“I am sure I do not know what
to do with you, Steve,” Lieutenant Embleton
said one afternoon as he and his son were sitting upon
a bench on the cliff at Ramsgate, looking over the
sea. “Upon my word I don’t see my
way at all; this peace has stranded most of us, and
at any rate, so far as I am concerned, there is not
a ghost of a chance of my obtaining employment-not
that I am fit for it if I could get it. I have
been nearly ten years ashore. Every one of us
who sailed under Cochrane have been marked men ever
since. However, that is an old story, and it is
no use grumbling over what cannot be helped; besides,
that wound in my hip has been troubling me a good
deal of late, and I know I am not fit for sea.
I don’t think I should have minded so much if
I had got post rank before being laid on the shelf.
The difference of pension, too, would have been a
help, for goodness knows it is hard work making ends
meet on a lieutenant’s half-pay. However,
that is not the question now. The thing that
I have got to consider is what is the best thing to
do with you.
“Yes, I know you are ready to
do anything, lad, and it is not your fault that you
are not in harness; but, in the first place, I found
it hard to spare you, and in the next, I wanted you
to stick to your books as long as you could.
I grant there are many officers even in His Majesty’s
service who are as rough as if they had come in through
the hawse-hole, but it tells against them. However,
as you are past fifteen, I think now that you will
do; and as you have been working steadily with me for
the past four years, you have got a lot into your
head that will give you an advantage over boys sent
to sea two years younger.
“You are well up in navigation,
and can take an observation as well as any old sailor,
either by sun, moon, or stars. You can steer a
boat in heavy weather, and knot and splice; you know
the sails and ropes, and can go aloft as quickly as
a monkey, and do anything that your strength permits.
There have been plenty of opportunities for teaching
you all this on short coasting voyages and on board
ships driven in here by stress of weather. I
suppose, Steve, however much we may talk of other professions,
it comes to the sea at last. I know that you
have always wanted it, but if I could have seen any
opening for you on land I would rather that you had
taken to it than have gone afloat. You see what
it has done for me, lad. It is a poor trade,
though as long as it’s war-time there is excitement
enough to make up for the shortness of the pay.
However, as I have told you many a time, there is
no chance whatever of my getting you a midshipman’s
berth.
“I have not the slightest influence
at the admiralty, and the navy has been so reduced
since the war ended that they must have fifty applications
for every vacancy; besides, now that there is no fighting
to be done, I don’t know that the merchant service
isn’t the best, for it is dull work indeed being
years on a station when there is no chance of a brush
with an enemy or the capture of a prize. In the
merchant service you can have at least a change, and
a smart young fellow who knows his business and has
gentlemanly manners, has much better chances of coming
to the front than he would have in the royal navy.
So I think the time has come when I must bring myself
to make a move in the matter.”
“Thank you, father; I know very
well that in studying with you I have learned a lot
more than I should have done if I had gone to sea two
years ago; but I do want to be working and earning
something, instead of being an expense to you, and,
as you know, I would prefer the sea to anything else.”
“It is Hobson’s choice,
lad; it is the sea or nothing. And after all,
I think the mercantile navy is as good a profession
as a lad can take to, that is if he has no influence
to back him on shore. I wrote a fortnight ago
to a friend in London. He is the owner of four
or five vessels, and it happened, a good many years
ago now, that I recaptured one of them with a valuable
cargo that had been taken by a French privateer.
I was sent home in her, and when he came down to Plymouth,
where I took her in, we became great friends.
We were about the same age, and the loss at that time
would have been a very serious one to him. I
stayed with him once or twice when I was in town.
I have not seen him for some years now-one
cannot afford to run about on a lieutenant’s
half-pay-but I remembered him the other
day when I was thinking things over in every light,
and wrote to him. I told him how we were situated,
and asked him if he would put you on board one of
his ships, and this morning I had an answer from him
saying that he would gladly do so. He said that
he would take you as an apprentice without fees, and
that at any time, should anything better turn up, or
you see your way to getting into a firm with a larger
fleet and better chance of advancement, he would cancel
your indentures. No kinder offer could be made,
and if you are willing I will write this evening to
accept the offer, and tell him that I will go up with
you in the hoy directly I hear from him that you are
wanted.”
“Thank you very much, father;
I am awfully glad that it can be managed without expense,
though I should be quite willing to go before the mast
and work my way up.”
