The malcontents in the ship were,
apparently, the most zealous seamen on board.
Certainly no one would have suspected them of organizing
any mischief, they looked so innocent and so determined
to do their duty promptly. Howe, Wilton, Little,
and others had done their work thoroughly and secretly.
They had arranged at least a dozen different tricks
for making confusion among the crew. To each one
of the discontented a part had been assigned, which
he was to perform in such a way as to conceal his
own agency.
Captain Shuffles was planking the
quarter-deck with the commodore. Everybody could
see that he was not entirely at his ease. His
position was a novel one to him, and he was oppressed
by its responsibilities, especially since the crew
had behaved so badly at the first drill. He could
not help knowing that a portion of the crew were opposed
to him, and would do anything they could to annoy
him. The situation was a difficult one; for,
at the commencement of his term of office, he did
not wish to have any of the seamen punished for neglect
or disobedience, even if he could discover the guilty
ones.
Mr. Lowington was not on deck.
He had purposely gone below, for he wished the new
captain to act on his own responsibility, and overcome
the difficulty alone. This was in accordance with
his previous course, when, even in a gale of wind,
he permitted the young officers to handle the ship
without any dictation. Though the action adopted
by the boys was not always in accordance with his
own judgment, he never interfered unless an obvious
and dangerous blunder was made. His policy had
worked well thus far, and he was disposed to continue
it. In the present instance, he was no better
informed than the captain in regard to the real cause
of the difficulty. He believed it was merely the
effect of a fun-loving spirit on the part of the crew;
a mere disposition to haze the new officers a little,
and perhaps prove what they were made of. He
hoped the new officers would satisfy them, and, if
necessary, send a dozen or twenty of the mischief-makers
to the mainmast for punishment.
“All hands, up anchor, ahoy!”
piped the boatswain, after he had received the order
from the captain, through the proper officers.
Those whose stations were at the cable
and capstan sprang to their places with unwonted alacrity.
“Bring to, forward!” added
the first lieutenant, giving the order to attach the
messenger. “Ship and swifter the capstan
bars!”
As it was not intended to get the
ship actually under way, only a portion of the work
indicated by the orders was really executed. The
form of hooking on the messenger was gone through with,
as also were the various preparations for catting
and fishing the anchor. The capstan bars were
inserted in the pigeon-holes.
“Heave round!” shouted
the first lieutenant; and the order was repeated by
the second lieutenant, whose station is on the forecastle.
Everything appeared to be progressing
with proper order and regularity, and Captain Shuffles
hoped the warning words of the principal had produced
an impression upon the minds of the mischief-makers.
But appearances are very deceptive. While the
hands were walking around the capstan, four of the
bars suddenly came out of the pigeon-holes at the
same instant, and a dozen of the seamen were thrown,
apparently with great violence, upon the deck.
The bars, confined at one end by the swifter, swung
round and cracked the shins of others, and a scene
of confusion ensued, which set at nought all ideas
of discipline.
No one was badly hurt, but every one
was excited. Those who were not concerned in
the plot caught the spirit of mischief from the others,
and, with but few exceptions, the crew joined in the
sport. The seaman who originated the trouble
had simply neglected to insert the pins which confine
the capstan bars within the pigeon-holes, or had left
the bars with the heads against the pins. As
nearly all joined in the frolic, there were none to
inform against others, and it was simply impossible
for Leavitt, the second lieutenant, or Ellis, the first
master,-under whose eye this breach of discipline
had occurred,-to determine who the ringleaders
were.
Shuffles and the commodore were intensely
annoyed at this scene, and immediately went forward.
By this time, those who had been thrown upon the deck,
which included nearly all at the capstan, had picked
themselves up. The Knights looked even more innocent
than those whom they had dragged into the scrape,
and the high officers from the quarter-deck were no
wiser than the lieutenant and master. In the midst
of the confusion, Howe and Wilton had removed the pins
from the bars, which still remained in the drumhead
of the capstan.
“Mr. Leavitt, how did this happen?”
demanded Captain Shuffles.
“Half the bars dropped out of
the capstan all at once, and the hands were thrown
down,” replied the lieutenant, who was hardly
less annoyed than the captain.
“Were the bars pinned in?”
“I supposed they were, sir.”
Captain Shuffles walked up to the
capstan. Not a single pin was inserted.
“Let your midshipman see that
the bars are properly pinned and swiftered next time,”
said the commander, as he walked aft to resume his
place on the quarter-deck.
“Unship the bars!” said
Leavitt; and they were restored to the rack, leaving
everything as it was before the drill began.
