I was apprenticed to the Sea when
I was twelve years old, and I have encountered a great
deal of rough weather, both literal and metaphorical.
It has always been my opinion since I first possessed
such a thing as an opinion, that the man who knows
only one subject is next tiresome to the man who knows
no subject. Therefore, in the course of my life
I have taught myself whatever I could, and although
I am not an educated man, I am able, I am thankful
to say, to have an intelligent interest in most things.
A person might suppose, from reading
the above, that I am in the habit of holding forth
about number one. That is not the case.
Just as if I was to come into a room among strangers,
and must either be introduced or introduce myself,
so I have taken the liberty of passing these few remarks,
simply and plainly that it may be known who and what
I am. I will add no more of the sort than that
my name is William George Ravender, that I was born
at Penrith half a year after my own father was drowned,
and that I am on the second day of this present blessed
Christmas week of one thousand eight hundred and fifty-six,
fifty-six years of age.
When the rumour first went flying
up and down that there was gold in California which,
as most people know, was before it was discovered in
the British colony of Australia I was in
the West Indies, trading among the Islands.
Being in command and likewise part-owner of a smart
schooner, I had my work cut out for me, and I was doing
it. Consequently, gold in California was no
business of mine.
But, by the time when I came home
to England again, the thing was as clear as your hand
held up before you at noon-day. There was Californian
gold in the museums and in the goldsmiths’ shops,
and the very first time I went upon ’Change,
I met a friend of mine (a seafaring man like myself),
with a Californian nugget hanging to his watch-chain.
I handled it. It was as like a peeled walnut
with bits unevenly broken off here and there, and
then electrotyped all over, as ever I saw anything
in my life.
I am a single man (she was too good
for this world and for me, and she died six weeks
before our marriage-day), so when I am ashore, I live
in my house at Poplar. My house at Poplar is
taken care of and kept ship-shape by an old lady
who was my mother’s maid before I was born.
She is as handsome and as upright as any old lady
in the world. She is as fond of me as if she
had ever had an only son, and I was he. Well
do I know wherever I sail that she never lays down
her head at night without having said, “Merciful
Lord! bless and preserve William George Ravender, and
send him safe home, through Christ our Saviour!”
I have thought of it in many a dangerous moment,
when it has done me no harm, I am sure.
In my house at Poplar, along with
this old lady, I lived quiet for best part of a year:
having had a long spell of it among the Islands, and
having (which was very uncommon in me) taken the fever
rather badly. At last, being strong and hearty,
and having read every book I could lay hold of, right
out, I was walking down Leadenhall Street in the City
of London, thinking of turning-to again, when I met
what I call Smithick and Watersby of Liverpool.
I chanced to lift up my eyes from looking in at a
ship’s chronometer in a window, and I saw him
bearing down upon me, head on.
It is, personally, neither Smithick,
nor Watersby, that I here mention, nor was I ever
acquainted with any man of either of those names, nor
do I think that there has been any one of either of
those names in that Liverpool House for years back.
But, it is in reality the House itself that I refer
to; and a wiser merchant or a truer gentleman never
stepped.
“My dear Captain Ravender,”
says he. “Of all the men on earth, I wanted
to see you most. I was on my way to you.”
“Well!” says I.
“That looks as if you were to see me,
don’t it?” With that I put my arm in
his, and we walked on towards the Royal Exchange,
and when we got there, walked up and down at the back
of it where the Clock-Tower is. We walked an
hour and more, for he had much to say to me.
He had a scheme for chartering a new ship of their
own to take out cargo to the diggers and emigrants
in California, and to buy and bring back gold.
Into the particulars of that scheme I will not enter,
and I have no right to enter. All I say of it
is, that it was a very original one, a very fine one,
a very sound one, and a very lucrative one beyond
doubt.
He imparted it to me as freely as
if I had been a part of himself. After doing
so, he made me the handsomest sharing offer that ever
was made to me, boy or man or I believe
to any other captain in the Merchant Navy and
he took this round turn to finish with:
“Ravender, you are well aware
that the lawlessness of that coast and country at
present, is as special as the circumstances in which
it is placed. Crews of vessels outward-bound,
desert as soon as they make the land; crews of vessels
homeward-bound, ship at enormous wages, with the express
intention of murdering the captain and seizing the
gold freight; no man can trust another, and the devil
seems let loose. Now,” says he, “you
know my opinion of you, and you know I am only expressing
it, and with no singularity, when I tell you that
you are almost the only man on whose integrity, discretion,
and energy ” &c., &c. For, I
don’t want to repeat what he said, though I
was and am sensible of it.
Notwithstanding my being, as I have
mentioned, quite ready for a voyage, still I had some
doubts of this voyage. Of course I knew, without
being told, that there were peculiar difficulties
and dangers in it, a long way over and above those
which attend all voyages. It must not be supposed
that I was afraid to face them; but, in my opinion
a man has no manly motive or sustainment in his own
breast for facing dangers, unless he has well considered
what they are, and is able quietly to say to himself,
“None of these perils can now take me by surprise;
I shall know what to do for the best in any of them;
all the rest lies in the higher and greater hands
to which I humbly commit myself.” On this
principle I have so attentively considered (regarding
it as my duty) all the hazards I have ever been able
to think of, in the ordinary way of storm, shipwreck,
and fire at sea, that I hope I should be prepared to
do, in any of those cases, whatever could be done,
to save the lives intrusted to my charge.
As I was thoughtful, my good friend
proposed that he should leave me to walk there as
long as I liked, and that I should dine with him by-and-by
at his club in Pall Mall. I accepted the invitation
and I walked up and down there, quarter-deck fashion,
a matter of a couple of hours; now and then looking
up at the weathercock as I might have looked up aloft;
and now and then taking a look into Cornhill, as I
might have taken a look over the side.
All dinner-time, and all after dinner-time,
we talked it over again. I gave him my views
of his plan, and he very much approved of the same.
I told him I had nearly decided, but not quite.
“Well, well,” says he, “come down
to Liverpool to-morrow with me, and see the Golden
Mary.” I liked the name (her name was
Mary, and she was golden, if golden stands for good),
so I began to feel that it was almost done when I said
I would go to Liverpool. On the next morning
but one we were on board the Golden Mary. I
might have known, from his asking me to come down and
see her, what she was. I declare her to have
been the completest and most exquisite Beauty that
ever I set my eyes upon.
We had inspected every timber in her,
and had come back to the gangway to go ashore from
the dock-basin, when I put out my hand to my friend.
“Touch upon it,” says I, “and touch
heartily. I take command of this ship, and I
am hers and yours, if I can get John Steadiman for
my chief mate.”
John Steadiman had sailed with me
four voyages. The first voyage John was third
mate out to China, and came home second. The
other three voyages he was my first officer.
At this time of chartering the Golden Mary, he was
aged thirty-two. A brisk, bright, blue-eyed fellow,
a very neat figure and rather under the middle size,
never out of the way and never in it, a face that
pleased everybody and that all children took to, a
habit of going about singing as cheerily as a blackbird,
and a perfect sailor.
