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From
Sailing Alone Around the World,
By Captain Joshua Slocum, 1900
V
Sailing
from Gibraltar with the assistance of her
Majesty's tug --The Spray's course
changed from the Suez Canal to Cape Horn --Chased
by a Moorish pirate --A comparison with Columbus
--The Canary Islands --The Cape Verde Islands
--Sea life --Arrival at Pernambuco --A bill
against the Brazilian government --Preparing for
the stormy weather of the cape
MONDAY,
August 25, the Spray
sailed from Gibraltar, well repaid for whatever
deviation she had made from a direct course to
reach the place. A tug belonging to her Majesty
towed the sloop into the steady breeze clear of
the mount, where her sails caught a volant wind,
which carried her once more to the Atlantic, where
it rose rapidly to a furious gale. My plan was,
in going down this coast, to haul offshore, well
clear of the land, which hereabouts is the home of
pirates; but I had hardly accomplished this when I
perceived a felucca making out of the nearest
port, and finally following in the wake of the
Spray. Now, my course to Gibraltar
had been taken with a view to proceed up the
Mediterranean Sea, through the Suez Canal, down
the Red Sea, and east about, instead of a western
route, which I finally adopted. By officers of
vast experience in navigating these seas, I was
influenced to make the change. Longshore pirates
on both coasts being numerous, I could not afford
to make light of the advice. But here I was,
after all, evidently in the midst of pirates and
thieves! I changed my course; the felucca did the
same, both vessels sailing very fast, but the
distance growing less and less between us. The
Spray was doing nobly; she was even
more than at her best; but, in spite of all I
could do, she would broach now and then. She was
carrying too much sail for safety. I must reef or
be dismasted and lose all, pirate or no pirate. I
must reef, even if I had to grapple with him for
my life.
I was not long in reefing the mainsail and
sweating it up--probably not more than fifteen
minutes; but the felucca had in the meantime so
shortened the distance between us that I now saw
the tuft of hair on the heads of the crew,--by
which, it is said, Mohammed will pull the villains
up into heaven,--and they were coming on like the
wind. From what I could clearly make out now, I
felt them to be the sons of generations of
pirates, and I saw by their movements that they
were now preparing to strike a blow. The
exultation on their faces, however, was changed in
an instant to a look of fear and rage. Their
craft, with too much sail on, broached to on the
crest of a great wave. This one great sea changed
the aspect of affairs suddenly as the flash of a
gun. Three minutes later the same wave overtook
the Spray and shook her in every
timber. At the same moment the sheet-strop
parted, and away went the main-boom, broken short
at the rigging. Impulsively I sprang to the
jib-halyards and down-haul, and instantly downed
the jib. The head-sail being off, and the helm
put hard down, the sloop came in the wind with a
bound. While shivering there, but a moment though
it was, I got the mainsail down and secured
inboard, broken boom and all. How I got the boom
in before the sail was torn I hardly know; but not
a stitch of it was broken. The mainsail being
secured, I hoisted away the jib, and, without
looking round, stepped quickly to the cabin and
snatched down my loaded rifle and cartridges at
hand; for I made mental calculations that the
pirate would by this time have recovered his
course and be close aboard, and that when I saw
him it would be better for me to be looking at him
along the barrel of a gun. The piece was at my
shoulder when I peered into the mist, but there
was no pirate within a mile. The wave and squall
that carried away my boom dismasted the felucca
outright. I perceived his thieving crew, some
dozen or more of them, struggling to recover their
rigging from the sea. Allah blacken their faces!
