<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
<p class="p4">“Why should I care for life or death? The
one is no good, and the other no harm. What is
existence but sense of self, severance for one
troubled moment from the eternal unity? We
disquiet ourselves, we fume, and pant—lo, our sorrows
are gone, like the smoke of a train, and our
joys like the glimmer of steam. Why should I
fear to be mad, any more than fear to die? What
harm if the mind outrun the body upon the road
of return to God? And yet we look upon madness
as the darkest of human evils!</p>
<p>“How this gliding river makes one think of life
and eternity! Not because the grand old simile
lives in every language. Not because we have
read and heard it, in a hundred forms and more.
A savage from the Rocky Mountains feels the
same idea—for ideas strongly stamped pierce into
the feelings.</p>
<p>“Why does the mind so glide away to some calm<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>
sea of melancholy, when we stand and gaze intently
upon flowing water? And the larger the
spread of the water is, and the grander the march
of the current, the deeper and more irresistible
grows the sadness of the gazer.</p>
<p>“That naval captain, so well known as an explorer
of the Amazon, who dined with us at
Nowelhurst one day last July, was a light–hearted
man by nature, and full of wit and
humour. And yet, in spite of wine and warmth,
he made the summer twilight creep with the sadness
of his stories. Nevertheless, we hung upon
them with a strange enchantment; we drew more
real pleasure from them than from a world of
drolleries. Poor Clayton tried to run away, for he
never could bear melancholy; but all he did was
to take a chair nearer to the voyager. As for me,
I cried; in spite of myself, I cried; being carried
away by the flow of his language, so smooth, and
wide, and gliding, with the mystery of waters.</p>
<p>“And he was not one of those shallow men who
talk for effect at dinner–parties. Nothing more
than a modest sailor, leaving his mind to its natural
course. Only he had been so long upon that
mighty river, that he nevermore could cease from
gliding, ever gliding, with it.</p>
<p>“Once or twice he begged our pardon for the
sweep of hazy sadness moving (like the night on
water) through his tales and scenery. He is gone
there again of his own free choice. He must die
upon that river. He loves it more than any patriot<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>
ever loved his country. Betwixt a man and flowing
water there must be more than similitude, there
must be a sort of sympathy.”</p>
<p>“<i>Tap–Robin</i>, ahoy there! Ahoy, every son of
a sea–cook of you. Heave us over a rope, you
lubbers. Would yer swamp us with parson aboard
of me?”</p>
<p>This was Mr. Jupp, of course, churning up
Cradʼs weak ideas, like a steam–paddle in a fishpond.
Perhaps the reason why those ideas had
been of such sad obscurity, and so fluxed with
sorry sentiment, was that the vague concipient believed
himself to be shipped off for an indefinite
term of banishment, without even a message from
Amy. Whereas, in truth, he was only going for
a little voyage to Ceylon, in the clipper ship <i>Taprobane</i>,
A 1 for all time at Lloydʼs, and never allowed
to carry more than twice as much as she could.</p>
<p>How discontented mortals are! He ought to
have been jollier than a sandboy, for he had a
cabin all to himself (quite large enough to turn
round in), and, what of all things we Britons love
best, a happy little sinecure. He was actually appointed—on
the strength of his knowledge of goods
earned at the Cramjam terminus, but not through
any railway influence (being no chip of the board,
neither any attorneyʼs “love–child”—if there be
such a heterogeny), only through John Rosedewʼs
skill and knowledge of the world, Cradock was
actually made “under–supercargo” of a vessel
bound to the tropics.</p>
<p>The clipper had passed Greenhithe already, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>
none had hailed her or said “Farewell.” The