We were in one of those Liverpool
hackney-coaches in less than a minute, and we cruised
about in her upwards of three hours, looking for John.
John had come home from Van Diemen’s Land barely
a month before, and I had heard of him as taking a
frisk in Liverpool. We asked after him, among
many other places, at the two boarding-houses he was
fondest of, and we found he had had a week’s
spell at each of them; but, he had gone here and gone
there, and had set off “to lay out on the main-to’-gallant-yard
of the highest Welsh mountain” (so he had told
the people of the house), and where he might be then,
or when he might come back, nobody could tell us.
But it was surprising, to be sure, to see how every
face brightened the moment there was mention made
of the name of Mr. Steadiman.
We were taken aback at meeting with
no better luck, and we had wore ship and put her head
for my friends, when as we were jogging through the
streets, I clap my eyes on John himself coming out
of a toyshop! He was carrying a little boy,
and conducting two uncommon pretty women to their
coach, and he told me afterwards that he had never
in his life seen one of the three before, but that
he was so taken with them on looking in at the toyshop
while they were buying the child a cranky Noah’s
Ark, very much down by the head, that he had gone
in and asked the ladies’ permission to treat
him to a tolerably correct Cutter there was in the
window, in order that such a handsome boy might not
grow up with a lubberly idea of naval architecture.
We stood off and on until the ladies’
coachman began to give way, and then we hailed John.
On his coming aboard of us, I told him, very gravely,
what I had said to my friend. It struck him,
as he said himself, amidships. He was quite
shaken by it. “Captain Ravender,”
were John Steadiman’s words, “such an
opinion from you is true commendation, and I’ll
sail round the world with you for twenty years if you
hoist the signal, and stand by you for ever!”
And now indeed I felt that it was done, and that
the Golden Mary was afloat.
Grass never grew yet under the feet
of Smithick and Watersby. The riggers were out
of that ship in a fortnight’s time, and we had
begun taking in cargo. John was always aboard,
seeing everything stowed with his own eyes; and whenever
I went aboard myself early or late, whether he was
below in the hold, or on deck at the hatchway, or overhauling
his cabin, nailing up pictures in it of the Blush
Roses of England, the Blue Belles of Scotland, and
the female Shamrock of Ireland: of a certainty
I heard John singing like a blackbird.
We had room for twenty passengers.
Our sailing advertisement was no sooner out, than
we might have taken these twenty times over.
In entering our men, I and John (both together) picked
them, and we entered none but good hands as
good as were to be found in that port. And so,
in a good ship of the best build, well owned, well
arranged, well officered, well manned, well found
in all respects, we parted with our pilot at a quarter
past four o’clock in the afternoon of the seventh
of March, one thousand eight hundred and fifty-one,
and stood with a fair wind out to sea.
It may be easily believed that up
to that time I had had no leisure to be intimate with
my passengers. The most of them were then in
their berths sea-sick; however, in going among them,
telling them what was good for them, persuading them
not to be there, but to come up on deck and feel the
breeze, and in rousing them with a joke, or a comfortable
word, I made acquaintance with them, perhaps, in a
more friendly and confidential way from the first,
than I might have done at the cabin table.
Of my passengers, I need only particularise,
just at present, a bright-eyed blooming young wife
who was going out to join her husband in California,
taking with her their only child, a little girl of
three years old, whom he had never seen; a sedate
young woman in black, some five years older (about
thirty as I should say), who was going out to join
a brother; and an old gentleman, a good deal like a
hawk if his eyes had been better and not so red, who
was always talking, morning, noon, and night, about
the gold discovery. But, whether he was making
the voyage, thinking his old arms could dig for gold,
or whether his speculation was to buy it, or to barter
for it, or to cheat for it, or to snatch it anyhow
from other people, was his secret. He kept his
secret.
These three and the child were the
soonest well. The child was a most engaging
child, to be sure, and very fond of me: though
I am bound to admit that John Steadiman and I were
borne on her pretty little books in reverse order,
and that he was captain there, and I was mate.
It was beautiful to watch her with John, and it was
beautiful to watch John with her. Few would
have thought it possible, to see John playing at bo-peep
round the mast, that he was the man who had caught
up an iron bar and struck a Malay and a Maltese dead,
as they were gliding with their knives down the cabin
stair aboard the barque Old England, when the captain
lay ill in his cot, off Saugar Point. But he
was; and give him his back against a bulwark, he would
have done the same by half a dozen of them. The
name of the young mother was Mrs. Atherfield, the name
of the young lady in black was Miss Coleshaw, and
the name of the old gentleman was Mr. Rarx.
As the child had a quantity of shining
fair hair, clustering in curls all about her face,
and as her name was Lucy, Steadiman gave her the name
of the Golden Lucy. So, we had the Golden Lucy
and the Golden Mary; and John kept up the idea to
that extent as he and the child went playing about
the decks, that I believe she used to think the ship
was alive somehow a sister or companion,
going to the same place as herself. She liked
to be by the wheel, and in fine weather, I have often
stood by the man whose trick it was at the wheel,
only to hear her, sitting near my feet, talking to
the ship. Never had a child such a doll before,
I suppose; but she made a doll of the Golden Mary,
and used to dress her up by tying ribbons and little
bits of finery to the belaying-pins; and nobody ever
moved them, unless it was to save them from being blown
away.
Of course I took charge of the two
young women, and I called them “my dear,”
and they never minded, knowing that whatever I said
was said in a fatherly and protecting spirit.
I gave them their places on each side of me at dinner,
Mrs. Atherfield on my right and Miss Coleshaw on my
left; and I directed the unmarried lady to serve out
the breakfast, and the married lady to serve out the
tea. Likewise I said to my black steward in
their presence, “Tom Snow, these two ladies are
equally the mistresses of this house, and do you obey
their orders equally;” at which Tom laughed,
and they all laughed.
Old Mr. Rarx was not a pleasant man
to look at, nor yet to talk to, or to be with, for
no one could help seeing that he was a sordid and selfish
character, and that he had warped further and further
out of the straight with time. Not but what
he was on his best behaviour with us, as everybody
was; for we had no bickering among us, for’ard
or aft. I only mean to say, he was not the man
one would have chosen for a messmate. If choice
there had been, one might even have gone a few points
out of one’s course, to say, “No!
Not him!” But, there was one curious inconsistency
in Mr. Rarx. That was, that he took an astonishing
interest in the child. He looked, and I may
add, he was, one of the last of men to care at all
for a child, or to care much for any human creature.
Still, he went so far as to be habitually uneasy,
if the child was long on deck, out of his sight.
He was always afraid of her falling overboard, or
falling down a hatchway, or of a block or what not
coming down upon her from the rigging in the working
of the ship, or of her getting some hurt or other.
