Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England




Peter Trawl, the Adventures of a Whaler, by W.H.G. Kingston.

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Peter is a young teenager in a family that suffers a series of
disastrous events.  Family money is lost due to the failure of a bank,
not at all uncommon in those days, probably about 1830.  They lived in
Portsmouth, where the father was a wherryman, ferrying people out to the
ships.  The father meets with an accident, having ferried a passenger to
his ship at anchor outside the harbour, is caught up by freak weather,
which broke up his boat and drowned him.  The mother does what she can,
taking commodities out to the ships for the benefit of the sailors, but
trade was bad at that time, and she became ill, and dies as well.  Thus
the family were left without any support, until a Mr Gray, a Quaker,
comes on the scene, and takes them under his wing.  He is also a
shipowner, and he gives Peter a chance on one of his ships.  However,
there are various mishaps with this ship, and Peter and his friend Jim
arrive in Shetland, an archipelago in the far north of Britain, where
Peter discovers that he has relatives.  He takes a lift in a ship back
to Portsmouth, as the ship was due to call in at Plymouth, but due to
fair weather passes it by.

The ship is a whaler, and needs to get into the Pacific Ocean, but has a
lot of trouble trying to round the Horn.  Eventually they succeed.  But
Peter now has a new ambition, to find his long-lost brother Jack who had
gone to sea years before, and never been heard of.  By chance he hears
that Jack may be alive.  In due course they find Jack, and come home
again with him to Portsmouth, where Mr Gray has kindly looked after the
female members of Peter's family, including his sister Mary.

Of course there are a lot of coincidences in this story, but that's part
of the fun.

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PETER TRAWL, THE ADVENTURES OF A WHALER, BY W.H.G. KINGSTON.



CHAPTER ONE.

MY EARLY DAYS AT HOME.

Brother Jack, a seaman's bag over his shoulders, trudged sturdily ahead;
father followed, carrying the oars, spars, sails, and other gear of the
wherry, while as I toddled alongside him I held on with one hand to the
skirt of his pea-jacket, and griped the boat-hook which had been given
to my charge with the other.

From the front of the well-known inn, the "Keppel's Head," the portrait
of the brave old admiral, which I always looked at with awe and
admiration, thinking what a great man he must have been, gazed sternly
down on us as we made our way along the Common Hard of Portsea towards
the water's edge.

Father and Jack hauled in the wherry, and having deposited their burdens
in her, set to work to mop her out and to put her to rights, while I
stood, still grasping the boat-hook, which I held upright with the point
in the ground, watching their proceedings, till father, lifting me up in
his arms, placed me in the stern-sheets.

"Sit there, Peter, and mind you don't topple overboard, my son," he
said, in the kind tone in which he always spoke to me and Jack.

I was too small to be of much use, indeed father had hitherto only taken
me with him when he was merely going across to Gosport and back or
plying about the harbour.

It was a more eventful day to Jack than to me.  When I saw mother
packing his bag, I had a sort of idea that he was going to sea, and when
the next morning she threw her arms round his neck and burst into tears,
and Jack began to cry too, I understood that he would be away for a long
time.

Jack had been of great use to father, who grieved as much as mother to
part with him, but, as he said, he wouldn't, if he could help it, bring
him up as a long-shore lubber, and a few voyages would be the making of
him.

"He can't get none of the right sort of eddication on shore," observed
father.  "He'll learn on board a man-of-war what duty and discipline
mean, and to my mind till a lad knows that he isn't worth his salt."

The _Lapwing_ brig-of-war, fitted out at Sheerness, had brought up at
Spithead, and her commander, Captain Rogers, with whom father had long
served, meeting him on shore, and hearing that he had a son old enough
to go to sea, offered to take Jack and look after him.

When Commander Rogers was a midshipman, he fell overboard, and would
have been drowned had not father jumped in and saved him.  He was very
grateful, but had not till now had an opportunity of practically showing
his gratitude.  Father, therefore, gladly accepted his offer, being sure
that he would do his best for Jack; and as Blue Peter was flying from
the masthead of the brig, there was no time to be lost in taking him on
board.

At the time I was too young, as I was saying, to understand these
matters, but I learnt about them afterwards.  All I then knew was that
brother Jack was going for a sailor aboard of a man-of-war.

Father and Jack were just shoving off, when two persons who had come out
of the "Keppel's Head" were seen hurrying down the Hard with cases and
packages in their hands and under their arms.  One, as his dress and
appearance showed, was a seafaring man; the other wore long toggery, as
sailors call the costume of landsmen.

"If you are going out to Spithead, my man, we'll go with you," shouted
the first.

"Ay, ay, sir!  I'll be glad enough to take you," answered father, happy
to get a fare, instead of making nothing by the trip.

"We'll give you five shillings apiece," said the officer, for such he
seemed to be.

"Thank you, sir; that will do.  What ship shall I put you aboard?" asked
father.

"The _Intrepid_, South Sea whaler--she's lying to the eastward of the
men-of-war.  We shall see her when we get abreast of Southsea Castle,"
answered the officer.

"Step aboard, then, sir," said father.  "The tide will soon have done
making out of the harbour, and there's no time to lose."

The strangers took their seats in the stern-sheets, and father and Jack,
shoving off, pulled out into the stream.

The officer took the yoke-lines, and by the way he handled them, showed
that he knew what he was about.  Careful steering is always required
where tides run strong and vessels are assembled; but especially was it
at that time, when, peace having been just proclaimed, Portsmouth
Harbour was crowded with men-of-war lately returned from foreign
stations, and with transports and victuallers come in to be discharged;
while all the way up towards Porchester Castle lay, now dismantled in
vast numbers, those stout old ships with names renowned which had borne
the victorious flag of England in many a fierce engagement.  Dockyard
lighters, man-of-war boats, wherries crowded with passengers, and other
craft of various descriptions, were sailing or pulling about in all
directions, so that the stranger had to keep his eyes about him to avoid
being run down by, or running into, some other boat or vessel.

"We'll step the mast, and make sail while we're in smooth water, sir,"
said father.  "There's a lop of a sea outside, when it wouldn't be
pleasant to this gentleman if we were to wait till then," and he gave a
look at the landsman, who even now did not seem altogether comfortable.

"The doctor hasn't been used to the sea, but he'll soon get accustomed
to it.  No fear of that, Cockle, eh?" said the officer, who was, he
afterwards told father, second mate of the _Intrepid_.

"I hope I shall, Mr Griffiths, but I confess I don't much like the
thought of going through those foaming waves out there in such a
cockleshell of a boat as this," answered the doctor.  "No offence to
you, my friend," he added, turning to father.

"Ha!  Ha!  Ha!  That's just what the boat is at present," said the mate,
laughing.  "Do you twig, doctor?  Do you twig?  She carries you and your
fortunes, and if she takes us safe alongside the _Intrepid_--and I see
no reason why she shouldn't--we shall be obliged to her and her owner
here.  What's your name, my man?"

"Jack Trawl, sir; at your service," answered father.  "Many's the time
I've been out to Spithead in this here wherry when it's been blowing
great guns and small arms, and she's ridden over the seas like a duck.
The gentleman needn't be afraid."

The doctor, who did not seem to like the mate's joking, or father's
remark about being afraid, sat silent for some time.

"I'll take the helm, sir, if you please," said father, who had stepped
the mast and hauled aft the sheets.  "My wherry likes me to have hold of
her, and maybe she mightn't behave as well as she should if a stranger
was steering."

"I understand," answered Mr Griffiths, laughing.  "You are wise not to
trust any one but yourself.  I'll yield to you in handling this style of
boat under sail, though I may have been more at sea than you have."

"I doubt that, sir, as I went afloat not long after you were born, if
not before, and for well-nigh thirty years seldom set foot on shore,"
answered father.  "All that time I served His Majesty--God bless him--
and if there was to come another war I'd be ready to serve him again, as
my boy Jack there is just going to do."

"A fine lad he seems, but he'd better by half have joined the merchant
service than submitted to the tyranny of a man-of-war," said the mate.

"There are just two opinions, sir, as to that," answered father, dryly.
"Haul down the tack, Jack, and get a pull of the foresheet," he sang
out.

There was a fresh breeze from the south-east blowing almost up the
harbour, but by keeping over on the Portsmouth side, aided by the tide,
we stood clear out of it.  The wherry soon began to pitch into the seas,
which came rolling in round Southsea Castle in a way which made the
doctor look very blue.  The mate tried to cheer him up, but he evidently
didn't like it, especially when the spray came flying over the bows, and
quickly wet him and most of us well-nigh through to the skin.  Every now
and then more than the mere spray came aboard us, and the doctor became
more and more uncomfortable.

Father now called Jack aft to bale out the water, and he set to work
heaving it overboard as fast as it came in.  I laughed, and did not feel
a bit afraid, because when I looked up at father's face I saw that there
was nothing to be afraid about.  At length the mate seemed to think that
we were carrying on too long.

"Doctor Cockle is not accustomed to this sort of thing," he observed.
"Hadn't we better take in a reef or two?"

"Not if you wish to get aboard your ship, sir, before night," answered
father.  "I know my boat, and I know what she'll do.  Trust me, sir, and
in less than half-an-hour you'll be safe alongside the _Intrepid_."

The mate seemed satisfied, and began talking to me, amused at the way I
sat bobbing, as the spray came aboard, under an old pea-jacket which
father had thrown over my shoulders, and grinning when I found that I
had escaped the shower by which the others got well sprinkled.

"I'll not forget you, my little fellow," he said, laughing.  "You'll
make a prime seaman one of these days.  Will you remember my name?"

"Yes, sir, I think I shall, and your face too," I answered.

"You are a sharp chap, I see," he observed, in the same tone as before.

"Do you intend to make a sailor of him?" he asked, turning to father.

"Not if I can find a better calling for the boy, sir," answered father.
"I've heard say, and believe it, that man proposes and God disposes.  It
mayn't be in my power to choose for him."

"Ay, ay, you're right there, my friend," said the mate.  "If he had been
as old as his brother I would have given him a berth aboard the
_Intrepid_."

It may seem curious that, young as I was, I should have remembered these
remarks, but so it was, and I had reason long afterwards to do so.

Even sooner than father had said we had hooked on to the whaler, a
barque of about three hundred tons, her black hull rising high out of
the water, and with three boats, sharp at both ends, hoisted up to
davits in a line on each side.  The good-natured mate having paid the
fare and given me a bright shilling in addition, helped the doctor, who
wasn't very well able to help himself, up on deck, and we then, shoving
off, stood for the man-of-war brig.

Jack almost broke down as we approached her.  Not that he was unwilling
to go away, but that he was very sorry to part from father and me, and I
know that we were very sorry to part with him.

"Jack, my son," said father, and his voice wasn't as firm as usual, "we
may never meet again on this side the grave.  You may be taken or I may
be taken.  What I want to say to you is this, and they may be well-nigh
the last words you will ever hear me speak.  Ever remember that God's
eye is upon you, and so live that you may be prepared at any moment to
die.  I can't say more than that, my boy.  Bless you.  God bless you."

"I will, father, I will," answered Jack, and he passed the back of his
hand across his eyes.

We were soon up to the brig.  He gave me a hug and a kiss, and then,
having made fast the end of the rope hove to us, he griped father's
hand, and sprang up the side of the brig.  His bag was hoisted up after
him by an old shipmate of father's, who sang out, "All right, Trawl,
I'll look after your boy!"

We had at once to shove off, for the brig was rolling considerably, and
there was a risk of the wherry being swamped alongside.  As we stood
away I looked astern.  Jack had climbed into the fore-rigging and was
waving to us.  We soon lost sight of him.  When, if ever, should we see
him again?

Having the wind and tide with us, we quickly ran back into the harbour.
For reasons which will appear by-and-by I ought to say a few words
respecting my family, though I don't flatter myself the world in general
will be much concerned about the matter.  Some people are said to be
born with silver spoons in their mouths; if that means, as I suppose it
does, that from their earliest days they enjoy all the luxuries of life,
then I may say that when I first saw the light I must have had a very
rough wooden one between my toothless gums.  However, as I've often
since thought, it isn't so much what a man is born to which signifies,
as what he becomes by his honesty, steadiness, perseverance, and above
all by his earnest desire to do right in the sight of God.

My father, Jack Trawl (as he spelt his name, or, rather, as others spelt
it for him, he being no great hand with a pen), was an old
man-of-war's-man.  I well remember hearing him say that his father, who
had been mate of a merchantman, and had been lost at sea when he himself
was a boy, was a Shetlander; and in an old Testament which had belonged
to his mother, and which he had treasured as the only relic of either of
his parents, I found the name written Troil.  The ink was very faint,
but I made out the words clearly, "Margaret Troil, given to her by her
husband Angus."  This confirmed me in the idea I had formed, that both
my father's parents had come from the far off island of Shetland.

My father being a sober, steady man, having saved more of his pay and
prize-money than had most of his shipmates, when he left the service
bought a wherry, hired and furnished a house, and married my mother,
Polly Treherne, the daughter of a bumboat-woman who plied her trade in
Portsmouth Harbour.

I have no cause to be ashamed of my grandmother, for every one who knew
her said, and I am sure of it, that she was as worthy a woman in her
line of life as ever lived.  She gave good measure and charged honest
prices, whether she was dealing in soft tack, fruit, vegetables, cheese,
herrings, or any of the other miscellaneous articles with which she
supplied the seamen of His Majesty's ships; and her daughter Polly, who
assisted her, was acknowledged by all to be as good and kind-hearted as
she was pretty.  No wonder, then, that she won the heart of my brave
father when she visited the ship in which he had just come home, or
that, knowing his worth, although she had many suitors, she consented to
marry him.

For some time all went well, but what happened is a proof that honest,
industrious persons may be overtaken by misfortunes as well as other
people.  Father had no intention that his wife should follow her
mother's calling, as he could make enough to keep the pot boiling; but
after they had been married a few years, and several children had been
born, all of whom died in their infancy, except my eldest brother Jack,
and me and Mary, the two youngest, bad times came.



CHAPTER TWO.

HOW A TRUE FRIEND WAS GAINED.

Just before we two entered this world of troubles, the bank in which my
father had deposited his savings broke, and all were lost.  The sails of
his wherry were worn out, and he had been about to buy a new suit, which
he now couldn't do; the wherry herself was getting crazy, and required
repairs, and he himself met with an accident which laid him up for
several weeks.  Grandmother also, who had lost nearly her all by the
failure of the bank, though she had hitherto been hale and hearty, now
began to talk of feeling the approach of old age.

One evening, while father was laid up, she looked in on us.  "Polly, my
girl, there's no use trying to beat up in the teeth of a gale with a
five-knot current against one," she exclaimed, as, dropping down into
out big arm-chair and undoing her bonnet-strings and the red
handkerchief she wore round her neck, she threw her bonnet over the back
of her head.  "I'm dead beat with to-day's work, and shall be worse
to-morrow.  Now, my dear, what I've got to say is this, I want you to
help me.  You know the trade as well as I do.  It will be a good thing
for you as well as for me; for look you, my dear, if anything should
happen to your Jack, it will help you to keep the wolf from the door."

This last argument, with her desire to help the good old lady, made
mother say that if father was agreeable she would do as grandmother
wished.  She forthwith went upstairs, where father was lying in bed,
scarcely able to move for the pain his hurt caused him.  They talked the
matter over, and he, knowing that something must be done for the support
of the family, gave, though unwillingly, his consent.  Thus it happened
that my mother again took to bum-boating.

Trade, however, wasn't like what it used to be in the war time, I heard
grandmother say.  Then seamen would have their pockets filled with
five-pound notes and golden guineas, which they were eager to spend; now
they rarely had more than a few shillings or a handful of coppers
jingling in them.  Still there was an honest livelihood to be made, and
grandmother and mother contrived to make it.  Poor grandmother, however,
before long fell ill, as she said she should, and then all the work fell
on mother.  Father got better, and was able sometimes to go out with the
wherry, but grandmother got worse and worse, and mother had to attend on
her till she died.

When she and father were away from home, Mary and I were left to the
care of our brother Jack.  He did his best to look after us, but not
being skilled as a nursemaid, while he was tending Mary, who, being a
girl--she was my twin sister, I should have said--required most of his
care, he could not always manage to prevent me from getting into
trouble.  Fortunately nothing very serious happened.

Dear, kind Jack!  I was very fond of him, and generally obeyed him
willingly.  It would not be true to say that I always did so.  He was
very fond of Mary and me too, of that I am sure, and he used to show his
fondness by spending for our benefit any coppers he picked up by running
on errands or doing odd jobs for neighbours.  As his purchases were
usually brandy-balls, rock, and other sweets, it was perhaps fortunate
for us that he had not many to spend.  By diligently pursuing her trade,
mother, in course of time, saved money enough to enable father to get
the wherry repaired, and to buy a new suit of sails, and when he got
plenty of employment he bade mother stay at home and look after Mary and
me, while Jack went with him.  As, however, it would not have been
prudent to give up her business altogether, she hired a girl, Nancy
Fidget, to take her place, as Jack had done, when she was from home.

I don't remember that anything of importance happened after
grandmother's death till Jack went to sea.  We missed him very much, and
Mary was always asking after him, wondering when he would come back.
Still, if I had gone away, she would, I think, have fretted still more.
Perhaps it was because we were twins that we were so fond of each other.
We were, however, not much alike.  She was a fair, blue-eyed little
maiden, with flaxen hair and a rosy blush on her cheeks, and I was a
broad-shouldered, strongly-built chap, the hue on my cheeks and the
colour of my hair soon becoming deepened by my being constantly out of
doors, while my eyes were, I fancy, of a far darker tint than my
sister's.

After Jack went mother seemed to concentrate all her affections on us
two.  I don't think, however, that any woman could have a warmer or
larger heart than hers, although many may have a wider scope for the
exercise of their feelings.  She never turned a beggar away from her
door without some relief even in the worst of times, and when any of the
neighbours were in distress, she always did her best to help them.
Often when she had been out bum-boating for the best part of the day,
and had been attending to household matters for the remainder, she would
sit up the whole night with a sick acquaintance who was too poor to hire
a nurse, and had only thanks to give her, and perhaps of that not very
liberally.

I have said that my mother had as warm and generous a heart as ever beat
in woman's bosom.  I repeat it.  I might give numerous instances to
prove the truth of my assertion, and to show that I have reason to be
proud of being her son, whatever the world may think about the matter.
One will suffice.  It had an important effect on my destinies, although
at the time no one would have supposed that such would be the case.  One
evening, as my mother was returning home off the water after dark, she
found a female fallen down close to our door, in what seemed to be a
fit.  Some of the neighbours had seen the poor creature, but had let her
lie there, and gone indoors, and several persons passing showed by their
remarks what they thought of her character; but mother, not stopping to
consider who she was or what she was, lifting her up in her strong arms,
carried her into the house, and placed her on the bed which used to be
Jack's.

Mother now saw by the light of the candle that the unhappy being she had
taken charge of was still young, and once had been pretty, but the life
she had led had marred her beauty and brought her to her present sad
state.  After mother had undressed her and given her food and a cordial
in which she had great confidence, the girl slightly revived, but it
became more evident than before that she was fearfully ill.  She sobbed
and groaned, and sometimes shrieked out in a way terrible to hear, but
would give no account of herself.  At length, mother, mistrusting her
own skill, sent Nancy and me off to call Dr Rolt, the nearest medical
man we knew of.  He came at once, and shaking his head as soon as he saw
the stranger, he advised that she should be removed forthwith to the
hospital.

"Not to-night, doctor, surely," said mother.  "It might be the death of
her, poor young creature!"

"She may rapidly grow worse, and it may be still more dangerous to move
her afterwards," remarked Dr Rolt.

"Then, please God, I'll keep charge of her till she recovers, or He
thinks fit to take her," said mother, in her determined way.

"She will never recover, I fear," said the doctor; "but I will do the
best for her I can."

Telling mother how to act, and promising to send some medicine, he went
away.  When father, who had been across to Ryde in the wherry, came
home, he approved of what mother had done.

"Why, you see, Jack, what I think is this," I heard her say; "I've no
right to point a finger at her, for if I hadn't had a good mother to
show me right and wrong, I might have been just as she is."

The next morning the doctor came again.  He looked grave when he left
the stranger's room.  "You are still resolved to let this poor outcast
remain in your house, Mrs Trawl?" he asked.

"Yes, sir, my good man thinks as I do, that we ought," answered mother,
positively.

Dr Rolt returned in the afternoon, accompanied by a gentleman wearing a
broad-brimmed hat and a straight-cut broadcloth coat of sombre hue.  He
smiled pleasantly at mother as he took the seat she offered him without
doffing his hat, and beckoning to Mary and me, put his hands on our
heads, while he looked into our faces and smiled as he had done to
mother.

"I have brought Mr Silas Gray, a member of the Society of Friends,
knowing that I should have your leave, Mrs Trawl, as he desires to see
the poor girl you have taken care of," said Dr Rolt.

"Verily, sister, thou hast acted the part of the Good Samaritan towards
the hapless one of whom friend Rolt has told me, and I would endeavour
to minister to her spiritual necessities, the which I fear are great
indeed; also with thy leave I will help thee in supplying such creature
comforts as she may need," said Mr Gray.

"Thank you kindly, sir," answered mother.  "I couldn't say much on the
matter of religion, except to tell her that God cares for her as well as
He does for the richest lady in the land, and will pardon her sins if
she will but turn to Him through Christ; and as to food, kickshaws fit
for sick folk are not much in my way, still I'll--"

"Thou knowest the very gist of the matter, sister," observed Mr Gray,
interrupting her; "but time is precious.  I'll go in with friend Rolt
and speak to the wandering child."  Saying this, Mr Gray accompanied
the doctor into the stranger's room.

He, after this, came again and again--never empty-handed--oftener indeed
than the doctor, whose skill failed, as he feared it would, to arrest
the poor girl's malady, while Mr Gray's ministrations were successful
in giving her the happy assurance that "though her sins were as scarlet,
she had become white as snow," so he assured mother.

"Praise the Lord," was her reply.

So the young stranger died--her name, her history, unknown.  Mr Gray
paid the expenses of her funeral, and frequently after that came to see
us, to inquire, as he said, how we were getting on.

We had not heard from brother Jack since he went aboard the _Lapwing_.
Mother thought that he might have got some one to write for him, though
he was no great hand with a pen himself.  All we knew was that the brig
had gone out to the East Indies, which being a long way off would have
accounted for our not often getting letters from him; but just one
father hoped he would have contrived to send after he had been a year
away; now nearly three years had passed since then.  Had the _Lapwing_
been fitted out at Portsmouth, we should have got news of him from
others, but as none of her crew hailed from our town, there was no one
to whom we could go to ask about him.  Father had taken lately to talk
much about Jack, and sometimes regretted that he had let him go away.

"You acted for the best, and so don't be blaming yourself," observed
mother, trying to console him.  "There's One aloft looking after him
better than we can, and He'll bring our boy back to us if He thinks
fit."

Mary and I little knew all the trials father and mother had to go
through.  Mother's trade was bad, and father was often out all day
without bringing a shilling home.  Younger men with more gaily-painted
boats--he would not acknowledge that they were better--got fares when he
could not manage to pick up one.  Sometimes also he was laid up with the
rheumatics, and was unable to go afloat.  One day, while thus suffering,
mother fetched Dr Rolt to see him.  Father begged the doctor to get him
well as soon as he could, seeing that he wanted to be out in the wherry
to gain his livelihood.

"All in good time, my man," answered the doctor.  "You'll be about again
in a few days, never fear.  By-the-bye, I saw our friend Mr Gray
lately, Mrs Trawl, and he was inquiring for you.  He would have come to
see your husband had he known that he was ill, but he went away to
London yesterday, and may, I fear, be absent for some time.  Many will
miss him should he be long away."

Sooner than father expected he was about again.  I had gone down with
father and mother to the Hard, mother to board a ship which had just
come in, and father to look out for a fare, while Mary remained at home
with Nancy.  It was blowing pretty fresh, and there was a good deal of
sea running outside, though in the harbour the water was not rough
enough to prevent mother from going off.  While she was waiting for old
Tom Swatridge, who had been with grandmother and her for years to bring
along her baskets of vegetables from the market, a gentleman came
hurrying down the Hard, and seeing father getting the wherry ready,
said:

"I want you to put me aboard my ship, my man.  She's lying out at
Spithead; we must be off at once."

"It's blowing uncommon fresh, sir," said father.  "I don't know how
you'll like it when we get outside; still there's not a wherry in the
harbour that will take you aboard drier than mine, though there's some
risk, sir, you'll understand."

"Will a couple of guineas tempt you?" asked the stranger, thinking that
father was doubting about the payment he was to receive.

"I'll take you, sir," answered father.  "Step aboard."

I was already in the boat, thinking that I was to go, and was much
disappointed when father said, "I am not going to take you, Peter, for
your mother wants you to help her; but just run up and tell Ned Dore I
want him.  He's standing by the sentry-box."

As I always did as father bade me, I ran up and called Ned, who at once
came rolling along down the Hard, glad of a job.  When he heard what he
was wanted for he stepped aboard.

"I hope to be back in a couple of hours, or three at furthest, Polly,"
father sang out to mother, as he shoved off the wherry.  "Good-bye,
lass, and see that Peter makes himself useful."

Mother waved her hand.

"Though two guineas are not to be picked up every day, I would as lief
he had stayed in the harbour this blowing weather," she said to herself
more than to me, as on seeing old Tom coming we stepped into her boat.

When father first went to sea, Tom Swatridge had been his shipmate, and
had done him many a kind turn which he had never forgotten.  Old Tom had
lost a leg at Trafalgar, of which battle he was fond of talking.  He
might have borne up for Greenwich, but he preferred his liberty, though
he had to work for his daily bread, and, I am obliged to say, for his
daily quantum of rum, which always kept his pockets empty.  He had
plenty of intelligence, but he could neither read nor write, and that,
with his love of grog, had prevented him from getting on in life as well
as his many good qualities would otherwise have enabled him to do.  He
was a tall gaunt man, with iron-grey hair, and a countenance wrinkled,
battered, and bronzed by wind and weather.

When he first came ashore he was almost as sober a man as father, and
having plenty of prize-money he managed to purchase a small dwelling for
himself, which I shall have by-and-by to describe.  Old Tom taking the
oars, we pulled aboard the _Dartmouth_, forty-two gun frigate, just come
in from the Mediterranean.  Several of the men had been shipmates with
father, and all those belonging to Portsmouth knew mother.  They were
very glad to see her, and she had to answer questions of all sorts about
their friends on shore.  It is the business of a bumboat-woman to know
everything going forward, what ships are likely to be commissioned, the
characters of the captains and officers, when they are to sail, and
where they are going to.  Among so many friends mother drove a brisker
trade than usual, and when the men heard that I was Jack Trawl's son
they gave me many a bright shilling and sixpence, and kind pats on the
head with their broad palms.  "He's a chip of the old block, no doubt
about that, missus," cried one.  "He'll make a smart young topman one of
these days," said another.  Several gave her commissions to execute, and
many sent messages to friends on shore.  Altogether, when she left the
frigate she was in better spirits than she had been for a long time.

Scarcely had we shoved off, however, when down came the rain in
torrents, well-nigh wetting us through.

"It's blowing plaguey hard, missus," observed old Tom, as he tugged away
at the oars, I helping him while mother steered.  "I hope as how we
shall find your good man safe ashore when we gets in."

On reaching the Hard the wherry was not to be seen.  After old Tom had
made fast the boat, wet as she was mother waited and waited in the hopes
that father would come in.  Old Tom remained also.  He seemed more than
usually anxious.  We all stood with our hands shielding our eyes as we
looked down the harbour to try and make out the wherry, but the driving
rain greatly limited our view.

"Hast seen anything of Jack Trawl's wherry?" asked old Tom over and over
again of the men in the different boats, as they came in under their
mizens and foresails.  The same answer was returned by all.

"Maybe he got a fare at Spithead for Gosport and will be coming across
soon, or he's gone ashore at the Point with some one's luggage,"
observed old Tom, trying to keep up mother's spirits; but that was a
hard matter to do, for the wind blew stronger and stronger.  A few
vessels could be seen, under close-reefed canvas, running up the harbour
for shelter, but we could nowhere perceive a single boat under sail.
Still old Tom continued to suggest all sorts of reasons why father had
not come back.  Perhaps he had been detained on board the ship at
Spithead to which he took the gentleman, and seeing the heavy weather
coming on would remain till it moderated.  Mother clung to this notion
when hour after hour went by and she had given up all expectation of
seeing father that evening.  Still she could not tear herself from the
Hard.  Suddenly she remembered me.

"You must be getting wet, Peter," she said.  "Run home, my child, and
tell Nancy to give you your tea and then to get supper ready.  Father
and I will be coming soon, I hope."

I lingered, unwilling to leave her.

"Won't you come yourself, mother?"  I asked.

"I'll wait a bit longer," she answered.  "Go, Peter, go; do as I bid
you."

"You'd better go home with Peter, missus," said old Tom.  "You'll be
getting the rheumatics, I'm afraid.  I'll stay and look out for your
good man."

I had never seen mother look as she did then, when she turned her face
for a moment to reply to the old man.  She was as pale as death; her
voice sounded hoarse and hollow.

"I can't go just yet, Tom," she said.

I did not hear more, as, according to her bidding, I set off to run
home.  I found Mary and Nancy wondering what had kept mother so long.

"Can anything have happened to father?" exclaimed Mary, when I told her
that mother was waiting for him.

"He has been a long time coming back from Spithead, and it's blowing
fearfully hard," I answered.

I saw Nancy clasp her hands and look upwards with an expression of alarm
on her countenance which frightened me.  Her father and brother had been
lost some years before, crossing in a wherry from Ryde, and her widowed
mother had found it a hard matter to keep herself and her children out
of the workhouse.  She said nothing, however, to Mary and me, but I
heard her sighing and whispering to herself, "What will poor missus do?
What will poor missus do?"  She gave Mary and me our suppers, and then
persuaded us to go to bed.  I was glad to do so to get off my wet
clothes, which she hung up to dry, but I could not go to sleep for
thinking what had happened to father.

At length mother came in alone.  She sat down on a chair without
speaking, and her hands dropped by her side.  I could watch her as I
looked out from the small closet in which my bunk was placed.  Even
since I had left her her countenance had become fearfully pale and
haggard.  She shivered all over several times, but did not move from her
seat.

"Won't you get those wet duds of yours off, missus, and have some hot
tea and supper?" asked Nancy, who had been preparing it.

Mother made no reply.

"Don't take on so, missus," said Nancy, coming up to her and putting her
hand affectionately on her shoulder.

"Bless me, you're as wet as muck.  I've put Peter and Mary to bed, and
you must just go too, or you'll be having the rheumatics and I don't
know what.  Do go, missus, now do go."

In vain Nancy pleaded, and was still endeavouring to persuade mother to
take off her wet garments, when I at last fell asleep.  When I awoke in
the morning I saw Nancy alone bustling about the room.  I soon jumped
into my clothes.  My first question was for father.

"He's not yet come back, Peter," she answered.  "But maybe he will
before long, for the wind has fallen, and if he put into Ryde he'd have
waited till now to come across."

"Where's mother?"  I next asked, not seeing her.

"Hush, Peter, don't speak loud," she said in a low tone.  "She's been in
a sad taking all night, but she's quiet now, and we mustn't waken her."

On hearing this I crept about as silent as a mouse till Mary got up, and
then we sat looking at each other without speaking a word, wondering
what was going to happen, while Nancy lit the fire and got breakfast
ready.  At last we heard mother call to Nancy to come to her, not
knowing that Mary and I were on foot.

"I must get up and go and look after my good man," she cried out, in a
voice strangely unlike her own.  "Just help me, Nancy, will you?  What
can have come over me?  I feel very curious."

She tried to rise, but could not, and after making several attempts,
sank back on her bed with a groan.  Mary and I now ran into her room.

"What's the matter, mother dear?" asked Mary, in a tone of alarm.

She gazed at us strangely, and groaned again.

"Missus is, I fear, taken very bad," said Nancy.  "I must run for a
doctor, or she'll be getting worse.  I'm sure I don't know what to do; I
wish I did.  Oh dear!  Oh dear!"

"Let me go," I said, eagerly.  "I know where he lives and you stay and
take care of mother.  I can run faster than you can in and out among the
people in the streets."

Nancy agreed, and I set off.



CHAPTER THREE.

A SAD CHAPTER IN MY LIFE.

As I ran for the doctor I felt that I was engaged in a matter of life
and death, for I had never seen mother ill before.  In my anxiety for
her I almost forgot all about father.  On I rushed, dodging in and out
among the workmen going to their daily toil--there were not many other
persons out at that early hour.  Two or three times I heard the cry of
"Stop thief!" uttered by some small urchins for mischiefs sake, and once
an old watchman, who had overslept himself in his box, suddenly starting
out attempted to seize hold of me, fancying that he was about to capture
a burglar, but I slipped away, leaving him sprawling in the dust and
attempting to spring his rattle, and I ran on at redoubled speed, soon
getting out of his sight round a corner.  At last I reached Dr Rolt's
house and rang the surgery bell as hard as I could pull.  It was some
time before the door was opened by a sleepy maid-servant, who had
evidently just hurried on her clothes.

"Mother wants the doctor very badly," I exclaimed.  "Ask him, please, to
come at once."

"The doctor can't come.  He's away from home, in London," answered the
girl.  "You'd better run on to Dr Hunt's.  Maybe he'll attend on your
mother."

I asked where Dr Hunt lived.  She told me.  His house was some way off,
but I found it at last.  Again I had to wait for the door to be opened,
when, greatly to my disappointment, the maid told me that Dr Hunt had
been out all night and might not be at home for an hour or more.

"Oh dear!  Oh dear!  Who then can I get to see poor mother?"  I cried
out, bursting into tears.

"There's Mr Jones, the apothecary, at the end of the next street.
He'll go to your mother, no doubt," said the maid.  "Don't cry, my boy.
Run on now; the first turning to the left.  You'll see the red and green
globes in his window."

Without stopping to hear more, off I set again.  Mr Jones was in his
dispensary, giving directions to his assistant.  I told him my errand.

"I'll go presently," he answered.  "What's the number?"

Our house had no number, and I could not manage to explain its position
clearly enough for his comprehension.

"Then I'll stay, sir, and show you the way," I said.

"Wait a bit, and I'll be ready," he replied.

He kept me waiting, however, a cruel long time, it seemed to me.  At
last he appeared with his silver-mounted cane in hand, and bade me go
on.

"Stop!  Stop, boy.  I can't move at that rate," he cried out, before we
had got far.  He was a short stout man, with a bald head and grey hair.
I had to restrain my eagerness, and walked slower till we reached our
house.  Nancy was looking out at the door for me, wondering I had not
returned.

"How is mother?"  I asked.

"Very bad, Peter; very bad indeed, I'm afeard," she answered, almost
ready to cry.  Then seeing Mr Jones stop with me, she continued, "Come
in, doctor, come in.  You'll try and cure missus, won't you?"

"I'll certainly do my best when I know what is the matter with her,"
answered Mr Jones, as he followed Nancy into the house.

Mary was with mother.  I stole in after the doctor, anxious to hear what
he would say about her.  He made no remark in her presence, however, but
when he came out of the room he observed in a low voice to Nancy, "You
must keep her quiet.  Let there be nothing done to agitate her, tell her
husband when he comes in.  I'll send some medicine, and pay her another
visit in the afternoon."

"But it's about her husband that she's grieving, sir," said Nancy.  "He
went away to Spithead yesterday morning and has never come back."

"Ah, that's bad," replied Mr Jones.  "However, perhaps he will appear
before long.  If he doesn't, it can't be helped.  You must give her the
medicines, at all events.  I'll write the directions clearly for you."

Poor Nancy had to confess that she could not read.  The doctor then
tried to impress upon her how and when she was to give the physic.

"You'll remember, and there can be no mistake," he added, as he hurried
off.

I fancied that everything now depended on the arrival of the
apothecary's stuff, and kept running to the door looking out for the boy
who was to bring it.  He seemed very long coming.  I had gone
half-a-dozen times when I caught sight, as I turned my eyes the other
way thinking he might have passed by, of Tom Swatridge stumping slowly
up the street.  He stopped when he saw me, and beckoned.  He looked very
downcast.  I observed that he had a straw hat in his hand, and I knew
that it was father's.

"How is mother?" he asked, when I got up to him.

"Very bad," I answered, looking at the hat, but afraid to ask questions.

"The news I bring will make her worse, I'm afeard," he said, in a husky
voice, as he took my hand.  "Peter, you had as good a father as ever
lived, but you haven't got one now.  A cutter just come in picked up
this hat off Saint Helen's, and afterwards an oar and a sprit which both
belonged to the wherry.  I went out the first thing this morning to the
ship your father was to put the gentleman aboard.  He had got alongside
all right, for I saw the gentleman himself, and he told me that he had
watched the wherry after she shoved off till he lost sight of her in a
heavy squall of rain.  When it cleared off she was nowhere to be seen.
So, Peter, my poor boy, there's no hope, I'm afeard, and we shall never
see my old messmate or Ned Dore again."

"Oh, Tom!  Tom!  You don't mean to say that father's gone!"  I cried
out.

"I'd sooner have lost another leg than have to say it," answered the old
man.  "But it must be said notwithstanding, and now how are we to tell
mother?"

I could not answer, but kept repeating to myself, "Gone!  Gone!  Father
gone!" as Tom led me on to the house.  We met the boy with the physic at
the door.

"Let Nancy give her the stuff first," said the old man, thoughtfully;
"maybe it will give her strength, and help her to bear the bad news."

Nancy took in the bottles, while Tom and I remained outside.  After some
time she came out and told Tom that mother wanted to see him.  He went
in, shaking all over so much that I thought he would have fallen.  I
followed, when, seeing Mary, I threw my arms round her neck and burst
into tears.  She guessed what had happened even before I told her.  We
sat down, holding each other's hands and crying together, while Tom went
in to see mother.  What he said I do not know, though I am sure he tried
to break the news to her as gently as he could.  When she saw the hat,
which he still held in his hand, she knew that father was lost.  She did
not go off into fits, as Tom afterwards told me he thought she would,
but remained terribly calm, and just bade him describe to her all that
he knew.

"I mustn't give in," she said at length, "I have the children to look
after, for if I was to go what would become of them?"

"While I'm able to work they shan't want, missus," answered Tom, firmly.

"I know what you'd wish to do, Tom; but there's one thing won't let you:
that thing is liquor," said mother.

"Then I'll never touch another drop as long as I live, missus!"
exclaimed Tom.  "May God help me!"

"He will help you, Tom, if you ask Him," said mother; "and I hope that,
whether I live or die, you'll keep to that resolution."

I believe that conversation with Tom did mother much good; it took her
off from thinking of father.  She was still, however, very ill, and had
to keep her bed.  The doctor came again and again; generally twice a
day.  He of course had to be paid, and a good deal too.  There was
nothing coming in, and poor mother became more and more anxious to get
out and attend to her business.  The doctor warned her that she would go
at great risk--indeed, that she was not fit to leave her bed.  "She had
no money left to pay for food and rent and the doctor's bill," she
answered, and go she must.  Though she had no money, she had, however,
ample credit to stock her bumboat.

Very unwillingly Nancy assisted her to, dress.  Out she would go, taking
me with her to lay in a stock of the articles she required.  People
remarked on her changed looks, and some did not even know her.  She
acknowledged that she was very tired when we got home, but declared that
she should be the better for going on the water.

The next morning old Tom had his boat ready.  "I do wish, missus, that
you'd stayed at home a few days longer," he remarked, looking at her.
"Howsomedever, as you've come, I hopes you'll just take what I say
kindly, and not be from home longer than you can help.  There's dirty
weather coming up from the south-west."

Tom was right.  We had two ships to visit.  Before we got alongside the
second down came the rain.  But mother would go on, and consequently got
wet through.  Tom was very unhappy, but she said that she had done a
good trade, and that no harm would come of it.  Unhappily she was
mistaken; that night she was taken very ill--worse than before.  I
fetched the doctor; he shook his head and said he wouldn't answer for
what might happen.  Faithful Nancy was half distracted.  Poor mother got
worse and worse.  At last one day she beckoned with her pale hand to
Mary and me to come to her bedside.

"I know that I am going to be taken from you, my dears," she said, in a
low voice, for she could not speak loud.  "I want you to promise me to
be true to each other, to do your duty in God's sight, and always to ask
Him to help you."

"I do, mother--I do promise," said Mary, the tears dropping from her
eyes.

She could scarcely speak for sobbing.

"I promise, too, mother, that I do!"  I exclaimed, in a firmer voice;
and I sincerely intended to fulfil my promise.

Mother was holding our hands in hers.  She said much more to us, anxious
to give us all the advice in her power.  Nancy came in with her
medicine, after which she rallied, and bade us go to bed.

I was awakened early in the morning by hearing Nancy cry out, "Run for
the doctor, Peter!  Run for the doctor!  Missus is taken worse."

I slipped into my clothes, and was off like a shot, without asking a
question, or even looking into mother's room.

I rang the night-bell, for no one was up.  At last the servant opened
the door, and said she would call her master.

Mr Jones soon appeared.  He had been paid regularly, and when he saw me
he was the more ready to come.  Eager as I was to get back, I did not
like to run ahead of him; and, to do him justice, he exerted himself to
walk as fast as his breath would allow him.

He asked me several questions; then I told him that mother had been
again out bum-boating.

"Bad--very bad.  I told her not to go.  A relapse is a serious matter,"
he remarked, panting and puffing between his sentences.  "However, we
must try what can be done."

Mary met us at the door.

"Mother has been breathing very hard since you went, Peter," she said,
"but she is quite quiet now."

The doctor's face looked very serious when he heard this.  He hurried
into the room.

"I thought so," I heard him remark to Nancy.  "I could have done nothing
if you had sent for me hours ago.  The woman is dead."

"Oh, dear!  Oh, dear!  What shall I do?" cried Nancy, sobbing bitterly.

"The sooner you let any friends the children may have know what has
happened the better, and then send for the undertaker," answered Mr
Jones.  "The boy is sharp--he'll run your errands.  I can do no more
than certify the cause of death."

He hurried away without bestowing a look at Mary and me, as we stood
holding each other's hands, unable as yet to realise the fact that we
were orphans.  He had so many poor patients that he could not afford, I
suppose, to exercise his compassionate feelings.  Even when Nancy
afterwards took us in to see mother's body, I would scarcely believe
that she herself had been taken from us.

I will not stop to speak of Mary's and my grief.

At last Nancy, her eyes red with crying, sat down, with her hands
pressed against her head, to consider what was to be done.

"Why, I ought to have sent for him at once!" she suddenly exclaimed.
"Peter, run and find Tom Swatridge, and tell him that poor missus has
gone."

I needed no second bidding, and, thankful to have something to do, I
started away.

On reaching the Hard, where I expected to find old Tom, I heard from
some of the watermen that he had gone off with a fare to Gosport, so I
had to wait for his return.  Many of the men standing about asked me
after mother, and seemed very sorry to hear of her death.  I saw them
talking earnestly together while I waited for Tom.  Others joined them,
and then went away, so that the news soon spread about our part of the
town.  I had to wait a long time, till old Tom came back with several
persons in his boat.  He pocketed their fares, touching his hat to each
before he took any notice of me.

"What cheer, Peter?  How's the missus?" he asked, stepping on shore and
dropping the kedge to make fast his boat.  "I feared she wouldn't be up
to bum-boating to-day."

"Mother's dead," I answered.

"Dead!  The missus dead!" he exclaimed, clapping his hand to his brow,
and looking fixedly at me.  "The Lord have mercy on us!"

"Nancy wants you, Tom," I said.

"I'm coming, Peter, I'm coming.  I said I'd be a father to you and Mary,
and I will, please God," he replied, recovering himself.

He took my hand, and stumped away towards our house.

"Dick Porter, look after my boat, will ye, till I comes back?" he said
to one of the men on the Hard as we hurried by.

"Ay, ay," was the cheerful answer--for Dick knew where old Tom was
going.

Not a word did the old man speak all the way.  When we got to the house,
what was my astonishment to find a number of people in the sitting-room,
one of whom, with note-book in hand, was making an inventory of the
furniture!  Mary was sitting in a corner crying, and Nancy was looking
as if she had a mind to try and turn them all out.  As soon as Mary saw
me she jumped up and took my hand.

"What's all this about?" exclaimed old Tom, in an indignant tone.  "You
might have stopped, whatever right you may have here, till the dead
woman was carried to her grave, I'm thinking."

"And others had carried off the goods," answered the man with the
note-book.  "We are only acting according to law.  Mrs Trawl has run
into debt on all sides, and when the goods are sold there won't be five
shillings in the pound to pay them, that I can see, so her children must
take the consequences.  There's the workhouse for them."

"The work'us, do ye say?  Mrs Trawl's children sent to the work'us!"
exclaimed old Tom, and he rapped out an expression which I need not
repeat.  "Not while this here hand can pull an oar and I've a shiner in
my pocket.  If you've got the law on your side, do as the law lets you.
But all I can say is, that it's got no bowels of compassion in it, to
allow the orphans to be turned out of house and home, and the breath
scarce out of their mother's body.  Nancy, do you pack up the children's
clothes, and any school-books or play-things you can find, and then come
along to my house.  The law can't touch them, I suppose."

"What is that drunken old Swatridge talking about?" said one of the
broker's men.

Tom heard him.

"Such I may have been, but I'll be no longer `drunken old Swatridge'
while I have these children to look after," he exclaimed; and giving one
hand to Mary and the other to me, he led us out of the house.



CHAPTER FOUR.

A FEARFUL CATASTROPHE.

Leaving Nancy, who could well hold her own, to battle with the broker's
men, Tom, holding Mary by the hand, and I walked on till we came to his
house, which I knew well, having often been there to call him.  It
consisted of two small rooms--a parlour, and little inner bedchamber,
and was better furnished than might have been expected; yet old Tom had
at one time made a good deal of money, and had expended a portion of it
in fitting up his dwelling.  Had he always been sober he would now have
been comfortably off.

"Stay here, my dears, while I go out for a bit," he said, bidding us sit
down on an old sea-chest on one side of the fireplace.  "I haven't got
much to amuse you, but here's the little craft I cut out for you, Peter,
and you can go on rigging her as I've been doing.  No matter if you
don't do it all ship-shape.  And here, Mary, is the stuff for the sails;
I've shaped them, you see, and if you will hem them you'll help us
finely to get the craft ready for sea."

Mary gladly undertook the task allotted to her, and even smiled as Tom
handed out a huge housewife full of needles and thread and buttons, and
odds and ends of all sorts.

"My thimble won't suit your finger, I've a notion, my little maid," he
observed; "but I dare say you've got one of your own in your pocket.
Feel for it, will you?"

Mary produced a thimble, six of which would have fitted into Tom's.

"Ay, I thought so," he said, and seeing us both busily employed, he
hurried out of the house.  He soon, however, returned, bringing a couple
of plum buns for Mary, and some bread and cheese for me, with a small
jug of milk.  "There, my dears, that'll stay your hunger till Nancy
comes to cook some supper for you, and to put things to rights," he
said, as he placed them before us.  "Good-bye.  I'll be back again as
soon as I can," and off he went once more.

Mary and I, having eaten the provisions he brought in, worked away
diligently, thankful to have some employment to occupy our attention.
But she stopped every now and then, when her eyes were too full of tears
to allow her to see her needle, and sobbed as if her dear heart would
break.  Then on she went again, sewing as fast as she could, anxious to
please old Tom by showing him how much she had done.  At length Nancy
arrived with a big bundle on her back.  "I've brought away all I could,"
she said, as she deposited her load on the floor.  "I'd a hard job to
get them, and shouldn't at all, if Tom Swatridge and two other men
hadn't come in and said they'd be answerable if everything wasn't all
square.  He and they were ordering all about the funeral, and I've got
two women to stay with the missus till she's put all comfortable into
her coffin.  Alack!  Alack!  That I should have to talk about her
coffin!"  Nancy's feelings overcame her.  On recovering, she, without
loss of time, began to busy herself with household duties--lighted the
fire, put the kettle on to boil, and made up old Tom's bed with some
fresh sheets which she had brought.  "You and I are to sleep here,
Mary," she said, "and Peter is to have a shakedown in the sitting-room."

"And where is Tom going to put up himself?"  I asked.

"That's what he didn't say but I fancy he's going to stay at night with
an old chum who has a room near here.  He said his place isn't big
enough for us all, and so he'd made up his mind to turn out."

Such I found to be the case.  Nothing would persuade our friend to sleep
in his own house, for fear of crowding us.  He and several other
watermen, old shipmates, and friends of father's, had agreed to defray
the expenses of mother's funeral, for otherwise she would have been
carried to a pauper's grave.  Her furniture and all the property she had
possessed were not sufficient to pay her debts contracted during her
illness, in spite of all her exertions.  We, too, had not Tom taken
charge of us, should have been sent to the workhouse, and Nancy would
have been turned out into the world to seek her fortune, for her mother
was dead, and she had no other relatives.  She did talk of trying to get
into service, which meant becoming a drudge in a small tradesman's
family, that she might help us with her wages; but she could not bring
herself to leave Mary; and Tom, indeed, said she must stay to look after
her.  As father had had no funeral, his old friends wished to show all
the respect in their power to his widow, and a score or more attended,
some carrying the coffin, and others walking two and two behind, with
bits of black crepe round their hats and arms, while Mary and I, and
Nancy and Tom, followed as chief mourners all the way to Kingston
Cemetery.  Nancy, with the help of a friend, a poor seamstress, had
managed to make a black frock for Mary and a dress for herself, out of
mother's gown, I suspect.  They were not very scientifically cut, but
she had sat up all night stitching at them, which showed her affection
and her desire to do what she considered proper.

Some weeks had passed since mother's death, and we were getting
accustomed to our mode of life.  Tom sent Mary to a school near at hand
every morning, and she used to impart the knowledge she obtained to me
in the evening, including sometimes even sewing.

During the time Mary was at school Nancy went out charing, or tending
the neighbours' children, or doing any other odd jobs of which she was
capable, thus gaining enough to support herself, for she declared that
she could not be beholden to the old man for her daily food.  I always
went out with Tom in his boat, and I was now big enough to make myself
very useful.  He used to make me take the helm when we were sailing, and
by patiently explaining how the wind acted on the canvas, and showing me
the reason of every manoeuvre, soon taught me to manage a boat as well
as any man could do, so that when the wind was light I could go out by
myself without the slightest fear.

"You'll do, Peter; you'll do," said the old man, approvingly, when one
day I had taken the boat out to Spithead alongside a vessel and back, he
sitting on a thwart with his arms folded, and not touching a rope,
though he occasionally peered under the foot of the foresail to see that
I was steering right, and used the boat-hook when we were going
alongside the vessel, and shoving off, which I should have had to do if
he had been steering.  "You'll now be able to gain your living, boy, and
support Mary till she's old enough to go out to service, if I'm taken
from you, and that's what I've been aiming at."

Often when going along the Hard a friend would ask him to step into one
of the many publics facing it to take a glass of spirits or beer.  "No
thank ye, mate," he would reply; "if I get the taste of one I shall be
wanting another, and I shouldn't be happy if I didn't treat you in
return, and I've got something else to do with my money instead of
spending it on liquor."

I never saw him angry except when hard pressed by an ill-judging friend
to step into a public-house.

"Would you like to see Jack Trawl's son in a ragged shirt, without shoes
to his feet, and his daughter a beggar-girl, or something worse?  Then
don't be asking me, mate, to take a drop of the poisonous stuff.  I know
what I used to be, and I know what I should be again if I was to listen
to you!" he exclaimed.  "Stand out of my way, now!  Stand out of my way!
Come along, Peter," and, grasping my hand with a grip which made my
fingers crack, he stumped along the Hard as fast as he could move his
timber toe.

It was a pleasure on getting home to find Mary looking bright and
cheerful, with her work or books before her, and Nancy busy preparing
supper.  The old man and I always took our dinner with us--generally a
loaf of bread, with a piece of cheese or bacon or fried fish, and
sometimes Irish stew in a basin, done up in a cloth, and a stone bottle
of water.  I remember saying that I was born with a wooden spoon in my
mouth, but when I come to reflect what excellent parents I had, and what
true friends I found in Tom Swatridge and Nancy, I may say that, after
all, it must have been of silver, though perhaps not quite so polished
as those found in the mouths of some infants.

Another change in my life was about to occur.  We had taken off a
gentleman from Gosport.  From his way of speaking, we found that he was
a foreigner, and he told us that he wanted to be put on board a foreign
ship lying at Spithead.

"Is dere any danger?" he asked, looking out across the Channel, and
thinking what a long distance he had to go.

"Not a bit, sir," answered Tom, for the water was as smooth as a
mill-pond.  There was a light air from the southward, and there was not
a cloud in the sky.  "We might cross the Channel to France for that
matter, with weather like this."

"Oh no, no!  I only want to get to dat sheep out dere!" cried the
foreigner, fancying that we might carry him across against his will.

"Certainly, mounseer; we'll put you aboard in a jiffy as soon as we gets
a breeze to help us along," said Tom.

We pulled round Blockhouse Point, along shore, till we came off Fort
Monkton, when opening Stokes Bay, the wind hauling a little to the
westward, we made sail and stood for Spithead.  A number of vessels were
brought up there, and at the Mother-bank, off Ryde, among them a few
men-of-war, but mostly merchantmen, outward bound, or lately come in
waiting for orders.  It was difficult as yet to distinguish the craft
the foreigner wanted to be put aboard.

"It won't matter if we have to dodge about a little to find her,
mounseer, for one thing's certain: we couldn't have a finer day for a
sail," observed old Tom, as we glided smoothly over the blue water,
shining brightly in the rays of the unclouded sun.

He gave me the helm while he looked out for the foreign ship.

"That's her, I've a notion," he said at length, pointing to a
deep-waisted craft with a raised poop and forecastle, and with much
greater beam than our own wall-sided merchantmen.  "Keep her away a bit,
Peter.  Steady!  That will do."

The tide was running to the westward, so that we were some time getting
up to the ship.

"You'll be aboard presently, if that is your ship, as I suppose,
mounseer," said Tom.

"Yes, yes; dat is my sheep," answered the foreigner, fumbling in his
pockets, I fancied, for his purse.

He uttered an exclamation of annoyance.  "Ma monie gone!  Some villain
take it, no doubte.  You come aboard de sheep, and I vill give it you,
my friend," he said.  "One half guinea is de charge, eh?  I have also
letter to write; you take it and I vill give two shillings more."

"All right, mounseer, I will wait your pleasure, and promise to post
your letter," answered Tom.

As there were several boats alongside, he told me to keep under weigh
till he should hail me to come for him, and as he was as active as any
man, in spite of his wooden leg, taking the foreigner by the hand, he
helped him up on deck.  I then hauled the tacks aboard and stood off to
a little distance.  I waited and waited, watching the ship, and
wondering why Tom was so long on board.

The wind at last began to drop, and afraid of being carried to leeward,
I was on the point of running up alongside when I heard a fearful
roaring thundering sound.  A cloud of black smoke rose above the ship,
followed by lurid names, which burst out at all her ports; her tall
masts were shot into the air, her deck was cast upwards, her sides were
rent asunder; and shattered fragments of planks, and of timbers and
spars, and blocks, and all sorts of articles from the hold, came flying
round me.  I instinctively steered away from the danger, and though huge
pieces of burning wreck fell hissing into the water on either side, and
far beyond where I was, none of any size touched the wherry.  For a
minute or more I was so confounded by the awful occurrence that I did
not think of my old friend.  I scarcely knew where I was or what I was
doing.  The moment I recovered my presence of mind I put the boat about,
getting out an oar to help her along, and stood back towards the burning
wreck, which appeared for a moment like a vast pyramid of flame rising
above the surface, and then suddenly disappeared as the waters closed
over the shattered hull.

I stood up, eagerly gazing towards the spot to ascertain if any human
beings had survived the dreadful catastrophe, though it seemed to me
impossible that a single person could have escaped.  One boat alone was
afloat with some people in her, but they were sitting on the thwarts or
lying at the bottom, not attempting to exert themselves, all more or
less injured.  The other boats had been dragged down, as the ship sank.
All about were shattered spars and pieces of the deck, and some way off
the masts with the yards still fast to them.  Here and there was a body
floating with the head or a limb torn off.  One man was swimming, and I
saw another in the distance clinging to a spar, but the former before I
could get up to him sank without a cry, and I then steered for the man
on the spar, hoping against hope that he might be old Tom.  I shouted to
him that he might know help was coming, but he did not answer.  Meantime
boats from the various ships lying around were approaching.  I plied my
oar with all my might, fearing that the man I have spoken of might let
go his hold and be lost like the other before I could reach him.  The
nearer I got the more I feared that he was not Tom.  His face was
blackened, his clothes burnt and torn.  Then I saw that he had two legs,
and knew for certain that he was not my old friend.  Still, of course, I
continued on till I got up to the spar, when I tried to help the poor
man into my boat, for he was too much hurt to get on board by himself.
But my strength was insufficient for the purpose, and I was afraid of
letting go lest he should sink and be lost.  There was no small risk
also of my being dragged overboard.  Still, I did my best, but could get
him no higher than the gunwale.

"Well done, youngster!  Hold fast, and we'll help you," I heard a voice
sing out, and presently a man-of-war's boat dashing up, two of her crew
springing into the wherry quickly hauled the man on board.

"We must take him to our ship, lads, to let the surgeon attend to him,"
said the officer, a master's mate in charge of the man-of-war's boat.

The man was accordingly lifted into her.  It appeared to me, from his
sad condition, that the surgeon would be unable to do him any good.

"What, did you come out here all by yourself, youngster?" asked the
officer.

"No, sir, I came out with old Tom Swatridge, who went on board the ship
which blew up," I answered.

"Then I fear he must have been blown up with her, my lad," said the
officer.

"I hope not, sir, I hope not," I cried out, my heart ready to break as I
began to realise that such might be the case.



CHAPTER FIVE.

A FRIEND LOST AND A FRIEND GAINED.

It seemed but a moment since the ship blew up.  I could not believe that
old Tom had perished.

"Some people have been picked up out there, sir, I think," observed the
coxswain to the officer, pointing as he spoke to several boats
surrounding the one I had before remarked with the injured men in her.
"Maybe the old man the lad speaks of is among them."

"Make the wherry fast astern, and we'll pull on and ascertain," said the
officer.

"If he is not found, or if found is badly hurt, I'll get leave for a
couple of hands to help you back with your boat to Portsmouth."

"I can take her back easily enough by myself if the wind holds as it
does now; thank you all the same, sir," I answered.

I felt, indeed, that if my faithful friend really was lost, which I
could scarcely yet believe, I would rather be alone; and I had no fear
about managing the wherry single-handed.

As may be supposed, my anxiety became intense as we approached the boat.
"Is old Tom Swatridge saved?"  I shouted out.

No answer came.

"Tom!  Tell me, Tom, if you are there!"  I again shouted.

"Step aboard the boat and see if your friend is among the injured men,"
said the good-natured officer, assisting me to get alongside.

I eagerly scanned the blackened faces of the men sitting up, all of whom
had been more or less scorched or burnt.  A surgeon who had come off
from one of the ships was attending to them.  They were strangers to me.
Two others lay dead in the bottom of the boat, but neither of them was
old Tom.  He was gone, of that I could no longer have a doubt.

With a sad heart I returned to the wherry.  The other boats had not
succeeded in saving any of the hapless crew.  The ship had been loaded
with arms and gunpowder, bound for South America, I heard some one say.

"Cheer up, my lad!" said the officer; "you must come aboard the
_Lapwing_, and we'll then send you into Portsmouth, as we must have this
poor fellow looked to by our surgeon before he is taken to the
hospital."

The name of the _Lapwing_ aroused me; she was the brig in which my
brother Jack had gone to sea.  For a moment I forgot my heavy loss with
the thoughts that I might presently see dear Jack again.  But it was
only for a moment.  As I sat steering the wherry towed by the
man-of-war's boat my eyes filled with tears.  What sad news I had to
give to Jack!  What would become of Mary and Nancy?  For myself I did
not care, as I knew that I could obtain employment at home, or could go
to sea; but then I could not hope for a long time to come to make enough
to support them.  My chief feeling, however, was grief at the loss of my
true-hearted old friend.

