A SQUALL IN THE GERMAN OCEAN.
“Mr. Cleats!” said Professor
Hamblin, in the most sternly solemn and impressive
manner, as he rushed up to the adult boatswain of the
Josephine.
“Here, sir!” responded
the old salt, touching his cap as politely as though
the learned gentleman had been an admiral.
“I want a boat, sir,” continued the professor,
fiercely.
“Your honor must apply to the
captain,” answered Cleats, touching his cap
again.
“I have applied to him, and
he has refused me. I desire you to take a boat,
and row me to the ship. The carpenter can assist
you.”
“Bless your honor’s heart,
I can’t go without the captain’s orders,”
added Cleats, opening his eyes as wide as though he
had been invited to head a mutiny.
“I will protect you from any
harm, Mr. Cleats. I will represent the matter
to Mr. Lowington.”
“I never do anything, your honor,
without orders from the captain. It would be
mutiny for me to do so, and I should be hung at the
fore yard-arm.”
“Nonsense, Mr. Cleats! Will you listen
to reason?”
“Sartain, your honor. I
always listen to reason; but there isn’t any
reason in leaving the ship without the captain’s
orders.”
“But the captain says I may
have the boat; and I only want a couple of men to
row it.”
“I will pull the boat with the
greatest pleasure, sir, if the captain orders me to
do so; or the first lieutenant, for that matter, sir.
I always obey orders, sir, if it sinks the ship.”
“I have a complaint to make
against the captain for disobedience of my orders,
and he will not permit me to go on board of the ship
to prefer the charge.”
“Whew!” whistled the boatswain,
as long and loud as though the sound had been made
with his own shrill pipe. “A complaint against
the captain! I beg your honor’s pardon,
but that can’t be. Nobody can have a complaint
against the captain.”
“I do not wish to argue the
matter with you. Will you do what I ask, or not?”
“I beg your honor’s pardon,
but I will not,” replied Cleats, who seemed
to have no doubt in regard to his own course, whatever
rupture there might be among the powers above him.
“That’s enough,”
growled Mr. Hamblin, turning on his heel.
“There’s a big squall
coming, your honor,” added Cleats, loud enough
for the professor to hear him. “The boat
wouldn’t live a minute in it.”
“I am not afraid of the squall,”
replied the learned gentleman, pausing. “Will
you row the boat?”
“No, sir; I would rather not,”
answered Cleats, shaking his head.
At this moment a heavy roaring, rushing
sound came over the sea from the direction of the
land. The water was covered with a dense white
mist. The sound increased in volume till it vied
with the booming thunder, and the surface of the sea
was lashed into a snowy foam by the coming tempest.
“Down with the jib and mainsail!”
shouted Captain Kendall, sharply.
“Stand by the mainsail halyards!”
said Terrill, through his speaking trumpet. “Man
the jib halyards and downhaul!”
“All ready, sir,” replied
the second lieutenant, forward; for all hands were
still at their stations, in anticipation of the emergency.
“All ready, sir,” added
the fourth lieutenant, whose place was on the quarter-deck.
“Let go the mainsail halyards!”
added the first lieutenant; and the order was repeated
by the fourth lieutenant. “Down with it,
lively!”
The heavy sail, assisted by twenty
pairs of willing and eager hands, rattled down in
an instant, and was speedily secured.
“Let go the jib halyards!
Haul down!” said the second lieutenant, on the
forecastle, when the order to take in the jib reached
him.
The hands “walked away”
with the downhaul, and the jib was on the bowsprit
in an instant.
“Lay out and stow the jib!”
added the officer. “Mind your eye there!
The squall is upon us!”
The roar of the squall-heard
at first miles away-swept along over the
ocean, carrying a tempest of foam and spray before
it, and came down upon the Josephine. Though
she carried no sail, the force of the wind was enough
to heel her down, while the spray leaped over her decks
in the furious blast. The scene was grand and
sublime. The thunders roared; the lightnings
seemed to hiss in their fury, as they darted through
the moist atmosphere; and the wind, hardly less than
a hurricane, howled in unison with the booming thunderbolts.
