The glimpse of moonshine only lasted
a second, but it was sufficient to light up the valley
of the shadow of death. All around was again
enveloped in obscurity. The moon, like a modest
benefactor who hides himself from those to whose wants
he has ministered, concealed itself behind its screen
of blackness.
The pinnace was thrown into stays,
and they resolved to lie-to till daybreak. There
might be rocks to windward as well as to leeward; at
all events, they felt that their safest course lay
in maintaining, as far as possible, their actual position;
and, after having returned thanks for their almost
miraculous escape, they made the usual arrangements
for passing the night.
Next morning they found themselves
in the midst of a labyrinth of rocks, from which,
with the help of Providence, they succeeded in extricating
themselves. The rocks, or rather reefs, amongst
which they were entangled, are very common in these
seas. As they are scarcely visible at high water,
they are extremely dangerous, and often baffle the
skill of the most expert navigator.
Whilst Willis steered the pinnace
amongst the islands and rocks of the Hawaian Archipelago,
Fritz kept a look-out for savages, fresh water, and
eligible landing-places. And Jack, after having
posted up his log, set about inditing a letter for
home.
“The voyage,” said he,
“has lately been so prolific in adventure, that
I scarcely know where to begin.”
“Begin by saluting them all round,” suggested
Fritz.
“But, brother of mine, that
is usually done at the end of the letter,” objected
Jack.
“What then? you can repeat the
salutations at the end, and you might also, for that
matter, put them in the middle as well.”
“I have written lots of letters
on board ship for my comrades,” remarked Willis,
“and I invariably commenced by saying I
take a pen in my hand to let you know I am well, hoping
you are the same.”
“What else could you take in
your hand for such a purpose, O Rono?” inquired
Jack.
“Sometimes, after this preamble,
I added, ‘but I am afraid.’”
“I thought you old salts were
never afraid of anything, short of the Flying Dutchman.”
“Yes; but the letters I put
that in were for young lubbers, who, instead of sending
home half their pay, were writing for extra supplies,
and were naturally in great fear that their requests
would be refused.”
“I scarcely think I shall adopt
that style, Willis, even though it were recognized
by the navy regulations.”
“Do you think the pigeon will
find its way with the letter from here to New Switzerland?”
inquired Willis.
“I have no doubt about that,”
replied Fritz, “it naturally returns to its
nest and its affections. If you had wings, would
you not fly straight off in the direction of the Bass
Rock or Ailsa Craig, to hunt up your old arm-chair?”
“Don’t speak of it; I
feel my heart go pit-pat when I think of home, sweet
home.”
“So do the birds. When
they soften the grain before they throw it into the
maw of their fledgelings when they fly off
and return laden with midges to their nests when
they tear the down from their breasts to protect their
eggs and their young, do you think their hearts do
not beat as well as yours?”
“But all that is said to be instinct.”
“Heart or instinct, where is
the difference? The Abbe Spallanzani saw two
swallows that were carried to Milan return to Pavia
in fifteen minutes, and the distance between the two
cities is seven leagues.”
“That I can easily believe.”
“When you see a little, insignificant
bird flying backwards and forwards, perching on one
branch and hopping off to another, whistling, carolling,
perching here and there, you think that it has no
cares, that it does not reflect, and that it does not
love!”
“Well, I have heard in my time
a great many wonderful stories of robin-redbreasts
and jenny-wrens, but I always understood that they
were intended only to amuse little boys and girls.”
“You consider, doubtless, that
a field-sparrow is not a creature of much importance;
but do you know that he consumes half a bushel of
corn annually?”
“If that is his only merit,
the farmers, I dare say, would be glad to get rid
of him.”
“But it is not his only merit.
What do you think of his killing three thousand insects
a week.”
“That is more to the purpose.
But, to return to the pigeon, supposing it is possible
for it to find its way, how long do you suppose it
will take to get there?”
“It is estimated that birds
of passage fly over two hundred miles a day, if they
keep on the wing for six hours.”
“Two hundred miles in six hours
is fast sailing, anyhow.”
“Swallows have been seen in
Senegal on the 9th of October, that is, eight or nine
days after they leave Europe; and that journey they
repeat every year.”
“They must surely make some
preparations for such a lengthy excursion.”
“When the period of departure
approaches, they collect together in troops on the
chimneys or roofs of houses, and on the tops of trees.