“I know you would, Steve, but
it is much better to start fair, for ship-owners prefer
to take a young mate who has regularly served as an
apprentice than a man who has only been trained before
the mast; for although the latter may have picked
up enough to scrape through his examination, he is
rarely a good navigator, and works out his reckoning
by rule of thumb, which is all very well as long as
the weather is fine and he can get his observation
at noon, but breaks down directly it comes to having
to depend upon a glimpse of the moon through the clouds,
or the chance of getting a star.”
Lieutenant Embleton had been a dashing
and gallant officer, but his career in the service
had been ruined by the fact that he had served under
Lord Cochrane, both in the Pallas, the Impérieuse,
and the Speedy. The latter was a little
sloop mounting fourteen four-pounder guns, in which
not only did Lord Cochrane capture many gun-boats and
merchantmen, but on the 6th of May, 1801, he took
the Gamo, a Spanish frigate, carrying six times
as many men as the Speedy and seven times her
weight of shot, an exploit that so aroused the jealousy
of Earl St. Vincent that for a long time Lord Cochrane
could not obtain employment. Three years later,
when Lord Melville succeeded St. Vincent as first
lord of the admiralty, Lord Cochrane was appointed
to the Pallas, in which he again did excellent
service; and distinguished himself still more when,
in the Impérieuse, he attacked the whole French
fleet in the Basque Roads, driving three or four of
their battle-ships ashore, capturing three others,
and compelling the rest to take to flight.
But the honour and popular applause
gained by Lord Cochrane was, in the opinion of the
authorities, more than neutralized by his fearless
exposure, from his place in Parliament, where he sat
as one of the members for Westminster, of the scandalous
abuses then prevailing in the navy. All attempts
to silence him by the offers of valuable appointments
being in vain, Lord Cochrane was subjected to a persecution
altogether without precedent in parliamentary history.
In the court-marshal which was held upon Lord Gambier
for his failure to assist Cochrane in the action in
the Basque Roads, the admiralty went so far as to
forge charts, and so to show that the admiral could
not come to Cochrane’s assistance, and Gambier
was not only acquitted, but received a vote of thanks
from the House of Commons for the victory in which
he had taken no part. For four years Lord Cochrane
received no appointment, but at the close of 1813 his
uncle, Sir Alexander Cochrane, was selected for the
command of the fleet on the North American station,
and nominated Cochrane his flag captain, an appointment
resting entirely with him, and with which government
could not interfere.
He did not, however, sail, for just
as he was about to embark, a relation, who was engaged
in stock exchange operations in conjunction with a
foreign adventurer, carried out some dishonest transactions,
those who were his dupes believing that he was acting
under information obtained from Lord Cochrane.
As soon as the latter heard a report of the affair
he left his ship, came up to London, and demanded
an investigation. Then followed one of the most
disgraceful parodies of justice ever performed in this
country. Lord Cochrane was arrested, tried, and
by means of a partisan judge, false evidence, and
measures more unscrupulous even than those of Judge
Jeffreys, convicted and sentenced to imprisonment.
A servile House of Commons obeyed the orders of ministers
to expel him from their body. His name was struck
off the order of the Bath, and his insignia torn down
from St. George’s Chapel with every mark of indignity.
Public indignation at the disgraceful
means that had been taken to secure his conviction
rose to such a height, that it was only by the persuasions
of Lord Cochrane’s friends that a riot was prevented.
The citizens of Westminster at once re-elected him
as their member, no one venturing to oppose him.
After remaining in prison for some months he effected
his escape and presented himself in the House of Commons.
He was seized and carried back to prison, where he
was thrown into a dungeon, and there kept until his
health so suffered that his persecutors, fearing that
fatal consequences would ensue, were obliged to place
him in more wholesome quarters. Here he remained
until the conclusion of his year’s sentence.
He then paid the fine of a thousand pounds, to which
he had also been sentenced, and on the very day of
his release from prison took his place in the House
of Commons, and resumed his work as one of the leaders
of the reform party.
Eighteen months later he was subjected
to fresh persecution, and was tried for his escape
from prison and fined a hundred pounds. A penny
subscription was at once started, and eleven hundred
pounds collected in this way, afforded a signal proof
of the intensity of the feeling in his favour.
This sum was used to pay the fine, and to reimburse
him for the former fine to which he had been subjected.