At first, on the long swells of the
ocean, which a moment before had been as smooth and
glassy as a mirror, thousands of little white-capped
waves gathered, throwing up volumes of fine spray,
which was borne away by the tempest; so that the air
was laden with moisture. Though the squall came
heavy in the beginning, it did not attain its full
power for several minutes. The effect even of
the onslaught of the tempest was tremendous, and officers
and crew clung to the rigging and the wood-work of
the vessel, fearful that the savage blast would take
them bodily from their feet, and bear them away into
the angry ocean.
“Down with the helm!”
roared Captain Kendall to the quartermaster, who,
with four of the strongest seamen, had been stationed
at the wheel.
The action of the fierce wind upon
the vessel’s side was powerful enough to give
her steerage-way without any sail, and her head came
up to the gale, so that she took the blast on her
port bow. Thus far, the effect upon the ocean
did not correspond with the violence of the tempest;
for even the severest blow does not immediately create
a heavy sea. But, if the tempest continued even
for a few minutes, this result was sure to follow.
There is no especial peril in a squall, if the seaman
has had time to take in sail, unless in a heavy sea;
but it does not take long for a hurricane, in the
open ocean, to stir up the water to its maddest fury.
Professor Hamblin was walking up and
down in the waist,-a very pretty type of
the squall itself,-when the initial stroke
of the tempest came upon the Josephine. His “stove-pipe”
hat, as non-nautical as anything could be, which he
persisted in wearing, was tipped from his head, and
borne over the rail into the sea. This accident
did not improve his temper, and he was on the point
of asking the captain to send a boat to pick up his
lost tile, when the full force of the squall began
to be expended upon the vessel. He found himself
unable to stand up; and he reeled to the mainmast,
where Professor Stoute was already moored to the fife-rail.
“Wouldn’t you like the
boat now, Mr. Hamblin?” chuckled the jolly professor,
hardly able to speak without having his words blown
down his throat.
“I’ve lost my hat,”
growled the learned gentleman, almost choked with
ill-nature within, and the ill-wind without.
“Ask the captain to send a boat
for it,” laughed Mr. Stoute. “There
he stands! Upon my word, he is a wonder to me!
He handles the vessel like an old admiral who has
been imbedded in salt for forty years!”
“Any boy could do it!” snarled the irate
professor.
“It is fortunate that Captain
Kendall went on deck when he did,” added Mr.
Stoute. “We should all have gone to the
bottom if they hadn’t taken in sail in season.”
“You distress yourself with
mighty bugbears,” sneered Mr. Hamblin. “I
am very sorry to see you encouraging insubordination
among your pupils, and-”
And a blast more savage than any which
had before struck the vessel ended the professor’s
speech; for, while it drenched him with salt water,
it gave him all he wanted to do to hold on for his
life. He worked himself round under the lee of
the mainmast, and held on with both hands at the fife-rail,
his breath blown down into his lungs by the wind.
The squall was not one of those which
come and go in a few moments; and, in a short time,
the sea had been lashed into a boiling, roaring, foam-capped
maelstrom. The Josephine rolled and pitched most
fearfully. Below there was a fierce crashing
of everything movable, while the winds howled a savage
storm-song through the swaying rigging. By the
captain’s order, the crew had, with great difficulty,
extended several life-lines across the deck, for the
safety of those who were compelled to move about in
executing the various manoeuvres which the emergency
required.
The angry professor began to cool
off under the severe regimen of the tempest.
He was drenched to the skin by the spray, and it required
the utmost activity on his part to enable him to keep
his hold upon the fife-rail. Now the vessel rolled,
and pitched him upon his moorings; and then rolled
again, jerking him, at arm’s length, away from
them, his muscles cracking under the pressure.
Professor Stoute, determined to be on the safe side,
had passed the end of the lee topgallant brace around
his body, and secured himself to one of the belaying
pins. Nothing ever disturbed his equanimity,
and though he was doubtless fully impressed by the
sublimity of the storm, he was just as jolly and good-natured
as ever.
The captain and the executive officer
were holding on at one of the life-lines on the quarter-deck.
Paul looked as noble and commanding as though he had
been a foot taller, with a full beard grown upon his
face. He appeared to be master of the situation,
and Professor Stoute regarded him with an admiration
strongly in contrast with the disgust of his fellow-teacher.
