“Hham d’illah! Praise
be to God!” exclaimed the pacha, as the divan
closed. “This is dry work, hearing petitions
for three hours, and not a sequin to my treasury.
Mustapha, has the renegade come back?”
“The Kafir waits to kiss the
dust of your sublime feet,” replied the vizier.
“Let him approach, then, Mustapha,”
said the pacha joyfully, and the renegade immediately
made his appearance.
“Kosh amedeid, you are welcome,
Huckaback. We have had our ears poisoned since
you quitted us. I forget where it was that you
left off.”
“May it please your highness,
at the ending of my second voyage, in which ”
“I remember when
the Frankish woman god, stopped the leak. You
may proceed.”
The renegade bowed, and commenced
his third voyage, as follows:
“I believe that I stated to
your highness, at the end of my second voyage, I determined
to go to Toulon, and make some inquiry after my dear
Cerise.”
“I recollect you did,”
interrupted the pacha, “but I tell you again,
as I told you before, that I want to know nothing
about her. Have the goodness to skip all that
part, or it will be five sequins out of your girdle.”
“Your highness shall be obeyed,”
replied the renegade, who, after musing a short time,
continued.
THIRD VOYAGE OF HUCKABACK.
I was so affected at the intelligence
of Cerise having destroyed herself, that I found it
impossible to remain on shore. Having met with
the captain of a whaler, who expatiated on the fortune
which might be realised by embarking in the speculation,
I purchased a large ship, and fitted it out for a
voyage to Baffin’s Bay. This consumed all
the money I had left, but as I expected to return
with ten times the sum, I made no scruple of parting
with it.
My crew consisted of about thirty
men, all strong fellows; ten of them Englishmen, and
the remainder from my own country. We stood to
the northward, until we reached the ice, which floated
high as mountains, and steering in between it, we
at last came to a fine open water, where a large quantity
of whales were blowing in every direction. Our
boats were soon hoisted out, and we were extremely
fortunate, having twenty-three fish on board, and
boiled down before the season was over.
I now considered my fortune made;
and the ship being full up to the beams, we made all
sail to return home. But a heavy gale came on
from the southward, which drove all the ice together,
and our ship with it, and we were in great danger
of being squeezed to atoms. Fortunately, we made
fast in a bight, on the lee side of a great iceberg,
which preserved us, and we anxiously awaited for the
termination of the gale, to enable us to proceed.
But when the gale subsided, a hard frost came on,
and we were completely frozen up, where we lay the
ice formed round to the depth of several feet, and
lifted the ship, laden as she was, out of the water.
The English, who were experienced
fishermen, told us, that we had no chance of being
released until next spring. I ascended to the
mast-head, and perceived that for miles, as far as
the eye could scan the horizon, there was nothing
but one continued succession of icebergs and floes
inseparably united. Despairing, therefore, of
any release, until the cold weather should break up,
I made all arrangements for remaining during the winter.
Our provisions were very short, and we were obliged
to make use of the whale oil, but it soon produced
such dysenteries, that it was no longer resorted
to.
After two months, the cold became
intense, and our fuel ran short. At the end of
three months the crew complained of scurvy, and could
not move about the decks. At the end of the fourth
month, they had all died except the chief harpooner,
a fat porpus of an Englishman, and myself.
The bodies remained on the deck, for
the cold was so intense that they would not have been
tainted for centuries; and, as at the end of five
months, the provisions were all expended, we were again
obliged to resort to the whale oil.
The whale oil produced a return of
our complaints, and having no other resource, we were
forced by imperious hunger to make our repasts from
one of the bodies of our dead shipmates. They
were so hard, that it was with difficulty that we
could separate a portion with an axe, and the flesh
broke off in fragments, as if we had been splitting
a piece of granite; but it thawed before the fire,
which we had contrived to keep alight, by supplying
it from the bulwarks of the quarter-deck, which we
cut away as we required them. The old harpooner
and I lived together on the best terms for a month,
during which we seldom quitted the cabin of the vessel,
having now drawn down the third dead body, which we
cut up as we required it with less difficulty than
before, from the change in the weather.
