The next day Pauline and her brothers
visited the wreck, and here new difficulties met them,
for although the vessel lay hard and fast on the rocks,
there was a belt of water between it and the main shore,
which was not only broad, but deep.
“I can easily swim it,”
said Dominick, beginning to pull off his coat.
“Dom,” said Otto, solemnly, “sharks!”
“That’s true, my boy, I won’t risk
it.”
He put his coat on again, and turned
to look for some drift-wood with which to make a raft.
“There’s sure to be some
lying about, you know,” he said, “for a
wreck could hardly take place without something or
other in the way of spars or wreckage being washed
ashore.”
“But don’t you think,”
suggested Otto, “that the men whose graves we
have found may have used it all up?”
Otto was right. Not a scrap
of timber or cordage of any kind was to be found after
a most diligent search, and they were about to give
it up in despair, when Pauline remembered the bay
where they had been cast ashore, and which we have
described as being filled with wreckage.
In truth, this bay and the reef with
its group of islands lay right in the track of one
of those great ocean currents which, as the reader
probably knows, are caused by the constant circulation
of all the waters of the sea between the equator and
the poles. This grand and continuous flow is
caused by difference of temperature and density in
sea-water at different places. At the equator
the water is warm, at the poles it is cold.
This alone would suffice to cause circulation-somewhat
as water circulates in a boiling pot-but
other active agents are at work. The Arctic
and Antarctic snows freshen the sea-water as well as
cool it, while equatorial heat evaporates as well
as warms it, and thus leaves a superabundance of salt
and lime behind. The grand ocean current thus
caused is broken up into smaller streams, and the courses
of these are fixed by the conformation of land-just
as a river’s flow is turned right or left, and
sometimes backward in eddies, by the form of its banks
and bottom. Trade winds, and the earth’s
motion on its axis, still further modify the streams,
both as to direction and force.
It was one of those currents, then,
which flowed past the reef and sometimes cast vessels
and wreckage on its shores.
Hastening to the bay, they accordingly
found enough of broken spars and planks, to have made
half a dozen rafts, twice the size of that required
to go off with to the wreck; so to work they went at
once with eager enthusiasm.
“Hold on!” shouted Dominick,
after a few spars had been collected and dragged up
on the sand.
Otto and Pauline paused in their labour,
and looked anxiously at their brother, for his face
wore a perplexed look.
“We have forgotten that it is
impossible to shove a raft of any size, big or little,
through these huge breakers, so as to get it round
the point, to where the wreck lies.”
“Well, then,” cried Otto,
with the ready assurance of ignorance, “we’ll
just drag it overland to the wreck, and launch it there.”
“But, Otto, you have not taken
into consideration the fact that our raft must be
so large that, when finished, the dragging of it over
rough ground would require three or four horses instead
of three human beings.”
“Well, then,” returned
the boy, “we’ll make it small, just big
enough to carry one person, and then we’ll be
able to drag it overland, and can go off to the wreck
one at a time.”
“Now, just think, brainless
one,” retorted Dominick; “suppose that
I were to go off first to the wreck, what then?”
“Why, then I would go
off next of course, and then Pina would follow, and
so we’d all get on board one at a time, and explore
it together.”
“Yes; but what would you come off on?”
“The raft, to be sure.”
“But the raft, I have supposed,
is with me at the wreck. It won’t go back
to the shore of its own accord to fetch you, and we
have no ropes with which to haul it to and fro.”
“Then there’s nothing
for it,” said Otto, after a few moments’
thought, “but to make it big enough for two,
or carry over the broken spars and planks piecemeal,
and put them together opposite the wreck; so, come
along.”
This latter plan being adopted, they
set to work with energy. To their joy they found
not only that a good deal of cordage-somewhat
worn, indeed, but still serviceable-was
mingled with the wreckage, but that many large protruding
bolts and rusty nails formed convenient holdfasts,
which facilitated the building up and fastening together
of the parts.
