OR, A VOYAGE AMONG THE TREE-TOPS.
CHAPTER I.
THE BROTHERS AT HOME.
Twenty years ago, not twenty miles
from the Land’s End, there lived a Cornish gentleman
named Trevannion. Just twenty years ago he died,
leaving to lament him a brace of noble boys, whose
mother all three had mourned, with like profound sorrow,
but a short while before.
“Squire” Trevannion, as
he was called, died in his own house, where his ancestors
for hundreds of years before him had dispensed hospitality.
None of them, however, had entertained so profusely
as he; or rather improvidently, it might be said,
since in less than three months after his death the
old family mansion, with the broad acres appertaining
to it, passed into the hands of an alien, leaving
his two sons, Ralph and Richard, landless, houseless,
and almost powerless. One thousand pounds apiece
was all that remained to them out of the wreck of the
patrimonial estates. It was whispered that even
this much was not in reality theirs, but had been
given to them by the very respectable solicitor
who had managed their father’s affairs, and
had furthermore managed to succeed him in the
ownership of a property worth a rental of three thousand
a year.
Any one knowing the conditions under
which the young Trevannions received their two thousand
pounds must have believed it to be a gift, since it
was handed over to them by the family solicitor with
the private understanding that they were to use it
in pushing their fortunes elsewhere, anywhere
except in Cornwall!
The land-pirate who had plucked them for
in reality had they been plucked did not
wish them to stay at home, divested, as they were,
of their valuable plumage. He had appropriated
their fine feathers, and cared not for the naked bodies
of the birds.
There were those in Cornwall who suspected
foul play in the lawyer’s dealings with the
young Trevannions, among others, the victims
themselves. But what could they do? They
were utterly ignorant of their late father’s
affairs, indeed, with any affairs that did
not partake of the nature of “sports.”
A solicitor “most respectable,” a
phrase that has become almost synonymous with rascality, a
regular church-goer, accounts kept with
scrupulous exactness, a man of honest face,
distinguished for probity of speech and integrity of
heart, what could the Trevannions do?
What more than the Smiths and the Browns and the Joneses,
who, notwithstanding their presumed greater skill in
the ways of a wicked lawyer world, are duped every
day in a similar manner. It is an old and oft-repeated
story, a tale too often told, and too often
true, that of the family lawyer and his
confiding client, standing in the relationship of
robber and robbed.
The two children of Squire Trevannion
could do nothing to save or recover their paternal
estate. Caught in the net of legal chicanery,
they were forced to yield, as other squire’s
children have had to do, and make the best of a bad
matter, forced to depart from a home that
had been held by Trevannions perhaps since the Phoenicians
strayed thitherward in search of their shining tin.
It sore grieved them to separate from
the scenes of their youth; but the secret understanding
with the solicitor required that sacrifice. By
staying at home a still greater might be called for, subsistence
in penury, and, worse than all, in a humiliating position;
for, notwithstanding the open house long kept by their
father, his friends had disappeared with his guests.
Impelled by these thoughts, the brothers resolved
to go forth into the wide world, and seek fortune
wherever it seemed most likely they should find it.
They were at this period something
more than mere children. Ralph had reached within
twelve months of being twenty. Richard was his
junior by a couple of years. Their book-education
had been good; the practice of manly sports had imparted
to both of them a physical strength that fitted them
for toil, either of the mind or body. They were
equal to a tough struggle, either in the intellectual
or material world; and to this they determined to
resign themselves.
For a time they debated between themselves
where they should go, and what do. The army and
navy came under their consideration. With such
patronage as their father’s former friends could
command, and might still exert in favor of their fallen
fortunes, a commission in either army or navy was
not above their ambition. But neither felt much
inclined towards a naval or military life; the truth
being, that a thought had taken shape in their minds
leading them to a different determination.
Their deliberations ended by each
of them proclaiming a resolve, almost sealing
it with a vow, that they would enter into
some more profitable, though perhaps less pretentious,
employment than that of either soldiering or sailoring;
that they would toil with their hands, if
need be until they should accumulate a
sufficient sum to return and recover the ancestral
estate from the grasp of the avaricious usurper.
They did not know how it was to be done; but, young,
strong, and hopeful, they believed it might be done, with
time, patience, and industry to aid them in the execution.
“Where shall we go?” inquired
Richard, the younger of the two. “To America,
where every poor man appears to prosper? With
a thousand each to begin the world with, we might
do well there. What say you, Ralph?”