<i>Taprobane</i> would have no tug. She was far too
clean in the bows for that work. Her mother and
grandmother had run unaided down the river;
even back to the fourth generation of ships, when
the Dutchmen held Ceylon, and doubtless would
have kept it, but for one great law of nature: no
Dutchman must be thin. But even a Dutchman
loses fat within ten degrees of the line. So
Nature reclaimed her square Dutchmen from the
tropics, which turned them over. Most likely
these regions are meant, in the end, for the
Yankee, who has no fat to lose, and is harder to
fry than a crocodile.</p>
<p>But who can stop to theorize while the <i>Taprobane</i>
is dancing along under English colours, and
swings on her keel just in time to avoid running
down Mr. Rosedew and Issachar? Mr. Jupp is
combining business with pleasure, being, as you
may say, under orders to meet the <i>Saucy Sally</i>, and
steer her home from Northfleet to the Surrey
Docks. So he has taken a lift in a collier, and
met Mr. Rosedew at Gravesend, according to
agreement, and then borrowed a boat to look out
alike for <i>Saucy Sally</i> and <i>Taprobane</i>.</p>
<p>When words and gifts had been interchanged—what
Amy sent is no matter now; but Loo Jupp
sent a penny ‘bacco–box, which beat fatherʼs
out and out (as he must be sure to tell Cradock),
and had “Am I welcome?” on it, in letters of gold
at least—when “God bless you” had been said for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span>
the twentieth time, and love tied the tongue of
gratitude, the <i>Taprobane</i> lay–to for a moment, and
the sails all shivered noisily, and the water curled
crisply, and hissed and bubbled, and the little boats
hopped merrily to the pipe of the rising wind.</p>
<p>Then Mr. Rosedew came down the side, lightly
of foot and cleverly; while the under–supercargo
leaned upon the rail and sorrowfully watched him.
Ponderously then and slowly, with his great splay
feet thrust into the rope–ladder, even up to the
heel, quite at his leisure descended that good bargeman,
Issachar Jupp. This noble bargee had never
been seen to hurry himself on his own account.
He and his deeds lagged generally on the bight of
a long and slack tow–rope.</p>
<p>The sailors, not entering into his character,
thought that he was frightened, and condemned
his apprehensive luminaries, in words of a quarter
the compass. Then Mr. Jupp let go with both
hands, stood bolt upright on the foot–rope, and
shook his great fists at them. “Let him catch
them ashore at Wapping, if the devil forewent his
due; let him catch them, that was all!” Thereupon
they gave him a round of cheers, and promised
to square the account, please God.</p>
<p>Mr. Rosedew and the bargeman looked up from
the tossing wherry, and waved their last farewell,
the parson reckless of Sunday hat, and letting his
white locks glance and flutter on the cold March
wind. But Cradock made no reply.</p>
<p>“All right, govʼnor!” said Jupp, catching hold<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>
of the parson; “no call for you to take on so.
Iʼve a been the likes o’ that there mysel’ in the
days when I tuk’ blue ruin. The rattisination of
it are to fetch it out of him by travellinʼ. And the
<i>Tap–Robin</i> are a traveller, and no mistake. Dʼrectly
moment I comes to my fortinʼ, Iʼll improve self
and family travellinʼ.”</p>
<p>Zakey, to assert his independence as his nature
demanded, affected a rough familiarity with the
man whom he revered. The parson allowed it as
a matter of course. His dignity was not so hollow
as to be afraid of sand–paper. The result was that
Issachar Jupp, every time, felt more and more
compunction at, and less and less of comfort in,
the unresented liberties.</p>
<p>As he said “good–bye” at the landing–place—for
he had seen the <i>Sally</i> coming—he put out his
hand, and then drew it back with a rough bow
(disinterred from long–forgotten manners), and his
raspy tongue thrust far into the coal–mine of his
cheek. But John Rosedew accepted his hand, and
bowed, as he would have done to a nobleman.
