The Red Eric by R. M. Ballantyne (world of reading txt) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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When a little wearied with those aerial journeys she would return to âFairyland,â and, leaning over the brinks of the pools, peer down into their beautiful depths for hours at a time.
Ailieâs property of Fairyland had gardens, too, of the richest possible kind, full of flowers of the most lovely and brilliant hues. But the flowers were scentless, and, alas! she could not pluck them, for those gardens were all under water; they grew at the bottom of the sea!
Yes, reader, if the land was barren on that ocean islet, the pools there made up for it by presenting to view the most luxuriant marine vegetation. There were forests of branching coral of varied hues; there were masses of fan-shaped sponges; there were groves of green and red sea-weeds; and beds of red, and white, and orange, and striped creatures that stuck to the rocks, besides little fish with bright coloured backs that played there as if they really enjoyed living always under waterâwhich is not easy for us, you know, to realise! And above all, the medium of water between Ailie and these things was so pure and pellucid when no breeze fanned the surface, that it was difficult to believe, unless you touched it, there was any water there at all.
While Ailie thus spent her time, or at least her leisure time, for she was by no means an idler in that busy little isle, the men were actively engaged each day in transporting provisions from the Red Eric to the sandbank, and in making them as secure as circumstances would admit of. For this purpose a raft had been constructed, and several trips a day were made to and from the wreck, so that in the course of a few days a considerable stock of provisions was accumulated on the bank. This was covered with tarpaulin, and heavy casks of salt junk were placed on the corners and edges to keep it down.
âIâll tell ye wot it is, messmates,â remarked Gurney, one day, as they sat down round their wood fire to dine in front of their tent, âweâre purvisioned for six months at least, anâ if the weather only keeps fine Iâve no objection to remain wotiver.â
âMaybe,â said Briant, âyeâll have to remain that time whether ye object or not.â
âBy no means, Paddy,â retorted Gurney; âI could swum off to sea and be drownded if I liked.â
âNo ye couldnât, avic,â said Briant.
âWhy not?â demanded Gurney.
ââCause ye havenât the pluck,â replied Phil.
âIâll pluck the nose off yer face,â said Gurney, in affected anger.
âNo ye wonât,â cried Phil, ââcause av ye do Iâll spile the soup by heavinâ it all over ye.â
âOh!â exclaimed Gurney, with a look of horror, âlisten to him, messmates, he calls it âsoupââthe nasty kettle oâ dirty water! Well, well, itâs lucky we hainât got nothinâ better to compare it with.â
âBut, I say, lads,â interposed Jim Scroggles, seriously, âwotâll we do if it comes on to blow a gale and blows away all our purvisions?â
âAy, boys,â cried Dick Barnes, âthat âereâs the question, as Hamlet remarked to his grandfatherâs ghost; wot is to come on us supposinâ it comes on to blow sich a snorinâ gale asâll blow the whole sandbank away, carryinâ us and our prog overboard along with it?â
âWotâs that there soup made of?â demanded Tim Rokens.
âSalt junk and peas,â replied Nikel Sling.
âAh! I thought there was somethinâ else in it,â said Tim, carelessly, âfor it seems to perdooce oncommon bad jokes in them wot eats of it.â
âNow, Tim, donât you go for to be sorcostic, but tell us a story.â
âMe tell a story? No, no, lads; thereâs Glynn Proctor, heâs the boy for you. Where is he?â
âHeâs aboard the wreck just now. The capân sent him for charts and quadrants, and suchlike cooriosities. Come, Gurney, tell you one if Tim wonât. How wos it, now, that you so mistook yer trade as to come for to go to sea?â
âI canât very well tell ye,â answered Gurney, who, having finished dinner, had lit his pipe, and was now extended at full length on the sand, leaning on one arm. âYe see, lads, Iâve had more or less to do with the sea, I have, since ever I comed into this remarkable worldânot that I ever, to my knowledge, knew one less coorous, for I never was up in the stars; no more, I sâpose, was ever any oâ you. I was born at sea, dâye see? I donât âxactly know how I comed for to be born there, but I wos told that I wos, and if them as told me spoke truth, I sâpose I wos. I was washed overboard in gales three times before I comed for to know myself at all. When I first came alive, so to speak, to my own certain knowledge, I wos a-sitting on the top of a hen-coop aboard an East Indiaman, roarinâ like a mad bull as had lost his senses; âcause why? the hens wos puttinâ their heads through the bars oâ the coops, and pickinâ at the calves oâ my legs as fierce as if theyâd suddenly turned cannibals, and rather liked it. From that time I began a life oâ misery. My life before that had bin pretty much the same, it seems, but I didnât know it, so it didnât matter. Dâye know, lads, when ye donât know a thing itâs all the same as if it didnât exist, anâ so, in coorse, it donât matter.â
âOh!â exclaimed the first mate, who came up at the moment, ââave hany oâ you fellows got a note-book in which we may record that horacular and truly valuable hobserwation?â
No one happening to possess a note-book, Gurney was allowed to proceed with his account of himself.