“America is a country where
men seem to thrive best who have nothing to
begin the world with. You mean North America, the
United States, I suppose?”
“I do.”
“I don’t much like the
United States as a home, not because it
is a republic, for I believe that is the only just
form of government, whatever our aristocratic friends
may say. I object to it simply because I wish
to go south, to some part of the tropical
world, where one may equally be in the way of acquiring
a fortune.”
“Is there such a place?”
“There is.”
“Where, brother?”
“Peru. Anywhere along the
Sierra of the Andes from Chili to the Isthmus of Panama.
As Cornish men we should adopt the specialty of our
province, and become miners. The Andes mountains
will give us that opportunity, where, instead of gray
tin, we may delve for yellow gold. What say you
to South America?”
“I like the thought of South
America, nothing would please me better
than going there. But I must confess, brother,
I have no inclination for the occupation you speak
of. I had rather be a merchant than a miner.”
“Don’t let that penchant
prevent you from selecting Peru as the scene of mercantile
transactions. There are many Englishmen who have
made fortunes in the Peruvian trade. You may
hope to follow their example. We may choose different
occupations and still be near each other. One
thousand pounds each may give both of us a start, you
as a merchant of goods, I as a digger for gold.
Peru is the place for either business. Decide,
Dick! Shall we sail for the scenes rendered celebrated
by Pizarro?”
“If you will it I’m agreed.”
“Thither then let us go.”
In a month from that time the two
Trevannions might have been seen upon a ship, steering
westward from the Land’s End, and six months
later both disembarked upon the beach of Callao, en
route first for Lima, thence up the mountains,
to the sterile snow-crested mountains, that tower
above the treasures of Cerro Pasco, vainly
guarded within the bosom of adamantine rocks.
CHAPTER II.
THE BROTHERS ABROAD.
This book is not intended as a history
of the brothers Ralph and Richard Trevannion.
If it were so, a gap of some fifteen years after
the date of their arrival at Cerro Pasco would
have to be filled up. I decline to speak of this
interval of their lives, simply because the details
might not have any remarkable interest for those before
whom they would be laid.
Suffice it to say, that Richard, the
younger, soon became wearied of a miner’s life;
and, parting with his brother, he crossed the Cordilleras,
and descended into the great Amazonian forest, the
“montana,” as it is called by the
Spanish inhabitants of the Andes. Thence, in company
with a party of Portuguese traders, he kept on down
the river Amazon, trading along its banks, and upon
some of its tributary streams; and finally established
himself as a merchant at its mouth, in the thriving
“city” of Gran Para.
Richard was not unsocial in his habits;
and soon became the husband of a fair-haired wife, the
daughter of a countryman who, like himself, had established
commercial relations at Para. In a few years after,
several sweet children called him “father,” only
two of whom survived to prattle in his ears this endearing
appellation, alas! no longer to be pronounced in the
presence of their mother.
Fifteen years after leaving the Land’s
End, Richard Trevannion, still under thirty-five years
of age, was a widower, with two children, respected
wherever known, prosperous in pecuniary affairs, rich
enough to return home, and spend the remainder of his
days in that state so much desired by the Sybarite
Roman poet, “otium cum dignitate.”
Did he remember the vow mutually made
between him and his brother, that, having enough money,
they would one day go back to Cornwall, and recover
the ancestral estate? He did remember it.
He longed to accomplish this design. He only
awaited his brother’s answer to a communication
he had made to him on this very subject.
He had no doubt that Ralph’s
desire would be in unison with his own, that
his brother would soon join him, and then both would
return to their native land, perhaps to
dwell again under the same roof that had sheltered
them as children.
The history of the elder brother during
this period of fifteen years, if less eventful, was
not less distinguished by success. By steadily
following the pursuit which had first attracted him
to Peru, he succeeded in becoming a man of considerable
means, independent, if not wealthy.
Like his brother, he got married at
an early period, in fact, within the first
year after establishing himself in Cerro Pasco.
Unlike the latter, however, he chose for his wife
one of the women of the country, a beautiful
Peruvian lady. She too, but a short while before,
had gone to a better world, leaving motherless two
pretty children, of twelve and fourteen years of age, the
elder of the two being a daughter.
Such was the family of Ralph Trevannion,
and such the condition of life in which his brother’s
epistle reached him, that epistle containing
the proposal that they should wind up their respective
businesses, dispose of both, and carry their gains
to the land that had given them birth.
