As soon as Rollo and Jane found themselves
thus established in their state rooms, they began
to examine the furniture and fixtures around them
with great curiosity. They were particularly interested
in observing the precautions which had been taken
in securing every thing which the state rooms contained,
from the danger of being thrown about by the motion
of the ship. The wash basin was made of marble,
and was firmly set in its place, so as to be absolutely
immovable. There was a hole in the bottom of
it, with a plug in it, so that, by drawing out the
plug, the water could be let off into a pipe which
conveyed it away. There was a small chain attached
to this plug, by means of which it could be drawn
up when any one wished to let the water off. The
pitcher was made broad and flat at the bottom, and
very heavy, so that it could not be easily upset;
and then there was a socket for it in the lower part
of the wash stand, which confined it effectually, and
prevented its sliding about when the ship was rolling
in a heavy sea.
The tumbler was secured in a more
curious manner still. It was placed in a brass
ring, which projected from the wall in a corner over
the wash stand, and which was made just large enough
to receive it. The soap dish and the brush tray
were also placed in sockets cut to receive them in
the marble slab, which formed the upper part of the
wash stand. The looking glass was round, and
was screwed to the wall by means of a stem and a ball
or socket joint, in such a manner that it could be
set in any position required, according to the height
of the observer, and yet it could not by any possibility
fall from its place. There were very few pegs
or pins for hanging clothes upon, because, when clothes
are thus hung, they are found to swing back and forth
whenever the ship is rolling in a heavy sea, in a
manner that is very tiresome and disagreeable for
sick passengers to see. Nor were there many shelves
about the state room; for if there had been, the passengers
would be likely to put various articles upon them
when the sea was smooth; and then, when the ship came
to pitch and roll in gales of wind, the things would
all slide off upon the floor. So instead of shelves
there were pockets made of canvas or duck, several
together, one above another. These pockets formed
very convenient receptacles for such loose articles
as the passengers might have in their state rooms,
and were, of course, perfectly secure.
There were two shelves, it
is true, in Jennie’s state room, one
over each of the two wash stands, but they
were protected by a ledge about the edges of them,
which would effectually prevent such things as might
be placed upon them from sliding off.
By the time that Rollo and Jane had
examined these things, a porter came into the state
room, bringing their trunk upon his shoulder.
Maria told the children that they had better open
the trunk and take out all that they would be likely
to require while on board, and then stow the trunk
itself away under the lower berth, in one of the state
rooms.
“Because,” said she, “as
soon as we get out upon the heavy seas we shall all
be sick, and then we shall not wish to move to do the
least thing.”
“When will that be?” asked Jane.
“I don’t know,”
replied Maria. “Sometimes we have it smooth
for a good many days, and then there comes a head
wind and makes it rough, and all the passengers get
sick and very wretched.”
“I don’t think that I shall be sick,”
said Rollo.
“You can’t tell,”
said Maria. “Nobody can tell any thing about
it beforehand.”
In obedience to Maria’s directions,
Rollo opened the trunk and took out from it all the
clothing, both for day and night, which he thought
that he and Jennie would require during the voyage.
The night dresses he put under the pillows in the
berths. The cloaks, and coats, and shawls which
might be required on deck in the day he placed on the
couches. Those which belonged to him he put in
his state room, and those that belonged to Jennie
in hers. While engaged in these operations, he
pulled up from one of the lower corners of his trunk
a small leather purse or bag full of money.
“What shall I do with this?”
he asked, holding it up to Maria.
“What is it?” asked Maria.
“Money,” said Rollo.
“How much is there?” said Maria.
“I don’t know,”
replied Rollo. “Uncle George put it in here.
He said I ought to have some money to carry
with me, in case of accidents. I don’t
suppose it is much.”
“You had better count it, then,”
said Maria, “so as to ascertain how much it
is. You and Jane may count it together.”
So Rollo and Jane sat down upon the
couch, and Rollo poured out the money into Jennie’s
lap. It was all gold. Maria said that the
coins were sovereigns and half sovereigns. The
large ones were sovereigns, and the small ones were
half sovereigns. Rollo proposed that he should
count the sovereigns, and that Jennie might count
the half sovereigns. It proved, when the counting
was completed, that there were thirty sovereigns and
twenty half sovereigns.
“That makes forty sovereigns
in all,” said Maria. “That is a great
deal of money.”
“How much is it?” asked Rollo.