The ice continued breaking up, and
all day and night we were startled at the loud crashing
which took place, as the icebergs separated from each
other. But my disgust at feeding upon human flesh
produced a sort of insanity. I had always been
partial to good eating, and was by no means an indifferent
cook; and I determined to try whether something more
palatable could not be provided for our meals; the
idea haunted me day and night, and at last I imagined
myself a French restaurateur; I tied a cloth before
me as an apron, put on a cotton nightcap instead of
my fur cap, and was about to make a trial of my skill,
when I discovered that I had no lard, no fat of any
kind except train oil, which I rejected as not being
suitable to the “cuisine Francaise.”
My messmates who lay dead, were examined one by one,
but they had fallen away so much previous to their
decease, that not a symptom of fat was to be perceived.
Without fat I could do nothing; and as I thought of
it in despair, my eye was caught by the rotundity
of paunch which still appertained to the English harpooner,
the only living being besides myself out of so many.
“I must have fat,” cried I fiercely, as
I surveyed his unwieldy carcase. He started when
he observed the rolling of my eyes, and perceiving
that I was advancing towards him, sharpening my knife,
he did not think it prudent to trust himself longer
in my company. Snatching up two or three blankets,
he ran on deck, and contrived to ascend to the main-top
before I could follow him. There he held me at
bay, and I continued watching him from below with my
large carving knife in my hand, which I occasionally
whetted. He remained aloft all night, and so
did I on deck, to get possession of him when he should
descend. I was so eager in my frenzy to obtain
him, that I felt neither cold nor hunger; the weather
during the day was now warm enough to be pleasant,
but the nights were piercing. My fat shipmate
remained in the top for three days and nights, during
which period I never removed from my post. At
the close of the third day he looked over the top
brim, and implored my mercy. When he showed himself
I hardly knew him, so much had he wasted away, and
it then struck me, that if he remained aloft much
longer he would have no more fat than the others,
and would not serve my purpose. I therefore pledged
him my honour, that I would not attempt his life for
ten days; and as he was perishing with the cold, he
agreed to the armistice, and once more descended to
the deck. But I was saved the crime of murder,
for he was so ravenous when he came down, that he
ate nearly the whole of a man’s leg, and died
from repletion during the night. I cannot express
to your highness the satisfaction that I felt at finding
that the carcase of the harpooner was in my possession.
I surveyed my treasure over and over again with delight.
I could now cook my French dishes. He was soon
dissected, and all his unctuous parts carefully melted
down, and I found that I had a stock which would last
me as long as the bodies which I had remaining to
exercise my skill upon. The first day I succeeded
admirably I cooked my dishes; and when
they were ready I took off my night-cap and apron,
passed my fingers through my hair, and fancied myself
a garcon at a restaurateur’s. I laid the
cloth, put the dishes on the table, and when it was
complete, went on deck and then returned as the bon
vivant who had ordered the dinner.
Never was any meal so delicious to
my insane fancy. I devoured every thing which
I cooked, and drank water for champagne. I meditated
upon what I should have for dinner on the ensuing
day, and then retired to my bed. In the meantime
the ice had separated, and the ship was again afloat;
but I cared not: all my ideas were concentrated
in the pleasures of the table and the next
morning I went on deck to obtain a piece of meat,
when I was astonished at a terrific growl. I turned
my head and perceived an enormous white bear, who
was making sad depredations in my larder, having nearly
finished the whole body of one of my dead shipmates.
He was as large as an ox, so large that when he made
a rush at me, and I slipped down the ladder, he could
not follow me. I again looked up, and perceived
that he had finished his meal. After walking
round the decks two or three times, smelling at every
thing, he plunged overboard and disappeared.
