“Sit still, and hear the last of
our sea sorrow.” Shakspeare
The weight of the tempest had been
felt at that hapless moment when Earing and his unfortunate
companions were precipitated from their giddy elevation
into the sea. Though the wind continued to blow
long after this fatal event, it was with a constantly
diminishing power. As the gale decreased the
sea began to rise, and the vessel to labour in proportion.
Then followed two hours of anxious watchfulness on
the part of Wilder, during which the whole of his
professional knowledge was needed in order to keep
the despoiled hull of the Bristol trader from becoming
a prey to the greedy waters. His consummate skill,
however, proved equal to the task that was required
at his hands; and, just as the symptoms of day were
becoming visible along the east, both wind and waves
were rapidly subsiding together. During the whole
of this doubtful period our adventurer did not receive
the smallest assistance from any of the crew, with
the exception of two experienced seamen whom he had
previously stationed at the wheel. But to this
neglect he was indifferent; since little more was
required than his own judgment, seconded, as it faithfully
was, by the exertions of the manners more immediately
under his eye.
The day dawned on a scene entirely
different from that which had marked the tempestuous
deformity of the night. The whole fury of the
winds appear ed to have been expended in their precocious
effort. From the moderate gale, to which they
had fallen by the end of the middle watch, they further
altered to a vacillating breeze; and, ere the sun had
risen, the changeful air had subsided into a flat
calm. The sea went down as suddenly as the power
which had raised, it vanished; and, by the time the
broad golden light of the sun was shed fairly and fully
upon the unstable element, it lay unruffled and polished,
though still gently heaving in swells so long and
heavy as to resemble the placid respiration of a sleeping
infant.
The hour was still early, and the
serene appearance of the sky and the ocean gave every
promise of a day which might be passed in devising
the expedients necessary to bring the ship again,
in some measure, under the command of her people.
“Sound the pumps,” said
Wilder, observing that the crew were appearing from
the different places in which they had bestowed their
cares and their persons together, during the later
hours of the night.
“Do you hear me, sir?”
he added sternly, observing that no one moved to obey
his order. “Let the pumps be sounded, and
the ship cleared of every inch of water.”
Nighthead, to whom Wilder had now
addressed himself, regarded his Commander with an
oblique ind sullen eye, and then exchanged singularly
intelligent glances with his comrades, before he saw
fit to make the smallest motion towards compliance.
But there was that, in the authoritative mien of his
superior, which finally induced him to comply.
The dilatory manner in which the seamen performed the
duty was quickened, however, as the rod ascended,
and the well-known signs of a formidable leak met
their eyes. The experiment was repeated with greater
activity, and with far more precision.
“If witchcraft can clear the
hold of a ship that is already half full of water,”
said Nighthead, casting another sullen glance towards
the attentive Wilder “the sooner it is done
the better; for the whole cunning of something more
than a bungler in the same will be needed, in order
to make the pumps of the ‘Royal Caroline’
suck!”
“Does the ship leak?”
demanded his superior with a quickness of utterance
which sufficiently proclaimed how important he deemed
the intelligence.
“Yesterday, I would have boldly
put my name to the articles of any craft that floats
the ocean; and had the Captain asked me if I understood
her nature and character, as certain as that my name
is Francis Nighthead, I should have told him, yes.
But I find that the oldest seaman may still learn
something of the water; though it should be got in
crossing a ferry in a flat.”
“What mean you, sir?”
demanded Wilder, who, for the first time, began to
note the mutinous looks assumed by his mate, no less
than the threatening manner in which he was seconded
by the crew. “Have the pumps rigged without
delay, and clear the ship of the water.”
Nighthead slowly complied with the
former part of this order; and, in a few moments,
every thing was arranged to commence the necessary,
and, as it would seem, urgent duty of pumping.
But no man lifted his hand to the laborious employment.
The quick eye of Wilder, who had now taken the alarm,
was not slow in detecting this reluctance; and he repeated
the order more sternly, calling to two of the seamen,
by name, to set the example of obedience. The
men hesitated, giving an opportunity to the mate to
confirm them, by his voice, in their mutinous intentions.
“What need of hands to work
a pump in a vessel like this?” he said, with
a coarse laugh, but in which secret terror struggled
strangely with open malice. “After what
we have all seen this night, none here will be amazed,
should the vessel begin to spout out the brine like
a breathing whale.”