“Why, in American money,”
said Maria, “it makes about two hundred dollars.”
“Two hundred dollars!”
repeated Rollo, with astonishment. “What
could uncle George think I could want of all this
money?”
“It was in case of accidents,”
said Maria. “For example, suppose this
ship should be cast away on the coast of Nova Scotia,
and all the passengers and baggage be saved, what
could you do there without any money.”
“Why, I should think that somebody
there would take care of us,” replied Rollo.
“Yes,” said Maria, “I
suppose they would; but it is a great deal better
to have money of your own. Besides, suppose that
when you get to Liverpool, for some reason or other,
your father should not be there. Then, having
plenty of money, you could go to a hotel and stay there
till your father comes. Or you could ask some
one of the passengers who is going to London to let
you go with him, and you could tell him that you had
plenty of money to pay the expenses.”
“Yes,” said Rollo, “though
I don’t think there is any doubt that my father
will be in Liverpool when we arrive.”
“I hope he will be, I am sure,”
said Maria. “But now, put up the money
again in the purse, tie it up securely, and replace
it in the trunk. Then you must keep the trunk
locked all the time, and keep the key in your pocket.”
Rollo felt quite proud of being intrusted
with so much money; so he replaced the bag in the
trunk with great care, and locked it safely.
“Now,” said Maria, “this
is your home while you are on board this ship.
When you choose, you can come here and be alone; and
you can lie down and rest here whenever you are tired.
At other times you can ramble about the ship, in all
proper places.”
“How shall I know what the proper
places are?” asked Rollo.
“Why, you will see where the
other passengers go,” replied Maria; “and
wherever you see them go, you can go yourself.
That is as good a rule as you can have.”
“Well,” said Rollo.
“And now, Jane, let us go up on deck and see
what we can see.”
Jane was pleased with this proposal;
so she followed Rollo to the deck. Maria said
that she would come by and by, but for the present
she wished to go and see her brother. She said
that she had a brother on board who was quite out
of health. He was going to Europe in hopes that
the voyage would restore him. At present, however,
he was very unwell, and was confined to his berth,
and she must go and see him.
So Rollo and Jane went to see if they
could find their way up on deck alone. Rollo
went before, and Jane followed. They ascended
the steep stairs where they had gone up at first,
and then walked aft upon the deck until they came
to the settees where they had been sitting before
the luncheon. They sat down upon one of these
settees, where they had a fine view, not only of the
wide expanse of sea on every hand, but also of the
whole extent of the decks of the ship. They remained
here nearly two hours, observing what was going on
around them, and they saw a great many things that
interested them very much indeed.
The first thing that attracted their
attention was the sound of a bell, which struck four
strokes very distinctly, and in a very peculiar manner,
near where the helmsman stood in steering the ship.
This bell has already been mentioned. It hung
directly before the helmsman’s window, and it
had a short rope attached to the clapper of it.
The helmsman, or the man at the wheel, as he
is sometimes called, from the fact that he steers
the ship by means of a wheel, with handles all around
the periphery of it, had opened his window just after
Rollo and Jane had taken their seats, and had pulled
this clapper so as to strike four strokes upon the
bell, the strokes being in pairs, thus:
Ding ding! Ding ding!
In a minute afterward, Rollo and Jane
heard the sound repeated in precisely the same manner
from another bell, that seemed to be far in the forward
part of the ship.
Ding ding! Ding ding!
“I wonder what that means?” said Rollo.
“I expect it means that it is four o’clock,”
said Jane.
“I should not think it could be so late as four
o’clock,” said Rollo.
“I have a great mind to go and
ask the helmsman what it means,” he added, after
a moment’s pause.
“No,” said Jane, “you must not go.”
It is difficult to say precisely why
Jane did not wish to have Rollo go and ask the helmsman
about the bell, but she had an instinctive feeling
that it was better not to do it. So Rollo sat
still. His attention was very soon turned away
from the bell by Jane’s calling out to him to
see some sailors go up the rigging. There were
regular shrouds, as they are called, that is,
ladders formed of ropes, which led up on each side
of the masts part way to where the sailors seemed to
wish to go. Above the top of the shrouds there
were only single ropes, and Rollo wondered what the
sailors would do when they came to these. They
found no difficulty, however, for when they reached
the top of the shrouds they continued to mount by
the ropes with very little apparent effort. They
would take hold of two of the ropes that were a little
distance apart with their hands, and then, curling
their legs round them in a peculiar manner below,
they would mount up very easily. They thus reached
the yard, as it is called, which is a long,
round beam, extending along the upper edge of the
sail, and, spreading themselves out upon it in a row,
they proceeded to do the work required upon the sail,
leaning over upon the yard above, and standing upon
a rope, which was stretched for the purpose along
the whole length of it below.
