Shortly afterward an incident
occurred which I am induced to look upon as more intensely
productive of emotion, as far more replete with the
extremes first of delight and then of horror, than
even any of the thousand chances which afterward befell
me in nine long years, crowded with events of the
most startling and, in many cases, of the most unconceived
and unconceivable character. We were lying on
the deck near the companion-way, and debating the
possibility of yet making our way into the storeroom,
when, looking toward Augustus, who lay fronting myself,
I perceived that he had become all at once deadly pale,
and that his lips were quivering in the most singular
and unaccountable manner. Greatly alarmed, I
spoke to him, but he made me no reply, and I was beginning
to think that he was suddenly taken ill, when I took
notice of his eyes, which were glaring apparently
at some object behind me. I turned my head, and
shall never forget the ecstatic joy which thrilled
through every particle of my frame, when I perceived
a large brig bearing down upon us, and not more than
a couple of miles off. I sprung to my feet as
if a musket bullet had suddenly struck me to the heart;
and, stretching out my arms in the direction of the
vessel, stood in this manner, motionless, and unable
to articulate a syllable. Peters and Parker were
equally affected, although in different ways.
The former danced about the deck like a madman, uttering
the most extravagant rhodomontades, intermingled with
howls and imprecations, while the latter burst into
tears, and continued for many minutes weeping like
a child.
The vessel in sight was a large hermaphrodite
brig, of a Dutch build, and painted black, with a
tawdry gilt figure-head. She had evidently seen
a good deal of rough weather, and, we supposed, had
suffered much in the gale which had proved so disastrous
to ourselves; for her foretopmast was gone, and some
of her starboard bulwarks. When we first saw
her, she was, as I have already said, about two miles
off and to windward, bearing down upon us. The
breeze was very gentle, and what astonished us chiefly
was, that she had no other sails set than her foremast
and mainsail, with a flying jib of course
she came down but slowly, and our impatience amounted
nearly to phrensy. The awkward manner in which
she steered, too, was remarked by all of us, even
excited as we were. She yawed about so considerably,
that once or twice we thought it impossible she could
see us, or imagined that, having seen us, and discovered
no person on board, she was about to tack and make
off in another direction. Upon each of these occasions
we screamed and shouted at the top of our voices,
when the stranger would appear to change for a moment
her intention, and again hold on toward us this
singular conduct being repeated two or three times,
so that at last we could think of no other manner
of accounting for it than by supposing the helmsman
to be in liquor.
No person was seen upon her decks
until she arrived within about a quarter of a mile
of us. We then saw three seamen, whom by their
dress we took to be Hollanders. Two of these
were lying on some old sails near the forecastle,
and the third, who appeared to be looking at us with
great curiosity, was leaning over the starboard bow
near the bowsprit. This last was a stout and
tall man, with a very dark skin. He seemed by
his manner to be encouraging us to have patience, nodding
to us in a cheerful although rather odd way, and smiling
constantly, so as to display a set of the most brilliantly
white teeth. As his vessel drew nearer, we saw
a red flannel cap which he had on fall from his head
into the water; but of this he took little or no notice,
continuing his odd smiles and gesticulations.
I relate these things and circumstances minutely,
and I relate them, it must be understood, precisely
as they appeared to us.
The brig came on slowly, and now more
steadily than before, and I cannot speak
calmly of this event our hearts leaped up
wildly within us, and we poured out our whole souls
in shouts and thanksgiving to God for the complete,
unexpected, and glorious deliverance that was so palpably
at hand. Of a sudden, and all at once, there came
wafted over the ocean from the strange vessel (which
was now close upon us) a smell, a stench, such as
the whole world has no name for no conception
of hellish utterly suffocating insufferable,
inconceivable. I gasped for breath, and turning
to my companions, perceived that they were paler than
marble. But we had now no time left for question
or surmise the brig was within fifty feet
of us, and it seemed to be her intention to run under
our counter, that we might board her without putting
out a boat. We rushed aft, when, suddenly, a
wide yaw threw her off full five or six points from
the course she had been running, and, as she passed
under our stern at the distance of about twenty feet,
we had a full view of her decks. Shall I ever
forget the triple horror of that spectacle? Twenty-five
or thirty human bodies, among whom were several females,
lay scattered about between the counter and the galley
in the last and most loathsome state of putrefaction.