“What am I to understand by
this hesitation, and by this language?” said
Wilder, approaching Nighthead with a firm step, and
an eye too proud to quail before the plainest symptoms
of insubordination. “Is it you, sir, who
should be foremost in exertion at a moment like this,
who dare to set an example of disobedience?”
The mate recoiled a pace, and his
lips moved, still he uttered no audible reply.
Wilder once more bade him, in a calm and authoritative
tone, lay his own hands to the brake. Nighthead
then found his voice, in time to make a flat refusal;
and, at the next moment, he was felled to the feet
of his indignant Commander, by a blow he had neither
the address nor the power to resist. This act
of decision was succeeded by one single moment of
breathless, wavering silence among the crew; and then
the common cry, and the general rush of every man
upon our defenceless and solitary adventurer, were
the signals that open hostility had commenced.
A shriek from the quarter-deck arrested their efforts;
just as a dozen hands were laid violently upon the
person of Wilder, and, for the moment, occasioned
a truce. It was the fearful cry of Gertrude, which
possessed even the influence to still the savage intentions
of a set of beings so rude and so unnurtured as those
whose passions had just been awakened into fierce
activity. Wilder was released; and all eyes turned,
by a common impulse, in the direction of the sound.
During the more momentous hours of
the past night, the very existence of the passengers
below had been forgotten by most of those whose duty
kept them to the deck. If they had been recalled
at all to the recollection of any, it was at those
fleeting moments when the mind of the young mariner,
who directed the movements of the ship, found leisure
to catch stolen glimpses of softer scenes than the
wild warring of the elements that was so actively
raging before his eyes. Nighthead had named them,
as he would have made allusion to a part of the cargo,
but their fate had little influence on his hardened
nature. Mrs Wyllys and her charge had therefore
remained below during the whole period, perfectly unapprised
of the disasters of the intervening time. Buried
in the recesses of their births, they had heard the
roaring of the winds, and the incessant washing of
the waters; but these usual accompaniments of a storm
had served to conceal the crashing of masts, and the
hoarse cries of the mariners. For the moments
of terrible suspense while the Bristol trader lay on
her side, the better informed governess had, indeed,
some fearful glimmerings of the truth; but, conscious
of her uselessness and unwilling to alarm her less
instructed companion she had sufficient self-command
to be mute. The subsequent silence, and comparative
calm, induced her to believe that she had been mistaken
in her apprehensions; and, long ere morning dawned,
both she and Gertrude had sunk into sweet and refreshing
slumbers. They had risen and mounted to the deck
together, and were still in the first burst of their
wonder at the desolation which met their gaze, when
the long-meditated attack on Wilder was made.
“What means this awful change?”
demanded Mrs Wyllys, with a lip that quivered, and
a cheek which, notwithstanding the extraordinary power
she possessed over her feelings, was blanched to the
colour of death.
The eye of Wilder was glowing, and
his brow dark as those heavens from which they had
just so happily escaped, as he answered, menacing his
assailants with an arm,
“It means mutiny, Madam; rascally, cowardly
mutiny!”
“Could mutiny strip a vessel
of her masts, and leave her a helpless log upon the
sea?”
“Hark ye, Madam!” roughly
interrupted the mate ’to you I will speak freely;
for it is well known who you are, and that you came
on board the ‘Caroline’ a paying passenger.
This night have I seen the heavens and the ocean behave
as I have never seen them behave before. Ships
have been running afore the wind, light and buoyant
as corks, with all their spars stepped and steady,
when other ships have been shaved of every mast as
close as the razor sweeps the chin. Cruisers have
been fallen in with, sailing without living hands
to work them; and, all together, no man here has ever
before passed a middle watch like the one gone by.”
“And what has this to do with
the violence I have just witnessed? Is the vessel
fated to endure every evil! Can you
explain this, Mr Wilder?”
“You cannot say, at least, you
had no warning of danger,” returned Wilder,
smiling bitterly.
“Ay, the devil is obliged to
be honest on compulsion,” resumed the mate.
“Each of his imps sails with his orders; and,
thank Heaven! however he may be minded to overlook
the same, he has neither courage nor power to do it.
