Part 16 (1/2)
”Good morning, Master Repton! Managed to get some sleep?”
”Yes, I have slept all night, captain. I say, isn't this tremendous? I did not think anything could be like this. It is splendid, you know, but it takes one's breath away.
”I don't think it is blowing quite so hard, is it?”
”Every bit as hard, but it is more regular, and you are accustomed to it.”
”But I see you have got up some more sail.”
”Yes, that's to steady her. You see, when she gets into the trough between these great waves, the lower sails are almost becalmed; and we are obliged to show something above them, to keep a little way on her. We are still lying to, you see, and meet the waves head on.
If her head was to fall off a few points, and one of these waves took her on the beam, she would go down like a stone.
”Yes, the brig is doing very handsomely. She has a fine run, more like a schooner than a brig; and she meets the waves easily, and rises to them as lightly as a feather. She is a beauty!
”If you are going to stay here, lad, you had better lash yourself; for it is not safe, standing as you are.”
Chapter 5: A French Privateer.
As he became more accustomed to the scene around him, and found that the waves were more terrible in appearance than reality, Bob began to enjoy it, and to take in its grandeur and wildness. The bareness of the deck had struck him, at once; and he now saw that four of the cannon were gone--the two forward guns, on each side--and he rightly supposed that these must have been run out, and tumbled overboard, to lighten the s.h.i.+p forward, and enable her to rise more easily to the waves.
An hour later, the second mate came along.
”You had better come down and get some breakfast,” he said. ”I am going down first.”
Bob threw off the rope, and followed the mate down into the cabin.
Mr. Probert had just turned out. He had been lying down for two or three hours, having gone down as daylight broke.
”The captain says you had better take something before you go on deck, Mr. Probert,” the second mate said. ”He will come down, afterwards, and turn in for an hour or two.”
”No change, I suppose?”
”No. She goes over it like a duck. The seas are more regular, now, and she is making good weather of it.”
Bob wondered, in his own mind, what she would do if she was making bad weather.
The meal was an irregular one. The steward brought in three large mugs, half filled with coffee; a basket of biscuits, and a ham.
From this he cut off some slices, which he laid on biscuits; and each of them ate their breakfast, holding their mugs in one hand, and their biscuits and ham in the other.
As soon as they had finished, the two officers went on deck and, directly afterwards, the captain came down. Bob chatted with him until he had finished his breakfast, and then went up on deck again, for two or three hours. At the end of that time he felt so completely exhausted, from the force of the wind and the constant change of the angle at which he was standing, that he was glad to go below and lie down again.
There was no regular dinner, the officers coming below by turns, and taking a biscuit and a chunk of cold meat, standing. But at teatime the captain and second mate came down together; and Bob, who had again been up on deck for a bit, joined them in taking a large bowl of coffee.
”I think the wind is blowing harder than ever,” he said to the captain.
”Yes, the gla.s.s has begun to rise a little, and that is generally a sign you are getting to the worst of it. I expect it is a three days' gale, and we shall have it at its worst, tonight. I hope by this time, tomorrow, we shall be beginning to shake out our reefs.
”You had better not go up, any more. It will be dark in half an hour, and your bunk is the best place for you.”
Bob was not sorry to obey the order, for he felt that the scene would be a very terrible one, after dark. The night, however, seemed to him to be a miserably long one; for he was only able to doze off occasionally, the motion being so violent that he had to jam himself in his berth, to prevent himself from being thrown out.