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The Ocean Waifs: A Story of Adventure on Land and Sea
Unpleasant as this mishap may have been, it was not the worst that might have befallen him on that occasion. Nor was it the fall itself that caused him to “sing out” at the top of his voice, and in accents betokening a terrible alarm.
What produced this manifestation was a peril of far more fearful kind, which at the moment menaced him.
The spot where the harpoon had been sticking was in the side of the cachalot, and, as the carcass lay, a broad space around the weapon presented an inclined plane, sloping abruptly towards the water. Lubricated as it was with the secreted oil of the animal, it was smooth as glass. Upon this slope Snowball had been standing; and upon it had he fallen.
But the impetus of the fall not only hindered him from lying where he had gone down, but also from being able to get up again; and, instead of doing either one or the other, he commenced sliding down the slippery surface of the leviathan’s body, where it shelved towards the water.
Good heavens! what was to become of him? A score of sharks were just below, – waiting for him with hungry jaws, and eyes glancing greedily upward. Seeing the two men mounted upon the carcass of the whale, and one wielding an axe, they had gathered upon that side, – in the belief that the flensing was about to begin!
It was a slight circumstance that saved the sea-cook from being eaten up, – not only raw, but alive. Simply the circumstance of his having held on to the harpoon. Had he dropped that weapon on falling, it would never have been grasped by him again. Fortunately, he had the presence of mind to hold on to it; or perhaps the tenacity was merely mechanical. Whatever may have been the reason, he did hold on. Fortunately, also, he was gliding down on the side opposite to that on which floated the “drogue.”
These two circumstances saved him.
When about half-way to the water, – and still sliding rapidly downwards, – his progress was suddenly arrested, or rather impeded, – for he was not altogether brought to a stop, – by a circumstance as unexpected as it was fortunate. That was the tightening of the line attached to the handle of the harpoon. He had slidden to the end of his tether, – the other end of which was fast to the drogue drifting about in the sea, as already said, on the opposite side of the carcass.
Heavy as was the piece of wood, – and offering, as it did, a considerable amount of resistance in being dragged through the water, – it would not have been sufficient to sustain the huge body of the Coromantee. It only checked the rapidity of his descent; and in the end he would have gone down into the sea, – and shortly after into the stomachs of, perhaps, half a score of sharks, – but for the opportune interference of the ex-man-o’-war’s-man; who, just in the nick of time, – at the very moment when Snowball’s toes were within six inches of the water’s edge, caught hold of the cord and arrested his farther descent.
But although the sailor had been able to accomplish this much, and was also able to keep Snowball from slipping farther down, he soon discovered that he was unable to pull him up again. It was just as much as his strength was equal to, – even when supplemented by the weight of the drogue, – to keep the sea-cook in the place where he had succeeded in checking him. There hung Snowball in suspense, – holding on to the slippery skin of the cachalot, literally “with tooth and toe-nail.”
Snowball saw that his position was perilous, – more than that: it was frightful. He could hear noises beneath him, – the rushing of the sharks through the water. He glanced apprehensively below. He could see their black triangular fins, and note the lurid gleaming of their eyeballs, as they rolled in their sunken sockets. It was a sight to terrify the stoutest heart; and that of Snowball did not escape being terrified.
“Hole on, Massa Brace!” he instinctively shouted. “Hole on, for de lub o’ God! Doan’t leab me slip an inch, or dese dam brute sure cotch hold ob me! Fo’ de lub o’ de great Gorramity, hole on!”
Ben needed not the stimulus of this pathetic appeal. He was holding on to the utmost of his strength. He could not have added another pound to the pull. He dared not even renew either his attitude, or the grip he had upon the rope. The slightest movement he might make would endanger the life of his black-skinned comrade.
A slackening of the cord, even to the extent of twelve inches, would have been fatal to the feet of Snowball – already within six of the surface of the water and the snouts of the sharks!
Perhaps never in all his checkered career had the life of the negro been suspended in such dangerous balance. The slightest circumstance would have disturbed the equilibrium, – an ounce would have turned the scale, – and delivered him into the jaws of death.