The proposition was at once accepted,
as Richard knew it would be. It was far from
the first time that the thing had been discussed,
epistolary fashion, between them; for letters were
exchanged as often as opportunity permitted, sometimes
twice or thrice in the year.
In these letters, during the last
few years of their sojourn in South America, the promise
made on leaving home was mutually mentioned, and as
often renewed on either side. Richard knew that
his brother was as eager as himself to keep that well-remembered
vow.
So long as the mother of Ralph’s
children was alive, he had not urged his brother to
its fulfilment; but now that she had been dead for
more than a year, he had written to say that the time
had come for their return to their country and their
home.
His proposal was, that Ralph, having
settled his affairs in Peru, which, of
course, included the selling out of his share in the
mines, should join him, Richard, at Para,
thence to take ship for England. That instead
of going round by Cape Horn, or across the isthmus,
by Panama, Ralph should make the descent of the great
Amazon River, which traverse would carry him latitudinally
across the continent from west to east.
Richard had two reasons for recommending
this route. First, because he wished his brother
to see the great river of Orellana, as he himself had
done; and secondly, because he was still more desirous
that his own son should see it.
How this last wish was to be gratified
by his brother making the descent of the Amazon, may
require explanation; but it will suffice to say that
the son of Richard Trevannion was at that time residing
with his uncle at the mines of Cerro Pasco.
The boy had gone to Peru the year
before, in one of his father’s ships, first,
to see the Great Ocean, then the Great Andes, afterwards
to become acquainted with the country of the Incas,
and last, though not of least importance, to make
the acquaintance of his own uncle and his two interesting
cousins, the elder of whom was exactly his own age.
He had gone to the Pacific side by sea.
It was his father’s wish he should return to
the Atlantic side by land, or, to speak
more accurately, by river.
The merchant’s wish was to be
gratified. The miner had no desire to refuse
compliance with his proposal. On the contrary,
it chimed in with his own inclinations. Ralph
Trevannion possessed a spirit adventurous as his brother’s,
which fourteen years of mining industry, carried on
in the cold mountains of Cerro Pasco, had neither
deadened nor chilled. The thought of once more
returning to the scenes of his youth quite rejuvenated
him; and on the day of receiving his brother’s
challenge to go, he not only accepted it, but commenced
proceedings towards carrying the design into execution.
A month afterwards and he might have
been seen descending the eastern slope of the Cordilleras
on mule-back, and accompanied by his family and followers;
afterwards aboard a balsa, one of
those curious crafts used in the descent of the Huallaga;
and later still on the montaria, upon the bosom
of the great river itself.
With the details of his mountain travels,
interesting as they may be, we have naught to do.
No more with his descent of the Huallaga, nor his
long voyage on the Amazon itself, in that up-river
portion of the stream where it is called the “Marañón.”
Only where it becomes the stupendous “Solimoes”
do we join Ralph Trevannion on his journey, and remain
with him as long as he is “AFLOAT IN THE FOREST,”
or making a voyage among the tree-tops.
CHAPTER III.
THE GALATEA.
On an evening in the early part of
December, a craft of singular construction might have
been seen descending the Solimoes, and apparently
making for the little Portuguese port of Coary, that
lies on the southern side of the river.
When we say of singular construction,
we mean singular to one unaccustomed to the navigation
of Amazonian waters. There the craft in question
was too common to excite curiosity, since it was nothing
more than a galatea, or large canoe, furnished
with mast and sail, with a palm-thatched cabin, or
tolda, rising over the quarter, a low-decked
locker running from bow to midships, along
each side of which were to be seen, half seated, half
standing, some half-dozen dark-skinned men, each plying,
instead of an oar, a paddle-blade.
Perhaps the most singular sight on
board this embarkation was the group of animated beings
who composed its crew and passengers. The former,
as already stated, were dark-skinned men, scantily
clad, in fact, almost naked, since a single
pair of white cotton drawers constituted the complete
costume of each.
For passengers there were three men,
and a like number of individuals of younger age.
Two of the men were white, apparently Europeans; the
other was as black as soot could have made him, unquestionably
an African negro. Of the young people two were
boys, not much differing in size, and apparently not
much in age, while the third was a half-grown girl,
of dark complexion, raven-colored hair, and beautiful
features.
One of the white men appeared to be,
and was, the proprietor of the montaria, and the employer
of its swarthy crew. He was Ralph Trevannion.