Glad to be rid of so unpleasant a
visitor, I came up, and cutting off the meat I required,
again exerted my cookery, was again satisfied and
went to sleep. I never felt so happy as I then
did in my insane condition. All I thought of,
all I wished, I could command my happiness
was concentrated in eating my fellow-creatures, cooked
in a proper manner, instead of the usual method of
bolting them down to satisfy the cravings of imperious
hunger. I woke the next morning as usual, and
when I crawled on deck, was again saluted with the
angry growl of the bear, who was busy making a repast
upon another body when he had finished he
plunged into the sea as before.
I now thought it high time to put
an end to these depredations on my larder, which in
a few days would have left me destitute. My invention
was called into action, and I hit upon a plan, which
I thought would succeed. I dragged all the bodies
to the after part of the quarter-deck, and blocked
it up before the cabin-hatch with swabs and small sails,
so as to form a sort of dam about eight inches high.
I then went below and brought up forty or fifty buckets
of train oil, which I poured upon the deck abaft,
so that it was covered with oil to the height of several
inches. On the ensuing morning the bear came as
I expected, and commenced his repast; I had stationed
myself aloft, in the mizen-top, with several buckets
of oil, which I poured upon him. His fur was
otherwise well saturated with what he had collected
when he lay down on the deck to devour one of the
bodies more at his ease. When I had poured all
my buckets of oil over him but one, I threw the empty
buckets down upon him. This enraged him, and
he mounted the rigging to be revenged. I waited
until he had arrived at the futtock shrouds, when I
poured my last bucket upon him, which quite blinded
him, and then gained the deck by sliding down the
back stays on the opposite side.
A bear can climb fast, but is very
slow in his descent the consequence was
that I had plenty of time for my arrangements.
I ran below, and lighting a torch of oakum, which
I had prepared in readiness, placed it to his hinder
quarters as he descended. The effect was exactly
what I had anticipated; his thick fur, covered in
every part with oil, was immediately in a blaze, and
burnt with such rapidity, that before he could recover
his feet on deck, he was like an immense ball of fire.
I retreated to the companion-hatch to watch his motions.
His first act was to return to the quarter-deck and
roll himself in the oil, with an idea of quenching
the flames, but this added fuel to them, and the animal
roaring in his agony at last jumped into the sea and
disappeared.
Having thus rid myself of my intruder
I returned to my cooking. The ship was now clear
of ice, the weather was warm, the bodies of my shipmates
emitted a fetid smell, but I saw and smelt nothing;
all that I observed was that the barley which had
been scattered on the deck by the fowls, had sprung
up about the decks, and I congratulated myself upon
the variety it would give to my culinary pursuits.
I continued to cook, to eat, and to sleep as before,
when a circumstance occurred, which put an end to
all my culinary madness. One night I found the
water washing by the side of my standing bed-place
in the cabin, and jumping out in alarm to ascertain
the cause, I plunged over head and ears. The fact
was, that the ship, when lifted by the ice, had sprung
a leak which had gradually filled her without my perceiving
it. My fear of drowning was so great, that I
ran into the very danger which I would have avoided.
I darted out of the cabin windows into the sea, whereas
had I gone upon deck I should have been safe:
for a little reflection might have told me that a vessel
laden with oil could not have sunk but reflection
came too late, and benumbed with the coldness of the
waters, I could have struggled but a few seconds more,
when I suddenly came in contact with a spar somewhat
bigger than a boat’s mast. I seized it to
support myself, and was surprised at finding it jerked
from me occasionally; as if there was somebody else
who had hold of it, and who wished to force me to let
it go; but it was quite dark, and I could distinguish
nothing. I clung to it until daylight appeared,
when what was my horror to perceive an enormous shark
close to me. I nearly let go my hold and sunk,
so paralysed was I with fear, I anticipated every
moment to feel his teeth crushing me in half, and
I shut my eyes that I might not add to the horrors
of my death by being a witness to the means. Some
minutes had elapsed, which appeared to me as so many
hours, when surprised at being still alive, I ventured
to open my eyes. The shark was still at the same
distance from me, and on examination I perceived that
the boat’s mast or spar, to which I was clinging,
had been passed through his nose in a transverse direction,
being exactly balanced on either side. The shark
was of the description found in the North Seas, which
is called by the sailors the blind shark. I now
perfectly understood that he had been caught and spritsail
yarded, as the seamen term it, and then turned
adrift for their diversion. The buoyancy of the
spar prevents the animal from sinking down under the
water, and this punishment of their dreaded enemy
is a very favourite amusement of sailors.
