<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></SPAN>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<h3>RESCUED.</h3>
<p>This is a thing easy to recall, but how am I to convey the reality of
it? What is there in ink to put before you that wide scene of
starlighted gloom, the dusky shapes of swell for ever running
noiselessly at us—no sounds save the occasional creaking of the raft as
she was swayed—the motionless, black outlines of Helga and myself
overhanging the pallid streak of cot—at intervals a low sob breaking
from the girl's heart, and the overwhelming sense of present danger, of
hopelessness, made blacker yet by the night? And amid all this the crazy
babbling of the dying Dane, now in English and now in his native tongue!</p>
<p>It was just upon the stroke of one o'clock in the morning when he died.
I had brought my watch to the lamp, when he fetched a sort of groaning
breath, of a character that caused me to bend my ear to his lips: and I
found that he had ceased to breathe. I continued to listen, and then, to
make sure, cast the light of the lamp upon him.</p>
<p>'He has gone!' cried Helga.</p>
<p>'God has taken him,' said I. 'Come to this side, and sit by me!'</p>
<p>She did as I asked, and I took her hand. I knew by her respiration that
she was weeping, and I held my peace till her grief should have had some
vent. I then spoke of her father, represented that his ailments must in
all probability have carried him off almost as swiftly ashore; that he
had died a peaceful death, with his daughter beside him, and his wife
and home present in a vision to his gaze; and said that, so far from
grieving, we should count it a mercy that he had been called away thus
easily, for who was to imagine what lay before us—what sufferings,
which must have killed him certainly later on?</p>
<p>'His heart broke when his barque sank,' said she. 'I heard it in his
cry.'</p>
<p>This might very well have been too.</p>
<p>Never was there so long a night. The moon was behind the sea, and after
she was gone the very march of the stars seemed arrested, as though
nature had cried 'Halt!' to the universe. Having run the lamp aloft, I
resolved to leave it there, possessed now with such a superstitious
notion as might well influence a shipwrecked man, that if I lowered it
again no vessel would appear. Therefore, to tell the time, I was obliged
to strike a match, and whenever I did this I would stare at my watch and
put it to my ear and doubt the evidence of my sight, so inexpressibly
slow was the passage of those hours.</p>
<p>Helga's sobs ceased. She sat by my side, speaking seldom after we had
exhausted our first talk on her coming round to where I was. I wished
her to sleep, and told her that I could easily make a couch for her, and
that my oilskin would protect her from the dew. I still held her hand as
I said this, and I felt the shudder that ran through her when she
replied that she could not lie down, that she could not sleep. Perhaps
she feared I would disturb her father's body to make a bed for her; and,
indeed, there was nothing on the raft, but the poor fellow's cloak and
his pillows and blankets, out of which I could have manufactured a bed.</p>
<p>Had I been sure that he was dead, I should have slipped the body
overboard while it remained dark, so that Helga should not have been
able to see what I did; but I had not the courage to bury him merely
because I believed he was dead, because he lay there motionless; and I
was constantly thinking how I should manage when the dawn came—how I
was so to deal with the body as to shock and pain poor Helga as little
as possible.</p>
<p>As we sat side by side, I felt a small pressure of her shoulder against
my arm, and supposed that she had fallen asleep, but, on my whispering,
she immediately answered. Dead tired I knew the brave girl must be, but
sleep could not visit eyes whose gaze I might readily guess was again
and again directed at the faint pale figure of the cot.</p>
<p>The light air shifted into the north-west at about three o'clock in the
morning, and blew a small breeze which extinguished the star-flakes that
here and there rode upon the swell, and raised a noise of tinkling,
rippling waters along the sides of the raft. I guessed this new
direction of the wind by my observation of a bright greenish star which
had hung in the wake of the moon, and was now low in the west. This
light breeze kindled a little hope in me, and I would rise again and
again to peer into the quarter whence it blew, in the expectation of
spying some pale shadow of ship. Once Helga, giving a start, exclaimed:</p>
<p>'Hush! I seem to hear the throb of a steamer's engines!'</p>
<p>We both stood up hand in hand, for the sway of the raft made a danger of
it as a platform, and I listened with strained hearing. It might have
been a steamer, but there was no blotch of darkness upon the obscurity
the sea-line round to denote her, nor any gleam of lantern. Yet for
nearly a quarter of an hour did we listen, in a torment of attention,
and then resumed our seats side by side.</p>
<p>The dawn broke at last, dispelling, as it seemed to my weary despairing
imagination, a long month of perpetual night. The cold gray was slow and
stealthy, and was a tedious time in brightening into the silver and rose
of sunrise. My first act was to sweep the sea for a ship, and I then