âShips has bin my houses all along up to this here date. I donât believe, lads as ever I wos above two months ashore at a time all the coorse of my life, anâ mostly not as long as that. The smell oâ tar and the taste oâ salt water wos the fust things I iver comed acrossââxcept the Line, I comed across that jist about the time I wos born, so Iâm toldâand the smell oâ tar and taste oâ salt waterâs wot Iâve bin used to most oâ my life, and moreover, wot I likes best. One old gentleman as took a fancy to me wâen I wos a boy, said to me, one fine day, wâen I chanced to be ashore visitinâ my motherâsays he, âMy boy, would ye like to go with me and live in the country, and be a gardner?â âWot,â says I, âkeep a garding, and plant taters, and hoe flowers anâ cabidges?â âYes,â says he, âat least, somethinâ oâ that sort.â âNo, thankee,â says I; âI bâlong to the sea, I do; I wouldnât leave that âere no more nor I would quit my first love if I had one. Iâm a sailor, I am, out and out, through and throughâtrue blue, and no mistake, anâ no one need go for to try to cause me for to forsake my purfession, and live on shore like a turnipââthatâs wot I says to that old genâlemen. Yes, lads, Iâve roamed the wide ocean, as the song says, far anâ near. Iâve bin tattooed by the New Zealanders, and Iâve danced with the Hottentots, and ate puppy dogs with the Chinese, and fished whales in the North Seas, and run among the ice near the South Pole, and fowt with pirates, and done service on boord of men-oâ-war and merchantmen, and junks, and bumboats; but I never,â concluded Gurney, looking round with a sigh, âI never came for to be located on a sandbank in the middle of the ocean.â
âNo more did any on us,â added Rokens, âMoreover, if weâre not picked up soon by a ship oâ some sort, weâre not likely to be located here long, for we canât live on salt junk for ever; we shall all die oâ the scurvy.â
There was just enough of possible and probable truth in the last remark to induce a feeling of sadness among the men for a few minutes, but this was quickly put to flight by the extraordinary movements of Phil Briant. That worthy had left the group round the fire, and had wandered out to the extreme end of the rocky point, where he sat down to indulge, possibly in sad, or mayhap hopeful reflections. He was observed to start suddenly up, and gaze into the sea eagerly for a few seconds; then he cut a caper, slapped his thigh, and ran hastily towards the tent.
âWhat now? where away, Phil?â cried one of the men.
Briant answered not, but speedily reappeared at the opening of the tent door with a fishing-line and hook. Hastening to the point of rock, he opened a small species of shell-fish that he found there, wherewith he baited his hook, and then cast it into the sea. In a few minutes he felt a twitch, which caused him to return a remarkably vigorous twitch, as it were in reply.
The fish and the sailor for some minutes acted somewhat the part of electricians in a telegraph office; when the fish twitched, Briant twitched; when the fish pulled and paused, Briant pulled and paused, and when the fish held on hard, Briant pulled hard, and finally pulled him ashore, and a very nice plump rock-codling he was. There were plenty of them, so in a short time there was no lack of fresh fish, and Rokensâ fear that they would have to live on salt junk was not realised.
Fishing for rock-codlings now became one of the chief recreations of the men while not engaged in bringing various necessaries from the wreck. But for many days at first they found their hands fully occupied in making their new abode habitable, in enlarging and improving the tent, which soon by degrees came to merit the name of a hut, and in inventing various ingenious contrivances for the improvement of their condition. It was not until a couple of weeks had passed that time began to hang heavy on their hands and fishing became a general amusement.
They all fished, except Jacko. Even Ailie tried it once or twice, but she did not like it and soon gave it up. As for Jacko, he contented himself with fishing with his hands, in a sly way, among the provision casks, at which occupation he was quite an adept; and many a nice tit-bit did he fish up and secrete in his private apartment for future use. Like many a human thief, Jacko was at last compelled to leave the greater part of his ill-gotten and hoarded gains behind him.
One day Glynn and Ailie sat by the margin of a deep pool in Fairyland, gazing down into its clear depths. The sunâs rays penetrated to the very bottom, revealing a thousand beauties in form and colour that called forth from Ailie the most extravagant expressions of admiration. She wound up one of those eloquent bursts by sayingâ
âOh, Glynn, how very, very much I do wish I could go down there and play with the dear, exquisite, darling little fishes!â
âYouâd surprise them, I suspect,â said Glynn. âItâs rather too deep a pool to play in unless you were a mermaid.â
âHow deep is it, Glynn?â
ââBout ten feet, I think.â
âSo much? It does not look like it. What a very pretty bit of coral I see over there, close to the white rock; do you see it? It is bright pink. Oh, I would like so much to have it.â
âWould you?â cried Glynn, jumping up and throwing off his jacket; âthen here goes for it.â
So saying he clasped his hands above his head, and bending forward, plunged into the
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