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<h2> Chapter 20 </h2>
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<h3> A Catastrophe </h3>
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<p>WE lay three days in New Orleans, but the captain did not succeed in
finding another pilot; so he proposed that I should stand a daylight
watch, and leave the night watches to George Ealer. But I was afraid; I
had never stood a watch of any sort by myself, and I believed I should be
sure to get into trouble in the head of some chute, or ground the boat in
a near cut through some bar or other. Brown remained in his place; but he
would not travel with me. So the captain gave me an order on the captain
of the 'A. T. Lacey,' for a passage to St. Louis, and said he would find a
new pilot there and my steersman's berth could then be resumed. The
'Lacey' was to leave a couple of days after the 'Pennsylvania.'</p>
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<p>The night before the '<i>Pennsylvania</i>' left, Henry and I sat chatting on a
freight pile on the levee till midnight. The subject of the chat, mainly,
was one which I think we had not exploited before—steamboat
disasters. One was then on its way to us, little as we suspected it; the
water which was to make the steam which should cause it, was washing past
some point fifteen hundred miles up the river while we talked;—but
it would arrive at the right time and the right place. We doubted if
persons not clothed with authority were of much use in cases of disaster
and attendant panic; still, they might be of <i>some </i>use; so we decided that
if a disaster ever fell within our experience we would at least stick to
the boat, and give such minor service as chance might throw in the way.
Henry remembered this, afterward, when the disaster came, and acted
accordingly.</p>
<p>The 'Lacey' started up the river two days behind the 'Pennsylvania.' We
touched at Greenville, Mississippi, a couple of days out, and somebody
shouted—</p>
<p>'The "Pennsylvania" is blown up at Ship Island, and a hundred and fifty
lives lost!'</p>
<p>At Napoleon, Arkansas, the same evening, we got an extra, issued by a
Memphis paper, which gave some particulars. It mentioned my brother, and
said he was not hurt.</p>
<p>Further up the river we got a later extra. My brother was again mentioned;
but this time as being hurt beyond help. We did not get full details of
the catastrophe until we reached Memphis. This is the sorrowful story—</p>
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<p>It was six o'clock on a hot summer morning. The 'Pennsylvania' was
creeping along, north of Ship Island, about sixty miles below Memphis on a
half-head of steam, towing a wood-flat which was fast being emptied.
George Ealer was in the pilot-house-alone, I think; the second engineer
and a striker had the watch in the engine room; the second mate had the
watch on deck; George Black, Mr. Wood, and my brother, clerks, were
asleep, as were also Brown and the head engineer, the carpenter, the chief
mate, and one striker; Captain Klinefelter was in the barber's chair, and
the barber was preparing to shave him. There were a good many cabin
passengers aboard, and three or four hundred deck passengers—so it
was said at the time—and not very many of them were astir. The wood
being nearly all out of the flat now, Ealer rang to 'come ahead' full
steam, and the next moment four of the eight boilers exploded with a
thunderous crash, and the whole forward third of the boat was hoisted
toward the sky! The main part of the mass, with the chimneys, dropped upon
the boat again, a mountain of riddled and chaotic rubbish—and then,
after a little, fire broke out.</p>
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<p>Many people were flung to considerable distances, and fell in the river;
among these were Mr. Wood and my brother, and the carpenter. The carpenter
was still stretched upon his mattress when he struck the water
seventy-five feet from the boat. Brown, the pilot, and George Black, chief
clerk, were never seen or heard of after the explosion. The barber's
chair, with Captain Klinefelter in it and unhurt, was left with its back
overhanging vacancy—everything forward of it, floor and all, had
disappeared; and the stupefied barber, who was also unhurt, stood with one
toe projecting over space, still stirring his lather unconsciously, and
saying, not a word.</p>
<p>When George Ealer saw the chimneys plunging aloft in front of him, he knew
what the matter was; so he muffled his face in the lapels of his coat, and
pressed both hands there tightly to keep this protection in its place so
that no steam could get to his nose or mouth. He had ample time to attend
to these details while he was going up and returning. He presently landed
on top of the unexploded boilers, forty feet below the former pilot-house,
accompanied by his wheel and a rain of other stuff, and enveloped in a
cloud of scalding steam. All of the many who breathed that steam, died;
none escaped. But Ealer breathed none of it. He made his way to the free
air as quickly as he could; and when the steam cleared away he returned
and climbed up on the boilers again, and patiently hunted out each and
every one of his chessmen and the several joints of his flute.</p>
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<p>By this time the fire was beginning to threaten. Shrieks and groans filled
the air. A great many persons had been scalded, a great many crippled; the
explosion had driven an iron crowbar through one man's body—I think
they said he was a priest. He did not die at once, and his sufferings were
very dreadful. A young French naval cadet, of fifteen, son of a French
admiral, was fearfully scalded, but bore his tortures manfully. Both mates
were badly scalded, but they stood to their posts, nevertheless. They drew
the wood-boat aft, and they and the captain fought back the frantic herd
of frightened immigrants till the wounded could be brought there and