went to the cot and looked at the face upon the pillows in it. If I had
never seen death before, I might have known it now. I turned to the
girl.</p>
<p>'Helga,' said I gently, 'you can guess what my duty is—for your sake,
and for mine, and for his too.'</p>
<p>I looked earnestly at her as I spoke: she was deadly pale, haggard, her
eyes red and inflamed with weeping, and her expression one of exquisite
touching sorrow and mourning. But the sweetness of her young countenance
was dominant even in that supreme time, and, blending with the visible
signs of misery in her looks, raised the mere prettiness of her features
into a sad beauty that impressed me as a spiritual rather than as a
physical revelation.</p>
<p>'Yes, I know what must be done,' she answered. 'Let me kiss him first.'</p>
<p>She approached the cot, knelt by it, and put her lips to her father's:
then raising her clasped hands above her head, and looking upwards, she
cried out: '<i>Jeg er faderlös! Gud hjelpe mig!</i>'</p>
<p>I stood apart waiting, scarcely able to draw my breath for the pity and
sorrow that tightened my throat. It is impossible to imagine the
plaintive wailing note her voice had as she uttered those Danish words:
'<i>I am fatherless! God help me!</i>' She then hid her face in her hands,
and remained kneeling and praying.</p>
<p>After a few minutes she arose, kissed again the white face, and seated
herself with her back upon the cot.</p>
<p>No one could have named to me a more painful, a more distasteful piece
of work than the having to handle the body of this poor Danish captain,
and launch him into that fathomless grave upon whose surface we lay.
First I had to remove the ropes which formed our little bulwark, that I
might slide the cot overboard; then with some ends of line I laced the
figure in the cot, that it should not float away out of it when
launched. The work kept me close to the body, and, thin and white as he
was, yet he looked so lifelike, wore an expression so remonstrant, that
my horror was sensibly tinctured with a feeling of guilt, as though
instead of burying him I was about to drown him.</p>
<p>I made all despatch possible for Helga's sake, but came to a pause, when
the cot was ready, to look about me for a sinker. There was nothing
that I could see but the jars, and, as they contained our little stock
of spirits and fresh water, they were altogether too precious to send to
the bottom. I could do no more than hope that the canvas would speedily
grow saturated, then fill and sink; and, putting my hands to the cot, I
dragged it to the edge of the raft, and went round to the head and
pushed.</p>
<p>It was midway over the side, when a huge black rat sprang from among the
blankets out through the lacing, and disappeared under the hatch-cover.
I had no doubt it was the same rat that had leapt from my shoulder
aboard the barque. If it had terrified me there, you will guess the
shock it caused me now! I uttered some cry in the momentary
consternation raised in me by this beastly apparition of life flashing,
so to speak, out of the very figure and stirlessness of death, and Helga
looked and called to know what was the matter.</p>
<p>'Nothing, nothing,' I replied. 'Turn your eyes from me, Helga!'</p>
<p>She immediately resumed her former posture, covering her face with her
hands. The next moment I had thrust the cot fair into the sea, and it
slid off to a distance of twice or thrice its own length, and lay rising
and falling, to all appearances buoyant as the raft itself. I knew it
would sink so soon as the canvas and blankets were soaked, yet that
might take a little while in doing, and dreading lest Helga should
look—for you will readily conceive how dreadful would be to the girl
that sight of her father afloat in the square of canvas, his face
showing clearly through the lacing of rope—I went to her, and put my
arm round her, and so, but without speaking, obliged her to keep her
face away. I gathered from her passiveness that she understood me. When
I glanced again, the cot was in the act of sinking; in a few beats of
the heart it vanished, and all was blank ocean to the heavens—a
prospect of little flashful and feathering ripples, but glorious as
molten and sparkling silver in the east under the soaring sun.</p>
<p>I withdrew my hand from Helga's shoulder. She then looked, and sighed
heavily, but no more tears flowed. I believe she had wept her heart dry!</p>
<p>'In what words am I to thank you for your kindness and sympathy?' said
she. 'My father and my mother are looking down upon us, and they will
bless you.'</p>
<p>'We must count on being saved, Helga,' said I, forcing a cheerful note
into my voice. 'You will see Kolding again, and I shall hope to see it
too, by your side.' And, with the idea of diverting her mind from her
grief, I told her of my promise to her father, and how happy it would
make me to accompany her to Denmark.</p>
<p>'I have been too much of a home bird,' said I. 'You will provide me with
a good excuse for a ramble, Helga; but first you shall meet my dear old
mother, and spend some time with us. I am to save your life, you know. I
am here for that purpose;' and so I continued to talk to her, now and
again coaxing a light sorrowful smile to her lips; but it was easy to
know where her heart was; all the while she was sending glances at the