Otherwise, a peaceful voyage would be such a rarity,
in these unsettled times, that few men would be found
hardy enough to venture on the water for a livelihood. A
warning! Ay, we will own you gave us open and
frequent warning. It was a notice, that the consignee
should not have overlooked, when Nicholas Nichols
met with the hurt, as the anchor was leaving the bottom
I never knew an accident happen at such a time and
no evil come of it. Then, had we a warning with
the old man in the boat; besides the never-failing
ill luck of sending the pilot violently out of the
ship. As if all this wasn’t enough, instead
of taking a hint, and lying peaceably at our anchors,
we got the ship under way, and left a safe and friendly
harbour of a Friday, of all the days in a week!
So far from being surprised at what has happened,
I only wonder at finding myself still a living man;
the reason of which is simply this, that I have given
my faith where faith only is due, and not to unknown
mariners and strange Commanders. Had Edward Earing
done the same, he might still have had a plank between
him and the bottom; but, though half inclined to believe
in the truth, he had, after all, too much leaning
to superstition and credulity.”
This laboured and characteristic profession
of faith in the mate, though sufficiently intelligible
to Wilder, was still a perfect enigma to his female
listeners. But Nighthead had not formed his resolution
by halves, neither had he gone thus far, with any
intention to stop short of the completion of his whole
design. In a very few summary words, he explained
to Mrs Wyllys the desolate condition of the ship, and
the utter improbability that she could continue to
float many hours; since actual observation had told
him that her lower hold was already half full of water.
“And what is then to be done?”
demanded the governess, casting a glance of bitter
distress towards the pallid and attentive Gertrude.
“Is there no sail in sight, to take us from
the wreck? or must we perish in our helplessness!”
“God-protect us from anymore
strange sails!” exclaimed the surly Nighthead.
“There we have the pinnace hanging at the stern,
and here must be land at some forty leagues to the
north-west. Water and food are plenty, and twelve,
stout hands can soon pull a boat to the continent of
America; that is, always provided, America is left
where it was seen no later than at the sun-set of
yesterday.”
“You then propose to abandon the vessel?”
“I do. The interest of
the owners is dear to all good seamen, but life is
sweeter than gold.”
“The will of heaven be done!
But surely you meditate no violence against this gentleman,
who, I am quite certain, has governed the vessel, in
very critical circumstances, with a discretion far
beyond his years!”
Nighthead muttered his intentions,
whatever they might be, to himself; and then he walked
apart, apparently to confer with the men, who already
seemed but too well disposed to second any of his views,
however mistaken or lawless. During the few moments
of suspense that succeeded, Wilder stood silent and
composed, a smile of something like scorn struggling
about his lip, and maintaining the air rather of one
who had power to decide on the fortunes of others,
than of a man whose own fate was most probably at
that very moment in discussion. When the dull
minds of the seamen had arrived at their conclusion,
the mate advanced to proclaim the result. Indeed,
words were unnecessary, in order to make known a very
material part of their decision; for a party of the
men proceeded instantly to lower the stern-boat into
the water, while others set about supplying it with
the necessary means of subsistence.
“There is room for all the Christians
in the ship to stow themselves in this pinnace,”
resumed Nighthead; “and as for those that place
their dépendance on any particular persons, why,
let them call for aid where they have been used to
receive it.”
“From all which I am to infer
that it is your intention,” said Wilder, calmly,
“to abandon the wreck and your duty?”
The half-awed but still resentful
mate returned a look in which fear and triumph struggled
for the mastery, as he answered,
“You, who know how to sail a
ship without a crew, can never want a boat! Besides,
you shall never say to your friends, whoever they may
be, that we leave you without the means of reaching
the land, if you are indeed a land-bird at all.
There is the launch.”
“There is the launch! but well
do you know, that, without masts, all your united
strengths could not lift it from the deck; else would
it not be left.”
“They that took the masts out
of the ‘Caroline’ can put them in again,”
rejoined a grinning seaman; “it will not be an
hour after we leave you, before a sheer-hulk will
come alongside, to step the spars again, and then
you may go cruise in company.”
Wilder appeared to be superior to
any reply. He began to pace the deck, thoughtful,
it is true, but still composed, and entirely self-possessed.
