, that isn’t much.
-He’s badly cut, an’ I daren’t interfere with his hurts
-’cause at present they’ve stopped bleedin’, and if I
-tech him an’ start ’em agen I mayn’t be able to stanch
-th’ flow then. Pity I got nothin’ t’ give him but a
-little soak biscuit an’ water. P’raps you’ll take a
-little yewrself, ma’am, at the same time t’ keep up
-yewr strength and courage.’</p>
-
-<p>The ghost of a smile flickered for a second about
-her white lips, and she said simply, ‘Thank you.
-You are very kind. What shall I call you?’</p>
-
-<p>He answered shortly, with a tightening at the
-heart, ‘My name’s Rube, ma’am&mdash;at least, that’s
-what I get usually. Call me thet, if ye don’t mind.’</p>
-
-<p>And then he busied himself with the preparation
-of the simple meal, measuring crumb and drop as if
-each represented so many minutes of life, and
-deciding that, as for himself, he could go a much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</span>
-longer time yet before encroaching upon the small
-stock which must suffice for them all. The breeze
-freshening, he set the sail again, and, hauling the
-boat’s head as near the wind as she would lie, found
-that she would make about E.N.E. on the starboard tack&mdash;by
-guess, that is, for there was no compass in the
-boat. And this course he chose, not because he knew
-whither it would lead them, but because he saw that
-it was taking them well away from those accursed isles,
-of whose very name and whereabouts he was ignorant.
-And having got the boat so easily trimmed that
-by lashing the tiller at a certain angle she would steer
-herself, coming up and falling off just as if a hand
-was at the helm, he turned his attention again to the
-skipper and his wife, finding that the former had
-returned to a reasonable appreciation of his surroundings
-and was quietly taking the biscuit pap from
-Priscilla’s fingers. His filmy eyes lighted upon
-Reuben, and he said in low but clear tones:</p>
-
-<p>‘Ah! yew never gut thet floggin’ I promised ye.
-Wall, I doan’ know as I’m sorry thet yew missed it.
-I guess I ben a pretty hard case ever sence I gut a
-chance t’ be, ’n’ I don’t believe I ever ben sorry fur
-anything I ever done befo’. I felt mad, but not sorry&mdash;no,
-never. ’N’ I thought I’d go some day jest like
-that. ’N’ now I kain’t. Pris’ (turning to his wife
-with sudden energy), ‘I want yew t’ fergive me&mdash;I’ve
-done y’ a power of harm. I ben an awful brute
-t’ ye. Wut I ben t’ th’ men don’ matter&mdash;that’s wut
-they’re aboard fur&mdash;but yew ben good t’ me, ’n’ I ben
-a devil t’ yew. Naow I’m a-dyin’, ’n’ I don’ care a
-plunk fer thet, but I’d like y’ t’ know I’m sorry fur
-wut I done t’ ye. Ez fur this galoot, I don’t know
-who he is er wut he is, ’n’ ef I a-hed my way with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</span>
-him he’d a-hed a pretty tough time, but I do b’lieve
-he ain’t half bad. Kiender soft mebbe fur all he’s so
-big an’ hefty, but I think he’ll put ye through in
-shape. An’ &mdash;&mdash;’ But then the voice suddenly melted
-into a few unintelligible sounds, and again the skipper’s
-head sank on to his wife’s lap and he was silent in
-another swoon. Rube looked at him helplessly for a
-moment, then, reflecting that the best thing for him
-would be to concentrate his mind upon the only
-thing he could do&mdash;viz., the handling of the boat&mdash;he
-stepped thoughtfully back to the tiller, and cast
-his eye first over the boat herself, then all around.
-She was going sweetly along, unguided, like a creature
-of intelligence, and as if she needed no human
-intervention, so, satisfied of this, Rube busied himself
-in making everything within her as neat and ship-shape
-as possible. Having done all he could at this,
-he counted their treasured biscuit, felt the weight of
-the water supply, and looked inquiringly at Priscilla,
-holding up the little wooden beaker or piggin with
-one hand and pointing to the keg with the other.
