<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
<p class="topnote">EIGHT WEEKS' CALM.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Leisurely</span> as our progress had been hitherto,
we had always managed to make some Southing
each day. But now ensued a time unique in all
my experience. What our exact position was I
do not know; but I fancy it must have been somewhere
near the Equator in the Atlantic. When
the faltering, fitful breezes first failed us, a long
succession of rain deluges set in, which at first were
most heartily welcome. For, like many other
ships of her class in those days, the <i>Western Belle's</i>
store of water-tanks contained barely enough of
the precious fluid to suffice us for half the voyage,
even upon the regulation allowance of three quarts
per man each day. Rain was depended upon to
replenish them in time, and on such voyages, of
course, seldom failed to afford a bountiful supply.
Now, however, it fell for whole days in one solid,
roaring downpour that, in spite of the many openings
by which the decks were drained, filled them
so that it was possible to swim from poop to forecastle
in fresh water. Everybody turned out all
their belongings that were washable, and a regular
carnival of soap and water took place. Then the
ports were opened and the decks cleared of water.<span class="pagenum">[195]</span>
It still poured over the front of the poop like a
small Niagara, and from thence, as being the cleanest,
we refilled all our tanks. Still the flood came
down without a break, until the incessant roar became
awe-inspiring. Many of the crew spoke of
it as passing all their experience, even hinting at
the possibility of another flood. It was so heavy
that the experiment was successfully tried of
scooping up drinkable water off the sea-surface,
which was like a mill-pond for its level, although
all a-foam with the falling torrent. The ship lay
as nearly motionless as it is possible for a ship to
be out in mid-ocean. For Coleridge's simile of
"A painted ship upon a painted ocean" is only a
poet's licence, and grates upon a seaman as the
sole picture in that wonderful work which is not
literally true. Admiral Wharton's remark that
"In all the incalculable mass of the ocean not one
particle is ever absolutely at rest," may strike most
people as strange; but it is sober truth, and therefore
it is impossible for a vessel at sea ever to be
perfectly motionless.</p>
<p>Gradually the massive downpour abated, the
sun peeped out, and the sodden decks and gear
dried up. But there was no breath of wind. And
as Captain Smith was a practical man, with all his
patience, he decided to utilize this otherwise barren
time in carrying out a scheme he had purposed
leaving for some long spell of waiting in Indian
harbours. We had on deck three huge, rough
spars—long logs, in fact. These were loosed from
their lashings and lifted on to the gallows, whereon
the boats usually rested. A big rip-saw was<span class="pagenum">[196]</span>
produced—the only time I ever saw one on board
ship—and the strange spectacle was witnessed of a
ship's deck being turned into a saw-pit, sailors into
sawyers. Thick slabs were sawn off the spars,
after which the carpenter, and a couple of men who
could handle axe and adze, set to work to fashion
them into topsail-yards. Meanwhile, the rest of
the hands toiled like beavers, unbending sails, sending
down yards, and overhauling standing rigging,
until the old ship looked as if she were in some snug
dock-corner being dismantled. All day long this
work went on, no one knowing or caring whose
watch on deck it should be, and at night the weary
workers lay around promiscuously, sleeping away
the hours of darkness in calm certainty of being
undisturbed. This curious interlude in an ocean
voyage developed strange faculties in our men.
The iron bands, which form part of the fittings of
a ship's yards, were, owing to the skipper's desire
to have heavier spars, found to be too small. No
matter. An impromptu forge was rigged up on a
barrel filled with sand, a most ingenious bellows
was made by somebody, and, as if born and bred in
a smithy, the bo'sun and two hands manipulated
that ironwork in such workmanlike fashion that
it answered its purpose as well as if turned out of a
Blackwall foundry.</p>
<p>For many days this work went on, with apparently
no more notice taken of its strangeness
than as if it were the normal course of events.
But gradually the deathly stillness of our surroundings,
the utter absence of the faintest air of
wind, or sign of any other vessel in a similar plight,<span class="pagenum">[197]</span>
began to tell upon everybody's nerves. Men took
to gathering in twos and threes in the evenings to
recount their experiences of lengthened calms, and
the yarns they had heard of bygone tragedies connected
with ships that had strayed into windless
seas. Even the busy working-hours could not
prevent the men from gazing uneasily over the side
where the familiar, smiling face of the sea was
undergoing a mysterious change. There is about
the deep sea, even in the hottest weather, a delicious
atmosphere of cool cleanliness, a searching
purity, such as the earth can never yield, giving
one the fixed idea that to this vast, unpollutable
limpidity the nations owe their health. In some
dim fashion this thought is present with all sea-farers,
however dense and unnoticing they may be.