In the mean time, as a common desire to quit the wreck
as soon as possible actuated all the men, their preparations
advanced with incredible activity. The wondering
and alarmed females had hardly time to think clearly
on the extraordinary situation in which they found
themselves, before they saw the form of the helpless
Master borne past them to the boat; and, in another
minute, they were summoned to take their places at
his side.
Thus imperiously called upon to act,
they began to feel the necessity of decision.
Remonstrances, they feared, would be useless; for the
fierce and malignant looks which were cast, from time
to time, at Wilder, as the labour proceeded, proclaimed
the danger of awakening such obstinate and ignorant
minds into renewed acts of violence. The governess
bethought her of an appeal to the wounded man, but
the look of wild care which he had cast about him,
on being lifted to the deck, and the expression of
bodily and mental pain that gleamed across his rugged
features, as he buried them in the blankets by which
he was enveloped, but too plainly announced that little
assistance was, in his present condition, to be expected
from him.
“What remains for us to do?”
she at length demanded of the seemingly insensible
object of her concern.
“I would I knew!” he answered
quickly, casting a keen but hurried glance around
the whole horizon. “It is not improbable
that they should reach the shore. Four-and-twenty
hours of calm will assure it.”
“And if otherwise?”
“A blow at north-west, or from
any quarter off the land, will prove their ruin.”
“But the ship?”
“If deserted, she must sink.”
“Then will I speak in your favour
to these hearts of flint! I know not why I feel
such interest in your welfare, inexplicable young man,
but much would I suffer rather than believe that you
incurred this peril.”
“Stop, dearest Madam,”
said Wilder, respectfully arresting her movement with
his hand. “I cannot leave the vessel.”
“We know not yet. The most
stubborn natures may be subdued; even ignorance can
be made to open its ears at the voice of entreaty.
I may prevail.”
“There is one temper to be quelled one
reason to convince one prejudice to conquer,
over which you have no power.”
“Whose is that?”
“My own.”
“What mean you, sir? Surely
you are not weak enough to suffer resentment against
such beings to goad you to an act of madness?”
“Do I seem mad?” demanded
Wilder. “The feeling by which I am governed
may be false, but, such as it is, it is grafted on
my habits, my opinions; I will say, my principles.
Honour forbids me to quit a ship that I command, while
a plank of her is afloat.”
“Of what use can a single arm prove at such
a crisis?”.
“None,” he answered, with
a melancholy smile. “I must die, in order
that others, who may be serviceable hereafter, should
do their duty.”
Both Mrs Wyllys and Gertrude stood
regarding his kindling eye, but otherwise placid countenance,
with looks whose concern amounted to horror.
The former read, in the very composure of his mien,
the unalterable character of his resolution; and the
latter shuddering as the prospect of the cruel fate
which awaited him crowded on her mind, felt a glow
about her own youthful heart that almost tempted her
to believe his self-devotion commendable. But
the governess saw new reasons for apprehension in
the determination of Wilder. If she had hitherto
felt reluctance to trust herself and her ward with
a band such as that which now possessed the sole authority,
it was more than doubly increased by the rude and
noisy summons she received to hasten and take her place
among them.
“Would to Heaven I knew in what
manner to choose!” she exclaimed. “Speak
to us, young man, as you would counsel mother and sister.”
“Were I so fortunate as to possess
relatives so near and dear,” returned the other,
with emphasis “nothing should separate us at
a time like this.”
“Is there hope for those who remain on the wreck?”
“But little.”
“And in the boat?”
It was near a minute before Wilder
made any answer. He again turned his look around
the bright and broad horizon, and he appeared to study
the heavens, in the direction of the distant Continent,
with infinite care. No omen that could indicate
the probable character of the weather escaped his
vigilance while his countenance reflected all the various
emotions by which he was governed, as he gazed.
“As I am a man, Madam,”
he answered with fervour “and one who is bound
not only to counsel but to protect your sex, I distrust
the time. I think the chance of being seen by
some passing sail equal to the probability that those
who adventure in the pinnace will ever reach the land.”
“Then let us remain,”
said Gertrude, the blood, for the first time since
her re-appearance on deck, rushing into her colourless
cheeks, until they appeared charged to fulness.
“I like not the wretches who would be our companions
in that boat.”