The young girl was his daughter, and
bore her Peruvian mother’s name, Rosa, more
often pronounced by its diminutive of endearment, Rosita.
The younger of the two boys also of dark
complexion was his son Ralph, while the
older, of true Saxon physiognomy and hue, was the son
of his brother, also bearing his father’s Christian
name, Richard.
The second white man was unmistakably
of European race, so much so that any one
possessing the slightest knowledge of the hibernian
type, would at once have pronounced him a “Son
of the Sod.” A pure pug nose, a shock of
curled hair of the clearest carrot color, an eternal
twinkle in the eye, a volume of fun lying open at
each angle of the mouth, were all characteristics
by which “Tipperary Tom” for
such was his sobriquet might be
remembered.
About the negro there was nothing
special, more than that he was a pure negro, with
enormously thick lips, flattened nose, long protruding
heels, teeth white as hippopotamus ivory, and almost
always set in a good-humored grin. The darkey
had been a sailor, or rather ship-steward, before
landing in Peru. Thither had he strayed, and settled
at Cerro Pasco after several years spent aboard ship.
He was a native of Mozambique, on the eastern coast
of Africa, to which circumstance was he indebted for
the only name ever given him, Mozey.
Both he and the Irishman were the
servants of the miner, or rather his retainers, who
served him in various ways, and had done so almost
ever since his establishing himself among the rocks
of Cerro Pasco.
The other creatures of the animated
kingdom that found lodgment upon the craft, were of
various shapes, sizes, and species. There were
quadrupeds, quadrumana, and birds, beasts
of the field, monkeys of the forest, and birds of
the air, clustering upon the cabin top,
squatted in the hold, perched upon the gangway, the
tolda, the yard, and the mast, forming
an epitomized menagerie, such as may be seen on every
kind of craft that navigates the mighty Amazon.
It is not our design to give any description
of the galatea’s crew. There were nine
of them, all Indians, four on
each side acting as rowers, or more properly “paddlers,”
the ninth being the pilot or steersman, standing abaft
the tolda.
Our reason for not describing them
is that they were a changing crew, only attached to
the craft for a particular stage of the long river
voyage, and had succeeded several other similar sets
since the embarkation of our voyagers on the waters
of the Upper Amazon. They had joined the galatea
at the port of Ega, and would take leave of her at
Coary, where a fresh crew of civilized Indians “tapuyos” would
be required.
And they were required, but
not obtained. On the galatea putting into the
port of Coary, it was found that nearly every man in
the place was off upon a hunting excursion, turtle
and cowfish being the game that had called them out.
Not a canoe-man could be had for love or money.
The owner of the galatea endeavored
to tempt the Ega crew to continue another stage.
It was contrary to their habit, and they refused to
go. Persuasion and threats were tried in vain.
Coaxing and scolding proved equally unavailable; all
except one remained firm in their refusal, the exception
being an old Indian who did not belong to the Ega tribe,
and who could not resist the large bribe offered by
Trevannion.
The voyagers must either suspend their
journey till the Coary turtle-hunters should return,
or proceed without paddlers. The hunters were
not expected for a month. To stay a month at Coary
was out of the question. The galatea must go
on manned by her own people, and the old Indian, who
was to act as pilot. Such was the determination
of Ralph Trevannion. But for that resolve, rash
as it was, and ending unfortunately for him who made
it, we should have no story to tell.
CHAPTER IV.
DRIFTING WITH THE CURRENT.
The craft that carried the ex-miner,
his family and following, once more floated on the
broad bosom of the Solimoes. Not so swift as before,
since, instead of eight paddlers, it was now impelled
by only half the number, these, too, with
less than half the experience of the crew who had
preceded them.
The owner himself acted as steersman,
while the paddles were plied by “Tipperary Tom,”
Mozey, the old Indian, who, being of the
Mundurucu tribe, passed by the name of “Monday,” and
Richard Trevannion.
The last, though by far the youngest,
was perhaps the best paddler in the party. Brought
up in his native place of Gran Para, he had been accustomed
to spend half his time either in or upon the water;
and an oar or paddle was to him no novelty.
Young Ralph, on the contrary, a true
mountaineer, knew nothing of either, and therefore
counted for nothing among the crew of the galatea.
To him and the little Rosa was assigned the keeping
of the pets, with such other light duties as they
were capable of performing.
For the first day the voyage was uninterrupted
by any incident, at least any that might
be called unpleasant. Their slow progress, it
is true, was a cause of dissatisfaction; but so long
as they were going at all, and going in the right
direction, this might be borne with equanimity.