The competent captain of the ship is always little
less than a miracle of a man to his passengers, especially
in a storm, when he is confident and self-reliant.
They feel that everything-their very lives,
and the lives of those they love-are dependent
upon him, and they look up to him as to an oracle
of skill and wisdom.
“It’s coming heavier and
heavier,” said Terrill, as the Josephine gave
a fearful lurch.
“Ay, ay! It’s nothing
less than a hurricane,” replied Paul.
“It’s the biggest squall
I ever was in,” added Terrill, blowing the salt
water out of his mouth, after a pint of spray had slapped
him in the face.
“It is kicking up an awful sea.”
“That’s so.”
“Keep your helm hard down, Blair!”
shouted Paul to the quartermaster in charge of the
wheel.
“She don’t mind it now,
sir!” yelled the quartermaster, at the top of
his lungs.
“She’s falling off, Mr. Terrill,”
added Paul.
“I see she is, sir.”
“We must keep her head up to
it, or our decks will be washed. Hard down, Blair!”
“She don’t mind it, sir!”
“Set the close-reefed foresail,
Mr. Terrill,” said the captain. “But
be careful of the hands.”
Terrill, with the trumpet in his hand,
sprang from the life-line to the fife-rail, so as
to be nearer to the hands who were to execute the
captain’s order. The unpleasant plight of
Mr. Hamblin attracted his attention, in spite of the
pressure of the emergency. His gyrations, as
he bobbed about under the uneasy motions of the vessel,
gave him a ludicrous appearance, which even the positive
expression of suffering on his face did not essentially
mitigate. He had evidently come to a realizing
sense of the perils of the sea, and was a pitiful sight
to behold.
“Man the foresail outhaul!”
shouted Terrill, through his trumpet. “Mr.
Martyn!”
“Here, sir!” replied the
second lieutenant; but his voice sounded like a whisper
in the roar of the hurricane.
“Double the hands on the outhaul!”
added Terrill. “Stand by the brails!”
“All ready, forward, sir!” reported Martyn.
“Stand by the fore-sheets!-Mr.
Cleats!” continued the executive officer.
“Here, sir!” said the
old sailor, who, with the carpenter, was holding on
at the weather-rail.
“Will you and Mr. Gage assist at the sheet?”
“Ay, ay, sir! This is heavy work.
I hope she’ll carry that foresail.”
“She must carry it, or carry
it away,” added Terrill. “We are falling
off badly.”
“So we are; it ought to be done,”
answered the boatswain, as he began to overhaul the
sheets.
It was with the greatest difficulty
that any one could stand up on deck. The billows
were momentarily increasing, and the Josephine had
fallen off into the trough of the sea, and rolled
helplessly in the surging waves, so that her fore
yard appeared almost to dip in the brine. The
outhaul was run out on the deck, and manned by all
the hands that could get hold of it. The lee
sheet was extended in like manner, and the whole after
guard, besides the two adult forward officers, were
called to walk away with it.
“O, dear!” groaned Mr.
Hamblin, after the vessel had given an unusually heavy
lee lurch, the jerk of which had nearly knocked the
breath out of his body.
“What’s the matter, your
honor?” demanded Cleats, who always pitied a
landlubber in a gale.
“Do you think there’s
any danger, Mr. Cleats?” gasped the professor.
“Danger! Bless your honor’s
heart! there’s never any danger in a good ship,
well manned,” replied the veteran tar, as he
knocked a kink out of the sheet. “Look
at the captain! When he gets scared, you may.”
“It is really terrible!” puffed the learned
professor.
“Wouldn’t your honor like
the boat now?” growled the boatswain, with a
hearty chuckle.
“All ready at the sheets, sir!”
screamed Robinson, the fourth lieutenant, who had
charge of the waist at quarters.
“Hold on, Mr. Terrill!”
shouted the captain, as the Josephine rolled on her
lee side till the water bubbled up in her scuppers.
“Wait till I give you the word!”
Paul was waiting for a favorable moment,
when the blast should lull a little, to set the reefed
foresail.
“You must get out of the way,
gentlemen!” said Terrill, roaring out the words
through his trumpet. “The sheet blocks will
knock you over!”