Soon after we got alongside the brig of war the master's mate told me to
come up on deck, while one of the men took charge of the wherry.  He at
once led me aft to the commander, who questioned me as to how I came to
be in the wherry by myself.  I described to him all that had happened.

"You acted a brave part in trying to save the man from the ship which
blew up.  Indeed, had you not held on to him he would have been lost,"
he observed.  "I must see that you are rewarded.  What is your name?"

"Peter Trawl, sir," I answered, and, eager to see Jack, for whom I had
been looking out since I got out of the boat, thinking that we should
know each other, I added, "I have a brother, sir, who went to sea aboard
this brig, and we have been looking out for him ever so long to come
home.  Please, sir, can I go and find him?"

The commander's countenance assumed a look of concern.  "Poor fellow!  I
wish that he was on board for his sake and yours, my lad," he answered.
"I cannot say positively that he is dead, but I have too much reason to
believe that he is.  While we were cruising among the islands of the
East Indian Archipelago he formed one of a boat's crew which was, while
at a distance from the ship, attacked by a large body of Malay pirates.
When we got up we found only on man, mortally wounded, in the bottom of
the boat, who before he died said that, to the best of his belief, the
officer in charge and the rest of the men had been killed, as he had
seen several dragged on board the proas, and then hacked to pieces and
hove overboard.

"We chased and sank some of the pirate fleet, and made every possible
search for the missing men, in case any of them should have escaped on
shore, to which they were close at the time of the attack, but no traces
of them could be discovered.  I left an account of the occurrence with
the vessel which relieved me on the station, and should any of the poor
fellows have been found I should have been informed of it.  It was my
intention, as soon as I was paid off the _Lapwing_, to come down to
Portsmouth to break the news to his father.  Say this from me, and that
I yet hope to see him shortly."

Commander Rogers seemed very sorry when I told him that father and
mother were both dead.  He asked me where I lived.  I told him, as well
as I could describe the house, forgetting that, too probably, Mary and I
and Nancy would not be long allowed to remain there.

"When I commission another ship, would you like to go with me, my lad?"
he asked.

"Very much, sir," I answered.  "But I have a sister, and I couldn't go
away with no one to take care of her; so I must not think of it now Tom
Swatridge has gone.  All the same, I thank you kindly, sir."

"Well, well, my lad; we will see what can be done," he said, and just
then a midshipman came up to report that the boat was ready to carry the
rescued man, with the surgeon, to the shore.

I found that the master's mate, Mr Harvey, and one of the men were
going in my boat, and of course I did not like to say that I could get
into the harbour very well without them.  I touched my hat to the
commander, who gave me a kind nod--it would not have done for him, I
suppose, to shake hands with a poor boy on his quarter-deck even if he
had been so disposed--and then I hurried down the side.

I made sail, and took the helm just as if I had been by myself, Mr
Harvey sitting by my side, while the seaman had merely to rig out the
mainsail with the boat-hook, as we were directly before the wind.

"You are in luck, youngster," observed Mr Harvey; "though you have lost
one friend you've gained another, for our commander always means what he
says, and, depend on it, he'll not lose sight of you."

He seemed a very free-and-easy gentleman, and made me tell him all about
myself, and how we had lost father and mother, and how Tom Swatridge had
taken charge of Mary and me.  His cheerful way of talking made me dwell
less on my grief than I should have done had I sailed into the harbour
all alone.

"I should like to go and see your little sister and the faithful Nancy,"
he said, "but I must return to the brig as soon as that poor man has
been carried to the hospital, and I have several things to do on shore.
Land me at the Point, you can find your way to the Hard by yourself,
I've no doubt."

"The boat would find her way alone, sir, she's so accustomed to it," I
answered.

We ran in among a number of wherries with people embarking from the
Point or landing at it.  The Point, it should be understood by those who
do not know Portsmouth, is a hard shingly beach on the east side, at the
mouth of the harbour, and there was at that time close to it an old
round stone tower, from which an iron chain formerly extended across to
Blockhouse Fort, on the Gosport side, to prevent vessels from coming in
without leave.

"Here, my lad, is my fare," said Mr Harvey, slipping half a guinea into
my hand as he stepped on shore, followed by the seaman; "it will help to
keep Nancy's pot boiling till you can look about you and find friends.
They will appear, depend on it."

Before I could thank him he was away among the motley crowd of persons
thronging the Point.  I was thankful that no one asked me for old Tom,
and, shoving out from among the other boats, I quickly ran on to the
Hard.

When I landed the trial came.  A waterman had gained an inkling of what
had occurred from one of the crew of the _Lapwings_ boat, and I was soon
surrounded by people asking questions of how it happened.

"I can't tell you more," I answered, at length breaking from them.
"Tom's gone, and brother Jack's gone, and I must go and look after poor
Mary."

It was late by the time I reached home.  Nancy had got supper ready on
the table, and Mary had placed old Tom's chair for him in a snug corner
by the fire.  They saw that something was the matter, for I couldn't
speak for a minute or more, not knowing how to break the news to them.
At last I said, with a choking voice, pointing to the chair, "He'll
never sit there more!"

Dear me, I thought Mary's and Nancy's hearts would break outright when
they understood what had happened.  It was evident how much they loved
the rough old man--I loved him too, but in a different way, I suppose,
for I could not ease my heart by crying; indeed I was thinking about
what Mary and Nancy would do, and of brother Jack's loss.  I did not
like to tell Mary of that at first, but it had to come out, and, strange
as it may seem, it made her think for the time less about what was to us
by far the greater loss.  Supper remained long untasted, but at last I
felt that I must eat, and so I fell to, and after a time Nancy followed
my example and made Mary take something.

Nancy then began to talk of what we must do to gain our living, and we
sat up till late at night discussing our plans.  There was the wherry,
and I must get a mate, and I should do very well; then we had the house,
for we never dreamed that we should not go on living in it, as we were
sure Tom would have wished us to do.  Nancy was very sanguine as to how
she could manage.  Her plain, pock-marked face beamed as she spoke of
getting three times as much work as before.  Short and awkward as was
her figure, Nancy had an heroic soul.  Mary must continue to attend
school, and in time would be able to do something to help also.

We talked on till we almost fell asleep on our seats.  The next morning
we were up betimes.  Nancy got out some black stuff we had worn for
mother, a piece of which she fastened round my arm to show respect to
old Tom's memory, and after breakfast I hurried out to try and find a
mate, that I might lose no time in doing what I could with the wherry.
I had thought of Jim Pulley, a stout strong lad, a year or two older
than myself, who, though not very bright, was steady and honest, and I
knew that I could trust him; his strength would supply my want of it for
certain work we had to do.  Jim was the first person I met on the Hard.
I made my offer to him; he at once accepted it.

"To tell the truth, Peter, I was a-coming to say, that if thou hadst not
got any one to go in the place of Tom Swatridge, I would help thee till
thou art suited for nothing, or if thou wilt find me in bread and cheese
I'll be thankful."

In a few minutes after this Jim and I were plying for hire in the
harbour, and we had not long to wait before we got a fare.  The first
day we did very well, and I gave Jim a quarter of what we took, with
which he was perfectly content.

"I wouldn't ask for more, Peter," he said, "for thou hast three mouths
to feed, and I have only one."

The next few days we were equally successful; indeed I went home every
evening in good spirits as to my prospects.  I made enough for all
expenses, and could lay by something for the repairs of the wherry.

Though Jim and I were mere boys, while the weather was fine people took
our boat as willingly as they did those of grown men.  Sometimes we got
parties to go off to the _Victory_, at others across to the Victualling
Yard, and occasionally up the harbour to Porchester Castle.

We worked early and late, and Jim or I was always on the look-out for a
fare.

When I got home at night I had generally a good account to give of the
day's proceedings.  Now and then I asked Jim in to take a cup of tea,
and many a hearty laugh we had at what the ladies and gentlemen we had
taken out had said and done.  Seeing that we were but boys they fancied
that they could talk before us in a way they wouldn't have thought of
doing if we had been grown men.

It must not be supposed that we were able to save much, but still I put
by something every week for the repairs of the boat I had got enough to
give her a fresh coat of paint, which she much wanted, and we agreed
that we would haul her up on Saturday afternoon for the purpose, so that
she would be ready for Monday.

We carried out our intentions, though it took every shilling I had put
by, and we lost more than one fare by so doing.  But the wherry looked
so fresh and gay, that we hoped to make up for it the next week.  Jim
went to chapel on the Sunday with Mary and Nancy and me, and spent most
of the day with us.  He was so quiet and unassuming that we all liked
him much.  As we had put plenty of dryers in the paint, and the sun was
hot on Sunday, by Monday forenoon we were able to ply as usual.  We had
taken a fare across to Gosport, when a person, whom we supposed to be a
gentleman from his gay waistcoat and chains, and his top-boots, and hat
stuck on one side, came down to the beach and told us to take him over
to Portsea.  We soon guessed by the way he talked that, in spite of his
fine clothes, he was not a gentleman.

"I say, you fellow, do you happen to know whereabouts an old chap, one
Tom Swatridge, lives?" he asked of Jim.

"He doesn't live anywhere; he's dead," answered Jim.

"Dead!  Dead, do you say?" he exclaimed.  "Who's got his property?"

"He had no property that I knows on," answered Jim; "except, maybe--"

"Oh yes, he had; and if the old fellow had lived he would have been the
possessor of a good round sum; but, as I am his nephew, that will be
mine, and everything else he left behind him, the lawyer, Master
Six-and-eightpence, as I call him, tells me."

All this time I had not liked to say anything, but the last remark made
me feel very uncomfortable.  The speaker presently took a letter out of
his pocket, and, reading it, said, "Ah!  I see Mr Gull is the man I've
got to go to.  Can you show me where Mr Gull, the attorney, lives?" he
asked of Jim; "he'll settle up this matter."

Jim made no answer, for we were getting near the shore, and had to keep
out of the way of two craft coming up the harbour.  We soon ran up to
the Hard, when the man, stepping out, offered Jim a sixpence.

"A shilling's the fare, sir," said Jim, keeping back his hand.

"No, no, you young rascal!  I know better; but I'll give you another
sixpence if you will show me the way to Mr Gull's."

"You may find it by yourself," answered Jim, indignantly, as he picked
up the sixpence thrown to him by our fare, who walked off.

"Half a loaf is better than no bread, Peter, so it's as well not to lose
the sixpence," said Jim, laughing.  "But no gentleman would have offered
less than a shilling.  I wonder whether he really is old Tom's nephew?"



CHAPTER SIX.

TURNED OUT OF HOUSE AND HOME.

We had just landed the gaily-dressed individual who had announced
himself the nephew of old Tom Swatridge.  Thinking that he might
possibly be the person he said he was, and not knowing what tricks he
might play, I was intending to row home, when a gentleman, with two
young ladies and a boy, who I knew by their dress to be Quakers, came
down, wishing to take a row round the harbour, and afterwards to visit
the Victualling Yard.

After we had pulled off some way, I asked if they would like to go
aboard the _Victory_.

"No, thank thee, young friend, we take no pleasure in visiting scenes,
afloat or on shore, where the blood of our fellow-creatures has been
shed," answered the gentleman.

As he spoke I thought by his look and the tone of his voice that he must
be Mr Silas Gray, who had come to our house when the poor girl mother
took in was dying, but I did not like to ask him.  The young people
called him father.  At last he began to ask Jim and me questions, and
how, young as we were, we came to have a boat by ourselves.

"I suppose thy father is ill on shore?" he said.

Then I told him how he was lost at Spithead, and mother had died, and
old Tom had been blown up, and I had taken his wherry, seeing there was
no one else to own her; and how Mary and Nancy and I lived on in his
house.

"And art thou and this other lad brothers?" he inquired.

"No, sir; but Jim Pulley and I feel very much as if we were," I
answered.  "My name is Peter Trawl."

"And was thy mother a bumboat-woman, a true, honest soul, one of the
excellent of the earth?" he asked.

"Ay, ay, sir!  That was my mother," I said, my heart beating with
pleasure to hear her so spoken of.

Then he told me that he was Mr Silas Gray, and asked if I remembered
the visits he used to pay to our house.  Of course I did.  The young
ladies and his son joined in the conversation, and very pleasant it was
to hear them talk.

We were out the whole afternoon, and it was quite late when we got back
to Portsea.  Mr Gray said that he was going away the next morning with
his family to London, but that when he returned he would pay Mary a
visit, and hoped before the summer was over to take some more trips in
my wherry.  He paid us liberally, and he and the young people gave us
kind smiles and nods as they stepped on shore.

While we were out I had not thought much about the fare we had brought
across from Gosport in the morning, but now, recollecting what he had
said, I hurried home, anxious to hear if he had found out the house.  I
had not to ask, for directly I appeared Nancy told me that while Mary
was at school an impudent fellow had walked in and asked if old Tom
Swatridge had once lived there, and when she said "Yes," had taken a
note of everything, and then sat down and lighted his pipe, and told her
to run out and bring him a jug of ale.

"`A likely thing, indeed!'  I answered him," said Nancy; "`what!  When I
come back to find whatever is worth taking carried off, or maybe the
door locked and I unable to get in!'  The fellow laughed when I said
this--a nasty sort of a laugh it was--and said, `Ay!  Just so.'  I
didn't know exactly what he meant, but presently he sang out, `What!
Are you not gone yet, gal?'  `No, and I shan't,' I answered; `and when
Peter and Jim come in you'll pretty quickly find who has to go.'  On
this he thundered out, trying to frighten me, `Do you know that I am old
Tom Swatridge's nephew and heir-at-law,' [I think that's what he called
himself], `and that this house and everything in it is mine, and the
wherry, and any money the old chap left behind him?  I'll soon prove
that you and your brother are swindlers, and you'll be sent off to
prison, let me tell you.'  He took me for Mary, do you see, Peter; and I
was not going to undeceive him?  I felt somewhat nonplussed when he said
this, but without answering I walked to the window, working with my
needle as I was doing when he came in, and looked out as if I was
expecting you and Jim to be coming.  I would give him no food, nor even
a drink of water; so at last he grew tired, and, saying I should see him
again soon, swinging his cane and whistling, he walked away."

"What do you think, Peter?  Can he really be old Tom's nephew?" asked
Mary, when Nancy ceased speaking.

"One thing is certain, that if he proves himself to be so we shall be
bound to turn out of this house, and to give up the wherry," I answered.

"Oh, Peter!  What shall we do, then?" exclaimed Mary.

"The best we can, my sister," I said.  "Perhaps the man may not be able
to prove that he is what he calls himself.  I have heard of impostors
playing all sorts of tricks.  We'll hope for the best.  And now, Nancy,
let us have some supper."

Though I tried to keep up the spirits of Mary and Nancy, I felt very
anxious, and could scarcely sleep for thinking on the subject.  Whatever
might happen for myself I did not care, but I was greatly troubled about
what Mary and Nancy would do.  I naturally thought of Commander Rogers,
from whom all this time I had heard nothing, though he had promised to
come and see after Mary and me.  Mr Gray had said that he was going
away again, so that I could not obtain advice from him.  "I have God to
trust to, that's a comfort," I thought, and I soon dropped off to sleep.

The next morning I remained at home to a later hour than usual.  Just as
I was going out a man came to the door, who said he was sent by Lawyer
Gull, and put a paper into my hand, which he told me was a something I
could not exactly make out, to quit the house within twenty-four hours.
"His client, the owner of the property, wishes not to act harshly, so
refrains from taking stronger measures at present," said the clerk, who,
having performed his task, went away.  I stopped a few minutes to talk
with Mary and Nancy.  Mary said quietly that if we must go we must, and
that we had better look out for cheap lodgings at once.  Nancy was very
indignant, and declared that we had no business to turn out for such a
scamp as that.  Old Tom had never spoken of having a nephew; she did not
believe the fellow was his nephew, and certainly, if he was, Tom would
not have left his property to him.  She advised me, however, to go out
and try to get advice from some one who knew more about the law than she
did.  I accordingly set off for the Hard, where I was sure to find
several friends among the watermen.  I had not got far when I met Jim
Pulley, looking very disconsolate.

"What is the matter, Jim," I asked.

"We've lost the wherry!" he exclaimed, nearly blubbering.  "Two big
fellows came down, and, asking what boat she was, told me to step
ashore: and when I said I wouldn't for them, or for any one but you,
they took me, crop and heels, and trundled me out of her."

"That is only what I feared," I said.  "I was coming down to find some
one to advise us what to do."

"Then you couldn't ask any better man than Bob Fox, he's been in prison
half a score of times for smuggling and such like, so he must know a
mighty deal about law," he answered.

We soon found Bob Fox, who was considered an oracle on the Hard, and a
number of men gathered round while he expressed his opinion.

"Why, you see, mates, it's just this," he said, extending one of his
hands to enforce his remarks; "you must either give in or go to prison
when they brings anything agen you, and that, maybe, is the cheapest in
the end; or, as there's always a lawyer on t'other side, you must set
another lawyer on to fight him, and that's what I'd advise to be done in
this here case.  Now I knows a chap, one Lawyer Chalk, who's as sharp as
a needle, and if any man can help young Peter and his sister to keep
what is their own he'll do it.  I'm ready to come down with some shiners
to pay him, for, you see, these lawyer folk don't argify for nothing,
and I'm sure some on you who loves justice will help Jack and Polly
Trawl's children; so round goes the hat."

Suiting the action to the word, Bob, taking off his tarpaulin, threw a
handful of silver into it, and his example being followed by a number of
other men, he grasped me by the hand, and set off forthwith to consult
Lawyer Chalk.

We quickly reached his office.  Mr Chalk, a quiet-looking little man,
with easy familiar manners, which won the confidence of his illiterate
constituents, knowing Bob Fox well, received us graciously.  His eyes
glittered as he heard the money chink in Bob's pocket.

"It's all as clear as a pikestaff," he observed, when he heard what I
had got to say.  "They must prove first that this fellow who has turned
up is Tom Swatridge's nephew; then that he is his heir-at-law, and
finally that the house and boat belonged to the deceased.  Now
possession is nine-tenths of the law; you've got them, and you must hold
them till the law turns you out."

"I couldn't, sir, if another has a better right to them than I have," I
answered.  "I lived on in the house and used the wherry because I was
sure that old Tom would have wished me to do so, but then I didn't know
that he had any relation to claim them."

"And you don't know that he has any relation now," said Mr Chalk; "that
has to be proved, my lad.  The law requires proof; that's the beauty of
the law.  The man may swear till he's black in the face that he is the
deceased's nephew, but if he has no proof he'll not gain his cause."

Bob Fox was highly delighted with our visit to the lawyer.

"I told you so, lad; I told you so!" he exclaimed, rubbing his hands;
"t'other chap will find he has met his match.  Bless you!  Old Chalk's
as keen as a razor."

As I could not use the wherry, I went home feeling in much better
spirits than before about our prospects.  I was able even to cheer up
Mary and Nancy.  I told them that, by Lawyer Chalk's advice, we were not
to quit the house, and that he would manage everything.  No one appeared
during the day.  The next morning we had breakfast as usual, and as the
time went by I was beginning to hope that we should be unmolested, when
two rough-looking men came to the door, and, though Nancy sprang up to
bar them out, in they walked.  One of them then thrust a paper out to
her, but she drew back her hand as if it had been a hot iron.  The man
again attempted to make her take it.  "One of you must have it," he
growled out.

"No, no!  I couldn't make head or tail of it if I did," answered Nancy,
still drawing back.

"Let me have it," I said, wishing to know what the men really came for.

"The sum total is, that you and the rest of you are to move away from
this, and if you don't go sharp we're to turn you out!" exclaimed the
bailiff, losing patience at the time I took to read the document.  "It's
an order of ejectment, you'll understand."

"Don't you mind what it is, Peter!" exclaimed Nancy; "Mr Chalk said we
was to stay here, and stay we will for all the scraps of paper in the
world!"  And Nancy, seating herself in a chair, folded her arms, and
cast defiant looks at the officers of the law.

They were, however, up to the emergency.  Before either she or I were
aware of what they were about to do, they had secured her arms to the
back of the chair, and then, lifting it and her up, carried her out of
the house and deposited her in the street, in spite of the incautious
attempt I made to effect a rescue.  The moment I got outside the house
one of the bailiffs, turning round, seized me in a vice-like grasp, and
the other then entering, led out Mary, who saw that resistance was
hopeless.  He next walked back, took the key from the door, and, having
locked it, released Nancy and re-entered the house with the chair.
Before Nancy could follow him he had shut himself in, while his
companion, letting me go with a shove which sent me staggering across
the street, walked off, I concluded to tell the lawyer who sent him and
his mate that they had got possession of the house.

Nancy was standing, with her fists clenched, too much astonished at the
way she had been treated to speak.  Mary was in tears, trembling all
over.

"Oh, Peter, what are we to do?" she asked.

"I'll go to Lawyer Chalk and hear what he says," I answered.  "If the
house and boat ought to be ours, he'll get them back; if not, I can't
say just now what we must do.  Meantime do you and Nancy go to Widow
Simmons's, and wait there.  She was always a friend of mother's, and
will be glad to help you."

Mary agreed, but Nancy, who at length found her tongue, declared that
she wasn't going to lose sight of the house, and that she would stay
where she was and watch and tell the folks who passed how we had been
treated.  As nothing I could say would induce her to move, I accompanied
Mary to the widow's, where I left her, and hastened on to Mr Chalk's.
The lawyer made a long face when I told him how we had been treated.

"I told you that `possession is nine-tenths of the law,' my lad, and now
they are in and you are out," he answered.  "It's a bad job--but we'll
see what can be done.  We must obtain at all events your clothes, and
any other private property you may possess.  Now go, my lad, and call
upon me in a week or two; I shall see Bob Fox in the meantime."

Soon after leaving the lawyer's I met Jim Pulley.  Having seen Nancy, he
was fuming with indignation at our having been turned out of our home,
and proposed trying to break into the house to regain possession, but I
had sense enough to know that we must abide by the law, whichever way
that decided I found Nancy still keeping watch before the door, and
vehemently appealing to all who would stop to listen to her.  It was
with some difficulty that I at length persuaded her to go with me to
Mrs Simmons's.  The kind widow was willing to give us shelter, and as
Mary had fortunately my savings in her pocket, we had sufficient to pay
for our food for some days.  The next morning Mary went as usual to
school; Nancy left the house, saying that she was going to look for
work, and I set out, hoping to find employment in a wherry with one of
the men who knew me.



CHAPTER SEVEN.

HELP COMES WHEN LEAST EXPECTED.

I found it more difficult to obtain employment with wages sufficient to
support Mary and me, not to speak of Nancy, than I had expected.  Jim
and I tried to hire a boat, but we could not obtain one to suit us for
any sum we could hope to pay.  Ours, for so we still called her, had
been carried off, and locked up in a shed at Portsmouth.  He and I
picked up a sixpence or a shilling now and then, but some days we got
nothing.  There was a great risk of our becoming what my father had so
strongly objected to "long-shore loafers."  I would not desert Jim, who
had served me so faithfully, and so we tried, as far as we could, to
work together.  Sometimes he talked of going off to sea, but as I could
not leave Mary his heart failed him at the thought of going without me.
At the time appointed I called on Lawyer Chalk.

"Sorry to say we are beaten, my lad," were the words with which he
greeted me.  "I fought hard, but there's no doubt that Mr Gull's client
is the nephew of Tom Swatridge, who died intestate, consequently his
nephew is his heir.  Had the old man wisely come to me I would have
drawn up a will for him, securing his property to you or any one he
might have desired.  I am very sorry for you, but law is law, and it
can't be helped.  I hope that you will find employment somewhere soon.
Good-day to you."  And he waved me out of his office.

In consequence of his failure in my cause, Lawyer Chalk sank
considerably in the estimation of Bob Fox and his friends, who declared
that the next time they wanted legal advice they would try what Lawyer
Gull could do for them.  I should have said that a day or two before he
had sent a clerk armed with due authority to accompany Nancy and Mary,
who brought away our clothing and all the articles which we had
purchased with our own money.  Curiously enough, I did not again set
eyes on Mr Eben Swatridge, who was, I understood, the son of a younger
brother of old Tom, who had gone into business in London and made money.
Some property having been left to the two brothers, or to the survivor
of either, Eben had been compelled to make inquiries respecting his long
unrecognised uncle, and had thus been induced to pay the visit to
Portsea which had produced such disastrous results to Mary and me.

The house and furniture and wherry were sold, and directly afterwards he
disappeared from Portsmouth.  Perhaps he thought it wise to keep out of
the way of Bob Fox and the other sturdy old salts who supported me.  Not
that one of them would have laid a finger on him, and Mary and I agreed
that, far from having any ill-feeling, we should have been ready, for
his uncle's sake, to have been friends if he had explained to us at the
first who he was and his just rights in a quiet way.  We had now a hard
struggle to make the two ends meet.  Mrs Simmons fell ill, and Mary,
who could no longer go to school, had to attend on her, and I had to
find food and, as it turned out, to pay her rent, she being no longer
able to work for her own support.  I did not grumble at this, for I was
grateful to her for her kindness to us; but though we stinted ourselves
to the utmost, we often had not a sixpence in the house to buy fit
nourishment for the poor old lady.  Nancy was ready to slave from
morning to night, but was often unsuccessful in obtaining work, so that
she made scarcely enough to support herself; she might have got a
situation, but she would not leave Mary.  Whenever honest Jim Pulley
could save a shilling he brought it, as he said, for the widow, though I
knew that besides his wish to help her he was much influenced by his
regard for us.  I often thought when the winter came what he and I
should do then.  I did not say anything to Mary about the future, but
tried to keep up her spirits, for I saw that her cheek was becoming
pale, and she was growing thinner and thinner every day.  At last one
morning, when I had got up just at daylight, and having taken a crust of
bread and a drink of water for breakfast, was about to go out in search
of work, Nancy came into the room, and said--

"I don't know what has come over Mary, but she has been talking and
talking ever so strangely all night, and her cheek is as hot as a live
cinder."

I hurried into the little back room Mary and Nancy occupied next to the
widow's.  A glance told me that my dear little sister was in a high
fever.  My heart was ready to burst, for she did not know me Mrs
Simmons was too ill to get up and say what she thought of its nature.

"I must run for the doctor, Nancy," I exclaimed; "there's not a moment
to lose;" and snatching up my hat I rushed out of the house, assured
that Nancy would do her best in the meantime.

I had caught sight of Dr Rolt passing along the street on the previous
day, so I knew that he was at home, and I felt more inclined to go to
him than to Mr Jones.  I ran as I had not run for a long time, and no
one ventured to stop me now.  The doctor was on foot, early as was the
hour.  He remembered mother and Mary and me the moment I mentioned my
name.

"I'll come to see your little sister directly," he said.

I waited for him, fearing that he might not find the house.  He was soon
ready, and, considering his age, I was surprised how well he kept up
with me.  I eagerly ushered him into the house.  He had not been long
with Mary before he sent me off to the chemist to get some medicine, for
which I had fortunately enough in my pocket to pay.  When I came back he
gave it to her himself, and said that he would send some more in the
evening; but he would not tell me what he thought of her.

I will not dwell on this unhappy time.  The doctor came twice every day
and sometimes oftener, but Mary seemed to be getting no better.  I had
to go out to get work, but all I could make was not sufficient for our
expenses, and I had to run into debt, besides which the widow's rent was
due, and she could not pay it.

One day Jim brought me a few shillings, which he said the watermen had
given him, but times were bad with most of them, and they could do but
little.  This enabled me to get some things absolutely necessary for
Mary and food for the rest of us.  The landlord called two or three
times for rent, and at last said that he must put in a distress if it
was not paid.  The thought of what the consequence of this would be to
Mary made me tremble with fear.  Ill as she and Mrs Simmons were, their
beds might, notwithstanding, be taken from beneath them.  The widow
might be carried off to the workhouse, and we should be turned into the
street I begged hard for delay, and promised that I would do all I could
to raise the money.  The landlord replied that he would give us two days
more, but would not listen to anything further I had to say.  The doctor
had just before called, so that I could not then tell him of our
difficulty.  He had not yet given me any assurance that he thought Mary
would recover.  Nancy could not leave the house, as she was required
every moment to attend on her and Mrs Simmons.  I was not likely to
find Dr Rolt till the evening, so I determined to consult Jim and Bob
Fox.  I soon met Jim; he was ready to cry when I told him.  He scratched
his head and rubbed his brow, in vain trying to suggest something.

"Bob can't help us either," he said, at length.  "He's got into trouble.
Went away three days ago over to France in a smuggling lugger, the
_Smiling Lass_, and she was catched last night with tubs aboard, so he's
sure to want all the money he can get to pay Lawyer Chalk to keep him
out of prison, if that's to be done, but I'm afeared even old Chalk will
be nonplussed this time."

"I wonder whether Lawyer Chalk would lend me the money," I said.

"Might as well expect to get a hen's egg out of a block of granite,"
answered Jim.

On inquiry I found that all my friends from whom I had the slightest
hope of assistance were away over at Ryde, Cowes, or Southampton.

"I tell you, Peter, as I knowed how much you wanted money, I'd a great
mind to go aboard the _Smiling Lass_ t'other day, when Bob axed me.
It's a good job I didn't, isn't it?"

"I am very glad you didn't, not only because you would have been taken,
but because you would have broken the law," I answered.  "Father always
set his face against smuggling."

"Yes, maybe he did," said Jim, who did not see that smuggling was wrong
as clearly as I did.  "But now what's to be done?"

"We'll go down to the Hard, and try to pick up a job," I answered.  "A
few pence will be better than nothing."

We each got a job in different boats.  The one I was in took some
passengers over to Ryde, and thence some others to Spithead and back, so
that it was late when I got home with a shilling and a few pence in my
pocket.  Mary was no better.  The doctor had been, and Nancy had told
him of the landlord's threats, but he had made no remark.

"I'll tell you what I'll do, Nancy," I said; "I'll offer the landlord
this shilling when he comes to-morrow to show that I am in earnest, and
perhaps he will let us off for another day or two."

"Better hear what the doctor thinks when he comes in the morning.  I
don't think that he'll allow Mary and Widow Simmons to have their beds
taken from under them.  Cheer up, Peter!  Cheer up!"

I did cheer up a little when Jim came in and brought another shilling,
his day's earnings, declaring that he'd had a good dinner, and had still
some coppers in his pocket to pay for the next day's breakfast.  He,
however, could not resist eating some bread and cheese which Nancy
pressed on him before he went away.

I could scarcely close my eyes for thinking of what the morrow might
bring forth.  About midnight Nancy came in and told me that Mary was
sleeping more calmly than she had done since she was taken ill.  Hoping
that this was a good sign my mind became less disquieted, and I fell
asleep.  The next morning the usual hour for the doctor's coming passed
and he did not appear.  We waited and waited, anxious to know whether
Mary really was better.  At last there came a knocking at the door, and
in walked the landlord, with a couple of men at his heels.

"Have you the rent ready, good people?" he asked, in a gruff tone.

"No, sir; but I have two shillings, and I promise to pay as much as I
can every day till you've got what you demand," I said, as fast as I
could speak.

The men laughed as I said this.

"Two shillings!  That won't go no way, my lad," cried the landlord.
"Let me see, why this old pot and kettle and the cups and plates, and
table and chairs, and everything in this room won't sell for more than
half my demands, so we must have the bedsteads and bedding and a chest
of drawers or so; and as the old woman in there won't ever be able to
pay me more rent, she and all of you must turn out with what remains!
So now, Crouch and Scroggins, do your duty."

The moment he had entered the house Nancy, passing behind me, had locked
Mary's and Mrs Simmons's doors, and having put the keys in her pocket,
had slipped into the scullery or little back kitchen, where we often
cooked in summer.  One of the men was in the act of placing one chair
upon another, and his companion was approaching Mary's room, when
suddenly Nancy rushed out of the back kitchen with a red-hot poker in
her hand, and placing herself before it, exclaimed--

"Step an inch nearer if ye dare, ye cowards!  Out on ye, Mr Grimes, to
come and disturb a fever-sick girl and an old dying woman for the sake
of a few filthy shillings!  Peter here has offered you some, and has
promised to pay you more when he can get them, and I promise too; and
now let me see if one of you dare to lay a finger on any of Missus
Simmons's things!  Get out of this house!  Get out of this house, I
say!"

And she began flourishing her poker and advancing towards the intruders
in a way which made them beat a rapid retreat towards the door, Mr
Grimes scrambling off the first, and shouting out--

"Assault and battery!  I'll make you pay for this, you young vixen!"

"I don't mind your salt and butter, nor what you call me either," cried
Nancy; and she was just slamming the door behind them, when two persons
appeared as if about to enter, one of whom exclaimed, in a voice which I
recognised as that of Dr Rolt--

"Why, my good girl, what is all this about?"

"They said that they was a-going to take Mary's and the widow's beds and
all the things away, sir, and I wouldn't let them," she answered,
panting and still grasping the hot poker.

"Verily, daughter, thou hast taken a very effectual way of preventing
them," said the other person, who I now saw to my great joy was Mr
Silas Gray.  He and the doctor at once entered the house.

"Now listen to me, damsel," he continued.  "Thou hast been prompted by
affectionate zeal to defend thy friends, I doubt not, but nevertheless
thou hast acted illegally, and the consequences to thyself may be
serious; however, I will say no more on the subject at present.  Put
back thy weapon into the fireplace and attend on friend Rolt, who
desires to see his patients."

I saw Mr Gray and the doctor exchange smiles as Nancy, producing the
keys from her pocket, unlocked the doors.  He now, observing me, said--

"Tell me, my lad, how all this happened.  I thought that thou wast doing
well with thy wherry."

So while the doctor was seeing Mary and Mrs Simmons, I gave him an
exact account of all that had happened since the day he and his family
were out with Jim and me on the water.  I had just finished, when the
doctor came into the room.

"I can give you a favourable account of your young sister, my lad," said
Dr Rolt.  "Her patience and obedience, aided by Nancy's care, have been
much in her favour, and she will, I trust, shortly recover.  As soon as
she has gained sufficient strength our friend Mr Gray wishes her to be
removed to his house, and Nancy can remain here to look after the poor
widow, whose days on earth are numbered."

"Oh, thank you, gentlemen; thank you!"  I exclaimed, my heart swelling
so that I could scarcely utter the words.

"And what about yourself, my son?" asked Mr Gray.

"Oh, Jim and I will try to rub on together, and I'll try to pay the
widow's rent as I promised, if you'll speak a word, sir, to Mr Grimes
and get him not to press for payment," I answered.

"Set thy mind at rest on that point.  I will satisfy the demands of the
widow's landlord," said Mr Gray; and he then added, "Come to my house
to-morrow, and I will meantime consider what can be done to put you in
the way of gaining your daily bread.  I desire to show thee that I am
pleased with thy conduct, but it were small kindness were I to enable
thee to live in idleness."

Again thanking Mr Gray from the bottom of my heart, I said, "What I
want, sir, is work.  Help me to get that, and it will be all I ask."

Before going away Mr Gray saw Mary for a short time, and paid a long
visit to poor Mrs Simmons, which she said did her heart good.

I had never felt so happy in my life, and could not resist going out to
tell Jim Pulley.

"Ask him to set thee up with a wherry and we'll go out together again as
we used to do.  That will be fine, and we'll be as merry as two
crickets!" he exclaimed.

"I think I ought to leave it with him," I answered.  "A wherry costs a
lot of money, and he has already been very generous, though I should
like him to do as you propose, and I promise you, Jim, whatever he
proposes, to stick by you."

"That's all I care for," answered my friend.

He accompanied me to the door, but would not come in for fear of
disturbing Mary.

The next day I went to see Mr Gray, who lived in a pretty house some
way out of Portsmouth.  He and his daughters received me very kindly.
He had, he said, been considering what he could do for me.  He would
obtain a wherry for me, but he considered that the life of a waterman
was not suited to a lad like me, and he then said that he was a
shipowner, and was about to despatch a brig in a few days to the coast
of Norway for timber, and that, if I pleased, he would send me on board
her as an apprentice.  Also, as he considered that I was already a
seaman, he would give me a trifle of pay.  Remembering what my father
used to say about not wishing Jack "to become a long-shore lubber," I at
once replied that I would thankfully have accepted his offer, but that I
could not desert Jim Pulley, who would well-nigh break his heart, if I
were to go away without him.

"Nor need thee do that, my son," he answered.  "I will provide a berth
also for thy friend on board the _Good Intent_, and he and thou need not
be parted.  I approve of thy constancy to him and of his faithfulness to
thee.  A long-shore life, such as thou wouldst lead if thou wast owner
of a wherry, would be dangerous if not demoralising, albeit thou might
live comfortably enough."

"But, sir, what will my sister do without me when she recovers and
leaves you, and where will Nancy go when the widow dies?"

"I will be chargeable for both of them.  Set thy mind at rest on that
point.  Should I be called away--and no man knows how long he has to
live--I will direct my daughters to watch over them.  Thou and thy
friend Jim can, in the meantime, follow thy vocation of watermen, so
that thou mayest eat the fruit of thy labours, which is sweeter far to
brave hearts like thine than food, bestowed in charity."

I did my best to thank Mr Gray as I ought, and hastened back to tell
Mary and Nancy and Jim.

"I'd have gone with thee, Peter, even if it had been to Botany Bay, or
any of them outlandish parts," exclaimed Jim, when I told him what Mr
Gray had promised.  "I am glad; yes, I am glad!"

We both tried at once to get employment, and did very well that
afternoon and on the two following days.

When I got home on the evening of the last I found that a message had
been left by Mr Gray when he visited the widow and Mary, directing Jim
and me to go the next morning at nine o'clock on board the _Good
Intent_, which had just come into the Commercial Dock.  I hastened off
to tell Jim at once.  As may be supposed, we were up betimes, and as we
got to the dock before the hour appointed we were able to examine the
_Good Intent_ at our leisure.  She was a fair enough looking craft, but
as she was deep in the water, having only just begun to discharge a
cargo of coals brought from the north, and had a dingy appearance, from
the black dust flying about, we could not judge of her properly.

As the bells of Saint Thomas's Church began to strike nine we stepped on
board, and directly afterwards Mr Gray, followed by a short, broad,
oldish man, who had not a bit the look of a skipper, though such I
guessed he was, came out of the cabin.

"Right!  Punctuality saves precious hours," said Mr Gray, with an
approving nod.  "These are the lads I desire to commit to thy care,
Captain Finlay.  Instruct them in their duties, so that they may become
able seamen, and they will repay thy teaching."

"I'll act justly by the laddies, Mr Gray, but there's an auld saying
that `ye canna make a silk purse out of a sow's ear.'  If they dinna
keep their wits awake, or if they ha' na wits to keep awake, all the
teaching in the world will na make them sailors."

"They are fair sailors already, and thou wilt find them handy enough, I
hope," observed Mr Gray.

After putting a few questions, Captain Finlay told us to come aboard the
next day but one with our bags, by which time the cargo would be
discharged.  We set off home greatly pleased, though puzzled to know how
we should obtain a decent kit.  With Nancy's help, I might be pretty
well off, but poor Jim had scarcely a rag to his back besides the
clothes he stood in.  In the evening, however, a note came from Mr Gray
with an order on an outfitter to give us each a complete kit suited to a
cold climate.  We were not slow to avail ourselves of it.  The next day
Dr Rolt considered Mary sufficiently well to be removed, and Mr Gray
sent a closed carriage to convey her to his house.  The doctor told me
to be ready to accompany her, and kindly came himself.  It was the first
time I had ever been in a coach, and the rolling and pitching made me
feel very queer.  The young ladies received us as if we had been one of
themselves, and Mary was carried up into a pretty, neat room, with white
dimity curtains to the bed, and the fresh air blowing in at the open
window.

"I'll leave her to you, now, Miss Hannah," said the doctor.  "This is
all she requires, with your watchful care."

After I had had a short talk with Mary alone I took my leave, and Miss
Hannah told me to be sure to come back and see them before the _Good
Intent_ sailed.  It was not likely I should forget to do that.

Jim and I now went to live on board the brig.  We had plenty of work,
cleaning out the hold and getting rid of the coal-dust, and then we
scrubbed the deck, and blacked down the rigging, and painted the
bulwarks and masts, till the change in the appearance of the dingy
collier was like that of a scullery-maid when she puts on her Sunday
best.  We did not mind the hard work, though it was a good deal harder
than any we had been accustomed to, but the master and the rest of the
crew set us a good example.  There was little grumbling, and what
surprised me, no swearing, such as I had been accustomed to hear on the
Hard.  Captain Finlay would not allow it, and the mate supported him in
checking any wrong expressions which some of the men had been in the
habit of uttering.

I got leave to run up and see Mary and to bid Nancy and Mrs Simmons
good-bye.  Miss Hannah and her sisters seemed to be making a great deal
of Mary.  It was evident they liked her much, and I was not surprised at
that.  The widow I never expected to see again.  Nancy would scarcely
let me go.

"Oh, Peter, Peter!  What should us do if anything was to happen to ye
out on the cruel sea!" she cried, as she held my hand and rubbed her
eyes with her apron.

The next day the _Good Intent_ went out of harbour, and I began in
earnest the seafaring life I was destined to lead.



CHAPTER EIGHT.

MY FIRST VOYAGE.

Wind south-south-west.  The North Foreland had been rounded; the
countless craft, of all sizes and rigs, generally to be found off the
mouth of the Thames, had been cleared, and the _Good Intent_, with
studding-sails alow and aloft, was standing across the German Ocean.

Jim and I soon found our sea-legs, and were as well able to go aloft to
reef topsails as the older hands.  We were already well up to the
ordinary duties of seamen, and could take our place at the helm with any
of them.

"Mr Gray was not mistaken about thee, laddie," said the captain to me
one day as I came aft to the wheel.  "Go on as thou hast begun; obey
God, and thou wilt prosper."

I was much pleased with this praise, for the old man was not given to
throwing words away.  While I steered he stood by telling me not only
what to do then, but how to act under various circumstances.  At other
times he made me come into the cabin and gave me lessons in navigation
to fit me to become a mate and master.  Jim, being unable to read, and
showing no aptitude for learning, had not the same advantages.  We both
of us lived forward with the men, some of whom were a little jealous of
the favour I received, and not only played me tricks, ordered me to do
all sorts of disagreeable jobs, and gave me a taste of the rope's-end on
the sly, but tried hard to set Jim against me.  They soon, however,
found out that they were not likely to succeed, for though Jim did not
mind how they treated him, he was always ready to stick up for me.

The forecastle of the _Good Intent_ was thus not a paradise to either of
us.  The greater number of the men were, however, well-disposed, and it
was only when they were on deck that the others dared to behave as I
have described, while, as we would not complain, the mate knew nothing
of what was going forward below.  I remember thinking to myself, "If
these sort of things can be done on board a ship, with a
well-disciplined crew and a good captain and mate, how hard must be the
lot of the unhappy boys serving in a craft where the captain, officers,
and men are alike brutal!"  Jim was always ready to oblige, and I did my
best to win over my enemies by trying to show that I did not mind how
they treated me, and I soon succeeded.

We were, I should have said, bound out to Bergen, on the coast of
Norway, for a cargo of hides, tallow, salt fish, and spars, which we
were to carry to London.  The weather had hitherto been fine, a great
advantage to Jim and me, as we had time to learn our duties and to get
accustomed to going aloft before our nerves and muscles were put to any
severe test.

But though the sea was smooth, the breeze, which had at first carried us
briskly along, shifted to the northward, so that we made but slow
progress.  Now we stood on one tack, now on the other, the wind each
time heading us.  At last the grumblers began to declare that we should
never make our port.

"The old craft has got a run of ill-luck, there's something worse
a-going to happen," said Sam Norris, one of my chief persecutors, as
during his watch below he sat with his arms folded on his chest in the
fore-peak.  "I seed a black cat come aboard the night afore we left the
docks, and no one knows that she ever went ashore again."

Some of the men looked uncomfortable at Sam's statement, but others
laughed.

"What harm could the black cat do, if she did come aboard?"  I inquired.
"Probably she came to look for rats, and having killed all she could
find, slipped ashore again unseen by any one."

"I didn't say a she-cat.  It looked like a big tom-cat; but who knows
that it was really a cat at all?" said Sam.

"If it wasn't a tom-cat, what was it?" asked Bob Stout, a chum of Sam's.

"Just what neither you nor I would like to meet if we had to go down
into the hold alone," said Sam, in a mysterious tone.

Just then the watch below was summoned on deck to shorten sail.  Not a
bit too soon either, and we were quickly swarming aloft and out on the
yards.

To reef sails in smooth water is easy enough, but when the ship is
pitching into the fast-rising seas and heeling over to the gale, with
the wind whistling through the rigging, blocks rattling, ropes lashing
about, the hard canvas trying to escape from one's grip, and blatters of
rain and sleet and hail in one's face, it is no pleasant matter.  We had
taken two reefs in the topsails, and even then the brig had as much
canvas on her as she could stand up to, and we had all come down on
deck, with the exception of Jim, who had been on the foreyard, when the
mate, seeing a rope foul, ordered him to clear it.  Jim performed his
duty, but instead of coming down as he ought to have done, remained
seated on the foreyard, holding on by the lift to get accustomed to the
violent motion, in which he seemed to take a pleasure.  The mate, not
observing this, came aft to speak to the captain, who shortly
afterwards, finding that the brig was falling off from the wind, which
had before been baffling, having shifted ahead, ordered her to be put
about.

"Down with the helm," cried the captain.

I saw the men hauling at the braces, when, looking up, I caught sight of
Jim at the yardarm.  I shrieked out with terror, expecting that the next
instant, as the yardarm swung round, he would be dashed to pieces on the
deck, or hove off into the raging sea.  The kind-hearted mate,
recollecting him, came rushing forward, also believing that his
destruction was certain, unless he could be caught as he fell.  My heart
beat, and my eyes were fixed on my friend as if they would start out of
my head I wildly stretched out my hands, yet I felt that I could do
nothing to save him, when he made a desperate spring, and catching hold
of the backstay, came gliding down by it on deck as if nothing
particular had happened, scarcely conscious, indeed, of the fearful
danger he had escaped.  The mate rated him in stronger language than he
generally used for his carelessness, winding up by asking:

"Where do you think you would have been, boy, if you hadn't have jumped
when you did or had missed your aim?"

"Praise God for His great mercy to thee, laddie, and may thou never
forget it all the days of thy life," said the old captain, who had
beckoned Jim aft to speak to him.

Jim, touching his hat, answered, "Ay, ay, sir!" but he was, perhaps,
less aware of the danger he had been in than any one on board.

The gale increased; several heavy seas struck the old brig, making her
quiver from stem to stern, and at last one heavier than the rest
breaking on board, carried the starboard bulwarks forward clean away.
Some of the men were below; Jim and I and others were aft, and the rest,
though half-drowned, managed to secure themselves.  To avoid the risk of
another sea striking her in the same fashion, the brig was hove-to under
a close-reefed fore-topsail.  As we had plenty of sea room, and the brig
was tight as a bottle, so the mate affirmed, there was no danger; still,
I for one heartily wished that the weather would moderate.  I had gone
aft, being sent by the cook to obtain the ingredients of a plum-pudding
for the cabin dinner.  Not thinking of danger, on my return I ran along
on the lee side of the deck, but before I reached the caboose I saw a
mountain sea rolling up with a terrific roar, and I heard a voice from
aft shout, "Hold on for your lives!"  Letting go the basin and dish I
had in my hands, I grasped frantically at the nearest object I could
meet with.  It was a handspike sticking in the windlass, but it proved a
treacherous holdfast, for, to my horror, out it came at the instant that
the foaming sea broke on board, and away I was carried amid the whirl of
waters right out through the shattered bulwarks.  All hope of escape
abandoned me.  In that dreadful moment it seemed that every incident in
my life came back to my memory; but Mary was the chief object of my
thoughts.  I knew that I was being carried off into the hungry ocean,
and, as I supposed, there was no human aid at hand to save me, when the
brig gave a violent lee lurch, and before I was borne away from her side
I felt myself seized by the collar of my jacket, and dragged by a
powerful arm, breathless and stunned with the roar of waters in my ears,
into the galley.

The cook, who had retreated within it when the sea struck the brig, had
caught sight of me, and at the risk of his life had darted out, as a cat
springs on her prey, and saved me.  I quickly recovered my senses, but
was not prepared for the torrent of abuse which my preserver, Bob
Fritters, poured out on me for having come along on the lee instead of
the weather side of the deck.

Two or three of the watch who had been aft and fancied that I had been
carried overboard, when they found that I was safe, instead of
expressing any satisfaction, joined the cook in rating me for my folly.
Feeling as I suppose a half-drowned rat might do, I was glad to make my
escape below, where, with the assistance of Jim, I shifted into dry
clothes, while he hurried on deck to obtain a fresh supply of materials
for the captain's pudding.  Shortly after this the gale abated, and the
brig was again put on her course.

I had been sent aloft one morning soon after daybreak to loose the
fore-royal, when I saw right ahead a range of blue mountains, rising
above the mist which still hung over the ocean.  I knew that it must be
the coast of Norway, for which we were bound.

"Land!  Land!"  I shouted, pointing in the direction I saw the
mountains, which I guessed were not visible from the deck.

The mate soon came aloft to judge for himself.  "You are right, Peter,"
he said.  "We have made a good landfall, for if I mistake not we are
just abreast of the entrance to the Bay of Jeltefiord, at the farther
end of which stands Bergen, the town we are bound for."

The mate was right.  The breeze freshening we stood on, and in the
course of the morning we ran between lofty and rugged rocks for several
miles, through the narrow Straits of Carmesundt into the bay--or fiord
rather--till we came to an anchor off the picturesque old town of
Bergen.  It was a thriving, bustling place; the inhabitants, people from
all the northern nations of Europe, mostly engaged in mercantile
pursuits.

We soon discharged our cargo and began taking on board a very
miscellaneous one, including a considerable quantity of spars to form
the masts and yards of small vessels.  The day seemed to me wonderfully
long, indeed there was scarcely any night.  Of course, we had plenty of
hard work, as we were engaged for a large part of the twenty-four hours
in hoisting in cargo.  I should have thought all hands would have been
too tired to think of carrying on any tricks, but it seemed that two or
three of them had conceived a spite against Jim because he would not
turn against me.

One of our best men, Ned Andrews, who did duty as second mate, had
brought for his own use a small cask of sugar, as only molasses and
pea-coffee were served out forward.  One morning, as I was employed aft
under the captain's directions, Andrews came up and complained that on
opening his cask he found it stuffed full of dirty clouts and the sugar
gone.  I never saw the captain so indignant.

"A thief on board my brig!" he exclaimed; "verily, I'll make an example
of him, whoever he is."

Calling the mate, he ordered him forthwith to examine all the men's
chests, supposing that the thief must have stowed the sugar in his own.

"Go, Peter, and help him," he added, "for I am sure that thou, my son,
art not the guilty one."

I followed the mate into the fore-peak.  Having first demanded the keys
from the owners of those which were locked, he examined chest after
chest, making me hold up the lids while he turned out the contents or
plunged his hands to the bottom.  No sugar was found in any of them.  He
then came to my chest, which I knew was not locked, and the idea came
into my head that the stolen property would be there.  I showed some
anxiety, I suspect, as I lifted up the lid.  The mate put in his hands
with a careless air, as if he had no idea of the sort.  Greatly to my
relief he found nothing.  There was but one chest to be examined.  It
was Jim's.

Scarcely had I opened it when the mate, throwing off a jacket spread
over the top, uttered an exclamation of surprise.  There exposed to view
was a large wooden bowl, procured the day before by the steward for
washing up glasses and cups, and supposed to have fallen overboard, cram
full of sugar.

"Bring it along aft," cried the mate.  "I did not think that of Pulley."

"And I don't think it now, sir," I answered, in a confident tone, as I
obeyed his order.

"What's this?  Where was it found?" inquired the captain, as we reached
the quarter-deck.

The mate told him.

"I'll swear Jim never put it there, sir; not he!"  I exclaimed.

"Swear not at all, my son, albeit thou mayest be right," said the
captain.  "Send James Pulley aft."

Jim quickly came.

"Hast thou, James Pulley, been guilty of stealing thy shipmate's sugar?"
asked the captain.

"No, sir, please you, I never took it, and never put it where they say
it was found," answered Jim, boldly.

"Appearances are sadly against thee, James Pulley," observed the
captain, with more sorrow than anger in his tone.  "This matter must be
investigated."

"I am sure that Jim speaks the truth, sir," I exclaimed, unable to
contain myself.  "Somebody else stole the sugar and put it in his
chest."

The crew had gathered aft, and two or three looked thunder-clouds at me
as I spoke.

"Thine assertion needs proof," observed the captain.  "Was thy cask of
sugar open, Andrews?"

"No, sir, tightly headed up," answered Andrews.

"Then it must have been forced open by some iron instrument," said the
captain.  "Bring it aft here."

The empty keg was brought.

"I thought so," remarked the captain.  "An axe was used to prise it
open.  Did any one see an axe in the hands of James Pulley?"

There was no reply for some time.  At last, Ben Grimes, one of the men
who had always been most hostile to Jim and me, said, "I thinks I seed
Jim Pulley going along the deck with what looked mighty like the handle
of an axe sticking out from under his jacket."

"The evidence is much against thee, James Pulley," said the captain.  "I
must, as in duty bound, report this affair to Mr Gray on our return,
and it will, of course, prevent him from bestowing any further favours
on you."

"I didn't do it.  I'd sooner have had my right hand cut off than have
done it," cried Jim.  "Let me go ashore, sir, and I'll try to gain my
daily bread as I best can.  I can't bear to stay aboard here to be
called a thief; though Peter Trawl knows I didn't take the sugar; he'd
never believe that of me; and the mate doesn't, and Andrews himself
doesn't."

"I am sorry for thee, lad.  Thou must prove thine innocence," said the
captain, turning away.

Poor Jim was very unhappy.  Though both he and I were convinced that one
of the men for spite had put the sugar in his chest, we could not fix on
the guilty person.  I did my best to comfort him.  He talked of running
from the ship, but I persuaded him not to think more of doing so foolish
a thing.

"Stay, and your innocence will appear in due time," I said.

As we went about the deck we heard Grimes and others whispering, "Birds
of a feather flock together."

They bullied Jim and me worse than ever, and took every occasion to call
him a young thief, and other bad names besides.  They saw how it vexed
him, and that made them abuse him worse than before.  The day after this
we sailed.  Poor Jim declared that if he could not clear himself he
would never show his face in Portsmouth.  I was sure that Andrews and
the other good men did not believe him to be guilty, but they could not
prove his innocence; and, as he said, the others would take care to
blabber about him, and, worst of all, Mr Gray would think him a thief.

An easterly breeze carried us clear of the harbour, but the wind then
shifted to the southward, and then to the south-west, being very light,
so that after three days we had not lost sight of the coast of Norway.
There seemed every probability of our having a long passage.  Some of
the men said it was all owing to the black cat, and Grimes declared that
we must expect ill-luck with such a psalm-singing Methodist old skipper
as we had.  Even Andrews prognosticated evil, but his idea was that it
would be brought about by an old woman he had seen on shore, said by
everyone to be a powerful witch.  As, however, according to Andrews, she
had the power of raising storms, and we had only to complain of calms
and baffling winds, I could not see that she had had any influence over
us.

At last we got so far to the westward that we lost sight of the coast of
Norway, but had not made good a mile to the southward--we had rather
indeed drifted to the northward.  Meantime, the captain hearing from the
mate how the men were grumbling, called all hands aft.

"Lads, I want ye to listen to me," he said.  "Some of ye fancy that we
are having these calms and baffling winds on one account, and some on
another, but this I know, that He who rules the seas does not allow any
other beings to interfere with His plans.  Ye have heard, maybe,
however, of the prophet Jonah.  Once upon a time, Jonah, when ordered by
God to go to a certain place and perform a certain duty, disobeyed his
Master, and trying to escape from Him took passage on board a ship,
fancying that he could get out of God's sight.  Did he succeed?  No!
God had His eye on Jonah, and caused a hurricane which well-nigh sent
the ship to the bottom.  Not till Jonah was hove overboard did the
tempest cease.  Now, lads, just understand there are some aboard this
brig who are disobeying Him and offending Him just as much as Jonah did,
and it's not for me to say that He does not allow these calms, so
unusual in this latitude, to prevail in consequence.  That's all I've
got to say, lads, but ye'll just think over it; and now go forward."

Whether or not the men did think over it, or exactly understood what the
old man meant, I cannot say, but the next morning the carpenter came aft
to the captain and said that he had had a dream which made him remember
that the evening before Andrews's sugar was found to have been stolen,
Ben Grimes had borrowed an axe from him, on examining which afterwards
he discovered that a small piece had been broken off on one side, and
that Grimes acknowledged he had done it by striking a nail in a piece of
wood he was chopping up.  On hearing this the captain again summoned all
hands aft, and ordered Andrews to bring his sugar cask.  There in the
head was found a piece of iron which exactly fitted the notch in the axe
which the carpenter produced.

"Now, lads, say who stole Andrews's sugar and concealed it in Pulley's
chest?" asked the skipper.

"Grimes!  Grimes!  No doubt about it!" shouted all the men, with the
exception of the individual mentioned and one other.

"You are right, lads, and Pulley is innocent," said the skipper.

"As the babe unborn," answered the men, and they all, except Grimes and
his chum, following my example, gave Jim a hearty shake of the hand.

I thought that he would have blubbered outright with pleasure.  Though I
was sure that Jim had never touched the sugar, I was thankful that the
captain and the rest were convinced of his innocence.

Before noon that day a dark bank of clouds was seen coming up from the
southward.  In a short time several black masses broke away from the
main body, and came careering across the sky.

"Away aloft and shorten sail," cried the skipper.  "Be smart, lads!"

We hurried up the rigging, for there was no time to be lost.

"Two reefs in the fore-topsail!  Furl the main-topsail!  Let fly
topgallant sheets!"

These orders came in quick succession.  The captain, aided by the mate,
was meantime lowering the mainsail.  He at first, I believe, intended to
heave the brig to, but, before the canvas was reduced the gale struck
her--over she heeled--the topgallant sails, with their masts, were
carried away just as Jim and I were about mounting the rigging, he the
fore and I the main, to furl them; the mainsail, only half lowered,
flying out, nearly knocked the mate overboard.  I had got down on the
weather side of the main-topsail yard to assist the hands on it, when
the straining canvas broke loose from our grasp, and at the same instant
the topgallant rigging, striking the two men on the lee yardarm, hurled
them off into the foaming ocean.

To lower a boat was impossible; we had not strength sufficient as it was
to clear away the topgallant masts, and to hand the topsails.  A grating
and some spars were hove to them by the mate, who then, axe in hand,
sprang aloft to assist us.  None too soon, for we could do nothing but
cling on to the yard till the topgallant rigging was cleared away.  The
men on the foreyard were more successful, and I saw Jim gallantly using
his knife in a fashion which at length cleared away the wreck and
enabled them to secure the sail.  The mate succeeded also in his object,
and we were expecting them to assist us in attempting to furl the
main-topsail, when the captain, seeing that we were not likely to
succeed, calling us down, ordered the helm to be put up and the yards
squared away, and off we ran before the fast-increasing gale, leaving,
we feared, our two shipmates, the carpenter and Grimes, to perish
miserably.



CHAPTER NINE.

I EXPERIENCE THE PERILS OF THE SEA.

The _Good Intent_ ran on before the increasing gale.  The fast-rising
seas came rolling up astern, threatening every instant to poop her, for,
having a full cargo, she was much deeper in the water than when we
sailed from Portsmouth.  We quickly lost sight of the grating and spars
thrown to our hapless shipmates, and they themselves had before then
disappeared.

The first thing now to be done was to get the main-topsail stowed, for,
flying wildly in the wind, it seemed as if about to carry away the
main-topmast.  The mate, Andrews, and two other men were on the point of
going aloft to try and haul it in, in spite of the danger they ran in so
doing, when a report like that of thunder was heard, and the sail, split
into ribbons, was torn from the bolt-ropes.  The fragments, after
streaming out wildly in the wind, lashed themselves round and round the
yard, thus saving us the hazardous task of attempting to furl the sail.