-But Priscilla, moistening her parched lips as well as
-she could, shook her head, giving a meaning glance
-at the little bucket wherein he had soaked the biscuit
-of which she and the Captain had been partaking,
-to show him that there was still some left.</p>
-
-<p>Just as Rube was wondering what he could do
-next for her comfort, and his own satisfaction, there
-was a commotion in the water alongside, and with a
-series of sharp taps against the sides and bottom of
-the boat, half-a-dozen large flying-fish fell into her in
-their hurried rush upwards from the onslaught of a
-big albacore, which went sweeping past with one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</span>
-their late comrades thwartwise in his mouth. In a
-moment Rube had gathered the welcome little wanderers
-together and hidden them all out of the sun’s
-rays but one. This he cleaned with the utmost delicacy
-and filleted, cutting the fillets into dainty narrow strips.
-With half-a-dozen of them balanced on his knife-blade,
-he approached Priscilla, who had been watching him
-languidly, saying, ‘Here, ma’am, is suthin’ that’ll dew
-yew and the skipper both good. It’s cool and moist,
-an’ ef yew shet yew eyes fur a minit yew’ll be
-surprised haow easy yew can take it. Thousan’s of
-people prefer it this way t’ cooked. ’N’ I’ll dry some
-fur ye then, only it ain’t so good fur ye because of its
-makin’ y’ thirsty, an’ water’s none too plentiful.’
-With utmost docility she roused herself, took the
-tender looking strips, and put one of them to her
-husband’s cracked lips. His mouth opened mechanically
-and his jaws moved, but he had no power to
-swallow, and his breath began to come and go
-laboriously. Putting one hand under his head, she
-beckoned Rube with the other, whispering, ‘Is he
-dying? Can’t you <i>do</i> anything for him?’</p>
-
-<p>With a fervent petition for aid to do the right
-thing, for wisdom to see it, Rube stepped to her side
-and took the Captain’s weight off Priscilla’s arm upon
-his own. There was, even to a man with as little
-experience of death as Rube’s, but scanty room to
-doubt that Captain Da Silva was going to his account.
-And then, incredible as it may seem to most of us,
-this simple-minded Christian man, forgetting all else
-but the pitiable plight of the sufferer before him,
-actually burst suddenly into earnest prayer that he
-might be spared&mdash;if only for a little while&mdash;spared to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</span>
-repent of the evil done and intended. But as he
-prayed he was conscious of something, he knew not
-what, driving into his mind the certainty that his
-prayer was not to be granted. That Ramon Da
-Silva had done all the direct ill he was to be allowed
-to do. Rube’s voice ceased, the skipper’s eyes opened,
-glazed and fixed, his lower jaw dropped heavily, and
-he was dead. Catching Priscilla’s eyes fixed earnestly
-upon his face, Reuben said solemnly, ‘He’s dead,
-ma’am, and the rest is with God.’ ‘May God have
-mercy upon him now,’ she replied.</p>
-
-<p>Until the evening scarcely another word was
-spoken by either of them, both busy with their own
-thoughts. But just before sunset, Rube said questioningly,
-‘We kain’t do no good, and may do much
-harm, by keeping the body any longer: d’ you mind
-my offering up a prayer an’ committin’ it to th’
-deep?’ She answered humbly, ‘Do what you
-think is right&mdash;I am willing. God knows I have
-every confidence in you.’ So Rube sank upon his
-knees on the thwart, and with bowed head commended
-the dead man to the mercy of the Merciful.
-Then he rose, and with a sudden heave of his great
-shoulders, lifted the piece of clay; there was a sullen
-splash, an eddy, and all that was mortal of Ramon
-Da Silva had disappeared for ever from human sight.</p>
-
-<p>With an unutterable sense of relief Reuben turned
-to the business of living, and bringing forth his little
-store of filleted fish and a handful of broken biscuits
-gently pressed Priscilla to eat. She at once commenced
-to try, only stipulating that he should also
-take something, for she felt sure that, since the
-catastrophe, at any rate, he had not broken his fast.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</span>
-He gravely acceded to her wish and began to eat,
-but had only taken two or three mouthfuls when he
-laid down the morsel he was conveying to his lips,
-put both hands to his face, and, his huge body shaken
-as with ague, burst into a tempest of sobs. Priscilla
-watched him in awe-stricken silence, until she, too,
-moved beyond bearing by such a passion in this quiet,
-self-possessed man, began to weep. But as soon as
-she did, Rube, by a tremendous effort, regained command
-of himself and began in tenderest fashion to
-speak such comforting words to her as his close
-acquaintance with the Source of all comfort had
-given him possession of. But be it noted, neither his
-consolation nor Priscilla’s distress had any reference
-to their present desperate condition whatever. That
-apparently gave them no uneasiness. These tears of
-Priscilla’s were due to reaction, to self-pity perhaps a
-little, but principally were an evidence of the passing
-away of an awful bondage. Such tears as a prisoner
-might shed on first emerging from a loathsome captivity
-in an underground dungeon into the blessed