He used to look at her and touch her, as if she was
something precious to him. He was always solicitous
about her not injuring her health, and constantly
entreated her mother to be careful of it. This
was so much the more curious, because the child did
not like him, but used to shrink away from him, and
would not even put out her hand to him without coaxing
from others. I believe that every soul on board
frequently noticed this, and not one of us understood
it. However, it was such a plain fact, that
John Steadiman said more than once when old Mr. Rarx
was not within earshot, that if the Golden Mary felt
a tenderness for the dear old gentleman she carried
in her lap, she must be bitterly jealous of the Golden
Lucy.
Before I go any further with this
narrative, I will state that our ship was a barque
of three hundred tons, carrying a crew of eighteen
men, a second mate in addition to John, a carpenter,
an armourer or smith, and two apprentices (one a Scotch
boy, poor little fellow). We had three boats;
the Long-boat, capable of carrying twenty-five men;
the Cutter, capable of carrying fifteen; and the Surf-boat,
capable of carrying ten. I put down the capacity
of these boats according to the numbers they were
really meant to hold.
We had tastes of bad weather and head-winds,
of course; but, on the whole we had as fine a run
as any reasonable man could expect, for sixty days.
I then began to enter two remarks in the ship’s
Log and in my Journal; first, that there was an unusual
and amazing quantity of ice; second, that the nights
were most wonderfully dark, in spite of the ice.
For five days and a half, it seemed
quite useless and hopeless to alter the ship’s
course so as to stand out of the way of this ice.
I made what southing I could; but, all that time,
we were beset by it. Mrs. Atherfield after standing
by me on deck once, looking for some time in an awed
manner at the great bergs that surrounded us, said
in a whisper, “O! Captain Ravender, it
looks as if the whole solid earth had changed into
ice, and broken up!” I said to her, laughing,
“I don’t wonder that it does, to your
inexperienced eyes, my dear.” But I had
never seen a twentieth part of the quantity, and,
in reality, I was pretty much of her opinion.
However, at two p.m. on the afternoon
of the sixth day, that is to say, when we were sixty-six
days out, John Steadiman who had gone aloft, sang
out from the top, that the sea was clear ahead.
Before four p.m. a strong breeze springing up right
astern, we were in open water at sunset. The
breeze then freshening into half a gale of wind, and
the Golden Mary being a very fast sailer, we went
before the wind merrily, all night.
I had thought it impossible that it
could be darker than it had been, until the sun, moon,
and stars should fall out of the Heavens, and Time
should be destroyed; but, it had been next to light,
in comparison with what it was now. The darkness
was so profound, that looking into it was painful
and oppressive like looking, without a ray
of light, into a dense black bandage put as close
before the eyes as it could be, without touching them.
I doubled the look-out, and John and I stood in the
bow side-by-side, never leaving it all night.
Yet I should no more have known that he was near
me when he was silent, without putting out my arm
and touching him, than I should if he had turned in
and been fast asleep below. We were not so much
looking out, all of us, as listening to the utmost,
both with our eyes and ears.
Next day, I found that the mercury
in the barometer, which had risen steadily since we
cleared the ice, remained steady. I had had very
good observations, with now and then the interruption
of a day or so, since our departure. I got the
sun at noon, and found that we were in La degrees
S., Lon degrees W., off New South Shetland; in
the neighbourhood of Cape Horn. We were sixty-seven
days out, that day. The ship’s reckoning
was accurately worked and made up. The ship did
her duty admirably, all on board were well, and all
hands were as smart, efficient, and contented, as
it was possible to be.
When the night came on again as dark
as before, it was the eighth night I had been on deck.
Nor had I taken more than a very little sleep in the
day-time, my station being always near the helm, and
often at it, while we were among the ice. Few
but those who have tried it can imagine the difficulty
and pain of only keeping the eyes open physically
open under such circumstances, in such
darkness. They get struck by the darkness, and
blinded by the darkness. They make patterns in
it, and they flash in it, as if they had gone out
of your head to look at you. On the turn of
midnight, John Steadiman, who was alert and fresh (for
I had always made him turn in by day), said to me,
“Captain Ravender, I entreat of you to go below.
I am sure you can hardly stand, and your voice is
getting weak, sir. Go below, and take a little
rest. I’ll call you if a block chafes.”
I said to John in answer, “Well, well, John!
Let us wait till the turn of one o’clock, before
we talk about that.” I had just had one
of the ship’s lanterns held up, that I might
see how the night went by my watch, and it was then
twenty minutes after twelve.
At five minutes before one, John sang
out to the boy to bring the lantern again, and when
I told him once more what the time was, entreated and
prayed of me to go below. “Captain Ravender,”
says he, “all’s well; we can’t afford
to have you laid up for a single hour; and I respectfully
and earnestly beg of you to go below.”
The end of it was, that I agreed to do so, on the
understanding that if I failed to come up of my own
accord within three hours, I was to be punctually called.
Having settled that, I left John in charge.
But I called him to me once afterwards, to ask him
a question. I had been to look at the barometer,
and had seen the mercury still perfectly steady, and
had come up the companion again to take a last look
about me if I can use such a word in reference
to such darkness when I thought that the
waves, as the Golden Mary parted them and shook them
off, had a hollow sound in them; something that I
fancied was a rather unusual reverberation. I
was standing by the quarter-deck rail on the starboard
side, when I called John aft to me, and bade him listen.
He did so with the greatest attention. Turning
to me he then said, “Rely upon it, Captain Ravender,
you have been without rest too long, and the novelty
is only in the state of your sense of hearing.”
I thought so too by that time, and I think so now,
though I can never know for absolute certain in this
world, whether it was or not.
When I left John Steadiman in charge,
the ship was still going at a great rate through the
water. The wind still blew right astern.
Though she was making great way, she was under shortened
sail, and had no more than she could easily carry.
All was snug, and nothing complained. There
was a pretty sea running, but not a very high sea
neither, nor at all a confused one.
I turned in, as we seamen say, all
standing. The meaning of that is, I did not
pull my clothes off no, not even so much
as my coat: though I did my shoes, for my feet
were badly swelled with the deck. There was a
little swing-lamp alight in my cabin. I thought,
as I looked at it before shutting my eyes, that I
was so tired of darkness, and troubled by darkness,
that I could have gone to sleep best in the midst of
a million of flaming gas-lights. That was the
last thought I had before I went off, except the prevailing
thought that I should not be able to get to sleep
at all.
I dreamed that I was back at Penrith
again, and was trying to get round the church, which
had altered its shape very much since I last saw it,
and was cloven all down the middle of the steeple in
a most singular manner. Why I wanted to get
round the church I don’t know; but I was as
anxious to do it as if my life depended on it.
Indeed, I believe it did in the dream. For
all that, I could not get round the church. I
was still trying, when I came against it with a violent
shock, and was flung out of my cot against the ship’s
side. Shrieks and a terrific outcry struck me
far harder than the bruising timbers, and amidst sounds
of grinding and crashing, and a heavy rushing and
breaking of water sounds I understood too
well I made my way on deck. It was
not an easy thing to do, for the ship heeled over
frightfully, and was beating in a furious manner.