The brig flew on, now plunging into the roaring and foaming seas, now
rolling from side to side so that it was difficult to keep our feet.
The fore-staysail and jib had been stowed in time, and the flying jib
had been blown away, so that the fore-topsail was the only sail set.

Thus hour after hour passed.  Had we been running in the opposite
direction we should have been making good progress, but we were now
going farther and farther from our destination, to be driven into even
worse weather, and perhaps to have to make our way south round the Irish
coast.  To avoid this, the captain was anxious to heave the brig to, and
I saw him and the mate consulting how it could be done.  It was a
dangerous operation, they both knew, for should she not quickly come up
to the wind, a sea might strike her on the broadside and sweep over her
deck, or throw her on her beam-ends.

"If we get a lull it must be done," said the captain.

"Ay, ay, sir!" answered the mate; and he ordered the men to stand ready
to brace round the fore-topsail-yard as the brig came up to the wind.

Still we watched in vain for the wished-for lull.  In spite of the
roaring seas I felt wonderfully sleepy, and could scarcely keep my eyes
open as I held on to a stanchion at the after-part of the deck.  Jim was
much in the same condition, for we had both been on foot since the
morning watch had been called, and we had had no food all day.

The kind captain, observing the state we were in, instead of abusing us,
as some skippers would have done, ordered us to go below to find
something to eat and to lie down till we were wanted.  We were making
our way forward when he shouted out--

"Go into the cabin, laddies.  There is some bread and cheese in the
pantry, and ye'll be ready at hand when I call ye."

We quickly slipped below, and he again closed the companion-hatch which
he had opened to let us descend.  The other hatches had been battened
down, for at any moment a sea might break on board, and if they had not
been secured, might fill the vessel.

Not a ray of light came below, but Jim and I, groping about, found the
bread and cheese we were in search of and soon satisfied our hunger.  We
then, thankful to get some rest, lay down on the deck of the cabin--
which landsmen would call the floor--for we should have considered it
presumptuous to stretch ourselves in one of the berths or even on the
locker; and in spite of the rolling and pitching of the brig we were
quickly fast asleep.

I seldom dreamed in those days, but, though tired as I was, my slumbers
were troubled.  Now I fancied that the brig was sinking, but that,
somehow or other, I came to the surface, and was striking out amid the
raging billows for the land; then I thought that I was again on board,
and that the brig, after rushing rapidly on, struck upon a huge reef of
black rocks, when, in an instant, her timbers split asunder, and we were
all hurled into the seething waters.  Suddenly I was awoke by the
thundering, crashing sound of a tremendous blow on the side of the
vessel, and I found myself hove right across the cabin, clutching fast
hold of Jim, who shouted out, "Hillo, Peter, what is the matter?  Are we
all going to be drowned?"

Before I could answer him there came from above us--indeed, it had begun
while he was speaking--a deafening mingling of terrific noises, of
rending planks, of falling spars, the rush and swirl and roar of waters,
amid which could be heard the faint cries of human voices.

The brig had been thrown on her beam-ends; of that there could be no
doubt, for when we attempted to get on our feet we found the deck of the
cabin almost perpendicular.

"Do you think the brig will go down?" shouted Jim.

The hubbub was so great that it was impossible to hear each other unless
we spoke at the very top of our voices.

"We must, at all events, get on deck as soon as we can, and do our best
to save ourselves," I answered.

Though I said this, I had very little hope of escaping, as I thought
that the vessel might at any moment founder.  Even to get on deck was no
easy matter, for everything in the cabin was upside down--boxes and
bales, and casks and articles of all sorts, thrown out of the lockers,
mixed with the furniture which had broken adrift, were knocking about,
while all the time we were in complete darkness.  The dead-lights had
fortunately been closed at the commencement of the gale, and the
companion-hatch remained secure, so that, as yet, no water came below.

Getting on our feet we were endeavouring to grope our way to the
companion-ladder when we heard two loud crashes in quick succession, and
directly afterwards, the brig righting with a violent jerk, we were
thrown half across the cabin, bruised and almost stunned, among the
numberless things knocking violently about.  After a time, on recovering
our senses, we picked ourselves up and made another attempt to get on
deck.  I now began to hope that the brig would not go down as soon as I
had expected, but still I knew that she was in a fearfully perilous
condition.  I was sure from the crashing sounds we had heard that both
her masts were gone: that very probably also she had sprung a leak,
while we were far to the northward of the usual track of vessels.

At last we found our way to the cabin door, but groped about in vain for
the companion-ladder, till Jim suggested that it had been unshipped when
the vessel went over.  After some time we found it, but had great
difficulty, in consequence of the way the brig was rolling, to get it
replaced.  As soon as it was so I mounted and shouted as loud as I could
to some one to come and lift off the hatch.

No voice replied.  Again and again I shouted, fancying that the people
might have gone forward for some reason or other and had forgotten us.

"What can have happened?" cried Jim, in a tone of alarm.

I dared not answer him, for I feared the worst.

Feeling about, I discovered an axe slung just inside the
companion-hatch, on which I began hammering away with all my might--but
still no one came.

"Jim, I'm afraid they must all be gone," I cried out at last.

"Gone!" he exclaimed.  "What, the old captain, and mate, and Andrews,
and the rest?"

"I am afraid so," I answered.

Again I shouted and knocked.  Still no one came.

"We must break open the hatch," I said, and I attempted to force up the
top with the axe, but did not succeed.

"Let me try," cried Jim; "my arm is stronger than yours."

I got down the ladder and gave him the axe.  He took my place and began
working away at the part where the hatch was placed.  I could hear him
giving stroke after stroke, but could see nothing, for the hatch fitted
so closely that not a gleam of light came through it.

Presently I heard him sing out, "I've done it," and I knew by the rush
of cold damp air which came down below that he had got off the hatch.

Still all was dark, but looking up I could distinguish the cloudy sky.
Not till then did I know that it was night.  We had gone to sleep in
broad daylight, and I had no idea of the number of hours which had
passed by since then.  I sprang up the companion-ladder after Jim, who
had stepped out on deck.

The spectacle which met my eyes was appalling.  The masts were gone,
carried away a few feet from the deck--only the stumps were standing--
everything had been swept clear away, the caboose, the boats, the
bulwark; the brig was a complete wreck; the dark foam-topped seas were
rising up high above the deck, threatening to engulf her.

The masts were still alongside hanging on by the rigging, their butt
ends every now and then striking against her with so terrific a force
that I feared they must before long drive a hole through the planking.
As far as I could make out through the thick gloom, some spars which had
apparently fallen before the masts gave way lay about the deck, kept
from being washed away by the rigging attached to them having become
entangled in the stanchions and the remaining portions of the shattered
bulwarks.

Not one of our shipmates could we see.  Again we shouted, in the faint
hope that some of them might be lying concealed forward.  No one
answered.

"Maybe that they have gone down into the fore-peak," said Jim; "I'll go
and knock on the hatch.  They can't hear our shouts from where we are."

I tried to persuade Jim not to make the attempt till daylight, for a sea
might break on board and wash him away.

"But do you see, Peter, we must try and get help to cut away the lower
rigging, which keeps the masts battering against the sides?" he
answered.

"Then I'll go with you," I said.  "We'll share the same fate, whatever
that may be."

"No, no, Peter!  You stay by the companion-hatch; see, there are plenty
of spars for me to catch hold of, and I'll take good care not to get
washed away," answered Jim, beginning his journey forward.

Notwithstanding what he said, I was following him when I fancied that I
heard a faint groan.  I stopped to listen.  It might be only the sound
produced by the rubbing of two spars together or the working of the
timbers.  Again I heard the groan.  I was now sure that it was uttered
by one of our shipmates.  It came from a part of the deck covered by a
mass of broken spars and sails and rigging.  Though I could not see as
far, I knew that Jim had reached the fore-hatchway by hearing him
shouting and knocking with the back of the axe.

"Are any of them there?"  I cried out.

"No!  Not one, I'm afeared," he answered.

"Then come and help me to see if there is any person under these spars
here," I said.

Of course we had to bawl out to each other at the top of our voices on
account of the clashing of the seas, the groaning and creaking of the
timbers and bulk-heads, and the thundering of the masts against the
sides.

Jim soon joined me.  We had to be very cautious how we moved about, for
besides the risk there was at any moment of a sea sweeping across the
deck, we might on account of the darkness have stepped overboard.  We
lost no time in crawling to the spot whence I heard the groans
proceeding.

On feeling about we soon discovered a man, his body pressed down on the
deck by a heavy spar, and partly concealed by the canvas.

"Who are you?" cried Jim.  "Speak to us,--do."

A groan was the only answer.

"Do you try and lift the spar, Jim, and I'll drag him out," I said.

Jim tried to do as I told him, but though he exerted all his strength he
could not succeed in raising the spar.

"Oh, dear!  Oh, dear!  The poor fellow will die if we cannot get him
free soon," I exclaimed, in despair.

"This will do it," cried Jim, who had been searching about, and now came
with the broken end of a topgallant-yard to serve as a handspike.  By
its means he prised up the spar, while I as gently as I could dragged
out the man by the shoulders.  No sooner did I feel his jacket than I
was almost sure that he was no other than our good old skipper.  He was
breathing heavily, and had apparently been rendered unconscious by a
blow on the head.  I at length got him out from under the spar.

"We must carry him below before another sea breaks on board," I said.
"Come, help me, Jim."

Together we lifted the old man, and staggering along the slippery deck,
reached the companion-hatch in safety.  To get him down without injury
was more difficult.  I going first and taking his legs, and Jim holding
him by the shoulders, we succeeded at last.  While Jim supported him at
the bottom of the ladder, I hunted about till I found a tinder-box and
matches and lighted the cabin lamp.  It showed us, as I had supposed,
that the person I had rescued was our captain.  He was pale as death,
and bleeding from a wound in the head.  The light also exhibited the
utter confusion into which the cabin had been thrown.  I managed,
however, to clear a way to the state cabin, to which we carried the
captain, and then getting off his wet clothes placed him between the
blankets in his berth.  Fortunately, there was a cask of water in the
pantry, which enabled us to wash and bind up his head, so as to staunch
the blood flowing from it.  The operation was performed but roughly, as
all the time the sound of the masts thundering like battering-rams
against the side of the vessel warned us that, we must try to cut them
adrift without delay.  I feared that already they had done some serious
damage.  Even before we left the captain he seemed to have somewhat
recovered his consciousness, for I heard him mutter, "Be smart, lads.
Tell mate--cut away wreck."

Of course we did not let him know that besides himself we alone of all
the crew were left alive.  In the cabin I found another axe, and Jim and
I, going on deck, began the difficult and dangerous task we had
undertaken.

The lower rigging, on what had been the weather side, had entirely given
way, so that we had only to cut that on the opposite side, but in
leaning over to reach the shrouds at the chains we ran a fearful risk of
being carried off by the sea as the vessel rolled from side to side.

We first tried to clear the mainmast.  We had cut two of the shrouds,
when a sea, having driven the butt end against the side with fearful
force, lifted it just as the brig rolled over, and it came sweeping
along the deck, nearly taking Jim and me off our legs.  With the
greatest difficulty we escaped.

"It shan't do that again," cried Jim; and dashing forward with axe
uplifted he cut the last shroud, and the mast was carried away by the
next sea.

We had still to get rid of the foremast and bowsprit, which were doing
as much damage as the mainmast had done, by every now and then ramming
away at the bows with a force sufficient, it seemed, to knock a hole
through them at any moment.  I felt anxious to return to the cabin to
attend to our old captain, but the safety of the vessel required us not
to delay a moment longer than could be helped in cutting away the
remaining masts and bowsprit.

I observed soon after the mainmast had gone that the wind had fallen,
and that there was somewhat less sea running, and in a short time the
light began to increase.  I do not think that otherwise we should have
accomplished our task.  Jim sprang forward with his axe, taking always
the post of danger, and hacking away at rope after rope as he could
manage to reach them.

I followed his example.  Often we had to hold on for our lives as the
seas washed over us.  At length the work was accomplished.  We gave a
shout of satisfaction as, the last rope severed, we saw the mass of
wreck drop clear of the brig.  But our work was not done.  There we were
in the midst of the North Sea, without masts or canvas or boats, our
bulwarks gone, the brig sorely battered, and only our two selves and our
poor old captain to navigate her.  To preserve his life our constant
attention was required.

"We'll go below and see how the old man gets on," I said.  "There's
nothing more for us to do on deck that I can see at present."

"Not so sure of that, Peter," answered Jim.  "You go and look after the
skipper, and I'll just see how matters are forward and down in the
hold."

As I felt sure that the captain ought not to be left longer alone, I
hurried into the cabin.  He was conscious, but still scarcely able to
speak.  I told him that we had cleared away the wreck of the masts, and
that the weather was moderating.

"Thank God!" he murmured.  Then, getting some more water, I again
dressed his wounded head, and afterwards proposed lighting the cabin
fire and trying to make him some broth.

"Water!  I only want water," he said, in the same low voice as before.

I procured some in a mug.  He drank it, and then said, "Get up
jury-masts and steer west," not understanding as yet, I suppose, that
the crew were lost.

"Ay, ay, sir," I answered, being unwilling to undeceive him, though I
wondered how Jim and I could alone obey his orders; yet, if we were ever
to reach a port, jury-masts must be got up.

As I could do nothing more just then for the captain, I was going on
deck, when I met Jim at the companion-hatch, his face wearing an
expression of the greatest alarm.

"Things are very bad, Peter," he exclaimed.  "The water is coming in
through a big hole in the bows like a mill-sluice, and I'm much afeared
that before long the old craft will carry us and the captain to the
bottom."

"Not if we keep our wits awake, Jim," I answered.  "We must try to stop
the hole.  Come along."

Hurrying forward, we dived down into the fore-peak.  We could now
venture to leave the hatch off, so as to give light below.  Sure enough
the water was coming in terribly fast, but not quite so fast as Jim
described, though already the men's chests and other articles were
afloat.

The largest hole was, I saw, in the very centre of a bunk, so that we
could easily get at it.  Dragging out all the blankets from the other
bunks, I rammed them into the hole.

"Hand me a board or the top of a chest--knock it off quick!"  I sang
out.

Jim, leaping on a chest, wrenched off the lid and gave it me.

"Now that handspike."

There was one close to him.  By pressing the board against the blankets,
and jamming the handspike down between it and the outer corner of the
bunk, the gush of water was stopped.

"Here's another hole still more forward, I can see the water bubbling
in," cried Jim, holding a lantern, which he had lit that he might look
round, to the place.

We stopped it as we had the first.

"It will be a mercy if there are no other holes in the side under the
cargo," he said.  "We'll try the well."

We returned on deck, and Jim sounded the well.

"Six feet of water or more," he said, in a mournful tone, as he examined
the rod.

"Then we must rig the pumps and try to clear her!"  I exclaimed.  "It
will be a hard job, but it may be done, and we must not think of letting
the old craft sink under our feet."

We set to work, and pumped and pumped away, the water coming up in a
clear stream, till our backs and arms ached, and we felt every moment
ready to drop, but we cheered each other on, resolved not to give in as
long as we could stand on our legs.



CHAPTER TEN.

ALONE ON THE OCEAN.

"Are we gaining on the leaks, think you, Jim?"  I at length gasped out,
for I felt that if our efforts were producing some effect we should be
encouraged to continue them, but that if not it would be wise before we
were thoroughly exhausted to try and build a raft on which we might have
a chance of saving our lives.

My companion made no reply, but giving a look of doubt, still pumped on,
the perspiration streaming down his face and neck showing the desperate
exertions he was making.  I was much in the same condition, though, like
Jim, I had on only my shirt and trousers.  I was the first to give in,
and, utterly unable to move my arms, I sank down on the deck.  Jim,
still not uttering a word, doggedly worked on, bringing up a stream of
water which flowed out through the scuppers.

It seemed wonderful that he could go on, but after some time he also
stopped, and staggered to where he had left the rod.

"I'll try," he said.

I gazed at him with intense anxiety.

"Three inches less.  We're gaining on the leaks!" he exclaimed.

I sprang to my feet and seized the brake.  Jim struck out with his arms
"to take the turns out of the muscles," as he said, while he sat for a
minute on the deck, and again went at it.

All this time the wind was falling and the sea going down.  As we
laboured at the pumps we looked out anxiously for the appearance of a
vessel which might afford us assistance, but not a sail appeared above
the horizon.  We must depend on our own exertions for preserving our
lives.  Though a calm would enable us the better to free the brig of
water and to get up jury-masts, it would lessen our chance of obtaining
help.  Yet while the brig was rolling and tumbling about we could do
nothing but pump, and pump we did till our strength failed us, and we
both sank down on the deck.

My eyes closed, and I felt that I was dropping off to sleep.  How long I
thus lay I could not tell, when I heard Jim sing out--

"Hurrah!  We've gained six inches on the leak," and clank, clank, clank,
went his pump.

I cannot say that I sprang up, but I got, somehow or other, on my feet,
and, seizing the brake, laboured away more like a person in his sleep
than one awake.

I saw the water flowing freely, so I knew that I was not pumping
uselessly.  Presently I heard Jim cry out--

"Hillo!  Look there!"

Turning my eyes aft, I saw the captain holding on by the
companion-hatch, and gazing in utter astonishment along the deck.  His
head bound up in a white cloth, a blanket over his shoulders, his face
pale as death, he looked more like a ghost than a living man.

"Where are they, lads?" he exclaimed at length, in a hollow voice.

"All gone overboard, sir," answered Jim, thinking he ought to speak.

The old man, on hearing this, fell flat on the deck.

We ran and lifted him up.  At first I thought he was dead, but he soon
opened his eyes and whispered--

"It was a passing weakness, and I'll be better soon.  Trust in God,
laddies; go on pumping, and He'll save your lives," he said.

"We'll take you below first, sir.  You'll be better in your berth than
here," I answered.

"No, no!  I'll stay on deck; the fresh air will do me good," he said;
but scarcely had he uttered the words than he fell back senseless.

"We must get him below, or he'll die here," I said; so Jim and I carried
him down as before, and got him into his bed.

"He wants looking after," said Jim; "so, Peter, do you tend him, and
I'll go back to the pumps."

Thinking that he wanted food more than anything else, I lighted the
cabin fire, and collecting some materials from the pantry for broth in a
saucepan, put it on to boil.

Though I had been actively engaged, I felt able once more to work the
pumps.  Jim said that he was certain the water in the hold was
decreasing, while, as the brig was steadier, less was coming in.  This
increased our hopes of keeping her afloat, but we should want rest and
sleep, and when we knocked off the water might once more gain on us.

We did not forget, however, what the captain had said.  When I could
pump no longer I ran below, freshly dressed the old man's head, and gave
him some broth, which was by this time ready.  It evidently did him
good.  Then, taking a basin of it myself, I ran up on deck with another
for Jim.

"That puts life into one," he said, as, seated on the deck with his legs
stretched out, he swallowed it nearly scalding hot.  A draught of water
which he told me to bring, however, cooled his throat, and he again set
to, I following his example.

By this time the day was far advanced, and even Jim confessed that he
must soon give in, while I could scarcely stand.

The wind had continued to go down, but the sea still rolled the vessel
about too much to enable us to get up jury-masts, even if we had had
strength to move, before dark.

"It's no use trying to hold out longer, I must get a snooze," sighed
Jim.

He looked as if he were half asleep already.

"We had better go and lie down in the cabin, so that we may be ready to
help the captain," I answered; "but I'll tell you what, we'll take a
look into the fore-peak first, to see how the leaks are going on there."

"Oh, they are all right," said Jim.  "We shouldn't have lessened the
water so much if anything had given way."

Still I persisted in going forward, and Jim followed me.  Just then the
vessel gave a pitch, which nearly sent me head first down the
fore-hatchway.  As we got below I heard the sound of a rush of water.
The handspike which secured the chief leak had worked out of its place,
and the blankets and boards were forced inwards.  It required all our
remaining strength to put them back.  Had we been asleep aft the brig
would have filled in a few minutes.  Jim wanted to remain forward, but I
persuaded him to come aft, being sure that he would sleep too soundly to
hear the water coming in should the leaks break out afresh, and might be
drowned before he awoke.  Having done all we could to secure the
handspikes, we crawled rather than walked to the cabin.

We were thankful to find that the captain was asleep, so, without loss
of time, Jim crept into one of the side berths, and I lay down on the
after locker.  In half a minute I had forgotten what had happened and
where I was.  As the old captain and we two lads lay fast asleep on
board the demasted brig out there in the wild North Sea, a kind
Providence watched over us.  We might have been run down, or, the leaks
breaking out afresh, the vessel might have foundered before we awoke.

A voice which I supposed to be that of the captain aroused me.  The sun
was shining down through the cabin sky-light.  The vessel was floating
motionless.  Not a sound did I hear except Jim's snoring.  I tried to
jump up, but found my limbs terribly stiff, every joint aching.  I made
my way, however, to the old man's berth.

"How are you, Captain Finlay?"  I asked.

He did not reply.  I stepped nearer.  His eyes were closed.  I thought
he was dead; yet I heard his voice, I was certain of that.  I stood
looking at him, afraid to ascertain if what I feared was the case.  A
feeling of awe crept over me.  I did not like to call out to Jim, yet I
wanted him to come to me.  At last I staggered over to the berth in
which Jim was sleeping.  "Jim!  Jim!"  I said, "I am afraid the captain
is taken very bad."

Jim did not awake, so I shook him several times till he sat up, still
half asleep and rubbing his eyes.

"What's the matter?" he asked.  "Oh--ay, I know.  We'll turn to at the
pumps, Peter."

I repeated what I had said.  He was on his feet in a moment.  He moved
at first with as much difficulty as I had done.  "Come along," I said,
and together we went over to the state cabin.  We looked at the old man
without speaking.  After some time Jim mustered courage to touch his
hand.  To my great relief the captain opened his eyes.

"Praise God, who has preserved us during the night, my lads!" were the
first words he spoke, and while we stood by his side he offered up a
short prayer.

He then told us to go on deck and learn the state of the weather.

We hurried up.  The sun was shining brightly; the sea was smooth as
glass, unbroken by a single ripple.  Jim did not forget the leak; he
sounded the well.

"We must turn to at the pumps, Peter," he exclaimed.  "She's made a good
deal of water during the night, and it will take us not a few hours to
get it out of her, but we'll not give in."

"I should think not, indeed," I answered.  "But I'll go down and hear
what the captain wants us to do."

Before I had got half way down the companion-ladder I heard the clank of
the pump.  Jim had lost no time in setting to work.

I hastened to the state-room.  I was startled by the changed appearance
of the captain's countenance during the short time I had been on deck.
His eyes were turned towards me with a fixed look.  I spoke, but he did
not answer; I leant over him, no breath proceeded from his lips; I
touched his brow, then I knew that the good old man was dead.  Presently
I closed his eyes, and with a sad heart returned on deck.

"He's gone, Jim," I cried.

"Gone!  The captain gone!  Then I am sorry," answered Jim, as he stopped
pumping for a moment, though he still held the brake in his hands.
"Then, Peter, you and I must just do our best to take the brig into port
by ourselves."

"I was thinking the same, Jim," I said.  "He told us to get up
jury-masts and steer west, and that's just what we must do if the wind
will let us."

The death of our good captain made us feel very sad, for we had learned
to look upon him as our true friend.  It caused us also to become more
anxious even than before about ourselves.  With his assistance we had
had little doubt, should the weather remain fine, of reaching a port,
but as we were neither of us accustomed to the use of charts, and did
not know how to take an observation, we could not tell to what port we
should steer our course.

We had both, however, dauntless spirits, and had been accustomed from
our childhood to trust to our own resources.  Our grand idea was to
steer west, if we could manage to get sail on the brig, but before this
could be attempted we must pump her free of water.

There was no time to mourn for our old captain, so without delay we
turned to at the pumps.  My arms and legs and every part of my body felt
very stiff.  Jim saw that I should not be able to continue long at it.

"Peter, do you go below and look out for some spars to serve as
jury-masts," he said; "I'll meantime keep on.  We shall soon get the
water under; it's only a wonder more hasn't come in."

Jim and I never thought who was captain; if I told him to do a thing he
did it, or if he gave an order I did not stop to consider whether or not
he had the right to command.  We worked together as if we had but one
will.

It was "a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull both together."

There were plenty of spars below, and I soon selected some which I
thought would serve for the masts and yards we required.  I had to call
Jim to help me get them up on deck.

"There'll be no use for these till we can find some canvas to spread on
them," I observed.

"Nor till we get a breeze to fill the sails," said Jim.  "However, we'll
get them set while the calm lasts, and no doubt you'll find as many as
we can carry in the sail-room."

This was right aft, down a small hatchway.  While Jim went again to his
pump, I hunted about and hauled out two topgallantsails and royals, a
fore-staysail, a second jib, and a main-trysail.  If we could set all
these we should do well, supposing we got a fair breeze.  It would be no
easy job, however, I knew, to get up the masts.  We had one advantage.
The proper masts had been carried away some six or seven feet from the
deck, so that we might lash the spars to them.  Before setting to work I
again went below to hunt for rope.  I got more than I expected from
different parts of the vessel, and we had also saved some of the
rigging, which had been entangled in the bulwarks.

"We shall want every scrap of rope we can find!" cried Jim, panting and
still pumping away.

"I'll take a spell with you," I said.  "Then we'll turn to and rig the
ship."

I pumped till I could pump no longer, and then, after a short rest, we
commenced in earnest.  We first lashed a short spar, with a tackle
secured to its head, to the stump of the foremast, and then, having
fitted two shrouds on a side, with a forestay and backstays, and blocks
for the halliards, to the spar we had chosen for a foremast, we swayed
it up my means of the short spar and tackle.  We could not possibly in
any other way have accomplished our object.  We next lashed the spar to
the stump of the mast.  No time was lost in setting up the standing
rigging.  Our foremast being thus fixed, we surveyed it with infinite
satisfaction, and then turned to and fitted the brig with a mainmast in
the same fashion.  This we made somewhat stronger, as we intended it to
carry a mainsail should we have to haul on a wind.  Our work, as may be
supposed, was not especially neat--indeed, we had to knot most of the
shrouds, as it was necessary to keep all the longer lengths of rope for
halliards, and we had none to spare.

I cannot stop to explain how we accomplished all this; we could not have
done it without employing tackles, which we brought to the windlass, and
thus gained twenty times as much power as we by ourselves possessed.

We were now pretty well tired and hungry, for, except some bread and
cheese and a jug of cold water, we had taken nothing all day.

It was with a feeling of awe that we went down into the cabin where the
old captain lay.  Jim, however, closed the door of the state-room, so
that we could not see him.  We then lighted the fire and cooked some
dinner--or rather supper, for evening was drawing on.  Anxious to be
again at work, we hurried over the meal.

"I say, Peter, don't you think we ought to bury the skipper?" asked Jim,
after a long silence.

"Not for some days to come," I answered; "I hope that we may get into
port first, so as to lay him in a grave on shore."

"I don't think it will make much odds to him; and, to say the truth, now
he's dead, I'd rather he were out of the ship," said Jim; "they say it's
unlucky to have a dead man on board."

I had some difficulty in persuading Jim of the folly of such a notion,
but we finally agreed that we would try to carry the captain's body to
land.

Before bending sails we took a look down forward to see the condition of
the leaks.  The handspikes were in their places, and, except a slight
moisture round the holes, we could not discover that any water was
getting in.  Still there was a great deal too much in the brig for
safety, so we took another spell at the pumps before going on with the
rigging.

Darkness found us hard at work.  We were too tired and sleepy to attempt
keeping a look-out, but I bethought me of hoisting a lantern at each
masthead, which would save us from being run down should a breeze spring
up during the night Jim thought the idea capital, and promised to get up
and trim the lamps.

Fortunately, the nights were short, so that there was not much necessity
for that.  Our chief wish now was that the calm would continue for a few
hours during the next day, that we might get the brig to rights.

"One spell more at the pumps!" cried Jim.

We seized the brakes, worked till we could work no longer, then went
below, ate some food from the pantry, and lying down in the two larboard
berths in the cabin, were fast asleep in a few seconds.

People talk of sleeping like tops.  A hard-worked ship-boy will beat any
top in the world at sleeping soundly.

For a second night the brig lay becalmed.  I doubt that if even a fierce
gale had sprung up it would have awakened us.  The sun was shining when
I opened my eyes.  It might have been shining for hours for what I could
tell.

I roused up Jim, and we sprang on deck, vexed at having, as we supposed,
lost so much precious time.  By the height of the sun above the horizon,
however, we judged that it was not so late as we had at first fancied.
The clock in the cabin had been unshipped when the brig went over, and
the captain's watch had stopped, so that we had otherwise no means of
knowing how the hours passed by.  It was still perfectly calm.  We
looked round in all directions.  Not a sail was in sight.

"We must get ready for the breeze, Jim, when it does spring up," I said.
"It will come before many hours are over, I've a notion."

I had observed some light clouds just under the sun.

"May be; but we must take a spell at the pumps first," he answered--his
first thought was always of them.

We turned to as before, till our arms ached, and then we ran down and
got some breakfast.  We knew the value of time, but we couldn't get on
without eating, any more than other people.

On returning to the deck we lowered the lanterns, which had long since
gone out, finished bending the sails, fitting braces, tacks, sheets, and
bowlines, and were then ready to hoist away.  We at once set all the
sails we had ready, to see how they stood.  To our satisfaction, they
appeared to greater advantage than we had expected.

"They'll do!" cried Jim, as we surveyed them; "only let us get a breeze
from the right quarter, and we'll soon make the land."

Fortunately, the rudder had been uninjured when the brig went over, and
the wheel was in order.  I stood at the helm, longing for the time when
I should see the brig moving through the water.  I may say, once for
all, that at very frequent intervals Jim and I went to the pumps, but he
stood longer at the work than I did.  There was urgent necessity for our
doing so, as, notwithstanding all our exertions, we had but slightly
diminished the water in the hold.

When not thus occupied we did various things that were necessary about
the brig; among others we got life-lines round the shattered bulwarks,
so that should a heavy sea get up, we might run less risk of being
washed overboard.  We also went to the store-room, and brought to the
cabin various descriptions of provisions, that we might have them at
hand when wanted.  We knew that when once we got a wind we should have
no time to do anything besides navigating the vessel.

I had gone below to get dinner ready, the only hot meal we took in the
day, leaving Jim pumping, when I heard him sing out down the
companion-hatchway--

"Here it comes, and a rattling breeze, too."

I sprang on deck and went to the helm, while Jim stood ready to trim
sails.  Looking astern I could see a line of white foam sweeping along
towards us over the surface of the ocean.  Before it was up to us the
sails bulged out, the brig gathered way, and presently she was gliding
at the rate of three or four knots through the water.

Jim and I shouted with exultation--we forgot the past--we thought not of
the future.  We believed that we were about to reap the fruit of our
labours.

For several hours we ran on with the wind right aft, steering due west.
I steered for most of the time, but Jim occasionally relieved me.  So
eager were we that we forgot all about eating, till he cried out--

"I must have some food, Peter, or I shall drop."

I was running below to get it, feeling just as hungry as he did, when
the wind hauled more to the southward.  We took a pull at the starboard
braces, and I then hurried below to bring up what we wanted.  Just as I
was cutting some meat which had been boiling till the fire went out, I
heard a crash.  I sprang up on deck.  The brig was again dismasted, and
Jim was struggling in the waves astern.



CHAPTER ELEVEN.

DANGERS MULTIPLY.

For a moment I could not believe my senses.  I fell like a person in a
dreadful dream.  What, Jim gone!  The brig again dismasted, and I left
alone on board her with the body of our dead captain!  I was recalled to
myself by hearing a faint shout, and looking over the stern I saw my old
friend struggling amidst the waves some distance off.

My first impulse was to leap into the sea and swim to his rescue, but
then the thought happily came to me that if I did we should be unable to
regain the vessel; so, instead, crying out, "Keep up, Jim--keep up, I'll
help you!"  I did what was far more likely to prove effectual--I unrove
the peak-halliards, cutting them clear with my knife, and fastened one
end to the wooden grating over the cabin sky-light.  This I threw
overboard, and as I feared that the halliards would not prove long
enough, I bent on another rope to them.  The grating appeared to be
dropping astern very fast; and yet Jim, who was swimming strongly,
seemed to be nearing it very slowly, by which I knew that the brig must
still, urged on by the impetus she had before received, be moving
through the water.  Securing the line, I therefore put down the helm,
and completely stopped her way.  All was done faster than I have
described it.

Springing back to the taffrail, with straining eyes I watched Jim, for
more I could not do to help him, except to give an occasional shout to
cheer him up.  The dreadful thought came that there might be sharks
about, or that his strength might fail him before he could reach the
grating.  I did more than cheer, though--I prayed to God with all my
soul that Jim might be saved.  Often he seemed scarcely to be moving
through the water--now he threw himself on his back to rest--then he
once more struck bravely out, replying as he did so to my cheer.  At
length he got near the grating.  My heart gave a bound of joy as I saw
him seize it, when he gradually drew himself up and lay flat on its
surface, the best way for making it afford him support.

With a shout to Jim to hold on, I began to haul in the raft till I
brought it under the quarter.

"Wait a minute, Jim, while I get a tackle ready to haul you on board," I
cried out.

This did not take me the time I said, and forming a bowline I lowered it
to him.  He seemed so exhausted that I was afraid lest in trying to pass
it over his shoulders he might slide off the grating; and I was about to
go down to assist him, when, seeing the rope, he slipped his arms
through it and exclaimed, "Haul away, Peter."

I was not long in obeying him, it may be supposed, and I almost cried
with joy as I had him at length safe on deck.  I knew that the first
thing now to be done was to get off his wet clothes, and to give him a
restorative, but I had a hard job to carry him below, as he could not
help himself.

"Never mind, Peter," he said, faintly; "I shall soon be all to rights
again."  But I was not going to leave him in the cold air on deck, so
going first, I let him slip gradually down the companion-ladder, and
then stripping off his clothes, in a short time had him snug between the
blankets.  I then quickly relighted the fire and warmed up the broth I
had before cooked, while I hung up Jim's clothes to dry.

The hot broth seemed greatly to restore him, but as he was pretty well
worn out before he had gone overboard, it is no wonder that as soon as
the basin was emptied he fell fast asleep.  I had not stopped to ask him
how the accident had occurred, but I suspected, as I afterwards found
was the case, that as the masts fell a rope had somehow or other caught
his legs and whisked him overboard.  He was, however, never very clear
how it happened.

Having performed my duties below, and taken some food, which I greatly
needed, I went on deck.  It was still blowing fresh, but there was not
much sea on, and the brig lay like a log on the water.  To my great
relief I found that none of the spars or sails had been lost, all of
them having fallen inboard, so I set to work to secure them as well as I
could, knowing that till Jim was strong enough to help me I could do
nothing towards getting up the masts again.

I did not for a moment contemplate giving up the struggle.  I next went
down into the fore-peak to see if our arrangements for keeping out the
water were secure.  Nothing had moved.  Still, as I knew that the water
must be coming in and might gain upon us dangerously, I took a spell at
pumping.  This pretty well exhausted all my remaining strength, yet
before turning in to get some rest there was another thing to be done.
We might be in the track of some vessel or other, and should the night
prove dark might be run down and sent to the bottom while we were
asleep.  I therefore trimmed the lamp in one of the lanterns, and with
great labour having lashed a spar to the stump of the foremast, hoisted
the lantern to the top of it.  This done I could do no more, and
crawling into my cabin was soon fast asleep in my berth.

I slept tranquilly, knowing that He who had hitherto preserved us was
watching over us still.  I was awakened by the clanking sound of the
pump.  It was broad daylight; Jim was not in his berth, and on springing
on deck there I saw him in his shirt and trowsers hard at work, forcing
up the water at a great rate.

"I'm all to rights, Peter," he said, in a cheerful tone, "and as I
guessed that you had been up long after I went to sleep, I thought as
how I would take a spell at the pump before rousing you up."

Thanking him for his thoughtfulness, I seized the other brake and pumped
till my arms ached.

"Now, Peter, we must see about getting up the masts again," he said,
when he saw me knock off.

"You want some breakfast first, and so do I," I answered.  "We'll then
set to work with a will."

We took some food, which rested and refreshed us, and then commenced the
task we had undertaken.

The wind had again fallen.  What there was of it was fair, and the sea
was almost as smooth as a mill-pond.  Had it been rough we could
scarcely have attempted the work.  We had first to unreeve all the
ropes, and unbend all the sails.  We then selected two much stouter
spars than before for fresh masts, got the standing rigging over their
heads, and by means of tackles got them set up to the stumps of the fore
and main masts, next securing them much more effectually we hoped than
the former jury-masts had been, with light spars of different lengths
lashed round them, and additional backstays.

We made such good progress that by night we were almost ready to hoist
the sails, having all the time rested only for a few minutes to obtain
some food and then going on again.

Nature, however, at last gave way, and if we stopped for a moment we
went fast asleep with a rope or marlinespike in our hands.

"It's no use trying to keep awake, Jim," I said.

He, in a sleepy voice, agreed, and having again hoisted the lantern we
went below to get the rest we so much needed.

The next morning I heard as before the pump going.  It was still dark,
but Jim had awoke, and this was always his first thought.  I joined him,
and we laboured on till there was light enough to enable us to bend
sails.  The wind being fair we soon had them hoisted, and I went to the
helm, Jim pulling and hauling to trim them as required.

It must be understood that everything was done in a rough-and-ready
fashion, but it was the best we could do.

Once more the brig glided on towards the west at the rate, as we
supposed, of three or four knots an hour.  Jim, having done all that was
required, took my place at the helm while I went below to get some food
for breakfast.  As I was unwilling to be off the deck a moment longer
than was necessary, without stopping to light the fire I brought up a
supply of provisions and water to last us for some time, as also some
cloaks and blankets.  We agreed that we must content ourselves with cold
water, and ham, and cheese, and bread, and be thankful, remembering how
many poor fellows had been much worse off than we were.

We ate a hearty meal, I feeding Jim while he steered.  He did not appear
to have suffered from his long swim, except that he complained of being
very sleepy.  I therefore advised him to lie down on the coats and
blankets I had brought on deck to get some rest, while I took his place
at the helm, promising to call him should the breeze freshen and it
become necessary to shorten sail.  He agreed and I steered on, now
looking at the compass, now at the canvas, and now all around on the
chance of a vessel appearing from which we might learn our position.  I
own that I should have been very unwilling for any one to have come on
board to take the brig into harbour, for we both thought how proud we
should feel if we could carry her in ourselves without help.  Still, for
the sake of the owners we could not, we had agreed, refuse assistance
should it be offered us.  At last my eyes began to close, and it was
with the greatest difficulty that I could keep them open, or prevent
myself from sinking down on the deck.  I was, therefore, very thankful
when I saw Jim begin to move.  I uttered his name.  He was on his feet
in an instant.

"I'll take a spell at the pump first," he said, rubbing his eyes and
looking round, especially ahead; "then I'll come to the helm."

Talking to him aroused me a little, and I was able to hold on till he
relieved me.  I was almost asleep before I sank down on the blanket,
only just hearing him say, "We must keep a bright look-out ahead, for we
ought soon to be making the land."

That sleep did me a great deal of good.  We agreed that we would both
take as much as we could during the day, that we might be more
wide-awake at night.  I had observed that there was something on Jim's
mind, and while we were at supper, soon after sunset, I asked him what
it was.

"Why, you see, as I said afore, I wish that our old skipper was, somehow
or other, out of the ship.  Now if you are willing, Peter, I'll sew him
up all comfortable like in an old sail, with a pig of iron at the feet;
and as you are a better scholar than I am, you can say the prayers over
him while we lower him overboard, and to my mind he'll be just as well
off as he would be ashore."

I reminded Jim that he had before consented to our keeping the body as
long as we could, but knowing that his superstitious ideas induced him
to make the proposal, and that he was really uncomfortable, I agreed to
bury our skipper at the end of three days if we did not by that time
sight the land.

The night and another day went by, the wind still holding fair.  I
pointed out to Jim how thankful we should be for this, as I was certain
that in the latitude where we were there was seldom so long a
continuance of fine weather.  He, however, was far from easy in his
mind.  He was sure, he said, that we ought to have seen the land before
this, and was continually, when not working the pump, going forward to
look out for it.

"I knows that England is an island, as the song says, `Our right little,
tight little island;' and don't you think that somehow we may have
passed to the nor'ard of it, and be going away into the Atlantic?"

"I hope not," I answered; "for if so we shall not get into port till we
have run right across it; but I am sure the captain never intended us to
do that when he told us to steer west; I think rather that we have not
been going as fast as we supposed.  I'll heave the log and try, though
it will be a difficult job to do so."

I got out the reel and glass.  The latter I gave to Jim to hold with one
hand, while he steered with the other.  The handle of the reel I managed
to put into a hole in the shattered bulwarks, so that it could run round
easily.  I then took the log-ship in my right hand and hove it.

"Turn!"  I cried.

"Turn!" said Jim.

The line ran slowly out.

"Stop!" cried Jim.

I examined the line.

Two knots and a half was all it showed.  Jim thought we were going four.
I was thus certain that we had run a much shorter distance than he
supposed, but he was not convinced that I was right.

Day and night, between the intervals of pumping, he went forward to look
out.  Another day went by.  It was again night Jim had been a long time
pumping when he said that he would go forward and look out till it was
his turn to take the helm.  I advised him rather to lie down, as I was
sure that he must be tired, but he would not, and away he went into the
darkness towards the bows.

I every now and then hailed him and he answered.  I had not hailed for
some time when I felt the breeze freshen.  The main-topsail and mainsail
bulged out, straining at the sheets, and the masts began to complain.

"Jim!  Jim!"  I shouted, "shorten sail, be smart about it."

But Jim did not answer.  I dared not leave the helm lest the brig should
broach to and our masts again be carried overboard.

Once more I shouted, "Jim!  Jim!"  Still he did not come, and the
dreadful idea arose in my mind that he had fallen overboard.

At last I could withstand the desire no longer of rushing forward to
ascertain what had become of him.  What mattered it, if he were lost,
what else might happen?  I made a dash forward, keeping my eye on the
stars.  I had got as far as the mainmast when I saw that the brig's head
was moving round, so I sprang back to right the helm.

Again and again I shrieked out my companion's name at the top of my
voice, springing forward, but had only got a little farther than before
when I had to return.

The wind continued to get up.  The masts would go, I saw, if sail were
not shortened.  I let go the main-topsail, and throat and
peak-halliards.  The sails flapped loudly in the wind, but as the brig
now kept more steadily before it, I thought that I should be able to
reach the forecastle, though I had very little hope of finding Jim.

I was still shouting his name, when what was my joy to hear him cry out,
"Hillo!  What's the matter?" and I saw his head rise from just before
the windlass.  I never in my life felt more inclined to abuse him for
the fright he had given me, thankful as I was that no harm had happened
to him.  I did not even tell him how much I had been alarmed, but merely
cried out, "Come, be smart, Jim, we must stow the canvas."  We were
beginning to do so, when the wind fell, and instead we again hoisted the
fore-topsail.  Jim owned that while he fancied he was looking out his
legs gave way and that he had sunk down on the deck.

"Take care that the same doesn't happen when you are steering, or worse
consequences may follow," I remarked.

He now let me take my nap, and when I awoke he said that we had had a
famous run; but towards noon the wind dropped, and it became towards
evening a stark calm.  This lasted all night and far into the next day.

"Peter, do you know if there's a prayer-book aboard?" asked Jim.

The question surprised me.  I was nearly certain that there was not.

"Well then, you can say some prayers without one," he continued.  "For,
Peter, there's no use talking longer about it; we must bury the
skipper."

Reluctantly I agreed.  Jim got a piece of canvas, a sail-maker's needle,
and some twine, with a pig of iron ballast which had been used in one of
the boats.  As there was no sign of a breeze, with these he went below,
and for the first time since his death opened the captain's state-room.
We brought the corpse into the main cabin, and placing it on the canvas,
without loss of time Jim began sewing it up.  The old man's kind face
had scarcely changed.  We took one respectful last look at it, and then
Jim, drawing the canvas over it, shut it out from sight.

We had now to get the body on deck, but without a tackle this we could
not have done.  At last we managed to haul it up the companion-ladder.
When Jim went below for more canvas and twine to fasten on the pig of
iron to the feet, we had been longer about our task than we had
supposed.  Looking astern, I saw that the sky was darkened by heavy
masses of clouds, while a line of foam came hissing over the surface of
the deep towards us.

"Quick!  Quick!  Jim," I shouted; "shorten sail, or the masts will be
over the side!"

I ran as I spoke to the halliards; he followed; we had to be smart about
it, and even thus the gale was on us before we could get the canvas
stowed.  That was not to be done in a hurry.  First one sail got loose,
then another, and we had to hurry to secure them.  The sea rose with
unusual suddenness, and the brig was soon tossing about in a way which
made us fear that another leak would be sprung, or the old ones break
out.  We managed at length to set the fore-topsail, closely reefed, and
I going to the helm, we ran before the gale.

If Jim was before anxious about our being near the land, he was more so
now.  His eyes were nearly always turned ahead, but I began to think
more about the leaks.  I asked him what he thought.

"We'll try the well," he answered.

No sooner had he examined the rod than he exclaimed--

"We must turn to at the pumps, Peter, if we don't want to go to the
bottom."

We no longer thought of burying the captain, or doing anything but
keeping the brig afloat.  The night began; Jim worked away as hard as
his failing strength would allow.  I shouted to him to let me take a
spell.

"No, no; you keep at the helm, Peter," he answered; "I'll work till I
drop."

He only stopped now and then to take a look-out ahead.

The gale seemed to be increasing; the brig pitched and rolled more and
more.  Suddenly there came a loud clap.  The foresail had given way.
Jim ran forward, and lowered it on deck.

As I could no longer be of use at the helm, I ran to his help, and we
tried to set it again, but all our efforts were in vain.  Every moment,
too, the seas now raging round the vessel threatened to break on board.

"Peter, the water is coming in as fast as we get it out, and if we don't
keep pumping it will gain upon us," said Jim.

For fear of being carried away, we made ourselves fast to some
stanchions near the pumps, so that we could reach the brakes, and worked
away till we were both ready to drop.  Now and then we had to stop to
draw breath and regain our strength.  The hard battered brig pitched and
rolled and tumbled, the seas dancing up wildly on every side of her.
Again we had stopped, when Jim exclaimed, "Hark!  I hear the breakers."

I listened.  The dreaded sound reached my ears.  The brig was driving
rapidly towards them.



CHAPTER TWELVE.

PORT REACHED IN AN UNEXPECTED MANNER.

The sound of the breakers grew louder and louder.  Every instant we
expected to find the brig sent crashing on the rocks, and to have the
furious seas breaking over us.

"There's no use pumping any longer, Peter," said Jim.  "We must cling to
whatever we can get hold of, and hope for the chance of being hove up on
the beach, if there is one."

"A poor chance that," I could not help answering.  "Perhaps the brig may
be driven in between some rocks, and will hold together till the
morning; if not we must be prepared to die."

And I spoke to him as I think my mother would have spoken to me.
Clinging to the shattered bulwarks, we waited for the dreadful event
with all the resignation we could muster.  Still the crash did not come,
though the vessel appeared to be tossed about even more violently than
before.

"Peter, the breakers don't sound so loud as they did just now,"
exclaimed Jim, after some time.

"Let's look at the compass," I said, casting off the rope round my
waist.

"I'll go too," cried Jim, doing the same.  "What happens to you shall
happen to both."

Together we made our way to the binnacle, in which the lamp was still
burning.  As we eagerly examined the compass we found that the wind had
shifted to the south-west, and if there was land, as we supposed, to the
westward, was blowing partly off shore.  We must have drifted past a
headland, on which we had heard the seas breaking.  Had the foresail
stood we should have run on it, and we had cause, therefore, to be
thankful that it had given way.  Now, however, as it was important to
keep off the land, we attempted to secure the clew and tack, and hauling
together succeeded in again hoisting it.  I then ran to the helm, and
found that I could steer east by north or thereabouts.  Though the brig
moved very slowly, still I believed that we were getting away from the
dreaded shore.  We ran on for some time, when once more the wind shifted
to the eastward of south, and blew with greater fury than before.

"It's drawing more and more to the east," said Jim, looking at the
compass.

We hauled down the foresail, as it would only, we believed, drive us the
faster to destruction.  The brig tumbled and rolled and pitched about in
a way that made it difficult for us to keep our feet, and every now and
then the seas, washing over the deck, would have swept us off had we not
again lashed ourselves to the stanchions near the pumps.  These we
worked as vigorously as our failing strength would allow.  We had
resolved not to give in while the brig remained afloat.  How we longed
for daylight, that we might see where we were, and judge how we could
best try to save ourselves!

That we were again driving towards the terrible rocks we knew too well,
and several times Jim stopped pumping to listen for the sound of the
breakers.  At length he exclaimed, "I hear them, Peter!  In less than
ten minutes the brig will be in pieces!  Good-bye, if the sea gets us;
but we'll have a fight for it; so the moment she strikes we'll cast
ourselves off from the stanchions."

We were shaking hands while he spoke.  I was not quite certain that I
did hear the breakers, the noises on board the tumbling vessel making it
difficult to distinguish sounds.  Shortly after this there came a lull,
but we thought it only the prelude to another squall.

The wind fell more and more.

"I see day breaking!" cried Jim, looking eastward.

Faint yellow and red streaks were visible in that direction under the
dark mass of clouds.  The light increased, and to the westward, fringed
by a line of rugged black rocks, a green island gradually rose before
our sight.  There were grassy slopes, and cliffs, and high, steep,
round-topped hills, with clear streams running between them, forming
lakelets near the beach, glittering in the rays of the rising sun, now
bursting through the dissolving clouds.  Far as our eyes could reach not
a tree was visible, nor could we discover a single cottage or other
habitation of man.  As the light increased we found that we were about
half a mile away from the entrance of a narrow gulf, which extended
apparently far inland.  Not a boat floated on the surface of the gulf,
not a sail was to be seen along the coast.

"I'm greatly afeared that yonder is a dissolute island," (meaning a
desolate island), "and if no help comes to us from the shore we may be
blown out to sea, and be worse off than before," said Jim.

The wind had fallen to an almost perfect calm, but what there was blew
out of the gulf, so that we could not hope to take the vessel up it,
while the breakers still burst in sheets of foam on the rocks, and we
lay tossed up and down by the glassy rolling seas.  We were utterly
helpless.

While we were at breakfast a thought occurred to me.

"I'll tell you what we'll do, Jim," I said; "we'll build a raft, put the
poor old captain on it, take him ashore, and bury him.  If we can find
no people or houses we'll go off again.  The brig won't drift far away
in the meantime.  If the wind will let us we'll run into the gulf, or if
it shifts to the northward we'll steer along shore to the south and look
out for another harbour.  From what the captain said we may be sure
there is one not far off where we shall find people to help us."

Jim jumped at my proposal.

"That's it, Peter; when once the dead man is out of the brig things will
go better with us," he answered.

I did not stop to argue the point, but turned to at once with him to
form the proposed raft.  We had plenty of spars below, so that our
undertaking was not so difficult as it would have been had we not had a
good supply.  We first cut them into lengths with a saw we found below,
and having placed them side by side, lashed others across on the top of
them.

Eager as we were to finish our task, we had more than once to stop and
rest, for we were both very weak, and I felt a sensation of weariness I
had not ever before experienced.  In fact, we were thoroughly knocked up
from the hard work we had gone through, and the little time we had had
for rest.

Having completed the raft and formed some paddles, we launched it
overboard and secured it alongside.

"Now, Jim," I said, "we must take some provisions, in case there are no
people on the island, as we may have a longer pull back than we may
like, and we have to bring up the captain and put him on the raft."

We quickly collected some provisions, and I took the empty water-jar
from the pantry.

"What's that for?" asked Jim.  "There's water enough on shore, surely."

"Yes, but if we have a long pull back to the brig we shall be thankful
for water," I answered.

While thus employed we heard a voice coming from no great distance hail,
"Ship ahoy!"

My heart leapt within me at the sound, and running to the side we saw a
boat with five men in her pulling towards us.  An oldish man of portly
figure, who looked like a sea captain, was steering.

"Are ye the only people aboard?" he sang out as he saw us.

"The only live ones, sir," answered Jim.

There was no time to exchange more words before the boat was alongside,
and the old gentleman and his men stepped on board.  He gave a look of
surprise as he saw the captain's body, and he then, turning to us,
appeared more surprised still.

"Why, my laddies, what has happened?  How did this craft come here?" he
asked, in a kind tone.

I briefly told him how the masts had been carried away and the people
washed overboard, and how the captain had been struck down and
afterwards had died, and how we had kept him to bury him decently on
shore, adding--

"He told us to steer west, sir, and so we did, but we don't know what
country we've come to."

"Why, surely, to Shetland, laddies," he answered.  "But if ye had kept a
little farther to the north ye would have passed our islands and run
into the Atlantic, and it's weel for ye that ye didna do that.  And now
my men and I will take your craft up the voe and anchor her in safety.
We might carry her to Lerwick, but the weather is unsettled, and she's
na weel fitted to encounter another gale, no discredit to ye, laddies."

Our new friend evidently compassionated our forlorn condition; indeed,
now that the necessity for exerting ourselves was over, we both sank
down utterly exhausted on the deck.

The Shetlanders would have carried us below, but we begged to remain
where we were, that we might see what was going forward.  They therefore
left us, and having placed the captain's body on the main hatch, covered
by a flag, they proceeded to pull our raft to pieces and to hoist the
spars composing it on board.  This done, the four men jumped into the
boat, and going ahead began to tow the brig, while the old gentleman
went to the helm to steer.

Before long, however, a breeze from the eastward springing up, the boat
returned alongside, the men hoisted the canvas, and we stood in towards
the voe, as the gulf, we found, was called.  I could just distinguish
the high green hills, with here and there grey cliffs and rocks jutting
out from these on either side, as we sailed up the voe, but my eyes grew
dimmer and dimmer till the brig's anchor was dropped, and I was just
aware that we were being placed in the boat to be carried on shore.

When I came to myself I found that I was in a comfortable bed with
curtains round it, the sun shining brightly through the open window of
the room, which looked neater and prettier than any I had ever slept in.

Hearing a footstep, I peered through the curtains, and saw a lady and a
little girl come in, carrying in their hands some things which they
placed on the table.

"I think the poor boy is awake, auntie," whispered the little girl.  "I
heard him move."

"Perhaps he was only moving in his sleep, but I will see," answered the
lady, and she approached the bed.

I was looking all the time at the little girl, who seemed to me like an
angel or a fairy, or some being altogether brighter than I had ever seen
before--even than my sister Mary.

"Yes, marm, I am awake, thank you," I said, as she opened the curtains,
"and please, I want to get up and go aboard the brig to look after her
and to see that our old captain is buried."

"He was buried by the minister the day you came, and the brig is taken
very good care of," she answered.  "My father, Mr Angus Troil, has
written to the owners to inform them of what has happened to her and of
your brave conduct.  He hopes soon to hear from them."

"Thank you, marm," I again said, puzzled to know what the lady meant
about hearing soon from Mr Gray, for I had supposed that Shetland was a
long way from England.  My first thought, however, had been about Jim.

"Please, marm, where is the other boy, my shipmate?"  I asked.

"He was very ill only for three or four days, and is now well enough to
go down to the brig with my father," she replied.  "But I must not let
you talk too much.  You were to have some food, the doctor said, when
you came to yourself.  Here, Maggie, bring the broth and toast."

Thereon the little girl brought the tray to the bedside and gazed
compassionately at me, while the lady put the food into my mouth, for I
was too weak to do so myself.

It now dawned on me from what the lady said that I must have been in a
state of unconsciousness for many days, and such I found was the case.
I recollected nothing that had passed since I was placed in the boat.  I
could not speak much, but when I had finished the basin of broth I
said--

"I am very thankful to you and your little daughter, marm, for all you
have done for me."

"You deserve to be taken care of, my boy," she answered; "but this
little girl is not my daughter.  Her father was my brother.  He was lost
at sea while captain of a ship, and her mother has since died, so that
she is very precious to us."

I looked at little Maggie with even more interest than before, and I
said--

"My father was also drowned, and so was my grandfather, and I believe
his father before him, for I come of a seafaring family."

"That has been likewise the fate of many of the Troils," said the lady;
"but I must not let you talk more now.  Before long my father and your
young shipmate will be returning, and they will be glad to hear from
your own lips how you feel.  In the meantime try to go to sleep again.
The doctor says that the more you sleep the sooner you will regain your
strength.  Saying this, the lady, followed by the little girl, left the
room."

I thought over what she had said to me, and kept repeating to myself,
"Margaret Troil!  Margaret Troil!  I know that name, I am sure!" but I
did not think long before I forgot where I was and what had happened.

I saw Maggie's sweet face peeping in at me when I woke, but as soon as
she saw that my eyes were open she ran off, and shortly afterwards Mr
Troil and Jim came into the room.  The old gentleman spoke very kindly;
told me that I must consider myself at home, and that though he hoped I
should soon get well, I must be in no hurry to go away.  He then went
out, saying to Jim, "I can let you stay only five minutes with your
friend.  When the time is up I must call you."

Jim could at first scarcely speak for joy at seeing me so much better.
He then told me how highly Mr Troil spoke of me and him for the way we
had kept the brig afloat, and brought her to the coast of Shetland.

"I told him as how it wasn't us who did it," continued Jim, "but that
God sent the wind as blew us here; and he says to me, `To be sure, that
was the case in one way, but then that God rewarded your efforts, and
thus you deserve great credit for what you did.'  He promises to see
that we are rewarded, and to do all he can for us himself.  I told him
as how you were really captain, and that I couldn't have done anything
by myself, except pump, and that I had done with a will, seeing I am
bigger and stronger than you."

I was inclined to smile at Jim's modesty, though I felt very grateful to
him for speaking so well of me, and was about to ask him what Mr Troil
said in return, when our host called him out of the room.  I was thus
left to myself, except when the lady, who Jim had told me was Miss
Troil, the old gentleman's daughter, or little Maggie looked in to see
if I wanted anything.  Two days after this I was able to dress and sit
out in front of the house, enjoying the sun and air, looking down on the
voe in which lay our brig, with a small sloop and several fishing
vessels and boats.  On that side, looking to the south, there was a view
of the voe and the opposite bank, but on all the others the house, a
square stone building, was protected by a high wall close to it, built
to keep off the biting cold winds and snow of winter.  Jim was out with
Mr Troil, and as Miss Troil was engaged, Maggie came and sat by me with
a book, and read and talked to me for a long time, getting me to tell
her all about myself and our perilous voyage, till her aunt summoned her
to attend to some household affairs.  When I returned to my room I found
that my chest had been brought on shore and placed there.  Miss Troil
came in and took out the things, which, having become damp and mildewy,
she wished to dry.  While doing so she came upon my old Testament,
which, chancing to open, she examined the inside of the cover with
intense curiosity.

"Why, Peter, how did you come by this?" she asked.

The family had got by this time to call me Peter.

I told her that it had belonged to my father's mother, and then for the
first time since I came to Shetland I recollected that the name in it
was spelt in the same way as that of my host.

"I must ask my father about this!" she exclaimed.  "He had an uncle
called Angus, after whom he was named, and who married a Margaret
Halcro.  There are none of the family remaining in Shetland, though at
one time they were numerous.  Peter, I should not be surprised if it
turns out that you are a kinsman of ours.  Should you like to be so?"

"Indeed I should!"  I answered; "I feel as if I were one already, from
the kind way you have treated me, even before you thought I might be a
relative."

When Mr Trail came in he listened attentively to what his daughter told
him, and, having examined the handwriting in the Testament, asked me the
ages of my father and grandmother, and all other particulars I could
tell him.

"I have no doubt about your being a near relative of ours, Peter, and I
rejoice to find you one, my dear boy," he said; "though why my aunt
Margaret Troil did not come back to her husband's relatives after her
husband's death I cannot tell."

"Perhaps she had not the means to make the journey, or my father had
gone away to sea, and she was afraid that he might be unable to find her
on his return if she left her home; or, now I think of it, I remember my
father saying that she died soon after my grandfather was lost, when he
himself was a little chap."