All Lord Cochrane’s efforts to obtain a new
trial, or an expression of an opinion from the House
as to the illegality of the proceedings of his judge,
Lord Ellenborough, were ineffective, the House, on
each occasion when he brought the matter forward,
obeying the orders of ministers and voting against
his motions by an overwhelming majority. He had,
however, the satisfaction of knowing that the nation
at large was heartily with him, and recognized the
gross injustice from which he had been a sufferer.
The hostility upon the part of the
admiralty and government extended to those who had
borne part in his glorious exploits at sea, and Lieutenant
Embleton was put on half-pay after the action of the
Impérieuse against the French fleet, and found
himself without any prospect of future employment,
and without even a chance of obtaining a nomination
for his son to a midshipman’s berth. The
blow was at first a very keen one, but it was less
bitterly felt after the conclusion of peace and the
great reduction of the navy, as his fate was only
that of thousands of other officers; and he had now
come to feel that the effects of his wound, for which
he received a small addition to his half-pay, rendered
him unfit for further service, even could he have
obtained an appointment. He had, since leaving
the navy, lived in a little cottage at Ramsgate, where
from his garden he could obtain a view of the sea
and the passing ships. The education of his son
afforded him employment for some hours a day.
His favourite position was on a bench in the garden,
from which he could watch through a telescope mounted
on a tripod the passing ships, criticise the state
of their rigging and sails, and form conjectures as
to their destination.
It was a great pang to him to part
with Stephen, but he felt that he could no longer
keep him by his side; and he was sure that the careful
training he had given him in all nautical matters
would enable the lad to make his way in the mercantile
navy. A fortnight after his conversation with
Steve, the lieutenant received a letter from his friend
in London, saying that one of his ships that had returned
a fortnight before was now unloaded, and would at
once begin to fit out for a fresh voyage, and it would
be therefore as well for him to bring Stephen up,
so that he might have the advantage of seeing the
whole process of preparing a ship for sea. He
gave a warm invitation to Lieutenant Embleton to stay
with him for a week or two, and on the following day
father and son went on board a Ramsgate hoy, and thirty-six
hours later arrived in the port of London. They
were warmly received by Mr. Hewson.
“I think your boy is fortunate
that the Tiger should be the first ship he
will sail in,” he said that evening. “I
regard the captain as my best officer. He is
a good seaman and a capital navigator, and he is of
a most kindly disposition; therefore, I can put the
boy under him with the certainty that he will be well
treated and cared for. In the next place, the
Tiger does not, like my other ships, make regular
voyages to and from a foreign port, but carries on
the business of a trader among the East Indian islands.
It is not every one to whom such a business could be
safely intrusted; but I have great confidence in Captain
Pinder. He is a good man of business, thoroughly
conscientious, and accustomed to the ways of the treacherous
natives of those islands. The Tiger is
more heavily armed than usual, and has more than once
beaten off the attacks of their piratical craft, and
there is no fear of Pinder’s being caught napping.
“She will in the first place
take a cargo to Calcutta, reserving a portion of her
hold for my goods for trading among the islands.
When she has landed her freight at Calcutta she will
cruise in the Archipelago for some months, as long,
in fact, as Pinder finds that he can carry on a really
good business with the natives. Then she will
return to Calcutta and fill up with freight for her
return voyage. Thus, you see, your boy will gain
a good deal of varied experience, and will see, perhaps,
as much adventure and excitement as he would meet
with in a score of ordinary voyages, and will have
the advantage of being under a kind commander, who
will instruct him in the rudiments of navigation.”
“Nothing could be better,”
Mr. Embleton said warmly. “It is the voyage
of all others that would be to the boy’s taste,
and I shall be satisfied indeed at his being in such
good hands. As to navigation, it is practice
only that he wants. I have taught him all that
I know myself, and he can take a lunar, or work his
reckoning out from a star observation, as accurately
as I could do it myself.”
“Is that so, Mr. Embleton?
I am glad indeed to hear it. Then there is no
doubt about the future of your boy, if he is steady
and industrious. I am pleased to hear it for
my own sake, if for nothing else; for although Pinder’s
mates are capital sailors, and in all other respects
able officers, they are not men of Pinder’s
type. They can take, of course, a rough observation
at noon, and work it out by rule of thumb and the aid
of tables, but beyond that they can do nothing.