-light of Heaven&mdash;free.</p>
-
-<p>There is no need to enlarge upon the cause of
-Rube’s breakdown: if it be not palpable, it would be
-futile to explain.</p>
-
-<p>Now he was torn with a raging conflict between
-his desires and his fears. Would Priscilla, after all,
-love him? Dare he make himself known without
-appearing to take any unmanly advantage of her
-helplessness, her utter need of some strong arm upon
-which to lean, whether she loved its owner or not so
-long as he was kind? Foolish&mdash;oh, yes, but quite
-natural where such faithful love as Rube’s reigns<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</span> in a
-man’s heart, allied with such a distrust of self as he
-possessed. So he sat speaking to Priscilla such
-things as he found best to say with this backlash of
-harassing thoughts occupying one corner of his brain,
-and causing his eyes to shine with almost audible
-intensity. And presently lifting her head Priscilla’s
-gaze met his. For a moment she stared spellbound,
-then gasped, ‘Rube, it’s <i>you</i>, it’s <span class="allsmcap">YOU</span>. O God,
-how good You are to me!’ And she bent towards
-him. All his fears were forgotten now, all his delicate
-self-tormenting diffidences vanished like breath-mist
-from a diamond, and he took her to his broad
-breast as a mother takes her infant, yearningly,
-hungrily.</p>
-
-<p>The boat sailed on steadily into the blankness of
-the horizon, hunger and thirst, and dreadful outlook
-all forgotten, and in that happy hour each lived a
-lifetime of perfect joy, feeling that, come what might,
-the price to pay would not be grudged by them.
-Then, with a sigh of perfect content, they released
-one another, and Rube, feeling as if the strength of
-ten lay in his great frame, the wisdom of a dozen old
-sea-captains had accumulated in his brain, set about
-preparing for the night. He felt ready to wrestle
-with death itself for her as Jacob did with the angel,
-and with no more fear. And she followed him with
-her eyes as he busied himself about the boat and made
-ready their tiny meal. It was so sweet to feel once
-more the presence of unselfish love ready to do and
-dare all things for her. If the prospect of that wide
-sea-plain and their utter loneliness upon it, and the
-knowledge of their want of food, did for a moment
-give her a chilly feeling as of the approach of darkness,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</span>
-it was only momentary: one glance again at his
-bright, brave, calm face dispelled it, and brought
-instead the glow of perfect happiness&mdash;that is, as
-nearly perfect as a spirit clothed with flesh can feel.</p>
-
-<p>They took their evening morsel of food, and
-uttered their evening prayers sitting hand in hand
-like little children, and with as little care or fear for
-the future as babes would have; they saw the bright
-sky darken into the violet of the night, while the
-gentle breeze held steadily and the boat still swept
-quietly forward to the east. Rube made Priscilla as
-comfortable as possible, sacrificing the jib’s usefulness
-for the night in order to protect her from the drenching
-dew, and as she laid her head down upon his coat
-rolled up for a pillow she gave a happy little sigh,
-murmured, ‘Thank you, dear,’ put up her face to be
-kissed as a tired child would out of its cot, and went
-instantly to sleep. Rube, noting this with intense
-satisfaction, composed himself upon the little deck
-aft, where he could look down upon Priscilla’s form,
-cast off the tiller, and, sitting with it under his arm,
-steered the boat steadily by the wind, still making,
-as nearly as he could judge by the stars, about a N.E.
-course. So through the night he sat, and dozed and
-woke alternately, never finding any alteration in the
-pose of that recumbent figure beneath him, never
-needing to do aught but just sit still and commune
-with his own thoughts. Strangely enough, do what
-he would he could not feel any apprehension for the
-future. Again and again he endeavoured to depict
-Priscilla and himself dying of hunger and thirst under
-the great solemn eye of heaven. Again and again
-he recalled his experiences in the <i>Xiphias</i>’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</span> boat when
-all the bitterness of such a death was actually undergone,
-and the survivors were literally haled back from
-the dark entry of the grave. But no answering tremor
-came. Not even when he thought of his father and
-mother, those waiting, lonely figures sitting by their
-cosy but quiet fireside praying for him. Ah&mdash;that
-was it. The effectual, fervent prayer of a righteous
-man availeth much, and whether he (and <i>she</i>) were
-to live or die, the peace which they were enjoying
-was undoubtedly due to that stream of real prayer
-ascending continually from the Eddy Homestead for
-the wanderers on unknown seas.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, in the morning, as daylight filled the
-sky, he faced the waking Priscilla with a countenance
-scarcely less bright. He drew her a bucket of water
-from overside, and recommended a sluicing of hands,
-and face, and neck, telling her that for the next half-hour
-it would be necessary for him to seat himself
-upon the bow and look steadfastly ahead in case in
-that clear dawn-light some vessel should be visible.