placed in safety first.</p>
<p>When Mr. Wood and Henry fell in the water, they struck out for shore,
which was only a few hundred yards away; but Henry presently said he
believed he was not hurt (what an unaccountable error!), and therefore
would swim back to the boat and help save the wounded. So they parted, and
Henry returned.</p>
<p>By this time the fire was making fierce headway, and several persons who
were imprisoned under the ruins were begging piteously for help. All
efforts to conquer the fire proved fruitless; so the buckets were
presently thrown aside and the officers fell-to with axes and tried to cut
the prisoners out. A striker was one of the captives; he said he was not
injured, but could not free himself; and when he saw that the fire was
likely to drive away the workers, he begged that some one would shoot him,
and thus save him from the more dreadful death. The fire did drive the
axmen away, and they had to listen, helpless, to this poor fellow's
supplications till the flames ended his miseries.</p>
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<p>The fire drove all into the wood-flat that could be accommodated there; it
was cut adrift, then, and it and the burning steamer floated down the
river toward Ship Island. They moored the flat at the head of the island,
and there, unsheltered from the blazing sun, the half-naked occupants had
to remain, without food or stimulants, or help for their hurts, during the
rest of the day. A steamer came along, finally, and carried the
unfortunates to Memphis, and there the most lavish assistance was at once
forthcoming. By this time Henry was insensible. The physicians examined
his injuries and saw that they were fatal, and naturally turned their main
attention to patients who could be saved.</p>
<p>Forty of the wounded were placed upon pallets on the floor of a great
public hall, and among these was Henry. There the ladies of Memphis came
every day, with flowers, fruits, and dainties and delicacies of all kinds,
and there they remained and nursed the wounded. All the physicians stood
watches there, and all the medical students; and the rest of the town
furnished money, or whatever else was wanted. And Memphis knew how to do
all these things well; for many a disaster like the 'Pennsylvania's' had
happened near her doors, and she was experienced, above all other cities
on the river, in the gracious office of the Good Samaritan.'</p>
<p>The sight I saw when I entered that large hall was new and strange to me.
Two long rows of prostrate forms—more than forty, in all—and
every face and head a shapeless wad of loose raw cotton. It was a gruesome
spectacle. I watched there six days and nights, and a very melancholy
experience it was. There was one daily incident which was peculiarly
depressing: this was the removal of the doomed to a chamber apart. It was
done in order that the <i>morale </i>of the other patients might not be
injuriously affected by seeing one of their number in the death-agony. The
fated one was always carried out with as little stir as possible, and the
stretcher was always hidden from sight by a wall of assistants; but no
matter: everybody knew what that cluster of bent forms, with its muffled
step and its slow movement meant; and all eyes watched it wistfully, and a
shudder went abreast of it like a wave.</p>
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<p>I saw many poor fellows removed to the 'death-room,' and saw them no more
afterward. But I saw our chief mate carried thither more than once. His
hurts were frightful, especially his scalds. He was clothed in linseed oil
and raw cotton to his waist, and resembled nothing human. He was often out
of his mind; and then his pains would make him rave and shout and
sometimes shriek. Then, after a period of dumb exhaustion, his disordered
imagination would suddenly transform the great apartment into a
forecastle, and the hurrying throng of nurses into the crew; and he would
come to a sitting posture and shout, 'Hump yourselves, <i>hump </i>yourselves,
you petrifactions, snail-bellies, pall-bearers! going to be all <i>day</i>
getting that hatful of freight out?' and supplement this explosion with a
firmament-obliterating irruption or profanity which nothing could stay or
stop till his crater was empty. And now and then while these frenzies
possessed him, he would tear off handfuls of the cotton and expose his
cooked flesh to view. It was horrible. It was bad for the others, of
course—this noise and these exhibitions; so the doctors tried to
give him morphine to quiet him. But, in his mind or out of it, he would
not take it. He said his wife had been killed by that treacherous drug,
and he would die before he would take it. He suspected that the doctors
were concealing it in his ordinary medicines and in his water—so he
ceased from putting either to his lips. Once, when he had been without
water during two sweltering days, he took the dipper in his hand, and the
sight of the limpid fluid, and the misery of his thirst, tempted him
almost beyond his strength; but he mastered himself and threw it away, and
after that he allowed no more to be brought near him. Three times I saw
him carried to the death-room, insensible and supposed to be dying; but
each time he revived, cursed his attendants, and demanded to be taken
back. He lived to be mate of a steamboat again.</p>
<p>But he was the only one who went to the death-room and returned alive. Dr.
Peyton, a principal physician, and rich in all the attributes that go to
constitute high and flawless character, did all that educated judgment and
trained skill could do for Henry; but, as the newspapers had said in the
beginning, his hurts were past help. On the evening of the sixth day his
wandering mind busied itself with matters far away, and his nerveless
fingers 'picked at his coverlet.' His hour had struck; we bore him to the
death-room, poor boy.</p>
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