I summoned up all my courage, and
being tired of holding on by the spar, resolved to
mount upon his back, which I accomplished without
difficulty, and I found the seat on his shoulders before
the dorsal fin, not only secure but very comfortable.
The animal, unaccustomed to carry weight, made several
attempts to get rid of me, but not being able to sink
I retained my seat. He then increased his velocity,
and we went on over a smooth sea, at the rate of about
three knots an hour. For two days I continued
my course to the southward, upon my novel conveyance,
during which I had nothing to eat except a few small
barnacles, and some parasitical vermin, peculiar to
the animal, which I discovered under his fins.
I also found a small remora, or sucking fish,
near his tail, but when I put it to my mouth, it fixed
itself so firmly on both my lips that I thought they
were sealed for ever. No force could detach it,
and there it hung like a padlock for many hours, to
my great mortification and annoyance, but at last
it died from being so long out of water, and when
it dropped off I devoured it.
On the third day I observed land at
a distance; it appeared to be an island, but I had
no idea what it could be. My steed continued his
course straight towards it, and being blind ran his
nose right upon the shore; before he found out his
mistake I slipped off his back, and climbing the steep
side of the island, was once more, as I thought, on
terra firm. Tired with long watching, I lay
down and fell fast asleep.
I was awakened by something touching
me on the shoulder, and opening my eyes, I perceived
that I was surrounded by several people, whom I naturally
inferred to be the natives of the island. They
were clad in dresses, which appeared to me to be made
of black leather, consisting of a pair of trousers,
and a long pea-jacket, very similar to those worn by
the Esquimaux Indians, which we occasionally fell in
with in the Northern Ocean. They each held a
long harpoon, formed entirely of bone, in their right
hands.
I was not a little surprised at being
addressed in the Patois dialect of the Basques in
my own country, which is spoken about Bayonne and
other parts adjacent to the Pyrennees. To their
questions I answered that I was the only survivor
of the crew of a whaler, which had been frozen up
in the ice, during the winter; that she had filled
with water, and that I had saved myself upon the back
of a shark.
They expressed no surprise at my unheard-of
conveyance to the island; on the contrary, they merely
observed, that sharks were too vicious to ride; and
asked me to accompany them to their town, an invitation
which I gladly accepted. As I walked along I
observed that the island was composed of white porous
pumice stone, without the least symptoms of vegetation;
not even a piece of moss could I discover nothing
but the bare pumice stone, with thousands of beautiful
green lizards, about ten inches long, playing about
in every part. The road was steep, and in several
parts the rock was cut into steps to enable you to
ascend. After an hour’s fatiguing walk,
which I never should have accomplished in my weak
state, without the assistance of the islanders, we
arrived at the summit. The view which met my
eyes was striking. I was on the peak of a chain
of hills, forming an immense amphitheatre, encircling
a valley which appeared about fifteen miles in diameter,
and the major part of which was occupied by a lake
of water.
I could discern what appeared to be
the habitations of men on different parts of the lake;
but there was not a tree or a shrub to be seen.
“What,” demanded I of
the man who appeared to take the lead of the rest
of the party, “have you no trees here?”