The crew were piped to muster, and
the order to weigh anchor repeated. The capstan
bars were shipped, and this time, the midshipman whose
station was on the forecastle satisfied himself that
they were securely pinned, and so reported to the
second lieutenant. As the rogues had made no
provision for this state of things, they were thrown
upon their own resources for the means of defeating
the operation a second time. Commodore Kendall
had placed himself in position to watch the movement,
and the officers in charge had pinned their eyes wide
open, fully resolved that the authors of the trouble
should not escape a second time.
Directly abaft the capstan was the
fore-hatch, over which lay the path of those who walked
around at the bars. Ordinarily the hatch was closed
when the capstan was used; but, on the present occasion,
a plank had been placed across the aperture, to avoid
the necessity of putting on the hatch, and thus excluding
the air from the kitchen, where the cooks were baking
their daily batch of bread.
“Heave round!” said the first lieutenant.
“Heave round!” repeated
the second lieutenant; and the hands at the capstan
began their circular march.
By some means not observed by the
vigilant officers, the plank over the fore-hatch slowly
travelled along until one end of it barely caught on
the combing of the hatch. Half a dozen seamen
had given it a kick with their heels as they passed
over it, and it was soon in condition to drop into
the steerage below. Little stepped upon it, and
down it went. Releasing his hold of the bar,
he dropped upon the steps below, and disappeared.
Sheffield followed him, and then Ibbotson. The
hands at the other side of the capstan took care that
the party should keep moving. A few well-disposed
boys, when they came to the hatch,-which
was not more than four feet wide,-leaped
across it, as any of them might have done, if they
had not been infected with the spirit of mischief.
“Avast heaving!” shouted the second lieutenant.
At this instant one of the lambs was
on the combing of the hatch, and he must either go
over or hang by the bar; so he pushed along, and his
movement brought another into a similar position.
Seeing how the case was, the rogues kept the capstan
going, in spite of the commands of the officers, until
two thirds of the gang had dropped into the steerage.
It was finally suspended by the efforts of the excited
officers, who took hold of the bars with their own
hands, and counteracted the efforts of the rogues.
The young rascals in the steerage
pretended to be hurt more seriously than they were,
though some of them had struck the steps or the floor
below with force enough to make them feel a little
sore. They began to limp, and to rub their shins
and shoulders, their heads and arms, very vigorously,
as though they believed that friction was a sovereign
remedy for aching bones.
“Why didn’t you stop,
Hunter, when I ordered you to do so?” demanded
Leavitt, indignantly.
“I couldn’t, sir,”
replied the lamb, speaking only the simple truth.
“Yes, you could! I will report you for
disobedience.”
“I was right over the hatch,
and I had either to go down or jump over: I couldn’t
stop there.”
“And you did the same thing, Hyde,” added
the officer.
“I couldn’t help it, sir,”
replied he. “When Hunter got over, he dragged
me so far that I couldn’t stop.”
“Why didn’t you let go, then?” demanded
Leavitt, angrily.
“I was afraid the next bar would hit me in the
head.”
Both of these boys were ordinarily
models of propriety, and they had not, for an instant,
intended to do anything out of order. The real
culprits were all at the foot of the stairs, rubbing
their limbs and making the most terrible contortions,
as though their legs, arms, and heads were actually
broken. The officers had all seen Hunter and Hyde
pushing along the bars after the order had been given
to stop. They seemed to be guilty, and they were
required to report at the mainmast to the first lieutenant,
for discipline. The second lieutenant then went
down the fore-hatch, where the appalling spectacle
of a crowd of sufferers was presented to his view.
“Are you hurt, Little?”
he asked, turning to the most prominent victim of
the catastrophe.
“Yes, sir,” groaned Little,
twisting his back-bone almost into a hard knot, and
trying to reach the seat of his injury with both hands
at the same time.
“How happened you to fall through?”
inquired Leavitt, more gently than he had spoken on
deck, for the sight of all this misery evidently affected
him.
“I don’t know, sir,”
answered Little, with one of his most violent contortions.
“I was looking up at the fore-yard arm, and-ugh!-the
first thing I knew, I was-O, dear!-I
was down here, with that-ugh!-with
that plank on top of me.”
“Are you much hurt?”
“I don’t know. It
aches first rate,” cried Little, with a deep,
explosive sigh.
“Well, go aft, and report to the surgeon.”
“I don’t want to go to
the surgeon. He mauls me about to death.
I shall be better soon.”
“On deck, all who are able to
do so!” added Leavitt. “Bennington,
you will ask Dr. Winstock to attend to those who are
hurt, and report to the first lieutenant.”
But it did not appear that any one
was so much injured as to require the services of
the surgeon, for the whole party went on deck at the
order. Little still writhed and twisted.
