<h2><SPAN name="V" id="V"></SPAN>V.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Well</span>, next day, I promise you, this incident of the bird gave us plenty
to talk about. In fact it even swamped the memory of the dance and the
supper, and again and again you would see one or other of the ladies
sending a wistful glance round the sea-line, in search of the dismasted
brig—as often looking astern as ahead, whilst one or two of the young
fellows amongst us crept very gingerly aloft, holding on as they went as
though they would squeeze all the tar out of the shrouds, just to make
sure that there was nothing in sight. However, there was a professional
look-out kept forward. I heard the captain give directions to the
officer of the watch to send a man on to the fore-royal yard from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_44" id="page_44">{44}</SPAN></span> time
to time to report if there was anything in view; but as to altering his
course with the chance of picking up the Frenchman, <i>that</i> was not to be
expected in old Bow, whose business was to get to Bombay as fast as the
wind would blow him along; and indeed, seeing that the <i>Ruby</i> had
already been hard upon four months from the river Thames, you will
suppose that, concerned as we might all feel about the fate of <i>The
Corsaire</i>, the softest-hearted amongst us would have been loth to lose
even a day in a search that was tolerably certain to prove fruitless—as
the mate proved to a group of us whilst he stood pointing out our
situation and the supposed position of the brig upon a chart of the
Indian Ocean lying open upon the skylight.</p>
<p>We got no wind till daybreak of the morning following the dance, and
then a pleasant air came along out of south-southeast, which enabled the
<i>Ruby</i> to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_45" id="page_45">{45}</SPAN></span> expand her stunsails, and she went floating over the long
sapphire swells of the fervid ocean under an overhanging cloud of cloths
which whitened the water to starboard of her, till it looked like a
sheet of quicksilver draining there. This breeze held and shoved the
ponderous bows of the Indiaman through it at the rate of some four or
five miles in the hour. So we jogged along, till it came to the fourth
day from the date of my adventure in the maintop. The fiery breeze had
by this time crept round to off the starboard bow, and the ship was
sailing along with her yards as fore and aft as they would lie. It was a
little before the hour of noon. The captain and mates were ogling the
sun through their sextants on either hand the poop, for the luminary
hung pretty nearly over the royal trunk with a wake of flaming gold
under him broadening to our cutwater, so that the <i>Ruby</i> looked to be
stemming some burning river of glory<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_46" id="page_46">{46}</SPAN></span> flowing through a strange province
of dark blue land.</p>
<p>Suddenly high aloft from off the maintop-gallant-yard—whose arm was
jockeyed by the figure of a sailor doing something with the clew of the
royal—came a clear, distant cry of “Sail-ho,” and I saw the man
levelling his marline-spike at an object visible to him a little to the
right of the flying-jibboom end.</p>
<p>“Aloft there!” bawled the mate, putting his hand to the side of his
mouth, “how does she show, my lad?”</p>
<p>“<span class="lftspc">’</span>Tis something black, sir,” cried the man, making a binocular glass of
his fists. “<span class="lftspc">’</span>Tis well to the starboard of the dazzle upon the water. It
is too blinding that way to make sure.”</p>
<p>“Something black!” shouted the little colonel, whose Christian name was
Desmond. “<i>The Corsaire</i>, Captain Bow, without doubt. Anybody feel
inclined to bet?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_47" id="page_47">{47}</SPAN></span>”</p>
<p>Some wagering followed, whilst I stepped below for a telescope of my
own, and then went forward and got into the fore-rigging, with the glass
slung over my shoulders. There was no need to ascend above the top. I
levelled the telescope when I gained that platform, and instantly saw
the object with a handbreadth of the gleam of the blue sea past her,
showing that she was well this side of the horizon from the elevation of
the foremast, and that she would be visible from the poop in a little
while. There was but a very light swell on; the spires of the <i>Ruby</i>
floated steadily through the blue atmosphere. I had no difficulty in
commanding the object therefore, and the powerful lenses of my telescope
brought her close. It was a wreck, a sheer hulk indeed, and without a
shadow of a doubt <i>The Corsaire</i>. Her masts were gone, though a fragment
of bowsprit remained. Whole lengths of her bul-<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_48" id="page_48">{48}</SPAN></span>work were apparently
crushed flat to the covering-board; nevertheless, the hull preserved a
sort of rakish aspect, a piratical sheer of long, low side. “Let her
prove what she will,” thought I, “I am a Dutchman if yonder craft hasn’t