“Away, away!” impatiently
shouted Nighthead “Each minute of light is a
week of life to us all, and every moment of calm, a
year. Away, away, or we leave you!”
Mrs Wyllys answered not, but she stood
the image of doubt and painful indecision. Then
the plash of oars was heard in the water, and at the
next moment the pinnace was seen gliding over the
element, impelled by the strong arms of six powerful
rowers.
“Stay!” shrieked the governess,
no longer undetermined; “receive my child, though
you abandon me!”
A wave of the hand, and an indistinct
rumbling in the coarse tones of the mate, were the
only answers given to her appeal. A long, deep,
and breathing silence followed among the deserted.
The grim countenances of the seamen in the pinnace
soon became confused and indistinct; and then the
boat itself began to lessen on the eye, until it seemed
no more than a dark and distant speck, rising and
falling with the flow and reflux of the blue waters.
During all this time, not even a whispered word was
spoken. Each of the party gazed, until sight
grew dim, at the receding object; and it was only
when his organs refused to convey the tiny image to
his brain, that Wilder himself shook off the impression
of the sort of trance into which he had fallen.
His look became bent on his companions, and he pressed
his hand upon his forehead, as though his brain were
bewildered by the deep responsibility he had assumed
in advising them to remain. But the sickening
apprehension quickly passed away, leaving in its place
a firmer mind, and a resolution too often tried in
scenes of doubtful issue, to be long or easily shaken
from its calmness and self-possession.
“They are gone!” he exclaimed,
breathing long and heavily, like one whose respiration
had been unnaturally suspended.
“They are gone!” echoed
the governess, turning an eye, that was contracting
with the intensity or her care, on the marble-like
and motionless form of her pupil “There is no
longer any hope.”
The look that Wilder bestowed, on
the same silent out lovely statue, was scarcely less
expressive than “he gaze of her who had nurtured
the infancy of the Southern Heiress, in innocence
and love. His brow grew thoughtful, and his lips
became compressed, while all the resources of his fertile
imagination and long experience gathered in his mind,
in engrossing intense reflection.
“Is there hope?” demanded
the governess, who was watching the change of his
working countenance, with an attention that never swerved.
The gloom passed away from his swarthy
features, and the smile that lighted them was like
the radiance of the sun, as it breaks through the
blackest vapours of the drifting gust.
“There is!” he said with
firmness; “our case is far from desperate.”
“Then, may He who rules the
ocean and the land receive the praise!” cried
the grateful governess giving vent to her long-suppressed
agony in a flood of tears.
Gertrude cast herself upon the neck
of Mrs Wyllys, and for a minute their unrestrained
emotions were mingled.
“And now, my dearest Madam,”
said Gertrude, leaving the arms of her governess,
“let us trust to the skill of Mr Wilder; he has
foreseen and foretold this danger; equally well may
he predict our safety.”
“Foreseen and foretold!”
returned the other, in a manner to show that her faith
in the professional prescience of the stranger was
not altogether so unbounded as that of her more youthful
and ardent companion. “No mortal could
have foreseen this awful calamity; and least of all,
foreseeing it, would he have sought to incur its danger!
Mr Wilder, I will not annoy you with requests for
explanations that might now be useless, but you will
not refuse to communicate your grounds of hope.”
Wilder hastened to relieve a curiosity
that he well knew must be as painful as it was natural.
The mutineers had left the largest, and much the safest,
of the two boats belonging to the wreck, from a desire
to improve the calm, well knowing that hours of severe
labour would be necessary to launch it, from the place
it occupied between the stumps of the two principal
masts, into the ocean. This operation, which might
have been executed in a few minutes with the ordinary
purchases of the ship, would have required all their
strength united, and that, too, to be exercised with
a discretion and care that would have consumed too
many of those moments which they rightly deemed to
be so precious at that wild and unstable season of
the year. Into this little ark Wilder proposed
to convey such articles of comfort and necessity as
he might hastily collect from the abandoned vessel;
and then, entering it with his companions, to await
the critical instant when the wreck should sink from
beneath them.
“Call you this hope?”
exclaimed Mrs Wyllys, when his short explanation was
ended, her cheek again blanching with disappointment.
“I have heard that the gulf, which foundering
vessels leave, swallows all lesser objects that are
floating nigh!”