-And when such a toilet as she was able to make was
-completed, a word from her would bring him aft on
-the jump supposing his vigil were not over. She
-smiled gratefully, appreciatively; and met him
-presently, when in response to her call he came
-leaping aft, with a face so bright and rosy in spite
-of its thinness that an involuntary exclamation of
-wonder and admiration burst from him. Then they
-sat down to their frugal breakfast of water and biscuit&mdash;the
-fish was now too stale to eat, unless they were
-much more ravenous than at present&mdash;and for sauce
-they had reminiscences, all that Rube could remember
-on both sides of the blank, and all that she <i>would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</span></i> recall
-of the doings of her dead husband. Then Rube,
-interesting Priscilla greatly, produced a hook and
-line which he had found stowed away in the ‘eyes’ of
-the boat. Carefully mounting a strongly smelling
-flying fish upon the hook, he trolled it astern, and in
-a few minutes succeeded in flinging into the boat a
-beautiful coryphena, or dolphin as the sailor calls
-it, of over ten pounds in weight. A portion of
-its flesh was cut off, and preserved for bait, a portion
-was carefully prepared for the next meal&mdash;they did
-not mind raw fish now&mdash;and the rest cleansed, and cut
-in strips, was laid in the sun to dry. And then they
-thanked God, ate another meal, and took courage.</p>
-
-<p>On the fourth morning, although they had caught
-plenty of fish&mdash;for in those prolific seas the deep-sea
-denizens swarm&mdash;they drank their last drop of water.
-They had husbanded it carefully, and as at the
-outset there was but little over a gallon, it had lasted
-well. But even now they did not feel dismayed.
-Amid their terrible surroundings they were quite, or
-nearly quite, happy. That same strange assurance
-enjoyed by Rube had communicated itself to Priscilla,
-and together they discussed their meeting with the
-dear old people, and all the wonderments that people
-so entirely ignorant of what had been happening
-since their departure might naturally be supposed to
-entertain. They caught a skip-jack that day, a kind
-of vivacious mackerel, weighing about five pounds,
-and almost gaily munched its juicy flesh, which was
-so grateful to their already parching mouths.</p>
-
-<p>Then, at the close of day, as usual&mdash;it seemed as
-if they had been thus associated for a lifetime&mdash;they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</span>
-prayed, kissed each other good-night, and Priscilla
-went to sleep, while Rube, as usual, sat erect and
-dozed. He was suddenly awakened by a great glare
-of light which dazzled him, proceeding from he knew
-not where. Next moment a clear voice sounded
-across the blackness following upon the blaze: ‘Boat
-ahoy!’ ‘Hallo,’ replied the deep tones of Rube.
-And then he saw the towering form of a ship, her
-green light glaring down at him as if in judicial
-inquiry just overhead. In fact, so close that only by
-putting his tiller hard over and bringing his boat up
-in the wind he escaped running into her with a crash.
-A side ladder was lowered, a couple of agile men
-glided down ropes into the boat, and in less than ten
-minutes Rube and Priscilla stood upon the deck of
-H.M.S. <i>Alcestis</i>, surveying ship, to whose splendid lookout
-they owed their rescue, and whose crew they had
-provided with a babblement of talk that was already
-surging throughout the remotest corners of the ship.</p>
-
-<p>A cabin was immediately found for Priscilla, and
-the wardroom attendants could not sufficiently show
-their zeal and readiness to anticipate her every want.