“None whatever; and yet we can
do very well without them. Do you not observe
that there is no mould; that the island is composed
entirely of pumice stone?”
“I do,” replied I.
“Pray what is the name of your barren spot and
in what part of the world are we?”
“As for its name, we call it
Whale Island,” replied the man; “but as
for where we are, we cannot exactly tell ourselves,
for we are a floating island, being composed entirely
of pumice stone, whose specific gravity, as you must
know, is much lighter than that of water.”
“How strange,” observed
I; “I cannot believe that you are in earnest.”
“And yet not quite so strange
as you imagine,” replied my conductor. “If
you examine the structure of this island, from where
you now stand, you will perceive at once, that it
has been the crater of some large volcano. It
is easy to imagine, that after having reared its head
above the surface of the sea, by some of those sudden
caprices of ever-working nature, the base has
again sunk down, leaving the summit of the crater
floating on the ocean. Such is our opinion of
the formation of this island; and I doubt whether
your geologists on the continent would produce a more
satisfactory theory.”
“What? you have communicated
with Europe, then?” cried I, delighted at the
hopes of return.
“We have had communication,
but we do not communicate again. In the winter
time, this island, which, strange as it may appear
to you, does not change its position many hundred
miles in the course of centuries, is enclosed with
the icebergs in the north: when the spring appears,
we are disengaged, and then drift a degree or two
to the southward, seldom more.”
“Are you not then affected by the winds and
tides?”
“Of course we are: but
there is a universal balance throughout nature, and
everything finds its level. There is order, when
there appears disorder and no stream runs
in one direction, without a counter stream, to restore
the equilibrium. Upon the whole, what with the
under currents, and the changes which continually
take place, I should say that we are very little,
if at all, affected by the tides which may
be considered as a sort of exercise, prescribed by
nature to keep the ocean in good health. The
same may be affirmed with respect to the winds.
Wind is a substance, as well as water, capable of great
expansion, but still a substance. A certain portion
has been allotted to the world for its convenience,
and there is a regularity in its apparent variability.
It must be self-evident, when all the wind has been
collected to the eastward, by the north-west gales
which prevail in winter, that it must be crowded and
penned up in that quarter, and, from its known expansive
powers, must return and restore the equilibrium.
That is the reason that we have such a long continuance
of easterly winds, in the months of February and March.”
“You said that you had communication with Europe?”
“We have occasionally visits
perforce, from those who are cast away in ships or
boats; but the people who come here, have never returned.
The difficulty of leaving the island is very great:
and we flatter ourselves, that few who have remained
any time with us, have ever felt the desire.”
“What not to leave
a barren rock, without even a blade of grass upon
it.”
“Happiness,” replied my
conductor, “does not consist in the variety of
your possessions, but in being contented with what
you have” and he commenced the descent
of the hill.
I followed him in a melancholy mood,
for I could imagine little comfort in such a sterile
spot.
“I am not a native of this island,”
observed he, as we walked along; “it is more
than four hundred years since it was first inhabited,
by the crew of a French vessel, which was lost in
the Northern Ocean. But I do not wish to leave
it. I was cast on it in a whale boat, when separated
from the ship in a snow-storm, about twenty-five years
ago. I am now a married man, with a family, and
am considered one of the wealthiest inhabitants of
the island, for I possess between forty and fifty
whales.”
“Whales!” exclaimed I, with astonishment.
“Yes,” replied my conductor,
“whales, which are the staple of this island,
and without them we should not be so prosperous and
so happy as we are. But you have much to see
and learn; you will by-and-bye acknowledge that there
is nothing existing in the world, which, from necessity
and by perseverance, man cannot subject to his use.
Yon lake which covers the bottom of our valley, is
our source of wealth and comfort, and yields us an
increase as plentiful as the most fertile plains of
Italy or France.”
As we arrived close to the foot of
the hills, I perceived several black substances on
the shores of the lake. “Are those whales?”
inquired I.
