The Death Ship (Vol. 1-3). William Clark Russell

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The Death Ship (Vol. 1-3) - William Clark Russell


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       William Clark Russell

      The Death Ship

      (Vol. 1-3)

      A Strange Story

      e-artnow, 2020

       Contact: [email protected]

      EAN 4064066400378

       Volume 1

       Volume 2

       Volume 3

      Volume 1

       Table of Contents

       CHAPTER I. I SAIL AS SECOND MATE IN THE SARACEN.

       CHAPTER II. WE MEET AND SPEAK THE LOVELY NANCY, SNOW.

       CHAPTER III. THE CAPTAIN AND I TALK OF THE DEATH SHIP.

       CHAPTER IV. WE ARE CHASED AND NEARLY CAPTURED.

       CHAPTER V. WE ARRIVE AT TABLE BAY AND PROCEED THENCE ON OUR VOYAGE.

       CHAPTER VI. THE CAPTAIN SPEAKS AGAIN OF THE DEATH SHIP.

       CHAPTER VII. I CONVERSE WITH THE SHIP'S CARPENTER ABOUT THE DEATH SHIP.

       CHAPTER VIII. A TRAGICAL DEATH.

       CHAPTER IX. MR. HALL HARANGUES THE CREW.

       CHAPTER X. WE DRAW CLOSE TO A STRANGE AND LUMINOUS SHIP.

       CHAPTER XI. A CRUEL DISASTER BEFALLS ME.

       CHAPTER XII. I AM RESCUED BY THE DEATH SHIP.

       CHAPTER XIII. WY ZYN AL VERDOMD.

       CHAPTER XIV. MY FIRST NIGHT IN THE DEATH SHIP.

       CHAPTER XV. I INSPECT THE FLYING DUTCHMAN.

       CHAPTER XVI. VANDERDECKEN SHOWS ME HIS PRESENT FOR LITTLE MARGARETHA.

       CHAPTER XVII. I TALK WITH MISS IMOGENE DUDLEY ABOUT THE DEATH SHIP.

       CHAPTER XVIII. THE DEATH SHIP MUST BE SLOW AT PLYING.

       CHAPTER XIX. I WITNESS THE CAPTAIN'S ENTRANCEMENT.

       CHAPTER XX. I HOLD A CONVERSATION WITH THE CREW.

      CHAPTER I.

       I SAIL AS SECOND MATE IN THE SARACEN.

       Table of Contents

      I will pass by all the explanations concerning the reasons of my going to sea, as I do not desire to forfeit your kind patience by letting this story stand. Enough if I say that after I had been fairly well grounded in English, arithmetic and the like, which plain education I have never wearied of improving by reading everything good that came in my way, I was bound apprentice to a respectable man named Joshua Cox, of Whitby, and served my time in his vessel, the Laughing Susan—a brave, nimble brigantine.

      We traded to Riga, Stockholm, and Baltic ports, and often to Rotterdam, where, having a quick ear, which has sometimes served me for playing upon the fiddle for my mates to dance or sing to, I picked up enough of Dutch to enable me to hold my own in conversing with a Hollander, or Hans Butterbox, as those people used to be called; that is to say, I had sufficient words at command to qualify me to follow what was said and to answer so as to be intelligible; the easier, since, uncouth as that language is, there is so much of it resembling ours in sound that many words in it might easily pass for portions of our tongue grossly and ludicrously articulated. Why I mention this will hereafter appear.

      When my apprenticeship term had expired, I made two voyages as second mate, and then obtained an appointment to that post in a ship named the Saracen, for a voyage to the East Indies. This was anno 1796. I was then two-and-twenty years of age, a tall, well-built young fellow, with tawny hair, of the mariner's complexion from the high suns I had sailed under and the hardening gales I had stared into, with dark blue eyes filled with the light of an easy and naturally merry heart, white teeth, very regular, and a glad expression as though, forsooth, I found something gay and to like in all that I looked at. Indeed it was a saying with my mother that "Geff,"—meaning Geoffrey—that "Geff's appearance was as though a very little joke would set the full measure of his spirits overflowing." But now, it is as an old poet finely wrote:

      My golden locks time hath to silver turn'd,

       (O time, too swift, and swiftness never ceasing!)

       My youth, 'gainst age, and age at youth have spurn'd,

       But spurn'd in vain!

      And here it is but right to myself that I should say, though as a sailor I am but an obscure person, yet as a man I may claim some pride and lustre of descent, an ancestor being no less a worthy than one of the boldest of Queen Elizabeth's sea-captains and generals—Edward Fenton, I mean, who was himself of a sound and ancient Nottingham stock; illustrious for his behaviour against the Spaniards in 1588, and for his explorations of the hidden passage of the North Sea, mentioned with other notable matters in the Latin inscription upon his monument by Richard, Earl of Cork, who married his niece.

      But enough of such parish talk.

      The master of the Saracen was one Jacob Skevington, and the mate's name Christopher Hall. We sailed from Gravesend—for with Whitby I was now done—in the month of April, 1796. We were told to look to ourselves when we should arrive in the neighbourhood of the Cape of Good Hope, for it was rumoured that the Dutch, with the help of the French, were likely to send a squadron to recover Cape Town, that had fallen into the hands of the British in the previous September. However, at the time of our lifting our anchor off Gravesend, the Cape Settlement lay on the other side of the globe; whatever danger there might be there, was too remote to cast the least faint shadow upon us; besides, the sailor was so used to the perils of the enemy


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