I could not see the men as I went
forward, but I could hear that they were hauling in
sail, in disorder. I had my trumpet in my hand,
and, after directing and encouraging them in this
till it was done, I hailed first John Steadiman, and
then my second mate, Mr. William Rames. Both
answered clearly and steadily. Now, I had practised
them and all my crew, as I have ever made it a custom
to practise all who sail with me, to take certain
stations and wait my orders, in case of any unexpected
crisis. When my voice was heard hailing, and
their voices were heard answering, I was aware, through
all the noises of the ship and sea, and all the crying
of the passengers below, that there was a pause.
“Are you ready, Rames?” “Ay,
ay, sir!” “Then light up, for
God’s sake!” In a moment he and another
were burning blue-lights, and the ship and all on
board seemed to be enclosed in a mist of light, under
a great black dome.
The light shone up so high that I
could see the huge Iceberg upon which we had struck,
cloven at the top and down the middle, exactly like
Penrith Church in my dream. At the same moment
I could see the watch last relieved, crowding up and
down on deck; I could see Mrs. Atherfield and Miss
Coleshaw thrown about on the top of the companion as
they struggled to bring the child up from below; I
could see that the masts were going with the shock
and the beating of the ship; I could see the frightful
breach stove in on the starboard side, half the length
of the vessel, and the sheathing and timbers spirting
up; I could see that the Cutter was disabled, in a
wreck of broken fragments; and I could see every eye
turned upon me. It is my belief that if there
had been ten thousand eyes there, I should have seen
them all, with their different looks. And all
this in a moment. But you must consider what
a moment.
I saw the men, as they looked at me,
fall towards their appointed stations, like good men
and true. If she had not righted, they could
have done very little there or anywhere but die not
that it is little for a man to die at his post I
mean they could have done nothing to save the passengers
and themselves. Happily, however, the violence
of the shock with which we had so determinedly borne
down direct on that fatal Iceberg, as if it had been
our destination instead of our destruction, had so
smashed and pounded the ship that she got off in this
same instant and righted. I did not want the
carpenter to tell me she was filling and going down;
I could see and hear that. I gave Rames the word
to lower the Long-boat and the Surf-boat, and I myself
told off the men for each duty. Not one hung
back, or came before the other. I now whispered
to John Steadiman, “John, I stand at the gangway
here, to see every soul on board safe over the side.
You shall have the next post of honour, and shall
be the last but one to leave the ship. Bring
up the passengers, and range them behind me; and put
what provision and water you can got at, in the boats.
Cast your eye for’ard, John, and you’ll
see you have not a moment to lose.”
My noble fellows got the boats over
the side as orderly as I ever saw boats lowered with
any sea running, and, when they were launched, two
or three of the nearest men in them as they held on,
rising and falling with the swell, called out, looking
up at me, “Captain Ravender, if anything goes
wrong with us, and you are saved, remember we stood
by you!” “We’ll all stand
by one another ashore, yet, please God, my lads!”
says I. “Hold on bravely, and be tender
with the women.”
The women were an example to us.
They trembled very much, but they were quiet and
perfectly collected. “Kiss me, Captain
Ravender,” says Mrs. Atherfield, “and
God in heaven bless you, you good man!” “My
dear,” says I, “those words are better
for me than a life-boat.” I held her child
in my arms till she was in the boat, and then kissed
the child and handed her safe down. I now said
to the people in her, “You have got your freight,
my lads, all but me, and I am not coming yet awhile.
Pull away from the ship, and keep off!”
That was the Long-boat. Old
Mr. Rarx was one of her complement, and he was the
only passenger who had greatly misbehaved since the
ship struck. Others had been a little wild, which
was not to be wondered at, and not very blamable;
but, he had made a lamentation and uproar which it
was dangerous for the people to hear, as there is
always contagion in weakness and selfishness.
His incessant cry had been that he must not be separated
from the child, that he couldn’t see the child,
and that he and the child must go together.
He had even tried to wrest the child out of my arms,
that he might keep her in his. “Mr. Rarx,”
said I to him when it came to that, “I have
a loaded pistol in my pocket; and if you don’t
stand out of the gangway, and keep perfectly quiet,
I shall shoot you through the heart, if you have got
one.” Says he, “You won’t do
murder, Captain Ravender!” “No, sir,”
says I, “I won’t murder forty-four people
to humour you, but I’ll shoot you to save them.”
After that he was quiet, and stood shivering a little
way off, until I named him to go over the side.
The Long-boat being cast off, the
Surf-boat was soon filled. There only remained
aboard the Golden Mary, John Mullion the man who had
kept on burning the blue-lights (and who had lighted
every new one at every old one before it went out,
as quietly as if he had been at an illumination);
John Steadiman; and myself. I hurried those two
into the Surf-boat, called to them to keep off, and
waited with a grateful and relieved heart for the
Long-boat to come and take me in, if she could.
I looked at my watch, and it showed me, by the blue-light,
ten minutes past two. They lost no time.
As soon as she was near enough, I swung myself into
her, and called to the men, “With a will, lads!
She’s reeling!” We were not an inch
too far out of the inner vortex of her going down,
when, by the blue-light which John Mullion still burnt
in the bow of the Surf-boat, we saw her lurch, and
plunge to the bottom head-foremost. The child
cried, weeping wildly, “O the dear Golden Mary!
O look at her! Save her! Save the poor
Golden Mary!” And then the light burnt out,
and the black dome seemed to come down upon us.
I suppose if we had all stood a-top
of a mountain, and seen the whole remainder of the
world sink away from under us, we could hardly have
felt more shocked and solitary than we did when we
knew we were alone on the wide ocean, and that the
beautiful ship in which most of us had been securely
asleep within half an hour was gone for ever.
There was an awful silence in our boat, and such
a kind of palsy on the rowers and the man at the rudder,
that I felt they were scarcely keeping her before the
sea. I spoke out then, and said, “Let every
one here thank the Lord for our preservation!”
All the voices answered (even the child’s),
“We thank the Lord!” I then said the
Lord’s Prayer, and all hands said it after me
with a solemn murmuring. Then I gave the word
“Cheerily, O men, Cheerily!” and I felt
that they were handling the boat again as a boat ought
to be handled.
The Surf-boat now burnt another blue-light
to show us where they were, and we made for her, and
laid ourselves as nearly alongside of her as we dared.
I had always kept my boats with a coil or two of good
stout stuff in each of them, so both boats had a rope
at hand. We made a shift, with much labour and
trouble, to got near enough to one another to divide
the blue-lights (they were no use after that night,
for the sea-water soon got at them), and to get a
tow-rope out between us. All night long we kept
together, sometimes obliged to cast off the rope, and
sometimes getting it out again, and all of us wearying
for the morning which appeared so long
in coming that old Mr. Rarx screamed out, in spite
of his fears of me, “The world is drawing to
an end, and the sun will never rise any more!”
When the day broke, I found that we
were all huddled together in a miserable manner.