-Rube, brought before a charming young-looking officer,
-was interrogated as to the how and why of this
-miraculous appearance in mid-Pacific in a boat, at
-night with one woman, but not before he had been
-offered and had refused a glass of grog and a cigar, and
-had accepted instead a plate of soup on the condition
-that some was first given to Priscilla.</p>
-
-<p>So Reuben told his tale to the Captain of the
-man-o’-war, and whether the sentry at the door had
-his ear to the keyhole all the while or not I don’t
-know, but certain it is that almost as <span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</span>soon as Reuben
-retired for the rest of the night to a comfortable
-berth, having first visited Priscilla’s cabin and found
-her supremely happy, his story was the common
-property of the ship’s company, and he could have
-had any one of them shed blood, their own or
-another’s, for him. Of that, of course, there was no
-need, but anyone who knows the British man-o’-warsman,
-officer or seaman, needs not to be told that
-on arrival at Honolulu the paymaster of the <i>Alcestis</i>
-handed over to Reuben a sum of money sufficient
-for all reasonable expenses and fare to Vermont.
-Among those <i>reasonable</i> expenses was included the
-cost of a wedding at the English church, to which
-over one hundred of the <i>Alcestis’</i> crew invited themselves,
-and made those proceedings vibrate with their
-own enthusiasm. I regret to say, though, that after
-escorting the newly wedded pair on board the mail
-steamer bound to ’Frisco, and cheering themselves
-hoarse as she departed, several of those gallant blue-jackets
-were found so full of spirits, animal and
-vegetable, that it became necessary for the preservation
-of the public peace to put them under lock and
-key, with serious results to themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Reuben and his adoring wife had no more
-adventures. They were the heroes of the passengers
-and crew of the <i>Golden Gate</i>, and they had much ado
-to dodge the wily reporters in the Queen City of the
-West. Nor were they able to prevent the appearance
-of their histories (with such extraordinary verbal
-embellishments as the said reporters deemed it
-necessary to add) in the flamboyant local newspapers.
-But in due time they found themselves travelling
-together the quiet moss-grown paths between Boston
-and the home farm, and arriving at the door of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</span>
-Eddy Homestead to be received as the latest and
-best gifts of a loving God to the faithful old couple
-who had never wavered in the long waiting for them,
-nor doubted that they would come. Also it seems
-an anti-climax to record their settling down to a
-happy, useful, and loving life in the old farm of
-Priscilla’s youth, kept in readiness for them by Rube’s
-father against the day of their return.</p>
-
-<p>It was somewhat of a wrench for them to be compelled
-to make a journey to New Bedford and depose
-to the circumstances in which the <i>Grampus</i> was
-lost, and there always remained a sense of something
-incomplete in Reuben’s mind about the early days of
-his departure from New Bedford, and the intervening
-months before awaking on board the <i>Grampus</i>. But
-these ripples made no impression upon the steady
-flow of their stream of happiness. Brother Will came
-to see them from Chicago, portly and full of dollar-talk,
-being almost a millionaire, and departed West
-again, feeling that there was, after all, something
-which even dollars could not buy, and that Rube and
-his sister possessed the chief of those things.</p>
-
-<p>Here let us leave the much-tried pair, nestling
-under the wing of the Loving Father, whose watchful
-care had been over them through all their perils, being
-serenely carried onwards to a golden sunset.</p>
-
-<p class="center">
-<i>Spottiswoode &amp; Co. Ltd., Printers, New-street Square, London.</i><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="WORKS">WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR.</h2>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</span></p>
-
-<h3>WITH CHRIST AT SEA<br />
-A RELIGIOUS AUTOBIOGRAPHY.</h3>
-
-<p class="center">Fifth Edition. Crown 8vo. cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘There is not a dull page in the whole narrative.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Times.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Those who are acquainted with Mr. Bullen’s work will
-know that he cannot fail to compel the attention of his readers.
-He writes with a sincerity and a simplicity which lend a great
-charm to all he does.... He has much to say of the conditions
-of the service in which he spent many years, and most of
-what he tells us is extremely interesting. Moreover, to those
-who love the sea the book is worth reading for its description
-of the varied moods, the storm and stress, the calm benignity,
-the delicate play of the ocean on which this religious life is
-spent.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Daily&nbsp;Telegraph.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Mr. Bullen has told the story of his inner life of faith as it
-grew amid the very real hardships and temptations of his life
-at sea. And by doing so, we do not doubt that he will have
-given to many men and boys the best help a fellow-man can
-give in their own struggle with like circumstance. Had he
-kept his book back for posthumous publication, he would probably
-have considerably lessened, as well as postponed, the
-good it is calculated to do, for the help to be got out of a biography
-is very much increased by the contemporaneousness of
-the experiences it records.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Spectator.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘We count this one of the most daring books ever printed&mdash;a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</span>
-book in which a very powerful writer has risked a great
-reputation for Christ’s sake. It is quite as fascinating as the
-book that made him, only in another kind of way. For simple
-verity, for power to make the thing live before readers, few
-autobiographies have the power of this. We could not put it
-down until we were through with it, and as we were going
-through we could not command our tears. The book will do a
-world of good; and, we say again, the witness is a very brave
-one, manfully borne.’&mdash;
-<span class="smcap">Methodist&nbsp;Times.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘As a human document nothing more interesting of its
-kind has appeared for many years.... No one can doubt on
-reading this book that Mr. Bullen has lived his religion.