It is scarcely necessary to conjecture what would ultimately have been the end of this perilous adventure, had the sailor and sea-cook been permitted to terminate it between themselves. The strength of the former was each instant decreasing; while the weight of the latter, – now more feebly clinging to the slippery epidermis of the whale, – was in like proportion becoming greater.
With nothing to intervene, the result might be easily guessed. In figurative parlance Snowball must have “gone overboard.”
But his time was not yet come; and his comrade knew this, when a pair of hands, – small, but strong ones, – were seen grasping the cord, alongside of his own. They were the hands of Little Will’m!
At the earliest moment, after Snowball had slipped and fallen, the lad had perceived his peril; and “swarming” up by the flipper of the whale, had hurried to the assistance of Ben, laying hold of the rope, – not one second too soon.
It was soon enough, however, to save the suspended Coromantee; whose body, now yielding to the united strength of the two, was drawn up the slippery slope, – slowly, but surely, – until it rested upon the broad horizontal space around the summit of that mountain of bones and blubber.
Chapter Sixty Three.
A Harpoon well handled
It was some time before either his breath or the tranquillity of his spirits was restored to the Coromantee.
The sailor was equally suffering from the loss of the former; and both remained for a good many minutes without taking any further steps towards the accomplishment of the design which had brought them on the back of the whale.
As soon, however, as Snowball could find wind enough for a few words, they were uttered in a tone of gratitude, – first to Ben, who had hindered him from sinking down into something worse than a watery grave; and then to little William, who had aided in raising him up from it.
Ben less regarded the old comrade whom he had rescued than the young one who had been instrumental in aiding him.
He stood gazing upon the youth with eyes that expressed a lively satisfaction.
The promptitude and prowess which his protégé had exhibited in the affair was to him a source of the greatest gratification.
Many a boy old as he, – ay, older, thought Ben Brace, – instead of having the sense shown by the lad in promptly running to the rescue, would have remained upon the raft in mute surprise; or, at the best, have evinced his sympathy by a series of unserviceable shouts, or a continued and idle screaming.
Ben did not wish to spoil his protégé by any spoken formula of praise, and therefore he said nothing: though, from his glances directed towards little William, it was easy to see that the bosom of the brave tar was swelling with a fond pride in the youth, for whom he had long felt an affection almost equalling that of a father.
After indulging a short while in the mutual congratulations that naturally follow such a crisis of danger, all three proceeded to the execution of the duty so unexpectedly interrupted.
William had succeeded Snowball in that simple culinary operation which the latter, commanded by his captain, had so suddenly relinquished.
The lad now returned to the raft, partly to complete the process of broiling the fish; but perhaps with a greater desire to tranquillise the fears of Lilly Lalee, – who, ignorant of the exact upshot of what had transpired, was yet in a state of unpleasant agitation.
Ben only waited for the return of his breath; and as soon as that was fairly restored to him, he once more set about the design that had caused him for the second time to climb upon the back of the cachalot.
Taking the harpoon from the hands of the Coromantee, – who still kept clutching it, as if there was danger in letting it go, – the sailor proceeded to draw up the drogue. Assisted by Snowball, he soon raised it out of the water, and hoisted it to the horizontal platform, on which they had placed themselves.
He did not want the block of wood just then, – only the line tied to it; and this having been detached, the drogue was left lying upon the carcass.
Armed with the harpoon, the ci-devant whaleman now took a survey, – not of the land, but of the sea around him.
There was an assemblage of sharks close in to the body of the whale, – at the spot where they had so lately threatened Snowball.
Some of them had since scattered away, with a full consciousness of their disappointment; but the greater number had stayed, as if unsatisfied, or expecting that the banquet that had been so near their noses might be brought back to them.
Ben’s purpose was to harpoon some half-dozen of these ill-featured denizens of the deep, and with their flesh replenish the stores of the Catamaran; for repulsive as the brutes may appear to the eye, and repugnant to the thoughts, they nevertheless, – that is, certain species of them, and certain parts of these species, – afford excellent food: such as an epicure, – to say nothing of a man half-famished, – may eat with sufficient relish.