We were deep in the water; being, as I found on mustering,
thirty-one in number, or at least six too many.
In the Surf-boat they were fourteen in number, being
at least four too many. The first thing I did,
was to get myself passed to the rudder which
I took from that time and to get Mrs. Atherfield,
her child, and Miss Coleshaw, passed on to sit next
me. As to old Mr. Rarx, I put him in the bow,
as far from us as I could. And I put some of
the best men near us in order that if I should drop
there might be a skilful hand ready to take the helm.
The sea moderating as the sun came
up, though the sky was cloudy and wild, we spoke the
other boat, to know what stores they had, and to overhaul
what we had. I had a compass in my pocket, a
small telescope, a double-barrelled pistol, a knife,
and a fire-box and matches. Most of my men had
knives, and some had a little tobacco: some, a
pipe as well. We had a mug among us, and an
iron spoon. As to provisions, there were in
my boat two bags of biscuit, one piece of raw beef,
one piece of raw pork, a bag of coffee, roasted but
not ground (thrown in, I imagine, by mistake, for
something else), two small casks of water, and about
half-a-gallon of rum in a keg. The Surf-boat,
having rather more rum than we, and fewer to drink
it, gave us, as I estimated, another quart into our
keg. In return, we gave them three double handfuls
of coffee, tied up in a piece of a handkerchief; they
reported that they had aboard besides, a bag of biscuit,
a piece of beef, a small cask of water, a small box
of lemons, and a Dutch cheese. It took a long
time to make these exchanges, and they were not made
without risk to both parties; the sea running quite
high enough to make our approaching near to one another
very hazardous. In the bundle with the coffee,
I conveyed to John Steadiman (who had a ship’s
compass with him), a paper written in pencil, and torn
from my pocket-book, containing the course I meant
to steer, in the hope of making land, or being picked
up by some vessel I say in the hope, though
I had little hope of either deliverance. I then
sang out to him, so as all might hear, that if we
two boats could live or die together, we would; but,
that if we should be parted by the weather, and join
company no more, they should have our prayers and
blessings, and we asked for theirs. We then
gave them three cheers, which they returned, and I
saw the men’s heads droop in both boats as they
fell to their oars again.
These arrangements had occupied the
general attention advantageously for all, though (as
I expressed in the last sentence) they ended in a
sorrowful feeling. I now said a few words to
my fellow-voyagers on the subject of the small stock
of food on which our lives depended if they were preserved
from the great deep, and on the rigid necessity of
our eking it out in the most frugal manner.
One and all replied that whatever allowance I thought
best to lay down should be strictly kept to.
We made a pair of scales out of a thin scrap of iron-plating
and some twine, and I got together for weights such
of the heaviest buttons among us as I calculated made
up some fraction over two ounces. This was the
allowance of solid food served out once a-day to each,
from that time to the end; with the addition of a
coffee-berry, or sometimes half a one, when the weather
was very fair, for breakfast. We had nothing
else whatever, but half a pint of water each per day,
and sometimes, when we were coldest and weakest, a
teaspoonful of rum each, served out as a dram.
I know how learnedly it can be shown that rum is poison,
but I also know that in this case, as in all similar
cases I have ever read of which are numerous no
words can express the comfort and support derived
from it. Nor have I the least doubt that it saved
the lives of far more than half our number.
Having mentioned half a pint of water as our daily
allowance, I ought to observe that sometimes we had
less, and sometimes we had more; for much rain fell,
and we caught it in a canvas stretched for the purpose.
Thus, at that tempestuous time of
the year, and in that tempestuous part of the world,
we shipwrecked people rose and fell with the waves.
It is not my intention to relate (if I can avoid
it) such circumstances appertaining to our doleful
condition as have been better told in many other narratives
of the kind than I can be expected to tell them.
I will only note, in so many passing words, that
day after day and night after night, we received the
sea upon our backs to prevent it from swamping the
boat; that one party was always kept baling, and that
every hat and cap among us soon got worn out, though
patched up fifty times, as the only vessels we had
for that service; that another party lay down in the
bottom of the boat, while a third rowed; and that we
were soon all in boils and blisters and rags.
The other boat was a source of such
anxious interest to all of us that I used to wonder
whether, if we were saved, the time could ever come
when the survivors in this boat of ours could be at
all indifferent to the fortunes of the survivors in
that. We got out a tow-rope whenever the weather
permitted, but that did not often happen, and how we
two parties kept within the same horizon, as we did,
He, who mercifully permitted it to be so for our consolation,
only knows. I never shall forget the looks with
which, when the morning light came, we used to gaze
about us over the stormy waters, for the other boat.
We once parted company for seventy-two hours, and
we believed them to have gone down, as they did us.
The joy on both sides when we came within view of
one another again, had something in a manner Divine
in it; each was so forgetful of individual suffering,
in tears of delight and sympathy for the people in
the other boat.
I have been wanting to get round to
the individual or personal part of my subject, as
I call it, and the foregoing incident puts me in the
right way. The patience and good disposition
aboard of us, was wonderful. I was not surprised
by it in the women; for all men born of women know
what great qualities they will show when men will
fail; but, I own I was a little surprised by it in
some of the men. Among one-and-thirty people
assembled at the best of times, there will usually,
I should say, be two or three uncertain tempers.
I knew that I had more than one rough temper with
me among my own people, for I had chosen those for
the Long-boat that I might have them under my eye.
But, they softened under their misery, and were as
considerate of the ladies, and as compassionate of
the child, as the best among us, or among men they
could not have been more so. I heard scarcely
any complaining. The party lying down would
moan a good deal in their sleep, and I would often
notice a man not always the same man, it
is to be understood, but nearly all of them at one
time or other sitting moaning at his oar,
or in his place, as he looked mistily over the sea.
When it happened to be long before I could catch
his eye, he would go on moaning all the time in the
dismallest manner; but, when our looks met, he would
brighten and leave off. I almost always got
the impression that he did not know what sound he had
been making, but that he thought he had been humming
a tune.
Our sufferings from cold and wet were
far greater than our sufferings from hunger.
We managed to keep the child warm; but, I doubt if
any one else among us ever was warm for five minutes
together; and the shivering, and the chattering of
teeth, were sad to hear. The child cried a little
at first for her lost playfellow, the Golden Mary;
but hardly ever whimpered afterwards; and when the
state of the weather made it possible, she used now
and then to be held up in the arms of some of us, to
look over the sea for John Steadiman’s boat.
I see the golden hair and the innocent face now,
between me and the driving clouds, like an angel going
to fly away.
It had happened on the second day,
towards night, that Mrs. Atherfield, in getting Little
Lucy to sleep, sang her a song. She had a soft,
melodious voice, and, when she had finished it, our
people up and begged for another. She sang them
another, and after it had fallen dark ended with the
Evening Hymn. From that time, whenever anything
could be heard above the sea and wind, and while she
had any voice left, nothing would serve the people
but that she should sing at sunset. She always
did, and always ended with the Evening Hymn.