Even if a baby smiled at him, John always acknowledged
the compliment. For he added Christian
courtesy, and the humility of all thoughtful minds,
to a certain grand and glorious gift of radiating
humanity.</p>
<p>Cradock Nowell was loth to be sent away, and
could not see the need of it; but doubtless the
medical men were right in prescribing a southern
voyage, a total change of scene and climate, as the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span>
likeliest means to re–establish the shattered frame
and the tottering mind. And so he sailed for the
gorgeous tropics, where the sun looks not askance,
where the size of every climbing, swimming, fluttering,
or crawling thing (save man himself) is
doubled; where life of all things bounds and
beats—until it is quickly beaten—as it never gets
warm enough to do in the pinching zones, tight–buckled.</p>
<p>Meanwhile John Rosedew went to his home—a
home so loved and fleeting—and tried to comfort
himself on the road with various Elzevirs. Finding
them fail, one after another, for his mind was
not in cue for them, he pulled out his little Greek
Testament, and read what a man may read every
day, and never begin to be weary; because his
heart still yearns the more towards the grand ideal,
and feels a reminiscence such as Plato the divine,
alone of heathens, won.</p>
<p>John Rosedew read once more the Sermon on
the Mount, and wondered how his little griefs
could vex him as they did. That sermon is grander
in English, far grander, than in the Greek; for
the genius of our language is large, and strong,
and simple—the true spirit of the noblest words
that ever on earth were spoken. How cramped
they would be in Attic Greek (like Mount Athos
chiselled); in Latin how nerveless and alien!
Ours is the language to express; and ours the race
to receive them.</p>
<p>What man, in later life, whose reading has led<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>
him through vexed places—whence he had wiser
held aloof—does not, on some little touch, brighten,
and bedew himself with the freshness of the morning,
thrill as does the leaping earth to see the sun
come back again, and, dashing all his night away,
open the power of his eyes to the kindness of his
Father?</p>
<p>John Rosedew felt his cares and fears vanish
like the dew–cloud among the quivering tree–tops;
and bright upon him broke the noon, the heaven
wherein our God lives. Earth and its fabrics may
pass away; but that which came from heaven shall
not be without a home.</p>
<p>Meditating, comforted, strengthened on the way,
John Rosedew came to his little hearth, and was
gladdened again by little things, such as here are
given or lent us to amuse our exile life. Most of
us, with growing knowledge and keener sense of
honesty, more strongly desire from year to year
that these playthings were distributed more equally
amongst us. But let us not say “equably.” For
who shall impugn the power of contrast even in
heightening the zest of heaven?</p>
<p>Amy met him, his own sweet Amy, best and
dearest of all girls, a thoroughly English maiden,
not salient like Eoa, but warmly kind, and thoughtful,
and toned with self–restraint. But even that
last she threw to the winds when she saw her
father returning, and ran with her little feet
pattering, like sweet–gale leaves, over the gravel,
to the unpretentious gate.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Darling father!” was all she said; and perhaps
it was quite enough.</p>
<p>Of late she had dropped all her little self–will
(which used to vex her aunt so), and her character
seemed to expand and ripen in the quiet glow of
her faithful love.</p>
<p>Thenceforth, and for nearly a fortnight, Amy
Rosedew, if suddenly wanted, was sure to be found
in a garret, whose gable–window faced directly
towards the breadth of sea. When a call for her
came through the crazy door, she would slam up
with wonderful speed her own little Munich telescope,
having only two slides and a cylinder, but
clearer and brighter than high–powered glasses,
ten stories long perhaps, and of London manufacture:
and then she would confront the appellant,
with such a colour to be sure, and a remark upon
the weather, as sage as those of our weather–clerks,
who allow the wind so much latitude that they
never contrive to hit it. But which of the maids
knew not, and loved her not the more for knowing,
that she was a little coast–guard, looking out for
her <i>eau de vie</i>? Of course she saw fifty <i>Taprobanes</i>—every
one more genuine than its predecessor—and
more than fifty Cradocks, some thirty miles
away, leaning over hearts of oak, with a faint sweet
smile, waving handkerchiefs as white as their own
unsullied constancy, and crying with a heavy sigh,
“My native land, good night!”</p>
<p>Facts, however, are stubborn things, and will
not even make a bow to the sweetest of young<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span>
ladies. And the fact was that the Ceylon trader
fetched away to the southward before a jovial
north–east wind, and, not being bound to say anything
to either Plymouth or Falmouth, never came
near the field of gentle Amyʼs telescope.</p>
<p>That doctor knew something of his subject—the
triple conglomerate called man—who prescribed
for Cradock Nowell, instead of noxious medicines—<i>medicina
a non medendo</i>—the bounding ease and
buoyant freedom of a ship bound southward.</p>
<p>Go westward, and you meet the billows, headers
all of them, staggering faith even in the Psalmistʼs
description (for he was never in the Bay of Biscay),
and a wind that stings patriotic tears with the everlasting
brine. Go eastward, and you meet the ice,
or (in summer) shoals and soundings, and a dreary
stretch of sand–banks. Go northward, and the
chances are that you find no chance of return.