“It sometimes happens.
For worlds I would not deceive you; and I now say
that I think our chance for escape equal to that of
being ingulfed with the vessel.”
“This is terrible!” murmured
the governess, “but the will of Heaven be done!
Cannot ingenuity supply the place of strength, and
the boat be cast from the decks before the fatal moment
arrives?”
Wilder shook his head in an unequivocal negative.
“We are not so weak as you may
think us,” said Gertrude. “Give a
direction to our efforts, and let us see what may
yet be done. Here is Cassandra,” she added turning
to the black girl already introduced to the reader,
who stood behind her young and ardent mistress, with
the mantle and shawls of the latter thrown over her
arm, as if about to attend her on an excursion for
the morning “here is Cassandra who
alone has nearly the strength of a man.”
“Had she the strength of twenty,
I should despair of launching the boat without the
aid of machinery But we lose time in words; I will
go below, in order to judge of the probable duration
of our doubt and then to our preparations. Even
you, fair and fragile as you seem, lovely being, may
aid in the latter.”
He then pointed out such lighter objects
as would be necessary to their comfort, should they
be so fortunate as to get clear of the wreck, and
advised their being put into the boat without delay.
While the three females were thus usefully employed,
he descended into the hold of the ship, in order to
note the increase of the water, and make his calculations
on the time that would elapse before the sinking fabric
must entirely disappear. The fact proved their
case to be more alarming than even Wilder had been
led to expect. Stripped of her masts, the vessel
had laboured so heavily as to open many of her seams;
and, as the upper works began to settle beneath the
level of the ocean, the influx of the element was
increasing with frightful rapidity. As the young
manner gazed about him with an understanding eye,
he cursed, in the bitterness of his heart, the ignorance
and superstition that had caused the desertion of the
remainder of the crew. There existed, in reality,
no evil that exertion and skill could not have remedied;
but, deprived of all aid, he at once saw the folly
of even attempting to procrastinate a catastrophe that
was now unavoidable. Returning with a heavy heart
to the deck, he immediately set about those dispositions
which were necessary to afford them the smallest chance
of escape.
While his companions deadened the
sense of apprehension by their light but equally necessary
employment Wilder stepped the two masts of the boat,
and properly disposed of the sails, and those other
implements that might be useful in the event of success
Thus occupied, a couple of hours flew by, as though
minutes were compressed into moments. At the expiration
of that period, his labour had ceased. He then
cut the gripes that had kept the launch in its place
when the ship was in motion, leaving it standing upright
on its wooden beds, but in no other manner connected
with the hull, which, by this time, had settled so
low as to create the apprehension, that, at any moment,
it might sink from beneath them. After this measure
of precaution was taken, the females were summoned
to the boat, lest the crisis might be nearer than
he supposed; for he well knew that a foundering ship
was, like a tottering wall, liable at any moment to
yield to the impulse of the downward pressure.
He then commenced the scarcely less necessary operation
of selection among the chaos of articles with which
the ill-directed zeal of his companions had so cumbered
the boat, that there was hardly room left in which
they might dispose of their more precious persons.
Notwithstanding the often repeated and vociferous
remonstrances of the negress, boxes, trunks, and packages
flew from either side of the launch, as though Wilder
had no consideration for the comfort and care of that
fair being in whose behalf Cassandra, unheeded, like
her ancient namesake of Troy, lifted her voice so
often in the tones of remonstrance. The boat
was soon cleared of what, under their circumstances,
was literally lumber; leaving, however, far more than
enough to meet all their wants, and not a few of their
comforts, in the event that the elements should accord
the permission to use them.
Then, and not till then, did Wilder
relax in his exertions. He had arranged his sails,
ready to be hoisted in an instant; he had carefully
examined that no straggling rope connected the boat
to the wreck, to draw them under with the foundering
mass; and he had assured himself that food, water,
compass, and the imperfect instruments that were then
in use to ascertain the position of a ship, were all
carefully disposed of in their several places, and
ready to his hand. When all was in this state
of preparation, he disposed of himself in the stern
of the boat, and endeavoured, by the composure of
his manner, to inspire his less resolute companions
with a portion of his own firmness.