They have not received the education to enable them
to grapple with mathematical problems, even of the
simplest kind; and although, in case of Pinder falling
sick, they might manage under favourable circumstances
to bring the ship home, they would fare very badly
if they had a long spell of bad weather and could
not get an observation at noon for days or even weeks
together. It will be a satisfaction to me to
know that in case of anything happening to the captain
there is someone on board who could, in such a case,
take a lunar or shoot a star. Well, to-morrow
morning we will go down to the docks, and I will hand
your boy over to Pinder. I should, of course,
be very glad to have him here, but I think it is of
great advantage to a boy to see everything done from
the first step. She is going to have an entirely
new fit-out both of standing and running rigging,
so she has been stripped entirely, and has nothing
but her three lower masts above the deck.”
Accordingly, after breakfast next
day Mr. Hewson sent for a hackney-coach and they drove
down to the docks.
“That is the Tiger,”
Mr. Hewson said as he stopped at the side of a fine
craft. “She is six hundred tons, three years
old, and a fast sailer. She is not much to look
at at present, but when she is in full dress she is
a handsome vessel.”
“She looks fast,” Mr.
Embleton said. “And for myself, I would
rather command a craft of that size than one of greater
tonnage.”
The Tiger at present certainly
did not show to advantage. Her deck was begrimed
with dirt. A body of riggers were at work in parcelling
and serving with spun yarn the eyes of the shrouds.
An officer in a rough canvas suit was superintending
the work.
“That is Mr. Staines, the first
mate,” Mr. Hewson said. “He would
not be happy if he was not on board from the very
first hour that the riggers were beginning their work.
Good morning, Mr. Staines!” he went on, raising
his voice. “Is Captain Pinder on board?”
“Yes, sir,” the mate said,
touching his cap, and then went aft to the poop-cabin,
from which the captain came out as his visitor stepped
on board. He also was in a working suit.
“Good morning, Mr. Hewson!”
he said. “We are all in the rough, you see.
One hardly expects visitors on her first day of fitting
out.”
“We all know that, captain.
This is Lieutenant Embleton of the royal navy, and
this is his son, of whom I was speaking to you two
days ago.”
“I am glad to meet you, sir,”
the captain said, shaking hands with Mr. Embleton.
“Every sailor knows you by reputation as being
one of Lord Cochrane’s officers. It will
be a pleasure to me to do all I can for your son.”
“You will find him very different
to most of your apprentices, Pinder. He has had
the advantage of his father’s teaching, and,
theoretically at any rate, he is already well up in
his work. When I tell you that he can take a
lunar, or an observation from a star, you may imagine
that he will not require much teaching in navigation.”
“I am glad indeed to hear it,
Mr. Hewson-heartily glad; there ought to
be two men on board a ship who can do that, for there
is never any saying what might happen if there is
only one. It has made me anxious many a time,
when we had a bad spell of weather, as to how the Tiger
would get on if I happened to be washed overboard
by a sea or killed by a falling spar. Well, Master
Embleton, I can see that I shall have no difficulty
in making a first-rate sailor of you. Have you
come to stay?”
“Yes, sir. My father thought
it would be good for me to be on board from the time
the fitting-out began.”
“Quite right, lad. You
will then learn as much in a fortnight as you would
in a year at sea. I always make a point of being
here myself, and my first officer wouldn’t allow
anything to prevent his seeing that everything was
right from first to last. But I don’t think
that you will be able to sleep on board for the next
fortnight.”
“Of course not,” Mr. Embleton
said. “I intend to take a lodging for him
as close to the dock-gate as I can. Perhaps you
may know of a tidy place.”
“He can’t do better than
lodge with us,” the captain said. “Mr.
Staines and I always put up at the same place.
We give them notice when we are going to begin to
fit out, and they keep the rooms for us. We both
slept there last night. The house is kept by
a nice clean woman, the widow of a skipper who was
lost with his craft about ten years ago. I have
no doubt she can put the lad up too, and he can mess
with us. I will go round with him myself; till
we get the shrouds up, one is quite enough to look
after the riggers.”
“I thank you very much, captain.
That will be in all respects more pleasant for the
boy than lodging by himself.”
The matter was speedily arranged.
Mr. Embleton then took Stephen to a clothing shop
and bought him two suits of rough canvas.
“You will find it dirty work,
Steve. There is no keeping free of the tar.
