The gentleman who had so kindly explained
the pilot system to Rollo did not return to the settee
after having given the pilot the letter, but went
away, and for a few minutes Rollo and Jane were left
alone. They observed, too, that a great many
of the passengers had disappeared, and now there were
very few about the deck. Rollo wondered where
they had gone. He soon received some light on
the subject, by overhearing one gentleman say to another,
as they passed the settee on their promenade,
“Come, Charley, let us go down and get some
lunch.”
“They are going to lunch,”
said Rollo. “We will go too. I am beginning
to be hungry.”
“So am I hungry,” said
Jane. “I did not think of it before; but
I am, and I have no doubt that Tiger is hungry too.”
So Jane took up her cage, and then
she and Rollo, walking along together, followed the
gentlemen who had said that they were going down to
lunch. They walked forward upon the promenade
deck till they came to the short flight of stairs,
with the green rope balustrade, which led down to
the deck below. These stairs were so steep that
the children were obliged to proceed with great caution
in descending them, in order to get down in safety.
They, however, at length succeeded; and then, passing
along where they saw that the gentlemen went who preceded
them, they entered into a long and narrow passage
way, with doors leading to state rooms on either hand.
Following this passage way, they came at length to
a sort of entry or hall, which was lighted by a skylight
above. In the middle of this hall, and under the
skylight, was a pretty broad staircase, leading down
to some lower portion of the ship. As the men
whom they were following went down these stairs, the
children went down too. When they got down, they
found themselves in a perfect maze of cabins, state
rooms, and passage ways, the openings into which were
infinitely multiplied by the large and splendid mirrors
with which the walls were every where adorned.
“Put Tiger down there,”
said Rollo, pointing to a place near the end of the
sofa, “and we will bring her something to eat
when we come from lunch.”
Jane was very anxious to take the
kitten with her; but she knew that, under the circumstances
in which she was placed, it was proper that she should
follow implicitly all of Rollo’s directions.
So she put the cage down, and then she and Rollo went
on together through a door where the gentlemen who
had preceded them had gone.
They found themselves in another long
and narrow passage way, which led toward the forward
part of the ship. The passage way was so narrow
that they could not walk together. So Rollo went
first, and Jane came behind. The vessel was rocking
gently from the motion of the waves, and Jane had
to put her hands out once or twice, first to one side
and then to the other of the passage way, in order
to steady herself as she passed along. Presently
they came to a place where they had to go up five or
six steps, and then to go immediately down again.
It was the place where the main shaft passed out from
the engine to the paddle wheel. After getting
over this obstruction, they went on a a little farther,
and then came into a large dining saloon, where several
long tables were spread, and a great many passengers
were seated, eating their luncheons.
There were a number of waiters in
different parts of the room, standing behind the guests
at the tables; and one of these waiters, as soon as
he saw Rollo and Jane come in, went to them, and said
that he would show them where to sit. So they
followed him, and he gave them a good seat at one
of the tables. As soon as the children were seated,
the waiter said, addressing Rollo,
“Will you have soup?”
“Yes,” said Rollo.
“And will the young lady take soup, too?”
he asked again.
“Yes,” said Rollo; “both of us.”
While the waiter was gone to get the
soup, Rollo and Jane had an opportunity of looking
around the room and observing how very different it
was in its fixtures and furniture from a dining room
on land. Instead of windows, there were only
round holes in the sides of the ship, about a foot
in diameter. For a sash, there was only one round
and exceedingly thick and strong pane of glass, set
in an iron frame, and opening inwards, on massive
hinges. On the side of this frame, opposite the
hinges, was a strong clamp and screw, by means of which
the frame could be screwed up very tight, in order
to exclude the water in case of heavy seas. The
tables were fitted with a ledge all around the outside,
to keep the dishes from sliding off. Above each
table, and suspended from the ceiling, was a long
shelf of beautiful wood, with racks and sockets in
it of every kind, for containing wineglasses, tumblers,
decanters, and such other things as would be wanted
from time to time upon the table. Every one of
these glasses was in a place upon the shelf expressly
fitted to receive and retain it; so that it might be
held securely, and not allowed to fall, however great
might be the motion of the ship.
There were no chairs at the tables.
The seats consisted of handsomely cushioned settees,
with substantial backs to them. It was upon one
of these settees, and near the end of it, that Rollo
and Jane were seated.
When the soup was brought, the children
ate it with great satisfaction. They found it
excellent; and, besides that, they had excellent appetites.
After the soup, the waiter brought them some roasted
potatoes and butter, and also some slices of cold
roast beef. When the roast beef came, Jane exclaimed
to Rollo,
“Ah! I am very glad to
see that. It is just the thing for Tiger.”
Then she turned round and said to the waiter,
“Can I take a piece of this meat to give to
my kitten?”
“Your kitten?” said the waiter. “Have
you got a kitten on board?”
“Yes,” said Jane.
“Where is she?” asked the waiter.
“I left her in the cabin,”
said Jane, “by the end of a sofa. She is
in her cage.”