There could have been no difficulty in destroying any of the sharks so late threatening to swallow Snowball, had the harpooner been able to get within striking distance of them. But the slippery skin of the whale deterred the sailor from trusting himself on that dangerous incline; and he determined, therefore, to try elsewhere.
In the direction of the cachalot’s tail the descent was gradual. Scarcely perceptible was its declination towards the water, upon which lay the two great flukes, slightly sunk below the surface, and extending on each side to a breadth of many yards.
There were several sharks playing around the tail of the cachalot. They might come within the pitch of a harpoon. If not, the old whaleman knew how to attract them within easy reach of that formidable weapon.
Directing Snowball to bring after him some of the pieces of blubber, – which, in cutting out the harpoon, had been detached from the carcass, – Ben proceeded towards the tail. Here and there as he advanced, with the sharp edge of the harpoon blade; he cut out a number of holes in the spongy skin, in order to give both himself and his follower a more sure footing on the slimy surface.
At the point where he intended to take his stand, – close in by the “crutch” of the cachalot’s tail-fin, – he made three excavations with more care. At length, satisfied with his preparations, he stood, with pointed harpoon, waiting for we of the sharks to come within striking distance. They “fought shy” at first; but the old whaleman knew a way of overcoming their shyness. It only required that “chunk” of blubber, held in the hands of Snowball, to be thrown into the water, and simultaneous with the plunge a score of sharks would be seen rushing, open-mouthed, to seize upon it.
This in effect was precisely what transpired.
The blubber was dropped into the sea, close as possible to the carcass of the whale, – the sharks came charging towards it, – nearly twenty of them. The same number, however, did not go back as they had come; for one of them, impaled by the harpoon of Ben Brace, was dragged out of his native element, and hauled up the well-greased incline towards the highest point on the carcass of the cachalot.
There, notwithstanding his struggles and the desperate as well as dangerous fluking of his posterior fins, he was soon despatched by the axe, wielded with all the might and dexterity which the Coromantee could command.
Another shark was “hooked,” and then despatched in a similar fashion; and then another and another, until Ben Brace believed that enough shark-flesh had been obtained to furnish the Catamaran with stores for the most prolonged voyage.
At all events, they would now have food – such as it was – to last as long as the water with which the hand of Providence alone seemed to have provided them.
Chapter Sixty Four.
The thick Waters
The most palatable portions of the sharks’ flesh having been stripped from the bones and cut into thin slices, were now to be submitted to a drying, or rather broiling process. This was to be accomplished by a fire of spermaceti.
As already stated, there was no scarcity on the score of this fuel. The “case” of the cachalot contained enough to have roasted all the sharks within a circle of ten mile around it; and, to all appearance, there were hundreds of them inside that circumference. Indeed, that part of the ocean where the dead whale had been found, though far from any land, is at all times most prolific in animal life. Sometimes the sea for miles around a ship will be seen swarming with fish of various kinds, while the air is filled with birds. In the water may be seen large “schools” of whales, “basking” – as the whalers term it – at intervals, “spouting” forth their vaporous breath, or moving slowly onward, – some of them, every now and then, exhibiting their uncouth gambols. Shoals of porpoises, albacores, bonitos, and other gregarious fishes will appear in the same place, – each kind in pursuit of its favourite prey, while sharks, threshers, and sword-fish, accompanied by their “pilots” and “suckers,” though in lesser numbers, here also abound, – from the very abundance of the species on which these sea-monsters subsist “Flocks” of flying-fish sparkle in the sun with troops of bonitos gliding watchful below, while above them the sky will sometimes be literally clouded with predatory birds, – gulls, boobies, gannets, tropic and frigate-birds, albatrosses, and a score of other kinds but little known, and as yet undescribed by the naturalist.
It may be asked why so many creatures of different kinds congregate in this part of the ocean? Upon what do they subsist? what food can they find so far from land?