"Well, all is ordered for the best, though we don't see how," said Mr
Troil.  "And now you have come you must stay with us and turn back into
a Shetlander.  What do you say to my proposal?"

"Oh, do stay with us, Cousin Peter!" exclaimed Maggie, taking my hand
and looking up in my face.

"Indeed, I should like very much to do so," I answered, "but there is my
sister Mary, and I cannot desert her, even though I know that she is
well off with Mr Gray."

"Then Peter must go and fetch her!" exclaimed Maggie.  "Oh, I should so
like to have her here!  I would love her as a sister."

"A bright idea of yours, Maggie," said Mr Troil.  "What do you say to
it, Peter?  I will furnish you with ample funds, and you can be back
here in a month, as I feel very sure that your friend Mr Gray will
willingly allow Mary to come."

I need not say that I gladly accepted my generous relative's proposal,
and it was arranged that as soon as I had quite recovered my strength I
should go south in the first vessel sailing from Lerwick, accompanied by
Jim, who wanted to see his friends, and hoped to be able to work his
passage both ways, so that he might not be separated from me.



CHAPTER THIRTEEN.

A DISASTROUS VOYAGE.

I was soon myself again, and ready for the proposed voyage southward.
Accordingly, Mr Troil having received directions from Mr Gray to send
the _Good Intent_ to Lerwick to be refitted, Tom and I, bidding
farewell, as we hoped, only for a short season to Miss Troil and Maggie,
went on board the brig to assist in carrying her there, intending to
proceed by the first vessel sailing after our arrival.  Mr Troil sent
us a pilot and a good crew to navigate the vessel, and accompanied her
himself in his sloop, that he might assist us if necessary.

The wind was fair and the sea smooth, and thus without accident we
arrived in that fine harbour called Brassa Sound, on the shore of which
Lerwick, the capital of the islands, stands.  We there found a vessel
shortly to sail for Newcastle.  Having taken in a cargo of coals, she
was thence to proceed to Portsmouth.  This so exactly suited our object
that Mr Troil at once engaged a passage on board her for Jim and me.

After Portsmouth the town appeared small, but the inhabitants have large
warm hearts, and were very kind to Jim and me.  As he remarked, it is
better to have large hearts and live in a small place than small cold
hearts and to live in a large place.  They seemed never to tire of
asking us questions about our voyage in the _Good Intent_, and how we
two boys alone managed to rig jury-masts and to keep her afloat.

"By just knowing how to do our work and sticking to it," answered Jim,
to one of our friends.

If we had remained much longer at Lerwick we should have begun to fancy
ourselves much more important persons than we really were; but the brig
_Nancy_, Captain Gowan, was ready for sea, and wishing farewell to my
kind relative, Mr Troil, who set sail in his ship to return home, we
went on board.  We soon afterwards got under way with a fair breeze, and
before night had left Sumburgh Head, the lofty point which forms the
southern end of the Shetland Islands, far astern.

The _Nancy_ was a very different sort of craft from the _Good Intent_.
She was an old ill-found vessel, patched up in an imperfect manner, and
scarcely seaworthy.  Jim and I agreed that if she were to meet with the
bad weather we encountered in our old ship she would go to the bottom or
drive ashore.

We discovered also before long that Captain Gowan was a very different
person from our former captain.  He had conducted himself pretty well on
shore, so that people spoke of him as a very decent man, but when once
at sea he threw off all restraint, abused the crew, quarrelled with the
mate, and neglected us, who had been placed under his charge.

Jim, who had to work his passage, slept in the fore-peak, but I was
berthed aft.  I, however, did as much duty as anyone.  Jim told me that
the men were a rough lot, and that he had never heard worse language in
his life.  They tried to bully him, but as he was strong enough to hold
his own, and never lost his temper, they gave up the attempt.  Captain
Gowan growled when I came in to dinner the first day, which I knew that
I had a right to do, and he asked if every ship-boy was to be turned
into a young gentleman because he happened to have saved his life while
others lost theirs?

I did not answer him, for I saw an empty bottle on the locker, and
another by his side with very little liquor remaining in it.  After this
I kept out of his way, and got my meals from the cook as best I could.

Jim and I agreed that if the _Nancy_ had not been going direct to
Portsmouth, we should do well to leave her at Newcastle, and try to make
our way south on board some other vessel.  Although we went, I believe,
much out of our proper course, we at last entered the Tyne.  Soon after
we brought up, several curiously-shaped boats, called kreels, came
alongside, containing eight tubs, each holding a chaldron; these tubs
being hoisted on board, their bottoms were opened and the coals fell
into the hold.

The kreels, which were oval in shape, were propelled by a long oar or
pole on each side, worked by a man who walked along the gunwale from the
bow to the stern, pressing the upper end with his shoulder while the
lower touched the ground.  Another man stood in the stern with a similar
long oar to steer.

The crews were fine hardy fellows, known as kreelmen.  I was astonished
to hear them call each other bullies, till I found that the term
signified "brothers."  So bully Saunders meant brother Saunders.

Jim and I had had the sense to put on our working clothes, which was
fortunate, as before long, with the coal-dust flying about, we were as
black as negroes, but as everything and all on board were coloured with
the same brush, we did not mind that.

With the help of the kreelmen the _Nancy_ was soon loaded, and we again
sailed for the southward.  Matters did not improve.  The captain, having
abstained from liquor while on shore, recompensed himself by taking a
double allowance, and became proportionably morose and ill-tempered,
never speaking civilly to me, and often passing a whole day without
exchanging a word with his poor mate; and when he did open his mouth it
was to abuse.  The brig, though tolerably tight when light, now that she
had a full cargo, as soon as a sea got up began to leak considerably, so
that each watch had to pump for an hour to keep the water under.  Jim
and I took our turns without being ordered, but though accustomed to the
exercise, it was hard work.  When we cried "Spell ho!" for others to
take our places, the captain shouted, "You began to pump for your own
pleasure, now you shall go on for mine, you young rascals!"  The men,
however, though they at first laughed, having more humanity than the
skipper, soon relieved us.

This was the third day after we sailed, when the wind shifting to the
south-west, and then to the south, we stood away to the eastward in
order to double the North Foreland.  After some time it came on to blow
harder than ever, but the brig was made snug in time, though the leaks
increased, and all hands in a watch were kept, spell and spell, at the
pumps.  The captain behaved just as before, drinking all day long,
though he did not appear to lose his senses altogether.  The mate,
however, looked very anxious as the vessel pitched into the seas each
time more violently than before.  I asked him if he thought she would
keep afloat.

"That's more than I can promise you, my boy," he answered.  "If the wind
falls, and the sea goes down, we may perhaps manage to keep the leaks
under; but if I were the captain I would run for Harwich or the Thames
sooner than attempt to thrash the vessel round the Foreland."

"Why don't you propose that to him, and if he does not agree, just steer
as you think best?"  I said.  "I suspect that he would not find out in
what direction we were standing."

"Wouldn't he, though!  Why, Peter, I tell you he would swear there was a
mutiny, and knock me overboard," answered the poor mate in a tone of
alarm.

He was evidently completely cowed by the captain, and dared not oppose
him.  The night was just coming on; the seas kept breaking over the
bows, washing the deck fore and aft, and the clank of the pumps was
heard without cessation.  The captain sat in his cabin, either drinking
or sleeping, except when occasionally he clambered on deck, took a look
around while holding on to the companion-hatch, and then, apparently
thinking that all was going on well, went below again.  When I could
pump no longer I turned in, thinking it very probable that I should
never see another sunrise.  By continually pumping, the brig was kept
afloat during the night; but when I came on deck in the morning, the
mate, who looked as if he would drop from fatigue, told me that the
leaks were gaining on us.  We were now far out, I knew, in the German
Ocean, and if the brig should go down, there was too much sea running to
give us a chance of saving ourselves.

Some time after daylight the captain came on deck, and he had not been
there long when there was a lull.  "Hands about ship!" he shouted.

The watch below tumbled up, and the brig was got round.

"Will you take charge, sir?" humbly asked the mate.  "I have been on
deck all night, and can scarcely stand."

The captain raved at him for a lazy hound.  "I haven't turned in,
either," he said, though he had been asleep in his chair for several
hours.  "I want my breakfast; when I've had that I'll relieve you."

The mate made no reply, and as soon as the captain went below he hurried
forward to bid the cook make haste with the cabin breakfast.  It was a
difficult matter, however, to keep the galley fire alight, or the pots
on it in their places.  The weather seemed to be improving, but the men
were well-nigh worn out with pumping.  When the captain at last came on
deck, in spite of their grumbling, he kept them labouring away as hard
as ever, and ordered Jim and me to take our turn with the rest.  This we
did willingly, as we knew that unless all exerted themselves the brig
must founder.

As noon approached, the captain brought up his quadrant, and sent below
to summon the mate to take observations though the clouds hung so
densely over the sky that there was but little chance of doing this.

"Might as well try to shoot the sun at midnight as now, with the clouds
as dark as pitch," growled the mate.  "What was the use of calling me up
for such fool's work?"

"What's that you say?" shouted the captain.  "Do you call me a fool?"

"Yes, I do, if you expect to take an observation with such a sky as we
have got overhead," answered the mate.

"Then take that!" screamed the captain, throwing the quadrant he held in
his hand at the mate's head, not, for the moment, probably, recollecting
what it was.

It struck the mate on the temple, who, falling, let his own quadrant go,
and both were broken to pieces.

"Here's a pretty business," cried one of the men, "I wonder now what
will become of us!"

Good reason we had to wonder.  The mate, picking himself up, flew at the
captain, and a fearful struggle ensued.  Both were too excited to know
what they were about, and the captain, who was the stronger of the two,
would have hove the mate overboard had not the crew rushed aft and
separated them.

The mate then went below, and the captain rolled about the deck,
stamping and shouting that he would be revenged on him.  At last he also
went down into the cabin.

Fearing that he would at once put his fearful threats into execution and
attack the mate, I followed, intending to call the crew to my assistance
should it be necessary.  I saw him, however, take another pull at the
rum bottle, and then, growling and muttering, turn into his bed.  I
waited till I supposed that he was asleep, and then I went to the mate's
berth.

"There is no one in charge of the deck, sir," I said.  "And if it was to
blow harder, as it seems likely to do, I don't know what will happen."

"Nor do I either, Peter, with such a drunken skipper as ours," he
answered.  "What are the men about?"

"They have knocked off from the pumps, and if you don't come on deck and
order them to turn to again they'll let the brig go down without making
any further effort to save her," I answered.

My remarks had some effect, for though the mate had himself been
drinking, or he would not have spoken as he did to the captain, he yet
had some sense left in his head.  He at last got up and came on deck.
All the hands, except the man at the helm, were crouching down under the
weather-bulwarks to avoid the showers of spray flying in dense masses
over us.  The sea had increased, and though we had not much sail set,
the brig was heeling over to the furious blasts which every now and then
struck her; if she righted it was only to bend lower still before the
next.

"Do you want to lose your lives or keep them, lads?" shouted the mate,
after sounding the well.  "Well then, I can tell you that if you don't
turn to at once and work hard, and very hard, too, the brig will be at
the bottom before the morning."

Still the men did not move.  Jim was holding on near me.

"Come, let you and me try what we can do," I said; "we have pumped to
good purpose before now."

Jim needed no second asking.  Seizing the brakes, we began, and pumped
away with all our might, making the water rush across the deck in a full
stream.  Before long one man got up and joined, then another, and
another.  When we got tired and cried, "Spell ho!" the rest took our
places.

"I see you want to save your lives, lads," cried the mate, who
occasionally took a spell himself.  "But you must keep at it, or it will
be of no use."

All that day we stood on, the crew pumping without intermission.

"If the wind moderates we'll set more sail," said the mate; "but the
brig has as much on her as she can bear.  We must be soon looking out
for land, though.  You, Peter, have a sharp pair of eyes--go aloft, and
try if you can see it."

Though the vessel was heeling over terribly at the time, I was about to
obey, when Jim said, "No, you stay on deck; let me go, Peter."

To this I would not agree.

"Then I'll go with you," said Jim.

So we both crawled up the weather-rigging together.  Jim said he thought
that he saw land on the starboard bow, but I did not get a glimpse of
it, and felt sure that he was mistaken; at all events there was no land
visible ahead.  We remained aloft till darkness came on, and there was
no use remaining longer.

We made our reports to the mate.  He said that Jim was right, and that
we had probably passed the South Foreland.

This was, however, I suspected, only to encourage the men to keep at the
pumps.  All night long, spell and spell, we laboured away.  When the
morning broke no land was in sight.  By this time we were all pretty
well knocked up, and most of the men declared that they could pump no
longer.

The mate now tried to make them keep on, reminding them that if they did
not they would lose their lives.  Some answered that they would take
their chance, but Jim and I and others kept at our duty.  Even we,
however, began to feel that the struggle would be useless unless we
should soon make the land, for the mate could not deny that the water
was gaining on us.

The wind, however, began to moderate, and the sun bursting forth from
between the clouds cheered us up a little.

At last the captain came on deck.  After looking about him for some time
he told me to go below and get his quadrant.  He was apparently sober,
and seemed to have forgotten what had happened.

"Have you a second one, sir?"  I asked.

"No; bring the one I always use," he answered.

"You hove it at the mate yesterday, sir," I said.  "And he fell and
broke his."

"What lies are you telling, youngster?" he exclaimed, uttering a fearful
oath.  Then he shouted to the mate, who had gone forward to be out of
his way.

"Did I heave my quadrant at you?"

"Yes, you did," answered the mate.  "You made me break mine, too, and if
we lose our lives you'll have them on your head."

The captain made no reply.  I think that the occurrence must have
flashed on his mind.  He looked at the compass, took two or three turns
on deck, and then ordered more sail to be set, directly afterwards
changing the ship's course to north-west.  I therefore supposed that we
were steering for the Downs, or perhaps for Saint Helens.  The men,
though very tired, went on pumping far more willingly than before.

A bright look-out was kept for land, but no land appeared.  For some
hours the brig made fair progress, but as the evening drew on the wind
again got up.  The captain had gone below.  He could not resist taking a
pull at the rum bottle.  We were carrying topsails and topgallantsails.

A sudden squall laid the brig over.  The captain sprang on deck and
shouted--

"All hands shorten sail!  You, Peter and Jim, up aloft with you and hand
the main-topgallant-sail."

The blast had passed over and the brig had righted.  Jim and I ran aloft
to obey the order.

The rest of the people were still on deck except one man, who had gone
up the fore-rigging, about to let fly the sheets and brail up; but,
nearly worn out with labouring at the pumps, they must have very slowly
obeyed the orders they received, for almost before a sheet was let go,
another furious squall struck the brig.  Over, over she heeled.

Jim and I slid down into the main-top.

"Hold on, whatever happens," cried Jim.

The warning was given not a moment too soon.  There was a fearful
cracking sound, the mast quivered, it was almost right over the water,
and just as the brig was on her beam-ends it gave way, tearing out the
chain-plates on the weather side, and Jim and I were hurled with it into
the raging sea.

I expected every moment that we should be washed off as the mast was
towed along, and so we must have been had not the lee shrouds given way.

To regain the brig was impossible; the next instant the mast was clear
and the brig drove on.  Before she had got a cable's length from us the
foremast also went by the board.

We could see no one on it as it was towed along.  A minute or more
passed.

The mast to which we clung rose to the top of a sea, we saw the brig
plunge into another.  Again we looked, for one instant we saw her stern,
and the next she was gone.

We were too far off to hear a cry.  The foremast must have been drawn
down with her.  The boats were securely lashed.  Nothing that we could
see remained floating.  We knew that our late shipmates had perished.

Our own condition was fearful in the extreme.  At any moment we might be
washed from our hold!  Now our head were under water!  Now we rose to
the top of a sea and looked down into a deep gulf below us.

"Hold on; hold on, Peter," cried Jim, who was clinging on the mast close
to me.  "Don't give up.  Here, I've cut a piece of rope for you.  Lash
yourself on with it.  I'll get a piece for myself presently."

I wanted him to secure himself first, but he insisted that I should take
the rope, and I lashed myself with it.  He soon afterwards secured
himself in the same way.  We might thus prolong our lives; but should we
be able to hold out till a passing vessel might pick us up?  I asked
myself.

We were far away from land, and hours, perhaps days, might go by before
the mast was seen, and only our dead bodies would be found.  We had no
food, no fresh water; night was coming on.  I did not tell my thoughts
to Jim, nor did he say what was passing in his mind; but we tried to
cheer each other up.  For an instant the clouds broke asunder in the
west, and the sun, just as he sank below the horizon, bursting forth,
shed a bright glow over the foaming ocean.

"He'll not be long down," cried Jim, "and he'll warm us on t'other side
when he rises."

Jim's remark did me good.  We had cause to hope for the best.  The
squall which had carried away the brig's masts was the last of the gale.
The wind rapidly fell, and the sea went down, so that in a short time
we could keep ourselves almost entirely out of the water.  The mast
became more quiet.  Had we not lashed ourselves to it when we fell
asleep as we both did now and then, we might have dropped off.  We
talked as much as we could, both to keep up our spirits and to prevent
ourselves from dozing.  Thus the night passed.  It seemed long enough,
but not so long as I expected.  I must have closed my eyes when I heard
Jim shout, "A sail!  A sail!" and opening them I saw a large ship under
all sail about a couple of miles away, standing on a course which we
hoped would bring her near us.



CHAPTER FOURTEEN.

JIM AND I CARRIED OFF AGAINST OUR WILL.

"Shall we be seen, Jim, think you?"  I asked, after we had gazed at the
ship some minutes without speaking.

"Ain't quite certain," answered Jim, in a sad voice; "if I thought so, I
could sing for joy, that I could, but the ship's a long way off, and
maybe she'll haul closer to the wind and pass us by."

"Oh, Jim!  Let us pray that she'll not do that," I exclaimed.  "She's
standing, as far as I can make out, directly towards us, and why should
we fancy that we are to be deserted?  Cheer up, Jim!  Cheer up!"

"That's what I'm trying to do," said Jim.  "Still we must not make too
certain.  If she doesn't pick us up another vessel may.  We are in the
track of ships going up and down Channel, and that's one comfort."

Jim did not say this all at once, for he stopped sometimes to take a
look at the stranger, and every now and then a sea washed up and made us
close our mouths.  Still the seas were every instant growing less and
less, and we at last unlashed ourselves that we might move about a
little and stretch our limbs.

We were on the top, it must be remembered, so that we did not run the
same risk of falling off as we should have done if we had had only the
mast to support us.

With straining eyes we watched the ship.  Still she held the same course
on which she had been steering when we first saw her, and which was
bringing her nearer and nearer to us.

"Hurrah, Jim!  We shall soon be seen, depend on that," I exclaimed, at
last, "and perhaps before to-night we shall be safe on shore.  Who can
say that we shan't be landed at Portsmouth itself?"

"I wish I could say I was as sure as you are, Peter," observed Jim, in a
doleful voice.  "If she had seen us it would have been all right; she
would pick us up, but she may alter her course.  Even now the wind is
shifting, and she may have to keep away."

I could not contradict this; still I kept on hoping that we should ere
long be seen.  I had a white handkerchief in my pocket, although it was
rolled into a ball by the wet.  I pulled it out, and waved it above my
head as high as I could reach.  Even now we might have attracted the
attention of those on board the stranger, although we could distinguish
no signal made to us in return.

"She's a thumping big ship, whatever she is," I remarked.

"She's high out of the water, and that makes her look bigger," observed
Jim.  "I have seen some like her brought up at Spithead, and to my mind
she's a South Sea whaler, outward bound.  That's the reason she looks so
high.  Yes, I am right, for I can make out her boats hoisted up at the
davits."

"I think you are right," I said; "but even if she is an outward bound
ship, she'll put us on board another vessel homeward-bound, or land us
on some part of the coast, the back of the Isle of Wight, or Portland."

"First let us get on board her before we talk of where we shall be
landed," said Jim.  "It seems to me as if she was going about.  The head
sails are shaking."

"No, no! the man at the wheel was not minding his helm," I answered.
"I'll wave again."

"They won't see that little bit of a rag," cried Jim, "I'll try what I
can do.  Here, Peter, just take hold of my jacket," he continued, as he
stripped it off, and then loosening his waistband he pulled his shirt
over his head, and began to wave it frantically.  I waved my
handkerchief, and then in our eagerness we shouted out at the top of our
voices, as if the faint sounds could be carried as far as the ship.

Presently our hearts sank, for there was no doubt that the ship was
keeping away.  Still, should anyone on board be using a spy-glass, and
turn it towards us, we should, we hoped, be observed.  We waved and
shouted even more vehemently than before, but even I was almost in
despair.

"She's going to pass us after all," cried Jim, "and there's not another
sail in sight."

Just as he spoke there came a puff of smoke with a bright flash, from
the ship's bows, followed by a sharp report.

"We are seen!  We are seen!" shouted Jim.  "That's a signal to us.
Hurrah!  Hurrah!"

The ship now came rapidly on, and we had no longer any doubt about being
rescued.  This very circumstance caused a reaction in our feelings, and,
strange as it may seem, we both burst into tears.  We recovered
ourselves, however, very soon, and continued waving, still having an
idea that the ship might sail away from us, but on and on she came.
Presently her courses were brailed up, and she hove-to about three
cables' lengths from our mast.  Almost at the same instant one of her
boats was lowered, and came pulling towards us as fast as the men could
bend their backs to the oars.  In a few minutes kindly hands were
stretched out to help us into the boat.

"Are you the only two?" asked the mate, who was steering.

"Yes, sir; all the rest are gone," I answered.

"Well, we'll hear all about it when we get you on board, lads, for you
both seem as if you wanted looking after," he said.

The boat leaving the mast, returned rapidly towards the ship.

While most of the crew scrambled up the sides, the tackles were hooked
on, and we were hoisted up in the boat, from whence we were speedily
handed down on deck.  I could not have stood if I had not been
supported, and Jim was much in the same condition.

We were soon surrounded by strange faces, some looking compassionately
upon us, others with indifference, as if it was a matter of very little
consequence that two boys should have been saved from perishing.

Meantime the yards were swung round and the ship stood on her course.

"We must have the lads below at once," said one of the persons standing
round.  "They have been many hours wet through and exposed on the mast,
and even now, if we don't look out, they may slip through our fingers."

"Very true, Doctor Cockle," said another, who was, I saw by his dress,
an officer.  "One of them may be put into my cabin, where you can look
after him better than for'ard."

"And the other can go into mine," said the doctor, the person who had
first spoken.

No one had asked us any questions; probably they saw by our condition
that we should have been unable to answer them, for both Jim and I were
fast verging towards unconsciousness.

We were at once carried below, when I was put into the mate's cabin,
where my clothes were stripped off by the doctor's orders, and, being
rubbed dry, I was placed between the blankets.  The doctor, who had been
looking after Jim, soon came and gave me something out of a glass, which
seemed to warm me up wonderfully.  But even then I could not have spoken
if my life had depended upon it.

"Get some warm broth as quickly as you can," I heard the doctor say to
someone, he in the meantime rubbing my feet and hands and chest.  It
seemed as if scarcely more than two or three minutes had passed when a
basin of hot broth was brought me, which I drank without difficulty, and
it did me more good than the stuff in the glass.

"You may go to sleep now, my lad," said the doctor, in a kind tone;
"you'll do well.  You shall tell us by-and-by how you and your companion
came to be on the mast."

I obeyed the doctor's orders, and scarcely had the door been closed than
I was fast asleep.  I was awakened by the doctor coming in, accompanied
by a boy who brought some more soup and some bread, and which, being
very hungry, I thankfully swallowed.

"You can eat something more substantial now," said the doctor, and he
told the boy to bring in some fowl and more bread from the
breakfast-table.

By this I guessed that I must have had a long spell of sleep, and that a
whole day and a night had passed since we were taken on board.  I
eagerly ate all that was given me.

"You may get up now, my boy, and dress, and we will find another berth
for you; we must not keep Mr Griffiths out of his bed," said the
doctor.

"I would not do that on any account, sir," I said; "I feel quite strong,
and am accustomed to live forward."

I soon dressed, and was glad to see that Jim also was up.  There were
two apprentices on board, who lived on the half-deck, and the doctor
said that the first mate promised to have some berths knocked up for us
with them.

"How did you come to be on board the vessel which went down?" asked the
doctor, when I accompanied him on deck.

From the kind way he spoke I was encouraged to give him a full account
of myself and Jim, so I told him that he and I belonged to Portsmouth,
and had gone in the _Good Intent_ to Bergen; and how she had lost her
masts, and the crew had been washed overboard.  How the captain had
died, and we had done our best to keep the brig afloat, and had been
driven in close to Shetland, and that I had found a relative there, and
was coming south in the _Nancy_ to fetch my sister.  He then asked me
about my father, and I told him that he had been lost at Spithead, and
that mother had died, and old Tom had taken care of Mary and me, and
how, after he had been blown up in the ship at Spithead, Jim and I had
managed to gain our bread and support Mary and Nancy till a claimant
appeared for old Tom's property, and our boat had been taken from us,
and we had been turned out of the house, and should have been in a bad
way if the good Quaker, Mr Gray, had not come to our assistance.

The doctor listened attentively, and he then asked me what sort of man
my father was, and whether I had a brother in the navy.

I described my father, and then said that Jack had gone away on board
the _Lapwing_ brig of war, but that he was supposed to have been cut off
by savages in one of her boats when in the Indian seas.  At all events,
that we had never since heard of him.

"That's very strange," he observed; "I think, Peter Trawl, that we have
met before, when you were a very little chap.  Do you remember your
father taking off the doctor and the mate of a ship lying at Spithead,
when you and your brother Jack were in the boat, and he was to be put on
board the brig?"

"Yes, sir," I said, looking up at his face: "I recollect it perfectly,
as it was the last time I saw Jack, though I little thought then that I
should never see him again."

"I was the doctor, and the first mate of this ship was my companion.
When I first heard your name, as it is a peculiar one, I all of a sudden
recollected that it was that of the boatman who took Mr Griffiths and
me off on the occasion I speak of.  We are now brothers-in-law, and have
ever since gone to sea together--that is to say, when we have gone to
sea, for both of us have taken long spells on shore.  If it hadn't been
for that, Mr Griffiths would have been a captain years ago."

"I am very glad to meet you and him again, sir," I said; "and now I look
at you I fancy I recollect your countenance, as I did your voice.  You
were not as well accustomed to the sea then as you are now."

"No," he answered, laughing.  "That was my first voyage.  I sometimes
wish that I had lived comfortably on shore, and made it my last, but I
got accustomed to a roving life, and having no regular business or tie,
when circumstances compelled Mr Griffiths--who married my sister--to
come to sea again, I agreed to accompany him."

I felt sure from the kind way in which Doctor Cockle spoke that he would
wish to serve me.

I asked him if the ship was going to put into Saint Helens, or if not,
would he get the captain to land Jim and me at Portland?

"We are some way to the westward of Portland, already," he answered.
"It is possible that he may land you at Plymouth or Falmouth, or if not
put you on board some pilot or fishing boat, or any vessel we may fall
in with coming up Channel."

"Surely, sir, he would not carry us away from home?  I would give
anything to be on shore, where my young sister is expecting me, and it
would break her heart to fancy I was lost, which she would do if I did
not appear," I said.

"As Mr Griffiths and I only joined the ship at Hull, ten days ago, we
are not very intimate with the captain: but I hope he would not refuse
your request."

The doubtful way in which he spoke made me feel very unhappy.  Still, I
hoped that when I told the captain the strong reasons I had for wishing
to be put on shore as soon as possible, he would not refuse.

The doctor left me to attend to one of the men who was sick forward, and
I joined Jim, who had also come on deck.  I had a long talk with him
about the matter.  He fancied we were only then just abreast of the
Downs, and that the captain would put in willingly enough for the sake
of getting rid of us.  It was a great disappointment to find that we
were so far down Channel, and that we should thus, at all events, have a
long journey back to Portsmouth.  Still we neither of us doubted for a
moment that we should be put on shore somewhere to the westward, as I
saw by a look I had at the compass that we were standing for the land.

While we were talking, the captain, whom we had not yet seen, came on
deck.  He was a fine, tall, sailor-like looking man, with a handsome
countenance and large eyes, which seemed to take in everything at a
glance--a person of whom the roughest crew would stand in awe.

His bright eyes fell on Jim and me; he beckoned us to come up, and,
looking at me, bade me give him the particulars of the loss of the brig,
about which Mr Griffiths and the doctor had told him.

I gave him the account as he desired, and then thought that I might
venture to ask him to put Jim and me on shore, for that, as may be
supposed, was the thing uppermost in my mind.

"We will see about that, my lads," he answered.  "If the wind holds as
it now does it won't cause us any delay, but I can make no promises.
Boys at your age ought to wish to see the world, and we can find
employment for you on board.  You are sharp fellows, I can see, or you
would not have saved your lives.  One of the apprentices isn't worth his
salt, and the other will slip his cable before long, I suspect.  His
friends insisted on my taking him, fancying that the voyage would
restore him to health."

The captain spoke in so free-and-easy a way that the awe with which I
was at first inclined to regard him vanished.

The wind, I should have said, had shifted to the westward of south.  We
were standing about north-west, a course which would carry us over to
the English coast before long.  We were obliged to be content with the
sort of promise that the captain had made, and I hoped that when the
doctor and Mr Griffiths spoke to him, that he would not refuse to put
us on shore.

Though Jim and I were well enough to walk about the deck, we were too
weak to venture aloft, or we should have been at the masthead looking
out for land.  We went forward, however, keeping our eyes over the
starboard bow, where we expected every instant to see it.

Several of the men spoke to us good-naturedly, and were as eager as the
officers had been to hear what had happened to us.  While we were
standing there looking out, a lad came up and said, "So I hear you
fellows are to be our messmates.  What are your names?"

I told him.

"Mine's Ned Horner," he said, "and I hope we shall be friends, for I
can't make anything of the fellow who messes with me, George Esdale.
There's no fun in him, and he won't talk or do anything when it's his
watch below but read and sing psalms."

"I shall be glad to be friends with you," I answered, "but I don't
suppose it will be for long, as I expect we shall leave the ship
to-night or to-morrow morning."

"That may or may not be," he remarked, with a laugh.  "Have you been
long at sea?"

I told him that I had been brought up to it from my boyhood.

"Well, you have the advantage of me, for this is my first voyage; and
Esdale didn't know the stem from the stern when he first came on board.
Now come along to the half-deck; he and I are going to dinner; I suppose
you'll join us?"

Jim and I were beginning to feel hungry, and willingly accepted Horner's
invitation.

The savoury whiffs which came out of the caboose as we passed made me
feel more eager than ever for something to eat.

Horner took us down to the half-deck, where we found Esdale, of whom he
had spoken, seated on a chest reading.  He was a pale, sickly-looking
youth, taller a good deal than Jim.

He put down his book and held out his hand to shake ours.

"It's your turn to go for the dinner," he said to Horner, "and it must
be ready by this time, but I'll go if you wish it."

"Well, you may go," said Horner; "I want to do the honours to these
fellows.  Take care that you don't capsize with the things as you come
along the deck."

Then, without another word, Esdale got up, and putting his book into the
chest, went forward.

"I make him do just what I like," said Horner, in a contemptuous tone.
"Take care that you don't treat him in the same way, for if he has too
many masters he may be inclined to kick."

Before long Esdale returned with a bowl of pea-soup, and a plate at the
top of it containing some potatoes, and a piece of fat boiled pork.

"Now fall to, youngsters," said Horner, in a patronising tone.  "I am
sorry not to be able to offer you better fare."

While he was speaking he got out of a locker four plates and two metal
spoons and two wooden ones.

We did ample justice to the dinner, as we had been accustomed to nothing
better while we were on board the _Nancy_.  After the meal was finished
we returned on deck, though Esdale did not offer to accompany us, as he
spent his watch below, as Horner had said, in reading, writing, or
singing in a low voice to himself.

We passed the afternoon looking out for the land.  At length, when night
came on, in spite of my anxiety to see the coast, and the long sleep I
had had, I felt scarcely able to keep my eyes open.  Still, I should
probably have remained on deck after dark had not the doctor come to us
and said, "I have spoken to the captain, lads, and he promises to put
you on shore to-morrow morning; so now go and turn in, for you require
sleep."

We went to the half-deck, where we found that the carpenter had knocked
up some rough bunks, in which some mattresses and blankets had been
placed.  We were both glad enough to turn in.  I observed that Esdale,
before he did so, knelt down and said his prayers.  It was Horner's
watch on deck, so that he was not present.



CHAPTER FIFTEEN.

THE VOYAGE OF THE "INTREPID" BEGUN.

I slept right through the night, and was surprised to find when I opened
my eyes that it was daylight.  Jim and I at once turned out and went on
deck.

There was the land, broad on the starboard bow, still at some distance.
When I looked aloft I saw that the yards were square, and studding-sails
on either side.  A strong north-easterly wind was blowing, and we were
running down Channel.

The captain, the first mate, and the doctor were on deck.  Jim and I
gazed eagerly at the land.

I went up to the doctor.

"Whereabouts are we, sir?"  I asked.

"We are off the Start, my lad."

"Off the Start!"  I exclaimed.  "Oh, sir, won't the captain put into
Plymouth to land us as he promised?  Do speak to him, sir."

"These lads are very anxious to be landed, Captain Hawkins," he said.
"It is of the greatest importance to young Trawl here, and it would not
much delay us."

The mate spoke in the same way, and entreated the captain even in
stronger language than Dr Cockle had used.

"No, no," he answered.  "Very likely they do wish to be put on shore,
but we cannot lose a moment of this fine breeze.  The trip won't do them
any harm, and they'll thank me for it by-and-by."

Jim, when he heard this, was too angry on my account to speak, but I
lifted up my hands and implored the captain to have pity on my young
sister, if not on me.

"Very fine, my lad," he answered, with a laugh; "but you are not quite
of so much importance as you suppose.  It might delay us not only for a
few hours, but for days, perhaps, and, doctor, I cannot listen to you.
We've got a favourable breeze, and I intend to make the best use of it."

Once more I implored and entreated that the captain would not carry us
away from home.  All was of no use; he would not listen either to the
doctor or the mate, or us.  At length, growing angry, he said he would
not hear another word on the subject, and Jim and I, by the doctor's
advice, went for'ard to be out of his way.  There we stood, watching
with straining eyes the shore, past which we were running, and at length
the Land's End came in sight.

"Cheer up, my lads," said our kind friend, who came for'ard to us.  "The
wind may change, and we may be driven back, or we may be able to put you
on board some homeward-bound ship.  Cheer up!  Cheer up!"

The land, as I stood gazing at it, rapidly sank below the horizon.  I
strained my eyes--the last faint line had disappeared.  I could have
cried, but my grief was too bitter for tears.  Not that I cared for
being carried away on my own account, but I thought of the sorrow my
kind relatives in Shetland would feel--Mr Trail and his daughter, and
dear little Maggie, and more than all how Mary would feel as she waited
day after day for the arrival of the brig which was never to appear, and
then, when all hope was gone, how she would mourn for us, and Nancy also
would, I knew, share her feelings.

If I could have sent but a line to my sister to tell her I was safe,
though I might be long absent, it would not have so much mattered.  Mr
Gray would take very good care of her, and she would have written to Mr
Troil to explain what had happened; but as it was I could scarcely bear
it.

"The doctor told us to cheer up, and that's what I say to you, Peter,"
cried Jim, trying to console me.  "Maybe we shall fall in with a
homeward-bound ship after all, though I don't think there's much chance
of our seeing the shores of old England again for a long time to come if
we don't, as it looks as if the wind would hold in its present quarter
till we are well out in the Atlantic."

Jim was right.  With yards squared and every stitch of canvas the ship
could carry, we bowled along at a rate which soon left our native land
far astern.

I had been too long at sea, and knew the duties of a sailor too well, to
feel for myself so much as many fellows of my age under similar
circumstances would have done.  Jim also tried to rouse me up, so
instead of moping I determined to exert myself.  I still had the hope to
support me that before long we might fall in with a homeward-bound ship,
and I concluded that the captain would, without hesitation, put Jim and
me on board her.

The day after we took our departure from the Land's End he saw us both
together on deck.

"What are those youngsters idling there for?" he exclaimed, turning to
Mr Griffiths.  "Put them in a watch at once, and let me see that they
do their duty.  If they don't, let them look out for squalls!"

"Ay, ay, sir!" answered the mate, who, though of a very independent
spirit, always spoke respectfully to the captain.

He considerately placed us both in the same watch, knowing that we
should like it, as we should be able to talk at night when we were on
deck and had no especial duty to perform.

We had no reason to complain of the way the men treated us, rough as
some of them were.  The doctor and Mr Griffiths always behaved kindly,
but the captain took no further notice of us, except when he ordered Jim
or me to do something.  To my surprise, I found that the ship was the
_Intrepid_--the very one my father and I had put Mr Griffiths and the
doctor on board so many years before.  She was then quite a new ship,
and, being strongly-built, she was as sound as ever.  I have spoken of
her as a ship, but she was barque-rigged, as almost all whalers are,
barques being more easily handled than ship-rigged craft.  The
_Intrepid_ was upwards of three hundred tons burden, with a crew of
thirty hands all told, and stored, I found, for a cruise of two years or
more.  She carried six whale-boats, and materials for building others
should any of them be lost.  There were three mates, a carpenter and
cooper and their mates; an armourer, a steward, and cook; four
boat-steerers, four able seamen, six ordinary seamen, the doctor, two
apprentices, Jim, and me.

I had never before been on board a whaler, and as I listened to the long
yarns of the men describing their hairbreadth escapes and the exciting
chases after the monsters of the deep, I felt, had I not had such cogent
reasons for returning home, that I would very gladly have gone out to
the South Seas to witness with my own eyes the scenes the men spoke of.
Still I longed as much as ever to get back to England.

Jim and I made it out pretty well with the two apprentices.  Horner was
inclined to look down upon Jim for his want of education.  Esdale
treated us both alike with gentleness and consideration, and offered to
teach Jim to read and write if he wished to learn.  It had never
occurred to me to try and do so.  Indeed, although we had been so much
together, I had not had many opportunities.

The second night we were on board I was awakened by feeling some hairy
creature nestling by my side.  I sung out, not a little frightened.

"What's up?" cried Horner, who had just come below to rouse Jim and me
out to keep our watch.

"A great big brute of some sort has come into my bunk; I wonder it
hasn't bitten me," I answered.

"Why, I've got another here!" exclaimed Jim, who just then awoke.  "What
in the world is it?"

Horner laughed loudly.

"Why, they're our ferrets," he answered.  "Didn't you see them before?"

"No, and I never wish to see them again," answered Jim, as he flung the
creature down on the deck.

Horner then told us that the captain had taken a couple on board at Hull
to kill the rats, and that although a hutch had been made for them the
creatures always managed to get out at night for the sake of obtaining a
warm berth, and that if we put them into their hutch they would be sure
to find their way back again into his or Esdale's bunks before they had
been many minutes asleep.

The truth was the ferrets were more afraid of the rats than the rats
were of them.  We bore the annoyance for three nights more, and then, by
the unanimous consent of our mess, we got Horner to carry them down into
the hold, from which they never ascended, and we concluded that they
either got drowned in the bilge water or were eaten up by the rats.

We had not been long at sea before a heavy gale sprang up, but as the
wind was from the westward we were able to lay our course.

To Jim and me it mattered very little, although the waves were much
higher than I had seen them in the North Sea, but poor Esdale suffered
very much, and Horner's conceit was taken down a good many pegs.  Jim
and I did our best to look after them, and to try to get them to eat
something, but they could only swallow liquids.

"Oh, let me alone!  Let me alone!" cried Horner.

The doctor came to see Esdale frequently, and advised that he should be
taken to a spare berth in the cabin, but the captain would not allow it.

"All lads get sick when they first come to sea if there's a gale of
wind, and he'll come round again by-and-by," he remarked in his usual
off-hand way.

This was not told to Esdale, who said, indeed, that he preferred
remaining where he was.

As the weather was tolerably warm, I believe that he was as well off on
the half-deck as he would have been in the cabin.

At last the gale came to an end--or rather we ran out of it.  Esdale got
somewhat better again, but I observed that he had changed greatly in
appearance since we came on board.

I had now to abandon all hopes of the ship putting back, but there was
still a possibility of getting on board a homeward-bound vessel.

Two days after the gale had ceased, while I was below, I heard the cry
of "Sail, ho!" from the man at the masthead.

I hurried on deck.  We had the wind abeam, and so had she--a soldier's
wind as it is called.  We should meet the approaching vessel before long
and pass each other, with not a cable's length between us.

I watched her eagerly.  We drew closer and closer to each other.  When
we got nearly abreast I went up to the first mate and asked him what she
was.

"She's from the Brazils, bound for Liverpool," he answered.

Just then I saw the captain come on deck.  Forgetting what he was I
rushed up to him.

"Oh, Captain Hawkins, will you put Jim and me on board her?"  I
exclaimed.  "You don't know how much I want to get home; it won't delay
you ten minutes to put us on board."

"Ten minutes of this fine breeze lost for the sake of a boy like you,"
he answered, with a scornful laugh.  "I expended more than ten in
heaving to to pick you up, and that was as much as you are worth.  Go
forward, you young monkey, and give me no more of your impudence."

Undaunted by his heartless answer, I again and again implored that he
would put me on board the Liverpool ship, but he stood looking
contemptuously at me without uttering a word, till Jim, seeing that I
was making no way, coming up, hat in hand, exclaimed--

"If you'll put Peter here on board yonder ship, sir, that he may go home
to his young sister and friends, I'll stay here and work for you, and be
your slave for as many years as you may want me.  Do, sir--do let poor
Peter go!"

"Off with you for'ard," thundered the captain, with a fierce oath.  "How
dare you speak to me?  Away, both of you!  Somebody has been putting you
up to this, I know."  And he glanced angrily at Dr Cockle and the mate.

"If you mean me, Captain Hawkins, I know that the lad has very good
reasons for wishing to return home, but I did not advise him or Jim
Pulley to speak to you.  I certainly wish that you would put Peter Trawl
on board that homeward-bound ship."

"You may wish what you like, but I am not going to allow what I choose
to do to be found fault with by you or any other man on board this
ship!" cried the captain, turning on his heel.  "So look out for
yourself," he added, glancing half over his shoulder.

The ordinary salutes were exchanged, and the two vessels stood on their
course.

My heart felt as if it would burst with indignation and sorrow.  Had the
wind been light, I might, perhaps, have been able to put a letter on
board, even although the captain would not have let me go.

Esdale tried to comfort me, and advised me to have one written ready to
send should another opportunity occur.

The first land we made soon after this was Madeira.  Except the coast of
Norway, I had seen no foreign country, and as we passed it within a
quarter of a mile, it struck me as very beautiful and fertile.

The wind being light we tarred down the rigging, and a few days
afterwards, when we were about eight hundred miles from the land, one
morning, on coming on deck, I noticed that the shrouds and every
freshly-tarred rope looked as red as if they had been just painted.  I
asked the doctor, who allowed me to speak to him in a familiar way, what
had caused this, and he told me that it was the red sand blown off the
coast of Africa, and that it was a common occurrence in these latitudes.

We passed in sight of the Cape de Verde islands, one of which, called
Fogo, seemed of a prodigious height.  The first place we touched at was
the island of Brava, into which the captain put to obtain fresh
provisions.

"Now is my time," I thought.  "If I can go on shore here, I shall be
able to get back by the next homeward-bound vessel which calls at the
place."

Jim proposed that we should smuggle ourselves on board some shore-boat,
but to this I would not agree.

"We will go with the captain's leave," I answered, "and he surely will
not refuse it now that he has no excuse for doing so."

I therefore went up to him as soon as he came on deck.

"Captain Hawkins," I said, in as firm a voice as I could command, "again
I ask you will you allow Jim Pulley and me to leave your ship and wait
on shore until we can get a passage home?"

"Peter Trawl, if that's your name, I shall do no such thing," he
answered.  "If I find you attempting to go on shore I shall put you in
irons."

I knew from previous experience that there was no use in expostulating.
When I told the doctor, he could scarcely conceal his indignation.

"I feel inclined to help you, my lad, at every risk," he said, "but we
must be cautious.  Wait until the evening, and then we will see what can
be done."

I thanked him heartily, and promised to follow his advice.  Jim was
ready for anything.

The doctor said he would go on shore and then send off a boat which
would wait under the starboard bow, and that we must manage to slip into
her as soon as it was dark.

The captain in the meantime had landed, but returned very shortly with
four tall negroes, whom he had engaged to pull the 'midship oars in the
whale-boats.  They are, I should say, first-rate oarsmen, and have a
gentle disposition, ready to obey, and are happy under all
circumstances.  Besides the negroes, two boats loaded with fresh
provisions came alongside.

These were soon hoisted on board, when the captain ordered a gun to be
fired and Blue Peter to be hoisted, a signal to all those on shore to
return immediately.

Dr Cockle and the third mate, with the cooper, whom the captain thought
he could trust, had landed.

Presently the captain ordered another and then another gun to be fired
to hasten them, and then to my bitter disappointment he directed Mr
Griffiths to loosen sails and heave up the anchor.

According to Esdale's advice I had begun a letter to Mary, but had not
had time to finish it.  Hoping that I should not be missed by the
captain, I ran below to add a few lines and then to close it, under the
belief that I should be able to send it off by a shore-boat.  I had to
get out Esdale's ink-bottle and pen, which he had before lent me; the
pen would not write, so I had to search for his penknife, and to try and
mend it as well as I could, but having little experience in the art,
this took me some time.  I at last got the letter closed with a wafer,
and directed to the care of Mr Gray, when I sprang with it on deck.
Just then the eye of the captain fell on me.

"Come aft here, youngster," he shouted.  "Where have you been away from
your duty?"

I had the letter in my hand.

"I wanted to get this ready to send on shore, sir," I answered, holding
it up.

"No excuse for leaving your station.  Take that!" he cried, as he gave
me a blow on the side of the head with his half-clenched fist, which
brought me to the deck, and nearly stunned me.  When I recovered myself
the first person I saw was Dr Cockle, who, looking at me
compassionately, said, "Come below, Peter, and I'll try to put your head
to rights, for you seem to be much hurt.  How did it happen?"

"I can't tell you now, sir, for I much want to send this letter off by a
shore-boat," I answered.

As I spoke I observed that the crew were hoisting away and sheeting home
the sails.  I ran to the side and jumped on to the main chains.  The
only remaining boat was just shoving off.  I shouted to the people in
her to come and take my letter; but they did not understand me, or did
not care to remain alongside, as the ship was rapidly gathering way;
another stroke of their oars and they were at a distance from the ship.
I waved and shouted to them to come back, but they did not heed me, and
just then I heard the captain calling to me in an angry tone to attend
to my duty.  I was obliged to obey, expecting another cuff harder than
the last; but when he saw me begin to pull and haul with the rest he
said no more.  Perhaps he observed the blood streaming from my head.
The sails were now sheeted home, the yards trimmed, and the _Intrepid_
stood away from the land.

Another opportunity of making my escape was lost.



CHAPTER SIXTEEN.

WE CROSS THE LINE AND ATTEMPT TO ROUND CAPE HORN.

Jim was always saying, "Cheer up, Peter, cheer up!" but it was a very
hard matter to be cheery when I thought of the cruel way in which I had
been treated, and the sorrow my sister must be feeling at my supposed
loss.  I tried, as advised, to keep up my spirits, and did my best to
obey the orders I received.

Jim observed that it was all the same to him.  His friends would not
grieve much over his loss, and, as far as he was concerned, he would as
soon be chasing whales in the Pacific as working a wherry in Portsmouth
Harbour.

As we approached the line I found that the men were making preparations
for going through the ceremony which was performed on board most vessels
in those days.  One of the boat-steerers, Sam Ringold, who stood six
feet four in his shoes, and was proportionably broad, was chosen to act
the part of Neptune, and the cooper's mate, who was as wide as he was
high, that of his wife.  The armourer took the part of the barber, and
the carpenter's mate, who was lank and tall, the doctor.

Three of the ordinary seamen, the smallest fellows on board, were their
attendants.  All the chests were searched for the required dresses, and
some curtains belonging to the cabin found their way forward to form a
petticoat for Mrs Neptune.  Some gold paper and pasteboard were
manufactured into crowns, and some fishes' tails were ingeniously formed
for the attendants.  I discovered the preparations going forward, but
was charged not to let Horner, or Esdale, or Jim know anything about
them.  I was more favoured than the rest of my messmates by the men, who
seemed to have taken a liking to me; whether it was because they had
heard how I had assisted to save the _Good Intent_, or thought that I
was ill-treated by the captain, I do not know, but so it was.  No one
ever abused me, or gave me the taste of a rope's-end.

We had been sailing on with light winds when one morning, after the
decks had been washed down and the other duties of the ship performed,
having run on for a short distance, we lay almost becalmed with the sea
as smooth as a mill-pond.  The captain and his mates were seen to be
taking an observation, and soon afterwards it became known that we were
just crossing the line.

"I've often heard about it, but I can't say I see any line," said Jim.

"Nor can I!" cried Horner, who was looking out eagerly.

Presently a gruff voice was heard, hailing from forward.

"What ship is that, shutting out the light from my palace window?"

"The _Intrepid_" answered Captain Hawkins, who with the mates and doctor
were standing aft.

"Then go ahead, will you, or I'll indict you for a nuisance," cried the
voice, the remark producing a general laugh.

"I can't think of standing on until I have had the pleasure of a visit
from Daddy Neptune," said the captain.

"Ay, ay!  Glad to hear that.  Then I'll come aboard in a jiffy with my
royal missus and some of our precious young family; and maybe, captain,
you'll have something to give them, for they're very fond of any hot
potions which may come in their way."

"Be smart about it, then, Daddy, for I see a breeze springing up, and I
may have to run you out of sight before you and your precious family
have had time to take a sip apiece," cried the captain, who seemed to be
in far better humour than usual.

All this time Jim and Horner were standing with me abaft the main
hatchway, with their eyes staring and their mouths agape, wondering what
was going to happen.

Presently, over the bows, appeared the strangest group I had ever set
eyes on.

First there came Daddy Neptune with a glittering crown, a beard of oakum
reaching to his middle, a girdle of rope yarn round his waist, a cloak
covered with strange devices, and a huge trident in his hand.

His wife wore a crown like that of her husband, with ringlets of the
same material as his beard, a huge sash of some gaily-coloured stuff,
and a cloak formed out of a blanket.  The barber had in his hand a pot
containing lather, a big bowl tucked under one arm, with a razor a yard
long and a shaving brush of huge size under the other; while the
children or attendant imps--for it was hard to say what they were--
waddled about in green clothing, looking like sea monsters, behind them.

"Well, I have heard of strange things, but these chaps are stranger than
ever I saw," cried Jim.  "Where do they come from?"

"From the bottom of the sea, I suppose," said Horner, who evidently did
not admire their looks as they advanced aft.

The captain, after a little palavering, ordered the steward to bring up
some grog and serve it out to them.  Then retiring a short way forward,
Neptune commanded all who had not before visited his dominions to come
and pay their respects to him.

We all did so, not feeling very comfortable as to what was to follow,
when his attendants got hold of Jim and me.  Horner tried to escape, but
was quickly captured and brought back.

No one interfered with Esdale, who had, I found, crossed Neptune's hand
with a crown-piece; which, of course, none of us were able to do.  A
huge tub of water had been placed in front of his majesty.  The barber
now came forward and insisted on shaving all those who were for the
first time crossing the line.  Three of the ordinary seamen were novices
like us.

The barber first lathered our chins with some abominable mixture from
his pot, and then, scraping it off with his razor, finally ducked our
heads into the tub.  Horner, when undergoing the operation, had the
brush several times thrust into his mouth, and his whole face and head
daubed over.  When he opened his mouth to expostulate, in again went the
brush.  As he kicked and screamed and spluttered, he was treated worse
and worse.

Jim, taking a lesson from me, kept his mouth shut.  I was let off even
more easily than he was.  Once Horner got loose, but instead of wisely
remaining on deck and holding his tongue, he ran up the rigging and
began abusing Daddy Neptune and his gang, whereupon he was again
captured and compelled to undergo the same operation as before.

Blacky the cook next brought out his fiddle, and Neptune and his party--
indeed, the whole crew--began dancing round and round, singing and
shouting every now and then as an interlude, catching hold of the "green
hands" and pitching them into the tub, chase being always made after
those who attempted to escape.

The grog circulated so rapidly among the crew that they would all soon
have been intoxicated had not the captain, in a thundering voice,
ordered them to knock off and bring their tomfoolery to an end.

They obeyed.  Neptune and his followers dived below, and presently
returned like stout seamen as they were.

The order was given to brace the yards sharp up, and, with an easterly
wind, we stood on our course.

The next land we made was a solitary islet.  Near it stood a remarkable
rock called the "Ninepin," detached from the land.  The doctor told me
that it is eighteen hundred feet in height.  It had the appearance of a
monument standing out of the ocean.  There are no inhabitants on the
island, nor any good landing-place, but fresh water is to be obtained
there, as well as pigs and vegetables.

We soon after this began to fall in with stormy weather.  We found our
ship, which had remarkably sharp ends, very wet, and as we were now
approaching the land of storms in the dead of winter, with the days
scarcely more than seven hours long, the greatest caution was deemed
necessary.  The royal masts were sent down and replaced by stump
topgallant masts.  The flying jib-boom was sent in and the studding-sail
booms were also sent down.  All the boats except one were got in, the
hatches were battened down, and everything was done to make the ship
light aloft.

We were nearly off the River Plate when there were indications of an
approaching gale.  The hitherto blue sky was overcast, and the scud flew
rapidly along, as if impelled by a hurricane.

"You youngsters will have to look out for yourselves before long," said
Tom Ringold, the boat-steerer, who had acted the part of Neptune.  "We
shall be having old Harry Cane aboard here, and he's a precious deal
more difficult to tackle than Daddy Neptune, who paid us a visit on the
line."

"Oh, dear!  Oh, dear!  I wonder what we shall do?" cried Horner, who did
not exactly understand what was going to happen.

"Why, hold on to the weather-rigging, if you haven't to be pulling and
hauling, and duck your head if you see a sea coming," answered Jim, who
understood the joke about Harry Cane.

In a short time the captain ordered the topsails to be reefed and the
mainsail to be stowed and all the lighter sails handed.  Jim and I were
sent aloft to the fore-topgallant sailyard to furl the sail.  We were
laying out when, to my horror, I saw Jim disappear.  I nearly fell from
the yard myself, from thinking that he would be dashed to pieces, and
that I should lose my staunchest friend.

"Jim!  Jim!  Oh, save him!  Save him!"  I shouted out, not knowing what
I was saying, or considering how useless it was to shout.

"Here I am all right, Peter," cried Jim, and his voice seemed to come
not far from me.

What was my joy to discover that he had been caught in the belly of the
sail, and there he lay as if he had been in a hammock, the reef tackle
having been hauled out just at the time he fell.  He quickly scrambled
on to the yard again, resuming his duty as if nothing particular had
occurred.  We having finished our work came down.  Scarcely was this
done when the gale struck us, taking us right aback.  The cabin
dead-lights not being properly secured, the cabin was nearly filled with
water.  The carpenter and his mates hurried aft to close them, and we
youngsters were sent below to help him, and put things to rights.

When this was done down came the rain in such torrents that it seemed as
if it would swamp the ship, while as she fell off into the trough of the
sea, she began to roll in a way which threatened every instant to shake
the masts out of her.  It seemed wonderful that they stood.  Had the
rigging not been well set up they must have gone.  The only accident I
have to mention was that one of our remaining pigs was killed, but this
did not grieve the crew, for as we had no salt on board, and the meat
would not keep, the portion not required for the cabin was served out to
us.

Another, and what might have proved a far more serious matter, occurred.
Tom Ringold was steering, when a sea striking the rudder with
tremendous force knocked him over the wheel, carrying away several of
the brass spokes as it flew round, and sent him against the bulwarks.
For a moment everyone thought he was killed, but he picked himself up,
and although he could not use his arm for two or three days, at the end
of that time he was able to do his duty as well as ever.

That storm soon came to an end, but the old hands told us that we might
look out for others, and so the captain seemed to think, for although he
was anxious to get round Cape Horn we were always under snug canvas at
night, and during the day a bright look-out was kept, lest one of those
sudden squalls called Pamperos might come off the land and whip the
masts out of the ship, or lay her on her beam-ends, as frequently
happens when the hands are not ready to shorten sail.  We, however, got
to the southward of the Falkland Islands without accident.

My poor friend and messmate Esdale severely felt the cold which we now
began to experience.  He came on deck to attend to his duty, but a
hacking cough and increasing weakness made him very unfit for it.  The
doctor at last insisted on his remaining below, although Esdale declared
that he would rather be on deck and try to do his best.

"But I insist on your remaining in your bunk until we round Cape Horn
and reach a warmer latitude," said Dr Cockle.  "I will see the captain,
and tell him plainly that he will be answerable for your death, should
he insist on your doing duty any longer."

Esdale still pleaded, but the doctor was peremptory.

"It is his only chance," he said to me; "I cannot promise that he will
live.  He will, however, certainly die if he is exposed to this biting
wind and constant rain.  I intend to tell the captain, but you, Trawl,
go and stay with him whenever you can; it will cheer him up, poor
fellow, to have someone to talk to, and that dull Horner cannot speak
two words of sense."

Before the doctor had time to do as he proposed, Captain Hawkins,
missing Esdale from the deck, ordered me to tell him to come up.

This I determined not to do, for it was blowing hard at the time from
the south-west and the wind would have chilled him through in a minute.
I, however, went below, and after remaining a little time, I returned,
and said--

"Esdale is very ill, sir, and is not fit to come on deck."

"How do you know that, youngster?" asked the captain, in an angry tone.

"Dr Cockle has seen him and says so," I answered boldly.

"Tell him to come up, or I'll send a couple of hands to bring him neck
and crop," thundered the captain.

I was as determined as before not to tell Esdale, knowing that he would
come if sent for.

"Go below and bring up that lazy young rascal," shouted the captain to
Tom Ringold and another man standing near him.

I immediately dived below to persuade Tom to let Esdale remain in his
bunk.

"It will be his death if he is exposed to this weather," I said.

"I am not the fellow to kill a shipmate if I can help it," answered Tom.
"Tell him to stay and I'll take the consequences."

When Tom returned on deck, the captain enquired in a fierce voice why he
had not carried out his orders.

"Because he is too ill to be moved, Captain Hawkins," answered Tom,
promptly.

The captain, uttering an oath, and taking a coil of rope in his hand,
was just about to go below when Doctor Cockle came on deck, and
guessing, from the few words he heard, what was the captain's intention,
came up to him and said--

"It would kill the lad to bring him up, and as he is my patient, I have
told him to stay below."

"Am I to be thwarted and insulted on board my own ship?" cried the
captain.  "Whether he is ill or well, up he comes."

And going down to the half-deck, he asked Esdale why he had not obeyed
his orders.

Esdale, of course, had not received them, and said so, beginning at the
same time to dress.  Before, however, he could finish putting on his
clothes the captain seized him by the arm and dragged him up.  Scarcely,
however, had he reached the deck when the poor fellow fainted right
away.  Tom, on seeing this, lifted him in his arms and carried him down
again.

"I warn you, Captain Hawkins, that you will cause the death of the lad
if you compel him to be on deck in this weather," said the doctor
firmly, as he turned to follow Tom and Esdale.

The captain, making no remark, walked aft, and did not again interfere.

Whether that sudden exposure to the cold had any serious effect I do not
know, but Esdale after this got worse and worse.  Whenever I could I
went and sat by his side, when he used to talk to me of the happy land
for which he was bound.  He did not seem even to wish to live, and yet
he was as cheerful as anyone on board.  The doctor and first mate used
also to come and talk to him, and he spoke to them as he did to me, and
urged them to put their trust where he was putting his.  I believe that
his exhortations had a beneficial influence on them, as they had on me.
When I said how I hoped that he would get better after we were round the
Cape, he answered--

"I shall never see the Horn, Peter; I am as sure of that as I can be of
anything."

Two days after this land was sighted on the starboard bow.  It proved to
be Staten Island; but scarcely were we to the south of it when we
encountered a furious gale blowing from the westward.