The waiter smiled to hear this statement.
Jane had been, in fact, a little afraid to ask for
meat for her kitten, supposing it possible that the
waiter might think that she ought not to have brought
a kitten on board. But the truth was, the waiter
was very glad to hear of it. He was glad for
two reasons. In the first place, the monotony
and dulness of sea life are so great, that those who
live in ships are usually glad to have any thing occur
that is extraordinary or novel. Then, besides,
he knew that it was customary with passengers, when
they gave the waiters any unusual trouble, to compensate
them for it fully when they reached the end of the
voyage; and he presumed, therefore, that if he had
a kitten to take care of, as well as the children
themselves, their father, whom he had no doubt was
on board would remember it in his fee. So, when
Jane told him where the kitten was, he said he would
go and bring her out into the dining saloon, and give
her some of the meat there, as soon as the passengers
had finished their luncheon, so that he could be spared
from the table.
Accordingly, when the proper time
arrived, the waiter went aft, to the cabin, and very
soon returned, bringing the cage with him.
He seemed quite pleased with his charge;
and several of the passengers, who met him as they
were going out of the saloon, stopped a moment to
see what he had got in the cage, and Jane was much
gratified at hearing one of them say,
“What a pretty kitten! Whose is it, waiter?”
The waiter put the cage down upon
a side table, and then carried a plate of meat to
the place, and put it in the cage. Jane and Rollo
went to see. While the kitten was eating her
meat, the waiter said that he would go and get some
milk for her. He accordingly went away again;
but he soon returned, bringing a little milk with
him in a saucer. The kitten, having by this time
finished eating her meat, set herself eagerly at the
work of lapping up the milk, which she did with an
air of great satisfaction.
“There!” said the waiter,
“bring her out here whenever she is hungry,
and I will always have something for her. When
you come at meal times, you will see me at the table.
If you come at any other time, and you don’t
see me, ask for Alfred. My name is Alfred.”
Jane and Rollo both said to Alfred
that they were very much obliged to him, and then,
observing that nearly all the passengers had left the
dining saloon and had returned to the cabin, they determined
to go too. So they went back through the same
passage way by which they had come.
There were two principal cabins in
the ship, the ladies’ cabin and the gentlemen’s
cabin. The ladies’ cabin was nearest to
the dining saloon, the gentlemen’s cabin being
beyond. A number of ladies and gentlemen turned
into the ladies’ cabin, and so Rollo and Jane
followed them. They found themselves, when they
had entered, in quite a considerable apartment, with
sofas and mirrors all around the sides of it, and a
great deal of rich carving in the panels and ceiling.
Several splendid lamps, too, were suspended in different
places, so hung that they could move freely in every
direction, when the ship was rolling from side to
side in rough seas. Rollo and Jane took their
seats upon one of the sofas.
“Well, Rollo,” said Jane,
“I don’t know what we are going to do next.”
“Nor I,” said Rollo; “but
we can sit here a little while, and perhaps somebody
will come and speak to us. It must be right for
us to sit here, for other ladies and gentlemen are
sitting in this cabin.”
Jane looked about the cabin on the
different sofas to see if there were any persons there
that she had ever seen before. But there were
none.
Among the persons in the cabin, there
were two who particularly attracted Jane’s attention.
They were young ladies of, perhaps, eighteen or twenty
years of age, but they were remarkably different from
each other in appearance. One was very beautiful
indeed. Her hair was elegantly arranged in curls
upon her neck, and she was dressed quite fashionably.
Her countenance, too, beamed with an expression of
animation and happiness.
The other young lady, who sat upon
the other end of the same sofa, was very plain in
her appearance, and was plainly dressed. Her countenance,
too, had a sober and thoughtful expression which was
almost stern, and made Jane feel quite disposed to
be afraid of her. The beautiful girl she liked
very much.
While the children were sitting thus
upon the sofa, waiting to see what was next going
to happen to them, several persons passed along that
way, taking a greater or less degree of notice of
them as they passed. Some merely stared at them,
as if wondering how they came there, and what they
were doing. One lady looked kindly at them, but
did not speak. Another lady, apparently about
forty years of age, walked by them with a haughty
air, talking all the time with a gentleman who was
with her. Jane heard her say to the gentleman,
as soon as she had passed them,
“What a quantity of children
we have on board this ship! I hate children on
board ship, they are so noisy and troublesome.”
Jane did not say any thing in reply
to this, but she thought that she and Rollo, at least,
did not deserve such censures, for they had certainly
not been noisy or troublesome.
Presently Jane saw the beautiful girl,
who has been already spoken of, rise and come toward
them. She was very glad to see this, for now,
thought she, we have a friend coming. The young
lady came walking along carelessly toward them, and
when she came near she looked at them a moment, and
then said, in a pert and forward manner,
“What are you sitting here for,
children, so long, all alone? Where is your father?”
“My father is in Liverpool, I suppose,”
said Rollo.
“Well, your mother, then,”
said the young lady, “or whoever has the care
of you?”