Three miles an hour was about their average rate of
speed; for half of which they were indebted to the
current of the river, and for the other half to the
impulsion of their paddles.
Considering that they had still a
thousand miles to go before reaching Gran Para, the
prospect of a protracted voyage was very plainly outlined
before them.
Could they have calculated on making
three miles an hour for every hour of the twenty-four,
things would not have been bad. This rate of speed
would have carried them to their destination in a dozen
days, a mere bagatelle. But they knew
enough of river-navigation to disregard such data.
They knew the current of the Solimoes to be extremely
slow; they had heard of the strange phenomenon, that,
run which way the river might, north, south, east,
or west, and it does keep bending
and curving in all these directions, the
wind is almost always met with blowing up stream!
For this reason they could put no
dependence in their sail, and would have to trust
altogether to the paddles. These could not be
always in the water. Human strength could not
stand a perpetual spell, even at paddles; and less
so in the hands of a crew of men so little used to
them.
Nor could they continue the voyage
at night. By doing so, they would be in danger
of losing their course, their craft, and themselves!
You may smile at the idea. You
will ask a little scornfully, perhaps how
a canoe, or any other craft, drifting down a deep river
to its destination, could possibly go astray.
Does not the current point out the path, the
broad water-way not to be mistaken?
So it might appear to one seated in
a skiff, and floating down the tranquil Thames, with
its well-defined banks. But far different is the
aspect of the stupendous Solimoes to the voyager gliding
through its gapo.
I have made use of a word of strange
sound, and still stranger signification. Perhaps
it is new to your eye, as your ear. You will
become better acquainted with it before the end of
our voyage; for into the “Gapo” it is
my intention to take you, where ill-luck carried the
galatea and her crew.
On leaving Coary, it was not the design
of her owner to attempt taking his craft, so indifferently
manned, all the way to Para. He knew there were
several civilized settlements between, as
Barra at the mouth of the Rio Negro, Obidos below
it, Santarem, and others. At one or other of
these places he expected to obtain a supply of tapuyos,
to replace the crew who had so provokingly forsaken
him.
The voyage to the nearest of them,
however, would take several days, at the rate of speed
the galatea was now making; and the thought of being
delayed on their route became each hour more irksome.
The ex-miner, who had not seen his beloved brother
during half a score of years, was impatient once more
to embrace him. He had been, already, several
months travelling towards him by land and water; and
just as he was beginning to believe that the most
difficult half of the journey had been accomplished,
he found himself delayed by an obstruction vexatious
as unexpected.
The first night after his departure
from Coary, he consented that the galatea should lie
to, moored to some bushes that grew upon
the banks of the river.
On the second night, however, he acted
with less prudence. His impatience to make way
prompted him to the resolution to keep on. The
night was clear, a full moon shining conspicuously
above, which is not always the case in the skies of
the Solimoes.
There was to be no sail set, no use
made of the paddles. The crew were fatigued,
and wanted rest and repose. The current alone
was to favor their progress; and as it appeared to
be running nearly two miles an hour, it should advance
them between twenty and thirty miles before the morning.
The Mundurucu made an attempt to dissuade
his “patron” from the course he designed
pursuing; but his advice was disregarded, perhaps
because ill-understood, and the galatea
glided on.
Who could mistake that broad expanse
of water upon which the moon shone so clearly for
aught else than the true channel of the Solimoes?
Not Tipperary Tom, who, in the second watch of the
night, the owner himself having kept the
first, acted as steersman of the galatea.
The others had gone to sleep.
Trevannion and the three young people under the tolda;
Mozey and the Mundurucu along the staging known as
the “hold.” The birds and monkeys
were at rest on their respective perches, and in their
respective cages, all was silent in the
galatea, and around, all save the rippling
of the water, as it parted to the cleaving of her
keel.
CHAPTER V.
THE GALATEA AGROUND.
Little experienced as he was in the
art of navigation, the steersman was not inattentive
to his duty. Previously to his taking the rudder,
he had been admonished about the importance of keeping
the craft in the channel of the stream, and to this
had he been giving his attention.
It so chanced, however, that he had
arrived at a place where there were two channels, as
if an island was interposed in the middle of the river,
causing it to branch at an acute angle. Which
of these was the right one? Which should be taken?
These were the questions that occurred to Tipperary
Tom.