sea close to the raft, where she might guess the cot had sunk, and twice
I overheard her whisper to herself that same passionate, grieving
sentence she had uttered when she kissed her father's dead face: '<i>Jeg
er faderlös! Gud hjelpe mig!</i>'</p>
<p>The morning stole away. Very soon after I had buried the Captain I
lowered the lamp, and sent the Danish flag we had brought with us to the
head of the little mast, where it blew out bravely, and promised to
boldly court any passing eye that might be too distant to catch a sight
of our flat platform of raft. I then got breakfast, and induced Helga to
eat and drink. Somehow, whether it was because of the sick complaining
Captain, with his depressing menace of death, being gone, or because of
the glad sunshine, the high marbling of the heavens, full of fine
weather, and the quiet of the sea, with its placid heave of swell and
its twinkling of prismatic ripples, my heart felt somewhat light, my
burden of despondency was easier to carry, was less crushing to my
spirits. What to hope for I did not know. I needed no special wisdom to
guess that if we were not speedily delivered from this raft we were as
certainly doomed as though we had clung to the barque and gone down in
her. Yet spite of this there was a stirring of hope in me. It seemed
impossible but that some ship must pass us before the day was gone. How
far we had blown to the southward and westward during the gale I could
not have told, but I might be sure we were not very distant from the
mouth of the English Channel, and therefore in the fair way of vessels
inward and outward bound, more particularly of steamers heading for
Portuguese and Mediterranean ports.</p>
<p>But hour after hour passed, and nothing hove into view. The sun went
floating from his meridian into the west, and still the horizon remained
a blank, near, heaving line, with the sky whitening to the ocean rim.
Again and again Helga sought the boundary, as I did. Side by side we
would stand, she holding by my arm, and together we gazed, slowly
sweeping the deep.</p>
<p>'It is strange!' she once said, after a long and thirsty look. 'We are
not in the middle of the ocean. Not even the smoke of a steamer!'</p>
<p>'Our horizon is narrow,' answered I. 'Does it exceed three miles? I
should say not, save when the swell lifts us, and then, perhaps, we may
see four. Four miles of sea!' I cried. 'There may be a dozen ships
within three leagues of us, all of them easily within sight from the
maintop of the <i>Anine</i>, were she afloat. But what, short of a straight
course for the raft, could bring this speck of timber on which we stand
into view? This is the sort of situation to make one understand what is
signified by the immensity of the ocean.'</p>
<p>She shivered and clasped her hands.</p>
<p>'That I—that we,' she exclaimed, speaking slowly and almost under her
breath, 'should have brought you to this pass, Mr. Tregarthen! It was
our fate by rights—but it ought not to be yours!'</p>
<p>'You asked me to call you Helga,' said I; 'and you must give me my
Christian name.'</p>
<p>'What is it?' she asked.</p>
<p>'Hugh.'</p>
<p>'It is a pretty name. If we are spared, it will be sweet to my memory
while I have life!'</p>
<p>She said this with an exquisite artlessness, with an expression of
wonderful sweetness and gentleness in her eyes, which were bravely
fastened upon me, and then, suddenly catching up my hand, put her lips
to it and pressed it to her heart, letting it fall as she turned her
face upon the water on that side of the raft where her father's body had
sunk.</p>
<p>My spirits, which remained tolerably buoyant while the sun stood high,
sank as he declined. The prospect of another long night upon the raft,
and of all that might happen in a night, was insupportable. I had
securely bound the planks together, as I believed, but the constant play
of the swell was sure to tell after a time. One of the ligatures might
chafe through, and in a minute the whole fabric scatter under our feet
like the staves of a stove boat, and leave us no more than a plank to
hold on by in the midst of this great sea which all day long had been
without ships. I often bitterly deplored I had not brought a sail from
the barque, for the air that hung steady all day blew landwards, and
there was no weight in it to have carried away the flimsiest fabric we
could have erected. A sail would have given us a drift—perhaps have put
us in the way of sighting a vessel, and in any case it would have
mitigated the intolerable sense of helpless imprisonment which came to
one with thoughts of the raft floating without an inch of way upon her,
overhanging all day long, as it might have seemed, that very spot of
waters in which Helga's father had found his grave.</p>
<p>Shortly before sundown Helga sighted a sail in the south-west. It was
the merest shaft of pearl gleaming above the ocean rim, and visible to
us only when the quiet heave of the sea threw us up. It was no more than
a vessel's topmost canvas, and before the sun was gone the dim starlike
sheen of those cloths had faded out into the atmosphere.</p>
<p>'You must get some rest to-night, Helga,' said I. 'Your keeping awake
will not save us if we are to be drowned, and if we are to be saved then
sleep will keep you in strength. It is the after-consequences of this
