Pieces of Eight eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 253 pages of information about Pieces of Eight.

Pieces of Eight eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 253 pages of information about Pieces of Eight.

As I thought of that particular kind of rock, I wondered too about my three friends, trussed like fowls, on their coral rock couches.  Of course they had long since cut each other free, and were somewhere active and evil-doing; and the thought of their faces seemed positively sweet to me, for of such faces are made “the bright face of danger” that all men are born to love.

Still the thought of that set me thinking too of my defences.  I looked well to my guns.  The Commandant had made me accept the loan of a particularly expert revolver that was, I could see, as the apple of his eye.  He must have cared for me a great deal to have lent it me, and it was bright as the things we love.

Then I called Tom to me:  “How about that sucking fish, Tom?” I asked.

“It’s just cured, sar,” he said.  “I was going to offer it to you this lunch time.  It’s dried out fine; couldn’t be better.  I’ll bring it to you this minute.”  And he went and was back again in a moment.  “You must wear it right over your heart,” he said, “and you’ll see there’s not a bullet can get near it.  It’s never been known for a bullet to go through a sucking fish.  Even if they come near, something in the air seems to send them aside.  It’s God’s truth.”

“But, Tom,” I said, “how about you?”

“I’ve worn one here, sar, for twenty years, and you can see for yourself”—­and he bared the brown chest beneath which beat the heart that like nothing else in the world has made me believe in God.

And so we went spinning along, and, if only I had the gift of words, I could make such pictures of the islands we sailed by, the colours of the waters, the joy of our going—­the white coral sand beaches and the big cocoanut palms leaning over them, and the white surges that curled along and along the surf reef, over and over again, running like children to meet each other and join each other’s hands, or like piano keys rippling white under some master’s fingers.

That night we made a good lee, and lay in a pool of stars, very tranquil and alive with travelling lights, great globed fishes filled with soft radiance, and dreaming glimmers and pulsating tremors of glory and sudden errands of fire.  Sailor and I stayed up quite late watching the wonder in which we so spaciously floated, and of the two of us, I am sure that Sailor knew more than I.

But one thought I had which I am sure was not his, because it was born of shallower conditions than those with which his instincts have to deal.  I thought:  What treasure sunk into the sea by whatsoever lost ship—­galleons piled up and bursting with the gold and silver of Spain, or strange triangular-sailed boats sailing from Tripoli with the many-coloured jewels of the east, “ivory, apes, and peacocks”—­what treasure sunk there by man could be compared with the treasure already stored there by Nature, dropped as out of the dawn and the sunset into these unvisited waters by the lavish hand of God?  What diver could hope to distinguish among all these glories the peculiar treasures of kings?

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Pieces of Eight from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.