At last, after considerable labour,
the raft was got ready early in the afternoon, and
the brothers, embarking on it with two long poles,
pushed off to the wreck while Pauline sat on the shore
and watched them.
It was an anxious moment when they
drew near enough to observe the vessel more distinctly,
for it was just possible that they might find in her
hold a supply of food and things they stood so much
in need of, while, on the other hand, there was a
strong probability that everything had been washed
out of her long ago, or that her former crew had taken
out all that was worth removing.
“What if we should find casks
of biscuits and barrels of pork, to say nothing of
tea and sugar, and such like?” murmured the sanguine
Otto, as they poled slowly out.
“And what if we should find
nothing at all?” said Dominick.
“O Dom!” exclaimed Otto,
in a voice so despairing that his companion turned
to look at him in surprise. “Look! see!
the ship has been on fire! It can only be the
mere skeleton that is left.”
Dominick turned quickly, and saw that
his brother had reason for this remark. They
had by that time approached so near to the wreck that
the charred condition of part of her bulwarks, and
specially of her lower spars, became obvious; and
when, a few minutes later, they stood on the deck,
the scene that presented itself was one of black desolation.
Evidently the ill-fated vessel had been enveloped in
flames, for everything on board was charred, and it
was almost certain that her crew had run her on the
rocks as the only method of escaping, her boats having
been totally destroyed, as was apparent from the small
portions of them that still hung from the davits.
“Nothing left!” said Otto.
“I think that Robinson Crusoe himself would
have given way to despair if his wreck had been
anything like this. I wonder that even this
much of it has been left above water after fire had
got hold of it.”
“Perhaps the hull sank after
the first crash on the rocks, and put out the fire,”
suggested Dominick, “and then subsequent gales
may have driven her higher up. Even now her
stern lies pretty deep, and everything in her hold
has been washed away.”
There could be no doubt as to the
latter point, for the deck had been blown up, probably
by gunpowder, near the main-hatch, leaving a great
hole, through which the hold could be seen almost as
far as the bulkhead of the forecastle.
Hastening forward to the hatchway
of this part of the vessel, in the feeble hope that
they might still find something that would be of use,
they descended quickly, but the first glance round
quenched such a hope, for the fire had done its work
there effectually, and, besides, there were obvious
indications that, what the fire had spared, her crew
had carried away. The only things left of any
value were the charred remnants of the hammocks and
bedding which had belonged to the sailors.
“Hurrah!” shouted Otto,
with a sudden burst of joy, as he leaped forward and
dragged out a quantity of the bedding; “here’s
what’ll make fire at last! You said, Dom,
that burnt rag was capital tinder. Well, here
we have burnt sheets enough to last us for years to
come!”
“That’s true,” returned
Dominick, laughing at his brother’s enthusiasm;
“let’s go aft and see if we can stumble
on something more.”
But the examination of the after part
of the vessel yielded no fruit. As we have said,
that part was sunk deeply, so that only the cabin
skylight was above water, and, although they both gazed
intently down through the water with which the cabin
was filled, they could see nothing whatever.
With a boat-hook which they found jammed in the port
bulwarks, they poked and groped about for a considerable
time, but hooked nothing, and were finally obliged
to return empty-handed to the anxious Pauline.
Otto did not neglect, however, to
carry off a pocketful of burnt-sheeting, by means
of which, with flint and steel, they were enabled
that night to eat their supper by the blaze of a cheering
fire. The human heart when young, does not quickly
or easily give way to despondency. Although
the Rigondas had thus been cast on an island in the
equatorial seas, and continued week after week to dwell
there, living on wild fruits and eggs, and such animals
and birds as they managed to snare, with no better
shelter than a rocky cavern, and with little prospect
of a speedy release, they did not by any means mourn
over their lot.
