The Battery and the Boiler: Adventures in Laying of Submarine Electric Cables by - (top 100 novels TXT) đ
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âPeckish, my dear, is hungry,â explained Robin, as they went into the cave together.
They found that Johnson was not only peckish but curious, and thirsting for information as well as meat and drink. As his pulse was pronounced by Dr Shipton to be all right, he was gratified with a hearty supper, a long pull at the tankard of sparkling water, and a good deal of information and small-talk about the pirates, the wreck of the Triton, and the science of electricity.
âBut you have not told us yet,â said Sam, âhow it was that you came to fail into the hands of the pirates.â
âI can soon tell âee that,â said the seaman, turning slowly on his couch.
âLie still, now, you must not move,â said Sam, remonstratively.
âBut that not movinâ, doctor, is wuss than downright pain, by a long way. Howsâever, I sâpose I must obey ordersâanyhow youâve got the whip hand oâ me just now. Well, as I was sayinâ, the yarn ainât a long âun. I sailed from the port oâ Lunâon in a tea-clipper, of which I was the cook; got out to Hong-Kong all right, shipped a cargo, and off again for old England. We hadnât got far when a most horrible gale blew us far out of our course. When it fell calm, soon arter, we was boarded by a pirate. Our captain fought like a hero, but it warnât of no use. They was too many for us; most of my shipmates was killed, and I was knocked flat on the deck from behind with a hand-spike. On recoverinâ, I found myself in the shipâs hold, bound hand and futt, among a lot of unfortunits like myself, most of âem beinâ Chinese and Malays. The reptiles untied my hands and set me to an oar. They thrashed us all unmercifully to make us work hard, and killed the weak ones to be rid of âem. At last we came to an anchor, as I knew by the rattlinâ oâ the cables, though, beinâ below, I couldnât see where we was. Then I heard the boats got out, anâ all the crew went ashore, as I guessed, except the guard left to watch us.
âThat night I dreamed a deal about beinâ free, anâ about former voyagesâspecially one when I was wrecked in the Atlantic, anâ our good ship, the Seahorse, went down in latitudeââ
âThe Seahorse!â echoed Robin, with an earnest look at the sailor; âwas she an emigrant ship?â
âAy, thatâs just what she was.â
âWas she lost in the year 1850?â continued Robin, with increasing excitement.
âJusâ so, my lad.â
âAnd you were cook?â
âYouâve hit the nail fair on the head,â replied the sailor, with a look of surprise.
âWell, now, that is most remarkable,â said Robin, âfor I was born on board of that very ship.â
âYou donât mean it,â said Johnson, looking eagerly at our hero. âWas you really the babby as was born to that poor miserable sea-sick gentleman, Mr Wrightâyouâll excuse my sayinâ soâin the middle of a thunder-clap anâ a flash oâ lightninâ as would have split our main-mast anâ sent us to the bottom, along wiâ the ship, if it hadnât bin for the noo lightninâ conductor that Mr Harris, the inventor, indooced our skipper to put up!â
âYes, I am that very baby,â said Robin, âand although, of course, I remember nothing about the thunder and lightning, or anything else. My father and mother have often told me all about it, and the wonderful deliverance which God mercifully sent when all hope had been given up. And many a time did they speak of you, Johnson, as a right good fellow and a splendid cook.â
âMuch obleedged to âem,â said Johnson, âanâ are they both alive?â
âThey were both alive and well when I left England.â
âCome now, this is pleasant, to meet an old shipmate in such pecooliar circumstances,â said the sailor, extending his hand, which Robin shook warmly; âquite as good as a play, ainât it?â
âAy,â observed Jim Slagg, who with the others had witnessed this meeting with deep interest, âanâ the babby has kepâ the lightenâ goinâ ever since, though heâs dropped the thunder, for heâs an electrician no lessâa manufacturer of lightninâ anâ a director of it too.â
The sailor wass good deal puzzled by this remark, but when its purport was explained to him, he gave vent to a vigorous chuckle, notwithstanding Samâs stern order to âlie still.â
âDidnât I say so?â he exclaimed. âDidnât I say distinctly, that night, to the stooardâThomson was his nameââStooard,â said I, âthat there babby what has just bin born will make his mark someâow anâ somewâeres.ââ
âWell, but I have not made my mark yet,â said Robin, laughing, âso youâre not a true prophet, at least time has not yet proved your title.â
âNot yet proved it!â cried Johnson with vehemence, âwhy, how much proof do you want? Here you are, not much more than a babby yetâanyâow hardly a manâand, besides havinâ bin born in thunder, lightninâ, wind, anâ rain, youâve laid the Atlantic Cable, youâve took up lightninâ as a professionâor a plaything,âyouâve helped to save the life of John Johnson, anâ youâve got comfortably located in a pirateâs island! If you onây go on as youâve begun, youâll make your mark so deep that itâll never be rubbed out to the end of time. A prophet, indeed! Why, Iâm shuperior to Mahomet, anâ beat Nebuchadnezzar all to sticks.â
âBut you havenât finished your story, Johnson,â said Jim Slagg.