Howe rubbed his knee, and Spencer nursed his elbow.
Commodore Kendall, who had witnessed the whole affair,
did not see how it was possible for them to tumble
down the hatchway without injuring themselves, and
he was willing to believe that the appearance was
not deceitful. He had kept his eyes fixed upon
the crew as they walked round the capstan, but he was
unable to determine whether the mishap was the result
of accident or intention.
Again the captain came forward; but
after consulting with Paul, he returned to the quarter-deck
without making any comments. The two lambs had
reported to the first lieutenant, and the matter had
gone to Captain Shuffles, who directed the culprits
to be sent to the principal. They went into the
steerage, and knocking at the door of the main cabin,
Mr. Lowington came out, and heard their statement.
They were ordered to their mess-rooms to await an
investigation.
The hatchway was closed, and the order
to man the capstan was given a third time. The
injured seamen had in a measure recovered the use of
their limbs, and though they still limped and squirmed,
they took their places in the line. Either their
will or their ingenuity to do mischief failed them,
the third time, for the form of heaving up the anchor
to a short stay was regularly accomplished. The
commodore and all the officers in the forward part
of the ship watched the operation with the keenest
scrutiny, and when it was successfully finished, they
hoped the end of all the mishaps had come.
“Pawl the capstan! Unship
the bars! Stations for loosing sail!” continued
the first lieutenant. “Lay aloft, sail-loosers!”
The nimble young tars, whose places
were aloft, sprang up the rigging.
“Man the boom-tricing lines!”
But the boom-tricing lines appeared
to be in a snarl, and it was some time before they
were ready for use, being manipulated by some of the
mischief-makers.
“Trice up!” shouted Goodwin, the executive
officer.
Up went the inner ends of the studding-sail booms.
“Lay out!” added Goodwin.
“Lay out!” repeated the
midshipmen in the tops; and the seamen ran out on
the foot-ropes to their several stations for loosing
sail.
At the same time, the forecastle hands
were loosing the fore-topmast staysail, jib, and flying
jib, and the after-guard, or quarter-deck hands, were
clearing away the spanker.
“Loose!” said the executive
officer; and the hands removed the gaskets, stoppers,
and other ropes, used to confine the sails when furled.
“Stand by-let fall!” was the
next order.
At this command all the square sails
should have dropped from the yards at the same instant,
but as a matter of fact, not half of them did drop.
Sheets, buntlines, bowlines, lifts, reef-pendants,
and halyards were fearfully snarled up. Some
of the seamen on the yards were pulling one way, and
some another; some declared the snarl was in one place,
others in another place. The rogues had realized
an undoubted success in the work they had undertaken.
Vainly the midshipmen in the tops tried to bring order
out of confusion. Those who were actually laboring
to untangle the ropes only increased the snarl.
The condition of affairs was duly
reported to the captain, who had become very impatient
at the long delay. The masters were then sent
aloft to help the midshipmen unravel the snarl, but
they succeeded no better. It was evident enough
to all the officers that this confusion could not
have been created without an intention to do it.
An accident might have happened on the main or the
mizzen-mast, but not on every yard on all three of
the masts.
“What are you about?”
asked Perth, who had been sent into the main-top,
as he met Howe.
“We have come to the conclusion
that Bob Shuffles can’t handle this ship,”
whispered the ringleader of the mischief, with a significant
wink.
“You are getting us into a scrape.”
“Well, we all are in the same boat.”
“Don’t carry it too far,” suggested
Master Perth.
“Carry what too far?”
demanded Robinson, the midshipman in the top, who
had heard a word or two of the confidential talk-enough
to give him an idea of what was in the wind.
“Dry up, old fellow,”
said Perth, with some confusion, as Howe, who had
come down from the yard to cast off a line, sprang
back to his place.
“What did you mean by that remark
of yours?” inquired the midshipman.
“I told Howe not to carry the
end of the buntline too far. It was wound three
times around the topsail sheet.”
“Was that what you meant?” asked Robinson,
suspiciously.
“Don’t you see that buntline?”
replied Perth. “It is fouled in the sheet,
and he was pulling it through farther, so as to snarl
it up still worse.”
“All right,” replied the
inferior, who, however, was far from being satisfied
with the explanation.
“All right!” retorted
Perth, smartly. “Is that the way you address
your superior officer. One would think I was
responsible to you for my words and actions.”
“I didn’t mean that,” added Robinson.
“What did you mean?”
“I only said all right to your explanation.”
“You did-did you?”
said Perth, severely. “Then you called me
to an account, and now you acquit me!”
“I beg your pardon. Whatever
I said, I did not mean anything disrespectful,”
pleaded Robinson.