“They were whales, but they
are now houses. That one by itself is mine, which
I hope you will consider as yours, until you have made
up your mind as to what you will do.”
We descended to the beach, and his
companions, wishing me good-morning, left me with
my conductor, who led the way to his house. It
was composed of the skin of one entire whale, much
larger than ever I had seen in the Northern Ocean.
The backbone and ribs of the animal served as rafters
to extend the skin, which wore the resemblance of
a long tent; it was further secured by ropes, formed
of the twisted sinews which passed over the top, and
were made fast to stakes of bone firmly fixed in the
ground on each side. When I entered, I found
to my surprise that there was plenty of light, which
was supplied from windows, composed of small panes
of whalebone ground down very thin, and at the further
end the head and scull of the animal formed a kitchen,
the smoke from the fire escaping through the spiracles
or breathing-holes above.
On each side of the room into which
I was ushered were raised seats, covered with seal
skins, and the other end of the house was divided off
with a species of black skin, into sleeping apartments
for the master of the house and his family. There
was not the least smell, as I anticipated before I
entered this strange dwelling-place.
I was introduced to his wife, who
welcomed me with cordiality. She was dressed
in the same dark skin as her husband, but of a much
finer texture, and had a scarlet cap on her head,
as well as scarlet trimmings to the front and bottom
of her dress, which on the whole was not only comfortable
but becoming in its appearance.
A bowl of milk was presented to me,
to refresh me after my walk and long abstinence.
“How!” observed I, “have you milk
here without pasture?”
“Yes,” replied my host,
“drink it, and tell me if you think it palatable.”
I did so, and found it very little
different from the asses’ milk of my own country perhaps
with a little more acidity of taste. In the meantime
several varieties of shell-fish, and a large cheese,
were placed upon the table, which, as well as the
stools, was composed entirely of bone.
“And cheese, too?” said I.
“Yes, and you will find it not
bad. It is the milk of the whale which you have
drank, and the cheese is prepared from the same.”
“Friend Huckaback,” observed
the pacha, “I think you are telling me lies.
Who ever heard of whale’s milk?”
“Allah forbid that I should
attempt to deceive a person of your highness’s
judgment; it could only end in mortification and defeat
to myself.”
“That’s very true,” observed the
pacha.
“Your highness has not called
to mind, that the whale is what naturalists call a
‘hot-blood animal,’ with arteries and circulation
of blood similar to the human species; and that it
brings forth its young alive, and nurses it at the
breast.”
“Very true,” observed the pacha.
“I had forgot that.”
My conductor resumed as follows: “As
I told you before, the whale is the staple of this
island. You observe that his skin serves us as
a house; from his bones we form all our implements from
his sinews, our thickest ropes down to our finest
thread. The dress we wear is composed of the
belly part of the skin, dressed with a sort of soap,
composed of the alkali obtained from the sea-weed
which abounds in the lake, and the oil of the whale.
His blubber serves us for fuel and candle; his flesh
for meat, and the milk is invaluable to us. It
is true, we have other resources; we have our lizards,
and a variety of fish and shell-fish; and when we
are shut up in the winter among the icebergs, we procure
the flesh and skins of the seals and the polar bear.
But we have no vegetable of any kind; and although
the want of bread may at first be unpleasant, a few
weeks will reconcile you to the privation. But
it is time to repose after your fatigues I
will report your arrival to the great harpooner, after
I have shown you to your chamber.” He then
conducted me to an inner room, where I found a couch,
composed of the skins of the polar bears, on which
I threw myself, and in a few minutes was fast asleep.
The next morning I was awakened by
my host. “If you wish to see the whales
milked, this is the hour that they are called in; a
short walk will explain more to you than many hours’
conversation.”