During this operation, they keep up an incessant cry,
which brings families of them from all quarters.
The young ones try the strength of their wings under
the eyes of the parents. Finally, they make some
strategic dispositions, and elect a chief.”
“You talk of the swallows as
if they were an army preparing for battle, with flags
flying, trumpets sounding, and ready to march at the
word of command.”
“The resemblance between flocks
of birds and serried masses of men in martial array
is striking. Wild ducks, swans, and cranes fly
in a kind of regimental order; their battalions assume
the form of a triangle or wedge, so as to cut through
the air with greater facility, and diminish the resistance
it presents to their flight.
“But how do you know it is for that?”
“What else could it be for?
The leader gives notice, by a peculiar cry, of the
route it is about to take. This cry is repeated
by the flock, as if to say that they will follow,
and keep the direction indicated. When they meet
with a bird of prey whose attacks they may have to
repulse, the ranks fall in so as to present a solid
phalanx to the enemy.”
“If they had a commissariat
in the rear and a few sappers in front, the resemblance
would be complete.”
“If a storm arises,” continued
Fritz, without noticing Willis’s commentary,
“they lower their flight and approach the ground.”
“Forgotten their umbrellas, perhaps.”
“When they make a halt, outposts
are established to keep a look out while the troop
sleeps.”
“And, in cases of alarm, the
outposts fire and fall in as a matter of course.”
“Great Rono,” said Jack,
“you are become a downright quiz. I have
finished my letter whilst you have been discussing
the poultry,” he added, handing the pen to his
brother, “and it only waits your postscriptum.”
Fritz having added a few lines, the epistle was sealed,
and was then attached to one of the pigeons, which,
after hovering a short time round the pinnace, took
a flight upwards and disappeared in the clouds.
They were now in sight of a large
island, which bore no traces of habitation. There
was a heavy surf beating on the shore, but the case
was urgent, so Willis and Jack embarked in the canoe,
and, after a hard fight with the waves, landed on
the beach.
Each of them were armed with a double-barrelled
rifle, and furnished with a boatswain’s whistle.
The whistle was to signal the discovery of water,
and a rifle shot was to bring them together in case
of danger. These arrangements being made, Jack
proceeded in the direction of a thicket, which stood
at the distance of some hundred yards from the shore.
He had no sooner reached the cover in the vicinity
of the trees than he was pounced upon by two ferocious-looking
savages. They gave him no time to level his rifle
or to draw a knife. One of his captors held his
hands firmly behind his back, whilst the other dragged
him towards the wood. At this moment the Pilot’s
whistle rang sharply through the air. This put
an end to any hopes that Jack might have entertained
of being rescued through that means. Had he sounded
the whistle, it would only have led Willis to suppose
that he had heard the signal, and was on his way to
join him.
Poor Jack judged, from the aspect
of the men who held him, that they were cannibals,
and consequently that his fate was sealed, for if his
surmises were correct, there was little chance of the
wretches relinquishing their prey. Jack had often
amused himself at the expense of the anthropophagi,
but here he was actually within their grasp.
Though death terminates the sorrows and the sufferings
of man, and though the result is the same in whatever
shape it comes, yet there are circumstances which
cause its approach to be regarded with terror and
dismay. In one’s bed, exhausted by old age
or disease, the lips only open to give utterance to
a sigh of pain; life, then, is a burden that is laid
down without reluctance; we glide imperceptibly and
almost voluntarily into eternity.
At twenty years of age, however, when
we are full of health and ardor, the case is very
different. Then we are at the threshold of hope
and happiness; our illusions have not had time to
fade, the future is a brilliant meteor sparkling in
sunshine. At that age our seas are always calm,
and the rocks and shoals are all concealed. Our
barks glide jauntily along, the sailors sing merrily,
the perils are shrouded in romance, and the flag flutters
gaily in the breeze. Then life is not abandoned
without a tear of regret.
To die in the midst of one’s
friends is not to quit them entirely. They come
to see us through the marble or stone in which we are
shrouded. It is another thing to have no other
sepulchre than the aesophagus of a cannibal.
How the recollections of the past darted into Jack’s
mind! He felt that he loved those whom he was
on the point of leaving a thousand times more than
he did before. What would he not have given for
the power to bid them one last adieu? The idea
of quitting life thus was horrible.