“I wonder if I could
climb up there,” said Rollo. “Do you
suppose they would let me try?”
“No, indeed!” said Jane,
very earnestly; “you must not try, by any means.”
“I believe that I could
climb up there,” said Rollo; “that is,
if the vessel would stop rocking to and fro, and hold
still.”
Presently, however, a boy, who appeared
to be about eighteen or nineteen years of age, and
who was upon another mast, accomplished a feat which
even Rollo himself admitted that he should not dare
to undertake. It seemed that he had some operation
to perform upon a part of the rigging down some fifteen
feet from where he was; so, with a rope hung over his
shoulder, he came down hand over hand, by a single
rope or cable called a stay, until he reached
the place where the work was to be performed.
Here he stopped, and, clinging to the rope that he
had come down upon with his legs and one hand, he
contrived with the other hand to fasten one end of
the short rope which he had brought with him to the
stay, and then, carrying the other end across, he
fastened it to another cable which was near.
He then seated himself upon this cross rope as upon
a seat, and clinging to his place by his legs, he
had his hands free for his work. When he had
finished his work he untied the cross rope, and then
went up the cable hand over hand a he had come down.
“I am sure I could not do that,”
said Rollo. “And I should not think that
any body but a monkey could do it, or a spider.”
In fact, the lines of rigging, as
seen from the place where Rollo and Jane were seated,
looked so fine, and the men appeared so small, that
the whole spectacle naturally reminded one of a gigantic
spider’s web, with black spiders of curious
forms ascending and descending upon them, so easily
and adroitly did the men pass to and fro and up and
down, attaching new lines to new points, and then
running off with them, as a spider would do with her
thread, wherever they were required. But after
all, in respect to the power of running about among
lines and rigging, the spider is superior to man.
She can not only run up and down far more easily and
readily wherever she wishes to go, but she can make
new attachments with a touch, and make them strong
enough to bear her own weight and all other strains
that come upon them; while the sailor, as Rollo and
Jane observed on this occasion, was obliged in his
fastenings to wind his ropes round and round, and
tie them into complicated knots, and then secure the
ends with “spun yarn.”
While Rollo and Jane were watching
the sailors, they saw them unfurl one after another
of the sails, and spread them to the wind; for the
wind was now fair, and it was fresh enough to assist
the engines considerably in propelling the ship through
the water. Still, as the ship was going the same
way with the wind, the breeze was scarcely felt upon
the deck. The air was mild and balmy, and the
surface of the sea was comparatively smooth, so that
the voyage was beginning very prosperously. Rollo
looked all around the horizon, but he could see no
land in any direction. There was not even a ship
in sight; nothing but one wide and boundless waste
of waters.
“I should think that there would
be some other ships going to England to-day,”
he said, “besides ours.”
Jane did not know what to think on
such a subject, and so she did not reply.
“Let us watch for whales,”
said Rollo. “Perhaps we shall see a whale.
You watch the water all along on that side, and I will
on this side; and if you see any whale spout, tell
me.”
So they both kept watch for some time,
but neither of them saw any spouting. Jane gave
one alarm, having seen some large, black-looking monsters
rise to the surface not far from them on one side of
the ship. She called out eagerly to Rollo to
look. He did so, but he said that they were not
whales; they were porpoises. He had seen porpoises
often before, in bays and harbors.
Just then the bell near the helmsman’s
window struck again, though in a manner a little different
from before; for after the two pairs of strokes which
had been heard before there came a single stroke, making
five in all, thus:
Ding ding! Ding ding!
Ding.
Immediately afterward the sound was
repeated in the forward part of the ship, as it had
been before.
Ding ding! Ding ding!
Ding,
“I wonder what that means,” said Rollo.
Just then an officer of the ship,
in his walk up and down the deck, passed near to where
Rollo was sitting, and Rollo instinctively determined
to ask him.
“Will you please tell me, sir, what that striking
means?”
“It’s five bells,” said the man;
and so walked on.