sort of exposure and mental distress which are to be dreaded.'</p>
<p>'Shall I be able to sleep on this little rickety platform?' she
exclaimed, running her eyes, glowing dark against the faint scarlet in
the west, over the raft. 'It brings one so dreadfully near to the
surface of the sea. The coldness of the very grave itself seems to come
out of it.'</p>
<p>'You talk like a girl now that you are dressed as one, Helga. The hearty
young sailor-lad that I met aboard the <i>Anine</i> would have found nothing
more than a raft and salt water in this business, and would have
"planked" it here as comfortably as in his cabin bunk.'</p>
<p>'It did not please you to see me in boy's clothes,' said she.</p>
<p>'You made a very charming boy, Helga; but I like you best as you are.'</p>
<p>'No stranger should have seen me dressed so,' she exclaimed in a tone of
voice that made me figure a little flush in her cheeks, though there was
nothing to be seen in that way by the twilight which had drawn around
us. 'I did not care what the mates and the crew thought, but I could not
have guessed——' she stammered and went on: 'when I saw in the bay what
the weather was likely to prove, I determined to keep my boy's dress on,
more particularly after that wretched man, Damm, went away with the
others, for then the <i>Anine</i> would be very short-handed for what might
happen; and how could I have been of use in this attire?' and she took
hold of her dress and looked down it.</p>
<p>'I have heard before,' said I, 'of girls doing sailors' work, but not
for love of it. In the old songs and stories they are represented as
going to sea chiefly in pursuit of absconding sweethearts.'</p>
<p>'You think me unwomanly for acting the part of a sailor?' said she.</p>
<p>'I think of you, Helga,' said I, taking her by the hand, 'as a girl with
the heart of a lioness. But if I once contrive to land you safely at
Kolding, you will not go to sea again, I hope?'</p>
<p>She sighed, without replying.</p>
<p>There was nothing but her father's cloak and my oilskins to make a couch
for her with. When I pressed her to take some rest, she entreated softly
that I would allow her to go on talking and sitting—that she was
sleepless—that it lightened her heart to talk with me—that there were
many hours of darkness yet before us—and that before she consented to
lie down we must arrange to keep watch, since I needed rest too.</p>
<p>I was willing, indeed, to keep her at my side talking. The dread of the
loneliness which I knew would come off the wide, dark sea into my brain
when she was silent and asleep, and when there would be nothing but the
stars and the cold and ghastly gleam of the ebony breast on which we
lay, to look at, was strong upon me. I mastheaded the bull's-eye lamp,
and spread the poor Danish Captain's cloak, and we seated ourselves upon
it, and for a long two hours we talked together, in which time she gave
me her life's history, and I chatted to her about myself. I listened to
her with interest and admiration. Her voice was pure, with a quality of
plaintive sweetness in it, and now and again she would utter a sentence
in Danish, then translate it. It might be that the girlish nature I now
found in her was accentuated to my appreciation by the memory of her
boyish attire, by her appearance when on board the barque, the work she
did there and the sort of roughness one associates with the trade of the
sea, whether true of the individual or not; but, as I thought, never had
I been in the company of any woman whose conversation and behaviour were
so engaging, with their qualities of delicacy, purity, simplicity, and
candour, as Helga's.</p>
<p>It was such another night as had passed, saving that the ocean swell had
the softness of the long hours of fine weather in its volume, whereas on
the previous night it still breathed as in memory of the fierce
conflict that was over.</p>
<p>A little after midnight there was a red scar of moon in the west, and
the hour was a very dark one, spite of the silver showering of the
plentiful stars. I had made for Helga the best sort of couch it was in
my power to manufacture, and at this time she lay upon it sleeping
deeply, as I knew by the regularity of her respiration. The sense of
loneliness I dreaded had been upon me since she lay down and left me to
the solitary contemplation of our situation. A small wind blew out of
the north-west, and there was much slopping noise of waters under my
feet amid the crevices of the clumsily framed raft. I had promised Helga
to call her at three, but without intending to keep my word if she
slept, and I sat near her head, her pale face glimmering out of the
darkness as though spectrally self-luminous, and for ever I was turning
my eyes about the sea and directing my gaze at the little masthead
lantern to know that it was burning.</p>
<p>Happening to bend my gaze down upon the raft, into some interstice close
against where the hatch-cover was secured, I spied what, for the
moment, I might have supposed a pair of glow-worms, minute, but defined
enough. Then I believed there was a little pool of water there, and that
it reflected a couple of stars. A moment after I guessed what it was,
and in a very frenzy of the superstition that had been stirring in me,
and in many directions of thought influencing me from the moment of my