It was in vain that he tried to shake
off his assailants; his adolescent strength was as
nothing in the arms of steel that bound him.
He saw that he was powerless in their hands, and at
length ceased making any further attempts to escape.
The savages, finding that he had relaxed
his struggles, commenced to rifle and strip him.
They tore off his upper garments, and discovered a
small locket, containing a medallion of his mother,
which the unfortunate youth wore round his neck.
This prize, which the savages no doubt regarded as
a talisman of some sort, they both desired to possess.
They quarrelled about it, and commenced fighting over
it. Jack’s hands were left at liberty.
In an instant he had seized his rifle. He ran
a few paces back, turned, took deliberate aim at the
most powerful of his adversaries, who, with a shriek,
fell to the ground. The other savage, scared
by the report of the shot and its effects upon his
companion, took to flight, but he carried off the
locket with him.
Jack had now regained his courage.
He felt, like Telemachus in the midst of his battles,
that God was with him, and he flew, perhaps imprudently,
after the fugitive. Seeing, however, that he had
no chance with him as regards speed, he discharged
his second rifle. The shot did not take effect,
but the report brought the savage to his knees.
The frightened wretch pressed his hands together in
an attitude of supplication. Jack stopped at
a little distance, and, by an imperious gesture, gave
him to understand that he wanted the locket.
The sign was comprehended, for the savage laid the
talisman on the ground.
“Now,” said Jack, “in
the name of my mother I give you your life.”
By another sign, he signified to the
man that he was at liberty, which he no sooner understood
than he vanished like an arrow.
Great was the consternation of Fritz
when he heard the reports; he feared that the whole
island was in commotion, and that both his brother
and the Pilot were surrounded by a legion of copper-colored
devils. From the conformation of the coast he
could see nothing, and, like Sisiphus on his rock,
he was tied by imperious necessity to his post.
The Pilot, on hearing the first shot,
ran to the spot, and both he and Jack arrived at the
same instant, where the savage lay bleeding on the
ground.
“You are safe and sound, I hope?”
said Willis, anxiously.
“With the exception of some
slight contusions, and the loss of my clothes, thank
God, I am all right, Willis.”
“We are born to bad luck, it seems.”
“Say rather we are the spoilt
children of Providence. I have just passed through
the eye of a needle.”
“Is this the only savage you have seen?”
“No, there were two of them;
and, to judge from their actions, I verily believe
the rascals intended to eat me. As for this one,
he is more frightened than hurt.”
And so it was, he had escaped with
some slugs in his shoulders; but he seemed, by the
contortions of his face, to think that he was dying.
“Fortunately,” said Jack,
“my rifle was not loaded with ball. I should
be sorry to have the death of a human being on my conscience.”
“Well,” said Willis, “I
am not naturally cruel, but, beset as you have been,
I should have shot both the fellows without the slightest
compunction.”
“Still,” said Jack, giving
the wounded savage a mouthful of brandy, “we
ought to have mercy on the vanquished they
are men like ourselves, at all events.”
“Yes, they have flesh and bone,
arms, legs, hands, and teeth like us; but I doubt
whether they are possessed of souls and hearts.”
“The chances are that they possess
both, Willis; only neither the one nor the other has
been trained to regard the things of this world in
a proper light. Their notions as to diet, for
example, arise from ignorance as to what substances
are fit and proper for human food.”
“As you like,” said Willis;
“but let us be off; there may be more of them
lurking about.”
“What! again without water?”
“No, this time I have taken
care to fill the casks; the canoe is laden with fresh
water.”
“Fritz must be very uneasy about
us; but this man may die if we leave him so.”
“Very likely,” said the
Pilot; “but that is no business of ours.”
“Good bye,” said Jack,
lifting up the wounded savage, and propping him against
a tree; “I may never have the pleasure of seeing
you again, and am sorry to leave you in such a plight;
but it will be a lesson for you, and a hint to be
a little more hospitable for the future in your reception
of strangers.”
The savage raised his eyes for an
instant, as if to thank Jack for his good offices,
and then relapsed into his former attitude of dejection.
Twenty minutes later the canoe was aboard the pinnace.
“Fritz,” said Jack, throwing
his arms round his brother’s neck, “I am
delighted to see you again; half an hour ago I had
not the shadow of a chance of ever beholding you more.”