We mostly took up the last line, and shed tears when
it was done, but not miserably. We had a prayer
night and morning, also, when the weather allowed
of it.
Twelve nights and eleven days we had
been driving in the boat, when old Mr. Rarx began
to be delirious, and to cry out to me to throw the
gold overboard or it would sink us, and we should
all be lost. For days past the child had been
declining, and that was the great cause of his wildness.
He had been over and over again shrieking out to me
to give her all the remaining meat, to give her all
the remaining rum, to save her at any cost, or we
should all be ruined. At this time, she lay in
her mother’s arms at my feet. One of her
little hands was almost always creeping about her
mother’s neck or chin. I had watched the
wasting of the little hand, and I knew it was nearly
over.
The old man’s cries were so
discordant with the mother’s love and submission,
that I called out to him in an angry voice, unless
he held his peace on the instant, I would order him
to be knocked on the head and thrown overboard.
He was mute then, until the child died, very peacefully,
an hour afterwards: which was known to all in
the boat by the mother’s breaking out into lamentations
for the first time since the wreck for,
she had great fortitude and constancy, though she was
a little gentle woman. Old Mr. Rarx then became
quite ungovernable, tearing what rags he had on him,
raging in imprecations, and calling to me that if
I had thrown the gold overboard (always the gold with
him!) I might have saved the child. “And
now,” says he, in a terrible voice, “we
shall founder, and all go to the Devil, for our sins
will sink us, when we have no innocent child to bear
us up!” We so discovered with amazement, that
this old wretch had only cared for the life of the
pretty little creature dear to all of us, because
of the influence he superstitiously hoped she might
have in preserving him! Altogether it was too
much for the smith or armourer, who was sitting next
the old man, to bear. He took him by the throat
and rolled him under the thwarts, where he lay still
enough for hours afterwards.
All that thirteenth night, Miss Coleshaw,
lying across my knees as I kept the helm, comforted
and supported the poor mother. Her child, covered
with a pea-jacket of mine, lay in her lap. It
troubled me all night to think that there was no Prayer-Book
among us, and that I could remember but very few of
the exact words of the burial service. When I
stood up at broad day, all knew what was going to
be done, and I noticed that my poor fellows made the
motion of uncovering their heads, though their heads
had been stark bare to the sky and sea for many a weary
hour. There was a long heavy swell on, but otherwise
it was a fair morning, and there were broad fields
of sunlight on the waves in the east. I said
no more than this: “I am the Resurrection
and the Life, saith the Lord. He raised the
daughter of Jairus the ruler, and said she was not
dead but slept. He raised the widow’s
son. He arose Himself, and was seen of many.
He loved little children, saying, Suffer them to come
unto Me and rebuke them not, for of such is the kingdom
of heaven. In His name, my friends, and committed
to His merciful goodness!” With those words
I laid my rough face softly on the placid little forehead,
and buried the Golden Lucy in the grave of the Golden
Mary.
Having had it on my mind to relate
the end of this dear little child, I have omitted
something from its exact place, which I will supply
here. It will come quite as well here as anywhere
else.
Foreseeing that if the boat lived
through the stormy weather, the time must come, and
soon come, when we should have absolutely no morsel
to eat, I had one momentous point often in my thoughts.
Although I had, years before that, fully satisfied
myself that the instances in which human beings in
the last distress have fed upon each other, are exceedingly
few, and have very seldom indeed (if ever) occurred
when the people in distress, however dreadful their
extremity, have been accustomed to moderate forbearance
and restraint; I say, though I had long before quite
satisfied my mind on this topic, I felt doubtful whether
there might not have been in former cases some harm
and danger from keeping it out of sight and pretending
not to think of it. I felt doubtful whether
some minds, growing weak with fasting and exposure
and having such a terrific idea to dwell upon in secret,
might not magnify it until it got to have an awful
attraction about it. This was not a new thought
of mine, for it had grown out of my reading.
However, it came over me stronger than it had ever
done before as it had reason for doing in
the boat, and on the fourth day I decided that I would
bring out into the light that unformed fear which
must have been more or less darkly in every brain
among us. Therefore, as a means of beguiling
the time and inspiring hope, I gave them the best
summary in my power of Bligh’s voyage of more
than three thousand miles, in an open boat, after
the Mutiny of the Bounty, and of the wonderful preservation
of that boat’s crew. They listened throughout
with great interest, and I concluded by telling them,
that, in my opinion, the happiest circumstance in
the whole narrative was, that Bligh, who was no delicate
man either, had solemnly placed it on record therein
that he was sure and certain that under no conceivable
circumstances whatever would that emaciated party,
who had gone through all the pains of famine, have
preyed on one another. I cannot describe the
visible relief which this spread through the boat,
and how the tears stood in every eye. From that
time I was as well convinced as Bligh himself that
there was no danger, and that this phantom, at any
rate, did not haunt us.
Now, it was a part of Bligh’s
experience that when the people in his boat were most
cast down, nothing did them so much good as hearing
a story told by one of their number. When I
mentioned that, I saw that it struck the general attention
as much as it did my own, for I had not thought of
it until I came to it in my summary. This was
on the day after Mrs. Atherfield first sang to us.
I proposed that, whenever the weather would permit,
we should have a story two hours after dinner (I always
issued the allowance I have mentioned at one o’clock,
and called it by that name), as well as our song at
sunset. The proposal was received with a cheerful
satisfaction that warmed my heart within me; and I
do not say too much when I say that those two periods
in the four-and-twenty hours were expected with positive
pleasure, and were really enjoyed by all hands.
Spectres as we soon were in our bodily wasting, our
imaginations did not perish like the gross flesh upon
our bones. Music and Adventure, two of the great
gifts of Providence to mankind, could charm us long
after that was lost.
The wind was almost always against
us after the second day; and for many days together
we could not nearly hold our own. We had all
varieties of bad weather. We had rain, hail,
snow, wind, mist, thunder and lightning. Still
the boats lived through the heavy seas, and still we
perishing people rose and fell with the great waves.
Sixteen nights and fifteen days, twenty
nights and nineteen days, twenty-four nights and
twenty-three days. So the time went on.
Disheartening as I knew that our progress, or want
of progress, must be, I never deceived them as to
my calculations of it. In the first place, I
felt that we were all too near eternity for deceit;
in the second place, I knew that if I failed, or died,
the man who followed me must have a knowledge of the
true state of things to begin upon. When I told
them at noon, what I reckoned we had made or lost,
they generally received what I said in a tranquil
and resigned manner, and always gratefully towards
me. It was not unusual at any time of the day
for some one to burst out weeping loudly without any
new cause; and, when the burst was over, to calm down
a little better than before. I had seen exactly
the same thing in a house of mourning.
During the whole of this time, old
Mr. Rarx had had his fits of calling out to me to
throw the gold (always the gold!) overboard, and of
heaping violent reproaches upon me for not having
saved the child; but now, the food being all gone,
and I having nothing left to serve out but a bit of
coffee-berry now and then, he began to be too weak
to do this, and consequently fell silent. Mrs.
