Captains Courageous
by Rudyard Kipling
Chapter 5
That was the first of
many talks with Dan, who told Harvey why he would transfer his dory's name to
the imaginary Burgess-modelled haddocker. Harvey heard a good deal about the
real Hattie at Gloucester; saw a lock of her hair - which Dan, finding fair words
of no avail, had "hooked" as she sat in front of him at school that
winter - and a photograph. Hattie was about fourteen years old, with an awful
contempt for boys, and had been trampling on Dan's heart through the winter.
All this was revealed under oath of solemn secrecy on moonlit decks, in the
dead dark, or in choking fog; the whining wheel behind them, the climbing deck
before, and without, the unresting, clamorous sea. Once, of course, as the boys
came to know each other, there was a fight, which raged from bow to stern till
Penn came up and separated them, but promised not to tell Disko, who thought
fighting on watch rather worse than sleeping. Harvey was no match for Dan
physically, but it says a great deal for his new training that he took his defeat
and did not try to get even with his conqueror by underhand methods.
That was after he had
been cured of a string of boils between his elbows and wrists, where the wet
jersey and oilskins cut into the flesh. The salt water stung them unpleasantly,
but when they were ripe Dan treated them with Disko's razor, and assured Harvey
that now he was a "blooded Banker"; the affliction of gurry-sores
being the mark of the caste that claimed him.
Since he was a boy and
very busy, he did not bother his head with too much thinking. He was
exceedingly sorry for his mother, and often longed to see her and above all to
tell her of his wonderful new life, and how brilliantly he was acquitting
himself in it. Otherwise he preferred not to wonder too much how she was bearing
the shock of his supposed death. But one day, as he stood on the fo'c'sle
ladder, guying the cook, who had accused him and Dan of hooking fried pies, it
occurred to him that this was a vast improvement on being snubbed by strangers
in the smoking-room of a hired liner.
He was a recognised
part of the scheme of things on the "We're Here"; had his place at
the table and among the bunks; and could hold his own in the long talks on
stormy days, when the others were always ready to listen to what they called
his "fairy-tales" of his life ashore. It did not take him more than
two days and a quarter to feel that if he spoke of his own life - it seemed
very far away - no one except Dan (and even Dan's belief was sorely tried)
credited him. So he invented a friend, a boy he had heard of, who drove a
miniature four-pony drag in Toledo, Ohio, and ordered five suits of clothes at
a time, and led things called "germans" at parties where the oldest
girl was not quite fifteen, but all the presents were solid silver. Salters
protested that this kind of yarn was desperately wicked, if not indeed
positively blasphemous, but he listened as greedily as the others; and their
criticisms at the end gave Harvey entirely new notions on "germans,"
clothes, cigarettes with gold-leaf tips, rings, watches, scent, small
dinner-parties, champagne, card-playing, and hotel accommodation. Little by
little he changed his tone when speaking of his "friend," whom Long
Jack had christened "the Crazy Kid," "the Gilt-edged Baby,"
"the Suckin' Vanderpoop," and other pet names; and with his
sea-booted feet cocked up on the table would even invent histories about silk
pajamas and specially imported neckwear, to the "friend's" discredit.
Harvey was a very adaptable person, with a keen eye and ear for every face and
tone about him.
Before long he knew
where Disko kept the old green-crusted quadrant that they called the
"hog-yoke" - under the bed-bag in his bunk. When he 'took the sun,
and with the help of "The Old Farmer's" almanac found the latitude,
Harvey would jump down into the cabin and scratch the reckoning and date with a
nail on the rust of the stove-pipe. Now, the chief engineer of the liner could
have done no more, and no engineer of thirty years' service could have assumed
one half of the ancient-mariner air with which Harvey, first careful to spit
over the side, made public the schooner's position for that day, and then and
not till then relieved Disko of the quadrant. There is an etiquette in all
these things.