Therefore, when that familiar freshness was found
to be giving place to a stale, stagnant greasiness
to which a mawkish, uninvigorating atmosphere
clung, what wonder that uneasiness—all the more
difficult to bear quietly because undefinable—became
generally manifest. Adding to the sense of
eerieness, was the fact that old Peter was failing
fast. I have already mentioned how willingly his
share of the common burden was borne by his
shipmates, and how loyally they tended him, even
though such service as he needed could not be
spoken of without offence. But now his mind had
completely gone. He lived in some misty past,
about which he babbled unceasingly. Often, in the
still evenings, all hands would gather round him,
listening in perfect silence to his disjointed reminiscences
of desperate deeds in the way of duty, of<span class="pagenum">[198]</span>
long-drawn-out debaucheries in filthy rookeries of
home ports, as well as the well-known hells at
Hong Kong, Calcutta, or Callao. They were
strange scenes, those dog-watch gatherings, nothing
distinctly visible but the red glow of the pipes—except
when the sudden glare of a match, struck
to light fresh tobacco, shed a momentary gleam
over the group of haggard, bearded faces, each beclouded
with an unwonted shadow. In the midst,
a placid stream of sound, Peter's voice prattled on,
its lurid language in the strangest contrast to the
gentleness of his speech. Still the days dragged
on and the faces grew longer. All the refitting
was finished, and only the ordinary routine of ship-life
was left to be carried on. Happily those duties
are always, in the hands of capable officers, sufficiently
onerous to prevent time ever hanging heavily.
One of the strangest of all the strange notions
current ashore about sea-life is that sailors
have nothing to do but watch the ship go along,
except during stormy weather. One would have
thought that the never-ending, ever-beginning
round of work in a house that is properly kept
would have taught all landsmen and women that
the great complicated machine called a ship would
demand at least equal labours to keep it fit and in
working order. But "watch and watch" was
now restored, which, of course, threw a great deal
of additional time upon the men's hands, since they
could still sleep through the night, if they chose,
without fear of being disturbed. So for hours,
when unemployed, men took to hanging over the
rail, watching, with an unnatural curiosity, the<span class="pagenum">[199]</span>
myriads of strange creatures that, lured from their
silent haunts in the gloomy middle-depths of the
ocean by the long-enduring stillness above, came
crawling about, blinking glassily with dead-looking
eyes at the unfamiliar light. Truly it was an
uncanny sight. Not only fish of bizarre shape
abounded, but vast numbers of great medusæ—semi-transparent
simulacra of all the hideous
things that ever haunted a maniac's dream—crawled
greasily about us, befouling the once clear
blue of the sea, and coating its sleek surface with
stagnant slime. And, deeper down, mighty shadows
passed sluggishly to and fro, filling the gazers
with wordless terror as the days crept wearily
away and those formless apparitions gradually
chose higher levels. Overhead the sweet fathomless
azure of the sky paled as if in sympathy with
the silent sea. Cloudless, indeed, but overspread
with a filmy veil of strange mist, that, while it
robbed the sun of its glare, seemed to enclose us
within a dome of heat, unventilated and stale.
When night fell, instead of cool refreshment—such
as comes, even in tropical calms, after sunset at all
ordinary times—there arose a foul odour of decaying
things that clung clammily to the palate like a
miasma. The densely populated ocean beneath
palpitated with pale fire, the gleaming of putrescence.
Instead of the usual brisk movement seen
among the glowing denizens of the deep, everything
crawled languidly, as if infected with some
universal pestilence. Moon and stars lost their
strong silver glow, and were no longer reflected in
the smoothness beneath as if shining in another<span class="pagenum">[200]</span>
heaven. And at moonrise, when the fantastic
mist-wreaths writhed about the horizon, the broad
red disc of the moon would be distorted into many
uncouth shapes, or patterns of strange design were
drawn across her paling surface.</p>
<p>At last, one night, when old Peter was holding
his usual levee, he suddenly raised his voice, and
authoritatively demanded that his auditors should
bear him on to the forecastle head. They instantly
obeyed, lifting him tenderly upon his mattress,
and laying him gently by the side of the capstan.
Then all hands gathered round him in the darkness,
only the glow of the pipes fitfully illuminating
the rugged countenances. Slowly the moon
rose, but sent no silvery pathway across the sea,
until suddenly, as if with a great effort, she broke
through the hampering mist-wreaths that seemed
to clog her upward way. A pure, pale beam shot
right athwart our vessel, lighting up the little
group of watchers on the forecastle, and lingering
as if lovingly upon the withered, weather-scarred
face of our ancient shipmate. As it did so he
smiled—a patient, happy smile—his lips unclosed,
and, with a sigh of relief like a weary child, he
died.</p>
<p>Breaking the steadfast silence came the mate's
mellow cry, "Square the mainyard!" As the men
rose to obey, a gentle breath, welcome as the first
thrill of returning health, kissed the tanned faces.