But go full–sail to the glorious south, and once
beyond the long cross–ploughings and headland of
the Gulf Stream, you slide into a quiet breast, a
confidence of waters, over which the sun more duly
does his work and knows it, and under which the
growth of beauty clothes your soul with wonder.</p>
<p>When shall we men leave off fighting, cease to
prove the Darwinian theory, and the legends of
Kilkenny (by leaving only our tails behind us, a
legacy for new lawsuits); and in the latter days
ask God the reason we were made for? When our
savage life is done with, and we are no longer cannibals—and
at present cannibals are perhaps of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span>
more practical mind than we, for they have an
object in homicide, and the spit justifies the
battle–field—when we do at last begin not to hate
one another; not to think the evil first, because in
nature prior; not to brand as maniacs, and marks
for paltry satire, every man who dares to think
that he was not born a weasel, and that ferocity
is cowardice—then a man of self–respect may
begin to be a patriot. At present, as our nations
are, all abusing one another, none inquiring, none
allowing, all preferring wrong to weakness, if it hit
the breed and strain; each proclaiming that it is
the favoured child of God, the only one He looks
upon (merging His all–seeing eye in its squint
ambition)—at present even we must feel that
“patriotism” is little more than selfishness in a
balloon.</p>
<p>Poor Cradock, wasted so and altered (when he
left black London) that nothing short of womanʼs
true love could run him home without check,
began to feel the change of sky, and drink new
health from the balmy air, and relish the wholesome
mind–bread, leavened with the yeast of
novelty. A man who can stay in the same old
place, and work the blessed old and new year at
the same old work, dwell on and deal with the
same old faces, receive and be bound to reciprocate
the self–same old ideas, without crying out, “Oh
bother you!” without yearning for the sea–view, or
pining for the mountain—that man has either a very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</SPAN></span>
great mind, or else he has none at all. For a very
great mind can create its own food, fresh as the
manna, daily, or dress in unceasing variety the
fruit of other intellects, and live thereon amid
the grand and ever–shifting scenery of a free
imagination. On the other hand, a man of no
mind gets on quite contentedly, having never
tasted thought–food; only wind him up with the
golden key every Saturday night, and oil him with
respectability at the Sunday service.</p>
<p>Now the under–supercargo of the <i>Taprobane</i>
was beginning to eat his meals like a man, to be
pleased with the smell of new tar, and the head–over–heel
of the porpoises, and to make acquaintance
with sailors of large morality. In a word, he
was coming back, by spell and spate, to Cradock
Nowell, but as yet so merely skew–nailed to the
pillar of himself, that any change of weather caused
a gape, a gap, a chasm.</p>
<p>Give him bright sun and clear sky, with a gentle
breeze over the water spreading wayward laughter,
with an amaranth haze just lightly veiling the
union of heaven and ocean, and a few flying–fish,
or an albatross, for incident in the foreground—and
the young man would walk to and fro as
briskly, and talk as clearly and pleasantly, as any
one in the ship could.</p>
<p>But let the sky gather weight and gloom, and
the sullen sun hang back in it, and the bright flaw
of wind on the waters die out, and the sultry air,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[92]</SPAN></span>
in oppressive folds, lean on the slimy ocean—and
Cradockʼs mind was gone away, like a bat flown
into darkness.</p>
<p>Sometimes it went more gradually, giving him
time to be conscious that his consciousness was
departing; and that of all things was perhaps the
most woeful and distressing. It was as if the weak
mind–fountain bubbled up reproachfully, like a
geyser over–gargled, and flushed the thin membrane
and cellular tissue with more thought than they
could dispose of. Then he felt the air grow chill,
and saw two shapes of everything, and fancied he
was holding something when his hands were
empty. Then the mind went slowly off, retreating,
ebbing, leaving shoal–ground, into long abeyance,
into faintly–known bayous, feebly navigated
by the nautilus of memory.</p>
<p>It is not pleasant, but is good, now and then to
see afar these pretty little drawbacks upon our
self–complacency—an article imported hourly,
though in small demand for export. However,
that is of little moment, for the home consumption