The said
"hog-yoke," an Eldridge chart, the farming almanac, Blunt's
"Coast Pilot," and Bowditch's "Navigator" were all the
weapons Disko needed to guide him, except the deep-sea lead that was his spare
eye. Harvey nearly slew Penn with it when Tom Platt taught him first how to
"fly the blue pigeon"; and, though his strength was not equal to
continuous sounding in any sort of a sea, for calm weather with a seven-pound
lead on shoal water Disko used him freely. As Dan said: "'Tain't soundin's
dad wants. It's samples. Grease her up good, Harve." Harvey would tallow
the cup at the end, and carefully bring the sand, shell, sludge, or whatever it
might be, to Disko, who fingered and smelt it and gave judgment. As has been
said, when Disko thought of cod he thought as a cod; and by some long-tested
mixture of instinct and experience, moved the "We're Here" from berth
to berth, always with the fish, as a blindfolded chess-player moves on the
unseen board.
But Disko's board was
the Grand Bank - a triangle two hundred and fifty miles on each side a waste of
wallowing sea, cloaked with dank fog, vexed with gales, harried with drifting
ice, scored by the tracks of the reckless liners, and dotted with the sails of
the fishing-fleet. - For days they worked in fog - Harvey at the bell - till, grown
familiar with the thick airs, he went out with Tom Platt, his heart rather in
his mouth. But the fog would not lift, and the fish were biting, and no one can
stay helplessly afraid for six hours at a time. Harvey devoted himself to his
lines and the gaff or gob-stick as Tom Platt called for them; and they rowed
back to the schooner guided by the bell and Tom's instinct; Manuel's conch
sounding thin and faint beside them. But it was an unearthly experience, and,
for the first time in a month, Harvey dreamed of the shifting, smoking floors
of water round the dory, the lines that strayed away into nothing, and the air
above that melted on the sea below ten feet from his straining eyes. A few days
later he was out with Manuel on what should have been forty-fathom bottom, but
the whole length of the roding ran out, and still the anchor found nothing, and
Harvey grew mortally afraid, for that his last touch with earth was lost.
"Whale-hole," said Manuel, hauling in. "That is good joke on
Disko. Come!" and he rowed to the schooner to find Tom Platt and the
others jeering at the skipper because, for once, he had led them to the edge of
the barren Whale-deep, the blank hole of the Grand Bank. They made another
berth through the fog, and that time the hair of Harvey's head stood up when he
went out in Manuel's dory. A whiteness moved in the whiteness of the fog with a
breath like the breath of the grave, and there was a roaring, a plunging, and
spouting. It was his first introduction to the dread summer berg of the Banks,
and he cowered in the bottom of the boat while Manuel laughed. There were days,
though, clear and soft and warm, when it seemed a sin to do anything but loaf
over the hand-lines and spank the drifting "sun-scalds" with an oar;
and there were days of light airs, when Harvey was taught how to steer the
schooner from one berth to another.
It thrilled through
him when he first felt the keel answer to his hand on the spokes and slide over
the long hollows as the foresail scythed back and forth against the blue sky.
That was magnificent, in spite of Disko saying that it would break a snake's
back to follow his wake. But, as usual, pride ran before a fall. They were
sailing on the wind with the staysail - an old one, luckily - set, and Harvey
jammed her right into it to show Dan how completely he had mastered the art.
The foresail went over with a bang, and the foregaff stabbed and ripped through
the stay-sail, which, was of course, prevented from going over by the mainstay.
They lowered the wreck in awful silence, and Harvey spent his leisure hours for
the next few days under Torn Platt's lee, learning to use a needle and palm.
Dan hooted with joy, for, as he said, he had made the very same blunder himself
in his early days.
Boylike, Harvey
imitated all the men by turns, till he had combined Disko's peculiar stoop at
the wheel, Long Jack's swinging overhand when the lines were hauled, Manuel's
round-shouldered but effective stroke in a dory, and Tom Platt's generous Ohio
stride along the deck.
"'Tis beautiful
to see how he takes to ut," said Long Jack, when Harvey was looking out by
the windlass one thick noon. "I'll lay my wage an' share 'tis more'n half
play-actin' to him, an' he consates himself he's a bowld mariner. 'Watch his
little bit av a back now!"
"That's the way
we all begin," said Tom Platt. "The boys they make believe all the
time till they've cheated 'emselves into bein' men, an' so till they die -
pretendin' an' pretendin'. I done it on the old Ohio, I know. Stood my first
watch - harbor-watch - feelin' finer'n Farragut. Dan's full o' the same kind o'
notions. See 'em now, actin' to be genewine moss-backs - every hair a rope-
yarn an' blood Stockholm tar." He spoke down the cabin stairs.
