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From
Sailing Alone Around the World,
By Captain Joshua Slocum, 1900
X
Running to
Port Angosto in a snow-storm --A defective
sheet-rope places the Spray in peril
--The Spray as a target for a Fuegian
arrow --The island of Alan Erric --Again in the
open Pacific --The run to the island of Juan
Fernandez --An absentee king --At Robinson
Crusoe's anchorage
ANOTHER
gale had then sprung up, but the
wind was still fair, and I had only twenty-six
miles to run for Port Angosto, a dreary enough
place, where, however, I would find a safe harbor
in which to refit and stow cargo. I carried on
sail to make the harbor before dark, and she
fairly flew along, all covered with snow, which
fell thick and fast, till she looked like a white
winter bird. Between the storm-bursts I saw the
headland of my port, and was steering for it when
a flaw of wind caught the mainsail by the lee,
jibed it over, and dear! dear! how nearly was
this the cause of disaster; for the sheet parted
and the boom unshipped, and it was then close upon
night. I worked till the perspiration poured from
my body to get things adjusted and in working
order before dark, and, above all, to get it done
before the sloop drove to leeward of the port of
refuge. Even then I did not get the boom shipped
in its saddle. I was at the entrance of the
harbor before I could get this done, and it was
time to haul her to or lose the port; but in that
condition, like a bird with a broken wing, she
made the haven. The accident which so jeopardized
my vessel and cargo came of a defective
sheet-rope, one made from sisal, a treacherous
fiber which has caused a deal of strong language
among sailors.
I did not run the Spray into the
inner harbor of Port Angosto, but came to inside a
bed of kelp under a steep bluff on the port hand
going in. It was an exceedingly snug nook, and to
make doubly sure of holding on here against all
williwaws I moored her with two anchors and
secured her, besides, by cables to trees.
However, no wind ever reached there except back
flaws from the mountains on the opposite side of
the harbor. There, as elsewhere in that region,
the country was made up of mountains. This was
the place where I was to refit and whence I was to
sail direct, once more, for Cape Pillar and the
Pacific.
I remained at Port Angosto some days, busily
employed about the sloop. I stowed the tallow
from the deck to the hold, arranged my cabin in
better order, and took in a good supply of wood
and water. I also mended the sloop's sails and
rigging, and fitted a jigger, which changed the
rig to a yawl, though I called the boat a sloop
just the same, the jigger being merely a temporary
affair.
I never forgot, even at the busiest time of my
work there, to have my rifle by me ready for
instant use; for I was of necessity within range
of savages, and I had seen Fuegian canoes at this
place when I anchored in the port, farther down
the reach, on the first trip through the strait.
I think it was on the second day, while I was
busily employed about decks, that I heard the
swish of something through the air close by my
ear, and heard a "zip"-like sound in
the water, but saw nothing. Presently, however, I
suspected that it was an arrow of some sort, for
just then one passing not far from me struck the
mainmast, where it stuck fast, vibrating from the
shock--a Fuegian autograph. A savage was
somewhere near, there could be no doubt about
that. I did not know but he might be shooting at
me, with a view to getting my sloop and her cargo;
and so I threw up my old Martini-Henry, the rifle
that kept on shooting, and the first shot
uncovered three Fuegians, who scampered from a
clump of bushes where they had been concealed, and
made over the hills. I fired away a good many
cartridges, aiming under their feet to encourage
their climbing. My dear old gun woke up the
hills, and at every report all three of the
savages jumped as if shot; but they kept on, and
put Fuego real estate between themselves and the
Spray as fast as their legs could
carry them. I took care then, more than ever
before, that all my firearms should be in order
and that a supply of ammunition should always be
ready at hand. But the savages did not return,
and although I put tacks on deck every night, I
never discovered that any more visitors came, and
I had only to sweep the deck of tacks carefully
every morning after.
As the days went by, the season became more
favorable for a chance to clear the strait with a
fair wind, and so I made up my mind after six
attempts, being driven back each time, to be in no
further haste to sail. The bad weather on my last
return to Port Angosto for shelter brought the
Chilean gunboat Condor and the
Argentine cruiser Azopardo into port.
As soon as the latter came to anchor, Captain
Mascarella, the commander, sent a boat to the
Spray with the message that he would
take me in tow for Sandy Point if I would give up
the voyage and return--the thing farthest from my
mind. The officers of the Azopardo
told me that, coming up the strait after the
Spray on her first passage through,
they saw Black Pedro and learned that he had
visited me. The Azopardo, being a
foreign man-of-war, had no right to arrest the
Fuegian outlaw, but her captain blamed me for not
shooting the rascal when he came to my sloop. I
procured some cordage and other small supplies
from these vessels, and the officers of each of
them mustered a supply of warm flannels, of which
I was most in need. With these additions to my
outfit, and with the vessel in good trim, though
somewhat deeply laden, I was well prepared for
another bout with the Southern, misnamed Pacific,
Ocean.