âThatâs trueâwhere was I? Ah, dreaminâ in the hold of the pirate-ship. Well, I woke up with a start all of a suddent, bent on doinâ suthinâ, I scarce knew what, but I wriggled away at the rope that bound me till I got my hands free; then I freed my legs; then I loosed some oâ the boldest fellows among the slaves, and got handspikes and bits oâ wood to arm âem with. They was clever enough to understand signs, anâ I couldnât speak to âem, not knowinâ their lingo, but I signed to âem to keep quiet as mice. Then I crepâ to the powder-magazine, which the reckless reptiles fastened very carelessly, and got a bit paper and made a slow match by rubbinâ some wet powder on it, and laid it all handy, for I was determined to escape and put an end to their doinâs all at once. My plan was to attack and overpower the guard, free and arm all the slaves, blow up the ship, escape on shore, anâ have a pitched battle with the pirate crew. Unfortunately there was a white-livered traitor among usâa sort oâ half-anâ-half slaveâvery likely he was a spy. Anyhow, when he saw what I was about, he slipped over the side and swam quietly ashore. Why he didnât alarm the guards I donât knowâpârâaps he thought we might be too many for âem, and that if we conquered he stood but a small chance. Anyhow he escaped the sharks, and warned the crew in good time, for we was in the very middle of the scrimmage when they suddintly turned up, as you saw, anâ got the better of us. Howsâever I managed to bolt below and fire the slow match, before they saw what I was after. Then I turned and fought my way on deck again, so that they didnât find out. And when they was about to throw me overboard, the thought of the surprise in store for âem indooced me to give vent to a hearty cheer. It warnât a right state oâ mind, I confess, and I was properly punished, for, instead oâ killinâ me off quick anâ comfortable, they tied me hand and futt, took me below, anâ laid me not two yards from the slowly burninâ match. I felt raither unhappy, I assure you; anâ the reptiles never noticed the match because oâ the smoke oâ the scrimmage. I do believe it was being so near it as saved me, for when the crash came, I was lifted bodily wiâ the planks on which I lay, and, cominâ down from the sky, as it appeared to me, I went clean into the sea without damage, except the breakinâ oâ one oâ the ropes, which, fortunately, set my right arm free.â
âCome now, Johnson, you must go to sleep after that,â said Sam. âYouâre exciting yourself too much; remember that I am your doctor, and obedience is the first law of natureâwhen one is out of health.â
âVery good, sir,â returned the seaman; âbut before I turn over Mr Wright must read me a few verses out oâ that bible his mother gave him.â
âWhy, how do you know that my mother gave me a bible?â asked Robin in great surprise.
âDidnât I know your mother?â replied the sailor with a flush of enthusiasm; âanâ donât I know that she would sooner have let you go to sea without her blessing than without the Word of God? She was the first human beinâ as ever spoke to me about my miserable soul, and the love of God in sendinâ His Son to save it. Many a one has asked me about my health, and warned me to fly from drink, and offered to help me on in life, but she was the first that ever asked after my soul, or tried to impress on me that Eternity and its affairs were of more importance than Time. I didnât say much at the time, but the seed that your mother planted nigh twenty years ago has bin watered, thank God anâ kepâ alive ever since.â
There was a tone of seriousness and gratitude in this off-hand seamanâs manner, while speaking of his mother, which touched Robin deeply. Without a momentâs hesitation he pulled out his bible and read a chapter in the Gospel of John.
âNow youâll pray,â said the sailor, to Robinâs surprise and embarrassment, for he had never prayed in public before, though accustomed from a child to make known his wants to God night and morning.
But our hero was morally as well as physically courageousâas every hero should be! He knelt at once by the sailorâs couch, while the others followed his example, and, in a few simple sentences, asked for pardon, blessing, help, and guidance in the name of Jesus Christ.
Thus peculiarly was bible-reading and family worship established on the piratesâ island in the year eighteen hundred and sixty-eight.
For the first few days of their stay on what they styled Pirate Island, our castaways were too much taken up with the wondrous and varied contents of the robbersâ cave, and the information Meerta and Letta had to give, to pay much regard to the island itself, or the prospect they had of quitting it. But when their interest and curiosity began to abate, and the excitement to decrease, they naturally bethought them of the nature and resources of their now home.
Of course they did not for a moment regard it in the light of home. It was merely a resting-place,âa refuge, where, after their escape from the sea, they should spend a few weeks, perhaps months, until a passing vessel should take them off. They did not know, at that time, that the islet was far removed from the usual track of ships, and that, like the Pitcairn Islanders, they might be doomed to spend many years, perchance a lifetime, on it. Indeed, a considerable time elapsed before they would admit to themselves that there was a possibility of such a fate, although they knew, both from Meerta and Letta, that no ship of any kind, save that of the pirates, had been seen for the last eighteen months, and the few sails that did chance to appear, were merely seen for a few hours like sea-gulls on the horizon, from which they arose and into which they vanished.
Having then, as
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