Mr. Stoute unmoored himself, and made
a dive at the life-line, where the captain was holding
on; but, being rather clumsy in his obesity, he missed
his aim, and was thrown into the scuppers. Mr.
Cleats went to his assistance, and picked him up while
he lay upon his back, with his legs and arms thrown
up like a turtle trying to turn over. Mr. Hamblin
was not encouraged by this experiment of his associate.
“Why don’t you go below,
sir?” shouted Terrill, placing his trumpet close
to the professor’s head.
“I can’t move,” replied he.
“Mr. Gage will help you,” added the lieutenant.
The carpenter assisted Mr. Hamblin
to the companion-way, while the boatswain had succeeded
in rolling Mr. Stoute up to the same point. The
doors were opened, and the head steward helped them
down the ladder.
“All ready!” shouted Captain
Kendall, when the favorable moment came for setting
the foresail.
“Let go the brails!” bellowed
the executive officer. “Haul out!”
The ready seaman promptly obeyed the
order, at the instant when the vessel, having rolled
over as far as her centre of gravity would permit
her to go in the trough of the sea, was poised as it
were on a balance, waiting for the recoil of the wave
that was to throw her down on the weather roll.
The close-reefed foresail flew out from the brails,
and began to thresh tremendously in the fierce blast.
“Slack the weather vang!”
continued Terrill to the hands who had been stationed
at this rope. “Walk away with the sheet!”
It required a tremendous pull to haul
home the sheet of the foresail, banging furiously
in the tempest; but there was force enough to accomplish
it, though not till the vessel had made her weather
roll, which lifted half the line of seamen from their
feet. The close-reefed foresail was trimmed so
as to lay the schooner to with her head up to the
sea. The billows were increasing in volume so
fearfully that it was no longer prudent to permit
the vessel to roll in the trough of the sea, where
she was in danger of being overwhelmed by the combing
waves.
“Mind your helm, Blair!”
called the first lieutenant, springing aft to the
wheel. “Port a little! Don’t
let the sail be taken aback!”
The head of the Josephine came up
handsomely to the sea, and it was thus proved that
the double-reefed foresail was just the sail for such
an emergency. It was only to be demonstrated
whether the sail would be blown out of the bolt-ropes
or not. If it had been an old one, such would
probably have been its fate; but being nearly new,
and of the best material, it stood the strain to the
end.
“Mind your eye, Blair!” roared Terrill.
“Starboard!”
“Starboard, sir!” replied the quartermaster.
“Touch her up when it comes so heavy,”
added the lieutenant.
The vessel had fallen off, and took
the wind so far on the beam that she buried her scuppers
deep in the waves. The order to “touch her
up,” or luff her up into the wind, so as partially
to spill the sail, was given to ease off the tremendous
pressure. The Josephine minded her helm, and
luffed so that she righted herself.
“Steady, Blair!” called
the lieutenant. “Port! Not too much,
or you’ll broach her to!”
“Sail ho!” suddenly shouted
several of the seamen in the forward part of the vessel.
“Where away?”
“Right over the lee bow! She has capsized!”
Paul and Terrill ran to the rail,
and discovered a small vessel, lying over on her beam
ends.
“That’s a Dutch galiot!”
exclaimed Cleats, who promptly recognized the craft.
“That’s a trick they have of turning bottom
upwards.”
“Port!” shouted Terrill,
who did not take his eye off the foresail of the Josephine
for more than an instant at a time.
The attention of the quartermaster
and the helmsman had been attracted by the announcement
of the wreck, and they had permitted the Josephine
to luff up until the foresail began to shake.
The atmosphere was so thick that the galiot was seen
but for an instant, and it then disappeared in the
dense mists. Captain Kendall trembled with emotion
when he saw the disabled vessel; but it was impossible
to do anything for her until the hurricane subsided.
Fortunately the worst of it had already
passed, and a few moments later it ceased almost as
suddenly as it commenced. The rain began to fall
in torrents, while a fresh breeze and a tremendous
sea were all that remained of the hurricane-for
such it was, rather than an ordinary squall.
“Set the jib and mainsail, Mr.
Terrill,” said Captain Kendall. “We
must endeavor to find that wreck.”