"'Guess you're mistook in your judgments fer once, Disko. What in Rome
made ye tell us all here the kid was crazy?"
"He wuz,"
Disko replied. "Crazy ez a loon when he come aboard; but I'll say he's
sobered up consid'ble sence. I cured him."
"He yarns
good," said Tom Platt. "T'other night he told us abaout a kid of his
own size steerin' a cunnin' little rig an' four ponies up an' down Toledo,
Ohio, I think 'twas, an' givin' suppers to a crowd o' sim'lar kids. Cur'us kind
o' fairy-tale, but blame interestin'. He knows scores of 'em."
"'Guess he
strikes 'em outen his own head," Disko called from the cabin, where he was
busy with the log-book. "'Stands to reason that sort is all made up. It
don't take in no one but Dan, an' he laughs at it. I've heard him, behind my
back."
"Y'ever hear what
Sim'on Peter Ca'houn said when they whacked up a match 'twix' his sister Hitty
an' Lorin' Jerauld, an' the boys put up that joke on him daown to
Georges?" drawled Uncle Salters, who was dripping peaceably under the lee
of the starboard dory-nest.
Tom Platt puffed at
his pipe in scornful silence: he was a Cape Cod man, and had not known that
tale more than twenty years. Uncle Salters went on with a rasping chuckle:
"Sim'on Peter
Ca'houn he said, an' he was jest right, abaout Lorin', 'Ha'af on the taown,' he
said, 'an' t'other ha'af blame fool; an' they told me she's married a 'ich
man.' Sim'on Peter Ca'houn he hedn't no roof to his mouth, an' talked that
way."
"He didn't talk
any Pennsylvania Dutch," Tom Platt replied. "You'd better leave a
Cape man to tell that tale. The Ca'houns was gipsies frum 'way back."
"Wal, I don't
profess to be any elocutionist," Salters said. "I'm comin' to the
moral o' things. That's jest abaout what aour Harve be! Ha'af on the taown, an'
t'other ha'af blame fool; an' there's some'll believe he's a rich man.
Yah!"
"Did ye ever
think how sweet 'twould be to sail wid a full crew o' Salterses?" said
Long Jack. "Ha'af in the furrer an' other ha'af in the muck-heap, as
Ca'houn did not say, an' makes out he's a fisherman!"
A little laugh went
round at Salters's expense.
Disko held his tongue,
and wrought over the log-book that he kept in a hatchet-faced, square hand;
this was the kind of thing that ran on, page after soiled page:
"July 17. This
day thick fog and few fish. Made berth to northward. So ends this day.
"July 18. This
day comes in with thick fog. Caught a few fish.
"July 19. This
day comes in with light breeze from N. E. and fine weather. Made a berth to
eastward. Caught plenty fish.
"July 20. This,
the Sabbath, comes in with fog and light winds. So ends this day. Total fish
caught this week, 3,478."
They never worked on
Sundays, but shaved, and washed themselves if it were fine, and Pennsylvania
sang hymns. Once or twice he suggested that, if it was not an impertinence, he
thought he could preach a little. Uncle Salters nearly jumped down his throat at
the mere notion, reminding him that he was not a preacher and mustn't think of
such things. We'd hev him rememberin' Johnstown next," Salters explained,
"an' what would happen then?" So they compromised on his reading
aloud from a book called "Josephus." It was an old leather-bound
volume, smelling of a hundred voyages, very solid and very like the Bible, but
enlivened with accounts of battles and sieges; and they read it nearly from
cover to cover. Otherwise Penn was a silent little body. He would not utter a
word for three days on end sometimes, though he played checkers, listened to
the songs, and laughed at the stories. When they tried to stir him up, he would
answer. "I don't wish to seem unneighbourly, but it is because I have
nothing to say. My head feels quite empty. I've almost forgotten my name."
He would turn to Uncle Salters with an expectant smile.
"Why,
Pennsylvania Pratt," Salters would shout. "You'll fergit me
next!"