leaving the barque, I had my hand upon the great rat—for that was what
it was—and sent it flying overboard. I remember the wild squeak of the
thing as I hurled it—you would have supposed it the cry of a distant
gull. There was a little fire in the water, and I could see where it
swam, and all very quietly I seized hold of a loose plank and, waiting
till it had come near, I hit it, and kept on hitting it, till I might be
sure it was drowned.</p>
<p>Some little noise I may have made: Helga spoke in her sleep, but did not
wake. You will smile at my mentioning this trifling passage; you would
laugh could I make you understand the emotion of relief, the sense of
exultant happiness, that possessed me when I had drowned this rat. When
I look back and recall this little detail of my experiences, I never
doubt that the overwhelming spirit of the loneliness of that ocean night
lay upon me in a sort of craziness. I thought of the rat as an evil
spirit, a something horribly ominous to us, a menace of suffering and of
dreadful death while it stayed with us. God knows why I should have thus
thought; but the imagination of the shipwrecked is quickly diseased, and
the moods which a man will afterwards look back upon with shame and
grief and astonishment are, while they are present, to him as fruitful
of terrible imaginings as ever made the walls of a madhouse ring with
maniac laughter.</p>
<p>It might have been some half-hour after this—the silly excitement of
the incident having passed out of my mind—that I fell into a doze.
Nature was well-nigh exhausted in me, yet I did not wish to sleep. In
proportion, however, as the workings of my brain were stealthily quieted
by the slumberous feelings stealing over me, so the soothing influences
without operated: the cradling of the raft, the hushing and subduing
gaze of the stars, the soft whispering of the wind.</p>
<p>I was awakened by a rude shock, followed by a hoarse bawling cry. There
was a second shock of a sort to smartly bring my wits together, attended
with several shouts, such as—'What is it? What have ye run us into?
Why, stroike me silly, if it ain't a raft!'</p>
<p>I sprang to my feet, and found the bows of a little vessel overhanging
us. Small as I might know her to be, she yet loomed tall and black, and
even seemed to tower over us, so low-seated were we. She lined her
proportions against the starry sky, and I made out that she had hooked
herself to us by running her bowsprit through the stays which supported
our mast.</p>
<p>My first thought was for Helga, but she was rising even as I looked, and
the next moment was at my side.</p>
<p>'For God's sake!' I cried, 'lower away your sail, or your stem will
grind this raft to pieces! We are two—a girl and a man—shipwrecked
people. I implore you to help us to get on board you!'</p>
<p>A lantern was held over the side, and the face of the man who held it
showed out to the touch of the lustre like a picture in a <i>camera
obscura</i>. The rays of the lantern streamed fairly upon us, and the man
roared out:</p>
<p>'Ay! it's a raft, Jacob, and there are two of 'em, and one a gal. Chuck
the man a rope's-end and he'll haul the raft alongside.'</p>
<p>'Look out!' shouted another voice from the after-part of the little
vessel, and some coils of rope fell at my feet.</p>
<p>I instantly seized the line, and, Helga catching hold too, we strained
our united weight at it, and the raft swung alongside the craft at the
moment that she lowered her sail.</p>
<p>'Catch hold of the lady's hands!' I shouted.</p>
<p>In a moment she was dragged over the side. I handed up the little
parcel, containing her mother's picture and Bible, and followed easily,
scrambling over the low rail.</p>
<p>The man who grasped the lantern held it aloft to survey us, and I saw
the dusky glimmer of two other faces past him.</p>
<p>'This is a queer start!' said he. 'How long have you been knocking about
here?'</p>
<p>'You shall have the yarn presently,' said I; 'but before the raft goes
adrift, it's well you should know that she is pretty handsomely stocked
with provisions—all worth bringing aboard.'</p>
<p>'Right!' he cried. 'Jacob, take this here lantern and jump over the
side, and hand up what ye find.'</p>
<p>All this had happened too suddenly to suffer me as yet to be sensible of
what came little short of a miraculous deliverance; for had the craft
been a vessel of burthen, or had there been any weight in the soft night
air still blowing, she would have sheared through us as we lay asleep,
and scattered the raft and drowned us out of hand—nay, before we could
have cried 'O God!' we should have been suffocating in the water.</p>
<p>I believed her at first a fishing-boat. She was lugger-rigged and open,
with a little forecastle in her bows, as I had noticed while the lantern
dangled in the hand of the man who surveyed us. Yet, had she been a
line-of-battle ship, she could not, as a refuge and a means of
deliverance after the horror and peril of that flat platform of raft,
have filled me with more joy and thanksgiving.</p>
<p>'The worst is over, Helga!' I cried, as I seized the girl's cold and
trembling hand. 'Here is a brave little vessel to carry us home, and you
will see Kolding again, after all!'</p>
<p>She made some answer, which her emotion rendered scarcely intelligible.