For two days; by keeping close hauled, the captain endeavoured to gain
ground to the westward, resolved, as he declared, "to thrash the ship
round the Cape."  On the third day, however, while I was on deck, a
tremendous sea came rolling up.

"Look out!  Hold on for your lives, lads!" shouted the first mate.

Every one clung to whatever was nearest to him.  One poor fellow was to
leeward.  There was no avoiding the sea, which, like a mountain topped
with foam, struck the bows.  The ship plunged into it, and for a few
seconds I thought would never rise again.  On swept the roaring torrent,
deluging the deck; and had not the hatches been battened down, would
have half filled her.

A loud, crashing sound followed, and when the water had passed over us
nearly all the lee bulwarks were gone, and with them our shipmate who
had been standing a minute before as full of life as any of us.  He was
not again seen, and must have gone down at once.

The captain was compelled at last to heave the ship to, and there we
lay, now rising to the top of a sea, now sinking into the trough, with
walls of water, half as high as the main-top, round us.  The seas in the
German Ocean and Bay of Biscay were nothing to be compared to those we
encountered off the Horn, though, perhaps, equally dangerous.

As soon as I went below, I hurried to the side of Esdale.  He asked what
had happened.  I told him.

"Some one was carried overboard?" he inquired.

"Yes," I said.  "Poor Jack Norris," wondering how he knew it.

"And I shall soon follow him," he replied.

His words proved true.  That very night, as I came off my watch and was
about to turn in, I heard my messmate utter my name in a low voice.  I
went to him.

"I'm going," he whispered.  "Good-bye, Peter; you'll remember what I
have said to you?"

I promised him I would, and told him I must run and call the doctor.

"No, stay," he said.  "He can do me no good.  Tell him I thank him for
his kindness.  Good-bye, Peter."

The next instant his hand relaxed its hold of mine, and stooping down
over him I found he had ceased to breathe.

So died one of the most amiable and excellent young men I have ever met.
The next morning he was sewn up in canvas, with a shot at his feet, and
brought on deck.  The captain stood aft watching the proceedings.
Whether he felt he had hastened Esdale's death I know not; but his
countenance was stern and gloomy as night.  The boldest seaman on board
would not have dared just then to speak to him.  Hail and sleet were
driving in our faces; a furious gale threatening to carry our only sail
out of the bolt-ropes was blowing; the mountain seas raged round us;
there was scarce time for a prayer, none for form or ceremony.  A
foaming billow came thundering against the bows; over the deck it swept.
We clung for our lives to ropes, stanchions, and ring-bolts.  When it
had passed we found that it had borne our young shipmate to his ocean
grave.



CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.

ROUNDING CAPE HORN.

For well-nigh six weeks we were endeavouring to get round Cape Horn,
when the weather moderated, making way to the westward, but again being
driven back often over more ground than we had gained.

The captain was constantly on deck, exhibiting on all occasions his
splendid seamanship.  He was ever on the look-out to take advantage of
the least change of wind which would enable us to lay our course.  Day
and night were alike to him; he seemed indifferent to the piercing wind
and tremendous storms of sleet and hail we encountered.  Twice we
sighted Cape Horn, but each time, before many hours had passed, were
again to the eastward of it.  The captain thought he could endure
anything, and certainly did not expose others more than he did himself.
We saw numerous sea birds--albatrosses, Cape pigeons, stormy-petrels (or
Mother Carey's chickens, as they are called), and many more.  The
albatross appeared to me a truly noble bird when on the wing; no matter
how rough the weather or how heavy the sea, he sat on the water
perfectly at ease, seeming to defy the very elements.

One of the mates having got a strong line with a large hook at the end
of it, a piece of meat as bait, and a cork to float it, let it drop
astern.  In an instant a huge albatross pounced down on the tempting
bait, and was hooked.  It required two men, however, to draw him on
board over the taffrail.  Even when brought on deck he attacked everyone
who came near him.  The doctor advised us to stand clear of his wings
and beak, but Horner thoughtlessly held out his hat, when the bird,
seizing hold of it, bit the crown clean out in a moment.  Not until he
had had several blows on the head with a handspike did he drop dead.  He
measured seventeen feet from tip to tip of the wings.  The feathers
under his wings and breast were as white as snow, and as they glanced in
the sunlight, shone like silver.

In contrast with the albatross was the stormy-petrel, a black bird
scarcely larger than a sparrow, and, of course, web-footed.  Vast
numbers flew about the ship, but they were more difficult to catch than
the albatrosses.

Again we sighted Cape Horn, standing out solitary and grand into the
Southern Ocean.  The wind had moderated and become more in our favour,
although the vast billows rolled on like moving mountains of water.  Now
the ship forced her way to the summit of one, the next instant to glide
down rapidly into the vale below, performing the same course again and
again.

At length even the billows subsided, and we began to look forward to
having fine weather.  About noon one day the look-out from the masthead
shouted--

"There she spouts!  There she spouts!"

A school of whales was in sight.

"Lower two boats," cried the captain.

No sooner was the order given than their crews, hurrying aft, jumped
into them, and very few minutes were sufficient to place all their gear
in readiness and to lower them into the water.

The captain himself went in one as harpooner, the second mate in the
other.  I should have liked to go, but I knew that it was useless to ask
leave of the captain.

Away the boats pulled at a rapid rate to windward, the direction in
which the whales had been seen, and that we might keep as near them as
possible the ship was hauled close up.  They were soon not discernible
from the deck, and on they went increasing their distance till even the
look-out from the masthead could no longer distinguish them.  Still the
first mate had carefully noted the direction they had taken, and seemed
to have no doubt about picking them up.  The weather, however, which had
been fine all day, now gave signs of changing, and in a short time the
wind began to blow in strong gusts, creating a nasty sea, but still it
was not worse than whale-boats have often to encounter.

Whether or not they had succeeded in striking a fish we could not tell,
for the days were very short, and evening drew on.

Fresh look-outs were sent to each of the mastheads, and we waited with
anxiety for their reports.  They soon hailed that they could see neither
of the boats.  At length, the darkness increasing, they were called
down, and lanterns were got ready to show the position of the ship.

"Shouldn't be surprised if we were to lose our skipper and the boats'
crews," said Horner to me.  "I've heard that such accidents have
happened before now."

"I hope not," I answered, "for although our captain is a severe man, it
would be dreadful to have him and the other poor fellows lost out in
this stormy ocean, with no land for hundreds of miles where they could
find food and shelter, even were they to reach it."

While we were speaking a heavy squall struck the ship, and the remaining
hands were ordered aloft to take two reefs in the topsails.  Jim and I
were on the fore-yardarm.  We had just finished our task, when Jim
declared that he saw a light away to windward.

On coming on deck we told Mr Griffiths.  He at once ordered a gun to be
fired as a signal.  A blue light was then burnt, the glare of which, as
it fell on our figures, gave us all so ghastly an appearance that
Horner, who had never seen one before, cried out, "What has come over
you fellows?  Is anything dreadful going to happen?"

As the firework died out we looked in the direction Jim had seen the
light, and in a little time we caught sight of it from the deck.  The
men on this gave a hearty cheer to show their satisfaction.  Now the
light disappeared, now it came in sight again, as the boat rose on the
summit of a sea.

The ship was hove-to.  Presently a faint hail was heard.  We answered it
with a shout from our united voices.  At length one boat could be
distinguished.  Where was the other?

The captain's voice assured us that he was in the first.  He was soon on
deck, and the boat was hoisted up.  He looked pale and haggard, and much
annoyed at not having killed a whale.  The other boat he said was not
far off.

We kept hove-to for her, fearing that if she did not soon appear she
might be swamped before she could be hoisted in, for as the wind and sea
were now rapidly rising every moment was of importance.  At length she
came alongside, but it was with the greatest difficulty that the men got
out of her.  They looked thoroughly worn out with their long pull.  We
had scarcely made sail again and were standing on our course when the
gale came down on us, more furiously than before, blowing right in our
teeth.  It was now evident that had a whale been killed we should have
been compelled to abandon it.

In spite of his fatigue the captain remained on deck, swearing fearfully
at his ill-luck.  Those who had been away with the boats were allowed to
turn in, but the rest of us were kept on deck, for at any moment all our
strength might be required.

Suddenly, while I was aft, the captain uttered a loud cry, or shriek it
seemed to me.

"What's the matter, sir?" asked the mate.

"I cannot see!" groaned the captain.  "Where am I?  What has happened?"

The mate went to him and took his arm.  "It may be but for a moment," he
said.

There had been no lightning; nothing, as far as we could discover, to
produce blindness.  Still the captain refused to leave the deck,
declaring that it would pass over.  The doctor, who had turned in, was
called up, and came to him.

The increasing gale compelled the mate to attend to the duties of the
ship.  The doctor summoned me to assist in leading the captain below.  I
took his arm; he was trembling like an aspen.  We led him to his berth,
and assisted him to undress.

"Shall I be better in the morning, think you, doctor?" he asked, in an
agitated tone.

"I cannot say, Captain Hawkins.  I believe that this blindness has come
on in consequence of your having overtaxed your physical powers.  In
course of time, with rest and a warmer climate, I trust that you will
recover your sight."

"Oh that it may be so!" cried the captain, as he laid his head on the
pillow.

We had a heavier gale that night than we had before encountered.  The
seas again and again washed over the deck.  It seemed wonderful that
more of the men did not knock up.

The first mate looked thin and haggard, and so did most of the other
officers and men.  The bulwarks on both sides had been carried away, two
of the boats had been injured, and the ship had suffered various other
damages.

Still we kept at it; the wind shifted; Cape Horn was actually weathered,
and at length a joyous cheer burst from the throats of the crew as the
ship's head was directed to the north-west.  It was some days, however,
before we felt any sensible change of climate, but after that it grew
warmer and warmer, for we were now fairly in the Pacific.

The captain was disappointed in his expectations of recovering his
sight.  He came daily on deck and stood turning his head round in every
direction, and I observed a painful expression on his countenance.

"I'll tell you what, Peter, I've a notion how the captain came to lose
his sight," said Horner to me in a confidential tone.  "It's a
punishment to him for the way he treated Esdale, and you, and Jim."

"We have no right to think that," I answered; "even if he had treated me
ten times worse than he has done, I should not wish him to suffer what
must be to a man of his nature so terrible a misfortune."

"Well, then, I suppose I must keep my opinion to myself," answered
Horner.

In a few days we reached the island of Juan Fernandez, and hove-to off
it that the boats might go in close to the shore to catch some fish.
Mr Griffiths gave Jim and me leave to go in one of them.  We were
provided with hooks and lines.  The water was so clear that we could see
the fish take the bait, which they did so ravenously, that in a short
time we had as many rock cod and other fish as we required.  We
afterwards landed and brought off a quantity of wild mint, which grows
in profusion over the island.  We made it into tea, which we enjoyed
very much after drinking pea-coffee so long.

While we were collecting the mint we saw a number of goats bounding
among the rocks, some standing still and looking down on us.  They were
descendants of those which inhabited the island in the days of Alexander
Selkirk, who was taken off by Dampier during his last voyage to the
Pacific.

At first we thought that there were no inhabitants, but just as we were
shoving off we heard a shout, and a white man and negro were seen
rushing down towards us, shouting and gesticulating furiously.

They were both dressed in skins, with high fur caps, and had long sticks
in their hands to help themselves as they ran.

"Why, I do believe that must be Robinson Crusoe and his man Friday,"
cried Horner, at which all hands laughed.

"He got home long ago, or he never could have written his history,
stupid," said the mate, "but whoever they are we'll wait for them."

Still Horner had not got his first idea out of his head.  He had not
read much, but he had read Robinson Crusoe, and believed in it as a
veracious history.

The strangers soon reached the boat.

"Now, I say, ain't you Robinson Crusoe?" cried Horner, as the white man
got up to the boat.

"No, my name is Miles Soper, and I know nothing of the chap you speak
of," answered the stranger.

"I say, mister," he continued, turning to the mate, "will you take us
poor fellows off?  We were cast ashore some six months ago or more, and
are the only people out of our ship, which went down off there, who
saved their lives, as far as I can tell.  Sam Cole here and I came
ashore on a bit of a raft, and we have had a hard time of it since
then."

"Why, as to that, my man, if you're willing to enter and serve aboard
our ship, I daresay the captain will take you, but he doesn't want
idlers."

"Beggars can't be choosers," answered Miles Soper.  "If you are willing
to take us we shall be glad to go, and both Sam and I are able seamen."

"Well, jump in, my lads," said the mate; "but haven't you anything at
the place where you have lived so long to bring away?"

"No, we've nothing but the clothes we stand up in, except it may be a
few wooden bowls and such like things," answered the stranger, who
looked hard at the mate as he spoke, probably suspecting that we might
pull off, and that he and his chum might be left behind.  Both the men
seemed in tolerably good condition.  They told us that they had had
abundance of goat's flesh and vegetables, as well as fruit, but that
they had got tired of the life, and had had a quarrel with four mongrel
Spaniards, who lived on another part of the island, whom they thought
might some day try to murder them.

They both asked to take an oar, and, by the way they pulled, they showed
that they were likely to be useful hands.  When we got on board the
_Intrepid_, Mr Griffiths spoke very kindly to them, and as they at once
said that they would be glad to enter, their names were put down as
belonging to the crew.

I took a liking from the first to Miles Soper, though he was perfectly
uneducated, and could neither read nor write.  Sam also seemed an honest
merry fellow.  He and the other Africans soon became friends.

The crew had been employed on the passage, whenever the weather
permitted, in preparing what is called the "cutting-in gear," which
consists of the various tackles and ropes for securing the whales
alongside when caught and taking off the blubber.  Then there was the
gear of the various boats, and it would astonish anyone to see the
enormous number of articles stowed away in a whale-boat when she starts
after a whale.

Everything was now got ready, as we were in expectation every day of
falling in with whales, and the men were on the look-out from the
mastheads from dawn until dark, in the hopes of seeing them.  I longed
to see a whale caught, for as yet the voyage had been profitless, and
every one was out of spirits.  The captain, who still remained perfectly
blind, notwithstanding the assurances of Dr Cockle that he would
recover, was so especially.  He seemed like a heartbroken man; his
countenance gloomy, as if troubled with melancholy thoughts, and his
whole manner and appearance were changed.  It was sad to see him come on
deck and stand, sometimes for an hour together, turning his face round,
as if he were picturing to himself the sparkling ocean, the blue sky
overhead, and the busy scene which the deck of his ship presented.

I observed that Mr Griffiths never gave an order if he could help it
while the blind captain was on deck.  The health of the latter, however,
by degrees improved, the colour returned to his cheeks, and his voice,
when he spoke, again had the ring in it which I had from the first
remarked.

Day after day, however, we sailed on without seeing a whale.  At length
one day, soon after noon, the first mate having just taken an
observation, and the captain being in his cabin, we were cheered by the
cry from the masthead of--

"There she spouts!  There she spouts!"

The loud tramping of the men on deck roused those below, who quickly
sprang up, eager to engage in the expected chase.

Among the first who appeared was the captain, who ran up the
companion-ladder with as much agility as he had ever displayed.

"Where away--where away?" he asked.

The men pointed to windward, and to our surprise the captain turned his
eyes in the same direction.

"Lower three boats," he shouted.  "I'll go in one of them."

Presently I saw a low, bush-like spout of white mist rise from the
surface of the sea, not two miles off.

"There she spouts!  There she spouts!" shouted the captain, showing that
he saw too.

With wonderful rapidity, as everything was prepared, the boats were
lowered.  The doctor had come on deck.

"Where are you going, Captain Hawkins?" he asked, in an astonished tone.

"In chase of those whales out there," answered the captain; "for,
doctor, I can see them as well as you do."

Of this there could be no doubt.  Several at that instant appeared at
various distances.

The excitement of the moment had given the required stimulus to the
captain's nerves, and he was restored to sight.

I remembered the fruitless chase off Cape Horn, when the captain and
those with him so nearly lost their lives, but this promised to be
successful.  The captain's boat took the lead.  His aim was to get up to
one of the monsters of the deep just as it returned to the surface for
breathing, as it would be some time before it could go down again, and
before that interval many a harpoon and lance might be plunged into its
body.

The captain soon took the lead; the men pulled as if their lives
depended on it.  Before they were half a mile away a whale rose just
ahead of the captain's boat.  Springing into the bows, he stood, harpoon
in hand, ready to strike.

Presently he was close up to the monster; the weapon flew from his
grasp, followed by three lances hurled in rapid succession.  The whale,
feeling the pain, darted off.  Another boat came up, and a second
harpoon was made fast, while several more lances were plunged into its
side.

Presently its enormous flukes rose in the air.

"He has sounded!  He has sounded!" cried those on board.

The whale had dived, and the lines coiled away in the tubs ran rapidly
out.  The monster, however, had not finished its breathing, and soon
after a second line had been secured to the first it came again to the
surface.  The boats pulled rapidly towards it, and the harpooners plied
it with their lances.  Presently we saw them pull away as if for their
lives.  The whale rose nearly out of the water, and began turning round
and lashing the surface with its flukes, each blow being sufficient to
destroy any boat and her crew within its reach.

"The monster is in its flurry," I heard the doctor say.  "It is ours to
a certainty."

He was right.  After lashing the water into a mass of blood-tinged foam,
it lay perfectly still.

Those on board raised a shout as they saw a little flag fixed on the
body.

The boats now made chase after another whale, which gave them more
trouble than the first; but they attacked it bravely, now pulling up and
hurling harpoons and lances into it, and now pulling away to avoid being
attacked in return.

Presently we saw one boat again dash forward, almost the next instant
its fragments rose in the air, and the crew were scattered far and wide
around.  Which boat it was we could not tell.  Some fancied it was the
captain's, others that it was the second mate's.

"He regained his sight to-day," said an old Orkneyman.  "It's a question
whether it wasn't that he might have a last look on his fellow-creatures
and the mighty sea."



CHAPTER EIGHTEEN.

OUR FIRST WHALES CAUGHT--I HEAR NEWS OF JACK.

The moment the accident was perceived Mr Griffiths ordered the only
remaining boat away, and jumped into her, for the carpenter had not yet
finished the two building to replace those lost off Cape Horn.  I asked
to go.

"No!  You stay on board and help to work the ship up to us," he
answered.

I accordingly went to the helm, as I steered better than most of those
remaining on board, while the doctor and steward lent a hand to the rest
in pulling and hauling, as we had continually to go about; but the wind
was light, and it was not very hard work.  I kept an eye constantly
towards the boats, and soon saw a whift planted on the back of the last
whale attacked, which showed that it was dead.

Our anxiety was relieved when, instead of returning, they made chase
after another whale.  It proved that although the boat had been
destroyed, the men had escaped with their lives.

"I do believe we shan't have the skipper aboard again," observed Horner.

"I hope so," I said.

"Ahem!" was his answer, as he walked away.

At length, shortening sail, we ran up alongside the first whale that had
been killed.  The men descended to its back with ropes round their
waists to hook on the tackles to its head and flukes.  We had then to
wait until the boats towed the other whale up to the opposite side.  We
eagerly watched their proceedings.

The third whale was attacked.  After sounding twice and carrying out,
apparently, three, if not four lines, we saw it suddenly come to the
surface and leap completely out of the water.  This is called breaching.
It then began rolling round and round, endeavouring in its agony to get
rid of the weapon sticking in it.  The boats for some time kept at a
distance.  Then once more they approached, again to pull off as the
whale commenced lashing the water with its huge flukes.

"It's in its flurry," observed the doctor, who was looking through his
telescope, which he handed to me.

At last we saw the three boats approaching, towing the whale by the
nose.  The wind having fallen, and having a whale alongside, we were
unable to near them to save them their long pull.  On they came, towing
the monster at the rate of a mile and a half an hour.  It was thus
upwards of that period of time before they got alongside.

The first man handed up was Miles Soper--or Robinson Crusoe, as we
called him--whose leg had been broken by the second whale attack.  He
had willingly endured the suffering, lying at the bottom of the boat,
rather than give up the chase.  No one else had been injured, though all
had run a great risk of being drowned; but a whaler's crew know that
such may be their fate at any moment.  The doctor at once took the man
under his charge.  No time was lost in hooking on the other whale, and
commencing the operation of "cutting-in."  This I may briefly describe
as taking off the blubber with large spades, the handles of which are
twenty feet long.  The whale is turned round and round by means of
tackles brought to the windlass, the blanket-piece, or blubber covering,
being thus gradually stripped off till it reaches the tail, which is
hove on board with the last piece.  The blubber is lowered down the main
hatchway and cut up into small pieces, called "horse pieces."  These are
afterwards piled up on deck to be minced into thin slices for boiling in
the pots.  The operation of "cutting-in" is a very dangerous one when
there is any sea on to make the ship roll.  The first and second mates
stand on stages lowered over the side, cutting the blubber from the
whale as the crew heave it round with the windlass.  The four
boat-steerers are on the gang-ways attending to the guys and tackles,
the captain superintending the whole process, while the carpenter grinds
the spades.

All round the sea swarms with sharks attracted by the oil and blubber.
When not otherwise employed, Tom and I and Horner attacked them with the
spades and killed great numbers.  We worked away until night, but did
not finish even then, as it takes twelve hours to strip the blubber off
a large whale.  We commenced again at daylight, and it was dark before
we began to cut into the second whale.  We had still a third to operate
on, but as each was worth nearly a thousand pounds, no one complained.

Fortunately the weather remained fine, and we got the blubber of the
third whale on board by the end of the next day.  We had also boiled the
spermaceti oil out of the head, with small buckets at the ends of long
poles.  This is the most valuable production of the whale, and is used
for making candles.

For night work the ship's company was divided into two watches, from six
to one, and from one to six.  The instant the last piece of blubber was
on board, the carcasses were cast loose to be devoured by fish and fowl.

We began the operation of trying-out, as boiling the blubber is called,
by first putting some wood under the try-pots.  As soon as the blubber
was boiled, the scraps which rose to the surface were skimmed off with a
large ladle, and after being thrown into a pot with holes in the bottom
to drain off the oil remaining in them, were used as fuel for boiling
the remainder of the blubber.

The appearance our decks presented, with huge fires blazing away under
our pots, and the men with the ladles skimming off the scraps, or baling
out the oil into the coolers, was strange and weird in the extreme.  Had
I been suddenly introduced among them, I should not have recognised them
as my shipmates, begrimed as they were with smoke and oil.  I was,
however, much in the same condition.  Dr Cockle had become accustomed
to it, but I cannot fancy that it was very pleasant to him.

The doctor told me that he should be glad, whenever I could, if I would
go below and talk to poor Miles Soper.

I willingly did so.  He was suffering occasionally great pain, but in
the intervals it cheered him to have some one to speak to.  I found that
he was even more ready to talk than listen, and I accordingly got him to
tell me about himself.  He happened to ask my name.  I told him.

"Peter Trawl!" he exclaimed.  "Trawl!  That's curious.  I remember a
chap of your name aboard the _Lapwing_ brig-of-war."

I at once was deeply interested.

"He must have been my brother Jack," I exclaimed.  "Do tell me what has
become of him, for I heard he was lost out in the Indian seas."

"That's just where he and I were nearly lost.  We were coming home when
a boat was sent away, and we, with six more men and an officer, went in
her, to visit an island on some business or other, I forget what, and I
didn't know it's name.

"There are wild sorts of chaps out in those parts, who go pirating in
their proas, as they call them.  While we were just shoving off, a dozen
or more of these proas came round us.  We knew if the pirates got hold
of us we should all be knocked on the head, so we began blazing away to
keep them at a distance.  We kept on at it till we hadn't a charge left
for our muskets.  Two of our men were killed, and our officer badly
wounded.  The pirates then came nearer and fired their gingalls into us.
Just then one of their proas caught fire, and sent up such clouds of
smoke that for some time, as we were near her, we could not be seen.

"`Now, lads,' said the officer, `those among you who are not wounded try
and swim to shore.  It's your only chance.  The rest of us must die like
men.'

"Our oars, you see, were shattered, and by this time all hands except
Jack and me were more or less hurt.  We followed our brave officer's
advice, and leaping overboard reached the beach before we were seen by
the pirates.  Some gingalls were fired at us, but we got away among the
bushes, and ran as hard as our legs could carry us in shore.  We did not
know where we were going, or what sort of people we should meet.
Whether the pirates landed or not we did not stop to learn, but as we
ran for three or four hours there was not much chance of being
overtaken.

"We saw at last a river before us, and as it was too broad to cross, and
we were afraid, should we attempt to swim over, that we might be picked
off by one of those big scaly beasts they call crocodiles, we kept down
along the bank, as we knew that it must lead us to the opposite side of
the island to where we had landed.

"`Cheer up,' said Jack to me.  `Maybe our ship will come round there and
take us off.  Our fellows are sure to be searching round the coast on
the chance of finding us.'

"`I hope you're right, Jack,' said I, `for it will be a bad job for us
if we can't get away, as how we are to find food is more than I can
tell, and it's very clear we can't live without it.'

"There were plenty of trees growing on the bank, though not so thickly
but that we could manage to make our way between them.

"Says Jack to me, `If those cut-throat fellows come after us, we must
climb up one of these and hide ourselves among the branches.'

"`I don't think they will take the trouble to follow us so far,' I
answered.  `But it's a good idea of yours, and it will give us a chance
of saving our lives.'

"We of course could not run as fast as we had been going in the open
country.  Sometimes we came across fallen trees, over which we had to
climb, and at others we had to go round thick bushes which we could not
get through.  Still, what stopped us would stop our enemies.  On and on
we went, till just as we got out of a wood we saw before us a village of
curious-looking houses, built on stout piles, many of them right in the
water.

"`Hadn't we better go back?'  I said to Jack; `the people who live there
may be the same sort of cut-throats as those we have got away from.
They'll be for knocking us on the head when they see us.'

"Jack agreed with me that it would be better to stay in the wood till it
was dark, and we might then make our way clear of the village down to
the sea.  We were just going back, when a woman came out on a sort of
verandah in front of the house nearest to us, and we knew by the way she
was looking that we were seen.  Then she turned round and called to
another woman, who also came out.

"`Come,' said Jack, `we had better go on boldly and ask those
dark-skinned ladies to give us their protection.  They are sure to do
that if we look humble enough, and show them that we want to be friends,
for to my mind women are alike all the world over.'

"So we moved on, kissing our hands, and then holding them up clasped
before us.  The women did not run away, or seem a bit frightened; and as
we got nearer one of them came down the ladder and held out both her
hands, which we took and put on our heads.  She then beckoned us up the
steps, and made signs to us to sit down on mats inside the house.  As we
were both very hungry by this time, we pointed to our mouths to show
that we wanted something to eat and drink.  The younger girl went to
another part of the house and brought back some fish and yams, and a
bowl with some liquor in it.  There was not much to be said for the
taste, but we were too thirsty after our long run to be particular.  We
tried to make the women understand that there were enemies coming after
us, and that we wanted to hide away, so when we had finished our meal
they beckoned us to come into another room, and, placing some mats on
the ground, they told us that we might sleep there safely--at least,
that's what we made out.

"Night came on, and Jack and I, agreeing that we had got into good
quarters, went to sleep.  There was no bell striking, and no bo'sun's
mate to rouse us up, and so we slept on till it was broad daylight.  We
got up and looked out from the verandah, or platform, which went round
the house, when we saw three men talking together.  As soon as they
caught sight of us they came towards the house, and one of them mounted
the ladder.  He looked at us with surprise, and seemed to be asking who
we were.  We told him as well as we could by signs that we had come
across from the other side of the island, and wanted to get off to our
ship, which would soon be round to take us aboard.  This did not seem to
satisfy him.  Presently in came the women, and they had a talk about the
matter, but what they said we could not make out.  The first man then
called the other two, and after more palavering they began to look
savage, and gave us to understand that we were to be their slaves, and
work for them.

"`Well,' says Jack to me, `all we've got to do is to grin and bear it.
Maybe, as we are near the sea, we shall have a chance of making our
escape.'

"This was one comfort; so we nodded, as much as to say we were ready to
do what they bid us, for, you see, we were in their power and couldn't
help ourselves.  After we had gone into the house and sat down, waiting
to see what would next happen, the women--bless them for their
kindness!--brought us some more food for breakfast, and a capital one we
made.  Bad as was our lot, yet it was better than being knocked on the
head or having our throats cut.  A number of people now came out of
their houses, and there was great rejoicing among them to think that
they had got two white men as slaves.  We found that we had plenty of
work to do to cut wood and fetch water, and to hoe in their fields,
which were some way from the village, or to go out fishing with them.

"This we liked better than anything else.  If it had not been for the
women our lot would have been worse, for they took care to give us food
every day, which I don't think the men would have troubled themselves
about doing, for they were regular savages.

"Day after day went by; we were getting accustomed to our life, and as
yet had had no chance of escaping.  A precious sharp look-out was at all
times kept over us, and I don't think even the women would have wished
us to go, for we had to do a good deal of the work which would have
otherwise fallen to their lot.  Though we were, as I was saying, used to
the life we led, we both wanted to get away.

"I've an old father down in Dorsetshire, and there's a bright young girl
who lives with him whom I would give something to see again; and Jack
sighed to go home, as he said, to see his father and mother, and a young
brother and sister.  He used to talk much to me about you all, and it
seemed to me as if I knew you long before we ever met.

"We found that we were much farther from the sea than we had at first
supposed, for although we went a good way down the river we never
reached its mouth.

"The people in the village didn't lead quiet lives, for they were always
on the watch, fearing that they might be attacked by enemies.  At night
they made fast their boats under their houses, and had their goods all
ready for a start into the woods, while they had men on the look-out
night and day to give notice should any strange vessels come up the
river.

"Jack and I agreed that if any enemies should come in the night we might
have a good chance of escaping, but from what we had seen of the fellows
who had attacked our boat we had no wish to fall into the hands of such
characters.  We thought that we might manage to slip into a boat and
pull up the river and hide ourselves until the pirates had gone away.

"You must know that we did not wish any ill to our masters, for though
we were their slaves we had taken a liking to them, as they did not
ill-treat us, and gave us a good deal of time to ourselves.

"Weeks and months went by.  We began to think that no enemy would come,
and that we must try to get off by some other means than that we had
first thought of.  At last we saw the men sharpening their long knives
and polishing their spears, and new painting their shields.

"`Depend upon it there's something in the wind,' said Jack to me.  `They
are going on a war expedition.'

"`No doubt about the matter,' I said, `and they'll want us to go with
them.'

"`Then we must take care not to go,' said Jack.  `I for one won't be for
killing men, women, and children, as these fellows are likely to do.  We
must pretend to be sick, or that we do not understand what they want of
us, and get off somehow or other.'

"Whether or not it was talking about being sick I don't know, but the
very next night I was struck down with fever.  Our masters saw that I
was not shamming.  The women also stood our friends, and declared that I
was not fit to get up and work, while Jack was allowed to stay at home
and nurse me.  I was very bad, and I believe he thought that I should
die.

"If he had been my own mother's son he couldn't have looked after me
better than he did; night and day he was always by my side, ready to
give me what I wanted.  One day I heard a loud shouting and singing, and
Jack, who had gone out, came back and said that the men had all started
with their spears and shields.  They had wanted to make him go, but the
women said he must stop behind, though he had a hard matter to escape
from the men.  I was already getting better, and this news made me feel
better still.

"`It will be a bad return to run off with one of their boats,' said
Jack, `but there seems no help for it, and it may be our only chance,
for the men will be back again in a day or two.'

"That very night, while Jack and I were sitting up talking, we heard
shrieks and cries in the distance; and presently, looking out, Jack said
he saw the houses lower down the river burning.

"Then depend upon it the pirates have taken the place, I said.

"`No doubt about it,' exclaimed Jack, `and now is our chance.  If we
could defend the poor women and children we would, but we cannot do
that.  They'll know where to fly to, and so, I hope, escape.'

"Suddenly I felt my strength come back, and I was able to follow Jack
down the ladder, at the bottom of which the boat was kept moored.  To
cut the painter by which she was made fast didn't take us a moment, and
springing into her we paddled across the stream.  As we looked down the
river we could see all the houses in a blaze, and here and there people
running off into the woods, while we made out half a score or more of
the dark proas stealing up along the shore."

Just as Miles Soper had got thus far in his history I was summoned on
deck, and eager as I was to hear how he and Jack had fared, I was
obliged to attend to my duty.



CHAPTER NINETEEN.

MILES SOPER'S NARRATIVE CONCLUDED.

"I've heard news of my brother Jack!"  I exclaimed, as I met Jim
directly after I sprang on deck.

"What!  Is he alive?" asked Jim.

"Miles Soper, who was his shipmate, thinks so," I answered.  "At all
events, he wasn't killed when we thought he was."

"Then, Peter, we'll find him if we search the world round!" cried Jim,
giving me a warm grip of the hand.  "I am glad; that I am!"

It takes a whole day to "try out"--that is, to boil down the blubber of
each whale.  I found that the cooper and his mate had just finished
filling up the casks from the coolers, and I was wanted, with others, to
assist in rolling them aft.

Here they were chocked and lashed and left to cool for several days
before they were in a condition to be stowed away in the hold.  In the
meantime we had to get up all the empty casks on deck so that we might
lay the ground-tier with the full casks.  As the casks were piled up,
one upon another, the ship was in consequence almost topheavy, and I saw
the captain and Mr Griffiths frequently casting glances round the
horizon, to watch for an indication of any change in the weather, for
should a sudden squall strike the ship she might, while in this
condition, be sent over in an instant.  Every possible exertion was
therefore made to get the task accomplished, and all hands were
employed.  Anxious as I was to hear what had become of my brother, I
consequently had no opportunity for a long time of listening to a
continuance of Miles Soper's narrative.  I should have said that though
the oil casks were stowed away empty and filled by means of the hose
from the deck, the greatest care was required in bedding them, as they
might have to remain three years or more in the hold.  The blubber from
the three whales was at length tryed out and secured in the casks, and
the decks being washed down, the ship once more resumed her ordinary
appearance, we meantime continuing our course northward.  The first
moment I was at liberty I went down to see Miles Soper.  He said that he
felt much better, though still unable to do duty.

"And what about Jack?"  I asked; "you and he were just pulling away
across the river at night to escape from the Dyack pirates."

"Yes; I have been thinking much about it since I told you.  I would not
have to go through that time again for a good deal if I could help it.
We could hear the shrieks and cries of the old men, women, and children
as the cruel pirates caught them and cut off their heads, and we could
see the flames burst out from the houses all along the banks of the
river.  We were afraid that the light would be thrown upon our boat, so
that we dare not venture down the river, but pulled up along the
southern bank close under the bushes.  We thought that we were safe, at
all events, till daylight, when we caught sight of two boats coming out
from among the pirate fleet and steering up stream.  I gave up all for
lost, as I knew that they would whip our heads off in a moment should
they come up with us.

"`Don't give in!' cried Jack; `perhaps it isn't us that they're after.'

"We ceased pulling lest the light should fall on our oar-blades, for we
should have had no chance if they had made chase.

"`Let's paddle in under these bushes,' whispered Jack; `they're very
thick, and we can lie hid here, while maybe they'll pass us.'

"We did as he proposed.  As the boughs overhung the water and almost
touched it with their ends, we hoped that the pirates would not discover
us.  We could just look out across the river, and saw the boats still
coming towards us.  We both lay down in the bottom of our boat and
remained as quiet as mice, scarcely daring to look up above the gunwale
for fear of being seen.  We could hear the voices of the pirates and the
splash of their oars as they drew nearer.  If they had before seen us
they might have observed the spot where we had disappeared, and I
expected every moment to have my head whipped off my shoulders.  Just
putting my eyes above the gunwale, I saw the two boats, broadside on,
pulling along.  They hadn't found us out.  On and on they went, right up
the stream.  They must have thought that we were still ahead.  We, of
course, didn't dare to move, hoping that they would give up the chase
and go back again.

"`We must not be too sure that they won't look for us when they do come
back,' said Jack.  `Howsomdever, there's no use crying out till we're
caught.  I'll tell you what; the best thing we can do is to get on shore
and make our way inland; then, though they may find the boat, they won't
catch us.'  I agreed; so, shoving the boat farther in till we reached
the bank, we sprang on shore, and having secured her by the painter, set
off directly away from the river.  As it was very dark, we had to grope
our way amongst the trees and bushes, though the glare in the sky from
the burning houses enabled us to steer a right course.  We half expected
that a snake or a wild beast might pounce down upon us, and we had no
arms to defend ourselves.  But anything was better than to be caught by
the pirates.  At last, when our clothes were torn nearly off our backs,
we reached some open ground, and set off running till we got to a wood
on the opposite side.  `Now,' says Jack, `we won't go farther, but hide
here till the morning; then maybe, if we can climb to the top of a tree,
we shall be able to catch sight of the river and find out what the
pirates are doing.'  I thought his idea a good one, so we sat down on
the ground and waited.  We could hear no sounds, so we concluded that
all the poor people had been killed.  We hoped, however, that the
warriors might come back and beat the pirates off.  Not that we wished
to fall into the power of our old masters again, for they would have
kept us prisoners if they didn't lake it into their heads to kill us.

"At last the light returned, and seeing a tall tree near: Jack and I
climbed up to the top.  Jack went first.  `Hurrah!' he shouted; `there
go the pirates down the river, pulling away with all their oars out!'
Sure enough I saw them also.  `But I say, Jack, perhaps the warriors
have come back and put them to flight; if so, we must take care not to
be caught by them.'  I said, `I can see where the village stood, but I
don't see any people moving about.'  `It's a long way, to be sure, so we
must be careful,' answered Jack.  We soon got down the tree and returned
to our boat.  The pirates hadn't discovered her, so we got on board, and
cautiously shoved out to the edge of the bushes, stopping just inside
them.  We then took a look-out, but could discover no one moving on the
opposite shore, so we pulled across to the village.  It was a fearful
sight we saw there.  Bodies of old men, women, and children were
scattered about, but the heads were gone.

"We were in a hurry, you may be sure, to get away, but, says Jack, `It
won't do to put to sea without food or water.'  So we hunted about, and
found in the bushes several baskets which the poor people had been
trying to carry off with food of all sorts, and some calabashes, which
we quickly filled at the spring where we were accustomed to get water.
We hurried with them back to the boat, and once more shoved off.  We
then paddled away down the river.  The current was running out, so that
we made good way, and were soon out of sight of the burnt village.  Our
craft was not very well suited for a voyage, but anything was better
than stopping to be killed on shore.  We pulled on until nearly noon
before we came in sight of the mouth of the river.  There was no bar,
and the sea was smooth, so we resolved to pull out at once, in the hope
of being picked up by some passing vessel.  We were still not certain
even now that our masters would not make chase after us, so we didn't
stop a moment, except just to look round, but pulled right away to sea.
Just as we got outside we caught sight of the pirate fleet under sail,
standing to the nor'ard.  We therefore pulled south, not that there was
much chance of their coming back, but we thought that if we went in
their wake we should not fall in with any merchant vessel, for at any
rate if they should have met one they would to a certainty have robbed
and scuttled her.

"We supposed that there were other islands away to the westward, but
then they might be inhabited by the same cut-throat sort of fellows as
those from whom we had escaped, and we didn't want to fall into their
hands.  Our chief hope was to be picked up by some passing vessel or
other, perhaps by our own ship, but Jack said he thought she would not
have remained at the station, and would have long ago given up searching
for us.  It was hot work paddling away all day, and we would have given
much for a sail, but the boat was not fitted for one, and she was not
fitted either for a heavy sea--not that there was much chance of that
getting up at such time of the year.  We had plenty of food and water,
so we kept up our spirits.  Where we were going to neither of us could
tell; all we knew was that we were our own masters.  We were queer
characters to look at, with our clothes all torn to shreds, our hair
long, and our faces as brown as berries.  No one would have taken us for
Englishmen, but we had English tongues and English hearts, and we made
up our minds to stick at it and not be downcast.  We wanted to get away
as far as we could from the shore, for fear any of the natives might
come after us--not that there was much chance of that.  We paddled and
paddled till our arms ached, and we were well-nigh roasted with the hot
sun.  We were thankful when night came on, and we were able to rest and
take some food.

"We had agreed to keep watch and watch, but it was of no use trying to
keep awake, so we both lay down in the bottom of the boat and went fast
asleep.  When we awoke it was broad daylight, and presently up came the
sun and beat down on our heads as hot as the day before.  There we were
floating on the sea with the water calm as a mill-pond, and not a sail
in sight.  There was no chance either of a vessel coming near us while
the calm continued.  We took our breakfasts, however, and talked of what
we should do.  Far away to the east we could see the blue outline of the
island we had left, but what part to steer for we could not make up our
minds.  There was only one thing we determined--come what might, not to
go back and be made slaves of.  It seemed useless to be paddling away
and yet not to know where we were going to; but we still hoped that we
might fall in with some merchant vessel, it mattered not of what
country, though we wished she might be English, and so we might find our
way home.

"`Come, let's be moving,' said Jack, at last.  `I've heard say that
there are Dutch and Spanish settlements out in these parts, and maybe we
shall fall in with one of them, and both the mynheers and dons are good
sort of people, and will treat us kindly.'

"So we took to our paddles and made our way to the westward.  All day we
paddled on, but no land appeared in sight, and now and then we stopped
to take some food and a drink of water, but it was tiring work.  We were
thankful when night came at last.  We didn't sleep so long, and were at
our paddles before daybreak, for we knew by the stars how to steer.

"Next day we did just the same, and the next after that.

"`I say, Miles,' said Jack, `we must soon manage to come to land or we
shall be starving.  We have not got food nor water for more than one day
longer, and without them we shall not be able to hold out.'

"That was very true; still neither of us thought of giving in.  A light
breeze from the eastward had sprung up, so that we made good way, but
there was no land to be seen ahead.  We didn't talk much, for we had
said all we could say about our prospects, and they were bad enough.
But they became worse when we had drunk up all the water and eaten every
bit of food we had in the boat.  I had heard of people going three or
four days without eating, but the want of water was the worst.  We would
have given a heap of gold if we had had it for a cupful.  The wind now
shifted to the southward, and blew much stronger than before, knocking
up a sea which threatened every moment to swamp our boat, which was not
fitted for rough water.  We now began to think that it was all up with
us, and that all we could do was just to keep the boat's head to the
seas to prevent her from capsizing.

"At last Jack sang out, `A sail!  A sail to the southward!'

"There she was, coming up before the wind.  A strange-looking,
outlandish craft she seemed as she drew nearer.

"`I wonder whether she's one of those Dyack or Malay pirates,' I said.
`If so, we may as well let the boat turn over.'

"`No, no; let us trust God, and hope for the best,' said Jack.  `Cheer
up, Miles!  She's sent for our relief.'

"I was not so sure of that, for it was easy to see from her outlandish
rig that she was one of the craft of those seas.  Presently, as she got
near us, she lowered her sails and came close up.  Ropes were hove to
us, and hands were stretched out over the side to haul us on board, for
we had scarcely strength enough left to help ourselves.  They tried to
secure the boat, but she drifted off and was swamped.  We just saw that
the people were Chinamen, pig-eyed, with turned-up noses and yellow
skins.  We both fainted away.  They brought us some water, and in a
short time we got better.  They then carried us into a small cabin aft
out of the hot sun.  Presently they brought us some food--rice, and some
stuff minced with it.  We were not particular, for we were desperately
hungry.

"We now found that the people who had picked us up were honest traders
bound northward with a cargo of sea-slugs, birds'-nests, and other
things from these seas.  We tried to talk to them, but could not manage
it, as none of them understood English, and we couldn't speak their
lingo.  But as soon as we got stronger we made ourselves useful, pulling
and hauling, and doing whatever came to hand.  Where we were going to we
could not make out, but we hoped that it was to some place at which the
English ships touched, and that we might get home some day.  As Jack
said, we had reason to be thankful that we had been picked up, for the
weather came on very bad, and our boat could not have lived through it.
The Chinamen kept a bright look-out, and seemed terribly afraid of the
pirates.  We tried to make them understand that we had seen the fleet
sail to nor'ard a short time before, and we ourselves didn't like the
thoughts of falling in with them.  We told them also that we would fight
to the death sooner than yield.  They understood us, and seemed to think
that we were very fine fellows.  We had been sailing on for three or
four days, and we began to hope that we were free of the pirates, when
just as we passed a headland we caught sight of a number of craft coming
out from under it.  On seeing them the Chinamen looked very much
frightened, hoisted all sail, and brought their arms on deck.  We
watched the strangers, who, it was very clear, were making chase after
us.  We should have a hard fight for it, even if we should manage to get
off.  Presently, however, we saw their sails flapping against their
masts as they came under the headland, whilst we still had a breeze and
went away dancing merrily over the water.  I never felt so pleased in my
life, and the Chinamen seemed highly delighted, chattering and jabbering
away like so many monkeys.  It was pleasant to see the pirates' sails
sink below the horizon, and pleasanter still to lose sight of them
altogether.

"We ran on day after day.  The breeze held fair and we by degrees got
accustomed to our new friends, and could make ourselves understood in a
fashion.  We sometimes were sailing between islands, and sometimes on
the open sea.  Whereabouts we were we had no idea, though we supposed
that we were approaching the Chinamen's country.

"We had been a fortnight or more on board when dark clouds rose up from
the south-west, and it came on to blow very hard.  The sails were
lowered and we ran before the gale.  I saw by the looks of the crew that
they didn't like it, nor did we, for it seemed as if at any moment the
clumsy craft might be capsized.  We, however, pumped and baled, and
tried to keep her clear of water.  It all seemed, however, of no use,
for the seas washed into her and she was leaking terribly.

"We had been driven a long way out of our course.  We did our best to
cheer up our shipmates, and set them the example by working harder than
any of them.

"At last the gale ceased, and we once more made sail, but, do all we
could, the water gained on us and the crew began to heave the cargo
overboard to keep the junk afloat.  The boats had been washed away, and
we knew that if she went down we should all be drowned.  Jack and I
talked of what we could do to save our lives, but we agreed that we
should have to share the fate of the rest.  It seemed to us that the
craft would not swim another night, when we made out a sail to the
westward.

"The Chinamen by this time were so knocked up that they were scarcely
able to exert themselves.  Jack and I sprang here and there, now
pumping, now baling, now trying to make our companions do the same.  It
seemed to us that they would let the craft go down in sight of help.
The stranger we judged by the cut of her sails to be a whaler.  The junk
was settling lower and lower in the water.  Jack found a flag, an
odd-looking piece of stuff it was.  He ran it up half-mast high as a
signal of distress.  The stranger came on slowly, for the wind was
light.  It seemed even now that she would not be in time to save us.  At
last she got near enough to see our condition, and hove-to.  Four boats
were lowered, which came pulling towards us.

"By this time the water was almost up to the lower deck.  Jack and I
stood ready to spring on board the first boat which came up.  The brave
crew came on, and were in time to haul the greater number of the
Chinamen on board before the junk sunk beneath their feet.  Several went
down in her, too much knocked up to exert themselves.  With us and those
saved, the boats returned on board.  We found that we had been picked up
by the _Helen_, whaler.  She had been cruising off the coast of Japan,
and was going to Macao for fresh provisions.  As she was short of hands
Jack and I at once entered on board her.  Having landed the unfortunate
Chinamen and taken in the stores we wanted, we stood away into the
Pacific.  We found ourselves among a somewhat rough lot, but we were
better off than we had been as slaves, though Jack and I agreed that we
would much rather serve on board a man-o'-war.  We had been cruising for
some time, and had caught and stowed away about a dozen whales or more,
when one night there was a cry of `Breakers ahead!'

"The captain, who was on deck in a moment, gave the order to put up the
helm and veer ship, but before she could be got round she struck
heavily.  We sounded round her and found the water deep on the starboard
side.  But all our efforts proving useless, the order was given to lower
the boats.  We had five fit for service, and they were got safely into
the water.  Jack went in one of them, I in another.  We were ordered to
keep off at a safe distance from the ship till daylight.  When morning
broke we found that the ship was a complete wreck, and that there was no
chance of saving her.  The captain then ordered the boats to come
alongside one at a time and embark the rest of the crew, with such
provisions as could be collected.  We now saw land away to the nor'ard,
and, having left the ship, pulled towards it.  Our great want was water,
and to obtain it the captain divided us into two parties to look into
any bays we might discover and try and find a spring.  I was in the
second mate's boat.  We were just pulling into a bay, when a dozen
canoes full of black savages, with bows and spears, darted out and made
chase after us, so we pulled away out to sea.  What had become of the
other boats we could not tell.  Your brother Jack had gone in the
captain's, and that was the last I saw of him."

"Do you think they could have escaped from the savages?"  I asked,
anxiously.

"I have no reason to suppose they didn't, just as we managed to escape,"
answered Miles, "but we didn't catch sight of them again.  We had sails
in our boat, and plenty of provisions, and the mate told us he intended
to steer for the Sandwich Islands, the nearest civilised place he knew
of, but that it was a long way off, and we should be a long time about
it.  He might have been right, but we were still many days' sail from it
when we ran short of provisions and drank up all our water.  I believe
that we should have died if we hadn't fallen in with another whaler,
which picked us up.  I entered on board her, as did some of the men, but
the mate and others preferred landing at Honolulu.  I served on board
her for some time.  We had gone southward, having got a full ship, when
we struck on a coral reef.  Though we did all we could to keep her
afloat, she went down with all hands, except the black and me, and we
managed to get ashore on Robinson Crusoe's Island, from which you took
us off."

"But can't you give me any idea as to what has become of Jack?"  I again
asked.

"Not more than I have told you," answered Miles; "but my idea is that
some if not all the boats got off, though in what direction they steered
I've no notion."

I was prevented from talking more on the subject just then by being
summoned on deck, and when I told Jim he repeated what he had before
said--

"We'll find him, Peter.  We'll find him."



CHAPTER TWENTY.

A MUTINY AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.

I told Dr Cockle all I had heard about my brother Jack from Miles
Soper.  He seemed greatly interested, and said that he sincerely hoped
we might find Jack or hear of him, though he confessed that it was very
much like looking for a needle in a bundle of hay.  Jim and I talked of
little else.  We neither of us any longer thought of going home, but I
got a letter ready to send, by the first ship bound for England, to my
sister Mary, and another to Mr Troil, telling them that I had got
tidings of Jack, and much as I wished to get back, should stay out in
those seas till I found him.

My great wish now was to fall in with other whalers, that I might make
inquiries about my brother.  The captain--though, I suppose, Dr Cockle
and Mr Griffiths told him what I had heard--seemed to take no interest
in the matter, nor did he show me any more attention than before.

We had left Juan Fernandez more than a month, when a cry came from the
masthead of "Land ho!"  It proved to be Chatham Island, one of the
Galapagos, a group of volcanic islands almost under the line, some
hundred miles away from the coast of Peru.  We brought up in a fine bay,
but the shore as far as we could see looked black and barren.  There
were, however, thick, low bushes of a peculiar kind, covering the ground
at some distance from the beach.  As Dr Cockle was going on shore with
one of the mates and a party of the men, he to botanise and they to
obtain fresh provisions, I went up to the captain and asked leave to
accompany him.

"I understand you have made up your mind not to run away," he observed,
in his usual sarcastic tone.

"Yes, sir," I answered; "I'm content to remain on board your ship,
though I know that I would until lately have done anything to get back
to England."

"Take care you don't change your mind," he said, in the same tone as
before.  "If the doctor will be answerable for you, you can go."

I told the doctor what the captain said.

"I know that I can trust you.  Peter, and I'll tell the captain that
I'll undertake to bring you back," he answered.

I was glad to find that Jim was to form one of the party.  Horner also
got leave to go.  Though he and I were on good terms, I can't say I
looked upon him as a friend, but I was well pleased that he should have
a run on shore, as I hoped that it would put him in good humour, for of
late he had become one of the most constant grumblers on board.  I even
now recollect the pleasure I felt on thus once more treading the firm
ground, as, except for the short time I had landed on Juan Fernandez, I
hadn't set foot on shore since I left Shetland.  The rest of the seamen
seemed greatly to enjoy their freedom.

As soon as we had secured the boat we all set off together, running over
the rough black ground, startling a number of strange-looking creatures
like lizards, some of which slid off into the water, others hid
themselves in holes and crevices of the rocks.

Jim and I, however, went back to join the doctor, as we knew that he
would want us to carry anything he might chance to pick up.  The mate,
after the men had had a good run, called them to him, and we proceeded
more leisurely.  The shrubs we had seen we found to be prickly pears.
We had gone some distance when we caught sight of some enormous
creatures like tortoises.  The doctor called them terrapins.  They had
been feeding on the prickly pears, and were now leisurely making their
way towards the hills which rose in the distance.  We were all suffering
from thirst, and the sun beat down on our heads with a great heat.  We
had in vain been looking for water.

"I'd give anything for a mugful!" cried Jim.

"So would I," "And I!" echoed several more of the men.

"You needn't have long to wait if you can catch those creatures," said
the doctor.  "They'll yield as much cool water as we want."

We all set off running after the terrapins, which, as they didn't move
fast, we soon overtook.  As we got close to them they drew their heads
into their shells, and remained quiet.

Horner had become unusually lively, and on seeing the creatures stop
jumped on the back of one of them, when immediately on it went carrying
him along with it.  At first he thought it very good fun, and began
snapping his fingers and pretending to dance, but whilst he was looking
round at us the terrapin carried him against a prickly pear-bush, and
over he went sprawling on the ground, to the great amusement of the men.

"Oh, save me!  Save me!" he shouted out, scarcely knowing what had
happened, and believing that the creatures were going to turn upon him
and run their bills into his body.

Jim and I helped him up, and found that he was bleeding from a cut hand
and a wound inflicted in his side by the point of one of the leaves.
The doctor, however, on arriving at the spot, examined his hurts and
comforted him by the assurance that there was not much the matter, and
that if he didn't think about it he could go on as well as the rest of
us.

We soon again overtook the terrapins, when the men who were armed with
spears ran them in under the creatures' necks and quickly killed them.
We turned them over, and under the doctor's directions, found, as he
said we should, plenty of perfectly cool water in their insides.  It was
fresh as if just out of the spring.  Leaving the terrapins to carry back
with us on our return, we pushed on in the hope of falling in with some
more.  We were not disappointed.  We in a short time killed four, as
many as we could manage to carry on board the boat, and sufficient to
give us fresh meat for several days.  I was in hopes of meeting with
inhabitants, as I wanted, wherever I went, to make inquiries for Jack,
not knowing where I might find him.  As Miles had come to the east, I
thought he might have found his way in the same direction.  None of the
islands are, however, inhabited, and only one of them, Charles Island,
has a spring of water, though people might otherwise exist in them for
years.  We saw a vast number of birds, which were very tame, but not a
single four-legged creature besides the terrapins and lizards.  We had
to make several trips to carry the meat to the boat.  As we shoved off
we saw the sea literally swarming with fish, and the next morning the
captain sent in two boats, which, in a short time, caught as many as we
could eat.

In the evening we sailed and cruised in the neighbourhood of the
islands, during which time we added the oil of four whales to our cargo.
We also met several other whalers, from all of whom I made inquiries
for Jack, but none of the people I spoke to had even heard of the wreck
of the _Helen_, and could give me no information.  At length the crew
began to grumble at being kept so long at sea, and we sailed for Tumbez,
on the mainland, where we took in wood and water.

When this task was accomplished the captain gave leave to half of the
crew to go ashore, and to remain away three days.  On their return the
other half had liberty granted them for the same time.

I accompanied the doctor.  We went up the river some distance, and then
landing walked to a town surrounded by sand, far from having a pleasant
look.  With the assistance of the doctor, I made inquiries for Jack,
thinking that if he belonged to a whaler he might have visited the
place; but I could gain no intelligence of him.  The night before we
sailed it was my middle watch, and when it was over I tumbled into my
bunk.

I had been asleep for some time when I was awakened by hearing Horner's
voice, exclaiming, "You are here, then?  Rouse up and come on deck.  The
captain is in a great taking.  He has found that a boat is missing and
some of the hands, and he declares that you have gone with them."

Slipping into my clothes, I hurried on deck.  It was just daylight; the
captain was standing aft, looking in a fearful rage, while the second
mate was forward, shouting to the men to come up and show themselves.

"Do you want me, sir?"  I asked.

"So you and Jim Pulley have not taken yourselves off?" he exclaimed.

"No, sir; we never thought of doing so, and I gave you my word that I
wouldn't desert."

He made no reply, but ordered Mr Griffiths to call over the names of
the men.  Four were found missing.

"Take a boat and six men, well armed, and see you bring the rascals
back, alive or dead!" he exclaimed, turning to the mate.

In a couple of minutes the boat was in the water and the men were ready,
and Mr Griffiths pulled away.

He was absent for some hours.  At last we saw his boat coming back, but
without the runaways.  On reaching the deck Mr Griffiths reported that
he had gone up the river and examined the coast on either side of it,
but could find no traces of the boat or men.

As soon as Captain Hawkins had abandoned all hopes of recovering the
runaways he ordered Mr Griffiths to go again on shore to try and pick
up some fresh hands in their place, and I was sent to look after the
boat.  On either side of the river as we pulled up it we saw numbers of
alligators sunning themselves on the sandy banks.  As we got near them
they plunged into the water, and at first I thought they were about to
attack the boat.

As we got higher up, the river narrowed and the trees bent over our
heads.  In the branches we could see numbers of monkeys leaping from
bough to bough and chattering at us.  At last, after going six miles, we
reached a landing-place, near which was an orange-grove coming close
down to the water.  Mr Griffiths, taking two men with him, ordered the
rest of us to remain in the boat, and on no account to quit her.
Scarcely, however, was he out of sight than the men declared that they
must have some oranges.  When I reminded them of the orders I had
received they laughed at me, and one of them, springing ashore, ran off
to the grove.  He soon again appeared, with a handkerchief in his hands
full of oranges, and sucking one as he came along.  He was followed by
an old gentleman, whom I at once guessed to be the owner of the
orange-grove, and who came on till he reached the boat.  He then stopped
and said something in his native language, which none of us understood.
When he found this he made signs to us that we had no business to take
his oranges without leave.  I tried to explain by pointing to the men's
mouths that they were very thirsty, and that I couldn't prevent the
sailor from taking the fruit.  Whether it was from my manner or looks I
can't say, but the old gentleman appeared to be pleased, and going back
to an orange-tree picked off a quantity of the fruit, which he brought
to me in his own handkerchief, patting me on the back at the same time,
as if he was satisfied with my explanations.

While sucking away at the oranges the men were kept quiet.  All the time
the monkeys chattered away at us from the neighbouring trees, and an
ugly alligator would now and then poke his snout out of the water to
have a look at us, but the shouts we raised made him swim off.  At last
Mr Griffiths appeared with four fresh hands, each man carrying a bundle
containing all his worldly possessions.  As soon as they stepped into
the boat we shoved off, and gave way down the river.  I was surprised to
find all the men talk in a way far superior to that of common sailors,
and soon found that they had deserted from American whalers, and had
been, before they came to sea, in good positions, which they had lost by
misconduct.  The moment we got on board, though it was now late in the
evening, the captain ordered the anchor to be hove up, and as the wind
was off shore, we stood out to sea.

We proceeded at once to our old cruising ground in the neighbourhood of
the Galapagos.  While we were on our way the new hands seemed perfectly
contented, having little or nothing to do.  I, of course, inquired of
them if they had heard of anyone who had escaped from the _Helen_, but
they could give me no information.  To my surprise, I found that, though
they had entered in different names, three of them were brothers, and
the fourth an old friend.  One of the brothers appeared to be a quiet,
well-disposed man.  As far as I could make out, he had come to sea to
look after the others, and to try and keep them out of mischief, though
he didn't appear to have been very successful, as time after time they
had got into all sorts of scrapes, and it was a wonder that they had
escaped with their lives.  On reaching the old ground we fell in with a
number of whales, and had very hard work, for scarcely had we stowed
away the oil of one than we were in chase of another.  The new hands
grumbled, and so did some of the others.  Of course they couldn't
complain of our success in catching whales, that brought them the work
to do.  The mates knew of their grumbling, but took no notice of it.  At
last, one morning, when I came on deck, I found a letter lying on the
companion-hatch, addressed to Captain Hawkins.  I, of course, took it to
him.

"Who sent this?" he asked, in an angry tone.

I told him where I had found it, and that I knew nothing more about the
matter.