“You see,” remarked Otto,
one evening when his sister wondered, with a sigh,
whether their mother had yet begun to feel very anxious
about them, “you see, she could not have expected
to hear much before this time, for the voyage to Eastern
seas is always a long one, and it is well known that
vessels often get blown far out of their courses by
monsoons, and simoons, and baboons, and such like southern
hurricanes, so motherkins won’t begin to grow
anxious, I hope, for a long time yet, and it’s
likely that before she becomes very uneasy about
us, some ship or other will pass close enough to see
our signals and take us off so-”
“By the way,” interrupted
Dominick, “have you tried to climb our signal-tree,
as you said you would do, to replace the flag that
was blown away by last night’s gale?”
“Of course not. There’s
no hurry, Dom,” answered Otto, who, if truth
must be told, was not very anxious to escape too soon
from his present romantic position, and thought that
it would be time enough to attract the attention of
any passing vessel when they grew tired of their solitude.
“Besides,” he continued, with that tendency
to self-defence which is so natural to fallen humanity,
“I’m not a squirrel to run up the straight
stem of a branchless tree, fifty feet high or more.”
“No, my boy, you’re not
a squirrel, but, as I have often told you, you are
a monkey-at least, monkey enough to accomplish
your ends when you have a mind to.”
“Now, really you are too hard,”
returned Otto, who was busily employed as he spoke
in boring a hole through a cocoa-nut to get at the
milk, “you know very well that the branch of
the neighbouring tree by which we managed to reach
the branches of the signal-tree has been blown away,
so that the thing is impossible, for the stem is far
too big to be climbed in the same way as I get up
the cocoa-nut trees.”
“That has nothing to do with
the question,” retorted Dominick, “you
said you would try.”
Otto looked with an injured expression
at his sister and asked what she thought of a man
being required to attempt impossibilities.
“Not a man-a monkey,” interjected
his brother.
“Whether man or monkey,”
said Pauline, in her quiet but decided way, “if
you promised to attempt the thing, you are bound to
try.”
“Well, then, I will try, and
here, I drink success to the trial.” Otto
applied the cocoa-nut to his lips, and took a long
pull. “Come along, now, the sooner I prove
the impossibility the better.”
Rising at once, with an injured expression,
the boy led the way towards a little eminence close
at hand, on the top of which grew a few trees of various
kinds, the tallest of these being the signal-tree,
to which Dominick had fixed one of the half-burnt
pieces of sheeting, brought from the wreck.
The stem was perfectly straight and seemingly smooth,
and as they stood at its foot gazing up to the fluttering
little piece of rag that still adhered to it, the
impossibility of the ascent became indeed very obvious.
“Now, sir, are you convinced?” said Otto.
“No, sir, I am not convinced,” returned
Dominick.
“You said you would try.”
Without another word Otto grasped
the stem of the tree with arms and legs, and did his
best to ascend it. He had, in truth, so much
of the monkey in him, and was so wiry and tough, that
he succeeded in getting up full twelve or fourteen
feet before being utterly exhausted. At that
point, however, he stuck, but instead of slipping down
as he had intended, and again requesting to know whether
his brother was convinced, he uttered a sharp cry,
and shouted-
“Oh! I say, Dom, what am I to do?”
“Why, slip down, of course.”
“But I can’t. The
bark seems to be made of needle-joints, all sticking
upwards. If I try to slip, my trousers vill remain
behind, and-and-I can’t
hold on much longer!”
“Let go then, and drop,” said Dominick,
stepping close to the tree.
“Oh no, don’t!”
cried Pauline, with a little shriek; “if you
do you’ll- you’ll-”
“Bust! Yes, I know I shall,” shouted
Otto, in despair.
“No fear,” cried Dominick, holding out
his arms, “let go, I’ll cat-”
He was stopped abruptly by receiving
a shock from his little brother which sent him sprawling
on his back. He sprang up, however, with a gasp.
“Why, boy, I had no idea you were so heavy,”
he exclaimed, laughing.
“Now, don’t you go boasting
in future, you prime minister, that I can’t
knock you down,” said Otto, as he gathered himself
up. “But I say, you’re not hurt,
are you?” he added, with a look of concern, while
Pauline seized one of Dominick’s hands and echoed
the question.