I sailed comfortably on under the jib and
forestaysail, which I now set. I fished the boom
and furled the sail snug for the night; then
hauled the sloop's head two points offshore to
allow for the set of current and heavy rollers
toward the land. This gave me the wind three
points on the starboard quarter and a steady pull
in the headsails. By the time I had things in
this order it was dark, and a flying-fish had
already fallen on deck. I took him below for my
supper, but found myself too tired to cook, or
even to eat a thing already prepared. I do not
remember to have been more tired before or since
in all my life than I was at the finish of that
day. Too fatigued to sleep, I rolled about with
the motion of the vessel till near midnight, when
I made shift to dress my fish and prepare a dish
of tea. I fully realized now, if I had not
before, that the voyage ahead would call for
exertions ardent and lasting. On August 27
nothing could be seen of the Moor, or his country
either, except two peaks, away in the east through
the clear atmosphere of morning. Soon after the
sun rose even these were obscured by haze, much to
my satisfaction.
The wind, for a few days
following my escape from the pirates, blew a
steady but moderate gale, and the sea, though
agitated into long rollers, was not uncomfortably
rough or dangerous, and while sitting in my cabin
I could hardly realize that any sea was running at
all, so easy was the long, swinging motion of the
sloop over the waves. All distracting uneasiness
and excitement being now over, I was once more
alone with myself in the realization that I was on
the mighty sea and in the hands of the elements.
But I was happy, and was becoming more and more
interested in the voyage.
Columbus, in the Santa Maria,
sailing these seas more than four hundred years
before, was not so happy as I, nor so sure of
success in what he had undertaken. His first
troubles at sea had already begun. His crew had
managed, by foul play or otherwise, to break the
ship's rudder while running before probably just
such a gale as the Spray had passed
through; and there was dissension on the
Santa Maria, something that was
unknown on the Spray.
After three days of squalls and shifting winds
I threw myself down to rest and sleep, while, with
helm lashed, the sloop sailed steadily on her
course.
September 1, in the early morning, land-clouds
rising ahead told of the Canary Islands not far
away. A change in the weather came next day:
storm-clouds stretched their arms across the sky;
from the east, to all appearances, might come a
fierce harmattan, or from the south might come the
fierce hurricane. Every point of the compass
threatened a wild storm. My attention was turned
to reefing sails, and no time was to be lost over
it, either, for the sea in a moment was confusion
itself, and I was glad to head the sloop three
points or more away from her true course that she
might ride safely over the waves. I was now
scudding her for the channel between Africa and
the island of Fuerteventura, the easternmost of
the Canary Islands, for which I was on the
lookout. At 2 P. M.,
the weather becoming suddenly fine, the island
stood in view, already abeam to starboard, and not
more than seven miles off. Fuerteventura is
twenty-seven hundred feet high, and in fine
weather is visible many leagues away.
The wind freshened in the night, and the
Spray had a fine run through the
channel. By daylight, September 3, she was
twenty-five miles clear of all the islands, when a
calm ensued, which was the precursor of another
gale of wind that soon came on, bringing with it
dust from the African shore. It howled dismally
while it lasted, and though it was not the season
of the harmattan, the sea in the course of an hour
was discolored with a reddish-brown dust. The air
remained thick with flying dust all the afternoon,
but the wind, veering northwest at night, swept it
back to land, and afforded the Spray
once more a clear sky. Her mast now bent under a
strong, steady pressure, and her bellying sail
swept the sea as she rolled scuppers under,
courtesying to the waves. These rolling waves
thrilled me as they tossed my ship, passing
quickly under her keel. This was grand sailing.
September 4, the wind, still fresh, blew from the
north-northeast, and the sea surged along with the
sloop. About noon a steamship, a bullock-droger,
from the river Plate hove in sight, steering
northeast, and making bad weather of it.
I signaled her,
but got no answer. She was plunging into the
head sea and rolling in a most astonishing manner,
and from the way she yawed one might have said
that a wild steer was at the helm.
On the morning of September 6 I found three
flying-fish on deck, and a fourth one down the
fore-scuttle as close as possible to the
frying-pan. It was the best haul yet, and
afforded me a sumptuous breakfast and dinner.
The Spray had now settled down to
the tradewinds and to the business of her voyage.
