Miles Wallingford eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 608 pages of information about Miles Wallingford.

Miles Wallingford eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 608 pages of information about Miles Wallingford.
English vessel of war we met.  This had the desired effect; and, after an amicable discussion, I agreed to pay them high wages on our arrival in a friendly port:  and they agreed to serve me as well as they knew how.  Seven men were rather less than half a crew for a vessel of the Dawn’s size, but it was possible to get along with that number.  The steering was the hardest part of the duty—­neither of the Frenchmen being able to take his trick at the helm.  We got along with the necessary work, however; and so glad were we all to be rid of both English and French, that I hazard little in saying, we would have endured twice as much, cheerfully, could we be certain of meeting no more of their cruisers.  Providence had ordered matters very differently.

That night the wind shifted again to the southward and westward.  We braced in the yards, and brought the ship to her course; but I thought it best not to carry sail hard in the dark.  Accordingly, I left orders to be called at sunrise, Marble having the watch at that hour.  When I came on deck, in consequence of this summons, I found my mate examining the horizon with some earnestness, as if be were looking for strangers.

“We are a merry party this morning, Captain Wallingford,” Marble cried out, as soon as he saw me.  “I have found no less than six sail in sight, since the day dawned.”

“I hope that neither is a lugger.  I feel more afraid of this Polisson, just now, than of all the names in christendom.  That fellow must be cruising in the chops of the channel, and we are working our way well in towards that part of the world.”

“I hope so too, sir; but this chap, out here at north-west has a suspicious, lugger-like look.  It may be that I see only the heads of his top-sails, but they are amazingly like luggs!”

I now took a survey of the ocean for myself.  The vessel Marble distrusted, I unhesitatingly pronounced to be a lugger; quite as likely the Polisson as any other craft.  The other four vessels were all ships, the five forming a complete circle, of which the Dawn was in the centre.  The lugger, however, was some miles the nearest to us, while as to the strangers, if they saw each other across the diameter of the circle at all, it was as much as was possible.  Under the circumstances, it struck me our wisest way was to keep steadily on our course, like honest people.  Marble was of the same opinion, and to say the truth, there was little choice in the matter, the ship being so completely surrounded.  The worst feature of the case was our position, which would be certain to draw all the cruisers to the centre, and consequently to ourselves.

Two hours produced a material change.  All five of the strangers had closed in upon us, and we were now able to form tolerably accurate notions of their characters.  The two astern, one on our larboard, and one on our starboard quarter, were clearly heavy vessels and consorts, though of what nation it was not yet so easy to decide.  That they were consorts was apparent by their signalling one another, and by the manner in which they were closing; as they carried studding-sails, alow and aloft, they were coming up with us fast, and in all probability would be alongside in two or three hours more.

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Miles Wallingford from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.