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From
Sailing Alone Around the World,
By Captain Joshua Slocum, 1900
XI
The
islanders of Juan Fernandez entertained with
Yankee doughnuts --The beauties of Robinson
Crusoe's realm --The mountain monument to
Alexander Selkirk --Robinson Crusoe's cave --A
stroll with the children of the island --Westward
ho! with a friendly gale --A month's free sailing
with the Southern Cross and the sun for guides
--Sighting the Marquesas --Experience in reckoning
THE
Spray being secured, the
islanders returned to the coffee and doughnuts,
and I was more than flattered when they did not
slight my buns, as the professor had done in the
Strait of Magellan. Between buns and doughnuts
there was little difference except in name. Both
had been fried in tallow, which was the strong
point in both, for there was nothing on the island
fatter than a goat, and a goat is but a lean
beast, to make the best of it.
So with a view to business I hooked my
steelyards to the boom at once, ready to weigh out
tallow, there being no customs officer to say,
"Why do you do so?" and before the sun
went down the islanders had learned the art of
making buns and doughnuts. I did not charge a
high price for what I sold, but the ancient and
curious coins I got in payment, some of them from
the wreck of a galleon sunk in the bay no one
knows when, I sold afterward to antiquarians for
more than face-value. In this way I made a
reasonable profit. I brought away money of all
denominations from the island, and nearly all
there was, so far as I could find out.
Juan Fernandez, as a place of call, is a lovely
spot. The hills are well wooded, the valleys
fertile, and pouring down through many ravines are
streams of pure water. There are no serpents on
the island, and no wild beasts other than pigs and
goats, of which I saw a number, with possibly a
dog or two. The people lived without the use of
rum or beer of any sort. There was not a police
officer or a lawyer among them. The domestic
economy of the island was simplicity itself. The
fashions of Paris did not affect the inhabitants;
each dressed according to his own taste. Although
there was no doctor, the people were all healthy,
and the children were all beautiful. There were
about forty-five souls on the island all told.
The adults were mostly from the mainland of South
America. One lady there, from Chile, who made a
flying-jib for the Spray, taking her
pay in tallow, would be called a belle at Newport.
Blessed island of Juan Fernandez! Why Alexander
Selkirk ever left you was more than I could make
out.
A large ship which had arrived some time
before, on fire, had been stranded at the head of
the bay, and as the sea smashed her to pieces on
the rocks, after the fire was drowned, the
islanders picked up the timbers and utilized them
in the construction of houses, which naturally
presented a ship-like appearance. The house of
the king of Juan Fernandez, Manuel Carroza by
name, besides resembling the ark, wore a polished
brass knocker on its only door, which was painted
green. In front of this gorgeous entrance was a
flag-mast all ataunto, and near it a smart
whale-boat painted red and blue, the delight of
the king's old age.
I of course made a pilgrimage to the old
lookout place at the top of the mountain, where
Selkirk spent many days peering into the distance
for the ship which came at last. From a tablet
fixed into the face of the rock I copied these
words, inscribed in Arabic capitals:
IN MEMORY OF
ALEXANDER SELKIRK, MARINER,
A native of Largo, in the county of
Fife, Scotland, who lived on this island in
complete solitude for four years and four months.
He was landed from the Cinque Ports galley, 96
tons, 18 guns, A. D.
1704, and was taken off in the Duke, privateer,
12th February, 1709. He died Lieutenant of H. M.
S. Weymouth, A. D.
1723, [note] aged 47.
This tablet is erected near Selkirk's lookout, by
Commodore Powell and the officers of H. M. S.
Topaze, A. D.
1868.
[note]
Mr. J. Cuthbert Hadden, in the "Century
Magazine" for July, 1899, shows that the
tablet is in error as to the year of Selkirk's
death. It should be 1721.
The cave in which Selkirk dwelt while on the
island is at the head of the bay now called
Robinson Crusoe Bay. It is around a bold headland
west of the present anchorage and landing. Ships
have anchored there, but it affords a very
indifferent berth. Both of these anchorages are
exposed to north winds, which, however, do not
reach home with much violence. The holding-ground
being good in the first-named bay to the eastward,
the anchorage there may be considered safe,
although the undertow at times makes it wild
riding.