By the way, Captain Pinder, I have not ordered Steve’s
outfit yet, for I know that on some lines the apprentices
dress like midshipmen, on others they don’t;
so I put it off until I saw you.”
“I always like the apprentices
on board my ship to be dressed as midshipmen,”
the captain replied. “There will only be
three on board as far as I know. I make a point
of messing with my officers, and if there are only
two or three apprentices on board they take their meals
with us, it does them good; and I don’t at all
approve of their mixing with the men forward.
I should say, Mr. Embleton, get him one good suit for
going ashore, another rougher suit for duty on board,
half-a-dozen duck suits for the tropics, and two or
three suits of dungaree for slipping on over the others
when there is dirty work to be done. The cap is
sufficient to indicate the officer. As for the
rest of his outfit, your own experience will tell
you what is needed. Railton in Leadenhall Street
is a man I can recommend. He keeps the house
badges for the caps, and turns out his work well.
I generally get my togs there, and find him as cheap
as anyone.”
“Thank you! I will take
Steve with me as far as that in the hackney-coach,
and get him measured. Then he can be back here
again by the time you knock off for dinner, and will
then put on his slops and get to work.”
Steve returned to the lodgings just
as the captain and first mate came in to dinner.
Then he carried one of his canvas suits down to the
ship, put it on, and was soon at work having his first
lesson in seizing ropes. For a fortnight the
work continued, and Stephen greatly pleased the captain
and first mate by his attention and willingness, working
all the time as a rigger’s boy, and paying the
greatest attention to all the minutiae of the work.
Saturday afternoons and Sundays he spent at Mr. Hewson’s,
where his father was still staying, his host refusing
to listen to any talk of his leaving until the Tiger
sailed. Another four days were spent in planing
decks and painting inside and out. The work was
scarcely finished when the cargo began to come on
board. As soon as this was the case, the second
and third mates and the other two apprentices joined.
Like Mr. Staines, Towel and Pasley, the second and
third mates, had both made their way up from the forecastle;
both were active young men and good sailors, who had
laboriously mastered the very small amount of bookwork
that was needed, in addition to practical seamanship,
to pass their examinations, but who, like the majority
of their class of that time, knew nothing of navigation
beyond taking a rough observation at mid-day and working
it out by rule of thumb on the tables. Mr. Staines
presented Stephen to them.
“This is our new apprentice,”
he said; “his father is a lieutenant in the
royal navy, one of Lord Cochrane’s men, and a
great friend of the owner. Stephen Embleton is
the lad’s name, and some day he will make a fine
officer. He has been at work here since the morning
the riggers came on board, and is not afraid to put
his hands into the tar-pot, as you can see from his
appearance. He has learned a lot from his father,
so we won’t have the trouble with him we generally
do have with Johnny-raws.”
“That is right, youngster,”
the second mate said heartily; “if you will
learn anywhere, you will learn here, for a better captain
never commanded a ship. No passengers, I hope,
Staines?”
“No; I believe that the skipper
has had two or three applications, but although the
owner has no objection to his taking them, he considers
the trouble is more than they are worth. Of course,
he would make something out of their passage, but
there would, almost certainly, be some cantankerous
beggars among them, and of course the table costs a
good deal more when there are passengers, especially
as he will have the apprentices to mess with him.
I am sure I am glad indeed that we sha’n’t
be bothered with them.”
The other two apprentices were about
Stephen’s age. Both had made one trip in
the Tiger, and were at first a little inclined
to patronize the new-comer. The day before the
Tiger hauled out into the river, the owner
and Mr. Embleton came down to look over her. Great
was the change that three weeks had made in her appearance.
Her deck was beautifully white, the lofty spars well
scraped and freshly varnished, and the network of new
rigging set her off to the greatest advantage.
The new suit of sails were all bent, and lay loose
in their gaskets ready for dropping. Four guns
were ranged along either side.
“She is a handsome craft indeed,”
Mr. Embleton said as he stood on the wharf alongside,
taking in every detail of her outfit with the eye of
a seaman. “What are the guns-twelve-pounders?”
“Yes, but there is a long eighteen
down in the hold, which will be mounted as a pivot
as soon as she gets among the islands. The others
are well enough when you come to close quarters, but
the long gun generally keeps the pirates from getting
there; they don’t like being peppered before
they come within fighting distance. I believe
the captain would rather part with all the other guns
than sail without Long Tom.”