I arose perfectly refreshed from my
long nap, and followed my conductor. We passed
a large tank. “This is our water; we are
obliged not to waste it, although we have a sufficiency;
the tank is coated by a cement, formed of lime, obtained
by the burning of the shells of fish. We make
all our vessels that are submitted to the fire, of
the same substance, mixed with pounded lava; it is
burnt in the fire, and glazed with sea-salt.”
We arrived at the edge of the lake,
where we came to a large shallow dock, cut out of
the lava in the side, in which were about two dozen
young whales, who followed my host as he walked round
the edge.
These are my calves; we do not admit
the mothers until we have first drawn off what milk
we require.
Several men now came down to the beach:
one of them blew a horn, formed out of a part of the
horn of a sea unicorn, and immediately a herd of whales
collected at the sound, and swam towards the beach.
They all answered to their names; and when the men
waded in the water up to their knees, quietly grounded
on their sides, so as to present one of their udders
to them, clear of the water. This was squeezed
by four men, and the contents received into a large
pail, composed of the bones of a whale, neatly hooped
together by the same substance.
As soon as the breast of the animal
was empty, with a lash of its tail it recovered the
deep water, and swam round and round in small circles,
near to the spot.
“We always leave one breast
for the calf,” observed my host; “when
they are all milked, I shall open the pen and let
the mothers in.”
“What are those enormous whales
which are playing at a distance?”
“They are our whale oxen,”
answered my host; “we find that they grow to
an enormous size. Our houses are built of their
skins.”
“Is that a dead whale on the beach?”
“It is one of our whale boats,”
replied he, “but formed, as you supposed, from
the skin of a whale, hardened by frequent applications
of oil and lime. We use them to catch the whales
when we want them.”
“You do not use the harpoon, then?”
“Only when we kill; in general
we noose the tail, and fasten the rope to one of these
boats, which are so buoyant, that the whale cannot
take it down, and soon tires with his own exertions.
I am now speaking of the males reserved for breeding,
or strange whales, who sometimes find their way into
our lake during the winter: our own are so domesticated
from their infancy, that we have little trouble with
them; but it is time that we return.”
“Here,” observed my host,
as we passed a whale-house, “is one of our manufactories;
we will step in. This is the common stuff of the
country, which is used for partitions in houses, &c.
This is a finer sort, such as I wear at present.
Here we have the skin of the whale calf, which is
usually worn by the women. This is the most expensive
article of our manufactures; it is the belly part
of the calf’s skin, which being white, admits
of a dye from the murex a shell fish, very
common on our shores.”
“Have you money?” inquired I.
“None we exchange;
but the chief article of exchange, and which serves
as money, is the whale cheese, which keeps for years,
and improves in quality. That fine cloth is worth
eight new cheeses a square yard, which is very dear.”
We arrived at the house, where we
found our repast ready; an excellent stew received
my commendation.
“It is one of our favourite
dishes,” replied my host; “it is made of
lizards’ tails.”
“Lizards’ tails!”
“Yes; I am about to procure
some for dinner, and you shall see my preserve.”
In the course of the day I walked
with my host a short distance up the hill, when we
stopped at a large pit, covered with a net work, made
of whales’ sinews. The man who accompanied
us, descended, and soon returned with a pail full
of lizards, confined by a similar net over them.
He then took them out one by one, and pulled their
tails, which were immediately left in his hand.
He then notched the stump, and threw the animal into
the pit.
“Of what use is it to return the animals?”
observed I.
“Because their tails will grow again, by next
year.”
“But why, then, were the stumps notched in the
middle?”
“That they might have two tails
instead of one, which is invariably the case,”
replied my host.
But I will not tire your highness
with an account of all that I saw, and which occurred
during my stay on that island. If I were to enter
into the excellence of their government, which consisted
of a Great Harpooner, and two councils of first and
second Harpoons, or of the manners and customs of
the inhabitants, ceremonies at births, and marriages,
and deaths of their amusements, and their
ingenious supply of all their wants, it would afford
materials for at least two volumes quarto, without
margin. I shall therefore confine myself to stating,
that after a sojourn of six months, I became so impatient
to quit the island, that I determined to encounter
any risk, rather than not accomplish it.