carried a bitter and poisonous sting in her head and tail in her time.”</p>
<p>They had “made” eight bells on the poop, and the mellow chimes were
sounding upon the quarter-deck, and echoing in the silent squares of
canvas, as I descended the rigging and made my way aft. I told Captain
Bow that the craft ahead was a hulk, and without doubt <i>The Corsaire</i>;
on hearing which the passengers went in a rush to the side and stood
staring as though the object were close aboard, some of them pointing
and swearing they could see her, though at the rate at which we were
shoving through it she was a fair hour and a half yet behind the horizon
from the altitude of the poop.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_49" id="page_49">{49}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>However, when I came up from tiffin some little while before two
o’clock, the hulk lay bare upon the sea over the starboard cathead, with
a light like the flash of a gun breaking from her wet black side to the
languid roll of her sunwards, and a crowd of steerage-passengers and
sailors forward staring at her. At any time a wreck at sea, washing
about in the heart of some great ocean solitude, will appeal with solemn
significance to the eye of one sailing past it. What dreadful tragedy
has she been the little theatre of, you wonder? You speculate upon the
human anguish she memorializes, upon the dark and scaring horrors her
shape <i>may</i> entomb. But it is a sight to appeal with added force to
people who have been at sea for many long weeks, without so much as the
glimpse of a sail for days at a time to break the enormous monotony of
the ocean, or to furnish a fugitive human interest to the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_50" id="page_50">{50}</SPAN></span> ever-receding
sea-line—that most mocking of all earthly limitations.</p>
<p>“Anybody see any signs of life aboard of her?” exclaimed Captain Bow.
“My sight is not what it was.”</p>
<p>There were many sharp young eyes amongst us, and some powerful glasses;
but there was nothing living to be seen. She looked to have been a
vessel of about two hundred and fifty tons. Her copper sheathing rose to
the bends, and was fresh and bright. She had apparently been pierced for
ten guns, but this could be only conjecture, seeing that her bulwarks
had been torn to pieces by the fall of her spars. There was a length of
topmast, or what-not, riding by its gear alongside of her, with a raffle
of canvas and running rigging littering the fore-part. Her wheel stood,
and her rudder seemed sound. She was flush-decked, but all erections
such as caboose, companion, and so forth, were gone. Yet she sat with
something<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_51" id="page_51">{51}</SPAN></span> of buoyancy on the water, and her rolling was without the
stupefaction you notice in hulls gradually filling. As her stern lifted,
the words, <i>Le Corsaire, Havre</i>, rose in long, white letters upon the
counter, with a sort of ghastliness in the blank stare of them by
contrast with the delicate blue of the sea. Old Bow hailed her loudly;
then the mate roared to her with the voice of a bull, but to no purpose.
I said to the second mate, who stood alongside of me at the rail:—</p>
<p>“Yonder to be sure is the ship from which the sea-bird brought the
letter the other night. There were three living men aboard her a few
days ago. Are they below, think you?”</p>
<p>“Been taken off, sir, I expect,” he answered. “Or dead of hunger, or
thirst, and lying corpses in the cabin. Or maybe they drowned
themselves. Mr. Pike’s hail was something to bring a dying man out of
his bunk to see<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_52" id="page_52">{52}</SPAN></span> what made it. No, sir, yonder’s an abandoned craft or a
coffin anyway.”</p>
<p>Some ladies standing near overheard this, and at once went to work to
induce the captain to bring the <i>Ruby</i> to a stand, and send a boat. I
listened to them intreating him; he shook his head good-naturedly, with
a glance into the northwestern quarter of the sea. “Oh, but dear
Captain,” the ladies reasoned, “after that letter, you know, as though
you were appointed by Providence to receive it—surely, surely, you will
not sail away from that wreck without making quite sure that there is
nobody on board her! Only conceive that the three poor creatures may be
dying in the cabin, that they may have heard your cry and Mr. Pike’s,
and even be able to <i>see</i> this ship through a porthole, and yet be too
weak to crawl on deck to show themselves?” What followed was lost to me
by the second mate beginning to talk:<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_53" id="page_53">{53}</SPAN></span>—</p>
<p>“She’ll have been a French privateer,” he said to me. “What a superb
run, sir! Something in her heyday not to be easily shaken off a
merchantman’s skirts. Of course she’ll have thrown all her guns
overboard in the hurricane. Does the capt’n mean to overhaul her, I
wonders,” he continued throwing a look aloft. “He’ll have to bear a hand
and make up his mind or we shall be losing her anon in yonder thickness.