“That I would,” Captain
Pinder, who had just joined, remarked. “Five
times has the pivot-gun made them sheer off without
venturing to come to close quarters; and indeed I
have never had to loose the broadside guns but three
times, in each of which they came suddenly round the
corner into a bay where we were lying at anchor.”
As they had had notice of the owner’s
intention to come down, the officers were all in their
new uniforms, and after Captain Pinder had shown his
guests round the ship, they sat down together to dinner
in the cabin.
“You have plenty of freeboard,
I see,” Mr. Embleton said, as, after returning
on deck, he looked over the side.
“Yes, I never will load down
my ships,” Mr. Hewson said, “and will never
take cargo within twenty per cent of their full carrying
power. I have as little as possible stowed either
quite forward or quite aft, so that they have not
only plenty of freeboard, but are buoyant in a heavy
sea. I am sure it pays. I don’t insure
my ships, and I have not lost one in the last sixteen
years. The insurance money saved makes up for
the loss of freight, and I have the satisfaction of
knowing that I have done all in my power to ensure
the safety of my officers and men.”
“And very good policy, Hewson,”
Mr. Embleton said warmly. “I see scores
of ships passing inside the Goodwins so loaded down
that I would not be on board in a heavy gale for all
the money in the bank, and the state of their sails
often shows that they are badly cared for in all other
respects. The system of insurance is no doubt
a good one, but it has been so scandalously abused
that it may safely be said that it has largely increased
the annual number of wrecks and loss of life.
Were it not for insurance, owners would, in their
own interest, be driven to see that their ships were
made in every respect seaworthy, well provided with
gear of all kinds, well manned, and above all, not
overloaded. Insurances are responsible for a
large proportion of our marine disasters.”
As, if the wind continued favourable,
the Tiger would drop down the river as soon
as she got out of dock, which would be at a very early
hour the next morning, it was necessary that Stephen
should be on board that evening. He, however,
went back with his father to Mr. Hewson’s, spent
the afternoon at Exeter ’Change seeing the wild
beasts, and returned by eight o’clock to the
ship.
The Tiger made a quick voyage
to Calcutta. She rounded the Cape without encountering
bad weather, and was only twice obliged to shorten
sail during the whole passage. Stephen enjoyed
his life exceedingly. He was in the first officer’s
watch, and became a great favourite with Mr. Staines.
He astonished his fellow-apprentices, as soon as they
were fairly on their way, by producing his quadrant
and taking observations at the same time as did the
captain and mates; still more so when he took lunar
and star observations, working them all out by figures
instead of from the tables in the nautical almanac.
He found at first some little difficulty in obtaining
accuracy when the vessel was rolling, but he was not
long in overcoming this, and the captain found that
he was able to place the ship’s position on
the chart quite as correctly as he did himself.
“I would give a lot, Steve,”
the first mate said, when they had been out a fortnight,
“if I could work things out as you do. I
have gone over and over again to fellows who advertise
that they teach navigation, but it is of no use, I
can’t make head or tail of all the letters and
zigzigs and things. I have tried and I have tried
till my head ached, but the more I study it the more
fogged I get about it. There does not seem to
me to be any sense in the thing, and when I see you
sit down and figure away with all those letters and
things, it beats me altogether.”
“It is not difficult when you
have begun from the beginning,” Stephen said.
“Of course, as my father wanted to teach me navigation,
he taught me just the things that led up to the problems
that you are talking about, so that it really was
not hard, but if I had to do any other sort of mathematical
questions I should be just as much puzzled as you are.
Then you see, my father explained every step as it
came, and as one led to another, I learnt them without
meeting with any one special difficulty; but I can
quite see that it would be very hard for anyone to
learn to work it out without having been coached from
the start.”
“I shall never try again.
I think I could find a port by reckoning and the sun,
but as for the moon and stars I give them up altogether.
There are hundreds of skippers, nay thousands of them,
who don’t know more than I do.”
This was indeed the case, and the
skilful navigators had less advantage over experienced
men who worked by rule of thumb than is now the case,
as the instruments were comparatively rough and the
chronometers far less accurate than at present, and
even those most skilful in their use were well satisfied
if at the end of a long voyage they found that they
were within twenty miles of their reckoning.