“Not in the least-only
a little wind knocked out of me. Moreover, I’m
not yet convinced that the ascent of that tree is an
impossibility.”
“You’ll have to do it
yourself, then,” said Otto; “and let me
warn you beforehand that, though I’m very grateful
to you, I won’t stand under to catch you.”
“Was it not you who said the
other night at supper that whatever a fellow resolved
to do he could accomplish, and added that, where there’s
a will, there’s a way?”
“I rather think it was you,
Dom, who gave expression to those boastful sentiments.”
“It may be so. At all
events I hold them. Come, now, lend a hand and
help me. The work will take some time, as we
have no other implements than our gully-knives, but
we’ll manage it somehow.”
“Can I not help you?” asked Pauline.
“Of course you can. Sit
down on the bank here, and I’ll give you something
to do presently.”
Dominick went, as he spoke, to a small
tree, the bark of which was long, tough, and stringy.
Cutting off a quantity of this, he took it to his
sister, and showed her how to twist some of it into
stout cordage. Leaving her busily at work on
this, he went down to the nearest bamboo thicket and
cut a stout cane. It took some time to cut, for
the bamboo was hard and the knife small for such work.
From the end of the cane he cut off a piece about
a foot in length.
“Now, Otto, my boy, you split
that into four pieces, and sharpen the end of each
piece, while I cut off another foot of the bamboo.”
“But what are you going to do
with these bits of stick?” asked Otto, as he
went to work with a will.
“You shall see. No use
in wasting time with explanations just now. I
read of the plan in a book of travels. There’s
nothing like a good book of travels to put one up
to numerous dodges.”
“I’m not so sure o’
that,” objected the boy. “I have
read Robinson Crusoe over and over, and over
again, and I don’t recollect reading of his
having made use of pegs to climb trees with.”
“Your memory may be at fault,
perhaps. Besides, Robinson’s is not the
only book of travels in the world,” returned
Dominick, as he hacked away at the stout bamboo.
“No; but it is certainly the
best,” returned Otto, with enthusiasm, “and
I mean to imitate its hero.”
“Don’t do that, my boy,”
said Dominick; “whatever you do, don’t
imitate. Act well the part allotted to you, whatever
it may be, according to the promptings of your own
particular nature; but don’t imitate.”
“Humph! I won’t
be guided by your wise notions, Mr Premier. All
I know is, that I wish my clothes would wear out faster,
so that I might dress myself in skins of some sort.
I would have made an umbrella by this time, but it
never seems to rain in this country.”
“Ha! Wait till the rainy
season comes round, and you’ll have more than
enough of it. Come, we’ve got enough of
pegs to begin with. Go into the thicket now;
cut some of the longest bamboos you can find, and bring
them to me; six or eight will do-slender
ones, about twice the thickness of my thumb at the
ground.”
While Otto was engaged in obeying
this order, his brother returned to the signal-tree.
“Well done, Pina,” he
said; “you’ve made some capital cordage.”
“What are you going to do now, brother?”
“You shall see,” said
Dominick, picking up a heavy stone to use as a hammer,
with which he drove one of the hard, sharp pegs into
the tree, at about three feet from the ground.
We have said the peg was a foot long. As he
fixed it in the tree about three inches deep, nine
inches of it projected. On this he placed his
foot and raised himself to test its strength.
It bore his weight well. Above this first peg
he fixed a second, three feet or so higher, and then
a third about level with his face.
“Ah! I see,” exclaimed
Otto, coming up at that moment with several long bamboos.
“But, man, don’t you see that if one of
these pegs should give way while you’re driving
those above it, down you come by the run, and, if
you should be high up at the time, death will be probable-lameness
for life, certain.”
