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<p id="id00007" style="margin-top: 4em">Produced by Suzanne Shell, Alev Akman and PG Distributed Proofreaders</p>
<h2 id="id00008" style="margin-top: 4em">THE GHOST PIRATES</h2>
<p id="id00009" style="margin-top: 3em; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 0%"><i>"Strange as the glimmer of the ghastly light
That shines from some vast crest of wave at night."</i></p>
<h1 id="id00010" style="margin-top: 5em">THE GHOST PIRATES</h1>
<p id="id00011">William Hope Hodgson</p>
<p id="id00012">1909</p>
<p id="id00013" style="margin-top: 6em"><i>To Mary Whalley</i></p>
<p id="id00014"> "Olden memories that shine against death's night—<br/>
Quiet stars of sweet enchantments,<br/>
That are seen In Life's lost distances…"<br/></p>
<p id="id00015"><i>The World of Dreams</i></p>
<p id="id00016" style="margin-top: 4em">Author's Preface</p>
<p id="id00017">This book forms the last of three. The first published was "<i>The Boats
of the 'Glen Carrig'</i>"; the second, "<i>The House on the Borderland</i>";
this, the third, completes what, perhaps, may be termed a trilogy; for,
though very different in scope, each of the three books deals with
certain conceptions that have an elemental kinship. With this book, the
author believes that he closes the door, so far as he is concerned, on a
particular phase of constructive thought.</p>
<p id="id00018" style="margin-top: 4em">The Hell O! O! Chaunty</p>
<p id="id00019">Chaunty Man . . Man the capstan, bullies!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha!-o-o! Ha!-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Capstan-bars, you tarry souls!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha!-o-o! Ha!-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Take a turn!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha!-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Stand by to fleet!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha!-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Stand by to surge!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha!-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Ha!—o-o-o-o!<br/>
Men . . . . . . TRAMP!<br/>
And away we go!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Hark to the tramp of the<br/>
bearded shellbacks!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Hush!<br/>
O hear 'em tramp!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Tramping, stamping—<br/>
treading, vamping,<br/>
While the cable<br/>
comes in ramping.<br/>
Men . . . . . . Hark!<br/>
O hear 'em stamp!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Surge when it rides!<br/>
Surge when it rides!<br/>
Round-o-o-o<br/>
handsome as it slacks!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha!-o-o-o-o!<br/>
hear 'em ramp!<br/>
Ha!-oo-o-o!<br/>
hear 'em stamp!<br/>
Ha!-o-o-o-o-oo!<br/>
Ha!-o-o-o-o-o-o!<br/>
Chorus . . . . They're shouting now; oh! hear 'em<br/>
A-bellow as they stamp:—<br/>
Ha!-o-o-o! Ha!-o-o-o!<br/>
Ha!-o-o-o!<br/>
A-shouting as they tramp!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . O hark to the haunting chorus<br/>
of the capstan and the bars!<br/>
Chaunty-o-o-o<br/>
and rattle crash—<br/>
Bash against the stars!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha-a!-o-o-o!<br/>
Tramp and go!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o-o!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Hear the pawls a-ranting: with<br/>
the bearded men a-chaunting;<br/>
While the brazen dome above 'em<br/>
Bellows back the 'bars.'<br/>
Men . . . . . . Hear and hark!<br/>
O hear 'em!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Hurling songs towards the<br/>
heavens—!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Hush! O hear 'em!<br/>
Hark! O hear 'em!<br/>
Hurling oaths among their spars!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Hark! O hear 'em!<br/>
Hush! O hear 'em!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Tramping round between the<br/>
bars!<br/>
Chorus . . . . They're shouting now; oh! hear<br/>
A-bellow as they stamp:—<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o-o! Ha-a!-o-o-o!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o-o!<br/>
A-shouting as they tramp!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . O do you hear the<br/>
capstan-chaunty!<br/>
Thunder round the pawls!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Click a-clack,<br/>
a-clatter<br/>
Surge!<br/>
And scatter bawls!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Click-a-clack, my bonny boys,<br/>
while it comes in handsome!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Hear 'em clack!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Ha-a!-o-o! Click-a-clack!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Hush! O hear 'em pant!<br/>
