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<h2> Chapter Fourteen—The Cruise of the Dolphin </h2>
<p>It was spring again. The snow had faded away like a dream, and we were
awakened, so to speak, by the sudden chirping of robins in our back
garden. Marvellous transformation of snowdrifts into lilacs, wondrous
miracle of the unfolding leaf! We read in the Holy Book how our Saviour,
at the marriage-feast, changed the water into wine; we pause and wonder;
but every hour a greater miracle is wrought at our very feet, if we have
but eyes to see it.</p>
<p>I had now been a year at Rivermouth. If you do not know what sort of boy I
was, it is not because I haven't been frank with you. Of my progress at
school I say little; for this is a story, pure and simple, and not a
treatise on education. Behold me, however, well up in most of the classes.
I have worn my Latin grammar into tatters, and am in the first book of
Virgil. I interlard my conversation at home with easy quotations from that
poet, and impress Captain Nutter with a lofty notion of my learning. I am
likewise translating Les Aventures de Telemaque from the French, and shall
tackle Blair's Lectures the next term. I am ashamed of my crude
composition about The Horse, and can do better now. Sometimes my head
almost aches with the variety of my knowledge. I consider Mr. Grimshaw the
greatest scholar that ever lived, and I don't know which I would rather be—a
learned man like him, or a circus rider.</p>
<p>My thoughts revert to this particular spring more frequently than to any
other period of my boyhood, for it was marked by an event that left an
indelible impression on my memory. As I pen these pages, I feel that I am
writing of something which happened yesterday, so vividly it all comes
back to me.</p>
<p>Every Rivermouth boy looks upon the sea as being in some way mixed up with
his destiny. While he is yet a baby lying in his cradle, he hears the
dull, far-off boom of the breakers; when he is older, he wanders by the
sandy shore, watching the waves that come plunging up the beach like
white-maned seahorses, as Thoreau calls them; his eye follows the
lessening sail as it fades into the blue horizon, and he burns for the
time when he shall stand on the quarter-deck of his own ship, and go
sailing proudly across that mysterious waste of waters.</p>
<p>Then the town itself is full of hints and flavors of the sea. The gables
and roofs of the houses facing eastward are covered with red rust, like
the flukes of old anchors; a salty smell pervades the air, and dense gray
fogs, the very breath of Ocean, periodically creep up into the quiet
streets and envelop everything. The terrific storms that lash the coast;
the kelp and spars, and sometimes the bodies of drowned men, tossed on
shore by the scornful waves; the shipyards, the wharves, and the tawny
fleet of fishing-smacks yearly fitted out at Rivermouth—these
things, and a hundred other, feed the imagination and fill the brain of
every healthy boy with dreams of adventure. He learns to swim almost as
soon as he can walk; he draws in with his mother's milk the art of
handling an oar: he is born a sailor, whatever he may turn out to be
afterwards.</p>
<p>To own the whole or a portion of a row-boat is his earliest ambition. No
wonder that I, born to this life, and coming back to it with freshest
sympathies, should have caught the prevailing infection. No wonder I
longed to buy a part of the trim little sailboat Dolphin, which chanced
just then to be in the market. This was in the latter part of May.</p>
<p>Three shares, at five or six dollars each, I forget which, had already
been taken by Phil Adams, Fred Langdon, and Binny Wallace. The fourth and
remaining share hung fire. Unless a purchaser could be found for this, the
bargain was to fall through.</p>
<p>I am afraid I required but slight urging to join in the investment. I had
four dollars and fifty cents on hand, and the treasurer of the Centipedes
advanced me the balance, receiving my silver pencil-case as ample
security. It was a proud moment when I stood on the wharf with my
partners, inspecting the Dolphin, moored at the foot of a very slippery
flight of steps. She was painted white with a green stripe outside, and on
the stern a yellow dolphin, with its scarlet mouth wide open, stared with
a surprised expression at its own reflection in the water. The boat was a
great bargain.</p>
<p>I whirled my cap in the air, and ran to the stairs leading down from the
wharf, when a hand was laid gently on my shoulder. I turned and faced
Captain Nutter. I never saw such an old sharp-eye as he was in those days.</p>
<p>I knew he wouldn't be angry with me for buying a rowboat; but I also knew
that the little bowsprit suggesting a jib, and the tapering mast ready for
its few square feet of canvas, were trifles not likely to meet his
approval. As far as rowing on the river, among the wharves, was concerned,
the Captain had long since withdrawn his decided objections, having
convinced himself, by going out with me several times, that I could manage
a pair of sculls as well as anybody.</p>
<p>I was right in my surmises. He commanded me, in the most emphatic terms,
never to go out in the Dolphin without leaving the mast in the boat-house.
