<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2>
<p class="topnote">ANOTHER QUEER SHIP.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Having</span> thus satisfactorily arranged for my future
during some months, at all events, I lost no
time in getting on board my new ship, finding her
fairly comfortable, although the crew's quarters
were under the top-gallant forecastle—that abominable
place that no men should ever be housed in.
She was called the <i>Harrowby</i>, a barque of some five
hundred tons, and, as nearly as I could judge,
about twenty years old. She had been absent from
England nearly two years, having been running
backwards and forwards between the Colonies and
Mauritius for some time, and was now, in the absence
of any other freight offering, going in ballast
to Rangoon for a cargo of rice to the United Kingdom.
Of her original crew but half was left: the
captain, mate, and second mate aft, two apprentices,
the carpenter, and three seamen forward.
The mate was a tall, wiry, red-headed Cumberland
man, stern and morose, but a good seaman, and inflexibly
just. The second mate was so fat and
easy-going that he looked more like an East-end
Jew tailor than a sailor; but he was a very jolly
fellow, knowing his business well, and thoroughly
independent, so that he stood not the slightest in<span class="pagenum">[292]</span>
awe of his superior officers, but did pretty much as
he liked. The two apprentices were gentlemanly
lads, whose parents had paid heavy premiums for
their indentures in this old tub, where they were
just loblolly boys, at every one's beck and call, no
one pretending to teach them anything, and kept
on precisely the same level as the crew, except that
they had a little pigstye of a berth to themselves
beside the carpenter's in a house on deck. Poor
lads! they were bitterly disillusioned, and full of
projects for showing up this shameful neglect when
they got home again. At this time one of them
was acting as cabin-boy, and the other was playing
at cook, with such casual direction as he could get
from Hansen, an old Danish seaman. But, generally
speaking, the hands went ashore to dinner
and chalked their bills up to the skipper's account.
The old carpenter was a philosopher in his way.
Nobody interfered with him, and he just muddled
along from day to day, finding himself enough
work to keep him from being actually idle, and
coming forrard every evening for a smoke and a
yarn with old Hansen, who, with a lanky Irishman
and a pimply faced young cockney, formed for the
present the whole of the crew forrard.</p>
<p>To my amazement I learned that for nearly a
fortnight the vessel had been ready for sea, but the
old man was so enamoured of his snug quarters behind
the bar of the little pub, that he could not
tear himself away. Nobody seemed to care very
much. They killed time in a variety of ways, making
believe to do some work, but principally occupied
in "dodging Pompey." This state of<span class="pagenum">[293]</span>
things was broken into by my advent. Whether
the act of engaging me had recalled Captain Bunker
to a sense of his duty or not, I can not tell; but
in the course of a couple of days we were joined by
an elderly Yankee A.B., rejoicing in the name of
Oliver Peck, an ex-mounted policeman, whom we
always called Joe; a tall, merry Suffolk man, who
was the very incarnation of good-humour; a white-faced
Scotchman, who said he had been chief cook
of a huge steamship called the <i>Mikado</i>, and had
just shipped with us as cook to work his passage
home; another ordinary seaman, like myself, a
Londoner, but twice the man I was; and a delicate,
artful little fellow, about my own age, who
shipped as cabin-boy. Now we had a full crew,
and soon the skipper made his appearance on
board, marching us up to the shipping-office with
him in great pomp and putting us all on the articles.
Having once broken the spell that had
bound him to the pub, he kept free, remaining on
board that night, and hauling off into the channel
at daylight ready to sail. But while we were actually
getting under way a boat came alongside, bearing
a lady in deep mourning and an official, who
mounted the side, and solemnly presenting the
skipper with a piece of stamped paper, informed
him that he had come to stop the ship until all
charges due to Mrs. Blank, landlady of the St.
Margaret's Hotel, for board, lodging, and refreshments
supplied, had been settled. The old man
made a ghastly attempt to smile, but the thing
was too palpable. Besides, all his crew were witnesses
of his attempt to pay the widow with the<span class="pagenum">[294]</span>
"foretopsail sheet," as sailors say, and, hugely as
<i>they</i> enjoyed the spectacle, he looked as if he had
been suddenly attacked by <i>cholera morbus</i>. There
was no help for it; he had to pay up, although how
he did it I don't know. At any rate he succeeded
in satisfying the bailiff, who bade him an elaborate
farewell and descended to the boat, where the widow
was volubly holding forth, in our delighted
hearing, upon the many delinquencies of our skipper.