“It is different work now, lad,
to what it used to be two years ago. Now one
walks up and down the deck, and though there may be
twenty sail in sight, one pays no more attention to
them than one would to as many sea-birds. Then
every sail was watched, and one was up, in the tops
with one’s glass twenty times a day, for there
was no saying whether it was a friend or an enemy.
One’s watch at night was a watch then, for there
was never any saying whether a French privateer might
not come looming out of the darkness at any moment;
and if a vessel of about our size was made out a mile
off, it was all hands on deck, and cast the lashings
off the guns, and stand by till she was out of sight
again. Now one jogs along, and all that you have
got to look out for, is to see that you don’t
run foul of another craft, or let one run foul of
you. Yes, we had a rough time of it in those
days, and I ain’t sorry that they are over.”
“But you look out sharp for
pirates when you are among the islands, don’t
you, Mr. Staines?”
“Ay, lad; but when one sees
a Malay pirate, there is no mistaking her for anything
else. At night it is generally a stark calm, and
whether one is lying idle, with the sails hanging
flat against the mast, or whether one is at anchor,
one knows that they can’t come upon us under
sail, and on a still night one can hear the beat of
their oars miles away. There is never any fear
of being surprised as long as there is a hand wide
awake and watchful on deck. Calms are the greatest
curse out there; the ship lies sometimes for days,
ay and for weeks, with the water as smooth as grease,
and everything that has been thrown overboard floating
alongside, and the sun coming down until your brain
is on the boil.”
“You have storms sometimes, don’t you?”
“Sometimes, not very often;
but when it does blow, it blows fit to take your head
off, and you have nothing to do but to cruise under
bare poles, and hope that nothing will get in your
way. There is one thing, they are not gales like
we have here, but cyclones, and instead of getting
blown along for hundreds of miles, you go round and
round, so that if there is no land within fifty miles
of you when the storm strikes, the chances are that
you are safe. If you can but lie to, you can manage
at last to edge out of it on the side that is furthest
from land. A cyclone is no joke, I can tell you;
but if you get warning enough to get your canvas stowed
and to send down your light spars, and have got a
ship like the Tiger under you in good trim,-not
too light, not too heavy,-you ought to be
able to live through it. There is no better sailor
nor one more familiar with the islands than the skipper.
He is not fond of carrying on, and perhaps at times
we think him a little too prudent, but he generally
turns out right; anyhow, it is a fault on the right
side.
“I have sailed under him fifteen
years now. I was third mate when I first joined
his ship; not this, you know, but the old Gertrude.
I have never had a cross word with him, nor have the
other two mates. He expects every man to do his
duty, as is right enough; but if that is done well,
everything goes on smooth. I don’t think
that there are ten of the crew who have not been with
the skipper for years. When we get back to port
and the crew are paid off, it is always, ’When
will you want us again, captain?’ and no matter
whether it is in a fortnight or in a couple of months,
pretty nearly every man will turn up.”
“That speaks for itself, both
as to the owner and the skipper, and the mates too,
Mr. Staines.”
“Well, we have not much to do
with it. Unless a man does his duty, and does
it pleasantly and without cursing and swearing, he
won’t make two voyages under the skipper; indeed
he won’t make one. Three years ago Towel
was laid up with a hurt he got on the voyage before,
and we had to get a new second mate at the last moment,
for Pasley had not got his certificate then, and couldn’t
take Towel’s place. The man was highly recommended,
and was a good sailor, but he was a bully, and a foul-mouthed
one, and the skipper put him on shore at the Cape,
and paid his passage home out of his own pocket-though
I know the owner returned it to him afterwards, and
said that he had done quite right. I tell you,
lad, you are lucky in making your first voyage on
board the Tiger, for, putting aside everything
else, I don’t know a single ship, except Hewson’s,
where the apprentices mess with the master and mates,
and are treated as they are here.
“I daresay you wonder why some
of us have not been apprentices, but it is only the
last two or three years that Hewson’s ships have
carried them. Before that there was always a
fourth mate to each of his ships, so that there were
two officers in each watch; but the ships have such
a good name, and the owner had so many applications
from friends with sons who wanted to go to sea, that
three years ago he made the change. But he is
mighty particular who he takes, and all his indentures
contain a clause that unless the reports by the captains
they sail under are favourable, the owner has the
right of returning the premium he received and of
cancelling the indentures. I can tell you, lad,
that if every owner took as much pains for the comfort
of his officers and crews as Mr. Hewson does, Jack
would have a deal better life than is now the case.”