The Waif of the "Cynthia" eBook

André Laurie
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 255 pages of information about The Waif of the "Cynthia".

The Waif of the "Cynthia" eBook

André Laurie
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 255 pages of information about The Waif of the "Cynthia".

The cyclone raged for an hour, then arrested in its course by the heights of Norway, it moved toward the south, and swept over continental Europe.  It is noted in meteorological annals as one of the most extraordinary and disastrous that ever was known upon the Atlantic coast.  These great changes of the atmosphere are now generally announced beforehand by the telegraph.  Most of the European sea-ports forewarned of the danger have time to warn vessels and seamen of the threatened tempest, and they seek a safe anchorage.  By this means many disasters are averted.

But on the distant and less frequented coasts, in the fishing-hamlets, the number of shipwrecks was beyond computation.

In one office, that of “Veritas” in France, there were registered not less than 730.

The first thought of all the members of the Hersebom family, as well as of all the other families of fishermen, was naturally for those who were on the sea on this disastrous day.  Mr. Hersebom went most often to the western coast of a large island which was about two miles distant, beyond the entrance to the fiord.  It was the spot where he had first seen Erik.  They hoped that during the tempest he had been able to find shelter by running his boat upon the low and sandy shore.  But Erik and Otto felt so anxious that they could not wait until evening to see if this hope was well founded.

The fiord had hardly resumed its ordinary placidity, after the passage of the hurricane, when they borrowed a boat of one of their neighbors, in order to go in search of him.  Mr. Malarius insisted upon accompanying the young men upon their expedition, and they all three set out, anxiously watched by Katrina and her daughter.

On the fiord the wind had nearly gone down, but it blew from the west, and to reach the entrance to the harbor they were obliged to use their oars.  This took them more than an hour.

When they reached the entrance an unexpected obstacle presented itself.  The tempest was still raging on the ocean, and the waves dashed against the island which, formed the entrance to the fiord of Noroe, forming two currents, which came and went with such violence in the narrow pass that it was impossible to gain the open sea.  A steamboat could not have ventured through it, and a weak boat could not have resisted it for a moment.

The only thing they could do, therefore, was to return to Noroe, and wait as patiently as they could.

The hour when he habitually came home passed without bringing Mr. Hersebom, but none of the other fishermen returned; so they hoped that they were all detained by the impassable state of the entrance to the fiord, and would not believe that he had personally met with any disaster.  That evening was a very sad one at all the firesides where a member was missing.  As the night passed without any of the absent men making their appearance, the anxieties of their families increased.  In Mr. Hersebom’s house nobody went to bed.  They passed the long hours of waiting seated in a circle around the fire, silent and anxious.

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Project Gutenberg
The Waif of the "Cynthia" from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.