"No -
never," Penn would say, shutting his lips firmly. "Pennsylvania Pratt,
of course," he would repeat over and over. Sometimes it was Uncle Salters
who forgot, and told him he was Haskins or Rich or McVitty; but Penn was
equally content - till next time.
He was always very
tender with Harvey, whom he pitied both as a lost child and as a lunatic; and
when Salters saw that Penn liked the boy, he relaxed, too. Salters was not an
amiable person (he esteemed it his business to keep the boys in order); and the
first time Harvey, in fear and trembling, on a still day, managed to shin up to
the main-truck (Dan was behind him ready to help), he esteemed it his duty to
hang Salters's big sea-boots up there - a sight of shame and derision to the
nearest schooner. With Disko, Harvey took no liberties; not even when the old
man dropped direct orders, and treated him, like the rest of the crew, to
"Don't you want to do so and so?" and "Guess you'd better,"
and so forth. There was something about the clean-shaven lips and the puckered
corners of the eyes that was mightily sobering to young blood.
Disko showed him the
meaning of the thumbed and pricked chart, which, he said, laid over any
government publication whatsoever; led him, pencil in hand, from berth to berth
over the whole string of banks - Le Have, Western, Banquereau, St. Pierre, Green,
and Grand - talking "cod" meantime. Taught him, too, the principle on
which the "hog-yoke" was worked.
In this Harvey
excelled Dan, for he had inherited a head for figures, and the notion of
stealing information from one glimpse of the sullen Bank sun appealed to all
his keen wits. For other sea-matters his age handicapped him. As Disko said, he
should have begun when he was ten. Dan could bait up trawl or lay his hand on
any rope in the dark; and at a pinch, when Uncle Salters had a gurry-sore on
his palm, could dress down by sense of touch. He could steer in anything short
of half a gale from the feel of the wind on his face, humouring the "We're
Here" just when she needed it. These things he did as automatically as he
skipped about the rigging, or made his dory a part of his own will and body.
But he could not communicate his knowledge to Harvey.
Still there was a good
deal of general information flying about the schooner on stormy days, when they
lay up in the fo'c'sle or sat on the cabin lockers, while spare eye-bolts,
leads, and rings rolled and rattled in the pauses of the talk. Disko spoke of
whaling voyages in the Fifties; of great she-whales slain beside their young;
of death agonies on the black, tossing seas, and blood that spurted forty feet
in the air; of boats smashed to splinters; of patent rockets that went off
wrong-end-first and bombarded the trembling crews; of cutting-in and
boiling-down, and that terrible "nip" of '71, when twelve hundred men
were made homeless on the ice in three days - wonderful tales, all true. But
more wonderful still were his stories of the cod, and how they argued and
reasoned on their private businesses deep down below the keel.
Long Jack's tastes ran
more to the supernatural. He held them silent with ghastly stories of the
"Yo-hoes" on Monomoy Beach, that mock and terrify lonely
clam-diggers; of sand-walkers and dune-haunters who were never properly buried;
of hidden treasure on Fire Island guarded by the spirits of Kidd's men; of
ships that sailed in the fog straight over Truro township; of that harbour in
Maine where no one but a stranger will lie at anchor twice in a certain place
because of a dead crew who row alongside at midnight with the anchor in the bow
of their old-fashioned boat, whistling - not calling, but whistling - for the
soul of the man who broke their rest.
Harvey had a notion
that the east coast of his native land, from Mount Desert south, was populated
chiefly by people who took their horses there in the summer and entertained in
country-houses with hardwood floors and Vantine portieres. He laughed at the
ghost- tales, - not as much as he would have done a month before, - but ended
by sitting still and shuddering.
Tom Platt dealt with
his interminable trip round the Horn on the old Ohio in the flogging days, with
a navy more extinct than the dodo - the navy that passed away in the great war.
He told them how red-hot shot are dropped into a cannon, a wad of wet clay
between them and the cartridge; how they sizzle and reek when they strike wood,
and how the little ship-boys of the Miss Jim Buck hove water over them and
shouted to the fort to try again. And he told tales of blockade -long weeks of
swaying at anchor, varied only by the departure and return of steamers that had
used up their coal (there was no change for the sailing-ships); of gales and
cold - cold that kept two hundred men, night and day, pounding and chopping at
the ice on cable, blocks, and rigging, when the galley was as red-hot as the
fort's shot, and men drank cocoa by the bucket. Tom Platt had no use for steam.