Later in the day another droger hove in sight,
rolling as badly as her predecessor. I threw out
no flag to this one, but got the worst of it for
passing under her Lee. She was, indeed, a stale
one! And the poor cattle, how they bellowed! The
time was when ships passing one another at sea
backed their topsails and had a "gam,"
and on parting fired guns; but those good old days
have gone. People have hardly time nowadays to
speak even on the broad ocean, where news is news,
and as for a salute of guns, they cannot afford
the powder. There are no poetry-enshrined
freighters on the sea now; it is a prosy life when
we have no time to bid one another good morning.
My ship, running now in the full swing of the
trades, left me days to myself for rest and
recuperation. I employed the time in reading and
writing, or in whatever I found to do about the
rigging and the sails to keep them all in order.
The cooking was always done quickly, and was a
small matter, as the bill of fare consisted mostly
of flying-fish, hot biscuits and butter, potatoes,
coffee and cream--dishes readily prepared.
On September 10 the Spray passed
the island of St. Antonio, the northwesternmost
of the Cape Verdes, close aboard. The landfall
was wonderfully true, considering that no
observations for longitude had been made. The
wind, northeast, as the sloop drew by the island,
was very squally, but I reefed her sails snug, and
steered broad from the highland of blustering St.
Antonio. Then leaving the Cape Verde Islands out
of sight astern, I found myself once more sailing
a lonely sea and in a solitude supreme all around.
When I slept I dreamed that I was alone. This
feeling never left me; but, sleeping or waking, I
seemed always to know the position of the sloop,
and I saw my vessel moving across the chart, which
became a picture before me.
One night while I sat in the cabin under this
spell, the profound stillness all about was broken
by human voices alongside! I sprang instantly to
the deck, startled beyond my power to tell.
Passing close under lee, like an apparition, was a
white bark under full sail. The sailors on board
of her were hauling on ropes to brace the yards,
which just cleared the sloop's mast as she swept
by. No one hailed from the white-winged flier,
but I heard some one on board say that he saw
lights on the sloop, and that he made her out to
be a fisherman. I sat long on the starlit deck
that night, thinking of ships, and watching the
constellations on their voyage.
On the following day, September 13, a large
four-masted ship passed some distance to windward,
heading north.
The sloop was now rapidly drawing toward the
region of doldrums, and the force of the
tradewinds was lessening. I could see by the
ripples that a counter-current had set in. This I
estimated to be about sixteen miles a day. In the
heart of the counter-stream the rate was more than
that setting eastward.
September 14 a lofty three-masted ship, heading
north, was seen from the masthead. Neither this
ship nor the one seen yesterday was within signal
distance, yet it was good even to see them. On
the following day heavy rain-clouds rose in the
south, obscuring the sun; this was ominous of
doldrums. On the 16th the Spray
entered this gloomy region, to battle with squalls
and to be harassed by fitful calms; for this is
the state of the elements between the northeast
and the southeast trades, where each wind,
struggling in turn for mastery, expends its force
whirling about in all directions. Making this
still more trying to one's nerve and patience, the
sea was tossed into confused cross-lumps and
fretted by eddying currents. As if something more
were needed to complete a sailor's discomfort in
this state, the rain poured down in torrents day
and night. The Spray struggled and
tossed for ten days, making only three hundred
miles on her course in all that time. I didn't
say anything!
On September 23 the fine schooner
Nantasket of Boston, from Bear River,
for the river Plate, lumber-laden, and just
through the doldrums, came up with the
Spray, and her captain passing a few
words, she sailed on. Being much fouled on the
bottom by shell-fish, she drew along with her
fishes which had been following the
Spray, which was less provided with
that sort of food. Fishes will always follow a
foul ship. A barnacle-grown log adrift has the
same attraction for deep-sea fishes. One of this
little school of deserters was a dolphin that had
followed the Spray about a thousand
miles, and had been content to eat scraps of food
thrown overboard from my table; for, having been
wounded, it could not dart through the sea to prey
on other fishes. I had become accustomed to
seeing the dolphin, which I knew by its scars, and
missed it whenever it took occasional excursions
away from the sloop. One day, after it had been
off some hours, it returned in company with three
yellowtails, a sort of cousin to the dolphin.