I visited Robinson Crusoe Bay in a boat,and
with some difficulty landed through the surf near
the cave, which I entered. I found it dry and
inhabitable. It is located in a beautiful nook
sheltered by high mountains from all the severe
storms that sweep over the island, which are not
many; for it lies near the limits of the
trade-wind regions, being in latitude 35 1/2
degrees S. The island is about fourteen miles in
length, east and west, and eight miles in width;
its height is over three thousand feet. Its
distance from Chile, to which country it belongs,
is about three hundred and forty miles.
Juan Fernandez was once a convict station. A
number of caves in which the prisoners were kept,
damp, unwholesome dens, are no longer in use, and
no more prisoners are sent to the island.
The pleasantest day I spent on the island, if
not the pleasantest on my whole voyage, was my
last day on shore,--but by no means because it was
the last,--when the children of the little
community, one and all, went out with me to gather
wild fruits for the voyage. We found quinces,
peaches, and figs, and the children gathered a
basket of each. It takes very little to please
children, and these little ones, never hearing a
word in their lives except Spanish, made the hills
ring with mirth at the sound of words in English.
They asked me the names of all manner of things on
the island. We came to a wild fig-tree loaded
with fruit, of which I gave them the English name.
"Figgies, figgies!" they cried, while
they picked till their baskets were full. But
when I told them that the cabra they
pointed out was only a goat, they screamed with
laughter, and rolled on the grass in wild delight
to think that a man had come to their island who
would call a cabra a goat.
The first child born on Juan Fernandez, I was
told, had become a beautiful woman and was now a
mother. Manuel Carroza and the good soul who
followed him here from Brazil had laid away their
only child, a girl, at the age of seven, in the
little churchyard on the point. In the same
half-acre were other mounds among the rough lava
rocks, some marking the burial-place of
native-born children, some the resting-places of
seamen from passing ships, landed here to end days
of sickness and get into a sailors' heaven.
The greatest drawback I saw in the island was
the want of a school. A class there would
necessarily be small, but to some kind soul who
loved teaching and quietude life on Juan Fernandez
would, for a limited time, be one of delight.
On the morning of May 5, 1896, I sailed from
Juan Fernandez, having feasted on many things, but
on nothing sweeter than the adventure itself of a
visit to the home and to the very cave of Robinson
Crusoe. From the island the Spray
bore away to the north, passing the island of St.
Felix before she gained the trade-winds, which
seemed slow in reaching their limits.
If the trades were tardy, however, when they
did come they came with a bang, and made up for
lost time; and the Spray, under
reefs, sometimes one, sometimes two, flew before a
gale for a great many days, with a bone in her
mouth, toward the Marquesas, in the west, which
she made on the forty-third day out, and still
kept on sailing. My time was all taken up those
days--not by standing at the helm; no man, I
think, could stand or sit and steer a vessel round
the world: I did better than that; for I sat and
read my books, mended my clothes, or cooked my
meals and ate them in peace. I had already found
that it was not good to be alone, and so I made
companionship with what there was around me,
sometimes with the universe and sometimes with my
own insignificant self; but my books were always
my friends, let fail all else. Nothing could be
easier or more restful than my voyage in the
trade-winds.
I sailed with a free wind day after day,
marking the position of my ship on the chart with
considerable precision; but this was done by
intuition, I think, more than by slavish
calculations. For one whole month my vessel held
her course true; I had not, the while, so much as
a light in the binnacle. The Southern Cross I saw
every night abeam. The sun every morning came up
astern; every evening it went down ahead. I
wished for no other compass to guide me, for these
were true. If I doubted my reckoning after a long
time at sea I verified it by reading the clock
aloft made by the Great Architect, and it was
right.
There was no denying that the comical side of
the strange life appeared. I awoke, sometimes, to
find the sun already shining into my cabin. I
heard water rushing by, with only a thin plank
between me and the depths, and I said, "How
is this?" But it was all right; it was my
ship on her course, sailing as no other ship had
ever sailed before in the world. The rushing
water along her side told me that she was sailing
at full speed. I knew that no human hand was at
the helm; I knew that all was well with "the
hands" forward, and that there was no mutiny
on board.
The phenomena of ocean meteorology were
interesting studies even here in the trade-winds.