These sails were accordingly hoisted,
the Josephine came about, and stood off in the direction
towards which the galiot was supposed to have drifted.
The Young America had not been seen since the squall
came up; but Paul conjectured that she had run away
before it. He was deeply interested in the fate
of those on board of the wreck, and trusted he should
be able to render them some assistance, if all on board
of her had not already perished.
The rain poured down furiously; but
it did not dampen the enthusiasm of the young officers
and crew, though they were already drenched to the
skin. The reefed foresail was taken in, for it
was found that the jib and mainsail were all the schooner
needed. She stood on for an hour or more, without
obtaining a sight of the wreck, though every eye on
board was strained to catch the first glimpse of it.
“We must have passed her,” said the captain.
“It is so thick we can’t
see her, even if we should go within half a mile of
her.”
“Come about, and stand a little
more to the southward!” added Captain Kendall.
“Let the fog-horns be blown. We may get
a signal of some kind from them.”
“I am afraid they were lost
overboard; and that there is no one left to make a
signal,” answered Terrill, sadly.
The vessel was put about, and headed
as indicated by the captain. The fog-horns were
blown at intervals, and every one on board listened
eagerly for a reply. These efforts were not unavailing,
for a response was obtained after the Josephine had
run half an hour on her present course. A hoarse
shout was heard on the weather beam, which was unmistakably
a cry of distress.
“Steady as she is!” said
Paul to the executive officer, as soon as the sounds
were reported to him, and the direction from which
they came.
“Are you not going about, Captain
Kendall?” asked Terrill, with a look of anxiety
on his dripping face.
“Certainly; but if we go about
here, we should fall to leeward of the wreck,”
replied Paul.
The Josephine stood on for a few moments
longer, and then tacked.
“Blow the horns, and keep a
sharp lookout forward,” added the captain, who
was quite as anxious as any other person on board;
but he kept apparently cool, in deference to the dignity
of his high office.
“I see her!” shouted Wheeler,
the boatswain, who had gone out on the flying jib-boom.
“Where away is she?” demanded
Martyn, from the forecastle.
“Well on the lee bow, sir.”
“Are we headed for her?”
“Ay, ay, sir! We shall go clear of her
to windward.”
“Wreck on the lee bow, sir,”
reported the second lieutenant to Terrill, who in
turn reported to the captain.
“Clear away the first cutter, Mr. Terrill,”
said Paul.
“All the first cutters, ahoy!” shouted
the boatswain’s mate.
“Mr. Pelham will have charge
of the boat,” added Captain Kendall, who had
great confidence in the zeal and ability of this officer.
“The wreck! The wreck!”
shouted all hands, as the disabled galiot came into
view.
On the rail of the vessel, whose starboard
half was completely submerged in the water, were two
men, making violent gestures, and shouting to the
crew of the Josephine. Not a word they said could
be understood, but it was easy enough for Yankees
to guess the meaning of their words. The schooner
was thrown up into the wind, the jib lowered, and she
lay to under the mainsail. Pelham and the crew
of the first cutter took their places in the boat,
and were lowered into the stormy sea. The falls
were cast off the instant she struck the water; the
coxswain gave his orders rapidly, and the cutter went
off, rising and falling on the huge waves like a feather.
The distance was short; but even this
was a hard pull in such a violent sea. Pelham
was cool and steady, and his self-possession encouraged
the crew to their best efforts. The boat ran
up under the lee of the wreck, and made fast to one
of the masts. As soon as it was secured, both
of the men on the rail began to jabber in an unintelligible
language.
“Parlez-vous francais?”
shouted Pelham, who had some knowledge of the polite
language.
But the men made no response; and
it was evident that no long speeches need be made
on the present occasion. Pelham made signs to
them to come down into the boat, which they did.
They were not satisfied, but continued to talk in
their own language, and to point earnestly to the
after part of the wreck. One of them repeated
a word so many times, that the officer of the boat
was enabled at last to separate it from the confused
jumble of sentences.
“Vrow?” said he.
The man nodded earnestly, and pointed
with redoubled vigor to the after part of the galiot.
Vrow means wife; and Pelham
concluded that the skipper’s lady was in the
cabin, but whether dead or alive he did not know.