Tearing it open, as he read it a frown gathered on his brow.  "The
mutinous rascals!  I'll not yield to them," he exclaimed.  "Say nothing
about this till I come on deck," he said to me.  "Send Mr Griffiths
here."

When the mate came the captain read the letter to him.  They then armed
themselves and went on deck, when the second mate was ordered to muster
all hands aft.

"Who wrote this letter?" asked the captain, in a firm tone.

No one answered, and there was silence for some time, until the captain
repeated the question.

"It was Muggins," at last said one of the men.

Muggins was one of the last hands shipped, and though a man of some
education, he always seemed to me utterly worthless.  He was a friend of
the three brothers, who went by the names of Washington, Crampton, and
Clifford.

"But in this precious letter I have the names of all the crew,"
exclaimed the captain.

Several of the men on this protested that they knew nothing about the
letter, and had not put their names to any paper.

"Well, then, let those who have agreed to it walk over to the port side,
and those who wish to stick to their duty and remain in the ship go to
the starboard side."

Eight only walked over, including those I have mentioned.

On this Miles Soper, stepping aft and touching his hat, said, "I never
like to peach on shipmates, but, as an honest man, I can't hold my
tongue.  On two different nights I saw Muggins get up and change the
meat and throw dirt in among the bread.  One night he carried up some of
the best pieces and hove them overboard.

"It's clear to me that he did it to make the rest of us discontented
with our victuals.  I had made up my mind to speak about it, but I
couldn't catch him at it again, though I'm certain he played the same
trick more than once afterwards."

"I believe you, Soper," said the captain, and at a signal from him the
mates rushed forward and seized Muggins, whom they dragged aft, none of
the others interfering.  The captain then produced a pair of handcuffs
which he had got ready, and fixed them on the wrists of the man.  He
then called to Horner, Jim, and me to assist the mates, and together we
carried the man down below and shut him up in the cabin store-room, the
captain meantime remaining by himself on deck.  When we returned we
found that the crew hadn't moved.

"Now, lads!" he said; "you who have made up your minds to remain in the
ship return to your duty."

On this the men on the starboard side went forward, but the remaining
seven mutineers stood where they were with their arms folded.  I was in
hopes that, as they were no longer under the influence of Muggins, they
would yield, but they would make no promises.  At length, tired of
standing where they were, they moved lazily along forward.  Dr Cockle
told me that the captain intended to put into the Marquesas, where he
could get rid of the men and obtain others.

I found the next day that we were steering in that direction.  After
this not one of them would do any work, though they were allowed to
remain at liberty.  I fully expected that they would try to rescue their
companion, but the captain and mates kept an eye on them, as did Jim and
I.

It was tantalising to us to see whales every day and yet not to go in
chase of them, but the captain wouldn't send any boats away with the
good men in them for fear of what the others might do in their absence.

At length we reached Witahoo, one of the Marquesas, and brought up in a
beautifully sheltered bay.  Had there been any English authorities in
the place the men would have been imprisoned, but as it was all the
captain could do was to release Muggins from his handcuffs, and to send
him and the other men ashore.  The second mate went in one boat, and I
had command of the other.  The mutineers were ordered to get into them,
and we pulled for the beach.  Though they had only their clothes and a
few articles put up in bundles, they stepped on shore with as jaunty an
air as if they were going among friends, and having walked a little
distance they turned round and jeered and laughed at us.

"I pity you poor fellows who have to toil away on board that filthy
whaler," cried Muggins.  "It's a shame that you haven't spirit enough to
lead the happy easy lives we are going to enjoy."

Before we shoved off several natives came down to the beach, with whom
the mutineers shook hands, as if they were old friends.  Presently a
huge fellow appeared, who, judging from the way the rest treated him, we
supposed to be a chief.  Though the others were of a gigantic size and
magnificent proportions, he was taller than any of them.  Every part of
his body that we could see was tattooed over a deep blue colour, from
the crown of his head to his feet.  His head was shaven, and every hair,
even to the eyelashes, was plucked out.

He introduced himself to the mate, who was standing up in the boat, as
Utatee, the chief of the island.  He spoke a little English, and from
him we made out that a missionary resided a short distance off up the
bay.  In a short time a number of other people came down, with several
women and children.  Nearly all the latter appeared to me to be very
handsome, their good looks not being spoilt by tattooing.  I have never
seen so many fine-looking people together in any part of the world.  The
chief told us that we should be welcome to as much wood and water as we
required, and offered to supply us with fresh provisions at a cheap
rate.

Next day the missionary came on board, and warned us to beware of the
people.  He had made but little progress with them, owing very much to
the misconduct of the runaway sailors who lived on shore and set them a
bad example.  Still he had some converts, and he hoped, in time, to make
more.  I told him about my brother Jack, and how anxious I was to find
him.  I got Miles Soper to describe him minutely, and the missionary
kindly promised to make inquiries for him.

The captain returned with him on shore to look for men, and came back in
the evening with eight he had picked up.  One of them was a runaway
sailor, who had been living on the island several years (such being
termed a beachcomber), a Portuguese, and six Kanakas, as the natives are
called.

Meantime the blacks and the Sandwich Islanders, with a few of the white
men, were employed in bringing off the fresh provisions we required.  As
Dr Cockle wished to visit a part of the bay a little distance off, he
borrowed one of the boats manned with two natives, Jim Horner, and me.
We visited two or three spots, where the doctor collected some plants
and some shells from the shore.  We were about to return when he
proposed that we should look into a little bay a short distance farther
on.  The natives seemed disinclined to go there, and as far as we could
make out advised us to return to the shore, saying that there were bad
people in that neighbourhood.

The doctor, however, who supposed that they only wished to save
themselves from the longer pull, persisted in going on.  As we got up
towards the head of the bay we saw several natives, who ran off as we
approached, and hid themselves behind the trees.

"We must be cautious, for perhaps our men here didn't warn us without
reason," observed the doctor as we pulled slowly in.  Directly after he
exclaimed, "There are two men lying on the beach.  Who can they be?  We
must, at all events, go in and ascertain."

He had brought his fowling-piece, and we had besides two muskets.  He
told Jim and me to stand up, with the muskets in our hands, for he
didn't like to trust Horner, while he stepped on shore.  Just as the
boat reached the beach, and Jim, who was in the bows, was about to jump
out, he exclaimed, "Why I do believe those two fellows are Muggins and
Jones."

The doctor leaped on shore, looking carefully round to ascertain that no
natives were near.  A cry of horror escaped him.  The two men were dead,
with their skulls fractured, the brains lying about.

Their "free and happy" life on shore had come speedily to an end.  Why
they had been killed it was difficult to say.  The doctor, stooping
down, felt the bodies.

"They are perfectly cold, and must have been dead some time," he
observed.  "They probably had a quarrel with some of the natives, and
were trying to escape to the beach to cry for help, when they were
overtaken."

As we could do nothing we returned to the ship, thankful that we had
escaped the treachery of the natives, though, as the doctor observed,
the men who had suffered had evidently brought it all upon themselves.



CHAPTER TWENTY ONE.

A CRUISE ACROSS THE PACIFIC AND THE ADVENTURES I MET WITH.

On reaching the ship we found that the captain, the English missionary,
and the big old chief, Utatee, had arrived on board just before us.  The
doctor at once told them what had occurred.

"The fellows probably brought their fate upon themselves," said the
captain.  "They must have provoked the savages and got killed in
consequence."

"I'm afraid that such was the case," observed the missionary; "but I
will ask the chief to inquire into the matter."

Utatee said he would do so, but if the white men were guilty he could
not undertake to punish their murderers.

While we were talking some of the crew cried out, "A shark!  A shark!"
and sure enough there was a huge creature swimming up close under the
counter, with his fin just above the water, his wicked eye glancing up
at the ship.  The chief said something to one of the natives who had
come aboard with him, a fine athletic fellow, who, like the chief,
appeared to be fully dressed in a tightly-fitting dark blue silk dress,
but who, in reality, had only a loincloth round his waist, fastened by a
girdle, in which were stuck a couple of knives, the rest of his body
being perfectly tattooed from head to foot.

The man looked at the shark, and waiting until it had gone a little
ahead, overboard he went, and swam rapidly up after it.  Presently he
dived, and we saw the shark floundering in the water.  I thought that he
had turned to seize the man, and that the blood which tinged the waves
was issuing from his body; but no, it was the shark which was wounded.
The man rose, and again plunged his knife into the monster's side.  He
did the same several times, and then towing it up by the tail to the
ship, made signs for the bight of a rope to be hove to him.  He passed
it over the shark's head, and another rope being secured near the tail,
the monster was hoisted up, while the native, with wonderful agility,
climbed on deck, apparently not in the slightest degree exhausted by his
exertions.

Immediately after this we saw a prodigious commotion near the entrance
of the bay, while a loud sound like that of stones knocked together
reached our ears.  We soon made out a number of people, men, women, and
children, who had come off from the extreme point forming one side of
the entrance of the bay, and were swimming across it, shouting and
striking together a couple of big stones, which they held in their
hands.  Having formed in a line across the bay, they turned and swam up
it, and we saw that they were driving before them a shoal of porpoises.
On they kept in perfect order, till the porpoises were driven right
ashore at the head of the bay.  Here a number of other natives met them.
Together they attacked the creatures, which they quickly killed.  The
missionary told us that their object was to extract the teeth, through
which they make holes for the purpose of forming necklaces.

"You'll not forget, sir, I hope, to look out for my brother Jack," I
said, as the missionary was going.

"You may trust me for that, my young friend," he answered, kindly; "but
I shall not be long on these islands, I fear, as the French are coming
to take possession of them, and they'll allow no Protestant missionaries
to live here."

The captain had no wish to remain for the purpose of inquiring into the
death of the two seamen, as they didn't belong to his ship, and we
therefore sailed at daybreak the next morning for Dominica, the largest
island of the group, where we understood that we could obtain a larger
supply of pork than we had obtained at Witahoo.

We quickly came off that island, but could discover only one bay into
which we could safely enter.

As soon as we brought up, two of the boats were sent ashore under charge
of Mr Griffiths, he going in one, and I, with Jim and Horner, in
another.

As we got near the beach we saw that a heavy surf was breaking on it.
Mr Griffiths, however, thought that we could land safely, and waiting
till the wave had burst, we dashed on.

Though we shipped a good deal of water, the boats got in safely.  The
natives being accustomed to supply whalers, guessing what we wanted, had
come down with a number of hogs to sell.  The price for one was a bottle
of powder, and five could be purchased for an old musket.

We had brought a number of these articles for barter.  Mr Griffiths
ordered me to stand by the boats while he carried on the trade.

As was my custom, I looked about in the hopes of seeing some English
sailor of whom I might make inquiries about my brother Jack.

When we had purchased as many pigs as the boats would carry, we prepared
to shove off.

The natives made signs to us that we had better be careful, but we
didn't understand them, and the pigs being put on board, we shoved off.

"I'll lead," said Mr Griffiths.  "When you see me safe outside you can
follow," and away he went.

He got through one breaker, but what was my horror to see the next catch
the boat and roll her completely over!  We knew that the place abounded
with ground-sharks, and we expected to see either him or some of the
other men carried off by the savage creatures.

He was not a bad swimmer, but, at the same time, was unaccustomed to
make his way through a heavy surf.

The rest of the men clung to the boat, but he attempted to gain the
shore by himself.  I was about to tumble the pigs out of my boat, and to
go off in her to his assistance, when three of the natives darted out
through the foaming seas towards where he was struggling.  Every instant
I expected he would disappear, but they quickly reached him, and
supporting him in their arms, brought him back safe to the beach, where
the rest of the men arrived, without hurt, on the bottom of the boat.

"We must not be defeated, lads," cried out Mr Griffiths, as soon as he
had recovered.  "We shall have better fortune next time."

The boat was baled out and put to rights, and the pigs, which had swum
ashore, being again put in her, away we pulled, but just as she had got
to the middle of the roller she broached to and over she went.

This time I, not without reason, feared that some of my shipmates would
be lost, as I saw the boat tossing helplessly in the breakers, but
presently she came driving, with all hands and the pigs, at a rapid rate
towards the beach, where the natives received them, looking as if
nothing unusual had occurred.

Still undaunted, Mr Griffiths determined once more to make the attempt,
and the next time succeeded.  I waited until the largest roller, which I
had carefully noted, had passed, and my men giving way, we got through,
although the boat was nearly half full of water.

We carried the pigs on board, but after this, at the suggestion of one
of the natives, we anchored the boats a short distance from the shore by
letting him dive down and make fast a cable to the coral at the bottom.

The natives then swam off to us with the pigs and the cocoanuts which we
bought of them, without making any additional charge for their trouble;
indeed, to them it seemed a matter of course.  We could obtain no yams,
but we got instead some enormous plantains, which served us instead of
potatoes.  As we could bring off but a few pigs at a time it was rather
a long business, and we had then to skin and salt them down.

The wind changing, and the surf no longer breaking at the end of the
bay, we were able to land without difficulty.  I had one day accompanied
the doctor, who took only three other men to pull the boat.  As he
wished to botanise and obtain some shells and other productions of the
island, the men went with him to carry what could be got, while I
remained by the boat to prevent the natives from stealing the lead and
gear belonging to her.

Before long two or three old women came down to the beach and began
talking to me by signs, for words were of no use.  Then others joined
them.  They took hold of my hands and seemed to be admiring my
complexion and examining my clothes.  As far as I could make out they
wanted me to accompany them to their village.  When I refused, for of
course I was not going to neglect my duty and leave the boat, they grew
angry, and at last several of them seized me by the arms and were
attempting to drag me off.  I struggled violently, and shouted out at
the top of my voice, but they didn't seem to mind that.

As they were very strong I was completely in their power, and I fully
believed that I should be carried off, when I caught sight of a man
running towards the boat.  He proved to be one of our crew who had been
sent back by the doctor for something he had left.  When he saw what was
taking place, holding his musket in his hand, he rushed towards the old
women, who let me go and scampered off.

"It's lucky for you, Peter, that they didn't succeed in getting you
away," he said.  "They would have tattooed you all over and turned you
into a nigger and made you marry one of their girls.  I'll stay by you,
for the chances are they may come back and try again to make you a
prisoner.  The doctor must manage to do without his spud."

When Dr Cockle returned, though at first he began to scold the man,
when he heard why he remained he told him he was right.  At all events,
had the natives carried me off it might have caused a deal of trouble to
recover me.

Sailing from the Marquesas we gradually worked our way westward towards
the Society Islands, catching a few whales, till we arrived at Totillah,
one of the Samoa group.

The scenery was magnificent, while everywhere the country was covered
with beautiful trees, among them the pandanus palm, the tree-fern, the
banyan, the bread-fruit tree, wild nutmeg, and superb bamboos.  The
natives also were very well-behaved and quiet, and were always inclined
to treat us hospitably.  Indeed, we might have travelled without the
slightest risk from one end of the island to the other.  The good
behaviour of the inhabitants was the result of their having become
Christians owing to the indefatigable exertions of missionaries.  It was
here that John Williams, the great apostle to the Pacific heathen, spent
several years.  Not far off from where we lay at anchor was Leoni Bay,
the scene of the massacre of the French navigator Perouse and his
companions.  While we were here two of the men we had obtained ran off.
Two others were shipped in their stead.  One of them, who called himself
John Brown, as he stepped on deck seemed to me a remarkably fine fellow.
He had belonged to a whaler which had been wrecked some time before,
and he had remained behind while the rest of the crew went on to Sydney.
I immediately asked him the question which I put to everybody.  "Do you
know anything of a young fellow named Jack Trawl?"

"It seems to me that I have heard of the name," he laid, "but when or
where I can't say.  When did you last get news of him?"

"He was wrecked in the _Helen_, and was last seen in one of her boats
when the crews were making their escape from the savages," I answered.

"Then perhaps I may help you a little," he said.  "Some time ago we fell
in with a whaler, and we were talking to her crew.  At last, as we were
going to shove off, one of the men said that he had been on board the
_Helen_, and he knew for certain two of her boats had got safely to
Timor, but what became of the others he couldn't tell."

I naturally asked which of the boats had reached Timor, and whether the
captain's was one of them, but he could not say, and I was obliged to
rest satisfied with this information.  It gave me fresh hopes that Jack
was alive.

I have not described the bay in which we lay.  It was very deep and
narrow, and might rather have been called a gulf.  Just as we got under
way the wind came right in, and we had either to anchor again or work
out.  The captain decided to do the latter.  Two boats were sent ahead
to tow the ship round, the rest of the crew were at their stations.  Not
a word was spoken, for we all saw that we had no easy task to perform.
As we went about, first on one tack then on the other, we each time
gained but little ground.

At last, as we were just again going about, a puff of wind drove her
right ashore on a coral reef.  In vain the men in the two boats
endeavoured to pull her round.  The captain and both the mates gave her
up for lost, and the crew seemed to think the same, but Brown, who was
looking round everywhere, called me, and we hauled away at the fore
brace.  The fore-topsail filled with a flaw of wind which came off the
shore, and away the ship went, the wind favouring us till we were clear
out of the bay.  It was one of the narrowest escapes from shipwreck I
ever had.

The next land we made was "Boscawen" and "Keppel" Islands, the former
being a high peak, the latter a low, level island.  We here landed to
obtain provisions, among which we got some of the finest yams I ever
saw.  The natives were good-looking, friendly people.

We continued on to the north-west, and made the "Duke of Clarence"
Island, which has no land within four hundred miles of it.  The captain
said that he had touched there years before, but that it was
uninhabited.  As we were nearing it, however, a number of natives came
off in large canoes loaded with cocoanuts and fruits, so that they or
their fathers must have made a long voyage to reach it in their
frail-looking vessels.

Thence we proceeded to the Kingsmill group, of which Byron's Island is
the largest.  The men, who were heathens, were quite naked, but the
women wore small aprons of seaweed.  They didn't tattoo themselves, but
many of them had their skins rough and hanging in flakes, which gave
them a most repulsive appearance.  This was in consequence of their
spending much of their time in the water.

They were savage not only in their appearance but in their customs, for
we heard that to prevent overcrowding, as they cannot provide sufficient
food for a large population, they kill their infant children.

Such were the people of all these islands, however handsome in
appearance, before the missionaries went among them.  Many of them had
terrible wounds, produced in their battles with each other, either by
their spears or clubs, which are covered with sharks' teeth.

We didn't see the land till we were within about ten miles of it, as it
is very low, being of coral formation.  Its only vegetable production is
the cocoanut tree, which is of the greatest value to the natives.  They
build their huts of the trunks and roof them with the leaves.  Their
canoes are composed of numerous pieces of the wood sewn together with
cocoanut fibre.  The form of these canoes, which are from eighteen to
twenty feet long, is curious; the shape is that of a whale-boat cut in
two lengthways; one side is round, and the other perfectly flat, and
they are kept upright by having an outrigger to windward which extends
about ten feet from the hull.  The sail is triangular and made of
matting, and in fine weather they can beat to windward with the fastest
ship.

We here spent several months, occasionally touching at Byron's Island
for fresh cocoanuts and water.  We had caught nineteen whales, when
towards the evening of one day a twentieth was seen at a considerable
distance.

"We must have that fellow," said the captain.

The boats were lowered; he went in one, Mr Griffiths in another, and
Mr Harvey, the second mate, in a third.  Another whale appeared much
nearer, but in a somewhat different direction.  While Mr Griffiths
pulled for the first, the captain and the second mate made for the
second.  Both were to windward.  We had a light breeze, and at once
began to beat up after them.

Just before sundown we found that the captain and the second mate had
made fast.  It took some time before the whale was killed, and we could
scarcely perceive the whift planted on its back before darkness came on.
We had, in the meantime, lost sight of Mr Griffiths's boat, but we
hoped that he would be equally successful.  We made tack after tack till
we got up to the whale, which two boats were towing towards us.  We
burned a blue light to show the first mate our position, but looked in
vain for an answering signal.  At last the captain, being anxious at his
non-appearance, and fearing that some accident must have happened,
ordered the second mate to hang on to the whale while he beat the ship
up in the direction Mr Griffiths's boat had taken.  The hours went by
and the wind increased and the sea got up.

"Never mind," said the captain; "Harvey will hang on under the lee of
the whale even if it does come on to blow harder, and he'll be safe
enough."

At last, at about half-an-hour to midnight, we made out a faint light
dead to windward.  It took us some time to get up to it, for, though we
were sure it must come from the mate's boat, it didn't approach us.

As we got near we could distinguish the people hanging to the bottom of
the boat, one of them sitting astride of her and holding up a lantern.
We immediately hove-to, and lowered a boat to take them on board.  It
then appeared that the boat had been stove in by a whale, when the mate
and his men clung on to her, the whale fortunately not molesting them.

The boat's lantern is always headed up tight in a keg, together with a
tinder-box and candles, and having providentially secured the keg, they
managed to open it, get out the lantern, and strike a light.  We might
otherwise have passed them in the dark, and they would all probably have
perished, as we should have run back to pick up Mr Harvey's boat and
the whale we had killed.  We now did so at once, and a hard night's work
we had of it, as we had to secure the whale alongside, and get ready for
cutting-in as soon as it was day.

Soon after this, while I was aloft, I saw Jim, who had just been
relieved at the wheel, go to the side, and, throwing off his clothes,
jump overboard.  It was what we often did, always taking care to leave a
rope overboard to get up by, to get rid of the soot and grease, besides
which, as we were close under the line, the weather was very hot, and a
bath refreshing.

Jim swam some way ahead of the ship, when the cook, to play him a trick,
hauled up his rope, which I didn't perceive, as I was looking at Jim.
Just then I caught sight of the fin of a shark at no great distance off.
I shouted to Jim to come back, and he, knowing that I should not give a
false alarm, struck out lustily for the ship.  Mr Griffiths, who was on
deck, seeing his danger, at once hove him another rope, and shouted at
the top of his voice to keep the shark off.  Still the monster came
nearer and nearer.  I saw Jim, to my great relief, get up to the side,
but as he took hold of the rope, from its being covered with grease, it
slipped through his fingers.  The mate shouted to the other men on deck
to come and assist him in hauling Jim up.  I slid down on deck as fast
as I could.  On came the shark.  Jim was still in the water, and I
expected to see my old friend caught.

With all our strength we hauled at the rope, but still Jim couldn't hold
on by it, and I feared that it would slip through his fingers
altogether, when, as it turned out, there was a knot at the end.  This
enabled him to hold on, and we hauled him up, more dead than alive from
fright, just as the shark, showing the white of its belly, shoved its
snout out of the water and made a snap at his feet, not six inches from
them.

Jim was saved, and I never in my life felt more inclined to cry for joy
than when I saw him out of danger.  While the shark was still alongside
looking for its prey, one of the Marquesas islanders who came on deck,
taking a knife in his hand, leapt right down, feet first, on the
monster's back, which so scared it that away it went like a flash of
lightning.

I have mentioned these circumstances just as they occurred to show the
sort of life led by the crew of a whaler.  I have more interesting
events to narrate in the following chapters.



CHAPTER TWENTY TWO.

A TYPHOON, AND HOW WE GOT THROUGH IT.

The crew of a whaler had need to exercise much patience.  Sometimes they
watch for weeks and weeks together, but watch in vain, for fish.  At
others so many are caught that they have not a moment to rest between
the time that one is tryed out and another is brought alongside.

We had at first been very successful, but a week or more having passed
without a whale being seen, Captain Hawkins ordered a course to be
steered for the Japan whaling ground.  The very first day that we
arrived in the latitude of these islands, which were, however, far out
of sight, we caught two whales.

We had tryed out the first and had the other alongside when another
whaler made her appearance.  As she got within half a mile of us it feel
calm.  Soon afterwards a boat was lowered from her, which came pulling
towards us.  When she came alongside a fine, hale-looking old man
stepped on board and introduced himself as Captain Barnett, of the
_Eleanor_.  He spoke in a hearty, cheery tone, which contrasted greatly
with the rough and unpleasant way in which Captain Hawkins generally
expressed himself.

Captain Barnett dined on board, and then invited Captain Hawkins and Dr
Cockle to come and sup with him, I managed to address the old gentleman,
and told him about Jack.

"Should I ever fall in with your brother I'll say that I met you, and
that you were inquiring for him," he answered, kindly.

When the two captains came on deck they took a look round the horizon.

"You must excuse me from accompanying you," said Captain Hawkins, "for I
tell you what, I don't like the look of the weather.  There's something
brewing somewhere I'd advise you to get on board as soon as you can."

The ocean had hitherto been perfectly calm, but there now came from the
north-east a slowly-heaving swell, which every minute increased, and the
whole atmosphere in a short time assumed a sombre, melancholy
appearance, while a peculiar light tinged the two ships and sea around,
owing to the sun's rays passing through clouds of a dull yellowish-red
colour.  Before this, numbers of birds had been flying about the ship,
but they now winged their way to distant lands.  As soon as our visitor
had pulled away, our captain ordered the hands aloft to shorten sail,
although at the time there was not a breath of wind.

Everything was taken in with the exception of a main-topsail and storm
trysail.

As the swell increased, the ship began to roll in a most frightful
manner, her chain-plates striking the water every time she heeled over,
while the water as it rose beat against the stern with a force so
violent that we were almost thrown off our legs.

We had to cast adrift the last whale caught before the whole blubber was
cut in, as it was impossible, without the greatest risk, to keep it
alongside.

I asked Brown, who was the most intelligent seaman on board, what he
thought was going to happen.

"We shall have a typhoon--a precious hard one too, I suspect," he
answered.

All night long the swell went on increasing, when suddenly the wind
sprang up and broke the hitherto calm swells into foaming seas, which
furiously dashed round the ship though they did us no damage.

Just as daylight came on the wind again dropped; but though the wind had
fallen, the sea, instead of going down, raged more fiercely than ever,
making the ship roll so violently that we feared that at any moment the
masts might be carried away.  Yet all this time there was scarcely a
breath of wind.  This state of things continued till about three
o'clock, when suddenly, as Brown had foretold, the gale again broke upon
us, and continued to blow with increasing violence until about two
o'clock on the following morning, when a more furious blast than ever
struck the ship.

"Hold on for your lives!" shouted Mr Griffiths, who was on deck.

The captain, followed by Dr Cockle, hurried from below.  There was
little need to give the warning; we all clung to the weather-bulwarks.
Over went the ship right on her beam-ends, and away flew the storm
trysail, while every article not securely lashed was carried away.
Fearful indeed was the uproar.  The wind howled savagely, the sea dashed
with thundering roars against the sides of the ship, the masts groaned,
the bulk-heads creaked, the ropes and blocks clashed together and
rattled in a way I had never before heard.  Indeed, I believed that our
last moments had come, for it seemed impossible unless the masts went
that the ship would right.  Jim and I and Horner crouched down close to
each other, sheltering ourselves as we could under the bulwarks.  Not
far off were Miles Soper, Sam Coal, and Brown.

"Is there any chance for us?" asked Horner, his teeth chattering and his
voice showing his terror.

"Chance!" answered Brown; "the chance that many a stout ship has braved
as bad a hurricane, and yet come out of it not much the worse."

We looked out for the _Eleanor_, but she was nowhere to be seen.  Some
of the men declared that she must have gone down.

"We're afloat and why shouldn't she be?" said Brown, who was ready to
cheer every one up.

Some of the hands stole below, and I believe if they could have got into
the spirit-room they would have made themselves drunk in order to forget
their fears.  Most of us, however, preferred remaining on deck and
watching what would happen.

Suddenly, during a momentary cessation of the wind, the ship righted,
and we flew on before it, though matters in other respects seemed but
little mended.  As the sea beat against the ship it seemed like a huge
battering-ram trying to knock her to pieces, every blow making each
plank shake though none gave way.  Now she plunged her head into an
immense hollow, now she rose rapidly to the top of a foaming sea, while
the next instant another rolling on threatened to overwhelm us.

Daylight came, but it brought no cessation of the hurricane.  The hours
went by; not one of us thought of breakfast.  Indeed, it was impossible
to cook anything.  We watched the masts quivering as the ship plunged
into the seas, and we expected every moment to see them go by the board.
The carpenter and the first mate had got their axes ready to cut them
away, should such occur.  At length a tremendous sea came roaring
towards our weather bow.  The ship struggled as if to avoid it, but she
pitched headlong into the deep hollow just before her, and a monstrous
sea, lifting its head half way up to the foretop, came right down on our
deck, sweeping up to the main hatchway.  Horner and several of the men
shrieked out with terror, believing that their last moments were come.
I scarcely supposed that the ship would recover herself, but suddenly
she came up with a jerk, the bowsprit carried away, and the next moment
it came right across our forecastle.

"Rouse up, lads, and secure the foremast," shouted the captain.

Led by the mates, with Brown, Ringold, Soper, Jim, and me, the crew
rushed forward to secure the fore-topmast stay.  We then got the
bowsprit inboard.  After this the ship began to ride more easily, though
the hurricane continued until near sunset, when it began to abate.  The
watch below turned in, eager to get some rest.  I never slept more
soundly in my life.  Next morning the sun rose from a cloudless sky.  A
gentle breeze was blowing.  The sea had already gone down, and in a few
hours sparkling wavelets alone played over the surface of the deep.

Two days afterwards we brought up under the lee of South Island to
repair damages.  After this we again sailed to resume our search for
whales.

I was forward, when I saw a dark object floating some distance on the
weather bow.  On my reporting it to the captain, he ordered a boat to be
lowered to ascertain what it was.  Mr Griffiths went in her with the
doctor, Jim and I forming part of the crew.  As we got near we saw that
it was a creature of some sort, but it made no effort to avoid us, and
seemed to be fast asleep.  With his harpoon Mr Griffiths went forward.
As we got closer it seemed to be an enormous turtle; the doctor said of
the "trunk" species.

We paddled as noiselessly as we could for fear of waking it, and on
getting close Mr Griffiths plunged his harpoon deep into its body
through its shell.  The creature in a moment was lively enough, and,
after swimming away a short distance, turned and made a snap at the
rope, which it nearly bit in two.  We were up to it again, however, and
two or three plunges of a lance quickly finished it.  We then secured a
rope to it and towed it to the ship.  By means of the windlass it was
hoisted on board.  When lying on deck it was found to measure seventeen
feet in length, to be seven feet wide, and four feet six inches in
depth.  All on board declared that they had never seen a creature of
that species of the same size.  We boiled it down as we would the
blubber of a whale, and it yielded nearly a barrelful.  Fish in these
seas are very numerous.  Sometimes from the masthead I could see the
whole ocean alive with them.

Before leaving for the Sandwich Islands, for which we were next bound,
we had a day's fishing, and in a few hours caught as many as we wanted.
I here also saw numbers of the paper nautilus floating on the calm
surface of the water.  I managed, with a small net at the end of a long
pole, to catch several for my friend the doctor.

I'll not describe our voyage back to Honolulu, the capital of the
Society Islands.  There were two or three merchantmen and about forty
whalers at anchor.  The entrance to the harbour is surrounded by coral
reefs, and is very intricate.  The chief pilot came out in his
whale-boat, manned by natives, and as he passed each ship he hailed to
have a boat sent him to assist in towing us in.  In a short time we had
nearly fifty whale-boats, twenty-five on each bow, in two long lines.
It was one of the prettiest sights I ever witnessed, towing on the big
ship at the rate of about three knots an hour between the coral reefs,
making what would otherwise have been a difficult business perfectly
easy.  Here we exchanged the fish we had salted down for fifty barrels
of potatoes and twenty of onions.  Among the ships was the _Eleanor_,
from which we had parted off Japan.  As the old captain had greatly
taken Dr Cockle's fancy, he wished to pay him a visit, and invited me
to accompany him.  On getting on board the mate said that he was below,
and considering all things, doing wonderfully well.

"What do you mean?" asked Dr Cockle.

"Why, sir, I'll tell you," answered the mate.  "If I ever saw a
wonderful thing done, our captain did it.  While the typhoon which
caught you as well as us was at its height our rudder broke adrift, and
on getting it on board to repair, it came right down on his leg,
crushing it fearfully.  We all thought he must have died, for you see
our doctor had left the ship some time before, and there was no one who
knew what was to be done.  So our skipper sat down on the deck and
ordered the carpenter to bring him the surgical instruments.  Our
carpenter is a wonderfully clever fellow, and between them they managed
to saw off the leg below the knee, to take up the arteries and stop the
bleeding.  [See Note 1.] We then got the old man, who is sixty years of
age, into bed.  Would you believe it?  In a few weeks after the accident
he had a turning-lathe brought to the side of his bed, and if he didn't
turn out a first-rate wooden leg for himself."

On going below the doctor found the old captain doing wonderfully well
and not requiring any further aid.  Before we left he was stumping about
on deck as hearty and cheery as ever.  Indeed, through his courage and
coolness he had undoubtedly saved his own life.

The old captain probably is dead, but Mr Rosden, the mate, who is the
son of an old Downs pilot, will confirm the account I have given.

The captain was constantly on shore, and Mr Griffiths kindly let me
take one of the boats, with Jim, and Soper, and Coal as a crew, and we
visited every ship in the harbour, that I might make inquiries for Jack.
As we pulled about, though disappointed at one ship, we half hoped to
find him on board another.  My heart grew sick as I approached the last.

"Do you think he's aboard her, Miles?"  I asked.

"If he isn't don't lose heart," was the answer.

"No, no, don't lose heart, Peter," echoed Jim.  "He'll turn up some time
or other.  It mayn't be to-day or it mayn't be to-morrow, but if he's
alive--and there's no reason why he should have lost his life--he'll be
somewhere no doubt, and you'll be led to him, that's my opinion."

We got on board the ship.  She was an American whaler, the _William and
Eliza_.  We found the crew in a great state of commotion, and they would
scarcely listen to what I had to say.  Their commander, Captain Rogers,
who seemed to be a great favourite with them, had been wrongly accused
of infringing the revenue laws, and had been imprisoned in a mud fort
which guarded the landing-place, and they were determined to rescue him.

Most of their boats were away visiting the other ships to obtain
recruits, and they declared that if he was not let out that evening they
would liberate him before morning.

I, of course, could not join them, but Soper and Coal were very eager to
lend a hand.  I persuaded them, however, to come back with me to our
ship after I had made all the inquiries I could for Jack without
success.

Miles and Coal brought the news, and what was to be done on board, and
several of our men declared that they would join, as much for the sake
of the spree as influenced by a regard for Captain Rogers.

As evening drew in, a number of boats put off from all the American
ships, and from several of the English, for the imprisoned skipper was
much liked, not only by his own men, but by the captains and mates of
nearly all the whaling ships.  He was a great friend, too, I found, of
Captain Hawkins.  When the captain came on board again, he gave any of
us leave to go that chose.  I don't say we were right, but when I found
the second mate about to lead a party of our men, Jim and I offered to
go with them, and away we pulled for the _William and Eliza_.

We found her surrounded by boats, carrying well-nigh two hundred men,
the whole being under the command of an American captain.

We waited till nearly midnight, when the order was given to shove off.
We could not tell whether the authorities on shore knew anything of what
was about to take place.

We carried a number of scaling ladders, with stout ropes and hooks.  The
first who got up with the ladders were to fix on the hooks, so that the
others might swarm up, and we might all mount the walls together.

We had no firearms, only axes, blubber-spades, and spears.  We pulled
in, forming a long line abreast, as silently as possible.  On reaching
the shore, two hands were left in each boat, and the rest of us rushed
up to the fort to fix the ladders.

It took but a few seconds before we were all at the top, and down we
leaped into the fort.

Nearly the whole of the garrison were asleep.  When they found the place
full of men some of them ran away and hid themselves, and others dashed
out at the gate.  We soon found the room in which Captain Rogers was
shut up.  The door was broken open and he was set free.  Not wishing to
have a disturbance with the natives, we hurried back with him the way we
came, and before long were on board again.  The captain made us a
speech, and thanked us for setting him free, and we returned to our
respective ships.  I don't know that any notice was taken of the affair
by the authorities, but of course Captain Rogers was unable to go on
shore again while he remained in the harbour.

Having repaired our ship and taken on board several fresh hands, who
wished to return home to England, we sailed again for the Marquesas, in
order to land the natives whom we had taken from those islands.

The passage lasted five weeks, during which time we didn't see a single
ship.  We proceeded at once to Resolution Bay.  On entering we found a
French man-of-war, which immediately sent a boat on board us.

The officer in command informed the captain that the islands now
belonged to France, and that we must not land anything in the shape of
firearms or ammunition.

While he was still on board a boat pulled off from the shore, bringing a
dozen soldiers, who, without asking leave, came up the side.

"Why do these men come on board my ship?" asked the captain.

"To see that you comply with the orders you receive," answered the
officer, who spoke very good English.

"I have no intention of breaking the laws you impose," exclaimed the
captain, who was not the man to stand that sort of thing, "but I'll not
submit to have foreign soldiers placed on board my ship."

The French officer shrugged his shoulders, and said that he was but
carrying out the orders of his superiors.

On this the captain ordered his boat to be lowered, and pulled away on
board the French man-of-war.  He there threatened to throw the ship on
the hands of the French if the soldiers were not immediately withdrawn.

After a little time the captain returned, accompanied by a French
lieutenant, who brought an order for the soldiers to return on shore.
Our stay here was rendered very unpleasant by the French.  As soon as we
got our fresh provisions on board we sailed again for the westward,
proceeding as before among the coral reefs, which lie to the north of
the Society Islands.  The navigation is exceedingly dangerous, as many
of them are so low that they cannot be seen till the ship is close to
them, and we had to keep a very sharp look-out as we sailed on.  The
most dangerous of all those we sighted was the Sidney group, which
consist of bare sandbanks, without the least vegetation, and are nearly
level with the surface of the sea.  We landed on some of them to obtain
birds' eggs and fish, which are very plentiful, but they are
uninhabited, as there is no fresh water.

Still sailing west we touched at the Kingsmills, passing also several
other islands, till we came off Strong's Island.  Here is a magnificent
harbour, surrounded by coral reefs, but the mouth is so narrow that we
could not have attempted to enter had not the boats of three vessels
lying there come out to assist in towing us in.  On bringing up, a
number of natives came off, who talked capital English, and seemed very
intelligent fellows.  We found that the chief of the island was named
King George.

In a short time another canoe came off with a fine-looking fellow on
board, who seemed as eager to trade and obtain anything he could as the
rest of the natives.

At last Captain Hawkins, turning to him, said, rather roughly, "You and
the other chaps must be off now."

"You know who I am?" asked the native.  "I King George, chief of all
these islands."

"I beg your majesty's pardon, but you don't look much like a king," said
the captain, laughing.

The chief, however, didn't appear to be angry, and shook hands with the
captain and officers, and stepping into the canoe paddled away for the
shore.

"We must take care these fellows don't play us any trick," observed the
captain to Mr Griffiths.  "We'll give them a salute to show them that
we're wide-awake."

We carried four nine-pounders, which we forthwith fired.  It was the
first time we had to use them during the voyage.  It was hoped that this
would awe the natives, and that we should not be molested during the
night.  The sound of the last gun had scarcely died away, when a Captain
Rounds, commanding one of the whalers, whose boats had assisted to tow
us in, came on board.  After he had shaken hands and the usual
civilities had passed, he said--

"You are wise to show that you are wide-awake, and when you hear the
account I have to give you of the fearful work which took place here not
long ago, you will judge whether it will be prudent to put yourself or
any of your people in the power of the natives."

------------------------------------------------------------------------

Note 1.  This account is true in every respect.  My friend, Mr Henry
Foster, Trinity pilot, vouches for it.



CHAPTER TWENTY THREE.

A FEARFUL NARRATIVE--DOINGS AT STRONG'S ISLAND.

As it was very hot below, the captain had ordered chairs and a small
table to be brought on deck, and he, with Captain Rounds, Dr Cockle,
and Mr Griffiths, took their seats, while Mr Harvey, Horner, and I
stood within earshot to hear the account our visitor had promised to
give.

"I came in here about two months ago for the first time this voyage to
obtain provisions and water," began Captain Rounds, "and as none of us
understood the language of the people, I shipped a couple of natives who
spoke English very fairly to act as interpreters.  Besides having been
to sea on board other whalers, they were, I thought, likely to prove
useful hands.  Everything went on in a satisfactory way while I lay
here.  The natives who came on board behaved themselves well, and King
George, their chief, seemed a very decent sort of fellow, and was as
honest in his dealings as I could expect.  I had made it a rule when I
came out to these parts never to trust many of my people ashore at a
time among the heathen natives without having some of the principal
natives on board as hostages, or so well-behaved and friendly did these
appear that I should otherwise not have hesitated to let half my crew
land at a time, feeling confident that they would be well treated.  Thus
it was that I every evening at sundown fired off my guns, and kept a
strict watch during the night.  I did this, not from any fear of being
attacked, but that I considered it prudent to keep to the rule I had
laid down, and to maintain discipline on board.  You'll see that I was
fortunate in doing so.  I parted on good terms with King George and his
people without having any reason to alter the favourable opinion I had
formed of them, taking the two native interpreters with me.  From the
way I treated them they became very friendly and much attached to me.
We had been at sea for some time, and had caught three or four whales,
each of which cost us, perhaps, more than the usual trouble to take.
The two natives, who go by the names of Jackey and Tubbs, seemed very
much struck by the exertions we had to make to secure the whales, and
one day they came to me and said that they could put me up to the means
of filling the ship with perfect ease if I would follow their advice.  I
asked them what they meant.  They then told me that a ship lay sunk in
their harbour loaded with casks of oil, and that they knew the exact
spot where she went down.  I then learnt from them the following
particulars.

"You, Hawkins, well knew Barber, who commanded the _Harriet_, of London,
as you sailed together as mates with old Captain Newton in the
_Felicity_.  I met Barber when I first came out to the Pacific, and was
wondering that I had never since heard of him or the _Harriet_.  The
natives now told me that about a year ago she had put into this harbour,
there being no other vessels here at the time.  You remember what a
good-natured, yet somewhat careless fellow he was.  The natives came in
numbers on board his ship, and appeared to be on the most friendly terms
with him and his crew.  They at length, one day, invited his men to go
ashore, and he consequently allowed the greater number of them to land.
This sort of thing continued while he lay in the harbour.  King George
and most of his though they came down to visit the ship when she first
arrived, were, at that time, living in another part of the island, and
the people just here did pretty much as they liked.

"Barber, with a boat's crew, only remained on board, when, on going on
deck in the morning, he caught sight of three of his men running down
towards the beach as fast as they could go, with a posse of natives
after them.  Presently they were overtaken.  First one was struck down
by the club of a savage, and directly afterwards the other two shared
the same fate.  The natives, on reaching the shore, jumped into their
canoes, a whole fleet of which came paddling off towards the ship.  The
crew, on seeing this, I suspect, took fright, thinking that they should
all be murdered, as their mates on shore had been.  Captain Barber
himself would, I am certain, have stopped to defend his ship, but
probably fearing that it would be of no use to make the attempt while
his crew were so faint-hearted, he ordered the boat to be lowered with
such provisions and water as could be hastily thrown into her.  They had
scarcely left the side of the ship before the savages were up to her.
They pursued the boat for some distance, but at length gave up the
chase, eager to get back and secure their prize.  They then set to work
to plunder the vessel of everything they considered of value.  They
stripped her of her sails and rigging, and all the iron-work they could
get at, managing even to carry away her topmasts, jib-boom, and yards.
Having done this, they towed the vessel higher up the harbour and
scuttled her.

"When King George, who had known Captain Barber and some of his people--
for he had been down at the harbour when the ship first arrived--heard
of the massacre he was very indignant, and Jackey and Tubbs told me that
he killed no less than thirty of those who had taken part in it with his
own hand.  Whether this was actually the case or not I could not make
out; but, after cross-questioning the two natives, I came to the
conclusion that he himself had no hand in the massacre, and was entirely
ignorant of it till afterwards.  What has become of poor Barber and his
boat's crew I am anxious to ascertain; but he would have had a fearfully
long passage to make to any other island, and I'm afraid that he and his
companions must have perished from hunger and thirst before they could
have reached any friendly shore.

"Having fallen in shortly after I heard this with the _Lydia_ and
_Pearl_, I communicated the intelligence to them, and we determined to
put in here to ascertain the truth of the story.

"Now you have come we shall be sufficiently strong-handed both to defend
ourselves from the natives, and to recover the _Harriet's_ cargo if we
cannot raise her."

Captain Hawkins at once entered into Captain Rounds' views, and they
agreed the next morning with their brother captains to set to work.
Captain Rounds, who was a very ingenious man, had a diving-bell
constructed out of a cask, with pipes to lead the air into it.

Proceeding with the boats, we found the ship sunk in six fathoms of
water at a spot Jackey and Tubbs pointed out.  They willingly agreed to
descend in the diving-bell, and Brown and another man also went down in
it.  It was then found that the ship had been set on fire, but she had
sunk before the flames had reached the cargo.  It was calculated that
there were one thousand six hundred barrels of oil in her.

Her figure-head and other articles were got up, thus clearly identifying
her as the unfortunate _Harriet_.

The captains proposed raising her, and dividing the oil between them;
but after a great deal of consultation it was considered that they had
better give up the plan, as it would have occupied a long time, and
caused a difficulty on their arrival at home as to whether they had a
right to possess themselves of it.  Thus the results of many a hard
month's labour were lost.

King George watched our proceedings with much interest, generally
hovering about the boats in his canoe while we were at work.  Perhaps he
thought from the first that we should not succeed, though I think we
should have done so had it been desirable to make the attempt.  As soon
as the undertaking was abandoned, the other vessels, which had only come
in for water and provisions, sailed, and we were left alone in the
harbour.  The king, who did not appear to be at all offended by the way
Captain Hawkins had treated him on his first visit, at once came on
board, and appeared to be excessively friendly.  He spoke English
remarkably well, having learned it on board a whaler in his youth, and
kept it up by frequently talking to runaway sailors who had remained at
the island.  He invited the captain to go ashore and visit him in his
palace, the name we gave to the great hut in which he lived.

"With great pleasure, king," answered the captain: "but fair play's a
jewel, you know.  If I go to visit you, your brother here will remain on
board to keep my mates company till I return."

The captain told Mr Griffiths to keep a strict watch on the king's
brother, and not to allow him to leave the cabin lest he might slip
overboard and swim on shore.

We called the young savage Charlie, though that was not his real name.
Charlie, who spoke a little English, seemed perfectly content; and when
the king and the captain went on shore, descended to the cabin without
the slightest hesitation.  As the stern-windows, through which Charlie
might have squeezed himself if he had had a mind, were left open for the
sake of the air, Mr Griffiths told me to remain in the cabin whenever
he was on deck.  At night he was locked up in the state-room.  I don't
know that the captain was very well pleased at having the savage
sleeping in his bed.

Next morning the captain came back, saying that he had been hospitably
treated.  In the afternoon, as Charlie wished to return, and as the
doctor and several men were on shore, the captain sent me, with Miles
Soper and Brown, to bring the king off, that he might take his brother's
place.

We pulled up a long narrow creek for several miles, till we arrived at
the royal residence, which was a large hut with a framework of poles and
roofed over with matting.  Near it were other huts, and a number of
natives were employed in different ways, some pounding kava between two
large stones, when the root, thus thoroughly bruised, was thrown into
water.  This is a much pleasanter way of preparing the beverage than by
employing the women to chew it, as is done in Samoa.

The king was away when we arrived, and we had thus plenty of time to
walk about the village and look around us.  Some natives were engaged in
cooking fish and yams.  This was done by putting them into a hole on the
top of some hot stones and leaves, and then covering them up with more
hot stones, leaves, and earth at the top of all.  We soon had an
opportunity of tasting them, and I can answer for their being most
delicious.

As the king didn't appear we walked some little distance into the
country, for we knew that we were perfectly safe while the king's
brother remained as a hostage.  Going into a hut we found a young woman
about to light a fire.  I watched the process.  She first took half of
the log that had been split in two and laid it down with the split side
upwards; then taking a small piece of hard wood about a foot long and
pointed at one end, she sat down astride of the log and commenced
rubbing the sharp point of the stick up and down the grain of the large
piece, thus making a groove, and shoving the shavings which she worked
out to the farther end, till at length they ignited, when immediately
catching up some dry leaves which lay handy, and blowing gently, she
soon obtained a blaze.  I tried the experiment under her directions and
succeeded very well.  Though simple and easy as is this method of
obtaining fire, I have never seen it tried in any other place.

On our return to the village we found the king, who invited us to feast
on the fish and yams which I had seen cooking.  We were now joined by
the captain and Dr Cockle, with the second mate and several men, and I
was directed to go back with the king, who had to take his brother's
place on board.

His majesty preferred going alone in his own canoe.  I sat in the bows
with a long pole to keep the bow off the rocks as we went down the
creek, and he placed himself astern with a paddle in his hand.  He
giving the canoe a shove from the bank, away we went.  I was highly
amused at the thought of carrying off the king as a prisoner.  He,
however, seemed to take it as a matter of course, and chatted and
laughed as we glided along.  Presently he asked--

"You young Englishman ever been here before?  I think I know your face."

"When was it your majesty fancied that you saw me?"  I inquired.

"Let me see," he said, holding his paddle in the air for a moment; "were
you ever aboard the ship that my rascally people sent to the bottom out
there?" and he pointed to where the _Harriet_ lay.

"No," I answered, a dreadful thought coming into my mind.  "Was the
person you fancy I am killed with the rest of the crew?"

"I think not.  If I think so, I no ask you," he answered.  "I see him
with the captain when he visit the shore, and each time I go on board
the ship.  When I come down to the harbour I took great fancy to him,
and asked captain to let him stay with me, but he and captain say no.
He want to go home to see father and mother, brother and sister.  When I
found the men killed I remembered him, but no find him 'mong them.  Dat
all I know, but me think that he was with captain when they got away in
the boat."

At first, on hearing what the king said, I was almost in despair, for I
was very sure that he was speaking of my brother Jack, as I thought that
by this time I should have grown very like him, as I often heard my
mother say that I was so when I was at the age at which he went to sea.
How he had got on board the _Harriet_ I could not tell, any more than I
could what had become of her boat.  Still there was a possibility of his
having escaped.  I had no wish to return on shore with "Prince Charlie"
after I had handed the king over to the care of Mr Griffiths, as I
wanted to talk about the matter to Jim.  As may be supposed, we did talk
about it for many an hour.  I was now eager to be out of the harbour, in
the hopes that we might visit some other islands at which Jack might be
found.  Jim was as sanguine as ever that he would be found.  When I told
Mr Griffiths he looked very grave.

"It is possible, my lad," he said, "and nothing would give me greater
pleasure than to find him at last; but you know what is likely to have
been the fate of the poor fellows in a boat, with a scanty supply of
provisions and a long voyage to the nearest land.  Just look at the
chart.  We are away from all civilised countries, with the wildest
savages on each side of us."

Next day, when the captain and the rest of the party came on board, and
as soon as our royal visitor had taken his departure, I was very glad to
hear the order given to get under way.  The breeze being fair we stood
out of the harbour.

We were soon at our old work again.  My patience was sorely tried.  If I
had not been actively engaged I don't know what I should have done.

My idea was that the captain would at once sail in search of the missing
boat, but he had no idea of the sort in his head.  He either was
convinced that she was lost, or considered that it was his business to
fill up his ship as soon as possible, and not to waste time in looking
for those who might never be found.

We had caught several whales, when the time came for returning to the
Japan fishing ground, as it's called, some distance off the east coast
of those islands.  My hope of finding Jack decreased, but didn't die
away altogether.

Jim kept me up.  "We don't know in what direction the boat went," he
observed.  "She may have steered to the northward, and we are as likely
to fall in with him the way we're going as anywhere else."

I often consulted the chart.  To the northward of Strong's Island I saw
the Caroline group, consisting of a vast number of coral islands, and
north-west of them, again, the Ladrone Islands, the principal of which,
Guam, is inhabited by Spaniards.  Knowing this, Captain Barber may have
attempted to reach it, and one day, to my satisfaction, I heard from the
doctor that Captain Hawkins intended to call there before returning
home.

We were now leaving those islands I have mentioned to the southward.  We
were very successful on the Japan ground, and nearly completed our
cargo, at least the lower hold was full.

At length, one calm day, a large whale was seen spouting at some
distance from the ship.  Four boats were lowered.  The captain, the two
mates, and Brown went in them, Miles Soper going as the chief mate's
boat-steerer.  His boat was the first up, and in a short time Soper put
two irons into the whale, which almost instantly turned over on its
back, threw its lower jaw open, and nipped her clean in two.

Wonderful to relate, the men all got clear, and Mr Griffiths, standing
up on half of the boat, plunged his lance right down the whale's throat,
and then jumped off and swam with the other men to the next boat coming
up.  The captain's boat now fastened to the whale, which, turning as
before on its back, treated her in the way it had the first.  When we
who were on board saw this, we began to lower the spare boats as fast as
we could.  While we were thus employed, the doctor, who was looking on,
exclaimed--

"There's a third boat caught!"

And we saw that the second mate's boat, which had got up, had been
nipped by the whale.  Brown's boat, the fourth, now pulled gallantly up,
watching every movement of the monster, if necessary to get out of its
way; but the wound it had received had already weakened it, and though
it made at his boat he escaped, and succeeded in plunging several
harpoons and lances into its body.

Meanwhile the crews of the other boats which had been destroyed had been
hanging on to them, and though the sea was swarming with sharks it was a
remarkable fact that not one of the men was lost.  Sharks rarely bite
people when a whale is bleeding, but keep following the track of the
blood.  Brown took some of the men on board, and we in the spare boats,
leaving only the doctor and two hands to take care of the ship, pulled
quickly up and rescued the remainder.

We soon had the whale alongside; it was the largest we had caught--
nearly a hundred feet in length; but we got very little oil out of it,
for, having been fastened to previously, there was a huge swelling on
its back as big as a tun butt, which was, no doubt, the cause of the
blubber being so thin.  We had still some spare space, and the crew were
eager to catch the additional whales required to complete our cargo,
that we might at length direct our course homeward.  Although I should
have before been the most eager of any to return to England, yet now,
with the idea that had taken hold of me that Jack was somewhere in the
neighbourhood, I was anxious to remain until I had found him.  Jim
shared my feelings, but I didn't suppose anybody else did.

We remained a week or more, however, after killing the last huge whale
which had cost us so much trouble, without seeing another, when the
captain determined to steer for the Ladrone Islands.  As we had now been
some months without obtaining fresh provisions, we first directed our
course for the Bonins, some degrees to the eastward of the coast of
Japan.  We understood that there were wild pigs, if not goats and sheep,
on them.  At all events, that fish could be caught in abundance off the
shore.  In a few days we sighted them, and ran under the lee of one of
the group called South Island.  Here the ship was hove-to, and a boat
lowered, in which Mr Griffiths, the doctor, Horner, Jim and I, Brown
and Miles Soper and Coal, with two other men, went.  We took with us
besides fishing-lines the whaling gear and a couple of muskets, three or
four casks to fill with water, and provisions for the day, for we didn't
intend to get back to the ship till evening.

Mr Griffiths, who had been there before, took the boat inside a high
reef of rocks, where he had, he said, caught a number of fish.

Our first object was to obtain bait.  Miles Soper and Coal undertook to
swim on shore with baskets and catch some crabs, for which the fish in
these seas seem to have a special fondness.  We pulled in as close as we
could to land them, and in a short time they filled their baskets, and
shouted to us to return and take them off.  We now dropped our kedge
anchor just inside the surf, in between two and three fathoms of water,
which was so clear that we could see the fish as they swam about, darted
at the bait, and swallowed the hooks.

We quickly hauled in a number of magnificent fish.  We were so eager at
the sport that we didn't consider how rapidly the time passed, while the
doctor was more occupied with admiring the variously-coloured coral, the
richly-tinted seaweeds, and the curiously-shaped fish of all the hues of
the rainbow, swimming in and out among the trees of their marine
gardens.

At last Mr Griffiths, pulling out his watch, exclaimed, "Hulloa!  How
time has gone by!  Get up the anchor, lads.  We ought to be off."

The order was more easily given than obeyed.  We hauled and hauled, but
the anchor had got foul of the coral, and we ran a risk of losing it.
Soper offered to go down and clear it, but just then a huge shark showed
his ugly throat alongside, and Mr Griffiths would not let him go.  At
last, just as it was dark, Brown managed to get the anchor up.

When we pulled outside the reef we found that the weather had changed.
It was blowing very hard, though, sheltered as we had been, we had not
discovered this.  We looked eagerly out for the ship, but she was
nowhere to be seen.



CHAPTER TWENTY FOUR.

OUR LIFE ON AN UNINHABITED ISLAND.

We were still in smooth water, but the sea was breaking in the offing,
the white caps rising against the dark sky.  Mr Griffiths thought that
the ship might have stood to the eastward and be concealed by the point
of land which ran out in that direction.  We eagerly gave way and pulled
off from the shore.  Several times he stood up to look about him.  At
length he cried out--

"There she is!  There she is!  She's burning a blue light."

We all looked in the direction he pointed, which was almost abeam, and
there we saw a light, appearing, however, just above the horizon.  He at
once steered the boat towards it, but as we pulled on the seas increased
and frequently broke aboard us; the wind was rising rapidly, and in a
short time blew a heavy gale.  In vain we again looked out for the
light; none could be seen, and there was a great risk, should we
continue to pull on, of the boat being swamped.

The doctor and Mr Griffiths talked together earnestly; the latter then
said--

"Lads, there's no help for it, we must try and get on shore for the
night, and in the morning, if the wind goes down, the captain will stand
in to look for us."

We all knew the danger we were in, for in pulling round the boat might
be caught on her broadside and turned over; but it had to be done, and
we trusted to Mr Griffiths' steering.  We gave way as he told us,
though for a moment I thought all was over as a sea struck the boat
abeam and half swamped her.

We got round, however, and while Horner and I baled her out, the men
pulled in towards the shore.  It was now very dark.  All we could see
ahead was an irregular line of black, but whether rocks or hills rising
near the beach we could not tell.  As we neared the shore Mr Griffiths
stood up looking out for a landing-place, but no opening could he
discover in the rocks, against which the surf was now breaking
furiously; should we get within its power the boat, we knew, would be
dashed to pieces in a moment.  The wind went on increasing till it blew
almost a hurricane.  At last Dr Cockle exclaimed--

"There is an opening.  We passed it this morning.  I remember it by the
clump of trees on the top of a rounded hill, and I can now make them out
against the sky."

Mr Griffiths hesitated.  Should the doctor be wrong in another minute
we should be hurled to destruction against the rugged rocks.  Just then
the moon rising on the other side of the island broke through the clouds
and showed us clearly the outline of the trees and the hill.

The mate hesitated no longer, but telling us to give way steered in for
the opening.  The surf broke wildly on either side of us, flying up
above our heads; the seas came rearing on astern, threatening to engulf
us.  We all gave way steadily together.  Now the boat rose on the top of
a foaming sea, and then down she glided into comparatively smooth water
inside the reef, and we were safe.

Pulling on, we saw ahead a small bay with the trees coming down to the
water's edge.  Their tops were waving wildly, but we felt but little
wind where we were, and we were able to run the boat's head on to the
beach and land without difficulty.  We at once drew her up and looked
out for a sheltered spot under some rocks to camp.  Here we got a fire
lighted, as there were plenty of broken branches and leaves lying about,
and soon had some of the fish we had caught cooking before it.

Outside the tempest was howling furiously, and we had reason to be
thankful that we had gained the shore, as no boat could have lived in
the sea which was by this time running.

After supper was over, and we had dried our clothes, wet through and
through by the spray, we lay down to sleep under the rock.  Mr
Griffiths assured us that there were no wild beasts or natives to molest
us in the island, though we were not altogether free from danger, as the
trees which grew on the top of the rock above our heads might be blown
down, or the upper part of the rock itself might give way and crush us.

That we might have some chance in being awakened so as to enable us to
attempt to escape, as also to prevent the fire going out, Mr Griffiths
arranged that one of the party should keep watch.  The doctor offered to
keep the first watch.  Mr Griffiths and the rest of the men then stowed
themselves away close under the cliff.  I, feeling no inclination to
sleep, joined the doctor, who was sitting by the fire on one of the
water-casks, every now and then throwing on a few sticks and making it
blaze up cheerfully.  I asked him if the ship were likely to return soon
to take us off.