is infinite. How noble it is to vaunt ourselves,
how spirited to scorn as <i>faber</i> Him who would be
father; when a floating gossamer breathed between
the hemispheres of our brain makes imperial
reason but the rubbish of an imperious
flood. Then the cells and clever casemates,
rammed home with explosive stuff to blow God
out of heaven, are no mortar, but a limekiln,
crusted and collapsing (after three days’ fire), a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</SPAN></span>
stranded cockle, dead and stale, with the door of
his shell a bubble; and so ends the philosopher.</p>
<p>Upon a glaring torpid sea, a degree or two south
of the line, the <i>Taprobane</i> lay so becalmed that the
toss of a quid into the water was enough to drive
her windward, or leeward, whichever you pleased
to call it. The last of the trade winds, being long
dead, was buried on the log by this time; and the
sailors were whistling by day and by night, and
piping into the keys of their lockers; but no responsive
dimple appeared in the sleek cadaverous
cheek of the never–changing sea.</p>
<p>What else could one expect? They had passed
upon the windʼs–eyes so adverse a decision—without
hearing counsel on either side—that really, to
escape ophthalmia, it must close its eyelids. So
everything was heavy slumber, sleep of parboiled
weariness. Where sea and sky met one another—if
they could do it without moving—the rim of
dazzled vision whitened to a talc–like glimmer.
Within that circle all was tintless, hard as steel,
yet dull and oily, smitten flat with heat and haze.
Not a single place in sky and sea to which a man
might point his finger, and say to his mate, “Look
there!” No skir of fish, not even a sharkʼs fin, or
a mitching dolphin, no dip of wing, no life at all,
beyond the hot rim of the ship, or rather now the
“vessel,” where many a man lay frying, with
scarcely any lard left. And oh, how the tar and
the pitch did smell, running like a cankered
apricot–tree, and the steam of the bilge–water<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</SPAN></span>
found its way up, and reeked through the yawning
deck–seams!</p>
<p>But if any man durst look over the side (being
gifted with an Egyptian skull, for to any thin head
the sunstroke is death, when taken upon the crown),
that daring man would have seen in blue water,
some twenty fathoms below him, a world of life,
and work, and taste, complex, yet simple, more ingenious
than his wisest labours. For here no rough
rivers profane the sea with a flood of turbulent
passion, like a foul oath vented upon the calm
summer twilight; neither is there strong indraught
from the tossing of distant waters, nor rolling
leagues of mountain surf, as in the Indian Ocean.
All is heat and sleep above, where the sheer dint
of the sun lies; but down in the depth of those
glassy halls they heed not the fervour of the noon–blaze,
nor the dewy sparkle of starlight.</p>
<p>“Typhoon by–and–by,” said the first mate, yawning,
but too lazy to stretch, under the awning
of a sail which they wetted with a hydropult, a
most useful thing on shipboard, as well as in a
garden.</p>
<p>“Not a bit of it,” answered the captain, looking
still more lazy, but managing to suck cold punch.</p>
<p>“We shall see,” was all the mate said. It was
a deal too hot to argue, and he was actually
drinking ale, English bottled ale, hoisted up from
a dip in blue water, but as hot as the pipes in
a pinery.</p>
<p>The under–supercargo heeded not these laconic<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
interchanges. The oppression was too great for
him. Amid that universal blaze and downright
pour of stifling heat, his mind was gone woolgathering
back into the old New Forest. The
pleasant stir of the stripling leaves, the shadows
weaving their morrice–dance, and trooping away
on the grass–tufts at the pensive steps of evening;
the sound and scent of the vernal wind among the
blowing gorse; the milky splash of the cuckoo–flower
in swarded breaks of woodland, the bees in
the belfry of cowslips, the frill of the white wind–flower,
and the fleeting scent of violets—all these
in their form and colour moved, or lay in their
beauty before him, while he was leaning against
the side–rail, and it burned his hand to touch it.</p>
<p>“Wants a wet swab on his nob,” said the first
mate, tersely; “never come to himself sure as my
name is Cracklins.”</p>
<p>“Donʼt agree with you,” answered the captain,
who always snubbed the mate; “heʼs a sight better
now than at Blackwall. Poor young gent, I like
him.”</p>
<p>“So do I,” said the mate, pouring out more
boiling beer; “but that ainʼt much to do with it.