Atherfield and Miss Coleshaw generally lay, each with
an arm across one of my knees, and her head upon it.
They never complained at all. Up to the time
of her child’s death, Mrs. Atherfield had bound
up her own beautiful hair every day; and I took particular
notice that this was always before she sang her song
at night, when everyone looked at her. But she
never did it after the loss of her darling; and it
would have been now all tangled with dirt and wet,
but that Miss Coleshaw was careful of it long after
she was herself, and would sometimes smooth it down
with her weak thin hands.
We were past mustering a story now;
but one day, at about this period, I reverted to the
superstition of old Mr. Rarx, concerning the Golden
Lucy, and told them that nothing vanished from the
eye of God, though much might pass away from the eyes
of men. “We were all of us,” says
I, “children once; and our baby feet have strolled
in green woods ashore; and our baby hands have gathered
flowers in gardens, where the birds were singing.
The children that we were, are not lost to the great
knowledge of our Creator. Those innocent creatures
will appear with us before Him, and plead for us.
What we were in the best time of our generous youth
will arise and go with us too. The purest part
of our lives will not desert us at the pass to which
all of us here present are gliding. What we
were then, will be as much in existence before Him,
as what we are now.” They were no less
comforted by this consideration, than I was myself;
and Miss Coleshaw, drawing my ear nearer to her lips,
said, “Captain Ravender, I was on my way to
marry a disgraced and broken man, whom I dearly loved
when he was honourable and good. Your words seem
to have come out of my own poor heart.”
She pressed my hand upon it, smiling.
Twenty-seven nights and twenty-six
days. We were in no want of rain-water, but
we had nothing else. And yet, even now, I never
turned my eyes upon a waking face but it tried to
brighten before mine. O, what a thing it is,
in a time of danger and in the presence of death, the
shining of a face upon a face! I have heard it
broached that orders should be given in great new
ships by electric telegraph. I admire machinery
as much is any man, and am as thankful to it as any
man can be for what it does for us. But it will
never be a substitute for the face of a man, with
his soul in it, encouraging another man to be brave
and true. Never try it for that. It will
break down like a straw.
I now began to remark certain changes
in myself which I did not like. They caused me
much disquiet. I often saw the Golden Lucy in
the air above the boat. I often saw her I have
spoken of before, sitting beside me. I saw the
Golden Mary go down, as she really had gone down, twenty
times in a day. And yet the sea was mostly, to
my thinking, not sea neither, but moving country and
extraordinary mountainous regions, the like of which
have never been beheld. I felt it time to leave
my last words regarding John Steadiman, in case any
lips should last out to repeat them to any living
ears. I said that John had told me (as he had
on deck) that he had sung out “Breakers ahead!”
the instant they were audible, and had tried to wear
ship, but she struck before it could be done. (His
cry, I dare say, had made my dream.) I said that the
circumstances were altogether without warning, and
out of any course that could have been guarded against;
that the same loss would have happened if I had been
in charge; and that John was not to blame, but from
first to last had done his duty nobly, like the man
he was. I tried to write it down in my pocket-book,
but could make no words, though I knew what the words
were that I wanted to make. When it had come
to that, her hands though she was dead
so long laid me down gently in the bottom
of the boat, and she and the Golden Lucy swung me
to sleep.
All that follows, was written by
John Steadiman, Chief Mate:
On the twenty-sixth day after the
foundering of the Golden Mary at sea, I, John Steadiman,
was sitting in my place in the stern-sheets of the
Surf-boat, with just sense enough left in me to steer that
is to say, with my eyes strained, wide-awake, over
the bows of the boat, and my brains fast asleep and
dreaming when I was roused upon a sudden
by our second mate, Mr. William Rames.
“Let me take a spell in your
place,” says he. “And look you out
for the Long-boat astern. The last time she
rose on the crest of a wave, I thought I made out
a signal flying aboard her.”
We shifted our places, clumsily and
slowly enough, for we were both of us weak and dazed
with wet, cold, and hunger. I waited some time,
watching the heavy rollers astern, before the Long-boat
rose a-top of one of them at the same time with us.
At last, she was heaved up for a moment well in view,
and there, sure enough, was the signal flying aboard
of her a strip of rag of some sort, rigged
to an oar, and hoisted in her bows.
“What does it mean?” says
Rames to me in a quavering, trembling sort of voice.
“Do they signal a sail in sight?”
“Hush, for God’s sake!”
says I, clapping my hand over his mouth. “Don’t
let the people hear you. They’ll all go
mad together if we mislead them about that signal.
Wait a bit, till I have another look at it.”
I held on by him, for he had set me
all of a tremble with his notion of a sail in sight,
and watched for the Long-boat again. Up she rose
on the top of another roller. I made out the
signal clearly, that second time, and saw that it
was rigged half-mast high.
“Rames,” says I, “it’s
a signal of distress. Pass the word forward to
keep her before the sea, and no more. We must
get the Long-boat within hailing distance of us, as
soon as possible.”
I dropped down into my old place at
the tiller without another word for the
thought went through me like a knife that something
had happened to Captain Ravender. I should consider
myself unworthy to write another line of this statement,
if I had not made up my mind to speak the truth, the
whole truth, and nothing but the truth and
I must, therefore, confess plainly that now, for the
first time, my heart sank within me. This weakness
on my part was produced in some degree, as I take it,
by the exhausting effects of previous anxiety and
grief.
Our provisions if I may
give that name to what we had left were
reduced to the rind of one lemon and about a couple
of handsfull of coffee-berries. Besides these
great distresses, caused by the death, the danger,
and the suffering among my crew and passengers, I had
had a little distress of my own to shake me still
more, in the death of the child whom I had got to
be very fond of on the voyage out so fond
that I was secretly a little jealous of her being
taken in the Long-boat instead of mine when the ship
foundered. It used to be a great comfort to me,
and I think to those with me also, after we had seen
the last of the Golden Mary, to see the Golden Lucy,
held up by the men in the Long-boat, when the weather
allowed it, as the best and brightest sight they had
to show. She looked, at the distance we saw
her from, almost like a little white bird in the air.
To miss her for the first time, when the weather
lulled a little again, and we all looked out for our
white bird and looked in vain, was a sore disappointment.
To see the men’s heads bowed down and the captain’s
hand pointing into the sea when we hailed the Long-boat,
a few days after, gave me as heavy a shock and as sharp
a pang of heartache to bear as ever I remember suffering
in all my life. I only mention these things
to show that if I did give way a little at first,
under the dread that our captain was lost to us, it
was not without having been a good deal shaken beforehand
by more trials of one sort or another than often fall
to one man’s share.
I had got over the choking in my throat
with the help of a drop of water, and had steadied
my mind again so as to be prepared against the worst,
when I heard the hail (Lord help the poor fellows,
how weak it sounded!)
“Surf-boat, ahoy!”