The news of the settlement of her claim only
seemed to add fuel to her fire, and, as long as she
was within hearing, she continued to favour us
with a minute account of the many acts and deeds
of meanness of which Captain Bunker had been
guilty. As the shrill sounds grew fainter, I could
not help thinking that it was an inauspicious commencement
for our voyage; and, in accordance
with an old mental trick of mine, began to run
over in my mind the probable state of my feelings
had I been in the skipper's place. There was quite
a little spell of silence after the boat's departure,
during which all hands looked first at one another
and then at the rubicund face of the skipper, which
bore a peculiar vacant smile, but not the slightest
symptom of shame. At last the uneasy quiet was
broken by the harsh voice of Mr. Messenger, our
chief, shouting, "Man the windlass!" In an instant
we were all busy again, and did not cease our
labours until the old barque, under all canvas, was
gliding gently down the beautiful bay towards the
wide Pacific.</p>
<p>At first my hopes were high that we should be
going north about, for, in addition to a strong de<span class="pagenum">[295]</span>sire
to avoid the unpleasantness inseparable from
working to the westward through the Great Australian
Bight, I was anxious to see something of
the East Indian Archipelago. But the thought of
Torres Straits, with its intricacies and baffling currents,
was evidently too much for Captain Bunker's
courage or confidence in his navigating ability, for
we made the best of our way to the southward as
soon as we were well clear of the Heads. At the
picking of watches I found myself, much to my
satisfaction, under the second mate, who seemed to
have some little liking for me as his townsman.
My watch-mates were the Yankee, Oliver, the ex-policeman,
and the Suffolker. As I could steer,
and, except for being rather a light weight on a
rope, was well up to my work, we felt pretty well
manned on our side. But the mate's watch came
worse off, as their "ordinary" could not steer.
Oh, it was weary work after my late life of ease!
The deadly slowness of our progress, too, down
the coast I had been used to skirt with the regularity
of a railway-train, was hard to bear. And,
in addition to all this, I soon found that my poor
three pounds a month was rankling in the skipper's
mind, and he was determined to try and reduce it
if possible. I got a friendly hint or two from the
second mate, who, although he liked me well
enough, certainly did not intend to openly side
with me against the old man. In most matters, it
is true, he treated the skipper with such scant
courtesy that I was amazed, but he put in no word
of backing for me. A fortnight passed away, and
we had all fairly shaken down into sea-life, while I,
by strenuous efforts, had managed to recall all my
previous experience and use it, with the added
benefit of my additional strength. What troubled
me most were the stun'sails. Studding-sails, as
the word should be spelt, are the <i>betes noire</i> of
seamen. Modern vessels have practically discarded
them, happily for their crews; but such vessels
as the <i>Harrowby</i> cling to them as long as they live.
They are temporary sails, which in fair weather are
set at the ends of some of the yards, thereby extending
the spread of canvas (when they are carried
on both sides) to nearly double its normal
width. They are set by means of booms, which
slide along in two hoops screwed into bands on
the yards. These booms vary in size, of course,
with the ship, and also with the height at which
they are carried; but even a top-gallant stun'sail-boom,
the size of an average scaffold-pole, which
has to be rigged out by one man, or even a boy, is a
quite heavy enough piece of timber to have loose
on your hands, or hand (since you <i>must</i> hold on),
while swaying on a footrope some eighty or ninety
feet above the deck. Then the sails themselves,
with their complicated gear, require deft handling
to get them adjusted in their lofty positions, and
as the upper ones need to be taken into the tops,
there is some fancy gymnastic work involved in
handling them, which generally falls to the boys.
But when they <i>are</i> set, if there is any wind worth
mentioning, and the vessel does not steer well, the
helmsman has a bad time, for their gear being
necessarily slight and simple, catching them aback
is apt to bring them down by the run in a raffle of
ropes, torn canvas, and splintered booms. These
delights on a dark, wet night cannot be explained;
they must be endured to be appreciated. No
doubt a ship with stun'sails set below and aloft,
flying along with a steady breeze just abaft the
beam, the golden sunlight glancing on her canvas,
and making her look like a mountain of snow,
while the sparkling wavelets leap around her or are
churned into lovely wreaths of dazzling foam by
the eager sheer of her cutwater, makes a magnificent
picture, and one that will be soon only seen
in pictures. But when one remembers the cruel
toil and deadly danger attached to these "flying
kites," as sailors term them, one can only feel devoutly
thankful that their day is done. Unfortunately,
in the <i>Harrowby</i> we were continually harassed
by these wretched things, which was the
more aggravating as she was a dull sailer, to whom
they made not a shadow of difference as far as any
acceleration of her speed went. But we accepted
them grumblingly, as sailors do any other crook in
their never very straight lot. Nevertheless I felt
pretty sure that, sooner or later, I should suffer in
some severe way from them, and the fulfilment of
my forebodings was not long delayed. We got a
heavy breeze from the north-east off Cape Leeuwin,
and the skipper, laudably anxious to get
round that awkward corner and up north into finer
weather, carried on all the sail the old barkey could
stagger under, including topmast and lower stun'sails.
Now the <i>Harrowby</i> steered none too well
at the best of times, for she was fitted with the old-fashioned
chain and barrel steering-gear, that made<span class="pagenum">[298]</span>
a two hours' trick at the wheel a fairly stiff ordeal
for a youngster like me. By dint of the hardest
trying, however, I had managed so far to get along
without more than an occasional growl from the
skipper to the effect that I was making a devilish
bad course. At last, on the night in question, I
came aft at four bells, fully equipped in oilskins,
for it was raining as well as blowing. As I reached
to take the spoke from Oliver, he muttered,
"Yew'd better shed them oilskins, er she'll sweat
yer hull soul out. She's kickin' like a broncho."