The bright sun-shine was sleeping
in a thousand places on every side of the silent and
deserted wreck. The sea had subsided to such a
state of utter rest, that it was only at long intervals
that the huge and helpless mass on which the ark of
the expectants lay was lifted from its dull quietude,
to roll heavily, for a moment, in the washing waters,
and then to settle lower into the greedy and absorbing
element. Still the disappearance of the hull
was slow, and even tedious, to those who looked forward
with such impatience to its total immersion, as to
the crisis of their own fortunes.
During these hours of weary and awful
suspense, the discourse, between the watchers, though
conducted in tones of confidence, and often of tenderness,
was broken by long intervals of deep and musing silence.
Each forbore to dwell upon the danger of their situation,
in consideration of the feelings of the rest; but
neither could conceal the imminent risk they ran,
from that jealous watchfulness of love of life which
was common to them all. In this manner, minutes,
hours, and the day itself, rolled by, and the darkness
was seen stealing along the deep, gradually narrowing
the boundary of their view towards the east, until
the whole of the empty scene was limited to a little
dusky circle around the spot on which they lay.
To this change succeeded another fearful hour, during
which it appeared that death was about to visit them,
environed by its most revolting horrors. The
heavy plunge of the wallowing whale, as he cast his
huge form upon the surface of the sea, was heard, accompanied
by the mimic blowings of a hundred imitators, that
followed in the train of the monarch of the ocean.
It appeared to the alarmed and feverish imagination
of Gertrude, that the brine was giving up all its monsters;
and, notwithstanding the calm assurances of Wilder,
that these accustomed sounds were rather the harbingers
of peace than signs of any new danger, they filled
her mind with images of the secret recesses over which
they seemed suspended by a thread, and painted them
replete with the disgusting inhabitants of the caverns
of the great deep. The intelligent seaman himself
was startled, when he saw, on the surface of the water,
the dark fins of the voracious shark stealing around
the wreck, apprised, by his instinct, that the contents
of the devoted vessel were shortly to become the prey
of his tribe. Then came the moon, with its mild
and deceptive light, to throw the delusion of its
glow on the varying but ever frightful scene.
“See,” said Wilder, as
the luminary lifted its pale and melancholy orb out
of the bed of the ocean; “we shall have light
for our hazardous launch!”
“Is it at hand?” demanded
Mrs Wyllys, with all the resolution of manner she
could assume in so trying a situation.
“It is the ship has
already brought her scuppers to the water. Sometimes
a vessel will float until saturated with the brine.
If ours sink at all, it will be soon.”
“If at all! Is there then hope that she
can float?”
“None!” said Wilder, pausing
to listen to the hollow and threatening sounds which
issued from the depths of the vessel, as the water
broke through her divisions, in passing from side
to side, and which sounded like the groaning of some
heavy monster in the last agony of nature. “None;
she is already losing her level!”
His companions saw the change; but,
not for the empire of the world, could either of them
have uttered a syllable. Another low, threatening,
rumbling sound was heard, and then the pent air beneath
blew up the forward part of the deck, with an explosion
like that of a gun.
“Now grasp the ropes I have
given you!” cried Wilder, breathless with his
eagerness to speak.
His words were smothered by the rushing
and gurgling of waters. The vessel made a plunge
like a dying whale; and, raising its stern high into
the air, glided into the depths of the sea, like the
leviathan seeking his secret places. The motionless
boat was lifted with the ship, until it stood in an
attitude fearfully approaching to the perpendicular.
As the wreck descended, the bows of the launch met
the element, burying themselves nearly to filling;
but, buoyant and light, it rose again, and, struck
powerfully on the stern by the settling mass, the little
ark shot ahead, as though it had been driven by the
hand of man. Still, as the water rushed into
the vortex, every thing within its influence yielded
to the suction; and, at the next instant, the launch
was seen darting down the declivity, as if eager to
follow the vast machine, of which it had so long formed
a dependant, through the same gaping whirlpool, to
the bottom. Then it rose, rocking, to the surface;
and, for a moment, was tossed and whirled like a bubble
circling in the eddies of a pool. After which,
the ocean moaned, and slept again; the moon-beams
playing across its treacherous bosom, sweetly and
calm, as the rays are seen to quiver on a lake that
is embedded in sheltering mountains.