"Not till the hurricane is over," he said; "the captain will not like to
come near the coast for fear of being driven on it."

"Then you think, sir, that we shall remain here long enough to explore
the island?"  I said.

"Why do you wish to explore the island?" he asked.

"Because I have a notion that my brother Jack is upon it," I replied.
"They say there are pigs here, and there are, no doubt, plenty of birds,
and he would be able to live as well as Miles Soper and Coal did on Juan
Fernandez."

"But it's a hundred to one--I may say a thousand to one--that the boat
was driven here; besides which, so many whalers pass by this island that
he would have been seen and taken off even if he had come here.  You
only raise up such ideas to disappoint yourself.  Don't think about it;
lie down and go to sleep."

Notwithstanding what the doctor had said, I could not get the idea out
of my head, and longed for morning, that I might set off and make a tour
round the island with Jim, who, I knew, would be ready to come with me,
as would Miles Soper and some of the others.

Notwithstanding the howling of the wind above our heads, and the wild
roar of the breakers on the rocky coast, contrary to my expectation I
fell fast asleep, and didn't wake till the mate roused up all hands at
daylight.  The storm was raging as wildly as ever.  Furious torrents of
rain had come down, but the watch had managed to keep in the fire, and
we all gathered round it to cook some more fish and dry our damp
clothes.  We were in good spirits, for we knew that the gale would blow
itself out in a short time, and we expected that the ship would then
come and take us off.

As soon as I proposed to Jim to explore the island, he at once agreed to
accompany me.  The doctor and Miles Soper also said that they would go.
The latter carried one of the muskets, which the mate said we might
take, and the rest of us armed ourselves with long pointed sticks.  The
mate thought we might as well go armed, for though the island had
hitherto been uninhabited, it was possible that some savages might have
been driven as far north in their double canoes, and might attack us if
they found we were unable to defend ourselves.

We took some cooked fish for provisions, and we hoped to find water as
we proceeded.  We had first to make our way through a thick forest, of
what the doctor called tamana-trees--some of them being of gigantic
size.  It was often so dark beneath their thick boughs that we could
with difficulty see our way; but we went on, guided by the doctor's
pocket-compass, in a straight line, until we at length got out of the
forest into more open country.  He proposed going on till we reached a
hill which we saw some way off, and there to light a fire, that the
smoke might attract the attention of any one living on the island.  He
carried out his plan, and collecting sticks as we neared the spot,
having brought tinder and matches, we quickly had a fire blazing.  We
looked in vain, however, all round the island for an answering signal.

"Perhaps, if there is any one, he is down by the shore, and has no means
of striking a light," said the doctor; "or maybe he is still sheltering
himself from the storm."

As this seemed very likely, leaving the fire burning, we made our way
down to the beach on the farther side of the island.

The view from the hill on the north side showed us only rugged and
broken ground, and we therefore proceeded along the shore as close as we
could get towards the southern end.  We saw plenty of birds, which would
have afforded us food if we had had time to stop and shoot them.  It was
somewhat rough work, especially in the more exposed places against the
wind.  At last we got back to the part we had started from, just as
night was falling.  From every height we kept a look-out for the ship,
but she did not appear.

"You're convinced now, Peter, that your brother is not on this island,"
said the doctor.  "I should have rejoiced if we had found him, but I did
not think it at all likely that he is here.  However, that is no reason
why he should not be somewhere else."

We had found water on our way, and the mate had discovered a spring not
far from our camp.  The hurricane, which had abated somewhat during the
day, came on again as night approached, and we were thankful to obtain
the shelter of our rock.  The wind blew more furiously than ever, the
lightning flashed and ran along the ground--now and again crashes were
heard as some tall tree was struck and rent in two, while the rain at
times came down in torrents, and nearly put out the fire.  We, however,
got shelter from the overhanging rock.  We had just done supper, when
Mr Griffiths observed--

"I'm afraid something may happen to our boat.  The breakers sound so
loud that they perhaps are dashing over the reef, and the sea may sweep
up and carry her off."

We hurried down to where we had left the boat.  A bright flash of
lightning revealed her to us, with the seething water rushing up under
her keel.  Dashing forward, we seized her just as a second wave was
lifting her, and in a few seconds would have carried her off.  We
dragged her up the beach till we had placed her, as we hoped, out of the
reach of the water.

While we were thus employed we heard a loud crash coming from the
direction of our camp.  On returning, we discovered our fire nearly out,
but it blazed sufficiently to show us a mass of earth and rock, and two
tall trees, which had fallen on the very spot where a few minutes before
we had all been collected.

We were thankful for our preservation, though we had lost the only
shelter we knew of.  The mate suggested that we should go back to the
boat, turn her over, and creep under her for shelter.  As no trees were
near where she lay, we hoped that we might thus rest in perfect safety.
Having taken the things out of her, we did as he proposed, and one by
one crept in, and stretched ourselves upon the damp ground.  After the
exertions I had made during the day I felt very sleepy, and though I
remained awake for some time thinking of Jack, my eyes at length closed.

I was awakened by hearing three distinct loud raps on the bottom of the
boat.  I fancied that I must be dreaming, but I found that Jim and
Horner, who were sleeping next to me, were awake, and had heard the
sounds.

"What are you lads making that noise for?" asked Mr Griffiths.

I told him of the raps which had awakened me.

"I thought it was one of you that made them," he said.

"I heard them also," remarked the doctor, from his end of the boat.

The rest of the men were asleep; all of us were inside, and the sound
certainly came from the outside.  On this I crawled out from under the
boat, half expecting to see some one standing there, but neither human
being nor animal was visible.  The rain had ceased, but the night was
very dark, and there was time for a person after the knocks had been
given to retreat into the woods.  Still, I didn't think that it could
have been Jack.  I returned to the boat, supposing that whoever had
knocked would knock again.  The expectation of this kept me awake, and I
determined that I would try to spring out and catch the person, whoever
he was.  I waited, however, in vain, and in less than two hours saw the
daylight coming in under the gunwale.

The surf was still breaking with a loud roar on the rocks, but the wind
had ceased to howl through the trees, and I hoped that the hurricane was
nearly over.  The noise I made in getting out from under the boat
awakened those sleeping near me, and the rest of the party were soon on
foot.

The first thing we did was to go back to our camp and see the effect of
the landslip.  The spot where we had been sitting was covered with a
large mass of earth, rocks, and trees.  We found a hollow in the rock
near the spot, which appeared safe, and here we determined to light a
fire and cook some more of our fish.  While most of the people were thus
employed, Mr Griffiths, the doctor, and I climbed to the highest rock
in the neighbourhood, that we might take a look-out for the ship.  The
sun was just rising, and cast a ruddy glow over the still heaving ocean
covered with foam-crested seas, which, rolling in towards the shore,
broke into masses of spray as they reached the surrounding reefs.  In
vain we looked round for the ship; not the slightest speck of white
appeared above the horizon.

"Can anything have happened to her?" said the doctor, in an anxious
tone.

"She has weathered out many a worse gale than we have just had,"
observed the mate.  "My only fear is that in attempting to make the land
she may have been driven on one of the hidden reefs which abound
everywhere hereabouts."

"And if so, what are we to do?" inquired the doctor.

"We must try to reach the nearest islands inhabited by civilised people.
We have casks sufficient to hold water for the voyage."

"I still hope she will come," said the doctor; "but we must not lose
heart whatever happens."

Taking another look round, we returned to the camp, where we found a
blazing fire and the fish cooked.  We remained all that day and the
next, unable to get out and catch any more fish.  By this time our stock
was completely exhausted--indeed, for the last day it had been scarcely
eatable.  While two of the men remained on shore to collect salt from
the rocks, the rest of us went off, and with the crab-bait soon caught a
large quantity of fish.  In two days we got as many as we could well
carry.  Some of these were salted, others were smoked over the fire.  We
didn't fail, as may be supposed, to pay frequent visits to our look-out
place on the rock.  Day after day went by and no sail appeared.

"She's not coming back," said Mr Griffiths, at length; "something must
have happened to her; and I put it to you whether we remain here or try
to reach either Japan or the Ladrones.  Though Guam, which is the chief
island of the Ladrones, is much farther off than Japan, we are likely to
receive better treatment from the Spaniards than we are from the
Japanese, who may either send us off again or put us to death.  The
passage there is also likely to prove more boisterous than to Guam."

The mate, having concluded his remarks, put the matter to the vote.  Two
of the men said they would rather remain on the island.  No one proposed
going to Japan, and the doctor and Miles Soper wished to steer for Guam.
The rest of us voted with them.  The mate considered that the sooner we
were off the better.  He said that the island was not a bad residence,
but that when the winter came on we should have rains and storms, and
might be unable to catch any fish or find other means of supporting
life.  We therefore at once set to work to prepare for the voyage.  We
first put off and caught a supply of fish, which we cured as before.  We
might have killed some birds, but we were unwilling to expend our small
stock of powder, which we might require to defend ourselves against any
natives who might prove hostile.

Led by the doctor, Brown, Jim, and I started to explore the
neighbourhood, to collect scurvy grass or roots of any sort which might
serve as vegetables.  The natural productions of the country appeared to
be very limited, but we dug up some roots which the doctor pronounced
wholesome.

We were about returning in despair of obtaining what we wanted, when we
came, near the shore on the other side of the bay, on a small open space
overgrown with what at first looked like weeds, but I saw the doctor's
eye brighten as he espied them.  Hurrying on he pulled away eagerly at
the seeming weeds.

"Here are onions," he cried, "of more value to us than gold; and see,
here are potatoes, and these are cabbages, though somewhat overgrown,
but there are leaves enough to supply us for a month."

We set to work to dig up the onions and potatoes with our pointed
sticks, and to pull away at the cabbage leaves.

"Some beneficent person must have planted a garden here not long ago,"
said the doctor, as we were labouring with might and main.  "These
vegetables may be the means of preserving our lives, for without them we
should have run a great risk of suffering from scurvy."

We each of us loaded ourselves with as many of the roots as we could
carry, and staggered back with them to camp.  We were received with a
loud shout by our companions, who knew the value of what we had brought.

We quickly had some of the potatoes roasting in the ashes, on which,
with some onions and fish, we made a more hearty meal than we had taken
since we landed.  We had fortunately an iron pot, in which we were able
to boil a quantity of the potatoes, and afterwards the greens and some
of the roots, which, being well-seasoned with salt, the doctor hoped
would keep for some time.

All our preparations being made, one morning, having breakfasted at
daylight, the doctor and I went up to the top of the rock to take a last
look-out for the ship.  On coming down we saw the boat in the water
loaded, when, all hands getting aboard, we shoved off and stood out
through the reef with a fair breeze from the north-west and a smooth
sea.  The wind would have been directly against us had we been bound for
Japan, so we were glad that we had decided to sail to the southward.

Our boat was somewhat deeply laden with provisions and water, but our
cargo would be rapidly lightened, and Mr Griffiths told us we must be
prepared to heave some of it overboard should bad weather come on.  We
were all in health and good spirits, our chief anxiety being about the
fate of the ship.

I must pass rapidly over the first part of our voyage.  We had the
boat's compass to steer by, but having no quadrant to take an
observation or log-line to mark accurately the distance run, we could
only guess at the rate we made.  Mr Griffiths, however, was a good
navigator, and was pretty certain that he was correct.  We had, we
fancied, plenty of food, but from the first he put us all on an
allowance of water.

While the sea remained smooth he also made us change our places
constantly, and by the doctor's advice he ordered one at a time to stand
up and move his arms and legs about to prevent them from becoming stiff.
He also encouraged us to spin yarns and sing songs; indeed, he did
everything in his power to keep us in good spirits.

After the first day of our landing we had not touched any of the
biscuits we had brought with us.  These we now husbanded with great care
in case our other provisions should run short or spoil, which the doctor
feared might be the case.  We were much indebted to him for the
precautions taken, as Mr Griffiths carried out all his suggestions.

We had a whole week of fine weather, and we could favourably compare our
lot with that of many poor fellows who had to voyage in open boats in
the Pacific, exposed to storms, and often with a scant allowance of food
and water.  The wind was generally from the northward, and when it fell
calm we took to our oars.  Mr Griffiths told us that we had a distance
of between seven and eight hundred miles to run, as far as he could
calculate, and that if the fine weather continued we might hope to reach
Guam in ten days or a fortnight.

We had got on so well that we began to fancy that we should have no
difficulties to encounter.  We were, of course, constantly on the
look-out for vessels.  At length we sighted a sail, but she was standing
away from us.  We steered after her for some distance, but before
nightfall her topgallant sails sank beneath the horizon, and we again
kept on our course.

"I wonder whether that craft out there is the _Intrepid_," said Jim to
me.

"Little chance of that," I remarked.  "If she escaped shipwreck, or has
not been severely damaged, she would have come to look for us long
before we left the island."

"Perhaps the skipper fancied that we were lost, and didn't think it
worth while to come and look for us," said Jim.

Four days after this, according to Mr Griffiths's calculations, we were
in the latitude of Guam, but to the eastward of the island.  Brown,
however, was of opinion that we had run farther to the south, and that
if we stood east we should see it on our port bow.  We accordingly
hauled up on the port tack.  Scarcely had we done so when the weather,
which had lately looked threatening, completely changed.  A strong wind
began to blow from the north-west; it rapidly increased, and the sea got
up and began to break over the bows in a way which threatened to swamp
the boat.  Three hands baled away together, but even thus we could
scarcely keep the boat free of water.

"We must form a raft to serve as a breakwater," said Mr Griffiths.

We lashed three oars together, the sail was lowered, the boat rounded
to, and the raft, with a stout rope to it, was hove overboard, the rope
being secured to the bows.  At the same time the steering-oar was peaked
and fixed into the after-thwart, with the flat of the blade facing the
bows.  This served as a sail, and kept the boat's head to the sea.

Thus, with the seas roaring and hissing round us, driving at the rate of
two miles an hour to the southward and west, we prepared to pass the
night, all of us feeling that we might never see another sun rise.



CHAPTER TWENTY FIVE.

A PERILOUS VOYAGE IN THE WHALE-BOAT.

The night was very dark, the sea rose fearfully high.  Now the water
broke over the starboard, now over the port bow, nearly swamping the
boat, and all hands were employed in baling it out.  We worked for our
lives, for should another sea come before the boat was clear she might
be swamped.  Some of the men cried out that we should not live through
the night.

Mr Griffiths and the doctor cheered them up, but if it hadn't been for
the raft ahead, which broke the seas, I believe that we must have gone
down.  I had heard of boats being saved by hanging on under the lee of a
dead whale, but I had not supposed that a few oars lashed together would
have served as an effectual breakwater.

The peaked oar played a most important part by keeping the boat's head
to the wind, and at a sufficient distance from the raft.  She must
otherwise have broached to, and it must have been driven against her and
stove in the side.

As soon as the boat was clear of water, Brown sang out, "Now let's have
a stave, lads," and he began to sing, but few were able to join in with
him.

Jim and I tried, knowing Brown's object, but we had scarcely got through
a verse when another sea came roaring on board, nearly carrying over the
men in the bows, and washing away some of our provisions.  We all had
immediately to turn to again and bale out the boat.  No one thought of
singing after this, for directly we were free of one sea another broke
aboard us.  It was a mercy that they didn't come together.

"We must pray to God, lads," cried Mr Griffiths.  "He who rules the
seas and winds, if we ask Him, can save us if He thinks fit.  Don't
cease baling.  He likes people to work and pray, but not to fall down on
their knees while there's work to be done and leave it undone."

He and the doctor set the example by baling away as hard as any of us.
We had the boat's regular balers, our iron pot, and a couple of small
buckets; the rest of us used our hats and caps.  Still, do all we could,
it was a difficult matter to keep the boat free from water.  We were wet
through, as was everything in the boat, and we were afraid that our
provisions would be spoilt, except perhaps the onions and potatoes.

Hour after hour went slowly by, for we had no time for talking to make
it appear shorter.  Still the night did come to an end at last, but
there were no signs of the gale abating.  As soon as the sun rose we
looked out eagerly on all sides for land.  Nothing broke the uniform
line of the horizon except the foam-topped seas, which rose up
tumultuously between us and it.  We were driving all this time, it must
be remembered, to the southward at the rate, the mate said, of two knots
an hour, so that if we had been near Guam when the gale came on we were
being driven farther and farther from it, and it would be a hard matter
to regain the island.

We had taken nothing during the night, and we now all cried out for
food.  The store of salt fish we had remaining was scarcely eatable, for
the salt had been washed out of it, and it was becoming bad.  What we
had smoked was a little better, but that also was almost spoilt, yet
such as it was we were glad to have a portion with an onion apiece, and
a small mug half full of water.  The mate would give us no more.

"What I do is for the good of all of us, lads," he said.  "I can't tell
when we may make the land, or what provisions we may find when we get
there."

Horner sang out, "We had some biscuit.  What has become of that?  Why
don't you let us have a piece for our breakfasts?"

"Because the biscuits will keep longer than anything else, and are all
we may have to depend upon," answered the doctor, who had got them under
him in the stern-sheets, and had been trying from the first to keep them
as free from water as possible.

We had till now fancied that we had an abundance of food, but some had
been washed overboard and some had been completely spoilt, so we found
to our dismay that we had a very small quantity remaining.  Horner now
began to complain bitterly of hunger and thirst, declaring that if he
didn't get some food he must die.

Jim and I endeavoured to cheer him up.  It was not a matter to joke
about; indeed I was myself feeling the pangs of hunger and getting
weaker and less able to work, though I did my best.  Jim kept up better
than I did.  We had not much time to be thinking, however, for we were
compelled to be constantly baling the greater part of the day.

Towards evening the sun broke through the western clouds, sending his
rays athwart the troubled ocean, and tinging the seas with a ruddy hue,
while his heat dried our wet clothes.

Soon afterwards the wind began to drop, but the seas still ran so high
that the mate thought it prudent to hang on some time longer to our
raft.  However, they no longer broke on board as they had been doing,
and we had better hopes than on the previous night that we should see
another sun rise.  We had been awake so long that none of us were able
to keep our eyes open, and I suspect that at times every person in the
boat was fast asleep.  I know for my part that I must have dozed through
the greater part of the night, for I was awakened by hearing the mate's
voice saying--

"Now, lads, we will get the raft on board and make sail."

I jumped up to lend a hand.  We got the oars out and put the boat before
the seas while we set up the mast and hoisted the sail.

The wind was still in the same quarter, blowing directly from where we
supposed Guam to be, and as there were no hopes of making it the mate
determined to run for some island to the southward, where, though it
might be uninhabited, we should probably find cocoanuts and water, and
might catch some fish.

As none of the islands are very close together we ran a great risk of
passing between them without seeing land, but then again he argued that
we might be days or weeks beating up to Guam, and as he could not tell
its exact position, we might even pass it after all, while by keeping to
the south we might have a better prospect of having fine weather, and
finding food on any shore at which we might touch.  On the other hand
again there was the risk of falling among savages, for the natives of
these latitudes were known to be fierce, treacherous, and inhospitable
to strangers.

We might, however, possibly meet with some ship, as we should cross the
course pursued by Spanish vessels sailing from America to the
Philippines.  Should we pass through the Caroline group we should have
another long channel to sail over, and must then reach the coast of New
Guinea.  If driven thus far south our prospect of escape was small
indeed; though we might obtain food, the people were supposed to be
extremely savage and cruel.

The doctor, to cheer us, said that he had some doubts about that, for
although such was the character of the natives of some parts, there were
others who might treat us kindly should we fall among them, provided we
behaved well and showed that we wished to be friendly.

As we sailed on the sea gradually went down, and at length we were
running with a light breeze over the smooth ocean.  Though at first the
warm sun was pleasant it soon became very hot, and while it dried our
clothes increased our thirst.

At the same time the heat destroyed the remaining portion of our fish,
which became so bad that we were obliged to throw it overboard.  We had
now only a few raw potatoes and onions, and the little store of biscuits
which the doctor had so wisely husbanded.

The mate told us that we must make up our minds to live on very short
allowance, and be content with a quarter of a biscuit, an onion, and a
small piece of raw potato.  To make the latter more wholesome he cut
them and hung them up to dry in the sun.  Our food was served out about
noon, and each day we sat eagerly waiting for the hour.  Horner would
turn his eyes up and watch the sun till he fancied that it had gained
its greatest altitude, and then cry out to the mate--

"It must be twelve o'clock, now, sir.  Won't Dr Cockle look at his
watch and see?"

The doctor was the only person who kept his watch wound up.  The mate
had collected all the provisions and placed them in the stern-sheets,
and he didn't think fit to tell us how rapidly they were going.  The
quantity he served out was scarcely sufficient to keep body and soul
together, but he acted for the best; there was no doubt about that.  We
were all becoming rapidly weaker, and longing for some substantial fare.
Horner at last cried out that if he didn't get it he must die.  Two or
three of the other men said much the same thing.  As I looked at their
faces I felt afraid that they spoke the truth.  Our limbs were swollen,
and we felt so stiff that we were scarcely able to move.

"Trust in God, lads," said the mate, to try and cheer us up.

We were no longer inclined to spin yarns or sing songs, and only now and
then exchanged a few words with each other.  Not long after this, as I
was gazing over the side, I saw a movement in the water, and presently a
score of flying-fish rose from the sea, their wings glittering in the
sunlight, and about a dozen pitched into the boat.  Oh, how eagerly we
all stooped down to seize them!  Just then, as I was looking out,
expecting some more to come, I saw several dolphins, which had no doubt
been pursuing the flying-fish, and now came close up to the boat,
looking out for them.

Notwithstanding our hunger the doctor advised that we should split the
fish and hang them up in the sun to dry.  We were, however, too hungry
to do this, but the mate insisted that all should be handed to him.  He
then served out to each of us half a fish, which we eagerly devoured.
This meal, scanty as it was, somewhat restored our strength.

"I told you to trust in God, lads," said the mate.  "See He has sent us
these fish, and He'll send us more, never fear."

Before long I saw, a hundred yards off, another flight of flying-fish
rise from the sea, and come darting through the air like masses of
silver, when, to our joy, a number struck the sail and dropped into the
bottom of the boat.  The mate immediately served out the remainder of
those which had at first been sent to us.  This made the men cheer up
more than ever, as we expected that, now we had got into the tropics, we
should have an ample supply every day.

We saw large quantities of dolphins, bonitos, and albicores, which
pursue the flying-fish, and induce them to seek for safety in flight;
but none of the larger fish came near enough to enable us to catch them,
though Brown, harpoon in hand, stood up as long as he could keep his
feet, in the expectation of striking one.  It was very tantalising to
see them sporting round us, and yet not to be able to get one on board.
We had, however, a sufficient number of flying-fish to give us a good
meal each for that and the next day.  The mate proposed drying some in
the sun and reserving them in case no more should come aboard, but
nearly all hands cried out that we were certain to have some more sent
us, and begged so hard to have the fish while they were good that the
mate yielded to their wishes.

During the night we steered south-east, with the wind on our port
quarter.  It was in that direction Mr Griffiths said he knew the
islands lay thickest.  We had a regular watch set, and a bright look-out
kept ahead, for we could not tell when we might come upon reefs, and the
boat might be knocked to pieces on some uninhabited spot where neither
food nor water was to be procured.  The next day was passed much as the
previous one had been, but no flying-fish came on board, though we saw
them glittering in the air in the distance.  It was drawing towards
evening when I saw a black triangular fin, which I knew to be that of a
shark, coming up astern.

"What are you looking at?" asked the doctor.

I told him.  Presently we caught sight of the monster's cruel eyes and
back a couple of fathoms from the boat.  I saw by their looks that the
men did not like its appearance.

"We hab him," cried Sam Coal.  "We eat him if he no eat us."

Brown, on hearing this remark, stood up, with his harpoon in hand, but
the savage brute seemed to know its danger, and kept just beyond his
reach, eyeing us, we thought, as if he expected to make a feast of the
whole party.

The men made their remarks on the shark, for having had sufficient food
they had somewhat recovered their spirits.  Still I wished that the
shark would take its departure, but it kept on swimming alongside the
boat, and as the breeze freshened it made faster way to keep up with us.
Brown at last proposed shooting it, for our powder, being in a metal
flask, had kept dry, but Mr Griffiths objected to any being expended
for the purpose.  It was a hundred to one that the shark would be
killed, he said, and every charge might be of value.  Still, as no
flying-fish had been caught, the men cried out that they must have the
shark, and Mr Griffiths at length allowed Brown, who was a good shot,
to try and hit it in a vital part.  Just, however, as he stood up with
the musket in his hands the shark dived and disappeared.

"Ah, ha, Jack Shark know what you going to do.  Him know eberyting,"
said Sam Coal.

Shortly after this the sun sank amid a bank of black clouds, and
darkness came down on the world of waters, the weather again looking
very threatening.  I was awakened by a splash of water in my face.  On
sitting up, though a heavy sea was running, I found that the boat was
still keeping on her course.  The sail had been reefed, but it was as
much as we could carry.  Again and again the sea broke on board.  The
sleepers were all aroused, and we had to bale as fast as we could.

Presently the mate said, "We must heave her to, lads.  Get the raft
rigged."

We soon had this done, but as we were rounding to a heavy sea came
rolling up, and breaking on board, nearly carried Sam Coal over the
side.  The raft was hove into the water, and we lay head to wind as
before, with the oar apeak.  This did not prevent the seas from
occasionally breaking on board, though they came with less violence than
they would otherwise have done; but the boat was severely strained and
shattered as they beat against her, and she now began to leak in a way
which gave us just cause for alarm.

We spent the night baling as hard as we could, all striving to save our
lives; but we hoped almost against hope that we should succeed.

At last some of the men, as before, began to despair, saying that it was
as well to die now as a few hours later, and that it would be better to
give in and let the boat sink, but seeing the mate and doctor calm and
composed as ever, I tried to imitate their example.

"God wants us to labour on, lads," cried Mr Griffiths.  "He'll help us
if we do.  Gales in these latitudes never last long.  Perhaps to-morrow
we shall have a fine day and catch some more flying-fish, or maybe we
are not far off from an island and we shall be able to stretch our legs
and find plenty of cocoanuts, and perhaps yams and pigs.  We shall soon
have a fire alight and something cooking before it, and then won't we
eat, boys!"

This sort of talk had a good effect upon the men, and they no longer had
any thought of giving in.  Still, the night went by very slowly.
Sleeping, even if we had had time, with the water washing into the boat,
was next to impossible.

Daylight came back at last, and as the sun rose the clouds dispersed,
the wind rapidly dropped, and the sea went down.  In a short time the
mate ordered the raft to be got on board, and we ran on as before.  We
were very nearly starving, for we had had nothing to eat since we had
devoured the raw flying-fish on the previous day.

"The doctor's got some biscuit," said one of the men, and they at once
all cried out, begging that they might have it.  The mate, however,
would only give us a quarter of a biscuit each, with a little water.  It
just served to stay the gnawings of hunger, but as the day grew on we
wanted food as much as ever, and our spirits again sank.

For the first time I began to think that I should not survive, even if
the mate and Dr Cockle did.  Though they had eaten no more than any of
us, they endured their sufferings better.  By this time we were a
scarecrow crew, our hair long, our faces wan, our bodies shrunk, and our
skin tanned to a yellow by the hot sun.  At last the men entreated that
they might have the remainder of the biscuit, declaring that they were
ready to die after they had had one good meal if we could not catch any
more flying-fish.

"No, lads," said Mr Griffiths; "I know what is best for you.  Your
lives are committed to my charge, and I'll not yield to your wishes.
See, while you have been talking the water has been coming into the
boat.  Turn to and bale away."

They obeyed, though with scowling countenances.  The mate had both the
guns in the stern-sheets, and he and the doctor looked as if they were
prepared to resist violence.  The men knew also that Jim and I would
have sided with the officers.  The wind had dropped, and with a gentle
breeze we were gliding on, when suddenly, not ten yards off, a number of
flying-fish rose out of the water and came towards the boat.  Some
struck the sail, and others we beat back with our hands.

"I told you not to despair, lads," said Mr Griffiths.  "Thank God for
what He has sent us!"

I believe we all did so most heartily.  The mate allowed all the fish we
had caught to be eaten.  I heard the doctor ask him why he did so, as we
might catch no more till the next day.

"I'll tell you presently," he answered.

We had finished our meal, with just a small piece of biscuit apiece and
a quarter of a pint of water, when the mate stood up, and, shading his
eyes, gazed ahead.

"I would not say so before, lads, for fear of disappointing you, but I
now tell you that we're in sight of land.  It is not very large, and may
not be inhabited; it may have no cocoanuts or other vegetables on it,
but it will give us room to stretch our legs, and we may be able to
catch as many fish as we want off it."

"Thank God!" burst from the lips of most of the crew, and I and some
others knelt down to return thanks to Him who had thus far preserved us,
while we prayed that we might be brought in time to a place of safety.

We all now wanted to stand up and see the land.  The mate told us to sit
quiet, but he allowed each one of us at a time to rise to our feet and
take a look ahead.  A blue irregular line could just be distinguished
above the horizon, clear and defined.  That it was land none of us had
any doubt.  A fair breeze carried us along at the rate of four or five
knots an hour.  In less than a couple of hours we might hope to be on
shore, but the sun was sinking, and it would be dark, unless the breeze
freshened, before we could reach it.

In a short time the wind fell, on which our hopes of landing before
night were disappointed.  We got out the oars, however, and pulled on.

"We must be careful, lads," said the mate, after we had rowed some
distance.

"Most of these islands are surrounded by coral reefs, and we may run
upon one of them in the dark and knock the boat to pieces.  We must
heave-to, shortly, and wait for daylight."

Some of the men grumbled at this, and asserted that the noise of the
surf upon the reefs would give us sufficient notice when we were
approaching them, but the mate was firm.

"I will not risk the safety of the boat for the sake of getting on shore
a few hours earlier," he said.

We all, however, had the satisfaction of taking another look at the land
and assuring ourselves that it was land before darkness came on.  Mr
Griffiths then ordered us to lay in our oars, and except two who were to
keep watch and bale out the water which leaked into the boat, to lie
down and go to sleep.

I don't think many of us did sleep.  We were all thinking too much about
getting on shore in the morning to care for rest.  We forgot that before
that time another gale might spring up and drive us off the land, or
dash the boat a hopeless wreck upon the coral reef.



CHAPTER TWENTY SIX.

MORE STARTLING ADVENTURES.

The night passed by, and as dawn at length broke, the mate rousing up
all hands, we hoisted the sail, and again stood towards the land.  The
sea was smooth, and the wind light and fair.

As we glided on, the mate told Brown to stand up in the bows and keep a
look-out for reefs.  As we approached the land we could see trees on the
shore and some on the hill, so that we had no doubt that we should find
fresh water.  It was a question, however, whether or not it was
inhabited, and, if so, whether the natives would prove friendly or
hostile.  The mate told the doctor that he believed it was one of the
most north-western of the Caroline group, the natives of which are
generally more friendly to strangers than the inhabitants of the islands
farther south; still, they are perfect savages, and it would be
dangerous to trust them.  We could, however, see no smoke or other signs
of the country being inhabited.

We had not gone far, when Brown sang out, "Starboard!  Hard a-starboard!
A reef ahead!"

On this the mate, luffing up, ordered us to lower the sail.  It was done
in an instant, and not a moment too soon, for we saw close abeam a coral
reef not two feet under the surface.

"We may be thankful that we didn't stand on during the night," said Mr
Griffiths to the doctor.

We now got out the oars and pulled cautiously on.  We soon found
ourselves in a channel, with coral reefs on either side, all of them
just below the surface; and as the passage twisted and turned in all
directions, it required the greatest possible caution to thread our way
through it.

We might well be thankful not only that we did not stand on during the
night, but that we had not driven farther south during the gale while we
rode to the raft.  Nothing could have preserved the boat from being
dashed to pieces.  At length we got clear of the encircling reef, and
found ourselves in a broad expanse of perfectly smooth water.  The rocks
rising directly out of it formed the shore.  We had to pull along them
some distance to find a convenient landing-place.  At last a beautiful
bay opened out, with a sandy beach, the ground rising gradually from it,
covered with cocoanut-trees.

On seeing it, led by Brown, we uttered a cheer, and giving way with a
will ran the boat's keel on the beach.  He jumped out first, and we all
followed, without thinking of savages, and only very grateful to find
ourselves once more on firm ground.  Led by the mate and the doctor, we
fell on our knees, and I believe with grateful hearts returned thanks to
God for our safety.

We were hurrying up to the trees with our eyes fixed on the cocoanuts
which hung temptingly from them, when the mate called to us to be
cautious, for though we had seen no natives, there might be some in the
neighbourhood, who might come suddenly down and attack us while we were
engaged in obtaining the cocoanuts.

He and the doctor then proceeded with their muskets in their hands a
little way in advance, while under Brown's directions we prepared to get
down the nuts.  Miles Soper, Sam Coal, and Jim were the best climbers,
but without assistance, weak as we all were, they found that they could
not swarm up the trees.  We therefore got some ropes from the boat, and
Soper soon twisted one of them into a grummet, or hoop, round the tree,
with sufficient space for his body inside it; then shoving the opposite
side of the grummet above him, and holding on with his knees, he worked
his way up the smooth trunk.  Coal did the same on another tree, but
Jim, after making the attempt, had to give up.

"I never tried that sort of thing before, and can't manage it," he said,
coming down and ready to cry for weakness.

"Look out there!" shouted Sam Coal, who was the first to reach the top
of his tree; and he threw down a cocoanut, and then another, and
another, but they all broke as they touched the ground.

"I say, that'll never do!" cried Brown, as he picked up one of them,
while Horner and I got hold of the other two.  "You must hang them round
your neck somehow.  We want the juice, which is the best part."

Coal, on this, fastened three or four together in a handkerchief; Soper
had in the meantime done the same, and they descended with four
cocoanuts apiece.  Horner and I had run with those we had picked up to
Mr Griffiths and the doctor, munching a portion as we went, while Brown
divided his among the other men, who were as eager to eat them as we
were.  So we found were the mate and the doctor.  They tasted delicious
to us, so long accustomed to salt or raw fish; but still more refreshing
was the milk, which we got on tearing off the outer rind by cutting
holes in the eyes with our knives.  The cocoanuts, indeed, served us as
meat and drink.

All this time the doctor and mate had seen no signs of inhabitants, and
as we were all far too weak to think of exploring the country, we sat
down in the shade of the cocoanut-trees to rest.  We talked a little to
each other for a short time, and first one dropped off to sleep, then
another.  Mr Griffiths himself didn't long keep his eyes open, though I
fancy I heard him tell Brown that we must set a watch, lest any natives
should come suddenly down upon us.  The mate and the doctor had both
been awake during the whole of the last night in the boat--no wonder
that they went to sleep.

At last I opened my eyes, and sitting up, looked about me, trying to
recollect where I was, and what had happened.  This I soon did.  My
companions lay scattered around me on the ground.  In front was the sea,
and the two sides of the bay were formed by moderately high cliffs.
Behind us was a grove of cocoanut-trees, extending along the shore to
the cliffs, and beyond them I could see a hill, which formed the farther
end of the valley, opening out on the bay.  Every one was asleep, and I
was thankful that while in that condition we had not been discovered by
savages, who might have been tempted to massacre the whole of us.  I was
glad that I at all events was now awake.  I didn't, however, like to
arouse my companions, so I got up noiselessly, and to stretch my legs
walked through the palm-grove.  On my way I found a cocoanut fallen to
the ground, and as I felt hungry, having taken off the rind, I sucked
the milk, and then breaking the shell, ate as much of the fruit as I
felt inclined to take.  This restored my strength, and I went on till I
got beyond the trees, which extended to no great distance up the valley.
Farther on the ground was tolerably open, with here and there a few
trees and bushes growing by the side of a stream which ran through the
valley, and formed a small lake, without any outlet that I could
discover.

A number of birds, some of which I took to be pigeons, were flying
about, but I saw no four-legged creatures of any sort.  The birds were
so tame that they came flying about me, and perched on the boughs
without showing any signs of fear.

"This is a beautiful spot," I thought to myself.  "How thankful I am
that we reached it!  We shall have plenty of food, and if there are no
natives we can remain as long as we like till we are all strong again,
and Mr Griffiths determines to pursue the voyage."

I was stopping, looking about, when I saw something move on the top of
the hill at the farther end of the valley.  The object stopped, and then
I made out distinctly against the sky the figure of a man.  He was too
far off to enable me to make out how he was dressed, or whether he was a
native or a white man.  He stopped for some time, as if he was looking
down into the valley, and I fancied that he might have seen me, for I
was in an open spot, away from any trees or shrubs.  At last I beckoned
to him, to show that my companions and I wished to be friends with the
natives.

He took no notice of my signals, but stood looking down into the valley
as before.

At first I thought of going towards him, but then it struck me that
others might appear, and that I might be taken prisoner, or perhaps
killed, and that I ought to go back and tell Mr Griffiths what I had
seen.  I found him and the doctor awake.

"I'm sorry to hear that," said the former.  "I had hoped that there were
no natives on the island.  If the person you saw had been a white man he
would have come down to us immediately.  I suspect that he must be a
native.  We must look out for a visit from others, and keep a more
careful watch than heretofore."

He and the doctor agreed to return with me, and if the person was still
where I had seen him, to try and open up a friendly communication with
him and any others who might appear.

Rousing up Brown and the rest of the people, and telling them where we
were going, we set off.  On our getting to the spot where I had been
when I saw the man, he had disappeared.  We, however, went on past a
little lake, and along the bank of a stream, looking out very carefully
on either side lest the natives might come down from the cliffs and cut
us off.  No one appeared; and as it was getting late, Mr Griffiths
thought it wise to return.

It was almost dark by the time we reached the palm-grove.  We found that
Soper and Coal had in the meantime collected some more cocoanuts; and
that Brown, with the rest of the men, had obtained some large clams and
other shell-fish from the rocks.  They were now lighting a fire to cook
them, while Jim had brought a kettle of water from the lake.  We had
thus materials for a hearty meal, of which we all partook with good
appetites.  We had been unable to do anything to the boat during the
day, but Mr Griffiths remarked that our first care must be to put her
to rights, that we might go out fishing in her, and afterwards make a
voyage to some place where we might find a vessel to take us home.  The
mate said that we might either sail northward again to Guam, or westward
to the Pellew Islands, the inhabitants of which were said to be
friendly, and thence on to the Philippines.  Various opinions were
expressed, but nothing was decided.

We had now to prepare for the night.  Notwithstanding the sleep we had
had during the day, we all felt that a longer rest was necessary to
restore our strength.  Mr Griffiths, however, insisted that a watch
should be kept, as now that we had discovered the island to be
inhabited, it would be folly to allow ourselves to be caught unawares at
night.  Though the weather was warm, as we had had no time to put up a
shelter of any sort, the fire was found pleasant; we therefore agreed
not to let it go out during the night.  It was settled that the doctor
should keep the first watch, Mr Griffiths the middle, and I was to have
the third with Jim.  Brown kept it with the doctor, and Soper with the
mate.  Our arrangements being made, we lay down to pass the night.

It appeared to me that I had been asleep only a few minutes, when Mr
Griffiths called me up, and Jim and I, taking the muskets, began our
watch.  The mate told me that the doctor's and his watches had passed
quietly away, and they had not heard any sounds to indicate that any
natives were near.  As we were not obliged to keep close to the fire,
and as there was a bright moon in the sky to enable us to see our way, I
proposed to Jim that we should go through the grove, where, should any
natives approach in the morning, we should discover them sooner on that
side than we should by remaining at the camp.  He agreed, and without
difficulty we made our way through the trees, which stood apart, with
little or no undergrowth.  The scene which presented itself to us as we
got out of the grove was very beautiful.  The silver moon and the
surrounding trees were reflected in the calm waters of the lake, while
the outline of the hills on either side appeared sharp and distinct
against the sky.  Finding a clear piece of ground not far from the shore
of the lake, Jim and I walked up and down, keeping a look-out now to one
side, now to the other, as also up the valley.

We had taken several turns, when Jim exclaimed, "Hillo!  Look there!"

Gazing up in the direction to which he pointed, I saw distinctly against
the sky the figure of a man.  How he was dressed it was impossible to
say; still, he had on clothes of some sort.

"He's not a native savage, at all events," said Jim.  "We'll hail him,
and if he's an Englishman he'll answer."

We shouted at the top of our voices, but no reply came, and the figure
disappeared.

"That's strange," said Jim; "I thought he would have come down and had a
talk with us, whoever he is.  Can't we try and find him?"

"We mustn't both leave our post," I answered; "but if you stop here I'll
try and get up to where he was standing, and unless he has run away he
can't be far off."

Jim didn't like my going, but I persuaded him to stop, and hurried
across the valley.  When I got to the foot of the cliff I could find no
way up it, and, after searching about, had to abandon the attempt.

I returned to where I had left Jim, and we resumed our walk, thinking
that perhaps the figure would again appear.

"Perhaps if he sees us he won't show himself," said Jim.  "Wouldn't it
be better to go and stay under the trees?  And then perhaps he'll come
back."

We did as Jim proposed, keeping our eyes in the direction of the cliff,
but we looked in vain for the reappearance of the stranger.

"He guesses that we are watching for him," said Jim.  "Perhaps if we
were to shout again he would come back.  If he's a white man he'll
understand us, and know that we are friends."

"There can be no harm in shouting," I answered, "though he may be a
native and there may be others with him; they would have come down
before this and attacked us, had they had a mind to do so."

We accordingly went from under the trees, and standing in the open
ground, I shouted out--

"Hillo, stranger, we're friends, and want to have a talk with you.  We
have just come here for a day or two, and intend to be off again on our
voyage."

Jim then said much the same sort of thing, and as his voice was even
louder than mine, we made sure that the stranger must have heard us.  He
didn't, however, show himself, though we sometimes shouted together,
sometimes singly.  At last we heard voices in the cocoanut grove.

"I hope that no enemies have got down between us and the sea," I said.
"We had no business to come so far away from the camp."

We stood with our muskets ready, watching the wood.  In a short time our
anxiety was relieved by the appearance of the doctor and Mr Griffiths.

"Why, lads, what made you shout out in that fashion?" asked the mate.
"We fancied you wanted help."

We told him of the man we had seen on the cliffs.

"It's very extraordinary," said the doctor; "I don't think he can be a
native, or he would not have shown himself in that way.  He must be some
white man who has been left by himself on the island, and has lost his
wits, as often happens under such circumstances.  He's been accustomed
to see savages visit the island, and has kept out of their way to save
himself from being killed or made a slave of.  He had not the sense to
distinguish between us and them."

"I believe you are right," said Mr Griffiths.  "We must take means to
get hold of him, both for his own sake and ours.  He'll soon come round,
supposing he's an Englishman, when he finds himself among countrymen,
and he'll be able to show us where to get provisions if the island
produces any.  He can't have lived always on cocoanuts and shell-fish."

By this time the dawn began to appear, and after waiting a little longer
we all returned to camp, and roused up the men to prepare for breakfast.
Miles Soper and Sam Coal again climbed the trees to get some cocoanuts.
Some of the men went down to the shore to collect shell-fish.  Others
made up the fire, while the mate and the doctor examined the boat to
ascertain the damage she had received, and to see how she could best be
repaired.

"We have a few nails, and we must try to find some substance which will
answer the purpose of pitch," observed the mate.  "Doctor, I dare say
you'll help us.  We will strengthen her with additional planks, and get
a strake put on above her gunwale.  It will be a work of toil to cut the
planks, but it must be done, and she will then be fit to go anywhere."

At breakfast the mate told the men of his intentions.  They all agreed
to do their best to carry them out.

We had first, however, to search for provisions.  Not knowing whether
there might be savages on the island, even supposing that the man we had
seen was not one, the mate did not like to leave the boat unprotected.
He therefore ordered Brown and one of the men to remain by her while the
rest of us proceeded together to explore the island.

The mate would not allow us to separate until we had ascertained whether
or not there were inhabitants besides the man we had seen on the island.

One musket was left with Brown, the mate carried the other, and we set
off, keeping up the stream I have before described towards the end of
the valley.  We looked out on either side for the stranger, but he
didn't appear.  Some of the men declared that we had not really seen any
one, and that we had mistaken a small tree or shrub for a man; but Jim
and I were positive, and the doctor, at all events, believed us.

On reaching the top of the hill, we looked down into a large hollow,
with water at the bottom, dark rocks forming its sides, grown over with
creepers, huge ferns, and various other plants.  The doctor said that it
was the crater of a long extinct volcano, and that the whole island was
volcanic.  There were many other hills out of which smoke was rising.
The doctor said that this was an active volcano; indeed, the country in
that direction presented a very different aspect from the part where we
had landed.  It was black and barren, with only here and there a few
green spots.  We therefore turned to the east, the direction which
promised us a better chance of finding roots or fruits, or vegetable
productions of some sort.

The strange thing was, that though the island appeared fertile, not a
single habitation or hut could we discover.  The doctor supposed that
this was on account of the occasional outbreak of the volcano, and that
the people from the neighbouring islands were afraid to take up their
residence on it.

We now descended the hill, and went along another valley, of course
looking out all the time for the stranger.

We were passing a small grove near a hollow in the side of a hill, which
was partly concealed by trees, when we heard a cock crow just as an
English cock would do.  At once that sound made my thoughts, as it did
those of the others, probably, rush back to our far-distant homes.

"If there's a cock, there must be hens and a hen-roost hereabouts,"
observed Miles Soper, hurrying in the direction whence the sounds
proceeded.

We followed; there, sure enough, sheltered by the hill, and under the
shade of the trees, was not only a hen-house of good size, but a hut
scarcely bigger than it was neatly built and thatched with palm-leaves.

"It must be the residence of the stranger.  He himself can't be far
off," said the doctor.

The hut was just large enough to hold one man.  It had a door formed of
thin poles lashed together with sennit.  At the farther end was a
bedstead covered with rough matting, and in the centre a small table,
with a three-legged stool.

No one had any longer any doubt that we had seen a man, or that this
must be his abode, and that he must be a white man, but whether English
or not was doubtful.  Miles Soper examined the matting, and as he was
looking about he found a knife on a shelf close to the bed.  Taking it
up, he examined it with a curious eye, opening and shutting it, and
turning it round and round.

"Well, that's queer, but I think I've seen this knife before," he said.
"If the owner is the man I guess he is I am glad."

"Who do you suppose he is?"  I inquired, eagerly.

"Well, Peter, that's what I don't want to say just yet.  I must make
sure first," he answered.

"Can he be my brother Jack?"  I exclaimed, my breath coming and going
fast in my anxiety.

"Well then, Peter, I'll tell you.  Jack knew how to make matting just
like this, because he learnt the way on board the _Harriet_, and so did
I.  He had a knife which, if this isn't it, is the fellow to it, so you
see that I have some reason to think that the man who built this hut,
and lives in it, is he.  But then again, you know, I may be mistaken.

"Why, if he is Jack, he should run away from us puzzles me.  If he
couldn't see our faces he must have known by our dress that we were
English or American, and that there was no reason for him to hide
himself.  There are many men who know how to make this sort of matting,
and there are many knives just like this, and that's the reason why I
can't tell you whether he's Jack or not.  But if Mr Griffiths will let
me I'll go on alone and look for him, and when he sees who I am he'll
come fast enough to me, and you may depend on it, Peter, if it's he I'll
bring him back with a lighter heart than I've had for many a day."



CHAPTER TWENTY SEVEN.

THE LOST ONE FOUND AT LAST.

I wanted to accompany Soper in his search for the stranger.

"No, no, Peter," he answered; "if he is Jack he'll know me; but he won't
know you; and if he's grown queer by living all alone on an island, as
has happened to some poor fellows, he'll get out of our way if he sees
two together."

The doctor assented to the wisdom of this, and advised me to be
contented and remain by while Soper set off himself.  The rest of the
party were meanwhile examining the hen-roost.

The fowls were mostly of the English breed, which made us suppose that
they had been landed from some English vessel.  We were confirmed in
this belief by discovering an old hen-coop, in which they had probably
been washed ashore.  There were other pieces of wreckage scattered
about, but the hut itself was composed entirely of the products of the
island.

At last the doctor proposed that we should proceed onwards, as the
stranger, whoever he was, would not be likely to come back if he saw us
near his hut.  I, however, believed that it must be Jack, and,
notwithstanding the doubts that Soper had expressed, begged that I might
be allowed to remain behind that I might the sooner meet him.  Mr
Griffiths gave me leave to stay if I wished it.  I thought that Soper
was more likely to bring him back to the hut than to follow the rest of
the party.

As soon as they had gone I closed the door and sat down on the
three-legged stool.  I should have been glad if I had had a book to read
to employ my thoughts, but the hut contained only some cocoanuts cut in
two for holding water, some long skewers, which had apparently been used
for roasting birds, a small nut fixed in a stand to serve as an egg-cup,
and a little wooden spoon.  There were also shells, some clams, and
others of different shapes.  Two or three of these would serve as cups
and plates.  I could judge from this what had been the food of the
solitary inhabitant of the hut.  This didn't look as if he were out of
his mind.

The time appeared to go by very slowly.  I remembered my disappointment
at South's Island when I heard the mysterious knocks on the bottom of
the boat, and I began to fear that after all the stranger might not
prove to be Jack.

I was now sorry that I had not accompanied the rest of the party--at all
events the time would not have appeared so long if I had been walking
and looking out for Jack.  At length I determined to get up and to go
out and try and find my companions--perhaps Soper and the stranger were
all this time with them, though I knew they would come back and look for
me.  I rose and went to the window, which had a view right down the
valley, probably that the inmate might watch anybody coming in that
direction.

I couldn't see any object moving, and I turned towards the door,
intending to go out, when the sound of voices reached my ears.  I
listened.  One of the speakers was Miles Soper, the other spoke so
indistinctly that I could not make out what he said.

I opened the door and saw two persons coming through the grove.  One
was, as I expected, Soper; the other a strange-looking being with long
hair, his skin tanned of a deep brown, his dress composed of an old
jacket and trousers, patched or rather covered over with leaves, while
his feet and head were destitute of covering.

I stood gazing at him for a few seconds, unable to trace in his
countenance any of the features of my brother Jack, which I fancied I
recollected.

"What, don't you know one another?" exclaimed Soper.  "This is Jack
Trawl and no other--the only Jack Trawl I ever knew.  Come, Jack, rouse
up, that's your brother Peter Trawl.  Give him your fist, man.  He's
been talking about you, and looking for you everywhere we've been."

The stranger stopped and gazed eagerly in my face.

"What, are you my little brother Peter?" he exclaimed.  "How are Mary,
and father, and mother, and Nancy?"

I knew from this that he was Jack, and springing forward, took both his
hands, and looked earnestly in his face.

"Yes, I am Peter, and I know you are Jack.  Mary was well when I left
home long ago, though you wouldn't know her now, and Nancy is with her."

I didn't like at first to tell Jack that father and mother were dead,
but it had to come out at last, and it seemed for a time to do away with
the happiness he and I felt at meeting; for he was happy, though he
looked so strange and talked so curiously.  He couldn't get out his
words at first, but we sat down, he on the bed, I on the stool, and
Miles Soper on the table, Miles drawing him out better than I could, and
he telling us how he had come upon the island.

He had been on board the _Harriet_, as I had believed, from what King
George had told me, and had escaped from her with Captain Barber in the
boat.  They had had a long voyage, and suffered dreadfully, missing
Guam, for which they had steered, just as we had done, and been driven
south.  The other men died, one and then another, till at last only
Captain Barber and he had been left.

The captain was in a dying state when the boat was driven on the reef,
and Jack could not tell how he had managed to reach the shore.  He found
himself at last in the very bay where we had landed.  He had just
strength enough to crawl up to the palm-grove, where he found some
cocoanuts on the ground, and managing to eat one of them he regained his
strength.

He looked about for the old captain, but could nowhere find him, and
supposed that he was drowned when the boat went to pieces.  He didn't
want to die, he said, so he got some shell-fish and cocoanuts, and now
and then caught some birds, which were very tame.  He had learnt how to
get a light from King George's people on "Strong's" Island, and after a
few days he managed to make a fire and cooked the shell-fish.  He found
some roots, but was afraid to eat them for fear they might be poisonous.

It was very melancholy work living thus alone, and some times for days
together he scarcely knew what he was about.  At last, however, came a
furious storm, and as he went down to the beach he saw a ship driving
towards the island.  He knew that there were reefs all around it, so he
feared that she would be knocked to pieces and bring no help to him.

His fears proved true; the ship struck at a distance from where he was.
He made his way down to the nearest point to where she was, hoping that
some of the crew might reach the shore alive, but the only thing of any
size which had come ashore was a hen-coop and some fowls lashed to some
gratings and some spars.  His idea was that the people had been trying
to make a raft, but that the ship had gone to pieces before they could
finish it, and the raft had been driven on shore by itself.  He secured
the hen-coop and fowls, most of which were alive, and carried them up to
where he had built a hut for himself.  Shortly afterwards, seeing three
canoes full of wild-looking natives coming near the shore, he collected
all his fowls and carried them away right up to the spot where he had
built his present hut.  He there lay concealed, as he was afraid of
falling into the hands of the natives after the way in which he had seen
his shipmates murdered at "Strong's" Island, as he thought the savages
would treat him in the same way.  This idea seemed to have upset his
mind.  He was nearly starved, for he would not kill any of his fowls
because they were the only living beings that seemed to care for him.

At last he ventured out from his hiding-place, and, creeping cautiously
on, saw the savages sailing away in their canoes.  They had nearly
stripped the trees of cocoanuts, and found his hut and pulled it to
pieces.  Why they had gone so suddenly he could not tell, but on looking
towards the burning mountain it was spurting out fire and smoke, and he
concluded that they had gone away from being frightened at it.  His mind
was now more at rest.  He employed himself in building his hut and the
hen-roosts, where his fowls might be safe from hawks or such-like birds,
or any animals which might be in the island.  He had seen wild cats at
some of those he had touched at, and knew that if they found out his
fowl they would soon put an end to them.  He had plenty to do to find
food for his poultry.  He got shell-fish and berries, roots and
cocoanuts, and watched what they seemed to like best.  They soon became
so tame that they would come and sit on his shoulders and knees and run
about between his feet.  What seemed to have upset him was another visit
from the savages some months afterwards, when he was nearly caught.
Though they pursued him they didn't discover his hen-roost or hut, but
after that he was always fancying they would come and kill him.  When he
saw our boat he thought we must be some savages, and yet he said he
couldn't help coming down to have a look at us, though it was so long
since he had heard a word of English spoken he didn't understand what
was said.  Fortunately, Miles Soper had passed close to the place where
he was hiding.  At length, when he heard his own name shouted in a voice
which he recollected, he came out, and at once knew his old messmate.
He could not at first understand that I had grown into a big fellow, and
had come to look for him, though he told Miles Soper that he should know
me at once if I were like what I had been when he went to sea.  When
Miles told him that Mr Griffiths and Dr Cockle were with me--the
gentlemen father had put on board their ship at the time he had joined
the _Lapwing_--he seemed to have no doubt on the matter, and by degrees,
with Miles speaking soothingly to him, the balance of his mind seemed
gradually to be restored.  He still found, however, a great difficulty
in speaking; he had been so long without uttering a word except when he
talked to his poultry.  He was almost all to rights when Mr Griffiths
and the doctor and the other men came back.  They seemed very much
pleased at seeing Jack, and all shook him warmly by the hand.  The
doctor and Mr Griffiths told him that they remembered him well when he
was a young lad, first going to sea, little thinking that from that day
to this he should be knocking about the world far away from home.  He
looked very shy and reserved, and seemed inclined to keep close to Miles
Soper and me, but in other respects he was as much in his senses as any
of us.  The doctor had found several roots and fruits, which he said
were wholesome, and would serve us as food, and Jack offered to catch as
many birds as we wanted, begging that we wouldn't touch his poultry.
The doctor promised that they should not be molested while we remained
on the island, but said to me--

"You must persuade your brother to let us have them for sea-stock when
we go away; they will afford us sufficient provisions to enable us to
reach the `Pellew' Islands or Manilla, with the help of the birds and
fish we may salt."

When Mr Griffiths was about to go away, Jack asked that Miles Soper and
I might stay to keep him company, promising to go down to the boat the
next morning.  To this Mr Griffiths agreed, and Soper and I remained
behind with Jack.  When they had gone Jack said--

"I haven't food for all the party, but I can give you a good supper,"
and he showed us his store-room at the back of the hut, in which he had
several cocoanuts, some birds dried in the sun, and a dozen eggs.

He showed us a sort of trap he used for catching the birds without
frightening the rest.  He quickly got a fire from a split log in the way
I have before described, and with the help of some fresh water and the
milk of the cocoanuts we had a very good meal.  He had a supply of mats
like those on his bed, and with these he rigged us up a place for
sleeping in when it was time to lie down.

I felt happier than I had been for a long time.  My hope of finding
Brother Jack was realised, and now my great wish was to return home with
him to Mary.  I forgot for the moment that we were on a remote island,
and that we had only a small boat to carry us to civilised lands.

When we got up the next morning Jack seemed more refreshed and better
able to talk than on the previous evening.  As soon as we had had
breakfast, which was very much like supper, we set off to join the rest
of the party at the bay.  We found them all busily employed, some in
caulking the boat, others in splitting a tree to form planks.

We fortunately had a couple of axes with us, which were of great
service, and while Soper and I lent a hand Jack went down to collect
shell-fish, which he did much more rapidly than we could, being well
accustomed to it.

The weather was so fine that we required only a very slight hut, which
we formed partly of the boat's sails and partly of the boughs and stems
of small trees.

Jack showed us a way up to the top of the cliff, and here Mr Griffiths
erected a flagstaff with a whift, which we had in the boat, increased in
size by a couple of handkerchiefs.  This was large enough to attract the
attention of any vessel passing near the island, but Mr Griffiths said
that he believed, owing to the surrounding reefs, none would
intentionally approach.

We were all anxious to get the boat finished as soon as possible and
commence our voyage.  We had many reasons for being in a hurry, though
we might have lived very well on the island for months together, but the
burning mountain might again burst forth and overwhelm us, and the
savages might return in large numbers and either kill us or make us
prisoners, for as we had only two muskets and a scanty supply of
ammunition, we could scarcely hope to beat them off should they prove
hostile.  Mr Griffiths and the doctor talked the matter over.

"One thing is certain," observed the mate, "the sooner we're away while
the fine weather lasts the better, but at the same time it won't do to
start until we have fitted the boat thoroughly for sea.  We have a long
trip before us, and if we're caught in a gale we shall have reason to
regret it if we don't take the trouble to fit our boat in the best way
we can."

It took a long time, first with our axes to split up the planks, and
then to smooth them with our knives.  We had next to shape out
additional timbers to strengthen the boat, as to which also to fix the
planks to.  We likewise decked over the fore and aft parts, both to keep
out the sea and to prevent our provisions from getting wet.  The doctor
searched everywhere for some sort of resin which might serve to caulk
our boat.

He at last found some which he thought might answer, but as we had only
a small iron pot to boil it in, we had to go without our soup or our hot
water till the pot was again thoroughly cleaned out.  It answered the
purpose, however, better than we had expected, and with mosses and dried
grass we made up a substance which served instead of oakum.  Jack worked
as hard as any of us, and was very useful in catching a number of birds,
which he salted and dried in the sun.

At length one day, when nearly all our preparations were concluded, the
mate said, "And now, Jack Trawl, we must get you to bring your
poultry-yard down.  We shall not have room for all the fowl, in the boat
but I think we can cut down and repair the old hen-coop to hold a good
many, and we must kill and salt the rest."

"What I kill my fowl--my old companions!" said Jack.  "What!  Cannot we
let them live?  They'll soon find food for themselves; they do that
pretty well already, and I couldn't bear to see their necks wrung."

"I wish we were able to do without them," said the mate; "but our lives
are of more value than those of the fowl.  I can enter into your
feelings, and we will not ask you to kill any nor to eat them afterwards
unless you change your mind.  Look you here, Jack; if the savages came
to the island they'd kill the fowl fast enough, and perhaps our lives
may depend on our having them."

The doctor then said something to the same effect, and at last Jack was
talked over to allow some of his fowl to be killed at once, and dried
and salted like the other birds.