This curtailed my anticipated sport, but the pleasure of having a pull
whenever I wanted it remained. I never disobeyed the Captain's orders
touching the sail, though I sometimes extended my row beyond the points he
had indicated.</p>
<p>The river was dangerous for sailboats. Squalls, without the slightest
warning, were of frequent occurrence; scarcely a year passed that six or
seven persons were not drowned under the very windows of the town, and
these, oddly enough, were generally sea-captains, who either did not
understand the river, or lacked the skill to handle a small craft.</p>
<p>A knowledge of such disasters, one of which I witnessed, consoled me
somewhat when I saw Phil Adams skimming over the water in a spanking
breeze with every stitch of canvas set. There were few better yachtsmen
than Phil Adams. He usually went sailing alone, for both Fred Langdon and
Binny Wallace were under the same restrictions I was.</p>
<p>Not long after the purchase of the boat, we planned an excursion to
Sandpeep Island, the last of the islands in the harbor. We proposed to
start early in the morning, and return with the tide in the moonlight. Our
only difficulty was to obtain a whole day's exemption from school, the
customary half-holiday not being long enough for our picnic. Somehow, we
couldn't work it; but fortune arranged it for us. I may say here, that,
whatever else I did, I never played truant (“hookey” we called it) in my
life.</p>
<p>One afternoon the four owners of the Dolphin exchanged significant glances
when Mr. Grimshaw announced from the desk that there would be no school
the following day, he having just received intelligence of the death of
his uncle in Boston I was sincerely attached to Mr. Grimshaw, but I am
afraid that the death of his uncle did not affect me as it ought to have
done.</p>
<p>We were up before sunrise the next morning, in order to take advantage of
the flood tide, which waits for no man. Our preparations for the cruise
were made the previous evening. In the way of eatables and drinkables, we
had stored in the stem of the Dolphin a generous bag of hard-tack (for the
chowder), a piece of pork to fry the cunners in, three gigantic apple-pies
(bought at Pettingil's), half a dozen lemons, and a keg of spring-water—the
last-named article we slung over the side, to keep it cool, as soon as we
got under way. The crockery and the bricks for our camp-stove we placed in
the bows, with the groceries, which included sugar, pepper, salt, and a
bottle of pickles. Phil Adams contributed to the outfit a small tent of
unbleached cotton cloth, under which we intended to take our nooning.</p>
<p>We unshipped the mast, threw in an extra oar, and were ready to embark. I
do not believe that Christopher Columbus, when he started on his rather
successful voyage of discovery, felt half the responsibility and
importance that weighed upon me as I sat on the middle seat of the
Dolphin, with my oar resting in the row-lock. I wonder if Christopher
Columbus quietly slipped out of the house without letting his estimable
family know what he was up to?</p>
<p>Charley Marden, whose father had promised to cane him if he ever stepped
foot on sail or rowboat, came down to the wharf in a sour-grape humor, to
see us off. Nothing would tempt him to go out on the river in such a crazy
clam-shell of a boat. He pretended that he did not expect to behold us
alive again, and tried to throw a wet blanket over the expedition.</p>
<p>“Guess you'll have a squally time of it,” said Charley, casting off the
painter. “I'll drop in at old Newbury's” (Newbury was the parish
undertaker) “and leave word, as I go along!”</p>
<p>“Bosh!” muttered Phil Adams, sticking the boat-hook into the string-piece
of the wharf, and sending the Dolphin half a dozen yards towards the
current.</p>
<p>How calm and lovely the river was! Not a ripple stirred on the glassy
surface, broken only by the sharp cutwater of our tiny craft. The sun, as
round and red as an August moon, was by this time peering above the
water-line.</p>
<p>The town had drifted behind us, and we were entering among the group of
islands. Sometimes we could almost touch with our boat-hook the shelving
banks on either side. As we neared the mouth of the harbor a little breeze
now and then wrinkled the blue water, shook the spangles from the foliage,
and gently lifted the spiral mist-wreaths that still clung along shore.
