<h2><SPAN name="VII" id="VII"></SPAN>VII.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">I had</span> met in my travels with but one specimen of such weather as this;
it was off the Cape of Good Hope to the westward; the ship was under
topmast and topgallant studdingsails, when, without an interval of so
much as twenty seconds of calm, she was taken right aback by a wind that
came with the temper of half a gale in it, whilst as if by magic a fog,
white and dense as wool, was boiling and shrieking all about her.</p>
<p>For some time my consternation was so heavy that I sat mechanically
staring into that part of the thickness where the boat had disappeared,
without giving the least heed to the sea or to the wreck. It was <i>then</i>
blowing in earnest,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_72" id="page_72">{72}</SPAN></span> the ocean still densely shrouded with flying vapor,
and an ugly bit of a sea racing over the swell that rolled its volumes
to windward. A smart shock and fall of water on to the forecastle
startled me into sudden perception of a real and imminent danger. The
fore-scuttle was closed, but the main and companion hatchways yawned
opened to the weather; there were no bulwarks worth talking of to
increase the wreck’s height of side, and to hinder the free tumbling of
the surge on to the decks, so if the wind increased and the sea grew
heavier, the hulk must inevitably fill and go down like a thunderbolt!</p>
<p>It would be idle to try to express the thoughts which filled me. I was
like one stunned: now casting an eye at the sea to observe if the
billows were increasing, now with a heart of lead watching the water
frothing upon the deck, as the hull heaved from one side to another;
then straining my sight<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_73" id="page_73">{73}</SPAN></span> with a mad passion of eagerness into the vapor
that shut off all view of the ocean to within a cable’s length of me.
There was nothing to be done. Even could I have met with tarpaulins,
there was no sailor’s skill in me to spread and secure them over the
open hatches. However, when an hour had passed in this way, I took
notice of a small failure of the wind, though there was no lightening of
the impenetrable mist. The folds of the swell had diminished, and the
sea was running steadily; the hull with her broadside dead on, rose and
fell with regularity, and though at long intervals the surge struck her
bow, and blew in crystals over the head, or fell in scores of bucketfuls
upon the deck, nothing more than spray wetted the after-part of her.</p>
<p>It was now about six o’clock in the evening. In two hours time the night
would have come down, and if the weather did not clear, the blackness<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_74" id="page_74">{74}</SPAN></span>
would be that of the tomb. What would the <i>Ruby</i> do? Remain hove-to and
await for moonlight or for daybreak to seek for me? A fragment of
comfort I found in remembering that the wreck’s position would be known
to Captain Bow and his mates, so that their search for me, if they
searched at all, ought not to prove fruitless; though to be sure much
would depend upon the drift of the hulk. Presently, fearing that there
might be no water or provisions on board, I was seized with a sudden
thirst, bred by the mere apprehension that I might come to want a drink.
There was still light enough to enable me to search the interior, and
now I suppose something of my manhood must have returned to me, for I
made up my mind to waste no moment of the precious remaining time of day
in imaginations of horror and of death and in dreams of desperate
despondency. I went on my hands and knees<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_75" id="page_75">{75}</SPAN></span> to the hatch, lest if I stood
up I should be knocked down by the abrupt rolling of the craft, and
entered the cabin. On deck all was naked and sea-swept from the taffrail
to the “eyes,” and if there were aught of drink or of food to be had it
must be sought below. I recollected that one of the forward berths or
cabins, which the second mate and I had looked into, had shown in the
gloom as a sort of pantry; that is to say, in peering over my
companion’s shoulders, I had caught a glimpse of crockery on shelves,
the outlines of jars and so forth. But the inspection had been very
swift, scarce more than a glance. I made for this cabin now, very well
remembering that it was the last of a row of three or four on the
starboard side. I opened the door, and secured it by its hook to the
bulkhead that I might see, and after rummaging a little I found a cask
of ship’s bread, a small cask (like a harness cask) a quarter full<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_76" id="page_76">{76}</SPAN></span> of
raw pickled pork, a jar of vinegar, two large jars of red wine, and best
of all, a small barrel about half full of fresh water, slung against the
bulkhead, with a little wooden tap fixed in it, for the convenience as I
supposed of drawing for cabin use. There were other articles of food,
such as flour, pickles, dried fruit, and so on; the catalogue would be
tedious, nor does my memory carry them.</p>
<p>I poured some wine into a tin pannikin, and found it a very palatable,
sound claret. I mixed me a draught with cold water, and ate a biscuit
with a little slice of some kind of salt sausage, of which there lay a
lump in a dish, and found myself extraordinarily refreshed. I cannot
tell you indeed how comforted I was by this discovery of provisions and
fresh water, for now I guessed that if the weather did not drown the
wreck, I might be able to support life on board of her until the <i>Ruby</i>
took me off, which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_77" id="page_77">{77}</SPAN></span> I counted upon happening that night if the moon
shone, or most certainly next morning at latest. My heart however sank
afresh when I regained the deck. The sudden change from the life, the
cheerfulness, the security of the Indiaman, to <i>this</i>—“Oh, my God! my
God!” I remember exclaiming as I sank down under the lee of the fragment
of bulwark, with a wild look around into the thickness and along the
spray-darkened planks of the heaving and groaning derelict. The
loneliness of it! no sounds saving the dismal crying of the wind
sweeping on high through the atmosphere, and the ceaseless seething and
hissing of the dark-green frothing seas swiftly chasing one another out
of sight past the wall of vapor that circled the wreck, with the blank
and blinding mist itself to tighten as with a sensible ligature into
unbearable concentration the dreadful sense of solitude in my soul.</p>
<p>Slowly the wind softened down, very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_78" id="page_78">{78}</SPAN></span> gradually the sea sank, and their
worrying note of snarling melted into a gentler tone of fountain-like
creaming. But the vapor still filled the air, and so thick did it hang
that, though by my watch I knew it to be the hour of sundown, I was
unable to detect the least tinge of hectic anywhere, no faintest
revelation of the fiery scarlet light which I knew must be suffusing the
clear heavens down to the easternmost of the confines above this
maddening blindness of mist.</p>
<p>Then came the blackness of the night. So unspeakably deep a dye it was
that you would have thought every luminary above had been extinguished,
and that the earth hung motionless in the sunless opacity of chaos out
of which it had been called into being. The hours passed. I held my seat
on the deck with my back against a bulwark stanchion. It was a warm
night with a character as of the heat of steam owing to the moisture
that loaded and thick-<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_79" id="page_79">{79}</SPAN></span>ened the atmosphere. Sometimes I dozed,
repeatedly starting from a snatch of uneasy slumber to open my eyes with
ever-recurring horror and astonishment upon the blackness. Gleams of the
sea-fire shot out fitfully at times from the sides of the wreck, and
there was nothing else for the sight to rest upon. At midnight it was
blowing a small breeze of wind and the sea running gently—at midnight I
mean as I could best reckon; but the darkness remained unchanged, and I
might know that the fog was still thick about me by no dimmest spectre
of moon or star showing.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_81" id="page_81">{81}</SPAN></span><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="page_80" id="page_80">{80}</SPAN></span></p>
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