We plainly saw that not a soul lived in that fated
vessel! Yet we could not help shouting to the
dead for help! Yes, long and loudly did we beg,
in the agony of the moment, that those silent and
disgusting images would stay for us, would not abandon
us to become like them, would receive us among their
goodly company! We were raving with horror and
despair thoroughly mad through the anguish
of our grievous disappointment.
As our first loud yell of terror broke
forth, it was replied to by something, from near the
bowsprit of the stranger, so closely resembling the
scream of a human voice that the nicest ear might have
been startled and deceived. At this instant another
sudden yaw brought the region of the forecastle for
a moment into view, and we beheld at once the origin
of the sound. We saw the tall stout figure still
leaning on the bulwark, and still nodding his head
to and fro, but his face was now turned from us so
that we could not behold it. His arms were extended
over the rail, and the palms of his hands fell outward.
His knees were lodged upon a stout rope, tightly stretched,
and reaching from the heel of the bowsprit to a cathead.
On his back, from which a portion of the shirt had
been torn, leaving it bare, there sat a huge sea-gull,
busily gorging itself with the horrible flesh, its
bill and talons deep buried, and its white plumage
spattered all over with blood. As the brig moved
farther round so as to bring us close in view, the
bird, with much apparent difficulty, drew out its
crimsoned head, and, after eyeing us for a moment
as if stupefied, arose lazily from the body upon which
it had been feasting, and, flying directly above our
deck, hovered there a while with a portion of clotted
and liver-like substance in its beak. The horrid
morsel dropped at length with a sullen splash immediately
at the feet of Parker. May God forgive me, but
now, for the first time, there flashed through my
mind a thought, a thought which I will not mention,
and I felt myself making a step toward the ensanguined
spot. I looked upward, and the eyes of Augustus
met my own with a degree of intense and eager meaning
which immediately brought me to my senses. I
sprang forward quickly, and, with a deep shudder, threw
the frightful thing into the sea.
The body from which it had been taken,
resting as it did upon the rope, had been easily swayed
to and fro by the exertions of the carnivorous bird,
and it was this motion which had at first impressed
us with the belief of its being alive. As the
gull relieved it of its weight, it swung round and
fell partially over, so that the face was fully discovered.
Never, surely, was any object so terribly full of awe!
The eyes were gone, and the whole flesh around the
mouth, leaving the teeth utterly naked. This,
then, was the smile which had cheered us on to hope!
this the but I forbear. The brig, as
I have already told, passed under our stern, and made
its way slowly but steadily to leeward. With
her and with her terrible crew went all our gay visions
of deliverance and joy. Deliberately as she went
by, we might possibly have found means of boarding
her, had not our sudden disappointment and the appalling
nature of the discovery which accompanied it laid entirely
prostrate every active faculty of mind and body.
We had seen and felt, but we could neither think nor
act, until, alas! too late. How much our intellects
had been weakened by this incident may be estimated
by the fact, that when the vessel had proceeded so
far that we could perceive no more than the half of
her hull, the proposition was seriously entertained
of attempting to overtake her by swimming!
I have, since this period, vainly
endeavoured to obtain some clew to the hideous uncertainty
which enveloped the fate of the stranger. Her
build and general appearance, as I have before stated,
led us to the belief that she was a Dutch trader,
and the dresses of the crew also sustained this opinion.
We might have easily seen the name upon her stern,
and, indeed, taken other observations, which would
have guided us in making out her character; but the
intense excitement of the moment blinded us to every
thing of that nature. From the saffron-like hue
of such of the corpses as were not entirely decayed,
we concluded that the whole of her company had perished
by the yellow fever, or some other virulent disease
of the same fearful kind. If such were the case
(and I know not what else to imagine), death, to judge
from the positions of the bodies, must have come upon
them in a manner awfully sudden and overwhelming, in
a way totally distinct from that which generally characterizes
even the most deadly pestilences with which mankind
are acquainted. It is possible, indeed, that
poison, accidentally introduced into some of their
sea-stores, may have brought about the disaster, or
that the eating of some unknown venomous species of
fish, or other marine animal, or oceanic bird, might
have induced it but it is utterly useless
to form conjectures where all is involved, and will,
no doubt, remain for ever involved, in the most appalling
and unfathomable mystery.