I looked up, and there were our companions
in misfortune tossing abreast of us; not so near that
we could make out the features of any of them, but
near enough, with some exertion for people in our condition,
to make their voices heard in the intervals when the
wind was weakest.
I answered the hail, and waited a
bit, and heard nothing, and then sung out the captain’s
name. The voice that replied did not sound like
his; the words that reached us were:
“Chief-mate wanted on board!”
Every man of my crew knew what that
meant as well as I did. As second officer in
command, there could be but one reason for wanting
me on board the Long-boat. A groan went all
round us, and my men looked darkly in each other’s
faces, and whispered under their breaths:
“The captain is dead!”
I commanded them to be silent, and
not to make too sure of bad news, at such a pass as
things had now come to with us. Then, hailing
the Long-boat, I signified that I was ready to go
on board when the weather would let me stopped
a bit to draw a good long breath and then
called out as loud as I could the dreadful question:
“Is the captain dead?”
The black figures of three or four
men in the after-part of the Long-boat all stooped
down together as my voice reached them. They
were lost to view for about a minute; then appeared
again one man among them was held up on
his feet by the rest, and he hailed back the blessed
words (a very faint hope went a very long way with
people in our desperate situation): “Not
yet!”
The relief felt by me, and by all
with me, when we knew that our captain, though unfitted
for duty, was not lost to us, it is not in words at
least, not in such words as a man like me can command to
express. I did my best to cheer the men by telling
them what a good sign it was that we were not as badly
off yet as we had feared; and then communicated what
instructions I had to give, to William Rames, who was
to be left in command in my place when I took charge
of the Long-boat. After that, there was nothing
to be done, but to wait for the chance of the wind
dropping at sunset, and the sea going down afterwards,
so as to enable our weak crews to lay the two boats
alongside of each other, without undue risk or,
to put it plainer, without saddling ourselves with
the necessity for any extraordinary exertion of strength
or skill. Both the one and the other had now
been starved out of us for days and days together.
At sunset the wind suddenly dropped,
but the sea, which had been running high for so long
a time past, took hours after that before it showed
any signs of getting to rest. The moon was shining,
the sky was wonderfully clear, and it could not have
been, according to my calculations, far off midnight,
when the long, slow, regular swell of the calming ocean
fairly set in, and I took the responsibility of lessening
the distance between the Long-boat and ourselves.
It was, I dare say, a delusion of
mine; but I thought I had never seen the moon shine
so white and ghastly anywhere, either on sea or on
land, as she shone that night while we were approaching
our companions in misery. When there was not
much more than a boat’s length between us, and
the white light streamed cold and clear over all our
faces, both crews rested on their oars with one great
shudder, and stared over the gunwale of either boat,
panic-stricken at the first sight of each other.
“Any lives lost among you?”
I asked, in the midst of that frightful silence.
The men in the Long-bout huddled together
like sheep at the sound of my voice.
“None yet, but the child, thanks
be to God!” answered one among them.
And at the sound of his voice, all
my men shrank together like the men in the Long-boat.
I was afraid to let the horror produced by our first
meeting at close quarters after the dreadful changes
that wet, cold, and famine had produced, last one
moment longer than could be helped; so, without giving
time for any more questions and answers, I commanded
the men to lay the two boats close alongside of each
other. When I rose up and committed the tiller
to the hands of Rames, all my poor follows raised
their white faces imploringly to mine. “Don’t
leave us, sir,” they said, “don’t
leave us.” “I leave you,” says
I, “under the command and the guidance of Mr.
William Rames, as good a sailor as I am, and as trusty
and kind a man as ever stepped. Do your duty
by him, as you have done it by me; and remember to
the last, that while there is life there is hope.
God bless and help you all!” With those words
I collected what strength I had left, and caught at
two arms that were held out to me, and so got from
the stern-sheets of one boat into the stern-sheets
of the other.
“Mind where you step, sir,”
whispered one of the men who had helped me into the
Long-boat. I looked down as he spoke. Three
figures were huddled up below me, with the moonshine
falling on them in ragged streaks through the gaps
between the men standing or sitting above them.
The first face I made out was the face of Miss Coleshaw,
her eyes were wide open and fixed on me. She
seemed still to keep her senses, and, by the alternate
parting and closing of her lips, to be trying to speak,
but I could not hear that she uttered a single word.
On her shoulder rested the head of Mrs. Atherfield.
The mother of our poor little Golden Lucy must, I
think, have been dreaming of the child she had lost;
for there was a faint smile just ruffling the white
stillness of her face, when I first saw it turned
upward, with peaceful closed eyes towards the heavens.
From her, I looked down a little, and there, with
his head on her lap, and with one of her hands resting
tenderly on his cheek there lay the Captain,
to whose help and guidance, up to this miserable time,
we had never looked in vain, there, worn
out at last in our service, and for our sakes, lay
the best and bravest man of all our company.
I stole my hand in gently through his clothes and
laid it on his heart, and felt a little feeble warmth
over it, though my cold dulled touch could not detect
even the faintest beating. The two men in the
stern-sheets with me, noticing what I was doing knowing
I loved him like a brother and seeing,
I suppose, more distress in my face than I myself was
conscious of its showing, lost command over themselves
altogether, and burst into a piteous moaning, sobbing
lamentation over him. One of the two drew aside
a jacket from his feet, and showed me that they were
bare, except where a wet, ragged strip of stocking
still clung to one of them. When the ship struck
the Iceberg, he had run on deck leaving his shoes in
his cabin. All through the voyage in the boat
his feet had been unprotected; and not a soul had
discovered it until he dropped! As long as he
could keep his eyes open, the very look of them had
cheered the men, and comforted and upheld the women.
Not one living creature in the boat, with any sense
about him, but had felt the good influence of that
brave man in one way or another. Not one but
had heard him, over and over again, give the credit
to others which was due only to himself; praising this
man for patience, and thanking that man for help,
when the patience and the help had really and truly,
as to the best part of both, come only from him.
All this, and much more, I heard pouring confusedly
from the men’s lips while they crouched down,
sobbing and crying over their commander, and wrapping
the jacket as warmly and tenderly as they could over
is cold feet. It went to my heart to check them;
but I knew that if this lamenting spirit spread any
further, all chance of keeping alight any last sparks
of hope and resolution among the boat’s company
would be lost for ever. Accordingly I sent them
to their places, spoke a few encouraging words to
the men forward, promising to serve out, when the
morning came, as much as I dared, of any eatable thing
left in the lockers; called to Rames, in my old boat,
to keep as near us as he safely could; drew the garments
and coverings of the two poor suffering women more
closely about them; and, with a secret prayer to be
directed for the best in bearing the awful responsibility
now laid on my shoulders, took my Captain’s
vacant place at the helm of the Long-boat.
This, as well as I can tell it, is
the full and true account of how I came to be placed
in charge of the lost passengers and crew of the Golden
Mary, on the morning of the twenty-seventh day after
the ship struck the Iceberg, and foundered at sea.