The measured dip of our oars and the drowsy twitterings of the birds
seemed to mingle with, rather than break, the enchanted silence that
reigned about us.</p>
<p>The scent of the new clover comes back to me now, as I recall that
delicious morning when we floated away in a fairy boat down a river like a
dream!</p>
<p>The sun was well up when the nose of the Dolphin nestled against the
snow-white bosom of Sandpeep Island. This island, as I have said before,
was the last of the cluster, one side of it being washed by the sea. We
landed on the river-side, the sloping sands and quiet water affording us a
good place to moor the boat.</p>
<p>It took us an hour or two to transport our stores to the spot selected for
the encampment. Having pitched our tent, using the five oars to support
the canvas, we got out our lines, and went down the rocks seaward to fish.
It was early for cunners, but we were lucky enough to catch as nice a mess
as ever you saw. A cod for the chowder was not so easily secured. At last
Binny Wallace hauled in a plump little fellow crusted all over with flaky
silver.</p>
<p>To skin the fish, build our fireplace, and cook the chowder kept us busy
the next two hours. The fresh air and the exercise had given us the
appetites of wolves, and we were about famished by the time the savory
mixture was ready for our clamshell saucers.</p>
<p>I shall not insult the rising generation on the seaboard by telling them
how delectable is a chowder compounded and eaten in this Robinson Crusoe
fashion. As for the boys who live inland, and know naught of such marine
feasts, my heart is full of pity for them. What wasted lives! Not to know
the delights of a clam-bake, not to love chowder, to be ignorant of
lob-scouse!</p>
<p>How happy we were, we four, sitting crosslegged in the crisp salt grass,
with the invigorating sea-breeze blowing gratefully through our hair! What
a joyous thing was life, and how far off seemed death—death, that
lurks in all pleasant places, and was so near!</p>
<p>The banquet finished, Phil Adams drew from his pocket a handful of
sweet-fern cigars; but as none of the party could indulge without imminent
risk of becoming sick, we all, on one pretext or another, declined, and
Phil smoked by himself.</p>
<p>The wind had freshened by this, and we found it comfortable to put on the
jackets which had been thrown aside in the heat of the day. We strolled
along the beach and gathered large quantities of the fairy-woven Iceland
moss, which, at certain seasons, is washed to these shores; then we played
at ducks and drakes, and then, the sun being sufficiently low, we went in
bathing.</p>
<p>Before our bath was ended a slight change had come over the sky and sea;
fleecy-white clouds scudded here and there, and a muffled moan from the
breakers caught our ears from time to time. While we were dressing, a few
hurried drops of rain came lisping down, and we adjourned to the tent to
await the passing of the squall.</p>
<p>“We're all right, anyhow,” said Phil Adams. “It won't be much of a blow,
and we'll be as snug as a bug in a rug, here in the tent, particularly if
we have that lemonade which some of you fellows were going to make.”</p>
<p>By an oversight, the lemons had been left in the boat. Binny Wallace
volunteered to go for them.</p>
<p>“Put an extra stone on the painter, Binny,” said Adams, calling after him;
“it would be awkward to have the Dolphin give us the slip and return to
port minus her passengers.”</p>
<p>“That it would,” answered Binny, scrambling down the rocks.</p>
<p>Sandpeep Island is diamond-shaped—one point running out into the
sea, and the other looking towards the town. Our tent was on the
river-side. Though the Dolphin was also on the same side, it lay out of
sight by the beach at the farther extremity of the island.</p>
<p>Binny Wallace had been absent five or six minutes, when we heard him