Hark! O hear 'em rant!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Click, a-clitter, clicker-clack.<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Tramp and go!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Surge! And keep away the slack!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Away the slack:<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Click-a-clack<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Bustle now each jolly Jack.<br/>
Surging easy! Surging e-a-s-y!!<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Surging easy<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Click-a-clatter—<br/>
Surge; and steady!<br/>
Man the stopper there!<br/>
All ready?<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Click-a-clack, my bouncing boys:<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Tramp and go!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Lift the pawls, and come back<br/>
easy.<br/>
Men . . . . . . Ha-a!-o-o!<br/>
Steady-o-o-o-o!<br/>
Chaunty Man . . Vast the chaunty!<br/>
Vast the capstan!<br/>
Drop the pawls! Be-l-a-y!<br/>
Chorus . . . . Ha-a!-o-o! Unship the bars!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o! Tramp and go!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o! Shoulder bars!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o! And away we blow!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o-o!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o-o-o!<br/>
Ha-a!-o-o-o-o-o!<br/></p>
<h1 id="id00020" style="margin-top: 5em">I</h1>
<p id="id00021" style="margin-top: 2em"><i>The Figure Out of the Sea</i></p>
<p id="id00022">He began without any circumlocution.</p>
<p id="id00023">I joined the <i>Mortzestus</i> in 'Frisco. I heard before I signed on, that
there were some funny yarns floating round about her; but I was pretty
nearly on the beach, and too jolly anxious to get away, to worry about
trifles. Besides, by all accounts, she was right enough so far as grub
and treatment went. When I asked fellows to give it a name, they
generally could not. All they could tell me, was that she was unlucky,
and made thundering long passages, and had no more than a fair share of
dirty weather. Also, that she had twice had the sticks blown out of her,
and her cargo shifted. Besides all these, a heap of other things that
might happen to any packet, and would not be comfortable to run into.
Still, they were the ordinary things, and I was willing enough to risk
them, to get home. All the same, if I had been given the chance, I
should have shipped in some other vessel as a matter of preference.</p>
<p id="id00024">When I took my bag down, I found that they had signed on the rest of the
crowd. You see, the "home lot" cleared out when they got into 'Frisco,
that is, all except one young fellow, a cockney, who had stuck by the
ship in port. He told me afterwards, when I got to know him, that he
intended to draw a pay-day out of her, whether any one else did, or not.</p>
<p id="id00025">The first night I was in her, I found that it was common talk among the
other fellows, that there was something queer about the ship. They spoke
of her as if it were an accepted fact that she was haunted; yet they all
treated the matter as a joke; all, that is, except the young cockney—
Williams—who, instead of laughing at their jests on the subject, seemed
to take the whole matter seriously.</p>
<p id="id00026">This made me rather curious. I began to wonder whether there was, after
all, some truth underlying the vague stories I had heard; and I took the
first opportunity to ask him whether he had any reasons for believing
that there was anything in the yarns about the ship.</p>
<p id="id00027">At first he was inclined to be a bit offish; but, presently, he came
round, and told me that he did not know of any particular incident which
could be called unusual in the sense in which I meant. Yet that, at the
same time, there were lots of little things which, if you put them
together, made you think a bit. For instance, she always made such long
passages and had so much dirty weather—nothing but that and calms and
head winds. Then, other things happened; sails that he knew, himself,
had been properly stowed, were always blowing adrift <i>at night</i>. And
then he said a thing that surprised me.</p>
<p id="id00028">"There's too many bloomin' shadders about this 'ere packet; they gets
onter yer nerves like nothin' as ever I seen before in me nat'ral."</p>
<p id="id00029">He blurted it all out in a heap, and I turned round and looked at him.</p>
<p id="id00030">"Too many shadows!" I said. "What on earth do you mean?" But he refused
to explain himself or tell me anything further—just shook his head,
stupidly, when I questioned him. He seemed to have taken a sudden, sulky
fit. I felt certain that he was acting dense, purposely. I believe the
truth of the matter is that he was, in a way, ashamed of having let
himself go like he had, in speaking out his thoughts about "shadders."