Her being suddenly awakened by the shock of the collision, her alarm on
seeing what might have passed in the gloom as a tall, black mass of bow
crushing into the raft; then the swiftness of our entry into the lugger,
and the sensations which would follow on her perception of our escape
from a terrible death—all this, combined with what she had gone
through, was too much for the brave little creature; she could scarcely
whisper; and, as I have said, her hand was cold as frost, and trembled
like an aged person's, as I gently brought her to one of the thwarts.</p>
<p>By this time I had made out that the boat carried only three of a crew.
One of them, holding the lantern, had sprung on to the raft, and was
busy in handing up to the others whatever he could lay his hands upon.
They did not spend many minutes over this business. Indeed, I was
astonished by their despatch. The fellow on the raft worked like one who
was very used to rummaging, and, as I knew afterwards by observing what
he had taken, it was certain not a single crevice escaped him.</p>
<p>'That's all,' I heard him shout. 'There's naught left that I can find,
unless so be as the parties have snugged any valuables away.'</p>
<p>'No!' I cried, 'there are no valuables, no money—nothing but food and
drink.'</p>
<p>'Come aboard, Jacob, arter ye've chucked up what's loose for firewood.'</p>
<p>Presently the lantern flashed as it was passed across the rail, and the
figure of the man followed.</p>
<p>'Shove her clear!' was bawled, and shortly afterwards, 'Up foresail!'</p>
<p>The dark square of sail mounted, and one of the men came aft to the
helm. Nothing was said until the sheet had been hauled aft, and the
little craft was softly rippling along over the smooth folds of the
swell, communicating a sensation so buoyant, so vital after the flat
mechanical swaying and slanting of the inert raft, that the mere feeling
of it to me was as potent in virtue as some life-giving dram.</p>
<p>The other two men came out of the bows and seated themselves, placing
the lighted lantern in the midst of us, and so we sat staring at one
another.</p>
<p>'Men,' said I, 'you have rescued us from a horrible situation. I thank
you for my life, and I thank you for this lady's life.'</p>
<p>'How long have ye been washing about, sir?' said the man at the helm.</p>
<p>'Since Monday night,' said I.</p>
<p>'A bad job!' said he; 'but you'll have had it foine since Monday night.
Anyone perish aboard your raft?'</p>
<p>'One,' I answered quickly. 'And now I'll tell you my story. But first I
must ask for a drop of spirits out of one of those jars you have
transhipped. A sudden change of this sort tries a man to the soul.'</p>
<p>'Ay, you're right,' growled one of the others. 'I know what it is to be
plucked by the hair o' the head out of the hopen jaws of Death, and the
sort of feelings what comes arter the plucking job's o'er. Which'll be
the particler jar, sir?'</p>
<p>'Any one of them,' said I.</p>
<p>He explored with the lantern, found a little jar of brandy, and the
glass, or rather I should say the pannikin, went round. I coaxed Helga
into taking a sup; yet she continued silent at my side, as one still
dazed and incapable of mastering what had happened. Indeed, with her
woman's apparel, you might have believed that she had re-equipped
herself with her woman's nature.</p>
<h3>END OF VOL. I.</h3>
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