登陆注册
15687800000076

第76章 CHAPTER XXXIII(1)

The days grow gray. The sun has lost its warmth, and each noon, at meridian, it is lower in the northern sky. All the old stars have long since gone, and it would seem the sun is following them. The world--the only world I know--has been left behind far there to the north, and the hill of the earth is between it and us. This sad and solitary ocean, gray and cold, is the end of all things, the falling-off place where all things cease. Only it grows colder, and grayer, and penguins cry in the night, and huge amphibians moan and slubber, and great albatrosses, gray with storm-battling of the Horn, wheel and veer.

"Land ho!" was the cry yesterday morning. I shivered as I gazed at this, the first land since Baltimore a few centuries ago. There was no sun, and the morning was damp and cold with a brisk wind that penetrated any garment. The deck thermometer marked 30--two degrees below freezing-point; and now and then easy squalls of snow swept past.

All of the land that was to be seen was snow. Long, low chains of peaks, snow-covered, arose out of the ocean. As we drew closer, there were no signs of life. It was a sheer, savage, bleak, forsaken land. By eleven, off the entrance of Le Maire Straits, the squalls ceased, the wind steadied, and the tide began to make through in the direction we desired to go.

Captain West did not hesitate. His orders to Mr. Pike were quick and tranquil. The man at the wheel altered the course, while both watches sprang aloft to shake out royals and skysails. And yet Captain West knew every inch of the risk he took in this graveyard of ships.

When we entered the narrow strait, under full sail and gripped by a tremendous tide, the rugged headlands of Tierra del Fuego dashed by with dizzying swiftness. Close we were to them, and close we were to the jagged coast of Staten Island on the opposite shore. It was here, in a wild bight, between two black and precipitous walls of rock where even the snow could find no lodgment, that Captain West paused in a casual sweep of his glasses and gazed steadily at one place. I picked the spot up with my own glasses and was aware of an instant chill as I saw the four masts of a great ship sticking out of the water. Whatever craft it was, it was as large as the Elsinore, and it had been but recently wrecked.

"One of the German nitrate ships," said Mr. Pike. Captain West nodded, still studying the wreck, then said:

"She looks quite deserted. Just the same, Mr. Pike, send several of your best-sighted sailors aloft, and keep a good lookout yourself.

There may be some survivors ashore trying to signal us."But we sailed on, and no signals were seen. Mr. Pike was delighted with our good fortune. He was guilty of walking up and down, rubbing his hands and chuckling to himself. Not since 1888, he told me, had he been through the Straits of Le Maire. Also, he said that he knew of shipmasters who had made forty voyages around the Horn and had never once had the luck to win through the straits. The regular passage is far to the east around Staten Island, which means a loss of westing, and here, at the tip of the world, where the great west wind, unobstructed by any land, sweeps round and around the narrow girth of earth, westing is the thing that has to be fought for mile by mile and inch by inch. The Sailing Directions advise masters on the Horn passage: Make Westing. WHATEVER YOU DO, MAKE WESTING.

When we emerged from the straits in the early afternoon the same steady breeze continued, and in the calm water under the lee of Tierra del Fuego, which extends south-westerly to the Horn, we slipped along at an eight-knot clip.

Mr. Pike was beside himself. He could scarcely tear himself from the deck when it was his watch below. He chuckled, rubbed his hands, and incessantly hummed snatches from the Twelfth Mass. Also, he was voluble.

"To-morrow morning we'll be up with the Horn. We'll shave it by a dozen or fifteen miles. Think of it! We'll just steal around! Inever had such luck, and never expected to. Old girl Elsinore, you're rotten for'ard, but the hand of God is at your helm."Once, under the weather cloth, I came upon him talking to himself.

It was more a prayer.

"If only she don't pipe up," he kept repeating. "If only she don't pipe up."Mr. Mellaire was quite different.

"It never happens," he told me. "No ship ever went around like this.

You watch her come. She always comes a-smoking out of the sou'west.""But can't a vessel ever steal around?" I asked.

"The odds are mighty big against it, sir," he answered. "I'll give you a line on them. I'll wager even, sir, just a nominal bet of a pound of tobacco, that inside twenty-four hours we'll he hove to under upper-topsails. I'll wager ten pounds to five that we're not west of the Horn a week from now; and, fifty to fifty being the passage, twenty pounds to five that two weeks from now we're not up with fifty in the Pacific."As for Captain West, the perils of Le Maire behind, he sat below, his slippered feet stretched before him, smoking a cigar. He had nothing to say whatever, although Margaret and I were jubilant and dared duets through all of the second dog-watch.