That type of man may think things at times; but he doesn't often put
them into words. Anyhow, I saw it was no use asking any further
questions; so I let the matter drop there. Yet, for several days
afterwards, I caught myself wondering, at times, what the fellow had
meant by "shadders."</p>
<p id="id00031">We left 'Frisco next day, with a fine, fair wind, that seemed a bit like
putting the stopper on the yarns I had heard about the ship's ill luck.
And yet—</p>
<p id="id00032" style="margin-top: 2em">He hesitated a moment, and then went on again.</p>
<p id="id00033" style="margin-top: 4em">For the first couple of weeks out, nothing unusual happened, and the
wind still held fair. I began to feel that I had been rather lucky,
after all, in the packet into which I had been shunted. Most of the
other fellows gave her a good name, and there was a pretty general
opinion growing among the crowd, that it was all a silly yarn about her
being haunted. And then, just when I was settling down to things,
something happened that opened my eyes no end.</p>
<p id="id00034">It was in the eight to twelve watch, and I was sitting on the steps, on
the starboard side, leading up to the fo'cas'le head. The night was fine
and there was a splendid moon. Away aft, I heard the timekeeper strike
four bells, and the look-out, an old fellow named Jaskett, answered him.
As he let go the bell lanyard, he caught sight of me, where I sat
quietly, smoking. He leant over the rail, and looked down at me.</p>
<p id="id00035">"That you, Jessop?" he asked.</p>
<p id="id00036">"I believe it is," I replied.</p>
<p id="id00037">"We'd 'ave our gran'mothers an' all the rest of our petticoated
relash'ns comin' to sea, if 'twere always like this," he remarked,
reflectively—indicating, with a sweep of his pipe and hand, the
calmness of the sea and sky.</p>
<p id="id00038">I saw no reason for denying that, and he continued:</p>
<p id="id00039">"If this ole packet is 'aunted, as some on 'em seems to think, well all
as I can say is, let me 'ave the luck to tumble across another of the
same sort. Good grub, an' duff fer Sundays, an' a decent crowd of 'em
aft, an' everythin' comfertable like, so as yer can feel yer knows where
yer are. As fer 'er bein' 'aunted, that's all 'ellish nonsense. I've
comed 'cross lots of 'em before as was said to be 'aunted, an' so some
on 'em was; but 'twasn't with ghostesses. One packet I was in, they was
that bad yer couldn't sleep a wink in yer watch below, until yer'd 'ad
every stitch out yer bunk an' 'ad a reg'lar 'unt. Sometimes—" At that
moment, the relief, one of the ordinary seamen, went up the other ladder
on to the fo'cas'le head, and the old chap turned to ask him "Why the
'ell" he'd not relieved him a bit smarter. The ordinary made some reply;
but what it was, I did not catch; for, abruptly, away aft, my rather
sleepy gaze had lighted on something altogether extraordinary and
outrageous. It was nothing less than the form of a man stepping inboard
over the starboard rail, a little abaft the main rigging. I stood up,
and caught at the handrail, and stared.</p>
<p id="id00040">Behind me, someone spoke. It was the look-out, who had come down off the
fo'cas'le head, on his way aft to report the name of his relief to the
second mate.</p>
<p id="id00041">"What is it, mate?" he asked, curiously, seeing my intent attitude.</p>
<p id="id00042">The thing, whatever it was, had disappeared into the shadows on the lee
side of the deck.</p>
<p id="id00043">"Nothing!" I replied, shortly; for I was too bewildered then, at what my
eyes had just shown me, to say any more. I wanted to think.</p>
<p id="id00044">The old shellback glanced at me; but only muttered something, and went
on his way aft.</p>
<p id="id00045">For a minute, perhaps, I stood there, watching; but could see nothing.
Then I walked slowly aft, as far as the after end of the deck house.
From there, I could see most of the main deck; but nothing showed,
except, of course, the moving shadows of the ropes and spars and sails,
as they swung to and fro in the moonlight.</p>
<p id="id00046">The old chap who had just come off the look-out, had returned forrard
again, and I was alone on that part of the deck. And then, all at once,
as I stood peering into the shadows to leeward, I remembered what
Williams had said about there being too many "shadders." I had been
puzzled to understand his real meaning, then. I had no difficulty <i>now</i>.