My host, and all the principal inhabitants,
finding that no persuasions could induce me to stay,
consented at last to furnish me with the means which
I had hit upon to make my escape.
I omitted to mention to your highness,
the whales had been rendered so docile, that they
not only were used for draught on the lake, but even
for carrying on their backs. I never could be
persuaded to mount one, I had such a horror of being
seated on a fish’s back, after my travelling
on the shark; but I had often crossed the lake in one
of the great whale boats towed by one or two of the
animals fastened to it by loops over their tails.
This conveyance suggested to me the idea of my escape,
which I proposed to make by means of one of these large
whale boats, covered completely in, and to be towed
out of the mouth of the lake by one of the draught
whales.
At my request, a boat was prepared,
and covered in, with whalebone windows to admit light;
a stock of provisions were supplied me sufficient
for a long voyage; and the whale being put to,
I departed amidst the tears and lamentations of the
friendly islanders, who looked upon me as a man bent
upon my own destruction. But I was aware that
the fishery would soon commence, and had great hopes
of being picked up by one of the vessels. I was
soon clear of the lake; and the lad who was on the
back of the draught whale, having towed me out in pursuance
of his orders, until the island appeared like a cloud
on the horizon, cast me loose and hastened back, that
he might return home before dark.
For three weeks I remained in the
inside of this enormous boat, or rather I may say
fish tossed upon the waves, but without injury, from
its extreme buoyancy. One morning I was awakened
from a sound sleep by a sudden blow on the outside
of my vessel. I imagined that I had come in contact
with an iceberg, but the sound of voices convinced
me, that at last I had fallen in with my fellow-creatures.
A harpoon was now driven in, which I narrowly escaped,
and a volley of exécrations followed, by which
I knew immediately that the people were English.
After a few minutes, they commenced
sawing a hole in the side of my whale boat; and a
piece being removed, a head was put in. Fearful
of another harpoon, I had raised up my large white
bear’s skin as a defence, and the man perceiving
it, immediately withdrew his head, swearing that there
was a white bear in the belly of the whale. The
boat shoved off, and they commenced firing musket
balls, which pierced my boat through and through,
and I was obliged to lie down at the bottom to save
my life. After about twenty shots, the boat again
came along side, and a man, putting his head in, and
perceiving me at the bottom of the boat, covered over
with the bear’s skin, imagined that the animal
had been killed, and reported to his companions.
With some degree of apprehension they climbed in at
the hole which they had cut, when I lifted up my bear’s
skin, and made my appearance, dressed in the black
skin worn by the inhabitants of Whale’s Island.
This frightened them still more; one roared out that
it was the devil, and they all ran to make their escape
at the hole by which they entered, but in their eagerness
they prevented each other.
It was with difficulty that I convinced
them that I was harmless, which I did at last; and
having explained in a few words how I came there,
they permitted me to go with them on board of the ship.
The captain was very sulky when he heard the story;
he had imagined it to be a dead whale, and had ordered
it to be towed alongside, to cut off the blubber.
Disappointed in his expectations, he swore that I was
a Jonas, who had come out of the whale’s belly,
and there would be no luck in the ship, if I remained.
The sailors, whose profits in the voyage were regulated
by the number of fish taken, thought this an excellent
reason for throwing me overboard; and had there not
been two sail in sight, standing towards them, I certainly
should have had some more adventures to narrate.
At last they consented to put me on board of one which
had hoisted French colours. She was from Havre,
and having twelve fish on board, was returning home.
The captain consented to give me a passage, and in
two months I was once more in my native country.
Such, your highness, were the adventures
of my Third Voyage.
“Well, the story of the Island
was rather too long,” observed the pacha, “but
altogether, it was amusing. Mustapha, I think
it is worth ten pieces of gold.”