Mark the depression in the ocean line nor’west, sir. D’ye notice the
swell gathers weight too and there’s a dustiness in the face of the sky
that way that’s better than a hint that the Bay of Bengal is not so many
leagues distant ahead as it was a month ago.”</p>
<p>He was rattling on in this fashion, more like one thinking aloud than
talking to a companion, when there was a sudden clapping of hands among
the ladies who surrounded the captain, and at the same moment I heard
him tell<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_54" id="page_54">{54}</SPAN></span> the mate to swing the topsail to the mast and get one of the
starboard quarter-boats manned. All was then bustle for a few minutes,
the mate bawling, the sailors singing out at the ropes, men manœuvring
with the boats’ grips and falls. I went up to the captain.</p>
<p>“Who has charge of the boat?” said I.</p>
<p>“Second mate,” he answered.</p>
<p>“Any objection to my accompanying him, Captain?”</p>
<p>“Not in the least, Mr. Catesby. I will only ask you, should you board
her, to look alive. The weather shows rather a suspicious front down
there,” indicating with a nod of his head the quarter to which the
second mate had called my attention. “But, bless my heart! there’ll be
nothing to see, nothing worth sending for. It is only to please the
ladies, you know.”</p>
<p>I sprang into the boat as she swung at the davits. It was a trip, a
treat, a pleasant break for me; besides, my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_55" id="page_55">{55}</SPAN></span> being the first to receive
the letter gave me a kind of title, as it were, to the adventure.</p>
<p>“There’s room for others,” said the second mate, standing erect in the
stern sheets with a wistful glance at a knot of pretty faces at the
rail.</p>
<p>There was no response from male or female. “Lower away now lively,
lads,” cried the mate. Down sank the boat, the blocks were dexterously
unhooked, out flashed the oars and away we went.</p>
<p>I couldn’t have guessed what weight there was in this ocean swell till I
felt the volume of it from the low seat of the ship’s quarter-boat. The
<i>Ruby</i> looked to be rolling on it as heavily again as she seemed to have
been when I was on her deck, and the beat of her canvas against the mast
rang in volleys through the air like the explosion of batteries up
there. The wreck came and went as we sank and soared, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_56" id="page_56">{56}</SPAN></span> I caught the
second mate eyeing her somewhat anxiously as though theorizing to
himself upon the safest dodge to board her. She was farther off than I
should have deemed possible, so deceptive is distance at sea, and though
the five seamen pulled cheerily, the job of measuring the interval
between the two craft, what with the voluminous heave of the swell
running at us, and what with the roasting sunshine that lay like a sense
of paralysis in the backbone, proved very tedious to my impatience to
come at the hulk and explore her. As we swept round under her stern,
supposing that her starboard side would be clear of wreckage, I glanced
at the <i>Ruby</i> and saw that they were clewing up her royals, and hauling
down her flying jib with hands on the cross-jack-yard rolling the sail
up. There were spars and a litter of trailing gear on either side the
hulk; every roll was a spiteful snapping at the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_57" id="page_57">{57}</SPAN></span> ropes with a drag of
the floating sticks which sometimes made the water foam.</p>
<p>“We must board her astern,” said the mate, “and stand by for a handsome
dip of the counter.”</p>
<p>Our approach was very cautious; indeed, it was necessary to manœuvre
very gingerly indeed. We got on to the quarter, and watching his chance
the bow oarsman cleverly sprang through the crushed rail as the deck
buoyantly swung down to the heave of the boat, carrying the painter with
him; the mate followed, and I, after a tolerably long interval, wanting
perhaps the nerve and certainly the practised limbs of the sailors. In
truth I may as well say here that I should have stuck to the boat and
waited for the mate’s report but for the dislike of being laughed at
when I returned. I very well knew I should not be spared, least of all
by those amongst the passengers who would have forfeited fifty pounds
rather than have quitted the ship.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_59" id="page_59">{59}</SPAN></span><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_58" id="page_58">{58}</SPAN></span></p>
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