In the first week in April southeast winds,
such as appear about Cape Horn in the fall and
winter seasons, bringing better weather than that
experienced in the summer, began to disturb the
upper clouds; a little more patience, and the time
would come for sailing with a fair wind.
At Port Angosto I met Professor Dusen of the
Swedish scientific expedition to South America and
the Pacific Islands. The professor was camped by
the side of a brook at the head of the harbor,
where there were many varieties of moss, in which
he was interested, and where the water was, as his
Argentine cook said, "muy rico." The
professor had three well-armed Argentines along in
his camp to fight savages. They seemed disgusted
when I filled water at a small stream near the
vessel, slighting their advice to go farther up to
the greater brook, where it was "muy
rico." But they were all fine fellows, though
it was a wonder that they did not all die of
rheumatic pains from living on wet ground.
Of all the little haps and mishaps to the
Spray at Port Angosto, of the many
attempts to put to sea, and of each return for
shelter, it is not my purpose to speak. Of
hindrances there were many to keep her back, but
on the thirteenth day of April, and for the
seventh and last time, she weighed anchor from
that port. Difficulties, however, multiplied all
about in so strange a manner that had I been given
to superstitious fears I should not have persisted
in sailing on a thirteenth day, notwithstanding
that a fair wind blew in the offing. Many of the
incidents were ludicrous. When I found myself,
for instance, disentangling the sloop's mast from
the branches of a tree after she had drifted three
times around a small island, against my will, it
seemed more than one's nerves could bear, and I
had to speak about it, so I thought, or die of
lockjaw, and I apostrophized the
Spray as an impatient farmer might
his horse or his ox. "Didn't you know,"
cried I--" didn't you know that you couldn't
climb a tree?" But the poor old
Spray had essayed, and successfully
too, nearly everything else in the Strait of
Magellan, and my heart softened toward her when I
thought of what she had gone through. Moreover,
she had discovered an island. On the charts this
one that she had sailed around was traced as a
point of land. I named it Alan Erric Island,
after a worthy literary friend whom I had met in
strange by-places, and I put up a sign, "Keep
off the grass," which, as discoverer, was
within my rights.
Now at last the Spray carried me
free of Tierra del Fuego. If by a close shave
only, still she carried me clear, though her boom
actually hit the beacon rocks to leeward as she
lugged on sail to clear the point. The thing was
done on the 13th of April, 1896. But a close
shave and a narrow escape were nothing new to the
Spray.
The waves doffed their white caps beautifully
to her in the strait that day before the southeast
wind, the first true winter breeze of the season
from that quarter, and here she was out on the
first of it, with every prospect of clearing Cape
Pillar before it should shift. So it turned out;
the wind blew hard, as it always blows about Cape
Horn, but she had cleared the great tide-race off
Cape Pillar and the Evangelistas, the outermost
rocks of all, before the change came. I remained
at the helm, humoring my vessel in the cross seas,
for it was rough, and I did not dare to let her
take a straight course. It was necessary to
change her course in the combing seas, to meet
them with what skill I could when they rolled up
ahead, and to keep off when they came up abeam.
On the following morning, April 14, only the
tops of the highest mountains were in sight, and
the Spray, making good headway on a
northwest course, soon sank these out of sight.
"Hurrah for theSpray" I
shouted to seals, sea-gulls, and penguins; for
there were no other living creatures about, and
she had weathered all the dangers of Cape Horn.
Moreover, she had on her voyage round the Horn
salved a cargo of which she had not jettisoned a
pound. And why should not one rejoice also in the
main chance coming so of itself?
I shook out a reef, and set the whole jib, for,
having sea-room, I could square away two points.
This brought the sea more on her quarter, and she
was the wholesomer under a press of sail.
Occasionally an old southwest sea, rolling up,
combed athwart her, but did no harm. The wind
freshened as the sun rose half-mast or more, and
the air, a bit chilly in the morning, softened
later in the day; but I gave little thought to
such things as these.
One wave, in the evening, larger than others
that had threatened all day,--one such as sailors
call "fine-weather seas,"--broke over
the sloop fore and aft. It washed over me at the
helm, the last that swept over the
Spray off Cape Horn. It seemed to
wash away old regrets. All my troubles were now
astern; summer was ahead; all the world was again
before me. The wind was even literally fair. My
"trick" at the wheel was now up, and it
was 5 P. M. I had
stood at the helm since eleven o'clock the morning
before, or thirty hours.