calling our several names in tones that indicated distress or surprise, we
could not tell which. Our first thought was, “The boat has broken adrift!”</p>
<p>We sprung to our feet and hastened down to the beach. On turning the bluff
which hid the mooring-place from our view, we found the conjecture
correct. Not only was the Dolphin afloat, but poor little Binny Wallace
was standing in the bows with his arms stretched helplessly towards us—drifting
out to sea!</p>
<p>“Head the boat in shore!” shouted Phil Adams.</p>
<p>Wallace ran to the tiller; but the slight cockle-shell merely swung round
and drifted broadside on. O, if we had but left a single scull in the
Dolphin!</p>
<p>“Can you swim it?” cried Adams, desperately, using his hand as a
speaking-trumpet, for the distance between the boat and the island widened
momentarily.</p>
<p>Binny Wallace looked down at the sea, which was covered with white caps,
and made a despairing gesture. He knew, and we knew, that the stoutest
swimmer could not live forty seconds in those angry waters.</p>
<p>A wild, insane light came into Phil Adams's eyes, as he stood knee-deep in
the boiling surf, and for an instant I think he meditated plunging into
the ocean after the receding boat.</p>
<p>The sky darkened, and an ugly look stole rapidly over the broken surface
of the sea.</p>
<p>Binny Wallace half rose from his seat in the stem, and waved his hand to
us in token of farewell. In spite of the distance, increasing every
instant we could see his face plainly. The anxious expression it wore at
first had passed. It was pale and meek now, and I love to think there was
a kind of halo about it, like that which painters place around the
forehead of a saint. So he drifted away.</p>
<p>The sky grew darker and darker. It was only by straining our eyes through
the unnatural twilight that we could keep the Dolphin in sight. The figure
of Binny Wallace was no longer visible, for the boat itself had dwindled
to a mere white dot on the black water. Now we lost it, and our hearts
stopped throbbing; and now the speck appeared again, for an instant, on
the crest of a high wave.</p>
<p>Finally, it went out like a spark, and we saw it no more. Then we gazed at
each other, and dared not speak.</p>
<p>Absorbed in following the course of the boat, we had scarcely noticed the
huddled inky clouds that sagged down all around us. From these threatening
masses, seamed at intervals with pale lightning, there now burst a heavy
peal of thunder that shook the ground under our feet. A sudden squall
struck the sea, ploughing deep white furrows into it, and at the same
instant a single piercing shriek rose above the tempest—the
frightened cry of a gull swooping over the island. How it startled us!</p>
<p>It was impossible any longer to keep our footing on the beach. The wind
and the breakers would have swept us into the ocean if we had not clung to
each other with the desperation of drowning men. Taking advantage of a
momentary lull, we crawled up the sands on our hands and knees, and,
pausing in the lee of the granite ledge to gain breath, returned to the
camp, where we found that the gale had snapped all the fastenings of the
tent but one. Held by this, the puffed-out canvas swayed in the wind like
a balloon. It was a task of some difficulty to secure it, which we did by
beating down the canvas with the oars.</p>
<p>After several trials, we succeeded in setting up the tent on the leeward
side of the ledge. Blinded by the vivid flashes of lightning, and drenched
by the rain, which fell in torrents, we crept, half dead with fear and
anguish, under our flimsy shelter. Neither the anguish nor the fear was on
our own account, for we were comparatively safe, but for poor little Binny
Wallace, driven out to sea in the merciless gale. We shuddered to think of
him in that frail shell, drifting on and on to his grave, the sky rent
with lightning over his head, and the green abysses yawning beneath him.