“Is this the kind of discipline
among the officers? If it is, I don’t wonder
that the crew get snarled up. I don’t like
to blow on a fellow, but I’m tempted to send
you to the mainmast.”
“I didn’t mean anything.”
Master Perth turned from his abashed
inferior, ascended the main rigging, and with a few
sharp orders, compelled the topmen to unsnarl the
ropes. He was afraid the midshipman would report
what he had said to the captain, and he had attempted
to intimidate him into silence by threatening him
with a similar fate.
“On deck!” hailed Perth
from the top. “All ready in the main-top,
sir,” he added, when the third lieutenant answered
his hail from the waist.
After a delay of half an hour, a like
report came down from the fore and mizzen-tops.
The masters returned to their stations on deck, and
everything was in readiness to continue the manoeuvre.
Captain Shuffles was in earnest conversation with
Commodore Kendall. A more unsatisfactory state
of things could not exist than that which prevailed
on board of the Young America. The conduct of
the crew amounted almost to mutiny. Those who
had maliciously made the mischief, and those who had
been engaged in it from a love of fun, had succeeded
in confounding those who meant to do their duty.
It was impossible to tell who were guilty and who
were innocent; for three quarters, at least, of the
crew seemed to be concerned in the confusion.
“It is clear enough that they
are hazing me,” said Captain Shuffles, sadly.
“I don’t know that I have done anything
to set the fellows against me.”
“Certainly not,” replied
Paul, warmly. “You have only done your duty.
I have no doubt those fellows who ran away in the
Josephine are at the bottom of it. If I am not
very much mistaken, I saw Howe, on the main-topsail
yard, tangling up the buntlines and sheets.”
“I have heard that these fellows
intended to get even with me,” added Shuffles,
with a smile, as though he had not much fear of them.
“I should keep the crew at work
until they did their duty. I would keep them
at it night and day, till they can get the ship under
way without any confusion,” added Paul, earnestly.
“I intend to do that, but I
do not like to be hard upon them.”
“There is no danger of your being too hard.”
“Whether I am hard or not, I’m
going to have the work done in ship-shape style, if
we drill till morning. All hands, furl sails,”
said he to the first lieutenant.
The boatswain’s call sounded
through the ship. The necessary orders were given
in detail, and after considerable confusion, the sails
were all furled, and the ship restored to its original
condition.
“Pipe to muster,” continued the captain.
Under this order all the officers
assembled on the quarter-deck. Captain Shuffles
addressed them in the mild tones in which he usually
spoke, as though he was not seriously disturbed by
the ill conduct of the crew. Assigning a lieutenant,
a master, and a midshipman to each mast, he directed
them to set each sail separately, without regard to
others. They were to set the topsails first, then
the other sails up to the royals. Other
officers were directed to drill the seamen stationed
at the head sails and the spanker.
During this conference Howe and his
associates were congratulating themselves upon the
success of their vicious schemes, and encouraging
each other to persevere if another drill was ordered.
They were curious to know what the captain was doing
with the officers on the quarter-deck; but they concluded
that it was only a meeting to “howl” over
the miserable discipline of the ship. But their
wonderings were soon set at rest by the boatswain’s
call of “All hands, make sail, ahoy!”
They sprang to their stations as zealously
as though they had no thought but for the honor of
the ship. They soon discovered that a new order
of proceeding had been introduced. The masters
and midshipmen perched themselves in the rigging,
where they could see the movements of every seaman.
The adult forward officers-Peaks, the boatswain,
Bitts, the carpenter, and Leech, the sailmaker-also
went aloft, and stationed themselves on the topmast-stays,
so that, besides the lieutenants on deck, the commodore,
and the past officers, there were three pairs of sharp
eyes aloft to inspect the operations on each sail.
Howe and his associates were not a
little disconcerted at this array of inspectors, and
still more so when the order was given to loose only
the topsails. Peaks, on the main topmast-stay,
caught Howe in the very act of passing the gasket
through the bight of the buntline. The veteran
tar came down upon him with such a torrent of sea slang,
that he did not attempt to repeat the act. The
topsails were then set as smartly and as regularly
as ever before. After the inspectors had seen
all the sails set and furled in detail, the topsails,
top-gallant sails, and courses, with the jib and spanker,
were set as usual, when the vessel got under way.
By the time the routine in detail
had been practised two or three times, the officers
began to know where to look for the mischief-makers.
Peaks had exposed the ringleader, and the conspirators
were finally beaten at their own game. But Captain
Shuffles was not satisfied; and when the crew were
dismissed from muster, he hastened to the main cabin
to consult with the principal.
The conspirators, at close quarters,
had lost the day, and discipline was triumphant.