His service closed when that thing was comparatively new. He admitted that it
was a specious invention in time of peace, but looked hopefully for the day
when sails should come back again on ten-thousand-ton frigates with
hundred-and-ninety-foot booms.
Manuel's talk was slow
and gentle - all about pretty girls in Madeira washing clothes in the dry beds
of streams, by moonlight, under waving bananas; legends of saints, and tales of
queer dances or fights away in the cold Newfoundland baiting-ports. Salters was
mainly agricultural; for, though he read "Josephus" and expounded it,
his mission in life was to prove the value of green manures, and specially of
clover, against every form of phosphate whatsoever. He grew libellous about
phosphates; he dragged greasy "Orange Judd" books from his bunk and
intoned them, wagging his finger at Harvey, to whom it was all Greek. Little
Penn was so genuinely pained when Harvey made fun of Salters's lectures that
the boy gave it up, and suffered in polite silence. That was very good for
Harvey.
The cook naturally did
not join in these conversations. As a rule, he spoke only when it was
absolutely necessary; but at times a queer gift of speech descended on him, and
he held forth, half in Gaelic, half in broken English, an hour at a time. He
was specially communicative with the boys, and he never withdrew his prophecy
that one day Harvey would be Dan's master, and that he would see it. He told
them of mail-carrying in the winter up Cape Breton way, of the dog-train that
goes to Coudray, and of the ram- steamer Arctic, that breaks the ice between
the mainland and Prince Edward Island. Then he told them stories that his
mother had told him, of life far to the southward, where water never froze; and
he said that when he died his soul would go to lie down on a warm white beach
of sand with palm-trees waving above. That seemed to the boys a very odd idea
for a man who had never seen a palm in his life. Then, too, regularly at each
meal, he would ask Harvey, and Harvey alone, whether the cooking was to his
taste; and this always made the "second half" laugh. Yet they had a
great respect for the cook's judgment, and in their hearts considered Harvey
something of a mascot by consequence.
And while Harvey was
taking in knowledge of new things at each pore and hard health with every gulp
of the good air, the "We're Here" went her ways and did her business
on the Bank, and the silvery-grey kenches of well-pressed fish mounted higher
and higher in the hold. No one day's work was out of the common, but the
average days were many and close together.
Naturally, a man of
Disko's reputation was closely watched - "scrowged upon," Dan called
it - by his neighbours, but he had a very pretty knack of giving them the slip
through the curdling, glidy fog-banks. Disko avoided company for two reasons.
He wished to make his own experiments, in the first place; and in the second,
he objected to the mixed gatherings of a fleet of all nations. The bulk of them
were mainly Gloucester boats, with a scattering from Provincetown, Harwich,
Chatham, and some of the Maine ports, but the crews drew from goodness knows
where. Risk breeds recklessness, and when greed is added there are fine chances
for every kind of accident in the crowded fleet, which, like a mob of sheep, is
huddled round some unrecognised leader. "Let the two Jeraulds lead
'em," said Disko. "We're baound to lay among 'em fer a spell on the
Eastern Shoals; though ef luck holds, we won't hev to lay long. Where we are
naow, Harve, ain't considered noways good graound."
"Ain't it?"
said Harvey, who was drawing water (he had learned just how to wiggle the
bucket), after an unusually long dressing- down. "Shouldn't mind striking
some poor ground for a change, then."
"All the graound
I want to see - don't want to strike her - is Eastern Point," said Dan.
"Say, dad, it looks 's if we wouldn't hev to lay more'n two weeks on the
Shoals. You'll meet all the comp'ny you want then, Harve. That's the time we
begin to work. No reg'lar meals fer no one then. 'Mug-up when ye're hungry, an'
sleep when ye can't keep awake. Good job you wasn't picked up a month later
than you was, or we'd never ha' had you dressed in shape fer the Old
Virgin."