-There is so little to be gained by professing to be a Christian
-at sea that a man who does profess to be a Christian probably
-is a Christian. If his rule is made applicable to the author of
-this book the present writer records his impression for what it
-is worth, that Mr. Bullen is one who has lived the Life, and that
-his account of it is interesting and manly.’&mdash;
-<span class="smcap">Daily&nbsp;Chronicle.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘One of the most popular books that he has written....
-Mr. Bullen, as usual, writes with considerable charm, and will
-once again elicit the sympathy and admiration of all who
-peruse his pages.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Westminster&nbsp;Gazette.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 id="THE_APOSTLES_OF_THE_SOUTH-EAST">THE APOSTLES OF THE SOUTH-EAST</h3>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</span></p>
-<p class="center">Second Edition. Crown 8vo. cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The story is touching and impressive, and fully establishes
-what we believe to be the real point about which Mr. Bullen is
-zealous&mdash;that there are no actually Godless corners anywhere
-in the world, simply because though men may forget God, God
-does not forget men, and in some way or other witness is borne
-to the truth of the spiritual life in the darkest times, and the
-most seemingly abandoned places.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Spectator.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘One of the most beautiful religious stories ever written.
-Mr. Bullen’s incomparable knowledge of the details of the
-sailor’s life is displayed as wonderfully as in his earliest books.’&mdash;
-<span class="smcap">British&nbsp;Weekly.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘An inspiring book, and charmingly written.’&mdash;
-<span class="smcap">Methodist&nbsp;Recorder.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘The whole tone of the book is healthy, inspirational, and
-hopeful.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Methodist Times.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘A story as interesting as any that could be written.’&mdash;
-<span class="smcap">Daily&nbsp;News.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘A remarkable book, interesting in the extreme to really
-religious readers as giving a view&mdash;accurate, the writer protests&mdash;of
-a phase of London life very little known and hardly ever
-realised by middle-or upper-class people.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Record.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘No one knows better how to make his characters picturesque,
-and yet actually faithful to nature, than does Mr. Bullen, and
-these humble Christians of the slums of Rotherhithe are
-wonderfully life-like. “The Apostles of the South-East” have
-been drawn from real life, and are sketched with all that vigour
-and fidelity that are so characteristic of the writer.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Rock.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h3 class="nobreak" id="WITH_CHRIST_IN_SAILORTOWN">WITH CHRIST IN SAILORTOWN</h3>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</span></p>
-<p class="center">With Illustrations. Fcp. 8vo. cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘It stands apart from books of a similar kind, not only
-because of the writer’s unique experience of the sailor’s life,
-but because of the high literary gifts which he can bring to his
-task; and it will help the public to know more than they do of
-an excellent work which appeals, above all, to Englishmen.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Literature.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Never has the pathetic side of sailor life been more
-vividly presented.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Birmingham&nbsp;Daily&nbsp;Gazette.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘We congratulate the author without reserve upon the
-judicious and generous use which he has made of his remarkable
-ability and popularity.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Manchester&nbsp;Guardian.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘Everybody should buy it, read, mark, learn, and inwardly
-digest it, and do all in his power to forward the amelioration
-and Christianisation of our merchant seamen, which implies
-the creation of an adequate Royal Naval Reserve.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Queen.</span></p>
-
-<p>‘It is written with sympathy and vivacity; and is full of
-inimitable touches which throw into relief the manly sympathy
-and moral courage of the writer, as well as the peculiar needs
-of the poor fellows of whom he writes at once so wisely and so
-well.’&mdash;<span class="smcap">Leeds&nbsp;Mercury.</span></p>
-</div>
-<hr />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p class="center">London: HODDER &amp; STOUGHTON, 27 Paternoster Row, E.C.</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p>Transcriber's Note:</p>
-<p>A number of typographical errors have been corrected silently.</p>
-<p>Books by the Same Author added to Table of Contents.</p>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A WHALEMAN'S WIFE***</p>
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