Thereʼs the wet swab anyhow.”</p>
<p>About an hour before sunset, when the sky was
purple, and the hot vapours piling away in slow
drifts, like large haycocks walking, a gentle breeze
came up and made little finger–marks on the water.
First it awoke shy glances and glosses, light as the
play upon richly–glazed silk, or the glimpse upon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span>
mother–of–pearl. Then it breathed on the lips of
men, and they sucked at it as at spring–water.
Then it came sliding, curling, ruffling, breaking the
image of sky upon sea, but bringing earthly life
and courage, hope, and the spirit of motion. Many
a rough and gruff tar shed tears, not knowing the
least about them, only from natureʼs good–will and
power, as turpentine flows from the pine–wood.</p>
<p>“Hearty, my lads, and bear a hand.” “Pipe
my eye, and be blessed to me!” They rasped it
off with their tarry knuckles, and would knock
down any one of canine extraction, who dared to
say wet was the white of their eyes.</p>
<p>The gurgling of the water sounded like the sobs
of a sleeping child, as it went dapping and lipping
and lapping, under the bows and along the run of
the sweetly–gliding curvature. Soon you could see
the quiet closure of the fluid behind her, the fibreing
first (as of parted hair) convergent under the
counter, the dimples circling in opposite ways on
the right and left of the triangle, and then the
linear ruffles meeting, and spreading away in broad
white union, after a little jostling. You may see
the same at the tail of a mill–stream, when the
water is bright in July, and the alder–shade falls
across it. For the sails were beginning to draw
again now, and the sheets and tacks were tightening,
and the braces creaking merrily, and every bit
of man–stuff on board felt his heart go, and his
lungs work. Therefore all were glad and chaffing,
as the manner is of Britons, when the man in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
foretop shouted down, “Land upon the port–bow.”</p>
<p>“I have looked for it all day,” said the captain;
“I was right to half a league, Smith.”</p>
<p>The skipper had run somewhat out of his
course to avoid a cyclone to the westward, but he
had not allowed sufficiently for the indraught of
the Gulf of Guinea, and was twenty leagues more
to the eastward than he had any idea of being.
Nevertheless, they had plenty of sea–room, and
now from the trending of the coast might prudently
stand due south. They had passed Cape
Lopez three days ago, of course without having
sighted it, and had run by the log three hundred
miles thence, despite the dead calm of that day.
So they knew that they could not be very far from
the mouth of the river Congo.</p>
<p>As they slipped along with that freshening
breeze, the water lost its brightness, and soon became
of a yellowish hue, as if mixed with a turbulent
freshet. Then they lay to in fifteen fathoms,
and sent off a boat to the island, for the intense
heat of the last few days had turned their water
putrid. The first and second mates were going,
and the supercargo took his gun, and declared that
he would stretch his legs and bring home some
game for supper. What island it was they were
not quite sure, for there was nothing marked on
the charts just there, to agree with their reckoning
and log–run. But they knew how defective charts
are.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When the water–casks were lowered, and all
were ready to shove off, and the mast of the yawl
was stepped, and the sail beginning to flap and
jerk in a most impatient manner, Cracklins, who
was a good–natured fellow, hollaed out to Cradock—</p>
<p>“Come along of us, Newman, old fellow. You
want bowsing up, I see. Bring your little dog for
a run, to rout up some rabbits or monkeys for
Tippler. And have a good run yourself, my
boy.”</p>
<p>Without stopping to think—for his mind that
day had only been a dream to him—Cradock
Nowell went down the side, with Wena on his
arm, and she took advantage of the occasion to
lick his face all over. Then he shuddered unconsciously
at the gun which lay under the transoms.</p>
<p>“Look sharp, Cracklins,” shouted the captain
from his window; “the glass is down, I see, half
an inch. I can only give you two hours.”</p>
<p>“All right, sir,” answered the mate; “but we
canʼt fill the casks in that time, unless we have
wonderful luck.”</p>
<p>The land lay about a mile away, and with the
sail beginning to tug, and four oars dipping
vigorously,—for the men were refreshed by the
evening breeze, and wild for a run on shore,—they
reached it in about ten minutes, and nosed her in
on a silvery beach strewn with shells innumerable.