Dominick did not condescend to answer
this remark, but, taking one of the bamboos, stood
it up close to the tree, not touching, but a few inches
from the trunk, and bound it firmly with the cord to
the three pegs. Thus he had the first three
rounds or rungs of an upright ladder, one side of
which was the tree, the other the bamboo. Mounting
the second of these rungs he drove in a fourth peg,
and fastened the bamboo to it in the same way, and
then, taking another step, he fixed a fifth peg.
Thus, step by step, he mounted till he had reached
between fifteen and twenty feet from the ground, where
the upright bamboo becoming too slender, another was
called for and handed up by Otto. This was lashed
to the first bamboo, as well as to three of the highest
pegs, and the operation was continued. When
the thin part of the second long bamboo was reached,
a third was added; and so the work progressed until
the ladder was completed, and the lower branches of
the tree were gained.
Long before that point, however, Otto
begged to be allowed to continue and finish the work,
which his brother agreed to, and, finally, the signal
flag was renewed, by the greater part of an old hammock
being lashed to the top of the tree.
But weeks and months passed away,
and the flag continued to fly without attracting the
attention of any one more important, or more powerful
to deliver them, than the albatross and the wild sea-mew.
During this period the ingenuity and
inventive powers of the party were taxed severely,
for, being utterly destitute of tools of any kind,
with the exception of the gully-knives before mentioned,
they found it extremely difficult to fashion any sort
of implement.
“If we had only an axe or a
saw,” said Otto one morning, with a groan of
despair, “what a difference it would make.”
“Isn’t there a proverb,”
said Pauline, who at the time was busy making cordage
while Otto was breaking sticks for the fire, “which
says that we never know our mercies till we lose them?”
“Perhaps there is,” said
Otto, “and if there isn’t, I don’t
care. I don’t like proverbs, they always
tell you in an owlishly wise sort o’ way what
you know only too well, at a time when you’d
rather not know it if possible. Now, if we only
had an axe-ever so small-I would
be able to fell trees and cut ’em up into big
logs, instead of spending hours every day searching
for dead branches and breaking them across my knee.
It’s not a pleasant branch of our business, I
can tell you.”
“But you have the variety of
hunting,” said his sister, “and that, you
know, is an agreeable as well as useful branch.”
“Humph! It’s not
so agreeable as I used to think it would be, when one
has to run after creatures that run faster than one’s-self,
and one is obliged to use wooden spears, and slings,
instead of guns. By the way, what a surprising,
I may say awful, effect a well-slung stone has on the
side of a little pig! I came upon a herd yesterday
in the cane-brake, and, before they could get away,
I slung a big stone at them, which caught the smallest
of the squeakers fair in the side. The sudden
squeal that followed the slap was so intense, that
I thought the life had gone out of the creature in
one agonising gush; but it hadn’t, so I slung
another stone, which took it in the head and dropt
it.”
“Poor thing! I wonder how you can be so
cruel.”
“Cruel!” exclaimed Otto,
“I don’t do it for pleasure, do I?
Pigs and other things have got to be killed if we
are to live.”
“Well, I suppose so,”
returned Pauline, with a sigh; “at all events
it would never do to roast and eat them alive.
But, about the axe. Is there no iron-work in
the wreck that might be fashioned into one?”
“Oh yes, sister dear,”
returned Otto, with a short laugh, “there’s
plenty of iron-work. Some crowbars and ringbolts,
and an anchor or two; but do you suppose that I can
slice off a bit of an anchor in the shape of an axe
as you slice a loaf?”
“Well no, not exactly, but I
thought there might be some small flat pieces that
could be made to do.”
“What is your difficulty,”
asked Dominick, returning from a hunting expedition
at that moment, and flinging down three brace of fowls
on the floor of the golden cave.
When the difficulty was stated, he
remarked that he had often pondered the matter while
lying awake at night, and when wandering in the woods;
and he had come to the conclusion that they must return
to what was termed the stone period of history, and
make their axes of flint.
Otto shook his head, and thought Pina’s
idea of searching the wreck till they found a piece
of flat metal was a more hopeful scheme.