We fell to crying, the three of us, and cried I know not how long.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the storm raged with augmented fury. We were obliged to hold on
to the ropes of the tent to prevent it blowing away. The spray from the
river leaped several yards up the rocks and clutched at us malignantly.
The very island trembled with the concussions of the sea beating upon it,
and at times I fancied that it had broken loose from its foundation, and
was floating off with us. The breakers, streaked with angry phosphorus,
were fearful to look at.</p>
<p>The wind rose higher and higher, cutting long slits in the tent, through
which the rain poured incessantly. To complete the sum of our miseries,
the night was at hand. It came down suddenly, at last, like a curtain,
shutting in Sandpeep island from all the world.</p>
<p>It was a dirty night, as the sailors say. The darkness was something that
could be felt as well as seen—it pressed down upon one with a cold,
clammy touch. Gazing into the hollow blackness, all sorts of imaginable
shapes seemed to start forth from vacancy—brilliant colors, stars,
prisms, and dancing lights. What boy, lying awake at night, has not amused
or terrified himself by peopling the spaces around his bed with these
phenomena of his own eyes?</p>
<p>“I say,” whispered Fred Langdon, at length, clutching my hand, “don't you
see things—out there—in the dark?”</p>
<p>“Yes, yes—Binny Wallace's face!”</p>
<p>I added to my own nervousness by making this avowal; though for the last
ten minutes I had seen little besides that star-pale face with its angelic
hair and brows. First a slim yellow circle, like the nimbus round the
moon, took shape and grew sharp against the darkness; then this faded
gradually, and there was the Face, wearing the same sad, sweet look it
wore when he waved his hand to us across the awful water. This optical
illusion kept repeating itself.</p>
<p>“And I too,” said Adams. “I see it every now and then, outside there. What
wouldn't I give if it really was poor little Wallace looking in at us! O
boys, how shall we dare to go back to the town without him? I've wished a
hundred times, since we've been sitting here, that I was in his place,
alive or dead!”</p>
<p>We dreaded the approach of morning as much as we longed for it. The
morning would tell us all. Was it possible for the Dolphin to outride such
a storm? There was a light-house on Mackerel Reef, which lay directly in
the course the boat had taken, when it disappeared. If the Dolphin had
caught on this reef, perhaps Binny Wallace was safe. Perhaps his cries had
been heard by the keeper of the light. The man owned a lifeboat, and had
rescued several people. Who could tell?</p>
<p>Such were the questions we asked ourselves again and again, as we lay in
each other's arms waiting for daybreak. What an endless night it was! I
have known months that did not seem so long.</p>
<p>Our position was irksome rather than perilous; for the day was certain to
bring us relief from the town, where our prolonged absence, together with
the storm, had no doubt excited the liveliest alarm for our safety. But
the cold, the darkness, and the suspense were hard to bear.</p>
<p>Our soaked jackets had chilled us to the bone. To keep warm, we lay
huddled together so closely that we could bear our hearts beat above the
tumult of sea and sky.</p>
<p>After a while we grew very hungry, not having broken our fast since early
in the day. The rain had turned the hard-tack into a sort of dough; but it
was better than nothing.</p>
<p>We used to laugh at Fred Langdon for always carrying in his pocket a small
vial of essence of peppermint or sassafras, a few drops of which,
sprinkled on a lump of loaf-sugar, he seemed to consider a great luxury. I
don't know what would have become of us at this crisis, if it hadn't been
for that omnipresent bottle of hot stuff. We poured the stinging liquid
over our sugar, which had kept dry in a sardine-box, and warmed ourselves
with frequent doses.</p>
<p>After four or five hours the rain ceased, the wind died away to a moan,
and the sea—no longer raging like a maniac—sobbed and sobbed
with a piteous human voice all along the coast. And well it might, after
that night's work. Twelve sail of the Gloucester fishing fleet had gone
down with every soul on board, just outside of Whale's-back Light. Think
of the wide grief that follows in the wake of one wreck; then think of the
despairing women who wrung their hands and wept, the next morning, in the
streets of Gloucester, Marblehead, and Newcastle!</p>
<p>Though our strength was nearly spent, we were too cold to sleep. Once I
sunk into a troubled doze, when I seemed to bear Charley Marden's parting
words, only it was the Sea that said them. After that I threw off the
drowsiness whenever it threatened to overcome me.</p>
<p>Fred Langdon was the earliest to discover a filmy, luminous streak in the
sky, the first glimmering of sunrise.</p>
<p>“Look, it is nearly daybreak!”</p>
<p>While we were following the direction of his finger, a sound of distant
oars fell on our ears.</p>
<p>We listened breathlessly, and as the dip of the blades became more
audible, we discerned two foggy lights, like will-o'the-wisps, floating on
the river.</p>
<p>Running down to the water's edge, we hailed the boats with all our might.