A ready reply to these questions may be given, by saying, that they subsist upon each other; and this would be, to some extent, true. But then there must be a base forming the food for all, and produced by some process of nature. What process can be going on in the midst of the ocean to furnish the subsistence of such myriads of large and voracious creatures? In the waters of the great deep, apparently so pure and clear, one would think that no growth, – either animal or vegetable, could spring up, – that nothing could come out of nothing. For all this, in that pure, clear water, there is a continual process of production, – not only from the soil at the bottom of the sea, but the salt-water itself contains the germs of material substances, that sustain life, or become, themselves, living things, by what appears, to our ignorant eyes, spontaneous production.
There is no spontaneity in the matter. It is simply the principle of creation, and acting under laws and by ways that, however ill-understood by us, have existed from the beginning of the world.
It is true that the whole extent of the great oceans are not thus thickly peopled. Vast tracts may be traversed, where both fish and birds of all kinds are extremely scarce; and a ship may sail for days without seeing an individual of either kind. A hundred miles may be passed over, and the eye may not be gratified by the sight of a living thing, – either in the water or the air. These tracts may truly be termed the deserts of the sea; like those of the land, apparently uninhabited and uninhabitable.
It may be asked, Why this difference, since the sea seems all alike? The cause lies not in a difference of depth: for the tracts that teem with life are variable in this respect, – sometimes only a few fathoms in profundity, and sometime unfathomable.
The true explanation must be sought for elsewhere. It will be found not in depth, but in direction, – in the direction of the currents.
Every one knows that the great oceans are intersected here and there by currents, – often hundreds of miles in breadth, but sometimes narrowing to a width of as many “knots.” These oceanic streams are regular, though not regularly defined. They are not caused by mere temporary storms, but by winds having a constant and regular direction; as the “trades” in the Atlantic and Pacific, the “monsoons” in the Indian Ocean, the “pamperos” of South America, and the “northers” of the Mexican Gulf.
There is another cause for these currents, perhaps of more powerful influence than the winds, yet less taken into account. It is the spinning of the earth on its axis. Undoubtedly are the “trades” indebted to this for their direction towards the west, – the simple centrifugal tendency of the atmosphere. Otherwise, would these winds blow due northward and southward, coming into collision on the line of the equator.
But it is not my purpose to attempt a dissertation either on winds or oceanic streams. I am not learned enough for this, though enough to know that great misconception prevails on this subject, as well as upon that of the tides; and that meteorologists have not given due credit to the revolving motion of our planet, which is in truth the principal producer of these phenomena.
Why I have introduced the subject at all is, not because our little book is peculiarly a book of the ocean, but, because that ocean currents have much to do with “Ocean Waifs,” and that these last afford the true explanation of the phenomenon first-mentioned, – the fact that some parts of the ocean teem with animal life, while others are as dead as a desert. The currents account for it, thus: – where two of them meet, – as is often the case, – vast quantities of material substances, both vegetable and animal, are drifted together; where they are held, to a certain extent, stationary; or circling around in great ocean eddies. The wrack of sea-weed, – waifs from the distant shores, – birds that have fallen lifeless into the ocean, or drop their excrement to float on its surface, – fish that have died of disease, violence, or naturally, – for the finny tribes are not exempt from the natural laws of decay and death, – all these organisms, drifted by the currents, meet upon the neutral “ground,” – there to float about, and furnish food to myriads of living creatures, – many species of which are, to all appearance, scarce organised more highly than the decomposed matters that appear first to give them life, and afterwards sustain their existence.
In such tracts of the ocean are found the lower marine animals, in incalculable numbers; the floating shell-fish, as Janthina, Hyalaea and Cleodora; the sea-lizards, as Velellae, Porpitae, and their kindred; the squids, and other molluscs; with myriads of medusa.
These are the oceanic regions known to the sailors as “thick waters,” the favourite resort of the whale and its concomitant creatures, whose food they furnish; the shark, and its attendants; the dolphins, porpoises, sword-fish and flying-fish; with other denizens of the water; and a like variety of dwellers in the air, hovering above the surface, either as the enemies of those below, or aids to assist them in composing the inscrutable “chain of destruction.”