A few dwarf rocks rose here and there, and the
line of the storms was definite, but for inland
view there was nothing more than a crescent terrace<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>
of palm–trees. The air felt beautifully fresh
and pure, and entirely free from the crawling
miasma of the African coast. No mangrove
swamps, no festering mud, no reedy bayou of
rottenness.</p>
<p>But the boat–crew found no fresh water at first;
and they went in three parties to search for it.
The mate with three men struck off to the right,
the boatswain with three more made away to the
left, only Cradock and the supercargo walked directly
inland. Wena found several rabbits, all of
a sandy colour, and she did enjoy most wonderfully
her little chivies after them. Most of the
birds were going to rest, as the rapid twilight fell,
but the trees were full of monkeys, and here and
there a squirrel shook the light tracery of the
branches.</p>
<p>Tippler and Cradock wandered inland for half a
mile or more, keeping along a pleasant hollow
which they feared to leave, lest they should lose
the way back, and as yet they had seen neither
spring nor brook, although from the growth and
freshness they knew that water must be near
them. Then suddenly the supercargo fired his
gun at a flying green pigeon, whose beauty had
caught his eyes.</p>
<p>To his great amazement Cradock fell down,
utterly helpless, pale as a corpse, not trembling,
but in a syncope. His comrade tried to restore
him, but without any effect, then managed to drag
him part way up the slope, and set him with his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>
back to an ebony–tree, while he ran to fetch assistance.
Suddenly then an ominous sound trembled
through the thick wood, a mysterious thrill of the
earth and air, at the coming of war between them.
It moved the wild grapes, the flowering creepers,
the sinuous caoutchouc, the yellow nuts of the
palm–oil–tree, and the pointed leaves of the ebony.</p>
<p>When the supercargo ran down to the boat, the
men were pushing off hastily, the water curling
and darkening, and a sullen swell increasing. A
heavy mass of cloud hung to leeward, and the tropical
night fell heavily, till the ship was swallowed
up in it.</p>
<p>“Jump in, Tippler! Just in time,” cried the
first mate, seizing the tiller–ropes; “not a moment
to lose. We must go without water; we shall have
enough out of the sky to–night. I could not tell
what to do about you, and the signalʼs ‘Return
immediately.’”</p>
<p>“But I tell you, we canʼt go, Cracklins. Poor
Newman is up there in a fit or something. Send
two men with me to fetch him.”</p>
<p>“How far off is he?”</p>
<p>“Nearly a mile.”</p>
<p>“Then I darenʼt do it. We are risking our lives
already. The typhoon will be on us in half an
hour. Said so this morning—skipper wouldnʼt
listen. Jump in, man, jump in; or weʼre off without
you. Canʼt you see how the sea is rising?
Ease off the sheet, you lubber there. We must
down with the sail in two minutes, lads, soon as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
ever weʼve got way on her. Lend a grip of your
black fist, Julep, instead of yawing there like a
nigger. Now will you come, or wonʼt you?”</p>
<p>Tippler was a brave and kind–hearted man; but
he thought of his wife and children, and leaped
into the boat. Although he was not a sailor, he
saw the urgency of the moment, and confessed
that nine lives must not be sacrificed for the sake
of one. The power of the wind was growing so
fast, and the lift of the waves so menacing, that
the nine men needed both skill and strength to
recover their ship, ere the storm burst.</p>
<p>And a terrible storm it was, of the genuine
Capricorn type, sudden, deluging, laced with blue
lightning, whirling in the opposite direction to that
which our cyclones take. At midnight the <i>Taprobane</i>
was running under bare poles, shipping great
seas heavily, with an electric coronet gleaming and
bristling all around truck and dog–vane. And by
that time she was sixty miles from her under–supercargo.</p>
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