This little school kept together, except when in
danger and when foraging about the sea. Their
lives were often threatened by hungry sharks that
came round the vessel, and more than once they had
narrow escapes. Their mode of escape interested
me greatly, and I passed hours watching them.
They would dart away, each in a different
direction, so that the wolf of the sea, the shark,
pursuing one, would be led away from the others;
then after a while they would all return and
rendezvous under one side or the other of the
sloop. Twice their pursuers were diverted by a
tin pan, which I towed astern of the sloop, and
which was mistaken for a bright fish; and while
turning, in the peculiar way that sharks have when
about to devour their prey, I shot them through
the head.
Their precarious life seemed to concern the
yellowtails very little, if at all. All living
beings, without doubt, are afraid of death.
Nevertheless, some of the species I saw huddle
together as though they knew they were created for
the larger fishes, and wished to give the least
possible trouble to their captors. I have seen,
on the other hand, whales swimming in a circle
around a school of herrings, and with mighty
exertion "bunching" them together in a
whirlpool set in motion by their flukes, and when
the small fry were all whirled nicely together,
one or the other of the leviathans, lunging
through the center with open jaws, take in a
boat-load or so at a single mouthful. Off the
Cape of Good Hope I saw schools of sardines or
other small fish being treated in this way by
great numbers of cavally-fish. There was not the
slightest chance of escape for the sardines, while
the cavally circled round and round, feeding from
the edge of the mass. It was interesting to note
how rapidly the small fry disappeared; and though
it was repeated before my eyes over and over, I
could hardly perceive the capture of a single
sardine, so dexterously was it done.
Along the equatorial limit of the southeast
tradewinds the air was heavily charged with
electricity, and there was much thunder and
lightning. It was hereabout I remembered that, a
few years before, the American ship
Alert was destroyed by lightning.
Her people, by wonderful good fortune, were
rescued on the same day and brought to Pernambuco,
where I then met them.
On September 25, in the latitude of 5 degrees
N., longitude 26 degrees 30' W., I spoke the ship
North Star of London. The great ship
was out forty-eight days from Norfolk, Virginia,
and was bound for Rio, where we met again about
two months later. The Spray was now
thirty days from Gibraltar.
The Spray's next companion of the
voyage was a swordfish, that swam alongside,
showing its tall fin out of the water, till I made
a stir for my harpoon, when it hauled its black
flag down and disappeared. September 30, at
half-past eleven in the morning, the
Spray crossed the equator in
longitude 29 degrees 30' W. At noon she was two
miles south of the line. The southeast
trade-winds, met, rather light, in about 4 degrees
N., gave her sails now a stiff full sending her
handsomely over the sea toward the coast of
Brazil, where on October 5, just north of Olinda
Point, without further incident, she made the
land, casting anchor in Pernambuco harbor about
noon: forty days from Gibraltar, and all well on
board. Did I tire of the voyage in all that time?
Not a bit of it! I was never in better trim in
all my life, and was eager for the more perilous
experience of rounding the Horn.
It was not at all strange in a life common to
sailors that, having already crossed the Atlantic
twice and being now half-way from Boston to the
Horn, I should find myself still among friends.
My determination to sail westward from Gibraltar
not only enabled me to escape the pirates of the
Red Sea, but, in bringing me to Pernambuco, landed
me on familiar shores. I had made many voyages to
this and other ports in Brazil. In 1893 I was
employed as master to take the famous Ericsson
ship Destroyer from New York to
Brazil to go against the rebel Mello and his
party. The Destroyer, by the way,
carried a submarine cannon of enormous length.