I took his advice, preferring to get wet than to be
hampered by too many coverings at such a task.
It was as dark as the inside of a coal-sack, so that
there was nothing to steer by but the compass and
the "feel" of the wheel, which every sailor knows
is not conducive to keeping a straight course, as
the compass, however lively, never moves at the
same moment the ship's head does, and consequently
you can't meet her with the helm as quickly
as when the stars or clouds are visible and indicate
her slightest movement. Besides, the "old
man" was on deck, and, before I had time to get
into her present peculiarities, he was at me with,
"Now, then! mind y'r weather hellum. Where
th' —— er ye goin' with the ship? Meet her—meet
her! Blast your eyes, meet her! Goin' to sleep—er
what?" and so on. I might have done fairly
well but for this brutal nagging; but now I certainly
steered badly, and the thought of wiping her
up into the wind and bringing all that raffle of
stun'sails and gear down about the ears of the
watch on deck made me as nervous as a cat.<span class="pagenum">[299]</span>
However, I sculled her along somehow—about
two points each way, I reckon—the "old man"
keeping up a running commentary all the time,
until suddenly, along came a howling big sea, hitting
her on the weather-quarter and sending a
dense mass of spray right over the quarter-deck,
drenching my tormentor and twisting her up into
the wind till the weather-leech of the lower stun'sails
began to flap. Down sprang the second mate
to my assistance, and hove the wheel up so that she
spun off the wind again like a weather-cock.
"Oh, we can't have any more of this!" yelled the
old man. "That —— fellow's no good. 'Nother
hand to the wheel!" "'Nother hand to the
wheel!" roared the second mate; and I declare I
wasn't sorry, though my pride was sorely hurt
at the injustice of the thing. The Suffolker came
aft, good-humoured as was his wont, and smiled
pleasantly as he took the wheel from my clammy
hands. He favoured me with a sly wink, too, as
much as to say, "Now you'll see some fun!" As
I went forrard along the lee alley-way, the old
man followed me, saying. "I'll log ye to-morrow.
I'll show ye how ter come aboard my ship on false
pretences." This did my business, and I turned
savagely round, saying, "I <i>can</i> steer as well as any
man in the ship if I'm let alone, and you know that.
You only want an excuse to stop my wages——"
Further remarks were drowned in a tremendous
roar of tumbling water and cracking spars as the
ship flew up into the wind, taking a mighty mass
of black sea over all, and bringing the stun'sails
down with an uproar truly terrific. "All hands on<span class="pagenum">[300]</span>
deck! Tumble up, there! Shorten sail!"
screamed the skipper, fairly dancing in his excitement.
Well, there <i>was</i> a mess, and no mistake!
It took us three hours of hard struggle before we
got her clear and shortened down, and during that
time there were as many curses levelled at the old
sinner as would have sunk the British Navy if
their weight had been proportionate to the wishes
of their utterers. For my part I was speechless
with delight, for I felt if ever a poor fellow was
vindicated promptly it was me. The diversion
gave us all sore bones, though; and when, at last,
we got below, we were almost too weary to growl.
Stripping off our drenched rags we tumbled into
our bunks, and slept so soundly that the two hours
and a half left of our watch seemed only like five
minutes. I took my usual trick at the wheel
again without comment; but after breakfast, to
my amazement, I was called down into the cabin.
The skipper solemnly read to me an entry in the
Official Logbook to the effect that on the night of ——,
in lat. —, long. —, it having been found that
I could not steer, I was sent from the wheel as unfit
for my work, and, in consequence, my wages
were reduced to one pound per month. This libel
was signed by the second mate as a witness. I was
then invited to sign it; but I refused, saying that
the entry was false, and appealing to the second
mate to support my protest. He, standing behind
the skipper, gave me a reassuring wink which
cheered me mightily, and after bandying a few
more compliments with the skipper, I was told to
"Get out of my cabin." The events of the past<span class="pagenum">[301]</span>
night were the subject of a good deal of comment
forrard, and the general conclusion arrived at was
that the old man was no good, and any deference
or politeness towards him might usefully be
dropped in future.</p>
<p>But something happened that day which, although
in no wise the skipper's fault, made the
feeling of insubordination ten times stronger than
it otherwise would have been. Hitherto we had
been living fairly well upon fresh meat and vegetables,
although the cooking was very bad. The
pasty-faced Scotchman who had shipped as cook
<i>might</i> have been cook of the <i>Mikado</i> as he said;
but, if so, he had certainly forgotten the most elementary
portion of his duties. Having just come
to an end of the fresh provisions, he informed us
pompously that he was going to make us "duff"
to-day, "An', ma wurrd," said he, with an air, "a'll
gie ye somethin' ye <i>can</i> eat! Ye dinna ken whatn'
duff's like aboord ther win'jammers." As may be
imagined, we were in high glee at the prospect of
such a notable benefit as high-class duff would be.
The last stroke was hardly off the bell at seven bells
before I was at the galley with the kid, my mouth
watering in anticipation of this superlative duff.
But it strikes me that the subsequent proceedings
were important enough for a new chapter.</p>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[302]</span></p>
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