“My mother is in Liverpool,
too,” said Rollo “and there is nobody who
has the care of us on board this ship.”
“Why, you are not going to cross
the Atlantic all by yourselves, are you?” said
the young lady, in a tone of great astonishment.
“Yes,” said Rollo, “unless
we find somebody to be kind enough to help us.”
“La! how queer!” said
the young lady. “I am sure I’m glad
enough that I am not in your places.”
So saying, the beautiful young lady walked on.
All the beauty, however, which she
had before possessed in Jane’s eyes was entirely
dissipated by this heartless behavior. Both Jane
and Rollo, for all the rest of the voyage, thought
her one of the ugliest girls they had ever seen.
It was some minutes after this before
any other person approached the children. Jane
observed, however, that the other young lady the
one who had appeared to her so plain looked
frequently toward her and Rollo, with an expression
of interest and kindness upon her countenance.
At length she rose from her seat, and came across
the cabin, and sat down by Jane’s side.
“May I come and sit by you?”
said she to Jane. “You seem to be all alone.”
“Yes,” said Jane; “we don’t
know any body in this ship.”
“Not any body?” said the
young lady. “Then you may know me.
My name is Maria. But your father and mother
are on board the ship, are they not?”
“No,” said Rollo.
“There is not any body on board this ship that
belongs to us.”
Maria seemed very much astonished
at hearing this, and she asked the children how it
happened that they were sent across the Atlantic alone.
Upon which Rollo, in a very clear and lucid manner,
explained all the circumstances of the case to her.
He told her about his father being sick in England,
and about his having sent for him and Jane to go to
England and meet him there. He also explained
what Mr. George’s plan had been for providing
them with a protector on the voyage, and how it had
been defeated by the accident of the loss of the trunk.
He also told her how narrowly they had escaped having
the trunk itself left behind. He ended by saying
that there were several of his father’s friends
on board, only he did not know of any way by which
he could find out who they were.
“Never mind that,” said
Maria. “I will take care of you. You
need not be at all afraid; you will get along very
well. Have you got any state room?”
“No,” said Rollo.
“Well, I will go and find the
chambermaid, and she will get you one. Then we
will have your trunk sent to it, and you will feel
quite at home there.”
So Maria went away, and presently
returned with one of the chambermaids.
When the chambermaid learned that
there were two children on board without any one to
take care of them, she was very much interested in
their case. Rollo heard her say to Maria, as they
came up together toward the sofa where the children
were sitting,
“O, yes, I will find them a
state room, if they have not got one already.
Children,” she added, when she came near, “are
you sure you have not got any state room?”
“Yes,” said Rollo.
“I did not know where the captain’s office
was.”
“O, you don’t go to the
captain’s office,” said the chambermaid.
“They pay for the passage and get the tickets
in Wall Street.”
“Perhaps this is it, then,”
said Rollo. And so saying, he took out his wallet,
and there, from one of the inner compartments, where
his uncle George had placed it away very carefully,
he produced a paper. The chambermaid opened it,
saying, “Yes, this is all right. Berths
sixteen and eighteen. Come with me, and I’ll
show you where they are.”
So the two children, accompanied by
Maria, followed the chambermaid, who led the way across
the cabin, and there, entering a passage way, she
opened a door, by means of a beautiful porcelain knob
which was upon it. They all went in. They
found themselves in a small room, no bigger than a
large closet, but they saw at a glance that it was
very beautifully finished and furnished. On the
front side was a round window like those they had
seen in the dining saloon. Under this window was
a couch, with a pillow at the head of it. On
the back side were two berths, one above the other,
with very pretty curtains before them.
“There!” said the chambermaid,
“sixteen. That lower berth is yours.”
“And whose is the upper berth?” asked
Maria.
“That is not taken, I think,” said the
chambermaid.
“Then I will take it,”
said Maria. “I will come into this state
room, and then I can look after Jennie all the time.
But where is Rollo’s berth?”
“In the next state room,” said the chambermaid.
So saying, she opened a door in the
end of the room, and found another state room communicating
with the first, where she pointed out Rollo’s
berth. There was another entrance to Rollo’s
state room from the passage leading into the cabin,
on the farther side of it.
“There,” said the chambermaid,
“now you can settle yourselves here as soon
as you please. Nobody can come in here to trouble
you, for you have these little rooms all to yourselves.
I’ll go and find a porter, and get him to look
up your trunk and send it in.”
So Rollo went into his state room,
and Jane sat down upon the couch in hers, by the side
of Maria, looking very much pleased. She opened
the door of the cage, and let the kitten out.
The kitten walked all about the room, examining every
thing with great attention. She jumped up upon
the marble washstand, and from that she contrived to
get into the round window, where she stood for a few
minutes looking out very attentively over the wide
sea. Not knowing, however, what to make of so
extraordinary a prospect, she presently jumped down
again, and, selecting a smooth place at the foot of
the couch, she curled herself up into a ring upon
the soft covering of it, and went to sleep.