In the same expedition went the
Nictheroy, the ship purchased by the
United States government during the Spanish war
and renamed the Buffalo. The
Destroyer was in many ways the better
ship of the two, but the Brazilians in their
curious war sank her themselves at Bahia. With
her sank my hope of recovering wages due me;
still, I could but try to recover, for to me it
meant a great deal. But now within two years the
whirligig of time had brought the Mello party into
power, and although it was the legal government
which had employed me, the so-called
"rebels" felt under less obligation to
me than I could have wished.
During these visits to Brazil I had made the
acquaintance of Dr. Perera, owner and editor of
"El Commercio Jornal," and soon after
the Spray was safely moored in Upper
Topsail Reach, the doctor, who is a very
enthusiastic yachtsman, came to pay me a visit and
to carry me up the waterway of the lagoon to his
country residence. The approach to his mansion by
the waterside was guarded by his armada, a fleet
of boats including a Chinese sampan, a Norwegian
pram, and a Cape Ann dory, the last of which he
obtained from the Destroyer. The
doctor dined me often on good Brazilian fare, that
I might, as he said, "salle gordo" for
the voyage; but he found that even on the best I
fattened slowly.
Fruits and vegetables and all other provisions
necessary for the voyage having been taken in, on
the 23d of October I unmoored and made ready for
sea. Here I encountered one of the unforgiving
Mello faction in the person of the collector of
customs, who charged the Spray
tonnage dues when she cleared, notwithstanding
that she sailed with a yacht license and should
have been exempt from port charges. Our consul
reminded the collector of this and of the
fact--without much diplomacy, I thought--that it
was I who brought the Destroyer to
Brazil. "Oh, yes," said the bland
collector; "we remember it very well,"
for it was now in a small way his turn.
Mr. Lungrin, a merchant, to help me out of the
trifling difficulty, offered to freight the
Spray with a cargo of gunpowder for
Bahia, which would have put me in funds; and when
the insurance companies refused to take the risk
on cargo shipped on a vessel manned by a crew of
only one, he offered to ship it without insurance,
taking all the risk himself. This was perhaps
paying me a greater compliment than I deserved.
The reason why I did not accept the business was
that in so doing I found that I should vitiate my
yacht license and run into more expense for harbor
dues around the world than the freight would
amount to. Instead of all this, another old
merchant friend came to my assistance, advancing
the cash direct.
While at Pernambuco I shortened the boom, which
had been broken when off the coast of Morocco, by
removing the broken piece, which took about four
feet off the inboard end; I also refitted the
jaws. On October 24, 1895, a fine day even as
days go in Brazil, the Spray sailed,
having had abundant good cheer. Making about one
hundred miles a day along the coast, I arrived at
Rio de Janeiro November 5, without any event worth
mentioning, and about noon cast anchor near
Villaganon, to await the official port visit. On
the following day I bestirred myself to meet the
highest lord of the admiralty and the ministers,
to inquire concerning the matter of wages due me
from the beloved Destroyer. The high
official I met said: "Captain, so far as we
are concerned, you may have the ship, and if you
care to accept her we will send an officer to show
you where she is." I knew well enough where
she was at that moment. The top of her
smoke-stack being awash in Bahia, it was more than
likely that she rested on the bottom there. I
thanked the kind officer, but declined his offer.
The Spray, with a number of old
shipmasters on board, sailed about the harbor of
Rio the day before she put to sea. As I had
decided to give the Spray a yawl rig
for the tempestuous waters of Patagonia, I here
placed on the stern a semicircular brace to
support a jigger mast. These old captains
inspected the Spray's rigging, and
each one contributed something to her outfit.
Captain Jones, who had acted as my interpreter at
Rio, gave her an anchor, and one of the steamers
gave her a cable to match it. She never dragged
Jones's anchor once on the voyage, and the cable
not only stood the strain on a lee shore, but when
towed off Cape Horn helped break combing seas
astern that threatened to board her.
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