It is impossible for me to overrate
the value of Mrs Reichardt’s assistance.
Indeed had it not been for her, circumstanced as I
was at this particular period, I should in all probability
have perished. Her exhortations saved me from
despair, when our position seemed to have grown quite
desperate. But example did more, even, than precept.
Her ingenuity in devising expedients; her activity
in putting them in force; her unfailing cheerfulness
under disappointment, and Christian resignation under
privation, produced the best results. I was enabled
to bear up against the ill effects of our crippled
resources, consequent upon the ill conduct of the
sailors of the whaler, and the failure of our fish-pond.
She manufactured strong lines for
deep-sea fishing, and having discovered a shelf of
rock, little more than two feet above the sea, to
which with a good deal of difficulty I could descend,
I took my stand one day on the rock with my lines
baited with a piece of one of my feathered favourites,
whom dire necessity had at last forced me to destroy.
I waited with all the patience of a veteran angler.
I knew the water to be very deep, and it lay in a
sheltered nook or corner of the rocks about ten feet
across; I allowed the line to drop some three or four
yards, and not having any float, could only tell I
had a bite by feeling a pull at the line, which was
wound round my arm.
After some time having been passed
in this way, my attention was withdrawn from the line,
and given to the narrative I had so lately heard;
that is to say, though my eyes were still fixed upon
the line, I had completely given up my thoughts to
the story of the poor German boy, who had been snatched
from poverty by the interference of the parish clerk’s
daughter; and I contrived to speculate on what I should
have done under such circumstances, imagining all
sorts of extravagances in which I should have
indulged, to testify my gratitude to so amiable and
benevolent a friend.
A singular course of ideal scenes
followed each other in quick succession in my mind as
I fancied myself the hero of a similar adventure.
I regarded my imaginary benefactress with feelings
of such intensity as I had never before experienced;
and it seemed that I was to her the exciting object
of sentiments of a like nature, the knowledge of which
awoke in our hearts the most agreeable sensations.
I was rudely disturbed out of this
day-dream by finding myself suddenly plunged into
the deep water beneath me. The shock was so startling,
that some seconds elapsed before I could comprehend
my situation; and then it became clear that I must
have hooked a fish, that had not only succeeded in
pulling me off my balance, but the line by which he
was held being round my arm, cutting painfully into
the flesh, threatened drowning by keeping me under
water. With great difficulty I managed to rise
to the surface, and loosened the windings of the line
from my limb; then, anxious to retain possession of
what from its force must have been a fish well worth
some trouble in catching, I held on with both hands,
and pulled with all my strength.
At first, by main force I was drawn
through the water; then, when I found the strain slacken,
I drew in the line. This manoeuvre was repeated
several times, till I succeeded in obtaining a view
of what I had caught; or, more properly speaking,
of what had caught me. It was merely a glimpse;
for the fish, which was a very large one, getting a
sight of me within a few yards of him, made some desperate
plunges, and again darted off, dragging me along with
him, sometimes under the water, and sometimes on the
surface.
His body was nearly round, and about
seven or eight feet long rather a formidable
antagonist for close quarters; nevertheless, I was
most eager to get at him, the more so, when I ascertained
that his resistance was evidently decreasing.
I continued to approach, and at last got near enough
to plunge my knife up to the haft in his head, which
at once put an end to the struggle.
But now another difficulty presented
itself. In the ardour of the chase I had been
drawn nearly a mile from the island, and I found it
impossible to carry back the produce of my sport, exhausted
as I was by the efforts I had made in capturing him.
I knew I could not swim with such a burthen for the
most inconsiderable portion of the distance.
My fish therefore must be abandoned. Here was
a bountiful supply of food, as soon as placed within
reach, rendered totally unavailable.
I thought of Mrs Reichardt.
I thought how gratified she would have been, could
I have brought to her such an excellent addition to
our scanty stock of food. Then I thought of
her steadfast reliance upon Providence, and what valuable
lessons of piety and wisdom she would read me, if
she found me depressed by my disappointment.