Part 43 (1/2)
The water was rippling under a light but steady and pleasant summer breeze from the north-west. They pushed out, and while the boat slowly drifted, set the sails. Directly the foresail was up she turned and moved bow first, like a horse led by the bridle. When the mainsail was hoisted she began to turn again towards the wind, so that Bevis, who steered, had to pull the tiller towards him, or in another minute they would have run into the weeds. He kept her straight before the wind till they had got out of the bay where the boats were kept, and into the open water where the wind came stronger. Then he steered up the New Sea, so that the wind blew right across the boat, coming from the right-hand side.
It was a beautiful breeze, just the one they wanted, not too strong, and from the best direction, so that they could sail all the way there and back without trouble, a soldier's wind, out and home again.
Mark sat by the mast, both of them on the windward side, so as to trim the boat by their weight and make her stiffer. He was to work the foresail if they had to tack, or let down the mainsail if a white squall or a tornado struck the s.h.i.+p. The ripples kissed the bow with a merry smack, smack, smack; sometimes there was a rush of bubbles, and they could feel the boat heel a little as the wind for a moment blew harder.
”How fast we're going!” said Mark. ”Hurrah!”
”Listen to the bubbles? Don't the sails look jolly?” said Bevis. The suns.h.i.+ne shone on the white canvas hollowed out by the wind; as the pilot looked up he could see the slender top of the mast tracing a line under the azure sky. Is there anything so delicious as the first sail in your own boat that you have rigged yourself?
Away she slipped, and Mark began to hum, knocking the seat with his knuckles to keep time. Then Bevis sang, making a tune of his own, leaning back and watching the sails with the sheet handy to let go if a puff came, for were they not voyaging on unknown seas? Bevis sang the same two verses over and over:--
”Telling how the Count Arnaldos, With his hawk upon his hand, Saw a fair and stately galley, Steering onward to the land.
'Learn the secret of the sea?
Only those who brave its dangers, Comprehend its mystery!'”
Mark sang with him, till by-and-by he said, ”There's the battlefield; what country's that?”
”Thessaly,” said Bevis. ”It's the last land we know; now it's all new, and n.o.body knows anything.”
”Except us.”
”Of course.”
”Are you going all round or straight up?” said Mark presently, as they came near Fir-Tree Gulf.
”We ought to coast,” said Bevis. ”They used to; we mustn't go out of sight of land.”
”Steer into the gulf then; mind the stony point; what's that, what's the name?”
”I don't know,” said Bevis. ”It's a dreadful place; awful rocks--smash, crash, s.h.i.+p's side stove in--no chance for any body to escape there.”
”A raft would be smashed.”
”Lifeboats swamped.”
”People jammed on the rocks.”
”Pounded into jelly-fish.”
”But it ought to have a name? Is it Cape Horn?”
”I don't think so, that's the other way round the world; we're more the India way, I think.”
”Perhaps it's Gibraltar.”
”As if we shouldn't know Gibraltar!”
”Of course we should, I forgot. Look! There's a little island and a pa.s.sage--a channel. Mind how you steer--”