I observed that about every seven days the wind
freshened and drew several points farther than
usual from the direction of the pole; that is, it
went round from east-southeast to south-southeast,
while at the same time a heavy swell rolled up
from the southwest. All this indicated that gales
were going on in the anti-trades. The wind then
hauled day after day as it moderated, till it
stood again at the normal point, east-southeast.
This is more or less the constant state of the
winter trades in latitude 12 degrees S., where I
"ran down the longitude" for weeks. The
sun, we all know, is the creator of the
trade-winds and of the wind system over all the
earth. But ocean meteorology is, I think, the
most fascinating of all. From Juan Fernandez to
the Marquesas I experienced six changes of these
great palpitations of sea-winds and of the sea
itself, the effect of far-off gales. To know the
laws that govern the winds, and to know that you
know them, will give you an easy mind on your
voyage round the world; otherwise you may tremble
at the appearance of every cloud. What is true of
this in the trade-winds is much more so in the
variables, where changes run more to extremes.
To cross the Pacific Ocean, even under the most
favorable circumstances, brings you for many days
close to nature, and you realize the vastness of
the sea. Slowly but surely the mark of my little
ship's course on the track-chart reached out on
the ocean and across it, while at her utmost speed
she marked with her keel still slowly the sea that
carried her. On the forty-third day from land,--a
long time to be at sea alone,--the sky being
beautifully clear and the moon being "in
distance" with the sun, I threw up my sextant
for sights. I found from the result of three
observations, after long wrestling with lunar
tables, that her longitude by observation agreed
within five miles of that by dead-reckoning.
This was wonderful; both, however, might be in
error, but somehow I felt confident that both were
nearly true, and that in a few hours more I should
see land; and so it happened, for then I made the
island of Nukahiva, the southernmost of the
Marquesas group, clear-cut and lofty. The
verified longitude when abreast was somewhere
between the two reckonings; this was
extraordinary. All navigators will tell you that
from one day to another a ship may lose or gain
more than five miles in her sailing-account, and
again, in the matter of lunars, even expert
lunarians are considered as doing clever work when
they average within eight miles of the truth.
I hope I am making it clear that I do not lay
claim to cleverness or to slavish calculations in
my reckonings. I think I have already stated that
I kept my longitude, at least, mostly by
intuition. A rotator log always towed astern, but
so much has to be allowed for currents and for
drift, which the log never shows, that it is only
an approximation, after all, to be corrected by
one's own judgment from data of a thousand
voyages; and even then the master of the ship, if
he be wise, cries out for the lead and the
lookout.
Unique was my experience in nautical astronomy
from the deck of the Spray--so much
so that I feel justified in briefly telling it
here. The first set of sights, just spoken of,
put her many hundred miles west of my reckoning by
account. I knew that this could not be correct.
In about an hour's time I took another set of
observations with the utmost care; the mean result
of these was about the same as that of the first
set. I asked myself why, with my boasted
self-dependence, I had not done at least better
than this. Then I went in search of a discrepancy
in the tables, and I found it. In the tables I
found that the column of figures from which I had
got an important logarithm was in error. It was a
matter I could prove beyond a doubt, and it made
the difference as already stated. The tables
being corrected, I sailed on with self-reliance
unshaken, and with my tin clock fast asleep. The
result of these observations naturally tickled my
vanity, for I knew that it was something to stand
on a great ship's deck and with two assistants
take lunar observations approximately near the
truth. As one of the poorest of American sailors,
I was proud of the little achievement alone on the
sloop, even by chance though it may have been.
I was en rapport
now with my surroundings, and was carried on a
vast stream where I felt the buoyancy of His hand
who made all the worlds. I realized the
mathematical truth of their motions, so well known
that astronomers compile tables of their positions
through the years and the days, and the minutes of
a day, with such precision that one coming along
over the sea even five years later may, by their
aid, find the standard time of any given meridian
on the earth.
To find local time is a simpler matter. The
difference between local and standard time is
longitude expressed in time--four minutes, we all
know, representing one degree. This, briefly, is
the principle on which longitude is found
independent of chronometers. The work of the
lunarian, though seldom practised in these days of
chronometers, is beautifully edifying, and there
is nothing in the realm of navigation that lifts
one's heart up more in adoration.
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