At first he thought of awakening his
master, and consulting him, but on once more glancing
at the two channels, he became half convinced that
the broader one must be the proper route to be followed.
“Bay Japers!” muttered
he to himself. “Shure I can’t be mistaken.
The biggest av the two ought to be the mane sthrame.
Anyway, I won’t wake the masther. I’ll
lave it to the ship to choose for hersilf.”
Saying this he relaxed his hold upon the steering
oar, and permitted the galatea to drift with the current.
Sure enough, the little craft inclined
towards the branch that appeared the broader one;
and in ten minutes’ time had made such way that
the other opening was no longer visible from her decks.
The steersman, confident of being on the right course,
gave himself no further uneasiness; but, once more
renewing his hold upon the steering oar, guided the
galatea in the middle of the channel.
Notwithstanding all absence of suspicion
as to having gone astray, he could not help noticing
that the banks on each side appeared to be singularly
irregular, as if here and there indented by deep bays,
or reaches of water. Some of these opened out
vistas of shining surface, apparently illimitable,
while the dark patches that separated them looked
more like clumps of trees half submerged under water,
than stretches of solid earth.
As the galatea continued her course,
this puzzling phenomenon ceased to be a conjecture;
Tipperary Tom saw that he was no longer steering down
a river between two boundary banks, but on a broad
expanse of water, stretching as far as eye could reach,
with no other boundary than that afforded by a flooded
forest.
There was nothing in all this to excite
alarm, at least in the mind of Tipperary
Tom. The Mundurucu, had he been awake, might have
shown some uneasiness at the situation. But the
Indian was asleep, perhaps dreaming of
some Mura enemy, whose head he would have
been happy to embalm.
Tom simply supposed himself to be
in some part of the Solimoes, flooded beyond its banks,
as he had seen it in more places than one. With
this confidence, he stuck faithfully to his steering
oar, and allowed the galatea to glide on. It
was only when the reach of water upon which
the craft was drifting began to narrow,
or rather after it had narrowed to a surprising degree,
that the steersman began to suspect himself of having
taken the wrong course.
His suspicions became stronger, at
length terminating in a conviction that such was the
truth, when the galatea arrived at a part where less
than a cable’s length lay between her beam-ends
and the bushes that stood out of the water on both
sides of her. Too surely had he strayed from
the “mane sthrame.” The craft that
carried him could no longer be in the channel of the
mighty Solimoes!
The steersman was alarmed, and this
very alarm hindered him from following the only prudent
course he could have taken under the circumstances.
He should have aroused his fellow-voyagers, and proclaimed
the error into which he had fallen. He did not
do so. A sense of shame at having neglected his
duty, or rather at having performed it in an indifferent
manner, a species of regret not uncommon
among his countrymen, hindered him from
disclosing the truth, and taking steps to avert any
evil consequences that might spring from it.
He knew nothing of the great river
on which they were voyaging. There might
be such a strait as that through which the galatea
was gliding. The channel might widen below; and,
after all, he might have steered in the proper direction.
With such conjectures, strengthened by such hopes,
he permitted the vessel to float on.
The channel did widen again;
and the galatea once more rode upon open water.
The steersman was restored to confidence and contentment.
Only for a short while did this state of mind continue.
Again the clear water became contracted, this time
to a very strip, while on either side extended reaches
and estuaries, bordered by half-submerged bushes, some
of them opening apparently to the sky horizon, wider
and freer from obstruction than that upon which the
galatea was holding her course.
The steersman no longer thought of
continuing his course, which he was now convinced
must be the wrong one. Bearing with all his strength
upon the steering oar, he endeavored to direct the
galatea back into the channel through which he had
come; but partly from the drifting of the current,
and partly owing to the deceptive light of the moon,
he could no longer recognize the latter, and, dropping
the rudder in despair, he permitted the vessel to
drift whichever way the current might carry her!
Before Tipperary Tom could summon
courage to make known to his companions the dilemma
into which he had conducted them, the galatea had
drifted among the tree-tops of the flooded forest,
where she was instantly “brought to anchor.”
The crashing of broken boughs roused
her crew from their slumbers. The ex-miner, followed
by his children, rushed forth from the tolda.
He was not only alarmed, but perplexed, by the unaccountable
occurrence. Mozey was equally in a muddle.
The only one who appeared to comprehend the situation
was the old Indian, who showed sufficient uneasiness
as to its consequences by the terrified manner in
which he called out: “The Gapo! The
Gapo!”
Mayne Reid.