Harvey understood from
the Eldridge chart that the Old Virgin and a nest of curiously named shoals
were the turning-point of the cruise, and that with good luck they would wet
the balance of their salt there. But seeing the size of the Virgin (it was one
tiny dot), he wondered how even Disko with the hog-yoke and the lead could find
her. He learned later that Disko was entirely equal to that and any other
business, and could even help others. A big four-by-five blackboard hung in the
cabin, and Harvey never understood the need of it till, after some blinding
thick days, they heard the unmelodious tooting of a foot-power fog-horn - a machine
whose note is as that of a consumptive elephant.
They were making a
short berth, towing the anchor under their foot to save trouble.
"Squarerigger bellowin' fer his latitude," said Long Jack. The
dripping red headsails of a bark glided out of the fog, and the "We're
Here" rang her bell thrice, using sea shorthand.
The larger boat backed
her topsail with shrieks and shoutings.
"Frenchman,"
said Uncle Salters, scornfully. "Miquelon boat from St. Malo." The
farmer had a weatherly sea-eye. "I'm most outer 'baccy, too, Disko."
"Same here,"
said Tom Platt. "Hi! Backez vouz - backez vouz! Standez awayez, you
butt-ended mucho-bono! Where you from - St. Malo, eh?"
Ah, ha! Mucho bono!
Oui! oui! Clos Poulet - St. Malo! St. Pierre et Miquelon," cried the other
crowd, waving woollen caps and laughing. Then all together, "Bord!
Bord!"
"Bring up the
board, Danny. Beats me how them Frenchmen fetch anywheres, exceptin' America's
fairish broadly. Forty-six forty- nine's good enough fer them; an' I guess it's
abaout right, too."
Dan chalked the
figures on the board, and they hung it in the main-rigging to a chorus of
mercis from the bark.
"Seems kinder
unneighbourly to let 'em swedge off like this," Salters suggested, feeling
in his pockets.
"Hev ye learned
French then sence last trip'?" said Disko. "I don't want no more
stone-ballast hove at us 'long o' your calm' Miquelon boats 'footy cochins,'
same's you did off Le Have."
"Harmon Rush he
said that was the way to rise 'em. Plain United States is good enough fer me.
We're all dretful short on terbakker. Young feller, don't you speak
French?"
"Oh, yes,"
said Harvey, valiantly; and he bawled: "Hi! Say! Arretez vous! Attendez! Nous
sommes venant pour tabac."
"Ah, tabac,
tabac!" they cried, and laughed again.
"That hit 'em.
Let's heave a dory over, anyway," said Tom Platt. "I don't exactly
hold no certificates on French, but I know another lingo that goes, I guess.
Come on, Harve, an' interpret."
The raffle and
confusion when he and Harvey were hauled up the bark's black side was
indescribable. Her cabin was all stuck round with glaring coloured prints of
the Virgin - the Virgin of Newfoundland, they called her. Harvey found his
French of no recognised Bank brand, and his conversation was limited to nods
and grins. But Tom Platt waved his arms and got along swimmingly. The captain
gave him a drink of unspeakable gin, and the opera- comique crew, with their
hairy throats, red caps, and long knives, greeted him as a brother. Then the
trade began. They had tobacco, plenty of it - American, that had never paid
duty to France. They wanted chocolate and crackers. Harvey rowed back to
arrange with the cook and Disko, who owned the stores, and on his return the
cocoa-tins and cracker-bags were counted out by the Frenchman's wheel. It
looked like a piratical division of loot; but Tom Platt came out of it roped
with black pigtail and stuffed with cakes of chewing and smoking tobacco. Then
those jovial mariners swung off into the mist, and the last Harvey heard was a
gay chorus:
"Par derriere
chez ma tante,
Il y a un bois joli,
Et le rossignol y
chante
Et le jour et la
nuit...
Que donneriez vous,
belle,
Qui I'amnerait ici?
Je donnerai Qubec,
Sorel et Saint
Denis."
"How was it my
French didn't go, and your sign-talk did?" Harvey demanded when the barter
had been distributed among the "We're Heres".
"Sign-talk!"
Platt guffawed. "Well, yes, 'twas sign-talk, but a heap older'n your
French, Harve. Them French boats are chock-full o' Freemasons, an' that's
why."
"Are you a
Freemason, then?"
"Looks that way,
don't it?" said the man-o'war's man, stuffing his pipe; and Harvey had
another mystery of the deep sea to brood upon.
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