And this morning, in a smooth sea and gentle breeze, the Horn bore almost due north of us not more than six miles away. Here we were, well abreast and reeling off westing.

"What price tobacco this morning?" I quizzed Mr. Mellaire.

"Going up," he came back. "Wish I had a thousand bets like the one with you, sir."I glanced about at sea and sky and gauged the speed of our way by the foam, but failed to see anything that warranted his remark. It was surely fine weather, and the steward, in token of the same, was trying to catch fluttering Cape pigeons with a bent pin on a piece of thread.

For'ard, on the poop, I encountered Mr. Pike. It WAS an encounter, for his salutation was a grunt.

"Well, we're going right along," I ventured cheerily.

He made no reply, but turned and stared into the gray south-west with an expression sourer than any I had ever seen on his face. He mumbled something I failed to catch, and, on my asking him to repeat it, he said:

同类推荐
  • 书记

    书记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 四明尊者教行录

    四明尊者教行录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 南齐书

    南齐书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 金色王经

    金色王经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Speeches-Literary & Social

    Speeches-Literary & Social

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 云落苍穹

    云落苍穹

    剑出星海,云落苍穹。坠入凡尘的少年和一把残破无锋的断剑,始于中土,踏上了名动四方,威震诸天之路。以心悟道,以血磨剑。为心意通明,求个众生太平,大道无争。请各位书友不要吝啬您的意见和点评,本人小白一个,真心求教。
  • 至尊天位

    至尊天位

    天位,至高无上之位。身为天位者,虽不是仙,亦可屠仙!我是谁?一个孤独者,徘徊在生死边缘,家破人亡,悔恨终生!我要......重来!!
  • 七曜星辰别行法

    七曜星辰别行法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 元素古墓

    元素古墓

    远古遗留下的元素传承,重新掀起了这一场腥风血雨夺他之命,还看你有没有这个本事!夺他之妻,你可得洗好身子待他来宰。项千一路向前,容不得别人阻拦,若天要灭我,那我便先逆了这天!
  • 玉女聆神

    玉女聆神

    她是单纯静好的少女,身怀优秀的驭灵血统,却流浪了十八年,直到遇见了那五位让她安定下来的年轻武士,却又从此慢慢陷入到另一个神秘的深渊。无法承诺的爱情,狠心背叛的友情,痛彻心扉的亲情,时光空负,她在血与火的洗礼中,将笑容和过往亲手埋葬。从此,只剩长歌如伤。
  • 重生之带着空间闯异界

    重生之带着空间闯异界

    在二十一世纪被逼婚的大龄剩女因为意外命丧车轮之下再次睁开眼睛的时候却发现自己来到了一个神奇的所在光怪陆离的异世界大陆又怎么样?!能够再活一次,我更要活出个自己来。更何况,咱身边可是带着个空间作弊器啊!看咱们女汉子养养小异兽顺便种种田打打怪如何在异界混个风生水起。
  • 被偷走影子的男人

    被偷走影子的男人

    你注意过你的影子吗?当你孤独的时候。直到另一个人来到你的身后,你的影子消失了,从此你成为了别人的影子。这是一个关于自我救赎的故事,当影子都被偷走的时候,你才真的一无所有。
  • 诡愿

    诡愿

    福无双至,祸不单行。在一次百年难得一遇的天文奇观中刘诗的命运发生了转变。接下来且看他奇异的经历。
  • 挚爱青梅:腹黑竹马约不约

    挚爱青梅:腹黑竹马约不约

    豆寇年华,在她十岁那年,他十五岁那年,从此相见。小时候,寂寞无边的她被清尹家领养了之后,成为了清尹寒的童养媳。他早知她的身世,却因保护她为由,迟迟不公布;她,因失忆被蒙在鼓里。十年后,她得知她的身世,被家族带走,离开了他,却又因身份错位,再度成为他的未婚妻。她喜,这一切都是命运吗?他笑,翻身压上,小东西,你跑不出我的手掌心。【此文为半甜文,时虐时甜,男女主身心健康。】
  • 送君一场盛世桃花

    送君一场盛世桃花

    我以我命,为你弹奏一场盛世桃花。我以我兵,为你征战一片太平天下。我若死了,将我葬在你院内那棵韶华树下,让我再为你绽放一世芳华。