Then was the time to uncover my head, for I
sailed alone with God. The vast ocean was again
around me, and the horizon was unbroken by land.
A few days later the Spray was under
full sail, and I saw her for the first time with a
jigger spread. This was indeed a small incident,
but it was the incident following a triumph. The
wind was still southwest, but it had moderated,
and roaring seas had turned to gossiping waves
that rippled and pattered against her sides as she
rolled among them, delighted with their story.
Rapid changes went on, those days, in things all
about while she headed for the tropics. New
species of birds came around; albatrosses fell
back and became scarcer and scarcer; lighter gulls
came in their stead, and pecked for crumbs in the
sloop's wake.
On the tenth day from Cape Pillar a shark came
along, the first of its kind on this part of the
voyage to get into trouble. I harpooned him and
took out his ugly jaws. I had not till then felt
inclined to take the life of any animal, but when
John Shark hove in sight my sympathy flew to the
winds. It is a fact that in Magellan I let pass
many ducks that would have made a good stew, for I
had no mind in the lonesome strait to take the
life of any living thing.
From Cape Pillar I steered for Juan Fernandez,
and on the 26th of April, fifteen days out, made
that historic island right ahead.
The blue hills of Juan Fernandez, high among
the clouds, could be seen about thirty miles off.
A thousand emotions thrilled me when I saw the
island, and I bowed my head to the deck. We may
mock the Oriental salaam, but for my part I could
find no other way of expressing myself.
The wind being light through the day, the
Spray did not reach the island till
night. With what wind there was to fill her sails
she stood close in to shore on the northeast side,
where it fell calm and remained so all night. I
saw the twinkling of a small light farther along
in a cove, and fired a gun, but got no answer, and
soon the light disappeared altogether. I heard
the sea booming against the cliffs all night, and
realized that the ocean swell was still great,
although from the deck of my little ship it was
apparently small. From the cry of animals in the
hills, which sounded fainter and fainter through
the night, I judged that a light current was
drifting the sloop from the land, though she
seemed all night dangerously near the shore, for,
the land being very high, appearances were
deceptive.
Soon after daylight I saw a boat putting out
toward me. As it pulled near, it so happened that
I picked up my gun, which was on the deck, meaning
only to put it below; but the people in the boat,
seeing the piece in my hands, quickly turned and
pulled back for shore, which was about four miles
distant. There were six rowers in her, and I
observed that they pulled with oars in oar-locks,
after the manner of trained seamen, and so I knew
they belonged to a civilized race; but their
opinion of me must have been anything but
flattering when they mistook my purpose with the
gun and pulled away with all their might. I made
them understand by signs, but not without
difficulty, that I did not intend to shoot, that I
was simply putting the piece in the cabin, and
that I wished them to return. When they
understood my meaning they came back and were soon
on board.
One of the party, whom the rest called
"king," spoke English; the others spoke
Spanish. They had all heard of the voyage of the
Spray through the papers of
Valparaiso, and were hungry for news concerning
it. They told me of a war between Chile and the
Argentine, which I had not heard of when I was
there. I had just visited both countries, and I
told them that according to the latest reports,
while I was in Chile, their own island was sunk.
(This same report that Juan Fernandez had sunk was
current in Australia when I arrived there three
months later.)
I had already prepared a pot of coffee and a
plate of doughnuts, which, after some words of
civility, the islanders stood up to and discussed
with a will, after which they took the
Spray in tow of their boat and made
toward the island with her at the rate of a good
three knots. The man they called king took the
helm, and with whirling it up and down he so
rattled the Spray that I thought she
would never carry herself straight again. The
others pulled away lustily with their oars. The
king, I soon learned, was king only by courtesy.
Having lived longer on the island than any other
man in the world,--thirty years,--he was so
dubbed. Juan Fernandez was then under the
administration of a governor of Swedish nobility,
so I was told. I was also told that his daughter
could ride the wildest goat on the island. The
governor, at the time of my visit, was away at
Valparaiso with his family, to place his children
at school. The king had been away once for a year
or two, and in Rio de Janeiro had married a
Brazilian woman who followed his fortunes to the
far-off island. He was himself a Portuguese and a
native of the Azores. He had sailed in New
Bedford whale-ships and had steered a boat. All
this I learned, and more too, before we reached
the anchorage. The sea-breeze, coming in before
long, filled the Spray's sails, and
the experienced Portuguese mariner piloted her to
a safe berth in the bay, where she was moored to a
buoy abreast the settlement.
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