We brought the hen-coop down to the beach, and by dint of hard work cut
it away so as to hold two dozen fowl closely packed.  At night, when the
birds had gone to roost, Miles, Coal, Jack, and I went up and took the
others while roosting.  What a cackling and screeching the poor
creatures made on finding themselves hauled off their perches and having
their legs tied!  The noise they made might have been heard over half
the island.

We brought them down and stowed them away in the hen-coop.  Jack,
accompanied by Jim, had before collected a good supply of seeds, which
might serve them as food with the help of the cocoanuts and scraps of
fish which we might leave.  Mr Griffiths and the doctor had arranged to
start the next morning.  All hands had agreed to do as they proposed,
which was to be up at daylight, and as soon as we had breakfasted launch
the boat and go on board.

We lay down, as we hoped, for the last time in our hut.  As the island
was known to be uninhabited it was no longer thought necessary to keep a
watch.  All of us slept like tops, recollecting that we should not for
many days get another thorough night's rest.

I was the first to wake, and, calling up Jim, he and I agreed to go to
the lake and fill our pot with water to boil for breakfast, knowing that
the rest would light the fire as soon as they were aroused ready for it.
There was just a single streak in the eastern sky, which showed us that
it would soon be daylight, and we knew our way so well through the grove
that we didn't think it worth while stopping till then.  We carried the
pot on a stick between us, and as we had to pass among the trees, of
course we could not do so as fast as if it had been daylight.  It took
us some little time before we could reach the place where we could dip
the pot in and get the water pure.  We filled it, and set off again on
our way back.  We had just reached the grove of cocoanut-trees.  I
happened to look up at the hill where I had seen Jack the morning after
our arrival, when I saw against the sky the forms of well-nigh a dozen
savages.

I rubbed my eyes for a moment, as I at first thought it might be fancy,
and then whispered to Jim to look in the same direction and then tell me
what he saw.

"Savages," he answered, "no doubt about that."

"Then we must rouse up the rest and be prepared for them," I said.

We ran on among the trees, to which we were close, hoping that we hadn't
been seen.  Still I thought that the savages must know that we were on
the island.  We didn't like to abandon our pot, though we spilled some
of the water as we hurried along.  Our friends were still fast asleep.

"Mr Griffiths!  Dr Cockle!  The savages have landed and are on the
hill out there," Jim and I cried out.

They started to their feet in a moment, and Jack and the rest of the men
jumped up on hearing our voices.  The mate seemed satisfied that what we
said was true.

"Then, lads," he said, "we will launch the boat at once; we must at all
events avoid a fight, and we can't tell how they'll behave if we
remain."

Jack was about the most eager to get the boat in the water, and Horner
looked not a little frightened.  We soon had her afloat, and then as
quickly as we could, running backwards and forwards, put the cargo on
board.

The doctor and mate were still on shore, seeing that nothing had been
left behind, when loud shrieks reached our ears, and a score or more of
tattooed savages, flourishing their war clubs, burst out of the grove
and rushed towards us.

"Quick, doctor," cried the mate.  "Get on board, and I'll follow you."

He stood, as he spoke, with his musket in his hand pointed towards the
savages, and then slowly retreated, while Dr Cockle sprang on board.
We had our oars ready to shove off as soon as the mate was safe.

"Come on, Mr Griffiths, come on," cried several others.

The savages were scarcely a dozen yards from us as the mate threw
himself over the bows, and we quickly shoved the boat into deep water,
while the savages stood yelling and heaving stones at us from the beach.

Just, however, as we got the boat's head to sea we saw, coming round a
point to the eastward, four or five large canoes.  It seemed impossible
that we could escape them.



CHAPTER TWENTY EIGHT.

ESCAPE FROM THE ISLAND AND THE EVENTS WHICH FOLLOWED.

"Give way, lads!  Give way!" shouted Mr Griffiths; "if the worst comes
we must fight for it, and try to save our lives, but I want, if we can,
to avoid fighting."  The men bent to their oars; the wind was ahead, so
that it was useless to hoist the sail.  The savages on shore howled and
shrieked as they saw us getting off, and hurled stones at us.  The big
double canoes came round the point, two more appearing astern.  They
were close on a wind, and rapidly skimming the water.

"There's an outlet from the bay to the westward, I marked it yesterday,
we will make for it," said Mr Griffiths.

The canoes were to the eastward, but it seemed very doubtful whether we
could reach the outlet the mate spoke of before they would be up with
us.  We pulled for our lives, for there could be no doubt, from the
behaviour of the savages on shore,--how those in the canoes would be
inclined to treat us.  While the mate steered, the doctor and I got the
muskets ready; the rest of the crew were rowing, Horner helping the
stroke oar.  On the canoes came, nearer and nearer.  We observed the sea
breaking over the reef, but there was a clear channel between it and the
shore.  The savages had left the beach and were rushing towards the
point which they knew we must pass; probably, as we supposed, to enjoy
the satisfaction of seeing us overtaken and massacred.  As the mate
altered our course to steer for the channel, we found the wind on our
starboard bow; should it shift a point or two more, it would come right
ahead, and even the canoes, though they sail closer to the wind than any
ordinary craft, would be unable to get through it; but they were already
within one hundred fathoms of us, and coming on rapidly.  I counted
seven of them.  One took the lead of the rest, and was coming up hand
over hand with us.  We could see the warriors on the raised deck dancing
and leaping and flourishing their clubs, and hear them shouting and
shrieking like their companions on shore.  I looked anxiously at the
channel.  Soper was pulling bow oar.  The mate told Horner to take it,
and directed Soper to keep a look-out for reefs ahead.  The leading
canoe was now within fifty fathoms astern.

"Give them a shot, doctor," said the mate; "but fire over their heads.
It will show them that we are armed, but I don't want to kill any one."

"Ay, ay!" answered the doctor; and shouting to the savages to make them
understand what he was about to do, he fired.  The first shot seemed to
have no effect.  Still the big canoe came on.  We were as far from the
passage as we were from them.  Our men were straining every nerve, and
could make the boat go no faster.  The doctor waited till I had reloaded
the first musket.  He again fired, still aiming high, as the mate told
him to do.  The next instant down came the yard and sail of the canoe.
The bullet must have cut the slings right in two.

"It was a chance shot, and a fortunate one," said the doctor, as he saw
its effect.  The canoe still glided on, but the next, unable to alter
her course, ran right into her, and the others, also coming up, were
thrown into confusion.  Our men cheered as they saw what had happened.
The channel was reached before our pursuers could get clear of each
other.  Then on they came again.  Before, however, they had come far,
the wind shifted a point and then blew right ahead.  First one lowered
her sail, and then another and another, while we pulled through the
channel, Soper keeping a bright look-out for sunken rocks.  I caught
sight of the savages on shore rushing along the beach, but we had passed
the point before they had gained it, and there they stood shrieking,
shouting, and gesticulating at us.  We pulled away in the wind's eye,
knowing that we should thus have a better chance of keeping ahead of our
pursuers.  They had not yet, however, given up the chase.  We saw them
at length coming through the channel urged on by their paddles.  They
could thus move but slowly.  Once outside, however, they might again
hoist their sails, and, by standing first on one tack and then on the
other, come up with us.

As we got away from the island we found the wind blowing steadily from
the southward, while in shore it still came from the westward.  This
gave us a great advantage.

"We'll hoist the sail, lads," said Mr Griffiths, "and see if a
whale-boat can beat a double canoe."

The men, who were streaming from every pore, gladly obeyed.  The mast
was set up in an instant, the sail hoisted, and "_Young Hopeful_," as
the doctor called our boat, glided rapidly over the dancing waters.

We had made good way before we saw the sails of the canoes once more
hoisted, standing, as far as we could make out, for the north-west.

Now we had got the wind, it would take them a long time to come up with
us.  The wind was too fresh to allow the oars to be of any use.  We
trusted, however, to the good providence of God to carry us clear.  All
that we would do was to sit quiet and hope that the wind would continue
steady.  We could see the canoes in the north-east hull down, and we
hoped that we might keep ahead till night should hide us from their
sight.  The mate said he was sure that they would not then attempt to
follow us farther.

"But, I say, is any one hungry?" exclaimed Horner.  "We've had no
breakfast, you'll remember."

We had all been too excited to think of eating, but the mention of food
excited our appetites, and the mate told the doctor to serve out
provisions.

The occupation of eating assisted to pass the time, and to raise our
spirits.  The mate told us that he and the doctor had determined to
steer for the Pellew Islands, the inhabitants of which, though
uncivilised, were supposed to be of a mild disposition, and likely to
treat us kindly.  Even had we intended to steer for Guam, the canoes in
that direction would have prevented us doing so.

From the Pellew Islands we should have a long voyage round to Manilla.
When once there we should be sure of finding European vessels on board
of which we should be able to obtain a passage to some English
settlement.  Every now and then, while we were eating, I took a look at
the canoes, but the sight of them didn't spoil my appetite, nor that of
the rest of us, as far as I could judge.

"They are getting no nearer," I observed.

"Wait till they come about," said Horner; "they'll then be up with us
fast enough, and this may be the last meal we shall ever eat."

"Haul in the slack of that, you young croaker!" cried the mate, in an
angry tone.  "You would like to make the others as much afraid as you
are yourself."

Horner could not say he was not afraid, for he looked it.  The breeze
freshened, and the boat made good way in spite of being heavily laden,
standing up well to all the sail we could set.  For another hour or more
we could see the canoes.

At last the mate, standing up, took a look at them and then cried--

"Hurrah!  They have gone about, and are steering for the land."

Just as the sun set they disappeared, and we had no longer any fear of
being followed.  The mate now set a regular watch;--the rest of us lay
down as we best could along the thwarts, or at the bottom of the boat,
with some of Jack's matting for pillows.  We were rather crowded, to be
sure, but we were thankful to have escaped our enemies, and hoped, in
spite of its length, that we should have a prosperous voyage.

Day after day we sailed on.  Mr Griffiths maintained good discipline
among us.  Everything was done with as much regularity as if we were
aboard ship.  He got us to spin yarns and sing songs.  I thus heard more
of Jack's adventures than I ever since have been able to get out of him.
He corroborated all that Miles Soper had told me, and added much more.
Sam Coal told us how he had once been a slave in the Southern States of
America, and made his escape, and being followed, was nearly caught, and
how a kind Quaker sheltered him, at the risk of his own life, and got
him away on board a ship, where he found that he had not changed much
for the better in some respects; but then, as he said--

"Dis nigger feel dat he was a free man, and dat make up for all de
rest."

The wind was fair and the sea calm.  Our chief fear was that we might
run short of water, so Mr Griffiths thought it wise to put us upon an
allowance at once.  Several times flying-fish fell aboard, which we
didn't despise, although we had to eat them raw, or rather dried in the
sun.  If we had had fuel we might have managed to make a fire and cook
them, but in our hurry to get off we had come away without any spare
wood.

"Never mind, lads," said the mate; "we'll get some at the Pellew
Islands, and after that we'll have a hot meal every other day at least."

Brown was always on the look-out with his harpoon, ready to strike any
large fish which might come near us, but they seemed to know what we
were about, and kept at a respectful distance.  Now and then a shark
would come up and have a look at us, and the men would call him all
manner of names.  One day, as we were running along at the rate of about
five knots an hour, we saw a black fin coming up astern; it sheered off
under the counter and then floated up abreast of us, just coming near
enough to show us its wicked eye.  It kept too far off, however, for
Brown to strike it, or it might have paid dearly for its curiosity.  At
last, cocking its eye, it gave a turn of its tail, and off it went like
a shot, followed by our roars of laughter.

"Tend on it, Jack Shark find dat we not going to make dinner for him dis
day!" cried Sam Coal, "so he tink better go look out sumber else."

Such were the trifling incidents which afforded us amusement and
assisted to keep up our spirits.  It was trying work, thus to sit all
day and day after day in an open boat with nothing to do, and unable to
move about freely.  We were very thankful, however, to be favoured by
such fine weather.

At last Mr Griffiths stood up in the stern-sheets, and, after shading
his eyes for some time--for the sun had already passed the zenith, said
quietly, "Lads, we have made a good landfall.  I'm much mistaken if we
have not the Pellew Islands in sight.  I make out a dozen or more blue
hillocks rising above the horizon.  Sit quiet, however, for you won't
see them just yet.  We shall have to heave-to to-night outside the reef
which surrounds them, but I hope we shall get ashore in the morning."

This news cheered us up, for we were beginning to get somewhat downcast,
and some of us thought that we must have passed the islands altogether,
and might make no other land till we reached the Philippines.  We ran on
till dark, by which time we could make out one large island and a number
of smaller ones, some to the northward and some to the southward, with a
reef marked by a line of white foam surrounding them.  As it would be
dangerous to attempt looking for a passage through the reef except in
daylight, we hove-to, and the watch below lay down--or "turned in," as
we used to call it--rejoicing in the hope of setting our feet on dry
ground the next morning, and getting a plentiful supply of provisions.
I had to keep the middle watch with Jim.  I took good care not to let my
eyes close, for we were at no great distance from the reef, and I knew
the danger of being drifted on it.  Now I looked to windward to make
sure that no vessel was approaching to run us down, now at the reef to
find out whether we were drifting nearer it than was safe.  After a long
silence Jim spoke to me.

"There's something on my mind, Peter," he said.  "I'm afraid that now
you have found your brother Jack you'll not be caring for me as you used
to do, for the whole of the last day you have not opened your lips to
me, while you have been talking away to him."

"Don't let such an idea rest on your mind, Jim," I answered.  "I very
naturally talked to Jack, for of course I wanted to hear everything he
had been about since he first went to sea, and it's only lately I have
been able to get him to say much.  I don't think that anything will make
me forget your affection for me.  Though Jack is my brother, you've been
more than a brother, and as brothers we shall remain till the end of
life."

In this way I did my best to satisfy Jim's mind.  It hadn't before
occurred to me that there was any spice of jealousy in him, and I
determined in future to do my best to prevent him having any such
feeling.  We talked on just as we used to do after that.

The wind was light, and except a slight swell coming from the eastward,
the sea was perfectly smooth.  If it hadn't been for the talking I
should have found it a hard matter to keep my eyes open.  After I lay
down, I had been for some time asleep, as I fancied, when I heard the
mate cry--

"Out oars, lads!  Pull for your lives!"

I jumped up in a moment.

The strong current into which the boat had got was carrying her along at
the rate of five knots an hour towards the reef, over which the sea was
breaking and rising up in a wall of white foam.

There was now not a breath of wind, but a much greater swell was coming
in than before.

We all bent to our oars, and had good reason to be thankful that we had
got them to help us, for a sailing vessel would very quickly have been
dashed to pieces on the reef, and every soul aboard lost.

The mate headed the boat off from the shore in a diagonal course, so
that we hoped soon to get out of the current.  Still, notwithstanding
all our efforts, we appeared to be drawing nearer and nearer the reef as
the current swept us along, and I began to think that, notwithstanding
all we had gone through, we were doomed to be lost at last.  The mate,
however, cheered us up.

Daylight soon broke.  As the sun rose the wind increased, and presently,
a fresh breeze springing up, he hauled aft the sheet, and with the help
of the oars the boat moved quickly along till we got out of the current.

We were now able to venture close enough to the reef to look out for a
safe opening.  At last we found one a little to the southward of the
largest island, and hauling up, we steered for it.

The sea broke on either side of the passage, which was large enough for
a good-sized vessel to venture through.  We stood on, keeping a look-out
for dangers ahead.

We were soon inside, where the water was perfectly smooth.  Seeing a
snug little harbour, we ran for it.  As we approached, we saw a number
of natives coming down, darkish-skinned fellows, though not so black as
those of the Caroline Islands all of them without a stitch of clothing
on except a loin cloth; but they were pleasant-looking, and we saw no
weapons among them.

The mate, however, kept the muskets concealed in the stern-sheets, ready
for use in case they were only acting treacherously, and should suddenly
rush down upon us with clubs and spears.  Still, as we got nearer, and
waved our hands, they showed no inclination to attack us, and made every
sign to let us understand that they wished to be friends.

We therefore lowered the sail, and pulled the boat gently towards the
beach.  On this they came down, and when we jumped out, helped us to
haul her up.  There was one man who seemed to be the chief.  He came up
and shook hands with Mr Griffiths, the doctor, and me, and then ordered
six of his people to stay by the boat, as we supposed to guard her.  He
made no objection when the mate and the doctor went back to get the
muskets, but seemed to think it very natural that they should wish to be
armed amongst so many strangers.

The other people were in the meantime making friends with the rest of
our party.  The chief now invited us up to his house.  It was built of
trunks of small trees and bamboo canes, and thatched with palm-leaves,
much in the same style as the huts of other South Sea islanders, though
of a fair size.  It was also very clean, and the floors were covered
with mats.  He begged us to sit down near him, while he squatted on a
mat at one end of the room.

As we could only talk by signs we didn't say much.  Presently a number
of girls appeared, bringing clay dishes, with fish and fowl and
vegetables.  As soon as they were placed on the ground, he told us to
fall to, and a very good meal we enjoyed, after the uncooked food we had
lived on so long.

The mate made signs that we had come from the eastward, and were bound
west for the Philippines, of which he seemed to have heard.

After dinner he took us down to the shore, and showed us some fine large
canoes, with the stems and sterns well carved.  They were used for going
about between the islands, but I don't think they could have done much
in a heavy sea.  Some were large enough to hold thirty or forty men.  He
then had a look at our boat, and seemed to wonder that we had come so
far in her.

The mate explained to him that, though she was shorter, she had much
higher sides, and was much lighter built than his canoes.  From the way
he behaved we had no doubts as to his friendly intentions, or any
anxiety about the men who were attended to by other natives.

In the evening he gave us another feast, and then took us to a clean new
hut, which by his signs we understood we were to occupy.  From the way
he behaved we agreed that, though he looked liked a native savage, he
was as civilised a gentleman as we could wish to meet.  The rest of our
party were billeted in huts close to us, and from the sounds of laughter
which came from them we guessed that they and their hosts were mightily
amused with each other.  The chief, after making signs to us to lie down
and go to sleep, took his leave, and we were left alone.

"I hope our fellows will behave well, and not get into any quarrel with
the natives," observed the doctor.

"I don't think there's any chance of that, though it would be a serious
matter if they did," answered Mr Griffiths.

"If you'll give me leave, sir, I'll go and speak to them," I said.  "I'm
sure Jim and my brother Jack will behave properly, and so I should think
would Brown."

"It doesn't do always to trust men," said the mate.  "Just tell them to
be careful.  I would rather that we had been all together, but it won't
do to show that we're suspicious of the natives."

I accordingly got up, and, directed by the sounds I heard, went to the
other huts.  I found Jack and Jim in one of them, with a number of
natives sitting round them, examining their dresses and trying to
imitate their way of speaking.

I advised them to let their friends know that they were sleepy, and
wanted to lie down.  As soon as they did this, the natives got up in the
politest way possible, and spread mats for them at one side of the room.
In the next hut I found Miles Soper and Sam Coal.  I said to them what
I had said before to Jack and Jim, and I then went on to another hut,
the natives in each behaving in precisely the same manner.

When I told the mate, he was perfectly satisfied, and said that we must
trust the natives.  We were not mistaken.  Early the next morning a
plentiful meal was brought us, and during our stay on the island we were
treated with the greatest kindness by these mild and courteous people.
The doctor said that they were Malays, though very unlike many of their
brethren scattered about the Indian seas.

Having recovered completely from the effects of being cramped up so long
in the boat, and the unwholesome food we had lived on, we were anxious
to prosecute our voyage.

The chief looked very sorrowful when the mate told him we must be going,
and that we should be thankful to him for provisions and water for the
voyage.  When he told his people, they brought us down fowl and
vegetables enough to fill the boat.  We showed them our hen-coop, in
which we could keep a number of the fowl alive, but that we wanted food
for them.  Off they ran, and quickly came back with a good supply.

By this time we could understand each other wonderfully well, helping
out what we said by signs.  The chief gave us all a grand feast the last
night of our stay, and the next morning, having shaken hands with all
round, we went aboard, and once more put to sea.  The natives at the
same time came off in their canoes, and accompanied us some way outside
the reef; then, with shouts and waving of hands, they wished us
good-bye.

We had a long passage before us, but we were in good health and spirits,
and we hoped to perform it in safety.  We had to keep a sharp look-out
at night, for, as the mate told us, there were some small islands
between the Pellew and the Philippines, and that, he not being certain
of their exact position, we might run upon them.

For a whole week we had fine weather, though, as the wind was light, we
didn't make much way.  At the end of that time clouds began to gather in
the horizon, and soon covered the whole sky, while the wind shifted to
the north-west, and in a short time was blowing a heavy gale.  The sea
got up, and the water every now and then, notwithstanding our high
sides, broke aboard, and we had to take to baling.  Night came on, and
matters grew worse.

We all had confidence in Mr Griffiths's skill; and as he had, by his
good seamanship, preserved our lives before, we hoped that we should
again escape.  At length he determined to try his former plan, and,
heaving the boat to, we cast out a raft, formed by the oars, and rode to
it.  The gale, however, increased, and seemed likely to turn into a
regular typhoon.

There was no sleep for any of us that night; all hands had to keep
baling, while a heavier sea than we had yet encountered broke aboard and
carried away a large portion of our provisions, besides drowning all the
fowl in the hen-coop.  Most of us, I suspect, began to think that we
should never see another sunrise.  It seemed a wonder, indeed, that the
boat escaped being knocked to pieces.  Had it continued long, we must
have gone down.  Towards morning, however, the wind moderated, and
before noon we were able to haul the raft aboard and once more make
sail.  But there we were on the wide ocean, with but scanty provisions
and a sorely battered boat.

The weather still looked unsettled, and we feared that we should have
another bad night of it.  The greater part of the day had gone by, when
Brown, who was at the helm while the mate was taking some rest, suddenly
exclaimed--

"A sail!  A sail!  She's standing this way."

We all looked out to the northward, and there made out a large vessel
steering directly for us.



CHAPTER TWENTY NINE.

ON BOARD OUR OLD SHIP--HER VOYAGE THROUGH EASTERN SEAS.

The doctor awoke Mr Griffiths to tell him the good news.  He at once
hove the boat to.  We sat eagerly watching the stranger.  She could not
possibly at present see us, and might alter her course before she came
near enough to do so.  Her topsails rose above the horizon, then in a
short time her courses were seen, and then her hull itself as she came
on swiftly before the breeze.  I saw Mr Griffiths several times rub his
eyes, then he stood up and looked fixedly at her.

"Brown," he said, "did you ever see that ship before?"

"Well, I was thinking that the same sail-maker cut her topsails that cut
the _Intrepid's_; but there's no wonder in that," answered Brown.

"What do you say to that white patch in the head of her foresail?" asked
the mate.  "It looks to me like one we put in when we were last at the
Sandwich Islands.  To be sure it's where the sail is likely to get worn,
and another vessel may have had one put in like it, still, the
_Intrepid's_ foresail had just such a patch as that."

"What!  Do you mean to say that she's the _Intrepid_?" exclaimed the
doctor, interrupting him.

"I mean to say that she's very like her, if she's not her," answered the
mate.

We all of us now looked with even greater eagerness than before at the
approaching vessel.

"Let draw the foresail," cried the mate.

We stood on so that we might be in the best possible position for
running alongside the whaler, for such she was, as soon as she hove-to.

"We're seen!--we're seen!" shouted several of our crew.

We waved our hats, and shouted.

"She is the _Intrepid_!" cried Mr Griffiths.

Presently she came to the wind, and we, lowering our sail and getting
out our oars, were soon alongside her.  There stood Captain Hawkins--
there the second mate, with many other faces we knew.  I never saw
people look so astonished as we sprang up the side, while our boat was
hooked on and hoisted on board.

"Why, Griffiths!--Cockle!  Where have you come from?" exclaimed Captain
Hawkins.  "I had given you up for lost long ago."

They gave a brief account of our adventures, but there was not much time
for talking, for we had not been aboard five minutes before all hands
were employed in shortening sail, and the gale came down upon us with
even greater strength than on the previous night.  Had we been exposed
to it in our open boat there would have been little chance of our
escape.  We had thus much reason to be thankful to Heaven that we had
got aboard in time.

There being plenty of sea room, the _Intrepid_ was hove-to.  Even as it
was, the sea broke aboard and carried away one of her boats and did
other damage.  She had been nearly wrecked on the reef during the gale
when we were on the island; and Captain Hawkins, believing that we had
been lost, stood for Guam, where he had been detained for want of proper
workmen and fresh hands.  Had it not been for this she would long before
have been on her homeward voyage.

For some time I felt very strange on board, often when half asleep
fancying myself still in the boat, and the air below seemed close and
oppressive.

The mate declared that he had caught cold from sleeping in a bed after
not having been in one for so many months.

The doctor suggested that his bed might have been damp.  However, the
gale being over, the sun came out brightly, and he soon got rid of his
chill.

The captain took no more notice of me than he did before, and did not
even speak to Jack.  His idea was to keep us at a proper distance, I
suppose.  He had heard, I have no doubt, of our adventures from Dr
Cockle or the mate.  It mattered very little to us, though I was afraid
that he might take it into his head to turn Jack out of the ship at some
place or other, on the plea that he did not belong to her.

I advised my brother, therefore, to keep out of his sight as much as
possible, especially when in harbour.  Jim and I agreed that if he was
sent ashore we would go also, wherever it might be.

"So will I," said Miles Soper, who had heard us talking about the
matter.

"And I no stop eider, and den he lose four good hands.  He no like dat,"
said Sam Coal.

Brown, hearing from Jim of my apprehensions, said he would go likewise
if the captain attempted to play any tricks of that sort.

Three days after the gale we hove-to off three small islands surrounded
by a reef.  Brown, Miles Soper, two Africans and the New Zealander, the
second mate and I, were sent on shore to catch turtle.  We hauled the
boat up and waited till the evening, at which time the creatures land to
lay their eggs.

Darkness approached, and we concealed ourselves behind some rocks, and
watched for their coming.  Presently one landed, and crawled slowly up
the beach.  Sam declared that she was as big as the boat.  She was
certainly an enormous creature.  Then another and another came ashore,
and commenced scraping away in the sand to make holes for their eggs.
We waited till some thirty or forty had come ashore.

"Now is your time," cried the mate; and rushing out, grasping the
handspikes with which we were armed, we got between them and the sea,
and turned them over on their backs, where they lay kicking their legs,
unable to move.  We had brought ropes to assist us in dragging them down
to the water and hauling them on board.  We had turned a dozen or more,
when I said to Jim.

"We mustn't let that big one go we first saw land."

She and the other turtles still on their feet, had taken the alarm, and
were scuttling down the beach.  We made her out and attempted to turn
her, but that was more than we could do.

"She'll be off," cried Jim.

We hove the bight of a rope over her head.

"Hold on, Peter!" he cried; and he and I attempted to haul the turtle
back, all the time shouting for help, for she was getting closer and
closer to the water.  At last in she got, dragging us after her.  We
could not stop her before, and there was very little chance of our doing
so now.

"Let her go, Jim," I cried out.

"We shall lose the rope," he answered, still holding on.

We were already up to our middles in the water.

"It's of no use.  Let go!  Let go!"  I cried out, "or we shall be
dragged away to sea!"

Supposing that he would do as I told him, I let go at the same moment,
when what was my dismay to see Jim dragged away out of his depth.

I swam off to him, still shouting loudly.  Presently Soper and Sam Coal
came up, and seeing what was happening, dashed into the water.  Our
united strength, however, could not stop the turtle, and Sam, who had a
sharp knife in his pocket, drawing it, cut the rope, and we got Jim back
to shore.

The mate rated Jim for losing the rope, though Brown and the rest
declared that he had behaved very pluckily, and that if help had come in
time we should have saved the turtle.  As it was we had turned more than
we could carry off.

Having been ordered not to attempt to regain the ship during the night,
we turned the boat up and slept under it, while a couple of hands
remained outside to watch the turtles and see that they did not manage
to get on their feet again and escape.

In the morning we loaded the boat, and pulled back with our prizes.

The mate said nothing about the lost rope, as he knew the notion Brown
and the rest had formed of Jim's courage.

We sighted after this several small islands, and then made the coast of
New Guinea.

The captain, seeing a good place for landing, sent a boat ashore with
the doctor and most of us who had been engaged in catching turtle.

It seemed a beautiful country, with magnificent trees, and birds flying
about in numbers among them.

"This is a perfect paradise," said the doctor, as we approached the
beach.

Just then a number of natives came rushing out from the forest,
brandishing clubs and spears.  They were the ugliest set of people I
ever saw, their bodies nearly naked and their heads covered with hair
frizzled out like huge mops.  They had also bows at their backs, but
they did not point their arrows at us.

The doctor and mate agreed that it would be folly to land amongst them,
so we lay on our oars while the mate held up bottles and bits of iron
hoops, beads and knives, and a few old clothes, to show them that we
wished to trade.  After a considerable time they seemed to understand
what we wanted, and some of them going away returned with numbers of
stuffed birds of a delicate yellow with long tails.  We made signs that
only those who wanted to trade must come near us.  At last several came
wading into the water bringing their birds.  They set a high price on
them, and we only bought a dozen or so.  As the rest of the people
behaved in as threatening a manner as before, as soon as the trading was
over we pulled off, not wishing to risk an encounter with them.

The doctor said that the birds were birds of paradise, and that they
were such as the ladies of England wore in their hats.  The curious
thing was that none of the birds had feet.

"Of course not," said the second mate, when I pointed this out to him;
"they say that the birds come down from the skies and live in the air,
and as they never perch, they don't want feet.  That's why they're
called birds of paradise."

The doctor laughed.  "That's a very old notion," he remarked, "but it's
a wrong one notwithstanding, and has long since been exploded.  They
have legs and claws like other birds, though the natives cut them off
and dry the birds as these have been over a hot fire.  It's the only way
they have of preserving them."

The captain said we were very right not to land, as the natives might
have been tempted to cut us off for the sake of possessing themselves of
the articles in our boat.

As we sailed along the coast the country seemed to be thickly populated,
and the boat was frequently sent to try and land, but we always met with
the same inhospitable reception.  The moment we drew near the shore the
black-skinned natives would rush down, apparently to prevent our
landing.

This was a great disappointment, for the captain was anxious to obtain
fresh provisions, as several of the men, from having lived a long time
on salt meat, were suffering from scurvy.  Curiously enough, we, who had
been in the boat, were free from it.  At one place, however, we traded
with the natives, and bought several more of the stuffed paradise birds,
and a number of live lories, which we kept in cages, and beautiful
little creatures they were.  Our hope was to carry them safely home,
but, either from improper food or change of climate, they all shortly
died.

Rounding New Guinea, and passing the island of Mysole, we came to a
small island called Gely, at the south-east end of Gillolo, lying
exactly under the equator.  It contains a magnificent and secure
harbour, in which we brought up.  There being an abundance of good
water, and trees from which spars can be cut, it is an excellent place
for repairing damages.  The second mate said that those suffering from
scurvy would, now have an opportunity of being cured.

The plan he proposed was to bury them up to their necks in the sand, and
to leave them there for some hours.  The doctor was unwilling to try the
experiment, though he did not deny that it might be effectual.  Two of
our men suffering from the complaint were, however, perfectly willing to
submit to the remedy, and, our boats having to go on shore to fill the
water-casks, we carried them with us.  Holes were dug, and the poor
fellows, being stripped naked, were covered up side by side in the warm
sand, leaving only their heads above the surface, so that they could not
possibly extricate themselves.  The captain, I should have said,
approved of the plan, having before seen it tried with success; but the
doctor, declaring that he would have nothing to do with the matter, went
with Jack and another man in an opposite direction.  Horner and I had
charge of the watering party.  The stream from which we filled our casks
was at some distance from the place where the men were buried.  I
undertook to see to the casks being filled if Horner would remain by the
men.  We had just finished our work and were rolling the casks down to
the boat when Horner came rushing up, with his eyes staring and his hair
almost on end.

"What's the matter?  What has happened?"  I asked, thinking he had gone
out of his mind.

"I can't bear it!" he exclaimed.  "It's too dreadful.  I couldn't help
it."

"What is dreadful?  What could you not help?"  I inquired.

"The brutes of crocodiles.  Poor fellows," he stammered out.  "There
won't be a bit of them left presently!" and he pointed to where we had
buried our poor shipmates, and where he ought to have been watching.

The men and I set off running to the spot.  A dreadful sight met our
eyes.  The body of one man lay half eaten on the sand.  A huge crocodile
was dragging off the other.  He had dragged it under the water before we
could reach the spot.  We could do nothing but shout at the crocodiles.
Horner confessed that he had gone to a distance for a short time, during
which the brutes had landed and killed the two men.  We returned very
sad to the boat.  As for Horner, it was a long time before he could get
over the horror he felt for his neglect of duty.  Several canoes filled
with natives came into the harbour from Gillolo, bringing potatoes and
other vegetables.  One of them brought a number of clam-shells of
various sizes.  One which we hoisted on board weighed four
hundred-weight, and we afterwards saw on shore one which must have
weighed a quarter of a ton.  The natives use them as tubs; I saw a woman
bathing a child in one.  The meat of the creature when fried is very
palatable.  I also obtained some beautiful specimens of coral, which I
wanted to carry home to Mary and my Shetland relations.  I bought also
two gallons of nutmegs for an old file, and a large number of shells for
some old clothes.  The harbour swarmed with sharks, which prevented us
from bathing.  We here cut some splendid spars for the use of the ship.
I may mention that the inner harbour, from its perfect security, has
obtained the name of "Abraham's Bosom."  Were it not for the sharks and
crocodiles the place would be perfect.

All the crew having recovered from scurvy, and the ship being refitted,
we once more put to sea.  The weather was delightful, and we sailed on
over the calm ocean with a light breeze.

We had to keep a constant look-out for rocks and reefs.

I can assert, though it is often denied, that when passing under the lee
of the Spice Islands, the scent which came off from the shore was
perfectly delicious.  Whether this arises from the flowers of the cloves
and nutmegs, or from the nature of the soil, I cannot determine.

Though we generally had a light breeze, we were sometimes completely
becalmed, on which occasions, when near shore, we ran the risk of being
driven on the rocks by the currents, and more than once we had all the
boats towing ahead to keep her off them till the breeze should spring
up.  We continued our course, passing to the eastward of Ceram and
Banda, and steering for Timor, to the north-west of Australia.  We had
other dangers besides calms and currents.  We had just left the Serwatty
Islands astern when the wind dropped, and we lay becalmed.

Though there was little chance of catching whales, we always kept a
look-out for them from the masthead, as we could stow one or two more
away.  We were most of us on deck whistling for a breeze, when the
look-out aloft shouted that he saw three craft stealing up from behind
the island to the eastward.  The second mate went up to have a look at
them through his glass, and when he returned on deck he reported that
they were three large proas, pulling, he should say, twenty oars or
more, and full of men, and that he had no doubt they were pirates.
Those seas, we knew, were infested with such gentry--generally Malays,
the most bloodthirsty and cruel of their race.  Many a merchant vessel
has been captured by them and sunk, all hands being killed.

"Whatever they are, we must be prepared for them!" cried Captain
Hawkins.  "I'll trust to you, lads, to fight to the last; and I tell you
that if they once get alongside us we shall find it a difficult job to
keep them off.  We will have the arms on deck, Mr Griffiths, for if we
don't get a breeze, as they pull fast, they'll soon be up to us."

All the muskets were at once brought up and arranged in order; our two
guns were loaded, and the armourer and carpenter set to work to sharpen
the blubber-spades, harpoons, and spears.  We had thus no lack of
weapons; our high bulwarks also gave us an advantage; but the pirates,
we knew, would probably out-number us by ten to one.

However, we did not lose heart; Captain Hawkins looked cool and
determined, and the mates imitated his example.  I didn't think about
myself, but the fear came over me that, after all, Jack might be killed,
and that I should not have the happiness of taking him home.

As the pirates approached, we made all necessary preparations for
defending ourselves.  Muskets and ammunition were served out to the men
most accustomed to firearms; the others had the blubber-spades and
spears put into their hands.  The two mates took charge of the guns,
which were loaded to their muzzles, and matches were got ready for
firing them.  The doctor provided himself with a couple of muskets and a
sword.  The captain told him he must not run the risk of being wounded,
as he might be required to bind up the hurts of the rest of us.  He
laughed, and said that the first thing to be done was to drive back our
enemies should they attempt to board the ship.

The pirates came closer and closer.  The captain looked anxiously round
the horizon, for though, like a brave man, he was prepared to defend his
ship to the last, he had no wish for a fight.  As I looked over the
sides I saw some cats-paws playing along the surface of the water.  The
pirates by this time were not a quarter of a mile astern.  Presently the
lighter canvas, which had hung down against the masts, bulged out, and
then the topsails filled.

"All hands trim sails!" shouted the captain.

The breeze came from the eastward; the yards were squared, and the
_Intrepid_ began to move through the water.  She glided on but slowly;
the pirates were still gaining on us.  The wind, however, freshened.

As we watched our pursuers, first one raised a mast and a long taper
yard, then another, and they were soon under all sail standing after us.
The breeze increased; we gave a cheer, hoping soon to get well ahead of
them.  Still on they came, and it seemed very doubtful whether we should
succeed.  I believe that some of the crew would rather have had a fight
than have escaped without it.

The pirates, by keeping their oars moving, still gained on us.  To look
at the captain, one might have supposed that it was a matter of
indifference to him whether they came alongside or not, but our cargo
was too valuable to risk the chance of being lost.  We had soon
studding-sails rigged below and aloft.  Again the wind dropped, and the
pirates were now almost within musket shot.

"We will slew round one of our guns, and run it through the after port,
Griffiths," said the captain.  "A shot or two will teach the rascals
what to expect should they come up to us."

Just, however, as we had got the gun run out the wind again freshened.
The _Intrepid_, deep in the water though she was, showed that she had
not lost her power of sailing.  Though the pirates were straining every
nerve, we once more drew ahead of them.  The more the breeze increased
the faster we left them astern, and by the time the sun had set we had
got fully four miles ahead, but still by going aloft we could see them
following, evidently hoping that we should be again becalmed, and that
they might get up with us.  During the night we continued our course for
Timor.  At the usual hour the watch below turned in, though the captain
remained on deck, and a sharp look-out was kept astern.  However, as
long as the breeze continued we had no fear of being overtaken.

It was my morning watch.  As soon as it was daylight I went aloft, and
saw the proas the same distance off that they had been at nightfall.  I
told Mr Griffiths when I came below.

"The rascals still expect to catch us," he said, "but we must hope that
they'll be disappointed.  However, we're prepared for them."

For some hours the breeze continued steady.  Soon after noon it again
fell, and our pursuers crept closer to us.  It was somewhat exciting,
and kept us all alive, though it did not spoil our appetites.  The whole
of the day they were in sight, but when the wind freshened up again in
the evening we once more distanced them.  The night passed as the former
had done.  We could not tell when we went below what moment we might be
roused up to fight for our lives.  I for one did not sleep the worse for
that.

The breeze was pretty steady during the middle watch, and I was not on
deck again till it was broad daylight.  The second mate, who had been
aloft, reported that the pirates were still in sight, but farther off
than they were the day before, and the breeze now freshening, their
hulls sank beneath the horizon, and we fully expected to see no more of
them.  We sighted Timor about three weeks after leaving Gely, and in the
evening brought up in a small bay, with a town on its shore, called
Cushbab.  Our object was to obtain vegetables and buffalo meat.

The natives are Malays, and talk Portuguese.  Nearly all those we met on
shore carried creeses, or long, sharp knives, in their belt, which they
use on the slightest provocation.  Every boy we saw had a cock under his
arm.  The people seemed to spend all their time in cock-fighting.  They
are very fond of the birds, which are of enormous size; considerably
larger than any English cocks.  Being unable to obtain any buffaloes
here, we got under way, and anchored in another bay some way to the
west, where we obtained twelve animals.

At first they were very wild when we got them on board, but in a few
hours became tame, and would eat out of our hands.  They were destined,
however, for the butcher's knife.  Some of the meat we ate fresh, but
the larger quantity was salted down for sea stores.  The unsalted meat
kept for a very short time, and we had to throw a large piece overboard.
The instant it reached the water up came two tiger sharks, which fought
for it, seizing each other in the most ferocious manner possible, and
struggling together, although there was enough for both of them.

After leaving Timor we steered along the south-east coast of Java, and
then shaped a course across the Indian Ocean for the Cape of Good Hope.
The wind was fair, the sea smooth, and I never remember enjoying a
longer period of fine weather.  In consequence of the light winds our
passage was lengthened more than we had expected, and we were running
short of provisions of all sorts.  There were still two casks of bread
left, each containing about four hundred-weight.

"Never mind," observed the second mate, "we shall have enough to take us
to the Cape."

At length the first was finished, and we went below to get up the
second.  It was marked bread clearly enough, but when the carpenter
knocked in the head, what was our dismay to find it full of new sails,
it having been wrongly branded!  The captain at once ordered a search to
be made in the store-room for other provisions.  The buffalo meat we had
salted had long been exhausted, part of it having turned bad; and
besides one cask of pork, which proved to be almost rancid, a couple of
pounds of flour with a few other trifling articles, not a particle of
food remained in the ship.  Starvation stared us in the face.



CHAPTER THIRTY.

THE VOYAGE HOME, AND HOW IT ENDED.

On hearing of the alarming scarcity of food on board, the captain called
the crew aft.

"Lads," he said, "I don't want to hide anything from you.  Should the
wind shift to the westward, it may be a month or more before we reach
the Cape, so if you wish to save your lives, you must at once be put on
a short allowance of food and water.  A quarter of a pint of water, two
ounces of pork, and half an ounce of flour is all I can allow for each
man, and the officers and I will share alike with you."

Not a word was said in reply, and the men went forward with gloomy
looks.  To make the flour go farther we mixed whale oil with it, and,
though nauseous in the extreme, it served to keep body and soul
together.

At first the crew bore it pretty well, but they soon took to grumbling,
saying that it was owing to the captain's want of forethought in not
laying in more provisions that we were reduced to this state.

Hitherto the wind had been fair, but any day it might change, and then,
they asked, what would become of us?  Most of them would have broken
into open mutiny had not they known that the mates and doctor, Jack and
I, Jim, and probably Brown and Soper, would have sided with the captain,
though we felt that they were not altogether wrong in their accusation.

I heard the doctor tell Mr Griffiths that he was afraid the scurvy
would again appear if we were kept long on our present food.  Day after
day we glided on across the smooth ocean with a cloudless sky, our food
and water gradually decreasing.

We now often looked at each other, wondering what would be the end.  At
last, one night, when it was my middle watch on deck, Jim came aft to
me.

"I'm afraid the men won't stand it any longer," he said.  "They vow that
if the captain don't serve out more food and water they'll take it.  I
know that it will be death to all of us if they do, or I would not tell
on them.  You let Mr Griffiths know; maybe he'll bring them to a right
mind.  They don't care for Jack or me, and Brown, Soper, and Sam seemed
inclined to side with the rest.  Jack says whatever you do he'll do."

"Thank you, Jim," I answered.  "You try to show them what folly they'll
commit if they attempt to do as they propose.  They won't succeed, for
the captain is a determined man, and there'll be bloodshed if they keep
to their purpose."

Jim went forward, and I took a turn on deck to consider what was best to
be done.  It was the second mate's watch, and it had only just struck
two bells.  I did not wish to say anything to him.  I waited for a
little, and then asked the second mate to let me go below for a minute,
for I could not quit the deck without his leave.

"You may go and turn in if you like," he said.  "There's no chance of
your being wanted on a night like this."

"Thank you, sir," I answered, and at once ran down to Mr Griffiths's
cabin.

He awoke when I touched his shoulder, and I told him in a low voice what
I had heard.

"You have acted sensibly, Peter," he answered.  "I'll be on deck in a
moment.  When the men see that we are prepared for them they'll change
their minds."

I again went on deck, and he soon appeared, with a brace of pistols in
his belt, followed by the captain and the doctor, with muskets in their
hands.

At that moment up sprang from the fore-hatchway the greater part of the
crew, evidently intending to make their way to the after store-room,
where the provisions and water were kept.

"What are you about to do, lads?" shouted the captain.  "Go below, every
one of you, except the watch on deck, and don't attempt to try this
trick again."

His tall figure holding a musket ready to fire cowed them in an instant,
and they obeyed without uttering a word.  The captain said that he
should remain on deck, and told Mr Griffiths and the doctor that he
would call them if they were wanted.

Some time afterwards, going forward, I found Jim, who told me that they
had all turned in.

The night passed away without any disturbance.  As soon as it was
daylight the captain ordered me to go aloft and take a look round.  I
obeyed, though I felt so weak that I could scarcely climb the rigging.
I glanced round the horizon, but no vessel could I see.  A mist still
hung over the water.

I was just about to come down when the sun rose, and at the same moment
I made out over our quarter, away to the southward, a white sail, on
which his rays were cast, standing on the same course that we were.

"Sail ho!"  I shouted in a joyful tone, and pointed out in the direction
in which I saw her.

The captain, immediately I came down, ordered me to rouse up all hands,
and every sail the ship could carry being set, we edged down to the
stranger, making a signal that we desired to speak her.  She was an
English barque, also bound for the Cape.

As we got close together, a boat being lowered, Mr Griffiths and I went
on board and stated our wants.  Her captain at once agreed to supply us
with everything he could spare, and we soon had our boat loaded with a
cask of bread, another of beef, and several other articles, and in
addition a nautical almanack, for we had run out our last one within a
week before this.  We had a second trip to make, with casks to fill with
water.  As may be supposed, we had quenched our own thirst on our first
visit.  When we again got back we found the cook and two hands assisting
him busily employed in preparing breakfast, and a right hearty one we
had.

We kept our charitable friends in sight till we reached the Cape, by
which time we had expended all the provisions with which they had
furnished us.

In a few days, from the abundance of fresh meat and vegetables which we
obtained from the shore, our health and strength returned, and I for one
was eager once more to put to sea, that Jack and I might the sooner
reach home.  We had got so far on our way that it seemed to me as if we
were almost there.  We were, however, detained for several days
refitting and provisioning the ship.

Once more, however, the men showed their mutinous disposition, for when
they were ordered to heave up the anchor they refused to man the
windlass, on the plea that they had had no liberty on shore.  Though
this was the case, there having been work for all hands on board, there
was no real excuse for their conduct, as they were amply supplied with
provisions, and had not been really over-worked.

"We shall see, my fine fellows," exclaimed the captain, on seeing them
doggedly standing with their arms folded in a group forward.

At once ordering his boat, which was pulled by Jack and Jim, Miles Soper
and Brown, he went on shore.  He soon returned, with the deputy captain
of the port, who, stepping on board, called the men aft, and inquired
what they had to complain of.  As they were all silent, Captain
McL--- made them a speech, pointing out to them that they were fortunate
in being aboard a well-found and well-provisioned ship.

"And, my lads," he continued, "you need not have any fear of falling
sick, for the captain has an ample supply for you of anti-scorbutics."

As none of the mutineers had a notion what this long word meant, they
were taken completely aback; and after staring at him and then at each
other, first one and then another went forward to the windlass, and we
soon had the ship under way.

Whenever during the voyage any of us talked about the matter, we always
called Captain McL--- "Old Anti-Scorbutic."  I felt happier than I had
been for a long time when the ship's head was directed northward, and as
we had a fresh breeze the men declared that their friends at home had
got hold of the tow-rope, and that we should soon be there.

On running down to Saint Helena we were followed for several days by
some black whales of immense length.  Sometimes they were so close to
the ship's side that we might have lanced them from the deck.  The
fourth day after we saw them the second mate and Horner took it into
their heads wantonly to fire musket-shots at them.  At last one of the
poor creatures was hit, when it dived, the others following its example,
and we saw them no more.  The only object of interest we met with
crossing the north-east trades was the passage through the Gulf Stream,
or Sargasso Sea, as it is sometimes called.  It was curious to find
ourselves surrounded by thick masses of seaweed as far as the eye could
reach on every side, so that no clear water could be seen for miles
away.  I can compare it to nothing else than to sailing through a
farmyard covered with deep straw.

The first land we made was Fyal.  Thence we ran across to Pico, where we
obtained provisions and water.  If we had got nothing else it would have
been well, but the crew managed to smuggle on board a quantity of new
rum, the effects of which were soon visible.

Leaving Pico, we shaped a course for old England.  The wind was now
freshening, and all sail was made, as the captain was in a hurry to get
the voyage over.  In the evening, when the watch was called, not a man
came on deck, every one of them being drunk, while most of the men in
the other watch, who had managed to slip down every now and then, were
in no better condition.  The captain, who had been ailing, was in bed.
Mr Griffiths, the doctor and I, Jim and Brown, were the only sober
ones.  The second mate evidently did not know what he was about.  Mr
Griffiths advised him to turn in.  I was very sorry to see my brother
Jack nearly as bad as the rest, though he afterwards told me that,
having been so long without spirits, they had had an unexpected effect
upon him.  We sober ones had to remain all night on deck, running off
when a puff of wind struck the sails.  It was a mercy that it didn't
come on to blow hard, for we could never have managed to shorten sail in
time to save the spars.  Indeed, very probably the masts would have
gone.  Brown, Jim, and I took it by turns to steer till morning broke,
by which time some of the rest of the crew began to show signs of life.
As we got into northern latitudes a strong north-easterly breeze made
the weather feel bitterly cold to us, who had been for so long a time
accustomed to a southern climate.

During all that period I had not worn shoes.  For the sake of warmth I
now wanted to put on a pair, but my feet had so increased in size that I
could not find any large enough in the slop-locker.

At last the wind shifted to the south-west, and we ran before it up
Channel.

The first object we made was the Owers light-vessel, about ninety miles
from the Downs.  Having made a signal for a pilot, one boarded us out of
a cutter off Dungeness.  How eagerly all of us plied the old fellow for
news, though as he was a man of few words it was with difficulty that
the captain or mates could pump much out of him.  We remained but a few
hours in the Downs to obtain provisions, of which we were again short,
and thence proceeded to the Thames, where we dropped our anchor for the
last time before going into dock to unload.

Jim and I, although we had been kept on board against our will and had
never signed articles, found that we could claim wages.  Though I had no
reason to like Captain Hawkins, yet I felt that I ought to wish him
good-bye.

To my surprise, he seemed very friendly, and said that if I ever wished
to go to sea again he should be very glad to have me with him, as well
as my brother and Jim.  Poor man!  He had made his last voyage, for I
heard of his death shortly afterwards.  I was very sorry to part from
Mr Griffiths and Dr Cockle.  They invited me to come and see them,
both of them saying that they never intended again to go afloat, though
I heard that Mr Griffiths got the command of a fine ship shortly
afterwards; so I supposed that like many others similarly situated he
was induced to change his mind and tempt once more the dangers of the
ocean.

"We will meet again, Peter," said Miles Soper; "and I hope that if you
and Jack go to sea, we shall all be aboard the same ship."

Brown said the same thing, but from that day to this I have never been
able to learn what became of him.  Such is often the case in a sea life.
For years people are living on the most intimate terms, and separate
never to meet again in this life.

After remaining a week in London for payment of our wages, Jim and I
each received five-and-twenty pounds, Jack also obtaining nearly half
that amount.  Our first care before we set off for Portsmouth, to which
we were eager to return, was, our clothes being worn out, to supply
ourselves with decent suits of blue cloth and other necessaries.

At daylight the morning after we were free, carrying our bundles and the
various treasures we had collected, a pretty load altogether, we went to
the place from which the coach started for Portsmouth, and finding three
seats on the top, off we set with light hearts, thinking of the friends
we should meet on our arriving there.  Jack confessed that he had
forgotten the appearance of most of them, though he longed to see Mary
and to give her the curiosities he had brought.  We had a couple of
parrots, three other beautifully coloured birds, a big basket of shells,
and a whole bundle of bows, and arrows, and darts, and a lot of other
things.

Rattling down the Portsmouth High Street, we at last dismounted and set
off for Mr Gray's house, where I fully expected I should still find
Mary living.  As we walked along, the boys gathered round us to look at
our birds, and some asked where we had come from with so many curious
things.

"From round the world," answered Jim, "since we were last at home,"
which was not a very definite answer.

In vain we looked, about expecting to see some old acquaintances, but
all the faces we set eyes on were strange.  No wonder, considering how
long we had been away, while certainly no one would have recognised us.
It was not quite an easy matter to find our way to Mr Gray's house, and
we had to stop every now and then while Jim and I consulted which
turning to take, for we were ashamed to ask any one.  At last, just as
we got near it, we saw an old gentleman in a Quaker's dress coming along
the road.  He just glanced at us, as other people had done; when I,
looking hard at him, felt sure he must be Mr Gray.  I nudged Jim's
shoulder.

"Yes, it's he, I'm sure," whispered Jim.

So I went up to him, and pulling off my hat said--

"Beg pardon, sir; may I be so bold as to ask if you are Mr Gray?"

"Gray is my name, young man," he answered, looking somewhat surprised,
"Who art thou?"

"Peter Trawl, sir; and this Jim Pulley, and here is my brother Jack."

If the kind Quaker had ever been addicted to uttering exclamations of
surprise he would have done so on this occasion, I suspect, judging from
the expression of astonishment which came over his countenance.

"Peter Trawl!  James Pulley!  Why, it was reported that those two lads
were lost in the North Sea years ago," he said.

"We are the lads, sir, notwithstanding," I answered; and I briefly
narrated to him how we had been picked up by the _Intrepid_ and carried
off to the Pacific, and how I had there found my brother Jack.

"Verily, this is good news, and will cheer the heart of thy young
sister, who has never ceased to believe that thou wouldst turn up again
some day or other," he said.

"Is Mary well, sir?  Is she still with you?"  I inquired, eagerly.

"Yes, Peter, thy sister is as one of my family.  Though greatly pressed
by her newly-found relatives in Shetland to go there and reside with
them, she has always replied that she was sure thou wast alive, and that
thou wouldst come back to Portsmouth to look for her and that it would
grieve thee much not to find her."

"How kind and thoughtful!"  I exclaimed.  "Do let me go on, sir, at once
to see my young sister."

"Stay, lad, stay," he answered.  "The surprise might be too great for
her.  I will go back to my house and tell her that thou hast returned
home safe.  Thou art so changed that she would not know thee, and
therefore thou and thy companions may follow close behind."

We saw Mr Gray go to his door and knock.  It was opened by a
woman-servant, who I was sure, when I caught sight of her countenance,
was Nancy herself.  She saw me at the same moment, and directly Mr Gray
had entered, came out on the doorstep, and regarded me intently.

"Yes, I'm sure it is!" she exclaimed.  "Peter, Peter, aren't you Peter,
now?  I have not forgotten thy face, though thee be grown into a young
man!" and she stretched out her arms, quite regardless of the
passers-by, ready to give me such another embrace as she had bestowed on
me when I went away.  I could not restrain myself any longer, but,
giving the things I was carrying to Jack, sprang up the steps.

"Here he is, Miss Mary, here he is!" cried Nancy, and I saw close behind
her a tall, fair girl.

Nancy, however, had time to give me a kiss and a hug before I could
disengage myself, and the next moment my sweet sister Mary had her arms
round my neck, and, half crying, half laughing, was exclaiming--

"I knew you would come, I knew you would, Peter; I was sure you were not
lost!"

My brother Jack and Jim were, meantime, staying outside, not liking to
come in till they were summoned.  Nancy did not recognise them, and
thought that they were two shipmates who had accompanied me to carry my
things.

At last, when I told Mary that I had not only come myself, but had
brought back our brother Jack, she was eager to see him, though she was
so young when he went away that she had no recollection of his
countenance, and scarcely knew him from Jim.

Mary had let me into the parlour.  I now went and beckoned them in.
Nancy, when she knew who they were, welcomed them warmly, but did not
bestow so affectionate a greeting on them as she had done on me.  Jim
stood outside the door while I brought Jack in.  Though Mary kissed him,
and told him how glad she was to see him, it was easy to see that she at
first felt almost as if he were a stranger.

Mr Gray left us to ourselves for some time, and then all the family
came in and welcomed us kindly, insisting that Jack should remain with
me in the parlour, while Nancy took care of Jim in the kitchen, where he
was much more it his ease than he would have been with strangers.  Jack,
indeed, looked, as he afterwards confessed to me he felt, like a fish
out of water in the presence of so many young ladies.

Though I had twice written to Mary, and had directed my letters
properly, neither had reached her; yet for all these fears she had not
lost hope of seeing me.

After supper, Jack and I were going away, but Mr Gray insisted that we
should remain, as he had had beds arranged for us in the house.

"I must not let you lads be exposed to the dangers and temptations of
the town," he said in a kind tone.  "You must stay here till you go to
sea again."

Mary at once wrote to Mr Troil to tell him of my return, and of my
having brought my brother Jack back with me.

While waiting for an answer, one day Jack and Jim and I were walking
down the High Street, when we saw a large placard stating that the
_Thisbe_ frigate, commissioned by Captain Rogers, was in want of hands.

"I shouldn't wonder but what he was my old skipper," observed Jack.
"And you fine young fellows couldn't do better than join her," exclaimed
a petty officer, who was standing near, clapping Jack on the back.

"Why I think I know your face," he added.

"Maybe.  I'm Jack Trawl.  I'm not ashamed of my name," said my brother.

"Jack Trawl!" exclaimed the man-of-war's man; "then you belong to the
_Lapwing_.  We all thought you were lost with the rest of the boat's
crew."

"No, I wasn't; Miles Soper and I escaped.  Now I look at you, ain't you
Bill Bolton?"

"The same," was the answer.  "Tell us how it all happened."

Jack in a few words told his old shipmate what is already known to the
reader.  While he was speaking, who should come up but Miles Soper
himself, come down to Portsmouth to look out for a berth, accompanied by
Sam Coal.  The long and the short of it was that they all three agreed
to enter aboard the _Thisbe_, and did their best to persuade Jim to
follow their example.

I had no notion of doing so myself, for I knew that it would break
Mary's heart to part with me again so soon, and I feared, indeed, that
she would not like Jack's going.  Still, taking all things into
consideration, he could not do better I thought--for having been so long
at sea, he felt, as he said, like a fish out of water among so many fine
folks.

Jim made no reply, but drawing me aside, said--

"Peter, I can't bear the thoughts of leaving you, and yet I know you
wouldn't like to ship before the mast again; but if I stay ashore what
am I to do?  I've no fancy to spending my days in a wherry, and haven't
got one if I had.  I've taken a liking to Jack, and you've many friends,
and can do without me, so if you don't say no I'll ship with the rest."

I need not repeat what I said to Jim.  I was sure that it was the best
thing he could do, and advised him accordingly.

"I'm with you, mates," he said, in a husky tone, going back to the rest,
and away they all went together, while I returned to Mr Gray's.

"I wish the lads had shipped on board a peaceable merchantman," he
observed when I told him, "but I can't pretend to dictate to them.  I am
glad thou hast been better directed, Peter."

Jack and Jim came to see us before the ship went out of harbour.  Jack
said he knew that he must work for his living, and that he would rather
serve aboard a man-o'-war than do anything else.

"I'll look after him as I used to do you, Peter," said Jim.  "And I hope
some day we'll come back with our pockets full of gold, and maybe bear
up for wherever you've dropped your anchor."

A few days after this a letter came from Mr Troil, inviting Mary, Jack,
and me to Shetland.  Mary was very unwilling to leave her kind friends,
but Mr Gray said that it would be to our advantage, and advised Mary
and me to go.

He was right, for when we arrived Mr Troil received us as relatives.
Mary became like a second daughter to him.  I assisted in managing his
property, and in the course of a few years Maggie, to whom he left
everything he possessed, became my wife, while Mary married the owner of
a neighbouring estate.

Some few years after a small coaster came into the Voe.  I went down to
see what she had on board.  A sailor-looking man, with a wooden leg, and
a woman, stepped ashore.

"That's him--that's him!"  I heard them exclaim, and in a moment I was
shaking hands with Jim and Nancy, who had become his wife.  He had got
his discharge, and had come, he said, to settle near me.  I several
times heard from my brother Jack, who, after serving as bo'sun on board
a line-of-battle ship, retired from the service with a pension, and
joined our family circle in Shetland, where he married, and declared
that he was too happy ever to go to sea again.

THE END.