“What do you say to trying both
plans?” cried Pauline, with sudden animation.
“Come, as you have voluntarily elected me queen
of this realm, I command you, Sir Dominick, to make
a flint axe without delay, and you, Sir Otto, to make
an iron one without loss of time.”
“Your majesty shall be obeyed,”
replied her obedient subjects, and to work they went
accordingly, the very next morning.
Dominick searched far and near for
a flint large enough for his purpose. He found
several, and tried to split them by laying them on
a flat stone, upheaving another stone as large as
he could lift, and hurling it down on them with all
his might. Sometimes the flint would fly from
under the stone without being broken, sometimes it
would be crushed to fragments, and at other times
would split in a manner that rendered it quite unsuitable.
At last, however, by patient perseverance, he succeeded
in splitting one so that an edge of it was thin and
sharp, while the other end was thick and blunt.
Delighted with this success, he immediately
cut with his knife, a branch of one of the hardest
trees he could find, and formed it into an axe-handle.
Some of Pauline’s cord he tied round the middle
of this, and then split it at one end, using his flint
for the purpose, and a stone for a hammer. The
split extended only as far as the cord, and he forced
it open by means of little stones as wedges until it
was wide enough to admit the thick end of his flint
axe-head. Using a piece of soft stone as a pencil,
he now marked the form of the flint, where it touched
the wood, exactly, and worked at this with his knife,
as patiently as a Chinaman, for several hours, until
the wood fitted the irregularities and indentations
of the flint to a nicety. This of itself caused
the wood to hold the flint-head very firmly.
Then the wedges were removed, and when the handle
was bound all round the split part with cord, and
the flint-head enveloped in the same, the whole thing
became like a solid mass.
Gingerly and anxiously did Dominick
apply it to a tree. To his joy his axe caused
the chips to fly in all directions. He soon stopped,
however, for fear of breaking it, and set off in triumph
to the golden cave.
Meanwhile Otto, launching the raft,
went on board the wreck to search for a suitable bit
of iron. As he had said, there was plenty on
board, but none of the size or shape that he required,
and he was about to quit in despair when he observed
the flat iron plates, about five inches square and
quarter of an inch thick, with a large hole in the
centre of each, which formed the sockets that held
the davits for suspending the ship’s boats.
A crowbar enabled him, after much trouble, to wrench
off one of these. A handspike was, after some
hours’ labour, converted into a handle with
one side cut flat. Laying the plate on this,
he marked its exact size, and then cut away the wood
until the iron sank its own thickness into it.
There were plenty of nails in the wreck; with these
he nailed the iron, through its own nail-holes, to
the hard handspike, and, still further to secure it,
he covered it with a little piece of flat wood, which
he bound firmly on with some cordage made by his sister
from cocoa-nut fibre. As the iron projected on
both sides of the handle, it thus formed a double-edged
axe of the most formidable appearance. Of course
the edges required grinding down, but this was a mere
matter of detail, to be accomplished by prolonged and
patient rubbing on a stone!
Otto arrived triumphantly at the golden
cave almost at the same moment with his brother, and
they both laid their axes at the feet of the queen.
“Thanks, my trusty vassals,”
she said; “I knew you would both succeed, and
had prepared a royal feast against your return.”
“To which I have brought a royal
appetite, your majesty,” said Otto.
“In truth so have I,” added Dominick.
There was a good deal of jesting in
all this; nevertheless the trio sat down to supper
that night highly pleased with themselves. While
eating, they discussed, with much animation, the merits
of the axes, and experienced no little difficulty
in deciding which was the better tool. At last
Pauline settled the matter by declaring that the iron
axe, being the strongest, was, perhaps, the best;
but as it was not yet sharpened, while Dominick’s
was ready for immediate use, the flint axe was in
present circumstances better.
“So then, being equal,”
said Otto, “and having had a splendid supper,
we will retire to rest.”
Thus, in devising means for increasing
their comforts, and supplying their daily necessities,
the days and weeks flew swiftly by.