Slowly the great yards swung round, a pleasant
murmuring as of a mountain rivulet arose from the
bows, and the long calm was over. In quiet attendance
upon the dead came the sailmaker, with<span class="pagenum">[201]</span>
a roll of worn canvas under his arm in which the
poor, shrivelled remains were reverently wrapped
and neatly sewn up. A big lump of coal was found
and secured to the feet, and the long parcel was
borne gently aft to the gangway. There in the
moonlight we all gathered, while the skipper, with
faltering, unaccustomed voice, read the stately
words of the Burial Service, all hands standing like
statues as they listened to what all admit to be one
of the most solemn as well as majestic selections
known in our splendid language. Suddenly there
was a pause; the skipper raised his hand, and those
who supported the plank on which the worn-out
tabernacle of old Peter lay, gently raised its inner
end. There was a subdued s-s-s-h as the white
fardel slid slowly seaward, followed by a sullen
plunge. All rushed to the side, where an ascending
column of green light marked the descent into
those calm profundities of our dead. An almost
inaudible sigh of relief escaped from every lip, as
if a well-nigh intolerable burden had been removed.
Undoubtedly that was the predominant feeling,
intensified by the fact that a sweet breeze was now
blowing steadily. In the blue dome above, the
moon and her attendant stars were shining with
their full splendour, and from the now sparkling
face of the surrounding sea the sickly mist was
rolled quite away.</p>
<p>Thenceforward, although our progress was
wretchedly slow, of course, we were little troubled
by calms. But our tribulations were not yet all
over. Barber, the painter A.B., was taken ill;
so ill as to be quite useless, nor did he ever again<span class="pagenum">[202]</span>
that voyage recover sufficiently to resume his place
as an active member of the crew. And other men
were grievously tried by scurvy, which, though in
a mild form, was painful and weakening. How it
was that they were no worse, I cannot think, for
the food was bad enough truly for the development
of that malignant disease in its worst form.
But, somehow, we worried along in dogged fashion,
every one showing rare patience under their
unmerited sufferings.</p>
<p>And so, in laborious fashion, we crept southward
and round the Cape without any bad weather
worth mentioning, until well to the eastward of
that justly dreaded point. Then one night we had
a narrow escape from serious disaster. It was our
(the second mate's) watch on deck from eight to
midnight. We were jogging along before a light
south-westerly breeze, at about four knots, the
weather being singularly fine for those latitudes.
Down in the cabin the skipper, his wife and daughter,
and the mate were playing cards, while the
second mate, with a carelessness most unusual with
him, was hanging over the open scuttle, absorbed
in watching the game. Rees, the old Frenchman
with a Welsh name, was on the look-out, and I
heard him muttering and grumbling because the
officer of the watch was oblivious of the fact that
an ominous-looking cloud was rising in the northeast,
or almost right ahead. Presently from its
black bosom faint gleams of lightning showed
themselves, while the subdued murmur of the
breeze we had became hushed in an unnatural
quiet. With a quickness that seemed miraculous,<span class="pagenum">[203]</span>
the threatening cloud ahead overspread the sky,
and still the second mate did not realize what
was coming. As all sail was set, the position began
to look so threatening that all the watch took
the alarm, and gathered in the waist, ready for the
sudden emergency imminent. Presently the wind
dropped dead, its sudden failure arousing the supine
officer, who, lifting his head, took in the situation
at a glance. But before he could issue an order,
there came a smart patter of rain, followed
immediately by a roar as the north-east wind, like
a savage beast, leapt upon us, taking us flat aback.
Then there was a hubbub. Up rushed the skipper
and mate, shouting for all hands. Everything was
let go at once; but the sails, jammed backward
against the masts, refused to allow the yards to
come down. The ship began to drive astern most
dangerously, nor could she be got round by any
means. Presently she dipped her stern right
under, taking a sea in over the taffrail that filled
the decks fore and aft. It was now a question of
minutes with us. If she could not be got round
she would certainly go down stern foremost, for
again and again she drove her broad stern under
the rising sea as the now furious gale hurled her
backwards. The feeble efforts of the crew seemed
utterly unavailing against the mighty force of this
sudden tempest. But, providentially, a huge sea
caught her on one bow, flinging her head off far
enough for the wind to grip the head sails. Round
she spun upon her heel like a top, and in another
minute the shreds of the rending sails were thundering
above our heads as they flew to fragments.<span class="pagenum">[204]</span>
In an indescribable uproar, wherein the howling of
the gale, the reverberations of the thunder, and
the crash of our yards were all mingled, the ill-used
vessel sped away before the wind as if fleeing for
her life. An almost continual glare of lightning
shed an unearthly light over all, by which the
havoc that was being wrought was plainly to be
seen. How that night's work was ever accomplished
I have no idea. But when morning
dawned we were fore-reaching under the three
lower topsails and fore topmast staysail, the fluttering
rags of what remained of our lighter sails
being secured in some haphazard sort of fashion to
the yards. We had escaped the doom of many a
fine ship, whose crew have paid the penalty of
carelessness with their lives. It was long, however,
before we overtook the labour which those
few hours involved us in. For many days we
jogged along under easy sail, getting farther and
farther to the northward every day, happily for us,
and so putting a greater distance between us and
bad weather.</p>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p><span class="pagenum">[205]</span></p>
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