Chapter Sixty Five.
A Whale on Fire!
Perhaps we have drifted too far adown the currents of the ocean. From our digression let us return to out special “Waifs.” We left them making preparations to roast the shark-flesh, – not in single steaks, but in a wholesale fashion, – as if they had intended to prepare a “fish dinner” for the full crew of a frigate.
As already stated, fuel they had in sufficiency; or, at all events, the best of oil, that would serve as such. The spermaceti could not be readily kindled, nor its blaze kept up, without wicks. But neither was there any difficulty about this. There was a quantity of old rope trash on the raft, which had been fished up among the wreck of the Pandora, and kept in case of an emergency. It needed only to restore this to its original state of tarry fibre, when they would be provided with wick enough to keep the lamp long burning. It was the lamp itself, or rather the cooking furnace, that caused them uneasiness. They had none. The tiny tin vessel that had already served for a single meal would never do for the grand roti they now designed making. With it, along with time and patience, they might have accomplished the task; but time to them was too precious to be so wasted; and as to patience, – circumstanced as they were, it could scarcely be expected.
They stood in great need of a cooking-stove. There was nothing on board the Catamaran that could be used as a substitute. Indeed, to have kindled such a fire as they wanted on the raft, – without a proper material for their hearth, – would have seriously endangered the existence of the craft; and might have terminated in a conflagration.
It was a dilemma that had not suggested itself sooner – that is, until the shark-steaks had been made ready for roasting. Then it presented itself to their contemplation in full force, and apparently without any loophole to escape from it.
What was to be done for a cooking-stove?
Snowball sighed as he thought of his caboose, with all its paraphernalia of pots and pans, – especially his great copper, in which he had been accustomed to boil mountains of meat and oceans of pea-soup.
But Snowball was not the individual to give way to vain regrets, – at least, not for long. Despite that absence of that superior intellect, – which flippant gossips of so-called a “Social Science” delight in denying to his race, themselves often less gifted than he, – Snowball was endowed with rare ingenuity, – especially in matters relating to the cuisine, and in less than ten minutes after the question of a cooking-stove had been started, the Coromantee conceived the idea of one that might have vied with any of the various “patents” so loudly extolled by the ironmongers, and yet not so effective when submitted to the test. At all events, Snowball’s plan was suited to the circumstances in which its contriver was placed; and perhaps it was the only one which the circumstances would have allowed.
Unlike other inventors, the Coromantee proclaimed the plan of his invention as soon as he had conceived it.
“Wha’ for?” he asked, as the idea shaped itself in his skull, – “wha’ for we trouble ’bout a pot fo’ burn de oil?”
“What for, Snowy!” echoed the sailor, turning upon his interrogator an expectant look.
“Why we no make de fire up hya?”
The conversation was carried on upon the back of the whale, – where the sharks had been butchered and cut up.
“Up here!” again echoed the sailor, still showing surprise. “What matter whether it be up here or down theear, so long’s we’ve got no vessel, – neyther pot nor pan?”
“Doan care a dam fo’ neyder,” responded the ex-cook. “I’se soon show ye, Mass’ Brace, how we find vessel, big ’nuff to hold all de oil in de karkiss ob de ole cashlot, as you call him.”
“Explain, nigger, explain!”
“Sartin I do. Gib me dat axe. I soon ’splain de whole sarkumstance.”
Ben passed the axe, which he had been holding, into the hands of the Coromantee.
The latter, as he had promised, soon made his meaning clear, by setting to work upon the carcass of the cachalot, and with less than a dozen blows of the sharp-edged tool hollowing out a large cavity in the blubber.
“Now, Mass’ Brace,” cried he, when he had finished, triumphantly balancing the axe above his shoulder, “wha’ you call dat? Dar’s a lamp hold all de oil we want set blaze. You d’sire me ‘crow’ de hole any wida or deepa, I soon make ’im deep’s a draw-well an’ wide as de track ob a waggon. Wha’ say, Mass’ Brace?”