Brown Wolf and Other Jack London Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Brown Wolf and Other Jack London Stories.

Brown Wolf and Other Jack London Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 227 pages of information about Brown Wolf and Other Jack London Stories.

But burn or no burn, I tell you it felt good.  By the time we arrived in Oakland I was as limber and strong as ever,—­though Charley and Neil Partington were afraid I was going to have pneumonia, and Mrs. Partington, for my first six months of school, kept an anxious eye upon me to discover the first symptoms of consumption.

Time flies.  It seems but yesterday that I was a lad of sixteen on the fish patrol.  Yet I know that I arrived this very morning from China, with a quick passage to my credit, and master of the barkentine Harvester.  And I know that to-morrow morning I shall run over to Oakland to see Neil Partington and his wife and family, and later on up to Benicia to see Charley Le Grant and talk over old times.  No; I shall not go to Benicia, now that I think about it.  I expect to be a highly interested party to a wedding, shortly to take place.  Her name is Alice Partington, and, since Charley has promised to be best man, he will have to come down to Oakland instead.

[Illustration]

MAKE WESTING

Whatever you do, make westing! make westing! —­Sailing directions for Cape Horn.

For seven weeks the Mary Rogers had been between 50 deg. south in the Atlantic and 50 deg. south in the Pacific, which meant that for seven weeks she had been struggling to round Cape Horn.  For seven weeks she had been either in dirt, or close to dirt, save once, and then, following upon six days of excessive dirt, which she had ridden out under the shelter of the redoubtable Terra Del Fuego coast, she had almost gone ashore during a heavy swell in the dead calm that had suddenly fallen.  For seven weeks she had wrestled with the Cape Horn gray-beards, and in return been buffeted and smashed by them.  She was a wooden ship, and her ceaseless straining had opened her seams, so that twice a day the watch took its turn at the pumps.

The Mary Rogers was strained, the crew was strained, and big Dan Cullen, master, was likewise strained.  Perhaps he was strained most of all, for upon him rested the responsibility of that titanic struggle.  He slept most of the time in his clothes, though he rarely slept.  He haunted the deck at night, a great, burly, robust ghost, black with the sunburn of thirty years of sea and hairy as an orang-utan.  He, in turn, was haunted by one thought of action, a sailing direction for the Horn:  Whatever you do, make westing! make westing! It was an obsession.  He thought of nothing else, except, at times, to blaspheme God for sending such bitter weather.

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Brown Wolf and Other Jack London Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.