There <i>were</i> too many shadows. Yet, shadows or no shadows, I realised
that for my own peace of mind, I must settle, once and for all, whether
the thing I had seemed to see stepping aboard out of the ocean, had been
a reality, or simply a phantom, as you might say, of my imagination. My
reason said it was nothing more than imagination, a rapid dream—I must
have dozed; but something deeper than reason told me that this was not
so. I put it to the test, and went straight in amongst the shadows—
There was nothing.</p>
<p id="id00047">I grew bolder. My common sense told me I must have fancied it all. I
walked over to the mainmast, and looked behind the pinrail that partly
surrounded it, and down into the shadow of the pumps; but here again was
nothing. Then I went in under the break of the poop. It was darker under
there than out on deck. I looked up both sides of the deck, and saw that
they were bare of anything such as I looked for. The assurance was
comforting. I glanced at the poop ladders, and remembered that nothing
could have gone up there, without the Second Mate or the Time-keeper
seeing it. Then I leant my back up against the bulkshead, and thought
the whole matter over, rapidly, sucking at my pipe, and keeping my
glance about the deck. I concluded my think, and said "No!" out loud.
Then something occurred to me, and I said "Unless—" and went over to
the starboard bulwarks, and looked over and down into the sea; but there
was nothing but sea; and so I turned and made my way forrard. My common
sense had triumphed, and I was convinced that my imagination had been
playing tricks with me.</p>
<p id="id00048">I reached the door on the portside, leading into the fo'cas'le, and was
about to enter, when something made me look behind. As I did so, I had a
shaker. Away aft, a dim, shadowy form stood in the wake of a swaying
belt of moonlight, that swept the deck a bit abaft the main-mast.</p>
<p id="id00049">It was the same figure that I had just been attributing to my fancy. I
will admit that I felt more than startled; I was quite a bit frightened.
I was convinced now that it was no mere imaginary thing. It was a human
figure. And yet, with the flicker of the moonlight and the shadows
chasing over it, I was unable to say more than that. Then, as I stood
there, irresolute and funky, I got the thought that someone was acting
the goat; though for what reason or purpose, I never stopped to
consider. I was glad of any suggestion that my common sense assured me
was not impossible; and, for the moment, I felt quite relieved. That
side to the question had not presented itself to me before. I began to
pluck up courage. I accused myself of getting fanciful; otherwise I
should have tumbled to it earlier. And then, funnily enough, in spite of
all my reasoning, I was still afraid of going aft to discover who that
was, standing on the lee side of the maindeck. Yet I felt that if I
shirked it, I was only fit to be dumped overboard; and so I went, though
not with any great speed, as you can imagine.</p>
<p id="id00050">I had gone half the distance, and still the figure remained there,
motionless and silent—the moonlight and the shadows playing over it
with each roll of the ship. I think I tried to be surprised. If it were
one of the fellows playing the fool, he must have heard me coming, and
why didn't he scoot while he had the chance? And where could he have
hidden himself, before? All these things, I asked myself, in a rush,
with a queer mixture of doubt and belief; and, you know, in the
meantime, I was drawing nearer. I had passed the house, and was not
twelve paces distant; when, abruptly, the silent figure made three quick
strides to the port rail, and <i>climbed over it into the sea</i>.</p>
<p id="id00051">I rushed to the side, and stared over; but nothing met my gaze, except
the shadow of the ship, sweeping over the moonlit sea.</p>
<p id="id00052">How long I stared down blankly into the water, it would be impossible to
say; certainly for a good minute. I felt blank—just horribly blank. It
was such a beastly confirmation of the <i>unnaturalness</i> of the thing I
had concluded to be only a sort of brain fancy. I seemed, for that
little time, deprived, you know, of the power of coherent thought. I
suppose I was dazed—mentally stunned, in a way.</p>
<p id="id00053">As I have said, a minute or so must have gone, while I had been staring
into the dark of the water under the ship's side. Then, I came suddenly
to my ordinary self. The Second Mate was singing out: "Lee fore brace."</p>
<p id="id00054">I went to the braces, like a chap in a dream.</p>
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