The call was heard, for the oars rested a moment in the row-locks, and
then pulled in towards the island.</p>
<p>It was two boats from the town, in the foremost of which we could now make
out the figures of Captain Nutter and Binny Wallace's father. We shrunk
back on seeing him.</p>
<p>“Thank God!” cried Mr. Wallace, fervently, as he leaped from the wherry
without waiting for the bow to touch the beach.</p>
<p>But when he saw only three boys standing on the sands, his eye wandered
restlessly about in quest of the fourth; then a deadly pallor overspread
his features.</p>
<p>Our story was soon told. A solemn silence fell upon the crowd of rough
boatmen gathered round, interrupted only by a stifled sob from one poor
old man, who stood apart from the rest.</p>
<p>The sea was still running too high for any small boat to venture out; so
it was arranged that the wherry should take us back to town, leaving the
yawl, with a picked crew, to hug the island until daybreak, and then set
forth in search of the Dolphin.</p>
<p>Though it was barely sunrise when we reached town, there were a great many
people assembled at the landing eager for intelligence from missing boats.
Two picnic parties had started down river the day before, just previous to
the gale, and nothing had been beard of them. It turned out that the
pleasure-seekers saw their danger in time, and ran ashore on one of the
least exposed islands, where they passed the night. Shortly after our own
arrival they appeared off Rivermouth, much to the joy of their friends, in
two shattered, dismasted boats.</p>
<p>The excitement over, I was in a forlorn state, physically and mentally.
Captain Nutter put me to bed between hot blankets, and sent Kitty Collins
for the doctor. I was wandering in my mind, and fancied myself still on
Sandpeep Island: now we were building our brick-stove to cook the chowder,
and, in my delirium, I laughed aloud and shouted to my comrades; now the
sky darkened, and the squall struck the island: now I gave orders to
Wallace how to manage the boat, and now I cried because the rain was
pouring in on me through the holes in the tent. Towards evening a high
fever set in, and it was many days before my grandfather deemed it prudent
to tell me that the Dolphin had been found, floating keel upwards, four
miles southeast of Mackerel Reef.</p>
<p>Poor little Binny Wallace! How strange it seemed, when I went to school
again, to see that empty seat in the fifth row! How gloomy the playground
was, lacking the sunshine of his gentle, sensitive face! One day a folded
sheet slipped from my algebra; it was the last note he ever wrote me. I
couldn't read it for the tears.</p>
<p>What a pang shot across my heart the afternoon it was whispered through
the town that a body had been washed ashore at Grave Point—the place
where we bathed. We bathed there no more! How well I remember the funeral,
and what a piteous sight it was afterwards to see his familiar name on a
small headstone in the Old South Burying Ground!</p>
<p>Poor little Binny Wallace! Always the same to me. The rest of us have
grown up into hard, worldly men, fighting the fight of life; but you are
forever young, and gentle, and pure; a part of my own childhood that time
cannot wither; always a little boy, always poor little Binny Wallace!</p>
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